<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11081" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/11081?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:54:03+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42047">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/60ea16d340dfcad80a4e6205f4257a0a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b035aa2e4173bca16e0fab52c3ea137f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34960">
                  <text>Page 14-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 24, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DOUBLE Manufacturer's
COUPON S~Y!N.~§.
5
Big Bear Stores will D~~~~E ;~:..~:~~;~"a:~YSize Item Named On The coupon

Ohio Lottery

Cheshire, HT
advance in
KC play

Pick 3:186
Pick 4: 1916
Cards : 6-H, 6-C
K-D; J-S
Super Lotto:

Cloudy tonight. Low In mid60s. Friday, partly cloudy.
High In 80s.

7-9-19-35-40-43
Kicker:684789

Page4

Coupons of UP to 50c for
' Cou na 01 socOr ten. Not T'E!t~de~.'V::'~!'~i ~~. ~~:~.
•otter umlttd To Manut-gtu~~~:. ot ~her Reteilers and No:!: tdentlct1 Items And Coupon•
Coupon&amp;, Fr~t Cour.:~,;_ PurchaMd. Additional Coupona
Umit Ont Cou ~ .-~'.....med At Face Value.
Over so• Will 8 t nl......-v

I

I

•

Vol. 42, No. 57

2 Sections, 16 Pages 25 cents
A Mullimedle Inc. Newspeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 25, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

Southern raises may be rescinded; Norris resigns
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
Raises for Southern Local
School District's superintendent
and treasurer given at the Monday
night meeting of the Southern
Board of Education will have to be
rescinded if the district has to go
into the state loan program for
opernting expenses.
That was the word from both
Scott Wolfe, vice-president of the
Board, and Dennie HiU, treasurer.
At the school Wednesday to
begin an evaluation of the district's
financial condition and make the
determination on the state loan program was Kirk Grandy of the state

auditor's office.
An answer on whether the district has adequate money with
which to operate or whether they
will have to $0 into the state loan
program, wtll take a month or
more, according to Hill.
While the treasurer repeated
Thursday morning that he is "pretty
sure" that the district wiU have to
go into the loan fund. Wolfe contended that the board members
were told Monday night when the
raises were given that "the district
could avert the loan fund."
"If there is adequate money, the
raises will go into effect", said
Wolfe, "but if there is not adequate

money there will be no raise for
Ord or Hill."
It, however, has no bearing on
increases for the teachers, Wolfe
explained.
He denied that the levy had anything to do with the teachers' salary
increases. "Whether or not the levy
passed those rnises were 'already in
stone' and to be paid regardless,"
he said. He gave no explanation as
to where the money would come
from if the levy had not passed.
The board vice-president said
the increases were tied to a contract
signed two years ago.
"The flTst year the teachers had
a zero increase, the second year

the increases were Board members
Susie Gruescr, Wolfe, and Denn y
Evans. Charles Norris and Gary
Willford voted against the increases.
NORRIS RESIGNS
Meanwhile, Norris has resigned
from the Board.
Thursday morning in talking
about his resignation, he said that
there have been "upsetting situation s" and that sometim es he
doesn ' t see things the way other
board members do . He said he
think s the "kids ought to come
first"
At the Monday night mee ting
Norris said that he was elec ted
the vote to give the raises was three for four years and really wanted to
"for" and two "against". Voting for fulfill the obligation, but tha t

(July I, 1991) a six percent
increase, and the third year (Jan. 1.
1992) a four percent increase.
He went on to explain that none
of the levy money wiU be collected
until the first half taXes of January,
1992, so "the school district does
not have any of that money yet, and
will not have it until the flTSl distnbution in April, 1992."
He said that as things stand now
"the motion on the salary increases
(for Ord and Hill) will be rescinded
at the Aug. 19 meeting, or some
special meeting before then."

"somet im es you JU St have to do
thin gs yo u rea lly do not wan t to
d 0.

00

He smd that '" the past he has
had to "vote to lake people' s jobs ,
not to buy new tex tbooks, to cut
out suppl ies, tr yin g io make it
through until th e leg islature could
do something to help local sc hool
districts, or somehow the district
could gel more money, and then in
the final analysis, after worrying
and fretting, it was just for raises."
He did state that he had hopes
that with th e passing of the four
mills in May and the re-evaluation
of property which will raise taxes,
the district could stay ou t of the
loan program.

Commissioners to finance new
tractor through Farmers Bank
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff

~ ­

,..- ·

California

Cantaloupe
Enjoy These
Flavorful
Melons

Enjoy This Flavorful Corn!

Grown In Ohio

Sweet
Corn

Fresh
Summer Time

Peaches
Sweet &amp; Juicy

lb.

Special Of The Weeki

Jce Cold Cut Halves
and Quarter

Watermelon
Good Eating

Tropical Foliage

House
Plants

Good
Selection
of

Varieties

HOUSE DEMOLISHED • This house on
Ebeneezer Street in Pomeroy is being demolished by street crews after being declared a safety hazard by Pomeroy Village Council. Numerous discussions have been held regarding the

bouse after a neighbor contacted council about
snakes and other pests near the structure.
Attempts to contact tbe property owner were
unsuccessful, so the house was torn down 30
days after a notice was posted on tbe building.

.--Local briefs____,
Motorcycle wrecked, abandoned

The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol investigated
an incident in which a motorcycle was found wrecked and abandoned Wednesday on C.R. 10 in Salem Township.
A paiTol report indicates the motorcycle is a black Yamaha 750
from which the license plate had been removed. The vchtele suffered moderate, disabling damage and had to be removed from the
scene.
The paiTol is currently searching for the owner or driver of the
motorcycle.

'·

Care-a-van set July 27
The American Osteopathic Association Care-A-Van will be at
the Louridge Community Center from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m. on Satur·
day, July 27.
The van wiU be staffed by volunteer osteopathic physicians, students and nurses to provide health screening in underscrved areas.
The screening will include height and weight, blood pressure,
pulmonary function, vision and hearing testing, total cholesterol,
and nutrition education.
The center is located in Lottridge, five miles west of Coolville.
Those in the area in need of transportation to the Care-A-Van may
contact the Center between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m.
A bake sale and flea market will be held by the senior citizens in
conjunction with the van visit.

Venoy vehfcle damaged in incident
.Food Club .
Fresh Frying

Chicken·Leg
Quarters

Turkey
Breast
4to7lb.
Size
.lb.

;

Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy Scott Trussell inves tiga ted an
accident that took place on private property on the Frvc Pomts area
on Wednesday afternoon.
Ferrell W. Day of Rutland had left his 1981 Volkswagen runnmg ·
while he entered !he Five Points E~prcss. Accordong to Mcogs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the emergency brake on the car
failed to hold and the car rolled across State Route 7 and struck a
I984 Oldsmobile owned by Brenda L. Venoy of Pomeroy. There
was light damage to the Day car and modernte damage to Vcnoy' s
car.

Alarms alert officers
An alarm at the Five PoiniS Express near Pomeroy early Thursday morning is believed to have thwarted a burglary atiCmpt.
Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy Jeff Miller, who responded to
the call, reported that an attempt ~t entry had been made at the store
by prying on a side door of the buildmg.

Deputies investigate /hefts
Two thefts have been reported to the Meigs County 'Sheriff's
Deparunent.
Continued on page J

Man charged
with false
practice of
medicine
CINCINNATI (AP) - A man
has been Jailed on charges he practiced medicine without a license at
several hospitals, including treating
patients, prescribing medicine and
performing surgery, police said
today.
Thomas David West, 32, of
Erlanger, Ky., was charged
Wednesday, police said. He was to
be arraigned today in Hamilton
County Municipal Court on three
misdemeanor counts of practicing
medicine without a licen se. two
felony counts of illegal processing
of drug documents and two felony
counts of sexual penetration, police
Sgt. John Burke said.
Po lice declined to identifv the
Cincinnati-area hospitals ~here
West allegedly practiced.
Police investigated after receiving a complaint Sunday from one
of West's "patients," Burke said.
When charged Wednesday,
West already was in the Hamilton
County Justice Center jail on a
felony theft charge alleging that he
stole $500 by deception from
another person, Burke ~aid . That
charge resulted from West's phony
medical practice, Burke said.
Police al lege West intentionally
made a false prescription for a dangerous drug on April 25 and Junc
29.
.
The sexual penetration charges
allege that West examined a
woman "patient" as part of his
false 'medical practice, Burke said.
Police arrested West on Sunday
on the theft charge and released
him on his recognizance. When he
failed to appear for arraignment
Monday, an arrest warrant was
issued. He was rearrested Wednesday and was held on $500.000
bond when the additional charges
were filed, poliee said.

The Meigs County Commissioners agreed to finance the purchase of a tractor through Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
Pomeroy when they met in regular
session on Wednesday afternoon.
The Case International tractor
arrived at the county garage two
weeks ago. It was purchased to
replaee a Massey-Ferguson tractor
which had been used for several
years and was in need of major
repair work.
In addition to contacting Farmers Bank, the highway dcpa.nmcnt
had obtained interest rate quotations from Home National Bank in
Racine, Central Trust in Middleport and Bank One, Athens, N.A.
Home National Bank's rate was
-quoted at seven percent; Central
Trust's from 6.93 percent to 8.63
percent: and Bank One's at6.3 percent.
Farmers Bank's rate of five percent was the lowest quotation
received and the commissioners
agreed to finance the purchase
through that institution.
The cost of the tractor , after
installation of additional equip-

ment, is estimated to be $32,000.
Rains that arrived in th e area
this week have assisted the hi ghway department in grad ing work,
according to Superintend ent Ted
Warner. Warner reported th at in
addition to grading, the dcparuncnt
is also doing mowing along county
roadways.
·
The contractor has now completed hot mix paving on Hysell
Run Road and is about to begin
work in the Story's Run area.
Those projects arc being funded by
Issue 2 monies.
In other business, the commissioners voted to purcbase an electronic ballot counter and voter registration system for the Meigs
County Board of Elections upon
that board's recommendation . The
only bid received for the system.
from Business Records Corporation. was submiued in the amount
of$37,781.
In addition to electronically
counting ballots, the system will
allow the board office to perform
many tasks in-house that had pre viously been performed elsewhere,
such as printing voter lists and
preparing jury lists.
The commissioners moved to

advertise for bids for interior renovation work at the Meigs County
Courthouse. That work will be performed in the offices of the county
auditor and the probate court.
The board also disc ussed installation of air conditioning at th e
Meigs County Jail. No action has
been iaken on that project.
In other action, the commissioners:
- discussed with County Engineer Philip Roberts a drainage
problem at the Basil Cremeans
property on County Road 3 and a
complaint regarding needed road
repairs on Beech Grove Road from
Ralph McCune;
-approved a $10,000 transfer of
funds within the highwa y department' s budget;
- exec uted an casement to allow
the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Commission to have acce ss to
county property for the purpose of
constructing a building adjacent to
the EMS office. That building will
be used for hospital storage.
Present at the meeting, in addi tion to county garage perso nnel.
were Commissioners RiehM.:!
Jones, Manning Roush and Davil!
Koblcntz and Clerk Mary Hobstettcr.

Ohio Supreme Court voids
local liquor sales ordinan~es
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state Department of Liquor
Control says cities and voters still
have a voice in liquor decisions
despite an Ohio Supreme Court rul ing that blocks municipal regula tion of alcoholic beverage sales.
Justices rul ed un animou sly
Wednesday that municipalities cannot use zoning ordinances to ban
sales of beer and wine at servi ce
station s beca use th e sta te ha s
exclusive regulatory power.
The ruling in the liqu or case
struck down a 1987 ordinance in
the Cleveland suburb of Wes~akc.
Mascot Petroleum Co. had challenged the ordinance.
Mascot received a permit from
the liquor control department for iL~
Sunoco Sunmart to se ll beer and
wine for off-premises consumption.
Westlake obtained an order
from Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Court blocking the sa les
under a local ordinance. That deci sio n was overturned by a state

appeals court.
The Supreme Court upheld the
appeals court ruling.
Justice A. William Sweeney
wrote in the high court's opinion
that changes in state law in 1987
gave the state exc lusive authority
in such cases.
But Liquor department Director
John Hall said that loca l governmcnts still have the right under law
to object to the issuance of hquor
permits.
"Citizens ha ve ih e power to
co ntrol alcohol sales by means of
local option elections which allow
voters to determine to what extent,
if any, alcoholic beverages wtll be
permitted to be sold wothm a partrcular voting precinct or residence
district," Hall said.. .
The Ohoo Munocopal Leag ue
satd the rulmg would affect several
dozen villages and clUes woth stmolar ordinances.
"It's unfortunate, but the court
is interpreting the law as they_sec
it, and if the (Legislature) thtnks

it's appropriate, obviously they can
move on !his item and mak e
changes in the statute," said John
Mahoney, a spokesman for th e
league.
A bill pending in the Senate
would prohibit liquor sales at service stations.
"I think this merely changes the
focus on this particular issue, and 1
think it 's an issue that prohably
won't go away," Mahoney said.
In other action,the court:
- Ruled that grandparents have
no legal right to vi sit grandchildren
unless there has hccn some di sruplion in the marriage of the grand child's parents.
- Upheld the aggravated mur der conviction and death sentence
of Melvin Bonnell in Cuyahoga
Co unty. Justice Andrew Doughts
sai d Bonnell's arraignment without
ho s attorney present did not consti tutc an error since the defendant
pl ea ded innocen t and made no
incriminating stateme nts.

Dahmer was quiet, average student
RICHFIELD, Oh io (AP) Alcohol led to problems earl y on
for a former Ohioan who has confessed he killed and dismembered
II people in his Milwaukee apartment.
Bath Township Police Captain
John Gardner said Wednesday that
Jeffrey Dahmer was arrested on
Oct. 7, 1981, at a hotel bar on
charges of disorderly conduct and
resisting arrest
"He was intoxicated, and he
was asked to leave but he refused
to leave the premises," Gardner
said.
Gardner said the police report
alleged that Dahmer carried an
open bottle of whiskey and failed
to cooperate with police making
the arrest.

spokesperson said. Wednesday thai
court records that would show the
dtsposition of thai case would noi
be available until today.
Dahmer, 31, has co nfessed to
the Milwaukee killings. He was to
be charged today, authorities said.
About the only clear memory
Chip Crofoot of Copley ha s of
Dahmer from their sc hool days in
Summit County is the image of
Dahmer sw igging from a liquor
bottle between classes.
"I think as far back as seventh
grade, he always had a little bottle
of gin," Crofoot told The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer in a story published today.
Dahmer's stepmother, Shari
Dahmer, also said alcoholism was
part of her stepson's problems.

An Alfrnn M11nirin~l rf\nrt

•i

'.'

He wa s discharged from th e
U.S. Army because of hi s drinking
problem, Mrs. Dahmer said. Afterwards, he tri ed to return to college,
but was thwarted once again by
alcohol.
"While he was at Ohio Stmc
(University in Co lumbu s) he
would sell his plasma two or three
times a week in order to get money
to buy alcohol," Mrs. Dahmer told
the newspaper. "He was always
drinking. That's why he nunked
out of college."
Kevin VanderVeen of {\kron,
who attended Revere High School
woth Dahmer, said Wednesday he
remembers seeing Dahmer "smoking drugs" at a house on the strecl
where VanderVeen lived in the late
1970s.
.

�Thursday, July 25, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AKE'l\

~1MULTIMEDfA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publlsher(Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All l•tters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub lished . Letters should bE" In good taste, addressing Issues , not personali ties .

Voinovich promises
crusade on child support
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Gov. George Voinovich's administration is preparing
a bill that could craclc down on about 500,000 Ohioans - mostly men
who are not paying or have fallen seriously behind in their child-support
obligations.
.
·
.
.
If it passes in the form outlined last weelc by Human Ser:v•ces D':ector
Terry Wallace, delinquent pareniS would not be able to obtam state licenses.
This would mean that they could not legally drive a car, go fishing or
hunting or practice in any of the regulated trades or professions ranging
from barbering to medicine.
Voinovich and Wallace said at a news conference that the details of the
bill are still being studied to collect hundreds of millions of dollars owed
to about 1.4 million Ohio children. Wallace S3ld each delinquent parent
has an average of two to three children.
"This is going to be a crusade," Voinovich said of the program that
already includes efforts to assist state employees who cannot collect
court-ordered child support. The employees must come forward voluntanIy to get help.
.
.
But workers in the Department of Human Servtces who are delmquent
could be fued unless they catch up, Wallace said.
.
Voinovich said he hopes to persuade private employers to ado~t policies similar to those of the state. He will try to sJrengthoo the state s policies by having them negotiated into upcoming contracts with public
employee unions, he said
Ohw's enforcement program has slipped in the past decade as the
numbers of errant parents has grown steadily, Voinovich said. .
.
The operation is monitored by the federal government, which withholds welfare subsidies when states frul to meet certam standards for
establishing parenthood, obtaining court orders and Iocati~g pare~ts.
Voinovich said Ohio already has lost $6.5 mdhon m substdtes and
stands to lose about $80 million more unless his administration can tum
things around. Currently, Ohio's delinquent parents owe $930 million.
Wallace said that about half of the state's 4I6,000 Aid To Dependent
Children recipieniS are children who should be getting child support
.
Their benefits, along with Medicaid to whtch ADC rectptents are enntled, swelled the state's human services budget to $11.5 billion - of a
total budget of $27.1 billion- for the biennium that began July I.
Wallace announced other elements of the plan that include elevating
the department's child-support program to the deputy director level, public education efforts that will include patermty estabhshment tratnmg m
high schools, a statewide telephone hot line to answer 9uestions and take
, tips on delinquent parents and theu whereabouiS, pubhcauon of a list of
Ohio's IO "most wanted delinquents," and the assignment of two fulltime investigators to traclc down parents with the highest amount of
arrcarages.

Today in history

,,,,

By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, July 25, the 206th day of 1991. There are 159 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
On July 25, 1956, 51 lives_were lost when the Italian liner Andrea
Doria sank after it collided w1th the Swedtsh shtp Stockholm south of
Nantucket Island off the New England coast.
On this date:
In I 593. France's King Henry IV converted from Protestantism to
Roman Ca,tholicism.
In 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named general of the Anny, the fust
officer to hold the rank.
In 1868, Congress passed an act creating the Wyoming Territory.
In J909, French aviator Louis Bleriot new across the English Channel
in a monoplane, traveling from Calais to Dover in 37 minutes.
.
In 1943, Benito Mussolini was dismissed as premier of Italy dunng
World War II .
In I 952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the
United States.
'
In 1963, the United States, the Soviet Union and Britain initialed a
treaty in Moscow prohibiting the testing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere, in space or underwater.
.
.
.
.
In 1969. a weelc after the Chappaquiddtck aCCident that clatmed the l1fe
of Mary Jo Kopechne, Sen. Edward M. K~nnedy, D-Mass .. pleaded ~utlty
10 a charge of leaving the scene of an acctdent, then went on televiSion to
address his constitueniS.
.
In 1978, the first "test tube baby" was born m Oldham. ~ngland.
Louise Joy Brown had been conceived through the techmque of . m-vttro
fertilization" pioneered by Patrick Steptoe and Robert Edwards.
In I979 President Carter issued a letter absolvmg Dr. Samuel Mudd,
the physic~ who'dtreated the broken leg of John Wilkes Booth, of any
role in the assassmauon of Prestdent Lmcoln. .
.
In 1984 Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savllskaya became the fust
woman lO ~alk in space as she carried out more than three hours of experiments outside the orbiting space station Salyut VU .
.
Ten years ago: Senace Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd prediCted at a
news conference that President Reagan would overcome Democratic
ilion and win con~essional passage of a three-year taX cut measure.
0
PWve years ago: MoVIe director. Vincente Minnelli, famed. f?,r suc~.film
musicals as "Meet Me in St. Lows," "An Amencan m Pans and The
Band Wa,~ton," died in Los Angeles at age 76.
year ago: The
ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie, met with
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to discuss Iraq's economic dispute with
Kuwait. The Senate formally denounced Sen. Dave Durenberger, RMinn .. for fmancial improprieties. Roseanne Barr sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" during a double-header at Jack Murphy Stadium in San
Diego.
.
.
Today's Birthdays: Acuess _Estelle Getty ts 68. Actress Janet Margolin
is 48. Singer Donna Theodore JS 46.
Thought for Today: "My friend s, there are no friends." -Coco
Chane!, French fashion designer (1883- I 97 I).
, ·

One

t
p,
I

'

.,.

·u.s.

Fair weather will prevail over Ohio next few days

OH 10 Weath er
Friday, July 26

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 25, 1991

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) time of year range from the lower
Generally fair weather will prevail 80s over northern Ohio to the midover Ohio the next several days die 80s in the south. Lows are usnwith pleasant temperatures.
· ..• ,.ally in the 60 to 65 degree range.
Considerable cloudiness pre:=-' On the latest weather map, a stavailed over the state today, prompt- tionary front extended from the
ing a forecast of some possible middle Atlantic coast through Kenshowers by evening, but clearing tuclcy to northern Texas with weak
slcies are expected over all but the low pressure areas along the front
extreme southern part tonight. in Virginia and Kentucky. A rein Overnight lows will range from the forcing cold front extended from
middle 50s to around 60.
Lalce Huron southwest through
Friday is shaping up as a great lower Michigan into Iowa. A large
day across the entire state. Partly to high pressure system was centered
mostly sunny slc.ies are expected over the Dakotas.
along with pleasant temperatures.
. The cold front over Michigan
Highs will top out in the 75 to 80 wtll move across Ohto 1oday and
degree range.
merge with the front to our south.
Slightly below normal tempera- This front will then move slowly
tures are forecast through the southeast and extend from Maine
weekend. Normal hiAhs for this

Accu-Weather$ forecast for daytime conditions and

Is U. S. going all-out to find MIA/POWs?
WASHINGTON - Behind
closed doors . Army Col. Millard
Peck has told eight members of
Congress and one senator that the
government's effort to find live
American POWs in Vietnam is a
farce.
Peck told the riveted lawmalcers
about his feeli ngs when he joined
the Pentagon's Office for Prisoners
of War and Missing in Action. "!
initially JU St wanted to fix the
office." After a while, Peck
changed hi s mind."! don't want to
be part of this," he decided. "I
don't want anyone to say I sold out
my buddies in Vietnam."
His comments carne in a closeddoor session of a House Foreign
Affairs subcommittee hearing on
May 30. The session has been classified as top secret. but our associace Jim Lynch has pieced together
what transpired.
The meeting was chaired by
Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., who
walked out after less than a half
hour and declared to the waiting
press that Peck's allegations were
flimsy and that there was no government conspiracy to block POW

investigations. Solarz missed out
on the last two hours of the secret
session in which Peck exposed the
failures of the program.
Peck's debut on Capitol Hill
came shortly after his pithy resignation letter was made public. In
that letter, he challenged President
Bu sh's assertion that the
POW /MIA issue was of the " highest priority" in his administration.
Peck wrote that "the entire issue is
being manipulated by unscrupulous
people in the government or associated with the government."
There have been I,400 reported
sighti ngs of U.S. servicemen in
Vietnam since the end of the war.
None of them have been confirmed, but Peck implied that the
Pentagon goes out of its way to
debunk each report
Peck told the committee about
an Air Force captain who, while
researching the war, found a credible Laotian general with new information about Site 85, an Air Force
radar base in Laos. The general
claimed he had participated in a
raid on Site 85 and that he was sure
two or three Ameri can soldiers
were captured and taken north. The

gene ral was willing to talk, and
Peele was willing to listen. But he
said he was stopped by Ann Mills
Griffiths, the director of the private
National Lea~ue of Families of
Amefican Prisoners and Missing in American prisoners. Peck said the
Southeast Asia. Peck said Griffiths information was di smi ssed on the
told him , "You're forbidden to do grounds that the te stimo ny of a
birdwatcher was not credtble.
this. I'll handle it. "
In the closed hearing , Rep .
We have reported in the past
Robert
Lagomarsino, R-Calif. ,
that Griffiths is not a governm ent
asked
Peck
if the problems were a
official and is supposed to be a
matcer
of
"disorganization
or conwatchdog for the prisoners and
spinacy."
Peck
replied,
"It
is
charitheir families, but she mouth s the
government li ne. Peck ·wid the . table to say disorganized. I really
committee that Griffiths repeatedly think it's much more." By the time
blocked his and others' efforts to Peele uttered those words, Solarz
pursue sighting reports and had had already left the meeting to tell
access to intelligence data often the press there was no conspiracy.
before the Defense Intelligence and had gone off to other commitments.
Agency was able to review it.
Peck privately concedes he is a
Griffiths has previously dented
marked
man for speaking out, and
Peck's allegations and called them
we
have
learned that an effort to
" ludicrous," considering he only
discredit
him
is already underway.
worked in the POW office for eight
But
he
is
still
spealcing out, and is
months.
scheduled
to
address
the Senate
It was long enough to convince
Rules
Committee
today
(July 25).
Peck that the government wasn't
The
hearing
will
focus
on a bill
sincere about going after remaining
POWs if they exist. He described proposed by Sens. Charles Grassone report from a Laotian bird- ley, R-lowa and Robert Smith, Rwatcher who reported see ing N.H., that would create a select
committee to study the POW issue.
MERGER MANIA - A wave
of bank mergers is changing the
country's financial landscape, and
it will lead to further depersonalization of the neighborhood banlc.
The mergers are no accident.
They're the intended effect of Bush
administration policies that call for
greater consolidation to strengthen
the industry.
Government
economists believe that this will
malce the industry healthier in the
long run. The merger mania was
touched off by a crisis that has seen
hundreds of U.S . banks failing or
skirting the edge of failure. The
strong are swallowing up the wealc.
MINI-EDITORIAL~ The Senate apparently felt it couldn't get by
without its precious honorari a
unless it gave iiSclf a $23,200 pay '
raise. That comes as a nasty blow
to the thousands of federal employees who were told last year that
under new government ethics laws,
they also can't moonlight. They
can't take money for writing freelance articles for publications. In
some cases, they can't even teach
night classes. The federal employees have one disadvantage that the
senators don't. They can't vote
themselves a pay raise to malce up
for the loss.
Copyright, 199I, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Economic development
Regardless of your status in the
workforce - whether you are a college graduate, someone with a fulltime job, out of work but looking
for a job or retired - we are all
affected by two words that th e
whole world seems to revolve
around: the economy. In Ohio, a
carefully targeted state economic
development strategy can stimulate
immediate growth and foster
longterm employment.
National trends seem to indicate
that the recession has bottomed out.
Consumer spending has resumed ,
industrial production has increased
for the second month in a row and
most business sectors have slowly
begun to restock their inventories.
Like many states, Ohio's economy typically lags behind nationaJ
economic trends. Our seasonal
adju sted unemployment rate for
June was 6.4 percent, compared
with a 7 percent nati onal rate.
However. filings for new unem-

ployment compensation claims
have begun to decline, in line with
national trends. Personal income
tax receipts also ran ahead of estimates for last month. Talcen together, these signs from our own state
seem to substantiate forecasts that a
slow. r ut steady, national economic
recow ry is underway.
A decade ago, Ohio was fully in
the grips of a recession that pushed
the unemployment rate higher and
higher. At the height of that recession. Ohio's public and private sectors came toge,ther to plant the
seeds for economic recovery . The
Ohio Housing Finance Agency was
created as well as Ohio's Thomas
Edison Program was established.
Massive new business invesunents
were sought, and those efforts paid
off as big name companies such as
Intenmet Inc ., T.S. Trim, Pillsbury,
Ford and Honda- to name a few made massive invesunents in Ohio.
Clearl y the state's economy is far

IMansfield I 79• I•

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

stronger. more diversified and
more competitive than it was 10
years ago.
.
Governor George Voinovich is
now putting his new plans together
for the state's economic development agenda. His proposed operating budget for the Ohio Department of Development continued all
major economic development programs already in existence. The
Department of Development was
also recommended for a 14 percent
spending boost by the new administration.
By far, Governor Voinovich' s
most controversial economic development initiative is his proposal to
create I 2 regional offices throughout the state. The Governor waniS
these outposts to be head ed by
"Economic Development Outreach
Teams" to facilitate growth of
those areas hardest hit by the recession. He correctly points out that
Ohio's emergence from the "rust

Sen Jan M. Long
belt" era did -not evenly distribute
economic prosperity throughout the
state. Many areas of Ohio, including Appalachia Ohio, have been
left to fend for themselves. The
Governor claims that a dozen
Development offices, one located
in Chillicothe, located throughout
the state will help those areas find
prosperity.
Few state driven programs are
more vital to Ohio's long-term economic viability than those of the
Ohio Department of Development.
Hopefully, the Governor's economic development initiatives will
assist in the economic recovery of
Ohio.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, Sutte Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comment~ about these
or any other issues. '-'t &gt;' number is
(614)-466-8 156, and oooy address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio.
43215.

IND.

•I Columbus I eo• I

Rain Flurriss

J rlirln'r lrnnw hnr T rtPr1riPrf

·'

1n

think out loud, hoping my verbal- didn' t need this.
The previous Friday night the
ized thought process would begin
to sound like a coherent explana- family 19-year-o ld had flounced
tion. "Well, for one thing, Vanity out of the living room where her
Fair is my favorite magazine, and father and I were watching a CounI'm used to seeing some classy por- try-Western dance show trying to
trait of one of the people featured piclc up a new twirl, announcing,
in the magazine on the cover."
''I'm going into my room and lis"You mean just head -a nd - ceo to some REAL music!" A half
shoulder shots? " he asked.
hour before that she had pro''No, not always, but never nounced nothing in our closets fit
naked. Think about it this way: to accompany her to the night club
What if it was Woody Allen stand- where her boyfriend was playing
ing there nalced, his hands draped "straight-edge punk," or at least I
over his chest and crotch?"
thinlc that's what she called it. If I'd
He wrinkled his nose. Ah, I was written it down, I could tell you.
And now I want to shove poor
starting to malce a point, I thought.
"Or, John Candy?"
pregnant Demi off the cover of
He wrinlcled his nose and sruclc Vanity Fair just because she's
out his tongue.
nalced. Twenty years ago, when I
''Or any other woman who was flouncing out of the living
wasn't pregnant?"
room where my parents were
His tongue went back and his watching Lawrence Welk, I'd have
nose unsnarled, but he conceded thought the portrait great art and
the point and I pressed it. "Then if defied my pareniS to say anything
you'd just as soon not see men or against it. I'd have been glad if it
non-pregnant women nalced on the made them uncomfortable and
cover of Vanity Fair, why is it OK thought it was just what they
for a pregnant woman to appear in deserved
I may be saddened to admit I
the all-to~ethel'l"
He looked even more confused don't want my conventions chalbut nodded his head, and I slunk lenged when I checlc· out at the
off feeling a lot like I'd just supermarlcet, but I'm afraid it &lt;Ill
manned the picket line that got this boils down to not wanting to be
Vanity Fair ISSUe banned iii all the uncomfortable when I shell out my
Winn-n1Y1P: t:tnrP:~ . J~eminv . T hard-earned money for MY maga-

Sunny

Pr. Cloudy

Clcudy

C1991 Accu-Wsather, Inc.

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Extended forecast:
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
Saturday through Monday:
Fair through the period. Lows 60-65. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday, partly cloudy. High near
55-60. Highs 75-80.
80.

Dissolutions, divorces processed
Actions for dissolution of marriage have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Terri L. Powell and James F. Powell, both of Middleport; Lisa Carol
Compson and Timothy Scott
Compson, both of Rutland; Timothy D. Lawrence and Dena M.
Lawrence, both of Pomeroy; and
Joseph L, Kirby, Sr., and Peggy A.
Kirby, both of Racine.
Divorce actions have been flied

in the court by Melissa G. Johnson ,
Middleport, against William A.
Johnson, Timexila, Calif.; Judy Lee
Tyree, Syracuse, against Gregory
Marie Tyree, Middleport; and Carmen D. Marshall, Racine, against
Roy Allen Marshall, Pomeroy.
A divorce has been granted to
Marcella Jacks from Dannie
(Willie) Jaclcs.
Civil case dismissed
A dismissal entry has been filed
in the case of Home National Banlc
against Terry Brewer.

--Area deaths-- ..----Local briefs----.
Lois Ballard
Lois Elaine Ash Ballard, 34, of
105 Center Street, Crestline, died
unexpectedly on July I8, 1991 at
the Mansfield Memorial Hospital at
Mansfield.
Born on March 28, 1957, she is
survived by her husband Melvin
(Butch) Ballard, four sons, Roger,
Christopher and Adam Likens, and
Shane Ballard, and one daughter,
Angela Likens, all at home.
Also surviving are her pareniS,
four sisters, Ruby, Violet, Evelyn
and Vivian, and a brother, Marie, of
Shelby.
Graveside services were conducted Saturday at the Oalcland
Cemetery, Shelby. The Rev . Jim
Bornert officiated al the service.
Attending from here were Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Ballard, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ballard, and Mr. and Mrs.
Junior White.
Turner Funeral Home at Shelby
handled the funeral arrangements.

