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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sel'ltlne~

New Iowa law bans teens
from even possessing tobacco
By GREG SMITH
Associated Press Writer
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- On
a mild summer night, IS-year-old
Sara Meeker and her friends like to
sit around shooting the breeze and
smoking cigarenes.
This week, the conversa tion
might not be as lighthearted as
before, because they'll be breaking
the law if they light up.
Anyone under 18 caught smoking, chewing or even possess ing
tobacco in Iowa is subject to fines
of up to $100 or a spell of community service. Teen-age smoki,ng
becomes illegal Monday, and Iowa
becomes probably the toughest
anti-tobacco stale in the union.
"I think it' s a bunch of
garbage," Meeker said. " I've been
smoking since I was in lifth grade,
when I was II years old. This new
law ain't going to change a thing. I
smoke, I'm addicled and that isn't
going to change."
Iowa's new anti-smoking law is
believed to be the toughest of. any

Monday, July 1, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

stale, said Carol Sipfle, director. of
programs for the American Lung
Association in Des Moines.
"Part of this law also has to do
with making ir harder for kids to
buy cigarettes in the first place:·
she said. " I think it will make a
difference, probably not a big difference, but we see this as progress
that needs to be made in small
s1eps."
Also taking effec t Monday are
measures in Virginia, Vermont and
Wyoming to raise the legal age for
buying cigarenes to 18 years, said
the Tobacco Institute, a trnde association in Washington.
Like spinach or booster shots, it
may be,.&amp;pod for them but that
doesn't guaran1ee kids are going to
like it.
" I want to get a prolest going in
the middle of the downtown mall
where we all can sit and chain
smoke, but everybody's afraid of
ge ttin g caught and paying 100
bucks,'' said Brian Hampton, 15.

"I know one thing, we won't
stop smoking. W~ just won't do it
in from of cops."
Police, too, are wary of the new
law.
"We are so busy out on the
street running down domestic calls,
robberies, rapes and accidents and
everything else, I really don'tknow
how they're going to enforce this,"
Des Moines police spokesman Sgt
Gail Dunn.
While on patrol, Dunn said he
took 25 trips a night on average.
"And if you told me, 'Well, in
between trips here, would you
mind stopping this kid for smoking?'l'd say, 'Right, yeah. Get a
life," ' said Dunn, a 23-year veteran.
Cedar Rapids Police Chief
William Byrne said that while
"overall intent of the law is good,"
the law will be difficult to enforce.
"I personally don't plan on sending
Jut roving smoking patrols," he
said.

NASA wants to prevent 'Doomsday
Rocks' from b.~ading toward Earth
By U ;E SIEGEL
Helin and Morri.$~n were among
AP Scienet' Writer
more than 160 astronomers, engiSAN JUAN CAPISTRANQ, neers and planetary scientists who
Calif. (AP) - Scientists say Earth gathered here Sunday for the Interis a sitting duck in a cosmic shoot- national Conference on Near-Earth
ing gallery of asteroids, and they Asteroids. The conference ·ends
are plotting ways to preven ~ a Wednesday.
"doomsday rock" from hitting 1he
The meeting is sponsored by ihe
planet. and wiping out much of NASA and The Planetary Society,
hl,!man•ty.
a non-profit group with 120,000
"We Wfult the public to know members worldwide.
there are these flying rocks out
Scientists say it's technically
there that may be a menace to feasible to prevent_catastrophic colEarth ," said planetary scientist lisions by placing huge rockets on
Eleanor Helin of NASA's Jet asteroids or exploding nuclear
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena bombs to nud'ge them o~ of
The chances of a big asteroid Earth's path.
striking Earth during any one
First, they want more money to
human lifetime are extremely build telescopes to search for
small. But so ·many people would · "near-Earth asteroids" -big
be killed that aay individual's rocks that cross Earth's orbit,
chances of dying this way are which are leftovers from the solar
between 1-in-6,000 and l-in- system's formation and may be on
20,000, said David Morrison, space a collision course with the planet
science chief at NASA 's Ames
"Earth exists in a cosmic shootResearch Center in Mountain ing gallery," Morrison said. " lt
View.
would be prudent to broaden the
"The risk that it will say on search so we can find out if there is
your tombstone, 'Killed as th~_..a doomsday rock out there."
result of an asteroid impact' if'
Such a collision "could happen
somewhat greater than chances tomorrow. It could happen any
you'll be killed in an airplane crash time," said Tom Gehrels, who.
- and much greater than being heads an asteroid-hunting project at
killed by fli'Cworks, tornadoes, vol- the University of Arizona's Spacecanic eruptions, nuclear accidents watch Telescope on Kin Peale. "If
or terrorism,'' he said
it does happen, society goes.''

By JEFF BARNARD
Associated Press Writer
OAKRIDGE, . Ore. (AP)
Rangers in the Northwest's national forests are chasing a new kind of
poacher: one with a drawknife who
strips bark from Pacific yew trees
to cash in on demand for a new
cancer-fighting drug.
"It's a damn waste," said Jim
Simonson, yew coordinator in the
Willamette National Forest. He
looked out over the naked white
trunks of 62 yews that were illegally stripped of their baric The
girdling kills the trees.
The ,bark is the primary source
of a drUg called taxol, which has
shown a unique ability to fight cancer by stopping cells from dividing.
It has proved effective in lests on
women with advanced breast and
ovarian cancer_
The National Cancer Institute is
so excited about the drug that the
government has pledged ro collect
750,000 pounds of yew bark a year.
That would produce about 55
poundS of taxol, enough to treat
I,250 people.
In a multimillion-dollar deal, the
government granted Bristol-Meyer
Squibb Co. exclusive rights to produce taxol from bark collected in
national forests.
Selling for $2.50 a pound, yew
CHECKING THE DAMAGE· Forest ranger
Jim Simooson, checks the damage done to a yew
tree after its bark was illegaUy peeled away by

poaches io the Willmette National.Forest in Ore·
gon. Bark from the yew tree is used in makiog a
new anti-cancer drug. (AP)

bark means easy money for some. taken by cutting down yews in
Logging restrictions to protect the areas slated for logging, or by scavnorthern spotted owl, a threatened enging logged-over areas. To prespecies, are making it tougher for vent poaching, Hauser estimates
loggers and millworkers to make a · how much bark should be coming
living.
.
in from legal peelers.
" As more and more people are
" To my knowledge,.there hasn't
laid off work, and mills close, we been any case of anyone who has
are expecting to see more crime approached us to sell bark that
problems on the national forests," wasn't taken with a pennit," said
said Carola E. Stoney, forest agent Dean P. Stul11 Hauser chief execuin Willamime.
tive officer.
"Of course, this deal on taxol
But it comes down to a matter of
has just taken the yew bark son of trust involving r.he Forest Service,
right to the head of the class. ''
Hauser and the collectors, Simon·
Bark that took 80 to 200 years to son said.
grow can be stripped in minutes
The government estimates 30
from as high as a man can reach to million yews grow on II million
about knee height. ·
acres of federal land in the NorthAuthorities have found no evi- wes~ but the trees grow so slowly
dence of a black market, though - yews reach 20 to 40 feet in
rumors abound, Simonson said. height, but an SO-year-old tree is
There also is talk that desperate only 5 inches in diameter- that no
cancer patients may be trying to one expects the bart to be able to
make home remedies. Si:nce taxol meet the demand for taxol.
isn't water soluble, it would be useLast week, however, ESCAgeless to brew the bark, he said. .
netics Corp. of San Carlos, Calif.,
Simonson said poached bark is announced it had produced taxol
probably mixed with legally taken from tissue cultures, a form of
bark and sold to the only autho· cloning. President Raymond
rized buyer, Hauser Northwest .in Moshy said that within two years
Cottage•Grove, a division of Haus- he expects to be able to produce
er Chemical Research Inc. of Boul- enough taxol to treat 5,000 people
der, Colo. It extracts the taxol and annually. More than 50,000 women
sells it to Bristol-Myers.
die of breast and ovarian cancer
Legally gathered taxol bark is
each year.

J

zation of doctors, also rejected
mandatory AIDS testing for doctors.
Instead it endorsed voluntary
testing of those at high risk of contracting AIDS, such as trnuma surgeons or those in areas with high
AIDS rates.
AIDS prevention for health professionals has come under scrutiny
since a Florida dentist, Dr. David
Acer, infected five patients. Acer's
case is the only known instance of
AIDS transmission by a health care
worker to a patient.
The nursing organi zation has
argued that compulsory, universal
leSting is not reliable because it can
take months for signs of the disease
to show up in the body.
Moreover, the estimaled $1 billion cost of testing could be better
spent on prevention, education and

treatment, the nursing organization
said.
Studies suggest that the chances
of infected workers passing the
viru s to patients are extremely
remote.
As of March, U.S. officials had
documented 40 cases of health care
workers · infected on the· job ,
according to the Centers for Disease Control.
The nurses also resolved to
develop a statement outlining, for
patients' benefit, infection control
procedures for health workers. Tbe
stalement would explain, for example, why the patient's nurse is
wearing gloves.
In addition, lhe nurses demanded the government provide annual
education to health workers on
AIDS, hepatitis and other infectious diseases.

Community calendar
Community Caleodar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
·

.'

day at 7 p.m. The public is inviled.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
Pageville Township Building. ·

TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. rather than Thursday so
that the Fourth of July may be
observed.

By SCOTT CHARTON
Associated Press Writer
KEARNEY, Mo. (AP) - An
explosion that killed Jesse James'
half-brother and maimed his mother was part of a plot by security
men to kill the .outlaw, a new fllm
alleges. For a century, the blast had
been considered an accident.
The documentary, "The Life
and Death of.JesseJames," blames
r.he Jan. 26. 1875, bombing on offi. cers of the Pinkerton National
Detective Agency, whom James'
gang had eluded for years.
Historians say James wasn 't
around when r.he explosion ripped
through his family's log fannhouse.
Eight-year-old Archie Samuel was
killed and Zerelda Samuel had to
have part of her right ann amputatect_.
Cited in the documentary is a
letter discovered recently in the
National Archi~es among late1800s papers of Allan Pinkerton,
head of the detective agency and
founder of the Secret Service. His
company, which once guarded
Abraham Lincoln, was then working for robbery-plagued railroads
and banks.
The lener, handwritten a month
before the explosion, was

addressed to lawyer Samuel Hardwicke of Liberty, a local contact for
Pinkerton. Although parts of the
lener are iUegible, the documentary
says Pinkerton gave Hardwicke
detailed instructions for a raid on
the fljml in the hiUs outside Kearney.r
At one point, the film says,
Pinkerton told Hardwicke: "Above
everything destroy the bouse.... Let
the men uke no risk. burn the •
house down."
Pinkerton also told Hardwicke
to have the raiders use ' 'Greek
fire,'' a primitive type of bomb.
Historians generally have agreed
that lawmen hurled two explosive,

devices into the house, but most
assumed that they were used to
flush James out or illuminate the
darkened building. They have speculated that one of the flare-type
devices accidentally exploded.
Instead of stopping the James
gang's robberies of railroads and
banks, the blast won public sympathy for the outlaw, according to the
film. It prompted an unsuccessful
push in the Misssouri Legislature to
grant amnesty to the gang.
James tived on until 1882, when
he was shot by a member of his
own gang.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT VAUEY ;HOSPITAL.

E~R,

NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

LOITRIDGE • The Lottrid~e
Community Center will hold 1ts
regular monthly meeting on ·Tues-

Pick 3:884
Pick 4: 5171
Cards : 10-H, 2-C
A-D; 5-S
Cloudy. Low tonight
in70s. High Wednesday
near 90.

PageS

.,
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tllesday, July 2,1991

Vol. 42, No. 40
Copyrighted 1991

1 Secdon, 10 Pogos 25 conto - ·
A Mulllmedla tnc. Newopoper

Pomeroy Council
finalizes Beech Grove
Cemetery paving plans

SPRUCING UP THE PARK • The depot
has been painted, the concrete slab stage
poured, and Monda;r arternooo the ftagpole was
gettinJ a coat or pa1nt. The work at Dave Diles
Park m Middleport ~ being done in preparation
ror Thursday's Cati'ISh J;estival. The depot bas

been painted light gray with BCCt'nts of a·darker
shade or gray and red. A tent will be put over
the concrete stage lor evening entertainment by
tbe Shady River Sbumers and the Crossover
Band.

AEP's Lhota to speak at SEORC
\Yilliaip J. {..bola, el!ecutive v.i&lt;:e

eastern Ohio will compete in a Calprest~l.RL~~c- - loway HandicaP Tournam.cnt.w.ill!,.
Power Servtce Corporauo~ . w111 a variety of prizes. Bill Childs,'
speak at the summer meetmg of popular golf professional from
S~utbeastern Oh10 R~810nal Coun- Pomeroy, will be the tournament
cil to be held followmg the annual director. Childs said the first 88
golf tournament July ll _at the Fair- golfers entered will play.
greens ·country Club m Jackson
Lhota has been with the AEP
County. .
System since 1965 w~en he joined
Lhota IS expected to comment the company as an associate transabout the current problem facmg mission engineer. He was named
the utility and Southeastern Ohio transmission and distribution engi·
concernmg the burmng of Oh10 neering manager in 1977 and later
coal and the installation of scrub- was named executive assistant to
bers at the Ohio Power Gavin gen- the president with responsibilities
erating plant.
.
in federal and state government
Bob Evans, president of the affairs . He was transferred to
SEORC, said that the golf touma- Columbus Southern and elected
ment _will begin _at 8:30 a.m. and senor vice president in 1983.
the dmner meeung_would begm
Lhota is chairman-elect of the
with a hospitality hour at 5:30p.m. Columbus Area Chamber of ComGolfers from throughout South- merce and a director of Huntington

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stall
Plans for paving at Beech Grove
Cemetery were finalized at Monday night's regular meeting of the
Pomeroy ViUage Council and work
is expected to begin on Wednesday.
/
Jess
Davis
of
S.W.
Dean
1
Asphalt Paving was in attendance
at the meeting and reviewed cost
estimates and time schedules for
the project, which will pave roadS
at the cemetery as well as several
village streets. Those streets scheduled to be paved are Spring Valley
Lane, Liberty Lane, Vale Street,
Wehe Terrace, Prospect Hill, and
Union Terrace.
Council members autborized
Davis to commence woik at the
cemetery when he completes work
m Mason County, W.Va. Davis
anticipates that work to be finished
by Wednesday.
The final decision as to when
those streets will be paved was not
made last night, pending approval
from Village Administrator John

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel
News Stall
.....

"'"~,

,.,)I.., ~ .

-~~'(+;-.~ ;

..

·~

lege, Executive Advtsory Board of
The Eastern Local School DisOhio University's CoUege or Busitrict
is ranked first among 115
ness AdminisiJ'8tion, and president
schools
in Appalachian Ohio in
of Capitol Square Renovation
students
who
proceed on to higher
Foundation.
education.
He earned a bachelor of science
According to statistics released
degree in civil engineering from
b~ the Ohio Board of Regents , a
Ohio State and a master of science
average of 63.7 percent of
degree from Massachusetts Insti- five-year
graduates
from Eastern High
tute of Technology.
School
go
on
to four-year colleges
Tickets for the dinner meeting
or
other
institutions.
That figure
may be purchased from -local compares with 48.2 percent
the
Chambers of Commerce, Tate Southern Local School Districtin and
Cline, Bernard Fultz , and Carl 36.1 percent in the Meigs Local
Dahlberg. Golfers may maJce reserDistrict
vations by mailing entries to School
The
figures were released as a
SEORC, Box 271, Wellston, 46592
of
the
Appalachian Access and
pan
with the entry fee of $42:50. Din· Success Project,
a program schedner reservations wiD close on July
uled
for
1991
-1992
funded by the
9. The dinner tickets are $I 5:
Ohio Board of Regents. The ~oal
of the project is to develop acuons
and pbins for increasing the educational success of the residents in
receipts for the year fell $63 mil- the Legislature acted. Voinovich Ohio's Appalachian counties.
lion short of projections, which signed the temporary budget Saturalready had been revised down- day night
Paychecks for the 132 members
ward by about $300 million over
or the Legislature, dated Wednesthe last two fiscal years.
"The reality is we're off on day, were released Monday after
revised revenue estimates. But certification by OBM, said John
we're happy that we have a betler . Conley, a spokesman for State
than expected fund balance," Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson. Legislative paychecks had been due
Browning said
Passage of a 3 1-day interim Monday.
Welfare checks were supposed
budget over the weekend by the
Legislature allowed the Ohio to have been mailed Friday for
receipt Monday, but wound up on
De~ent of Human Services to
m&amp;l welfare checks for July worth postal trnys at a warehouse until the
temporary budget was in place.
$74 million.
The department said 274,000 Human Services spokeswoman
checks to recipients of Aid to Susan Moning said State Highway
Dependent Children and 36,000 Patrol troopers provided extrn secuunder the General Assistance pro- rity.
gram were mailed Saturday after
Continued on page 3

State ends fiscal year with $135 million
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State government has started a new
fiscal year with a temporary budget
and $85 million more left over
from last year than officials had
expected.
The Office of Budget and Management said Monday that the state
wrapped up the old fiscal year at
midnight Sunday with a balance of
$135 million instead of the $50
million that had been forecast
Gregory Brownin,g, the OBM
director who is the top budget offi) cer for Gov. George Voinovich,
II3Ced the balance to federal reimbursements that were higher than
expected, and receipt of some state
tax money in June that nonnally
would have arrived in July.
However, overall st11te ta x

been posted on an abandoned
house on Ebeneezer Street. Several
complaints regarding health and
safety hazards surrounding the •
house have been filed with council •
and attempts to personally contaci
the structure's owner have been
unsuccessful.
In other business, council:
- reviewed a letter received from
a Columbus resident who owns
property in Pomeroy. The letter
writer wrote to complain about
abandoned cars that sit in front or ~
her propeity;
- heard a complaint from Council President Larry Wehrung
regarding increased speeding and
reckless driving on Lincoln .
Heights;
- approved the Mayor's Report
of fines collected for the month of :
June in the amount of $2,012.
Attending, in addition to Morris,·
Reed and Wehrung, were council
members Betty·Baronick, Bryan
Shank, and Thomas Werry. and·
Mayor Richard Seyler.

Eastern scores high in project

Bancshares, Inc., Ohio Chamber of
~c. OIUil.~-Col ­

Anderson. Council members were
especially concerned about paving
on Wehe Terrace and Vale Street,
as water line replacement work is
now underway in those areas.
The cemetery portion of the
work will cost the village an estimaled $18,000, and several council
members agreed to meet with
Davis at the cemetery ol\J'uesday
to discuss the project.
In other business, council agreed
to finance $13.000 for six months
through Bank One, Athens, N.A.
for the new Chevrolet Caprice
police cruiser, which will be purchased from Don Tate Chevrolet in
Pomeroy. The balance of the cost
of the car, approximately 2,800,
will be paid from the village safety
fund.
Police Chief Jerry Rought was
authorized to spelld up to $1 ,500
for accessories for the new cruiser,
including a light bar, a radio and
cage.
Clerk Brenda Morris reporled to
council that a demolition notice has

According .to Dewey Lykins, a ulty - place a high value in educaretired SuMrintendent of Schools liD' n "
·
·· fiom'SCio,-COIII!tY'.-..v'hOwi11 over: . ...
'facllfflll Eastern iW
a
see the project, the project was high number of seniors going to
prom pte~ by . a concern !hat college also indicates that the
Appalach180 residents_access high- school district is doing its job,"
er educatiOn at a s•gn•f•cantly Smith said "despite the economic
lower rare t!Um d~ other Ohioans.
problems ihat have forced us to
The project will survey vanous deal with less resources textbooks
segments of the popul~tion of and supplies."
'
Appalachtan Oh10 to 1denbfy barriAccording to Smith, Eastern's
ett to _educauonal ach•e:vement and rating in the study is made more
assessmg _htgher educauon. Groups significallt when compared to some
that are likely to be-surveyed are of the lower-scorin~ disliicts in r.he
school staff, ~tudents, parents and study. Belpre, for mstance, ranked
other adult res1dents.
II 5th in the study and Gallipolis
.~e project will also in~entory
City School District at 66th.
ex1sang programs and acuymes m
Smith also pointed out that Eastschools and colleges and m com- em outscored districts in wealthier
munity g~oups whi~h enhance areas like Wheelersburg (6) in1
access to h1gher educauon.
Scioto County and Milford (4) in
"We are extremely pleased with Clermont County J!liich are
E~tern's ra~ng,". Superinte~~ent included in the Appabchian region
R1chard Smuh sa•d Fnday. The despite their strong economic
results of the study show that the bases.
peopl~ in the Eastern district When asked whether Eastern's
mcluding .parents, students and facContinued oo page 3

"i'iie

suth

Banned by Federal law In 1966
due to large amounts of explosive
composhlon. They are not made
wilh the safeguards ollegal
flreworlls, and are very dangerous.

Cherry Bomb
Red, approx.
1' In diameter

M-80

-____,Local briefs---

\\WE HAVE IIEARINC AIDS"

.,, Sentinel
will publish Thur:sday
'
p

(304) 675-1244

The Daily Sentinel will publish a holiday edition on Thursday,
July 4. An early news deadline (9:30 a.m.) will be observed. The
business office will be closed. Normal hours of operauon will
resume Friday.

MONDAY
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Truslees will hold a pubLic hearing on the proposed budget
for 1992 on Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.
All intereSted are inv•led to anend.
The budget will be available for
inspection at the-clerk's residence
after that time.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Lodg~ No. 363 F and AM will
meet '1\Jesday at 7:30p.m. Refreshments will follow the meeting.

,,

'

Documentary: conspiracy behind
Nurses Association approves new AIDS policy deadly explosion at Jesse-] ames .farm
By MARGARET TRAUB
Associated Press Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Like the American Medical Associalion before it, the nation's largest
organization of nurses has come
out against compulsory AIDS testing for its members and patients.
The American Nurses Associa·
tion approved the policy 577-13
Sunday at the organization's annual
convention.
"Compulsory universal testing
isn't reliable and it is extremely
expensive," ANA president Lucille
Joel said in a statement.
Delegates representing the
nation's 2 million regislered nurses
jnstead endorsed voluptary 'testing
as well as voluntary AIDS -infection disclosure by nurses.
Last week, the 300,00-member
AMA, the nation's largest organi·

Wimbledon
action
continues.

"We're talking about almost
unbelievable widespread death and
destruction" if Eanh is hit by an
asteroid wider than one-half to one
mile, Morrison said. Such a collision would have the power at least
77,000 atomic bombs of the size
that destroyed Hiroshima - and
probably many more, he said.
"If you've seen pictures of what
it's been like in the Philippines
with Mount Pinatubo erupting, just
imagine that happening all over
Earth," he said. 'The sky turns
pitch black. Temperatures drop and
kill crops. Most of us would proba·
bly starve to death.''
Evidence suggests a 6-milewide asteroid smashed Into E '
65 miiiion million years ago ,
killing two-thirds of all species,
including the dinosaurs.
Smaller asteroids pose a more
frequent threat. A 10-foot-wide
rock would kill thousands if it hit
midtown Manhattan, Helin said.
· Earth came close to such a collision. on Jan. 18, when a 30-foot. wide asteroid swept within I06,000
miles of Earth, less than half the
distance to the moon.
An asteroid one-tenth of a mile
wide blew up over Siberia in 1908,
leveling hundreds of square miles
of unpopulated forest with a blast
equal to 1,000 Hiroshima bombs.

Demand for can·cer drug
creates yew bark poachers

Ohio Lottery

Trash service to run Thursday
Manley's Trash Service of Middleport will operate its usual
routes on Thursday {Independence Day), according to owner Roger
Manley.
·
·

Waste grease spills .on highway
Some motorists may have encountered a potentially ·slippery situation Monday afternoon after a section of U,S. 33 iQ Salisbury
Township· was smeared with waste grease after two barrels of the
material fell from the back of a truck.
.
· .,
According !Q a report flied by the Gallia-Mei$s Post of t1ie State
Highway Patrol, Douglas Howard, 30, of ZanesviUe, was eastbound
on U.S. 33 roWiding a curve when the drums containing the grease
fell off tile back of the truck and onto the roadway causing the
grease to cover pans of the roadwav.
·
·
CQDtinued on page 3

SAVINGS•••
in the Classifieds!

\

.,

.\ '

,1,1 .

Red, approx. II 112 • in length

Kiddie tractor pulls
slated for Racine
During Racine's Fourth of July
celebration the Racine Park Board
will sponsor kiddie tractor pulls at
2 p.m. on Thursday at Star Mill
Park. ·
·
Two classes will be offered
according to the weight ·of the participants and three trophies will be
awarded in each class. A $1 entry
fee will be charged to participate in
the kiddie puUs.
. The pulls are ljll()er .the direction
of Ted Smith and Dan Smith.
The part board's activities are
possible due to contributions by
Eber's Gulf, Cross Store, Dr. Douglas Hupier, J.D. DriUing, Rose's
Excavating and Sonja~ s Country
Kitchen.
The park board will also be selling food at Star Mill Parle. beginnin.s at 12:30 'p.m. including hotdogs or sausag~; po!lltoes, salad,
baked beans, pies and soft drinks.
The board is asking for donations •
of pies from area residents.
·

1 .· I Permit flreworlcs of so~ type .

D

Do not permit fireworlcs of any type

IIDIID Have no flrellf.orlcs laws, except at county level
IZ1a Allow only sparlclers and other novelti6s

Must be labeled "Class c
Common Flreworlls". Afew
examples:
.

Firecracker
Paper tub6 of

'

.
gunpowder and orner
··
/ngiWdlents. When Ignited ...,.~
It explodes with booming noises.

,Spartler
Chemical coated
metal wire which
shoots out sparlcs

when ~pn!ted.

Roman Csnclle
Tubll with gunpo~r
charges separated by lnac,tfve
material. Shoots out a series
or sparlcs and colored names
with booming n'olses.

