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                  <text>Farm Flashes

Agriculture

GALLIPOLIS - Summer activi ties are in full swing.
The annual meeting and dinner
of the Gallia County Cattlemen's
Association wiD be Friday evening,
June 19. Dr. Tom Wagner, from
the OU/Edison Biotechnical Center
will be guest speaker.
This year's function will be held
at the Holiday Inn of Gallipolis
starting at 7 p. m. The officer.; and
directors have asked me to infonn
everyone that the dress is casual,
the program will be short and !hat
nonmembers are welcome. They
hope the progtam will be of interest
to everyone both farm and non·
farm .
Each year the association has
ttaditionally presented a couple distinguished service awanls. This has
become a highlight of the program
as those to be honored arc
announced. We hope you will want
to be present to congratulate til is
year's winner.&gt;. To help with plan·
ning we encourage you to get a
ticket on Monday. Tickets arc
available at the Boster Vet Clinic
and the Gallia County htension
Office. Several of the director.&gt; also
have tickets.
Time is rapidly approaching the
July I deadline for tobacco leases
to be complete. It is sometlling that
you probably don't want to wait
until the last day. Landowners who
don't plan to grow their Qu001 are
encouraged to make the poundage
available to active producers
through the lease procedure. Last
year tobacco sales in Gallia County
topped the $4 1/2 million dollar
mark. This is a very significant part
of the local economy. If we are to
put the value of 1992 crop over the
$5 million dollar mark, all avail able quota pounds must be used.
Entry forms are available at the
county extension office for Phillip
Morris
"Outstanding Young Tobacco
Farmer" Award and Recognition
Program. All active farmers under
the age of 35 at the beginning of
the year can be nominated. At least
75 percent of their total income
must come from farming. State
winners receive a substantial cash
pnze, a plaque, and a expense paid
trip.
Gallia County has been fortu nate to have sc"w"cral state semt·
fmalist and state winners over the
past few years. There arc no rules
that say friends or family member.&gt;
cannot help with the nomination
"paperwork". County entry/nomination fonns for the Young Farmer
Program arc due June 23.
The 1992 Second Annual Gallia
County Junior Fairground Fund
Rai ser is scheduled for Saturday,
June 27. Activities for all famil y
members are planned. Admiss1on IS
$ 3 per person. A special feature

COLUMBUS. Ohi o (AP ) The food and agriculture mdustr y
m Otuo generates S37 billion annually for the state , but is subj&lt;c t to
some of the stiffest budget cuts. a
"""'spaj)CI has reported.
Agriculture provides 12 percent
of the state's output and employs
15 percent of a ll Ohioa ns, The
Colurnl:lus Dispatch said last Sun da)
"Agriculture reall y takes it un
the cbm for being the No. 1 indu s·
tr y in Ohio. " said Don Noah
depury director of the Ohio Depart~
ment of Agriculture.
"Pnvate industry would never
stand fo r it They' d say kiss 111 )

this year will be the District 6 Hoi·
stein show. Some of the top Hoi·
stein cattle of thi s region will be
shown. If you like to see top quah ·
ty animals shown. don't miss this
show. Dairy cow s in Gallia and
Meigs County produced more than
5 million gallons of milk in 1991.
Stop by the Jun e 27 show and
sal ute the local industry .
Other events and happenings:
June 22 - Rescheduled - South·
em Ohio Hlty and Pasture Day.
June 25 · 7 p.m. - Beef-Forage
Tour. Ltwrence Burdell Fann.

Gee s;ud agri cu lt ure has been treat·

newspaper.

r tl fatr ly at th e univers ity, eve n

Farm ets ' ad voc a lc Wi l l iam

Swank attacked rece nt and pro ·
po sed b ud~ c t cut ' for the Ohio
State Untvcrsny Collc,:c c&gt;f Agri·
cultur e-, th e Oh1 o Ag ri cul tura l
Research and l.kvcl nprncn t Cen ter,

the Ohio Coopcr al t\"C [., tension
Se n ~e e and the t\ ~ n c ultu ral Tech
nical lnstllutc.
··AgriCulture 1s " t:t\h gl' nrrat mg industry in Oh 1o. lt Jnu 'rc worried ab out your enmum ), dun ·!
knock in the head th e one· that 's
workin!! ." sai d Sw ank . t' \ Cr ultW
\' ll'C pres iden t () [ tb ~· 1 11t t ~&gt; Farm
Hur r au l·cllcrat H.lll

a~ n c u h u rc prognun s have
take n a dtsproportionate share of
budget cuts.
He satd dollars follow students,
rather than programs. The number
of Ohi o State agriculture studenLs
dropped 40 percent in th e past 10
years. The Dispatch satd.
Ch ri s Co rdl e, man ager of
immu nology and scienti fic affairs
at Ross Laboratories m Columbus.
s;1id agri cultural research offers a
140 perce nt mte of return and bene·
fi Ls the entire state economy.
The state Agr ic ulture Depart-

lhou ):!: h

ment's fiscal chief, Frank Forgione,
said his is the only stale department
that has been regularly funded
below the rate of inflation for the
past 10 years.
State Agriculture Director Fred
Dailey said Sundsy that the department could do better at communieating its value to the Legislalure,
producers and consumers.

Pick 3:
065
Pick 4:
2262
Super Lotto:
2- 17-21-22-30-40
Kicker: 566257

PageS

Dailey , who took over the
department 15 montlls ago, said the
Legislature has been more supponlve of social pro~rams than farm
programs, someumes because of
federal mandates.
Vai.G,IID...