Garnet Welker
Garnet H. Wellcer, 99, Vinton,
died Wednesday, July 24, 199I, in
Scenic Hills Health Care Center,
Gallipolis.
She was born June 30, 1892, in
GaUia County, daughter of the late
Alfred and Susan McCarley Scott.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Herbert H. Wellcer, on
December 23, I957. She was also
preceded in death by a daughter,
Susie Huntley, three brothers and
one sister. She is survived by one
son, WilliamS. Welker, McArthur;
one daughter, Mrs. John (Verna)
Ewing, Middletown, Ohio; two
grandchildren. three greatgrandlchildren and two great-great
grandchildren.
Private funeral services will be
conducted 11 a.m. Saturday, July
27, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton , with Rev. Marvin
Sallee officiating. Burial will be in
the Vinton Memorial Parle.
There will be no calling hours.

Jeffrey Alloway
Jeffrey Clyde Alloway, 18, of
Route I, Belpre, died Wednesday,
July 24, 1991 as a result of injuries
sustained in a motorcycle accident
in Belpre.

Demi 's photo elicits a surprise reaction
My first thought when I saw the
nude photo of Dcmi Moore on the
cover of Vanity Fair magazine was,
"What on earth!.?" I admit, I was
none too proud of my reaction.
After all, my co-worker, a nice
young churchgoing man in his mid20s who had been a missionary to
China, thought it was just fine. " !
don't see anything wrong with it,"
he said. " I thinlc pregnant women
are beautiful."
OK, OK, I groused, feeling the
red start to creep into my ears. Here
this conservative'young salt-of-theearth type thought a photo of a
nut,le pregnant woman with her
hands strategically draped over
essential parts was perfectly proper
for the cover of a national magazine. And here I am, the fust one in
my crowd to buy a subscription to
Ms. magazine when I was his age,
being shocked. I tried to explain
myself, hoping my words would
paint me as less a dinosaur than I
felt.
"Well, of course you're right,
there's nothing wrong with a pregnant woman's nude body," I told
him. " I guess I just ... well, ! guess
it's just that I, uh ... well, it malces
me uncomfortable!"
He looked at me with amazed
intrigue. '"Really? Why?"

Ice

Via Associated Press GtspllcsNet

(USPS llil·t•t
A 01\'lolloo of Multimedia, Inc .

By Sarah Overstreet .

PublishEd Pvery afternoon. Monday

through Friday. Ill Court St .. Po·
meroy. Ohio. by lhP Ohio Valll'Y PubllshlnJt Compan.v /Multlmedla. Inc ..
Pomproy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second rlass postagf' paid at PomE&gt;roy,
Ohio.

zinc, and naked people on the front
make me uncomfortable. Put a
naked Demi or Woody or John or
whoever you want inside the magazine, just don't startle me on my
way out of th~ Winn-Dixie.
NEWSPAPER
(C)I991
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

1MPmbPr: 'J'h(' Associated Press, In·

land Dally Prf'Ss Assoctaflon and theOhio N"'spa~r Ass4X'Iallon. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
NPWspap&lt;'r Sales, 7JJ Third Ave-nue,
Npy,• York . N(&gt;W York 10017.
POSrMASTER; Send address changes
ro ThE&gt; Dallv Sentlnt'l. Ill Coun Sl. .
Pomeroy, Oh.lo 4~769.

Berry's World

SUBSCRII'TJON RATES
By Carrt~r or Motor Rout~

Ont&gt; Wt&gt;f'k ................... ................ $1 .60
Ont&gt; Month ..
.. ........... ......... $6.95
Ont&gt; Yea r .....
.. ..... SfG.20

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
...... 25 Cfnts
' Dall.v .......... .
Subscribers not deslrln~ to pay thtcar·
rlf"r may rE"mlt In advan«- direct to
' The Dally St"ntlnel on a 3, 6 or 12 month

basis. Credlf wtll be gtvt'n carrier each
Wt"f'k .
1
1

No subscriptions by mall permltte~!ln

art&gt;as wherf' hoiTK" carrier serviCE' II

; avail,abl~:~.

Mall SubocrlplloDI
lnalde Jllelp CouaiJ
13 Weoks ..... ., ........................... At.8t

' ~ ~:::

: ::::: ::::::::::::: ::::::=:~
Oulolde Mtlp CGIIIIJ

:~ E5L:: : : : :::::::::::::::::::::=ti

were expecced throughout the day
in parts of Texas, Olclahoma, Kentuclcy, Tennessee, West Virginia,
North Carolina, Kansas, Ne\f-'Mexico, California, Wisconsin, Mlertigan and Oregon.
Highs for today were forecast in
the 60s and 70s in the extreme
Northwest , along California's
coast, the Great Lakes region, the
central Plains and the northern haU
of the Midwest; the 80s in the most
of the Northwest, the northern
Plains. the Rockies. the Northeast
and the southern half of the Midwest; the 90s in the South and central California; and above 100 in
southwest Ariwna.
The high for the nation was II 0
degrees at Lalce Havasu City. Ariz.,
and Borrego Springs, Cal if.

to Georgia by Friday night. The
high pressure area will build southeast with its center reaching Wisconsin by late Friday.
Around the nation
A band of thunderstorm s
dumped rain from Washington,
D.C., to central Texas early today
as a cold front that ended a Northeastern heat wave stalled north of
hot, humid conditions in the Southeast. Slc.ies were mostly clear elsewhere.
Rain fell early today in parts of
Virginia, Maryland. Florida.
Arkansas, as well as in Idaho and
Washington.
Showers and thunderstorms

--Meigs Court news-- -Meigs announcements--

W. VA.

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

He was born in Parkersburg,
W.Va. on February 26, I973, the
son of Clyde Harry Alloway, Jr.
and Ada Frymier Alloway of Belpre.

Continued from page 1
George Morrison repcrted to the department that someone had
entered a residence on Sand Ridge Road and removed a quantity of
copper wire.
Three 36-inch tires and three wagon-wheel rims were removed
from a 1978 Blazer belonging to Steve Swan of Peach Fork Road.
The time of the thefts is undetermined.

Besides his parents, he is survived by two sisters, Diane Louise
and Angela Ann Alloway, both at
home; paternal grandfather and
step-grandmother, Clyde H. and
Gracie L. Alloway of Belpre; pacernal great-grandmother, Ethel McKIn The Daily Sentinel on Wednesday, it was reported that the
inney of Belpre; paternal grandparpurchaser of Central Trust's Middleport operation was not lcnown.
ents, Sam and Pluma Frymier of
In fact, the proposed purchaser is Central Trust Company, N.A. of
Tanner, W.Va.; and many other
Cincinnati.
close family members in the Belpre
area.
He was preceded in death by his
paternal grandmother, Louise
Five calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs CounAlloway.
ty Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday.
He was a senior at Belpre High
On Wednesday at 12:50 p.m., Syracuse squad went to Apple
School, was a member of PorterGrove-Dorcas Road for Nora Pearson, who was taken to Veterans
field Baptist Church and the PonerMemorial Hospital. At 12:52 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Beech
field Pushers 4-H Club. He particiStreet
ApartmeniS. Lisa Bentz was taken to Veterans. At I:36 p.m,,
pated in all sports at Belpre High
Middleport squad went to Page Street. Pauline Hudson was transSchool and was a member of the
ported to Vecerans. At 2:46 p.m., Middleport squad went to Page
Peer Sports Group in Belpre.
Street Mabel Oeland was transponed to Holzer Medical Center. At
Funeral services will be held at
3:10p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Arbaugh Addition. Isaac Jackson
II ·a.m. on Friday at Porterfield
was transponed to St. Joseph's Hospital. At 8:04 p.m., Middleport
Baptist Church with Youth Minissquad
went to Page Street for William Smith. He was taken to Vetter Bob Lyons, Rev. Leonard
erans.
Lewis and Rev. Steve Schmidt officiating. Burial will be in Evergreen
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday af~r 3 p.m. at
the White-Ethridge Funeral Home
in Belpre. Family will receive
friends from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A paying for their housmg and for
p.m . to 9 p.m. and one hour prior to woman testified she received gifts trips and buying them gifts, includthe funeral time at the church.
from a former state official charged ing cars.
with embezzling $1.3 million from
Ms. Bethel said she used some
the Ohio Department of Health.
of the money to quit her job as a
Deborah Bethel of Grove City, stripper at the Candy Store on the
testified Wednesday that Frank city's west side.
She testified that when she
A New Haven, W.Va., woman Burge, a former health department
received light injuries as the result supervisor, gave her presents she learned the source of the money
of a two-car accident Tuesday estimated were worth $20,000. She used to buy the gifts, she destroyed
afternoon on S.R. 7 in Cheshire.
satd that from November to Apnl, them. She said she sold the car and
According to a Galli a Coun\Y · he gave her gtfiS _that mclu_ded Jew- used most of the money Burge had
Sheriffs Deparunent repon, Elet- elry, a car, a tnp to Flonda and given her to pay bills.
She said she toolc a check for
mer R. Roush Jr., 61, of New cash.
Haven was southbound on S.R. 7
Testimony was to resume today $3,100 and a ring and a watch that
when a vehicle driven by Eugene in the Franklin County Common had been gifiS to the State Highway
R. Buclcley, 68, of Cheshire, exited Pleas Court tnal of Burge, who IS PaJrol.
Former Candy Store employee
East Poplar Street into his path char_ged wtth one count of engagSteve
Davis testified Wednesday
causing Roush's 1990 Oldsmobile mg m a pattern of corrupt acuvtty,
that
Burge
spent $1,000 to $1,500 a
Cutlass to strike the front-righl side o~e count of aggravated theft and
He said Burge gave
week
there.
of Buckley's 1983 Pontiac Grand- e1ght counts of theft 10 offtce. If
Prix.
convtcted of all counts, he could be him about $3,500 to attend school
to become an auto mechanic . He
Roush's passenger, Hilda sentenced to 40 years 10 pnson.
Roush, 61, was transported to
Investigators clatm Burge spent called.. Burge "a friend to everyPleasant Valley Hospital by the much of the money on stx women, bod y.
GaUia County Emergency Medical
Service.
Roush's car was listed as having
received moderate damage and was
driven from the scene. Buclcley's
car received heavy damage and had
to be towed.
BATAVIA, Ohio (AP)- A Ohio Department of Motor VehiBuclcley was ciled by the depart- man convicted for drunken driving cles shows his licen se prevtously
·ment for failure to yield.
for the Il th time and aggravated has been suspended six times and
vehicular assault was sentenced revoked twice.
This was Jimison's lith drunktoday to three to five years in
en
driving
conviction since 1979.
prison.
Ms.
Rudd,
28, of Seaman, is a
Donald D. Jimison, 30, of Russellville, was i nv&lt;ilved in a traffic licensed practical nurse. She was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) accident May 16 on Ohio 32. The driving home from her JOb at a
Laclc of rain and heat stress have driver of the other car, Fonda Batavia nursing home when the
taken their toll on some Ohio Rudd, was hospitalized with bro- accident occurred. She faces
months of recuperation from multicrops, but cqrn, soybeans and oats ken bones and a ruptured aorta.
ple broken bones and open-heart
are holding their own, according to
the Ohio Agricultural Statislics
Clermont County Common surgery fo~ her damaged aorta.
Service.
Pleas Judge Robert Ringland today
The service's crop and weather sentenced Jimison to three to five
summary for last weelc said that years in prison and a S1,000 fine
some areas of Ohio have had Ie'ss for aggravated vehicular assault,
than two inches of rainfall since one year and $1,000 for drunken
late May.
driving and six months for driving
In Guernsey and Holmes coun- while under court suspension. The
ties last week, livestoclc was sentences are to be served concurallowed to graze in emergency pas- rently.
tures as part of a drought relief proRingland also permanently
gram. Othe~; counties ·in southeast revoked Jimison's license.
·
Ohio may get similar relief soon.
Jimison pleaded guilty to the
Pasture conditions were rated charges July Il. In exchange for
fair to poor cxccpl .in south central the plea, county prosecutors ·
Ohio, where they were rated good. dropped charges of driving without ·
That was the only part of the state a license and driving while under
reporting more than 5~ percent of state suspension.
its soils had enough moiSture.
A judge in Cin~innati had.
Statewide, soil moisture rated revoked Jimisoi)'S license in Jan72 perCent short, 27 percent ade- uary I990 on lhe occasion of his
quate and 1 percent surplus ~ the lOth drunkel! driving conviction.
report said.
)imlsori's driving record from the

Clarification

EMS units answer five calls

More companions to testify
in embezzlement trial

New Haven Woman
hurt in accident

Man gets 3 to 5 years for vehicular
assault and drunken driving

will be held on Sunday at Chester
Speaker named
The Rev. Roben Bumgardner of Fire House at I 2 noon.
Sidney, former pastor of the Heath Soup, bake sale slated
A soup supper and bake sale
United Methodist Church, will be
speaker at the Middleport church will be sponsored by the Faith Full
for the 10:30 am. Sunday worship Gospel Church on Saturday at 5:30
service. His wife, Ruth, will p.m. at the home of Dolly Reed in
accompany him lO Middleport for Reedsville.
the service. The Rev. Franlc Smith, VSC to'meet
The Meigs County Veterans
pastor, is auending an education
Service Commission will meet on
program.
Monday at 7:30p.m. in the VeterCar wash Saturday
A car wash will be held Satur- ans Service Office on Mulberry
day at 9 a.m. by Boy Scout Troop Avenue in Pomeroy.
Reunion to be held
249 at Pleasers.
The 67th annual Hayes-YoungPatriotic Day to be observed
"Patriotic Day" will be observed Holiday School Reunion will be
by the Victory ~aptist Church at held on August I I at the old school
525 North Second St, Middleport, ground. Dinner will be held at
on Sunday during the 10 am. Sun- 12:30 p.m.
day school service and the 11 a.m.
worship service.
A special invitalion has been
issued by the Rev. James Keesee,
pastor, to men and women who
have served in the armed services,
as well as all civil service personVeterans Memorial
nel such as policemen.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Dr. Stan Anderson, dean of the - Nora Pearson , Racine; Audrey
MassiUon Baptist Colle~e will be Scofield, Chesire; William F.
the speaker and there w1ll be spe- Smith, Sr., Middleport; and
cial music for the worship service.
Michael Imboden, Pomeroy.
A nursery will be provided.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
Name omitted
-Alva Clarlc, Wilbur Ord, and Ula
Judy Well, 39764 SR 681, Strauss.
Shade, was inadvertently omitted
from the Hocking spring quarter
dean 's list, the college announced
today.
Country music night
The Lottridge Community Center will host "Country Music
Night" on Saturday at the Center.
The event will begin at 7 p.m. and
FRI., SAT .• SUN.
continue until midnight and all
JULIA ROBERTS
bands are welcome to participace.
IN
Refreshments will be available
throughout the evening. The public
is invited to attend. The Center ts
R
located on Athens County Road 53,
AND
five miles west of Coolville.
JOHN RinER
Southern Volleyball meeting
IN
There will be a meeting at
Southern High School on August 2
at 10:30 a.m. for all girls in grades
7 through I2 in the district who
will be trying out for volleyball this
fall.
Biggs Reunion
The A.D. Biggs family reunion

Hospital news

DYING YOUNG

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

~•

. ':

13 . 00
11.00
BAAf.AtN IIATINHS SATURDAY I SUNDAY
BARGAIN NIGKT TUESDAY

.

NOW PLAYING
TODAY HIO,HO
fRIDAY 7 ,00 ,9, 10
SAT . I oOO ,l' 10,7 o00,9 o10
SUN.l oOO ,l o10.7 ollO,I' 10

MON. - THURS .7o00,9 ol0

~•

{;_,,"~'

'. W;•
~
\.. . •

0 ""

,.,,.,..
Now

th•y

0)

Boll&amp; Ted 's

lh&lt;y modr

.

ar~ h11to,.y

~ ~~-

'_! I - '

OUrTley

PI;

(1.1.,~"'''"'

·~aw ­
~~"~!~'-.;~;~

101
DILIIITIANS
TODIY 7o20

KEVIN COSTNER

Ros1N "Hooo
_ , Of THIN.&gt;

IP!Ei e.

liD

C 'ASSES . II) lAMAr• lt l lit!T

TOOA't' 9:30
FR TOA Y 9:30
SATUROAY 9: 30
SUNDAY 9:10
MON . - THURS. 9:

fRIDAY 7o20
SATURDAY lo 00,l o20. 7o20
SUNDAY t o00,3 o20.7 o20•

101. - THURS .7o

MINUET

Soybeans, oats
still in good shape

..

10 Karat Gold

HighSchool
Class Rings.

$50oFF
PLUS, FREE CUSTOM FEATURESA VALUE OF OVER $50.00

(l!8P--..
~~en
212

E. Mlln - Jtomerov

'•

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, July 25, 1991
Page-4

-

Thursday, July 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NFL's top stars not ready for coniing exhibition season
By The Associated Press
The NFL 's exhibition season is
about to begiri. That doesn't mean
the league's top stars are ready for
a fuU workday.
The Chicago Bears travel to
Miami to take on the Dolphins Fri·
day night to begin the 1991 season.
Saturday's Hall of Fame game
at Canton, Ohio, will pit the Den·
ver Broncos against the Detroit
Lions, while the San Francisco
49ers will visit the Los Angeles
Raiders. The first weekend wraps
up on Sunday with the Buffalo
Bills taking on the Philadelphia
Eagles in American Bowl '91 at
Wembley Stadium in England.
British fans won't see much of
the teams' star quarterbacks.
Philadelphia's Randall Cunningham won't play very much - and
Buffalo's Jim Kelly may not play
at all.
"You've got to take the game
serio usly, but you also want to

make sure you don't get injured," only play the ftrSt quarter of their
said Cunningham, who led the meeting at the Coliseum.
NFC last season with 30 touchRaiders coach Art Shell
down passes. ••A couple of series declined to reveal how be will use
would be good enough. A quarter his other quarterbacks - veterans
would be more than enough:"
Vince Evans and Steve Beuerlein
Rich Kotite, Philadelphia's new and rookie Tood Marioovich - but
new head coach, said he hasn't yet said: "Jay's our starting quarter·
decided how much Cunningham back. Everybody else is compel·
will play, but added, "lt will be ing."
more than a series. He won't be
San Francisco coach George
making a token appearance."
Seifen said Montana also would be
Kelly, who pulled his right ham- limited to the ftrSt quarter.
string on the first day of training
Several stars will miss the Hall
camp and has not practiced since, of Fame Game. The Lions have
eight holdouts, including running
rna~ spend the day watching.
'It's day to day," said Kelly, back Barry Sanders. Denver is
who threw 24 TD passes last year missing running back Bobby
and led all quarterbacks with a 63.3 Humphrey and safety Steve Atwa·
completion percentage. ''Whether I ter, also due to contract problems.
play remains to be seen. I'd love to
John Elway will start at quarter·
play a few series, but it's up to the back for Denver, but play sparingdoctors.''
ly.
Starting quarterbacks Jay
On Wednesday, the Washington
Schroeder of Los Angeles and Joe Redskins gained a quarterback but
Montana of San Francisco will lost a light end.

Woods to start season on sidelines;
Bengals say no to raise for Billups
CATCHES POPUP- Pomeroy first baseman Josh Harris looks
up and makes the catch on a popup behind the first base bag bit by
Cheshire's John Browning in the fifth inning of Wednesday night's
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament game, which the Bobcats
won 3-1. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

In Kyger Cree k U

OUrnament urret dnesday,

T

1

DRUMMOND SCORES -Cheshire's Brian Drummond (left)
kicks up some dust around the plate, as be beats the late throw by
Pomeroy shortstop David Anderson to catcher Matt Ault and scores
in the third inning of the opener of Wednesday night's Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament doubleheader at Cheshire. The Bobcats
beat the Mustangs 3-1 to earn the right to face Hannan Trace on
Friday. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN- In an attempt to cut the deficit furtber than tbe four-run margin that existed in the fourth inning of
the nightcap of Wednesday night's Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament doubleheader, the GaUipolis White Sox's Kevin Wood
(left) is caught in a rundown between third base and home seconds
before Hannan Trace catcher Robbie Harrison puts the tag on him
to end the inning. The Wildcats won 12-5 to earn the right to take
on Cheshire in a Friday night quarterrmal contest. (OVP photo by
G. Spencer Osborne)

Cheshire, Hannan Trace move ahead to·quarterfinal action
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Weather more conducive 10
baseball greeted Wednesday's
competitors in the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament, which
saw second-round action concluded

and the winners - Cheshire's a solo homer m the first inning
Bobcats and Hannan Trace's Wild· against Joe Hill, who did all he
cats - complete the quarterfinal could (five slrilceouts, one walk) to
picture.
keep the Kentucky Fried Chicken·
Cheshire 3, Pomeroy 1
sponsored Mustangs in the game.
The Bobcats got off on the right
But Pomeroy got only two hits
paw when Chris Maynard cracked (a double by G.J. Powell and a sin·
gle by Hill), four free passes to first
base and whiffed 12 times against
Bobcat moundsmen Ray Cox and
John Browning . Five of those
strikeouts belonged to Browning,
and two of his came in the
Pomeroy sixth.
·
director and former Rio Grande
The Bobcats ' two-run lead
ca tcher Herb Sharfenakcr Jr. of see med in danger, even after
Bishop Ready H.S. in Columbus; Browning struck out Powell for
Scott Gheen, former Meigs star, what was for them an inspirational
Kyger Creek head coach and for· ftrst out. Why? Because for open·
mer Rio Grande player; Dave ers, Jared Warner grounded a 2·2
Oglesby, head coach at the Univer· pitch to second that second basesity of Rio Grande; and Herb Shar· man Brian Bradbury muffed. Then
fenaker Sr., head coach at Bishop Browning, who was witness to
Ready H.S.
Warner's stealing second during
Four other instructors include Clay Crow's at-bat, ran the string
John Collins, Bishop Ready assis· out on Crow before walking him.
tant; Darrell Marcum, Hamilton
But during Justin Roush's at·
H.S. grad and Rio Grande pitcber; bat, Warner strayed halfway be·
Robie Sharfenaker; incoming tween second and third (who didn't
freshman at Rio Grande and Bish· in this game or the one that fol·
op Ready grad; and Chris Stewart, lowed?), and Browning fired to
former Meigs High School pitcher third sacker Cox, who came up the
who is now playing at Kentucky line to put the tag on Wamer. Then
Christian College.
Browning went to work on Roush,
The sign-up date will be July and after falling behind 2·1, fired
24, 1991 from (4:30·6:00) at Mid· two straight strikes for the K and
dleport Park. Please have camper's the save.
shirt size and check made out to
Cheshire's hit collectors were
Herb Sharfenaker Jr. For more Maynard (2-3), Steven Stinson (I·
information please call Herb Shar· I), Billy Cremeans (1-2) and Brian
fenaker Jr. at 245-9123 or Gene Drummond (1·3).
Wise at 992-6224.
Score by innings
Pomeroy
010 000- 1·2·2
Ill OOx- 3-5-3
Cheshire
WP -Cox (Browning save)
LP-HiU
Hannan Trace 12
Gallipolis White Sox 5
Just as Cox and Browning com·
bined to toss a two-hitter in the
ly. The shad population grew and opener, Hannan Trace hurlers
provided food for the walleyes.
Jamie Merrick and David Rucker
Stocking has increased from did the same in the nightcap and
127,000 fingerlings in I988 to added IS strikeouts (five by Mer·
258,000 in 1989 and 328,000 in rick, 10 by Rucker), though their
1990.
13 walks took some of the gloss off
"Still, when you think about that two-hitter thrown against the
driving time and the problems you Johnson's Supermarket-sponsored
can have with weather, C.J. has its White Sox.
advantages,'' Maloney said.
Six of those walks came in the
Sox's second, which started when
Kevin Wood struck out. Merrick
handed out free passes to Travis
Fisher, Andy Tirado and Jake
Tennis
Blevins
before striking out Dan
MONTREAL (AP) - Top·
Magnussen.
Then Merrick walked
seeded Ivan Lend! defeated Gilad
Andre
Howell
to force in Fisher.
Bloom 4-6, 6-4, 6·4, and second·
and
did
the
same
to Ryan Canaday,
seeded Jim Courier beat MaliVai
which
forced
Tirado
to dent the
Washington 7·5, 6·3 in the second·
plate
as
well.
Walk
No.
6, which
round of the Canadian Open.
forced
Blevins
10 scae, was issued
In other second-round matches,
Petr Korda upset third-seeded to Tim Siders. At that point the
Andre Agassi 7-6 (7·3), 6·2, and Wildcats' braintrust brought Ruck·
seve nth -seeded John McEnroe er, the shortstop, 10 the mound and
sent Merrick to shortstop. Rucker
defeated Jimmy Arias 6·1, 6-2.
got
Gation Justice to hit into a
Baseball
choice 10 Merrick, whore·
fielder's
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
tired
Canaday
second to end the
Cleveland Indians demoted reliever frame with the at
Sox
ahead 3-2.
Doug Jones, their all-time save
Trace
seemed
destined for a
leader, to Colorado Springs of the
three-up-and-three-down
third, as
Pacific Coast League.
Merrick
and
Jessie
Halley
Jones, 34, had th"e right 10 refuse things off by grounding started
out to
the assignment and become a free shortstop, but Rucker walked
and
agent, but said he would report to moved to second on Jon Hall's sinthe minors. If he had opted for free gle. Robbie Harrison then followed
agency, he would have forfeited by hitting a grmmder to second that
more than $700,000 remaining on Tirado misplayed. Rucker, round·
his $2.05 million salary for this in~ third at the time, scored on that
year.
m1scue to tie the game. Travis
Jones is J. 7 with a 7.47 ERA Mooney
followed with a walk to
and six saves in II opportunities
load
the
bases, which preceded
this season. He had a team-record
Chad
Michael's
on an er•
43 saves last year, his third straight ror by Justice atreaching
shortstop
that al·
year with more than 30. He has 127
lowed
Hall
and
Harrison
to
score.
saves in four-plus seasons with
Michaei
Waugh
struck
out
to
end
Cleveland.
the Guyan third, but oot before the

Middleport Baseball Camp
scheduled for Monday
The annual Middleport Baseball
camp will be held from Monday,
July 29 to Friday, August2 in Mid·
dleport for Pony League and Little
League-age players seven to 15
years old.
Each camper will receive lunch,
after the session, and a camp Tshirt in adult sizes only. The Pony
League sessions, for players 12 to
15 years old, will be 8:30 a.m. to
noon, while Little League, for players seven to 11 years old, will run
from I 10 4:30p.m.
The camp fee is $35, with a
family of two set at $50 and a family of three at $75.
Each camper will be taught the
fundamentals in hitting, catching,
running, pitching, fielding and slid·
in g.
There will be live games for
both age groups and awards for
each age group and campers must
come fully equipped with glove,
hal, cleats and baseball pants.
Each player will receive group
and individual training from the
camp staff. which includes camp

Clark County's C.J. Brown
Lake prime spot for walleye
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) Anglers in the southwest part of the
state are learning that you don't
have to drive for hours 10 find the
best spotiO catch walleye.
CJ. Brown Lake in Buck Creek
State Park, named for former Con·
gressman Clarence J. (Bud) Brown,
may be responsible for a small
decline in the number of people
traveling to Lake Erie for walleyes.
Brown Lake, located on Ohio S.R.
4, is a convenient spot for Dayton
and Springfield-area anglers.
"Yes, there's something to be
said for the CJ. Brown walleyes,"
said Doug Maloney, district fish
management supervisor.
Maloney said, "The size of
walleyes taken at CJ. cannot com.
pare to those cau~h t at Lake Eric,
and the catch rate IS lower."
But, the fiShing is improving at
Brown Lake. Maloney has doubled
walleye stoCking at the 2,120-acre
reservoir lhe last three years.
The average walleye caught at
C.J . Brown ranges from 12·14
inches. Fish 15·18 inches are not
uncommon and any walleye over
25 inches can be considered an old
fish. Based on growth studies, a 25. ·
inch walleye at CJ. Brown is probably at least seven years old.
The bag limit at inland lakes is
10 walleyes per day per angler,
compared to five at Lake Erie.
C.J. Brown was filled in 1975
and stocked with 290,000 fingerling walleyes. Plantings have taken
place annually since, as a total of
2.6 million walleyes have been
released over 17 years.
Maloney said the turning point·
for CJ. was in ·J982 when the giz·
zard shad, previously lacking from
the lake, established itself natural·
I

Wildcats took a 5-3 lead that was
destined for greater growth in later
innings.
Siders, who started and pitched
five innings before giving way to
Justice in the sixth, combined with
his successor to slrilce out three and
walk seven.
Trace's hits came courtesy of
Rucker (3·3, double included),
Harrison and Steven Queen (both
1·3), and Hall (1-4). The Sox's hits

LAWN

the nightcap will have Hubbard's
Greenhouse No . 1 battling
Coolville at 7:30 p.m. On Friday.
Mason VFW will face Rutland at 6
p.m., and Cheshire will take on
Hannan Trace at 7:30p.m.
Thursday's winners will play in
the first sem ifinal game on Satur·
day at 6 p.m., and Friday's victors
wi II take the field in the seco nd
semifinal contest on Saturday at
7:30p.m.

GARDEN CLOSEOUT

Limited to In Stock Quantities-Now thru 8/3/91.
STOCK 110.

ITEM

535039
Weed &amp; Feed 26-3-3
191593
Turf Builder 5,000 sq. ft.
191SI5
Turf Builder 10,000 sq. ft.
174375
Turf Builder Plus 2 1S,000 sq. ft.
119717
Turf Buildler &amp; Halts
70609
2 cu. ft. Sphagnum
70610
40 lb. All Purpose Peat
70611
40 lb. Top Sail
70614
20 qt. Potting Sail
70613
40 lb. Potting Soil
70623
1 cu. ft. Red Volcanic Rock
45780
Mulch Monster w/handle
139181
Metal Leaf Rake
153270
20' Lawn Edging
60203
Homelite Gas String Trimmer
60228
Homelite 20" Push Mower
60238
Homelite 21" Push Mower
5/a"x;90' Rubber Vinyl Hose
136358
140301
50' Sprinkler Hose
156299
5fa"x60' Reinforced Water Hose
224667
Lawn Insect Control
H749587
10 lb. Diazinon Insect Control

lEG. PIICE

SW PIICE

10.99
9.69
18.49
38.99
19.49
S.49
1.99
1.79
1.39
2.39
4.59
15.99
7.79
4.99
259.00
289.95
309.95
31.49
8.99
14.99
9.99
13.99

6.99
6.99
13.99
26.99
12.99
3.25
1.19
1.09
.85
1.45
2.79
5.99
4.99
2.99
179.00
219.00
239.00
18.99
5.49
8.49
7.99
8.99

ALL IN STOCK POOL SUPPLIES &amp; CHEMICALS
DRASTICALLY REDUCED.

Sports briefs

'

AND

came off the bats of Canaday (1·2)
andWood(l-3).
Score by innings
Hannan Trace 023 403 - 12-6-I
Gal. White Sox 030 200- 5-2-4
WP- Rucker (in relief of Mer·
rick)
LP-Siders
The quarterfinals
Quarterfinal action will begin
today with Green and PVH Medi·
cal taking the field at 6 p.m., and

407411
419131
514323
464111
305151
305177
356766
357335
16.1186
157990
396366
396473

19" Push Mower 3.5 hp
Lawn Chief 21" Push Mower w/rear bog
Lawn (lief 21" Push Mow• self-propelled 3.5' hp
Lawn Chief 14 hp 43" Cut Lawn Tractor
10" Electric Weed Eater
14" Electric Weed Eater
XT -50 17" Cut Gas Weed Eater
XT-20T 15" Cut Gas Weed Eater
XT -1 00 Gas Weed Eater
XT -12 5 Gas Weed Eater
8" Electric Weed Eater
16" Electric Weed Eater
Serwess

129.88
219.88
269.11
1949.00
35.99
54.99
149.95
99.99
169.99
219.99
29.99
64.99

105.00
179.00
199.00
1499.00
30.00
36.00
99.00
75.00
129.00
145~00

24.99
42.00

·Sbme Ou•ntlties M•v Ba
Llmtted' '

.. Not Responaibtl tor Typoar•phical Errors. '·

&amp; SUPPLY CO.
614-992;..6611
555 Pill ST.
MIDDLIPOIT. OH.