�Tuesday, July 2i 1991

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A M E M BER or The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspape{ Publishers Association.
are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lett ers should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
!.ETTE RS OF OPINION

Wednesday, July 3
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 2, 1991

Domestic agenda rears its head

Dear Editor:

We would like to !hank everyone who helped make !he ice cream
&amp; who donated. We would lilce to
thank everyone who came out to
the social and a big !hanks to !he
entenainment and hope they will

play again. Also a thanks to Mary
Rose for the hanging basket for
doorprize.
.
Hope 10 see all of you in August
at our next ice c'ream social
Terri Browning
Secretary

Supports effort

band members whiie majoring in
another
field. Whichever !he case,
I am in suppon of the effon to
!he
imponant
fact is !hat !hey are
preserve the band program of
Southern Local Schools. Those of motivated to go on to college
us who were members of a high Among these may be one who
school band or have had children in desires to return home and continue
band activities, can testify to the the band pro~ram in the high
value of being band members, The school where hiS or her association
least of these are the memories and wiih music began.
My high school band experifriendships formed during years
ences remain very special to me.
spent in band functions.
Band membership, offers a My husband and daughter we also
"The first question is addressed to the
bonus to a child's educational pro- members of the band. All of us
cess. Hard work, dedication to a were proud Wahama White Falcon
candidate in the house?"
common goal and determination Band participants. We continue to
are basic ingredients to band be very interested in !he current
requirements. Students develop Wahama Band program. Our pride
individual talents, in learning to in their suctess is still as profound
-play one or more instruments. They as when we were members.
We would hate to imagine !he
arc introduced to play one or more
Some view it as the end of an tlie last few years.
instruments. They are introduced 10 effect on us and our community
How one views this unexpected
and acquire respect for all types of !hat the loss of !he Wahama Band era, others would say we have
music , from classical to pop and would create. Young musicians turned a corner and are heading in development on the Court depends
motivated to work toward perfec- deserve !he same interest and sup- a new direction. However you in large pan on one's judicial phition of their musical performances. port from everyone as do yo,png define the surprise retirement of losophy. As we all know, it is now
Competitive skills, needed to athletes. Bandmembers work very Supreme Coon Justice Thurgood up to !he President to nominate a
become successful in life are pan hard for 12 months a year in order Marshall, it is sure to stir !he emo- replacement and it is up to !he Senof !his learning process. Band stu- to reach !heir goals and make us aU tions of anyone familiar with !he ate to confum !hat nomination.
Speculation is alrelldy rampant
dents learn to work with fellow proud. They deserve our sincere nature and workings of our coun- &gt;
effons
on
their
behalf.
on
who
that will be and as this coltry's
higheSt
court.
bandsmen as a uniL They learn !he
I
extend
my
best
wishes
to
!he
umn
goes
to press the rumor mill is
With
the
retirement
of
the
value of individual effon, in order
to perform as a unit to the best !hey studlats and parents of Southern Court's most liberal member, a alive wilh candidates. Many think
Local for the future of !heir band member who began his service dur- !he President wiU want to preserte
can be.
. A deep sense of pride is devel- program. I urge aU area bands and ing the reformist years of Chief !he Coon's current racial make-up
OP.ed by the band as a whole , as booster groups to also show !heir Justice Earl Warren, !he Coon for and replace Justice Marshall with a
!hey achieve victory and recogni- suppon. The value of a high school !he first time in many a decade will black.
Others feel !he President will
tion for their efforts. This pride band program cannot be measured be without a predictable liberal
simply
by
a
dollar
sign.
Let's
work
not
be bound by such consideravoice.
radiates throughout their school
to
give
the
Southern.
Band
it's
tions
and will simply be intent on
During
his
24
years
on
the
High
and community in !he very same
miiDner as does a winning basket- chance to prove just how good !hat Court, Jus lice Marshall has been placinf on !he Coon a jurist reflec!hey can be. You will be proud you closely identified with that block of tive o !he philosophical profile he
ball campaign.
_
•Many students are motivated to did. Good Luck Marching Torna- jQCiSts bent on legal activism -with has repeatedly voiced a preference
those inclined to make the law, for, a judge who is a strict constitugo on to a higher, education in does!
Thank you, rather !han interpret it.
tionalist, a judge whose conservamusic and attend college as a direct
Diane
D.
Hickel
tive record and outlook suggest
What
makes
his
retirement
all
result of their high school band
P.O.
Box
128
that. once on !he bench, he or she
!he
more
surprising
is
!hat
he
had
exJ)eriences . Manv are college
New Haven, W.Va repeatedly stated that he viewed his will interpret the law in a manner
lifetime appointment literally. as consistent with !hose expectations.
Coincidental to Justice Minone !hat would only be terminaled
shall's retirement, !he High Coon
by his Passing.
. One can only surmise that with last week concluded its current
the retirement of his fellow ideo- term wi !h two case decisions !hat
By The Associated Press
logue Justice WiUiam Brennan last clearly underscore the changing
Today is Tuesday, July 2, !he 183rd day of 1991. There are 182 days year he felt increasingly isolated on conservative makeup of the Coon,
left in !he year.
a coon whose philosophical make- two decisions aimed at narrowing
Today's Highlight in Histnry:
up has changed discernibly over the J)rotections afforded criminals
On July 2, 1881, President James A. Garfield was shot by Charles J.
Guiteau, a disappointed office-seeker, at the Washington railroad station.
Garfield died !he following September.
On !his date:
In 1566, the French astrologer, physician and prophet Nostradamus
died in Salon.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - You thought might be used to earn some
In 1776, the Continental Congress passed a resolution saying !hat might fmd it hard to believe that a exira fede(ll) dollars for the s!llte.
"these United Colonies are, and of right, ought 10 be, Free and Indepen- federal program could owe a single
Under changes passed by
dent States."
,
·
state a half-biUion dollars and nei- Congress, which became effective
In !890, Congress passed !he Sherman Antitrust Act, designed to pre- ther !he state nor Washington real- last year, !he fedenjl Medicaid fund
vent restraint of inters!llte trade or commerce with foreign nations through ized it. But the program is Medi- provides matching funds - on a
truSts.
caid, and !hat is exactly what hap- formula of either 2-to-1 or 3-to-1
In 1926, the United States Anny Air Corps was created.
pened.
- for states !hat collect voluntary
In 1937, aviator Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, disWhile many states are in an eco- donations to care for the poor.
appeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make the first roWJd- nomic bind, few are experiencing Betts began to wonder if a Mastbe-world flight at the equator.
·
problems as severe as those of sachusetts state fund that her
' In 1955, the "Lawrence Welk Show". premiered on ABC television.
Massachusetts. This year's state department administered would
In 1961, 30 years ago, author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to death budget is more !han $2.7 billion out qualify as a voluntary donation.
at his home in Ketchum, Iilaho.
of balance. Newly elected RepubliSo Beus did the bureaucratically
In !963, President John F. Kennedy met Pope Paul VI at !he Vatican, can Gov . William Weld has correct thing: She wrote a memothe first meeting between a Roman Catholic U.S. chief executive and !he announced major cuts, including random to her boss. He, in tum,
head of the Catholic Church.
shuuing down state government also did the correct bureaucratic
In 1964. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law a civil rights act completely for the last week in thing: He formed a committee to
passed by Congress, !he most sweeping legislation of its kind since the June, with all- employees taking a look into the matter.
Reconstruction era.
,
week's pay cut.
The more !he committee looked,
.In 1976, the U.S. Supreme Coon ruled !he death penalty was not inherNow, however, the most draco- !he more it became convinced !hat
. ently cruel or unusual.
nian cuts have been rendered Betts had actually stumbled onto
In 1987, 18 illegal aliens were found dead inside a locked boxcar near . unnecessary. In one fell swoop- something . So state Human SerSierra Blanca, Texas, in what authorities called a botched smuggling given !he cuts that already have v.ices Undersecretary Charles
attempt A 19th 1J1311 in the boxcar surviv~.
been made ·- Massachusetts has Baker got involved, as did !he state
gone from its worst one-year Treasurer's Office and !he MasTen years ago: The us. Supreme eoun ruled unanimously !hat Presi- deficit in history 10 a slight budget sachuseus Hospital Association.
dents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan had !he legal authority to nullify surplus. ¥d it is all thanks to the
The Medicaid office in the
court orders and suspend private lawsuits in order to carry out the agree- sharp eye of a $22,000-a-year, pan- Department of Health and Human
ment with Tehran ·that ended the Iranian hostage crisis.
time bureaucrat - Kathleen Betts.
Services was next contacted. To
Fiv~ years ago: 'Ruling in a pair of cases, the U.S. Supreme Coon
Betts, 38, is the Massachusetts say the least, they were not haPJlr
'upheld affumative a:tion as a ~y for past job discriminalion.
Department of Public Welfare with Massachusetts' request. and It
One year ago: More than 1,400 Muslim pilgrims were killed in a stam- employee who oversees state pay- was initially denied. However, after
pede inside a pedeslrian
. . tunnel leading to Mecca in Saudi Arabia. The ments to hospitals for Medicaid- weeks of hard ba!'gaining and no
Soviet Union's 28th Communist Party congress opened in Moscow with covered care. In January, she was s""all amount of ann-twisting and
an address by President_Mikhail S. OorbaChe~, who ~ceded- mistakes reading through complex rule cajoling by members of !he Maschanges for federal Medicaid reim- sachusetts congressional delegawhile defending RCfCSliOika.
·
Thought for Today: ''You have not convened a 111111) because you have bufsement when· she Sl!ddenly · lion, it was announced !hat Kathsilenced him. ' ' - Lord Morley, English statesman (1838-1923).
came across a change that she · leen Beus had been right. The MasDear EdiJor:

-

A significant corner has been turned

Today in history

Cong. Clarence Miller
to bring !heir cases to federal coon.
Bv a 6 to 3 ruling, !he Court
reversed an earlier Supreme Coon
decision and said juries, when considering death penalty cases, can
now hear victim-impact - type ev~­
dence about !he character of murder victims and the suffering !hat a
criminal act imposed on the survivors.
Justice Marshall spoke out
against the introduction of such
evidence and, in his dissenting
opinion, criticized the majority for
overturning previous court deci sions -tllat had either affirmed or
reaffirmed a defendant's right to
have such evidence barred from
coon.
He lambasted the current coon
for giving short shrift 'to-'the doctrine of "stare decision," !he principle of adherence to precedent.
By a smaller 5 to 4 majority,
with Justice Marshall again dissenting, !he .Coon also voted to uphold
the mandatory sentence of life
without parole for a 45-year old
Michigan drug dealer caught with a
pound and a half of cocaine in his
possession. Here too, Justice Mar- ,
shall took verbal swipes at !hose in
!he majority, labelin~ !heir actions

as being openly defiant of judicial
precedent
Ironic, isn't it, for a man who
was an active member of the
majority during !he Warren Coon
era, a coon known for its judicial
activism and for its flagrant disregard of legal precedent?
Personally, I applaud both of the
aforementioned decisions and
would ask with regard to the fU'St,
how is the admission of such victim related evidence any different
from one detailing or displaying
!he physical harm !hey incurred in
an automobile accident or as a
result of a malpractice suit
Justice Marshall and his col- .
leagues who dissented claim that
the detailing of the psychological
damage incurred by victims and
!heir families plays on !he emotions
of the jurists and distracts them
from the facts.
It is just such faulty reasoning
!hat leads me to conclude !hat !he
corner we are about to turn with
Justice Marshall's retirement from
!he Court, will point us in a direction much more· consistent and
much more protective of !he rights
of our nation 's vast majority of law
abiding citizens.

State worker finds half a billion

I
l
I

I

I

I
.

;11
I

I

J.

"

.

V

By Robert J. Wat? man

sachusetts slllte fund did qualify for
federal matching funds, retroactive
to 1988 and the amount owed to
!he state' was $489 million.
Kathy Betts says she was
shocked: "When I was reading the
regulations I thought we .could
qualify for matching funds, but I
never dreamed it would be more
than $60 million or perhaps as
much as $80 million. I never
dreamed it could be $50&lt;i million. ''
This -story has more than its
share of irony.· When conservative
Weld rim for office last year, he ran
against state workers and !he state
bureaucracy , If he won , he
promised he would slash the
state's bloated payroU. Now one of
those same faceless bureaucrats has
possibly saved Weld's political
career.
This irony is I)Ot lost on Betts.
"For.a long 'time state workers
have been seen as people who .
come in late and leave early " she
says. "But I don't think thai's the
f11SC at all. Hopefully, as !he governor has gotten 10 know ahd worli:
with state worli:ers, he has changed
his opinion and found !hem to be
valuable and dedicated employ-

ees.''

· Betts also says !hat she· hopes
what she has done will be an inspiration to working mothers. Last
. yeanhe 10-year Welfare Depart_-

\

ment employee switchea to a threeday-week, JOb-sharing schedule so
.she could spend more time with her
two children.
.
"I hope !his shows !hat mothers
who work pan ume can do the J~~
and can ~7comph ~h somethmg,
she S81d. I hope 1t shows ,'';e can
hold down responstble JobS.
Wash!ngtrin, meanwhile, is not
happy w11h !he Massachusetts payment, or !he matching-fund scheme
under which it is owed. Office of
Management and Budget head
Richard ~~an. m, ~act, calls !he
program a scam. At least 20
states have .started "voluntary"
funds !hat are actually mandatory
donatiOns from hospitals, which are
then matched 2-to-1- by federal
funds and returned to the hospuals.
But Massachusetts ap~ to be
!he only state w1!h !he kind .of taxsupponed fund~~ drew !h1s large
match. At least 11 IS !he on!~ state
that has such a fund and IS not
already getting maximum Medicaid
reimbursemenL
(C)l991
. NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
When a bureaucrat discovered .
tbat l!.Siate fund qualified for federal matehing money, no one expected the amount owed to tl\e. s!llte
would come 10 $489 million.

of the nation braced for rain and
storms later.
Rain was forecast today in !he
Dakotas and Minneso!ll. Thunder-

storms were expected over pans of
Texas, Oklahom a·, New Mexico,
Florida, Georgia, South Carolina,
Pennsylvania, Delaware and Virginia
"
In !he West, !he California coast
had partly cloudy skies early today.
while inland areas were clear and
warm . Partly cloud y skies prevailed in !he Pacific Nonhwest, as
well as in Idaho, Wyoming and
Colorado. Sunny skies and sizzling
temperatures were expec ted in
Nevada, Utah and Arizona.
Sunny skies and low humi dity
were fore&lt;;ast for !he Northeast.
A tornado touched down at Germantown, )Vis., Monday afternoon.
Large hail and high wmds caused
some damage west of Elkins, W.
Va. There also was wind damage at
Nonh Lake, Wis., Opelousas, La.,
and near SJ)ringfield, IlL

IToledo I sa• I

By}osephSpear •

•

and limiting !he ability of prisoners

.

MICH.

-·

ever pull it off: I loved that pan tutional amendments - flag burnwhere you said, 'There is a ~r ing, abortioo, term limits, balanced
way, one !hat combines our ef(orts budget, line -item veto, school
- !hose of government properly prayer. (By !he way, that teary bit
defined, !he marketplace properly wim the Southern Baptists was also
understood and services to others brilliant: RR himself could not
properly engaged. This is the only have done better.) The Paleos love
way - all three of !hem - to an this stuff. Think up a couple more
America whole and good.' BriUiant amendments (an Assistant Presibabble!
· -·
dent titl&amp;for the Chief of Staff, per"I know of Y.our desire 10 sim- haps?) and whip them out when
ply !l5k for an endorsement and be needed
don~ with it, but campaigns don't
"Games. Aerobic golf. Wallywork that way . You have to say ball. Poople eat it up. Play somesomething about something once in thing at every slOp.
.
a while. So here's the domestic"Points. The Thousand Pmnts
issue re-election slrategy in a nut- of Lighi thing is a proven winner.
shell: Amendments, Games, Points, Let's promise Five Thousand durVetoes, Veggies, War and Wed- ing the second term . The only
drawback is writer's cramp. You'd
gies. To wit:
"Amendments. You' re already have to write a personalized Pointon !he record in favor of six consti- of-Light note every seven hours,
but hey , this is America. Volunteerism is what it's all abouL
"Vetoes. Anytime anybody says
we don't have a domestic agenda,
point out !he 21 vetoes during !he
first two years of your term .
Promise more. With great solemnity, of course.
"Veggies. Do the broccoli
thing. If you· want a change of
pace, do cabbage, celery, kohlrabi,
parsnips and rutabagas. ·
" War. Remind everybody
everywhere at all times who the
wimps against !he war were and
who won it.
"Wedgies. Don't forget the
Wedge Issues - flags, pledges,
prayer, crime, abortion, and quotas,
quotas, quotas. Split !he Democrats
down the middle and waltz through
!he gap.
"Now it's not likely to happen.
but if you get cornered or tonguetied, you can always atta_ck
Congress, promise a blue ribbon
panel, call for another Desen Storm
parade or invoke the image of
Jimmy Caner. Like you did in New
Mexico last fall . 'You face a
choice,' you said, ' whether to turn
!he clock back and return to ... the
malaise days.' Old Jimmy is a great
audience. Is there a Democratic out. Use him.
"Now, who the hell says we ·,
don ' t have a domestic agenda?"

Appreciates donations

By The Associated Press
Thunderstorms rumbled across
Illinois, Indiana and Michigan
early .
while
other

Accu-Weathere forecast

e

PA.

IMansfield I so· I•

The 1992 presidential campaign salient excerpts:
"Once again , the pathetic
hasn't even staned yet, and I am
already weary of !he only issue !he Democrats are trying to goad us
feckless Democrats have managed into taking stands on domestic
to come up wi!h: George Bush's issues. As your chief adviser and
all egedl y none xistent domestic the person to whom you have
agenda. He only cares f&lt;pr foreign turned over all responsibility for
affairs, !hey say. He doesn' t give a domestic mat\¥_rs, I once again
hoot about health care, bankrupt remind you !hatt'fomestic issues are
losers. We are in 'favor of no!hing,cities and crumbling bridges. I can now repon !hat !he Bush Do not be goaded by !hose liberal
adminislration does have a domes- noodleheads or !heir media handtic agenda, after a fashion. I know maidens into taking a position on
this because I have uncovered a anything. Let the Democrats do !he
White House memorandum that proposing. We'll do the opposing.
"I congratulate you on the way
p utlines the president's elec tion
you
handled !he domestic issue !he
strategy as regards domestic matother
night with that speech to
ters . The writer employs code
business
'lind civic leaders on the
names - it's addressed to "Skippy " and it's from "Deep Doo South Lawn. The PR strategy
Doo" - but it appears authentic in called for a ' high-minded, cerebral,
ever y way . I herewith present amorphic' approach, and did you

Letters -to the editor

I '

I

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

·Thunderstorms, rain forecast- for most of nation

OHIO VVeatiler

Commentary

The Dally Sentinel Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.. '

•Icolumbus I so• I

...

W. VA.

Cigarette ignites _fireworks, 3 hurt

~'

Ice

Sunny

CINCINNATI (AP) - Poli ce
are investigating an ex pl os ion
inside a car caused by a lit cigarette
!hat fell on gunpowder (rom fireworks !hat had been cut open.
Three people suffered bums in
the incident, Hamilton County
sheriffs officer.; said Monday.
The three were taken to Be!hesda North Hospital for treatm ent
after Sunday night's accident near
J-275's Loveland-Madeira Road
·'exit in Symmes Township, sherifrs .
spokesman Frank Weikel said.
No charges were filed immedi ately , but the incident remain ed

Pl. Cloudy_ Cloudy

.----Local briefs... - - continued from page 1
Howard Wll'l cited by the patrol for having an insecure load.
The waste grease was removed from the roadway by !he Ohio
Depanrnent of Transponation.
·
·

Woman cited in two-car collision
A Pomeroy woman was cited Monday afternoon following a
two-car collision on S.R. 681 in Bedford Township.
A repon by !he Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
Sllltes Lyman Stanley, 76, of Albany, was eastbound on S.R. 681
when a vehicle driven by Vicki Phillips, 33, of Pomeroy, pulled
from a ~vate drive into the path of Stanley's vehicle causing !he
two velucles 10 collide.
. Phillips' 1980 Chevrolet Monza and Stanley's ~990 Ford Tempo
were both listed as having sllffered moderate, disabling damage.
Phillips and her passenger, Dennis Hart, 39, of Pomeroy, and
Stanley were uninjured according !he report. All were reponed as
wearing lap and shoulder belts at !he time of the accidenL
Phillips was cited by the patrol for failure to yield from a private
drive.

Hartford Tournament slated
The Hartford Little League will sponsor a double-elimination
tournament beginning on Saturday. The cost per team is $40 plus
two balls. The games will be played at Hanford Elementary School.
Deadline for entry is Wednesday. For more information, call (304)
882-2434.

EMS units answer 10 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answ~ I 0 calls
. ~
for assistance on Monday and early on Tuesday.
At 10:24 a.m., Rutland squad went to Leading Creek Road. John
Lamben was taken to V~s Memorial HOspital. At 11:12 a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Children's Home Road for Garnet Swan.
She was taken to Veterans. At 11:54 a.m., Racine squad went to
State Route 338 for Roben Webb, who was taken to Jackson General Hospital.
.
At 2:13 p. q~ . , Middlepon unit responded to Grant StreeL Jeff
Evans went to Veterans. At 2:11 p.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 U.S.
Route 33 for a grease and oil spill. At 5:27 p.m., Middleport squad
went to Cole Street for Nacha Friend, who was taken to Veterans.
At 10:24 p.m., Racine unit went to Bashan Road for a structure fue
at !he Pauline Rose residence. The house was destroyed. Bashan fire
depanrnent assisted. At II :07 p.m., Rutland Wlit went to New Lima
Road for Robin Wood. Wood went to Veterans.
On Tuesday at 2:51 p.m., Middleport went to North Second
Street. Charles McCloud was taken to Veterans. At 3:48 a.m.,
Bashan unit went to a rekindled frre at the Rose residence.

state ends... _c_on_ti_nu_ed_fr_om_·_:_pa.:..ge_l_ _ __
''To have !his many of them sitting in one location was uncommon. It became fairly common
knowledge .. . that they were
!here,'' Ms. Mooing said.
The department hoped most
checks would be received today.
"Most people are within about a
one- or two-day delivery from us,"
she said.
1/
Browning pegged !he size of !he
temporary budget at $2.2 biUion in
state money.
The amount is higher !han a typ-

ical month's worth of spending
becailse !he budget includes a full
year of payments to financ.e the
state's debt.
· A House -Senate conference
committee is continuing to work in
private 10 resolve differences over
a full, $27 billion budgpt to cover
spending for the next two fiscal
years.

The Daily Sentinel

Am Ele Power ..................28 5/8
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 3/4
AT&amp;T.. ........................ ..... .38 3/4
Bob Evans ........................ 18 1(2
Charming Shop.................22 1/8
City Holding .................... .l3 1(2.
Federal MoguL .... ............ l7 1/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ................ .33 1(2
Key Centurion .................. 14 1/4
Lands' End ....................... 21 1/8
Limited Inc ....................... 28 3/4
Multimedia Inc ................. 27 3/4
Rax Reslaurant ................ J/8
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .33 1(2
Shoney's Inc..................... 15 5/8
Star Bank .......................... 21
Wendy lnt' l... .................. ...9 5/8
Worthington Ind . .........::: ..25 7/8
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provldtd by Blunt, Ellis

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MONDAY ADMISSIONS Gamet Swan, Pomcozo)'; John Lam. ben, Middleport; Martin Bowland,.
Middle~ Virgin~ $ayre, Syracuse; Linda BJUDty,,Racine; Freeda
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·
MONDAY DISCHARGES Ricky -JOhnson, Burwell McKinney
and Char!CS Heck.
. -· ·~ '

-

Winds gusted to near 70 mph at
Beaumont and Pon Arthur, Texll'l,
at Decatur, IlL, and near Medora,
Kan.
More than an inch of rain fell in
30 minutes at Saffordville, Kan.,
Monday afternoon.
Heavy rains in the past week,
above- normal tides and stron g
southerl y winds ca used floodin g
near the mouth of the Peace River
at Charlotte Harbor, R a., and several homes across the river from
Punta Gorda, Ra., were isolated by
high water.
Louisv ille. Ky. reac hed 99
degrees Monday, a record for the
date. Beckley, Wes t Va., reached
88 degrees, tying its record for !he
date.
The hi gh tempera ture in the
nation Monday was 117 degrees at
Palm Springs, Calif.

Weather

Eastern. ~ . .k
ACCEPTS DONATION - Southern Ohio Coal Company's
(SOCCo) .Meigs Division recently donated $200 to the Albany Volunteer F1re Depar~ment. Nelson Kidder, SOCCo engineering
~upe~intendent, delivered the check to Fire Chief Jim Ferguson.
'We re pleased to support the work of the Albany Volunteer Fire
Department," Kidder said. ''It does a fine job in the community
and we are glad we can help further its efforts. "The department
plans to p_ut the money in, a general fuad to purchase new equipment. Ch1ef Ferguson (nqht), and Kidder, stand in front of a
recently purchased water truck.

Meig$ announcements
Judging of all photOgraphy and an
Dance to be held
The Tuppers Plains VFW will contest will be held as well as all
sponsor a dance Friday from 8- junior crafts. A potluck supper will
11:30 p.m. at !he post hom e with foUow !he meeting.
music by The Country Grass Band.
' Bible school
Public is invi~.
Vacation Bible School will be
held at the Rejoicing Life Youth
Parents encouraged to
Church in Middleport July 8-12
attend meeting
Parents of all Southern High from 9:30 a.m. to noon daily for
School football players are encour- children ages 3-18. The theme is
aged to attend !he Southern Athlet- "Adventures of Life With Jesus."
ic Boosters meeting tonight (Tues- Pastor Michael Pangio invites the
public.
day) at 7:30p.m.
Movies to end for summer
No more Saturday and Monday
movies will be shown at !he Meigs
County Public Library and Middlepen Library until the first part of
September.
Library closed for holiday
The Meigs County Public
Library will be closed Thursday in
observance of Independence Day.

under investigation, he said.
"Some fireworks in !he car had
been cut open, and !he gunpowder
removed.' " Ill c1garette fell on 11
and it went boom,'' Weikel said.
Officer.; tden!Jfied thOS:f InJured
as Roben Vanover, 21, Cmc1nnau,
who suffered burns on h1s legs and
arms: Jenny V1elhauer, 18, Newtown, burns on !he hands and face,
and. Tammy Pnce , 18 , South
Salem, Ohio, burns on !he face and
arms. The driver, Mickey Vanover,
19, Milford, was umnJured.
A passmg moton st took them to
!he hospital, Weikel saJd.
South Central Ohio
Low tonight in 70s. Wednesday,
-cloudy. limited sunshine. High near
'1 90.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Thursday. Humid Friday
and pleasant Saturday. Highs in 90s
Thursday, in lower 80s Friday and
mid-80s Saturday.

Continued from page I
success rate was equally comparable in the area of graduates retr)IJining in college, Smith stated that
such a statistic was difficult to
obtain , given !he fact !hat official
records on the subj ect were not
kepL However, Smilh did state !hat
district officials believe the college
dropout rate among Ea~ tem graduates is no higher !han that of q_ther
schools in the area.
·

•

i

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Lottery numbers

446 ·4524

'.. :. "

$3 .00 IAAGAIII MTINEES SA'MOAY I SUI0\'1
U .OO BARUIN IIIGtiT T\.IE S ~Y

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
the winning numbers se lec ted
Monday night in !he Ol!io Lottery:
Pick 3 Numbers
8-8-4
(eight, eight, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-1-7-1
(five, one, seven, one)
Cards
10 (ten) of Hearts
2 (two) of Clubs
A (Ace) of Diamonds
5 (five) of Spades
The Super Lotto jackpot is $4
million.

L _JUII•
28 IIIN JULY • __J
FRIDAY thl"'l THIJI:SD\YI

Volleyb!lll camp
Volleyball camp will be held at
Meigs High School July 15-19
from 9 a.m. to noon for grade 7-12.
The cost is $30 per person and may
be sent to Rick Ash, Box 126,
Syracuse, 45779. Also advise of tshirt size and grad~ . Checks should
be made payable to "Marauder
Volleyball Camp."

il

I

Swim lessons slated
OEStomeet
The Evangeline Chapter No.
172 Order of !he Eastern Star, Middleport, will meet Thursday, July
II, at 7:30p.m. Officer wear street
dresses.
&gt;Pomona grange to meet
The Meigs Cqunty Pomona
Grange will meet Friday at 7:30
p.m. at the Rock Springs Grang.:
HalL Inspection will be held and
degree work wiU be performed. A
special deaf program will precede
!he meeting. Hemlock Grange will
be !he hosts.
Star granges to meet
The Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will meet Sall!rday at 8
p.m. at !he grange hall located on
County Road I Ifear Salem Center.