1 Seclton, 10 p - 2 5 A Mullh; tdll Inc.

71111

Heritage Day exhibits
and demonstrations
conclude 2-day event

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Tlw'&gt;l.' are e J~ ceplional sl~p va lues. even wmc Sena

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DEPE NDAB LE M AV rAG

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WASHfNGTON (AP) - Amer·
tea' s between -meal eating habits
arc catching on abroad as the U.S.
sna ck food industry pursues a
boo min g overse as bu siness in
condy , salt ed peanut s and corn
chips.
SwecLs seem to be the world 's
favorite snack . Sin ce 1986 . U.S.
export&gt; of candy, cakes and cook·
ies grew nearly fourfold, from $116
milliOn to $454 m1llton in 1991.
acconlmg to tile June issue of the
Agriculture Department 's AgE&lt; rorter magazine .

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LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE
ALL ON SALE!

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rtolt.l 5 1llL·fl'

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COLONIAL STYLE
WITH COMFORT

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&amp; CHAIR

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COLONIAL PINE 4-PIECE BEDROOM GROUP
Spectacular qua tl ty and popular Cotoniall stylng INika an
unbtatab.. eombln•Hon Warm pine finish wtth inb lcate
embossing and brass drawer pui s Tri P'- dr•5-Mf shell
mirror, chest ol
and
twadboard ar a
tncluded.
Night stand evailab,. on sal~

dr~wers

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ON SALE

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COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) Jllc)PO"sor of 1 bill
would

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PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THRU SATURDAY, JUNE
27,
.
~

1992
.

lions about lhe proposal.
"I don't deny that there's a need

M~~••l~~~~~nm~
tbose wbo bil10 pay child support people
o have arrearages on
says tbe mc:as.re is intended to their suppon. I'm just wondering
IIRIIJIOthe'MlT!Iolfcnders.
about the wisdom and technical
Rq1. Raymood Sines, R-Perry, capability of doing what they're
said the pOjiQIII would be an addi- proposing to do," Secrest said.
tional tool ror autborities to use in
He called for tougher enforcefiading delinquenu and forcing ment of existing laws.
them 10 pay.
"In my mind, and I'm certainly
"This isn' t a aormal person. not an expert on child support
These are the offenders that have enforcement laws, but I know in
gone tbrough tbc: syslem, they've
gone: tbroogb the coons, and they
stiU cao't colkl," Sines said.
Sines a:tnowledgcd he was surprised a qoroao "" over the concept
of the biD tbat surfaced during a
r=-: rneaing of the House Public
Saftty IIIII Higbways Ccmmittee.
MANSAELD,Ohio(A~ ­
"We' re doing a better job in Results of the Miss Ohio pageant
collecting child support. But the would have looked very familiar to
extreme cases .., slill there. That's anyone attending its Miss Manswhy we ba~ Sl billion in (unpaid) field preliminary earlier this year.
child support. A lot of these are
Robin Meade of Mansfield was
yean-and-yean-old payments.·· the winner of both events and Sissy
Schaefer of Alliance finished as
Sines said..
His biD would Rquire child sup- ftiSt runner-up both times.
Ms . Meade, 23, received a
port eafdcement agencies 10 provide the Slate Registrar of Motor $10,000 scholarship for being choVdtd•'S with the name and Social sen as Miss Ohio 1993 in her
Security number ol any person hom etown and will represent the
fOUDd by a court to be in de fault state in September at the Miss
America pageant in Atlantic City,
under.~ oolcr.
The measure would prohibit N.J.
"I feel just great . It 's been a
iSSIWICC Of I driver' S license Or
vdtide regis1ra1ion 10 such persons nice week all along. Even if I
hadn't won, I still would have
until they oo Icaaer are in default.
Rep. Joe Secresl, D-Senecaville, enjoyed it, " said Ms. Meade, an
was anoag tho!te witll srote ques- Ashland University graduate with

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Things of yesteryear displayed
and demonstrated highlighted the
annual Heritage Day observance at
the Meigs Museum over the weekend.
Using the theme "The Good Old
Summertime", visitor.&gt; were treated
to everything from exhibits of vintage fashions and memombilia, to a
depression era western show and
Civil War re-enactments by the
9lst Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
And since summertime IS for
kids, too, there were games - the
old fashioned kind, like thre e
legged races, cracker whistles, sack
race, and the egg toss.
If variety is indeed the spice of
life, or in this case a celebration .
then the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society seemed to have
it all.
The costumed rc- cnactors
pitched their tents on the lot across
from the museum and demonstmt·
ed the typical Civil War infantry

lifestyle on both Saturday and Sunday. Recruit train1ng . skirm1 sh
drills and medical demonstrations
were included in thetr acuvities.
As a kickoff to their lifestyle
demonstration at the museum, tile
volunteer infantry marched in Saturday's downtown Pomeroy parade
and then the 91st's Auxiliary presented a Ctvil War fashwn show.
A highlight of their weekend
was the placing of a wreath at the
Civil War monument on the Meigs
County Courthouse lawn at noon
Sunday .
Demonstrauons included chair
canin~ by Mary Wise, spinning and
weavmg by Nancy Schul , black smithing by Herman Schul . quilting by Eli zabeth and Davis and
Vada Hazelton, and printing by
Austin Jones.
An exten sive display by the
Southeast Ohio Railroad Club of
model trains . Su sie Carpenter's
doU collection, a pri vale collection
of antique railroad watches, and
tools and kitchen utensils from the