HOUIS
11011.-fll.
7:00·5.00
'SAT.
7:00·3:00

L=~;;;.lb~===l!l

[±)

Toll Free 1-800-733-3334

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) lckey Woods' season probably will
begin the same way as his last one
- on the sidelines.
The Cincinnati Bengals expect
to put the fullback on injure&lt;)
reserve before opening the season
Sept. l in Denver. Woods also
began last year on the injured list,
rehabilitating his reconstructed left
knee.
This year, it's the other knee. A
training camp accident Monday left
him with torn cartilage and
stretched ligaments that required
arthroscopic surgery Tuesday
night.
The Bengals expect him to miss
almost aU of training camp rehabil·
itating the latest knee injury.
"Four weeks from now, he
might be able to do some jogging
and that type of thing, but he will
not be able to do any cutting or
football skills," head coach Sam
Wyche said Wednesday.
The rehabilitation won't start for
a while. Woods remained in
Cincinnati on Wednesday, the knee
too swollen 10 do anything.
His pro~nosis started the Bengals plannmg to open the season

without him. Wyche said Woods is
likely 10 open the season on injured
reserve.
"That's probably what will hap·
pen, but we won ' t have to make
that decision for a while, so we 'II
wait and see," he said.
The Ben~als were looking to get
their backf1eld back to speed thts
year with Woods' return to full
strength. He had trouble putting on
a burst of speed to elude tacklers
last season, when he missed the
first six games rehabilitating his
left knee from a 1989 injury.
Tailback James Brooks ended
up as the featured back last year,
carrying 195 times for 1,004 yards.
That's more than twice as many
carries as the next-closest back
(Harold Green, 83). No other back
rushed for as many as 400 yards.
Woods carried 64 times for 248
yards during the regular season, but
never rushed for more than 50
yards in a game. He had his best
game of tpe year in a playoff
against the Los Angeles Rarders,
rushing II limes for 73 yards.
Wyche was encour~ged when
Woods reported to uammg camp m
good condition, determined to play
a bigger role in the offense. Now.
Wyche only can hope that the off.
season conditioning pays off in a

'Clean living' has kept Browns'
Matthews in NFL for 14 years
MENTOR, Ohio (AP) - In a
league where the average stay is
only four or five years, I4-year vet·
eran outside linebacker Clay
Mauhews is something of an
anomaly.
Mauhews, 35, attributes his suc·
cess to "clean living."
"Seriously, you have to have a
certain degree of luck, avoiding
injuries," Matthews said. "Some
just physically can't do it
"But what 1 think drives most
people from the game is that they
just get tired of it," he said. "They
realize that running into another
person is not a thing that they want
to keep doing ."
.
.
He said he's been takmg h1s
career "one season at a time."
"Sometimes, at this camp, I
wonder if I'll make it this year."
Matthews has been to five Pro
Bowls, and says plaring in a Super
Bowl and making 11 into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame are still on
his mind.
"A more reasonable goal for
me, however, is to still be a pro·
ductive player.''
Coach Bill Belichick said
Matthews' longevity makes the
University of Southern California
graduate extraordinary.
"You have to be pretty damn
good 10 play 10 years in the NFL,"
Belichick said. "You can't fool
people.
"Clay continues to be a player" Belichick said. "I'm pleased
with his condition. As I said, it
takes a special player 10 play more
than 10 years."
Fonner Browns coach Bud Car·
son moved Matthews to the left
side of the line in 1989, after II
years on the right. Matthews is
back on the right side this year, and
says that's just as weU with him.
''When they (Belichick and
defensive coordinator Nick Saban)
asked me about it, I said I preferred
the right side," Matthews said.
"They said that would be a good
startin~ place for me. And that was
fine w1th me."
Last year, the Browns played to
a dismal 3-13 record. Th1s year,
things will be different, Matthews
predicts.
"Football is the same as run·
ning a business," he said. "If you
are fundamentally sound and_pay
attention to every detail, you_ will at
least have an adequate team, a team
you can be proud of.
.
''Then with some good fortune,
avoiding injuries and having some
rookies or new players come
through, who knows?" he said.
"Maybe 9· 7, at least"
• .
Matthews said he doesn t thmk
his million-dollar contract has
changed him.
"I don't feel any different than I .

ever fel~" he said. "Money is sec·
ondary when you start playing.
"When you're not playing, you
might think about it. I really wasn't
prepared to come 10 camp on time,
but then the Browns made an offer
about four days before the start. I
thought it was fair and I took i~"
he said.
Matthews said he might prefer
to spend the last years of his career
back in California. But he added,
"That's the way the system works,
and it has for my 14 years. You're
only spinning your wheels if you
complain.''

quicker recovery from the latest
knee surgery.
"The one thing to his advantage
is he was in such good shape and
he worked so hard that he may
come back sooner than the doctors
are predicting," Wyche said. "I
think he probably would have been
injured much worse had he not
been in the shape he's in."
Wyche said he'll use the full
complement of running backs, as
he did last season, rather than rely·
ing on just one to flU in for Woods.
"We're going to alternate
them," he said.
The Bengals brought in former
Pittsburgh Steelers running back
Rodney Carter for a tryout
Wednesday, looking to add depth
to their backfield. But Carter failed
his physical Wednesday morning.
The Bengals aren't budging on
their refusal to give cornerback
Lewis Billups a raise. Neither are
they looking to trade him, owner
and president Paul Brown said
Wednesday.
Billups wants a raise this season, the option year of a contract
that reportedly will pay him
$575,000. He's holding out of
training camp, and the Bengals are
fining him $1,500 a day.
Brown said Billups won't get a
raise.
"We don't think he merits
more. We've told him that,"
Brown said. "We're set in our
point of view. He understands how
we feel. He's going to have to
accept iL "
Brown said there's been no indi·
cation how long Billups might hold
out. He said the Bengals have no
plans to trade him.
"We'd trade any player if it's in
our best interests . Lewis is no
exception," Brown said. "But
we're not going to trade a player
because he wants more money or is
dissatisfied.' '
He said no team has called
expressing an interest in Billups.
"His coin is a little devalued at
the momcn~" Brown said.

Quarterback Mark Rypien ended

a 10-day holdout, signing a new

contract just just hours after tight
end Don Warren broke his right
ankle. Warren is expected to be out
for at least 10 weeks.
A mainstain to the Redskins '
offense, Warren, a 12-ycar veteran,
was injured while blocking during
the first play of a controlled scrimmage against Pittsburgh. Redskins
head coach Joe Gibbs said another
player fell over the back of War·
ren's legs.
Team spokesman Charles Day·

ton said Warren would undergo
surgery today, be in a cast for two
to three weeks and likely not play
until early October, missing the
ftrst five games of the season.
Details of Rypien's new contract were not disclosed.
''We've reached agreement with
Rypicn, he'll be here tomorrow,"
general manager Charley Casserly
said.
Rypien had complained that he
was not being offered enough
money and had sought Sl.6 million

this year. Until recently, the Red·
sk ins were said to have offered
about $1.2 million. Rypien earned
$300,000 la st year, the lowes t
salary of any NFL starting quarter·
back.
At Suwanee, Ga., rookie wide
receiver Mike Pritchard signed a
three-year contract with the Atlanta
Falcons for a reported $2.3 million.
"I happened to be a littl e bit
antsy ," the Falco ns' rirst·round
draft choice from Co lorado said .
"Things went smoothly though ."

Anglers finding prime areas for
Lake Logan catfish on shorelines
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Here is the weekly fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
LAKE LOGAN - Fish from
shoreline areas using eight or 10·
pound test line to take channel cat·
fish. Most are active during the
evening hours, however, some are
taken during the day from shaded
areas. Bluegills can be taken from
theSe same areas by using small
worms or night crawlers fished
beneath a bobber in $hallow water.
SALT FORK LAKE - Large·
mouth bass, channel catfish and
muskies are very popular among
summer anglers at this lake. Troll
large crank baits and other muskie
lures in the lower half of the lake.
Check with area bait shops for lat·
est conditions.
Southwest
RUSH RUN LAKE -Bluegill
fishing is best during early mommg
and evening hours . Try using
worms and larval baits fished along
weed lines and also at depths of 5
to 15 feet. Try small spinners, pork
rind combinations, and night
crawlers for best results in taking
largemouth bass.
GRAND LAKE ST. MARYS
- Try fishing among the rocks
along the east and west shorelines,
or the woody areas in channels and
tributaries to take largemouth bass.
Use small jigs or minnows around
brushy areas for best results in talc·
ing crappies. Use small night
crawlers fished along the bottom m
boat channels and tributaries to
take brown bullheads.
Central
DEER CREEK LAKE - Try
fishing with cut shad in the creek
channel at the upper end of the lake

to take channel catfish. The Hard·
ing cabin area is a good place 10 try
for largemouth bass. White bass
may be taken on small jigs tipped
with worms near the dam dunng
early morning hours.
FARM PONDS - Ohio's farm
ponds offer good fishing opportuni · ties to anglers of all ages and levels
of experience. Many contain large·
mouth bass, bluegill and channel
catfish. Use night crawlers w1th or
without a bobber, and fish m shal·
low areas. Many farm pond fish are
active during the day and can be
easily caught.
Northwest
CLEAR FORK RESERVOIR
- There have been 10 huskie
muskies taken from this lake dur·
ing 1991. Most muskie anglers are
trolling through the weed beds near
the islands and by the darn. Check
with area bait shops for lates t con·
ditions, Crappie, channel catfish,
largemouth bass, and bluegill arc

present.
BEAVER CREEK RESER VOIR - Bluegill offer good sum mer fishing along the shorelines
and in areas with submerged vegetation. Usc light line, small hooks,
and either larval baits or worms for
best results. Try use chicken livers
rished along the bottom to take
channel catfish.
Northeast
HIGHLANDTOWN LAKE Use worms or larval baits to take
bluegills. Night crawlers and cut
bait work best to take channel cat·
fish. Largemouth bass up to six
pounds arc present Try using surface plugs, small spinners, or night
crawlers fished in shallow water
areas.
CLENDENING RESERVOIR
-This is one of nonlleast Ohio's
best bass lakes. Largemouth bass
arc concentrated around submerged
structures. Try using a variety or
live and imitation baits

ALL PEPSI PRODUCTS
2 Liter 99¢
12 pack cans $2.99
24 can case $5.29

MIDDLEPORT GULF
385 North Second

Middleport

992-3397

DODGE DEALER'S
AUTHORIZED

I

/1#~9iJi•J!J11•1ii:IJ:ffil•1!!1"'1•1ii:ll1f!1i.#l/

H

Now during our '91 model year clearance, we're really dealing! The '92
models are coming soon and we've got to make room. Pius, take advantage
of big cash back and package savings that could save you big!

-

.........
"""'111111111

And a whole lot more to taste _

691 West Main

.lcKkson Ave. &amp; 24th St.
Pt. Pleasant
204-67 5-4130

~SJOOO~,

Enjoy lh! sun in aspor1y new ShaOO.v Cooier1ible and save willl
$1000 cash back . Use the savifliiS kJI a """pair o1 sunglasses•

MONDAY

~

ssoo es"-~!

Shadow America, lh! kMesl pricad car in il1e v.orld with an alrllaQ~'
ISOON an even beller wlue with $500 cash back kJI nrsHme car bu)ers'
Plus. get agreat clearance deal'

Chicken Salad Plate..•..~!!.~.~~!!~.~.'!.~!~~ .............. S2 2'1
1UCIUESbDSaiY:ndWIC• h PIat I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WITH SMALL OR INK
5295

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

~n:~.~~

W H ALAD, HOMEMADE ROLL or GARLIC BREAD

'IIIUISDAY:

.

lcllctel Steak Dinner .....................................,•••..•

FIIDIY:

.

All You Can Eat

~aahetti .................................

S42S
S4U
5300

.~':.:!t

Dinner ............................................... 54 25

SUNDAYs

lakicl Chicken Dinn• .........................................

5315

lliiCLUDES HOMEMADE ROLL AND HDIIEIIADE PIE .·'

ROAST BEEF SPECIAL-SUNDAY ONLY
BUY ONEL.GET ONE 11"2 PRICE

· OPIIED fACE ROAST IEEF
..... IHf • •• Pontoes s1. . &amp; Gr ~·_..
BRING IN YOUR CHURCH BUUETIN FOR
10% DISCOUNT

OPEN 6 AM·10 PM~ FRI .• SAT. 6 AM·11 PM
SUNDAY 7 AM·10 PM

lr. .fast Slrwlll AU Day

·

DIIVE-UP WINDOW

HOMEMADE PIES end ROLLS D.AILV

SSoo
·

WitH SALAD. GARLIC iftEM'D

CASH BACK AND
NO EXTRA OIARGE AIR
ON SBECT MODIS!

Americal al-a me beSt·Sdlnll·rninMr1 nas $500 casll bad&lt;, lOads o1
satety fealures and $857 AFW Package savings on select Caravan&lt; !hal's ile ge11ing air condi~ at no eoctra charge!"

REDISCOVER AMERICAN VALUES
DURING THE DODGE FACTORY AUTHORIZED CLEARANCE GOING ON NOW!

�·-

..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 25, 1991

Show's AL debut .successful,
as A's hand Indians 8-41oss
By The Associated Press
Going from the National League
to the American League hasn't
been all that smooth a transition for
Eric Show, a long-time fixture in
the San Diego Padres' slilfting rota·
lion.
Show had won 100 games for
the Padres before coming over to
the American League with the
Oakland Athletics as a free agent in
December. But it wasn't until
Wednesday night in Cleveland Show's 11th appearance and third
start with the A's- that he finally
won for the fust time in the AL, 84 over the Indians.
"This was a long time coming
for me and I feel great about it,"
said Show, who signed with the
A's after going 6-8 for the Padres
last year. "The last two years have
seemed like a giant rut. Frankly,
my only motivation was to pay
back the A's. I wanted to show
them they made the right deci·
sion.''

OPEN MIXED DOUBLES FINALISTS The piur ol Frank Porter and Joy Bentley Oeft)
edaed Babs Weekley and Keith King 7-S, 6-1 to

win the open mixed doubles title in the Gallia
County American Cancer Society's Tennis
TournamenL

So did Oil Can Boyd, who
returned to the AL with the Texas
Rangers following a two·year stint
in the National League with the
Montreal Expos . Boyd was 6·8
with the Expos before being
acquired by the Rangers last Sunday.
Boyd made his first start for
Texas Wednesday and lost a 2-1
decision to the Boston Red Sox, his
former team.
"You could tell he was a little
nervous because he wanted to show
what he had and he wanted to
win," said Boston's Mike Greenwell after the game in Arlington.
Elsewhere, it was Toronto 2,
Chicago I; Detroit 6, Minnesota 3;
Baltimore 5, California 2; New
York 10, Seattle 2, and Kansas City
7, Milwaukee 4.

six hits, three walks and had four
strikeouts.
Blue Jays 2, White Sox 1
David Wells won his seventh ·
straight decision and Joh~ Olerud
and Joe Caner each drove m a run.
Olderud hit his 12th home run and
Caner had an RBI single.
.
Wells (12·4 ), in six and onethird innings, gave up one mn on
six hits and one walk, stnking out
two.
Jack McDowell ( 12·5) allowed
I 0 hits and struck out nine.
Tigers 6, Twins 3
Bill Gullickson survived a threerun homer by Chili Davis in the
(See AL on Page 7)

Athletics 8, Indians 4
Show (1·2)' allowed three runs,
two earned, and six hits in six
innings.
The A's took the lead for good
with three runs in the sixth off
Greg Swindell (6-8). Dave Henderson had a two-run homer and Oak·
land scored the go-ahead run on
Terry Steinbach's RBI single.
Red Sox 2, Rangers 1
Joe Hesketh and two relief
pitchers combined on a two-hitter.
Heske!h (4-1) went six and twothird innings before Jeff Gray and
Jeff Reardon finished up. Boyd
went five innings against his old
teammates and gave up two runs,

Limited special two-deer
permits available in Meigs
that sell licenses, as well as the Soil
and Water Conservation District
Office.
Wood said that applicants who
arc successful in the random draw·
ing will receive a regular deer hunt·
ing permit which is valid for one
deer (buck or doe) anywhere in the
state, and a special management
antlerless deer permit which is
valid only in the county named.
The completed application and a
$32 check or money order are to be
submitted. The $32 will be refunded to those who do not receive the
special permit for an anterless deer.
Persons who are exempt from
the $32 fee are landowners, tenants, and "free license" holders.
Non-residents can apply for the
special permit after purchasing a
non-resident hunting license,
according to the Wildlife Manage· ·
mcnt Division.

Meigs County is one of 63 Ohio
· counties where a limited number of
special two-deer permits will be
issued this year, according to Keith
Wood, Meigs County's state game
protector.
·
Wood explained that the applications for the two·deer permits are
available at all 23 places in the
county where hunting and fishing
licenses are sold.
He said that the emphasis of the
new program is to "get the kill up
and the population down."
The permits will be selected by
drawing in all of the counties, with
more to be issued in some counties
than others depending on the deer
population, Wood explained.
The applications, according to
the game protector, will not be
accepted before Aug. l nor after
Aug. 16. They are currently available at all stores and other outlets

NDERSON'
Don't Let These Super
Savings Pass You By!

MEN'S OPEN DOUBLES FINALISTS Frank Porter and Jobn Bentley (middle)
knoc:ked orr Steve Mullins aod Jim Osboroe
(ri1bt) 3-6, ti-3, 6-4 to capture the men's open

doubles championship in tbe Gallla County
American Cancer Society's TeDDis TournamenL
At far left is tournameot director Brant Pauley.

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
-Antron Nylon Uphol•tery
$
-Pillow Arm•
HOT SUMMER SALE .

. 00
48 8

OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF LIVING ROOM FURNITURE IS AT HOT
SUMMER SALE PRICES!

SYLVANIA 19" COLOR TV
-Re•olt Coatrol
-cable Ready

SYLVANIA 25"
COLOR TV
-Re•ote Control
-3 Cabinet Styles
-caltla ReadJ

-Ga Scrtta Display

Hot Summer Sale

SYLVANIA

VCR

OPEN SINGLES FINALISTS - John Bentley or Syracuse (center) beat Cheshire's Chip
H1111trty (right) ti-2, 6-2 to win the men's open

-Rt•ott Coatrol

-155 c......
-cable Ready

singles title in the Gllllla County Americlln Cancer Society's Tennis Tournament. At left is tournament director Brant Pauley.

}ones confident Indians no longer want him
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Doug
Jones is headed for the minor
leagues, confident he has a few
good years left and just as _confi·
dent that he's no longer m the
Cleveland Indians· plans.
The Indians sent Jones outright
to Class AAA Colorado Springs on
Wednesday, hoping he .can .so!ve
the problems that cOSt hun his Job
as lfieir closer. Jones was 1-7 with
a 7.4 7 ERA and six saves in 11
oppa-wnities this season.
Jones could have refused the
assignment and become a f!ee
agent, but he would have ~o~e1ted
more titan $700,000 remammg on
his $2.05 million salary.
"That deeision wasn't hard at
all," Jooes said.
The demotion came as no silr-

prise, because there were reports
earlier in the week that Jones had
been placed on waivers. He cleared
waivers Wednesday afternoon
before he was sent down.
Jones, 34, is the Indians' alltime save leader, with 127 in four·
plus seasons. He set a team record
with 43 last season, his third
straight year with more than 30.
Opponents have batted .328
against him in I991.
"I don't see where pitching here
would hurt the liallclub any more
than it's already hurt," Jones said.
''They want to wjn games, and I
can understand what they're thinking.
"I think they're building for
three or four years down the road,
when they get a new stadium. I
only have three or four years left.
That's not part of the equation."

He said he wasn't surprised that
no team claimed him off waivers.
"Who wants my contract?" he
said.
Jones became Cleveland's best
relief pitcher th(l past few years
because of a change-up that moves
like a screwball, ~ing away from
left-handed hitters nd into righthanded hitters. Th pitch hasn't
been working this year.
"I've been feeling a little too
strong and I picked up a few bad
habits because I was overthrowing," Jones said. "I can't blame
anybody but myself. ~ '
The Indians called up right·
handed reliever Rudy S~ez, 22,
who was 4-2 with a 2.58 ERA and
seven saves in 25 games at Class
M Canton-Akron. A power piiCher, he struck·out 73 and walked 30
in 38 I-3 innings.

Thursday, July 25, 1991

Relaxed Browning, Reds post 12-3 win over Chicago Cubs
CHICAGO (AP) - Tom moved to third on O'Neill's single
Browning was relaxed. So were the to right. Both scored on Sabo's
rest of the Cincinnati Reds.
double to the center field wall, givIn fact they felt so good they ing the Reds a 3-1 lead.
pounded out 17 hits and scored 12
Shawon Dunston's sacrifice fly
runs, equaling season highs, in a in the founh CUI the lead to 3·2 and
12-3 rout of the Chicago Cubs on Andre Dawson's RBI single in the
Wednesday.
fifth tied the score.
Both the Reds and Browning
The Cubs' largest home crowd
have been struggling since the All- of the season, 36,215, saw a tame
Star break and needed a game lilce game less than 24 hours after Daw·
this.
so n and Cincinnati reliever Rob
Browning (11-7) got his first Dibble were ejected by umpire Joe
complete game since June 13, West in separate incidents during
1990, and it was only the Reds' Chicago's 8-5 victory on Tuesday
sixth complete game this season. night.
He snapped a personal three-game
Elsewhere in the NL it was Los
losing streak by scattering 10 hits, Angeles 2, Philadelphia I; Pittswallcing one and striking out two.
burgh 7, Atlanta 4; St. Louis 4,
"I've been pressing so much I Houston 3; and Montreal 8, San
got away from my style," Brown· Diego2.
ing said. "I'm a rhythm pitcher and
L.A. bikes NL West lead
1 had a good feeling. I got back into
As usual, a trip to the West
the groove. I relaxed. I tried to Coast is causing all sorts of havoc
keep the ball down.''
with the pemant races.
Chris Sabo paced the offense
Philadelphia, much to the chawith three hits and three RBis, grin of Atlanta, has blown two
while Paul O'Neill also had three straight late-inning leads at Dodger
hits and Joe Oliver ended an O·for- Stadium to help Los Angeles take a
18 streak with a pair of hits and 4 1/2-game lead over the Braves in
three RB!s as the Reds won for
only the second time in 14 games.
BiU Doran warned that although
Wednesday's game made everyone
happy, "We ean't be too optimistic

too soon.''
The game was tied 3·3 when
Hal Morris opened the sixth with a
single, but was forced at second by
Eric Davis. O'Neill's single to center sent Davis to third. Sabo followed with an RBI single to give
the Reds a 4·3 lead and Oliver then
broke out of his slump with a single to left that scored O'Neill.
Heathcliff Slocumb replaced
Mike Bielecki (10· 7) and Sabo
broke for home with Freddie Benavides at bat and was easily tagged
out by catcher Rick Wilkins. On
the play, Oliver moved to second.
Benavides was then given an
intentional walk. Browning then hit
a grounder to second baseman
Ryne Sandberg, whose throw to
ftrSt went off the glove of Slocumb,
who was given an error as Oliver
scored. Then when Mark Grace
retrieved the loose ball in front of
the Reds dugout and made a wild
thorw home it allowed Benavides
to also score, giving the Reds a 7·3
lead.
"We had a ball game until the
sixth .inning," Cubs manager Jim
Essian said. "Then we weren't able
to hold them. They're just pretty
good hitters."
The Reds added two runs in the
eighth on an RBI single by Benavides and a run-scoring double by
Browning, then got three more in
the ninth on a two-run single by
Oliver and a sacrifice fly from
Benavides.
Bielecki pitched five and onethird innings, allowing six runs,
five earned, on 10 hits.
. "Everybody is going to take
their lumps," Bielecki said. "On a
day when I felt good I give up 10
tiits in six imings. I'm sitting here
wondering what went wrong. I had
better stuff than my last time out.''
With the game tied 1-1 in the
fourth, Davis got an infield hit and

Dates for Eastern
sports physicals set
Sports physicals for all sports
for the 1991-92 school year at Eastem High School will be conducted
on Saturday, July 27 at Eastern
High School.
The physicals will be given by
Dr. Mark Brown, Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Dr. James Witherell.
The schedule for the physicals
will be as follows:
9 a.m.-noon - all students in
grades 7· 12.
Student athletes should wear
shorts or loose comfortable clothing on the day of the physicals and
bring a completed phystcal card
with them. The cards can be
obtained in the office at Eastern
High School.
On the day of the physicals all
athletes should report to the school
cafeteria.
There will be no charge for the
sport physicals on this day. If
unable to attend on Saturday, other
arrangements will have to be made
by individual at their own expense.
For further information, contact
athletic director Pam Douthitt at
667-6942.

The American Cancer Society· s
Meigs County unit will sponsor a
golf tournament at the newly
remodeled Meigs County Golf
Course on Thursday, Aug. I. All
golfers are invited to p&amp;n1C1pate and the tournament IS open to
thepub1ie.
The entry fee will $50 for nonmembers and $42 for members.
. In addition to cash and merchandise prizes, the first three teams
win the opportunity to play m the Ohio state finals at Firestone Country Club in Akron. All proceeds
will go the Meigs County ACS
unit.
For further information, call the
Meigs County ACS unit or the
Meigs County Golf Course.

ar,ea

FU.NITURE, APPLIANCES, TV's, FLOOR COVERING

992·3611

·

. DOWNTOWN POMEROY

STOll HOURS: Moaday 9:30.8:00; Tuesday-Saturday 9.:30·5:00
•fREE DELIVERY•
Visa/Mister Card/AIIdeno•'s Uarge
' I

the National League West
The New York Mets are 0-for-2
at Candlestick Park, increasing the
Pittsburgh Pirates' lead in the East
to 5 l/2 games. The Mets still have
seven games left in California, and
it could just about be all over by
the time they come home on Aug.

2.

"We can't afford to fall too far
behind the Pirates," New York
first baseman Dave Magadan said
after an 8-4 loss to San Francisco
on Wednesday night. "We had a
good streak to get close once, but
they're too good a team to have to
catch again."
After a 2-9 road trip, the
Dodgers are 2-0 at the stan of a
nine-game homestand. After
tonight's game against the Phillies,
Montreal and the Mets hit town .
Mike Scioscia's sacrifice fly
into foul territory scored Stan
Javier as Los Angeles rallied again
to beat Philadelphia 2·1.
Dodgers 2, PbiUies 1
Los Angeles' second straight
comeback against Philadelphia
spoiled a fine effort by Jose Dele-

sus, who gave up one run and three
hits in eight innings.
After the Dodgers tied the score
with a run in the eighth, Kal
Daniels led off the ninth with a
bloop double to left off reli ever
Steve Searcy (1 · 1). Javier, a pinchrunner, went to third on Mik e
Sharperson 's sac rifice and sco red
on Sciascia's foul fly to left field.
John Candaleria (1 - 1) pitched
two innings, striking out five, for
the victory.
Pirates 7, Braves 4
Lloyd McClendon had three hits
and drove in two runs against AllStar starter Tom Glavine.
The anticipated duel between
All-Star lcfl-handcrs Glavine (135) and John Smiley (12-6) didn't
develop - neither pitched past the
sixth - but Smiley man aged to
win his third in a row. He gave up
eight hits and three runs in five and
one-third innings.
Giants 8, Mets 4
Kevin Bass hit hi s se cond
homer in as many nights and Kevin
Mitchell also homered as San Francisco battered David Cone. Bass
and Mitchell combined to drive in

Scoreboard

Meigs ACS to hold
golf ~ourney Aug. 1

ANDE·RSON~s

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL LEAGUE
E.lst DIYIJion
w L Pet.
Te•m
PITISDURGH
sa 34 .630
... S1 40 .S70
New York.
.. Sl 41 .S43
St. Louis
... 4S 49 .479
Chicago
......... 42 52 .447
Montreal
Philadelphi• """' 40 54 .426
West Division
w L PeL
Team
Lo• Angeles """ 51 40 510
Atlanu
......... 48 44 .522

S111 Ft~~nciaco, 17; Mitchell, San FrUtas·
co, 17.
STOLEN BASES - Nixon, Atlanta,
53; Griuom, Montreal, 44 ; DcShic:ldt,
Montreal, 40; Coleman, New York, 33;

GB

AL games ... (Continued from Page
eighth inning.
Gullickson (13-5) moved into a
five -way tie for the American
League lead in victories with late
relief help from Mike Henneman,
who gained his 15th save with one
and one-third innings of shutout
reticf.
David West (1-2) matched Gullickson before tiring in the sixth
when Detroit took the lead for

6)

good.
Orioles 5, Angels 2
Rookie Chito Martinez hit hi s
second game -wmn ing hom e run
since being call ed up from th e
minors on JulyS.
Martinez' s fourth homer in 16
games broke a seventh -innin g tie.
Leo Gome z add ed a two -run
homer in the eighth .

•aflle.lllael

Williamt, S.n Francisco, 17; W. Cl~.

In the majors ...

six runs, and John Burkel! (7·5) th e head of center fi elder Gera ld
Young.
pitched an eight-hitter.
Lee Smith (5-2) pitched one
Cone (9· 7) was roughed up in a
second srraight outing, giving up innmg for the victory,
Expos 8, Padres 2
seven runs - four of them
Mon
rreal
scored five runs in the
un earned - and six hits in four
first inning off Dennis Rasmussen.
mnmgs.
Rasmussen (3 -7) lasted only
Cardinals 4, Astros 3
Jose Oquendo's bases· loaded two· thirds of an innin g, allowing
single over a drawn·in outfield lift- five runs on seven hits.
Brian Barnes (2.3) gave up two
ed St. Louis over Houston.
Felix Jose drew a walk from AI runs and six hits in fi ve and twoOsuna (5-3) with one out in the third innings for the victory. Mel
ninth. Todd Zeile singled and Tom Rojas replaced Barnes in the sixth ,
Pagnozzi walked on four pitches and Jeff Fassero fini shed with three
before Oquendo hit a fly ball over perfect innings for his fourth save.

SINt:s f92f

AMsRieA's TEeHNt!ILot:v Sf'DRs·

Lankford, St Louis, 28; Bonds, Plti.J ·
burah, l8i Butler, lol Angelc&amp;, 2l
PrrCHlNG (9 docilioos) - Carpenter,
St. Louis, 7-2, .778, 3.88 ; Walk, PIUS·
burah, 7-l, .771, 3.19i GliVine, Atlanta,

s.s

8
t4
t7
19

13-5 , .722, 2.19; R. Martinez, Los Angeles, 12-5, .706, 2.49; Greene, Philadelphia, 7-J. .700, 3.00; Hurst, San Diego,
11 -5, .6&amp;7. 3.20: Avery, Atlanta, 10-5,
.667, 3.64: Smlhy, Plllsburah. 12-6,

GD

45
46 46 .500 6.5
.... 45 50 .474
San Diego
9
II
San Francisco """ 42 51 .412
Houston
"""" 37 57 .394 t6.5

.&amp;67, 3.36.

CINCINNATI

STRIKEOliTS -

Cone , New York ,

137; Glavine, Atlanta, 12A; Gonder~, New
York,l22; G. Maddu l, Chi cagn, 113;

Hami..cch, HouslOn , 911; Benea, San Diego,
95; Bdchcz, to. Angeles, 90
SA YES - l..e• Smith, St. Loui1, 26;
Dibble, Clncl•nall, 23; Franco, N~w
Yolk, 21; Mi':Ch W~ama, Ptulade!phla,
18· Ono Smnh, Chicago, 16; B. landr'um, Plttaburah, U; Lcffc.rta , San
Dicso, IS; Oaengua, Atlanu, l S.

Wedne.."day's scores
Clnclnnatll2, Chlcaao 3
PltUburah 7, Atl•nta 4

St. Louis 4, Hou.&amp;ton 3
Monuu.l. 8, San Diego 2
San Francisco 8, New York 4
Los Arlgcle. 2, Ph.i11dclph.ia I

American League

On deck ...

BA ITINO - Tanabull, Kanua City,
.333; Pucketl, Minnea:ota, .331; C. Ripken Baltimore, .331; Palmelro , Teu t,

Today
Clndnnall (RUo ' ·2) •• Chlcaao (G.

Moddux 1-6~ 2::!0 p.m.

.330: Bcus. 801\an, .321; Molitor, Milwaukee. .320; E. Manincz, S..nl~ J 16.

New York (Whitehurst S -6) at San
Francisco (Wilsat
p.m.
Montreal (Darlings ~ 7) at San Diego (G.
Harris 2-2), 4:05_p .m.
Pltiladelp/lil (Kuffln 2-2) at I....os Anac-

S·9). 3:3S

lc.&lt;~

RUNS - Molitor. Milwaukee, 70;
Palmeiro, Teu1. 67; CanKCo, Oakland .
67; White, Tormw. 64; C. Rir*.c:n. Baltimore, 64; Siura, Tex.u. 63: f ielder, Detroit, 62.

(R. Maninez 12·5). 10:35 p.m.

RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 77; Camu~..::n ,

Oak.land, 72; Carter, Tom'lto, 68; Siern ,
Teus., 67; Tuubull, Kan111 City, 66; C
Davia, Minnuoll , 66; C . Rip,k en, Balu-

Frld•y
Atlanta (Ave ry 10-5 ) al Chi c ago
(Caslillo 3-0), 3:20p.m .
PIUsburgh (Walk 7-l) at Uou,ton
(KIIe 3 -5),11:35 p.m.
Cincinnati (llammond 7 -6) •I St.
Loula (Tewksbury 6-6), 8:35p.m.
New York (Fern•ndez 0 · 0) at San
Diego (Hunt ll ·S), 10:35 p.m.
Monuttl (Sdmidt ~I) at Los Angclt-1
(Honhioa J.2),
p.m.
Philadel~hia (Mulholland 9·9) at San
Francisco (Downs S-4), IO:Jj p.m.

L PeL
39 .S89
........... 49 44 .521

GB

... 45 45 .500
........ .. 46 48 .489
Milwaukee
...... 41 53 .416

8.5
9.5

. 56

Detroit
New Yolk
B01ton

6

14.5
17
31 61 .337 23.5
38 lS .409

Baltimore
CLEVELAND

Weil D!Yislon
w 1.. Pet.