Swimming lessons will be held
at London Pool , Syracuse from
July 8-19, David Deem, instructor,
announced today.
·Deem said that !he cost per person for lessons wiU be $20. Classes ·
for !hose six and older wy.IA&gt;c held
at 9:30a.m. each day.
Another class for children six
months of age to five years of age,
wiU be held from 6 to 7 p.m. at !he
pool.
Hymn sing scheduled
A hymn sing will be held at the
Mt. Olive Community Church Saturday at 7 p.m. Several local
groups will sing and !he public is
invited to attend by Pas tor
Lawrence Bush.

--Area ·d eaths.--James Cunningham
Jam es H. Cunningham . who
died on Thursday, was the son of
the late Henry and Cora Davidson
Cunningham . The nam es of Mr.
Cunningham's patents were primed
incorrectly in The Daily Sentinel.

'
Roger Reynolds
Roger Reynold s, 49, of Third
Avenue in Gallipolis, and a form er
resident of Middlepon, died on Saturday, June 29, 1991 , at SL Mary's
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
Born in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
he was the son of the late Frank
and Geraldine Rhodes Reynolds.
Surviving are two brothers, Jim
(Patricia) Reynolds of Gallipolis
and floyd (Diane) Reynolds of
Middleport, and one sister, Mrs.
Todd (Judy) Porter, Middleport.
Several nieces and nephews survive.
Mr. Reynolds was an electric
motOrs ~an and .also worked
for Conratl Railroad in Middlepon.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. on Tuesday at Letan Falls
Cemetery Chapel with Charles
Jones officiating. Burial will be at
Letan Falls Cemetery.
Visitation hours have been
extended to include 9 a.m. to I
p.m. on Tuesd3y.

AMERICA -FOREVER!
··'

\..

•

Q

Mabel M. Smith
Mabel Mae Smith, 84 , of
Cheshire, died Monday , July I ,
1991 , at her residence following an
extended illness.
Born in Gallia County, she was
!he daughter of the late Elmer and
Mattie Cundiff Shoemaker. She
was a homemaker.
She is survi ved by two stepdaughters, Mrs. Guy (Linda) Bing
of Syracuse, and Mrs. Darrell
(Thelma) Soliday of Arizona; five
nephews, Roger and Phillip Shoemaker of Cheshire, Alben Shoemaker, Jr. of Michigan, and Billy
and Charles Shoemalcer, both of
Columbus: a niece, Helen Davis of
Washington; seven grandchildren,
two great-grandchildren.
. .

Proud, Strong, and Free. ·
Here. in this great land. we enjoy many
liberties ... shared with some of the most caring
people in 1he world. Lers give !hanks for our good fortune
as,we joyously pay tribute 10 this fine nation.

Alllo~ations

vvill be closed on Thursday,
_July 4, 1991 in observance of
Independence -Day.

Slie was preceded in death by
her husband, Cecil Smith, in 1981
a stepson, Cecil, Jr., and four broth:
ers.
Funeral servit es will be held
Friday at !he Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport_at II a.m. IntcrlJment w1ll be m the Pine Str~et
Cemetery in Gallipolis following
cremation. Friends .may call on
Wednesday , 6 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral home.

PEOPLES BANK
.

'

·2nd StrHt ' 2212 Jackson Ave.

MASON
773-5514

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121
Member

·'

sth strHt

NEW HAVEN

812·2135

FDIC
I

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\JeSday, July 2, 199'r

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Edberg beats M"cEnroe in Wimbledon today

Tuesday, July 2,1991

. By ROB GLOSTER
AP Sparta Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Defending c~ampion and top
seed Stefan Edberg used a CQuple
of short streaks to bounce John
McEnroe out of Wimbledon tOday.

curve .''

It was the second time in three days that Barfield
and Maas hit consecutive home runs. But no one
knew the last time two hitters took turns reaching the
opposite upper decks at Yankee Stadium.
" I've gone up there in batting practice, but never
in a game. That was a pretty impressive shot ,"
Barfield said.

Sandberg' s two-run homer in
the eighth cut a 5-2 Pittsburgh lead
to one run, and Jerome Walton's
solo shot in the ninth tied it Sandberg won it in the 13th with a single to right to score Damon Berryhill from second.
"It was a great ball game, "
Pirates manager Jim Leyland said.
Cubs manager Jim Essian called
it "a great emotional win. The
guys were excited and cheering in
the clubhouse.' '
With Andy Van Slyke slapping
four hits, including a fifth-inning
homer, the Pirates built a 5-2 lead
for starter Bob Walk, who was
attempting to run his unbeaten
record to 7-0. But the bullpen
couidn 't protect the lead.
Bob Scanlan (3-3) got the victo-

,

v

F:&gt;

..

.Atlanta Hawks sweep out vets
Webb, Rivers for new breed

I

By CARLOS A. CAMPOS
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP) - The
Atlanta Hawks made room on their
roster for newly acquired Blair
. Rasmussen and Travis Mays Monday by renouncing the contract of
veteran center Moses Malone.
In return for Rasmussen , the
Hawks sent the rights to fllSt-round
· draft pick Anthony Avent of Seton
. Hall to the Denver Nuggets, which
immediately traded his signing
rights to Milwaukee for the rights
to Bucks first-round piclc Kevin
, Brooks. The Nuggets also got the
Hawks' second-round draft pick in
1993.
In another deal, 5-foot-7 guard
Spud Webb was traded to the
. Sacramento Kings for Mays, along
· with a second-round draft selection
in 1994, Last week, .veteran guard
Doc Rivers was traded to the Los
Angeles ClipperS for a first-round
pick the Hawks used to draft
Stacey Augmon.
" It's always difficult to trade
away veteran players," Hawks.
generaJ .manager Pete Babcock
said. ·~1 think the fans by and large
understand tha.t the time was right
to make these moves. We just
needed to get younger as a team."
The Mays and Rasmussen trades
were made after the NBA draft last
week, but couldn't be finalized
until Monday so Atlanta could
remove enough money from its
. payroll to fit buth Rasmussen arid
Mays.
In order to make room for Rasmussen and Mays under the NBA
salary cap, the Hawlcs' renounced
Malone's $2.4 million contract,
makin~ him an unrestricted free
agent meligible to sign with the
Hawks next season.
"I wouldn't say cleaning
house ," coach Bob Weiss said.
"That impijes that we didn't like
what we had, and that's not true.
We see a need to get younger without making the talent base deteriorate.' '

Rasmussen, 28, replaces Malone, who is 36. Augmon is 25 and
•.. . Mays 24. The Hawks also drafted
.Rodney Mo~ of North Carolina
-Swe, 23. Gone ·are Rivers, 29, and
Webb,27.
JOhn Battle, 28, also became an
unrestricted free agent after the
Hawks were unable to reach a coRtraCt agreement With him , Babcock
• slid. Battle wanted $1.5 million a
: · scasoo for the next four years. ·
- ' Rasmussen averaged 12.5 points
: and led Denver in rebounding (11th
; ··overall in the NBA) and blocked
shots (16th in NBA). Over his sixyear career, the 7-foot center has
averaged 10 ,1 points and 6.0
rebo!Jnds.
"The move to pick up Blair
Rasmussen is a move to give us
more offense in the pivot," Babcock said. "While one of hi s
strengths is his shootillg ability, he
has great work habits and he comes

to produce every night''
(See HAWKS on Page 5)

Fire kills former Marshall
cage star L·eo Byrd, 53
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Investigators were searching
Monday for the cause of a fm: that
killed a former Marshall University
basketball star and critically injured
his wife.
Leo Byrd, 53,
died during the fm: at the Huntington home of his mother. said
Deputy Fire Chief Jeff Davis.
Byrd's wife, Nancy Byrd, also 53,
was severely burned and wa:s
reported in cntical condition Monday at Cabell Huntington Hospital.
Firefighters extinguished the fire
about 1:30 a.m. MollWiy and began
inspecting the fire scene later the
same day.
Investigators haven't determined the cause of the fire; but
Deputy Fire Chief Roben Carrico
, said it apparently began In the living room at the front of !he house.
Byrd, a Huntington native ,
played guard for the Thundering
Herd from I956-59 and was a charter memher of the school's Hall of

WHERE'S THE BALL?- Cleveland Indians catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. searches ror the
ball while the New York Yankees' Steve Sax
(reel in air) bowls over Alomar to score on his

ry.

Cardinals I, PhiDies 0
Bryn Smith (7-4) allowed three
hits over seven innings, then gave
way to Cris Carpenter and Lee
Smith. The Cardinals won on the
strength of Todd Zeile's basesloaded single in the fifth that
scored Tom Pagnozzi.
Carpenter pitched the eighth
before giving way to Lee Smith,
who got his 21st save.
·
' New York 4, Montreal2
Howard Johnson, With 57 ,
moved atop the NL RBI heap as
the Mets made the most of second
baseman Delino Deshield's fielding blunder. Daryl Boston hit,a
made-to-order grounder 'to
Deshields with two out in the third,
but Deshields threw the ball away,
Garry Templeton followed with a .
bloop double to left
Mark Gardner (3 -5) then
plunked Dave Magadan to load the
bases and walked Kevin
McReynolds to force in a run ,
Johnson followed with a two-run
single to right.

.

Wounded Reds 'coming together'

!n other American League games, it was Boston 6,
Milwaukee 0; Toronto 4, Seattle 3; Balti!!lore 10,
Dettoit 2; California 6, Texas 2: Chicago 5. Minnesota 4 in 10 innings, and Kansas City 7, Oakland 3.
Red Sox 6, Brewers 0 - Roger Clemens, who
had his scheduled stan moved back a day by food
poisoning, allowed five singles in seven innings.
Blue Jays 4, Mariners 3 - The Blue Jays sent a
holiday crowd at the Sky Dome away happy by rallying for three runs in the bottom of the ninth.
Orioles 10, Tillers 2 - Ben McDonald limited
Dettoit to two hits rn eight shutout innings in his fllSt
outing since May 22 and Baltimore hit four homers.
Angels 6, Rangers 2 - Mark Langston won his
s i~th straight decision and Wally Joyner singled
home the go-ahead runs in the seventh inning.
Lance Parrish and Dave Winfield had two-run
homers for the Angels.
White Sox 5, Twins 4 -Carlton Fisk's two-out
homer in the 1Oth inning lifled Chicago over Minnesota.
Royals 7, Athletics 3 - Mike Boddicker held
Oakland to four hits over seven and two-third innings
and Kevin Seltzer hit a game-breaking three-run
triple.

';

·-~

.

Chicago, St. Louis, New York
Mets Monday's NL winners
By The Associated Press
Just when things. appear out of
reach, along comes Ryne Sandberg.
Thanks to Sandberg's bat, the
Chicago Cubs overcame a 5-2
deficit and beat the Pittsburgh
Pirates 6-5 in 13 innings Monday
night. Because of that camebaclc,
the Pirates had their lead in the
National League East reduced to
five games over second-place St. .
Louis and to S 1/2 over third-place
New York.
St. Louis beat Philadelphia 1-0
and New York shaded Monlreal 42 in the only other NL games Monday.
The victory also kept the fourthplace Cubs at least within hailing
distance oj the leaders, II 1/2
games out of fllSt.

Graf deteateG seventn seed Zina
Garrison 6-1,6-3, pining revenge
for her loss to Gamson in the 1990
semifrnals. Fernandez won 6-2.7-5
over fourth seed Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario.

Edberg ran off 15 sttaight points
midway through the second set and
then won 16 of 20 points in a thirdset spurt.
The Sweden won the tie-breaker
to end a fllSt set that wtnt entirely
on serve. The 16th-seeded McEnroe seemed to sag after the tieAccording to Piniella,
breaker.
"He outplayed me. When it
really came down to it, he just
played a little better than I did,"
said McEnroe, who complained
tant to us," Piniella said. "I'm not Star break: was not upon us," he about a few line calls but avoided
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
going to look any farther ahead. said. "There's no way in God's any major verbal explosions.
creation would could have gotten it
CINCINNATI (AP) - Lou Six ~ames - jusi six games.
"His game is suited to grass,
' We've hung in there tough. done.''
Piniella is upbeat for a mana~er
it's a natural. Anyone that volleys
They couldn't have gotten it that well is going to be good on
who's watched four of his starling · The guys have hustled out there,
pitchers get hurt in the last two and I appreciate it. We need six done wtthout their offense, either.
grass. I would have preferred to
After strugglin$ through the first play a lot of other guys.' '
good games now and then the Allweeks.
two months with the worst team
He figures if the Cincinnati Star break, rest and come back.··
Edberg thought the match would
average
in the NL, the Reds have have been tougher.
Reds can hold their ground while
The last two weeks have taught
losing their rotation, they're still in the Reds not to look very far ahead. been hitting in the last month. The
"I still believe he can play some
Just when they thought they were average has jumped from a league- very good tennis out there, but he's
pretty good sltatJe.
"It's coming together," PinieUa ready to make a run at the Dodgers, low .235 on June 4 to .258.
not as consistent as he was
"It's CQme at the right time," before," Edberg said of McEnroe.
said. "It's a matter of getting some their pitching staff came apart
PinieUa said. "Soone" or later we "He has lost a little bit of his
healthy bodies back and getting game by game.
together for a stletch run.''
Charlton was disabled for the were going to CQpie out of it Last speed, but there' s still a lot of
Their rotation came apart the second time this season by tendini- year we staned at' .300 and eventu- greatness out there.··
last two weeks, as Norm Charlton, tis in his pitching shoulder when he ally came back down to our level
Unseeded David Wheaton
Jose Rijo, Scott Scudder and Gino couldn' t get loose before a game - .260, .265. This year, we siarted reached the quarterfinals with a 6Minutelli went on the disabled list June 18. Two days later, Rijo broke slow and we're CQming back up to 4, 6-3, 6-1 defeat of Jan GunnarsCharlton and Scudder have tendini- his right ankle while slidmg into our level."
son. On Monday, Wheaton ousled
They've hit two or more homers third seed Ivan Lendl in four sets.
tis in their shoulders; Rijo broke his second base.
Piniel)a patched up the rotation in eight of their last nine games,
ankle; Minutelli aggravated a groin
Also advancing to the quanerfiby adding Minutelli, who was just and are averaging 5.3 runs a game,_, nals was French Open champion
pull.
Remarkably, the Reds lost no coming off the disabled list at Class over their last 21. As a result, the Jim Courier, who defeated 14th
ground while they lost most of their AM Nashville from pulled groin Reds have won seven of their llist seed Karel Novacek 6-3, ~. 6-2.
starting staff. They resume play in muscles. His plans disintegrated nine to keep the pressure on LA.
His next opponent will be sixth
"Everybody was down on us at seed Michael Stich, who rallied to
Atlanta today, following an off- Saturday night, when Scudder was
day, trailing Los Angeles by four diagnosed with tendinitis in his the beginning of the year, but we're win the final three games for a 4-6,
games in the National League pitching arm and Minutelli rein- sure scoring runs now," said out- 6-3, 7-5, 1-6, 7-5 victory over
jured th~ groin just one inning into fielder Paul O'Neill, who leads the Alexander Volkov. Courier defeatWcs.
.
team with 15 homers . "We've ed Stich in the semifinals of the
That's the same margin they his flfSt major-league start.
been swinging the bats gradually French Open.
Two
weeks,
four
disabled
trailed on June 17, the day before
better and better over the last
starters,
the injuries began.
The fourth-seeded Courier,
Piniella can get to the All-Star month."
An offensive revival has
whose best previous Wimbledon
The Reds proved themselves performance was reaching the third
papered over the pitching injuries break with Tom Browning, Jack
and kept them from falling out of Armstrong and Chris Hammond, capable of long hitting streaks last round last year, now has lost only
the race. If they can mak:e it plus one start from a long reliever. season, when they rode their two 13 games in his last two victories.
through another week with their Then, he hopes the three-day break opening months and a torrid Octo"It's kind of unexpected to me,
bitting and makeshift starting rota- can help him replenish the rotation ber to the Series championship. because I'm not a natural grasstion, Piniella figures they'll have by giving the ailing pitchers time to They're hoping the cutrenC streak court player," Courier said. "I' m
lasts at least one more week.
dodged the worst and will be in recover.
pleasantly surprised to be in the
"Our bullpen's very tired. They quarterfinals
position to challenge the Dodgers.
"We CQuldn't do this if the AU...
need a break. Our starters are beat
"The nextsix glii'IIMare imporWheaton and a couple of other
up," second baseman Bill Doran Americans - Andre AJ(assi and
said. " We're goinf~ to have to keep
Tim Mayotte - had won th irdscoring runs unul we get to the
round matches on Monday.
break."

Pag~

New York Yankees post 6-2
win over Cleveland Monday
By The Associated Press
Now Greg Swindell knows what the pill:hers on
" Home Run Derby" must have felt like.
Swindell served up back-to-back upper-deck
blasts to New York' s Jesse Barfield and Kevin Maas
on Monday night But unlike the pill:hers on the old
TV show who were supposed to give up home runs,
. all Swindell got for his effort was another loss as the
Yankees beat the Clc'lcland Indians 6-2.
Barfield's two-run blast in the fifth inning made
the upper deck in left field and gave the Yankees a 52 lead. One pitch later, Maas connecled for a shot
into the upper deck in right field.
"I don' t usually watch 'em, but I watched the one
Maas hit It went a long way," Swindell sailtl "The ·
: pitch to Barfield was the old cement mixer, a hanging
slider that rolled over re3l slow. Maas got a hanging

Edberg beat McEnroe, a threetime champion, 7-6 (7-4), 6-1, ~ .
and moved into the quarterfinals.
Top women' s seed Steffi Graf
and fifth seed Mary Joe Fernandez
rolled to easy victories and
advanced
to a semifmal meeting.
.
.-·

second attempt in the third inning or Monday
night's game in New York, which tbe Yankees
won 6-2. Sax, who missed tbe plate tbe first time,
advanced on Roberto Kelly's triple. (AP)

Baseball's official scorers make few . _
dollars, fewer friends at ballparks
By DOUG TUCKER
AP Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - It
was closing time. California had
just beaten Kansas City and official
scorer Del Black was probably the
most unpopular man in Royals Stadium.
On this particular night, it was
virtually the entire visiting party of
players and team officials who
were angcy. The Angels were nearing the American, League record
for consecutive games without an
error, and Black had Charj!ed right
fielder Max Venable with what
many considered a questionable
misplay.
On other nights, it might be the
Royals who are ready to lynch him

Fame when he was inducted in
1985.
Byrd holds Thundering Herd's
record for a single-season scoring
average from 1958-59, when he
compleled the season with an average of 29.3 points. He held the
Marshall record for single-season
points, with 704, until Skip Henderson broke it in 1987-88 with
804 points.
When h~ was a child, Byrd's
parents nevei expected him to
become a star athlete, especially
after a childhood bOut with polio
that left him confined to bed or a
wheelchair for two months. They
were grateful he could walk.
"I was bound and determined it
wasnUt going to get me dow·n,"
said Byrd, speaking of his illness,
said in 1959. "When they let me
outside, I tried to run. It hurt a lot,
but I didn't let them know it I tried
to walk straight so they wouldn't
know I was in pain."

Meigs 2-2 in weekend twinbills
vs. Portsmouth, Glouster
The Meigs "fnerican Legion second, Randy Corsi doubled to
baseball team ~ent 2-2 on the score Finlaw. Those were the only
weekend after losmg a Jl8lf to state , hits Meigs was able to get off of
power Portsmo.uth on Saturday and wmning pitcher Miller.
sweepmg a parr from Glouster on
In the doubleheader sweep over
Sunday. .
Glouster, Meigs scored six runs in
In the fust game on Sat~rday. the third inning to turn around a 2Portsmo~th . scored five runs rn the Q deficit. Meigs added two more
second mm~g ~n r~ute to a 10-I runs in the sixth inning, three in the
wm over ~e1gs. ~Cig~ sc~ thea seventh and four runs in the eighth
only run m the Sixth mmng when enroute to a 15-4 win.
Meigs pounded out 15 hits off
Andy . Baer .d~ubled, . Ter~y
McGuue sacnf1ced and Chns of Glouster pitching. Wright, who ,
Stewart smgled to score Baer. .
had four singles to lead the way,
Ports~outh pounded out 15 hits was followed by McGuire (two sinoff a . tno of Me1gs pitchers . gles, double), Sl{llwn Hamon (sinMcGwre started and took the loss, gle, double), Reuter (!Wo singles),
andBaer and Terry Reuter also saw Baer and Tim Bissell ( one double
acuon on the mound.
each), and Heck and Stewart (one
Me1gs was led at the plate by single each),
Wright was the wiiiDing pitcher
Jason Wnght~ who had a pa,~r of
smgles, McGum: and Baer added a for Meigs, going the route and givdouble each, and Stewart and Jason ing up seven hits.
Hager each had a smgle.
In the second game, Shawn
Ports~outh got off to another Hamon pitched a two-hitter, and
fast~ 10 the second game•.send- Meigs posted a 3-0 win. Hamon
10g I2 ~alters to th~ pia~ 10 the struck out six and walked only
firSt mmn.g and scormg eiJihl runs three to pick up the win,
on four hits, three walks, 3!1d two
Meigs scored in the second
en'l!rs en ml!te to a 13-2 wrn over when Mark Stanley walked, stole
Me111s. !be game was called after second and scored on a slllgle .,..., .. · I
five 10nrn~s.
·
·
Nathan ·Brown. Meigs scored
Matt Finla.w was the starter and final two runs in the fourth inning
loser ~or Me1gs. Te,unmates Jere- when Rusty Triplett and Hamon
my. Dill and Je,ff Durst also saw reached on fielder's choices and
acuon .on the mol!"d.
. .
scored on a single by Durst.
~eJ&amp;S scored rn the fllSt mnrng,
Meigs was led at the plate by
wh1ch began when Enc ~eclc Durst (two singles) Corsi (double)
walked, Baer doubled, and Frnlaw · .
'
.
'
singled, and after Baer was lhrown ~mlaw, Brown and Tnplett (one
out at the plate and Finlaw stole srngle each),

'

or Sid Bordman, who shares scoring, duties with Black at Roy~ls
Stadium.
.
Being official scorer is just
about the easiest way in baseball to
make enemies. Even umpires have
been known to cast sympathetic
looks toward the west end of the
pressbox where Black and Bardman take their customary seats.
Every major league club has its
full-time scorers, and splitting the
81 games at Royals Stadium are
Bordman and Black, former baseball writers for The Kansas City
Star. Almost every night they make
decisions that are virtually guaranteed to upset somebody.
Was it a hit or an error? A wild
pitch or a passed ball? If the hit-

ter's not upset, the pitcher is,
because in this age of salary arbitration and seven-figure contracts,
a lot more than pride hangs on each tli.l
judgment.
Arbitrators settle almost every
case strictly on statistics.
'' A few calls here and there can '
end up making a difference of
$100,000 or more in an arbib'alion
settlement," said Black, who left
the Star in 1979 to enter private
business. "Sid and I both are very
much aware of that."
"I try to look at every play as
objectively as I can," said Bardman, who retired from the newspaper in 1989. "I know I'm not infallible. Sometimes you're going to
(See SCORERS on Page 5)

Scoreb6ard

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Eon Dhlsloll

W

Plltsburgll
Sl Loots
New York
Cllbao
Moalroal
Phlloddphla

LAngeles
Clncfnnad

Adaall
San DiotiO
San Fran
Houston

,
•

••

Moodly'sGames

New Yorlt 4. Moouul2
SL louis I, Phihdelphia 0
Chicago6, Pil1Jbu1Jh5, 13 innings
Only gameo acheduled
1\laday's Games
Pinsbutgh (Drabek 6·8) at Chicago (Bos·
kie 3-7). 2:20~.m.
New Yorlt (Cone 7-5) 11 Montreal (Boyd
4-7), 7:35p.m.
SL louis (Bill 7-S) al Philadelphia
(Gn:ene S-l). 7:35p.m.
Cincinnati (Annsuong S-6) 11 Man~&gt;
(Leibnndt7-S). 7:40p.m.
Los Angelea (R.Maninu 10-3) at San
Diego (Raamuasen 3-2), 10:35 p.m.

••
•
•
••

•
•••
•,.

RHOPES
,AND
DREAMS

L
Pct. GB
28
.616
34
.547 s
40
34
.541 S~
35
41
.461 It y,
33
43
.434 13 y,
3%
oM
.4%1 14 y,
West Division
W
L
Pet. GD
45
29
.608
41
33
.554 4
37
36
.507 7V.
38
39
.494 8 v.
33
4%
.440 121&lt;1
29
46
387 161\
45
41

.•
•

Hounon (Ponuaal 6-4) at San Franci1oo

(Block 6-6), 10;35 p.m.
Wednesday's Gama

PiaabuiJh at Chicago, 2:20p.m.
New Yorlt at Montnal. 7:35p.m.
SL Louis 11 Philadelphia, 7:35p.m.
Cincinnati a1 Atlanl&gt;, 7:40 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Diego, 10:05 p.m
Hounoo a1 San Francisco, 10:05 p.m.

•

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dlvlsloo
W
L
1'&lt;:1. GB
Toronto
...
33
.571
Boston
38
36
.514 4~
37
38
.493 6
Detro! I
38
.472 71'1
New York
34
Mllwauk .. 34
40
.459 81'1
Baltimore 31
43
.419 It v.
Cleveland
24
49
329 18
West Division
W
L
Pet. GB
Minnesota 45
' 32
.584
California 42
33
.56G 2
39
3%
.549 3
Texas
Oakland
41
35
.539 3 ~
Chkago
39
35
.527 4 V.
Sealtlc
39
37
.513 5 V.
Kansas City 34
40
.459 9Vs

•

,.,.••'
,.
,.

..

TALK.TO HER
ABOUT DRUGS

.·,.

,.,.

-~~

,.

.-,,•

,.

~ NBBA2 130

Your child could be learning more than
chemistry and English in schooL She could
be learning to use drugs. She needs your
help to make the right decision.
Talk to your kids. See what they think about
drugs and the people who use them. Show
them the rew~ds of saying ''no;' to drugs.
Don't l~t drugs take her future away.

Monday's Games

Toronto 4, Seallle 3
New Yorlt 6, Qeveland 2
Baltimore 10. Detroit2
Boston 6, Milwatkee 0
Chicago S, Minnesol.l4, 10 innings
Kansas City 7, Oalcland 3
California 6, Texas 2
TuesdaJ 'I Games
Oeveland (York 0-0) at New York (Taylor
3·2). 7:30p.m.
Deuoit (Gullickson 94) 11 Baltimore
(BaUud 4-8), 7:35p.m.
Minnesota (faponi 5· 7) 11 Toromo
(Ju.Guzman 2·2), 7:35p.m.
Boston (Bolton 7·5) 11 Milwaukee {Knudson 1·1 ), 8 : ~p .m .
.
Oakland (Welch 7-3) 11 Teua (Ryan 44).
8:35p.m.
Kansas City (Gubicza 3-4) a1 California
(lAbbou 6-S), 10:35 p.m.
Chicago (Femondet 4-7) at S..n1e (Han·
son4-3). 10:35 p.m.
Wednesday's Ca....
Detroit at Baltimo,., 6;35 p.m.
' Cleveland 11 New York, 7:30p.m.
Minnc:aota 11 Toronto, 7;35 p.m.
Boaton at Milwaul&lt;ee, 8:05p.m.
Oalcland 11 Teus, 8:35p.m.
Chicaso a1 S..llle, to:CJS p.m.
Kansas Qly a1 California, 10:35 p.m.

