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wv

Page-08--Sunday Times--Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

rrom D-1
FoodII'and···-Continued
------

Meigs livestock judging result are announced_ ·,

&lt;llil&gt;man, Gallia B"""""""n,l.ind.o Hulfm1111

POMEROY- Results of the
livestock judging, held July 29 al
the Roct Springs Fair Grounds,
have been announced.
General Livestock JudgingMichele Guess, grand champion;
Riki Barringer, n:servce champion;
Jessica Barringer and Tim Epling,
honorable mention.
Market Hog I- Lester Parker,
grand; Travis Lodwick, reserve;
Matthew Justice, David Rankin,
Chrisly Riley, Robert Ritterbeck,
Mandi Sheets, Jeremy Smith and
Tara Rose, honorable mention.
Market Hog n- Leslie Parker,
grand; David Rowe, reserve;
Alyssa Hoffman, Aric Patterson,
Brent Rose and Jeff Rose, honorable mention.
Market Hog III - Palrick
Gibbs, grand; Mike Hoffman,
reserve: Keith Hunt and Christine
Schu!Jz, honorable mention.
Swine Production I- Mandi
Sheets, grand.
Swine Production Advanced Christine Schultz, grand.
Market Lamb I. Michelle BisseU, grand; Rebecca Scott, reserve;
Matthew Evans, Mary Francis, Kay
Hunt and Hannony Thobaben, bonarable mention.
Market Lamb II - Joshua
Ervin, grand; David Herdman,
reserve; Stephanie Jones, Sara
Ervin, Kelly Dalton and LeAnn
Rowe, honorable mention.
Market Lamb III - Jennifer
Taylor, grand; Billee Pooler,

and t..n of GallipoliJ, $I; Ouis Dian, Ohio
Rlidon, OVB, $1, clonaed 10 Gallia Co..uy
&lt;llild""l Serviceo; Jwlin Taylor, Country
Kida, Outer Traaor Sale1, $1.10;
Robbie Mannon, Sundance Kidl, Halli41y, SlleeU .t. S.~a~derolaw finn, $1; len·
oilerS..,..,, Whiz K.idl, Rundl'1 Whiteook
Valley Fann, Bidwell,$ 1.30; Nichola• Wil~111111, KCW1try Kriuen, Norris-Nonll~
Dodae. SI.SO; Bradley Potrie, ViniOft VItina•, Oak Hill Hospital, $1.10; Gwynne
O.mbrouah, lull Friend•. Burlile Oil Co.,
SI.SO; Juu lloollle, Hayoeedo, Pride in
Tobacco Wmhouae, S1.30; JaiCII Williomo,
KOIIIIIr)' Krillen, FNih'o Plwmacy, $1.30;
Healbcr Allen, Temperawrea RiJin&amp;, Owe
PaiJel Co., Florida, $1.70; Donnie Slooe,
T'lriJiahl&lt;n, D. Dean llvano 1111d Rock Fort
Randl, $1.70: Michael Belville, Trion&amp;Je,
wi_,., ~n~u..no., s1.30; Slclli McComu,
~~··Retry Lou llYifll, S1.40, clonaled
.,
'a C....ty Childn•11 Serviceo; Corey
Burlilo, Ttmperalllllll Rilin&amp;, Conlral T11111
Co., $1 .90; Mallllaoler, Noflh Gallia 4-H,
GaWpolio Tabacco .t. Cindy Co., $1.20;
O.viil Ball, RIICCO&lt;D Valley, OVB, $1.30;
ICcDy Kinaory, ~ Rowclieo, Owlea
ODd k.nyllarau,$1.40; Jamie Humpltn:ya,
OurO.., Tan'alin: .t. Au100inic, $1.30;
Jlllli o_,., Ready for lhe World, Lonnie
Boua TNCkin" $1.10; Jeuica Roberti,
Noid1Gallia4-H, Wiaenanlnounnce,$1.30;
OuiaiGpller Meaiae. KC S,.11hine Kidl.
HuaJ!et Dairy Farm, Addison, S1.20; O.ad
Filch, SoodonocKidt, New Fannen Tobocco
W.........., $1.30; Danidle Neal, Vin101t
Vitina•. P'oor Boya T1n:1 Inc.. HendefiCII,
W.Va., SI.SO; Bnu a-be, Hayoeeda, Falbl Brolhen H&lt;a Fann, $1.20; TII!IIIRy
faJuiCII, KClUIIU)' Krillen, Bodirner'a Grocery, JtDCinoy, S1.70; Aaron Adamo, Coon try
Kida, Bob EYUIO Fanna, $1.10; Liz Pn:ttm,
llocilbcau, Southern Slalcl Inc., Poinl Pleaa-.SI.40; Zoc:k Ruff, Conlerville Fannllandl,
llodilllor'1 GIOCiery, $1.6(}. laue Saundera.

1tlccoon Rowdiea, Paul O.vie1 Jewelen,

$2.30; Joe Rode1111, Raccoon Rowdies, Big
$1.SO; Jamifer Queen, HilliOp Ram ,bllra, Sandy Galewood and Dave Rodaker,
$1.2';
- Doma Twyman, Raccom Valley, RB
'F111111.t Gardenin&amp;,S1.40; Jeremiall Waugh,
Goldlliaen,Joaepb L c.in, $1.10; Barney
Vollbom, Dairy Club, Union SIOclcyardJ,
Hilllbon&gt;, S1.50; RoiJbie Rider, Rivenide
Rlopn, VFWI'ost4464,$1 .15; AIClS.unden, RIICCOCIII Rowdies, Pride in Tobocoo
w.......... $2.20; Tim Snedaker, Upside
llDn, Wholeule Meats, Gallipolis, $2.10;
-Bobby Criaenberry, Rivenide R1111aen.
·Martin '• Coal.t. Slone, S1.20; Rick Weaver,
'Raoc:oon valley, lim'• Fann Equipmcn~
$1.20; Todd Kemper, Hillbillies, lllac:kbum
ilally,$ 1.10; Rya1 Snedal&lt;er, Upaide Down,
Norrit-Norlhup Dodae and Saunden lnour·
.,.., $2.10, clonaled 10 Gallia County Cilld - Servica; JaiCII Mauie, TrianJie,
Harrison TNCkina. SUO; Jan:d Bryan,
'Raoc:oon Rowdies, Blunt, Ellis .t Loewi,
$1.40; Kevin lldwarda, Racoooa Valley, Star
Bani&lt;, Sl.lO; Todd lloolhe, HayiOeda, Wiae·
maa lnounnce, $1 .40; Richanl Shaddeau,
llno Sail 0... Frulh'a Pbannaey, $1.30; Brad
'!hanll, Sundanao Kick, Kemper Cual&lt;lm
Bulcherinl. $1.20: J1101 Lyall, Cldmus Bordertioen, ~ Valley Profesrianal Buildina, $1.30: llnc Humphn:yo, Our Gana,
Rollald K. Canaday, $1.40; Ashley Roberti,
-~.

For•uey

Corbin It Snyder Fumiwre, $1.10; Anlhony
Owcn1, Cadmus Bordcrtincra, Pride in Tobac&lt;o Wan:houae, $1.10; Kyle Dod, Rac-

coon Valley, Ralph Stoinbecl:, $1.20; Brioma Ball, RaCCOOII Valley, Counuy_Mart,
Jaduon, $1.30; Shawn Cox, Gold !Ji&amp;aen,
Bob Ev11111 Farms, $1.30; Amanda Burlile,
Temperalun:s Risina. Bry1111 Morri11011, Ullle
Rock, Art., $1.6(}. Tracy Fellure, Meroerville Wikk:a~ ludse Dmald Aodn:w Cox
and Denni1 Salisbury, SI. I0; CurliiSprie,FJ,
Northup Llda &amp;. Lusies, Producen Uve·
aiOdc, Hillabcao, S1.30; NalhMI Belville,
Triangle, Canol (Caaey) McKmzie, $1.20;
Cindy Oroenlee, Hillbilliu, Gallia County
Republican Ouh, $1.40; Jamie Harris, Triangle, Riclt Penlue lnallfllllce, S1.35;
Tn:nt Fdlun:, Menxrville Wildcat, 8ren1
A. S.unden. attorney. SI. 40; Fnnlina Sanden,llarly Birdt, Kenny'• Au10Cen1er,S 1.20;
Marie Kuhn, Temperaturea Riaina, SllCO
Inc.,$2; Bryna Vollbom, OairyOub, Pope.t
Pope Fenilizor, $1.60; Kim Prulon, lttecoon Valley, Country Mart, $1.30; Joey
Dambroup, lull Frienda, Muakingum UveIIOdc, Zaneoville, S1.50; Brie Swindler,
Men:erville Wilda~ Fannen Tobacco
Wan:houae, $1 .40; Jamie Grallsm, TrianJie,
Caner'• Phmbin&amp; .t Healina. $1.70; Tcny
GeofJe, Raccoon Valley, Bnmhi MiJiina,
Bidwell, $1.30; Harry Hod1&lt;11, a...d&lt;ee
Valley, Dennis Salisbury and La11 0....0.
Carryou~ $1.30; Alan Queen. H11!1RM1 Trace
FFA, loretla, Dana and Heather Alita ll!1d
Alha CmaiNctioo, $1 .70, donaleciiO Oallia
County OUidreftt Servicea; Dennie SIUdter,
Ga!lia Buccaneera, Bickle's Cortraaina,
$1.20; Chris Pn:IIOO, Raccoon Valley,
M&lt;.Coy-Moore P....ral Home. $1.40; Bryon
Cox, Gold Diaen, New Home Fannon
Tobacco Wuehouae, SI.SO; GreaM..I&amp;an·
cry, Otuiden, Harold Mcnl&amp;ornc:r)'. $1.40;
Soou Oart, lua Friend•, Shake Shoppe,
SJ.SO; Belh Vollborn, Dairy Oub, Halliday,
Sheell .t Sa101den, $1.5Q; Kui Brown,
Raccoon Rowdiea, Star Bank, SI.SO; Heather
Raynor,l..iule Kyger Valle!'.i.~DeU Lumber
Co., $1.30; R11111 Baylof, . Kypr Valley, Dennis Salisbury ll!1d Lany Mullins, BP
Bulk Pi•~ $1.40; T.C. Beaver, RacxOon
Rowcliea, Ralplt Stcinbedt and Mall Hall,
$1.70; Gwen Mon~&amp;anery,Ouuiden, Pride
in Toboca&gt; Warehclllle, $I .SO; RYIIII Alder·
man, Raccoon Valley, Wiaenun lnaunnee,
$1.70; Stac:y G-... Ready f« lhe World,
Irvin's Gla11 Setvice, $1.~ David Spur·
lock, Human Trace FFA, J.D. Noflh Produce, $1.30; William Olapmon, Gallia Buec:aneen, BiJ Bear, $1.40; bncly Cox, Lillie
Ky,er Valley, Slat Bank. $1.40; Nalhan
Sanden, Hannu Trace FFA, Harold
Mcn~&amp;omery, $1.70: Aaron Mundy, Ohio
Raiden, OVB, S1.40;
David Raynor, Our Gan&amp;. Bob llvan1
Fanna, $1.30; S11c:y ~
Rowdioa, Sanden Gulf, 0 · 's, $1.60;
Jamie Lyall, Codm•
, Bryan
Morriaal, Ullle Rock. Ark., S1.40; Ryan
Wa110n, Rodney Ranam. Shake ~.
$1.50; Heidi Bryan, Whiz Kida, On. Smilh
ll!ldlorJenson, clerlilu, $1 .40; Brian Crouae,
Ready forlhe World,s-Inau111100, Harley
Crouae, Alhena Stodtyarda and Stale R.p,
Mary Abel, $2; Jolm Sp~rloclt, Hannan TFFA, Judae Thornu Moulton, Molly Ply·
male and Demis Salisbury, SI.SO; Adam
K.insery. Raccoon Rowdiet, F011er Salu,
$1.90.

Continued from D-1

l)

···------.... su- Strait. SJ.50 Ralph Steinbock; ville WUdcau, $1.50 Gene Jolwon a-.
RymSicno.Mon:aville Wild..u,$1.7SNew rolet; Trac:y Fellure, MenlOrville WDdeau,
Sl Fann Cn:di1 Service; Jud100 Swindler,
f - Toboa:o Warehclllle; Leanna SandMm:erville Wildellh, $1.50 Pack Rail Recv·
·en,ijoy_,ja, $1.1S Jividen's Farm Supply:
din ; Julie Simnons, Rio Silver Thimbl'e,
O.ria llrya~~, ~ Rowclies, $1.7flluSl ~J.D. NOIIh Produce; s.- Kiser,GaWa
CU'a Car!lll OuiJet A Shop; and 81111 Cre·
~~uoca_..,sJ AoyUmollulcherShop: llovid
- · .Mon:emlle Wildc:all, $2 Gal Au10
1 - , Trianalo $2.50 Bidwell Calli Feed
Paru, Gallipolis.
S~«e; Lealiolfuclsc., KC .t Swullino Kids,
Allen Hilley,Hopea HdpinsHands, $2.:!$
Sl.50 Dr. Alan 11o11er: Krilla1 Salmcoo, Rio
Shake ~; AJ.u. Queen, Human Troa:
Silver Thimble, $2 Gal. Tobacco .t Candy;
FFA,S2.Jl Irvin's Glw; Ja11011 Bryan, RaeS~eva~ ~ Owidera, $2.2$ 8111111, Billa
-Rowdiel, SJ.7S C...ral TNI~ Jared
A Loewi and W'uanon Aaency, Jeff Kim·
• Bry-.~Rowdiea,$2RiverCityFann
boll, Hillbillies, $2 IWfelt'• Car!lll Mill;
-~y; Krinal Webner, Cen~erville
Kevin Statal, Caucrville YCW11 "Fumm,
: Fonahonds,SI.SOHunL TobaccoWm:howe;
$1.50 CondorGrodia Crown City; ICdiJho
'. JaM Wolfe, llillbilliel, $1.50 Mucn Co. A
Wa,...,, T'lriJiah~&lt;n,~I.2S Oycle Rumen.
· Gallia Co. ·Sherilfa; Samuel Garber, Ccnter-villeYOIIIWF.....,.,$1.50D.C.MetaiSalea
A. Duma Crisenberry; Gail Haner, Ohio
Valloy B... Jadtcu, SI.SO Mart KiealinJ,
011y.; l'luiHupea, Uule KyiJl'rV alley,$1.50
Tltelmll Shaver; TIIIUIIy Vance, Cenlerville
Yoana Farmen;$1.:!$ HomeCily Ice; Tn:n1
Fcllure, Mera:rville Wildeau, $1.25 Gal- lipolia Stockyu-cla; Steplten Fonner, Conlervillo Y01111 Fumen, SI.SO V.S. Taylor
Tnadlina. Bidwell; Jemifer Lewis, Conler. ville Parmhanda, SI Tun llv1111; Kim Tri·
plell, 1livaer Pioneen, Sl .SO Hannm Hill
Fana; Mary Mohler, K-9 Korps,SJ .7S Black.... Realty; Joe Woll'e, llillbillieo, Sl Barr'•
11u1cber Shop; Adam Brukiron, Cenlerville
Y-a Farrnen, Sl Larry Beu, Oallia Co.
T-.; William Miller, Noflhup Lada .t
........ $1.2S Blackburn Reali)': Jennifer
Slower. Whiz Kick, $1.:!$ Dennis R. Salio•250 GALLON
llllly .t Bowman Heolina .t Coolina; Aody
8...-nfidd, 'l'hMrler Pioneen, $2.:!$ Gary
•330 GlllOI
-Jams, CPA; Heidi _Bryan, Whiz K.idl, SI.SO
Star Bull; StepJwUe Cash, Our Gana. $1.:!$
,Blunt, FJlia.t !.oewi; Brie Swindler, Mercer-

continued rrom D-1
Ohz·o T,.T.alley···------

$.96; Bnndcx! Twymao, Raccoon Valley,
RB Farm .t Ganlen, S.ll; llullin Filher,
Mid4&lt;t Pn:n, $.83;
Paul Hutchina, Sunclance K.idl, Gallipolia Stockyanlo, $.17; Bobby Hurlow, Hllllfllll
Trace FFA, Rah:y Suppll• $.81; Robbie
Woodwud, Trilln&amp;le. Minill Enno, $.86;
s.... Tactot~ Vinl&lt;ln V::t,Jividen Fann
Supply, $.81; Brion Shadle, ope'1 Helpins
H1111dt, Holzer Oinic:, $1.10; Sieve Stw~
Couruy Kids, Unity S.vinao.t Loll:n· $.80;
D1n11 Twyman, Raccoon Valley, Mil:elllliou and Ellioll Hcain1 .t Coolin1 , S.14;
Alhley Robet11, Norlh GaJJia 4-H, Thoma
Do-ll Cenler, $.81; Tma Rusoell, Eao Sail
On, Comer Convenience Stor., $.16; Toni
.Caldwdl, Racooon Rowdies, Jaymar Inc.,
$.80; Candy Brumfield, Raccoon Rowdiea,
CenlriiTNII Co.,US; Brad Shadle, Hope'1
Helpina Handa, Ruas Brolhen, Jaclt10r1,
$1.01; Richard SIOJII!ens, Raci:oon Valley,
Smidt Buiclt-Pontiac, 51; Kari Alderman.
Raccoon Valley, lolm K. Gill Trudtina and
Fdlun: TN&lt;kiD&amp;, S:~; Kc:nny Williams, KC
Sunshine K.ids,Uvin 1 Gla11 Service, US;
Deanna llvans, TrillnaJe, Gallipolia S!Oclr.yarda, $.81; Dasmie New1m10, Norlh Gallia
4-H, Tom Pucjualeand Bell Cal........ Co.,
Ul;JeremiaiiCupener,GalliaBua:anoen,
Countryaide Apanmenu, $.15; Amber
Brumfield, Rllc&gt;Ooon Rowdioa, Unity Savinas A t-1, $,1,; Tun Switxr, Sundance
Kida, Glwbum F111111, $.75; Kelly Smilh,
Triangle, Jaymar Inc., $.10; Eric Shriver,
Kounuy Kriacn, Richanl M. Kinaery flllllily, $.16; Midlad Harden, Gallia Buc:ca·
ncs. OVB, $.10; Maabew Sanden, Hay·
....... Star BaN:, $.71; Rid&lt; llilloao, Hannan
T.- FFA, Toler .t Toler lnaurance, $.79;
Jwi&lt;a Robeftl, Nonh Gallia 4-H, Wiaenan
,,........... $,7,; Lanna Sllllden, HayaeedJ,
Doiley T'ue, $.7'; Amy Williamo, KC Sunshine Kids, OVB, $.10;
JonadlanLewii,Galliaa-n,OVB,
$.10; An.;. Lewis, Silver $1n:ak. McCoy·
Moore Funeral IIane, $.19; Tim Slone, Tri·
qle, &lt;;hapmln PritUt&amp;. SI.S'; Jill Canu,

Rain-.

Buy From A Locally Owned

BULK GAS SUPPLIER
•HEATING
•HOT WATER

reserve; Mary Naliy, Michele
Guess, Shawn Dailey and Amity
Dtxon, honorable f!ienlion.
Sheep Breedmg I - Marvin
Edwards, grand; Kay HunJ,
reserve; Joshua Ervin, Tim Epling
and ~manda Upton, honorable
mennon.
Advanced Sheep Breeding Michele Guess, grand; Billee Pooler, reserv_e; Adam Sheets, honorable mennon.
Market Steer _- Ryan Buckley,
grand; J~n PuUms, reserve; Toby
Curtts, Bnan Hoffman and Ltsa
Hoffman, honorable me~tion.
Feeder Calf- Robbte Calaway,
grand; Chns Rood, reserv~; and
Wesley Karr, honorable mention.
Beer Breeding I: Stephanie
Hoffman, grand; Amla Calaway,
reserve; James Chapman and
Michele Guess, honorable mention.
Beef Breeding D - Robbie Calaway, grand; Kristen Slawter,
reserve; and Aaron Sheets, honorable mention.
Dairy Calves and Heifers Vicki Warner, grand; Anna Wolf,
reserve; Rebecca Scou and Tyson
Rose, honorable mention.
Dairy Cows .and Management
- Brent Rose, grand; Chuck Parker,
reserve.
Goats - Jenny Varney , Ben
Crane, reserve; BiUy Crane, honorable mention.
Basic Horsemanship - Holly
Milhoan, grand; Peggy Pinkston,
reserve; and Melissa Clifford, han-

•COOUNG
•CYLINDER TANKS

UJIU, J..airuc 8oua Truckin&amp;, Sl; Tooy
Hupea, Hope's RelpinJ Hands, Yea~aer
Fann Supply, $.15; An.,. Blakeman, Cen·
1erville Farmhondl, Produceri Uveo!Oclr.,
$.7,; JaiCXIIluniap, Gallia a_,..n,llob
llvw Fonns, $.12; Bubllro G....,., Rae·
coon Rowdiol, GaWpoli1 Toboca&gt; A Cindy
Co., $.80; O.ria Alclerm.,,Raccoon Valley,
Callral TNII Co., $.85; Sieve K.iaer, Oallia
Bucaneen,AIIizierFannSupply,$.70;Dovid
Raynor,OurGang,WisemarilnluiiiiC0,$.17.

··--""" -....,.-,-

,., , .,

August 4, 1991 _

orabie mention.
Horse Science - Sara Craig,
grand; Jamie Ord, reserve; Sarah
Grueser, Kandi Hysell, Kyle r)rd.
honorable mention.
Horse Nutrition - Eric Tultlc,
grand.
Draft Horse - Eric Tuttl e,
grand.
Br~aking and Training the
Yearhng Harness Horse - Molly
Toban, grand.
Horse Reproduction and
Genetics- MoUy Toban, grand.
Basic Horse Training - Susan
lirueser. grand; Donnie May .
reserve.
Learning to Jump - Lori
Hayes, grand.
Dressage - Dee Canter, grand.
Raising Pullets - Mary Nally,
grand; Odie Carr, reserve.

Reds edge
Giapts on
walk 6-5

Raising B~oilers - Odte Carr,
grand; Mau Kirk, reserve.
Ducks. · Rebekah~· ~d. Rabbtt I • Jenmfer Clifford,
grand; Btllee Pooler, reserve;
Ralph Rose Jr., Shannon Enright._Matthew Kang, Alatcta R~ssell,
rodd Shafer, honorable men~on.
Rabbit II · Greg McKmney,grand; Amy _Smith, reserve; Joshua
Roush, Melissa Clifford, Bndget
Varney, Jennifer Proffitt, honorable
mcntaon. .
.
Rabbot Advanced - Kelhe
Ervm, grand; Rebecca Snowden,
reserve. .
.
.
_Vetermary Sc1ence- l!n•t I ¥ichele Guess, grand; Shctla Lattimer, res_erve. .
.
.Veterma_ry Sctence - Un1! ~ Mtchael Letfhell, grand; Chrisnne
Schultz, reserve.

79 Jeckaon Pika

MIDDLEPORT

GALLIPOLIS

814·992-6248

614-446-3837

BUY ONE,

Super

Page4

POMEROY

614-992·6292

AU~.u:!A~NLY

EAST LONDON, Soulh Africa
Passengers from a Greek
cruise ship that sank in stormy seas
off soulheastem Soulh Africa said
today JhaJ Jhe crew abandoned Jhe
vessel while hundreds of people
were still on board. ·
Air Force officials said four
people remained to be accounted
for from Jhc liner Occanos, which
sank Sunday jus! aboul a mile offshore. Air Fon:e Maj. Gerrie Evert
said 578 people aboard the Durbanbound ship had been rescued.
TransporJ MinisJry officials
were investigating claims thai
many of Jhe crew were among Jhe
first to abandon Jhe ship.
Passengers claimed crewmembers took the ship's only two
motorized lifeboats, leaving passengers to try to launch regular
motorless lifeboats.
Stephanie Hankinson, Jhe ship's

(AP) -

AUGUST 5·11 Monday thru Sunday

FISH DINNER............ s3.s9
SHRIMP DINNER ••••••• s3.99
(So" A Dollcr ($) On Each Dinner)

SERVED WITH (choice of two): French Fries, Homemade
Coleslaw. or Homemade Baked Beans. Bread Roll included. Your choice of Tartar Sauce or Cocktail Sauce.

DON TATE'S 1991 CLOSEOUT SALE HAS

~::..

HOPE ENTERTAINS AT THE FAIRComedian bob Hope waves to the crowd foDowing his performance at the Ohio State Fair Sun-

1991 GEO STORM
12,000 OFF

1991 GEO PRIZM
11,611

1991 CUTLASS SUPREME

111,111

1987 CHRYSLER
SUP II SHARP ................................................................. . .,,.,.,.,
1989 DODGE DYNASTY. ONLY 13,000 MUS ........................................................59,999
1985 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY .......................................................... S2, 99 5
1986 CHEVROLET CAVALIER ........................................................... 52,495
1987 5·10 BLAZER. 40,000 MILES. SHARPI ................................................................... SAVE
1987 FORD. ESCORT:....................................................................... S3, 99 5
1987 MERCURY GRAN MARQUIS .................................................... S7, 999
1987 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE..................................................... 488
1990
SEVIll£ ................................................................ s1

KEVIN KNAPP

992-2156

........ ,.....
................
S1695 .., .....
.. .....,...
lort.pmlotf...

·---

......

FRONT -WHEEL

ALIGNMENT

, INSTAUED STRUT CARTRIOGES

*Official Stalt lnspKtion (enter
*2 Full Time Mechanics
*2 Bay Drive Tlwaugh Oil
Changes
*New and Used Passenger Tires
*Mufflers, Tail Pipes, Etc.
*Struts, Shacks, Good Prim
*Semi Tires, New and Ultd
*Front End Alignments, ExperieMIII 0111rator

*Ball Joings, Idler Arm.
(enter Linl!, Etc.
*3 &amp; 4 WhHI Tires ATV
* 2 Road Seniu Trucks
*New Portable Welding
Available
*farm Senice Avcilable
with ~oad Prius, lmple·
ments, Tractor Tires
*Fast~ Frietldly Service

WE INSTALL

'

-

deck. As the sh ip began Jo list,
some leaped overboard, Evert said.
The last people on board were
rescued at midday Sunday- only
90 minutes before the Oceanos
sank.

Military officials said they did
not know why the ship began Jak.
ing on water, but that its proximity
10 shore suggested it may have hiJ a
reef off the dangerous "Wild
Coast."
The captain said a piston in Jhe
engine room bursJ, knocking a hole
in the hull.
The 7,554-ton Oceanos - 495
feet long and 64 feet wide - was
carrying mostly Soulh African passengers.
It had left Ibis Indian Ocean port
on Saturday on the return leg of a
Durban-Cape Town-Durban cruise.
It sank off Coffee Bay, part of Jhe
Transkei black homeland.

day night. Hope returned to perform at the fair
after an eight-year absence.

logos fallliliar
sight at Ohio State Fair

GEORGE BUSH

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Corporate logos are becoming as
familiar at Jhe Ohio Slate Fair as a
merry-go-round bn Jhe midway. _
Fairgoers can leave Jheu vehtcles in McDonald's parking lots
and ride McDonald's express shuttles 10 the fairgrounds enll'lii1ce.
Once inside, they can get a
birds-eye view with a trip on the
Cal Spas Skyride.
Folks who don't have a $3 tickel
10 Jhe airoonditioned Celeste Center .for.·ilightly entertainment can
waiCb it free on a big outdoor video
screen courtesy of Donato's Pizza,
Kroger&amp;: WCMH-TV, Columbus.
Bothered by a blisJer after all
that walking? Stop in Jhe SuperX
Drugs first aid sJanon.
Those companies and olhers are
among the corporations which
underwrite a "Day at Jhe Fair" or
a specific event lilce pig races, Jhe
petting zoo, or cheerleading and
baton twirling contests.
Ohio Bell sponsored Jhc opening day luncheon for reporters and
oJhers involved wilh Jhe fair.
Michael Froehlich, fair general
manager, said Jhe 7-year-old corporate sponsorship program produced
$800,000 last year.
"People Jhink that since we arc
a slate agency that we receive state
funds and so forth. For Ibis year's
fair, we received zero dollars from
the slate,'' Froehlich said.
"In Jhe pasl, in Jhe early 1980s,
we received over $1 million in state
support. That was used for Jhe various Junior Fair activities, youth
programs. Thai was whiJtled down

to zero in 1987 ," he said in an
interview.
Froehlich said the fair could
seek state money for construction
projects through a separate capiJal
improvements budget
"But for day-10-day operation,
day-Jo-dar maintenance, we generate 100 percent of our money. So
that's why sponsoring does play an
important part.'' he said.
Increased reliance on corporate
underwriting, which slarted during
the adminislration of former Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste, also
fils into the "public-privaJe partnership'' policy of Republican
Gov. George Voinovich.
"I think Jhe reason you're seeing it is a lot of Jhem iealize it's a
wonderful way for them Jo show

off their wares. It's a chance to
show off Ohio products and,
frankly, exhibit pride in their
Slate," Voinovich said in an interview.
"Whal's Sood for Ohio is good
for Ohio bustness, and I lhink Jhey
realize that. And I think il also
gives litem a chance to promote Jhe
agribusiness that we've got in this
state, which is Jhe biggest industry
we have," he said.
ParticipaJing companies may
benefit from advertising on the
fairgrounds, commercials on the
public address system and other
publicity.
The state fair reported Sunday
thai 257,743 people attended on Jhe
third day, compared to 167,420 on
the same day last year.