Team
Minna au
Texu
Chic:aJO
Oakland
California

Seattle
Kan1u City

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

S5
49
50
5t
48
49

40
42
41
44
45
46

.579
.538
.538
.S37
.5 l6
.Sl6

GB

..... " 45 48 .484

Budget-Priced Personal LOWEST PRICE EVER!
Dot-Matrix Printer
12x·Zoom VHS Camcorder

-save
-'100

17988

Low Ae $15 Per Month •

4
4
4

Detroit , 7-2, .778, 2.80; Stoulemyrc,
Toromo, 10-3, .769, 2.77; Langston, Cali·

6
6

!omia, 13-4, .765, 3.63; Welb, Toronw,
12-4, .7l0, 273; Finley, California, 13-l,
.722, 3.98; Gullickson, Detroit, 13-5,
.722,4 .15.
STRIK.EOlJTS - R. Johnson, St11tUe,

9

Wednesday's scores
New Yod tO, Sc.~ttlc 2
Baltimore: 5, California 2
Oakland 8, CleYel•nd 4
Dcuoit 6, Minnc:aou 3

WII27U5ln
CatatoQ

Low AI S25 Per Month •

1991

On deck ...

so~?.Oo

• 2·Lux Sensitivity • Auto-Focus
•12x Variable-Speed Zoom

a IBM®Proprinter Emulation
a100 cps
•26·2821

M16-826

Call On Us
For Cordless
Savings
'52 Off
Easy-to·Use Telephone
Answerer Bargain

Cut33~3~.

~5

• Outgoing Message in Man's or
Woman's Voice Built In

VHS VCR With Remote
On-Screen Programming

-'80

Save

!

2399

Low As S15 Per Month •

Reg .

S12U5
Tone/pulsa d•a.ltnQ

S31U5

...

•1-Yeari6·Event Timer
• HO System
116-520

• Base·to·Handset Paging
• Speed-Dials 30 Numbers

......

••3·562

~

141 ; Clcmcru, Bonm, 136; Ryan, ~eus,
135; Swindell, CleYeland, 121; F1nlcy,
California, 120; McDowell, Chicago, 117;
Candioui, Torooto, 113.
SAVES - Aguilera, Mwnesota, 25;
Eckersley, Oakland, 24; Rc:~rdon , Boston ,
24: lluvcy , California. 23; O lson. Balti more, 21 ; Thigpen. Chicago, 20: Jeff Rus·
Jell, Tc:u .s, 20; Henke, Toronto, 20.

Toronto 2, Oticag_o 1
Kansu City 7, Milwaukee 4
801l011 2, Tuu I

$788

Save '211

24; Brett, K.anns City, 2A ; Canseco, Oak land, 23; White, Toronto, 23.
TRIPLES- Molitor , Milwa ukee, 9;
Polonia. California, 7; White, Toronto, 7;
R. Alomar. Toronto, 6; M cRae, Kansas
City, 5; Devcre~~ux. Baltimore, S; Puckeu.
Minnewta, S; Raine~, Ch.i~ago. 5.
HOME RUNS - Fielder, Detroir, 26;
Canseco, Oakland, 24; Carter, Toronto,
23; Tuubull, Kansas City, 22; C . Davis,
Minneaota, 21; C. Ripken, Baltimore, 21;
Deer, Detroil, 19; D. Hendettoo, Oakland,
19; Winfield,Califomia, J9.
STOLE:-.l' BASES - R. Henderson,
Oakhnd, 33; R. Alomar, Toronto, 32;
Raine~, Oic•go, 31; Polonia, Cd.ilomia,
30; Cuyler, Detroit, 22: White, Toronto,
22; Franco, Teus, 19.
PITCHING (9 Decisions) - Ericksoo,
Minnesota, 13-3, .812, 202; Henneman,

Eul DIYiilon

W

Etren
!:Is
• Die·Cast Metal Enclosure
• 2·Way • Handles 40 Watts
Black, ••0·2030. While, 140·2045

HITS - C. Ripken, Baltimore, 124;
Pabneiro, Texu, 123; Puckett, Minnesota,
122; Molitor, Milwaukee, 120; Sierra,
Teut, 11 5; Carter, Toronto, 113; Franco,
Texas, Ill .
DOUBLES - R. Alomar, Toronto, 30;
Carter, Toronto, 29; Pllmeiro, Teus, :lll;
Boggs, Boston, 28; C. Ripken, Baltunorc,

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Toronto

2995

Cut40%

more, 62.

t0:35

Tum

World's Best-Selling
Mini Speaker System

Today
Selltle (Krueger 7 -3) at New York
(Taylor ~-4), 1 p.m.
Toronto (Stottlemyre 1~3) at Chicago

(Garcia 1-3), 1:05 p.m.

Transactions
BasebaU

.

Califomia {McC:uk.i\1 7-12) at Balti more (R .Smith S-2), 7:35 p.m.
Oaklud (lbwkhu 4-6) at Cleveland

(OUo 0-1), 7:35p.m.

American Leaaue
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Stnt
Ooua Jones, pllchtr , lo Coloudo
Sprln&amp;• or the P.clnc Co•1t Lugue.
Reu lled Rudy Seancl, pltchtr, from
C•nton· Akron of the Eaatern Leaaue.
MJNNESOT A TWINS - Optioned Allan Andenon, pi~..::hcr, to Ponland of lhe
Pacific Coau League . Acti vued Da n
Gladden, outficlder, from lhe 15-day dis·

.

Minnesota (Ericklon 13 -3) at De troit

(Aid..C 0·0), HI p.m.

MilwaLU.cc (lluntcr 0.3) tat Karu u City

(Aquino 3-2), 8:35p.m .
friday
California (Langston 134) at New York

abled li5l.

(Sanderson 10-5). 7:30{..m.
Oakland (Stewart -5 ) at Blitimon:
(Robinson 4-9). 7 :35p.m .
Chic:.agn (Hibbard 7-K) at Boru111 (Gudiner 3-4), 7:35p.m.
Suttle {Delucb 8-6) al CleYtland
(Boucher 1-6), 7:35 p.m.
Kan&amp;u City (Bodd1cker 8-7) at Toronto
(Key 10-6), 7:35p.m.
Milwaukee (Dosio 7·7) at Minnesota
(fapani 6-7), 8:05 p. m.
Detroit (Tc.rrcl16-9) at Tc~r..u (Drown 7·
8),11 :35 p.m.

1'\atlonal League
MONTREAL EXPOS - Sold the con Inlet of Scou Service, pitcher, to the Chu -

nichi Dragons or the Japan League.
NEW YORK METS - Named R.C.
Reuteman general manager of baseball
operations of Binghamton of lhc Eastern
League. Ac: t..ivated Vince Coleman, out ·

Pritchard, wide receiver, to a

tncl.

nmninJ. back, to a three-year con-

Pl•ccd Liffort Hobley,ufety, on the

NEW YORK GfANTS - Si&amp;ned
Howard Crou, tiahl end, 10 a 1wo--year
contract and Henry Bl ade~, no&amp;e tack...le...

Waived baniel Kelner, wide rccei.vu, and

' ; Candaele. HOUitOil, S; Coleman, New
Yodd;M. Thom-SLlouii,S.
HOME RUNS -lolln1011, New Yorlt,
22: 01nt. A~hnta, 19: McOriff, Sn

249~
:Is
a Lighted Keypad
aOne·Touch
Redial

Cut 2Q'Ii

Aareed to terms with Ervin Randle ,
linebacker. Signed Robert Maru, of~en ­

Tontlpulal dialing

Hockey
N•llonal Hocker Lt-aue

ST. LOl/lS BUJES -Agreed to tcmu
whh Bn:.ndan Slwlahli-1, right wing.

19: ·a. Bell, Chicaao. 18: Matt
L . •

~22 ·162 1

Compact
MobHe CB

143·586 Groy, 143·587

terback.

13:\5
• Detects XIK-Band Radar
• Light and /or Buzzer Alarm

Save 1611

$1388

Low AI $43 Per Month •

W11 S1H8.00 In
1991 Cat•log

a1500 HD • Weighs Only 6 lbs.
• Up 10 4 Hours of Power , 25 . 3506

Save '100

Whlt1, 143·585. Almond,

REDSKtNS

69~5

Cut 29~ ·

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -

Agnomclto te:ml with Ma.rlt Rypicn, quar-

HALF
PRICE

Notebook PC is
13/4" Thin

Our Best
200·Channel
Handheld
Scanner

Jerry Williuna, dcfenaiYe lineman .
Asreed to tenna with K1n1YiJ McGhee,
linebacker, on a threo-yea: contrac:t.

WASHINGTON

Lankford, St. Loui1, 8; l . Gonzalez,
Houoron, 6; KNk, Pbiladelphia, 6; felcl&lt;r,
San Francia:eo, 6; Vaa "Siyke, PlttiiMU1h,

WHY DRIVE BLIND?
Compact Radar Detector

Sleek
Trlni·Fone®
For Desk/Wall

sive lineman. Waived Dave Colonna, ught
end.

San Die&amp;o. 9;

- - ·

lhrcc- ye~r

phyaica.Uy-unable-to-perform lilt.

Oant, Atlanta, 23; L. Qootalez, HoUSlOfl, •
21; T. GwyM, San Diego, 21-; Sandberg.
ChiCIJO, 21.

1111 Cltltof

SmartOrive" and CM-5 Color Monitor.
Reg . Separale !!ems 1749.65.
125·160311043/1047. 5111 '1088.00

MIAMI bOLPHINS - Siancd Aaron
Cnver,

WIII10V9.951n

• Tandy" tOOO TL/3 Computer
Save $861 on a TL/3 wtlh 20MB

Durin Trieb, lincbacko-.
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS - ReleaiQll On:&amp; Malt, defauive end.

lOTS- T. Gwynn , San Dieao, 127;
Samuel, Loa Angelca , Ill; Buller, Loa
Angeles, 108; Joae, St-. Loui•.• 105;
Calderon, Montreal, t 03; Bon Ill•, Plltl·
burah, 102i 0 . Bell, Chicago, 10~.
DOUBLES - Joae , St. L~uu, 29 ;
Morrll, Clndnnall, 25; Bonlll•, Pltll•
burah, l4i McJlcynoldr, ~e.w Yod. 24;

--· -

Low As $20 Per Month •

coo tract.
DALLAS COWBOYS - Signed John
Geack. auard, to I three-year contnct..
lNDIANAPOllS COLTS - Wmed

gelea, 59.

" -

m -1603

Nationa l Footb•ll Leajlut
ATLANTA FALCONS - Signed Mike

RBI - John1on , New York, 70; W.
Cbrk, San Franei1eo, 69; Bond1, Pltllbur&amp;}l1 U; G. Dell, Olicago, 62; P_aw1on,
Chicago, 61; Kruk, Philadelphta, 59;
Bon Ill•, Plttaburah, 59; Mwny, Loe: An-

·-

49995

Football

BAITING- T. Gwynn, San Diego,
.336; Pendleton, ALlan~ • . 333; Nixoo, At·
lanla, .331; Morrla, Cincinnati, .315;
McGee. S10 Francisco . . 323 ; Jose . St
Louis , .314; Calderon, Montreal . .310.
RUNS- Butler , lo1 Angelc1, 68 ;
JohnJM, New York, 65; Sandberg, Otic:ago, 63 ; Vu Slyke, PI_UJburah , ,1_;Gant:
Atlanta , 59; 0 . Sm1th, St. Louu, 59.
DeShielda, Mont:teal, 57.

-

5

SA.:\1 FRANOSCO GIANTS - MovM
Scon Garrelts from the 15 -day disabled
list to 60-d•y diubled list. Purehasetl the
contract of Bryan Hickerson, pLlcher,
from Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League.
Sent Grc:g Liuon, infielder, to Phoenix.

National League

Diea~.

SaVe
600

fielder, from the IS -day dlubled list . Scm
Kelvin Torve, fLrSt baseman. to T1dewatcr
of the lntemat..ionallugue

Major league leaders

TRIPLES - T. Gw)'M,

Powerfui286·Based PC

4985
:.L

• Never Drive "Alone" Again
• Great for Help or Directions

.22995
W01 1321.15 In
1V91Calli"'t

Low Ae -115
Ptr Month•

• Keyboard to 32,Q58 Frequencies .
• Fire, Police, Ham, Air, 800 MHz ·

121·1509

120·135

Check Your Phone Book for the Radio $hack Store or Dealer Nearest You

·-====·
1~
" · "
··

.

·

.

.

~ (lo1by. llboii!Oriosl&lt;ensing Co&lt;p, MS·OOS l - - - 18M Raa./TM IIIII
Co&lt;p. -blltary·-radoquipm!M ,,clucltsblltlrill. SWITC!IMLI TOUCIUONEr~l.S!
_..,.,
-Wo&lt;i.anlioltltonaaod!)Uitlinll. Tiwlfl)ll . ~llllll-onilpuillliOiary.dill)
_._......_
hs. youcanltll use SIMc:tl~tonll. FCC~: NDI-Iori*1Y or Coin tints. We
~wllltOIIII.
.
.

I

-

111a1or Ct.c..w.,
....

�Thursday, July 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

Man confesses to killings; describes mutilations

IN COURT . Milwaukee County District Atty. E. Michael
McCann, right, confers in court Wednesday with an assistant,
Carol White, while asking Milwaukee Circuit Judge Frank T.
CriveUo to set a $1 minion cash bond for Jeffrey L. Dahmer in the
case involving dismembered bodies in that city. At left is the defendant's attorney, Gerald Boyle. Dahmer was not present. (AP)

,,•

...

BROTHER MISSING • Reginald Lindsey of Milwauk«!e
a family photo he brought Tuesday to the seen~ outside a Milwa~­
kee apartment building where parts of 11 bodoes were found. Hos
19 year-old brother Errol, front row, l.ert, in family p~otograph,
bas been missing since April 7 and Londsey feared h•s brother
might be among the victims. (AP)

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Rela ti ves of co nfessed kil ler Jeffrey
Dahmer said they discovered a vat
fill ed wi th bones and slim e three
years ago when he li ved with his
grandmother but couldn ' ttcll if the
remain s were human or animal.
Dahmer, 31, confessed to killing
and culling up II peo pl e whose
parts, including three refrigerated
heads, were found in his tiny, foul·
smellin g apartmen t, poli ce said
Wednesday. Police also found a
photo of a boy who has been missin g since May and whose brother
Dahmer was convi cted of molesting in 1989.
Dahmer tol d police he drugged
and strangled hi s victims, dismembered them and boiled some of the
heads to remove the fle sh, accord·
ing to court papers.
Circuit Judge Frank T. Crivello
set bail at Sl million cash. Homi cide charges could be fil ed today,
Dist ri c t Allo rn ey E. Mi chael
McCann sa id.
Dahmer moved in with hi s
gra ndm ot her in suburban Wes t
Allis in 1982, The Plaon Dealer of
Cleveland reported today. Dah mer's stepmother. Shari, to ld the
paper that six years later she
smelled a harsh, chem ical odor
com ing from the basement and the
garage.
Dahmer's father, Lionel, invcsti ·
gated and found "bones and the
resi due in the containers, but he
couldn 'ttell if they were human or
animal bones," Mrs. Dahmer said.
"Jeffrey said it was an animal
he found. When he was young, he
liked to use acid to scrape the meat
off dead animals. He told Lionel
that's what he was doing."
The family fe ared he was
involved with the occult, she said.
Mrs. Dahmer al so sa id her stepson often brought men home
through a private entrance to the
basement.
"One time he was down there
with a man and his grandmother
opened Ihe door," she said. "He
was bare -c hested and he said to
her, 'Don' t come down here, you
don't want to come down here.' ·
She thought they were both naked.
So she didn't go down ."
Police Chief Philip Arreola said
police found five full bodies and
parts of six others at Dahmer 's
apartment. All the victim s were
apparently mal e , he sa id. He
refused to comment on news
reports that Dahmer admitted to
cannibalism.
Dahmer is sued a stat eme nt
through his lawyer saying he " has

no one to blame but himself, not
the police, not the courts and not
lhc probation department. ' '
" There comes a time when you
have to be honest and this is the
time," he said.
Police today identified one of
the victim s as Oliver Lacey, 23.
His mother, Catherine Lacey, said
he was last seen July 12 going to a
Milwaukee mall for ice cream .

Sou th

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?

Nebraska

Colo.
Kansas

..._ ""

100 km

RECESSION ANNIVERSARY • Louise Ellis, former presi·
dent ror a Portland, Ore., bank, looks through trade magazines in
search of a banking job. Ellis, who has been unemployed since the
start or this year, has little hope or finding a similar job as banking
positions become scarcer. (AP)

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
END OF THE MONTH
(~
f.~

li

HERE IS JUST AFEJI OF THE SA_-=-=TWIN BED
COMPLETE
Headboard, Box
COnr·mn and Mattress

3 PIECE

BEDROOM ·\

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

SALE

$188°0

~!!!.EM~ror,

Bed,
Chest &amp; Night Stand

ALl FLEXSTEEL,
LA·Z·BOY AND
CAT NAPPER
RECLINERS ON.SALE
RECLINER PRICES
'

-· '1'

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

·'

Early American in Blue
Velnt

THOMAS ON THE ffiLL • Supreme Court
Justice nominee Clarence Thomas, center, poses
with several Senators Wednesday on Capitol
Hill. With Thomas, lert to right are John Sey-

lEG. '1599

STAUING AT

$149°0

ON SALE

$888°0

DINING ROOM
SUITES

lfaible·s, It Chairs, Matching
China

SAVE

~p

TO

S6QQOO

CARPET
SALE
Save On
Everything in
Stock.
for Details Abctutl

Free Sweeper with
Carpet Purchase.

ij
t

I

Baby Calves:

m.oo &amp; down.

Butcher Sows:
400-600 lbs., 38.00-43.00.
TopHoas:
22().250 lbs., 50.50-52.00.

DL 1ooo..... "········-············3ss.oo
YARN-ATTACHMENT-·1.\U M COST

FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY

110 W. MAIN

992·2284

mour, R·Calit., Larry Craig, R·ldaho, Robert
Dole, R-Kan., Jesse Helms, R·N . C., Connie
Mack, R·Fia., and Dan Coats, R-Ind., right
rront. (AP)

Top Pension Takeovers
Here are the ten largesl pension funds terminated by the government
agency that guarantees pensions. The agency's deficit is expected to
surpass $2 billion once Pan Am's funds are taken over.
In millions of dollars

$840

Pan Am
Termination date: 7191,
Number of plans: 2

701l

Eastern
10190, 7

498

Wheeling-Pittsburgh
11185,7

LTV*-250
10186, 1

Kaiser .Steelm.l 220
Allis-Chalmers 7185, 10185, 11

White Motor

8

~-P
--G
. -c-·s-

2187. 3187, 1o181, 4

175

D-ef- i-ci-t ---.

II 66

11181,8

14 Cu. Ft.

HK 100 ............................... 49.00
LK 100 ••••..•...••...•••••••••••••• 149.00
SK 21 0••••••••.••••.•••••••••••••••335.00
SK 155 •••••.•.•...• ,............... 440.00
SR P 60N ...................... ,. 250.00
SK 700 •••••. ~··········"~ ............ 465.00
SK 151 o••····~·, .......... ,... ,... ,. ... 277 .00

@]

Time lo Check
Grcal lluys ...
Shop C!assificds

HONEST ...
Clnssifieds
Work!

ANDERSEN WINDOWS

BLOW-IN
INSULATION

3 PIECE

inside a nearby apartment. The
tion still continues as one man is in cust
Police say several homicides may be invol •
(AP)

All KNITTING MACHIN ES AT
COST OR BELOW

not mak e tax c uts wothout on put
from his staff and that he was consc1enoousabout hi SJOb.
Esposoto ha s no lega l back ground but IS defending h1m se lf
because he says he cannot afford a
lawyer. He faces 18 month s in
pnson 1f convtcted.
A repon issued last year by the
Ohio auditor's office said Esposi to
and DeCourcy should repay HamiliOn County $1.57 million in lost
revenue becau se of tax reductions
they granted.

being accused of lowering property
taxes for friends and j)Oiitical allies.
Esposito was md1cted Feb. 20
on 220 mi sdemeanor co unt s of
dereliction of duty and hsung fal se
values on property tax records, but
is facing only 20 of those charges
because Common Pleas Jud ge
Thomas Crush wanted to a vo id
redundant charges.
DeCourcy was indicted by the
same grand jury on 190 felony and
misdemeanor counts rangins from
th eft in office to de rei ic uon of
duty.
His trial date has not been set.
Cincinnati attorney John Kelley
Jr. , who testified Tuesda y, sa1d ·
Esposito reduced his property value
by $76,000 three years ago without
consulting the auditor' s staff.
"There was a change made on
the tax bill at the meeting," Kelley
said. "He just scratched out one
number and put in a different num ber."
Karen Gillen, a cle.rk in th e
auditor's office, said Esposito did

with Wingback Chair. Blue
Plaid.

Livestock report ________

Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Heifers:
250-300 lbs., 85.00-100.00;
300-500 lbs., 80.00-92.00;
500· 700 lbs., 75.50-89 .00;
700-Up 68.00-81 .00.
Butcher cows:
Utilities, 50.00-55.50.
Canner/Cutters, 53 .50-Down.
Light weight low grade cows,
47.00-Down.
Heifereues, Up to 68.50.
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
300-800 lbs. 71.00-87.00.
Butcher Bull:
Utilities, 62.00-68.50.
Canner/Cutter, 63.50-Down.
Veal Calves:
Choice/prime, 92.50-105.00.
Medium. 85.00-94.00.
Springer Cows:
600.00 &amp; down.
Cow/Calf Com.:
850.(J().down.

of duty and 10 counts of false li st·
ing of property values.
Howard G. Thiem ann said on
Wednesday that Towne Properties
earned nearly 20 percent in profits
on one Cincinnati apartment com plex and more than 23 percent in
profits on another after Esposito
approved tax cuts for the properties
in 1986 and 1987. respectively.
Thiemann, a real estate apprais ·
er, testified that similar apartment
complexes expect to earn between
9 percent and II percent a year.
Esposito has maintained that the
informal tax cuts he granted were
legal and were no1 done without
input and recommendations from
his staff.
Special Prosecutor Thomas R.
Smith contends that the reductions
were illega l because they were
granted after Hamilton County's
property tax bills were cenified by
the Ohio treasurer.
Esposito and his fath er-in-law ,
former auditor Joseph L. DeCourcy
Jr., resigned in March 1990 after

FIBER

lEG. S]69.00

LIQUIDATION SALE

The Commerce Department said
orders for durable goods - usuall y
expensive products expected to last
more than three years - totaled a
seasonally adjusted $116.5 billion,
down from $118.4 billion in May.
The drop followed gai ns of 3.6
percent in April and 2.0 percent in
May, but the . May figure wa s
revised down from 3.4 ocrccnt in

CELLULOSE

With 4 Motching Chairs
In Oak and Cherry

Pigs by Head:
18.00-38.00.

sion,'' Fitzwater said.''

S239 9

ROUND
PEDESTAL T

Butcher Boars:
22 ,()().4 5'00.

an earlier estimate. Orders had fall - cent in June.
Still, eco nomi st Michael P.
en during th e previous three
N1emira of Mitsubishi Bank in
months.
Durable goods orders are a key New York, said the inventory sececonomic barometer of manufac- tion in th e Commerce Depart·
turing industry plans. A prolonged ment 's factor)' orders report next
decrease in orders could resu lt in Wednesday w111 be "crucial."
''T hey (inventories) probably
declining production and a loss of
fell in June and that will sci us up
jobs.
Another indication of the slug· for a nice rebound" in orders to
gish recove ry was a 1.1 percen l refill empty shelves and vacant
drop in unfilled orders in Jun e. back loiS, he said.
Without a buildup in orders, proThe overall decline in orders in
ducers arc able to keep up wilh June resulted in part from a 15.6
demand using their currem facili - percent pi ung e m Defense orders
ties and work forces.
follo win g gains of 22.5 perce nt in
And non -defense capital goods May and 16.4 perce nt in Apnl.
orders excluding aircraft , often a Exc ludin g thi s vo la til e sec tor,
barometer of business plan s to durable goods orders fell onl y 0.4
expand and modernize, fell 5.0 per- percent.

lYING
SUITES
Camel la&lt;k Sofa, loweseal

I

Gallipolis Stockyards Co.
July 13, 1991
Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Steers:
250-300 lbs., 93.50-120.00;
300·500 lbs., 94.00-105.00;
500-700 lbs., 86.00-102.00;
700-Up 76.50-88.00.

CINCINNATI (AP)- A real
estate company earned double the
average profits on two apartment
complexes because of property tax
cuts, an appraiser said during the
trial of the former Hamilton County deputy auditor.
Michael Esposito is on trial in
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Courts on 10 counts of de'reliction

~~

3 ONLY

ery will be uneven. "
And at the White House, presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater described the drop as a "blip"
which did not alter the administration's contention that a recovery is
under way .
" We continue to believe that
we're com ing out of th e reces-

: Witness said Esposito gav(!~ improper tax cuts .

100 miles

$299

BONES FOUND • A Milwaukee police offi·
cer takes photo of bones round in alley behind
an apartment building Tuesday in Milwaukee
where police uncovered several body parts

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
flow of orders to U.S. factories for
durable goods ebbed in June for the
· first lime in three months, the government reported Wednesday. Analysts said the 1.6 percent drop was
the latest sign of a choppy, slow moving recovery.
" The June durable goods report
will probably reignite talk of a double-dip recession," said economist
Marilyn Schaja of Donald son,
Lufkin &amp; Jenrette, a New York
securities firm . "The data, however, only reinforces our impression
of the recovery being mild from a
historical perspective.''
Ed Yardini, an economist with
C.J. Lawrence Inc ., a New York
investment firm, sa id the report
"supports our view !hat the recov-

~

With Dual Massqge
Limited Quantity

.I

tographs, court papers said.
"Dahmer further stated that he
would drug these individuals and
usually strangle them and then he
would dismember the bodies, often
boiling the heads to remove flesh
so he could retain the skulls." a
police &amp;ffidavit said.
··Mr. Dahmer further stated that
he took Polaroid photographs of a
number of these persons while they
were still alive, after he had killed
them, and of their heads and body
parts after he had di smembered
them," the affidavit said.

Dakota

RECLINER

I

Police also said they found in
Dahmer's apartment the photo·
graph of a 14-year-old boy who is
the missing brother of a youth Dahmer molested Dahmer fondled that
13-year-old youth after promising
to pay him $50 to pose for photos.
Dahmer was released from pri son
in March 1990.
The boy's brother, missing since
May, is seen in the photo in his
underwear, his handcuffed hands
over his head, another brother said.
Dahmer found hi s victim s at
bars and shopping malls and lured
them to his apartment for pho·

Orders for big ticket items decline

Refrigerator

$449 9

GAS &amp;
ELECTRIC

RANGES

.S34

SPECIAL
PRICES
ON
DISCONTINUED
STYLES OF
MAYTAG
WASHERS AND

DRYERS

LOWEST PRICES IN THE AREA,
CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU

--

:_ -

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS FOUND THROUGHOUT THE STORE

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
ST. RT. 124

742·2221
TOLL FREE 1•800·837·8217

RUTLAND, OHIO

Rath Packing 166
9182, 3
Wisconsin SteeJII6t
5180, 2

Braniff Airways 160
· LTV (Republic Salary Plan)

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House, facing a poss1ble fight with
the Senate and a presidential veto,
has voted to raise federal grazing
fees less than originally planned.
By 254-165, it approved a measure Tuesday that would limit any
increase paid by some 27,000
director of the pension agency, said ranchers in 13 western states to 33
taking over the two underfunded percent a year.
plans "eliminates the un certainty
The measure was attached to a
ove r the pen sion liability , thus bill directing the Interior Depart·
clearing the way for sales of Pan mcnt' s Bureau of Land Manage·
Am assets.'' •
mcnt to emphasize environmental .
Because the other airlines arc concerns more in its management
only trying to buy certain portions of 270 million acres of land. virtuof Pan Am, they would not be ally all of it in the West.
responsible for pension plan liabiliLast month, the House
ties, Lockhart said.
approved, 232-192, a fourfold
increase in monthly grazing fees
over the next four yg,ar~•.
Rep. Buddy DAI'IIen, 'D·Ga., one
of the chief advocates of the higher
fees, said the ver~ ion approved
Tuesday was intended to offer a
compromise to the Senate, where
westerners have repeatedly blocked
consideration of higher grazing
fees.
AP /Carl Fo•

Govetnment moves to take
over PanAm pensions
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
government agency that guarantees
pensions moved today to take over
two Pan Am Corp. pen sion fund s
worth about $840 million - a
record loss for the agency.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corp. said it asked a U.S. District
Court in New York this morning
for an order to terminate the plans.
The agency said it would guarantee
payment of benefits 10 the 35,000
airline workers and retirees who
fall under the two plans.
Pan Am, which has filed for
protection in bankruptcy court, is
now in the process of trying to sell
off its assets. United Airlin es.
Tran s World Airlines and Delta
have all made various offers.
James B. Lockhart, exec utive

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Senate Judiciary Commillce has
scheduled confirmation hearings
for Clarence Thomas to begin Sept.
10, the day Congress returns from
its summer recess.
Thomas. a federal appeals court
judge, has been nominated by President Bush to succeed Supreme
Coun Justice Thurgood Marshall.
The announcement of the hearing s schedule came Tuesday as
People for the American Way, a
liberal activist group, charged that
Thomas was derelict in his duty to
enforce civil rights laws when he
was an assistant education secretary during the Reagan administra·
Lion.
Thomas, meanwhile, continued
to make the rounds on Capitol Hill ,
m

House facing possible
fight with Senate

8182, 3

Source: Penston Benefit Guaranty Corp.

Thomas
hearings to
begin on
Sept. 10

o,.1 l-'K ltD
,,.,cw~
,..,v,.••..,._..,-

1
9
3

:~,;---:]1
::==-,- _1.-:.;_._

30 lB. BAG

~

l,!

I

-~\ - fJ'
J
li
1 _.~- :i:

30 pound bag
has 20"/o more
insulation than our
competitors

-~J~::;.Jl . .

'.

~-

'

'

SAVE

44%
Off LIST
/\
•ll% Off Spe&lt;iaf Order
Windows
•Emflent for window reploctmlt1t or new con.
struction
•Wood core, double-pan•
insulating glass

tOVER 400
WINDOWS
IN STOCK

'· ~ ;-:;r- ,·,
/"' ./ 'J:Iii'L
Ii .I· ·

v /'

1

l

~

L _

!

,

~--~--r

J ,·

·
_ , j__

_).

•Limited to Quantities on Hand
•Wt Special Order Anderstn
Windows for Every Application
•Check Our Prices Before You

10'

4" SEWER AND DRAIN
Jlf2"x10' Schedule 40 ................ 3.79
2"x10' Schedule 40 ................... 5.29
3"x10' Schedule 40 ................. 10.6'
4"x10' Schedule 40 ................. 12.49

40°/o OFF

lf2"X 10' ....................................... 1.79

MERILLAT
KITCHEN

lf•'' 11 0' ....................................... 3.29

CABINETS

SMOOTH WALLS AND CEILINGS

4 STEPS TO A

CPYC WATER PIPE

With
Thrifty

ROCK

your entire
kitchen
shaw ing each door and
window .

299

2, Measure the location

lf2"x4'x8'

_....,:.;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _--1&lt;1. . . . . . : . . - - l . - - - - - -'---'--....J,; - - · - · - .

j

NEW KITCHEN
1, Sketch o floor plan of

SHEET

lf2"x4'x12"

1

of eoch plumbing, olectricaf and gas outlot.

CASH AND CARRY

3.

list appliance&lt; you
wont to use in your new
kitchen and their dimtnsions.

4. Come to us with your
plans and ideas and let
our txp•ts htlp you design a now kitdoenf .

·~=~

"'•- -

I -

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 25, 1991

Action, adventure videos abundant
By JEFF HILLEARY

This month, ac tion and advcn"""..,.~- ·~ ture fonns the backdrop for Video
Views as we take a look at two
films from Republic Home Video.
While nei ther of these will ever
have to worry about being considered Oscar material, they do, how ever, deserve to be watched for the
fact they are stra ight adv enture
yarns with more than a little action
in them.
Payback , for example, is a 94minute, R-rated talc of drug dealers
and escaped convicts is a movi e
that moves sluggishl y script-wise
with more than a small amou nt of
unne cessa ry swearing, ye t still
manages to be entertaining. Starry
Corey Michael Eubanks, Michael
Ironside and Don Swayze, it is the

original/{lthe Heat of the Night.
Wmgs Hauser looks like a football
player and has the rugged good
looks that make for your typical
leading man. Playing small-town
sheriff Ralph Baker, Hauser turns
in an excellent performance in a
story of escaped conv1d Clinton film full of them. Frances Fisher
Jones who escapes to a small town plays his lover interest and from
where he gets a job in a service sta- there on, Frame-Up becomes one
tion , fall s in love with a girl who of the fastest moving tales of good
ju st happ ens to be the sheriff' s guys and bad guys I have seen in
daughter and gets in touch with the some time.
Here is a capsule description of
bad old drug dealer to ge t some
old-fashioned revenge on him. A one of the best crime dramas of this
month. A fraternity hazing goes
shoot out follows and then...
Just get a co py of this fi lm if haywire and a boy dies. An innoyou want to see something that for cent salesman is fal sely accused of
all of the action is still a contrived hit and run. Then, enter the town
mass of cliches. But, it still is a lot bigwigs who manage to get the
investigation squelched. But count
of fun, so watch it anyway.
Frame -Up is one of the best on valiant effon by Sheriff Baker
small-town crime dramas since the to get to the truth. At a risk of

Video
Views

repeating myself, this is a great
movie and should be seen by the
lovers of adventure. Rated "R" for
nudity and swearing.
Now, friends, neighbors and
video game lovers, here is the tip of
the month. The game is Super
Mario Brothers 2 - The Adventures
of Mario and Friends in the Dream
World of Sub-Con. For those who
arc wondering where the warp zone
is that can take you directly to
World 4, it is a very easy to find
place. In World 1-3, frnd your second botOe of potion and take it to
the end of the board where the
large jar is. Throw the magic bottle
at the jug and go through the door.
On the other side, go down the jug
and, presto, there you are, directly
in the deadly ice world of World 4.
That's it for this month. Until
next month , be kind and rewind.