turn of the ccnwrv were feamre; of
the exhibits .
·
In the mu se um ·s mtn1-tbcauc
Saturda y nigh t. viewers saw 1111:
"Mystt¥Y of the Hooded Honeman" a '~western made in the 19J0'5
starring Tex RttttJT.
Slides dunng tile """days featured Me1gs 4-Her' s from the forties.
There was an old fashioned pie
social with Dan Smith •01 •*• i"'l
off th e ptcs after thev luld beaa
judged. Trophies and priHs pruoided by Crow's Restawul., U...C
National Bank, MdQ!aJdc a-'s
Market, Krogers. llld Pkwsto the winner.; - frrsts 1D Sllaml
Rim e. Margaret Palm, _. Maline Lee: seconds 10 Susie KJiiPI.,
Sarah Houser, and Riffie ; a lld
thirds 10 Pan:er and Pany Coot.
Music, sponsored by The Famers Bank in cooperation willa the
Museum, was proVIded by CJ. and
the Country Gentlemen.., Sabrrday. and The ClaSSlcs doing fonics
and fifties music on SUDday.

the last fow or f1ve years that horse
has come around the track several
have done things that we
thought toughened the support
laws, and increased the local support agency's ability to go after
non-custodial parents who had support orders against them,'' he said.
Sines said changes would be
proposed in the bill to give court&lt;l
more l~eway to act.

Mansfield woman wins
state pageant on third try

Pomeroy police investigate
B&amp;E, crashes, bicycle theft
11fte a • i!n111 a lmlting and
erering. and the tbeh of a bicyde
v.ae ~over the wcetend

JO El l C fRI C ~Af~G t
Wll H LI FT O FF DOO P

Weekend activities at the Meil!li Museum. Here
be turns out a flyer encouraging enlistmeat iD
the 9lst Ohio Volunteer lnrantry.

Individuals who fail to pay child
support may lose driver licenses

REG. 179.95

,..,. ·:roo· . .

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s

4 DRAWER CHEST

Sa ve on LA.Z.OOY ' recliners this week only.
' "" -

SET .. REG. 1799 ...

PRINTlNG DEMONSTRATION- Austin

Joaes ~ PoiJd f'lo nt asiDgturn or tbe ceatury
eq.up.e.t ~ted !be tedious process or

I~

JUST WENT DOWN!
•

...... .. REG. 1249 ...

SPECIAL ORDER

WASHER
TRANSMISSION
WARRANTY

lfw N

,[";I" .

QUEEN
KING

MAY TAG

WASHERS
•l

$129
2 PC . SE I .. Reo. '599 ...s299

FULL EA. PC .... .

DEPENDABLE
MAYTAG

Low tonight in mid-60&lt;.
Tuesday. parUy cloud~ . H!r:h ill
mid 80s.

C ;;sU

Sale of U.S. snacks
booming overseas

Continued rrum D-1
consum ed. Treatment consists of
spraymg the tree with 59% Scvm .
whic h IS a commonly sold insccli ·
cide.
An oth er common insec t is the
svitlicbug, which is most commonly found on Scotch pine, although
ll is often abundant on white and
pitch pine as well as others. Heavy
Infes tation s of spittlebug s may
cause twig , branch and tree
morlality the following year. The
control measures most often used IS
to spry with Sev in , Malathion. or
Dursban.
We have many insec ts in our
area that attack trees but do not
cause mortality. However, from an
ornamental standpoin~ most people
like to control the problem . Usually
111secticidcs s uc h as Se vin ,
Malathion or Dursban can control
most insect infestations.
Trees arc most su sceptible to
insects when they become stressed.
Stress can come in tl1e fonn of the
site being too wet or too dry , or in
the case of this spring too cool.
Also a major factor is construction
where tree roots are compacted in
the soil. A common problem in the
urban setting is pruning . Trees
should only be pruned for health
reason s. Too much unnecessary
pruning leaves the door open for
1nscets, di sease and dec lining
health.
Many other insect problem s
occur which are too numerous to
mention. If you have any questions
concerning your trees, call the Gallia SWCD at 446-8687.

0!11o State Presi dent Gordon

what 's- it and mo ve,'· Noah told the

Ohio Lottery

Bulls cop
second NBA
title in row

Agriculture industry subject to severe budget cuts

July 1 is deadline for 1992
tobacco leases to be complete
By ED VOLLBORN
Gallla County
Extension Aaent,

June 14, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-08--Sunday Times-Sentinel

by I'OOleioy l'lllite.
The a::cideuts all occurred on
Saturday m1 n:sulrm in ooly light
velticlc dalilge and DO injuries.
AI. 8:3S a.m.. • the inlmu:tion
of Rnole 7 and 33 a 1990 Oldsmobile ckivaa by Daisy Frecter. 66,
"-'ltloy. "''S S1nd in the rear by
a 1984 Muuay tlmm by Charles
Lewis. fll. also of horltluy. Lewis
"'as cited ror failure 10 maintain
assured clear diuarre . .~cording
to the rqJOII. Frrdcr had stepped
• lhc .,., sip Ill Rnnle 7 prqtaring to mah 1 left bind tum when
her odliclc - SUUt:t iD the rear
by the Lewis car. There was light
daJnl&amp;c 10 the n:ar of the Frecker
vehicle and ao damage to the
Lewis car.
AI. 10'.39 a.m. the 1990 Honda
driven by Denais Hockman. 37,
MiddlqJon. - SlniCt iD.the rear
by 1 car drivs by Alma Dcrotby
Dan&amp;, 29, l'hnhR. She was cited
ror railare Ill mainllin IS&gt;Wtd clear
dimnoe llid 1111 insunnce. There
was li&amp;bl damage to the bact
bwnpel' or the Dockman car, llld