SII\KING -The Greek cruise ship Oceanos,
shown here in a video image shortly before it
was completely submerged, sank Sunday otT the
coast or Soutb Africa. Sbips and helicopters res-

Drama to be presented at
Ravenswood festival

MILWAUKEE (AP)- Nearly
300 people rallied in support of the
police department amid allegations
Jhat officers may have been able to
stop a killing spree eight weeks
before Jhe arrest of Jeffrey Dahmer.
Officers and their families organized the "Operation Blue Ribbon" rally outside City Hall on
Sunday to counter a series of
demonstrations by outraged residents.
On July 26, police suspended
three officers who failed to intervene when a 14-year-old naked and
bleeding Laotian boy was found
sJumbling outside Dahmer's apartment on May 27.
Black neighbors pleaded the boy
needed help but police concluded
he was Dahmer's homosexual lover

auditorium on Tuesday. The beautiful baby pageanJ for ages 0 to 23
months will be at 6 p.m, Jhe Little
Prince and Princess, ages 2 to 4 at
7 p.m . and Jhe Little MisJer and
Mtss. ages 5 to 8 at8 p.m.
Thursday the Queen's pageant
wiD be held at 7:45 p.m. at Jhe park
following the opening ceremonies
at 6 p.m. and entertainmenJ by
"Just Us Four" from 6:45 to 7:45.
The Mz ORF contest will be at
9:30p.m.
The youth pageants will take
Friday's activities will feature
place at Ravenswood High School music by the rock band, "Joshua"
from 6 10 7 before Jhe drama and
8:30 to 9:45 afterwards. Fireworks
wiD be at 10 p.m.
On Saturday there will be a distance run beginning at 8 a.m., a
parade at 10 a.m. majoreue competition at 12 noon, and a cake and
pie
CORteSI at I p.m.
Al presstime, deputies of Jhe Meigs Counly Shen.'ffs Department
Meigs CounJy's Shady River
were searching for an escapee from Jhe Meigs Coun1y JaiL
Shufflers will perform at 2 and 5
According 10 Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Donald L. Edwards, 22,
p.m.
Saturday. Other activities at
walked away from the jail at approximately.8:30 a.m . while a
the
Riverfront
Park will be Jhe
deputy's back was·turned. The depuly was opening the cellblocltto
Athens
Ski
Club
show, the Krazy
lock Edwards up, Soulsby reported .
Raft
Race,
music
by "Dave and
-Edwards was being housed in Jhe jail on charges of JhefJ.
Sugar" and a stem wheeler event
"Eclipse" will play from 6 to 7
P..m. and again at 10 p.m. and
'Dave and Sugar" wiU reJum 10 Jhe
Maallew B. Haynes, Rutland, was cited on a charge for failure
s1age at 9 p.m. There will be dance
10 maintain control following an accident on Mill St. in Middleport
at lhe NY A hall "Wanted/Rock
Wilson" beginning at 10.
at 11:15 p.m. Saturday.
Middleport police reported that Haynes was Jraveling west on
Activities will conclude on SunMiD SJreet when his truck wenl off the right side of the sJreet, and
day with the Jel Ski Champistruck a uJilily pole. The pole was clipped off on impacL There was
onships from 10 a.m. 10 2 p.m., a
heavy damage to Jhe Haynes vehicle.
car show at 9 a.m., a pet show at I
p.m:, and a sospel sing from 2 10 4
Continued 01,1 page 3
p.m.
A drama "A Time of Changes"
to be performed Friday and Saturday evening, 7 p.m. at Riverfront
Park will be a highlight of the 1991
Ohio River Festival which gets
underway Tuesday at Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Other features of the festival
will include the queen's pagean~ a
parade, a variety of entenainmenJ,
Jel ski championships, and fireworks.

Deputies search for escapee

and an adult. The officers joked
about needing to be deloused aflcrward.
The remains of the boy, Koncrak Sinthasomphone, were among
II dismembered bodies discovered
in Dahmer's apartment July 22.
Dahmer has confessed to killing 17
people since 1978, including Jhe
boy and aJ least four other people
after him, aulhorities said.
The demonstrators said police
shouldn't be blamed for Dahmer's
alleged actions. They vowed 10
wear blue ribbons unJil a departmenial investigation is compleJe.
May&lt;l' John 0 . Norquist created
a panel•to study police-communily
relations.
"Our 'spiril is low and our hearts
are broken," Alderwoman Anneue

E. Schcrbcrt told the rally. "If Jhe
police officers are not judged fairly
and with compassion, a pan of this
city will never recover."
The crowd circled City Hall
repeatedly and tied blue ribbons on
light posts and strecJ signs. "My
dad is a great cop and there arc
many lilre Jhem," one banner said.
Norquist declared Sunday a day
of healing in the city.
"We've had a terrible Lime over
the lasJ 12 days," he told members
of Greater Galilee Baptist Church.
"When we look aJ Ibis, we have to
look aJ it as a way to try to have
some good come out of it''
The Milwaukee Journal reported
Sunday that a random survey of
5II adults in Jhe metropolitan area
Continued on page 3

Outhouse races 1991 fair feature
Oulhouse races wiD be Jhe Saturday nighl grandstand aaraction at
the 128Jh Meigs County Fair, Aug.
12-17, on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
·
A "ftrst" for the fair, the outrace
races will begin at 8 p.m. The enlry
fee is $5 per oulhouse and entries
will be accepted until 4 p.m. on
Monday of fair week in Jhe secreJary' s offtce.
Prizes will be awarded to the
best looking ou~use and coSIUme,
$25 and a trophy,
in each division, $50 for fust, 0 for second,
$25 for Jhird, $10 for fo5?.rtand
$5 for fiflh.~edivisions
18
and under, I to 29 years age,

Rutland man cited on charge

••

cued more than 500 people from the sinking
liner and storm-lashed waters. (AP - ABC
News)

POliCe get support from Milwaukee residents

Local briefs

Wt Ult tht .. totf ctmputwi11tl

photographer, said the crew's
departure created havoc: "They
left and there was a total slate of
panic because nobody else knew
how to let the lifeboats down .' '
Employees and enterlainers of
the South African tour company
that rented Jhe Oceanos reponcdiy
took over, launching lifeboats and
helping people who were airlifted
to safely by helicopters.
Capt. Yiannis Avranas defended
his decision 10 leave the ship, saying it was necessary to direcl rescue operations from shore.
"I don't care whal Jhese people
say about me. I am separated from
my family, who were rescued by
one of the other ships, and I lost
my own ship - what more do lhey
want?" he !Old reporters.
Terrified passengers waited for
help all night on the ship's upper

@&amp;ppgr~ate

Sentinel
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Parlly cloudy. Tuesday, blgh
In 80s. Chance ol rain SO per·

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SHOCK INSTALLATION

' .

1 Section, 10 PagH 25 cents
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and 30 years of age and up.
The teams are to consisJ of not
more than five persons, four Jo
push or pull and one member seated inside. Wheels and rollers are
permissible bul there can be no
form of propulsion or mechanical
power other than what would be
provided by the four participants in
the race with both feel on the
ground.
The rules specify that Jhe outhouse must be six feel Jail from
floor to roof top and constructed of
flake board, plywood, or wood
panelin~. No A-fnune cons~cti~n
or lattice work construction ts

allowed, nor are motors, gear,
chains, or propellers.
Batteries may be used for wund
effects, music, lights or decorative
effects.
The distance of Jhe race will be
determined ad the time of arrival
on race day and the number of
entries will determine the number
of heats before the run-off.
The outhouses are to enter Jhe
grounds by Jhe horse barns and
proceed to the· race track infteld. At
6:30 p.m. prior to the races, an
inspection and briefing will be
held. Each outhouse may only be
entered in one division.

�r

.'
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Commentary

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 5, 1991

Ohio has mostly clear skies; humidity to drop

O f 110 w(~d\IH •r
Tuesday, Aug. 6
Accu-Weath~ forecast for

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Something called a Canadian high
pressure system located over the
Great Lakes is responsible for the
mostly clear skies and comfortable
temperatures that prevail over
Ohio.
It will allow drier air to flow
south over Ohio which in turn will
lower the humidity.
Skies will be partly cloudy
across Ohio tonighL Oouds will be
increasing into the state from the
west and southwesL A low pressure
system developing over the mid

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
Il l Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTE RESTS OF THE MEIGS- MASON A Rt~\

'1MULTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WING ETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A ME MBER o!The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI"ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addresstnglssues. not personalit ies.

City wrestles with curfew
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO - Recent violence that swept Ohio's fourth-largest city has
led some local ofilcials to renew their push for a citywide curfew for teenagers. .
But there are some leaders who say a curfew would do more harm than
good.
"These days, many of these young folks are traveling together in
gangs, and they are acting irrespo~sibly at times. All too many times,
innocent persons are getbng hurt, netghbors are terronzed, particularly the
elderly, and citizens feel helplessly outnumbered by these young people.
It is time for this sense of frustration, hopelessness and fear to end,''
Councilman Jack Ford said Thursday at a news conference.
Ford and Vice Mayor Carty Finkbeiner said they are pushing for a
petition drive that would place the issue before voters in by May.
They need to collect 18,543 signatures of registered voters in order to
get curfew legislation on lhe ballot.
City Council last month twice rejected curfew legislation sponsored by
Finkbeiner and Ford.
The proposal calls for children 11 years old and under to be off the
streets between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. For children II 10 15, the curfew
would be imposed from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. The curfew for 16- and 17-yearolds would be set from riiidnight to 5 a.m.
The curfew would not apply to minors returning home from a school
activity, enterrainment, such as a movie, or a job.
The legislation would be tried for two years, Finkbeiner said.
He said this would be his last attempt at a curfew.
In the last week, more than a dozen people have been shot on the
streets at nighL Some of the victims and people accused of committing the
crimes have been teen-agers. Six ICen-agers were wounded in a drive-by
shooting.
Last month, violence erupted in an east-side neighborhood when
Robeen Wilson, 19, allegedly beat to death 16-year-old Chad Good .
Police say Wilson beat Good with a board and dropped a 65-pound concrete slab on his head. The crime occurred shortly after midnight July 16.
Some residents said Good's death was ractally motivated. Good is
white; Wilson is black.
Finkbeiner said the curfew is designed to curb violence, and it has the
support of Police Chief Marti Felker.
But the police union said it would not support the curfew. Union President Mike Collins said there aren' t enough officers to enforce the law. He
said the department already is about 100 officers below authorized
strength of 775.
_
And at least one local civil rights leader, the Rev. Floyd Rose, has
come out against a curfew. He said it could lead to harassment of innocent
young blacks and add to rac!&amp;J problems.
. . ..
.
" The innocent would ulamately be 1ts greatest vtcum, Rose SBJd.
There is fear_in inner-city neighborhoods that police, using the curfew,
would randomly stop black teen-agers, he said. Felker in 1988 ordered
police to randomly stop black teen-agers in a west-side neighborhood to
stop gang violence. The order was rescinded after Rose and other civil
rights leaders an~ organizations protested. .
. .
Finkbeiner S81d the curfew would not be 311Ded at blacks. He SBJd 1t has
widespread support from residents, including blacks, who fear that violence will continue to escalate.
He added that other cities in Ohio and the nation have used curfews to
curb violence, including Dayton, which has had a curfew since 1967, and
Atlanta.

Berry's World
-

1.-

lJ

Doctor-owned medical labs under fire
WASHINGTON - Florida is a have more complicated ailments
land of opportunity if you happen than the rest of us.
to be a doctor who isn ' t above
The most attractive investment
referring your patients for frivolous tool of the '90s for Florida doctors
tests so you can get a legal lcick- is the Magnetic Resonance Imaging
back on the fees.
machine, or MRI. They are as
A soon-to-be-released report on numerous as street-comer vendors
medical self-referrals exposes the in Florida . Mitchell and Scott
sleazy profits doctors earn by found that nearly all of the centers
investing in medical labs where in Florida with MRI machines are
they send their patients for over- owned by doctors who refer their
priced and needless procedures. patients there. And nearly all of the
The doctors who line their own exams conducted at those facilities
pockets this way say the prolifera- are done on people with insurance.
tion of medical labs increases the We have to believe either that peopatient's access to proper care, ple with insurance need ,more comespec ially in rural areas. But the plex diagnostic procedures, or that
statistics from Florida tell another poor patients are not being run
through the same hoops because
story.
The research was done by Jean they can't pay for it.
The number of billings made to
Mitchell and Elton Scot~ two associ ate professors at Florida State patients covered by insurance conUniversity. Their report has not yet tradicts the claims of medical
been released, but our associate groups such as the American MediScou Sleek has obtained derails of cal Association and the Florida
the contents. It shows that residents Medical Association that doctorin the sunshine state are being owned labs and clinics promote
bilked through doctors' self-refer- better care for the poor.
The three labs in Florida that are
rals. The only other explanation for
the data is that people in Florida not owned bv doctors do far less

business than the doctor-owned
MRI labs.
The researchers found that MRI
machines are overworked, but certainly not underpaid in Florida. The
studv compared urban Broward
County Florida with Baltimore,
which has two medical school s but
almost no doctor-owned MRI facilities. The rate of MRI procedures
in Broward County was about 38
for every I ,000 residents compared
to 12.3 per 1,000 in Baltimore. And
the average charge in Broward
County is $783 compared to $450
in Baltimore.
The Health and Human Services
Department has announced new
rules to curb self-referral abuses by
doctors. HHS wants to allow doctors to stay in the business, but with
limits set on the percentage of the
business that comes from selfreferrals. The rules are timid and
would require a nightmare regulatory setup to make sure doctors
weren't skirting the law with hidden ownerships and bogus billings.
Rep. Fortney "Pete" Stark, DCalif., wants to take it II step fur-

WHAT A~ 'IOU

COUNTING, KIDS?
...LICE~E PLATtS

NO...
CaK~RU:1tON
SIGNS~

...zos;

•
IToledo I 77" I

By Jack Anderson
ther. He is considering a bill that
would forbid doctors from referring
their patients to any medical lab in
which they have a financial interest, pl ain and simple. The doctor
lobby claims that Stark's bill punishes the entire profession for the
greed of a few . But Stark is sticking to hi s gun s. He thtnks selfreferrals are a scam resulting in
overcharges, including tens of millions of dollars sucked from Medicare.
The stories of questionabl e
referrals aren ' t hard to find - like
the 18-year-old patient who underwent a $1 ,000 MRI exam . The
diagnosis was that he had bruised
his thigh.
A SHOO-IN - Democrats and
Republicans have agreed on a $2 l3
billion limit to their defense budgeL But just because the funding is
cut doesn't mean that the moneY.
will be spent where it is needed
most. It will be spent on the projects with the most political clout;
Take the case of the B-2 "Stealth"
bomber. Even the Pentagon brasS
now has to agree that it probablx
wiU never be used for its intendeil
purpose - to bomb the Soviel
Union. Now they say it would be
useful against an unruly dictator
like Saddam Hussein, but the B-2
wasn' t used against Saddam in th~
Persian Gulf War. The Pentagon
doesn ' t want to demonstrate it in
real combat for fear of exposing
some of its secrets.
:
MINI-EDITORIAL - Nelson
Mandela is keeping some bad com;
pany these da_ys, hobnobbin~ witi!
Fidel Castro tn Havana while the
two of them bad-mouth the Unite4
States. Mandela should recognize
in Castro a man who has nothing to
give, but is more than willing to
take. We doubt that Castro gave
Mandela a tour of Cuban prisons
where political prisoners are kept,
If he had, Mandela, who has dona
some unjust jail time him self;
would have recognized that SoutH
Africa has no monopoly on injustice.
·

were ever extradited. He would, no
doubt, be let out on bail, would hire
a lawyer and, if acquitted, would
'ask for a green card,' the Syrian
reportedly joked."
Shock does not begin to convey
what the Cohens felt as they listened to the words read to them by
Kathleen Flynn, of McLean, Va.,
whose 21-year-old son, John
Patrick, was also a passenger on
Pan Am 103.
"The outrage - the fury - I
felt when I heard those words cannot be expressed," says Susan. Her
husband adds: "The joke is so
grotesque. We're dealing with the
murder of our child. And to think
that someone who we suspect was
behind it is joking about it with the
president of the United States and he gets away with it - is .... "
His voice trails off; there is no
word for what it is.
How did Bush react to Assad's
unconscionable little joke? Did he
respond firmly or just smile along
with the Syrian despot on whom he
was lavishing his diplomatic woowoo in the hope that it would bring
Syria to the peace table. The White
House officially has nothing to

report; in facl , said spokesman
Douglas Davidson, " Our people
don't remember that exchange as
havin~ happened.' ·
Th1s much we do know : Our
president has not comnorted himself well on behalf of the families
of those who flew Pan Am I03 on
Dec. 21, 1988. Indeed, in that time
of presidential transition , the Rea gan and Bush White Houses let
four months pass before sending
their flfSt response - a perfunctory
letter of condolence. Bush had
found time in the interval to greet
the champions of the Super Bowl
and the NCAA's Final Four.
A few days ago, the families of
2 I of the victims wrote the Lord
Advocate of Scotland, Lord Peter
Fraser, who is in charge of the official investigation of the bombing,
to release a report on his government's findings. Their letter said
that "the most plausible theory"
aired publicly is that Iran paid the
Syrian-based Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine's General
Command (headed by Ahmed
Jebril) to blow up the jetliner, and
that the job apparently was contracted out to Libyan terrorists

Can the Democrats Savage Gates?

'I
'~
" You 've probably heard of me. Ism
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. "

One of the Democrats' favorite
tricks (and I' m sure the Republicans would use it too, if their roles
were rever sed) is to fasten onto
some prominent presidential ~de
or appointee and savage him until
he resigns or the Senate refuses to
confirm him. The purpose of this
exercise is to create a small pile of
sleaze, in the hope that some of it
will rub off on the real target- the
president, of course.
Perhaps the most spectacular
example of this in the Reagan
administration was the job done by
the Democrats and their media
allies on Atto~ney General Ed
Meese. Meese, however , was a
tough old bird, as well as a highly
able and honorable public servant,
and the mud-gunners never man-

aged to bring him down.
White Hou se Chief of Staff
John Sununu has been the target of
choice in the Bush administration.
At the moment he is still in office,
but the opposition is by no means
finished with him and the prospects
are not altogether reassuring.
Meanwhile, Mr. Bush's nomination of National Security Council
Deputy Director Robert Gates as
head of the CIA has given the
Democrats another victim to Ieick
around (since the Senate must consent to the appointment) . They
have not evinced much enthusiasm
for the opportunity. Their attitude
reminds me of a mongoose I once
watched in India, being egged on
by its owner to fight a cobra. The
battle was instinctive and hence

Today in history _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __
\

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, Aug. 5, the 217th day of 1991. There are 148 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 5, 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe was found dead in tbe bedroom- of her Los Angeles home. Her death was ruled a "probable suicide" caused by an overdose of sleeping pills. Monroe was 36.
On this date:
In 1861 the federal government levied an income tax for the flfSt time.
· In 1864, during ~ Civil War, Union Admiral David G. Farragut is
said .to have given his famous order, " Damn the torpedoes, full speed
:liheadl' • ~he led his fleet against Mobile Bay, Ala.
· .., Jp 1884, the cornerstone for the Statue of Liberty was laid on Bedloe's
.(slandinNew Yorld~.
.
.
In 1~14, the flfSt electriC traffic hghts were mstalled, m Oeveland.

•

Showers T-slom!s Rain FluniiiS

In 1924, the comic strip "Little Orphan Annie,'' by Harold Gray,
made its debut
In (953, Operation Big Switch was under way as pri!;Oners taken during the Korean Conflict were exchanged at Panmunjom.
In 1954, 24 boxers became the flfSt induclecs into the Boxing Hall of
Fame, including Henry Armstrong, Gentleman Jim Corbett, Jack
Dempsey, Jack Johnson, Joe Louis and John L. Sullivan.
In 1957, " American Bandstand,'' hosted by Dick Clark, made its network debut on ABC.
In 1969, the U.S. space probe Mariner Vll flew by Mars, sending back
photographs and scientific data.
In 1980, Hurricane Allen battered the southern peninsula of Haiti, leaving more than 200 dead.
In 1984, actor Richand Burton died at a hospital in Geneva, Switzerland, at,the age of 58.
·
\

l

George' s superior, "must" also
have known about it - though he
has repeatedly del\icd this under
oath.
This " sandwich theory,'' with
Casey and George as the two slices ·
of bread and Gates as the ham, may :
sound irresistibly logical to people :
unfamiliar with the way an mtelli- ·
gence service works, but in fact it's .
as full of holes as a Swiss cheese.
For one thing, as Casey' s :
deputy, Gates specialized in techni- .
cal intelligence and watching ·
developments in the Soviet Union; :
Casey kept the more dramatic feats :
of cloak-and-dagger inteUigence to ·
himself and those directly con- :
cerned with them (e.g., George). ·
For another, knowledge of covert ·
operations as risky as the fund :
diversion .to the contras is stnctly
confined to those who "need to
know" - a category that in this
case certainly didn' t include ·Gates.
Sensing that the "sandwich theory" is a pitifully weak reed on
which to rest rejection of Gates,
certain Democratic senators are
beginning to mutter about broader
(and vaguer) concerns: Gates'
"candor" in earlier congressional
appearances, etc. But Republican
minority leader Bob Dole, who
Icnows a fading offensive when he
sees one, flatly predicts that Robert
Ga~ will be confmned.

•

Weather

Ice

Pl Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

C&gt;1119t Accu-Woather, Ire.

South Central Ohio
Today, panly cloudy. High in
the lower 80s. Northeast winds 5 to
15 mph. Tuesday, variable cloudiness with scattered showers and
thunderstorms. High in the lower
80s. Chance of rain 50 percenL
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday
Mostly fair through the period.
Morning lows mostly mid 50s to
mid 60s. Highs upper 70s to mid
80s Wednesday and mostly 80s
Thursday and Friday.

Mississippi Valley may cause some
li!Jht rain to spread into the Ohio
R1ver Valley after midnight.
Overnight lows will range from the
lower 50s to the lower 60s.
The 'Chance for showers and
possible thunderstorms will
mcrease across the south on Tuesday. It's eltpccted that the rain if
any will be light, with heavier
amounts under thunderstorms.
Highs will again range from the
mid 70s to the lower 80s.
It will stay dry through most of
the week. Temperatures will slowly
warm each day reaching into the
80s at weelt' s end.
The morning weather map
shows a large area of high pressure
covering the Great Lakes and central Canada was centered over
upper Michigan. A cold front
elttended east to west from the
North Carolina coast through Tennessee to Colorado.

There will be litlle movement of
the weather system s through
tomorrow morning. The high will
expand to the mid AUantic region
while the western portion of the
front begins to return northward
into Missouri as a warm front on
Tuesday.
Fair skies greeted much of the
nation this morning, but rain fell in
a handful of areas around the country, including Omaha, Neb., and
San Francisco.
Heavy rain was forecast for later
today in northern New England ,
with the possibility of some local
flooding.
Scattered thunderstorms were
likely throughout the rest of New
England. Drier air and seasonal
temperatures were predicted elsewhere in the Northeast
A cold front was expected to
scauer thunderstroms from the
Tennessee Valley to the Carolina

L~~!!!'!~fs...

A local manufacturer will be day at 10 a.m.
American Alloys, Inc. of New
presented with a Quality Award by
Haven
recently achieved the Ford
a Big Three Automaker Wednes-

Marijuana plants valued at $1.2
million seized over weekend

The Rudaoo man then left the scene but later reported the accident to Middlepon police.
An accident on the Fruth's Pbarmacy parking lot was investigated by Middleport police Friday morning. Robert G. Bobo, Deltter
and Teresa L. Baker, both driving pickup bUcks, backed into each
other from parking spaces. There was minor damage to both vehicles. No citations were issued.

POINT PLEASANT - Marijuana plants, with a street value of
over $1,200,000, were confiscated
Saturday and Sunday by the Point
Pleasant Detachment of the West
Virginia State Police, with assistance from the Mason County
Sheriff's Department and Point
Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department, according to Sgt. Gordon
Clark of the WV State Police. Over
SSO plants were confiscated on
Redmond Ridge and Crab CreeJc.
According to Clark, the state
police acted on information
received from county informants.
They enlisted the help of the West
Virginia National Guard, who provided a helicopter to locate the
marijuana patches, from the air.
After the patChes were discovered,
Clark contacted the sheriff' s
department and the fJre department
for assistance.

Volleyball registration now open
The Middleport Recreation Department is currently seeking
teams interested in participating in a volleyball tournament on
September 7 and 8. The tournament will be held at General
Hartinger Park. Each team may have up to. I0 players on the~ roster. There will be a $25 entry fee for each team. For further Information, contact the department at 992,6782.

Squads get 9 weekend calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered by Meigs County Emergency Medical Services over the weekend
On Saturday at 12:40 a.m., Rutland unit went to County Road
10. Cindy Warden was talten to Veterans' Memorial Hospttal.
At 12:53 p.m., Middleport unit went to Page Street. William
WatSOn was taken to Veterans. At 12:56 p.m., Chester unit went to
an auto rue. At 4:06p.m., Racine unit went to Front Street. Robert
·Saltsman was taken to Veterans. At 8:15p.m., Syracuse unit went
to Buclctown Road. Cowtney Jones was taken to Veterans and later
taken, by Life Flight. to Children's Hospital i!l Columbus.
.
At 12:33 a.m. on Suriday, Pomeroy umt went to West Mam
Street. Jeff Proffitt went to Veterans. At 9 a.m., Tuppers Plains
squad went to Main Srreet Mirna Walker was taken to SL Joseph
Hospital. At 10:35 a.m., RuUand squad went to State Route 124
East foc Virginia Hanson, who was raken to Veterans. At 7:58 a.m.,
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Frances
Hawkins, who was taken to Veterans.

No one cited after wreck
Moderate damage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident
Sunday at 11:28 a.m. on West Main StreeL
According to Pomeroy Police, Janice Hendricks, Letart, W. Va.
was traveling east on West Main and had stopped at a traffic light in
preparation to making a left tum onto the Pomeroy-Mason bridge
when her car was snuck by one driven by WendyiYoung, Mason,
W. Va. traveling west
Young said that she became ill and momentarily lost consciousness and her car drifted into the left lane striking the Hendricks
vehicle. Young refused treaunent There were no citaqons.

-----Area deaths---R. D. Bibbee
R. D.. (Red) Bibbee, 68, of
Torch, died Saturday, August 3,
1991 at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. following an
extended illness.
Born in Coolville, he was the
son of the late Curtis and Letha
Baker Bibbee. He was a former
employee of the B&amp;:O Railroad.
He is survived by four brothers,
Gerald, O.C. and William, all of
Coolville, and Clair Baker, of
Columbus; one sister, Marjorie

Oral (Cock:r&gt; Cain, 66, of Route
I, Vincent, died Sunday, 'Aug. 4,
1991, at Riverside Methodist HosP.ital in Columbus following a brief
1Uness.
Born in Troy Township, he was
the son of the lat.e Floyd and Mary
Caner Cain. He retired from the M
and 0. Dredging Co. in Piusburgh,
Pa. and was a member of the Operating
Mr. · was senior warden of
the Coolville Masonic Lodge 337,
F.&amp;:A.M., a member of the Scottish Rite of Cambridge, and the
Order of the Eastern Star, Minear
Chapter 274.
lie was veteran of the U. S.
Army.
He is survived by his wife,
Norma Farley Cain, two sons,
Robin and
both of V~nt,

(U81'81t. . . )
A Dlvllloa or M1dtlmedla, Inc::.

Published every attnnoon, Monday
through · Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·

meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub-

li s hing Compan)'fMultlmedla , Inc .,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21116. S...
Ohio.
cond class poetaa:e pald ·at Pomeroy,

M ~mber: 'llle Associated Preas, Inland Dally PrHs Aasoclatlon and the

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POSTMASTER:

to The

Barber of Lalceside, Mont.; two
nephews, Larry Bibbee of Decatur,
Ala., and Jerry Bibbee of Coolville;
two niece.!l, Letha Mathers. Bradenton, Fla., and Gloria Styer of Lakeside, Mont.; and two special
friends, Margaret Newman and
Ethel White.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at Whire-Biower
Funeral' Home in Coolville with
Rev. Wesley Thatcher officiating.
Burial wiU be in Success Cemetery
in Tu~ Plains.
Fnends may call from 7 p.m. to
9 p.m. on Monday.