It's Not Just ,the Neighbors' Kids
Who Use Drugs.

Major league leaders
American Leque

BA1TIII~.

JU..... Boltinu...

.354; Molkclr, MUwaulee. .333; Siet~.

Tos11, .332: Pucbll. WU..-.. 332:
B..... 0o111oM. .329; I.,..., California,

.,.-.r
.....m
lUNS-Molltor, Milwaukee. 59:

The Daily Sentinel

Patm.U.., Toau, 55: C. IUpkon, Balli·
moJO, 55: D. llooclcnon, Oakland. 54:

.
'

Sian, Texu , S3; Can.eco, OUla:nd. 53;

Franco. Tu.u, ~3.
JtBI-Fielcler, Deuoit, 60; Thomas,
Chicaao. 57; Siom. TCUI, 56; Winfield,
California, SS; Cuter, Toronto, S4; C.
Ripka1, Ballimcn, 54; Joyner. California,
53.

IDTS- (. Ripken, Baltimore, I 04;
Sicm, T...., 99; Puckcu, Minneacu, 99;
Mollun, Milwaukee. 98; Palmeiro, Tcxu, ·
94; Joyner, Califomil, 92; Cana, Toronto. 92; Fnnco, r ..... 92.
!lOUD~ Alcmu, Toron10,2l;

C&amp;Ret, TcrcalO, 2o4; Palmciro. Tcua, 23:
WlDio. T~, 22; B-. B~ 21 ; C.
Ripk ... lbl......._ 2C!; 5.,. bed- II.
TRIPLES-Molitor, Mil••ukoe, 1;
......... Califomio. 6; R. Alarw. r .....

10, 5; WlDio. y.....,, 5; Rainca. OUA:a...
5: 6.,.dedwilh4.

HOME JlUNS-C. llavil, Minneacu,

19; Canuco. Ollllilld, II ; Fielder. tJo.
troi~ 11; C. ~&amp;~';,' Ballitn.,., II; D.
~0
ll;c.Mr, Tonll1lo.
17; Willfield. Calilontia, 17.

STOLEN

BASES- R. Hendcnoa,

Oakllnd, 29; Polonit, CalilcmU.,·27; R.
Alom1r, ToronlO, 26; Rainca, Chic:a1o,
2S· While.. Toronto, 18; Cu11cr, DeuoiL,
16: R. Jtdly, Now YOlk. 15; Pcuia; Tcau,
15: Franco, Tu.u, 15 .

PITCIIING (7 docioi..,.)-Lon - .
Calilomh, 12-2, .IS7, 3.4~ : Erictson,
Minnoo .... 12-1, .800, 1.81; Mnloy, Califomia.l1 ·1, .786. 3.72; Key, Toron10. 10.
3, .769, 2.30; SlOlllanyn:. Toronto. 9·1.
.1SQ, 3. 13; Sandcnon, New York, 9-3,

.750, 3.69; H.......,an, Detroi~ S-2, .714,
2.96; Klink , Oakland, 5·2, .714, 2.67;
Thill&gt;at. OUA:aao. s-2, .714.189.
"lTRIKEOUlS-Clcmenl , BOlton,
114; R. lohn1on, Se~nl c , 113; Ryan,

?7:

~Dowe.ll, ~~10. 96; Fin ley, CllifCIIIUI, 96; CandiaUi. ToronW». 89;
Swindell, c1...1. .d, 11.

Tcxu,

SAVES - Ec:konley, Oakland, 22:
Harvoy, CaliiGm!a, 21 ; A1uilen, Mirl -

nctCU, 20; Roudon, BOlton, 19; ObM,

Bahlmore, IS; Mo ..t ao• •rJ, Kuau

cu1, u ; 'l'hiJ:pen, 0\iclao. ts: Jeff RUI·
sell, TCK.U,

ll.

National League
BAmNO- T. Gwynn. Sm Dieao.
.3S7; looe. St. LoWJ• .331 ; Pondlcton. At·

llnu . .377; McOoo. San l'rano:iooo, .l2A;
Big:io. HDW1m• .323; Samuel, Loo An·
aelco• .321 ; Caldam, Monoal, .314.
RUNS-Bu~"' Loo Anaelco, 52: T.
Fcmt:adez , San Dieao, ~0; Sandberg,

Chidao, SO; Johnson, New Yotk, 49;
DeShields , Monlf'Oil, 47: Samuel, Loa
Anplco, 46; 0 . Smith. SLl.oWJ, 46.

RBI- lohuon, New York, !57; W.
am San francilco, 56; Kruk, Ptliladdphia, '54; Justice, Allanta, 51 ; McGriff,
San Dict&lt;»t 3i0; O'Nt UI. Clnclnnt&amp;_l. .c1j
Caldcton, Montroal, 41; G. Bcll, ducaao,

47; Mwmy..... Ana..... 47.

IDTS- T. OwyM, San Dieao. 110;
Samuel, Lo1 Anaeles. 92 ; Sa~dbe rf·
Chica ao . 19; loae , St. Louu , 8 ;
C alderon, Montf'Cil, 18: T. Femandu .
Sen Dieao. IS; McGee, San Fnncitco,
84; G. Boll. Chicaao, 84.
DOUBLES - Joae , St. Lou i1, 23;
Bonilla, Pinaburah . 21; Mc Reynoldt,
New YcD., 20; T. Gwynn, San Die&amp;o, 19;

t. GonU1ez. """""" II; Morril, Cincin·
ruti. II; Zail.c, SL Louil, 17; Juatice., At·

llnu. 17; O'Ndl~
berJ. OUA:aao, 17.

CIMinnal~

t7; Sand·
.

TIUPl..ES-T. OW)M. SIR Dicao. I;
Lanifad, St. l.ouP, 6; Felder, S... fnn ·
ciac:o, 6; L. Gonulet, HOUI\On, S; Krull,
PhiladGlptUa.. S; Coleman, New YOlk, S;
M.
~~ LoWJ, s.
HOME klJNS-Johmon, New Yotk..
17; O'Neill, Cincinnati, U; McGriff,
S• n Dieao. IS ; 0 . Bell , Ch icaao. 15;

Th""''""",

Larkin,

Clnclnrs~tJ,

14; Gant. At.lt fltl ,

13; Mitcltdl , San franci1 co, 13; Sand·

berJ, OUA:aao, ll; B-a, New YO!It. 13.
STOL!N BASES- Ni•on, AUi nu ,
38; Oria1om, Montre&amp;l., 37; DeShieldt,
MontiNI, 34; Coleman, New 'Vork, 33;
LankfOJd, St. LoWs, 21; Calderon, Monlreal, 20; lond1, Plttlburah, 19i 0 .
Smith, SL louia, 19.
PITCHING (7 docioi,..)-Cupa~oe.,
St. LooU, 1· 2, .771 , 3.26; R. Martinez,
Loa Anaelea, 10-3, .769 , 2.67 ; Rijo,
Cincinnati. 6-2. .7.50, 266; Oltvine, Atllnu. 11-4, .733, 2.06; Sampat. Monuoal.

5·2, .714, 4.71 : , ........ Plllab....,, 5-l,
.714, J.lt; .,.,.,.., Cll&lt;lonaU, tk
.714,141; Aa-. SL louia, 5·2, .714, .
5.44.
STRIKEOUTS-Cone, New Yor.k ,
99; Olavine, AUanll , 98; G. Maddul,
~c:aao, ?4;. Goqdcn, New Yori, 92;
RiJo, Cincin!Wi, ·86; Ban•, San Oicao.
It; IJ.miado,
· 71.
SAVES- Dibbll, Cl•cln .. u, 22i
Lee Smith, SL LoW., 21 ; Franco, New
York, 16; D1ve Smilh, OUc:aao. 16; I.
LIMnm. PIU1bu,..., U : Lelferu:, Su
Di...,, 1•: Miodt Willi.,., Pltiladclpbia.

13.

: .L.----------~----------------~
.

.

, ,.,c . .~

., ~

,.

I

Falk finds upper Scioto Ri~er
sandbar hot fishing spot
COLUMBUS, Oh io (APj Doug Falk has foQnd a fishing
perch that's never crowded -:- a
sandbar in the middle of the Sc1oto
River.
Falk's sandbar is north of
Columbus Zoo southern Delaware
County. His presence in the middle
of the river has startled some
passers-by.
"Nobody ever asked how I got
there, " said Falk, 40, of
Marysville. "I have had a f~w fishermen in boats park alongs1de me.
When I catch a fiSh they say 'How
do you do that when I've just
worked that area?' "
· Other boaters just give him a
wave.
"I ~et some big waves sometimes,' Falk said. "Boats try to go
by and see if they can drown you .
They do."
Since April, he has caught two
saugeyes and a largemouth bass
that met the Fish Ohio minimum
standard of21 inches.
Faile often fishes the Scioto
before going to work in the lcitchen
at a Dublin restaurant, He doesn't
claim to be a pioneer in wading the
river.
.
"At that time , in the beginnmg
of April, I could see the b~: You
could stand on it and he dry. Faik

GETTING A LEG UP on her opponent - Sweden 's Catarina
Lindqvist, in this case- wasn't bard ror American Martina
Navratilova in tbeir match Monday at Wimbledon, which
Navratilova won 6-1, 6-3- (AP)

,.

Ohio University to remain
committed to MAC - trustees
ST. CLAIRSVll.LE, Ohio (AP)
- Ohio University trustees have
reaffumed the university's commitment to the Mid-American Conference.
The trustees, meeting Saturday
at the university's Belmont .COunty
regional campus, adc;&gt;pled a resolution saying the institution planned
to CQntinue MAC membership and
supporting " the value of intercollegiate athletics as an important contributor to human development and
to the university's fulfillment of its
educational mission.' '
The university has been a mem ber of the MAC since its founding
in 1946.
The resolution was adopted after
trustees reviewed a faculty committee's suggestion to downgrade the
university's football program from
Division 1-A to Division 1-M as a
way of cutting costs by reducing
athletic scholarships and coaching
positions. Trustees also e~amined
an analysi s by the university
provost's office, which said such a

said. "I had seen boats there and
people wading it for saugeye. I
knew fish like to congregate
around bars because baitfish and
crawdads hang out there.' '
Falk decided to wade out and
see if fish believed his theory.
"I took it one step at a time the
filS~ time I fished," Falk said. "On
my way out I saw carp leaving mud
trails and I knew it wasn ' t very
deep there."
Because of unfinished work on
O' Shaughnessy Dam, the river
level was down and Falk was able
to wade to the bar easily.
On his first time out, Faile
caught three saugeyes - one 19
inches long - and two largemouth
bass, 14 inches and 18 inches, he
said.
"What I was doing was fiShing
for bass and the saugeye took (the
lure)," Falk said. •
On his best day, Falk caught II
largernouths from 12 to 21 inches,
four channel catfish between nine
and 18 inches and a 22-inch saugThe first annual Eastern Eagles
eye.
Football Camp will be held for
By late spring, Faik had caught grades 5-9 during the week of July
and released 64 bass 12 inches and 15-19 from 6 p.m . to 8 p.m. at
larger, he said. But then the water Eastern High School.
level had risen and Faik' s sandbar
The camp will be open to both
disappeared into the depths.
·residents and non -residents of the
Eastern Local School District. To
secure an application or for more
information please contact the
(Continued from Page4)
Ea~tern Athletic Booster Clul&gt;, in
care
of head varsity football coach
mess up.''
importance
of
the
scorers'
deci
Randy
Churilla. Eastern High
Scorers have 24 hours to change sions.
38900 S.R. 7, Reedsville
School,
a decision, an option Black exer"It' s a challenge and a lot of OH 45772.
cised after a televised replay responsibility ," Bordman sa id.
The entry fee for the camp is
showed Venable never got to the " But I enjoy it . I enjoy bein g
$20
wnich should be made payable
ball Kevin Seitzer hit. So Black involved in the game.''
to
the
EHS Athletic Booster Club.
changed his original call, a double
Refer
to a future edition of The
and error, and gave Seitzer a triple.
Daily
Sentinel
of Sunday-Times
This allowed the Angels to lceep
Sentinel
for
an
application
or send
their errorless streak going,. and
the
following
information
and
entry
two nights later they broke the AL
to
Churilla:
name,
grade,
age ,
(Continued from Page 4) ·
record.
nome, address, home phone, emerBordman has a$onized over
In Mays, the Hawks are getting gency phone and shirt. size along
more than a few dec1sions himself. a perimeter shooter. His .365 three- with a parental/accident release
Royals' second baseman Frank point percentage was 13th in the notice. The application deadline is
White once had a lor.g errorless NBA last season and he ended the July I.
.
streak going when he failed to season as the fourth-leading !corer
Highlights of the camp wdl be
make a play on a hot shot by Rick- among rookies with a 14.3 average, non-CQntact drilling, form and ncxey Henderson. Bordman ruled it an behind Derrick Coleman, Lionel ibility running techniques, and
error, triggering a loud show of dis- Simmons and Dennis Scon.
movement skills, pfOIJ:Cf stance .and
approval from practically everyone
" Mays plays very well in the start-up, mstrucuon m centenng,
in the sJadium.
wide-open system and the passing passing, lciclcing, catching and line
The ne~t day, Bordman was game," Babcock: said , " and we techniques, Campers will be chalwalking with Yankee~: ' broadcaster would like to move more in that lenged to raise your expectations in
Phil Rizzuto, a trusted friend from direction.
play, conduct and sportsmanship,
their days together with the old
''Our needs were for a veteran and instruction in the mental and
Kansas City Blues.
point guard, a young, quick point
"I had gone home that night and guard, Spud fills that criteria. He
couldn't sleep. I take this very seri- has tremendous speed and quickfootball
ously," Bordman said. "I said, ne ss, '' Kings player personnel
'Phil, I think I messed up that call director Jerry Reynolds said,
for
22
on Rickey Henderson and Frank
The right to sign .Brooks, of
White.' He said, 'I'm almost sure Southwestern Louisiana, was sent
The 1991 Meigs Marauder Footyou did,"'
to Denver, plus a second-round
ball
Camp will be held July 22-26
After changing the call to a hit, draft choice rn 1994 and other CQnat
Meigs
High School.
Bordman ran into White in the siderations.
The
camp
is open to boys enterpressbo~.
"We' re glad 10 add iniO our mix
"Sid, you didn't have to do that a young, athletic power player such ing grades 4-8. The cost'of the
for me,' ' White said.
as Anthony Avent," Jjuclcs coach camp is $30 for 15 hours of
" I dido ' t do that for you, Del Harris said. "He's done an instruction and a maximum of $50
Frank," Bordman replied. "I did it outstanding job at Seton Hall in per family.
For late registration and in forforme."
establishing himself as a solid
mation
you can contact Marauder
Official scorers j!et $65 a game, rebounder and inside player at the
head
coach
Mike· Staggs at Meigs
a paltry amount 10 view of the high~st level of college basketHigh School at 992-2158.
salaries players conlniand and ball."

mov e would cos t more than it
would save.
But university president Charles
Ping said a number of recom)llendations by the faculty com)flittee
"make sense and will be Implemented."
'
He said some recommendations,
such as requirements for a minimum number of quarter hours students must complete so they can
retain eligibility, are similar to
recent MAC recommendations to
the NCAA, " but the MAC recommendations are more stringent than
those of the faculty committee."
The committee report was
prompted by an Associated Press
series in December on costs of varsity athletics at the eij!ht state-supported universities 10 Ohio that
compete in the big league of college sports. The series said Ohio
University had the lowest athletic
revenues and the third-highest loss
from athletics among all such institutions.

..

·:
I

'

•

I'

Football camp set for July 15

Scorers...

Hawks...

-

Marauder
camp set

July

physical aspects of the game will
be given by guest speakers and
films.
Students should bring football
shoes, tennis shoes, gym shorts,
shirts, and socks.
Each camper will receive a Tshirt, and certificate of attendance
as well as a sttong basic knowledge
of the game.

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT
When you qualify a 1 a preferred
risk for State Auto Companies'
apeciet Medelilt Auto Policy, your
rates won ' t go up wfth vour first
.accident .
Unlike similar polk:les thet require
throe ynra of policy ownerlhlp,
the Medolillallowa the 11omptlon
immedlo tely.
The Medalilt recogn izes tht older,
safer driver with tubt tentiel rate
reduction• and broader coverage.
Rete reductions begin 11 early 11
11111 25 and ore ponlcularly &amp;llrOC·
live lor tho 45 to 14 year old .
If you have 1 11fe driving record.
see just how low your ear insurance premium can be with the
Medali8t Auto Poliey from State
Auto Insurance Compeniea.
1\ Call u1 about thla car insurance
breekthrough for ufe driven.

ROGAN

ER

@
'

'