,

light damage to the driver's side
front of the 1980 Pontiac driven by
Darsl

The third accident on Satunday
occurred on tile Pomeroy parlting.
Jamie Kennedy, 16, Pomeroy, driving a 1982 Ford owned by Perry
Kennedy, backed from a parking
space into the left front quarter
panel of a 1980 Chevrolet driven
by Jody Will, 22, Pomeroy. Will
was westbound on the lot when the
accident occurred.
Maureen Hennesy reponed Saturday that a hoy's Schwinn fivespeed bicycle had been taken
sometime Friday evening from the
yard at the family 's Fisher Street
residence.
At6:14 p.m. Sunday, Bruce
Teaford reported a breaking and
entering at Teaford's Realty, 216
East Main Street. Teaford said he
found the back door open and two
sofa beds missing. The incident
remains under investigation.
Tammy Rizer, Hartford, 30, of
Hartford, W.VL, reported 10 police
that her vehicle incurred light rear
bumper damage when she backed
into a utility pole on the parking lot
at Pizza Hut Sunday aflemoon.

degrees in radio -television and
political science.
"I think I was more ready for
this than I have been in the past.
This time I was just Robin Michele
Meade, and it worked.' '
She succeeds Renee Autherson
of Newark as Miss Ohio.
Ms . Schaefer, 21, a Mount
Union College senior . won a
$3,000 scholarship. She was Miss
Central Ohio.

BAYONET DRILL - Getting prepared ror
skirmishes was a real part or the Civil War
inrantry's training program, and here a demonstration or a bayonet drill was given by the 9lst

Ohio Volunteu Infantry re-enactmt'llt ewe -••
tion during Sunday's Heritage Weekmd adirities at the Meigs Museum .

Two treated for
•
• •
•
mznor
znJunes
after accident
Two Pomeroy men were treated
for minor injuries following a
motorcycle crash on Oltio 7 in Salisbury Township Sunday around
2:40a.m.
According to a repon from the
Gallia -Me1gs Post of the State
Todd Smith and Danny Smith, first, ud 0..
CANOE RALLY WINNERS - Pictured are
Highwa~ Patrol, Gregory A. LaudTillis and Brady Johnson, strotJd. I• dot'winners of events in Saturday's Canoe Rally
ermilt, 29. was southbound on
mile marathnn, winners wert Todd Smidt ud
held in conjunction witb Heritage Weekend .
Ohio 7 and lost control of his 1980
Danny Smith, first, and Don Tillis ••d B....,y
Winners or the milk run were Todd Smith and
Harley Davidson in a left curve.
Danny Smith, first, and Doug Staats and B.J . · Johnson, second. PH:turtd, 1-r, art 008 Tiilla,
The motorcycle slid off the right
Brady Johnson, B,J. Workman, DOll&amp; Staab.
Workman, second. Slalom race winners were
side of the roadway and struck a
Danny Smith and Todd Smith.
guardrail.
Laudermilt and his passenger,
William D. Whittington, 27, were
transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by a passing motorist.
They were treated and released.
Damage to Laudermilt's motorcycle was listed as moderate and
COLUMBUS - Four current ty College Association, also was formerly of Belmont Techaocal
disabling.
College: Jacob See, formerly of
Laudermilt was cited by the and fonner presidents of two-year indicted.
The four current and former Owens Te chnical College. llld
patrol for driving under the inOu- colleges. including the president of
presidents
who were indicted face a Richard Bry9011, Marion T" 1 - 'II
Hocking
Technical
College,
and
a
ence, driving under suspension and
variety
of
felony
and misdemeanor College.
group
representing
the
schools
failure to control.
Ohm is now presulent of Kelcharges.
Among
the charges are
were
indicted
in
an
investigation
No injuries were reponed after a
logg
Community College in Billie
theft
in
office,
engaging
in
a
pat·
deer-car accident on Ohio 124 in into whether public money was
Creek,
Mich.
tern
of
corrupt
activity
and
.tamperSutton Township Monday around funneled 10 lawmakeiS, the special
The
officials were indiatd 111t11
ing with records.
prosecutor said today.
!2:10a.m.
The association is charged with week by a Franlr.lin County p-.1
Fourteen other current and forAccording to the patrol, Dawn
engaging
in a pattern of corrupt jury. Special prosecutor Rocty
mer
college
presidents
were
named
M. Shuler, 18, Racine, was eastactivity,
theft
and tampering with Coss announced the ind&gt;• t liS
in
bills
of
information.
They
will
bound on Ohio 124 and struck a
records.
It
also
is accused or giving today at a news oonfm:noc.
face
no
jail
'time
or
fines
in
deer that entered the roadway.
improper
political
contributions.
The 18 currentllld farmtr cuiDamage 10 Shuler's !988 Dodge exchange for participating in a
The
four
current
and
former
lege
presidents were arrvscd ol
Omni was listed as moderate and diversion pogram.
presidents
are
John
Light
of
HockHal Roach, former director of
illegal expendilllres fOIIIia&amp; disabling.
ing
Technical
College;
Paul
Ohm,
the
Ohio
Technical
and
CommuniCODtilued 01,. 3
The deer was left at the scene.

Hocking Technical College president
indicted as result of investigation

�Monday, June 15, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 15, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Warm, humid weather forecast for Ohio

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, June 16
Accu-Weather• forrcast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
· Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS Of OPINION are welcome They should

be less tban 300

words. All letters are subject to editin g and muse be signed with name ,
adcnss and telephone number. No unsigned leuen wiU be published. Lenm
should be in good laste, addressing issues. not personalities.