Oral Cain

· The Daily Sentinel

~nd

address changes
Dally Senllnel. Ill Cour1 St .

POmeroy, Ohio 45769.

StJBSaiiP'nON RATI!S
B) Carrier or Mol..- I!AIIIIo

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Sgt. Clark, Trooper Mike
Roach, Trooper Ron Kyle, Sheriff
Ernie Watterson, Deputy Curtis
McConihay and Corrections Officer
David
Anthony
searched the wooded area and discovered the patches. The plants
were pulled and transported to the
state police office. The plants will
be destroyed.
Clark is anticipating arrests following the completed investigation.
According to Clark, this is the
largest find for the detachment in
this area. He said this find brings
the total amount of marijuana confiscated by the state police to
$1,300,000. Clark added, "We are
not fmished yeL"
Last Tuesday, the sheriff' s
department confiscated plants with
an estimated $700,000 street value
near Henderson. Within a week,
local law enforcement agencies

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Aug. 2 - Becky
Clutters, Mason Pavelich, Mrs.
James Saunders and daughter, Fred
Smith and Elizabet.h Wasch.
Discharges, Aug. 3 - Mrs.
Christopher Close and son, Mrs.
Dennis Coy and daughter, James
Plants, Mrs. Donald Roush and
daughter and Mrs. Brent Wachs
and son.
Discharges, Aug. 4 - Connie
Nichols and Ramona Weethec.
Births, Aug. 4 - Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Herdman, a son, Leon,
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ross, a
daughter, Kitts Hill. Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Steinbeck, a son, Rio
Grande . Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Zerlcle, a son, Hartford, W.Va.

~

with the Rev. Dave Hubbard and
Rev. Wesler Thatcher officiating.
Burial wil be in the Rockland
Cemetery, Belrre. Friends may call
at the funera home after 2 p.m
Tuesday. In lieu of flowers,
memorial contributions may be
made to tbe American Heart Association.

Titus Pickens
Titus G. Pickens, 89, of Hubbard Street in Syracuse, died on
Sunday, August 4, 1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospital. He was a
mechanic, employed by the Ebersbach Construction Company for
several years. He was also a former
employee of the Meigs County
Highway Department.
Born on October 3, 190 I in
Saxon, Ohio, he was the son of the
late George and Adaline Burris
Pickens.
He is survived by his wife ,
Laura Boyd Pickens; a brother; and
four sisters-in-law.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by several brothers
and sisters.
He attended the Syracuse Presbyterian Chwch.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at II a.m. at Letart
Falls Cemetery Chapel with Rev.
Charles Norris officiating. Burial
will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
· Tuesday.

coast. Very high humidit y, but
more sun shine than clouds were
expected in the states farther south.
Rain was likely from central
Missouri to the western Dakotas,
with some areas receiving up to 2
inches of precipitation and temperatures 20 degrees below normal.
Highs today were expected to be
in the I00s in some parts of Texas
and Ariwna; in the 90s throughout
the South and in some parts of
Texas, Arizona and California; in
the 80s throughout much of the
Northeast. the Ohi o Vall ey and
most of the West; and in the 70s in
the Plains, the Upper Mississippi
Valley. the Great Lakes and pans
of New England and the Pac ific
Northwest. Some highs in the 60s
were predicted in northern New
England.
The high for the nation Sunday
was Ill degrees at Bullhead City.
Ari z.

Ame,ican Alloys gets quality award
\

By William A. Rusher
inevitable, and the mongoose was
sure to win; but its attitude, when
hauled out of its sack to do its stuff
yet again, was, " Must I?"
Nevertheless the Democrats
have worked Gates over, using a
technique which London's
Economist called "the death of a
thousand cuts." No one cut is fatal,
or even particularly harmful, but
they add up to a potentially deadly
injury.
In addition, the Democrats have
gouen some unexpected help from
Alan Fiers, a small CIA fish in the
Iran-contra pond, who agreed to
testify in special prosecutor
Lawrence Walsh's interminable
probe of that old scandal in return
for a lighter sentence for having
falsely told Congress he dido 't
knO'\&amp;bout the diversion of Iranian
arms sale proceeds to the
Nicaraguan conttaS.
Fiers has sworn that his immediate superior, Clair George, the
CIA's assistant director for coven
operations (or head of the " Dirty
Tricks Department"), had seemed
to know about the diversion
already when Fiers mentioned it to
him; and then ordered Fiers to lie
about it to Congress.
The Democrats argue that; since
the late CIA Director William
Casey knew about the diversi·on,
Gates, as his deputy. and Clair

•I Columbus I·so• I

W. VA.

By Martin Schram .
based in Malta.
These families expressed concern about "what appears to be acampaign to absolve the West' s
new friend, Syria, from any responsibility,'' adding: "We need full disclosure, free from any political ·
interference .. .. " They deserve at ·
least that - and so do the rest of
us.
President Bush and Secretary of
State James Baker deserve a world :
of applause for their efforts to bring :
peace to the Middle East. But they
surely know that Assad turned to
the United States in an act of des-·
peration, not a rush of affection,
after seeing his Soviet benefactors
plunge into economic and political
bankruptcy.
The shock and outrage felt by
the Cohens, the Flynns and aU who
lost loved ones on Pan Am 103 is a
jolting reminder:
There will be no peace for
peace-makers who , in the rush to
the tables in the Middle East,
choose diplomatic silence as their
vehicle of expedience.
·

PA.

IND.

Bush owes Pan Am 103 families more
Susan and Daniel Cohen, writers of children ' s books, haven ' t
done much since their only child,
Theodora, a Syracuse University
theater major who was studying
abroad, boarded a jetliner, buckled
her seat belt and died at age 20
because tep'Orists chose 10 blow up
Pan Am 103.
So the Cohens were in their
home on Elizabeth Street in Pon
Jervis, N.Y., on July 27, when a
friend called and read them a
Washington Post story about how
fabulously President Bush and
Syria's Hafez al-Assad have gouen
along ever since their Geneva
meeting last November - where
Assad "displayed his fabled sardonic wit" on the subject of terrorism.
The Post's Pulitzer Prize-winnin~ Caryle Murphy wrote:
'Responding to U.S. com plaints about the presence in Damascus of Ahmed Jebril, a Palestinian guerrilla leader who has been
linked to the 1988 bombing of Pan
American Flight 103 over Lockerhie, Scotland, Assad launched into
a tongue-in-cheek speech about the
complications for Bush if Jebril

•

IMansfield I 79• I•

and Dale Van Atta

The Da lly S enunei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 5, 1991

have confiscated nearly I ,000
plants.
Clark asks for any person with
information on marijuana patches
to contact the state police or sherifrs department. This will enable
them to follow up on the tips and
confiscate any plants.

Lottery numbers
Super Lotto
13-15-20-27-30-36
(thirteen, fifteen, twenty , twenty-seven, thirty, thirty-six)
The jackpot is $20 million.
Kicker
1-7-2-2-8-0
(one, seven, two , two, e ight,
zero)
Pick 3 Numbers
7-3-3
(seven, three, three)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-5-2-1
(three, five , two, one)

Sixteen killed on Ohio
roads over weekend
By The Associated Press
Sixteen people died in accidents
on Ohio highways over the weekend, the State Highway Patrol said.
The patrol counts traffic fatali ·
ties from 6 p.m. Friday to midrtight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
MEDINA - Two unidentified
women killed in a one-car accident
on a Medina County road.
FREMONT - Cletis Mullennex Sr., 50, of Tiffm, motorcyclist
lcilled on a Sandusky County road.
ST. CLAIRSViLLE- Kathleen Ortiz, 44, of East Chicago,
Ind., in a two-car accident on Interstate 70 in Belmont County
FREMONT - Eric S. Turpin,
17, of Bettsville, in a two-car accident on a Sandusky County road.
LIMA -James Kula, 18, of
Lima, motorcyclist killed on a city
streeL
SATURDAY
BATAVIA - Brian W. Morgan, 21, Russellville, and Glen S.
Switzer, 55, of Batavia, in a twocar accident on Ohio 133 in Clermont County.
JOHNSVILLE - Timothy W.

Kuhn, 28, of Galion, died in a twocar accident on U.S. 42 in Morrow
County.
COLDWATER - Michael J.
Raterman , 19, of Rus sia, and
Robert M. Lundgren, 46, of Grosse
lie, Mich., bicyclists lcilled when
they were hit by a tractor-trailer on
Ohio 118 in Mercer County.
COLUMBUS - Montree Garmjittagoon, 40, of Columbus, in a
three -vehicle accident on a
Franklin County road.
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Eugene
E. Bartniclci III, 22, of Benwood.
W.Va., in a two-vehicle accident
on Interstate 470 in Belmont Coun ty.
MARION - Diana L. Coleman, 33, of Belle Center, truck
driver on Ohio 739 in Marion
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
NEW PHILADELPHIA Keith W. Palmer, 35, of Mineral
City, motorcyclist lcillcd on Ohio
212 in Tuscarawas County.
COSHOCTON - Tul sa V.
Miller, 26, of Baltic, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 93 in Coshocton
County.

__ Meigs announcements_
Meeting slated
The Big Bend Youth Football
League will hold a meeting tonight
(Monday) at 8 p.m. at Pleasers in
Pomeroy. This is for all parents of
players and c~eerlea~ers and anyone interested m helpmg.
Inspection to be held
· .
The R.ock Springs Gran~e wtll
meet Wednesday at 8 p.m., mstead
of Thursday. Annual inspection
wilr be held and all members arc
urged to attend.· ·
Bake sale planned
.
The Stiversville Word of Fatth
Church will have a bake sale
fundraiser on Tuesday at from 9

a.m. to dark on Stiversville Road in
Portland . Rain will cancel. Call
Pastor David Dailey for further
information or directions, 985 4482.
Booth clean up slated
The Meigs Local Band Boosters
will start fair booth clean-up on
Thursday at 6 p.m. All boosters are
urged tQ.Ilttend.
Spccfal meeting
.
.
There will be a spectal meeung
at the Reedsville Fire House on
Saturday at noon for the purpose of
reviewing resumes for the postuon
of cleric of Olive Township.

Motor Compan y's Q-1 preferred
supplier status. A short ceremony
will be he ld in New Hav en
Wednesday to commemorate the
event
Bill Landers, general manufac turing manager of the Ford Casting
Division, and a native of West Virginia, will present the award and
Q-1 Flag to American Alloys personnel. The Q-1 Flag, symbolic of
the prestigious achievement, will
then be raised.
American Alloys currently supplies two Ford Iron Casting Plants
with ferrosilicon alloys. In order to
meet Ford's rigid quality standards.
American Alloys must provide
ongoing statistical evidence that the
material supplied is of satisfactory
composition and size. In Jun e
1991 , a Ford auditor spent two
days at the plant monitoring exi&gt;ting quality assurance systems and
procedures.
The plant received a rating of
"excellent" on the audit and thi s
ac hie ve ment combined with an
acceptable product performance
rating by Ford's user plants. qualified American Alloys for the Q-1
Award.
In addition to Landers, Bill
Beard, president and CEO of
American Alloys and Mike Farrell,
chairman of American Alloys, will
be present at the award presentation and flag-raising event.

Police ...
Continued from page 1
showed 80 percent felt policemen
acted improperly in the May 27
incident. Amon g bl ack re spondents , the sentiment was 93 percent.
The poll has a margin of error of
5 percentage points overall and 8
percentage points for blacks.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........ .... ...... 29 1/8
Ashland Oil ...... ...... ......... .30 3/8
AT&amp;T... ............................. 39 3/4
Bob Evans ....... .. ............... 18 1/4
Charming Shop.................. 23 3/4
City Holding ............... ...... 13 3/4
Federal Mogul.. ................. 17 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. 37 1/8
Key Centurion ..... ............. 14 5/8
Lands' End .................... ... l91/8
Limited Inc. ...................... 30 1/8
Multimedia Inc........... ...... 29 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................. 17/32
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .31 7/8
Shoney's Inc .. ...... ............. l5 3/4
Star Bank .......... ................ 22
Wendy lnt'l... .................... IO
Worthington Ind . .............. 26 3/8
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quoles provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loew/ of Gallipolis.

DOWNING C!IIID1
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 S.COIICI St., P01111r0r
YOUIINDEPENDifn·
AGENTS SIIVING
MEIGS COUNTY .

SINCE 11168

Farley,Farley.
Little
o~ur~~~~~Jac~ki[e
Belpre Hospital news

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SUbocrl~ro

week.

avaJYble.

--•
dnen
. ' se..,...

-.too.

~ine Ice Cain, and~ balf·Jmh··,
cr, Erwin Cain.
.·

w'"' . . . . . . . . . . . .,. . . . .

· ·i211 we.u .:...:..................-......:... t~5.50
.

--

, l!oso. Racine;
. Middleport

c:~~d~~:is~~JJ!~.

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bollelllelp c.utJ
13. Weelu ......... :.. 1.. . ........ . ......... fll.IN
26 Weelu ..... ..... , ........ ,.............. ti116
52 Weeko ..'.'" ..... .............: .......... - .76
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13
123:10
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DIS~~GES

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'·f11ner!ll servi~es ill. •be h~~d • NStNDA y . DISCHARGES.
Wedilelday at I p.m. at _the Wl!ite,- ·
Kna
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gory
PP·
w_

52
Weeko ..... ........ .-............... ., ... 1118.10
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ore ·

~I

\•

I

I

�Monday, Auguat 5, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports
• ,,

.......

f

..

Steelers roll over R.edskins
16-7 in exhibition encounter

Monday, August 5, 1991
Page--4

..~

~

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~

·~

i.

"l

\
'

..

-·

'

\.ARKIN

t1

TIES IT UP- Cincinnati Reds Barry Larkin
Is greeted at home plate by Joe OUver after bit·

By Tbe Associated Press
Neil O'Donnell and Ron Fair,
both fighting to stick with the Pittsburgh Steelers, found an effective
way to make strong cases - they
teamed up.
O' Donnell, a 1990 draft choice
who didn't get in a game last season, got the chance to play the
entire, second half Sunday when
backup quarterback Rick Strom
tore rib cartilage in pregame
warm ups.
He made the most if it, too,
completing 9 of 13 passes for Ill
yards, including a 34-yard touchdown pass to Fair that lifted Pitts·
burgh to a 16· 7 victory over the
Washington Redskins in the exhibition opener for both teams.
"Ron and I have always worked
well together," said 0' Donnell,
who also led the Steeters on a later
drive that ended with a 54-yard
field goal by Gary Anderson. "He
has a way of getting open, and he's
easy to read out of his cuts. I'm
hoping· we get to work together a
lot more." ·
The Redskins, meanwhile,
showed thatlhey just need work.
Chip Lohmiller missed field
goal attempts of 41 and 24 yards
and Cary Conklin, fourth on Washington •s depth chart, was by far the
Skins' most effective quarterback.
If Conklin had a chance to stick
~oing into the game, he has an
Improved opportunity now, especially after engineering the Redskins' only scoring drive, capped
by a 19-yard pass to Ricky Ervins
with 28 seconds left in the half.
The play gave Washington a 7-6
lead at the intermission.
In other games on the f1rst full
weekend of exhibition games, San

Houston sweeps Los Angeles;
Reds edge Giants on walk 6-5
By Tbe Associated Press
The Los Angeles Dodgers prefer
their baseball outside.
In 13 games under domes at
Houston and Montreal this season,
the Dodgers are 2-11. The latest
loss game on Sunday when Craig
Biggio's run-scoring single in the
lOth inning gave last-place Houston a 2-1 victory and a three-game
sweep of Los Angeles.
Meanwhile in Atlanta, the
Braves beat San Diego 9-7 to cut
the Dodgers' lead in the National
League West to 3 1/2 games.
"Getting beat three in a row by
the last-place team is bad," cemer
fielder Brett Butler said. "Maybe
we will tum it up because we don't
deserve to win the way we' ve been
playing."
Los Angeles probably figured it
wasn't their day when the Astros
turned a triple play in the fifth

inning, their second of the season.
" They must be thinking they
are snake bit," Astros manager An
Howe said. "I know they are sayin~ let's get out of this place, and
th1s is just the start of their road

and fifth thi s season at the
Astrodome - in lhe fourth inning
off starter Jim Deshaies to give the
Dodgers a 1-0 lead.
Pirates 2, Cardinals 1
Ozzie Smith's fifth error of the
season gave Pittsburgh the goahead run in the sixth inning.
With runners on first and second
and one out. Smith took a throw at
second on Gary Yarsho' s grounder,
then spun and threw the ball over
the head of third baseman Todd
Zeile in an att.empt to catch Orlando Merced off the bag, Merced
then scoring easily.
John Smiley (13 -7) won. Ken
Hill (8-8) gave up two runs in eight
innings.
Cubs 8, Mets 3
Chicago chased struggling
David Cone (I 0-8) in a five-run
third inning.

trip.''

Elsewhere in the NL it was
Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis I; Chicago
8, New York 3; Philadelphia 3,
Montreal 2 in 10 innings; and
Cirtcinnati 6, San Francisco 5 in a
night game.
Gerald Young started the Houston IOth with a walk from reliever
Kevin Gross (6-7) and moved to
second on a single by Steve Finley.
Biggio then lined a single to right
field.
AI Osuna (7-3) pitched two hitless innings for the victory.
At least one Dodger likes playing at Houston this season. Darryl
Strawberry hit his 15th homer -

Francsisco Giants reliever Kelly Downs. The
Reds went on to win ~-S.

ling a 3-run seventh innin2 borne run orr San

Twins stay on top with 6-2 win
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The Minnesota Twins turned
back their first big challenge in the
American League West. Now, the
TIIOnto Blue Jays will try to do the
same in East.
There were plenty of doubters
who wanted to see just how well
the Twins would do this weekend
in Oaldand. It turned out they did
just fine, winning twice in the
three-game series, capped by Scott
Erickson's major league-leading
15th victory Sunday.
"We came in here in fiiSt place,
and we're leaving in fust place,"
said Chili Davis, who homered and

doubled in Minnes01a's 6-2 win.
In the East, Toronto still leads
Detroit by four games. Both teams
won Sunday, the Blue Jays beating
Boston 2-1 and Detroit with a dramatic 8-7 victory in 10 innings
over New York.
In other games, Chicago beat
Baltimore 1-0, Kansas City defeated Cleveland 2-0, Milwaukee ral lied past Texas 3-2 and Seattle beat
California 5-2 in 12 innings.
Erickson (15-3) allowed two
runs on five hits in 6 2-3 innings.
He improved to 4-0 in five starts
since returning from the disabled
list, and Carl Willis finished for his

Paul Brown, Bengals
founder, is dead at 82
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati Bcngals founder Paul Brown
died this morning. He was 82.
Bengals spokesman Allan Heim
says Brown died at .his home in
Cincinnati from complications
caused by pneumonia in his lungs.
He is survived by his wife,
Mary Brown, and two sons,
Michael and Pete Brown. The sons
are on the Bengals staff. Another
son, Robin, died in 1978.
Heim said a funeral is scheduled
for Wednesday morning at St. Timothy's Episcopal Church in his
hometown of Massillon, Ohio.
Mter coaching at a high school
in Massillon and at Ohio State University, Brown formed the Cleveland Browns of the All America
Football Conference in 1946. The
Browns captured four league titles
before entering the NFL in 1950
and immediately winning its championship - the f~rst of three in the
1950s.
The 1960s saw him get f~red in
Cleveland, win election to the Pro
Football Hall of Fame, and form

-.

Scoreboard

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(Aal"'ll-5) 11 Bllllimon:
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New Yodt (S-10.7) "llouoit
7-9). ?:3s p.m.
BOIIaD (Mal\on 2--2) 1t Kanlu City
(Aoalno 5-2).1:35 p.m.
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(Moan 9-7).10:05 p.m.
. Mi-.1 (BinUI).O)" Califomil
(11inlo114-5), t0:35 pJD.

1

'

the Bengals expansion franchise
that he coached until1975. He continued to run the team's operations
as vice president and general manager, usually taking a behind-thescenes approach.
It was as a coach that the Brown
made his biggest mark on the
game. He was known for his innovations - introducing classroom
techniques that are commonplace
today, using film to grade players,
calling plays from the sideline. He
also ran his team with a seriousness
that shaped his image.
"I was a serious-looking guy,"
he said. "Of course, you can't
exactly do much about how you
look. They formed images of me.
"Every time we 'd go to New
York to ~lay the Giants - and
were beaung them pretty regularly
- I'd get a new term. The first one
was 'the cold, calculating Brown.'
Then I got to be 'deadly'; we were
winning too much," he said, laughing. "Cold, deadly, calculating."
And a winner. Brown had a
213-104-9 record as a professional.

'

'

PilUbwJh
SL Louia
New York

W L
..... .. 61 42
.. S6 48
.. ..... SS

48

Chicaao
...... 51 52
Pbilodclphio . .... .. 46 58
Montroal
....... 43 61
West Dlvblon
W L

Loo Ansel.. .. .... 58 45
AlloniO
.......... 54 48

Cincinntti ......... Sl 51
San Francilco .... .. SO 53

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14

San Dicao
....... 50 54
Hou\On
......... 44 59
SundaJ'• C.ma
AilladelPlia 3, MOfltna.l 2. 10 inninga
A\l.ln\1 9, San Dieso1
PIU~borp 2, SL Low. I
Howtc:a 2, Lo. ~elca \ , 10 inninga
o.ice.ao I, Now Yodt 3
Cincinn.U 6, San Francisco S
Monday's Gam•

to. Anadet (Martinez 14-S) It Cincinntti {Rijo"'7-2), 1:,!5 P:m.
San Fruu:iiCO (llobtnlon S-7) 1t A}lanLI
(Smolto 6-12), 7&gt;40 p.m.
OUeaao (Cutillo 3-2) at New Yodr.
(Scil.....a 2-H. NO p.m.

San,Dieao (Huri.l2-3) It Housto:t
(lluniodll-7), 1:35 p.m.

=--ulocl

T

J'IGunt~

'-:'» Alloeia (lleoshil..- 3-2) "Cincin·

... (JCI.ar- 4-2), 7:15 p.m.
a.icaao (Suoclilfe 2-4) ot Pbiloddphi•

(RioiiJo 3-3), 7:35 p.m.
S.. Fnacioco (McCicllud 2-0) 01 AI·
lon11 (Moblor ~).NO p.m.
PIUoburalo Cfanllo 6-&lt;1) oi New Yodt
(Femandoo 0.1 ), 7&gt;40 p.m.
S..IMfo(1'-3-3)otllowlon
(l(jlo&lt;l-6), 1:15 p.m.
""""'-1 (Nobbol&gt; ~) "SL LoW
(Tewbbtuy7-7), 1:15 p.m.

second save.
Dave Stewart (8-6) got tagged
for five runs in five innings.
"This one series won't make or
break us." Stewart said. .
Dav1s ~It h1s _care_er-h1gh 25th
home run m the mnth mnmg.
Tige_rs 7, Yankees~
. .
.
Pmch hitter Tony Ph11l1ps ued
the game wllh a solo homer w1th
two outs in the bottom of lhe ninth,
and Lloyd Moseby smgled home
the wmner m the I_Oth.
New York reliever Steve Farr
had not allowed a run in 27 2-3
innings until Phillips, batting for
Skeeter Barnes, hit his career-high
lith homer.
Detroilloaded the bases with
one out in the lOth against Farr (22) on an infield hit, a walk and a hit
by pitch. Moseby lined over drawnin left fielder Hensley Meulens for
his fiiSt four-hit game since 1987.
Mike Henneman (9-2) was the winner.
Blue Jays 2, Red Sox I
Tom Hedke tied a major league
save record and John Olerud doubled home the tiebrealcing run in
the eighth inning.
Olerud's go-ahead hit came with
two outs and followed a potential
double-play grounder that fill-in
third baseman St.eve Lyons mishan·
died and managed only a force
play.
Henke is perfect in 23 straight
save chances, matching the mark
set by John Franco in 1988 and tied
by Rob Dibble this year.
Duane Ward (4-3) won in relief
and Dennis Lamp (3-3) took the
lo5s.
White Sox I, Orioles 0
Charlie Hough pitched a five hitter for his first shutout since
1989 and Frank Thomas homered.
Ho,11gh (7 -6) struck out seven,
walked two and retired 15 straight
batters early in the game.
Mike Mussina, 22. lost in his
major league debut. He pitched 7
2-3 innings and allowed only four
hits, three by Thomas.
Royals 2, Indians 0
Brei Saberhagen pitched a threehitter and struck out a season-high
nine.
Saherhagen (8 -5) walked none
and retired 21 of the final 22 bat·
ters in his first shutout since Sept.
26, 1989. Gary Thurman hit an RBI
single and a sacrifice Oy .
Dave Otto (0-2) allowed just six
hits in eight innings, walking none
and striking out seven .
Brewers 3,Rangers 2
Willie Randolph's RBI double
with two outs capped a two-run
rally in the bottom of the ninth
inning.
The teams got into a benchclearing brawl in the seventh
inning after Brewers starter Chris
Bosio hit Kevin Reimer in the knee
with a pitch. The incident occurred
after Brian Downing's home run
and Ruben Sierra's RBI single, and
both Bosio and Reimer were ejected.
Paul Molitor singled home the
tying run with two outs and Randolph followed with the game-winner off Jeff Russell (3-4).
Chuck Crim (6-5) piiched 2 2-3
innings.
Mariners 5, Angels l
Jay ,Bohner homered for the
fourth straight game, a three-run
shot in the top of the 12th inning.
Mike Fetters (0· 3) started the
12th by walking .Omar Yizquei and
hitting Edgar Martinez with a pitch.
Two outs later, Buhner hit his 20th
homerun.
Mike Jackson (6-4) retired Luis
Sojo on a fly ball with the bases
loaded to end the II th inning. ~e
Schooler pitched the ·12th for his
third save.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-0

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l

I
l

as head coach of the Patriots.
Saints 18, Vikings 3
Morten Andersen kicked six
field goals, capping each of New
Orleans' fiiSt six possessions, and
Bobby Heben returned from a oneyear holdout to help beat visiting
Minnesota.
Hebert quieted the boo-birds
13.
On Friday night, Detroit beat with a 51 -yard completion to
Cincinnati 24-20 and Denver beat Quinn Early on his first play .
Indianapolis 10-3,
Hebert finished 7 for 15 for 148
Bubby Brister, Pittsburgh ' s yards.
starting quarterback , was sharp in Dolphins 19, Raiders 17
his first half of work, completing
Scott Secules hit rookie Scott
II of 14 passes for 114 yards. He Miller with a 20-yard TO pass and
had touchdown passes to Louis EJ. Junior returned an interception
Lipps and Merril Hoge called back 38 yards for a touchdown as Miami
won at the Tokyo Dome.
by penalties.
The Steelers' defense, top- Eagles 24, Jets 10
ranked in both overall defense and
Randall Cunningham led visitpass defense in the NFL last sea- ing Philadelphia to touchdowns on
son, also excelled, limiting the its firSt two drives and lzel Jenkins
returned an interception 33 yards
Redskins to 64 yards rushing.
for another score.
Chargers 31, Oilers 29
Falcons 38, Rams 17
John Carney kicked a 27-yard
Mike Pritchard, Atlanta's first
field
goal with 2:04 left to lift San
pick out of Colorado, scored on
receptions of 12 and 17 yards from Diego over visiting Houston in a
Brett Favre. then finisher! a four- wild shootout that featured eight
catch, 72-yard performance with a touchdown passes. San Diego' s
29-yard TO pass from Gilbert Ren- Billy Joe Tolliver and Houston 's
Cody Carlson had three each.
froe.
Cardinals 31, Seabawks 13
Cowboys 24, Chiefs 14
Anthony Thompson had 66
Alvin Harper, a supplemental
first-round choice out of Ten - first-half yards and two touchnessee, had scoring catches of 41 downs, and Tim McDonald
reUilned one of three Phoenix interand II yards.
ceptions
27 yards for another.
Cliff Stoudt twice conn ected
49ers
21,
Bears 7
with Harper on scoring passes.
Montana
and Steve Young
Joe
Packers 28, Patriots 7
had
TD
passes
as
San Francisco
Don Majkowski , in his first
game since rotator cuff surgery last won at Berlin. Montana lhrew a 19December, threw two touchdown yard touchdown pass to Jerry Rice
passes to lead Green Bay to a 28-7 and Young had a 4-yarder to Sanvictory over visiting New England, jay Beach to lead the 49ers.
spoiling Dick MacPherson's debut
Fr~ncisco

beat Chicago 21-7 at
Berlin, Miami beat the Los Angeles
Raiders 19-17 at Tokyo, Green Bay
beat New England 28 -7, New
Orleans beat Minnesota 18-3,
Philadelphia beat the New York
Jets 24-10, San Diego beat Houston
31-29, and Phoenix beat Seattle 31 -

'

•

OUT OF REACH -Washington Redskins
tigbtend (88) Jimmie Johnson reaches for a pass
that ralls short or the mark as Steelers strong

HAVANA (AP) - The U.S.
women 's basketball team can stop
counting now. But don't stop
counting on them .
"We 're not stunn ed, we ' re
mad ," the team' s star player ,

(AP) -

TRIPLE THREAT- Kansas City Royals
speedster Brian McRae, lert, slides into third
basf with an eighth inning triple as Cleveland

Indians third baseman Jeff Manto waits for tbe
throw SUnday in Cleveland Stadium. The Roy·
alswon 2..0.