Thursday, July 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Baptists break ground for addition
A ground-breaking ceremony
was held recently for a new educatiOnal and fellowship hall at First

Baptist Church in Middlepat. The
footer and concrete blocks have
been laid at the location and the
new wing is heing constructed by

Banlcs Construction Company of
Pomeroy. Th~ church hopes to be
in the facility by the end of 1991.

BEST CHEER - The Southern Varsity Cheerleaders received
the Camp Championship Trophy for Best Cheer presented in the
varsity division during the last day of competition at the Universal
Cheerleaders Association's Competition at Kent State University.
The cheerleaders are under the supervision of Sandra Baer. Pictured, 1-r, front, are Amber Cumings, Roberta Caldwell, Tamara
Hayman, MicheUe McCoy and Julie Hill. Back, Advisor Sandra
Baer, Marcy Hill and Nikki lhle. Top, Valerie Connolly.

Golf activities reported
Winners after an 18-hole golf
sc ramble held by the Tuesday
morning Ladies' League at the
Meigs County Golf Course on
Tuesday were, tied for the win,
Becky Anderson, Julia Hysell and
Abby Stratton; Ada Nease, Donna
Nease and Mary Froendl
A mixed scramble will be held

at the club on Sunday, August 11.
Meat will be furnished for the
potluck dinner.
Winners on Tuesday, Jul y 16
were: Margaret Follrod, Low
Gross, Low Putts and Chip-in-hole;
Tied for Low Net were Becky
Anderson and Ada Nease and
Chip-in-hole, Ada Nease.

have been caug ht trying to cross
the 280-m ll e German-Poltsh border. GuenterKrause,directorofthe
German border guard, says that IS
only a smal l fraction of the al1ens
who got through. Off1c1als at border outposts and swamped refugee
ca mps say hundreds have been
commg _dally smce June.
Outs1de_the Pohsh border town
of Szczectn, 30 Romaman men,
wo men and ch1ldren hvc m stench
atop a sprawling garbage dump, a
squalid way station on the road to
the West.
" I want to go to Berlin, but they
won' t let me in." says 35-year-old
Georg i Anton . "We'll stay here
until we can get to Gennany."
They have built plastic and cardboard huts amid the refuse. The
men forag e for junk to sell. The
women and children beg in town.
Anton says his 10 children work
th e stree ts. asking sttangers for
money the family will use to get to
Germany .
In one of the countless postCold War ironies, the once-feared
East German border patrol troops
who were so adept at keeping peapie inside East Gennany are finding it difficult to keep people out.
The Oder River in the north and
the Neisse in th e south form the
German -Po lish border. At some

points, the placid, tree-lined Neisse
reaches only to an adult's knee.
'' When they come over the
Neisse, they come with only what
they're wearing ," said Baerbel
Hesse, who works in a refugee center in the German border town of
Eisenhuettenstadt.
Authorities say many refugees
are spirited into Gennany by organized rings that often charge 500
· marks_ about $280 _per family
'

or five months' wages.
Officials in west Germany 's
Baden-Wuerttemburg state say
they now are processing 100 asy!urn-seekers daily, most Romanians
and Yugoslavs.
The German Interior Ministry
said 3,507 Yugoslavs sought asylum last month, up 774 from May.
Overall, the number of Yugoslav
refugees is up 35 percent from last
year.

Roush birth announced
Kevin and Marcy (Craig) Roush
of Racine have announced the birth
of their first child, a son, Colton
James Roush, on May 22, 1991 at
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
· He weighed 8 pounds and was
21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Charles and Debbie Craig, Racine,
and Don and Rhonda Dillon of
Canton. Maternal great-grandpar.ems are Roy and JoAnn Proffiu of
Canton.
Paternal grandparents are Ray
and Libby Roush of Racine. Paternal great-grandparents are Irene
Roush and the late Arthur Roush
and Nonnan Milliron and the late
Katherine Milliron, all of Racine.

Readers show support for Martha Raye
Dear ADD LaDders: Thanlcs a
million for printing that letter from
the World War II Gl in Buffalo who
asked what had happened to Martha
Raye.
As a result of that column she has
m:eived hundreds of !cum from
fans who are conc:emcd about htz
health. They aU sent their love and
made her feel marvelous.
I have known Ms. Raye since
1967 when she Clllertaincd the troops
in Vielnam. About 18 months ago,
Martha had a stroke which left htz
panially paralyzed. I am caring for
her, and it is a privilege. She is now
in a wheelchair, taking physical
therapy three times a week and
making remarkable progress. This
RJQt trooper is anxious to get back
to work. With her spirit, I'm sure
shell make il
Martha sends her love to you,
Ann, and to all your generous
readers who are letting her
know that she has not been forgotten. -- RAMON RODRIGUEZ
COMMAND SERGEANr MAJOR
(RETIRED), U.S. ARMY SPECIAL
FORCES
Dear Sgt. Rodriguez: Thanks for
the updalc. I have been swamped
with love leuers for Martha. Here is
a sampling:
From Fon Lauderdale: During
World War II, I served in North
Africa and in Italy. I had the

privilege of seeing that terrific
entertainer Martha Raye in both
places. Please let her know she did
a world of good and that we all
remember her and love her. -- BOB
ALLEN
ANN LANDERS
Mechanicville, N.Y.: Guess who
"1111, Los An&amp;eles
flew into a miserable base in
nm .. Synllcale aDd
Vietnam with the east of "Hello,
Crealon Syndlcale."
Dolly!" None other than Martha
Rayc. It was raining cats and dogs
from beginning 10 end but not one
person lefL Every man in the 11th very last letters, he wrote to tell m~
Annoural Cavalry Regiment loved what a terrific show she had put on
htz.- RAY SHAKOW
'
and he sent me a oicture of himself
Waco, Te:tas: I worked with with Martha, taken under the wing
Martha for four years on her TV of a big plane. WiD you teD her for
show. She has tremendous talent me, please? --1EANNE1TE HALE
Atlanta: You mentioned Martha
and a bean as big as aU outside. I
never saw her get mad or give Raye's rendition of "Mr. Paganini."
less than 110 percent of herself. WeD, she was also a fabulous singer
She's a grand woman. -- MILTON of ballads. Her recordings of "Body
and Soul" and "Stairway to the Stars"
wn.soN
Fort Lauderdale: I served aboard are coUectors' items. A truly great
the USS Coral Sea off the coast of artiSL- HARRY D. SMITH
Albany, N.Y.: It was wonderful
Vietnam in 1968 and '69. Martha
came aboard to entertain us. She to .see your generous words about
gave us an evening that none of us Martha Rayc. She gave everything
will ever forget.
she had to her country and now we
Cludeston, W.Va.: When I read hope htz country will honor her with
Martha Raye's name in your column, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
the memories flooded over me. I We have already forwarded to
have always wanted 10 let her know President Bush petitions with 23,000
how much she meant 10 the troops signatures. We hope and pray that
everywhere, but especiaUy 10 the she gets iL -- NOONIE FORTIN
men who fotight in Nonh Africa. AND BEU..E PELLEGRINO
DEAR NOONIE AND BELLE:
My husband was tilled in action
soon after her visit. but in one of hi• So do I.

Ann
landers

I ' 1

. j ...

BUILDING COMMITI'EE ·Ted RDey, Jr.,
Dan Riggs, and Dale Walburn, all of Middleport
First Baptist Church's Bulldin&amp; Committee, and

Larry Banks helped break &amp;round ror a new fellowship hall at the church recently. Absent
were: Randall Davis and Jeff Tyo.

sian for the Dance Theater of
not the color of your skin.''
Another, Bernard McClain, says Harlem to perfonn several of them.
that he's "learning an an that's not Earlier this month, when the com for everybody. And I should be pany per!'ormed at the Spoleto Fesprivileged that I'm doing that. He tival m Italy, they danced Balan(MiiChell) gets his message across chine's "Serenade" and MiiChcll's
to me in a way that I am a better "John Henry." The audience, by
person than I was seven years ago applause, clearly preferred them to
dance companies from Monte
driving a forklift ... "
The show bas a lot of dancin~, Carlo and Canada appearing at the
some with voice-overs. The rrrstiS festival.
One of the company's stars, Vira "Swan Lake" solo by Judy
Tyrus. The last is "Dougla," a ginia Johnson, is shown in despairmodern , Africa -oriented work. ing tears as the company disbands
Final credits roll over a perfor- in the spring of 1990, not sure if it ·
mance of "The Firebird."
ever will come back. Ultimately,
Mitchell is shown hard at work, the layoff lasted six months.
radiating commitment to his comJennings says that 700 students,
pany as he woos funds from the mostly from the black middleShuhert Organization, Chase Man- class, attend the company's school.
hattan Bank, American Express As a class of tots kicks the "Can
and wealthy individuals. He also is Can," he says, " What they do here
shown at rehearsals, working his doesn't fit the stereotype most outdancers hard.
siders have about what the youth of
Of special note to dance fans is Harlem are up to. ''
a film clip of MitcheU and Suzanne
This hour about the Dance TheFarrell dancing some of "Agon," ater of Harlem, while not a perfect
which Balanchine choreographed portrait, nonetheless is interesting
for them.
m its look at its subject from many
Balanchine, who dido 't bestow and varied angles.
his ballets lavishly, gave permis-

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD in advaDce
to 8lisure publication in the calendar.

REEDSVILLE - Sports physicals for all sports grades 7 through
12 for 1991-1992 school year at
Eastern High School from 9 a.m.
until noon. Students should wear
shorts or loose comfortable clothing and bring a completed physical
card with them. There will be no
charge.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Women's Fellowship will
KANAUGA - Liberty Mounmeet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Church of Christ. taineers will perfonn at the DAY
Helen Swartz will demonstrate bas - Center in Kanuaga on Saturday.
ket weaving. The public is invited.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs United
Methodist Cooperali ve Parish on
Condor Street in Pomeroy will
have a free clothing day on Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to noon .

THE 1991

BUY ONE PAIR
OF SALE SHOES
AT~ PRICE
AND RECEIVE THE
SECOND PAIR OF

EQUAL VALUE OR
LESS FOR '10
GROUP SANDAL

LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will hold a hymn sing at 7:30p.m.
SATURDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Neville Family
Reunion from 10 a.m. until dark at
0.0. Mcintyre Park in Gallipolis.

RACINE - Jan and Kathy ,
Specks of Bluegrass and Country
Blend will perform at Star Mill
Park in Racine on Saturday at 7:30
p.m.

1/2 PRICE

Chapman Shoes
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

here Arthritis Pain Strikes ••
Rheumatic end Arthritic
Pain can strike the joints
in any of the indicated
areas !•e arrows on chart)

SYRACUSE - London Pool in
Syracuse wiD have a d.j. dance and
swimming on Saturday from 8 p.m.
until II p.m. The public is invited.
The cost is $3 per person.
SENIOR MEMBERS • Th,ae long·tlme
: -members were on hand at the ~nd bre;a!titll!
· .ceremony at the Middleport First Ba·prm
::Church recently, where plans are underway tor

a feUowshlp and education hall.
Pictured, left to right, are Ouida Chase, Katy
Anthony, Beulah White, Milton Hood, Harold
Chase and Ethel Hughes.

Reed named to ARC position

The Meigs County· Fair Tab Is
Coming August 9, 1991.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 2, l991.
CALL DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION ·

992-2155
.,

. Brian J. Reed, a writer with The
Daily Sentinel , recentlr accepted
Chairmanship of the Me1gs County
AmeriCl!ll Red Cross (ARC) Blood
Program.
"Brian will be a great asset to
the Meigs County Blood Program,"
1\RC Donor Resources Consultant
Debra L. Stalnalcer said. "His background in radio and newspap~r
j()urnalism will be most helpful 10
presenting the needs of the bl?od
recipients and attracting fust-llme
donors to meeting the 500-plus
gOIII that Mei~s County must meet
10 provide patient needs."
· ·"The blood prog~m began in
this area in 1951 and smce has seen

many new faces as blood chairmen," Stalnaker continued. "We
welcome Brian and we know he
will welcome you as a blood
donor."
Meanwhile, Reed stated that he
was looking -forward to working
with the ARC and the local community.
"As a Meigs County native, I
am pleased to help in this very
important cause," Reed sai!l. "I
realize the importance of blood
donors in loday's fast-paced society. I am also aware of the Meigs
County's impressive history in the
area of blood donorship. We have
every reason to be proud of the
past. We can also- look forward to

TOPS 570 hold meeting
: TOPS 570 met on Tuesday at
Carpenters Hall in Pon:'eroy. Virginia Pooler was recognized 8li best
loser, and Bonnie Johnston was
~ed best runner-up.
. 'Linnie .Aleshire was named Best
KOP loser. The fruit basket v.:as
w0n by Trina Faulk ~ a SUI)X1St
gift was won by Bomte Johnson.
: A "no-balce" sale was set for the

August 6 meeting.
The next meeting will be July
30 at the Carpenters Hall in ·
Pomeroy. Anyone interested in
TOPS can call 992-2516 or 9925638. Meetings are held every
Tuesday with weigh-in from S p.m.
to 6 p:m. and the meeting from 6
p.m. to 7 p.m.

/•

an c;quaUy proud future."
''I have enjoyed involvement in
the program for the past several
years," Reed continued, "having
served as a donor, a volunteer and
on the job as a 'promoter' of the
bloodmobile in Meigs County."
The next bloodmobile will be
held on August 21 at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.

LOTTRIDGE - American
Osteopathic Association (and Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine) will host Care-A-Van at
the Lottridge Compwnity Center
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. offering
health screening. Also, there will
be a flea market and balce sale from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. For transportation,
call667-6124 .

Puts Pain to

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club will
hold a dance on Saturday from 8 to
II p.m. at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy with
Dale Eddy as caUer.

SLEE,

'low for lhr first time, onrniKbl bleued

Pomeroy
.

vtce.

Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat.

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 wiD hold a
round and square dance on Friday
from 8 p.m. to II :30 J!.m. Happy
· Hollow Boys will provide music.
Everyone is welcome.

RUTLAND- Men 's Class E
Softball Tournament Saturday and
Sunday. For infonnation or to register, eaU 992-7307.

MIDDLEPORT - Taylor-Harper
reunion will be held on Sunday at
the home of Ben and Ruby Rife of
Leading Creek Road in Middleport.
Bring a covered dish and table scr-

FINAL CLEAN UP ON
ALL SALE SHOES

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 meets
Thursday at 7 p.m. (Note different
time.)

Cbalrmu of the Board of Christian Edueatlon .
helped break ground for the church's feUowship
and edueation building.

POMEROY - Descendants of
the late Guy and Iva Singer will
hold their reunion on Sunday at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Potluck dinner will
begin at noon. All family and
friends are welcome.

CLEAN SWEEP
CLEARANCE SALE

POMEROY - Free clothing day
will be held on Thursday at the Salvation Anny in Pomeroy from 10
a.m. until noon. All area residents
in need of clothing arc welcome.

COLTON ROUSH

Alfred notes
By NeUie Parker
Wilma O'Brien of Columbus,
daughter of Garner Griffin, died
recently . Surviving besides her
father is her husband, Charles and a
son, Kevin. The church and community extend sympathy to the
family.
The Alfred Church recently
hosted a dinner welcoming back
the Rev. Sharon Hausman as pastor
for another year. The occasion
marked the Northeast Cluster of
Methodist Churches fifth Sunday
gathering with all churches of the
cluster being represented.
Many from the church and community either visited or attended
funeral services' for Violet Spencer
Parker, Long Bo!tom, who grew up
ncar Alfred and attended the
Shumway School.
Recent guests of Martha, Joe
and Will Ppole were Joe's mother,
Louise Poole and an aunt, Blanche
Poole, bod\ of Houston, Texas.
Guests of Marguerite and Delbert Steams were their grandchildren, Chad Lewis of San Diego,
Calif. and Daniel and Leah Cohen
of Akron, and their daughters,
Donna, and her husband, Howarcl .
Stoler, Centerville, Virginia, and
Laura Cohen, Akron.
Nina Robinson, Clara Follrod,
Pam, Aaron, and Sarah Yost visited
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robinson, .
Belpre, and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Swanz, Reno.

ABC, Jennings special studies
dance theater of Harlem
NEW YORK (AP) ..:._ "Peter
Jennings Reporting: From the
Heart of Harlem" is about a black
ballet company. But it isn't primarily a culture story. It attempts to
place the Dance Theater of Harlem
in context in society.
In the ABC News special, airing
tonight, Jennings finds the dancers
and younl! dance pupils purposeful
and ambitious. He finds the company a window into the lives of middle-class blacks.
Arthur Mitchell, for 15 years a
much-admired dancer in the New
York City Ballet, founded the
Dance Theater of Harlem and its
school in 1969. His PllflX&gt;Se was 10
create a place for aspiring black
ballet dancers. He had been one
among 100 white dancers when
George Balanchine made him the
fii'St permanent black member of a
major American baUet company.
Jennings calls him "the Jackie
Robinson of the ballet world."
When the dancers speak, they
stress art, not race. Sandy Phifer
says, "You want them (audiences)
to look at you for the quality of
your work. It's what you produce,

East Europeans make efforts to slip into promised land
ALONG THE POLISH-GERMAN BORDER (AP)- R1ca
Chdstin el is cro ss in g the river
tom &amp;ht. He ha s h1s passport m a
~last•c bag and an ultimate destmatw~ .'n mmd.
,
Once I ge t to ~crmany I II
move to Amsterdam, srud the 27year-o ld Romam an, one of 200
refugees crammed mto a park m
the Pohsh border town of Zgorzelec.
.
"Once I get to Amsterdam, I II
catch a ship to America.' '
It 's not known if Chri stin e!
made it across the Neisse River and
into Gennany on Su nday night.
But it doe sn't matter. He'd
already tried to get into Austria and
Italy. If he failed his first crack at
Gennany, he said he'd keep trying .
The former electrician is one of
thousands of Eastern Europeans
camped along the German-Polish
border, banging loudly on the gilded door to the West. Thw co un tries are facing hard times and they
want in for a beuer life. .
Now that the weather IS wann,
they arc coming, swimming across
nvers, Jumpmg off trams, mov mg
through th1ck forests m the dead of
mght.
Border troop s say th ey can' t
stop th em. During the first six
months of the year, 1,200 people

The Dally Sentinel Page-11

lt~~tporary

992-2124

Hours:
U am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp;: Sat.

WE NOW
HAVE
DIET !'£PSI

AVAILABLE AT:

FOUR FREE
PLASTIC DESERT STORM CUPS
With ·Purchase of A
Large Deluxe Pizza

-

and you can actually feel the pal• 1t111
lrs.wnln•· Bt!lln to sleep pooctfully opln.
And what '• mort II will 1101 llhlln or
IIIIHr &lt;iolhtna or bed lhtela.

-~ "·""·

-· .. .

- tlwv .... 1:00 l .nr. lo I~ p.m.

IUIMIIf 'o:OCi o.nr. to " 'OO , ....

I'I'IESC:IIli'TIOHI
E. M!lln
. Fri..., ...... Ice

''

relief from the pain of

arthrllls, bunlll1, rheumattsrv. 110ft-,
slllfneu. Jwl rub Poln-Buii-RII's crtomy
balm over the affected jolnll or mUICieo,

',

I'H. lt2· 2111

Pom•oy. OH.

il

�Page--12-Ttie Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy......f.tlddleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 25, 1991

NASA officials confirm shuttle launch
delay will be at least a week
By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL , Fla.
(AP) - NASA delayed today' s
launch of space shuttle Atlantis by
more than a week because of a
failed computer on on e of th e
ship's main engines.
The failure occurred before
dawn today, about six hours before
the scheduled liftoff, while the
shuttle was being filled with more
than a half-million gallons of fuel
for a nine-day mission.
"Nice try," launch director Bob
Sieck told his team in announcing
the delay. A new launch date was
not set, but Sieck said it would be
no earlier than late next week.
The five astronauts assigned to
the satellite·deliverv mission were

'Poison Pen' biography turns
the tables on Kitty Kelley
The book's publisher, Lyle Stu·
art, was Kelley's publisher before
the two had a falling out.
NEW YORK (AP) - The
After giving Stuart her "Jackie
tables have been turned on Kitty Oh!" manuscript about Jacqueline
Kelley with a vengeance.
Onassis, Carpozi writes, Kelley
The go-for-the-jugular celebrity admitted fabricating an intimate
biographer is herself the subject of bedroom conversation between
a Kitty Kelley·style bio that accus· Onassis and columnist Pete Hamill.
es her of the same kind of scan ·
" So where did you get this condalous behavior that made her versation?" Carpozi quotes Stuart
books on Nancy Reagan , Frank as saying.
Sinatra and others best sellers.
" Kelley looked down at her
In "Poison Pen: The Unautho· shoes as if studying the condition
rized Biography of Kitty Kelley," of their shine," Carpozi writes. '"I
George Carpozi Jr. portrays Kelley made it up,' she said. When she
as promiscuous and claims she looked up, her demure expression
stole dresses and perfumes - as was that of a naughty little girl.
well as other writers' words - and ' They won't sue,' she repeated,
made up tales about the rich and almost imploringly."
famous.
Stuart said he ordered the
"Kelley has been exposed inter· invented scene deleted.
nationally as a teller of inaccurate
Kelley could not be reached for
tales, manufactured scandal, and comment because she was en route
malicious mounds of made-up from Los Angeles to Washington,
muck," Carpozi concludes in his said John Goldhammer, head of
book, which is due in stores next program development for MCA TV
week.
in Universal City. Calif. The enter·

..,., ....

tainment company is prei?aring a
syndicated talk-show senes with
Kelley as host
A message left on Kelley's
answering machine at her home in
Washington was not returned.
Carpozi also claims in his book
that Kelley borrowed heavily from
Frances Spatz Leighton's book
"The Search for the Real Nancy
Reagan." By twisting the material,
Carpozi claims, Kelley made it
seem Mrs . Rea~an and Sinatra
were engaged in 'lustful conduct"
when they were only having lunch.
As for her own sex life, Carpozi
reports that Kelley was known as
"available Kitty" during the time
she worked for Sen. Eugene
McCarthv.
Carpozi also takes Kelley to
task for reporting supposedly ver.
batim conversations that he says
she could not possibly have wit·
nessed. But Carpozi does the same
thing himself in reporting on her.
For example, Carpozi criticizes
Kelley for reporting a purportedly

verbatim exchange between Mrs.
Reagan and her parents when she
tells them she plans to marry
Ronald Reagan. Carpozi himself
reconstructs a conversation
between Kelley's parents that pur·
ponedly occurred on the night they
met in Spokane, Wash.
In a telephone interview, Car·
pozi, a former editor at The Star
supermarket tabloid who has writ·
ten biographies on Sinatra and
Onassis, defended his use of quotes
as "literary license, not like Kitty's
dialogue." He said his sources for
the book exceeded 400.
Kelley was born in 1942 to
William Vincent Kelley, a lawyer,
and Adele Martin Kelley. The old·
est of five girls and a boy, Kelley
became a surrogate mother to her
siblings because of her mother's
heavy drinking, Carpozi writes.

Pomeroy......f.tlddleport, Ohio

Researchers announce lower-fat sausage

asleep in crew quarters when the including a 1989 case that delayed
launch was canceled. They planned an Atlantis flight by nearly a week.
to return to Johnson Space Center
Launch pad workers are not
in Houston this afternoon.
expected to get into the crowded
''I'm sure they 're disappointed, engine compartment until Thurs·
but they want it right, too," said day , after all the fuel has been
shuttle director Raben Crippen.
drained from the tank. NASA plans
Jerry Smelser, manag~r of the to install the new controller this
shuttle main engine project, said weekend and test it early next
the fu eling was going well when week.
one of two communication chan·
"Should that all go smoothly ...
nels on one engine controller shut we would be in a posture to pick up
down. Ea ch of the three main the count about the middle of next
engines has a controller, which week," Sieck said.
In the past week, workers
communicates with the shuttle's
flight computers and essentially repaired a cracked floor beam in
serves as the engine· s brains.
the engine compartment, replaced
The faulty controller will be two electrical components and had
replaced with a spare, Smelser said. trouble with a circuit. But the con·
Officials said the same problem troller tested fine until today.
has cropped up on shuttles before, Smelser said.

By CATHERINE CROCKER
Associated Press Writer

Thursday, July 25, 1991

STILL ON THE PAD- The Space Shuttle orbiter Atlantis
sits on Launch Pad 39-A after being scrubbed Wednesday due to a
faulty main controller. NASA delayed the launch by more than a
week because of a failed computer on one or tbe ship's main
engines. (AP LaserPboto)

NEW YORK (AP) - With
health authorities repeating like a
mantra the advice to cut down on
fat, it's no wonder that food manufacturers keep coming up with low.
fat versions of old favorites.
The latest is a lower-fat pork
sausage, developed by the
researchers at Auburn University in
Alabama who came up with the
beef for McDonald's McLean
Deluxe.
On Wednesday, they announced
AU Lean and offered it for sampling.
The link sausage, juSt over 5
inches long, had a peppery taste
and consistency similar to standard
links. An Italian sausage served on
pizza also tasted much like its fatti·
er counterpart. A patty made from
lhe sausage tasted bland, with a
lighter texture than standard.
The sausage contains pork and
pork stock, carrageenan, flavorings,
spices and a yeast extract, accord·
ing to the university. Carrageenan
is a seaweed derivative that binds
moisture and helps maintain tex·
ture .
A 2-oun~e link has 114 calories,
63 of them from fat, the university
said. That compares with 210 calo·
ries, 153 from fat, in standard links.
The McLean Deluxe, including
trimmings, contains 320 calories,
90 of them from fat. To compare, a
McDLT sandwich has 580 calories,
331 of them from fat
Because sausage generally has

Patriotic Day

Sunday School I0 a.m. Worship II a.m.

Pu..lc Welcome

Special Invitation to •n &amp; Women who llavt
served in tho Ar~ntd S.nices, Policemen and Civil
S.nict PtrsoHI
Special Sptaktr

JARRATT, Va. (AP) - A former maintenance man who raped
and killed a 13-year-old girl who
lived at the trailer park where he
worked gave the thumbs-up sign
just before he was executed in Vir·
ginia' s electric chair.
Albert Jay Clozza, 31, offered
no final words before his execution
Wednesday ni~hl Earlier Wednes·
day, Clozza S3ld in a statement that
he did not expect forgiveness.
"I only ask that if you find
someone who needs help, do not
tum a blind eye to them, offer them
a hand," he said.
Clozza was convicted of killing
Patricia Beth Bolton in 1983. He
abducted the girl as she walked
home and raped , sodomized and
beat her.
"I cannot change what I have
done in the past, no matter how
much I wish that I could," Cloz·
za's statement. said. ".Nothing I can

Days

Words
16
15

6

15

"Atc.Ne I 50 ch1coun1 for ads ~id tn •dv•nce
"Free ads - Otvetway and Found ads under 15 words Wtll b e
run 3 dtVSit no ch•ge.
•Pric• uf ed fur ell &lt;:1pitel lenen" double puce of ad coal

4 - Giveeway
'5 - Happy Adt
6 - Lolt end Found
7 - Y~td Salefpatd '"advance)
B .... Public S•le &amp; Auc1ion
9 - Wanted to Buy.

*

THE

PHOTO SPECIAL

Jfo.

:~~
-----------------------!*
*!
PORTRAIT
~
*
~
*
PACKAGE
~
*
~
*
Save $2.00
~
*
~
*
~
*
~
*
~
*
~
** $6 97
serve
*
country
**
** July 22 thru July 28
!fr
*
*
*
WHITNEY'S
COLLECTION

R'S CHOICE

ONE 8xl0. FOUR 5x7'S

~

~

~
~

~

-l&gt;-

-,..
~

.t.-

,..
~

-l&gt;-

,..
~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~
t...

~

,,

•

Bless Those Who
Their

To commemorate those
wno nave courageouslv
served their 'country,
The ENESCO Pi?ECIOUS
MOMENTS"' Collection is
proud to introduce six
exquisite new porcelain
bisque figurines which
beautifully portray our
OelovecJ setVice men and
women. These nearrwarming figurines represene members of each
branch of the United
States Armed Forces and
are a loving tribute to
their pride, dedication
and valor

VIsit us toctav and see our
fine select/on of Pi?ECIOUS
MOMENTS figurines to

nonor vour setVICe person.
'"' fftfKO

1991 so~m u'r

snown
' Buren« uc En,sca

COfOOIICIOII rtem

""' ·4dddddd~..~ ~

AND EIGHT WALLETS

.

;

GAl.

.

~

-

.

'

.

1 1- HelD Wented
1 2 - Sttuatton Wanted
13 - tnsurance

-11 ,QOA.M SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M . MONDAY
- 2 00 P.M TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 ·00PM THURSDAY
-

14 - Busin•• Tr~m•no
16 - School• &amp; lnuruchon
16 - Radio. TV &amp; CB Rapatr

17- Mitcellaneous
18 - W•nted To Du

2 ·00 P.M FRIDAY

21 - Busin•• Opportun t1y
22 - Moni!IY to Loan
23 - Prot ...onal Strvtcts

I

Jotlou·inf! telephon'f.' exchanj[es ...
G1lli1 Coun1y

Aou Cod• 614
446 - GIIIipoltt

367- Ch•htre
388-Vtnton
245 - RIO Grinde
256-GuYin Otst
643 - A,.brl Ott1
379 - Weln~l

Metga County

AoeoCode614
992 - M•ddleport
Pomeroy
98!1 - Chester

Real Eslale

M.. on Co . WV
Area Code 304

31 - Homes for Sale
32 - Mobile Homes tor Sale
33 - Farms lor S11e
34 - Busmen Buridmgs
35 - lou&amp; Acre~e
36 - A••I Es111e W•n1ed

&amp;75 - Pt Pleeaen1

458-leon
576 - Apple Gro11e

843 - Pon .. nd
247-letlr1 fillS

773 - MISOIT
882 - New H111en

949 - R•cme

895 - Le1art

937 - Buffalo

742 - Rutlend

41 - Houses for Rent
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms tor Rent
44 - Apartment tor Rent
45 - Furntahed Rooms
46 - Sptce tor Rem
47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - Equtpmen1 far Rent

Oat Recults Fut

49 - ~or

u...

.&lt;r

"--

.&lt;r

:lt
!fr

PINK SALMON

*

$1''

"--

.&lt;r

*
'ft

lii:L._

.ozr

BUY A COVERLESS PAPER BACK
NOVEL AND A BATH SCALE &amp; GET A
PAIR OF HOUSE SLIPPERS FREE!

l e Me

PUBLIC N.OTICE
The Meiu• County Board

BULLETIN BOARD

~ Commi11ionere 11 ICCIPI·

my written oeoied bida for
the purchon of cortein rwol
property •• deecr.,.d be·
3 . Announcements

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

$500.00 REWARD
For information leadint
to
prosecution and
conviction of person or
persons responsible
for setting bam and
trailer on fire.

PRICE REDUCED&lt;
Partial owner1 linancinfef3:a.ble. The IJice
has been ""'"'"" to
, $77.900 and
owner loancing ol up lo 80% d pun:hase .
amounl may be possible lor quoiilyirig pmon

to buy VOfY nia! lari!!! home on 3\\ ICres o Ra·

Ronald H. Ritehie

e&lt;ne. 4 BR 3 bath~ 2 gar111es. rented I BR apt
Property ndudes 4~00 sq. II. farm bid'
Call 614·992·7104 lor Appl.

48456 St. Rt. 248
Long Bonom, Oh. 45743
Telephone

(614) 474·4937

REWARD

5

Happy Ads

*

'

2501 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WY. 25550

\\TITlE~

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
(614) 446-6620

(304) 675-2303

\HE LI\IITFD

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760

56 - 8uHdina Supph•

56 - Peu tors .. "

57 - Muticll Instruments
58 - Frutts&amp; Vt;tllbl•
59 - For Sale or Tr1d1

Farm SuppliP.s
&amp; L1vestuck
e 1-

farm Equipmen1

62 63 64 66 -

Wanted to Buy
ltVtiiOck
H•v &amp; Or••n
S ..d &amp; Fertililer

TransporlaiJOn
71 - Au101 for Sale

72 - Trucks fo, s ...
73 - Vens 8t 4 WO 's
74 - Motorcycl•
76 - BDifl &amp; Motors for S1le
76 - Auto Par116 Acc•sori•
77 -- Auto Repair
76 - C•mpinljl Ettuipmtn1
79 - Campeu &amp; Motpr Homn

For Information Leadiflg
to the Whereabouts of
Navy Fireman

Meigs High School ·
1990
SON OF JOYCE
(BROGAN) ELLIS
CALL 614-444·2187 or
Officer Potter
1·800-562.7573

Look Who's

"30" Today

'

We love
Terri,&amp; The 3

(614) 992-6491

tritl end wife.
Slid Rill Eltale hoving
percll number 05·00617.
Percll No. 2: The follow·
ing deecribed reel oollle, oi·
tulle in the County of Vin·

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

ton. in thelownlhipof Vinton end in the St1te of Ohio,

Speclalldnt Ia
Culto• Fra••liiJIIIr
IIIW &amp; USED NITS FOI

IO·Wit:

liijiji44'

Beinv the Ohio Com·
peny'o Purchooe, and being
tho oouth hell of 1ho

81 - Homelmpruwm.-.1t

82 - Piumtung &amp; Ht11ing

Ali lUllS &amp; MODIU

992·7013

aouthHit querter of Section

83 - Eltcwatin;
84 - EiedriCII &amp; Rtffiger•tion
85 - Genenl Hauhng
86 - Mobile Mome Rtpai'
87 - Uotlohterv

--

Public Notice
low.