Disclosure forms more
opposition for Hill detractors
By ASSOA TEO PRESS
WASHINGTON - ll's a bad year to be a member ol Congress, and
lawmakers got anolher reminder lasl weelc of why: lhe headache of !heir
annual fmancial confessional10 lhe public.
Is it flDI for Rep. Jim Traficant, D-Ohio, 10 say he still owes the lnlanal Revenue Service more lhan $100,000? Or does Sen. Marte HalfiCid, ROre., enjoy laying out his ex1ensive and growing perronal debt for all to
see?
And Rep. Claude Harris, D-Aia .. must know !here will be questions
about why he and his wife spent 10 days in China and Hong Kong and six
days in Sweden last year, with private groupB in those countries footing
lhe bill.
It's all grist, as well, this election year, for political opponents - who
don't have to make any such disclosures themselves. And because
Congress is in even more disrepule lhan usual, the financial ammunition
could be more deadly.
There's little of the traditional talk this year of the advanlllges of
incumbency - lhe name recognition, the ability 10 send rree mail to constiruents, the privilege of immersing oneself in major issues in Washington.
In an upside-down political world, those have all become disadvantages. Better 10 be an unknown, an outsider who pays for his own mail,
unburdened by Congress' messy and minimalist record of the last two
years.
Add to those burdens lhe flllJIJICial disrobing incumbents had 10 do last
weelc, and it makes one wonder why lhe job is still worth it.
While far from detailed, the disclosure forms all 535 senators and
House mem hers must file do offer insights in10 !heir investment acumen,
their assets and debts, their friendshipB and associations, and their traveL
It's clear that the disclosure process and the news it generares are
sources of in1ense worry for lawmakers. Nervous press secrewies call
reporters to complain, argue and plead for gentle treatment, fearful of how
the news will look back home.
With good reason. The base salary for lawmakers, about $120,000, still
looks like a lot of money in Paw Paw, Mich., or Pecos, Texas.
And most Americans find it difficult to identify with gelling half a
dozen or more rree trips a year, many of lhem 10 prime vacalion spots,
pajd for by special interests lookiog for legislative favors.
For Rep. Dan Rostenkowski. D-111., being chainnan of the laX-writing
House Ways and Means Commitlee is also lhe ticket to a lot of free golf
'"luxurious settings, for example.
. His disclosure form shows he went to at least nine golf events last
year, including the Hawaiian Open. lhe Frank Sinatra Celebrity lnviwional in Palm Springs, Calif., lhe Kemper Open in Hawaii, lhe Dinah Shore
'" Rancho Mirage, Calif., and lhe Doral Ryder in Miami. Most expenses
were picked up by tournament sponsors or groups that scheduled speeches
by the chairman at 10urnament time.
:still other details remind voters lhatlheir Washington representauves'
lifestyles are foreign to them .
Senate colleague Don Nickles gave Minority Leader Bob Dole, RKan., a silk tie worth SIOO. Rep. William Lehman, D-Fla., sold a Picasso
plate for be!Ween $1 ,000 and $15,000.
And Sen. John Warner, R-Va., received $20,509 from lhe sale of a
huilting horse named " Richard." Thai's more lhan lhe average per capita
im;ome in his slate.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today 1s Monday, June 15, the I 67th day of 1992. There are 199 days
Jeft m the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 15, 1215, King John signed the Magna Carta at Runnymede ,
England. granting his barons more liberty.
On thts date:
In 1520, Pope Leo X threatened 10 e.communicate Martin Luther if he
did not TCQlllt his religious beliefs.
In 1775 , the Second Continental Congress voted unanimously to
iwoint George WashingiOn head of the ContiriCnlal Army.
: In 1836, Arkansas became the 25th state.
-- In 1844 , Charles Goodyear received a patent for his process to
Srrenglhen rubber. (Even so, Goodyear did not benefit from lhe invention ,
and died in poverty in 1860.)
· In 1846, the United States and Britain signed a treaty settling the
boundary between Cannda and the U.S. in the PacifiC Northwest.
: In 1849, James Polk, the eleventh r:resident of lhe United States, died
tO Nashville, Tenn.
; In 1864, Socretary of War Edwin M. Stan Jon signed an order designat~g a site in what became ArlingtOn. Va., as a military cemetery.
'•

Berry's World

'
,•
·'

'
y

I

Debate grows on access to government files
WASHINGTON - When he
left the Penlllgon , Caspar Weinberger removed more than 13,000
government documents relating 10
his time as Secretary of Defense,
depositing lhe papers for safekeeping at the Library of Congress
where a taxpayer-s upported
archiVISt spent 18 months organizing lhe records.
Weinberger then wrote his
memoirs, drawing from these and
other materials, for which he
received a reported $500,000
advance.
As one of the more celebrated
leak-bashers in lhe Reagan administration, Weinberger at one point
in his book paraphrases a dinner
co nversation with then -S oviet
Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin
with the help of "a classified
memo I prepared for the president
afler that dinner.''
Weinberger's conduct violated
no law or re~ulation, but raises a
serious quesuon for some critics:
Should privileged former officials
or the public at large own government documents created at govern-

men! expense? Weinberger is considered the owner of the informal ion , although the Library of
Congress anticipates that he will
ultimately deed over lhe documents