-----

•
••

Piniella blasts Darling
after call is reversed

•

r
t

•i

,.,.

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI- Manager Lou
I"
Piniella got in another jab at
umpire Gary Darling before getting
one of his own from crew chief
Dou~ Harvey.
PinieUa, still fuming over a call
I
I"
reversal
night by Darling,
I'
.. accused Saturday
the umpire of being biased
against the Cincinnati Reds. He
told reporters before a 6-5 victory
I"
over San Francisco on Sunday
that Darling is a bad umpire
,' . night
who's purposely made calls against
'
team.
,.' his "I
honestly feel that Darling has
,.
bias against us and won't f!ive us a
,.
all year," Piniella srud. "It's
,. call
time
he gets his act together now.
•
;: We have more complaints against
.. . him than against any other umpire.
"As far as I'm concerned he's
,.
•· . not a good umpire. He's biased
•· against us- it's obvious."
Piniella went wild Saturday
night after Darling overruled fust
base umpire Dutch Rennert and
called B11l Doran's ny ball foul
rather than a home run, as Rennert
had indicated.
The reversal prompted Piniella
to throw his hat, kick dirt on home
plate and fust base, and argue at
·. length following his ejection. The
Reds went on to lose 7-3 to the
Giants.
The Reds have been involved in

f,.

,.

.-.

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4 •••••

MASON, Ohio (AP) - David
Wheaton is looking for his first
major tennis title. He hopes to end
his quest when the $1.3 million
Thriftway ATP Championship gets
under way today at the Jack Nicklaus Sports Center.
Wheaton, of Lake Minnetonka,
Minn., is seeded eighth and has
drawn a bye into the second round,
where he wiU meet Jhe winne~ of a
matcll between Andres Gomez.and
Stefano Pescosolido. That winnet
faces a quarterfin811Jleeting wl~
top-ranked Boris Becker. .
·
. Whealon has reached ai least the
quarterrmals of three Grarid Slam

.. ..
%·. . tournaments.
....,,
. · "It conftrms in my own mind

. . ,.• ::f~ ~iii

that l have the llbi)ity to play and
a ~ra~d Sl~~,': ~e
' "I~ it's a liUie bit of ,expe·

-~----

..

--

.

(~ __,_

season, was named to the job full
time Feb. 4.
"Certainly the rookies and veterans on both teams are trying to
make an i111pression," Belichick
said. "I think this game will have a
little more to it than some of the
average fiiSt preseason games I've
beea associated with.
"I think it's the type of game
where there will he a lot of good
effort, good intensity and good hit-

tin\~lichick said he's ready to take

a look the entire preseason roster.
"We'll have everybody
involved in all phases," Belichick
said.
"I think it's im~X~rtant for our
veterans to get playmg time in our
system. Certainly, they've been
practicing in it and working in it
but doing it under f1re, under pressure and reacting to the fuU-speed
intensity of the opponent· especially a good one like Tampa Bay- is
something we need to see.··
The opening exhibition may
provide clues to the quality of the
Browns' rookies, Belichick said.
"I know it will be quite an
experience for them one way the
other. It's such a different level of
intensity from college and practice.
I'm sure some of them will have
their eyes opened and find ou1 what
it's like to play in this league."

several arguments this season with
Darling, a fourth-year umpire. But
Harvey bristled Sunday when
Piniella's accusations were relayed
to him by reporters before the
game.
Harvey responded with an
expletive, then dismissed PinieUa's
complaints.
"People like this should think
before they mouth off," said Harvey, in his 30th year in the major
leagues. "You get a tough situation
go against a man, and he wants to
come out and make it a personal
thin~. I am deeply offended."
Pmiella's on-field tirade was his
most animated since he uprooted
fust base and twice threw it while
disputing a call last August in a
game against Chicago.
Fans littered the field with trash
Saturday night, holding up the
BLANC, Mich. (AP)
game for several minutes. Reds - GRAND
The
worst
over for Brad
outfielder Paul O' Neill also was Faxon now. Theisman
has paid his
ejected for throwing a drink cooler
dues.
on the field.
Oh, how he has paid.
Harvey blamed Piniella for the
Faxon, who has been on the
uproar.
PGA
Tour since 1983, won his first
"I am deeply offended by the
tournament
Sunday. beating
actions of not only him but
defending
champion
Chip Beck in
O'Neill, who got tossed out for
a
playoff
at
the
Buick
Open.
throwing the thing out on the
so
much
for you, "
"This
does
field," Harvey said. "I'm offended
Faxon
said.
"Winning
a
golf tourand sorry for the fact that the pennament
is
how
we
get
measured.
pie of Cincinnati picked up on it
bi~~est thing is probably
and acted as animalistic as Lou · The
recogDillon from your peers. I
Piniella did."
mean, look at Jack Nicklaus. He's
won o.ver 70 tournaments. And
Sam Snead, I guess, has won about
100.
"Here I've only won just one.
But at least I've got this now.''
The lean years have been hard
rience," he said. "I've beaten a lot on Faxon. His friends all wondered
of the top players and most of the why he wasn't winning. They
guys in the top 10. It's given me couldn't understand how tough it is
confidence to do well in bigger to win on the tour.
tournaments."
"It's really hard to stick it out,"
The tournament will feature Faxon said. "The worst time was
seven of the top I 0 players in the . my second year on the tour. I
world, including Becker and sec- miSsed the last two cuts lhat year,
ond-ranked Stefan Edberg, the then missed the first six cuts the
defending champion.
next year. I mean, I was a 6-handiSeven men players survived cap playing the tour. That really
weekend qualifying by winning got to me."
three matches. They were Fernando
Faxon and Beck both finished at
Roese of Brazil, Danie Visser of . 17-under 271 after 72 holes at WarPalm~. Calif.; OianlucaPozzi
wiclc Hills Golf and Country Club.
of .Italy, Chris Garner of .Bay The playoff began and ended on
Shore, N.Y., Grant Stafford of the lOth hole, a 401-yard, par-•t
S01ith Africa, Steve DeVries of Beck took three putts to get down
Suisl,ln,'Calif., and Marcos Ondrus· from 60 feet and Faxon won with a
ka of South Africa.
par, rolling in a 6-foot putt to
Tlte tournament runs through cUnchiL
, next Sunday.
Faxon tttrned · 30 on Thursday,
the day the tournament began.

Faxon claims
initial PGA
tournament

Wheaton looking for first
major tennis championship

.
••

SERTAPEDIC
SAVOY PLUS

Belichick said he understood
taking over a new team and implementing a new system can be difficult.
"We certainly haven't covered
every base, but I'm comfortable
with where we are and I think
we've done a pretty good job given
the situation we're in. The coaches
and players are coming together
under a new system and we'll have
to see where we are. The biggest
problem we're facio~ is the newness of the situation.'
Belichick won't be the only one
in a debut coaching role: Tampa

_

~

.

•'

_::'~:.......--~-- ---·-------------~--

---- . - --

___

-:....__

.

safety (37) Carnell Lake watches in tbe first
quarter or Sunday's preseason game in Pittsburgh.

U. S. women cagers drop Pan Am tilt

Archer
Browns open pre-season play tonight repeats in
CLEVELAND
Former son but I think we ' re pretty well Bay's Richard Wiiliamson, who senior event
New York Giants' assistant coach prepared for the preseason."
took over as interim coach late last

Bill Belichick makes his game
debut as coach of the Cleveland
Browns tonight as the team plays
its opening game of the preseason
against Tampa Bay.
"I don't think (I'll be nervous)," Belichick said, looking
ahead to the game.
"I don't know . I think we've
had a good three weeks of training
camp, we've had a productive offseason and we had good minicamps."
~·
At -the same time, Belichick
r
said, "We're not where we want to
:: be for the start of the regular sea'I"'

I

JERICHO, N.Y. (AP) George Archer no longer has a reason to offer excuses for poor play
on the Senior PGA Tour.
Not that lhe 54-year-old Archer
was playing that poorly. Certainly
not m the $450,000 Northville
Long Island Classic, in which he
successfully defended his title with
a 3-under-par 69 Sunday for a 54hole total of 204.
That was two strokes better lhan
rookie Jim Colbert and Larry
Laoretti, who closed with rounds of
68 and 71, respectively, on the par72, 6,655-yard Meadow Brook
Club course.
"I used to think I couldn't win
in hot weather, but I can't use that
as an excuse any longer," laughed
Archer, who collected $67,500 for
his victory. "It was 95 out here all
three days.··
"I've also been fighting bad
putting for I 0 weeks. Somehow,
I've been working through it, but I
can't alibi after this. It was pretty
good."
Especially on the par-5, 463yard third hole, when Archer had
an eagle, thanks to sinking a IS footer. Then there was a birdie on
the par-5, 506-yard lOth hole when
Archer two-putted from 40 feet.
Colbert. troubled by back
spasms, started the day in a fiveway tie for third, three strokes off
the lead shared by Archer and
Laoretti.
Colbert birdied the fir st six
holes o' the back nine to close
within one shot. It remained that
way until Colbert, who quit the
regular tour in 1987, two-putted for
bogey on the par-3 final hole.
Bob Charles took fourth at 207,
followed by Bob Brue and Jim
Dent at 208. John Brodie, former
quarterback of the San Francisco
49ers, tied Gary Player and J.C.
Snead at 209.
Charles shot 69, Brue 67 and
Dent 70 on the final day. Brodie
closed with a 67 and Player and
Snead shot 69s.
Lee Trevino, who had an open ing-round 78, shot his second consecutive 66 to tie the course record
and finish at 210, tied with Rocky
Thompson (71 ), Charles Coody
(71) and Dick Hendrickson (77) .

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.

Theresa Edwards, said. " ... I think
our actions will speak louder than
our words.' ·
On Sunday at the Pan American
Games, she and her t.eammates saw
a 42-game winning streak in major
international competition, dating
back to 1982, ceme to an end .
Brazil beat the Americans 87-84 in
the preliminary round.
The world's most dominant
international amateur team had
been beaten, and that meant it w·as
a day to rejoice for Brazil. When
the buzzer sounded, just before
Bridgette Gordon launched a long,
errant 3-point att.empt, coaches and
Brazilian officials streamed onto
lhe Ooor, and the pro-Brazil crowd
of Cubans cheered wildly.
"How would you feel if you
beat the world champions and the
Olympic champions?" Ihe Brazilian coach, Maria Cardoso, asked.
"We could be today world champions or Olympic champions. 1 am
so, so happy.'
While the U.S. women still are
expected to advance to the medal
round and win the gold , other
Americans were salting away their
precious meials early . Karen
LaFace of Pittsburgh won the
women's 3-meter springboard and
Sabrina Dornhoefer of Colorado
Springs, Colo., won the women's
3,000 meters. giving the United
States its first track and field gold.
Mike Herben of Rogers, Ark. ,
won the 1,000-metcr singles kayak
and received more than a gold
medal. He got a visit from Cuban
president Fidel Castro, who presented him with the medal, then
saluted the U.S. nag at the presentation ceremony.
"It was quite a surprise to see
him," Herbert said.
After two days of competition,
the United States had 17 medal s,
five gold. Cuba still led lhe medal
standings with 13 gold and 2ltotal.
For so long, it seemed, the U.S.
women 's basketball team had been
making up for the failures of the
American men, who have lost their
last four major international compeiitions. But the American men

beat a tough Cuban team 92-88 on
Saturday , and now, perhaps the
tables have turned, if only slightly.
The U.S. women , who beat
Canada 87-70 Saturday in the first
game of its tournament, hadn'tlost
a big international game since
falling to the Soviets for the gold
medal at the '82 world champi onships. Since then, it had won two
world championships , two
Olympics, two Pan American
Games and two Goodwill Games.
This team includes five Olympic
gold medal winners.
'' These players are world champions, and there's no que stion
they 'II come out mGre determined
than before," U.S. coach Yivian
Stringer said. "They arc champions in their attitude, and every one
of them will be that much more
determined. ''
The U.S. team got off to a 26-8
lead, but saw lhat cut to 26-22 after
the Brazilians scored 14 straight
points with Hortencia Marcari,
their star player and a Brazilian
Playboy centerfold, on \he ~nch in

foul trouble.
''When Hortencia was out was
when they made their run, which
speaks to our mental state,"
Stringer said, complaining that the
team lacked intensity and concentration, especially on defense.
Brazil trailed 45-40 at halltime,
bui took a 52-51 lead when Marta
de Souza. who led the Brazilians
with 24 points, hit a jumper from
the right comer midway in the second half. Edwards' driving layup
put the United Stat.es behind 85-84
with 19 seconds left. but instead of
fouling immediat.ely, the U.S. t.eam
let the Brazilians tick off 12 sec onds before Edwards fouled out in
an effort to regain possession.
Maria DaSilva made one of two
free throws with seven seconds left.

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The ninth mce trifccta of Nos. 51-8 paid $3,270.80.
The crowd of 2,597 bet
$266,148.

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Elassified

Monday, August 5,1991
. Page-6

Your social security
By Ed Petersoo
Social Security
Manager in Athens

Meigs fair to start one day
earlier this year- Aug.l2

people are collecting monthly
Social Security benefits, one out of By Jobn C. Rice
seven Americans. And they're not County Extension
all older people. Ther. are retired Agent, Agrk:ulture
workers and their famtlies (28 milPOMEROY • The Meigs Counlion); disabled workers and their
ty
Fair
will soon be here.
families (4.3 million); survivors of
The
1991 is one day longer this
deceased workers - widows, widyear.
It
will start on Monday, Aug.
owers and children (seven million).
12.
Deadline
for Open Class entries
Social scientists estimate that
is
Thursday,
Aug.
8, at 4 p.m. This
Social Security benefits keep more
is
one
earlier
than
last
year.
than 13 million people out of
Good
Fences
Make
Good
poverty. These are people who,
Neighbors
•
ever
hear
this?
Somewithout Social Security, would
times I get questions about this.
have almost no income at all.
The
problem arises many times
Studies show that Social Securiwhen
people become landowners
ty benefits represent half the to~
and
do
not intend to own or have
income of 60 percent of benefiCiaany
livestock.
Chapter 971 of the
ries 65 and older. about 90 percent
Ohio
Revised
Code (ORC) and
of the income of a quarter of peorelated
court
decision
govern the
ple 65 and older, .and 100 percent
construction
and
maintenance
of
of the income of 14 percent of peofences
and
watergates
in
partition
ple 65 and over. This means that
Ohio.
these benefits are spent immediateSection 971.02 ORC provides in
ly to pay for food, rent, and other
part
that Ule owners of adjoining
hvinf! necessities. And i~ t!'e comland
shall
build, keep up, and mainmuruties where beneficl3nes hve,
tain
in
good
repair, m equal shares.
Social Security benefits are imporAll
partition
fences between them,
tant contribuuons to the health of
unless
otherwise
agreed upon by
the local economy.
The bottom line, really, is that them in writing and witnessed by
too many people are counting on two person. The fact that any land
Social Security to let it go under. In or tract of land is wholly unen our democratic system, where pub- closed or is not used, adapted, or
lic programs ultimately depend on intended by its owner for use for
the will of the people, that's the agricultural purposes shall not
best guarantee you can get: Social excuse the owner there for the obliSecurity will be there for the gations imposed by sections 971.01
to 971.37 of the Revised Code.
future.
In general, If a landowner
The Athens Social Security
neglects
his duty ID keep his share
office is located at 221 1/2 Nonh
of
a
partition
fence in the condition
Columbus Road, 592-4448.
that an ordinary person would, he
is liable for damages caused by
trespassing animals.
More specifically, If the owner

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

Readers offer help for
'platonic relationship'

of livestock fails to keep up his
portion of a partition fence he
Dear Ann Landers: I have
would be liable to his neighbor or something to say to that 44-year-old
to other parties for damages caused
Two news items caught my
by his trespassing livestock. Also, a woman in Maine who is having
attention recently, one good, the
person failing to keep up his por- a "platonic relationship" with a
other not so good. The good news
tion of !he fence thus permitting the 35-year-old man, and her husband,
was that the Board of Trustees for
neighbor's livestock to get out to whom she has been married for
Ule Social Security Trust Funds
thmugh Ulat portion can not collect 21 years, doesri't like it.
certified for the sixth straight year
She says there is nothing sexual
for
damages caused on his property
that the progrrun is sound and will
involved
•• they just have lunch
and
may
be
liable
to
other
parties
be paying benefits well into the
together
and
maybe see a movie
for
damage
caused
by
the
trespassnext century. The bad news was a
every few weeks.
ing animals.
poll that said few people believe
This sounds so much like what
Partition fences in Ohio need
that.
not be of any particular design or happened to my wife and me that
The poll found Ulat almost half
material. However, the fence may I was stunned. Even the ages were
of non-retired workers do not think
not be entirely constructed of right on the button. That's a
that the system will be able to pay
barbed or electric wire unless the dynamite situation, Ann. Please tell
them when they retire.
adjoining
landowner consent~ in that woman's husband if he values
We would often say that part of
writing. One or two barbed wues his marriage, he should order his
the "security" provided by Social
on top of another tme of fence may wife to knock off those lunches and
Security is know ledge that benefits
be used without the ·consent of the movies. Married women don't
will be there when you need them.
adjoining owner. In which case no "date." •• NO NAME IN SANTA
If that's true, an awful lot of people
barb is to be closer to the ground FE
are missing out on a big part of
than 48 inches (ORC 971.03).
what their taxes art paying for.
SANTA: Maine's letter hit
Generally, adjoining pr~pe~ty a DEAR
I find myself wondering what it
hot
buuon
the likes of which I
owners do have the 'responstbibty
would take to convince people that
haven't
seen
in
ages. It also pulled
of building an equal ponion of a
they can count on Social Security
in
five
times
as
many
responses from
partition fence. This' responsibility
to be there when they are ready to
men
as
women!!!
Want
to pull up a
liecomes important when one of the
retire • to f!ive them that peace of
chair
and
look
over
my
shoulder?
property owners wishes to pasture
mind their mvestment is paying for.
From Louisville: I have a simple
livestock. The quality of the fence
One answer may lie in laking a
solution
for the woman whose
to
be
build
is
not
set
forth
in
Ohio
flood look at what Social Security
husband resents her dating a guy she
ts doing now as an indicalion what
Statutes, but the guide should be a
met in class. She should find a nice
we can expect for the future .
fence which is adequate to tum
Understanding the role Social
girl, nine years his junior, for him
livestock.
Security plays in American society
There is an old adage of build·
to date. It will talce his mind off Iter
is the key to recognizing its
ing the right side of a partition
social life. When he comes home
strengths • the reason why it is sure
fence as the fence is faced by a smiling after his no-sex dates, she
landowner standing on his own
to be around for a long time.
will feel good about herself. ·•
property. This is not a part of Ohio JIMP.
Today more than 40 million
Law. However, this may be a
Louisiana: I am an adult who is
method of deciding between neighbors which p~rtion of th_e. fence free to have lunch with any friend I
choose, regardless of age, sex, race,
each is to be build and repatr.
creed or marital status. Maine's
husband needs to grow up. ••
MARRIED, NOT CHAINED
Long Island: My husband has a
female friend -a woman with whom
court appearances during eight
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
he works every day and some
months of hearings.
Associated Press Writer
weekends. I trust him and am sure
If his son is convicted, he could
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) nothing sexual is going on but I do
Nearly five years ago, when he be sentenced to die in the electric
feel
threatened by that woman and
buried his son, Joseph Viscido chair.
By Liz MltcbeU
nized around main ingredients, this
fmd
their friendship hard ID accept
In May, Rosati's father appealed
American Library Assn.
promised he would track down the
one is about Ule exttas that mali:e
I'm
sure
be wouldn't stand fot it.if I
persoo who killed him.
to U.S . Attorney General Dick
Cutting dietary fat is one of the them palatable. The book contains
had
the
same kind of friendship
"I've never broken a promise to Thornburgh to investigate the way nation's top nutritional concerns, 50 spice blends that ar~ simple to
Florida authorities handled the so "Low Fat and Loving It" prepare and require no cooking. going with a man.
that kid in my life," Viscido said
San Francisco: I, too, had a
Last September, after Viscido case.
(Warner, 318 pages, $19.95) will The daughter of a fiireign service
"For the last 240 days of our probably become a classic. Author offteer who spent her c'"-ldhood in "platonic" friendship with a man
providp~ what police ~ay was
'l nvaluable llelp; Carl Stephen · lives my "~rife, our 110n, «:M. ~ugh· • 'Rilth spear has wriaen ·about food India, the ·C&amp;iibbean arid Mexico, who lived next .door and it damned
Rosati was indicted on charges of ter, and I have been ~tcUmtzed, and health for popuJar magazines, Klein shares international flavors, near wrecked both his marriage and
murdering 26-year-old Joseph Vis- pers~uted, ~n~ t_erronzed ~t the but it was not until a decade ago, including French, ltaliaJj, Mexican, mine. It started out very innocently,
cidoJr.
Amencan judtctal system, he when she was diagnosed with Japanese, Indian and Thai.
but we ended up in a motel room .
It was then that Carl H. Rosati wrote. ''My family _has spen~ the breast cancer, thill she began to pay
Klein provides two or three easy Those two ought 10 stop and ask
made a vow to his son: He wouJd last ei~ht months livmg thiS ntght- attention to the fat in food.
recipes for each blend and encour- themselves if what they are getting
tlo everything he could to prove his mare_.' .
.
"Never eat anyUling you don't ages readers ID experiment beyond
-innocence.
Vtsctdo also speaks of the mght· love," she advises. "Of course it that. From Seafood Blend she
: Florida authorities say Rosati, mare he said began when he lost would be a cinch to lower your fat makes Richer Than Rich C~illed
31, and Peter Dallas forced their his only 110n. At one point, he said, consumption by eating little or no Shrimp Soup; from Gallic Herbs
way into the younger Viscido' s he was driven by grief to playing meat and nali:ed salads, avoiding Blend she makes Bubbling Brown
Deerfield Beach apartment in Octo- Russian roulette. "I put a gun to dairy products and desserts .... If Sugar Peaches.
ber I986 ID steal cocaine. During a my head and pulled the trigger,"
you were to follow such a stringent
Why would anyone want to
struggle, Viscido, a champion he said from his waterfront home in plan ... sooner or later you'd go make a fat-laden version of a dish
:surfer, was shot in the head.
Pompano Beach, Fla. "I just back to your old unhealthy habits." if there is a leaner version that
TWINSBURG, Ohio (AP) - A
· Dallas, indicted with Rosati, has couldn't live without my son."
Spear offers ways to avoid fats tastes just as good? Some might
record 2,776 sets of twins and more
'pleaded guilty to second-degree
while grocery shopping and eating doubt that the low -cal version than 120,000 "singletons" without
murder. He is expected to testify
He said he learned of his son's out, and she extols the vinues of could possibly measure .up. Or, as loolcalikes attended the weekend's
against Rosati and a third man, cocaine abuse three months before microwave cooking, which requires author Judith Pachl suggests, most
Peter Roussonicolos, when the case he was killed and had persuaded little or no fat. She provides a folks like variety, and even those Twins Day Festival at Twinsburg.
Three-week-old Colin and
goes to trial.
week's wonh of menus, with 30 who usually cook light might want Kevin Watson of Lorain were the
him to undergo treatment
Rosati maintains he was in
The two had made plans 10 start percent or less of their calories a more decadent version of a
Rhode Island, running his health a construction business and were from fat. Then she teaches how to favorite recipe from time to time, youngest twins at Sunday's activispa and planning his wedding, scheduled to pour the foundation turn fat-gram counting from a so she includes both heavy and ties. The oldest were 85-year-old
when Viscido was killed. Twenty- for their ftrst project the day after chore into an instinct, with more light renditions in "Lean or Lav- Lillian Hoffer of Nonh Canton and
brother Leo Lowe of Wooster.
, two 'witnesses corroborated his his son's death.
than 200 great recipes, breakfast ish" (Warner, 295 pages, $12.9S).
Tbe twins coming farthest Sunstory in court, but six witnesses
The elder Viscido's funeral through dessen, including German
This unusual approach can con- day were from BlliZil, England, and
placed him in Florida.
promise took him to Canada, Ohio, Apple Pancakes, Pasta with vert skeptics to the concept of
Viscido and the authorities have New York, Florida's west coast Smoked Salmon and Basil, Beef lighter cooking, since they may try Montreal. The twins who traveled
the farthest to Saturday's activities
released few details about the case. and deep into the seamy world of Fajitas, Firehouse Chili, Low-Fat two versions of the same1recipe. By came
from Australia, Israel and
But police have said they believe drug dealing. He wore a hidden Lemon Cheesecake, and Blueberry comparing ingredients or cooking Romania.
Rossonicol'os set up the robbery microphone, staged one-man stali:e· Cobbler.
techniques, they can learn a lot
Tbe record turnout of twins was
and Dallas and Rosati were the outs, passed out hundreds of fliers
Taste is the ingredient most peo- about healthier cooking habits.
based
on in-person regisuations,
gunmen.
and followed people.
ple find lacking when they try to
Consider that Pacht' s Tortilla said festival spokeswoman Shari
The Rhode Island Supreme
. adopt healthier eating habits. In Pizza with Artichoke and Tomato McCullough. She said the number
Court on Tuesday ordered Rosati
"This man is entitled to a "Skinny Spices" (Surrey, 192 is 535 calories laden with cheese. of
twins in attendance may have
exuadited to Florida for trial.
tremendous amount of crerlit." said pages, $8.95 paper), Erica Levy but only 158 without the Parmesan been higher because many sets of
Tbe order ended an extradition Broward County, Fla., sheriff's Klein focuses entirely on how to and fontana. The lavish version of
twins didn't ref!iSter.
battle that spanned nearly a year Sgt. Richard Scheff.
spice up basic low-calorie, low-fat Rice Pudding with Apricot Sauce is
Donald Ketth, chairman of the
and took its toll on both fathers.
But Rosati says his son is inno- foods, offering an easy way to 1,044 calories; the lean only 306. Center for Study of Multiple Birth,
1be elder Rosati, 64, was hospi- cent. "When they said my son was avoid burning out on unbuttered The difference is in the substitution
ralized for five weeks with· a heart into cocaine I knew something was vegetables, skinless boiled, broiled of non-fat milli: for whipping cream which he co-founded in Chicago
condition. The prominent Rhode wrong. My son is a health nut," he and steamed poultry, and unsweet- and half and half, egg whites for with his twin brother, Louis, said
reseanchers who study twins found
Island developer has sai through 20 said.
ened desserts.
whole eggs, and apricot nectar for the twins attending the activities
While most cookbooks are orga- sugar.
very willing to answer questions.
.
·~This is the mecca for twin·
related research because of the
PubliC Notice
, . PubliC Notice

Two fathers fight to
keep promises to sons Low-fat recipes

are high on taste

"Ath OUISMh~ MlliHS. Gallla 01 Ma~un CU\ 11\tl~ must b l!
fltl!cl
"Rt!t: CIV I~ $

•t r et! ads
run 3

Ann
Landers

: CINCINNATI (AP)- Kenyans eagle in this country," Werikhe
venerate the black rhinoceros the said. .
Already, there are encouraging
way Americans revere the bald
eagle, according to a man who has signs for those who want to prewalked 3,600 miles over Ule conti- serve the black rhino. In Kenya,
nent of Europe to publicize the where the government is involved
in protecting the species, 2l! black
plight of the endangered rhino.
Now Michael Werikhe is walk- rhino cows were born last year.
" The birth ofUle 28 cows has
ing across the United StateS to raise
money in hopes of drawing atten- given us hope," Werikhe said,
adding Ulat more moner is needed
tion to the aruma!.
"I feel its imponant the Ameri- to expand educations programs
can people know about this," and .equip rangers to defend the
Werikhe said duri!ll' the first of black rhinos' habitat
Werilthe began his walli: across
three days walking through the
Cincinnati area on Friday. "Nature America on April 13 in T8111pa,
Fla., and expects to cover 1,500
belongs to allof us.
Werikhe (pronounced Where- miles on a route that includes New
Ree-Kay) said 96 percent of !l~k Orleans, Atianta, Boston and Balli·
more. He is due in Columbus this
rbiool, native to. East, Cen.Jral and
Southwest Africa, have disap. week and then Cleveland.
He said he hoped to raise $2
pemd in the lalt 20 to 25 Yt,!!l1·
million
to $3 million from Dledges
· "The blact rhino is ~ unpor'
Iaiit tD us because its a IiVJD&amp; sym- . he receives from people who join
bo! of consetvation, like the bald bim on the walk in cities be visits. ;

•

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
C11e No. 91 CV 65
Vinton Countv National
Bank,
Plaintiff,
VI.
Michael E. Crameana. et al . .