W•itton oeolod bida muat
be •oceivod in the Mei111
County Commiuionera Of·

fice, Moigo County Court·

No. Two 121 of Aid Town·
ohip No. Nine (9), Range
Sixteen 1161. excepting
Forty 1401 ec111o offtho woa1
ond of uid p111mioeo oold by
E. P. Davia 10 leond01 Co1·
trill.
Aloo the north hell of uid
eoutheaat quarter of uid

sotd and deeded to Leander

Cottrill end John Mork, con·
taining Mventy (70) acres,

wit:

Section Number Thirty· Two
1321 in Townohip No. Nine
19i of Ronge No. FiftHn 11 Ill
of the Ohio Compeny'o
Purch111 containlnv Forty
(401 oc,.o morw or la11.
Aloo. tho foNowing de·
acribed reel 11tate, com·
mencing 11 tho north-t
corner of Section No. Thirty·
one 131 I of Townlhip No.
Nine 19). Renge No. Fitteon
1111. of the Ohio Compeny'o
Purch-; thonce uo1 Forty
1401 rode, thence oouth
Forty 1401 •ode; thence - t
Forty 140) roda; thonce
nolth Forty 1401 rode to tho
place of beginning, contain·
ing Ton 110)ectft morw or

and the northealt quarter of

the aoutheaat

qu~rter

of

Two 121 .
&amp;oid Roll Eotate hoving
porcel number 16·00394.
Deed Roforwnco: Volume
183, Pago 1011 end Volume
214. Pego 239, Moiga
County Deed Recorda. Vol·
ume 83, Pege 1174 end Vo·
lume 138. Pege119, Vinton
County Deed Recordo.
~ction

No Wlr•ntiea are made ••

to any liena. mortgeg11 or
encumbrances on the above

Reel Eotato.
The 8oerd of Commit·
oionero moy reject ony bide
ond 111·1dvertioo thlo prop·
erty until ell ouch property io
oold or IHtod.
Terma of peymen1 oro ••
foUowe: 10" of purchprlcl peid immldilleiy by
ExciiJiting from tbe Forty caah or bank check. R11111in·
1401 ecre trlct ebove de· inv blllnoe due within thirty
ecrlltd, one Ill rod, Six- 1301 dan of ule.
1111 flit wide on tbe e81t
Mlilll Cou~ Board
Of Commlillo-a
llide. belno 1 rtaht nf (7)
18.
21; (8)1, •• 4tc
r10W oWMd by Loula Cot· .

....

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

of Mlddl•pm
UPHOLSTERY
213· No. S.CGIId
Middleport
Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes

CEDAR

or 992·5553
01 TOUFIEE

36 Yun Upnlener

CONSTRUCTION

1·100.141·0070
DARWIN, 01110
7/24/lfo

t-------A&amp;B

Section No. Two (21. ••· 111
cepting whet E. P. Dovia

houae.
Pomeroy. Ohio, ml~..:'T::'i~ (30)ocroo oH
46789, no llltor then Wod· 1honorthendol1hoooo1holt
noodoy,Auguot21,1991,et
the aouthoeat q""r1er of
4:30P.M. Nobidowillbeec· of
Townlhip
cep1ed poatde1ed lllter then Section
Ninel91. Two
RongeIZJ.Six1oen
1161
Auguat 21, 1981 . The writ· ~urc~~Ohio Compeny'a
ten ooeiltl bida ahould in·
Aloo a amolltroC1 of lend
ciudetho bidder'a namo. od·
dreu. telephone number. 1 olt""ted in theobovo nomod
dHC•iption of tho p10porty Townlhip and County, eontho ptlrM&gt;n wioh11 to bid on, toinlngllpringofl1ockwo·
the price 1he individuol io ter de.crbed •• follows, bebiddlnv on the dote•ibed ing at the north end of the
property, end tho dote tho eoot one·holl of tho
bid io being moiled. The oeal eoutheaet quarter of Section
propo•ty will be oold to tho No. Two 121 of Townlhip
higheot 1111ponlliblo bidder. Nine (91. of Range Six11on
The property to be aold io: 1161. ond in the Ohio
Parcll No. 1: The follow· Compeny'a PurchiN.
ing dHCribed 11111 oatate,
The ebove deacribed 11111
oituotod in the Townlhip of lllall being the IOU1hlllt
Cofumbie. in the County of1 qUirter of the southeast
Molgo and S1eto of Ohio. to' q""rte&lt; of Section Two 121;

The eouthweat comer of
the 80uthweet quarter of

C. DALE
JOHNSTON
Ol

53 - Antiques
64 - Mitc Merchandtlt

Public Notice

·

Ih~DIES%

&amp;2 - SportinQ Ooods

I;®UijiJ

667 - Cool11il l e

BUY A TIE AND A PAIR OF
SOCKS AND GET A LEATHER
BELT FREE!

Mer ctlallUi se

llhijiUN@il

Classified paf!es .corer I he

•,-...

·.' .. •..

$399 .
'

'

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

«

e

MEN!

Regular Price $8.97

PACKAGE INCLUDES

RINSO

BLEACH DETERGENT

89C

o.R1nS9
--

SUNDAY PAPER

.42
.60
.06 / dov

51 - Hou.ehold Good11

Serv1ces

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

THURSDAY PAPER
FRIOAY PAPER

.30

59.00
113.00
S1 .30/ doy

Employment

will also app•.,. in 1he Pt Ple••nt Aagis11' •nd the Gallt·
polis Daily Tr ibune, ftiiChing over 18.000 homes

MONDAY PAPER

16.00

Announcements
1 - Card of Ttlankt
2 - ln Memorv
3 - Annoucements

"A cluttf•ed actvert1Mmen1 plet:ed tn The Daily Senttnelllll ·
cepl - cl•tified displfY , Busin•s Card and legal not•ces)

TUESDAY PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

Ro1o
Over 16 Worda
14.00
.
.20

A•t" •re tor eonNc:u1111e runs. brolt•n up d-vswill bt ch•o.t
fnr e•r.f'l tffllllrtl •• .. p•r•t• ads

'

COPY DEADLINE -

15
15

Mon1hiy

POLICIES
.
"Ads outstde Metgs. Galttl or Mason coun1•• mu11 be pre ·

plid

1
3

10

"7 point line type only uMd
"Stntinet is not responsible for errors dte,r first dl'r' (Check
fOf •rrurt first d-v ed runt tr. paper) C•ll before 2 00 P m
d~ aft..- publtc .. ton 10 m•e correction
"Ads th8t must be p,aid in advance are
Carel of Th.,lta
Happy Ad1
In Memoritm
Y1rd Sales

Jj!. ~ ~ ::It ~

say or do w1l1 stop tne pam that I
have caused.''
He became the 12th person to
die in the electric chair since Vir·
ginia resumed executions in 1982
and the nation's !50th person exe·
cuted since the 1976 U.S. Supreme
Court ruling allowing states to
resume capital punishment.
He was pronounced dead at
11:07 p.m., said Jean Clarke, oper·
ations officer at the Greensville
Correctional Center.
There were no last-minute
appeals, said Clozza 's attorney,
Christopher M. Malone. and he did
not request clemency from Gov. L.
Douglas Wilder.
About three dozen death penalty
opponents stood outside the prison
gate carrying candles and .singing
hymns before the execuuon . An
equal number of curious local residents stood with them.

RATES

CLOSED SUNDAY

AT FRUTH PHARMACY

r.:~~~~:.m~r:~r:::::::::::::::lT;::::::::::::::;lr.;::::::::::::::;

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

VIctory Baptlit Church
525 N. 2nd, Middle ort

Business Services

Child killer executed in Virginia

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. ta S P.M.

Special Mus1c
Nurserr Previdod

better with the sausage.
"It's still a high-fat food,'' she
said.
Nutritionists generally have
praised the McLean Deluxe. And
the federal government is consider·
ing the Auburn beef, alon~ with
other products, for usc m the
school lunch program. A version
also is available in supermarkets.

Classified

Su..ay, July 21th

Dr. Stan Anderson· Dean of
Massillon Baptist CoiiiJ•• Masslllion

more fat t,ban ground beef, the team
faced more obstacles in coming up
w1th a low-fat version, said Dale
Huffman, a meat science professor
and head of the research team that
developed both meats.
Jayne Hurley, a nutritionist at
the consumer advocacy group Cen·
ter for Science in the Public Inter·
est, said lhe researchers need to do

The Dally Sentinei-Page--13

1

614·992·2328

992-6648 or
698-6864

We Sev Whet Wo Do.
We Do Who1 Wo Soy.
10·19·t mo.

5· 14·'91-tfn

1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:__ _ _-:-:~-:---t
I'
ll

/fl.
$lock//
rrOtf

COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops.
Carpets, Headliner
"· Seat Covers and
"'
Minor Auto Repair .
MAIN ST., MASON, WY.

1·(304)•
773·9560

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUilEWIDE HOMES

. . ......... . . .... . · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · ·

BENNETT'S

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;

COOLING

Locond On Safford School ld. off lt. 141
(•14) 4U-94U or 1-800-172-59U

• -29-11

Howard l. Writestl

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Camping Ia hmllf Fun
NEW nus SEASON ..

POOL

OPU TO 1111: PIIBLIC
CAIIJ'IItO • BcauUful Surroundlnp

RillES · Day, Week, Month. or Scaaon

PICNIC IIIULTDl an4 IIITAOE P'or Rent
Reuntona - Get Togclhen • Partlca

FJaiOIIG

949-2168

7 -115-91 - 1 mo. pd.

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios

•Driveways
•Slabs
10'%. DISCOUNT TO
51"101 CI11ZENS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7130

1·4-'11·1 mo.

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EVEIYTJIING UNDEINIATH

.TROMM BUILDERS
FlEE ESTIMATES

e20 Ytlll'l Experience
•Ouellty Homes end
Cuetom Remodeling

742-2328

Get Quick Rnsul!s! PldCI! A Stl Per Day ·su llelln Bodrrl Arlvr~rllsr!lllenl In Tlw Daily ~enlirwl Classilier! Section.
\

...

~

f '

~~ ~.~~----------~~~------~----------~------~--~--~--------------~~~----~~--

11/ 22/ tfn

�SNAFU® by 8111Ce Beattie

Announcements
3

35

rueonabll
...-on
COmpllto
lion
mollld
.....-. 304-4755251, Jatm D. Gorlach, no

county

CIWIEBE KEIIPO
CloeMO ot.rtlng . - .

~m

Mil
- - -youlllopo up ond
l pllplc:al obllllloo, lor lnlor·
vlow ... Jay 5-10 p.m. IM-l'C2·
2541.

top_,.,

37 on f&lt;londly Rklao Rd.
Eatoto ol Oowoy I .Alto W'ooton.
Coli 41t-2t4-21S4.
llllutllul-lullclng- SIMI 2-6
Ac- on IAodlnli CrMk Ad with
~lng Crook Wiler. $300013800 per Kn, 114-tl2-2712.

Aecluco Sole And Foot With
- - Copllto And E·Vop
Dknllo At Fruth Phlnnocy.

lcot
80x 100,
COmer
Maado•brook Addition, Pdnt

aervtce and newsJttttr

lor .,.. olngleo. All ogoo. Con-~~ end oNonloble. Write:
SlngiHL. !'.0. Box 1043, Ga~

P111oanl, h2,000. 304-575-2131.
Crown City, Ohio tl3 Acr•
At .
~. 304-622-'lltl,
- y InN friday, t :00-4::10.

.z ..

tlpollo, "" 45031.

4

Giveaway
10 wll old hall 8101011 ond hall
eo.
pup, ·3321
3 hall 7224 .

gle pupo,

"Your pants remind me ... l have to get my
sofa reupholstered!"

known, 304-1137-3277:

Col ond kllton, lomoleo, :104-a~
1817 aveningland w•kendt.

Top Prlcoo For: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gokl Alnga, Oltmonda
Sllvtr ~ns, Starling, Gold

=

lllcJcll, 304-t~734t.

ordtrtl People call you. No ••·
peri•nce neceMiry. 1-80()..255-

To Good Homo, Como &amp; 2 Klt- 0242 oidonolon P :11138 B.
tono.IM-4411-2303.
S3!1MlAV PROCESSING
Youno moll Dolmotlon, 304-458- PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
CALLVOU.
1M7.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1-101).251-0242 EXTENSION P.
6 Lost&amp; Found
6193.
FOUND: Pleoc~ptlon tlnlod
-~~ Bokor'• lAncing. 114- AVON • All aren, C.ll abrllyn
44l.o501.

-ardl

Pay,

Tranaportatlan,

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
4 FomMI11: Friday, '!,2'1 Conlon·
II'J T - - . .. aoaopnodo,
cu.talnl, BlllbiH Cordi, Baby,
Cllllchn, Adul Clothlo. t-?
4 lamlly yanl - : Lincoln Plkl
In cn..wy. Mite., coUectlbftle,
eorne antlqu.. Thura, Fri, S•t.
ALL Yonl So... IIUII B1 Pold In
- · DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bolon tho od t. to run.
lundoy - . . . • 2:00 p.m.
Ftldor. - y odllon • 2:00

, .... a-.y.

Corpool Sill: Thunodly, Friday,
l Sllurday. 910111ng AllOa.m., 5

--hOnAt.I
Friday July 21th Onlyl Adull
And ~ Clalhlo, Crill, OloiiM And CookWIIO. 3
0.. Ooorgoo C...k On
· Aldat. -2nd HouN On
I,Ml ...... TMtbork. (-lgt'o).
. . _ T-. July 23, 8-51 all
- . llaor Raocl 3 mlleo nom
M. 71n -.n. Follow algno.
Yonl Sill AI 1120 Chatham
A - . Thunclly, Friday 6

..-y.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Yonl Sail July 256 21, 403 24th
91, 1:00 tlti 3:30. T11n clothing,
knlvea, guna, puah mow•ra,
ilrgll women• clolhle, mlac.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Vatd Sileo Mull Bo Pold In
Advo,_, O..cllno: 1:OOpm tho
day boiON tho od lo lo run,
Sunday edition· 1:00pm Friday,
lliondaJ odhlon IO:OOo.m.
Slturday.
Public sate

&amp; Auction
llcll PloNOn Auction COmplny,

lui time ouct-r. comllleto
ouctlon -· ~Ohio,
Wool Virgilio, 304·773-57!15.
Wanted to Buy

llldclll age ooup. with lamlly
_..,. fo buy lorm on land
- · 114-843-5381 &lt;&gt;&lt; IMt2131.
pcooto, llcArlhw Lumblr
.....
-co,
Inc, Southoldl, wv

Yonl. 7:30 1MI 4:00, 304-475-7580.
Wonlod ol 1un1t ond acrop met·

..... Wi031.
Wlnled 1o buy, SIJilldlngllmbor,
. . . - - • Sonl 114-tt2·

11141.

SMALL
W\NTAOS

1m&lt;

AIE PliO!

Ext 571.
Ratunded.

Beneflta,
C07·2Q2..C)I7,

h .m.-10p.m.

675-133~

Fenc•.

Rooldlntlal, Commercial, In·
duatrial, Free Estima1•1 Com·
plllo lnotallatlon. Ploono: 114)M.em.

Real Estate
31

UnturnlaMd

good tocatkwl, will return ~
-•mont In 5-yuro, " Haven, WV, --2481.
For S.ll: Rlvar bonk properly In
llaoon. 304-773-5151.

36

Homes lor Sale

12 yr old, 3-BR, 2-bath homo.
Ooyltght bootmonl, 1-ocro,
dtalrable tocation, new roof,
ntw 3-car gar~ge,lnlerlor need1
liniohlng, 28151 Boohan Rd,
Roc~1 OH, $17,000. Colt 814992-TJ05 or IMt-2714.
2 olory, loCated Point Ploaoanl
Hlotorlcol Dill, Main 51, t
rooma, 2 112 baths, ronovolod,
poaaaa1ion on clo1ing. Owner
•nxioua to MIL kcepllng beat
otter over 155,000. before July

31. To lnopect caH 304.e7!1-1348
0&lt;1~7580.

25 AcNI, 3br Homo, Floll Pond,

0701.

A Fr1me Home, 3br, Priced

Rlghti114-258·1!Nit.
Reduced To Sill: 2 Story 3bt

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted, 3-BR home, Roclroo

.,... lo rtnl or 1M11 w/ollllon,

814-8411-2713.

Rentals
41

3-BR houN lor renlln Pornoroy,
$225 por mo, dlpooM roqulr..t.
Ho ,..., l*ta-4551.

42 Mobile Homes
14170 2 BR, IIC. cond., lg. clock,
country N111ng. 1250/mo., dip.
llq'od, 114-311U135, 3N-IN4.
14x70 thrw bedroom mobile
home, 119 country tot, citJ
wator, Bud Chanin Rd. Point
30447S.l501

eher

4:30PM.
2 And 3 Bedroom Mobile
Homn:,

Stove,

RefriQtntor,

Wotar, Truh Poldt...ln ~'1·
Vlnlon Ansa, $110 I'IUI Dopooll,
Reforonceo, 114-388_....,,

2 bedJOOm lumllhod trailer,
$180. month, $100. cllpoolt. 7

mil• from town In

Rooms

- - i o n - . . -- l o r ront · - o r month.

~=~·47 11510.
111 $120/mo. Oollla Hotll.
I

Sloor&gt;lna roomo whh cooking.
All&lt;i troller-· All hook-upo.
Coil after 2:00 p.m., 304·7735851, MalOti wv.

12,000 ml, $11,500. 514·992·5225.
11181 Oodgo Rom, 5 Sooocl, Low

46 Space lor Rent

614·245-5711i.

Counlry llobllo Hcnoo Park,
Roule 33, Norlh of Pomoroy.
Lola, ,.,tall, poria, Min. Coil
SM-11112·li7V.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Merchandise
HousehOld
Goods

gs· Couch $50;114-441·7055.

County Applle,_, Inc. Good
ulld appllancn, T.V. HI I. Open
I a.m. 10 I p.m. Mon ...S•t. i14441·1611t, 627 3rd. Avo. Ga~
llpotlo, OH
Frigidaire Rolrigorator Almond,
Llkio "-· $2$11: 2 Air Condhlonora, e,ooo B'ni, S150 Eoch;
=go Appllancn, 114-446-

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Walherl, d.,.,_, retripratora,

rongn. Skoggo Apjlla,_l,
Upper Rlvor Rd. Bnldo Stone
Croll1 llolol. Coli 114-446-73Q8.

...,..rwon.

304.e75-1t20.
2 bedroom• nbl private lol,
central air, ~250. month, $:!00.

XSldl. Will Soli Cheap! 114-446-

7015.

Kenmore All·ln-One Washer •nd

Dryer Comblnotlon, $350, 614llt2-5275.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
COmplalt homo lumlolllngo.
Houre: lion-Sot, t-!. 114-4480322, 3 mlleo out Bulavlllo Rd.
Froo Oollvory.
PICKENS FURNITURE

Havo Oponl"'l For Eldorly Por·
10n At Gwinn 1 C.re Home, St
Rt. 218, Crown City, 614·256-o

&amp;500.

14

Wanted to Do

Coli 114-245-5786.

Buoh Hog So.-.lco. Roaoonoblo
Rolli. NO Job To Smolll 614·
3'11·:11142.
Goorgoo Portablo S.wmlll, don't
houl YOlK logo to lho mill Just
call304.e75-1957.
ilt.o Paula'o Day Core Contor.
Sill, oltonleblo, chlldcaro. ll.f
5 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agol 2~10.

Before, 1ft• achool . Drop-lne

Wllcoma. 114-441-8224. Now In·
lant Toddler care, 114-44Wm.

Polnllng llioldl I OUIIIdl
rouonable ratoo, i14-tt2·2503 '
Will build polio covoro, clocks,
....roomo, put up wino!
troller lkl~lng . 114·

Buslhess
Opportunity

12160,

Kent 12x58 both lor

1074

1 SR

~2500

124 pa.t Mother CupDOara 11t
rd. on '-" 1 mUe out Portl•nd
Ro•d Racln•, watch tor elgn1

on right.

1978-Durengo

Homa
Aroo.

Re .-enc:ea Avall1bl1. All Shifts.

;:a;

Window Air, 1br, 1 Btlh, Call Tc;;
S.e: 1·800·t4G-1202.

196Q Parkntata

Nowii!Southe111•m

Will Babyoh In My
Anr.lmo.
Rodnay

12K52 lArge LA With Corpot

$9,000. 114-245-5!11&amp;.

Buolnou Collego, Sp~ng Volloy
Pluo. Coli Today, 114-441-436711
Rogiltorlllon •110-05-12JICB.

18

Caii1-6M·m·1220.

141170 Gr•nvlll• Moblt. Hom•.

Business
Training

Retrain

Furnished Apar1men1, 1br, $235

hOt.JM trailer, 2·

BA, 14x10, n.w rafrl98falor, n.w
c•rpet, 114·7142-2343.
1982 Commador Mobile Horne 2

BR 1 Gordon Tub, 88 Poorl Si.
lloadloporl $7900. 114·11t2-5030.
1Q87 14160' 2br llanolon, Gave
St,:!OO; Toko Ovor Paymonll.
5 14 2 4

5771

;;~:=":.:::5-::;;.:.::.:·--:::-::-:--:--

Kno1 19111, 1-ownor, 2 bedroom,
all olaclrlc, call l14-llt2·30:11 or
814-llt2-7101.

~N:-ow--::t:CIIt::2"1;,.41"80::-:lh:-,.-,-bed:-:,-room-,

2 lull bothl1 ohlllglo rool, vinyl

11c11
.,..
.:....~
ng,
- · CArllllthrouGhout,
Ill
drywoU
lnlorlor
lnd S-boy ..._ . l17,tt7.00.

l.-721-8011.
Tralllr For Sill: 141111 Wllh
-Add On, Wlh 2 Lola. ..._

Coli

klnt 118,- . 1_,7117.
Business
34
Buildings

OFACE ~ FOR LUll on
2nd Ave., CllllipaiL Cloeo ID
Court
HouH.
1 - ·All
2
I ,_
, 4 ,__
nlcaly

-or

INOTlCE!
OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO. -..... ... --...a.
iUiccmmenda that you do bu.._ your
I IIIII aN plla.
.... No
-with poopll JOU kr»W1 lnd lloka your HOT 1D und -..,througn lhl ...... - . tho phone, rou
man u.. ll you haV8 lnvoougatod
Phone ,., on
1ho ollorlng.
~5311....
. day,

--1-

appol-. · - -

Utllh ... Pold. 120 Fourlh Avo,
814-&lt;M&amp;-4418 •ft•r
7p.m.

54 Miscellaneous

58

Fruits &amp;

$600,

1984 Dodg• Car1van LA, 7 pas-

Vegetables

Crib wtdr.... r, ltrotlw, playpen,
watlriw, car Mit, highchl.r, Blue
Wlltow collector pl•c••· Glnnay
Lrn crib wldrnsiny f1ble, 304·

Conning Tomalou For S.loll
614-843-5153.

1~541.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

For Sale: Good Uaed Rotollll•r,
UfVI Dog HouH, Now Two 6
P1r.l OroiOfa, Pre-hung, Size:

32180. 614-44tHm, Evonlngo 6
Wllkondo.

Girl Scout unilonn all• 16, $25.
Sid machine $40. Abdomln•l

m.c::hlne $100. 3x12 awtmming
pool no llnor $20. 304-675-7349.

Ktcchen

Cabinets,

Complet•.

61

Farm Equipment

lntemt~tlon..

Model-720. Forag•
chopper, 2-row, com hHd and

gra11 p~u •lso 16-fod stock
frallor exc cond, 114-902-5114,

1&amp;70 Chovy 1-Ton, 12-loot otool
filii bed, exc: cond, 614·992-5114.

Like

Jim'• Farm Equipment SA. 35,

20

Ouar1
O.humiditler, Used 1 V•ar, $75.

114-446-4705.

N.w Juns.all siz11 $5.00,
Covaralle, Bibbl, Denim J•ck·
Its, Woftt P1nt1 10..C, 132 But·
tamu1 Pomeroy, •nd 6086 R1d·

lord Rd. Athono
Plnsburgh Paint Interior llat wall
paint $10.41 SPI, lnlartor semi·
glose S13.et .gal, ert•rior ll•t

houoo point $13.11t. 2415 Jock·

son Ave, Point Ple111nt, Pt. Ptt.

304.e71l-40&amp;1.

West Golllpollo, 61444&amp;-am:

S.t. 1111 Noon.

HorH
Pow• 01...1 Tractor $3',050;
3010 John Deer• Oles•l, $4,850;

Late

Model

Long

40

luggaga rock, 25,000 miles, ·
$8,000. 30UI5-:11148.
.
Motorcycles

1986-Hondo Four Trox-250, uc.
cond., $1800, 614-843-5211.

4010 John O..ro Dloool, $4,850;

75 Boats &amp; Motors

FIMnc•, 61&lt;4·286-6522.

IT' CDME$ lf'l
ANP GOff OLIT

\

14ft. Y-Bonom · Fish Bool, Two

19!11 Stock Trollor, 1:! ft . $1,795;
Big 5 Yur Old AOHA Galdlng;
Billy Royol Show Saddlo, Call
614-2116-6522.
AOHA ScrTIII G"dlng, 8 Ytlrl

Old, 15.1 H, Ouln Bul N - E•·
porloncod Rldor, $900. 614-441·
1610 Aftor Dark.

!

•

76

Calli•

WHY'DYOU

ST,JI,RT CHUNKIN'
THOSE STONES
,A,T US'!'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

combat trai ning to

carrier-based lighter and
anack pilots in the Allanlic
Ileal. (1:00) Stereo.
®I 112111) Top Copo An
officer helps in a tense
hostage situation. (A) Stereo .

1985 Chavy Cavalier for parte, ·

Tondr CM-5 Color COmputer
llonllor. $150. 114-446-7231 After
lp.m.

IJMd 2310-Ditch Witch Trwochor,

Dt..- Enalroo, .._ HOUri, Coli
51Wf4-m2.
.UIId Whirlpool lcemoklr, 200
lb. capaclty, $250. lnqulro ot:
Bioi Wollorn William Ann
llolll.

55

Building

304-675-3044.

Transportation
71

1968 Camaro,

'

13-81 Chevrolet 1ruck hood ·
$50.00, 73-81 Chovrolll bodsido, ·
pasunger sidt, $50.00 614-992· :

Autos lor Sale

6125 •tl•r 5:00.

1980 Sunbird,

rowing mochlno, 304-875·3939.

1D72 Ford Grand Torino alation
wagon. Exc. Cond., one own•r,
PSIPB, auto, only 58,000 miles.

79

1966 Arrow C1mper. 614.446- ·

014-446·3005.

9:Z06.

1Dn Cadillac, 4-dr Sedan
Deville, 87,000 ICIUII miles,
good cond, $800 obo 614-992·

1985 Palomino Hard Side, AC.
Microwave, Refrigerator, Sc:rHn

6525.

dillon. 614-245-9:!58.

Block, brick, _ . , plpoa, win·
- · Unlalo, ole. Cloudl Winlore, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 614·

1m

1988-26ft Tioga Mo1or Home on

245~21.

Spacial 24X24X8, 2 car gorage,
Z·VX7 owo-1.
1-3
ft
..,,.,_, oroctod. 13149.00
Pracltoion Pool Bulldlro 114-992·

354t

56

Pets lor Sale

Groom ond SUPI&gt;IY Shop-Pot

Grooming. All brHde, atyl...
111m. Pel Food Deller.
Wabb. C.H 614-441.0231,

Julie

1-800-

352.0231.

AKC Roglllorod 811HI Hound
Pupplea, $100, 114-887-1758.
AKC
Roglolor..t
Brll~
:Jt;.:.~· 1 Wookl
·

mliu, g•neutor and all eltras, .

1m Monte Car1o, 350 auto. One
owner, runs great, some rust,

21 '-Travel Word, chevy engine, .
AC, low miles, auto, PS PB

$600, 614-J112-2133.
1978 LTD Ford, Runo Good
$685: 114-446-1055.
'
.:.,
1m
= z==2=s,...304
~-4
:.:s:=:s:-.:,1"'o5"'9-.- -

MtwaJS IIJ AID AW ·~~ ..
f:AJ:: &lt;aVtS m£ 1Hf'IIJ&lt;. 'tlXJ
kOTt W111-11* 5ll\W 00 IT

a Ford chassie, 5100 .ctual ·

VZ 490 $850; 1980 Ford Mustang
$1,000. 614-256-6970.

614·992-3102.

radio, CB, 614-992-38111.

Shasta, SIHpo &amp;, Low lllloago,
Sell Conlalnljl. &amp;14;r251.e8011.

Services

'

1979 Chevy Malibu wagon, 305
V-8 1uto ale, hitch, new tires,

trane u

ayttem battery, John

KriWICZ)'n, 614·11tZ·Z71l

1979 ChrySler Cordoba

tlreafwhHis, AMIFM cauette,

Frenc:h .. Lop" Bunni••: 4 wks.
old, $10 ••ch. 614~46-4680.

Shorpll $3:!00, 114-V.II-20:11.
1gss CaVIller Twpe 10 Automallc

HAPPY JACK DROPOEAO
FLEA-TICK MIST: Advoncld

With Air, 64,000 Mlln. Excellent

Condition. $3,800. 614-446-09l!4.

lonTIUIII kills quicker, IIIII
longer. For dogs and c1ts!! Con·

G l-~~~~----~

81

Home
Improvements

360,

tverythlng, $1400.
dayo 614·11t2·2155. anor 5:30pm,
coil 304-675-6955.
1980 Oklo Cutlass, 2 Door, H,
$1,100. 614-992-6542.
auto, new

COckallol Blrdl, whlto $45 or 1980 Pinto Station Wagon $1200.
gr1y $35, 814·114t-2804.
1975 Lincoln $1100, 614-949·
Dog and Col grooming on 2104.
bNOdl, opeclallrod In Poodlo
Buick Regal Limlled, good
grooming, 12 yn experience, 1981
cond, 68,000 miles, $2,000. 304·
304..7...332.
175-2799.
Onlgonwynd Conery Porolan, 1981 Monte Carlo, 304-675-1506.
Slim... and Himalayan kittens.
114-441-3144 oftor 7 p.m.
1982 Otds Cutlass Supreme,
Fish Tank, 2413 J•ckaon Ave. SBOO. 614-446-2714.
Point Pllloant, 304-175-20413, 1984 Camero a~cellent condi·
lull llroo Tropical lloh blrdo, lion, super 1DOCJyfenglne, new
email 1nlm111 and aupplift.

so ~ros ~ rmrurr
-u I&lt;£(()SUZ£ rr AWSEAD.S

Room, Slaaps 7, Exc:tlllnt Con-

Supplies

Buick Riviera $750; Par1s
tor 1178 Ford F-150 truck, 1983

gIll
Tho Slmpoono After
misbehaving, Bart's dog is

..

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

All typos of maoonry, brick, ·
block

and

stone.

Free

llmalea. 304-m-9550.
ATTA CONSTRUCTION

11-

j

THE~L.L.

M6.te&gt;IN lHJe

CO. '

quost. 304-675-3156.

Ia!•

g

au... _,,

-r

AND "THE EtAMf

THE"i'Ve BEaJ

..JU!5TST~

BOOINEt~D

"TEN MINUTI:S
AGO.

"THfa::)WINEf

TONNARE

Ruldln1ial, commercial, farm,
cuetom
homes,
additions, ·.
remodallng,
buainass
renovation•. Estlmatll on r•·

THINGS AL-L.

~U..Y'IOLJ6H.

sent 1to obedience school. (A)
Stereo. t;1
I!J Murder, She Wrote r:;l
9 On Slage Slereo
a PrlmeNews
II) The Dirty Ooren: The
Series
8:05 (IJ MOVIE: Misalng in Action
2: The Beginning lA! (2:30)
8:30 (l) D «Jl Different World
Dwayne bets Whitley she
can't keao silent tor a day.
(R ) Stereo. C
I!] Ql True Colore Ellen
learns a lesson in race
relations. (R ) Sweo. r:;1
9 American Music Shop
Stereo.
@ Wlndourflng Curacao
Championship (R)
9:00 Cll D «Jl Cheera Rebecca
takes Woody's credit ca rds
and llias home 10 San Diego.
(R) Stereo. 1;1
C1J (IJ Ill Gabrlel'a Fire Bird
and Louis lravello Los
Angeles tor a film-noir
mystery (R) Stereo. Q
CZl (!) Mylleryl Phylhda ·s
new position places her in

AFTER.NCX)N ...