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein
as a gift and that it would fall under
government management
The Weinberger case is but one
of many that deal with the free flow of information - fodder for a
major srudy by the Cen1a for Public Integrity that is scheduled for
release June 17.
"Weinberger's case is, unfortunately , typical of former government officials," according to an
advance copy of the report entitled
"For Their Eyes Only: How Presidential Appointees Treat Public
Documents as Personal Property."
"Many olhers have left office,
been granted exclusive access to
government documents while closing them off to others, written their

versions of history, and profited on material that 100 of1en is withheld from the public for political
from the memoirs.~'
At the Lyndon Baines Johnson and even fmancial reasons.
From the Pentagon Papers case
Library, a recendy published list of
to
Watergate to, most recently,
closed records included some of
President
KeMedy's assassination,
Clark Clifford's Secretary of
government
officials hav_e withheld
Defense files . Meanwhile, Clifsensitive
documents
vttal to the
ford's insider memoir was pubpublic's
right
to
know.
lished in 1991, which is impossible
"In recent decades, there have
to verify because access to those
been very few positive changes in
files is closed.
the
laws governing access to secret
A recent list of materials
government
files ," the report
acquired by the Gerald Ford
states.
"
Indeed.
'national security'
Library mentions almost nothing
and
other
excuses
continue to be
that is open 10 researchers. A typiconsistently
cited
as
rationales for
"'' f.nrrv read&lt; : "The naners of
Philip Buchen, 1973-1990, two routine Iy denying access to many
and otherwise secret doc·
cubic feet The collection includes classified
.
uments.
correspondence, clippings , a
The Cenler for Public Integrity
speech file, pbo10graphs and misthe double-standard of
derides
cellanea relating to Mr. Buchen 's
which
it
accuses Weinberger and
activities as counsel to the presiothers.
Government
employees
dent from 1974 10 1977.... These
must
sign
a
"prepublicalion
materials are not open for
review" agreement for books writresearch. "
According to the Center for ten about !heir former employers,
Public lnlegrity report, which was agreeing not to reveal classified
authored by Sieve Weinberg, presi- information.
"While Weinberger acknowldents, vice r:residents and Cabinetedges
using classified information,
level appoinleeS hold a monopoly
no administrative or court action
has been taken against Weinberger," the report states . "On the
other hand, many authors and former government employees who
have sought to publish similarly
sensitive malerial have been subjected 10 long reviews in which
much of their writing was gutted by
agency censors."
In what may be lhe last bastion .
in the Cold War, the classification
bureaucracy is still stamping away.
In 1990 alone, 6,500 government
officials classified more than a
half-million documents to some
degree. The number of classified
documents throughout lhe government is thoughiiO range near I billion pages.
Most documents stored in the
National Archives are apparently
up for declassification after 30
years. Currently, previous "slllte
secrets," such as records from lhe
Office of Petroleum Progmms from
1943, are up for declassification.
Jack Anderson and Michael
8 instein are syndicated columnists for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

wa s •mage·makmg at its very
worst: Clinton , who had yet to look
the least bit presidential, donned
dark sunglasses, bright ti c and
tenor sax to blow a little "Heartbreak Hotel" on "Arsenio Hall,"

Martin Schram
looking like the third Blues Broth·
cr.
But lhe next night, Clinton was
at his video best on CNN's "Larry
King Live" (birthplace of Perol for
President), fielding questions with
a command that was downrighl
presidential. Gone was that selfsatisfied look and youthful smirk
that seemed like he was perpetually
running for president of Boys'
State; he seemed serious and substantive, explaining how he'd balance lhe budget in five years.
Clinton also sharply dcfmed lhe
Perot Appeal: "I think there are
two things there. One is he criticizes the &gt;yslem and says, ' Both
parties have let us down.' I agree
with that... . The other is he says.
'I'll fu i~ I'm a fixer; vote for me.·
And the American people, in elect-

mg a president, wam somebody
who will fix it. They are tired of
the finger-pointing and the blameplacing and they think both parties
have let them down."
And that gets to the central Ullth
of Campaign '92. Two-lhirds of the
vo ters have made a preliminary
decision: They ' ve told pollsters
they've experienced a Bush presidency and want so meone else thai Bush has oroven that he can't
lead and won't govern on the
domestic problems they care about
mosl
So the task of the two challengers comes down to this:
Clinton, a maJor party challenger wilh major public perception
problems, must demonstrate in lhe
campaign ahead that he can lead
and can govern effectively- if he
is 10 gain in the polls.
Perot, who has risen 10 the top
of the polls because voters are dissatisfied with the other two, must
prove that he cannot lead and govern effectively - if he is to fall in
the polls.
For CliniOn to be convincing, he
must convince an electorate that
has grown wise about and weary of
image -slunls . Including Larry

King' s lifth caller, who asked if
Clinton's appearance in his John
Belushi look-a-like srum on "Arsenio" "might have the same effect
on him or his campaign as did
Michael Dukakis' gelling in the
tank?"
"No," Clinton replied, concluding thatlhe discussion he and wife
Hillary had with Arsenio "is what
will Imger in the minds of the people who wau:hed the show."
Wrong. Every stralegistl spoke
to outside Clin10n's camp lhought
the sax-and-shades stunt was
unpresidcntial - hence, politically
tone-deaf. "Here's how he could
have pulled if off and scored big,"
offered one stralegisL "AU he had
to do was first sit and be interviewed and have it cooked up in
advance so Arsenio would coax
him to play the sax - no shades,
just a regular guy playing regular
rock."
That savvy slrategist was a
se nior Bush campaign official.
Which just proves we can all be
great strategy-makers - for the
olher guys.
Martin Schram is a syndicated
columnist ror Newspaper Eaterprise Association.