Defendenta.

Purauant to en order of

..,. from the Meigo County
Common Ple11 Court. I will
offet for ..,. 11 public IUC ·
tlon at the lobby of the
Maigo County Courthou•.
Pomeroy. Ohio on the 27th
dly of Auguot, 1991 11
10:00 A.M., tho foNowlng
deocribed ,.., HUile:
Sltueti In Jhe Village of
Middleport,
:eou.ntv of
Melgo lnd State of Ohio. to
Wit:

S.lng 1 percol of lind
fronting on the Eon 'lido at
Vine 8t1Ht In lide VIllage of
Mlddloport, bounded 1nd
d-rlbed •• loUowo: S.lng
• pert of. lot No. 29 •• lol·
low,: Point af ·beginning
North-t COI'Mr of [&lt;n No.
29 on the E11t lid4l of Vlno
St.-t, "'!1\lclh -runt South·..
....., lnd 11 bounded 1nd de·

scribed 11 followe: Begining
at the Southwest corner of

i.old Lowlo
Farmer lot;
thence Eut1910 feet, mote
or mloll olongllwlo farmer
Lot: thence South 80 fHt:
thence
Weot 1 90 feet:
thence North 80 feet to thti
pl1co of beginning.
Lilt prior cconveyonce:
Volume 309. P1ge 499.
Melgo County Dood Ao·

ANN LANDERS

S•ld re•l eoiJitelocoted ot
11.60 Vine St .. MiddlepOrt.
Ohio 4157110.
The property opprli10d for
f7,IIOO.OO ond connot ·be
.,ld for leu thin 2/3 (two·
thlrdl) Of the IPPraJitd VI•
luo.
Torma of Sale: 10% c11h
or certified check. doy .of
sale 1nd balance af deiiW!y
of deed.
Jeffrey L. Slmmono/
N. Robert GrMlo
Attorney• for Pllintlff
Vinton County Nationll
B1nk
·
·
J1m.. M. Soullliy
Mila• Co11!!1Y Sheriff . ·
(7) 22,•29; (SI .II 3tc,. · 1

nm.s,...... ..,.
CftiiGnS,radl-."

out the relationship is worth the
risks they are taking.- G.R.
Scranton, Pa: My wife also had
an "innocent friendship" with a man.
We were married for 27 years. Tell
"Maine" if her husband doesn't like
it and she sees the guy anyway, she
must like the guy a lot and will end
up in bed with him. When that
happens the marriage is doomed. ••
GERALDS.
Berwick, Maine: A genuinely
loving relationship is one in which
both parties have full freedom and
independence •• no questions asli:ed.
To deny one's partner access to love,
in any of its myriad forms, is ID deny
that individual personhood. ••
D.V.D.
Charleston, W.Va.: A married ·
woman who is playing it straight ·
doesn't have lunches and go ID the
movies with other men. Gimmc a
breali:. -- AL R.
Washington, D.C.: That letter
from Maine could have been
written by my ex-wife. She, too, had :
a "no-sex friendship" with a man. I :
bought it until she turned up :
pregnant I had had a vasectomy a
few years earlier. End of Slory. - ·
B.B.
Pittsburgh: Here's asuggestion for
the husband of that woman in Maine:
Get one of those magazines that has
personal ads and 6n!l one that says,
"Attractive, unattached woman
lOOking for older man who enjoys
quiet wallcs in the woods, long chats
and just plain friendship." 1bat11
settle her hash in a huny. -10E B.
Do you halle questioll.! about sa,

SUNDAY PAPER

I

'l

tl~t •

Galha County

Metg&amp;. Cou nty

AreaCode614

Area Code 614

446

Galhpohs

367
388
245
256
643
379

Ch01oh11e
Vunon
Rio Gr1nde
Guyan Otst
Aribla Ou&amp;t
WMnut

992

949
742

Mlddltjpol1
Pomvroy
Chester
Portland
letart ft~lls
R•cme
Rulland

667

Coohrtlle

985
843
147

6 75

12
ll

IASIHOIIICtl

14
1S

Busmeu Trauwu1
Schools I lnslflK: tnon

16

Radto. TV &amp; CB Rl!'p&lt;IH
Mrsctl'll•n ll'Uu 1

17
18

CONTACT

PERSONNEL
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
POINT PLEASANT, WV

W;~ntltd

..

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

Roofing, Vinyl
siding, Painting,
and Home repairs
667·6681
After 7:00p.m.

POOU,
CISTERNS, ETC.

•1

I

'

11JUIH4W
lmp1 0\1UIIIt..'IU

8 1

HUillt!

62

Plumbm!t &amp; Ht~ olln•u

Rl

E IICdii.IIIIICI
E1m1~rcal &amp; Rllh•~IHHtltUil

'lo

84
65
B6

Gt :r1t.'f.a l H;~utmu
Mohtlu Hun1 c Ht!p,m

B7

Upt1 o l s tcr~

YOUNG'S
- Room Additions
- Gutter work
-EI•ctric11 1nd Plumbing

lmo

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
oSLOWN IN
INSULATION

Iring tt In Or Wo
Pick Up.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICI

.... lliMHI luilt

"Free Estlmateo"

JIIH. 949·2101
· or los. 949-2160
NO StlfjOAY

INSULATION

Sptclallling in
Custom frOIH Repair ·
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAlES &amp;
MODElS

•Vinyl Siding
•Roplocement
Window•
•Roofing
ofntullttlon

992-7013
or 992·5553

JAMES IIEESIE
992-2772 or
742-2251

01 IOU REI
1-100-141-0070

639 Bry1n Place

Middleport. Ohio

DAIWIII, OliO

C'lt4ti.llt

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTIUCliON

7 / 31 / '91 tin

· · 11-!Nft

SIGNS
' by

•N•w H•-•

tick tttoMtl(

· a~rby
:
~UALITY

•Garaps

•Compltte
.

Point Pltasant · 675-692' '

1 Card of Thanks
The Famllv Of
GARNET SWAN
Would like to exprtheir sincere appreci·
ation to all those who
helped during the ill·
. _ and palling of
our loved one. Thank
you to the Pomeroy
EMS, the staff of Ewings Funerlll Home
and to those friends
and neighbors who
sent flowers, cards
and food. And a special thanks to Eloise
Eblin for caring for
her during the long ill·
ness. Thank you all
for your caring.
HappyAds

985-4473
667-6179

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006
6-6-'91
Howord L. Writatl

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Downspout•

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

LANGSVILLE - 1972 Kitkwood 12'x60' mobile
home located on 2 acres on CR 10. Includes
outbuilding and garden space. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSIONI.ASKING $~8,000.

7· 11· 81 · 1 mo. pd.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

.

for ''30''
And Thot ~ ]uat
Ducky with

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-2269

Pomeroy, Ohio

USED RAilROAD TIES·

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

A&amp;B

992·621 s

8-12-90-tfn

11 ·14-'90 tin

COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

lastallina Cellllar
Phoaes, (• Stereos
or Radios, CB's

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

On Sltelnsto.tkln
F111 Estimates

IUIII ST., IUSOII, WV.

1-(304)·
773-9560

742·2656

WE DO

ROOFING .

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

,TROMM BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES

•20 Years Experience
•Quality Homes and
Custom Remodeling

742-2328

5/22/tfn

IIIIBifllllt
-·-

AIR CONDmONERS ~ HEAT PUWS ancl
FURNACES FOR MOBilE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES .
0

0

•••••

0

•••••

•

0

0

•

0

•••

OilY eSilL eTIIH
OPEN
TuHciiY thru Saturday
10:00 •m-11:00 pm
742~U21

2111 MI. ouhl•
Rvtland on • •
Umalll.

0

•

0

••

0

MOBILE HOME

BENNETT'S

"~::~:6'

Located On Safford School Rd. off Rt. 141
(1114) 4U-UU or 1·100-172·59117

4 -29 -91

5·3I -'90 tfn

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

NEW USTING- Approx. 2 acres level ground w~h
large strawberry patch. 2 story older ho":le that has
been remodeled. 3 bedrooms, bath, ut1lrty, newet
plumbing, witing &amp; roof. ASKING $29,900.

BILL SLACK

(FAEE ESTIMATES)

•••••••

lo-.Wing
Stop &amp; Compare
FrH Estimates

Gutters
5

- Interior • E•t•lor
Painting

ljltflarA-

WHALEY'S
AUTO•·PART&amp;

J&amp;L

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
.
.

- concrete work
- Rooflno

OHIO 45775·9626
614-742·2904
1-24

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

CARPENTER SERVICE

1,625 GAL- S35-S4S
lt. 1, lox 71·1
IUILIND,

7-25 l mo

Me!
;

55
56

Sporting Goods
Antiques
Mrsc M er c hand• ~c
Butldm g Supplltll
Ptttl tor Sal-=

Business Services

° ·

,.,.. ,

Aulu Rcpdll
C.UIIJ.Itn~t Equt fiii iC!It
C .ttiiJH!f~ 6 Mutur tt11 1111' ~

HouM:hold Good~;

1

59

3/6/90/tfn

.

lY

23

PO.IIOY, 01110

...

Mutor cydrn;
Buotl i &amp; Mulor s lu1 S.tl t:
Aulu Pouts t'oo A~;etnostolll~

/7
18

Frutts &amp; Vt! gutabl t!S
For Sal e or Tudtl

117 I. locantl St.

,i.

74

Trans ortation

76

Mu~t catlnstrt• •nenl s

Across ,,... Pllt OHice

l

Aulo 5 !01 Salu
T111cks lo• So~l1 :
v.," ~ p. 4 wo · ~

L61.o~~u

58

992·5335 or
915·3561

GOOD ,OR YOUR NERVES! IF YOU FEEL LIKE
USINQ A TRANQUitiZER O:VER T~AT ~OUSE
YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL ...COM! ON IN
TO OUR OFFICE! BUYING AND SELLING
HOMES II·A Sf!ECIAUZED BUSINESS. WE ARE
THE SPECIAUSTSI THROW OUT THE' PILLS
AND COME SE .USI WE'LL SAVE YOU LOTS, OF
TIMEANDTROUBtE!
·

Fm

/ 1
TJ
13
1~

57

AU IUDS

NEW LISTING - SR 124 - 1987 Fortest Park
Mobile Home s~uated on 1. 10 acre of land. Home
includes 3 bedrooms, one bath . Some furnishings.
Additional featutes are t7x52 gatage With
comptessot and two 15x52 carports. ASKING
$32,500.

49

52
53

lo l oan
ProfiiSSIOilal s~rvr c~

EOEIAA

NEW USTING - Racine - 2 story home that
Includes 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 enclosed P,Orche~,
has a newer Lennox Pulse healing &amp; cooling un~.
Presently being painted outside, full basement and
1 car garage. MANY OTHER EXTRA FEATURES I
ASKING $44,900. MAKE AN OFFER I

W anh :d lo Ae111
Eq111pmttnt I&lt;Jf Runt

~

Busmms Opporlumty

(304) 675-4340

AGAIN!
story home has ·" alii
. 1~ bath,
.
room 2 cat garage, new ale un~. new wallpaper
kitchen &amp; dining family room &amp; bath. Latge ftont
sitting potch. Nice home. Reduced to $45,900.
MAKE AN OFFER I

Spacu fo1 R~tnl

47
48

F&lt;trnr lQU1Jll11t.!lll
W .ml r-d tu lluv
l ov u\ t oclo.
Hay &amp; G•a u•
Suml &amp; hlftth.tc•

Merchandise

To Do

MICIOWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

"it:IN~:cu

46

62
63
64
&amp;!t

I) 1

l;tfillld

'12 Money

21

Real Estate General

600lllelilt

Houses lor Rent
Mobtl e Horn as lur R~111
faflns tor ~~111
Apilrtrnenl tor Ruut
Furmshed Room s

~4

Help Wanted

Medical- Surgical- OB
&amp; Pediatric Registered Nurses

BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT ss.OO PER DAY

'

41

P1 PhtMCint

leon
S 76 Apple (irovu
773 Ma son
882 New Hav en
895 Letart
937 Buffalo

Opportunity To Cross-Train
In Speciality

•H!Int . . . .

Real Estl1u Wantull

4~8

THIS l"xl"

number of twins here," he said of
the 16th annual event.
Twinsburg was founded by
twins Aaron and Moses Wilcox,
who changed the name of the town
from Millsville to Twinsburg ..
Festival organizers said that in
pas! years, more female than male
twins attended. One who came this
year .,.... Helen Kirk, of Galveston,
Texas·- claims there are indeed
more female twins.
"Man is the weaker of the
sexes," said Ms. Kirk. "More are
born but fewer survive."
She has tracked births of twins,
uiplets and quadruplets since the
physician for whom sbe worked for
38 years delivered quadruplets in
1939, she said
Researchers attending the festi val said there is some credence to
Ms. Kirk's thesis.
Louis Keith said female twins
survive at a greater rate. But he
said the difference is "fractional,
not~t''
.
His brother, Donald, board
chairman of the Center. for Study of
Multiple Births, said female twins
may be in greater evidence at
Twtnsburg's festival for sociological reasons, not physiological ones.

36

43
44
45

Helo Wilnlud
Srtuahon Wanted

11

Masun Co . WY
A11:&lt;t Code 304

EXPERIENCE PREFERRED

•

'

t'tll'l'r

R.N.'s

Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
cenrer of Hysell Run Road
· 0 f Order 1Sale (County Road 15), said point of
By wtu~ · an
issuedootoftheCommon
Pleas beginning being 857.15' South
CourtofGalliaCounty;Ohio, in 21 deg. 17 min. 32 sec. East
thecaoeo/DaleLPriddy, Plain- from the center of the interseoliff, against Shltley J. Priddy, lion of Hysel Run Road and
Defendant. upon a judgment Rudand Township Roltd 175;
theoein rendered, being Case thence foRewing the canl8r o/
No. 82-Cl-343 in said Court, 1 HyseN Run Rood lhe following
will offer for sale, at the) front three cour&amp;es:
dooroflhe CoolrtHoU18inPomSouth 5 deg. 9 min. 47 sec.
eroy, Meigs County, Ohio, on Easl90.18 ft;
the 26 day of August, 1991, at
South 7cleg.3olmln.S318C.
10:00 o'clock A.M., the follow- WeS'c:h~ 3ft:cleg. 29 min. 10
ing lands, tenements and per- sec. Wasil 03.12 ft: to the north
sonal
property • to-w~:
· djolnIng 12 ft.
Situate
in the Townlhlp of line 0 f a semor-a
and righl of way conveyed lo Her·
Rudand,.County of Me'-s
"'
man E. Moore bydaadraccn:lad
State of Ohio, anci'oounaedand in Volume 158, Page032 Meigs
dascribed as follows:
Colllty Deed Record•; thence
Being In Section No.2,Town leaving Hysell Run Road and
No.6, RangeNo. t4ofhtClhio following lhe north line of said
Company's Purchase and be- 12ft. rightolway North 89deg.
ginning 232 rods and 12 Hnka 5min.47sec. West372.901t.IO
Wesl and 75-t/2 rods South an iron pln.set on the eullina of
from the Northeast corner of the senioradjoining Richerd II
said Section No.2; thence South or lois Rosenbeum property
90 rods; thence East 18 rods (Volume 286, Page 129 Meigs
and 12 links; thence North 35 eo111ty Deed Records), panrods and 11 links; thence East ing on iron pin set at25.82 ft.;
to the cente&lt; of the old road; th11!1cele&amp;VIng the north line of
thence in a Northerly direction said right of way and to•owlng
following the cenrerol said road the aast ~ne of said Roienb&amp;im
to where formerly D. F. Me- property North 268.43 ft. 1o an
Naughton's South line intersects iron pin set In a berbed wire
and crosses said road: lf1ence fence on the north lines of aaid
Easllo the center of HyseH Run; Rosenbaum and Priddy properthence North 16 degrees East ties;thiiOc:eleavingtheeutine
12 rodsand41inks; thence North of said Rosenbaum propel\' fW1d
22 degrees West 3-314 rods; following lhe barbed wire lance
thence West 123 rods and 4 andthenorthlineohaidPriddy
links ID the place ol beginning. property East 400.00 ft. Ill the
Sawandexcept2-314acres point of beginning, puling 111
in the Southwest part belonging iron pin selinlilelilnc:eat373.84
toGeorgeHalay,conlaining42· fl.. containin~ 2.472 acres.
1/2 acres, more or less.
Subject to all lellaleuements.
The abow description wu
Saw and except the ooa1
known as No. 8 or Pomeroy made in accordance with an
vein, lying under said abow actual survay oonc*Jcled by
dascribed premi1111.
Eugene Triplett RS 6786 on 11
Excepting one acre and a 28191 , 218/91 and 2112191 .
right of way 12 feet wide which Bearings 818 based on an aswasherelllforecon119'1ediDHer· sumadeastlwelldireclionoflhe
man E. Moore(Dead Book 158, f!OrthlineollheDale&amp;/orShi~ey
Pall" 32).
Jean Priddy property (Volume
Reference Deed: Deed Book 206, Page 063 Meigs County
193, Page 191, Meigs Co111ty DeedRecords)andareilitendad
Deed Records.
Ill clenole angles only.
DEED REFERENCE: Y_ol·
Said real estate was apume 205, Page 63, Meigs ptaised at: $12,750.00
County Deed Rec:ordl.
Terms of Sale: Calh
The abow desc:ribed. real
Real ..111111 cannot be sold
estate Ia ldantifiltd In the f'fiC- for less than two-thirds of the
ordo of the Meigs County Audl· appraised value.
1Dr by Parcel No. 11-00850.
Jam111 M. Soulsby Sheriff '
EXCEPTING AND REof Meigo County Ohio '
SERVING aU oil, gas and other
'
minerals undertying the above (7) 22. 29; (8) 5. 3TC
delaibed
realestata..
EXCEPTING
from the above . - - - - - - - : - describedpremises2.4728C181 3 Announcements
conveyad 1D Gary L. Priddy and
Araka R. Ptfddy, hlilband and
wile, bv deed reoordad In Vol·
SAl£
ume 324, Page 396, Meiga
Dead Recorda and
.
A
UG.
1·7, 1991
followl :
catte, .en, ·SI!IP. sa ,
143 JlarrlsenYiJit
lttth llocll Cllt' c•4y, ·

J~

M ol.Ki ll Hunlt!S IO! S.rlt!
Foums lo r SaltJ
Bus•nuu OurldiiHJio
L(]ts &amp; Acreagtl

Jl
3l

Servi ces
Cltl.~si.fit•tl /Ul!W ·'

I

\

Ho111us tor Sale

32

Empl oyment

11

To all who reminded
me they cared when l
was huning, l thank
youl Your kindeu
touches me and I will
always remember!
Esther Frecker

:n

42

jollowitiJ{ I l'it•plrt ;,H' t•.rd11111 1{1'-'--·

BULLE'l'iN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

O~EN:

'

.42
60
.06 / day

Rates aru to• conseaatwe runs. brokttnupdr,s wtll be ch•gud
lor each day u sepillrlte ads

BULlETI-N BOARD

but no oM to talk to? Ann Lander$'
booklet, "Sa and tM Teen-Ager,"
is fronlc and to the poillt. Send a
self-addressed, long, busiMss·siu
en...elope and a cited: or 1t101tey
order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and luJndling) to: Teell.!,
clo Ann Landers, P.O. Bo:x ll562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.45/

MONDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
8 am-12 roon and 1 pm~6 pm
TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
10 am-12 noon and 1 pm-8 pm
FRIDAY 8 am-12 noon and1 ·pm-4 pm
SATURDAY
8 am-12 noon
'
~ ~
•'&gt;
'
Appomtmen~~ Q~ _Wa!k·,lns :.yvelcome,

HiiPP'I Ath
Y;lftf S.tlt~

2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
1 00 PM THURSDAY
1 00 PM FRIDAY

THURSDAY PAPER
tHIOAY PAPER

THOMAS SPENCER, D.O.
Receiving Patients
Startil•g Augusi 5

, . , \I

ol Thanks
In Memory
J Annoutem en ls
4 Gweaway
5 Happy Ads
6 lost and Found
7 Y •d Sale (patd on ;,~dv;mccl
8 Public Sale &amp; Auc 11011
9 Wttnted to Buy

. 30

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

C;~rd

1
2

co~t

O.AV BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 1 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0NfSDAY PAPER

992-6418 or 992-6588

•

tot &lt;I ll captlal letltn s tS dmtblt: puc~ ot ad

• A c i&lt;IS l&gt; lflt~l oltNt!IIISt.'ll,t!llt pl.t c · ~· · Ill 1 htt Dill I\' Si!lllllllll tu•
c" l-ll
cl&lt;tss•ho.!d lh SIJidv . OusiiU !!&gt;!i. Car1l ,uullt..-, talnol.tcesl
woll .ols u ••PJll!af 111 ll1 c PI Plt~.ISillll Re~JISIIJI .uul tht! Gall!
1-1ohs O;uly Tr~I)\ HUJ. lco~ c hm~l 0\11!1 18.000 hon1us

.

.'

.20

no ch•Utt

C&lt;11d ullhank!&gt;
In Mt!lllOrlillll

224 EAST MAIN • ·POMROY, OH.

COrdi.

10

'Ads thatm usl btl pa1d Ill 1UIIol&lt;t11CI! ilfl!

"t•l. Loa Aarei•

.

15
15
15
15

3
6

'ScutUlA~ IS not IHSp 0 11Sibl t! l0 1 C IIUI S .sltw !1151 lia'1 !Check
tclf t~rrurs llr s t day ad runs tn pap•~•) Calllwhntt 2 00 p 111
{t~ otht!l lJUbii CirtiOIIIn mak t! (:0/ f t!CliUII

POMEROY·HEALTH CARE
.

;~d

.
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
s 13.00
S1 30/day

16

Ann ou ncements

Over 15 Word&amp;

Rate

Words

Day s
'1

• 7 Vtllnt lm e lypu only used

Record sets of twins
participate festival

Man has walked 3600
miles to save black rhinos

pit!

50 diSCOIIIll f O I adf pant tn' atlv iiii CC
G1vt!away imd Found ads umh!f l!;wOf tls Will be

n.,..s a1

'Pnct! ol

RATES

~onthly

POUCII:S

• T,he Area's Number 1 Marketplace

INDEPENDENT
CARPET ClEANEIS
and nlE FLOOI CAll
•Reoeoneble Roteo
oQuallty Work
•Free Eatimeteo
•Carpet Haa Fut Dry
Time ·
•High Gloes on Tile
Floor Finish
MIKI LIWIS, OwRI. 1, RutlttN, OH.

742·2451

3-14-'91-tfn

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

FULLY INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

CONSTRUCTION
992-6641 or
691-6164
;
1 ·14· .......

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Brttds

·EMILEE M£RINAI .
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Jllonlll'oy,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"4.t R-nablt Prices''
JIIH. 949-2801
or los. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNOA Y CALLS
. 4-16·1&amp;-11

USED AI'PUAIICES

90JIUWUUm ·
WAINIIS- $1 00 .,
DRUS-)n up

IIFIIGOATOIS-$100 up
IANGIS-Got-Doc.-$125 up I
FIII~IIS-$1U "'
'
'
lt!CIO OVOIS-$79 Ufl

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-S33S ., 91S-JS61
Acr011 fr0111 Post Offico
POMEIOY, OHO
10/30119 tfn

You'l Pinel Cool Sa...:. . .
Inn. Clalllfledt

Anno uncements

'•

"

�~

' '' . •

"., .,. • "'''

I

,. •

'

'I

•

,.

•

·~

•

•

•

•

I

•

" . .,

O•j

..

•

~

'

•

~

' •• •

••

,_,''''I

. I

.

" I., ·.

I '

\

~The Dally Sentinel

Page

Monda~August5,1991

Pomeroy--Middlepon, Ohio

Monday, August

3

SNAFU® by

Announcements

Bruce

Beattie

Lilflt things
art

Roduce.;,Bum on Fot Willie You

fht Cl•ssifitd Stclion !

Phllmwcy.

4

Giveaway

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

5 Poot Rotrlovor Pupploo 4
Moleo, 1 Femalo, I Wooka' Otct,

latll &amp; HI'HIQI IVIIIIble for
new home conatruoUon on

tM-245-5111 A•r Sp.m.
Black Lab Rotrlovor I Collla

Aoy~um

county

mlxod, ...... 114-111~ .

· -· 114-24&amp;-1325.
~-1771 .

Lost &amp; Found

FOUND- 4 month old Slm....
Pers&amp;ln kitten on 124 n..r Rut-

lonciiM-11112Found: Malo Collla, Nebo Rood
AroL 114-:171-2714.
l..ool: Black Lab Puppy, In Vinton - · Hao Chokor Chain On
1. 114-:1111-1209.

water,

reaeonable

521:1, John D. Gooloch, no
olngt.wldo trolloro, ptoooo.
40 kroo WHh llobllo Homo.
114-387-7054.
lllrcor Bottom SUb-dlvloion,
ono ocre lola, AI. 2 trontogo,
prlco reduced, cHy wotor, 304116-2331.
Trllllf LDt For Rent, 10 Mlln
From Gllllpollo, (Rt. 141) 614·
3714501.

hair, mo8tiY black with whit•

6

Rood. Paved ..,.d,

rettrte1lona. Complete Information mailed on reque.t. 304-171-

Kill..,. To Gl-woy, et1
Spnlca Stmt, Galllpotlo. 1
-um olD ,._lo dot. long
Pupploo,

Rentals
"Td feel better aboul riding the subway without all those ads for self-defense classes ...

41 Houses lor Rent

"r."•

·-•Y·

.. a- - ..

-=

,_Old ·- -

&amp; Auction

' bedroom holM, full baument,

30t.76-8844.
Farmera
ollglblo,
new

Rick "-noon Auollon Company,
lUll limo ouot-r, oompleto
ouollon oorvtco. Uoonood Ohio,
w.. Vlrglnll, -77W711.

--

Home

3 bedroom bouoo on 3 ocreo, 1
milo out Boulahvtllo Rood,
$85,000. OIC cond, 114-441-1511.

Taking Apptlcotiono II
Domlno'o Pliu, Gilllpollo.
wanted to Buy
Pom•or · M~ and AIMb
Plno poe!l, llcArlhur Lumbar Cantor Ia occoptlng oppllcollono WHh Oponor In Potrlol.~
Rwol
ond Poet Co, Inc, ........... WV for full.llmo LPN. lluot bo wll~ Wat8r, CGncrltl Drlvtway, AU
Ylld. 7:JO 1114:00, --71-M. ing to work 11om-7om and 3pm- Corpotod. 114-441·1101.
W.ntod ol 1unk and ..,... mot· 11pm. Sallry bu.ed on ••· 4 t*:lrooma, 1 acre lot:, tully
porioncL
Elcallont bonoiH carpMed, heat pump, 10112 out·
package. Corot Klnowotoky, AN, bulking, 10 mlnut• from 1-n
W.ntod to bur, Slondlna 11-, D.O.N., 114-11112.e101 or apply tn on AI. Z, roooonobly prlcad. 304....-on ot 31751 Roclloprlngo 171-218a.
Rd., Pomeroy, E.O.E.
1441.
room cozy home, ••tra lot:,
SUbotMuo
T - noodod 11 IClifton.
T• Prlceo Paid: All Old U.S.
aiding, front/back
Corloton
lluat hovo por&lt;:hllo,alumn
vlllct Ohio Tooching Cortlllcato. II\Miage. 304-m-'235 INvo
Co1no. II.T.B. Coin . 11\op, 151 Contoct: llolat County Soard of
IIRIDD, 1310' Corloton Stroot, 1-room houN tor oolo In uppor
Second Avlftlll, G1lllpalll
ay,.._~ ~io, 4577t. 114-11112·
T - Plaine, 114-812-5830.
IICIIII~ not dltEmpl oyment Services Mil.
crlmlnoto In pravtolon of oorvlco A Frlmt HorM, 3br, Priced
or .........,_, bocouoo of han· Rlghti114-ZII-1N8.
dlcap, roco, color, notional
GOVERNMENT HOMES form 11
Oligln, MI. or ago.
11 Help Wanted
(U ropolr). Dol.!:\::' tu
. Your
Typloio: Pott·TI- Elcotlont ..,_.,. I I $2,100 CREDIT CARDI
~Your own Houre. eon 1· orN (1 105-1112-8000. Ell. GH·
10181 tor current rap:~ 1181.
Guorontood- ~~
·~$3/Min.