-I

.1!1

I .... AIIto

.....,....

~~~--•c

I '

�~

July 2, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

, By The Bend

°

TUesday, July 2, 1991 .
Page-6

Rutland Garden Club members
discuss July piCnic, workshop

Contemporary Living
ll's great to look out in the gardens and see all the fruits and vegetables growing. We just had our
firSt taste of fresh com, tomatoes
and peppers this week. What a
treat
Allhough you may not have
much produce ready to preserve
yet, now is the time to get out the
canner, jars, and freezing containers. Dust them off and check their
condition for use this year. The following checklist is to help you
organize and get ready to go:
1'1111 out your pressure canner or
water bath canner. Pressure canners
are a must foc low acid vegetables
such as corn, carrots, beans,
squash, peas, and lima beans. In
fact, all vegetables except tomatoes
require a pressure canner. If you
don't have a pressure canner and
plan to can vegetables, you might
want to purchase one oc fine one to
borrow.
Have lh~ pressure canner gauge
iested before use. Jiggle gauges do
not need to be checked. Our offiCe
provides the pressure gauge testing
free of charge. We will also check
the gaskets and safety valves on the
lids to be sure that they are not hard

or cmclced.
Boiling water canner - check to
be sure the rack ,is in usable condition. The canner should be deep
enough for jars and lids to be covered with from one to two inches of
water and there should be room foc
rapid boiling withOut boiling over.
Check your canning jars for any
problems. Examine screw bands
for rust and damage. Zinc lids with
loose ceramic inserts should be
thrown away.
Closely inspect glass jars. They
lll,lly be cracked or have a chip out
of the top oc uneven sealing edge.
In these cases, remove them from
tl¢ jar supply.
· You may have wondered
whether or not home canning is
worth the time and effon invested.
Generally, home canning can be a

savings if:
• You have your own garden or
access to inexpensive produce;
• A canner and equipment are
available;
• You are willing to read and
follow instructions. Experimenting
with times and methods is not recommended for heallh and safety
reasons.
• Your effons result in safe, edible, enjoyable food.
Consider the costs of sugar, produce, and your energy when deciding whethC{ or not to preserve this
year.
Freezing fresh fruits and vegelables is another popular method of
food preservation. If you prefer-this
method, here are some tips to help
you get ready for the harvest.
The recommended temperature
for freezing foods is -20 degrees F.
to -40 degrees F. Many home
freezers hold food at about 0
degrees F. This is adequate, but do
not allow food to get any warmer.
The lower temperarure of - 20 F. to
-40 F. gives smaller ice crystals for
more nutritious and acceptable
foods when eaten.
Check your container supply.
Heavy duty foil, laminated. wrapping papers, glass coplainers, and
some plastics are adequate for
freezing.
Plastic containers should be free
of holes, easy to fill, and seal tightly. Coffee cans and margarine containers are not good for freezing. ·
They may not be moisture proof,
and the metals or plastic surface
may react to your food.
For additional information on
canning or freezing contact the
Meigs County Extension Office at
992-6696 or write to Box 32,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Did You Know That •... turning
jars upside down after removing
them from the canner could break
an adequate seal? Always allow
jars 10 cool undisturbed.

The Ru!land Garden a ub met 81
lhe home of Mrs. Cv.r.!i£D.alton fqr
the June meeting.
Pauline Atkins presided at the
meeting which opened with a
poem, "Rain Upon the Roof' and
Kathy Dalton had devotions with
the poem, "Be calm." Roll call as
answered with II members niuning
the new rose plants they had
bought. The club's creed and Collect were repealed and the officers
repons given.
Margaret Belle Weber and Neva
Nicholson had been watering the
two planted areas and reported that
Steve Lambert of Rutland, had
been bringing a great deal ofwater
the planters.
Pauline Atkins, Pearle Canaday,
Janet and Joe Bolin planted shrubbery from Harper's Nursery and
flowers from Hubbard's Green·
house at the Harrisonville Masonic
Temple, well-de~rved communi·
ty projecL
Those who viewed the Bob
Snowden garden in Rutland were
Margaret Parsons, Marcia Denison,
Pauline Atkins and Dorothy
Woodard.
Eva Robson visited both the
Harris and Hill gardens near Letart.
Ruby Diehl thanked the club for
the flowers during her illness.
Other arrangements were provided
by Stella Atkins, Neva Nicholson,
Eva Robson and PaulineAtkips. .
Kathy Dalton displayed an
anangement of yellow daisies and
Eva Robson displayed and
described her patriotic arrangement
which will be talcen to Overbrook
Center.
It was noted that the wildflower
areas nearby are in poor condition
but those near Columbus are very
pretty
The traveling prize furnished by
Margaret Weber was drawn by
Stella Atkins and Pauline Atkins

a

o

LANDON DIES · ·Actor Michael Landon, best known ror his
roles in "Bonanza" and "Little House on the Prairie," died at tbe
age or 54 Monday, after a battle with cancer. The cause or death
was not immediately released. (AP)

0

Michael Landon dies
Community calendar
of cancer at age 54

Community Calendar items
appear two days before u event
a!ld tbe day of tbat evenL Items
must be rtetived well in advance
to assure publication in the calel)dar.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Lodge No. 363 F and AM will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Refreshments will follow the meeting.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Lodge No. 363 F and AM will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Refreshments will follow the meeting.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
Pageville Township Building.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers
Plains YFW Ladles Auxiliary
LOTTRIDGE - The Lottridge '
No.
9053
will meel Wednesday at
Community Center will hold its
7:30
p.m.
rather than Thursday so
regular monthly meeting on Tuesthat
the
Fourth
of July may be
day at 7 p.m. The public is invited.
observed.·
'
POMEROY - American Legion
POMEROY - Meigs County
Drew Webster Post'No. 39 will
Enforcement Explorer Post
meet Tuesday at the post home foc Law
will
meel
Wednesday at 4 p.m. at
installation of officers. Dinner at 7.
the
Meigs
County
Coun House.
p.in., meeting at 8 p.m.
HARRISOVNll.LE - The HarPOMEROY - Pomeroy Order of
risonville
Holiness Chapel, Route
the Eastern Star, No. 186, will meet
684,
Pomeroy,
will have a missionTuesday at 7:30 p.m. Officer:s wear
ary
meeting on W~y at 7:30
street dresses.
p.m. with Rev. Steve Shover and
REEDSVll.LE - The River Val- family. Rev. John Neville invites
ley Herbalists will meet Tuesday at the public.
7 :p.m. at the home of Debbie
THURSDAY
Gilmore, S1$CesS Road, Reedsville.
POMEROY - Various activities
RACINE - Southern Boosters and games are planned for the
will meel Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Fourth of July at the Hillside Bapthe hjgh school. All. coaches and tist Church. Activities will begin at
ad)l]sors of junior high school 5 p.m. followed by an outdoor
spons should attend. Plans will be hymn sing at 7 p.m. Rev. James R.
made for the fair booth and fall Acree Sr. invites the public.
~ns.

Busy Bee class meets
The Busy Bee Class of the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church met
recently at tll'e church of a picnic
potluck.
Readings were given by Beulah
White. Nora Jordan and Betty
Denny.
··
Present were B~uy Denny, Lii-

,,!

lian Demosky, Elizabeth Slaven,
Beulah White, Pooch Brewer, Ruth
Ebersbach, Elizabeth Searles,'
Rosemary Lyons, Caroline Miller,
Nora Jordan, Dorothy Evans, Betty
Gilkey , Freda Edwards, Jerry
Pullen, teacher. and one guest.
Mary Beth Brewer.

Midd/;pOrf OES holds inspection
The Evangeline Chapter No.
172 Order of the Eastern Star, Middleport. held its inspection recently
with worthy matron Bea Kuhn and
worthy )llltron !lob Kuhn presiding.
Deputy grand matron Betty
Schenkel was introduced and invited to sit in the ~
The grand representatives Margaret McNabb 10 Maine and leona
McCutheon to North- Dakota were
presented and welcom,ed to the
east.
All worth matrolls and wonh y
patrons of olher ehapt~;rs were
prsented and welcomed. Past
matrons and past palroiiS were presen led and welcomed. Honored
masons and districl repeseatatives.
district officers, grand page and
grand aides, focmer·8f8lld appointments, JlllSl matron and pasl pattons
of other chapters were welcotiled.

.

Worthy - matron Bea Kuhn
thanked those who helped with the
inspection. Deputy grande matron
Betty Schenkel made the repoo and
gave the chaprer a good report on
their wort and thanked the chapter
for her gif1 and.dinner.

News notes
Soviet dictator Josef Stalin died
in 1953.
Frozen foods went on sale for
the first lime in 1930 in a store at
Springfield, Mass·
.
More than 180 people &lt;Jrowned
in 1987 when .aBritish ferryboat
capsized near Zeebrugge, Belgium.

Born Eugene Maurice Orowitz
to show business parents Eli
Orowitz and Peggy O'Neill in New
York City, Landon spent much of
his childhood coping with a suicidal mother and fighling in and
being kicked 01,1t of school.
He graduated second from last
in a high school class of 301 students.
A national high school ·cham pion javelin thrower, with a record
toss of 211 feet, seven inches, Landon was offered several dozen collegiate scholarships, selecting the
University of Southern California.
Forced to drop out of school
after a ligament tear, Landon took a
variety of odd jobs.
While unloading freight cars. a
co-worker who happened to be an
aspiring actor asked Landon to help
him prepare for an audition.
When the filmed audition was
held, it was Landon who was asked
to join the Warner Bros. acting
school.
Landon wanted to scrap his
given name of Eugene Orowitz for
Mike Lane, but the Screen Actors
Guild told him lhe name was lalcen.
After scanning a telephone book,
he picked Landon.
After four months of study, Landon was cast in a starrin~ role in
television's "Telephone Ttme."
Other early roles came in "Q.E.
Theatre, " "Dupont Theatre, "
"Schlitz Playhouse of Stars,"
" Studio One," "Playhouse 90,"
"Tales of Wells Fargo," "Wanted
Dead or Alive," "Texan,"
" Trackdown" and "Cheyenne."
Landon made his movie debut
in the 1957 schlock film "I Was a
Teeo -Age Werewolf." He
appeared in the police drama series
"The Sheriff of Cochise" in the
late '50s.
After several of these smaller
television roles, he was cast as the
romantic, spontaneous Little Joe
Cartwright in the long-running
series "Bonanza."
With Landon's passing, the only
original cast member still alive is
Pernell Robens.
The NBC Western ran from
1959-73, and for most of the 1960s,
"Bonanza" was the most piSpular
show on television, .and was No. 1
from 1964 to 67. At the time, it was
seen weekly in some 87 countries
by an estimated 400 million viewers.
Landon began writing in 1963
while in the. "Bonanza" cast.
He later wrote and directed
other segments of the popular family Western.
In 1976, he wrote, directed and
acted in "The Loneliest Runner,"
a television movie about a teen-age
athlete based on Landon's own
bed-wetting traumas. Another autobiographical film, "Sam's Son,"
was made lly l.ar)don in 1984.
. He wrote and direct,ed most of
the episolles of "Little House on

that the last program boolt w. as
given the score of 100 by regton
and Slate.
The July meeting will be a picnic and workshop at the home of
Pauline Atkins
tollfing Janet
Bolin's garden. Eva Robson, Kathy

afaer

~tkins,~n·fU::~::fC&gt;c~{!}=

will provide the arrangements
using the classes drawn for the two
fair flower shows in August. '
The program began wilh an anicle on Rex Begonias by Dorothy
Woodard. They are reliable houseplants that combine richly colored
and patterned foliage with low light
requirements. They are another
world of begonias from wax and
tuberous and differ from caladium
with their thick and brittle leaves.
A Rex begonia may be the most
excidng foliage plant for your west
window.
StellaAtkinsreviewedanarticle .
on catmints, nol camip which is a ::.relative. Catmint wears a coat of ·:
lavendar flowers from spring .... ·
throuRgbh surnD.merhl.
d
h ·~
u Y te repone on t e ~;
world's smallest bird, the humming · ·
bird. Gardeners feel t1aUacd when ·:
· a hummingbird visitS their flowers. · ·:
The ttick 10 llllrilcting the tiny bird ·
is planting ~ iii shades of red
or orange. Some common ·plants
include bee balm, nicotinia, petu· ·
nia, salvia and lrtlllpet creeper.
Margaret Parsons said that the
·mourning dove is one of Ohio's .
most popular birds. They are easy
10 attract to ..yards and feeders with ·,
40 percent being year-round residents.
The program concluded with a 1
patn'otic poem from Ideals and the '
Lord's Prayer was repeated before "
the hosless served' a table of
refreshments.
0

Federal officials say no to label
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government is trying to dilute the
power of su~estton in the labeling
and adyertismg of malt liquors.
The Treasury Department's
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms already has canceled the
use of.the PowerMasrer label on G.
Heileman Brewing Co.'s potent
new brew because it says the label
connotes a higher alcoholic content
than its competitors.
And, spokesman Tom Hill said
on Monday, the investigation into
malt liquor advertising and labeling
has been extended to other brands
as well.
"We've been collecting advertising and any we find similar in
nature, using the term 'r.&gt;wer' or
connoting strength, we wtll be writing those companies letters telling
them to cease and desist that type
of advertising,·· Hill said.
Federal law prohibits brewers
from citing the alcohol percentage
of their products in advertising or
on their labels - a rule designed to
eliminate any chance of competition on that basis.
PowerMaster has a 5.9 percent
alcohol content, compared with the
5.5 percent of most malt liquors

and considerably lligher than regu.
Jar beer, which IS about 3.5 percent
alcohol.
Hill Said the PowerMaster label
had been approved by li bureau
official before it was suggested that
the name connoted the potent alcoholic contenL

The Wahama High School Class
of 1955 gathered at the home of
Wayne and Jan Bergdoll recently
for the annual picnic.
Decorations featured ferns and
red balloons and~ traditional picnic fare was served from clay flower pots followed by "din" cake.
Assisting were Wanda Roush
and Mary Roush, sisters of Mrs.
Bergdoll.
Q
Dinner grace was given by
Naomi Cobb Houser and following
lunch a shon business meeting was
conducted by Marjorie Clarke Walburn. She presented a memorial for
the deceased using "Today is the
First Day" and "Atti!udes." Lola
Roush Miller gave the meditation, .
"Seasons of the Soul."
The group decided to give a
$100 scholarship each year 10 a
deserving Wahama High School
graduate. The choice will be made
by the alumni sc.holarship committee. This will be presented at the
alumni banquet each year. Letters
explaining the details of the scholarship will be mailed 10 alumni not
attending. Sylvia Blake Sayre is the
chairman of the scholarship fund
and contributions are to be made to
her at Box 392, New Haven, W.Va.
25265.
The 1992 annual picnic will be
··
·

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
PO.,CIES

.

•Ads outside Meigl . Gall•• or Mason count•• must be pre·

paid.

•RecliNe I 50 dtscount for ads paid 1n •dvance
•Free ads - Giveaway and Found ads und• 1 5 words w•ll be

run 3 diVIIt no ch•ge.

•Price of ad for all capitallenet~•s double pnce ot td co st
'7 point line type only ustd
,
•sentinM is not reJponsible tor errors 1tter hut diV IChedc
for errors first day td runs in paper \ Cal1 before 2 00 P m

Office to be closed
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient Services offices
will be closed Thursday in obser-

ctpt ~ cl••ified displey, BtJsin•s Card end leg-' not teet)
will also appear in the Pt . Ple•ant Regi11er and ttle Gall1
polis Deily Tribune. reaching o..,e; 18,000 homes

MONOAY PAPER
TUESOAY PAP,ER
THURSOAV PAPER
FRIDA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

G•ll•• County

exchanf!e~ ...
Mnon Co . WV

Meucas County

Area Code 614

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

446-G•Uipoils

992 - MiddiC)ort
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
843 - Portltnd

675-Pt Pleaunl

3&amp;7 - Ch•hire
388 - Vinton
245 - Rio ·Grende
256 - Guyan Dist
643 - Ar•bia Oi&amp;t
379-W•Inot

247-Letart Falls
949 - Raeine
742 - Rutlend

6
10

Monthly

$13 .00

15

Announcemenls
4 - Giveew•y
5 - H•ppy Ads
6 - lou end Found

Fum Supplies
61 - flfm huipmern
62 - Wanted to Buv ~

14-Busin•s Tre•n•ng
1 6 - Sehools &amp;

lnltru~toon

16- R•dio. TV &amp; CB Rtpa.,

17-Miac.tlaneous

63 - livntock
64-H•v &amp; Grain
66- S.td &amp; Fert~i~er

18 - Wen1ed To Do

Transponalion
21 - Busin•s Opportunity
22 - MoniV to lotn
23 - Prof•llanal

Servtcft

Real Eslale

74 - MotorcvciM

76 -'~ol1s &amp; M.o tors for Sale

76 - Auto Peru
77 ~- Auto

&amp;

Ace• tori•

PRICE REDUCED&lt;

Partial ow""' fioancinMv'-able The price
has been renuced to . $77.900 and
owner f~ancm~ of up to 80'Ii M putthase
amount may bi possi~elor qualifying person
to buy Vl!ff nice large home on 3~ acres in Ra·
Cine. 4BR. 3bath~ 2gilfages, rented 1BR apt
Property ildudes 4~00 sq. fl fatm b~g
Call 614·992·7104 for Appt

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
.

I· 14· ' 81 . 1 mo. pel.

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•tn1ulltion

JAMES KEESH
992-2772 or
742-2251

639 Bryan Piece
Middleport, Ohio

BISSELL
·auiLDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prien"

PH. 949-210 1
or Its. 949-IS.O
.11ay or Night
NO SUNDAY

ol Mlidl,,m
213• lh, Slc011d

Middleport
Hand Tufting
Custom Drape•
36 Yean

43 - Farms tor Rent

81 -- ttom• lmpro~rn.,u

82 - Piumbing • He ailing
83 - hc:atatjng
84 - Eiectrical &amp;. Refrigtfelion
85-Gen.,al Hauhng
86 - Mobile Hom• Repait

Public Notice

flee. 320 Eaot Main Stroet.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
P. 0. Box 272. Pomeroy,
Tho Boatd of Education of Ohio,
on ,.Ot before 12:00
tho Melg1 Local School Dia· o'clock
noon on Tueldey,
trlct deelree to receive Juty 9, 1991
.
ooolod bldo for the follow·
ENVELOPES
SHALL BE
lng:
PLAINLY MARKED "BID".
1. Fleet lnsur~nce
1
Tho Board of Education
2. Gaaollne and 011 Pro· reetrvtt
the right to 1ccept
duct1
or rejact any ond all blda.
3. Tire• ond Tublla
Jane Fry, Tre11ur•
4. . Fire Ew:tinguleher InMeigs Local School Diatrlct
spection &amp; Repolro
320 Eaot Main Strtet
In order to be contidered,
P. 0 . Box 272
otl oooled bldo shotl be rePomeroy. Ohio 46769
ceived in the Tre11urer' 1 Of·
(6118, 21; (7) 2. 3tc

CLASSWIEDS!

Experlea~

614-992-2321

We Sey What W. Do.
Wa Do What Wt Say.
10-19-t mo.

tide

ltlOiti'U'f

. ~~~~!
FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

s,,,, s'""''
S]Q .

30

SESSIONS

949-2826
TACIIEIVILLE ID.
IACINEr OH.
6/12/'91/1 mo.

.YOUNG'S
-R"oom AddltkHt1

-Gutter won
-Etoctolcol end
-Concrete work
-Rooting

P!umbl~

- lnterktt' • Exterior

'"'"'""

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomtray, Ohio
11-14-'90 tin

A&amp;B
COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY _
Convenible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
a. Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST., MASON, WY.

1-(304)·
773-9560
SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Sia~s

1O"'e DISCOUNT TO
SINIOI ClnlENS

POOL'VI~!V.jLICHI~IE I

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

POMEROY

FREE ESTIMATES .

992-7130

11·4- '91·1 "'o.

BOWLING
310 'Ealt 2nd St.

992-3432 or
992-2403

.• ISSELL
SIDING CO.
N••ltillllll•ullt
"Free Eltlmetea"

PH. 949-2801
or ltL 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CAW
3-ll·tfn
tODAYWliUtm

992-5335

915·3561
Post OHica

II

Acro11 from

POMEROY, OHO

IM0/'19 tfn

ADD A
OF
TO YOUR LIFE - wilh this
beautiful Colonial Home hJCaled in Middleport! Has levellol
orate trim allic sludto wilh skylight, 2 car garage well1n:
sulaled. Experience the elegance - COME SEE'' ASK'ING
$49,900. After you're enchanged ... MAKE AN OFFER•

BISSEU &amp;
CONSTRUCnON
•New Ho-•

e'Garages

•Complete

205 N.' Sacoltd Str•t

lemocWing .

Business ·Services

frH Estimates

THE

INDEPIIIDENT •
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Board of Education of
Eaatern Local School Dlotrlct dnlroo to racolvo
ooeled blda on t!'te following:
Dalrv Producta, Bakarv
Producta. Guoltno. Dleaol
Fuol. Fuol 011. 011 I Gro01o,
Tirn I Tubllo.
8paclflcetlon oheoto oro
The

IYiile~•

..

~

(Former Simon's Pidc·A"Pair)

BUTTONS &amp;· BOWS
220 E. Main St., Pom•oy, Ohio

•!·

..

'

1 ..:~-··-

Soard of Education reHrVal
tho olght to occept or reject
ony and all porto of any and
otl bldo.

•Re..oneble Aatea
eQuality Work
•Frill' Ettimatea
•Carpel H11 Fall Dry
Time
•High Glou on Tile
Floor Finlah
Mill llWIS. Owner

Elolae Boaton, Treeaurer

Eaatern Local School
Dlltrlct
38900 SR 7.
Reodavllo. Oh. '411772
(8111 , 1B. 211; (71 2, 4tc

It the tre1aurer' 1

office.
In ord.er to be conaldefed 11 HelpWanted
ell aulad bld1 ahall be rocolved In the trNauror'o of· to
NU. RSH
flee by 12 o'cloclc noon on
~
July 1.1111.
Fun a-.. ._. TiTha blda will be for the
nu •• ' ,.,.
1981-82 flllCOI vtar. Said
Positions
COMPETITIVE SAL~RY
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING
VARIED SHIFTS
In Memory
2
SHIFTe~~:~~~~NTIAL

.:..:::::::;;;;;;:=::;

IN MEMORY
Remembering
Yolan on her .
birthday. ·

1

• Dorothy

Context:
Sally Glcteckllll', IN DON

-::~:=-.~=
992·6472
EOl

lt. 1_,.Rutland, OH.

742-2451 .
3-14-'91-tfn

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All lrnds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Pomeroy,

Camping Is Family Fun
.Nl:f1f THIS SEMOI'f -· J'O?L

MtDOlEPOIT, OHIO 4576&amp;
Offlct 614-992-2116
HOME 614-992-5692

DOntl S. TUINEI, IIO*Et
HOUSES•LOTSM FAll Mlil
COMMERCIAL
We Need LIO!IIn_g

Now /tr.
S'•d/1
AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOillE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

... .. ... .... .. .... . ..... ....... .. .
MOilLE NOME

BENNETT'S "~:::G'

locattd On SaHord School ld. off It. 141
(614) 446·9416 or 1·10lt·llr2·5967

WE DO

ROOFING

OPaf TO TUI: PIJBUC

CAIIPUIQ · BcouUI'ul SwToundlngs
RA'IES ·Day. Week·. Month , or Season
PICIUC IIIELT£11 ond STAGE For Rent
Reuniono · Cet Togethers · Parttea
FIIIIIIIQ
XITCIIU IIOW OPEN
SeMnc Brealtl'ast, Meals. and Snacks

ARCADE

ROOII GALORE! 3 bedrooms, lamtly room. l'n baths. large
kttchen. basement 1car garagel Also. w1t this nice 111-level
home there's an 8'115' shed with electri already (nstalled
- n&lt;ce large lot and close lo everywhere~ l THIS AT SUCH
AGREAT PRICE' ASKING $49.000. Make an 1!1'1'-'

lfASitEIS-$100.,
DITII-50V "'
IIIIIGOATOIS-$100 "II
IAHGIS-O..·U...-$125 ., ·
FftEZEII-$ US up
'
WCIO OYENI-$79 op

1·4-'11-t mo.

985-4473
667-6179

CAII'n CLIANEIS
. and TtLE· FLOOI CAIE

'''

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Stop I Compare

Public Notice

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

USED APPUMCES

992-2156

•

by

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
•Rernodellnv and
Home R'epalrs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED

UPHOLSTERY

Public Notice

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

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

78 - C•mping Equ1pment

49 - For Luu
IIII--~·8~-.E.Qu.·o~m~enltllo,'
, Rielntii~~S~?-IUiplholl•.•"::.• . . . . . .~

BULLETIN BOARD

NEW- REPAIR

79-Campen &amp; Motor Homn

Rep1ir

44- Apartment tor Renl
•s - Furn1shed Rooms
46 - Spac:e to• Aenf

I! I

ROOFING

73 - Vans &amp; 4 WVD 's

limfilll

47-Wanleel to Rent

Howard L Wrltnll

71 - Autol for S•le
72 - Trucks lot 5•1•

41 - Houses· tor Rent

42 - Moblle Homes for A en!

Get RecuJts Fast·

57 - Musicallnstruments
58 - Fu.uu &amp; \legM•b'•
59 - For S•lt Of Trade

lit Ltvesllll:k

1 1 - Help Wanted
t2 - Situ•tion Wanted
1 3 - lnsurancl! ·

36- Aul E.1111e Wanted

667- Coolville

55 - Building Supph•
56 - Pets for Salft

Servtces

773 - Mnon

895-letart
937 - Bufttlo

Merch~ndtse

Emplovmenl

576 - Apple Grove

882-New Haven

.06/ doy

51 - Hounhold Good••
62 - Sportk'lg Goods
53 - Antiques
54 - Misc. Merctllf'ld•••

31 - Homes tor S.le
32 - MobileHomes for Sale
33 - F~rma tor Sale
34-Busineu Buildrngs
36 - Lots &amp; AcruQt

458-Leon

.80

&amp;1 .30/ doy

A•'• .,.• for conM cutNe runt . broken updrvl will bt ch1r0ed
fnt eet!tl tt.w •• tePirtt e ads

, - C~rd of Thank•
2 - In P.hmory
3 - Annoucements

1614) 915-41'10
11·10-'81 · 1'mo. pd.

SIGNS

•

We Ari Moving To

\'

th('

•

The more we sell,
The less we move•••.

1

2 ·00 PM FRIDAY

..
•

(Sa.le does not include Special Orders)

992·5.l77

- 2 ,00 P.M. WEONESOAV
- 2 ,00 PM THURSOAV

pa~es .cm-er

15

,6

•

SUMMER
CLOTHING
(Sizes 12 nios. &amp; up)

·

2 :00P .M TUESDAY

follou.:inf! telephonf'

'•

100 . EAST
MAIN·
ST.
'
.

-

Classified

..•

SAtE!
'400/o OFF

- 2,00 PM MONOAV

WEDNESDAY PAPEA

vance of Independence Day. ~
Offices will r-eoPen Friday at 8:30
~
a.m.

MO~·IN8

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A.M . SATURDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

15

3

lti'IIIIOI • mntOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
·painting.
Ltt me do it for you.
YEIY REASOHAILE
HA YE REFERENCES

J&amp;L

Rate
Over 16 Word•
14.00
°
.20
$6.00
.30
$9.00
.42

16

7 - Yetd Salejp11d 1n •dllanctl
8 - Publi e; Seta &amp; A1.1ction