What to do about Balkan bloodshed
As Serbian guns pound Bosnia
and Croatia in the land once known

as Yugoslavia, the "new world
order" of 18 monlhs ago seems out
of mind and out of reach . Each
institution that should be leadtng
the way toward a solution to the
trngic situation is either immobilized or ineffectual. The rhetoric IS
occasionally strong, but the actual
response is weak. Because collec uve security remains a slogan
rather than a reality. anarchy and
terror prevail .
As is often said , since this is a
European problem, the European
Community should be taking the
lead. But "Europe" remains a
word in search of a definition . In
the real Europe. a place composed
of nations w1th different inlerests
and objectives, !here is no common
policy toward the Balkans. Germany, the most powerful of the
nations on the Continent, has
played the most problematic role of
all. Despite urgent appeals thai it
co nform its policies with U.N.
peacekeepin¥ efforts and other
major nations , it rushed pell-mell
to recognize the new Balkan
nations withoul conditions. What
that did was discourage compromise and encourage intractability,
effectively sabotaging the work of
special U.N. envoy Cyrus Vance
and of the European CommlDlity's
negotiaiOrs as well.
But the U.N. presence remains a
shadow of what it should be .

Vance 's work was heroic and untiring, but Security Council action has
come slowly and inadequately .
Lacking a permanent peacekeeping
force, the United Nations must
stitch 10gelher an ad hoc response
to each crisis. When the belliger-

Hodding Carter III
ents refuse to honor their agreements, as in Yugoslavia, and U.N.
personnel come under fire, lhey are
effectively immobilized and must
withdraw. Their on-again, offagain pre se nce is an ironic
re minder of what might have been
rather than an effective antidote.
Finally, there is the Uniled
States. During the run -up to the
I 00-hour war against Iraq, President Bush made much of the need
for inlanational teamwork against
aggressor sllltes. Immense diplomatic activity was concentrated on
persuading individual states and the
United Nations iJself to join in lhe
campaign against Iraq. The president popularized the idea of a new
world order and celebrated its success as Kuwait was liberated .
While the Uniled SillieS took the
mililllry lead, the effort was largely
financed by other countries and
several made significant contributions of fighting units and equipment
It looked like it might be a
model. So far, it has proved 10 be
an exception. Under fire for con-

IToledo I 78' I

i).

ce ntrating on foreign policy al a
lime of domestic diff1culty, the
president dropped the phrase. More
to the point, the administration
dropped the ball. Raiher than
applying the same political muscle
at the United Nations that it had
brought to bear after Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait, it
acce~ted half-way measures. As
Serb1a repeatedly proved that it
would respect nothing short of military defeat, Washington seemed 10
blink - or yawn.
Now Yugoslavia. already in lhc
midst of calamity, is on lhe verge
of unimaginable chaos. It should be
unacceptable as well, because the
bloody fragmenllltion there holds
ominous portents for other spots on
the globe as well, some no more
distant than the former Soviet
Union and others as far away as
Africa and parts of Asia. If, despile
all the talk, Europe, the United
Sllltes and lhe United Nations are
unable to stop aggn:ssion and preserve the territorial integrity of
wealr: nations in lhe Balkans. where
the issues are clear, there is no
hope at all in the far murkier circumsJanees that await resolution
elsewhere.
The most effective way for
Washington to act in such situations, whctc its immediale security
interests are not direclly affected, is
lhrough the peacekeeping mechanisms of lhe United Nations. ThBI
requires paying our U.N. dues.

'

which Congress has refused to
honor and lhat are now in massive
arrears. It also requires shepherding
the creation of a permanent peacekeeping force through lhe Security
Council, as Cyrus Vance strongly
urged recendy. If such a foo:e were
in place, the lag-lime between
Security Council voles and actual
deployment could be cutiO a minimum. U.N. forces could be on the
scene before the shellin~ of a
Dubrovnik began. U.N. atrcraft
could be silencing the artillery
poundin~ away at civilian enclaves
10 Bosn1a, and lifting sieges while
it still mallered.
As it is, each new crisis requires
the reinvention of the wheel. Under
the most favorable of circumstances, that always takes months.
In less favorable circumslllnces, it
simply doesn't happen, as it is not
happening in the -liallr:ans, a form
of mternational impotence that
implies assentiO butchery.
The president's brief nirtation
with vision produced impressive
results early last year. The failwe
of vision and leadership this year
has been dispiriting.
Hodding Carter Ill, rormer
State Department spokesman
and award-winnlag reporter, editor and pubHsber, II president of
MainStreet, I Wasblni!IOII, D.C.·
baled television production 1!0111•
pany ands a syadlcatecl columnist
tor Newspaper Enterprise Association.

PA.

IMansfield I 79' I•
t

'I Columbus! 81 ' I

By The Associated Press
Temperatures are expected to
move into lhe 80s on Tuesday, with
heal and humidity forecast throughout the state by Wednesday.
Widely scattered showers or
thunderstorms may occur Tuesday.
The rocord high temperalure for
this date at the Columbus weather
sllltion was 96 in 1897. The record
low was 47 in 1959.
Sunset today will be at 9:02
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
6:02a.m.
Around the nation
A storm system produced rain

today in parts olthe Great Basin
and northern Plains.
Thunderstorms dumped heavy
rain and large hail Sunday in the
Plains, 1he lower Great Lakes
region, 1he Southeast and parts of
the WesL
A stonn lhat dropped snow near
Lake Tahoe on Sunday produced
showers early today in Boise.
Idaho. Rapid City, S.D., and Reno,
Nev. Temperatures were expected
to silly in the 60s across much of
the Great Basin and norlhern
Plains.
Rain also fell today in Key

;a

D

.