....

9

...........

.

lob-~-----

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ru.rlrilt~

~~~~--~bl.2524.

Sc-.

.

WANTED: Port-time Llconood
PriCIIcol Nu- (20 hrolwk) lor
communHy
grou~P::::­
AVON • All · CoM llorllyn for peraon
wtth deY
tal
w-:IOWG-2141.
diNbltllloo In GoUla County
{GIIIpollolllldwotQ. Houre: 3:30AUBTRAUA WAHTll YOU
a:30p.m., Frl; le.m.-lp.m., Sat;
~~Ply,
Bono'!!,
T~,
407-212-4,.,. 1-fp.m., SUn; 2.,.... wookly
Ell 171. to.m.·10p.m. Tot! atoll mooting; -'&gt;our wookly
LPN metelng; or •• othlrwiM
-ulod.
Currant
LPN
AVON I AU Arooo I Shirley Uconoo, (lntorlm PormH Acc:opSpoora, 304471-1421.
loblo),
OOPNESINAPNES/or
Slota Soard opprovod training,
le on TV Nny needed tor valkt drlver'e llcenn and good
comme~clale. Now hiring all driving
r.cord, good com- . For -lng lnlo coli 115- munkiatlon and :::rniZIIdon
77f.7111 IIlii. T-2:17.

-

CANNERY WORKERS ALASKA
H1rin11 ..... Woman. Up To MOO
w.altly. T'""-'lllon, Hou.
Ina. CAU NOW 1-201-738-lUOO
EXl111411

Cuol- S.rvtco R-ntoUvo.

Forrottgoa, 0 prlvotaly -nod
-'&lt;ottng oompony ond •
~id loodor In our ln_ry, to - n g o Cuot-r
Bortoil Aoprooonfotlvo lor our
=alii

looatlon.

•rot':ol
oltloo, and

Reapon-

":.!;::::.,
':"ld~
hondllnil cuat-r

Bust ness
Training
Rotroln
-IIISouthoootorn
Buolnooo Collogo, StHina Volley
Ptazo. Coli Today, 114-441-431711
Aoglotorotlon fi0.011-1ZJIIB .

,1,B_W:--an-:-t-:ed-:-to_D-o
: ~­

2-Fomolo lludonlt aooklng a

.. '

lut . -.. will ..... Ohio unr-oHy, wtlllng .to help
- o l offlco or w/goo money.
- " " ~. 10 wpm
WIN BobyoM In lly Anvllrno.
Rodney
Aroo.
0 fncluclo Uoelionl Ro...._ Avollabla. AH Shlho.
Cotii14-24W7tl.
ooiMM*otlon okltlo,
Ul fhal• MiQUIUI, ' and •
oo111n!lln.~ to provtd- Built Hog Sorvlco. Rluonoblo
. . . . , CUICOIMI' Hnlce. Rot•. 110 Job To Smolll 114o4for ·• -..oi!Uvo ootory :IN-2142.
and .,
'bonoiMo pock· Chrlotlan mothor will bobyoH
....
·
..
proiM
ring doya and ovonlngo. Call :104lliill .. I n ¥ - .... ....
IJIIIIori.
175-1411.

""' ptuoJ.,.

:!~1~~~~

·-lor

-lonl

........, .......... •'-let

Dunlavy Woklng Shop. Will do
emaH lobO and monullcturo
tmiH · -· :104-837-2733.
Goorgoo Porlabla S.wmlll donl
haul ~ logo to tho min juot
unity Emllfovor. Clll ~1tf7.
=:.'"'....:'I Diu&amp; Frilo .,: Hauling and polntlna 11
, . . - . llile , _ -a-tloltc, ,._,.blo rotoo, 114-11112·2412.
lolllolhlloll. ~To IMm
A11!11 Willi T• So R I I liN For llloo Pouto'o Day Cora Contor..
,..,.._.,., . Wo Wll Bolo, atlordoblo, chlldooro. 11-F
Toeoll You 1o 8o A 01 I Lm. • 5::10 p.m. ~ ~10.
0.. T - An'
IPiao In- llolora, oftor ochoot. Drop-Ina
CIIUdl Adnll~. Ftlnotlon Wlfcarna. 114 4411224. New Jn.
tn A
f1noNiol lor- lonl Toddw Cora. 814-«H:m:
~,:;:.:
Wll bobfolln my homo on tho
••• ..-.,.. wYou 11ovo El· 111
Allltond • -· eon onytlmo, 11425
tlllklll Adli.-llolretlri llllltlo ·;;;;:2-::;:.:12;;:·;-:-·-::-----7-...,AM Tep
~build patio covors, docka,
-Col~
oc-1111 , _, put up vinYl
114 til Z20t For -~~~ :J~J.'. trolw oklrting. 1.14Cot •"' attw•

:"'"f

Col-'·

J::

Not.:.,--=SW:

'

INI~~m~rW,

teed and ..,.•• Mutt

olgn contriCII 2-BA, Largo LR,
DR, lalh, hu now roof arid guttor, now and PVC plumbIng, nood oomo woriL You pay
lor the moving! Only Mr10ut

collorol Coil tf4.f82·207t oftor
7:oopm.
Nut and nice 4 room and bath,
ltrge laundry and etorag• a,.a,
all new Anderaon wlndOWI, lot
50x100, uc loqetlon, mkl 20'1,

304-675-3030 or 171-3431.
Vary nlco 3-BR Ranch, brick
lklllt, punctual, •
atM to front, carport, 112 - n l ,
Worl at part of I team IWqUJradj hardwood
tlooro, 1110 aeroo, 3oxporlonce working w~h par· ml from ltotzor HoopHol, SA 110,
_ , wHh montot rotordodon 114-1112·2721.
and dovolopmontol dloobllhl•
prolorred. Solsry: '114.00/hour, to
oton. Sonct rooumo to Cecilia 32 Mobile Homes
Baker, P.O. Box 104, Jack.on,
lor Sale
OH 4St40. Doodllno tor oppllcanto: lllltl1. Equal Oppor· '74 Now lloon, 2 bedroom,
tunHy Emptoyor.
13,500. 304-675-ug&amp;.

- - , . . - . onil Accounto Who oommutoo to tho
Reaalvlble oolllctiona. 1'hl University of Rio Grandi and

tonnn1 tiJolr- and ootory
requft..... to : P'ERAELLBAI
. . . U8 Ill 36
Galt II ,OH4ttl3t
.... o,ltortunlty Emptoyor .

HOUS'

FOR FREEII lluot movo
oH lot In Mldcloport. Fill In

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lany Wrlaht

Nlco 1br, Kftohon1 ~tt Wotor
And Trooh FumloMa,
t&lt;40/mo.
Pluo DopooH. IM-4...._.
Complotly Fumlohlld moblls
hc;tme, 1 mila beloW town o~
looking rlvor. No Poto, CA. 114441-4338.
North 3rd St, Mlddloport, Ohio, 1
bedroom IUmlahod opt, rotoroncoo and dopooM roqulrod. 304-

Ono bedroom opt In Point
Pluunl, extra clean 11\d
roomy, wfth waahlr a dryer
hookup, no pota, 304-G711-131Mi.

Ono bedroom turnlohod opt
lbln Sl1 raferenca and depoall
roqulroa, 304.e75~330.
Unfurnlohod 3 room oportmont,
104 Spring Avenua, Pomeroy.
Coli 614·gg2·51108.

gg2.2ooa.
Country llobllo Homo Pork,
Routo 33, North ol Pomeroy.
Loto, rontolo, porta, ooloo. (:all•
1
eM-112-111711.
Privata Lot For llobllo Homo
$85/mo. lt4-446-707t.

51

Goods
18 cubic foot cheat frMzll'.

Good oond. Coli oftor I p.m.,
614-4411-2041.
5 ploco pH living room ouho,
brown volvo! look, $310. 304Tr.J.sagz.
e Chair Dlnotto Sot, Chlldo 314
Bod Comploto WHh End Tobia,
Floor Storoc. 114-446oll6tn.
t-It chool IIMZ« ltl. 2-30"
oloctrlc rongoa. 3-ZMIIh 25"
oolor TV. 3-relrlgorotoro $85. 2·
GE aulomatlc waehera: Electric
and au dryoro, Fl,.tono Storo
In lllddloporl.
ALL WOOD KITCHEN CABS
Now lo Uood. Froo Ell·Trodo
In•. Mayo Khc:hlnt, IJ4.181.
t2e0.

County Appllonco, Inc. Good
oato. 0t&gt;on
8 a.m. to I p.m. llon..Sot.
441·1111!.1 • 127 3rd. Avo. Gil·

•*

:Z.IR opo~mont In llld·
dloport. ~
· Co . '
oqulppod
kltchon,

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd A.... OotlipoiiL ~ to
Coull- 1 ....... 2·s roomo, • , _ All -ly
docorolod, air condHionlng,

Merchandise
1·Davenport, 1-chaln, table, 0.

cholno, 1-Choot, 1-drMaor, mloc
Homo, 1 month old, 4114t8 SA
338 Lotort Folts, 114-247•zt00
1111 John o.- 11octot a,
RobuiH, Elcollonl CondHionl

;

qulf'ld,
1:00pm.

-

'

ret...... ,..

'

.

4141

Hllv..., 2 ~oom

after
fur·

11175 Ford Ringer F·100. Truok
cub cap WHh
v~ e~'~i
112 Ton, PS, PI, Ant. Two
With Lay Down lock Soot Fair
CondHion, Coil Any11mo. 458-1818.
tm lnlornollonll Tronootor II
ooml, modal 407GB 400 Cummingo, oxc oond, $1000, 1141185-33114 .... lpm.
1910 Chevy Shott Bod, 305
Auto. SIIS. IM-448-0233.
1812 GIIC Shollbod, Alllo, 350
Engine. 614-:IIMI-8183.
1183 F-150 wHh robiAit -or,
Dwight Bokor 3044115-31138.
1185 louzu pickup, 4 cyl, ~
opood, now rlmol mudilo,. and
hooctoro, hllod 1nora, rott bar
ond tog llghta, •uoo. or ollor. FtouBng trollor, lx11 ft,'
now wood. 11oovy duty bod,

Bod. 114-441-2318.
25121 Chain Unk Fonco With
Goto. Good CondHionl $200.
114-388-1183.
- ,_,.Coplor....,.....,.,llodol....,.......,et-:-:
311
1. Prtc:-:-od..,-:-To
111111 French City llobllo Homoo.
114-441-11340.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

!

61

Farm Equipment

1100 011- Troctor With Big
Vermeer Aound Baler, $4,1Mi

1450 Otlvor Dlaool, $3,850; 1130
Ill-, $3,150; T030 Forguoon
WHh Turf TirOL Owner WNI
Flnoco. 614-2111-8522.

S.ddlta, Held Sfalla, &amp; Brust

sz.-.

Conv.,.lon

V1n,

Aut:om~~llc,

CNiaa, Air, AMIFU CIIMttl, ·.
$5,200. Soli Or Trade. 114-251·

1210.

=
pion

ne,

olao lllnlotunt Scltno.UDfl,
Coolvfllo 114.e&amp;74404.
Poodlo puDPioo, toyoit:= too
cupo, AICC 'Chomllioil
Uno,
Coolvlllo 114.ee74404.
Roalotored 1 Month Old Block &amp;
Wlilto Cocker Spaniol Puppy,
114-~46-11407.

Roglllorod Chaw Chow Pupptao
For Solo. Croom, lluo, Black I
Clnnomon.l14-44fl.8323.

fiT

Musical
Instruments

Vegetabln

Conning
otroody
picked or pick ·
y... own
at
Joh._,., form, 114-241';2Mt.
sn- corn 11.45 c1oz,
you pick 81.20 doz. 304471lltSO.

I'

•'
'
I

o

8-S'

•

'.

'
:'

D06

'.

14ARASSMENT!

'&lt;

D06

'

':

~AR.AS SMENT I

(!) 3-2·1 Contac1

RoglotorodAnguo aprtng holtoro
and bulla for 111o. Groot broocf.
lng otock and VOIY tamo. Priced
upon lnopoctlon, 814-1112·3033.
Uood 4 Horoo aoo-k Troller
11,8N; 12 Ft. Horoo And Stock
Trollor, 11,7NL 3 f!oroo Slant
·Load WHh ...--ng Rocm,
14,511; 1tll Big AQHA Rod

y,,. ShoWn Br 10 VHr

Rome

64

1V7Z.COOCtvnon Codal compor

Hay &amp; Grain

Good hay, round - · · 114-11431211

Transportation

Services

71

Autos lor sate
1H8 Comoro Rune Good,
$1,000. 114-31l-7054.
1m Dodgo Swinger 2clr, Good
Conclllon, Auto, PS, PB, 318

81

Home
Improvements

$2,000. Call Anyllmo. &amp;14-2561718.
1H8 VolkaWigOn Fo1, 4 door, 4
AC, 42,000 mlln, $4,200.
7" •375 1ft 4:OOPII
~
or ·
·
1811 ChovoH'!r. 4 Spood, Air
CondHio~'- &lt;!ood Condltlonl
11,eso. eM-.....,251.
18M Chovotto, 4opd, 2dr, Good
Condftlon. l14-441-2203.
11111 CMvrolot Covollor, 304&amp;71-3424.
11et lluot.,g GT, 302.1. 5 Spaid,
Elcotlont CoildHoon uood Goo
IIU-. Reduced Prlco, . lluot
S.NII14..311-toto.

=·

Rooting, Shlngloa, And Trollor
Root Coating. Rouonoblo
RotOL 114-441-2203.
S.ptlc Tonk PuntDing 1110._Ollila
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPniSES.
Jockoon, OH 1-100-637-8521.
Dovlo
Sow·Voc
Sorvtco,
a-goa C - Rd. Porta, auppllao, pickup, and delivery. 1144411.0214.

82

DARACE

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2

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NALPT

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.

.

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MM to .,;ghbo&lt;, "I """'
out why the cost of stamps
went up. The extra money is

I

f: .r ··C·o-·m·p-.le., te
th e chuck le quoted
by Id lin g in the mi ssing word s

V

.

.L......J you develop from step N o . 3 below .

PRINT NUMBERED LETTE RS I
IN THE SE SQUARE S

liD) 1121m Current AHelr

t;1

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
B·2
Beauty - Deity - Swept - Modern - WANTED to BE
" Did your parents push you into a career?" the pro·
lessor asked the graduate. " No." she replied . ·· They
said I could be any kind of doctor I WANTED to BE. "

'

ID Spor11Cinter

18 Moneyllne
liD Scarecrow end Mro. Kino

7:0511) The JeHoraono
7:30 (2) 0 tDl J80PirdJII;I
(J) MI/Ot' Lug111 Be11ball
Chicago Cubs at New York
Mets IL)
(IJ IDlll Ent-lnrnent
Tonight Stereo.
C1J Ill Mems'a Family
all Wheel ot Fortuna 1;1
liD Ill M'A•s•H
Be a Star Stereo.
ID SUrfer Magezlne
18 Crossftrs
7:3511) Mojor League Beaeball
San Francisco Giants at
Atlanta Braves (L)
8:00 (2) 0 tDl Freoh Prince of
Bel Air Will's gi~frtend risks
losing her scholarship . (R)
Stereo. C
(IJ C1J IIJ NFL Preaeeaon
Football BuHalo Bills at New
York Giants (L) Stereo.
(l) Scientific American
Frontiera Segments include
the MIT design competition
and nature vs. nurture.
Stereo. l;l
(J] Adventure British cyclist
Tom Vernon looks tor the
roots of Cajun culture . D
all 1121 (I) Evening Shoae
Wood and Ava reminisce
about Ava's election vlclory .
(R) Stereo. D
liD Ill MOVI~: 'The Sure
lltlng' FOX Night II the
Movleo(PG13) {2:00) Stereo.
II! The Lilt Deyo 01 Mlrllyn
Monroe The unexplained
circumstances surrounding
the death of Marilyn Monroe
are e•amined. (I :00)
On Stage Stereo.
ID Wortcl Wat1r Skiing From
Lansing, Mich. (T)
18 PrlmeNewo
liD lleluty end the 11e1st 1;1
8:30 (2) D tDl DIH•rent Workl
Whitley upsets her boss by
buying a painting a~nst his
wishes. (R) Stereo. g
all 1121m MI/Ot' Did The
Major and his fellow oHicers
organiza a talent shOw. (A)
Stereo. Q
On Stage Stereo.
9:00 (2) 11 tDl 'Aegl of Angela:
The Story Contintlla (PI 2 of
2)' NBC Mondly Night 81 lite
Movtee (2:00) Stereo. 1;1
(l) (J] American Molten
Frederic Remington's
19th-century Weslem art
career. Stereo. !;I
all 1121 (I) Murphy Brown
Murphy loses her voice
before a presidential news
conference. (A) Stereo. 1;1
II! WWF Prime Time
WrseUing
Neahvllle Now Siereo.
ID Women'o Pro Beech .
Volleyball Coors Light U.S.
Open from Venice, Calif. (T)
18 Llrry King Uvel
liD Beauty and lite Beelll;l
9:30 all 1!2l81 Dealgnlng Women
Anthony tests his manhood
by standing up loa bully. (A)
Stereo. l;l
10:00 (l) (!) Rop City llhoptocly
all 112llll Nortltem Expoaure
Joel's fiancee une•pectedly
ends their relationship. (R)
Stereo. !;I
I!J) ID Star Trek
ID Pro SUrfing From
Huntington Beach, Calif. (T)
18 World Newa
liD 700 Club With Pot
Robertaon
10:20 ()) MOVIE: Kenny Rogere 11
the Gembler (2:00)
10:30 (J) Newt
12!1 Crook end Choae
11:00 (2) .. (IJ CIJ Ill liD) 112l.
il)) N8WI
(J) Twilight Zone
(l) NeWtW81ch
liD ID Aroenlo Hill
II! Crime Story
12!1 On Stage Stereo
1D IIIHball Tonight
1B Sporta Tonight
liD Scerecrow •nd Mro. King
11:30(2)0 tl)) Tonight Bilow
Stereo.
(J) Megnum, p.l.
(l) Europe1n Joumol
CIJ D Nlalttllne 1;1
liJ) Al'llrilo Hell
1121D '8wutlng Bulleta' CBS

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1 (PIJT E£LIEVE 1HAT
WITH l'iL ta'V£ E€£1-J
~ I.Utll-1 SAIXWI\
IV55ak.&gt; .. .

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In&lt; O&lt;ESSIVE Mil.)()- .
&amp;X-6lt~

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r DONT RE.MEMee:R
Aei&lt;INGJ FOR !He SrORT'
OF YCOR L.IFE!

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BARNEY
THESE ALL-NIGHT
CARD GAMES
ARE KILLIN' ME!!

I BET YO'RE
HDNtSR'Y
AS A BEAR,
PAW!!

ASTRO-GRAPH
II

.,·~

'.'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Cottor'o Plumbing
ondHootlng
Fourth and Plno
Golllpollt, Ohio
614-4411-3881

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Roildontlot or oommon:lal
~ ,_ aorvloo or _,,..
llo•r . Uconood oloctrlcton.
fllctooio(w Eloctrlcol, --711711.

t;1

liD Ill Nlaht Court Q
II! MecG'yver

114 Ul 3001, 7p.m.

1885 Ford W1g_on Eacorl. bee/.
1ont CondHioril 1 Owner. Auto,

(IJ C1J D 1n11de Edition
(l) (!) MecNeii/Liftrer

NewaHour 1;1

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

trailer, MW awning, good condJ.

the
be·
low to form four simple words

8

~ Night Court Q

2213.

lion, 114-1182-tOe.
1m 21ft. Cooctvnon Compor
WHh AC, Awning, V~~ Good
CondHion, $3,100. 114 3 • lal4.

0 four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

•

6:3511) Andy Grffl~
7:00(2) II tl)) ~"' of Fortune

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories
73-81 Chovrolot truck .._.
$50.00,73-81 Chovrolot bodoldo,:
pooaongor oldo, $50.00 114-812·
1125 ohor 5:00.
Budgot Tronomloolono Uood lo
robulH, otottlng at 18i: Auto
PoliO. 114-245-Sin, 114-370-

79

UMI

IIDl 1!2llll CBS News 1;1
liD Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
1D Up Close
liD New Zorro Stereo. t;1

76

Old loyL Nloo 2 Yoor Old Golcf.
l!&gt;g, 30 uoya Riding Tlmo And
Sliown In HaMor; Big FobNory
14, 18to Chootn=-=~ Yoorllng
Point Filly. 114-2
.

WOlD

Ito~ ~y

6:00 (2) . . (IJ CIJ Ill liD) 1!2).
tDl Newt
(J) Andy Grffl~
(l) Club Connect
(!) Raadlng Retnbow 1;1
liD D Andy Grfftlttt
II! Clrtoon Expreaa
ID Beat of Scholoollc Sporto
Amerlco
IB World Today
liD Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
Stereo.l;l
6:0611) Sew~chod
6:30 (2) II tDl NBC Newo 1;1
(J) I Drsem of Joennle
(IJ (J) II ABC Newo 1;1
(l) Wild Amerlco

~

~~~-~~~~~~~A'-J~ · ~~~v~~~ ... ---~--~J~~

...,.,..,....=_,..,......,..:.,,...---,.,.

All typoo ot muonry, brick, .
block ond Ilona. Froo ...
1m Iuick La Sabra, 13 ooo oc·
tuot mUoa, now tlkroo, air, 1100. '"""'"· 304-773-e550.
or boot ottor, -.7t-tee8.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1m Unooln 4dr T-n Cor,_f.olr UncondHionll
lllotlmo guoronCondition, $1,100, Or Boot urrorl
IM. Local reloroncoo IUmlohod.
114-441-11104.
Freo ootlmotoo. Coil collocl I·
1m Otdo CUIIuo, 4dr, Sedan. 614-237-o481, day or night.
115,000 llllao. 114-441-31Zl
Rogoro Boaomont Wat-ling.
1m Clo'Yofor Cordoba 360,
auto, new everything, $1400. Corpontry and romoclotlng of oil
doya 114-812·215&amp;'. ottor 5:30pm, lOlii. RNIOnlbll ratM. Clll
coii304-G75.e888.
onytlmo, 114-1112·1400 or 1182·
3440.
111711 llonto Carlo, T·Topo,
Corpontry and remodeling of oil
cruloo, liM, dotoy, 304-G71-4t85.
1011.. RNaonabll rat•. can
1110
Buick Rogot wHh V.e, $500. onvtlmo, 114-1112·1400 or 11112304·1'7WIII.
3440.
Cockltlol llrdoii- whitt 145 or
gr.y $31, 114-14 - 1810 Pinto Slotlon Wagon 11200. Compietolloblio Homo Bot-Upo,
1871 Lincoln 11100, l14-148- Ropolro; Conomorical, flooldan.
till lmpravomonta. Including:
~-·.nd~:llz£t"':''Lf"t: 2104.
-1181 Honda Accord, atandard. Plumbing, Eloclrlcol. lnouronco
Clalmo kcoptod. IM-251-1811.
grooming, 12 yro uporlonco, 1150. 114-441-IBOI.
304.e75-6332.
lmprovomanta:
Dro-wynd Colt~ Potolon, 188111onto Corio, 304-675-1506. Curtlo
Yoara Elporlanco on Otdor 1o
.,..... nd HI -·' ••
Slomooo a
moltyan u•lono. 1112 llonto Corio zag Vol, Many Nowor HomoL Room AddMiono,
et4 440 3144 oftor 7 p.m.
Eltrul
Foundotlon Work, Roofing,
••- CO '/1100; A~lno Romov· Wlndowo
lo Siding. Freo 6- ·
Floh Tonk, 2411 Jockaon Avo. ""'"
layer, 00· 114-446llmotool Rotor-. No Job To
Point Patuanl, 304.f7S-2063, 7025.
lull tina Troptcol tloh 1 blrda, 1HS Comoro zza, ioodod, tiC Big Or SmoiiiiM-441-o:!ZS.
omoll anlmola and ouppl100.
cond, $4,500. 304-675-61211.
.
JET
Aeration Motora, rapalr.d. New
For oota AKC Roglatorod Coeur 1185 Covollor Typo10 Automatic • r•buiH motore In otocft, RON
Spaniol pupa, BuH ond WhHo, WHh Air, 14,0110 Mlloo. Excollont EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-tOO- .
114-MW417.
CondHion .•:1,000. 114-441-0124. 537-1128.
.
Plno Ridge CoiliNg! Wooka Old 1185 Doctgo Arloo LE, po, J:!:J Ron'o TV Sorvlco, opoclollllng
In Z.nhh aleo llf'Viclng moat
::.~127-ltl:. ~m~r~=~ ~~~.00:'';.1 ...v•~4oo, g&amp;14- other
brenda. House calla:, elao
MW ....
oomo appliance ,.polro. WV
Pood 1e pu
, toyoa:~~~~~304.e7t-2381 Ohio 114-446-2414 .
cupe, AKC

'E

jI

'::~:~~~' S@\\.Jl~-LGt.tfs·
Ed
CIA Y l . POUAN

EVENING

73 Vans &amp;4 WD's

1888 Voyager Mini Von I&gt; 7 f'O•
Konmon pottoblo dlohwoohor Slropo. Coil Elllno'o Dlocount unger,
one owner, PS, a, AJC, ·
ISO. Tolklng lllckty llouN and S.ddlory, 114-281H522.
luggogo roc~ -~-~000 mlloo,
topoo 115. llo- Corvotto cor D-17 AJ:, Dleoot Tractor With 111;000.
304-67.......
110. 304-6711-2514 ond loovo CuHI~ator And Groin DriR,
mnug•.
D-14 AC, With AC 74
Motorcycles
Kenmo,. w..her &amp;: Dryer UHd, Loodor, $2,1185; 7030 AC, Supor
Good Condhlonl $210. 114-441- Shorpl 11,150; 424 lntomotionol 1g12 1100 Hondo Cuotom with:
Dleool Troctor WHh 5 Ft. Buah uppor and lowor torlng. Many.
G340.
!!og, 12,1185. Ownor WUI ollroo, 8500 mlloo. $1500. 304-.
Plnaburgh Paint tntorlor tillwoll :..Fin0neo==·.:l14-=2tl=.e::l22.=._.,-- 1_171-1_.,.
70_2_. ,....-,.,--,=-,.,.,.point $10.41 gol, lntorlor ... ~
glooo $13.DII . gal, ollorfor till Jim'o Form Equlpmont1 _SR. 35, 1183 Hondo llogna V45 750cc,
1\ouoa pofnt $13.gg. 2415 Jock· W• Gllipotlo, 114-411-W77; good condition, low mlloo, 11 tOO
whh holmot. 304-571-21114 or
ton A.., Point Ploaoont, Pl. Pl. Wldo ooloctlon MW lo uood form
lrocloro I lmptemonto. Buy, 576-2158.
304.e76-808ol.
Nil, trade, 1:00-1:00 wookdoyo,
Portabla llghlod changeable lot· Sol till Noon.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor
olgn
$211.
Freo
dollveryllettarL Plaotlc loll.,. 63
for Sale
Livestock
147.10 box. 1.-1133-3453.
lilt llborform with 150 hp Mar·
Uood 1115 cltchwkch tronchor 1·Raglater.d Arabian Horse tor cury
13,700.
304-4171-2121
wlblckhoe •ttachrntnl, dlnal ..... 114-11112-51102.
evanlnga.
angina ond John Dooro 300 00110, 304... 2-3750.
boCkhoo. t14-fi4.7142.

~

$300. ~1.

1m .loop, 304 angina, 3 opood,
4 wMol drive, worl&lt; good, •7,000
mloo, runa and looka good;
11,100. 304-571-27!7.
:
11176 Ford Bronco XLT, 351
Clavoland motor, lor polio or
con llx. 1475. oftor 5:00, 304-41714041.
1m Shortbod.Chovy 414. Small
v.a. t14-211-11m.
1983 Chovy 20 Sorloo Glsdlotor-

MON., AUG. 5
Ci19SI I TV L•stlng ii'IC Ft Worth , TlC

·

100 Poovoy lllxor Amp., 2 H15
SoN""' 801'a 2 811 5I Bhu¥0
Mlc And ltondo, Bound Lovol
Buy or ootl. Rlvoolno Anllquoo, Uotor'a, Finder Dolulo Amp.
1117 Trana Am, l9.w miiHgt, ••·
1124 E. lllln Stroot, Pomeroy. 114-251-1501:
'
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 1~..:..;;~=:;...,--,.-,-~ oellonl.oondHion, 11,200. Phono
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. AHo ..., muolc otond, cloonlng 304.e71-1flll.
114-11112-2121. '
oupptloo, oxcotlonl condHiori,
$400, 1~8-ZIJII.
54 · Miscellaneous
· Fruhs .&amp;
M&amp;rchandlll

Upotolr, Fumlol1od ADortmerlt,
Browno Bogtnnlng
FoolboR -A~ot· llh
Pro4 Roome I Both. No Poto. Sooool!
I
Rotoronc:O lo Socurlty DopooH.
R:'l~~f
1111-.
114-2511·12~
your water &amp; ...., Wllara p.ICJ. 114 .......~.
11
2218.
Iloilo your oholoo - · No Wodao ~1, 101 Burdotto St,
quotilo
..., tho phone, you
, Concrwto I . ptutlo ooptlo lsniJa,
muot Ilia thom. P~ .., on PoW Ploloont, no llolo, 1 ond 2 Ron Evono EntoFJHiloo, Jock·
IIDIIOinl~. 114-4411-lltt day, . bod-, ~2072 attar
_,, 0H HIOO·UJ..121.
~13teVI,
. · 1:00.