1udgment or Rumpole . (PI 5
of6) Q
®I 1121111 Trials of Roele
O'Neill Rosie defends a man
accused ol raping a child. (A)
Stereo. 0
I!] ID Beverly Hilla, 90210
Dylan moves into the Walsh

·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

.

Uncondilionll lllttime guarantee. Local relertr'ICII furnished .
Free estin1a1es. Call collect 1·
614-237-0488, day or .night. ·
Rogers

Basement

home after bein~hurt while

surf1ng . Stereo.

Waterproo-

1!J MOVIE: The etum of lhe

BARNEY

fing.
Carpentry and ramodlllng of all
sorte. Reasonable ratas. Call
1nytlme, 614-742-1-tOO or 992-

I STILL LIKE
MY OLD·
FANtiLEO
ONE BEST!!

MY SISTER lONIE
JEST GOT HER A

3440.

Compaeta Mobile Home S.t·Ups, .
Repairs; Commerical, Aesiden·
tial lmprovamenls. Including : •

NEW•FANtiLEO
DISHWASHER II

Ptumblng, Electrical. Insurance ·
Claims Accepted. 614-256-1611.
Curtis Home lmprovemen11:
Yurs Experience On Older &amp;
N•wer
Room Addhlona,
Found•tlon
Wont, Roofing,
Windows &amp; Skiing. Frae &amp;llm•tul R•f•rencn, No Job To

Hom••·

·
·
·

·

Aeration Uotore, repaired. New
&amp; r•a.lln motort In stock, RON

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800.537-8!28.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Oavlo

Slw·Yoc

Slnrlco

.up:

441-0:IM.

82

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

,,

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Rnldentl•l
or
commercial
wiring, new Mrvlcl or rtptlra.
M1ater Ucensed el«::lricl•n.
Ridenour Electric•! 304-t75·

,786,

87

I

Upholstery

-roy·o Upllol111orlng oorvlc·
lng 1rl county aroa 2! yearo. Tho
bolt In lumHUrl Upltolotorlng.
Coil 304-175-4154 lor ~.. oollmatoo.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

ing $1.25 plus a long. sell-addressed.
stamped envelope 10 Astra-Graph. c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Bo• 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure lo slate
your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Your

trying to remake lriends mto your own
image IOday. be appreciative of Iheir individuality. Any olher approach could
create unnecessary friction .

chances for lultiUing your ambitious in·

PISCES (Fab. 20-Merch 20) II your alii·
tude is nega1ive loday . lhe end resulls
of what you allempt could lead to a de-

ten1ions are a bil slim Ieday. This is be·

pression based more on fantasy than

cause you may first have to resolve
problems you .previously created for
yourself .

optimistic.

on fact
ARIEB

Be realiStiC,

~March

as well

as

21-Aprll 18) Allhough

.LIBRA (Bapt. 23-0ct. 23) You're likely

you'll be inclined to trea1 others in a

to feel comfortable in places where
friends and acquaintances are familiar
with your credentials today. II you have

friendly, generous manner Ieday. your
good Intentions might go by the board s

10 associate wilh strangers. you may

c.n.,·e Plumbing

and Heating
Fourth ond Pine
Oolllpollo, Ohio
114-441-:1888

Beverly Hillbillies (2:00)
9 Naahvllle Now S!ereo.
@ Top Renk Boling USBA
Cruiserweight Championship:
Allred Cole (17-1, 8 KOs) vs .
Frankie Swindell (20-5-1, 14
KOs), 12 rounds , lrom
Allanlic Cily, N.J . (L)
Larry King Llvel
II) The Dirty Dozen: The
Seriao
9:30 (l) D «Jl Wings Joe and
Helen secretly decide to go
oul on a dale. (A) Stereo. 0
10:00 Cll D «)) L.A. Law A murder
suspect tnes to outsmart the
1ury. (R) Slereo. 0
l!l News
C1J (IJ 0 Primellme Live
Slereo. C
CZl (!) ARve From Off Cenlor
Slereo. 0
®I 1121111 Stephen Klng'a
Golden Veers Harlan and
Gina decide Ia anempl a
getaway . Stereo. r:;l
I!] Ql Slar Trek
World News
II) 700 Club WHh Pal
Robonaon
10:30 Cll (!)New Television r:;l
9 Crook and Chile
10:35 (IJ MOYIE: St. lveo (PCl)
(2:00)

feel insecure.

when you have to deal with difficult

people .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In order 1o

SCORPIO ~OcL z.t.Hov. 22) Try lo be achieve important objectives today. you
gralelul ana apprecllllve IOday of who musl lake lnlo consideration all lhe
you ere and whal you have. The grass conlrlbullng factors . Traallng them In·
lsn'l as green mlhe other guy's garden. dllterenlly will lessen your chances tor
success.
as you'veltid yoursellto believe.
July 21, 1!1i1
8AGmARIU8 ~Nov. 23-Dee. 21) Vou GEMINI (Mar 21.June 20) Your Judg·
oo not make changes merely tor tend lo have a somewhat Pollyanna mentis usually prtidlcaltid upon concluchange saKe In lhe year ahead. If tto!ngs view of lifaiOday: Thl81i well and goOd, sions you errlva at after Sl)ber lhoughl.
are going well where your career Is con· .Provided you doh'l have 1o deal wllh Hciwevar, under pressure loday, you .
earned, don'l rock life boat.
cold. hard developments. Reallly could may make rash moves &amp;6 a resull of lear
or Insecurity.
·
LEO ~JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) II miiJ~Ibe very , be unnerving.
d1Hicul11or you 10 be C!)mpll~lary to,. · CAPtiiCOIIH (Dec. 22.Jan. 18) Even CANCER (June 21.JuiJ 22) If you do
ward others tOday. Rathel ,lhan pral18• · lnqugh you'd like 10 collect wha1 you not lhlnk well of ,yourseiJ IOday, and
there is a polllbllitY you'll - UtC8IIII ·leal you're entitled lo from Olhera IO· should you have 10 deal wl1h someone
or pul·downa. Gel a Jump on lt. by un-, day, lhl8 mlghl not .be the rlghl lime 10 who ,lllakee you feel poo&lt;ln lhe rioalm of
d~standlng tho lnftuenc:ee governing lighten lhe screw.. Wall until co'ldl11ons eccompllftlmenls, you'll humble' your, eelfun-rlly.
, .
.
you· l~ 1hl...,. aMIId. Send tor 1.10'1 ••• more .~lve.
Astra-Graph predict~ !O!IIY by mllf . AOUARIU.S (.1M. 21oFeb. 11) Instead of
I

{,

__..

--..- -

--~· ------

:oo rn u rn

(IJ

m ®I

1121111

«))News
1!J Twilight Zone
CZl Newawatch
I!] Q1 Arsenio Hall Stereo. r:;1
I!) PGA Golf Canon Greater
Hartford Open, 1st round
from Cromwell, Conn. (A)
9 On Stage Stereo.
rD IIMeball Tonight
Sporta Tonight
II) Scateeraw and Mrs. King
11:30(l)8 @Tonight Show
Stereo.
Ill llqnum, p.J.

a

) CZl Airieeii-A!Mriclln Joumel

~fr:':~tereo. Q
.1121. 'Fly by Night' CBS

lAM I

be·

low to form four simple words .

I

I I 1I I I
I

(.:. . ;.~. . ;[,~11

-r-j

1-:--l,

.::,....:L

_~ .;. . IT0-=.1 .:G . ,;.l~ ..----lf;;
~
_.JI~
0

...:.

"Isn't 11 amazing," gnnned

0

-.L.-.L.-.L._.L.
1

L.

the cut1e, " to see so many
people on an ego trip with so

SHAGAT
'little ·······?"
l--.f.;~6;-:;.1..:..:.,1~7....:..;1r"'TI--l G) Complolo

I

_.J

1.-.1..-.l.-.l.-..J.l--..L..

8

lho chuckle quoted
by tilling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETIERS
IN TH ESE SQ UARES

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

,_, y

Lastly - Hatch - Conch - Rudder - HOLD HANDS
" The true test ol a relationship," advised the mom to
her teenager, "is to disagree but still HOLD HANDS ."

...

BRIDGE

NORTH

H:i·"

'I AK6 5 3
t A9R 52

+7 6 ~
PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST
• K764
'11084 2

EAST

... 5
'IQ J9
t K Q .I 3
+ 10 g 4 3

• 10 7
+ AKQ

SOUTH
+A Q 10 9 R l 2

'1 7

One chance
is better than none
By Phillip Alder
Often when you g1ve yoursell a

• 64

+J 8 2
Vulne rable: Ne ither
Dealer: South
Sout h

Wesl

1\orlh

Eas l

3•

Pass

Pass

Pa ss

Openmg lead + K
tract, it bears no fru11. Eit her the
ca rds a re so fnendly that even the sec- L..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
and -best play would work. or they are
so foul that nothtng works . But if you
keep tr ying. eventu a ll y a ha nd will
come a long on which yo ur exc&lt;l lent pro ble m was to avo1d two spade los ers. If the opposing trumps were divid ·
technique 1s rewarded.
If you would like to test yourself. ed 3-3. there was nothing South could'
cover the East-WeSI ca rds in this dea l do; he would have to Jose tri cks to the
from Ron Klinger's "Guide to Better jack and king. But if th ey were break ·
Card Play ." and plan your line of pla y ing 4-2. he had one c hance: an oppoin three spades. West starts by cashing nent holding jack doubleton . (Fi nding
three club winners and then switches someone w1th king doubleton would do
no good, as the Jack would eve ntua ll y
to a diamond
There are days when you WISh your score a trick.)
Declarer ruffed a di amond to get
partner had stayed in bed . North had
that feeltng when he heard his partner back to ha nd. cashed the s pade ace a nd
open three spades. But luckily no one conttnued wtth the spade queen South
doubled - and South even made the felt the appeara nce of the jack was
only right and proper. West won With
contract.
After the three cl ub tTJcks and dia - the spade king, bul dec la rer rulfed h1s
mond switch. declarer won in the hea rl return, drew trumps and
dummy a nd cashed the heart winners claimed nine tricks.
@ 1911, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
to discard his diamond loser. Now the

small extra chance to make a con-

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anawer to Prevloue Puzzle

37 Lenin's
countty
38 Chart
39 Bargain baae·
ment event
41 Pig meal
42 Clam genua
44 Curve
46 Lacking tool
parto
49 Eyeleshaa
53 Ornamental
vaae
54 Direction
56 Allow lo
57 Biblical king
58 Coated with
gold
59 Highway

1 -In
Cincinnati
5 Study hard
(al.)
9 Besketball
league
· (abbr.)
12 Wild sheep
13 Sman sword
14 Aclor March
15 A swelling
17 - de France
18 Composition
1g Free from
bacteria
21 Future ally&amp;.'
uam
23 Do or24 Greek letter
27 Swarm
29 Think nolhlng

curve

60 Small
cushions
61 Concert halls

32 Worked lor
34 Of horses
36 List of
poaolble

DOWN
1 Carry on
2 ActorKrlatofferaon

jurors

3 Masaages
4 Weather
torecaster's
balloon
5 Film director

7 Catches
8 Adjuated ao

as to conform

9 Type of
ulmon ·
10 Indonesian
Island
11 - Gulnneu
16 Cocktail
seafood
20 Oevout
22 Yollow lover
mosquito
24 Please reply
25 Part Of llhOt
26 Oecoratlons
28 SingerHaggard
30 Freshwater
porpolae
31 Sporta group
33 Tr,pe of
pas tic
35 Slakt
40 Ridiculous
43 Fable writer
45 San-, Calif. 46 Wt~lern
·
marah plant •
4 7 Raw minerals
48 Body
so Placed
,
51- of Wight - 52 Leaf-cutting _
ani
55 Thatch pJanls

-Craven

6 Sedative

a

11

WOlD

the

a

.

Big Or Smolll &amp;14-441.0225.
JET

Georgu Cnek Ad. P•rta,
pllu, pickup, 1nd dellvlf'Y. 114-

school.

ol performance dales. (1 :00)
s weo. t;1
CZl On the Waterways
Stereo.
(!) Blackbirds In the Sun
Navy Squadron 45, the
Blackbirds. provides atr·IO·atr

1988 Baha, Mint cond, w/350
Chevy motor, $13,750.00. Steve

and Poggy Oavlo, 6086 Radford
Rd, Athons, OH, 614-592-4241 or
614-992-2529.

to

has ca used the cancellation

·_,.,.,..., ·A\..\t""~,AJES ,._

Motor, $2,200. 614·992-6542.

return

(PG13) (2:00)
CIJ (IJ Ill Paler Jennlngo
Report The ftnancial crisis ol
lhe Danca Theatre ol Harlem

1·25

rude Mercury Thruster Trolling

to

(A) Slereo. C
(!) MOYIE: Crary Moon

'•

Swivel S.1ts, New Galvanized ·
Trailer, $650. 614·992-6542.

15 112 Ft. Boso Boot, 70 hp Evln·

are ready
~

Tl1i J"Afv1f
PAy.

"""h

-.-7Wtlt

MY fAYcHEc/C 1$ Lt/CE THE TIP/ • --

for sale

Livestock

Aeglllered Limousine
YNrllnp, lt4·192-61i0.

\L

1988 Suzuki 250 Quad Racer,

Cub low Boy, Plow, Disc, Blade,
Mow•, $2,395; Owner Will

and c11f ehow hahers tor
ula, P1int Plus, 2415 Jackson
Ave, Point PINunt, WV.

114-4411-3158
Vl'ro Fumhuro

eenger, one owner, PS, PB, AIC,

$1,200. 304-675·1665.

cow

RENT20WN

1724 or 675-5215.
IQ88 Ford Econollroo Convor·
olon Van, lully oqulppod, $1,000.
304.e82-21182.
1V88 5-10 4 Whool Drive, Extended Cab, 114-37f.28:ZO.
1U88 VOyager Mini Von, 7 pao-

Wide 11lection new &amp; us.d farm -:-,.....,.,.-..,-=...:..-=-=,.-,tn~c:tora &amp; lmpll&gt;mentt. Buy, 1981 Hond1 CM 400T, $350. 614·
Mil, tradt, 8:00-5:00 w"kdayt,446
==·70
-:-:-55_. .,.-.,;--:;- = - -

63

Port•bl• lighted changeable ID1·
,.,
llgn
$211.
FrH

van, lully oqulppod, good cond. ·
11177 Oodgo cor, run• good, ·
aood work cor. 11 ft. low boy

Rearrange letters of
0 Jour
scrambled words

1:;1

NewaHour 0
®I 1121111 Current Affair O
I!] Ql Nlgh1 Court r:;l
I!) MacGyver r:;l
@ SportaCenter
a Moneyllne
II) Scarecrow and Mra. King
7:05 (IJ The Jelteraona
7:30 Cll D «Jl Jeopardy I 0
(!) Andy Griffith
(1) 1121111 Entartainmanl
TonllJhl Stereo. r:;1
(IJ Ill Mama'• Famllr
®I WhHI of Fortune r:;1
I!] 1D M'A'S'H
9 Be 1 Star Slereo.
@ Amerlce'o Cup '92
Setting Sail tor San Diego
a Cronflre
7:35 (IJ GoOd Tlmas
B:OO Cll D «Jl Cooby Show The
Hu•lable kids. except Rudy,

1984 Ford Econollne Converson

74

(IJ Ill Inside Edition

CZl (!) MocNellflehrar

f,_ller, UHd very little. 304-675- .

:'&lt;::.:
14-4
....:..:.46-87:...::..:51::..- - , - - : New,

CIJ

6~7858 .

t.trs·

~y

2

~ Nighl Court E;l

f'"ll"

Nngor, 1 ownor,
kepi,
44,000 mlleo, S6,2S . 080. 304-

Merchandise

call 304-e75·1450.

114·11t2·2521.

Work.

O.B.O. 614-446-8807, &amp;14-4462835.

1865 Cho"lr' 5·10, Blaror, 5
Spood, 4 WO, Excollanl Condl·
talno no olcohol. R&amp;G FEED &amp; lion. 614-3117-72311.
SUPPLY 114-llt2·2114.
Nlc•ly Fumlahed Ap~~rtment, 54 Miscellaneous
1Q87 Codalllc Slvlllo, 4-DR, Ol·
Miniature Schneuzer puppin. tral, very CIHn car, $12,000.
1br, noocl to Ubrory, periling,
AKC, oan &amp; popper, Reduced, 1988 Bulck 4-DR, oidroo, $4000,
c:entrel h..t, •lr, reter.nce ,..
Merchandl$11
1
qulr..t.l14-441.03311.
prlcoo, 614·tn·5148.
614-371-1408.
1977 Holkllr R•mb*, zstt, •"
Fumllhed eftlclency w/elove I
to apprwcllte. 1171 John DHr Poodla pu.,..o, toyo and loa 1888 Pontiac GTA Trano Am,
r~lrlgorator. Shiro both. tll 2nd
650.00zer, winch and f..w1y cupo, AKC 'dhomplon llloodllno, Mint COndhion. Brlwht Rod,
Avo. $100 per month. 114-4411- · bladl. 1tN F·250 Ford pick up. Coolville 114...7-3404.
Loaded, IIUII 9111 Glof-441.e751,
31145.
Air compreaeor, B and S En814-448-7!104.
K - COmp., 30-911 57
Musical
Fumllhod Efficiency, $150 gine,
1tn Oodi" eon, :zo,ooo 111 .... 4
rank. 114-~41.
Utllll ... Paid, Shari 8aih, 701
Speed, $2,525i 1188 Horizon,
Instruments
Fourlh, Dolllpollo, 1 - 1 1 1tN Chlvr llaUbu-$1000, run•
Autom1Uc:, Air, $2,500i 1NI
1fter?p.m.
good. 22 Som~Automotlc Rille Black Cherry t-Pioctt. Tama Sundanu, ~.ooo Mllft, 5
Nlnto- w-Advontage Drum Sol W/4 Zlldjlan Cymbllo, Spood, Air, $3,1500 · 1t88 Dodge
Groclouo living. I ond 2 bod- 150.
Comrol
$70. Nlntondo Oomaboy, Double Booo Klckor, 814·742· Daytona, 36,000 M1In, 5 Speed,
room lpel1menta •• Vllltoe 2-llpll $10, 114·t4t-2417.
3130 after 5:00pm.
Air, $4,800. 614-371-2721.
lla,_
ond
Rl-llile
Apa~-.te In llkldloport. From
1t85 Cololo Suprame, 3.0, V.e
150, 10110 8olena mowera, 1100; 58
Fruits &amp;
$1M. 0.11114-11112·7711. EOH .
Engine, Special Order, New
65 glllon lloll tonlo,
$250;
IVH' liFO 14' boat wit 1tl'C
Transmission, And N.w Air
Vegetables
IAiayotto lla-;,=:, 2 lalho, All Johnoon
Conditioner. Good Condition!
50 HP -or 12000.
· Utllhlll lncl
. IM:Wmo. 114-a51-143t.
$3,300. 114·245-1525.
canning tomaton for uta.
o.-11 Roqulrod. No Plio. 114444-7733, 814-448-4222.
Acluft Trike, llloml Sun1 All now Bring contol,.,., 814-247-:11161.
R•ll Buggy, Factory Fram•,
,.rtl, t125, 114-H2-515i.
SlrHt le9JI, New Wlrlng, M•g
Conning
Tomaloull
S3
Buohol·
Haven, 2 bedroom lur·
Whlolo Slldor Break, Now
nllhod lporlrnonl, ~ ond lhama &amp;loll, fun cruiH-IIolll VOU PlCKII Bring Own Con- Tlrn,
Seals, Tuned Up
talnoro.
Bob
IIO&lt;rlo,
IAiart
Folio,
rwllnnee 1 ~.
package, Flof'id• to B•h•mae,
Hoador P po. Lot• 01 Eidrool
OH.
114-247-3421.
$211. per couplo, 5 dayo-4
$1,600, o.B.o. 114-441-4282.
COmplltly Fumllhod mobile nlghtto. Ouolhy holll, llmltod
home, 1 milo bolaw town OVII'• .UPrOIY, good lor 1 yr. 404-126- Conning Tornaloooll Bring con- Scolty'• UHd C.rs, N.w Hlv•n,
~na rlvor. No Poto, Cl. 114- '7&amp;1.lalnor. 13-YOU PICKI n WE WV. 304-&amp;e2-3752.1083 Lincoln
PICK! llof8hall Adamo, Lalorl Contlnonlalllork IV $3,:1115. 198&amp;
448.0:131.
Black Show/Tack Box, SBO. 114- Folia, 114-247-2055.
Buick Century Llmhod 57,000
North :ltd 91, lllddl_,, Ohio, 1 441-1025, 114-3'11-2113.
bedi'OCMII- apl, , _
canning Tomot-11 Picked 14 a miiH S5,800. 1187 Plymouth
coo and dlpaol roqulrod. 304- Cluller Diamond Ring, Double bu...... $1..... au- Com, Turlomo $1,tt5. 1983 Ford Ran·
tr Rod $2,195. 1t811 Oodgo
Diamond Ring, Double Antiquo laking ord.,. . lor rooll -k.
MJ-2511.
aytonl $2,615. 1984 Bronco II
Flllalft DiamOnd Ring, Single Royniond R-o, 114-247-42112.
4x4, $3,185. lt88 Ford Ronger
North 41hlu-loPO!t' Ohio. 2 Solftalr1 Diamond Ring. 814-446bedi'OCMII mllhod opt, dapooll 2985, ...; After 5p.m. 814-258· Connlng
tomaloo,
alrlldy $4,608. 19111 Oldl 98 $1,6115. 1g83
plcltld. $6 buohol. loughmon S10 4K4, $1,895. 1V83 Corvalr 4
.
and roloronceroqulr..t, - - 1841.
:ISH.
firm. 7 112 mlllo of Go~ opood $1,11t5. 1987 Blaror 4X4
61,000 mi ..., $7,050. ltM Fonl
One _ _ , opt In Point COmmon:lal plua oven whh all Npotlo, 91, Rl. 7. IM-251-1535.
Rangar 414, $3,615. 5 coro ond
oqulpmonl, omlll counlor lop
PfNNnt, atra ciNn and piua overi, piiU lo0111 lnd grown ailclng tomalooo, 5 lnoclla undor $1,000.
roomy, with wuhlr 6 drtw
lb. lor f2. Col Farm, m Palrlol
hooltup, no pols, 304-171-131d.
·
- · """"
5 an11quo
- ...~.
bootho
upholoto~ng. olr Rood, olt 778, IIIII polllho poolt,
$1.50 doz. 72 Trucks lor Sale
One b d ""'~ olllcloncy aport• - · ....... lnd dry.... old 81.....
anllct-, TVo, Evlcllo, hall .... utllltloil poll!, porllally . d_ki_,..
110r1h
Point 1875 Ford Ranger, F·100L Truck
Anny
vy Sorlnallolct nllo In . . . _ Rt. 12, 304:1_,,
. ·cub Cop With 1m v.e •nglne.
ox• .-.~~.
112 Ton, PS, PB, Ant. Two Diooro
Conctolo • plootlc ..,..lc tonlto, -Dou.-Corn,
Form,
Grlmmaau-,
Land- With lAy Down Back Slat. Fair
Ron EVI!'II E~leoa, Jock. Ina, lUO doo or 11.25 you pick, Condhlon, Coli Anytli'no. 304458·1811.
aon, OH 1-800-137-IW.
M-411-1721.
Galllpolle.

~

Senllnei-Page-15

S@~~~0,
CLAY l. POllAN

TIIAT DAILY
PUIILII
_ _ _ _...;,__; 141tod

ACEHUG

a

AND M'&lt; MOHlER ALWA'&lt;S
WORRIED THAT I'D NEVEl'.
AMOUNT TO AN'&lt;THIN6 ..

1979 VW Van, Good Body, Tires,
Needs

•

6:00 Cll D CIJ (IJ Ill ®l 1121111
«))News
l!l Andy Griffith
CZl Club Connect
(!) Reeding RainbOw 1:;1
I!] Q1 Andy Griffith
I!) Cartoon E1pre11
@ Thoroughbred Digeat
World TOday
II) Our House
6:05 (IJ Bawttched
6:30 Cll D «Jl NBC Newo 1:;1
l!ll Oreem of Jeennle
CIJ (IJ Ill ABC News 0
CZl Wild America 1:;1
(!) 3-2·1 Contact 0
®l 1121111 CBS Newo 1:;1
I!] Q1 WKRP In Cincinnati
@Up CIOII
6:35 (IJ Andy Grlffilh
7:00 Cll D «Jl Wheel of Fortune

Mlle•ge, Take Ov•r J:tayments,

dotlveryllel1oro. Plolllc llltoro
$47.10 box. 1.-&amp;33-3413.
IJMd All cltchwltch lranchlr
New/Used
w - oftachmont, dlooel
Houeehold furnishing. 1!2 mi. engine and John 0..,. 300
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. Pluunt, WV, blckhol. 814-IM-7142.

1124 E. '"'In Street, Pomeroy.
Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.

SUPPER IN A GLORIOUS
BRAND NEW SUPPEI'. DJ514

air, dual gas tank, ps, pw, pb,

Engine

THU., JULY 25
EVENING

wlndowo, dieHI. 614-446-8044.
11189 Ford Rangor XLT, 4 Whlol .
Drlvo Pickup, With Compor Top,
Excollonl Condlllon, Loadld,
24,000 111111. $10,500. 614-4461155.
1990 Ford F·150 414 XLT Lorlat,

,.,..._.. OYO- "" 2 .. 3

51

•

crui11, tilt. Loll oi1Jtr11. tinted

H•rveet
Cold
A•frigM"I1or,
Slov• &amp; Oiahw1aher; Al10 Skl1

for Rent

Pluean1,

Furnished

-·

,

SI:ZOO,
614·lll2·2838
oftor ·
5:00pm.
1986 Toyota, I Ton, Plck.Up, 5
Spood. $3,000. 614-446-4782.
1&amp;88 GMC IUIO, PSIPB AC,

1:00.

45

614 ~742-.

The Dall

Television
Viewing

good, needs body worlc, eulo, -

bldroome, ~2072 •Iter

Clbeon .&amp;ec dryer, retrioerltor,
both good oond, 304-6~-41131
1fter5:00.

Houses for Rent

Trucks lor Sale

3902.
1980 Chovy, 305 112 Ton, AIAo,
$795. 614-44~233.
1883 Ford Rangor Pick Up, runo

2nd

- . PCIIIIOrOy. 4 . - , bolh.
No poll. R e - and dlpollt,
IM-11112·227!1aftwl:30pm.
Wldae Aplo, 1108 Burditt• St,
Pvlnl' P-nt, no .,..., 1 and 2

Wlllr,

Aentll Property, HouM and 4o.
mobllo homoo, good condl11on,

•partment,

. Pomeroy~lddlepf?rt. Ohio

11177 Ford Pick Up, 112 Ton, '

Sola 6 Chair, 111.10 Wllk;
Roell,_, S5.47 Wook, Swlvll
depoelt, 2· ,..,.encn, near Rockor, $163 Wook.Bunk Bod
Corner LoC In Chn~lre Ohio.
Excellent Condition. For Ftn~nc· AXZO a-leal P.nl. 304-175- COmpllta $8.41 W11k, 4 Orowor
Babyo!Hor Noodod In lly Homa lng,
Chill, $3.21 Wllk; Pootor Bod·
Five Star Mortgage, Vlck,. 1221.
In Tho City ol Golllpollo. Prolar Hauklren. 814-446-40.f2, Seller
room Sulo, 7 pc., S1U7 W111&lt;,
SorMone Who Llvn In Town. Will Poy Polnlo. 004-132-1059,
Inc!- lloclcl1ng.Counlry Plroo
114-44...m.
t04-t32-7!170.
Dinotto Whh llonCh l 4 Chalro,
$10.M Wook.OPEN: llondoy
Bar maid that can mix drlnkl, By owner 3 bedroom l'louse,
304.e75-4048.
- 441 -For
Rent, phone ThJV Slturday, llo.m. to &amp;p.m.,
$40,000. 1005 Kenny Court, 114
Sundoy 12 lfoon Till 5p.m. 4
0101 or 44fol»1.
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA shown by appointment only, call
IIIIH Oft Routo 7 On RoUio 141,
Hiring lloMVomon. Up to $100 between 5:00 PM and 9:00 PM, - - l o r r o n i « N I I, In Con1onary.
lumlohod, 114-1112•'JII7t.
wHkly. Transportation, Hcu• 304.e75-7820.
SWAIN
lng. CALL NOW 1·2041·738-7000 By owner, nice 4 bedroom Newly renu diiiJ, lfnlll 2-IA
AUCTION l FURNITURE. f2
Exl. 161789.
home, h..t pump, loe•tad At. 62 troller on 11 In llolgo Olivo St., Golllpotlo. Now &amp; Uood
Ripley Rood, priced low, 304- Countv II Pteio FOlio, 1-lnl fumhw•, helter., Wntem a
CONSULTANT
ot
Rt
ft
on
CoriMn
Act,
depolft,
675-21aa.
Work boolo. 814-441-31511.
Mature pti"'In to help children
Nllrencee,
HU0
wetoorM,
114lnd ldUHI with I HJiOUI GOVERNMENT HOMES lorm $1.
llll:l.e'IIIS.
Two
euper lingle w•t•r beds, 1
p~m,
EnurHII.
Ap- (U
repair). Delinquent tax
polnlmonlo HI by us. Hard property. Aepoa-"on1. Your S y - , 2·8R $110. pluo whHo and 1 daolt plno, 304-675work and lrovol 11qulr..t. ll1k1 oroa (1) 805-V82.aootl. Eid. GH- utllltlll. dlpoolt. 114-lt:l-4732 528t.
$40,000 to S50,000 commloolon. 1018t few current repo lilt.
oftor I:Oo pm.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Coli ~~n-2233.
114-441-3158
HOUSE FOR FREE!I 111111 movo Toto! Ellclrlc llobllo Noma F0&lt; LIVING ROOM: Sola &amp; Chair,
EARN MONEY Rlldlng booltal olt lot In llldcloporl. Fill In Aonl. No ....... IM-317-'11131.
Slllt.OO;
Rocllnor,
$14t.OO;
$30,00CIIrr. Income potonUal. b..emen, aNd 1nd atr11w. Mull
Swivel Rocker, $11t.OO; ColiN l
Dotalt.. (1) 801-V82-IOOO Ed. V· sign contraell 2-BA, Large LA,
End Tablol, $1t.OO Sei.OININO
44
Apartment
10118.
DR, 81th, h.. new roof arid gut·
ROOM: Table With 4 Poddad
ter, new copper and PVC plumb.
for Rent
ChaiN, $14t.OO; COuntry Plroo
Ex
. po rloncld Machonlc, C.H lng, need eome work. You PlY
Bot.., 1 &amp; op.m. 814-441.0731 tor th• movlngt Onty HrioUI 1·BR unlumilhOd aparlnoont. Dlnono With Bonch And 3
For An Appolntmont.
S21111.oo; Matching 2
c•Uera! Call 614-0S2·207't after Dtpoeft and reterenc. ,.. Chalra,.
Door Hhch, 1348· Or S581.00
quK.d, rn~•lmum 2·people, 114- Sol;
IIYI•In r.-okllpor. 114- 7:00pm.
Ook Table. 4M2 Whh I
tn.;oM.
251·1001.
Bow
Back
Chalro,
HouM tor ul•, 5 rooma •nd
Pootor Bod·
Rooponolble Babyolttor blith, comer tot Hend•rson, WV. 2br Ape~-.! Acrou From Rio $628.00.BEOAOOII:
room
Suhe
(5
oc.),
$34t.OO;
4·
Grande eon-, All UtiiHioo
In My llorn!t Monday Thno 614-446-7523 or 304-675-1488.
Pold, 114-381-511.
Ora. .r Chell, $44.Hi Bunk
Fridar. For .,,. lnlormatlon
Mayo Drive, New Haven, tox125'
Bod, 12:111; COmp.te Futl llaft
Coli: 514-251·1181 After 5p.m.
Bldi'OCMII
Apa~mont.
lot, 4 bedrooms, 1 112 btthl, 2 2
S.~ $105.00 Set; 7 pc. Cedar
Downtown.
814-448-4801.
Bldroom Sullo, $6tt.OO.OPEN:
Now Hiring AI Ouko C...non, ttory, all brick, blck deck com114-4411-1412, Or Stop By &amp; Aok pllloly corpllod, 304-882-2382.
MonUr Ttwu S•tur•~m. to
2br
Fumlolood
Or
Unlumlolood,
For llro. IIIII.
TUI
Raatorad
home
tor
ua.. Air, Coblo, Nlco I Clun. llllul~ lp.m., SUndoy 12
4 111111 011 R - 7' On
Oftlco
Admlnlltrotlon,
30 Htrdwood lloora •nd urpet, lui Alvor Vlow In Kanauga. Foo- lp.m.,
HouniWMk. Poeltlon Requires heat pum~lral air, 112 acre toro Mobile Homo Park. 814-441- Route 1411n Conlanary.
Whllpool wlllw/dryer oomPeople SkHII, COmputer And l•nd, garage (1 V2 cars), 2-out 1803.
biMtlon, hllvy duty, good
Gonor1l Oftlce AbiiHy. Sind bulldlngt, full baiHm•nt and
Cont1ct Information To: Box cell•r, etorm window• 1nd BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT oond. 114-llt24110
CLA 084 c/o Galllpollo Dolly dOOf'l. Smell down J)llyment •nd BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Tribune, hs Third Avenue, Gai- take ov.r paymenlt, 614-247- ESTATES 538 Jacklon Pilla
lrom $1i'2imo. Walk to ohop l
52 Sporting Goods
2100.
Hpollo, OH 45831.
movlae. Coli 114-4411-2551. EOH.
fthaca model 87 12 fill, tuoltoy
Phone Surveyor Warned. Part32 · Mobile Homes
Bllch SIJMI, llkldleporl, Ohio.
ol. Avollable wfth ooopo
Thnet. Ev•nlngt. Call 614.. 4S.
One room eltlcloncy opl,
od 25 ln. olug borrlll. 1143014 Mon.frl, f0-5.
lor sate
r1loronceo lnd dlposH, 304308 or 245-M23.
well groomed, ••perlenced $500 Down On Soloct Ropoo- 882-2511.
S.. .,-non the M•igs Co. ewaed MobUe Hamn. FrH S.1
Eltlcloncy Apartmlnl, Fur- _53..,.,..--:A:-nt_l,..:q~u_es-=---:-ar•a. 614-992-3273.
Up And O.tlvtry. Fintnclng
nllhod, Oopooll, A Rolaronca .,.
Roqulr~d. No Polo, 114--487t. Antique FumMuro Ropolrad;
Available. Mid Ohio An•nce, 1·
lAmpo Rewired. (25 Voaro Ex800-589-5711.
For ront, 1 bedroom apa~mant, porlonc:e) W. WfoHo, 114·245$500
Rebat.c&gt;n
AnJ
1980
Or
12
Situation
1225 UUih ... Included, dlpooK M48.
1991 Lot Modet AI EIHa Home r~qulrod, no pots, &amp;14-182·2211.
=
- - -- -,R- - - -. - 1-Iq1 ... n uea,
11 1verne
8 uy or H.
Wanted
Cen1er. FrM S•1 Up I Oeflvery.