9 - Wented to Buy

Happy Ads
Ya•d Sates

In Memouarn·

Words

1

ct~4tLIIt

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or
698-6864

RATES
Days

LINDA'$
PAINT
. lNG

FREE ESTIMATES

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Ctrd of Thanks

:i

rice Mae Smith, Rutland.
Nancy A. Patterson, dec' d aka
Nancy Ann Patterson; dec'd, affid.,
10 Harold L. Patterson, Sutton.
Jay Hall, Jr., Lillian Marlene
Hall, Jaymar Coal Co., parcels, to
Addington, Int., Salisbury.
Donald J. Peterson and Pearl S.
Peterson, right of way, to Cols. So.
Power Company, Columbia.
Robert R. Gray, Jr. and Kay
Gray, right of way, to Cols. So.
Power Company, Orange.
John Fisher, Jr. and Sarah S.
Fisher, right of way, to Cols. So.
Power Company, Chester.
Dale L. Priddy and Shirley Jean
Priddy, 2.472A., to Gary L. Priddy
and Aroka R. Priddy. Rutland.
Larry Vance and Sharon L.
Vance, easemem/right of way, to,
GTE North Inc., Scipio.

Classified

d._, lift• pubhcl'lion to mike correction
•Ads th., must be paid in a!Nance are

held again at the home ot Jan and '.:
Wayne Bergdoll on June 20, 1m .:,:
at 1 p.m.
·
·
The remainder.of the afternoon :
was spent in reniiniscing, albums, ;;
picture taking and renewing old ''
acquaintances.
.
·
•,
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. :;
Heber (Lola Roush) Miller, Hunt· ,;,
ing10n, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Joe !
(Janice Miller) Bradley, New !
Haven, .W.Va.; Earl Robinson, Gal· :
lipolis; Jean Somerville, Point .:~
Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. ,
James~Thompson) Miller, .'
Parkeriblirg.)N~~o,; Mr. ilnd Mrs.
Herb (Patricia Roush) Noel, . ~
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Luther :(Shirley Oliver) Tucker, Mason, !
W.Va.; Carol Russell Workman, ~
June McMillion Maxie, Hanford, ·•
W.Va.; Dr. 11nd Mrs. Charles •
(Naomi Cobb) Jlouser, Charleston,
W.Va; Peggy McDaniel Edwards,
Mason, W.Va.; Opal Kelly Bostic, ~
Dunbar, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. •
Charles (Geraldine Mattox) Rottsh, •
New Haven, W.Va.; Emma Lee
Turnbull Keams, Hartford, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight (Sylvia •.
Blake) Sayre, New Haven, W.Va.; ·'
and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne (Janice ;
Nicholson) Bergdoll. .
;
The door prize, a gift certificate ~
to Fruth's, was won by Charles ·;;
Roush.

of that
initial will
approval,
HillBecause
said bureau
officials
meet It
today with Heileman representalives to determine how much the
company has spent on the brew's
promotion and whether it has been
distributed 10 retailers.

Rollo R. Whitiner m and Linda
Whitmer, quit-claim deed &amp;
release, to David W. Armpriester
and Kathryn E. Armpriester,
Meigs.
'
Karen F. Neff, fka, Karen Layh,
aka Karen Neff Henrich, quit-claim
deed &amp; release, to David W. Armpriester and Kathryn E. Armpriester, Meigs.
Tina Jacobs, by POA, 1.610A,
to Frances Jean Wright, Salisbury.
Tina Jacobs, by POA, parcel, to
Frances Jean Wright, Salisbury.
Farmers Bank &amp;. Savings Co.,
parcels, to Harold W. Fetty, Virgie
A. Fetty, Tammie L. F4:tty and
Brett Bush, Pomeroy ViUage.
Giles Glenwood Smith aka
Giles Smith and Beatrice Mae
Smith aka Beatrice Smith, parcels,
to Giles Glenwood Smith and Beat-

The

Bu.
s
iness
Services
-;:===::===;t:========'Jt=======::;Tr=:::::=::::::::==t

Meigs property transfers

"A clnsified adverttMment placed tn·~The Daily Sent1nel1e• ·

Man dies after
setting self on fire

0

.

DorotbTWooclard .annoR,DCed .

WHS class of '55 holds picnic

the Pi-airie," featuring the actor as
· the patriarch of a pioneer family.
Based on the childrens' books of
Laura InJalls Wilder, the series
was dismiSsed by some as saccharine while praised by others as
moving.
Landon, who also starred in the
TV series "Highway to Heaven"
and whose career was jammed with
writing, producing and directing
credits, died shonly about I p.m.,
said Ronne Schmidt, a recepuonist
for Landon's attorney and friend,
iay Eller.
"
Schmidt said details of Landon's death, including where he
died, were not being release.d
immediately.
Landon was set to start work on
the new CBS series ''US" when he
was diagnosed with liver and pancreatic cancer on April 5.
"I think every little moment
gets more important after something like this," a stoic but congenial Landon said after he learned he
was terminally ill. "It's not like
I've missed a hell of a lot I've had
a pretty good lick here.''
He joked that he didn't want to
lose his trademark curly locks during cancer treatments. '''I ceitainly
hope I don'i lose my hair, since
everybody has been reviewing mY
hair for 35 years." .
In 1981 , Landon created and
produced a spinoff to "Liule
House on the Prairie" called
"Father Murphy." Starring football Hall of Farner and "Linle
House" co-star Merlin Olsen,
"Murphy" dealt with a frontier
orphanage.
'
Landon ' s' other film credits
included "God's Little Acre,"
"The Legend of Tom Dooley,"
"Maracaibo," "The Errand Boy,"
·'Where Pigeons Go to Die.''
He divorced his firs[ Wif6,
Dodie, in 1962. He was divorced
from Lynn Noe in the mid-1960s.
Landon is survived by his third.!
wife, Cindy, and nine children,
Mark, Josh, Cheryl, Michael Jr.,
Leslie. Ann, Shawna Leigh,
Christopher Beau, Jennifer and
Sean.

SAN ANTONIO (AP)- An
Army veteran who splashed him·
self with gasoline and set himself
on fire to pr01est a reduction in
medical benefits died MondaY,.
William Benefield, 40, of Amarillo, died at Brooke Army Medical
Center,-doctors said.
Benefteld wasoutsidethtveter·
ans Administ{ation Hospital in
Amarillo on Friday when he set
himself on fire: He ran into 1he
lobby, where two worlters put out
. the flames, officials said.

drew the door prize.

.. .

Ohio

AND EYEIYTHING UNDEINEA111

,JROMM BUILDERS
FlEE ESTIMATES

a20 Y•rs Experience
•Quality Homae and
Cuetom Remodeling

7•42-2328

11/22/tfn

COllE ON INt Thismv1t1ng home •s perfecllota couplewtlh a
child or lot older ind•vtduals. The one floor plan home lea·
lures 2 bedrooms. I balh, ntce kitchen cabmels and a n1ce
Iron\ porch lo relax on. located on QUiet slreel, some netgh·
bors buLnolloo close. Come on 1n, let us show you around.
We know yq~'ll feel al home. ASKING $19.500.
HELP! Th1s home •s begg1ng for some a1tenl1on and tender
loving care. 26.2 acres in the country.6 rooms. 3 bedrooms.
pnvale &amp; secluded. With your help land some hammer &amp;
nail~ etc I This abandoned home can have a v1tal sturdy life
with youl $28,000. MAKE ANOFFERI
COMMERCIAL BUILDING IN POMEROY! Large off1ce/show.
roOin with huge d1splay window, lots of slorage space. Ntce
rooms upstairs, loo, for possible meeting room, add11ional of·
lice space. maybe convert inlo an apartment lor added tn·
comet Unlimited pos~bilil 1s wtlh a l«tle work and a hltle
imagination' $19,900.
NEW LISnNG- REEDSVILLE - Agreat hllle place lo get
away from it all! ~ \\ acre block home wilh 2 bedroo'll s. 1
bath, screened porch and garden spot. ASKING $11]00.
TELEPHONE. TELEGRAPH. TELL TRACY- SHE'Ll TELLEVERYBODY .. .THAT SHE'S LISTED YOR HOllE! AND IN NO
TIME FLAT... YOUR SIGN WIL~ READ "SOLD"!
WANTTO SELL? CALL US NOWITHE WEATHER IS HOT AND
SO ARE OUR 8UY£RS!WE HAVE PEOPLE EVERYDAY lOOKING FOR PROPERTY! WE NEED LISTINGS FOR ALL AREAS
O.F ltf!GS COUNTY. IF YOU'RE SEIIOUSABOUT SULING
YOUR'ftOME OR LAND GIVE U,SA CALL WE GET THE WORD

oun

.

WE NEED LISTINGS! IF YOU WANT TO SELL..SEE US! WE
HAVE BUYERS WAlTlNG FOR HOUSES NAO PROPERTIES
OF ALL KINDS. LISTING URGENTLY N.EEDED. FOR A"GOOD
DEAL", AT THE BEST PRICE AND PROMPT ACTION. LET US
HEAR FROI4 YOU!.
HENRY E. CLELAND ................... ... ... ... .......... 992·6191
TRACY.BRINAGER ................., ....................... ,949-2439
JEAN TIUSSELL ....... ... ...................................949·2610
JO HILL .........,. .............. :: ..............................915_.
OFFICE ................ ......... ................................992·2259

0

�1\Jesday, July
Page . ~The Dally Sentinel

Announcements

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes

44

3

·n

Announcements

KJ't 'N' CARLYLE~ lly l.arr)' Wrlabt .

1WA~T10~KW

l

phyak;al ablllll•, tor lnler·
view call Jay 5-10 p.m. 814--742·
2546.

CHINESE KEMPO
KARATE

lH~

AlONe CALL III"TEAD

~l':&gt;&amp;f\Ne, /II)STAAI.-IA

•

&amp;:oo(l)e

I phyaiCII abllllln, lor lnlerview Cllll !Jay 5-10 p.m. &amp;14·742·
2546.

(J) (I)D G

ONiwt

•

PIIZLII

S@ 1\.~lA- &lt;Z t.trs·

_ _ _ __;.......; Uffo4

~y

WOlD
tAMI

CLAY I. POUAN

Roarron;o folren ol
0 four
tcromblod words

low fo fonn four

~mplt

tho
bo-ds.

1121e

~ Clllllll In Chi!Je 1;1

2 bath1, Many Extras I Mull SM

wortc out. Improve your mental

TUE •• JULY 2

TU'NII.Y

Sentlnei-Pag~

EVENING

1985 Redm1n Home. 14x70, 2brl

ClltiN 11artlng now. Ltam aelf
det.nce while you shape up and

Television
Viewing

TA~ ~MOtJel' ftllt

$4,500. 304-895-3664.
1971 Brookflald 12K60, Furnlthod, O.B.O. 614-441-1211.
1182 14K70 2 BR, 1 bolh, CA,
;711K26h. oxpondo. Dock &amp; un derpinning. Very nlea. 614-24511020.

work out. Improve your mental

814-441-6605, Luvt MaaHga.

(1)=:=1;1

3br, 1 112 Balh Loeolod Plna
Slrlll, Noxl To ilolrhul. 614-2459440.

10 cartoon l!xpNu
ID Runnlna and A~

Andy Orlffllll

II]) •

,{}.t44-~
7JJJ.IJ./ .Jwu.Mit tlJIL d

Chriatlan. tor Goapel Music
Group, 304-675-7453 after 5:00.

WE SHOULD PUHIPSTICK ON, AND
LEAVE NICE RED KISS PRINTS AT
TI-lE BOTTOM OF THE LETTER .•.

~· bo 'f"'-~

FrM Single Bulletin, Personal

ldt. Writt 10: J.S .O., P.O. Box

M4? U).£

184, Manlllon, OH 44648

4

I'LL

M'{ ATTO~'I 1111

Naw Moon 2 bedroom

mobile home 12x65, axe cond,

CHINESE KEMPO
KARATE
Clu... atartlng now. Laam Mit
de....,. Whllo you ohopo up ond

The Dally

. Pomeroy-Middl_eport. Ohln

BORN LOSER

Apartment
for Rent

for Sale

2, 1991

~~.

a Worl!l.fod4ty

GlUCK WOULDN1T
KNOW WI! AT TIIEV

.,

DOur Houle

1:05 ()) llnltclled
1:30 (l) e 0 NIC Newt 1;1
(J) fbrMm of Jaanrtle
(I) (I) • AliC Newt 1;1
(1) Willi Alftlllee St11rwo. 1;1
(I) 3-2·1 COfti1ICt 1;1

WERE ..

Giveaway

llll 1121e CIS Newa 1;1

II])

e WKRP In Clnclnilltl

I~

BLEE R
5 I· ~~tJ
.I 1
_ _
_ _. ..

Grandma said to teen, •
When you think you have
~en something lor nothing

~-~ _!~.!t

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

I

CAMOTI

IG

1--.;.~::...::.:,,..:..:..,1:_.:,1'"7,:-r-1--l
I·-.1.-..1-..1-...11-..J.......I

haven't received the

Complo1o tho chuckle quoted
by filling In lhe miuing words

you develop from step No. 3 bt~low.

ID UpCioH
8:35 Cll Andy Grlfft1h
7:00~D aJ) Wheel of F-ne

CfJ Andy Grlfft1h
Roome for rent. week or month .
St1rtlng at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

54

SIHping rooml with cooking.
Also trllllr apace. All hook·Upl.
Call after 2;00 p.m., 304·773-

Boby crib, llroflo~ car Hlf,
wolkar, ploy pen ono othor baby

5651, M. .on WV.

46 Space for ~ent

lablo, 304-875-4S48.
Boauly Shop, 3 atollono oil a-

Country Mobile Home Park,

304-882-3736 daya oftar 1:00,.,.

614-446'-9!580.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Loto 6 aeroo;o available for
home conllructlon on
Rlybum Ro.d. Paved ro.d,
county
watar,
reaaon1blt
reltrictlona. COmplete Inform•·
lion mall6d on requalt. 304-t~
5253, John II. Gorloeh, no
alngle·wlda trailers, plaaN.
new

Lost &amp; Found

6

looi-Malo,

bloeklwh~algroy

~:

Mala Cocker Spinlel. Got·
den On Top, Bun Color UndernHih. L.oat In Gaga On Rt.325 &amp;
Rt .141. Rew1rdl 614-379-2317.

Yard Sale

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
3 family garage Hie: aubdlvlochoo~

5th, 5th. Rain or thlrw.

4 flmiiiH: Baby Bod, Boby
hamo, Ullo Bll Of Everything!
123 Fourth Avenue, t-5, S"undey,
Mondly, TUHdly.
5

fllmlly

carport

e11e: 202

Kineon Or. 4th, 5th, 6th. Aduh,
chlldrent,
clolhlt, . tlereo,
.,.ada, curtains, miK.

ALL Yord Soloo Mul1 So Pold In
Advonee~.._DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the dly wfore the ad Ia to run.

SUndoy odlllon - 2:00 p.m.
Frfdoy. Monday odlllon - 2:00

MuHI-Famllr,, July 3, Juno Sl,
Ruatlc Hll 1, Syraeu.a. Satre

be"'lnd Pln.a Hut . lntiqu.a,
many taot1, Iron whHia, hunt·

In; l flohln; oupplln, C. B.o,
toys, ck»thn,chaln uw, guns.
. 2, 3, 4.
Big Yard Sola: lodoy lhru July
13. t lo 5. 424 Rend Ava.,
Konou;o, OH.
Eurob Communlly Yord SaiH:
Friday, July 51h, I 1111 6, Anllqual, T-. Ho .. ohold homo,
Miocellono!JUI
Eurtka'l

Annual

Community

yord oolo: 7-6-ti.
Ga- Solo: July 101, 2nd, 3rd.
180 llouah Lone, 1 IIIIa OH
StRt.7 a-hlro, OH.
July 2nd, 3td, t:oo-? Clolhoo,
lledlpNodo, Curlolno, Fobrlc,
Antlq. .a, ,.umtturw, Odele •
en.. . _c.n 114-6112-7163 112 Milo
OUt ur Conlantlllo On m. ShlrloyAnowood.
Mollw-OaugiMr Solo: !50 Noll.
VHS ,.,.looi, blkl, clolhol, bod·
ding, dr-. cu~olno, jowlfry,
;Ndor,frllw.
s- Yord Solo: July .111, 2nd,
3rd. Aalof1ed Houlehokl Ar·
llefol And Clolhlng 5 111111
Wool Of ~lro, ~ Sl. At.

Business
Training

Ratrlgarator Fumlahed. Deposit
&amp; Ralarenca Required . 614·446·

door cholrw, bodolda commode,
wolkor, Chril1moa deeorsllono, 18 Wanted to Do
ao grill, Wobar grill, aloelrle __;,____..;,__ ___;__ _
lankat, clothing.
Will Bobyoll In lly Homa
Anytlma.
Rodnay
Aru.
Y1rd
Sale,
.Omethlng
for Raferancu Avlllable. All Shifts.
everyone, 715 Syumore 51 • Call 614-245-5786.
Middleport, July 1-3.

3br 1 112 Balha, Clly Sehoolo,
Haal Pump, CA, Kllchon
Cablnol, Eloelrle Slovo, 6

g

8

Baby ,all, clean houeelotfict,
Clfl tor tlcklaldlr1y, trained ax ·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Purson Auctlon Company,

pariencld

full lim• auctlonHr, complete
1uction 1ervic1. Uc•nNd Ohio,

37$-2942.

WHI VIrginia, 304-773-5785.

Georg• Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to tht mill just
call 304-875-1957.

9 Wanted to Buy
~eo-s"'h-.:F_,ix..:.:._:ll_obl..;,_lo.:.::.!H_o_mo_:
Rapelrablo Condlllon, Wllh !AI.
Clooa To Goltlpollo. 614-31189001, onytlmo.
Used Mobile Homes, Cell 614·

446.0175.

Wanted to buy, Standing timber,
Bob Williams &amp; Sona 6t4-992·

5449.
Wanted to buy, waaher &amp; dryer
In working condltlon, cell attar 4
p.m. 614-992-61103.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoa
wtth or wilhoul motora. Call
LJorry llvaly. 614-3118-9303.
Wonlod To Buy: Slondln; lim-

ber, Top PricK Paid For While
Oak • Ash. Call after 7p.m. 514·

367-7519.

Employment Services

l.otl of GoocUHI

Wod-, 413 Hubbord Slrlll,
K*\auga. 'urniture, Home Inter·
kw, ba6y &amp; kida elothet, ml.c.

Yord Solo: July 111, 2nd, 3rd. VB
Milo Off U.S. 160, on Floyd Clark
Rood.

~1,_1__H_e;;..l:;_p_w_a;;..n_t..;,ed.;;__
,$350.00/day r:ocnolng phona
ordaral Peop • call you. No ax·

perlence necea.. ry. 1o800.255·

0242 Exlanolon P-2746A.

POMEROY
'ASSEMBLERS NEEDED'
lmmedlltt openln_gt. No ax-

porioneo noodod. Full/Pan-limo.
can TOU FREE 1-800-743-5121,
Yard Salt: July 111, 2nd, lfd. t8, Bom-10pm 7 doyo.
Four1h SltMI. Bidwell, Ohio.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Somechlng For Everyone!

Yard Solo: July 3rd, t-3. Rodnoy
Village II, m~dla atrHt . Cloth·
lng, foybox, booka.

Eaceuenc
Pay,
Benellta ,
Transportation,
407·29!-7600,
Elt. 571. 9a .m.-10p.m. Toll
Rstundlld.

nu,.fng

..aletant,

Mava relarancn, 304-175-97'89.
Buoh Hog Sarvleo. Roaoonablt
Rat•. No Job To Sn11lll 514·

.

Mlaa Paula's Day Care Center.

Solo, offordabla, ehlldeora. 11-F
o a.m. - 5:30 p.m. A;oa 2~10.

Before, ahtr ac:hoot Drop-Ina
welcome. IM-446-8224. New In·

lonlloddlor Caro, 614-44W227.
Will bobyolt In my homo
wookdayo, 3 V2 ond undar, $10
per doy, 614-992-7327.
Will Dllbyslt Wltkanda at your
hou11 or mint. Have rtferenc:••·

014-992·61103.
Will build polio eovars,-doeks,

scrnnld rooms, put up vinyl
aiding or trailer skir11ng. 614·

245-5657.

.

Will cart for bed patient in' my
home.
Raatonablt.
Above

Racine on 124. 614-949-2392.
Will Do General Houu Cltanlng. S4.50 Por Hour. Galllpollo
Arto. 614-446-8406.

Financial

5$4.

T..ldrt. Wodnlldoy, t-? 111
Wooclond Drive. Clolholh Co~
loefibloo, And 1Mw croft omol

51

Household
Goods

21

Aalrlg111tor. Reference &amp; By

Seoonc1Av111...
I room tto.a, Nlarence end

dopooh rwqulrod, 304-1715-1090.
Smell 2 BR/1 B flomo In
ratr.ncel

Syr.cUM,

·recommend• that you do busl·

nata With people you know, and
NOT to 11nd money through the
mall until you have lnv..tfgatld

the oH~rlng.

·

Arthur's Choln Link Ftnco.
RHidanflal, Commorelol, ln-

duatrlal, FrH Es!lmalu! Com·

plola lnolallallon. Pllont: 614-

384-em.

chines, Gallll &amp; Meigs, small invHimant, 304-675-5162.
Large lcxll Vending Route For

Salo. Will Soli An Or Pori,
Repeat
Buslnt11
secure
L.ocatlona. Above Average Income. t-800·840-8883.

Loeol Phona Roulo. Company

:~tr~'~ - s.u auick. 1-800-695-

Locat Vending Route. Company

Supporl. Soli Oulek. H00-69S4044.
Vandln; Rout• : For Salt. Caah
BualnHs. High Trame Loeal
Loeatlona. HofiHt MaehlnH On
Marklf. 1.eD0-234-26)1.
•
' -

Real Estate

eall304-675-14!50.
Rofrlgaralors, $125; aulom.llc
wathtrl, $SJ5; electric drYfra,
$75; goo dryars, S!iO; ;oo ron-

houaahold

llama.

3pm.

42 Mobile Homes

Delbert

Appllancoo,
Comer Rend ond Poreh SlrHI.
Konougo, 614-446-7473.
RENT 20WN
614-44&amp;-315e

1978 Chevy Seolodalo, 4 wheal

qulpment In t,.llar, move•'!._'!J

N2-~24&amp;.

Concrsfo 6 plaollc aopflc lonko,
Ron Evant Enlorpriaoo, Jackeon, OH 1-IOo-537-9528.
Couch, deep fr11zar, Mayt1g

AIngar Wloh.or, 614'912-7212.
Full Slra Wlllfarn Saddla 6
Haovy Duly Soddf• Sland, Lllllo
Uaad, h . For 4-Hor, 514-4453687.
Llflllytar Rower Sklor $125

brend new, Lltntyler 2000 Er-

gometer Bike $15 Exc. Cond.

1984 IOOc lntomallonal Dozor,
(IOOd conclhlon, 1-614-192-2364.
Fergueon SO tf'lctor, $1,800.
BruOh Hog $280. 304-8t5-3fill.

Ftir Salt: Fo,_l Cub With Cu~
tlvoloro, Comllfotafl' Rlbulh,
Now Tlroo, Now pofnlb$2,200;
=e:..~.~ r.r'woy ':.~~~~
$14,000. 114-379-27'13.

Vl'r1 Furniture

for Rent

Sofa &amp; Chair, $11.10 Wook;

10x5! 2 bedroom mobile home.

Roekor, S3.63 WHk.Bunk Bod
Complolo 18.41 WHk, 4 Drawor
Choal, $3.26 Wook; P011ar Bod-

Roelrw 1r11. 614-912-!5858.
2 bedroom mobllt llomo, lorga
private lot, wfcantral air, Gal·

Recliner, $5.47 WHic, Swivel

Gravety garden tractor,

30"

rotary mower 1700. 304-882222\
Horae &amp; otock lrollor-1191, 16 h.
123M. I yr, old AOHA Big Faney
Rod Romo geldl"'f. s-n w•
lam pllll~rt, Big 811- Royol
-lo.I14-21M522.
Jlm't Farm Equipment, SR. 35,
Will Galllpollo, 614-446-11777;

room Suite, 7 pc., $11.67 WHk,

lncludao Boddlng.Counlry Plno
llpolla Forry 1111, 304.e75-1226 Dlnauo Wllh Banch 6 4 Chalro,
thor O:OOPM.
$10.98 Woak.OPEN: Mondoy
2 bedroom trailer, $225. month Thru Solurdoy, 9a.m. to 5p.m.,
plua 111 ulllllln, $100. dopoall, Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
304.&amp;75-1137 between 5:00 ana MIIH OH Roulo 7 On Raula 141,
In Clntonory.
1:00 ev1nlng1.
2·8R mobltl home, camral 11r,
large lot In country, 614-843-

5216.
2br

Located

In

EvtrgrMn,

$175/mo. 614-446-36!17 or 61424U223.
2br Moblla H'""o $200/mo. $200
Dtopooll, 6t;;367-7802.

htJ , Syr1cuu

2-BR,

Hom11

For

Rent.

Sloro Cofdlpol UPJfahl Froozor,
vary clan, lock oil dOor, Interior
.llghl, 114-lltz-7136.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; RJRNITURE. 62
Olivo 51., Galllpollo. Now I Uaod
fumhura, hllforo, Wlllarn 6
Worll boolo. 6-3151.
VI'RA FURNITURE
614-448-3156
LIVING ROOM: Sofa &amp; Chair,
$11t.~i

~hwr,

tl41.00i
Swivel Rocker, .ID.OOi Coffee &amp;

Roloroneo And Dopooll A• End Tabloo, 10.00 lat.DINING
ROOM : Table With 4 Poddod
qulrod. 614-446.0027.
Chairs, $148.00; Country Plno
Tralltr tor RanlL In country near Dlnaua With Bonoh And 3
Aulland. &amp;14-99•-3027.

Transportation

NSA
WJior
• Purfllnl
(Bactorfoolltlcl Now Countor
Tope Gauronlaod To Filer a,ooo
GIL CIDOOflylt 112 -~
a14-446-4336, ulh.
RoeondMJonecl-horw, Dryoro.
Guoronlaod prompl oorvu for
oil
r111koo, - · Tho -her
Otyor
Shoppo. a14-448-a44.

Building
Supplies

Stock,

brick, ..wer pipet, wfn·
dows, lint1111, 11c. Qaudl WI,.

loro, Rio Grande, OH Call a14245~2~

Pets for Sale

.,...-~--.,-~-,_.,.--,,-­

Groom and Supply Shop-Pot

GrOOming. All breeds, ttyles.

lama Pol Food Dtoo)er. Julio
Webb. Coli 814-448.o231, 1-800352.0231.
AKC coma Chomplon llfoodllno,

Sunblrd n"d1 subtr~me. 304·

Motorcycles

~~.Gold Wing Hondo. 614-4461t82 Yamohli !550 V-Twln 6

Valve, ,DOHC Shaft brlva, Water
Cooled, 8823 Mllet, $900. 614·

367.0561.
1Vflt Kowaaakl Ninja 600R. Naw .
Engine, Now Roar Tlra, $1,!500.
614'445-1536.
:
1989 Honda Mtgna 700 CC, Ex_J:ellant Condltfonl Vary Low

0200,1Aan Mnuga.

or boo! oHor. 304-675-4988.
11111 Codolllc Coupe O.VIIIo,

Exc. Cond., avery option, new

~

!

s~.250. 1it4-256.e480 .

•

1985 Flberglall ball boat with

t111ll1r, 55 hp Yamaha out -board,

walt kept, 304-675-1616.

7-2.

1988 BomWr B111 Boat, t50
Mecury Motor, used very 111111,

614-992-7880.
22 Fl. Soa Roy .1228 More.) On
Tralltr. SIHpl 91x, Hard Top, -··

Wllh Full Golly. $8,500. X.Cond.
814-446-483e.
7-112 HP bool motor. 614 -446- · :
7n5.
Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

a

1 Chevrolet 8 ft. truck badaldi~,..,:
patHnr,r aide, $50.00. Call 614- ;.
902~12 1ft•r 5 p.m.
·•

2263.

four cyl., many new parte. :t900

·

·•

Montha

Sol; Ook Toblol. 42•62 WHh 6
Bow
Boc•
Choirs;
S629.00.BEDROOM: POOler Bodroom Suho (5 pe.l, $34t.OO; 4
Fur- DroMr Chill, ...4.M; Bunll
nl•h·t d,
1
Block
From Bod, 1229;_Comploto Full Mon
Sol, S105.uu Sal; 7 pc. Cadar,
Downtown. C.11 014-44~38.
Bedroom Sullo, S&amp;H.OO.OPEN:
4-bodroom In lllddlaporl, $200, Monday Ttlru Saturda~ Ol.m. to
1-bodroom In Pomeroy, S1!50, 2- &amp;p.m., Sunday t2 oon Til,!.,
bedroom In Pomtroy, ulllltlat
5p.m., 4 ~~" Off AouiO 7 01\
pd, $285, 614-912-6712.
Route 14t In C.ntanary.
Apl lor ronl 8-h Slroal lllddloport, Ohio, 2 bedroom fur- 53
Antiques
nlahed, deppett and Nferance, -::---.,.-=~-,..-,,.-304-882·2564.
Buy or aall. AlveriM Antlquea,
1124 E. Main Slrool, Pomoroy.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 - . lo 6:00
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON p.m., Sunday I :00 to 6:00 p.m.
ESTATES, 536 Jackoon Plko 614-912-2526.
from $192/mo. Walk to allop A
movln. Coll614-448-2568. EOH. 54 Miscellaneous
B-h Slroat, Mlddloporl, Ohio.
Merchandise
Apartment
for Rent
1br· Apanmtnt, Appllencet

room

eHicltncy

apt,

reterencat and dapoalt, 304-

882-2516.

Centenery Araa. 2blj $235/mo.

'

10 HP J1coblan 42 ln. cut riding

mower. $590. Aolollllor $80. 61(446,8568.

No Pl)o; Rio Grsndo Area, 2br, 10 hp riding mowar, looko rough
12311/mo. No Poll. 814-44&amp;-8031. runs good, $150. finn. 304-f711Colla;o for ronl, fumllhod, AIC, ~4.:.31:.:2.:.·---,---,--,-,--,-,----,.--,-c•rJ*, good neighborhood, no
pete, Pf: PitaNnt, WV 1·304·

175-6200.

lOft black mnh Unidan S•talllt•
wlln· house· and remota control,

304.e95-3694.
197
0:::-B- OI
:::c=,
do:.:..,c=-u--:n-• •-,-. -:v'"'.e=-,""S::5:::00
For rani, 1 bedroom 1p1t1mtnt, ~
$225 UIIIIIIH . Includod,. dopoaH Now -5pc. Solid Wood Living
31 Homes for Sale
rsqulrod, no polo, 614-99:1.2216. Room Sullo. $400. Moro91Z;
Slareo System With Sptlklrl,
3br HOUII 25 Acral, t 111111 Furnlthad 4 Roome &amp; Bath, $75.00. 814-445-8734.
Upttllra.t.. No Pats, Reference &amp;
From Town, 514-441-1340.
Dtopoolt Hoqulrod. 114-446,D444. 2 pes of bilge nylon caf'l)tt,
Houu F'Of' S.le In Town On
12x14 e1, 2 windows w/alum
Third Avonuo: 3br, Naw VInyl Nicely Fumlahod Aporlmant, lrtplo lrack atorm window,
1
br,
next
lo
Ubrary,
periling,
Siding, Now Roof, Low S20'o.
32x42, 1 pr of tender mount
cll'llrll hilt, air, reference r•· lowing mlrroro, 115 h ol uaod,
614-379-2787.
qulrod. 614-44e.0336.
Blreh lloorin;, •14-985-3805.
HouM With t 314 Ac:r., Utan,
WV. f10,000. Call Colloc:l, 614- F\'mlahed Aptr1mant, 1 Bid· 4- rsfrtg 175.00 up 30" Amant
room, l23tllmo. Utllhln · Pold Rodar Rang• · S4t5.00. 2-26"
111-3815.
807 Soeond, Oolllpoll•, 614-44S: Z.nHb color eonoofo. 1-1•" RCA
Lyono AddHion In lluon 4411 attar 7p.m.
·
color $110.00; Elaelrlc dryer
lluahly bulh, 4 bodroomo, :i
$65.00 up, Flrotlono, Slore MidFumlohod
EHiela""y,
All
bathe~ c..tom oot · In khchon,
DR, Fn, 2 firllllacoo, CA, 1 aero UlllhiH Paid, Share Balh dlaporl
.:;,.Morolll .,17,500. · 304-773- t1~1mo. t11 Second Avenue: 5-old fashion church -~ 1'6"d·
Galllpollo, 614"'!46-3145.
good ohopo, oofl ono or 1 I, f1
EHicloney, f1!50 ... 6144112-3744.
0n lhe rl-1 2 ~R polllblo 3rd, Fumlohod
2 112 boln. 3 ear gara;o UlllhiH Pold, 9hora Bolh, 7Vf
odSooNr Poo 1 Tab!:' ,._S4 !50.,_ H~
w/carport. 1.75 ocroo pluo. Gal- Fourth, Qalllpolla, 614-446-4418 8AHB.
- , ow, 1 3 00. • 1 36 72 ••·
llpoflo ochoolo. Owner looking ohar7p.m. .
A CARIBBEAN BLOWOUT! Wo
for""""'· 216-235-112t5.
Graclooll liVIng. 1 ond 2 bod- ovarboughl crulaoo, Florida lo
Reduced To Soli: 2 Sfo!Y 3br room oponmonla a1 Vllloga lho Bohomu, oh 1 luxury·nner.
and
Rlvorolaa 5., dor•· 4 nl;hlo, U211coullle.
Comor Lot In Chllhl,., . Ohio. Manor
Eacelloril Condition. 104-i32- Aportmanlo In Mlddlaporl. From Hofa paid, N"o ;lmmlcka. Tick- ·
$1M. Coll614-192-7711. EOH.
l\51, 1104-t32-717V.
111 good 1 yur. 404-'451-1901.

a

. '·

.

Budget Tranami11lons, Used a. ·~
rebulll, starting at S99; Auto ~
Parte.

6t4-24S"-ssn.

614-379-

79

Campers&amp;'

.

r 1HiklK '-.W stUJLD KWUJ,

Cil &lt;IJD 'Nitpctleon IIIII

.1110~0-.£. WAT 'rW&lt; a::l\J5WJT

JoHDidnt: A Love S1orJ (Pt
3 of 3)' ABC Movie of 1M
Week (2:00) Stereo. 1;1
(1) (I) RlH end Fall of
CeeuHICU Journalist
Edward Behr dissects the Ufe
and career of the Romanian
dlctalor by examining his
background through
intervtews and E!ivate
footage. (1 :00)1:;1
1!1) JD) 111 'Winclinllla of the
Godo (PI 1 of 2)' CBS
Tueldi~Movle (2:00)
Stereo.
I!) Tue ay Night Flghll
USBA Junior MlrJdlewelght
Championship: VIMy
Pazienza (29-5, 23 KOs) vs.
Ron Amundsen (2Q-.I-1 , 8
KOs), 12 rounds, from
P1ovi&lt;lenca, R.I. (L)
Q!l Nlllt¥1111 Now Stereo.