•

1185 S-15 GIIC Plck""f.• AMIFII.
Radio, Air, 114-446-872 ·
tgq GMC outo PS/PB AC
Vegetables
crulao, 1111. Loto olollru. 'hnted
wlndowo, dloool. 114-«6'8044.
Connlng Tomot-11 Picked 14 • t8a8 Doctao D-10, 21,000 lllloo. 5
buohol. Picked own 13. Sllvor Spood, 'bcollont CondHion.
Ouoon Com Is roody, Roymond Sharp Truck! 1148/mo. 614-441Rowo, 114-247-4282.
1751

H~w 4 Stage fork Uft, Dock
Pfate, 3 TraUIIr Alia, l Trailer

-·b!.!"'

'"t.

Television
Viewing

Fruits &amp;

58

,...,tnOM,

:&amp;;::;;

Business
Buildings

54 Miscellaneous

RMOndMtonod Woohoro, Dryoro.
Ken•~:· ~~er'a Mobile Home
llpolla, Ut1
Gu... ntood piOtnpl aorvlco for
Pork.
·1102.
mokoo, - · Tho Woahor
3 bedroom traitor, $210. par GOOD USED APPLIANCES an
Dryor SMpp8. 114-«6-21144.
month, 1 month dtpoelt, 3 prior Woohoro, dryore, ralrfgorlloro,
rongoo. Skllgga Appllanc01, Salt ContolnM Comf*', 17 Ft.
304-e71-1185.
Uppor Rlvor Rd. Booldo Stone Excotlant Condhlon, l1,000j_ 18
3-BA, tumlohod, waahor/dryor, Cnoatllolol. Collti14-441-73N.
Cubic
R.
Froet
•AC, 114.012·!1800.
Rolrfgorllor, Good Condition!
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
$121. 114..311-1811.
.
3br Trellor For Rant, on llorgon Comptoto homo IUml~~
Houre: lion-Sot, t-5. 1
Sl ...r Rood.. IM-3711-231 1.
Toola Alllo lloollonlco~ High Uft
0322, 3 mllao out Bulavlllo Rd. Air Jock SNrs 12 HP ~lac. Stott
Fumlahed 2br No Peta, Water FreoDollvory.
P~ll Slott -or.
Pold, 1300/mo. S27a DopooH. 112
John Fuol Oil
Aiding
· m
IIIIo Eoot 01 Portor. t14·:1111- Match!~ lloytog Waohor I Gollon
Tonk,2 Trenolor
ttl3.
Dryor. GOod Condhlon. t14-446- Cuoo, FH 1111 lo 1m Bronco,
11113t.
3011. 318 t~ Coppor
Mobile HomM For Rent, conTubinG, Chivy Allemotoro
otructlon -'&lt;oro and Hud wllPICKENS FURNITURE
Robullt, Ford Slott.,. Ell 114Newi\Joed
- · lf4-4.41.01501 or 446-832\
Houoohold lumlohing. 112 mi. 2511-1101.
Now Rio Orondo Collogo, 1250; Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Plaaunt, WV,
Toppor lor 1ona bod amoll
1100 0.110011, Newly Romodolod. Clll304475-1450.
piCkUp $100. BotDMo dloh wHh
114-246-81111.
RENT20WN
-qulpmont
wlra.$100.
- :IOW82•2010.
oontrol " ..
tM-446-3151
44
Apartment
Vl'ra Fumltu,.
lor Rent
Solo &amp; Choir, 111.10 Wook· 55
Building
Rocllnor, $5.47 Wook, Swivol
1-BR, 3 112 mils oouth ol Mid· Rockar, $3.t3 ·Wook.Bunll Bod
SupplieS
dlopott. 2-BR, lloaon WV both Comploto 11.41 Wook, 4 Drowor
IUmlshod, utllltlao paid, 614-367· Choot, $3.26 Wook; ·Poolor Bod- Block, brick, ttlpoa, win081t
,_, SuHo, 7 pc., $11.17 Wooft, -._tlntota, ""'· Cloudo Winlncludoo Boddlng.Countoy Pine ..... nlo Orondo, OH Coli 1141·BR,
turniiMd
b111ament Dlnotto With Bonch lo 4 Cholre, 2~t
oportmont, oil utllhloo paid, 1200 110.118
Wook.OPEN: llondoy
month, 014. .2· 5003 or i4• ThN Saturday,
lo.m. to lp.m., 56 Pets for Sale
WI.
SUndoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. • ..,..---....,.....,.-,...-,.--,,-,
1br Apottmont. Uvlng Room Mlloo on Routo 7 On Routo 141, Groom ond SUtllliY Shop-Pat
Grooming, All &amp;;aida, atyloo.
Fumlllhed. Klchen, SIOYI, In Contonory.
lama Pol Food Doolsr. Julia
Rtfrigerttor, Dlahwuher, Gar- Solo On All Corpot lo Vinyl Floor Wobb.
Call 114-441-4231, 1-800bage Dlopoool, - o r In Both; Covorlng In Slockl Mollohon 352-4231.
Goo HootI._ Air Cond., Aloo, Corpoto, At. 7 No~h. 114-441- ~::-:::-::'""-.:----:--=:-;:
W11her, uryer. Good Quiet 11144. .
AKC Chlhuohuo pupploo, $50
Neighborhood. Rotoronco, &amp;
ooch. 114-367-Na.
DopooH. 114-446-1370 Aftor Solid oak t.d room IIUitl, 3045p.m.
671-3431 oltor 6:00 Pll.
AKC r~lot- Cockor Spaniol
pup,. 13 wka old, 175. 304-882·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
SWAIN
3331
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. I~
ESTATE!Jl. 1138 Jockaon Pika Olivo St., Golllpolla. Now &amp; Uood AKC
Rogl-ed
llolo
from 11WJmo. Walk to ohop &amp; IUm"ur. •··taro Wootam &amp; Chihuahua, 1 "oar Old. $75. 614,
'
441-otl2.
movloo. Coiii14-44845N. EOH. Work boola. 114-445-31511.

Booch SIIHI, lllddlopoll, Ohio. .
VI'RA FURNITURE
Ono , _ oHicloncy ot&gt;l,
114-441-3151
reflrancea and depoalt, ~ LIVING ROOIIi Solo I Chair,
182-2511.
11gg.oo;_ Rocllnor, 1148.00;
Hocker, S9t.OO; Coff• &amp;
EHiclonct Apo~monl, Fur· Swivel
End Tobloo, $81.00 Sot.DINING
nllhod, Dopooft, I Roforonco ROOII: Tabla WHh 4 Poddod
Roqulrod. No Polo, 114-441-48711. Cholro, 1141.00; Country Plno
With Bonch And 3
EHicloncy
apartment, Dlnollo
"·l
$ - 00 M0 I hi
2
llvlnalllltchon, bothlo'-, AC, C~
•~ ·
cnong
Door Hitch, 1348; Or $511.00
IFreo Porch) Buy a Now Skyllno c:oucR maktl cleln ._ct. nac. Sot;
Dlk Toblo1 42xl2 With I
28xl2 Soctlonal And Got A nolghbor'-d, 304-375-6200.
Bow
Back
Chel,..,
10hltth. AhocMd Porch Freol
French CHy llobllo Homoo, 114- For rtnt, 1 bedroom apar1ment, 16~8.00.BEDROOM: Poolor Bocf.
1225 utiiHiao Included, dopoolt room SuHo (5 pc.), $241.00; 4
4411.0340. Umkod limo Olforl
D,.wer Chllt, $44.Hi Bunk
required, no peta, 1114..ft2-2218.
Bod, $221; Comploto Full lion
1072 Mobile Home, 2br, On Aen·
tad Lot, $5,500. t14-446-2235 Or Fumlahed APIIrtment, 1br, ~~~~ 1101.00 Sot; 7 pc. Cedar
Share
Bath.
7'01
Fourth
Ave,
Gtl·
Bedroom Suho, $8gg.oo.OPEN:
LNveMnNga.
llpollo. 1185 UtiiHioo Paid. 614· Monday Ttvu Saturdly, h.m. to
11176 Boyvlow 14170, 2br, Don, «6-4411 Aftor 7p.m.
lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
New Carpet, Blockl Skirting,
~ ~~~~~!.!';."'• 7 on
a.16 P0r&lt;:h, se,ooo. 614·2511- Fumlohod Aportmonta, 1br,
1235 Utllftlao Pold. 1120 Fourth
1338.
Avo, I 107 Socond Avo, Gal· Whirlpool woohar, $85; Kon1185 14170 Rodmon 1 2 BR, 2 112 llpollo. 614-441-4416 altar 7p.m.
mcn dryu, $71; Kenmore ~~~.
both, whirlpool tuo, okyllght,
$95·! gu dryor, $ 95; Cold Spot
CA, polio dooro, muat movo. Nlcoly Fumlohlld Apartment, rofr g., H, 1121; Copoprlono Acf.
tbr, noll to Ubrory, portdng,
112,000. 114·2!8·1058.
rolrlg, H, 1150.; Wlllrlppot
control hall, olr1 .r:otoronco ro- mlrol
rofrlg, 1125; .froorM, uprttt,
1tee tiYH bedroom, 14170, gaa qulred. 114-4411-4...,.
11
50: Whirlto aloe. rohongo, IS;
ltOYI, rlfrlglrllot1 Wllhlf' 6
11 avta_
g w ngw Wll r, lquare
dryor, bod, $8,500. 304.-75-6113. ·Fumlahed afficlllnCY wtstov• I tub,
$150. Skoggo Applloncoa,
re~lgorotor. Shore both. t1t 2nd
Uppor
Rlvor Rd. 114-441-73111.
70 plut acr.., ready1tor home, Avo. 1100 par month. All Utllltloo
chy water, exc hunting, Ut,OOO. Paid. 114-441-3141.
$4,000. buya mobile- home II·
52 Sporting Goods
roody on proporty, 304-4511-1522. Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
room apertrunta at VIllage Remington 22 Modal 541·8, Now
Now Skyline 141111, 2br Front Manor
and
Al~teraiCie
In Box. Prlco: 1425; Bolglum
KftcMn, Vinyl Siding, Shlnglo Apo~monto In Middleport. From Modo Browning 12 Gogo, 32
Rocl,
Spolcal:
l18,gg5, till. CoiiiM-11112·7787. EOH.
Inch Full ChokO, Bonl Rib, El·
Dollvorod lo Sat. French City
collonl Condition! aeeo. 114-441Laloylllo lloll~ 2 Botha, All 3413.
llobllo Homoo. 114-4411-G340.
Utllhlao lncl
• 1425/mo.
DtDollt Roaulrld. No Polo. 11433 Farms lor Sale
Antiques
53
~rm. ~ 441 4222.

34

1----------"T----------i

Stock Trolloji{' 14~ 1 11,1115; 2
Freozor Sool For Sola, Uvo 1811
Yoor Old AQHA lly whh
1 Ha~
Wolahl .'IV Canto A Pound. 114- tor
Point,
10 Big Uood Show
371~et.

Household

uood oppllsncM, T.V.

"' '" •

55, 30, I 10 Gillon Aquoriumo
AN WHh FIHore i Acc-1,
Pluo Flott. $300. 114-44M471 Attor lp.m. w-.yo.

Merchandise

BORN LOSER

1m

:!56 e.

1-Acre, trailer epace , Rva
Polnta arN, Flatwood1 Ad. 114--

Sale

tm Joop plck·upi 310 -=~
IUIO., 4 WD, PSIP I .....
cond., $1250. 114311 1501.

North 4thlulllctd-, Ohio. 2
bedroom mlahod opt, dopooH
ond roforenco roqulrod, 304-812·

46 Space lor Rent

Autos for

The Dally Sentlnei- Page- 9

72 Trucks lor Sale

182~511.

Furnished
R OOmS
Apartment ovolloblo for 2 or 3
c:onatrvcllon workara 304-882·
256t.
Rocmotor rant . wook or month.
s::~':2' at 1120/mo. Golllo Holol.
6
eseo.
Stoop!~ roomo with cookl~.
....
Aloo tro lor opoco. All hook""PI·
CoN oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, llloon WV.

71

. Pomeroy--Middlep&lt;?rt, Ohio

For Solo: 11111 Cutlaoo Solon,
Sharp Corl Good Condition.'
$5,8N. 114-441-4ili0.
.

45

- I l l 11000 for tho roturn of l-:====::::::::::::::::::::=1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'11 Bedroom Fumlotlod Houoo.
lltM and contentllolt bltw11n I'
735 Rear Third Avenue, $150/mo,
Langovllio Co. Rot.1o and 11
Help Wanted
1100
114-441-3670, 614·
-or
llldd~ ....
••• t3
botong~to wcall 14-Jit2·2141
eon Jr. "
21
Business
=-::.
·.:::::.·- --,.,.-.....,.....,...
""'""· DollvOfY I Corpot lnotollotion,
3 bedroom cloublo wldo privata
or 1112·
or tl82-113l
ox~lanco protorrod. Appty 12•
Opportunity
iol, 2IUII botho, air conil., tamlly
2.
., Tuaa., Wed. Tope- Fwmlroom, dining room, cantril I halt,
lura, 151 Socond Avo .... , 011INOTlCEI
utiiHy room, front porch wHh
Yard sate
7
llpotlo.
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. owning, plonty of yord opoco.
DollvOfY, Corpot lnotollor, El· recommondo that you do bull- Nlco ilofghbor'-d, Gllllpollt
parlance Prelorrod. Apt&gt;ly tO • 12 noaa wHh pooplo you know, and
Forry, 1325. 304_.75-308l lluat
Noon, Monday, Tuoodoy, Wad· NOT to oond money througn tho Sao To Approclsto.
Gallipolis
--•
~
F - •
•h
moll untN you have lnvootigalod
•opo
u.... uro, ~· tho oHorlng.
3 -~room houoo, retoronco ro'
Socond Avonuo, Clllllpolla.
&amp; VIcinity
qulred, $310. month, 304-G'IIEARN MONEY Raiding bookal Allhu(o Chain Llnll Fonco. 31M18.
ALL Yard S.loo lluot Bo Pold In $30,000/yr.
lnoomo potontlol. Rooldontlol, Commorclol, lnAdvOMO. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1011-1152-1000 Ell. y. lfuotrtal, Froo Eottmatool Com· 3br Uvlng Room I Don, 2
the day boloro tho ad Ia to ru~. Dotollo.-(1)
10111.
plato lnotallollon. Phone: 114- Sotho, Gonion Tub, WW Corpot,
Sunclay odHion . 2:00 p.m.
Dlohwa-. CA, 2 Blocko From
'Friday. Monday odHion • 2:00 Eaay Workl Elcotlont Poyl Al- 364-ezn.
CMy Schoolo. 114-441·14011, 4.p.m. Saturday.
Local Von~ Routo. lluat Soli 7p.m.
oornblo
Producta At1104+11-1003
· Coil Oulokly. t
2111-1414 Ell. S.
For lnlo.-tlon.
Auauot •••~ ' I . 104 Socond, .. Ext 313.
S Room Cottage Ono
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich Fumlohod
Loc!lao Clclhlng,
Bldroom In Town. No P.ta.
Oul&lt;k? No Wayl But Wo Hovo A Aot.ronoo Roqulrod, Dopoolt.
·- UMGI Houoohold Got paid lor oomplllng nomoo Good, Stoody, AHordablo, Buo~ 114-441-:1543.
~and addr....., $500. per 1,000. non. Won1 L.aot. 1.-oG-:INl!lovlng
Furniture,
Ap- Colt 1·1100-246-3131 ($0.8Wmln) VEND.
and 3-bodroom opott·
Kldo
Clclhoa,
mont tor rant, 114-IMI2·2554.
or wrlto: PASSE, 517 w.. 111
Toyo. Evorythlna Hao South
Uncotn-y,
North
Real Estate
1
aa.-TorrocoCoutt, Aurora, 11110542.
for rant, Union Avo,
Pomeroy, ~. Coli oltor 4:00pm,
111·? .-.'11142.
114-lt2-t2111.
GET PAID for Compiling Namoo
Yll'd - : I 111 DulL Socond and Addro-. $500 par 1,000. 31 Homes lor Sale
Nlco - I n Country For Rant,
Coil 1-gO(l-246-3131 ($0.8Wmln)
llol.On
114.11-, 'Tuoodoy.
or Wrko: PASSE 31W, 161 South 12 yr old, 3-BR, 2-blth homo. 12511/mo. t14-S71-2l't4.
Oaytlghl baumant, 1·Kra,
Uncotnwoy, North Auroro, ll dnlrablt
location, naw root, 42 Mobile Homes
Pomeroy,
10142.
new 3-car garae-, lnlerlor nllda
for Rent
Middleport
LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST: tlnllftlng, 21851 luhon Ad,
A
oct~,_ OH, 117,000. Coli 114- 12XIO two bedroom
liLT
(ASCP)
Or
Equivalent
For
uniUr·
&amp; VIcinity
Holzer Clinic La.,.,.. County 812-T.JUO or 114~4.
nllhod mobile homo, holt milo
Bronch
At
Proctorvlllo.
Fulf.
All Yard Sileo Ia Paid In
2 IIOfl. ~-SA h.,_ located at poll Hollar IIC, dopooH and
,.,..,... Doocllno: 1:00pm tho Tlmo PooHion Monday Friday 112 · ""'"' St. Mlddlopott. r.t.r.ncM required, 114-446Compotltlvo
Salary,
Elcotlonl
day batoN the ad Ia io run,
Sltuotod on largo double lot 4388 or 30447W330.
Sunclay odHion- 1:OOpm Frldoy, lonotlto. Sand RooUmo To: Por· (5t'lZet') wHh 2-elllf . horN
Monday
odHion 10:00o.m. oonnot Dopottmont, Holzor bam with anoc~ food/track · 2 bedroomt, furnlahed, waaher,
air cond, $200. month
Clinic, P.O. Box 144, Oalllpolft,
noom and loncod paddock. dryer,
III""*Y·
plut uUIItiM, reflrwncee, 3()4..
OH 414131. No Phone Colla.
Hou11 hu fuU ben?T'Iel1t with 175-48111.
n.w roof, fumance, water
~A I H AgontoNeodod
lmmodllloly to modlcaro, hllotor, ond oump pump. lloy bo 2br Furnlahod or UniUmlshed,
hoolkh and Uto mortcot. 304-7tJ. - n by calling . 114-1182-3015. Cloy Chopot Rood, $250 Ront,
Alklng 1140,000. Olforo occoptocl 1250 Dopool, Pluo Utllhloa,
2757 or 1-...s7-1003.
II 1-411-447·7230.
Rotoronco. 114-2511-8408, 61481. Paul UnHod Moth. Chur&lt;:h, Maturo labvolltor Noodod lm- 2 Story, I roomo ond both, 2 cor 2511.e7tl.
T _ . Ptalno Auo. 6-8, modlatjy In llr · Monday
clol:hea, toya. Houlehold lttml, ThN Friday. Doyoltlft. s Yoor gorogo, A·1 condHion. 304-G71- 2br L.ocatod In Evorgroon,
$171!/mo. Pluo 0.110011. 11'1-446Old,
And
2
Yoor
Old.
Non 3030 or 175-3431.
mloc.
Smoker. Sand Rooumo To: CLA 3br Honw, 25 Acrl8, 1 Mile From 3687, 114-245-6223.
081, c/o Clllltpolla Dolly Tribu!!~ 1 CHy Umfto. Will Conoldor Trodo.
211!. Air, Coble, Now Corpot, Nlco
Public sate
125 Third Avonuo, Gllllpolls, "" 614-4411-1340.
8
l \OINn, IHutlful River VIew In
45131.

,
$

Apartment
lor Rent

i•

81- IOU OPo\L A'lliloblo AI:
Frut~

44

Worth Alot

5, 1991

Auo. e. 11111
Several social contacts could play very
important roles In your llle In the year
ahead. One may be of big help to.you tn
lhe business realm, the others w11i help
enhance yciur popularity.
LEO (JUly 23-Aug. 22) 11 you 're.trying to
save money at this time, don I get In·
valved socially wllh a good friend whO
always gl.veti tM credll cards a workout.
You can't handle tM pace. Know. where
to look for romance and you'll find n.

,•J

I'M DYIN'

FER SOME
HAM AN'

ECS(fSif

The Astra-Graph Matchmaker ·lnstanlly

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) A recre-

reveals which signs are romantical ly

ational break today, even though it is

perlect for you. Mall $2 plus a long. sell·
addressed. slamped envelope to
Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your great·
est grallllcallon will be gained loday

early in the week . will help prevent tenSIOns from building up. The looser you
are, the better you will be able to perform in all areas .

PISCES (Fob. 20-M•rch 20) Two mat·
ters you've been wanting to wrap up
from slluatlons where you use your can be finalized to your salislaf tiOn tomental agility to meet and over come day. Alter you do what needs doing. you
challenges and obstacles.
may wonder why II took you so long lo
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Under most get around to them .
conditions, it Isn't wise to offer unsolic- ARIES (March 21-Aprll 111) There Isn't
ited advice to others. Today. however, much that Is likely to escape your notice
could be an exception. If you have sugtoday. You're both curious and obser·
gesllons that could help a contused vant. and you'll be eager to share what
friend . speak up.
you learn lor yo~rsell with companions.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Joint van- TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) Keep your
lures should work out quite well tor you wits about you In financial or commer·
at this lime - II each ol the partlas in- clal dealings today. You're a quick
volved Is making an equal contribution. thinker. and you should be able 10 im·
It they aren't. speedy adjustments are provlse something advantageous and
profitable.
Imperative.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec:. 21) You GEMINI (lilly 21-June 20) You're en·
may be required to decide an issue dowed wllh a tatentthat enablea you lo
where the alternatives appear to be of juggle Several projects simultaneously.
equal worth today. Lean toward the al- What will. baHie observers today Is your
ternative
which was
previously ability to do an equally good job wllh
each one.
successful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) You CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) In order to
may have an opportunlly today to put · fulfill an ambitious objective today, &amp;e·
dowri .Omeone who hasn't treated you crecy Is essential. Keep a low profile
too kindly of late. The temptation will be . and don't talk about your Intentions to
great, buill you don't, you'llearn there- anyone.
. spec1 of others.
\.

Ll':£:.1;1
111
on
Stereo.

ID
1B Moneyllne

11 :35 (IJ Clttlrll;l
12:00(1) Dlnto the Nlgh1 Stereo.

"A 9
• to 7 4
+J 532

PHILLIP

ALDER

"KJI076 3

tAB
+tO 9 7

that wasn't

Vulne rable: Neither
Dea ler : South

By Phillip Alder
There is somethin g thrilling a bout
making a deeeptive play - ba mboozling the deela rer (or the de fenders),
persuading him (or them) to misguess
the play.
Cast your eyes over tod ay's dia·
gram. Most pairs would reach lour
hearts, and every West would lead the
diamond king.
Faced with five possible losers {one
heart, one diamond and three clubs).
you have to hope for some friendly
breaks. After winning the fi rst tr ick
with your diamond ace a nd unblocking
the A· K of spades, you have two logi·
cal continuations. You could cash the
heart king and cross to the heart ace.
If the heart queen drops doubleton, the
spade queen needs to stand up. If the
heart queen doesn't a ppear · the spade
jack must drop under the qu een.
Alternatively, .you could play a
heart to dummy s ace tmmedt~tel(,
and follow wtth the s pade quee ·
that card lives. you wtlltak.e the hea rt
·finesse tn an effort to avoJd a trump

12:20 (J) Nlllonll Geogrlpltlc
Exploret

Soutb

Wesl
Pass
Pass

I"

3"

Eas t
Pass
All pass

Opening lead:

t

K

loser.
At the table. the declarer went for
the second line, which was destined to
ceed H 1 ed If h
sue
· e Pay 0 t e top spades,
crossed to the heart ace and cashed
h
d
d'
d.
h
t e s pa e queen, tsca r tng is diamond loser. When he did that, East
dropped the spade jack. Now decla rer
· ·
1
h
1hought he saw a wtnmng
P ay: e
called for the spade 10 - and East
produced the nine. South discarded a
club loser, but West ruffed, the defend·
ers cashed two club tricks, and East
still had the heart queen to come for
one down .
A brilliant coup by East ' Certainly,
except that East said: "I'm very sorr y,
partner. 1 had the spade nine stuck beI1hind another card. 1 didn't realire I
had it." At least he was honest.
. :

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Electrical
unit

4 Attention·
gelling
sound
8 - Piper
12 Popeye's
friend Olivo
13 Actor Cronyn
14 Do as- 15 Mother of
Mile.
16 Three·
banded
armadillo
17 Front ot
airplane
18 Sleep noiSily
20 Smaller
22 Rat·-· 24 Motorists'
org.
25 Part of a
lypewrller
28 Tattle
3 I Eggs

Anawar to Pravioue Pu1111

32 Verno hero
34 Italian
currency

35 Mexican
money
37 Edible seeds
39 Over (poet.)
40 Small hole
42 Mine paosago
44 Unplayed
golf hole
45 Flrat·rete
12 wds.)
46 Small profit·
able period
49 Wandered
53 Pronto
(abbr.)
54 Nutlree
56 Be obligated
to
'
57 Hindu
garment
58 Wallach and
Whitney
59 Astronaut's
ferry
60 Opera role
6 t Diminutive
sulllx

I

62 Bl plus one

DOWN
t Mothers
2 Religious
song
3 Vegetable
spread

.-+-+--f

..,

4 Light lour·
wheeled
carrloga
5 Han • moal
6 Deep blue
plgmtnl
7 Actren Garr
8 Duck
g Lonollnaoa
10 Luxury
11 Clothoo tlnlot
19 Mortar mt1or .
21 Color
23 In reaerd to
25 Strong cord
26 Actreoo
Judith 27 Lower·well · .
leaturo
..
28 - voce
29 Amarlcan
lndlon
30 Flu filament
33 Greek lellar
36 Actreaa - :
Dukekll
38 Dewn
41 Wrigqly lith ..
43 New (prel.)
45 Lopolded
481nlemoul
47 Greve! rldgn
48 Sm811 IWord
so Fencing lup
51 Wetor pllchar
52 Actreoa
lloora
5~ lllumlneled

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celeb.,ty Copher cryp togrem t are eretl ed lrom quotallOfll by lamous people . pa!lt and presan t
Each taHer In the cop her ttand t lor another TOOay '5 ciUIJ A squ.1/s 0

' C I P

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OPYDPLP

IGIJPVC

12:05 (IJ NlgltiiN Q

EAST

+J9 52
"Q 5 2
t 952
+A Q4

The coup

II! lite Hllcllhlker

1B NewaNWtl
0 Betl!utr-' the .a...t 1;1

WEST
t7 63
"8 4
tKQJ6 3
tK 6 6

SOUTH
+ AK

PLPUECIDKN ;

12!1NIIfltrllle Now Stereo.

S.S-tl

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liD e Plr1J MIGI!tne w~
Nil Pelplll

..

NORTH

BRIDGE

EAGKN
AIVSU

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PLPUECBOKN ;
F K A R

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PLPU E CIOKN

RDYTP .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Allred Hitchcock couldn't have been a nicer ·•·
fellow . 1 whistled coming to work on . his lllms." - Cary Grant.