21

992-:~156

Toll

AVON I All Aruo I Shlrloy
Spooro, 304-175-14:111.

Financial

446-2342

Link

3~.P2-~5.

Excellent

-•ell 1'1"' peracrlptlon
..-g' u·a metal fnme 1oM at
Holzor iiiod1Co1 c.ntor '1n Ga~
llpolls 0&lt; In lho -n&gt;y·Mid·
~ ..... 814-tn-267!1.

Chain

ldoal For Horaoo. 1 Mile From
CHy UmHo. 114-441·1340.
Accopllng Applicollono FO&lt; AI· Nk:e 2BR, riviMiw, Olnge, 112
listant Man•ger. Full Time Posl· Acrl Lal, largo utiiHy bulldlngUon. Only Mature Peraons With 10x11, Aaklng $37,000. lmSome llonagtmont Sklllo Nlld modlolo PooMulon. 114·251To Apply. Mull 81 Bondable. 1017 IAavo M-go.
Training Will Be Anll•b'-. Full
3 bedroom houM on 3 acree, 1
Hollmaik Shop, 114-441-7330.
milo out Blulahvlllo Rood,
$SS,000. OIC Cond, 514-448·115111.
POMEROY
"POSTAL JOBS'
bedroomo, 2 bltho, :lt41
$11.71-SlUO hr. No oxp. nlldod. 3lla-brooll
Orlvo, call lor opFor e11m and 1ppllcatlon Into.,
c•ll 1-216-SI67-6800 7a.m.-10p.m. polntmont ond prlca 304-t 754411.
7dayo.
3br
2 Full Bathe, GrNt Room, 2
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Cor Ooraw•. $57,500. 114-4&gt;16Wuver

Found: Sol o1 Koyo, Tycoon
L..INANO.I14·38U267.
Lool: Black Pit Bull Kornper Hetlow ArM. II Anyone--..
Callllolt, 814-441-1101.
Lool: 1Wo Small Black, Whho,
Only 91rlpod Klnono. One With
While Pa- 1~.

Arthur'•

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriRbl

Apartment
for Rent

good condlllon, $700,

m-me.

Opportunity

Employment Services

FIM klnont: booutllul, long holr,
- · 114-441-11325.
FIM
pupplea,
molhlr 11
Help Wanted
~~.lothor Lhaoa Apoo, ::530 0.tD-::-1-y-':P-roc...
"'"""
1ng--pll.,--on-o
order1 at homa. Peopl• c1ll you
&lt;lc&gt;ldtn Roorlovor To Good to order. For Info. 1-800-T:JS.8197
EXT 1822.
-.114-211H5N.
Old rnlllreet and aprklgt at.o $350. per day procoulng phone

9

*

prlca roctuc:od, city

Colno. II.T.S. COin Shop, t5t
Second Avenu., Qalllpolla.

8

Lovel Lalo For Solo 100ot150,
Oobblo on.., ~.soo; CoN 1
448·7231 After &amp;p.tn.

lloJCOr
304-8~ r-=========~==========21
B
one
ocreBolltom
loll, At.Sub-dlvlolon,
2 Iron!;&amp;::
9 Wanted to Buy
uslness

4 ~. 3 mi ..., 1 femate,
molt. Doberman flth..- un·

7

In-

11 clllr, "'"'rood.
to rolling,
on
block
Water,
ollct., • phone crOR prop.
Good lronlogo. Pllono 114-37t2171.

Dotroll llaor _.... buo trip
Aug 24 l 25 we -lellorlnon.
llf. ..... No Smaldng "' Alchol
pennilted on bua. l"n IMvn
l&gt;uint PleoNnl 1:00 All. Coli
~&lt;:_-to 304-751-2431 or

Si....

•••·

alng-111111N,plloll.

oul . ....... , ..... montol

-

44

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lola • ICNigl a.. lor
,.. ·home -ruction on
Royllum Rood. Povlll toed,

Announcements
KARATE

Thursday, July 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--14-The Dally Sentinel

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebro1v Copher cryptograms are created trom quot111on1 by famous people. peal and present
Each lellet m the CIPI"MN' ltll'ldl lor 11'1011'\ef Toclay ·l CW. N «/!MIS G

ow
Z 0 F F

OY

A P P J B

MYCXJGL

F 0 V DB

0 KYYXE

DKY

YOP

KJ,

VME

M F F

G0 B

J K B G •

WOENPC

WCM£A

ZCONGY.
F F X L S
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II I had lhe dough, I'd buy up the negative ol
every 111m I ever mtide and start one hall ol a lire... - Slerllno Hayden.

e

1911 by NEA. InC

25

uta Night Stereo. I;J

..._ _ _ . ------·- -- - - -· __.___ _,.._____ _ ______.....__ _ _ _ ___ .....__1

�Thursday, July 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Astronomers say they've found first planet outside solar system
New World
Bntish astronomers cla1m to have
dtscovered the hrst known planet
outside our solar sys tem The plane!
orbits a very dense, compact star

called a neutron star
NEW PLANET
about 10-12 t1mes the mass of Earth

NEUTRON STAR
about 20 miles

NEW YORK (AP)
Astronomers say they have detected the first known planet outside
th e solar sys tem, an ObJeCt that
orbits a very dense sial' and IS perhaps 12 t1mes as massive as Earth.
The report challenges scienti sts'
understandmg of how some stars
form.
" Th1 s object I thmk IS going to
re&lt;jutre some degree of wild speculatt on to exp lam, " sa1d Harvard
astro nomy pro fesso r Ram es h
Narayan, who was famll•ar w1th the
work.
Other researchers have reported
apparent detectmns of planets out·
stdc the solar system before, but
some reports have been refuted and
none ISw1dely accepted.
Prm ceto n Unt vers uy phystcs
professor Josep h Taylor sai d he
found the new report persuastve.
" They've got somcthmg there that
IS s•gn•f• ca nt , no questiOn abo ut
It," he srud.
Dav1d Black, d~r ec tor of the
Lunar and Planetary In st!lute m
Houston, called the study "a good
start" toward a convmcmg case for
the planet's existence.
The det ecuon IS reported In
Thursday 's 1ss ue of the Bnt1sh
journal Nature by Andrew Lyne,
Matthew Ba1les and Setnam Shemar of the University of Manches ter' s Nuff1eld RadiO Astronomy

Laboratones in Jodrell Bank, Eng- mass IS perhaps about 10 times that
land.
of Earth , but Lyne sa1d a better
"We were very surpn sed," guess IS 12 l!mes. The planet IS
Lyne sa1d in a telephone interview. probably about two to three umes
The planet hes m the d!fect!On the diam eter of Earth, depending
of th e constellation Sagittanus, on whether 1t is rocky like Earth or
probably not very far from the cen- gaseous like Jupiter, he SaJd.
ter of the Milky Way galaxy, Lync
It orbits the star about as closely
said. It IS some 20,000 to 30,000 as Venus orb1ts the sun, which IS
l1ght-years from Earth. A l1 ght-year about seven-tenths the diameter of
ISabout 5.9 tnll10n miles.
Earth's orb1t, researchers calculatThe sc ienti sts detec ted th e ed
Lync srud 11 1s most unl1kcly that
apparent planet by analyzmg radio
wav es from a very den se OhJect anythmg lives on the planet.
called a neutron sial'
The 1dea of a planet orb111ng a
The waves arnvc m pulses abou t neutron s1ar was a surpnse because
three Urnes a second. But SC ienti sts
no tiCed that thi S hi ghly preC! SC
"clock" would run about a hun dredth of a second fast for a while
and then about a hundredth of a
second slow. The cycle repea ted
ttself about every SIXmonths.
Appare ntl y, th e spee d-up
occ urred as th e star edged abou t
I,500 m1les toward Earth and the
slowdown when 11 moved away by
the same amount, Lyne sa1d . The
motiOn IS separate from the Earth's
orbtt around the sun.
The researchers concluded that
the sial' was betng pulled to and fro
by th e grav1tattonal tu g of an
unseen planet th at orbits 11 about
once every SIX months.
The y wro te th at th e planet's

planet pulled

the star bacll
and forth
SoYrce Nature, DlsCOV9rin(J the UniVBfStJ

Coolville,
PVH gain KC
semifinals

takes, sc1entists said.
"It may be that this collapse
isn't (always) as violent, and perhaps the presence of th1 s planet
suggests that," Lyne srud.
Black sa1d that1f the planet truly
emts, he cons1ders it unlikely that
the planet was there before the neutron star form ed.
But if th e study do es reveal
some gradual, " kinder. gentler"
process of mass loss by the central
star "the new d1scovery w1ll have
led to a revoluuon m this branch of
astrop hy sics," Black wro te m a
Nature editonal.

Zornek IS asking $50 m!lhon m
PINE BLUFF, Ark. (AP) - An
am mal handler has filed a $ 100 damages for h1mself and $25 mtl ·
m1llion cla1m agamst the fed eral lion each for h1s wife and son, sa1d
government because he contracted Arthur S•mon. an agency clatms
a deadly virus apparently when he off1 cer.
was sc ratched by a monkey two
years ago.
Zornek' s lawyer, Kenneth Ba1m ,
Michael Zornek, 36, cla1ms neg- sa1d Monday that h1s cl ien t fil ed
ligence by the Department of th e clatm beca use of un certamty
Health and Human Servt ces in about h1s health and the health of
ensurin g safety at th e Nauonal h1s w1fe, Karen , and son, Joseph .
Center for Toxicological Research There IS at least one known case of
m Jefferson, where Zomek works th e rare VlfUS be1n g transmitted
w1th laboratory pnmates for a pn- between humans

Vol. 42, No. 58

•POWER BRAKES
•REAR WINDOW DEFOGGER
•1.6 LITRE, 4 CYL.
•AM RADIO

SALE

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
wtll have $262 million on the line
when Congress votes next week on
rwsmg the gasohne tax to pay for
new highway projects.
The House Public Works and
Transportation Committee on
Thursday advanced legislation
approving the road and bndge
spending as well as a nickel-a-gallon gasoline tax to pay for them.
The five-year highway bill
doesn't eanmark every dollar designated for Ohio, but does specifically authorize something for every
pan of the state:
-$26.2 million for the U.S. 68
Ohio River bridge, Aberdeen.
-$24 .8 million to build a fourlane highway from Cadiz to Interstate 70 along U.S. 50.
-$24 million for the Aerospace
Technology Clark Access road,
Brookpark.
-$21.75 million for a U.S. 68
bypass in Clark, Champaign and
Logan counties.
-$16 million for the Kelly
Avenue extension, Akron.
-$14.4 million to replace the
Center Street bridge
10
Youngstown, including ramps at
Interstate 680 and a Poland
Avenue-Shirley Road connector.
-$8.8 million for a Route 30
extension, East Canton and Minerva.-.... - .
-$8 million to add an I-90
interchange on Route 615 in Men tor.
-$5 million for a bicycle and
pedestrian facility m Greene and
Montgomery counties.
-$4 million to improve Shan
Creek Highway from Cadiz to
Ryland.
-$3 million for improvements
to U.S. 224.
-$2 million for improvements
to Route 46.
-$1.4 million to replace the
Belmont Street bridge m Niles.
-$1.4 million to replace the
Bridge Street bridge in Struthers.
-$I million for improvements
to Route 5.
- $1 million for relocation of
U.S. 62.
-$1 million for Improvements
to Route 534.
-$1 million for improvements
to Route 45.
-$I million for an outer belt
around Warren
-$400,000 for a study of a U.S.
250 bypass for Norwalk.
-$400,000 for a study of a
Route 18 bypass for Medina.
-$320,000 for a study of
widening Route 24 from Fort
Wayne, Ind. to Toledo.
-$240,000 to plan Improvements to six Toledo-area railroad
corridors.
Ohio also would mdirectly benefit from $3.2 million authonzed to
upgrade U.S , 30 from the OhiOWest Vrrg~ma border to the Greater
Pittsburgh International Airport in
Pennsylvania.
Rep. Douglas Applegate, a
member of the committee that put
the bill together, said he was
responsible for securing that money
to "provide Columbiana County
residents with access to points

•WIDE BODY SIDE MOLDING
•RACK AND PINION STEERING
•FULL SIZE SPARE
•CUSTOM WHEEL COVER
0
•
PRICE
75
5
OR 143 **

$6726°

Tax and Title Not Included.
"60 Months 10.25 APR, Tox and Title Not Included II You Qualify.

not been processed by a physicmn Northrup, argued that Wittmann
- mstcad he CJaculatcd mto cups had told Northrup and her partner,
m a pri vate home - that he is not Mary Northrup, earlier that he had
barred from seek 1ng patcrn!ly no mterest in fatherhood .
" We made it clear.It was our
nghts.
Wittmann, who filed his paterni- family . I made 1t clear th at he
ty su1t SIX month' s after the baby's wou ld have no fmancial or emobirth, claimed he had agreed to pro- tiOnal mvol ve ment ," Mary
vide sperm knowing he would par- Northrup srud.
But Stevens ruled for Wittmann
uctpate as father m the child's hfe.
on
the ground that there wa s no
Randall Blake, an attorney represe ntm g the moth er, Andra agreem ent surrendenng h1s
parental nghts.

Jeep,
Eagle

Harrison, Clapton team up to tour

,'

' I

IS SIMPLY YOUR BEST BUY
ON A NEW CAR OR TRUCK!

Singer, of 'Yentl' fame, dead at 87
iI

'

t•

MIAMI (AP) - Isaac Bashevis
Smger, whose tales of Jewish hfe
in Eastern Europe 's ghettos and
America won him the Nobel Prize
in literature and were made into
such films as " Yentl ," has d1ed at
87.
The Polish-born wnter died
Wednesday after several strokes,
said his wtfe, Alma.
Singer's native tongue was the
Ytddish of Poland's Jews and he
wrote in no other language, even
after mastering the English of his
adopted country. He wasn 't translated into English until the I 950s.
But as acclaim for his passionate stories of a vanished Jewish
culture in Europe and of Jewish
immigrants in the United Stales
grew, his reputation spread worldwide, a fact that often amused htm.
''The Japanese translate everythin~ I write immediately," the
fragile, impish storyteller once
said . ''T hey even publish me in

English, wnh Japanese notes. How
could I explrun why some Japanese
m Yokohama will like to read what
I write?"
Ulumatcly, he suggested, a good
wnter touches the ''km sh1p
between souls" that transcends Ian·
guage and geography.
Smgcr wrote more than 30
books, and The Jewish Daily Forward, a Y1ddtsh paper in New York
now called The Jewish Forward,
serialized many before they were
published m English. His stories
also appeared in the New Yorker.
He had no patience with fiction
grounded in social, political or psychological theory. His work was
mhabned by demon and dybbuks,
spints and specters.
Most of the stories are of the
shtetls, Jewish villages m Poland
during the three centunes before
the Holocaust. The modem stones
were set in New York or Florida.
His short story "Yenll and the

Yeshiv a Boy " was made mto the
movi e "Ycn tl " by Barbra
Strcisand m 1983.
HIS 1972 nove l "E nem1 es. A
Love Story ," about Holocaust survivors m New York , wa.~ made mto
a mov1e in 1989 starnng Ron Sil ver, AnJ el•ca Hu ston and Lena
Olin.
In his acceptance speech for h1s
1978 Nobel Prize. Singer spoke a
single sentence m Yiddi sh: "The
high honor bestowed on me by the
Swedish Academy is al so a recognition of the Yiddtsh language - a
language of e~ile, without a land,
without fronuers, not supported by
any government."
He went on, in English, to
describe his native tongue as "a
language which possesses no ':"'ords
for weapons, ammuruuon, m1lttary
exercises, war tactics: a language
that was despised by both gentiles
and emancipated Jews. ''

- .

l

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 conlo
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Committee
approves
highway
projects

vate contractor

NEW YORK (AP) - Former Raul Ferrera were workmg only on drunke.n dnvmg, rec kl ess dn vmg
Beatie George Ham son, who destgns cosung up to $20,000
and speed mg In the acc1d cnt 1n
hasn'ttourcd since 1974, plans a
wh1ch Dykstra's car crashed mto a
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) senes of concerts 10 Japan wnh
tree.
guitarist Eric Clapton.
Mary Chapm-Carpcnter, whose
Dykstra suffered a bro ken co lIf the shows go well, Ham son saunc "Openmg Act" was a h1t at larbone and cheekbone and three
and Clapton might also tour the last year' s Country Mus1c Assoc•a- broken ribs and m1ssed more than
Umted States and Europe, Clap- t!On awards, 1s among 10 nommccs two months of play. Phillies catchton' s manager, Roger Forrester, for the CMA' s HoriZon Award.
er Darren Daulton, who was a pasThe award honors performers senger, was out 15 days w1th eye
said Tuesday.
The Japan tour will consist of 13 who showed "signi ficant creativ e IOJUf!eS
growth and development" dunng
dates between Dec. I and Dec. I8.
It will include material taken the year.
NASHVILLE. Tenn (AP) Other nomin ees arc: Carlene Th e FBI IS mvest•ga tm g whether
from Harrison' s years with the
Beatles, his nine solo albums and Carter. Mark Chestnutt, Btlly country smger Dotue West Illegall y
his two albums with the Traveling Dean, Joe Diffie , Ray Kennedy, h1d valuable s from th e IR S, a
Wilburys. the band that also M1ke Re1d, Doug Stone, Pam Tillis newspaper reported.
mcludes Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne and and Trav1s Tritt
Authonues arc probing whether
Bob Dylan
The winner w1ll be named at the Wes t h1d th e Items befor e a
Oct. 2 award s show on CBS.
bankruptcy aucuon held m Junc to
NAPA, Cal1f. (AP)- An archi Garth Brooks won last year.
pa y off £ l 5 million owe d th e
tectural fum IS sumg Francis Ford
Int ern al Reve nu e Sc rv1ce, the
Coppola for allegedly rencgmg on
MEDIA, Pa. (A P) - Philadel- Nashville Banner sa1d Wcdncsd.1y.
a contract w build a film studio and phia Phiiiies outfiCider Len Dyk- c1tmg sources 11 d1d not 1dcnufy
wmery.
stra, scnously hurt m a May 6 car
FBI offictals refused to say 11' an
The " Godfath er" director crash, won ' t face arratgnment on mv csl!gal!on IS under way, and
planned to take the stand at the trial drunken driVIng charges until he West's lawyer, James Harn s Ill .
'
and h1 s teammates return from a d1d not return calls from The Assotoday or Friday.
The hrm Ilarragan and Ferrera West Coast road trip.
cta ted Press
wants 5900,000 for work done m
Dykstra, 28, 1s in Los Angel es
Furmturc, anuqucs, mcmorab1ha
1982 on a studto, work space and for a game agamst the Dodgers.
and other 1tems helongmg to West
H1s arraignm ent had be en were sold at th e auct1on . wl11 ch
winery in Rutherford. The projects
were halted 10 1983 10 a contract sc heduled for today . Instead, he ra1sed $86,000
will appear m court Aug. 8, offidispute.
Wes t, 58, IS bes t known fo r
Coppola's attorneys contend the Cials sa1 d Wednesday.
"Every T1mc Two Fools CoiiJdc,"
The outfielder faces charges of a duct wuh Kenny Rogers.
director thought Lu1 s Barragan and

Partly rloudy tonl1bt. Low
Ia mid-60s. Sunny Saturday.

Cop~rlghted 1991

Judge rules for man who donated
sperm for lesbian couple's child
WOODLAND, Caltf. (AP) - A
judge has ruled that a man who
donated sperm for a lesbtan couple
to have a ch1ld may seek parental
rights.
The ruling Tuesday by Yolo
County Superior Court Judge Jtm
Stevens does not establish custody
or visitation nghts, but allows further litigation over those issues.
Stevens had ruled earlier that
smce Steve Wittmann 's sperm had

Pick 3:979
Pick 4: 6583
Cards : 4-H, 6-C
7-D; 8-S

Page4

1991 PONTIAC LEMANS

Monkey handler files claim
diSCOVery
was made
by analyzmg
pulses of
radio waves
trom the star.
The pulses
vaned 1n
speed as the
orb1Ung

of the way neutron stars are
thought to fonn, Lyne said.
Standard theory says neutron
stars form when a massive star collapses onto itself and creates a huge
supernova explosion that blows
away much of the s1ar's mass.
If the newly detected planet
were in orbit before the explosion,
the slar's sudden mass loss proba·
bly would de stroy th e planet 's
graVItatiOnal leash and send it sa!lmg off into space. Or at least, •t
probably would push the planet
Into a more ellipucal orbit than the
nearly c!fcular path 11 apparently

Ohio Lottery

Membership
tickets for '91
fair go on sale

STREET WORK UNDERWAY -Repaving
of several streets in Racine got underway this
week. Shelly Co. of Thornville is doing the hot
mix paving with a combination of funding from
the viUage and Issue Two monies. Streets to be
paved with villa2e funds are Fourth from Vine

GNP posts 0.4 percent
gain in second quarter
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
U.S. economy started growing
again in the spring, the government
reponed today, but the barely perceptibte_9.:1~~~ent annual increase
rwsed new concerns over whether
thereeessionisreallyover.
The Commerce Depanment srud
the gross national output, the country's. total production of goods ~d
servtces, expanded m the ApnlJune quarter follow.ing two consecuuve quarterly declines.
GNP fell by 1.6 percent in the
October-December penod and by
an even sharper 2.8 percent tn the
January-March penod, meeu~g the
class•c defm1uon of a recessiOn as
at least two consecutive declines m
GNP.
While the Bush admm•stratmn
belt eves that a return to growth IS a
valid signal that the recession is
mdeed over, pnvate economists are
~arntng oft~~ poSSibility of a
double-dip recessiOn - m
which GNP grows for a quarter or
t~o only to slip back mto the negattve range as the recovery falters
and the recessiOn returns wtth full
forcc.
Even tf that scenariO does not
dev.elop, analysts believ~ that a
vanety of problems facmg th e
Umted States, from strams on the
bankmg system to an overload of
consumer debt, Will make this
expanston the weakest m U.S . h1s-

torv.
The administration, facing a
presidential electiOn next year, has
kept up pressure on the Federal
Reserve to boost economic demand

Bank remains
under Central
Trust name
The Middleport office of Central Trust, Marietta, will remain
under the Central Trust name and
not be included in the sale of the
bank's other assets, Mayor Fred
Hoffman and Business Leader
Bernard Fultz were told Thursday.
Instead, they were told, the
office will be ti'ansferred to Central
Trust, Cincinnati, while efforts proceed to frnd another purchaser.
The Central Trust, Cmcinnati,
officials indicated efforts were
already underway to sell the Middleport office. Several prospective
purchasers have expressed preliminary interest.
Mayor Hoffman and Fultz met
with officials of Central Trust,
Cincinnati, after a notice of the
proposed sale of the office to Central Trust, Cincmnati , appeared in
this newspaper last Monday.
Central Trust, Marietta, is one
of four Central Trust regiOnal affiliates whose sale has been approved
by the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.

Spradling found
not guilty by jury

1991 FORD F·l50

Retall.........112,752.00

Manufacturer's Suggested
lnvo Ice ...................................................... 11,707,1 0
Free Tank Of Gas ..............................................0.00
+"'"'" ""' "" """""" "" "'"" ..... '" .. """"" ... """ '49.00
Rebate .............................................................500.00

Manufacturer's Suggested Retail. ........111,231 .00
lnvo ice.....................................................10, 367.85
Free Tank Of Gas..............................................o.oo
+""' """" """'" ""' "" "" """"" """ "'" "" ""'"...49.00
Rebate ...........................................................500.00

T. P. Everyday Low Prlce ....511 ,256.10

T. P. Everyday Low Prlce ......59,916.85

_ ____________________________________ i________________________________,__

A Jackson County JUry found
Jerry Spradling of Pomeroy, OH
not guilty of battery Tuesday in
charges
stemmmg
from
a
Ravenswood Aluminum related incident.
According to Jackson County
Magistrate Clerk Kathy Evans,
Spradling was charged following
an incident which occurred at the
Super 8 Motel in Ripley. Spradling
and other union workers allegedly
beat up a replacement worker at the
Motel. Two others charged in the
incident have also been found not
guilty by jury trial.
Evans said Jackson County
Magistrate Coon has 330 RAC
related cases that are sull pending.

I

~~

by lowering interest rates .
However, the Fed has resisted
for fear inflation could get out of
hand once the recovery begins.
Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress
that he believed the possibility of a
double-dip recession was low.
The 0.4 percent GNP growth
rate in the second quarter was significantly tower than e~pected by
analysts, many of whom were looking for the GNP to expand at an
annual rate of I percent or better.
Given the small GNP increase,
which could be revised away altogether in upcoming reports, and a
string of other weak indicators
recently, analysts said the possibllity of a double-dip recession cannot
be ruled ouL
Analysts note that in five of the
last eight recessions, including the
last downturn in 198 I -82 there
was one positive GNP quarier fol·
lowed by further declines b~ore
the recession was finally over
The administration contends
that the positive GNP figure m the
second quarter will mark the actual
end of the recession. In a forecast
released last week, the admimstration predicted that GNP growth
will strengthen for the rest of the
year and by 1992 the economy will
be growing again at a healthy annual rate of 3.2 percent. By contrast,
the administration predicted GNP
growth for this year will post a 0.2
percent decline.

SPECIAL VISIT • Linda Foreman, and ber
daughiers Heather and Kristin, took tbelr collie,
Carrie, and their sbeltie, TJ,, for a visit at tbe
Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care
Facility on Thursday afternoon. The visit, or2a·

ga te will be $5 eac h. Children
under the age of one year will be
admmcd free at the gates wh1ch
wtll open at i a.m . each day and be
locked at II p.m. For those paying
ga te admiSSion the mechanical
rides are free.
The charge for campers and
trailers for one week IS $50 while
the charge for tents IS $25. Accordmg to the rules, no campers are to
be spotted before 9 a.m. on Sunday
and must be out by noon on the following Sunday.
Campers ca n pay and select
their spots at the Fau Board SccreIary 's Off1ce on th e fatrgrounds
begmning on August 7.
The camping cost docs not
mclude entry on the grounds, Mary
G1lmore, secretary explamed . A
fair ucket must be purchased by
everyone over one year of age stayIng in the camper who plans to
come onto the farrgrounds. Sixteen
feet of space if allotted for each
camper and awnings, tables, and
cars must be kept wtthm th e
assigned area. Any pets must be
kept on a leash 1f they are outside
the camper and no pets are permit·
ted inside the fenced fairgrounds
except those who are there for the
pet show.

Police identify 7
• •
massacre vzctims
MILWAUKEE (AP)- Police
Identified the remains of seven
people they sard were killed and
mutilated by Jeffrey L. Dahmer,
and said they included a 14-yearold boy whose brother Dahmer was
convicted of molesting three years
ago.
Dahmer, 31, who police say has
confessed to the slayings, showed
no emotion during a coun appearance Thursday as he was charged
with four counts of murder.
At the time of Dahmer's court
appearance, only four vict1ms had
been identified. Authoriues believe
he is responsible for 17 killings
over the last I 0 years and say more
charges are likely to lodged as victims continue to be identified.
One of those who has been identified was the 14-year-old brother
of a 13-year-old boy Dahmer was
sentenced to prison for molcsung
in 1988. Dahmer was paroled after
he wrote to a JUdge that he would
never be mvolved in another such
incident.
Authonties sa1d seven human

Hoffman asks
merchants to
attend session

east"

1991 MUSTANG LX

to Main, Sycamore from Third to Fourth, North
Broadway and a section or East Vine Street.
Issue Two monies are being used for the paving
on Cross and sections of Pearl and Main Streets.
Cost of the project is $27,966.10 with $9,570 of
that coming from tbe Issue Two funds.

Membership tickets for th e
!28th Meigs County Fair to be
staged Aug. 12-17 op the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds are now on
sale in several locanons around the
county.
The tickets at $9 each entitle the
holder to gate admission and free
parking for the entire falf, but
require a $3 per day additional
charge for those who want w go on
the midway rides. The same $3 per
day charge for rides applies to
those with season or 4-H uckets.
Membership tickets are not transferable from person to person and
are not sold to comparues or orgamzations.
Tickets may be purchased at the
Sugar Run Mill, Pearl's Exxon,
Gloeckner's and Swtsher and
Lohse rn Pomeroy, the F1ve Pomts
Express, the Middleport Department Store, Joe's Country Market
in Rutland, Whaley's Grocery at
Darwin, Baer's Market m Syracuse, Waid Cross and Sons in
Racine, Keebaughs and Baum
Lumber and Hardware in Chctiter,
Nida Jean Ritchie in Tuppers
Plains, Phyllis Lark10s 10 Long
Bottom, or from any member of the
Fair Board.
General admission liCkets at the

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman encouraged downtown merchants to auend the meeting to be
held Monday, July 29, at 7 P.M. at
the Village Council Chambers to
discuss proposed improvement
plans in the business district.
The mayor stated that the village is in the process of mitiating
requirements necessary before any
grant applications can be made for
downtown revitalization proJects
through the OhiO Department of
Development.
Representatives from the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District will be on
hand to discuss proposed downtown busmess plans and eligible
activities under the Downtown
Revitalization Program.
The mayor stated that
BH/HVRDD will be preparing an
updated business plan and analysis
as a part of their EDA program this
year at no cost to the village.
All downtown merchants who
plan to attend this meeting are
asked to contact Jean Trussell at
992-6782 in order that plans may
be made for the number attending.

JEFFREY DAHMER
skull s, four tle shcd heads and a
kettle contammg what was believed
to be decomposed hands and a genItal organ were among the parts
fo und m the aparuncnt.
Police officers were led to the
apartment Monda y by a man who
smd Dahmer mvlled h1m over for a
beer, then handcuffed h1m and tned
10 kill h1m before he managed to
escape.
Pollee also were rev1ewmg an
mc1dent 10 which a woman satd
police d•d not come to the aid of a
boy who tned to escape from Dahmer on May 27.
WISN-TV m Milwaukee reported Thursday that an 18-year-old
Milwaukee woman saw a bleedtng,
naked As1an boy running down a
street near Dahmer' s apartment.
Nicole Childress said a man she
believed was Dahmer wrestled the
boy away from her after she called
police.
Pollee detcrmtned ll was a
homosexual affair and declined to
mtervenc, WISN reported.
"We are aware of that IOCident
and reserve comment until we
review the officer's actions," Capt.
Joseph Purpero satd Thursday.
In all, Dahmer is suspected of
17 slayings over the past 10 years.
The victims identified as of
Thursday were: Coneralc Smthasomphone, 14, Milwaukee; Oliver
Lacy., 23, Milwaukee; Jeremiah ·
Weinberger, 23, Chicago: Matt
Turner, 20, Chi~go: Joseph Bradehoft, 25, Greenville, Ill.; Anthony
Hughe s, 3 I, Madison : Ricky
Beeks, 33, Milwaukee.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="312">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9603">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34962">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34961">
              <text>July 25, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2553">
      <name>alloway</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1068">
      <name>ash</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3350">
      <name>ballard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1988">
      <name>welker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