t.arry King Uvet
10:00 (l) D IIJ) Law a Order An
investigation ol a mugging
leads to a city-corruption
scandal. (RJ Stereo . 1;1
(j) News

~Jro700 Cf M£ 1£AJES ME
(£t.RSC
ocr~

Motor Homes

evr cu

1958 Fan 18h camper, $1,000. or

botl offor, 304-882-3455.

a

..

1974 Coaehman HIQhland 1iark
camper, 35 ft. Wllh llp·oul,
apartment sized appliances.

$4,500. 614-949-2369.
6FI Sllde~n·Truek

Camper,
llllpt 4, lllf contained, tully •·

quipped with ti• downt, good

eond. 614-992-2757.

·

.

tlroo, 3!50, V-8, S11!50, 614-992- Slide In camper, bathlshow•r, : ·
v
refrigerator, furnace , double HouMborkan, 81 Bladen R011d,. 671t.
OH Qf Rl.7.
1tB2 Ford Eocorl Slollon sink, stova/ovan, air cond, $800. .
W1gon, good atlckar, runs 304-671-2321.
AKC Fomalt B..lon Tarrlo&lt;· goOd,
3~75-5728 .
Wonnod I Sllolo. I wka. Old, 4
112 Monlho Old, AKC Raallfartd 1113 Plymouth Horizon, runs
Services
RofMIIor Fomalo, 114-367-0133. . · real, now 111ekor, $650. 30475-8347.
AKC Ra(ll11artd Cocker Sponfoif,
aholt, wol'm8d, hNhh guaran· 1tl3 Ratlanl, n,ooo mi., PSIPB, 81
Home
IN, 304-875-21t3.
~PJ nc. eond., f1500. 614-445Improvements
For Solo: AKC Roglolortd
Fomalo Coekor Sponllf, Chick- 1tl3 Toyoll Crooalda, loodod,
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
ens,
Rabbha,
~
porfoet cond, 304-87U132.
PhiiHnlo, Hano, Turf&lt;oya, 514UncondHionol llfollmo ;uortn1tl4 l)odgl Omnl, $800. 614- IH. Local roforone11 fumlahod.
1112-3168.
388-8872.
Froo llllmaiH. Coli eolloet tBoauiiM
purwbrtd
whho
614-237-0488, doy or night
Amorleon Eoklmo dog. Only 2 1tl4 Llnooln llorf&lt; VII Bill Blosa Rogera Baument Wlterproolaft, 180 Hch. &amp;14-38a:8015 bol- ' Edhlon, All Opllono, High. flng.
w- 6 l e. .
.MIIaa;o, Very Good Condii!Onl
Soa To AppNCiolll Only, $3,400. carpentry and Remodeling ol all
-and -c;~- ilr..Oming -,j, 11~137.
oorls, 1.e14-1112-1400 or 912-3440
broodl, opoclollzld In Pilodlt
anytime.
grooming, 12 yro txporfafll'o, 1814 Ofdl II Regency, 4-dr
:304:::.:.e::.7:_W::3::32::·- - - - - Sadin, like now, ovory opllon Curtlt Home Improvements: · '\
hlctory CB loW mlltogo, Yurl Experience On Older •
000 BOARDING. Going on Inc.,
now Urea, 3117, V-6, $2850, 614- Newlt Homes. Room Addlllon1,
voeollonl I.Nvo your dog wllh 19247ft.
Foundation
Work, Rooting,
mol lAving eoro. Plooao book
Wlndowo &amp; Siding. Froo E•
11r1y, Ravontwood, WV, 304- 1111 Ford LTD Brougham, tlmatH! Rateranc .., No Job To
:273-.::_:•::5:::12::__ _ _ _ __
•·
48,000 mlloa1 _$_3JOOO. or bOol of- Big Or Smalll614-441-0225.
far,304-842-04oo.
,Orlgonwynd CaHery Ptrtlln
.
JET
SiemoN ond Hlmlloyon klllono' 11111 8-10 Blour, V.e, I SPNCI, Aeratl2fl Moto,.., repaired. N•w~::·;.
814-446-3144 lhtr 7 p.m.
·
Air, TIM, Crulao, Very Cfoon,
motof'l In 11ock, RON 1
E~ NS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800--: '
Flth Tonk, 2413 Jaeklon Avo. $1,3110.114-367-0122 afterlp.m.
Polnl Plaaaanl, 304-875-2063, 1117 ~h Horizon ft,200. 5 -1528.
--- - - - - - -· .:
full llno Tropleol floh blrdo, 11118 POntile Grond Am oulo " Ron'• TV Service, apecl•llzlng '
omoll onlmalllnd lllPPfiN.
12,500. Chlvrofat lruck 1800. In Zenith also 11rvlelng moat . ·
other brandt. HouM ealfs, also ., ~
Poodlo puppiH, A¢ Chem::~n 304-876-2440.
Bloodllna, -llny toy, Ot~-GOT·
. 1111 Flrablrd Formulo._l Onwar, soma appliance rtpalra. WV •
304-5715-2398 Ohio 814-446·2454."'
~01111 Mlloa, 111111 "'"'dillon.
Rooting, painting and aCCII•
Eatro
llhart&gt;l
111111
Saa,
18,800.
Taking Mposlt1 on AKC Reg.
sorill.
Good
work
tor
BoKtr puppiH. 114-245-6828 ot- a~m. h4-448o7104.
r11aonabla prlc::e1. Don't wall
ter! p.m.
1 • Ltlaron Conv. 2.1, Auto, call guaranteed low. 304·67S.CNiao, TIM, All P-, AC, . 74S4.
Fruits &amp;
40f!:. Mlloo, Rod. Block, llo;
58
W
- 18,000. IM-441-11114. a~ Sopllc lank Pumping SllllcGallla
Vegetables
ter ~p.o\.
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Jaekaon, OH 1-800-637-9528.
Ounroyln Fru• l!orm: Jllll oH 1•· ChoYy CIYOIIor, Z-24,
SA Ill ·1111 ol Albany 514-6tfl- Slw·Vac
Strvlce,
~akit O¥Or poymonlo. Davit
6298. Tuu-Bun 9AM-71'M. l4olhe 1111 ~ C.VII._r, lie, ,., pb, Georgn CrHk Rd. Pal11, supgrown tomaton, corn •nd AIIII'M eaoaollo 514-192-2912 or pUn, p~kup, 1nd delivery. 6to1·
1
grHn btane. We accept Food 1112-27'13.
446.0294.
3

F1ma11,

I

~

18 Fool V-Hull, 90 HP, Mercury,
With Acctasorlas, Runs Good,

1171 Culla11 Suprema,

1750 Or Bol1 Offer. 614-4462311.
111111 Plym.oUih Voloro, rough,
1150. Coli Tuoa. botwHn 6 &amp; 9.
614-3118-8015.
11180 Chevy Monla Co~o. all
power, exc cond, Inside 1nd out,
whl lroda for lruck and PlY dltfartnco, 304-875-4437.
1tlll 8ulek Skylorf&lt;, 2 dooro1 2.5

(;OLUf.IIN.

for Sale

Old,

a

...z.

(!)StaNn~

(I) P.O.V.

.
ewa
liD 700 Club With Pat
Robertoon
10:20 (I) MOVIE: Callfomll
!Trearnlng (Rl 11 :551
10:30 (!)Millar t.aague Beaeblll
Chicago White So• II Seattle
Mariners (L)
II]) II To Ill Ahnounced
Crook and Chill
ID Malar Le1gue BeHbiH

a wortd

BARNEY
WHAT ARE YOU
DOIN' WITH
THAT THING,
WILFERD?

11110 Nl111n Sanlro oport eoupo,
5 epood, AM-Fiol CIIHft, olr.
1ttl Chevy 5]1 4 whoot drlva

Farm Suppl1c~
&amp; L1ves1ock
61

frH ntlmatH, call George at 1-

Tahoe, AM-FM c&amp;IUtll, 5
epold, olr, bod llnor, 304-675-

814-992-5752.

1i80 Plymouth Sundancli 3,000

82

1140.

Aeluof Mlln. Air Condlllonod,

·

Automttlc Tranimllllon, Rear

Farm Equipment

1150 Ollvor 011111, , Eacellotil
~~· $4p00.00, ~1~'!112166 M•-Y Fare...,. ~rector,
With Hydroullc U.dor, IS~jl­
lnlomailonol Lito Mocfot ... HI
Dint!, t4,110L!,~.' :IO F...,_.
Turf uaotor wnh· ......, Hoa.
$2,311; Afi!e Cltofnwa D 1'1
Dlooof Willi Plow Cirfl..... And
Grein Drlff, tUI0-114 :1M tl:tl

0.'-, Uko ·Now, Aokln;

18,100.114-841-7720.
1._, ~~ Tolon' llock · 5opd,
~4!0 Mlloo, Alliin; $1,100 or
Ollar. 114-1168-1252, 614·
251-1736.
111111 Soli: 11114 T·Bird, Rod!
Wllh 1\rrbo, lllnroot, 6 Extra
~,100, Boot Ollar. 114-

. 72 - TrUCkS for Sale
1100 011 .., t-or with
- · ·14111. 115 ~ 1!171 Ci!IYJ Pick-up, 1 112 Ton 4
., . , . _ IIIOior wlllt ICJI!ty WIMrlf Drlvo., Now Robulltlololor,
froril and · IOidoJ., 14110. 11040 . Oood Solid rruck, 614-371-11887.
NJ fllleol PliO. IN I'Oni ·With
•1879 Fonl . 4K4, f1;!00; 1959
PIO!L, ~~c:\.P'rHP~l~ ·Chivy
1 Ton Dump, 11,100; 19111
~- ...,,. c:hevy 112 Ton $2 215· 11170
dilll!!!!:_!f._,~P~II80~.~
· OWrw~:__:·_wtff_flri'_ Chovy 112 1800. i14-if7-'i2e7.
!'*·
'"" :lit tl:tl
·

ilili

10

Will do ramodlllng, ·roofing
building, lrto lrlmmlng an~
removal, houu painting. For

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSQL

0·
;-.

f«

··-·-~~~--------··
.

~'llrthdaJ
····
.

...uu&amp;

Fourth and Pfn•

Electrical &amp;
Befrlgeratlon

Realdenllal
or
c:ommercl11 '
wiring, new •rvlce or repairs: ·
Malter UcenMd tltctriclan . .

Rldonour Eloetrteal, 304-6751786.

87

Upholstery

Mo....,y'o Uphololartng Hrvle- ,
lng trl counly. area 25 YHrt. TfMr
ba'at In tumlluro upholotortng
call 304.e75-41S4 for ..... ..:
UmaiH.
1

"Jl085
t72
• A 10 7 3

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST
8982

8J643
"Q 6 4

•s

"AK73
t A Q 10 9
• 95

tJl
6 42

SOUTH
8 K 10 5

.92
tK8654

Bridge

.KQJ

in the sun

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

By Phillip Alder
Bridge tournaments in the south of
France are delightluL The bridge is
played from four till eight. leaving the
rest of the day free for golf, tennis or
swimming, or for lazing on the beach.
In the evening you sample the gastronomical delights of the area .
The most popular congress is held in
Juan-Jes-Pins on the Cote d' Azur.
Players flock lrom all over Europe,
and ~asionally you see some strange
sights. Once a sunburned Englishman
was asked why he was so red. Wishing
to demonstrate his knowl.e dge of the
local lingo, he replied, "Je suis rouge
parce que le solei! est ruddy hot. "
Back in 1954, Philadelphians
Charles and Peggy Solomon battled
for five days in the main pairs event.
Charles was Life Master 16 and was
World Bridge Federation president in
1964-68. Peggy is a top player with
many national titles to her credit.
They defended today's ·hand perfectly
en route to their most praiseworthy
second place.

South

West

North

East

2t

Pass

Pass

Pass

'"

Opening lead: • 4
...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

The bld4ing comes from the days of
four-card,}najors. Now most experts
sitting South would prefer a take-out
double (or pass) over one heart.
.
Declarer seemed destined to lose
only two hearl and three diamond
tricks, but Charles found the killing
defense. He won Peggy's heart lead ·
with the king, cashed the heart ace and ·
led a third heart. Declarer ruffed, .
crossed to dummy with a spade and·
called for a trump. Charles put up th~
ace and led his last heart, generating a
fourth trump trick for the defense.
@

'"t, NEWIPAPIA ENTERPtttH AIIN.

The World Almanacf Crossword Puzzl~
ACROSS
33
37
40
42
44
.
45

1 Treat In
contrived
mennar
5 Party giver
IPoaHaael
12 Poll
13 Flying uucera (lbbr.)
14 Yorkahlrt

46

"'"

15 Wild plum
18 Clrolntry
tool (2 wda.)
18 Rnted In
cllllr
11 Former Communllllladtr
20 Border on
21 Involve
23 lllttreat
24 Salf11m1
27 Gamble
28 Ao~ndad
lump
29 Saawleda
31 Cleansing

48
49
51
52
53
54
55
58
57

Answer to Previoua Puzzle

agent
KayCan. pro•Alluolon
Arrow poleon
AaUgloue
holiday
Bomb ahelter
Aealdence
Hotel
OpUmlaUc
Mlnut11 of
court
Chemical
IUflil
Actor Lldd
Look cloaely
Crlmoon
Habit
Swirl

DOWN

4 LJnguage
aufflx

I Jordtn'a
Klng2 City In
Florida
3 Tied

5 Dltgrace
6 Think nothing
7 Hernando Da

11 :00 (l). (J) (I).. ill 1121.
aJ) NIWI
CD Nawawatclt
II]) II Al'llltlo H1H Stereo. Q
I(J Crime Slory
Q!l On Stage
Sportt Tonight
liD Scarecrow II1CI Mra. King
11:30 (l) D IIJ Wimbledon
Hlghllghta
(!) AINm Smlth'e Money
World
&lt;llD Nlahdlne D
1!1) Arwarilo HIIM Stereo. D
1121e 'The Exile' CBS t.ale
Night Stereo. 1;1
Q!l Churclt Snat StatiOII
Monaytlne
11:35 (J) Chiara Q
11:45 (2) D IIJ Tonight Show
Stereo.
12:00 &lt;Jle Into the Night Stereo.
liD II Pally Machine With
Nil Peaptaa
0 1111 Hitchhiker
Q!l Nlahvtlll Now
NIWINight
liD The Dilly Dozen: The

a

and Hating

84

l-!·91

(L)

Caner's Plumbing

Golllpolla, Ohio
614-446-3888

NORTH
8AQ7

a

•=Ill

Stampa.

Croaafire
7:35 (Jl Malar LIIQUI BeHbiH
Cincinnati Reds Bl Atlanta
Braves (Lj
8:00 CD D all Matlock Matlock
defends a fashion
photographer accused of
murder. (R) Stereo. D
(!) MOVII:: The Outllclero
jPG) (2:00)
(J) &lt;ll D Who'e tile Bou?
Tony and Angela are asked
to care for 8 5-year-old boy.
(RJ Stereo. I;!
CD (I) Nova The greenhouse
effect is examined. D
l!al 1121111 Reacue: ' ' 1 A
teen clings to a loose rock
2,400 feet above the ground .
(R) S!ereo. D
I!) Murder, She Wrote
Q!l Oft Stage Stereo.
PnmeNewt
liD Georae Walltlngton (Pt 1
of 4) (2:00)
8:30 (J) &lt;IJD ROHIRnl .
Roseanne and Dan pressure
Becky to s'l:tinq a boy
they detest. Rl stereo. Q
Church
Stltloli
9:00 (liD all In tile HMt of 1M
Night A teacher Is accuHd
of molesting a flfth-1lrade
student (Rl Slereo. Q

' -t

BRIDGE

a

/ APV"f

75 Boats &amp; Motors

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Poncho - Savor- Idiot - Belong - VOICE
The guest speaker had been long winded and very
condescending. One man commented that there were
-times when silence has the loudest VOICE"

(L)

IT1 AN

"MIINgo. Asking $2,700. 614-441·

4 cyl Datsun motor, S sptad
tr~nsmlsalon, 68,000 milia St75.
Eaty Lift Car hlleh SIOO. 304571-2897. .

Ow-n1r,

a

....,,-:-.,..,.,.,--..,.:---,--..,.,.,~

a75-3t3t.
11177 Uncofn Mark V._ A-1 eond,
,_ Michelin llroo, ,.,,200. 304773-tl31 """ 5:30.
11177 Ponlloc Flrablrd, S500. 614446-7151.
1

MacG'yverQ
Sport1ICentir
MoneJIIne
liD Scarecrow and Mra. King
7:05 Cll The Jefforoona
7:30CDD lUI Jeopardy! 1;1
(!) Bewitched
(J) 11211D En-lnment
Tonight Stereo. 1;1
&lt;llll Mame'a Family
llll Wheel of Fortune 1;1
II]) • Milar LHgue
BeHbiK Cincinnati Reds at
Atlanta Braves (L)
ill Be a Star Stereo.
JD Malar League BeHbiH

$6,500. 614-446-6751, 814-446·
7604.

71 Autos for Sale
76
=-=~::-::--;----~
•go Rod Ford Probe, very good
eond, want lo _buy home must
1011 car, 304-875-8864.
1M8 Cornaro, good ohopo. 1980

• Nlllllt Court 1;1

~"kii~r's0:.:9· ~·=.oi o;,g

44

One

IIOU

56

I
=

1086 Dodge Caravan, 49,000
Mllee 1 1 Owner, Auto, Air,
Cruiaa, Stereo, New llr11,

74

1;1

~£....Affllrl;l

mlloo, $4,500. 304-882-2221.

ltema, oak table, oak drum

55

(J) (I)
tnaltle Edition
(1) (I) MIICNIII/Lelnr

drive, 350 auto, 38,000 actual

BINI pipe ldoof for cuiWn'poll
lfzn, eou from s:oo 10 a:oo M.
Colllgovlllo, wv 304-372-8406.
bumera $50 11ch; 5 hood fane Won1ono blk loolhor jackal lfzo
wllh llghta, S20 11eh; 1 5 - amall, 180. purehuOd Wlllone
0uHn wringer w1aher, $7~. All Loofher Shop, 2 yro old, 304klnds
or
mlscell•neoua, 682-27'113.

and . Swlahor'o .Uoad

-urlly dopooh roqulrtd, eall
COIIOOI, 1-406-723-4702 oftor

Mobile

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

New/Used
HouHhold tumlshlng . t/2 mi .
J•rrlcho Rd. Pt. PINHnt, WV,

Appointment Onfyll14-445-31107. gil, $75; whfta Kenmore
electr(c rJnga, like . new, $110;
4bf HouH In Ala Grande Area. aloetrle range, $75; 5' chnllypo
Avalloblo Augul1 1o1. 614-441- dup frMier, $150; portable
062t.
compact washer, $125· 2 g11
oven ranges, $85 tac:h,
5 room hoUH: 44 Olivo St., Gal- double
g11 build In o..-en with drop In
llpollo. 12111/rno. Inquire of: 118 bum_ar, $75; 2 elec1ric drop In

$150/mo, pluo ulllllloa, dopooll,
614-992-{1511.

Health Problema .. Must SaU
Vending Route, 17 Pepsi ma-

Classifieds
446-2342
992-2156

1232.

Mobile

Business
Opportunity

e

Farm Equipment

Wldl eelletlon new &amp; uNcf f1rm
614-245-5667.
. tractoro l lmplorrtlfllo. Buy,
Lumblr:
Wolnut
&amp;
Cherry.
toft, lrtdo, I :OD-5:00 wookdoya,
used appliances, T.V. aete. Open
Marctr. Bottom Sub-dlvlllon, B a.m. to IS p.m. Mon ..Sat. 514· Soooonod &amp; plonod. Aloo, ba. . Sot. 1111 Noon.
one 1cra tote, Rt. 2 tronfaga, 446-16119, 827 3rd. Avo. Gal- boord, eoalng, ole. 614-446-8036.
Trailer- Flolbod lx12. 1250. 614price reduced, city w1tar. 304· lipolis, OH
Now Horizon, Ha~ford, WV. 361-o681.
5715-2338.
.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Flnlah yqur flower blda, planta
Fqr S.le; River bank propar1y In Washers, dryara, rtlrigtrltors, . now reduced, $4. per trat on
63
Livestock
Maoon. 304·773-5151.
ron;H. Skaggo Applloncll, moM planla, Monday lhru
Solurdoy,
1:00
11115:00.
NIIW
Horae
And Sloek lrollar,
Upper River Ra. B11lda Ston•
f1.ll98; 7 YHr Old Woll Broko
Crol1 llolol. Calf 614-445-~98 .
Naw Jllno·AII Slzn $5.00, Now AgHA Galdlng Whh 7 Wollam
Rentals
Dtonlm Jockllllor.S2D.OO, Work PfaHuro Pofnfa. &amp;14-286-1522.
LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Complete hQme fumi•=I~J:· Porn lor S1.00, Frt-111~ autlarnut Avo. Pomoroy,
111-4 64
Hours: Mon-Sat, 0.5. 11
Hay &amp;Grain
41 Houses for Rent
0322, 3 miiH oul Bulavlllo Rd. p.m.
'
Freo Delivery.
Now mobflt home, 2-112 lon CA
3 Room Houu, Located t01t
unh. 304.f15-1840 or a14-245Third
Avanua.
Stove,
PICKENS RJRNITURE

Retrain
Now!I!Southuat•m
Bualn- Cona;o, Sf1~H Vallov
Plaza . Coli Today, 61
-4387fl
Ro;latarallon 190-05-1274B.

upright trMz•r, outdoor red·
wooa utee, canning J•r•. curtains, houuwlrM, Hoover, out-

p.m. Saturct.y.

Bia Garage Solo: 5I Madloon,

Merchandise

Corpel $4.00 Yord I Up. VInyl
Now Haven, $28,500. 304-773- S3. 99 &amp; SU9 Yord. Porch Turf,
5811.
$3.91 &amp; $5.91 Yord. Mollohon
Corpolo, Upper Rlvor Rood, &amp;14Commercial lola 314 mila toU1h 446-7444.
of Silver Bridge on US 35, 304·
County Appliance Inc. Good
675-11121 or 304-937-3477.

trH, eall 614-742-2805 or 9926647.

alon bohlnd old Bidwell

614-912-11179.

25 aeraa, rur11 water available,
local~ on Broad Run Road,

mlxed-Auatrlln thMp dog ty,..
llub tall-In the JH.. Creak

7

Route 33, North of Ponwroy.
Lots, rentals, parlll, uiH. Cailf

61

Miscellaneous
Merchandl18

July 3; 11111
Once you gel on a financial roll In , the
year ahead, you'll begin to pick up momentum. ·As a result, this fl'lghtturn o~l
to: be one of ydur larger earning years.
CANCER (June 21-.luty 22) Some Information ycl~ recently acquired could be
of value to an associate you're Involved
with In a separate endeav.or. Dqn't let
the day go by without sharing what you
know Cancer treat yourself to a birth·
. day gill. Send.tcir Cancer's Astro-Graph
·predictions tor the year ahead by maH-

ing $1 .25 plus a long. self-addressed.
stamped envelope lo Astro-Graph. c/o
lhis newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland . OH 44101 -3428: Be sure to slate
your zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Somelhing may be told 10 you today in lhe slrlctest confidence. It's the type ol news you'll wan!
10 tell other&amp;. but It's besf you keep
whalls said to yourself.
VIRGO
23-Sept.
22) You acould
h~ve an ·(Aug.
opportunity
to reinforce
relatlonshlp
needs more
loday.
Yourthai
counterpart
feelsbonding
the same
way. so things should work oul well.
LIIAA (Sepl 23-0ct. 23) A goal you
have recently ntabllshed for yoursell
can be achieved, buill mlghf have fo be
done one step at a time. Don'! let your
impatience urge you to do things
hastily.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Treating
loday's developments philosophically
will help you make molehills ,out of
mountains, and problems·you perceive
as Jmposslblti will become manageable .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Deo. 21) An
earnest dlecuaelon with a no-nonsense
approach can help correct a condition
at home that's been CB!Jiing everyone
lrustratloni ol late. Call the meeting to
order.
·
·

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) There·s
a big difference belween looking al
things realistically and just seeing 1ne
dark side. Try to do the former loday.
nOIIhe latter
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Conditions ·continue to look favor.able for you

where your material Interests are con·

cerned . However, don 'lthlnk lhalevery
time you pula quarter in !he slot you·re
going 10 hit the jackpot .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Someone
you may become Involved wilh socially
today mlghlturn out to be more of a tutor than a playmate. Something ol intrinsic value could be learned .
ARIES (March 21-lpril 11) II you give
oulslde interests priority over compassionate responslbllllles, you're not likely
to nave peace of mind today. First take
care of those lo which you' re.emoilonally auached.
TAURUS (April 20-lllly 20) You'v"
been neglecting a friend with whom you
used to be quite chummy. It would
please this lndlyldual very much If you
called occasionally. Why not today?
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) Something Is
developing atthl~ time that could prove
to be profitable. h's not apt to be gigantic In nature, buill could be moderately
significant

a

a

CELEBRITY
CIPHER
QU()I1Uon1 by famous

people , past 1nd
EICn llf11f ln.tht Cipher llandllot ltiOifl«. Todl1'1 eM: N tqUIIS V.

CMIH"Ity CiOhlr eryplogriiTit lit crtlted from

hrlea
12:06 (J) Nlghtllne 1;1
12:1&amp; (Jl MOVIEi Rachal and 1M
Strlnglr (1:50)
12:30 1!1) Puty llllcltlnl With N1a

p..,...

Beat of Love
Connaction
. JD). ltlnl Copy
I!) Alfred Hltcltcoctl

'OZTXT
IMGDTXM
XIJRTXM

GTEXTEM

S X

FTJPCG,
P G

present

C: I D

N PET

8 X

VIX

II]) •

P,.Mnta

12:35 (J) Love CornliCticMI
12:45 CD
0 Lilt Night With
David Llltamllln

e

·- ..

-.

• y y -'

GIBRTH
ASZCGSC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "This lo lhe· machine age. The only lhlng people
do by hand Is oerateh lhemHivH." - Joe Laurie, Jr.
C 1M1 by NEA. Inc~

--·-------- · ---~------· ·--

·--

2

�.........~31"'~
!!!"'!!'
- "!!SIIII,,.""'"(II!kllll$11"'!fi.""QIIIO!&amp;I"&amp;-Uilll¢1".!114111&amp;"'1#-i"!!$1!!0
. -4...i!l'II"'$I'II$11114-t101S,l"'@!l'ltt-tl"'4-·t-§"'S"!!&amp;"'.C!b!JJ-S-.I..0-'!1
. -•a""-'"'I!--C·S&amp;!l'!I#INSI!'.I!OL'!Il¢11UII!IIS"l"$11!11.t..
_ o_ _ _ _,.,_,..,_,_ _ _,.,.,.,,..tt_______....,....,,..,..,.,_~~-·--

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

Tuesday, July_t, t9!u ~-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Education: the key to a bright futur~

i

It

Dear Ann Landers: I must cornmenton the Ietttz from "Homework
Blues,• the woman who complained
because her child had too much
homework.
As a substitute high school
teacher, I am disheartened and
alarmed by tbe poor academic
performance and apathy of our
students. Three hours of daily
homework is the norm. in Japan.
-~'.!NRU!~..NI a.
.aJic! three months of summer
vacation ts unheard of.
It is predicted that within a
decade, America will face a critical
~ of ~ti~ ~UstS and cngtneers, which bodes til
for the future of our country. It is
clear that American students 1leed
more work ~ less play.
.
If we fail to heed the warrung
signs, we will surely slip from our
role as a world leader to that of a
second-rate nation. -- B.C., CLARK,
NJ.
DEAR B.C.: I agree, but with
Lamar Alexal)der. u the new
secretary of ~ucatlon and Davtd
Keams as hu deputy, I am
optimistic that things will improve
~Y· Here'sanotherpaintof
vtew:
.
Dear _Ann Landen: The public
schools :n New Orleans are not very
good so I put my children in private
school. Believe me, Ann, just
because you pay a fortune for
private school doesn't mean it's

Quartet, The Children or God and Linda Jones.
Rev. James R. 'Acree Sr.lnvites tbe public. Pictured, 1-r, are Gary and Sandi Jones and Jamie
and Joe Humphrey, members or tbe Redeemed
Quartet.

FOURTH OF JULY EVENTS PLANNED Various activities and games are planned for the
Fourth or July at the Hillside Baptist Church.
Activities will begin at 5 p.m. followed by an
outdoor bymn sing at 7 p.m. featuring God's
Little Lambs, The Joyful Hearts, Tbe Redeemed

Modern Woodmen sponsor activity
.I

The Modern Woodmen of
Amenca, Camp 10900, sponsored a
Family Life Activity honoring
fathers at the Coolville Ltons Club
Hall recently.
The Woodmen's Creed was led
by Martha Elliott, Alfred, and
Ralph and Frances Henderson,
Coolville. Palriatic songs were led
by Shannon Breedlove and Tanya
Smilh, Coolville,
Congratulations were extended
to John Breedlove, Coolville, on
his appointment to Zone Eight
Chairman, Dislrict 13, Ohio Lions.
Breedlove is immediate past presi-

dent of Coolville Lions &lt;;lub.
Clare Woodey, recetved a 50year membership P,in and admis.:
ston to the MW A Half-Century
Club. Andy and Terri Hayes,
Coolville, were congratulated on
their recent we(lding. Invitations
were extended to members to
attend the forthcoming weddings of
member George Gilben, Coolville,
to Windy Burkirch, Little Hocking,
and member Donald filliott, Alfred,
to Orenda Cunningham, Guysville.
Marjorie Malone, Coolville,
presented a Family Life Activity
which emphasized the involvement

bellu.
.
.
After two years, I disoovered that

of all family members in "Recycling Reusable Materials" in an
effort to conserve the environment
Family fun contests were won by
Clarence Henderson and Warren
Elliott Alfred and Richard
McPhe~son, Belpre. Door prizes
were won by Ida Livingston
Sharon Smith and Sue Breedlove'
CoolviUe.
'
Proceeds of a "Summer Silver"
collection will be given to the
Torch Food Pantry Torch. Cheer
plates and cards wdre delivered to
shut-in members.

The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District held its regular
monthly meeting recently.
· Toptcs discussed included SumtVer Supervisors School July 28-30
in Dayton; the Meigs County Fair
llooth and Hay Show; and Soil and.
Water Conservation Day.
One multiflora rose cost-share

" Normally I hate looking at
other people's home movies, but
this will be different," said Meg
Marshall, one of lhe first guests toarrive at Bennett's Long Island
home.
In fact, the video - shot in living color - was a hit, garnering
applause and thumbs-up ratings
from the entire audience.
"The human body is so wonderful," said Donna RusseU.
Surgeons across the country
have begun giving out vid~~!tpes,

application was approved and one
approved application was approved
for payment. Those people with
approved applications are reminded
that upon completion of the treatment, theY. are to turn in their
chemical btlls to the Meigs SWCD
Office and report completion of the
practice.
Rex Shenefield was welcomed

religious tenet he shared with his
wife about SQStaining life as long as
possible. He said he realizes it
would take a miracle to cure her.
"It's the doctors' job to sustain
life. not to snuff it ou~" said Wanglie, 87, a retired lawyer. "You
recall what Hitler did in Germany?
He kiUed off all the elderly people,
the sick people, like they were
weeds.
"We seemed to have lost a lot
of our moral fiber in this country.' '
The Wanglies are devout
Lutherans. Mrs. Wanglie is a minister's daughter. Although they
often discussed the use of life-support systems, Mrs. Wanglie never
made her wishes known in writing.
Dr. Steven Miles testified that
the hospital was unable to find
another place to care for Mrs. Wanglie.
_
William Lubov, an attorney for
Mrs. ~Vf. anglie,. said he doesn •t
doubt that doctors at Hennepin
County Medical Center are compassionate. But he said they
shouldn't make decisions that
belong to a family.
"It's· a monumental clash
between individual rights and an
institutional decision-making process," Lubov said. "I just can't
imagine lhat we want to have our
life and death decisions made by
committee. ~ '

and some medical experts Uunll: it's
comforting for patients and their
friends to see what happens during
an operation.
Others are skeptical.
"Well, it's a free country and
people can do what they want,"
was the reaction of manners expert
Letitia Baldrige when told of Bennett's party. "Let me just say that I·
hope the food is delicious and that
it's served well in advance of the
screening."

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$2.GmilliOO