I

�Page-10- The Da1ly Sentmel

Pomeroy-Middleport, On1o

Monday, August 5, 1991

Fund-raising party raided
HUNTSVu..LE, Ohio (AP) - A
woman who raises money for charilable causes has been charged with
illegally serving alcohol at a fundraising party that was raided by
authorities.
Freda Taylor is to be arraigned
today in Bellefontaine Municipal
Court. If convicted, she could be
fined $100 to $500.
Ms. Taylor, a past president of
the Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce, was charged with selling
liquor without permit, said Pauy
Haskins, a spokeswoman for the
Ohio Department of Liquor Contml.
On July 27, two liquor control
agents, acting on an anonymous tip,
raided the party held at Ms. Taylor's Logan County home, said Ms.
Haskins.
State law requires non-profit
organizations to get a temporary

permit to sell liquor. Ms. Taylor
did not have a permiL
Guests were charged $75 per
couple to attend the Polynesiantheme party sponsored by the
chamber of commeroe.
"I've had 22 oc 23 parties in the
last five years for the Cancer Society, for education. I've been a good
community supporter for many
years. This ha&lt;; certainly been a bad
experience for me and my family,"
Ms. Tayloc said.
"I never heard of the word 'permit' before. We've had all kinds 01
parties up here," she said.
On July 25, two days before the
event, a liquor agent called the
chamber of commerce office,
informing the group that serving
alcohol without a permit is illegal,
Ms. Haskins said.
" The depanment. recognizes a
lot of people don't know what the

Browns drop
pre-season
opener

liquor laws are. ll's not a situation
where we say, ' Let's go get
them ." ' she said. The department
had received a copy of an ad that
appeared in an Indian Lake-area
newspaper promoting the event.
Ms. Haskins said it was possible
that a permit, which usually takes
I 5 days tD acquire, could have been
issued if chamber members had
returned the liquor department's
calls.
On July 26, the liquor department called again, she said. Ms.
Taylor said a chamber member
informed her of the call, but she
said she thought it was something
that could be handled Monday, two
days after the party.
"In reality, there was a communication problem," Taylor said. "I
guess I lake the blame because I
dido 't pursue the phone call."

Fourth annual doll show slated

Community calendar

in the rugged Sierra Nevada area
180 miles southeast of San Francisco.
Yosemite
Superintendent
Michael Finley acknowledged the
park wants to buy the land but said
park service officials are not trying
to force people to sell.
"Our general management plan
says we will acquire that property
from willing sellers," Finley said.
"But our position has always been,
meet the same (health) standards,
let it be professionally evaluated
and let the chips fall where they
may. "

Blackened granite boulders and
the burned-out husks of pine and
oak trees are reminders of the blaze
that scorched more than 26,000
acres. The fues forced the closing
of Yosemite for 11 days, the only
time in the park's 100-year history
that it was closed.
Ferns and lupin are returning,
but Focesra won' t resemble its former self for years. Many residents
wonder if they will be around to
watch tbe area recover.
Four of six people who have
filed applications to rebuild have
been granted permits thus far.
Dozens of others are waiting to see
wbat happens with the remaining

two before filing. Major sticking
points have been sewage and water
rules that, among other things,
require that a septic tank be no
closer than 100 feet to a well.
Residents say the codes are too
strict for an area where houses
were built in the 1940s.
Finley acknowledged regulations have been tightened over the
years. "Foresra was kind of a backwater - an out-oi-the-way place
- and there was no construction
going on," he said.
Residents also complained about
the eviction after the fire of four
households that sold the park service their property in return for an
annual lease equal to I percent of
the sale price.
After the blaze, tenants were
told they were being evicted
because the frre had destroyed park
employee housing and the properties were needed to house workers.
George and Lucille Lange said
park personnel had led them to
believe they could remain in Foresta the rest of their lives, though
such a clause wasn't in the contract.
They have been ordered to leave
by June. Park officials have denied
making any such promises.

Great scot! Designers are mad about plaid

Names in the news

If you do,· Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Spedalist, for further information.
Phone (614) 992-6712

skinny pants, ankle boots - and
racy black leather motorcycle jackets to wear anytime, anywhere.
"Our number one trend for fall
is color, ranging from brights to
jewel tones, color blocking, plaids
and black and white combined with
red," says Karen Bohnhoff, vice
president of public relations for
Dayton Hudson Corp. in Min -

neapolis.

pants, $215, are a water resistant
blend of nylon, couon and spandex.
Add A-Line's polyester and nylon
jacket in lime with zip-off sleeves,
$285.
Also. look for stirrups in zany
patterns such as houndstooth or a
mustard and purple plaid, all with a
big top. Bohnhoff suggests a cardigan updated with color blocking
and zippers, an over-sized turtleneck or a big shin.
The perfect ending?
"The proportion of a big tunic
over a slim leg is best finished off
with short boots," Bohnhoff says.
"The components work well for
walks in the woods, riding bicycles
and doing Saturday errands.''
Many have zip closures. Nordstrom's Davies suggests those in
black suede or patent with a midheel. "Black is the good neutral,"
she says, although colors such as
fuchsia or purple are strong contenders.
Whatever the color, match them
with opaque stockings. "It gives
the longest line to the leg," Davies
says.
The shon pleated skirt is a musthave accordmg to Kaner, preferably in thin wool crepe or georgette
or chiffon that gives it 11-month
wearability.

"The most popular palette," she
says, "is the red family, from purple to burgundy, scarlet to flame.' ·
Look for it head to toe.
A jacket, says Kanes, is the most
vital and versatile piece in a
wardrobe. New styles are long and
shapely, with a peplum or cropped
at the waist and Zipped up scubastyle.
'·A jacket works over almost
everything from leggings to short
skins to catsuits to jeans," says
Sarah Davies, fashion director for
Nordstmm. headquartered in Seattie.
Two bright ones to catch her eye
are by Gemma Kahng: a tangerine
wool knit cropped jacket with purple and gold dove-shaped buttons,
$594, and a fuchsia tweed banded
in lime green, $830.
. Some of the best-dressed legs,
thts season w1ll be stepping out in
sleek ski pants . "It's a trend
"It's a way to update the long
inspired by athletic gear," Davies
says.
jacket you may already have in
Anne Klein 's A-Line black ski your wardrobe, she says.

Sometfr.ing (joorf's Yt{ways Coof:j.ng Ytt

MASON
FAMILY
1
RESTAURANT
Located on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason,

wv

Sunday thru Thursday, 6:30 m~- 10 pm: Friday &amp; Saturday, 6:30 am-11 pm

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPEC
Monday Friday. 11 a . m . to 3 p .m .

MONDAY· Sauerkraut with Pork, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
TUESDAY -Creamed Chicken over Biscuits
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
WEDNESDAY- Philly Sandwich, Fries, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
THURSDAY- Chopped Steak, Choice of Potato
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
FRIDAY· Chick!ln Sandwich, Fries, Soup &amp; Salad Bar roESDAT • THilJISDAT, CIIILDU!f VlfDER 12 ICAT li'REit
FROM CHJLDRE!f'S DlfU.
DRINK A DESSERO

Pick 3:483
Pick 4: 7007

Cards : 6-H, J·C
Q-D;3-S
Low Iooigb I lo mid -60s.
or rain 70 perce nt.

Chance

Page4

1 Se&lt;;Uon , 10 Pagea 25 centa

1991

A Multimedia Inc.

Pay raises pass first reading

Residents burned out in Yosemite blaze
say park is trying to force them out
By NOEL K. WILSON
Assodated Press Writer
YOSEMITE
NATIONAL
PARK, Calif. (AP) - One year
ago, 70 homes surrounded by
Yosemite National Park burned to
THRILL AND CHILLS • Twehe-year-old ence Sunday. His 5-year-old cousin; Cory King,
the ground. Now homeowners say
Tony Thomas, left, finds tbe kiddie roller coast- was less thrilled, actually chilled, about it. (AP)
the National Park Service is blocker at tbe Ohio State Fair an exhilarating experiing rebuilding efforts in an attempt
to foroe them out.
"I still dream about my home
every night," said Marion Patterson, who was in Utah last August
FINDLAY · The Fon Findlay Boslon, will be doing doll and bear and country. Also on sale will be when sbe learned flames were ragDoll Fanciers Club is sponsoring appraisals at the show. She is a doll clothes, supplies, patterns and ing through the park. "All the
things I had, all I was going to
its founh annual Public Doll Show. member of the Auctioneer's Asso- accessories.
A snack bar with homemade work on in my retirement were
Sale and Competition on Aug. 18 ciation and a member of United
at the Old Barn Auction. Route Federation of Doll Clubs, Inc. food will be open all day. There there - and it burned, it all
224-W (Exit 159 off 1-75) in Find- Appraisals are limited to two dolls will be hourly door prizes given burned."
lay from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
By the time she returned, Patterper person with a $2 charge per away.
Admission is $2 for adults and doll.
Proceeds from the show are son's house and 69 others were
$1 for children 12 and under.
Dealers from surrounding states given to area charitable organiza- destmyed. Only 18 houses on eight
Barbara Blevins, a former Find- and Ohio will featurc all kinds of tions. For show information or acres of private land in the area
lay resident , now living in New bears and dolls - including antique. competition forms you may call known as Foresra still stood.
reproduction, collectible, original 419-422-7577.
Pauerson and others who lost
homes in the forest rue believe the
National Park Service is trying to
make them sell. The fire, Patterson
said, was "a convenient way to get
us to go."
Since the fire, Patterson said,
Community Calendar items Friday. Classes are held from 6:30- in the Multi-purpose health build- residents trying to rebuild have
appear two days before an event 8:30 p.m . To register call the ing on Mulberry Heights.
been stalled by strict sewage and
and the day of that event. Hems church at 742-2060. The program
water regulations that residents say
must be received weD in advance features Bible study, crafts, activiwere never rigidly enforced before
CHESTER - Mrs. Joan Tewksto assure publication in the cal- ties and music.
bary, R.N., will give skin tests
endar.
Monday from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the
SYRACUSE • The Sutton Chester Fire Slation.
MONDAY
Township Trustees will meet MonPOMEROY - Open Gym for day at 7:30 p.m . in the Syracuse
TUESDAY
By FRANCINE PARNES
girls volleyball, grades 9-12, will Municipal Building.
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleFor AP Special Features
be held at Meigs High School
port Masonic Lodge No. 363 F and
There's enough plaid out there
Monday through Thursday from
REEDSVILLE - The Olive AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
9:30-11 a.m. Practice will begin on Township Trustees will meet Mon- There will be work in the E. A. for fall to pave all the roads in the
Scottish highlands.
Friday, Aug. 9. All girls in grades day at the Reedsville firehouse at degree.
There are plaid handbags and
9-12 interested in playing are 7:30p.m.
headbands.
Plaid dresses, jumpers,
encouraged to attend.
POMEROY • The American
MARlETT A - Spina Bifida Legion Post 39 Drew Webster of skirts and jackets. Plaid shoes,
LETART - The Letart Township Suppon Group meeting, Monday at Pomeroy will meet Tuesday at the plaid jewelry. And, of course, plaid
· Trustees will meet Monday at 7 7p.m.
post home. Dinner at 7 p.m., meet- scarves.
p.m. at the office building.
Don't fret it's ubiquity. It's an
mg at 8 p.m. All members urged to
easy, budget-friendly update. An
POMEROY - Vacation Bible attend.
REEDSVU..LE - The Reedsville School at the First Southern Baptist
investment of just $39 at The LimChurch of the Nazarene will hold Church in Pomeroy will be held
ited,
for example, will get a red
MILLWOOD, W.VA - The
Vacation Bible School Monday Monday through Friday from 6:30- River Valley Herbalists will meet plaid cotton and Lycra skin with
through Friday from 6-8:30 p.m . 9 p.m. The public is invited.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of side zipper pockets.
for children to age 13. Adult class
Plaid is a versatile look, showGlenna Tucker, Millwood, W.Va.
will be offered. Those age 14 and
ing
up in traditional schoolgirl tarRACINE - The Southern Local
over are invited to assist with the School Board will hold a special
tans
as well as in new hot combinaPOMEROY - Tire Pomeroy
program. The public is invited.
tions
of color, fabric and style.
meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the Eastern Star will meet Tuesday at
"If
you were to buy only one
high school.
7:30 p.m. Members wear chapter
RACINE - The Southern Boostnew
thing
for fall, in my opinion
dresses.
ers wiD meet Monday at 7:30 p.m.
it'd
have
to
be plaid," says Joan
POMEROY- The Fellowship
to work on the football programs. Church of hte Nazarene in
Kaner,
senior
v1ce president and
PORTLAND • The Stiversville
Those having ads should bring Reedsville will have vacation Bible
fashion director at Neiman Marcus.
Word
of
Faith
Church
will
have
a
them to this meeting. Anyone school Monday through Friday bake sale fundraiser on Tuesday at
A new plaid jacket will perk up
wanting to help is invited to attend.
last season's. pants and skirts of
from ~to 8:30 p.m. Ther will be from 9 a.m. to dark on Stiversville
complementary hues, or tanan flats
both children and adult classes and Road in Portland. Rain will cancel.
MIDDLEPORT - Tiny Tech the public is invited to attend.
Call Pastor David Dailey for fur- with proper tights can give new life
Preschool will have an open house
to an old suit.
ther information or directions, 985on Monday at 6 p.m. at the United
For a Glen plaid with a jolt, try
MIDDLEPORT · "Around the 4482.
PenteCOstal Church in Middlepon.
Adrienne Vittadini's marigold and
World with Jesus" is the theme of
magenta suit. The double-breasted
Vacation Bible School at Victory
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- Baptist Church in Middleport Monwool blazer, $370, is worn over
NELSONVu..LE
•
The
Hocking
port Arts Council will offer a t-sltirt day through Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Valley Community Residential
matching slim skin, $195.
designs with paint class, for chil- nightly. Public invited.
Making a foray into evening are
Center Board will meet Wednesday
dren on Monday at I p.m. Michele
extravagantly embroidered plaids.
at the Quality Inn Hocking Valley
Garretson is instructor. Each child
"A new twist," Kaner says, "is
PORTLAND - The Portland in Nelsonville from 11 a.m . to I
is to bring his or her own t-shirt Elementary PTO will meet Monday p.m.
adding sequins or beads or braid
and a card board to go under the at 7:30p.m. at the school.
trim. ' '
shin. Cost of the class is $7 .50.
Scipio
PAGEVILLE
The
A strong seller, she predicts,
4(74-MR2675 to register.
POMEROY - Joan Tewksbary, Township Trustees will meet will be Oscar de Ia Renta's short
R.N., will give skin tests to
RUTLAND • Vacation Bible employees of Meigs Local School Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the beaded pleated skirt in red plaid
silk, $4,400, with black longSchool will begin at the Rutland District on Monday and Tuesday Pageville Township Building.
sleeved wool crewneck, $470.
Church of God Monday through from 8:30-11:30 a.m. al her office
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
With all the fuss over plaid. is
Springs Grange will meet Wednes- there anything else?
day at 8 p.m., instead of Thursday.
Color. color. color.
Annual inspection will be held and
Shapely jackets, kicky pleats,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Don nearly two years perfecting the all members are urged to attend.
Ameche has wrapped up filming script. "Please don ' t change a
the new comedy "Folks" just in word," Lubitsch told them.
time to see a tribute to his 58 years
And they didn't.
in front of a camera.
"All I had to do was learn my
A retrospective this weekend lines every morning and go to
Would you like to purchase a SOxl 00 ft. buildincludes excerpts from 10 Ameche work," Ameche said. "I never had
ing lot in a good location for only S3SOO?
films, including two of his more to worry about what I was going to
recent effons, 1985's " Cocoon" do with them. I knew I was in perWould you lilce to build a new home and pay
and 1983's "'l'rading Places."
fect hands."
Ameehc, 83, said he's glad the
no real estate taxes for 1S years? ·
tribute will open with his favorite
film, "Heaven Can Wait,"
DECATUR, Ala. (AP) Would you_li.. to have up to SSOOO FREE
released in 1943. It stars Ameche Singer.W~lie D.'s mother says seeas an 1890s playboy who goes to IDg h1m JUmp around in black
for site improvements on your building loti
hell and is sent to heaven in a leather pants in music videos
mocking gesture by Satan.
instead of playing college tennis
The 1978 film "Heaven Can has taken some getting used to, but
, Wait," which starred Warren Beat- she has adapted.
ty was a remake of die 1941 film
"One o( my friends aslced how I
"Here Comes Mr. Jordan" and could stand seeing my son in tight
unrelated to Amecbe's fJim.
leather pants on tbe video, but that
For his movie, Ameche said, didn't faze me at all," Jane
23 7 lace Strttt, Mlthlltpert Village Offices
director Ernst Lubitsch called the McClung said in a recent interview.
Tille lervlee .. , ....... tllrotllll tile Jolllt efforia ol the vm.,e
cast together the flr5t day of shoot- "You have to accept it. ... It's like
"' Mlddlepel1111d tile Governer•a Ofllee ol Appalacllla.
ing and told them be and writer a costume.' '
Samson Raphaelson had spent

Ohio Lottery

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StafT
First readings of ordinances
granting pay raises to village officials were conducted when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session Monday evening.
All readings were approved last
night, but not without dissension
from some council members.
The council voted 3-2 to raise
the salary of the mayor to $6,000
per year. Council member Bruce
Reed abstained. Councilmen Bryan
Shank and Thomas Werry voted
against the raise, while members
Betty Baronick, Larry Weluung
and Bill Young voted in favor of
the raise. Reed and Wehrung are
both seeking election to th e
mayor's office in November.
Accordin~ to Mayor Richard
Seyler, the ume involved in the
mayor's job warrants an i11crease in

salary. Seyler has stated previously
and reiterated Monday evening that
he has paid some expenses related
to the job out of his pocket. Seyler
curren~y is paid $3,400 per year as
mayor.
Shank, Werry and Wehrung
voied against raismg council memhers ' salaries, and Baronick, Reed
and Young voted in favor. Seyler
cast the deciding vote in favor of
the raises.
Th e proposed increase would
raise the salaries of council memhers from $25 per meeting to $30
and the council president's salary
to $40. Currently, Wehrung, the
president of the board, does not
receive extra money for attending
the meetings.
Council also unanimously voted
to continue a raise for the position
of village clerk. That ratse wa s
granted earlier this year, but was
set to expire in January.
Two more readings of and votes

on the raises must be conducted
before rassage. All raises in question , i passed , would become
effective in January, 1992.
Council agreed to place two
levy renewals on the November
ballot One levy - a two-mill, five
year levy - would provide $156.000
for the operation of the fl.fe depanment. That money, if approved by
the voters, would probably be spent
on the purchase of new pumper
truck for the department to replace
a 1968 truck currenuy in use.
Clerk Brenda Morris slaied that
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle has estimated the cost of the truck at
$150,000.
The second proposed levy
renewal, a one-mill levy for street
lights, would generate $15,694.
Council voted to place two cur·
ren~y unused street lights within
needed areas of the village.
Young presented council with a
petition si~ned by residents of the

Dumpsters are a thing of the
past at selected state parks
WREATH FOR A-BOMB VICTIMS- Japanese Prime Minister
Tosbiki Kaifu carries a wreath of flowers to the memorial or atomic
bomb victims to otTer a prayer during the·memorial service at the
Hlroshi.ma Peace Memorial Park Tuesday. Japan is observing the
46th anniversary of the atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima. (AP)

· ftnii1versary of Hiroshima
bombing observed today
HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu
praised nuclear disarmament gains
today as he joined more than
50,000 people for a solemn commemoration of the 46th anniversary
of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
The city paused for a silent
prayer at 8: 15 a.m .. the exact
moment in 1945 when a blinding
flash killed thousands in the
world's first atomic attack.
"I pay my deep respects to the
citizens of Hiroshima, who have
built this city of international peace
from the ashes," Kaifu told the
crowd. "Tragic experience is a
warning that must be shared with
the world for the sake of the human

race."

Japan's constitution, written at
U.S. msistence after World War II,
bans the use of all but defensive
force. Parliament is, however ,
debating whether the nation's Self
Defense Forces should be allowed
to join international operations like
the Persian Gulf War coalition.
Kaifu has endorsed a role for
Japan's military in international
peacekeeping , but with some
restrictions.
In his remarks, the prime minister noted the U.S.-Soviet agreement

on reducing long-range nuclear
weapons and the closing of the
book on the Cold War.
The 55,000 people gathered
with Kaifu in the cool early morning bowed their heads. Then
mournful bells peeled, and 1,500
doves symbolizing peace were
released into a sunny skies that
belied the somberness of the ceremony.
Exactly 46 years ago, the bomb
unleashed a devastating fireball
that killed 140,000 people. Three
days later, a second atom bomb
was dropped on Nagasaki, killing
70,000 people.
Mayor Takashi Hiraoka, as pan
of an annual appeal for the
"preservation of the human race".
c11lled for renewed efforts to eslablish peaceful resolutionS' to conflicts.
"Let all peoples everywhere
recognize the folly and futility of
war, reaffllm the treasure of peace,
and work together for human happiness," he said, appealin~ this
year for an end to nuclear tesung.
Throughout the day, a steady
stream of people, some in black
mourning, bowed before the
memorials for the bomb's victims,
offering flowers, incense and water
to console the dead.

r----Local briefs----.
Special applications available
Special management antlerless deer permit applications for 1991
are available at the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District
Office, 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Applications must be mailed
before Aug. 16. The office is open between 8 a.m. and 4:30 Monday
through Friday.

Miller to have booth at fair
The office of lOth District Congressman Clarence E. Miller will
be represented at the Meigs County Fair next week to assist area
residents with any concerns they may have with the federal government
A public opinion ~ on national issues will also be conducted .
from the Miller bootli during .!he fair. Questions on Social Security,
national health care, the use of the military, medical research and
Soviet relations highlight this year's fair poll.
The office will be staffed from 12:30 p.m to 9 p.m each·day by a
field representative from the Congressman's Distnct Office.

By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel News StafT
Unsightly dumpsters will be a
thing of the past at Forked Run
State Park near Reedsville and at
other selected state parks this summer.
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources officials have launched
the "Carry In/Carry Out" program
which encourages park visitors to
take out with them any items that
they bring into a p;u-k area.
"Rather than disposing of trash
on site, we are asking park visitors
to 'carry out' their trash, recycle
what they can and properly dispose
of the rest," ODNR Director
Frances Buchholzer said. "This
program will also educate visitors
about separating recyclables from
their trash and taking the materials
to a local collection center."
In addition to eliminatin~ ugly
eyesores, ODNR officials S81d that
removal of the dumpsters should
reduce the number of bees, other
insects and nuisance animals in
public picnic areas and give a more
na1ural appearance to park areas.
From a fmancial standpoint, the
state parks in Ohio are faced with
increasing trash-hauling costs and a
rapidly decreasing budget.
With assistance from the ODNR
Division of Litter Prevention and
Recycling, the Carry In/Carry Out
Program will use signs and printed
information to educate the public
about a variety of solid waste
issues - including litter prevention
and recycling - to keep the park

clean.
According to Forked Run Park
Manager Randy Wachter, the program will be implemented at the
park in two to three weeks, or as
soon as the signs arrive on-siiC.
Wachter reports that the campgrounds and the concession areas at
Forked Run will not be affected by
the new program this year. However, dumps\Cll$ will be removed from
all of the picn ic areas and the
campground areas.
Those using the areas affected
will have no place to leave their

This symbol will mark
locations in Forked Run State
Park and other participating
state parks where tbe "Carry
In/Carry Out" program will
go into effect. Visitors to these
areas will be encouraged to
take their garbage with them
wbeo tbey leave selected areas
or the parks.

'·

.

BERNARD GILKEY

Gilkey to
Health Recovery Services receives grant seek trustee
position
The Health Recovery Services
which works in a four-county area
including Meigs has been selected
as recipient of a grant through the
Ohio Department of Alcohol and
Drug Addiction Services.
The funding will be used to train
an individual in drug and alcohol
prevention techniques. The person
will work as a VISTA volunteer
under HRS supervision during a
year long training period _and after

that time could be reaay tor a pre- general relief in the form of food
ceptorship as a prevenuon special- stamps as as Blue Cross/Blue
ist subject to cenification.
Shield medical benefits.
As explained by Belinda FlemAnother plus of the program ,
ing, Prevention Program Manager, Fleming said, is that time put in as
an acceptable applicant would be a VISTA Volunteer can be applied
someone with a desire to work in to paying off any form of outstandthe field, somewhat assertive, with ing student loan. Benefits received
a high school diploma. Although through VISTA will not, however,
the state money would probably disqualify the recipients for any
not be enough by itself to live on, other government benefits such as
the trainee would be eligible for Social Security.
Besides such training as attending conventions and workshops,
the person would do educational
)
work in local schools and communities. Deadline for applying is
Aug. 15. Any additional information may be obtained from Fleming, 28 N. College St, Athens, 1800-645-8287.

Judging Friday

Woman hurt in one-car wreck
A one-car auto accident on Pearl Street in Middlepon around 4
a.m. Tuesday resulted in heavy property damage and injury to the
driver.
According to Middlepon police, Carol A. Riffle, Racine, was
traveling south on Pearl Street when she lost control of her vehicle.
It went off the left side of the street, hit a tree, struck a porch at 738
Continued on ~~~ge 3

refuse after a picnic, and Wachter
anticipates that littering may be a
problem at Forked Run until park
users get accustomed to the lack of
trash containers in the picnic areas.
He explained that staffers at the
park were prepared for this problem, and that the park planned to
continue issuing trash bags to park
users through the office upon
request
However, an informal survey of
park users conducted recently by
Wachter resulted in a largely favorable response to the new program,
which is aimed at encouraging
campers and other park users to
"reduce, reuse and recycle."
Wachter says that a new
brochure offering tips to picnickers
will be fonhcoming from Columbus, but in the meantime, he slates
that the first rule of thumb for those
·planning to visit Forked Run to picnic would be to carry foods in plastic or other reusable containers that
can be taken home after the picnic,
.and to bring a trash bag or other
container to transport trash and
other non-recyclables home.
Of course, the state is encouraging park users to recycle those aluminum, paper and plastic products
that can be recycled, and those
products should be packed separately after a picnic.
Funher information concerning
the program will be available at the
park offices or by contacting the
Ohio State Parks Information Center at 1952 Belchcr Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43224.

400 block .of Spnng Avenue, who
stated that a rash of theft and vandalism in the area could be alleviated with additional street lights.
Werry stated that other areas of
the village were more in need of
additional street lights, including
the area surrounding the MG M
property and the Pleasant Ridge
community.
With Ba ronick voting against
the light placement (also stating
thai other areas were more in need
of lighting) and Young abstaining
(he lives in the Spring Avenue
area), the motion to place the lights
on Spring Avenu e and Pleasant
Ridge passed.
Council agreed 10 spend an estimated $1,385 to pave a portion of
East Main Street from the new Nye
Av ~ nue intersection to the Food
Shop. (All of Main Street is to be
paved in 1992). Discussion was
also held regarding the need for
pothole repair and other tar-related
work in the village, including
repairs on Lincoln Heights, which
will be included in the East Main
Street contract
Council also:
• approved the mayor's report of
fines collected in July in the
amount of $3,544;
• held second readings on a resolution for a transfer of funds into
the cemetery account and a resolution authorizing financing for the
new village police eruiser;
• approved the interdepartmental
transfer of $!,000 for Public
Employee Retirement System benefits for Clerk Brenda Morris;
• discussed lime frame for
repairing streets after water leaks
are repairoo;
• discussed a complaint regarding a dead tree on Maple Street
with specific discussion surroundmg liability and ownership.

MILLER BOOTH AT MEIGS FAIR· The mobile ofllce or
Congressman Cta.-eoce MUter will be at the Melp County Fair all
next week. Miller's r~etd representatives will stafT the otr'tu from
1Z:30 to 9 p.m. each day.

There will be a make-up judging
·on Friday for any Cub or Boy
Scout Explorer that did not bave a
project judged. If you have a project to be judged call Brenda Neutzlinj! at 9'1?- ~770 for funher informauon.
Patrol duty for all B.S.A. units
exhibiting at the Meigs County Fair
is as follows: 10-11 a.m. • Pack
245; 11 a.m. to noon • Troop 240;
noon to I p.m. - Pack 240; 1-2 p.m.
• Troop 249; 2-3 p.m. • Pack 249;
3-4 p.m. -Pack 241 ; 4-5 p.m. •
Pack 235; 5-6 p.m. • Troop 245; 67 p.m . • Pack 246; 7-8 p.m. · Pack
246; 8-9 p.m. - Troop 235; and 9
p.m. to m1dnight · Post 230.

Bernard Gilkey of Middleport
will seek election to the position of
Salisbury Township Trustee in
November.
Gilkey has , in the past, served as
a Township Trustee for 13 years
and served for two years as a
Meigs County Commissioner. He
also served for two years as the
superintendent of the Ohio Depanment of Transportation's Meigs
County Garage.
Additionally, Gilkey acted as
the County Supervisor of the Meigs
County Ltuer Control Program for
several years both county-wide and
for the Village of Middleport
Gilkey also was elected to the
position of Central Commiteeman
for Middleport Founh Ward, where
he resides, and served in that position for several years.
Gilkey is a member of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens, a
Veteran of \vorld War II, the Ohio
Trustee and Clerks Association,
V.F.W. Post 9926 and Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171.

Chamber to meet
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will meet in full session
on Tuesday, Aug. 12, at noon at
Overbrook Center in Middlepon. A
representative from Congressman
Clarence Millcr's office will be the
guest spealcer.

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