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·· · · ·~ehnB &amp; LOUlSC
8 $2.2
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· 9 $2 million

me.''

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)With a new $1 .8 million house
down the street from GIoria Estefan, rapper Vanilla Ice will help
Star Island live up to its name.
Ice also wiD have French singer
Michel Sardou as a neighbor on the
exclusive island in Biscayne Bay,

.

1

;.What AboUt

!

$1.9 mlllio"

1

I'

in the Classlfieds!

II

'

.

.,

I

It I

I

Partly cloudy tonight.
Low in 60s. High in mid80s Thursday.

Vol. 42, No. 41

2 Section a, 16 Pagoa 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

Copyrighted 1991

.,

AEP chief executive

says c)loice is easy

PAVING TO BEGIN ·Pomeroy village omcials and Jess Davis or S.W. Dean Asphalt
Paving met on Tuesday afternoon at the Beech
Grove Cemetery to discuss the viUage's plans to
pave roadways there. Work is expected to begin

on Wednesday on the project, and cost is estimated at $15,000. Pictured, left to rigbt, are
Councilmen Bryan Shank and Thomas "PeeWee" Werry, Jack Krautter or the Pomeroy
Street Department, Village Clerk Brenda Morri-1 and Davis.

Civil rights groups say look at
Thomas' record, not his race
WASHINGTON (AP) Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas in 1987 praised an essay in
which a conservative scholar
denounced lhe landmark high court
decision le~allzing abortion.
.
. TI)amas.:..comments, .made. in a
speech to the Heritage Foundation,
were_distributed Tuesday by an
abortion-rights group. The group
called on the Senate to reject
Thomas ' nomination unless he
publicly declares his support for
the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe vs.
Wade decision.
The criticism from the National
Abortion Rights Action League
came a day after President Bush
announced he would nominate
Thomas, a conservative federal

Plans for the annual Fourth of
July celebration in Racine have
been finalized.
The day will begin with a
parade at 10 am. Par.lde units will
begin assembling at 9:30 ca.m. at
Southern High School
FoUowing the parade there will
be a chicken barbecue at the Racine
Fire Department followed by children's games at 12:30 p.m.
The always popular "Anything
· That Floats But A Boat Race" will
be held at the park along with a
kiddie tractor pull. The pulls will
feature two classes according to the
. weight of the participants and three
trophies will be awarded in each
class . A $! entry fee will be
: charged to participate in the lciddie
: puUs. The pulls are under Lhe direc- lion of Ted Smilh and Dan Smith.
· Skydivers from Parkersburg,
W.Va., are scheduled to perform at
· 3p.m.
At 5 p.m. mud wrestling match. es will be held .by the Women's
Mud Wrestling Federation and at' 7
. p.m. entertainment at the park will
take place.

appeals court judge, to the court
vacancy created by Justice Thurgood Marshall's retirement.
The group distributed copies of
a 1987 speech in which Thomas
praiSCil as "a§l!.\~~ple of,
a~lying- i!lillllirllw" an essay in
wiiich Lewis Lehrman attacked the
Roe vs. Wade decision as conflicting with the Declaration of Independence and the Constimtion.
As potential opponents searched
for material to use against him ,
Thomas visited \)le White House
on Tuesday and spent about an
hour in the office of legislative
affairs, discussing preparations for
his confirmation hearings. As a
fiJSt step, the administration decided to recruit Kenneth Doberstein, a

Winners of Cincinnati Reds
tickets wiD be announced at 9 p.m.
and the day's festivities will conclude with ftreworks at I0 p.m.
The Racine Park Board wiD also
be selling food at Star Mill Park
beginning at 12:30 p.m. including
hotdogs or sausage, potatoes, salad,
baked beans, pies and soft drinks.
The board is asking for donations
of pies from area residents.
RACINE FOURTH OF JULY
ACTIVITIES
9:30a.m. - Parade line-up at
Southern High School
10 a.m. - Parade
I I a.m . - Chicken barbecue at
Racine Fire Department
12:30 p.m.- Children's games
2 p.m. - Anything That Floats
But a Boat Race and Kiddie Tractor Pull
at Park
3 p.m. - Afternoon skydivers
5 p.m. - Women's Mud
Wrestling Federation Matches
7 p.m. - Music at the Park
9 r.m. - Announcement of winnero four Cincinnati Reds tickets
10 p.m. · Fire works.

·. .--Local briefs---

are relocating

Ms. Edwards, who is the mother and her unborn child. It is a shame
of a 15-month-old child was to be we had to use this course through
arraigned Tuesday on ~barges of lhe judicial system, but it was the
drug abuse and child endangering only tool left to us."
WILTON, Conn. (AP)- By
in Lake County Common Pleas
LaTourette said he based his the year 2000 it's expected that one
Court. Both are fourth-degree decision on legal cases pending in out of every three employees relofelonies that ·carry six-month to other states and on one pending in \.1 cated by their companies will be a
five-year jail sentences.
Toledo. In the Toledo case, a · woman.
Lake County Prosecutor Steven woman was charged with child
Basing this estimate on a 10---.
C. LaTourette said he was aware endangering after the baby .was year market research study. Harvey
the indictment might raise sensitive born, but the charges were thrown Auger, president of PHH Homelegal and ethical issues. But he out twice because the Lucas Coun- quity, said corporate transfers 11f
maintained that county authorities ty court ruled a fetus is not a child women jumped 60 percent over the
were c:oncemed only about the Authorities in that case alleged the past five years and now account for
health1of Ms. Edwards' unborn mother's cocaine use caused the 16 pen:cnt of all employee moves.
child.
baby to. suffer seizures and other
Auger attributed much of the
gain to women attaining upper
"You couldn't take a spoon and · neurological disorders.
feed a baby crack_cocaine. We are
The Toledo prosecutoJ: now is !Danag_ement positions in ever·
asking for a legal determination asking the Ohio Su~e Court for mcreasmg number.
"Ten years ago," he said, "the
that you can't do that to a fetus authority to file clilld-endangering
number of women being relocated
either," LaTourette said. "We're charges.
was too small to measure."
not trying to make a socie\81 state-

.....

3-D; 7-S

.Village of Racine all set
for July 4 activities

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
huge mural of Michael Jackson,
with a three-dimensioflal extension
of his arm, probably will be dis-

_.,

,.

played on the wall of a Hollywood
theater. But one critic says the idea
is hardly a thriller.
Tbe Hollywood Arts Council wants to construct the mural on the ·
65-year-old El Capitan Theater, _
which the Walt Disney Co. recently
renovated for $6 million.
"Michael Jackson is talented
and generous," said Robert Nudel-·
man, chairman of the Hollywood
Project Area Contmittee, "but he
doesn't fit with the building~"
Jackson, better known for his
singing and dancing, has appeared
in only one feature film, "The
Wiz," in 1978.

LONDON (AP) - Princess
Diana turned 30 with little pomp
but more circumstance than she
wanted.
.
The princess had wanted Monday to be "business as usual." But
others did not let her birthday go
unnoticed.
When she attended a lunch at
the Savoy Hotel for the benefit of a
children's hospice, she received a
giant birthday cake with 30 candles. She and 12-year-o1d Sharon
Caner, who has cystic fibrosis,
blew out the c;J!ndles in one try.
Prince Chili-les was at the couple's country home, where he was
host of a reception. He was resting
there because of back pain.

•

;_ .. •. .

Partly ( 'loudy

Page 4

onto the board to till the vacancy of
the late Rodney Chevalier.
The next meeting · will be
Wednesday, July 24 at 8 p.m. at the
Soil Conservation Service Office.
Those in attendance were Supervisors Alan Holter, Charles Yost,
Thomas Theiss, Rex Shenefield.
Others in attendance were Blair
Windon and Opal Dyer.

The Miami Herald reporied Monday.
He plans some changes in the
six-bedroom, six-bath house, said
the newspaper.
On the drawing board: ice blue
neon decorations, an aerobics and
dance studio, a recording studio, a
theater, half court for basketball
and a king-and-a-half-size bed
under ceiling stars that twinkle to
music.
Vanilla Ice is touring Europe
and the Far EasL His lawyer, Inaki
Saizabitoria, did oot immediately
return a call for comment.

···-

Pick 3:178
Pick 4: 0907
Cards : 7H, 3-C

1::

NEW YORK (AP) - Pete Rose
was not allowed to wear a professional baseball uniform in a TV
mooae about Babe Ruth because
he's banned from the game.
Producers of the film sought
permission from major league
baseball to use team logos and uniforms for the film, in which Rose
plays baseball great Ty Cobb.
"We told them, 'We don't want
you not to employ Pete Rose, but if
you do, he can't appear in a uniform because he is on the disqualified list,"' Rick White, president
of Major League Baseball Properties, said Monday.
"They suggested using hint in
civilian clothes to solve the problem. They probably changed a
marginal scene or two."
The film's executive producer,
Larry Lyttle, and its producer,
· Frank Pace, did not immediately
return calls Monday.
The film airs on NBC on Oct 6.
John Goodman of "Roseanne"
wiD play Ruth.
Rose was banned from baseball
in 1989 for gambling. Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti said he
believed Rose had bet on games
involving his team. the Cincinnati
Reds. Rose later served five
months in prison for cheating on
his taxes.
Rose discussed his gambling
troubles wilh NBC's Jane Pauley in
an interview that airs Sunday.
"It took me some time to find
out that I had a ¥ambling disorder," he said. ' I'm having no
problem with that right now, but
there's always a possibility that can
come back, so I have to guard
against that
"TJte whole situation saved me,
becafise, you know, I might have
ended up gambling everything. I
don't think I would have, but I
might have and that's scary to

Woman accused of endangering her unborn child More women ·
EASTLAKE, Ohio (AP) - A 28 in Eastlake.
ment Our focus is on this mother
pregnant Eastlake woman was
charged with endangering her
unborn child by repeatedly smoking crack cocaine.
The case could be precedent-setting in Ohio in determining
whether a 6-monlh-old fetus is enti·
tied to the same constiwtional pro.:
tections as a newborn or older
child. officialS said
Carla J. Edwards, 19, was arrested Monday by Eastlake police on a
warrant for falling. to appear in
court last May on a soliciting-forprostitution charge in Cleveland.
The two-count indictment
alleges that Ms. Edwards, "being
the parent of baby Doe, did create a
substantial risk to the ·health or
safety of such child by ingesting
cocaine" between June 9 and June

Ann
Landers

Names in the news-----;

Latest in home video: your operation
WANTAGH, N.Y. (AP)- The
friends who attended Karen Bennett· s last party got to see h side of
her they never had before: the
inside.
Bennet~ a 22-year-old financial
planner, threw the bash last week to
screen a videotape of her recent
gallbladder operanon.
The video was recorded last
month by a tiny camera lowered
inside her abdomen to guide the
surge9ns, who provide play-byplay commentary.

Sabo paces
6-3 Reds
victory

my daughter's teacher had never
been to college. I then put my kids
in a church scbool where they had
several houn of homework every
night I talked to the teacher and she
said the SIUdents had plenty of time
ANNLANDBRS
to do the worlc in class and that my
Ht.l, Lol Aq'elM
-SJD&lt;Icoleaad
kids were goofmg off.
Creai«nSpdlca&amp;e.''
I decided to take my kids out of
school and teach them at home. They
were more relaxed and happier ballet lessons. I learn abo\lt the real ·
fintballd,-and 11!11 very goocl.;
without the.P!mn,-ofcompetition. ·- wadd
in
math,
langUage and visual arts.
If they were havirig JXI)blems with
1t11
tutored
in French by a universitymath in school, they received a low
student
11!11
now in the Sixth gracre:
grade and went from there. At home,
French
book
while my friends at;
if they didn't Wlderstand something,
public
school
arc Slill in the grade;
we stuck with it until they did
five
book.
If you print this leuer, the
Northrop Frye, tbe .famous.
National Education Association will
scholar,
did not go to sdlool unlit
jump all over you because it is
the
age
of
8. After that, ·he regarded:against home schooling. But tests
it
as
"one
of the milder forms of·
show that home schoolers do just as
penal
ICI'Vitude..
And he is right:
weD or better than regular school
Home
schooling
allows
me to be the;
students.
way
eYeiy
child
should
be. Free. --:
Mter two years, my kids took an
A
KID
IN
CANADA
achievement test and they were
DEAR KID: If you area 10-year-:
above grade level in every subject
old
and wrote that letter without:
When we moved to Aorida. I put
help,
you are a great ad for homethem in a public school and they did
beautifully. I'll sign this -- IT schooling. Congratulations.
Do yo11 have questions abolll sa.
WORKED FOR ME
DEAR YOU: Wonderful, but it bill no OM to talk to? AM Lalukrs'·
wouldn't worlc for everybody. I'm booklet, "Sa and the Teen-Ager/
not giving home schooling blanket is franlc and to the poinl. Send ti
approval. Each situation requires self-addressed, long, busiiiUs-sizc
careful assessment Here's someone envelope and a check or money or-·
der for $3.65 (this includes postage
who agrees with you:
Dear Ann Landers· I 1!1110 years and halidling) 10: Teens, c/o Atui
Lalukrs, P.O. BOJC 11562, Chicago,
old. My mother~ me at home.
1U.
6061 1-{)562. (In CQIIQt/o, send
I have time to play with. friends. I
1!11 in a choir and take~violin and $4.45.)

Meigs SWCD holds regular meeting

Judge rules against doctors who
sought to unplug respirator of patient
investigate and act upon Helga
By TONY KENNEDY
Wanglie's conscientious, religious
Associated Press Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A and moral beliefs.·'
William Miller, an attorney for
judge on Monday turned down doc·
the
county-owned hospital, said
tors who wanted to unplug the respirator of an elderly, severely lhere likely will be no appeal.
. Doctors at the hospital routinely
brain-damaged woman despite the
yteld to famdy wtshes about lifewishes of her husband.
"I think she'd be proud of me," support systems. but rarely do famOliver Wanglie said when a judge ilies disagree when doctors recomgranted him p(jwer to make medi- mend terminating care, said Dr.
cal decisions for his wife of 54 Ronald Cranford, a medical ethicist
at the hospital.
years, Helga.
Doctors sought a conservator in
Doctors at Hennepin County
the
case because they believed
Medical Center had asked Dislrict
Wanglie
did not fully understand
Judge Palricia BeloiS to appoint an
independent conservator to decide his wife· s hopeless condition.
Cranford said it is morally wrong
the fate of the 86-year-old woman.
They hoped a conservator would 'to use a respirator on a severely
permit them to take her off the brain-damaged person who has no
machine that has helped keep her hope of recoverr.
"Society wtll have to look at
alive since May I990, when she
whether
it should support spending
feU into a persistent vegetative state
$800,000
for the care of someone
after a respiratory auack.
in
a
persistent
vegetative state
Belois ruled that such decisions
when
there
are
37
million people in
are best left to family members
thts
country
who
are under- or
when they are competent.
"Except for unconvincing testi- uninsured and without adequate
mony from some physicians and medical care,'' Cranford said
"Perhaps what you should do if
health tare providers at the Hennepin County Medical Center, there you want maximum care in this
is no evidence that Oliver Wanglie country is fall into a persistent vegis unable to perform the duties and etative state."
Mrs. Wanglie's medical costs
~esponsibilities of a guardian," the
have
been paid in full under the
JUdge wrote.
family
's insurance policy.
"He is in the best position to
Wanglie said he is holding to a

Ohio Lottery

District honored for bus safety
. The Eastern Local School Dislrict was one of three Ohio school
dtstrtcts honored with the Award of Merit from the Ohio School
Board Association for bus safety.
Accordmg to the June, 1991 issue of the OSBA's magazine
Copley Fairlawn City, Eastern Local and Urbana City school dis:
trtcts were honored for the 1991 school year.
. The .award IS gtven to bus fleets that have maintained a safe drivmg standard for three to four years.

··,

·.

Council meeting postponed
Due to Independence Day, S)'Iacuse ViUage Council will meet
orr July II rather than Thursday.

Beneficial to close Thursday, Friday
The .Beneficial finance office in Pomeroy will close on Thursday
and Fnday for th~ observance of Independence Day.
Continued on P.age 3

..
....__~--------~~------~~

former White House chief of/Staff
who shepherded David Souter
though the conftrmation process, to
help ~ith Thomas' nomination.
"We will review his record just
as closely as if he were not an
African•American,' ~ 'said Dr. BenjamTh L: Hoots, executive director
of the National Association for the
Advancement 'or Colored People.
But he also said that in deciding
whether to publicly support or
oppose Thomas· nomination, "we
have to compare what might happen if we go against him and he
doesn't make it; who will the president appoint?"
The abortion-rights group dislributed copies of Thomas' speech,
to the conservative Herita~e Foundation, in which he pratsed the
essay by Heritage trustee Lehrman.
"All persons cannot be
endowed both with the liberty to
take innocent life by abortion and
with the inalienable right to live,"
Lehrman wrote. Later in the essay
he referred to the abortion rights
granted in the 1973 decision as "a
spurious right born exclusively of
judicial supremacy with not a sin·
~le trace of lawful authority,
tmplicit or explicit, in the actual
text of history of the Constitution
itself."
On Monday, Thomas declined
to answer when asked his views on
abortion, saying he would not discuss any substantive issues before
his confirmation hearings.
Kate Michelman, executive
director of the National Abortion
Rights Action League, urged the
Senate to reject the nomination
" unless Judge Thomas explicitly
repudiates this legal philosophy
and clearly rec·ognizes that the
Constitution protects the fundamental right to privacy including
the right to choose."
Bush on Monday nominated the
43-year-old blade jurist, a member
of the U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit, to replace MarshalL
·
Civil rights groups will have to
decide wbether Thomas' record on
such issues is negative enough to
justify opposing his nomination to
succeed Marshall, the nation' s first
black Supreme Court justice,
Hooks said.
Thomas's humble beginnings as
the grandson of Georgia sharecropper. raised in a home without
indoor plumbing, would weigh in
his favor only if it seemed he had
drawn the right lessons from the
experience, activists said.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said
anyone )Vho opposes Thomas "is
taking him on because they favor
quota$ at!!~ numerical preferences"
for mmonues.
Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., for
whom Thomas worked as a legislative aide, defended the nominee's
commiunent to civil rights.
" Here is a person who knows
discrimination," Danforth, who
has tried to broker a co~promise
on civil rights legislation. told
reporters in St. Louis. "He has a
reaJ. commiunem to fighting injustice.''

-.

LEXINGTON, Ky . (AP) Uncertainty over the economics of
scrubbers is weighing in favor of
burning low-sulfur coal to comply
with ne-w..clean -air standards,
accordmg to the chairman of the
nation's ,second largest investorowned utility.
The choice has been forced by
provisions of the l990 Clean Air
Act that set new standards for pollutants, especially sulfur, which is
found in varying degrees in all
coal.
Coal from the Illinois basin,
which includes western Kentucky,
has particularly high levels of sulfur. Coal from the western United
States, like the Powder River basin
in Wyoming, has a lower sulfur
content and would allow utilities to
meet initial poUution standards.
The other method of complying
with poUution standards would be
to install devices dial remove the
sulfur from coal smoke, called
scrubbers.
"I really believe our industry
has the mind-set today to fuel switch to the maximum extent possible,"said Richard Disbrow, chief
executive officer of American
Eleclric Power Service Corp.
AEP, which is based in Columbus, Ohio. and operates utilities in
seven states with 20 coal-fued generating plants, has not made the
choice between scrubbers and "lowsulfur coal, bllt that day is fast
approaching, Disbrow said.
Many fear the result of that
choice could be a crippling, perhaps even mortal, blow to some
parts of the coal industry.
Disbrow said during the first
meeting of the Kentucky Coal
Authority that utilities have no
assurances that state regulatory
agencies will allow the recovery of
the costs of installing scrubbers.
And even if the costs can be recovered, it is usually not allowed until
after the scrubbers begin operations
year after construction begins.
Disbrow said utilities will likely
opt for lower sulfur coal initially
because it gives them more options
than building scrubbers.
"Because once you put the
brick and mortar together, you're
stuck for 30 vears," Disbrow said.

Chase ends in
wreck; two
are arrested
Two West Virginia men are in
the Meigs County Jail following a
police chase which took the subjects across the Ritchie Bridge at
Ravenswood, W.Va., and ended in
a wreck in Chester.
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reports that around I I p.m.
on Tuesday, West Virginia authorities began to pursue a yellow Pontiac Firebird foUowing a report that a
subject in the car had ftred several
shots in a Ravenswood trailer
court.
The subjects crossed the Ritchie
Bridge and headed toward Portland. After passing Harris Fagns in
Portland, lhe police pursuit ceased.
However, a West Vtrginia trooper
continued to follow the car.
· Meigs County Sheriffs Deputy
Robert Beegle, en route to a call at
Letart Falls, was notified by
R,avenswood Police of the pursuit.
Beegle then radiqed Deputy Ralph
Trussell, who was off duty, to head
for Long Bottom _
The subjects than headed for
State Route 7 via S.tate Route 248.
State Game Protector Keith Wood,
who was on State Route 248 and
w~ foll~wing the inci~ent on his
radio, watted for the vehtcles.
According to Soulsby, the car
came up behind Wood ' s vehicle
an.d attempted to pass by going off
the roadway on the right, up the
embankment and came back down
on the roadway, clipping the right •
front bumper of Wood's state vehicle.
The driver of the Pontiac failed
to stop ~~ the stop sign at the intersection of Routes 7 and 248 and
drove across Route 7, into thjllawn
of Rex Bailey; where the car struck
the comer of the Bailey home.
Continu~d on page 3

•

-'

"If you fuel-switch, you get aneth cr bite at lhe apple if your decisi11n
goes awry.'
'
The dilemma posed by lhe federa! pollution standards pits pans
of the coal mdustry agamst each
other as well as endangering the
whole industry, officials at the con-

ference said.
Many participants at the authoRty meeting, which included execO- ·
uves of some of the largest coal .
~ompanies in the nation, said Lhett
mdustsy had lost the public relalions battle leading up 10 the 1990
legislation.
·

THE CLOGGING SISTERS • Clogaing their way through
Elvis Presley's "GJ. Blues" at Thursday's July 4 celebration in
Middleport wiD be sisters, Love Batey, left, and Andrea Wist. The
patriottc sbow directed by Paulette Harrison will feature special
music by members or the Crossover Band, Richard Butcher
Sandy Butcher and Cheryl Walters. Servicemen attending wiD b~
recognized during the program.

Middleport ceremonies _will
start at 11:30 a.m., July 4
Fourth of July festivities in Middleport will begin with an II :30
a.m. parade carrying out the "For
God and Country" theme and conelude at 9:30 p.m. with a gigantic
fueworks display.
Bob Gilmore. president of the
Middleport Community Associa lion and chairman of the celebration, asks that all units for the
parade be in place at I I a.m. on
Ash Street in lower Middleport.
The parade, with Gen. James
Hartinger as parade marshal, will
move out at 11:30 a.m., proceed up
Art Lewis Blvd. to Gen. Hartinger
Blvd., out to Second St., and then

. on to Dave Diles Park where Lhe
trophies will be awarded.
. The evening program at the park
wtll begm at 6:30. Chuck Kitchen
will be emcee with Mayor Fred
Hoffman to introduce Gen
Hartinger, speaker. Entertainmeni
will include a palriotic performance
by the Shady River Shufflers and
the Crossover Band. The ftreworks
display will begin at9:30 p.m.
Other activities will include an
aU-day hymn sing at the American
Legion hall sponsored bY the Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post and a
fish fry at the Legion Park by the
firemen.

P~TRIOTIC PERFORMANCE · Tbese Shady River Sbul- ,
ners Mil carry out the "For .God and Country" theme or the Mid· .
dlep?rt July 4 cel!bration when they perform at 7:15 Thursday ,
eyen:ng at Dave Diles Park. The patriotic sbow will feature a 8 • •
c~l tribute to servicemen. Clogging to "Yankee Doodle Dan:l';.• :
wtll be, left to right, front, Ashley Hannahs, Andrea Krawsczyo ·
and Denise Cotterill, second row, Lara McCleary and Meggl'
Mc.Cieary, th~d row, Melissa Ramsburg, Sara Larkins, Susie Cot~
ter:U, and Jod•~ Sisson, and back, Daniel Young .

'

..

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