•

Showers T-stomls Rain FluniO$

Snow

Vie Associated Pres&amp; Gtap/JcsNfll

/cs

.

•

W. VA .

Ponland, Maine, hit 88 degrees
Sunday, shattering '" record of 84 ,
set to 1945.
The high temperature for ihe :
nauon Sunday was I 00 '" Casa :
Grande and Coolidge, Ariz.
Temperatures today were fore - :
cast 1n the 60s and 70s in the ;
l'ort heast. Great Lakes region, •
northern Plams and much of the :
West; m lhe 80s'" lhe mid-Atlantic :
states, the central Plams and Soulh- ·
ern California; and in the 90s :
across the Desert Southwest, south- :
ern Pl&amp;ns and Gulf Coas1 slates.

West, Ra.
Tornadoes touched down Sun ·
day near Lanark, Ill., and Burley,
Idaho, but no in juries or damage
were reported . the National Weath ·
er Servtce said.
Rivers and streams m south-cen tral Kansas spilled over thw banks
Sunday and Ooodcd farmland after
up to 4 inches of rain fell , authori ·
ties said.
Wind gusts topped 60 mph Sunday in Kansas, Oklahoma ,
Arkansas and Utah. Hai I up to an
inch in diam eter fell in Oklahoma.

:1
'..- .··
. ·r

..

What campaign strategists face
America - what a country! is a land in which any of us can run
for president, once we've banked
our ftrst billion. Or, failing that, we
can at least be presidential campaign strategists.
Right now , there's a big need
for our stralegic services over at the
headquaners of Bush/Quayle '92
and Clinton for Presidenl. Bolh
teams have been signaling lhat they
are in a dither ever since their candidates disappeared into the
Bermuda Triangle of video-ag e
polittcs, as H. Ros s Perot began
appearing on all channels at once.
Over at Bush/Quayle , the
image-makers found a stralegy lhat
only made President Bush look
ridiculous - they had him request
prime TV time for an •mportant
news conference but forgot to give
him any importanl news 10 say. So
he JUSt repeated his old plea lhat we
should amend the Constitution to
forbid him from submilting any
more deficit budgets, which , of
co urse, were the hallmark of the
Reagan -Bush years.
Meanwhile, strategists at Clinton for President came up with Jwo
back-lo·back video events. One

•

IND

The Dally Sentlnet-Page-3

'

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Pr. Cloudy Cloudy

Sunny

C1992 ~WINithor, Inc.

!

------Weather----South-Central Obio
Extended rorecast:
Tonight, pardy cloudy. Low in
Wednesday through Friday
lhc mid-60s with east winds about
Fair Wednesday wilh lows in
10 mph. Tuesday, variable cloudi- the 60s and highs in the 80s. A
ness with a slight chance of show- chance of showers or thunder ers or thunders10rms. High in the storms thursday and Friday. Lows
mid-80s. Chance of rain 30 per- in the mid 10 upper 60s and highs
cent.
near 90.

--Area deaths-Florence A. Baldwin

Ray Boston

Florence A. Baldwin, 75, Gallipolis, died Sunday June 14, 1992.
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Baldwin was a homemaker,
born January 19, 1917 in Gallia
County, daughla of the late Grover
Sheline and Maybelle Persinger
Sheline. She was married to the
!ale James A. Baldwin in 1946 in
Pomeroy.
Survtvors include one sisler·inlaw, Margaret Sheline of Columbus; three nieces, Delorse Crosky
of Columbus, Sandy Bennett of
Columbus and Debbie Fellure of
Galll3 Coumy; and three nephews,
Henry Shehnc of Galhpolis,
Howard Sheline of Columbus and
Donald Sheline of Harrington,
Delaware.
She was preceded in death by
four brothers, Howard "Cowboy"
Sheline, Leslie Sheline. Martin
Vernon Sheline, and James Gilbert
Sheline; and one sisler, Lucy, in
infancy.
Services will be held I
p.m. Wednesday at the Willis
Funeral Home . Burial will be al
the Pine Street Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home on
Tuesday from 6-8 p.m.

Ray Boston, 89, of Letart. died
Sunday, June 14, 1992, in Plcasam
Valley Hospital.
Born June 25, 1902, he was a
son of lhe late Samuel and Fannie
(Blessing) BosiOn.
He was also preceded in death by
his wife, Lola (Thompson) Boston,
who died in 1975, four brothers and
a sister.
He taught school in h1s earlier
years, and was a retired rural mail
carrier. He was also a member of
the Old Town Board Bapt1st
Church.
Surviving are a son, Dennis R.
and Patsy A. Bos10n of Tul sa, OK.
a brother, Tafl Basion of Letart; a
twin sister, Gay Wenenbergcr of
Dover, Ohio, and an additional sister, Clara Dyer of Stow. Ohio.
The funeral will be Tuesday, I
p.m., at the Old Town Board Baptist Church with the Rev. Bud Hat·
field and Rev. Joe Hammack
officiating. Burial will be in the
Oak Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home Monday,
7 10 9 p.m., and at the church one
hour pnor 10 service.

Shon Bobb II

HTC
...
Continued rrom page I

Shon Michael Bobb II , infant
son of Shoo Michael Bobb Sr. and
Carrie Anne Graves, Route 33,
Pomeroy, died shortly afler birth
Friday evening, June 12, 1992 at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
Athens.
Besides his parents lhe infanl is
survived by a sister, lonnie Lee;
maternal grandparents, Don and
Lisa Graves and Donna and Alan
Oney. all of McArthur; paternal
grandparents. John and Wilma
Bobb. Mason, W.Va.: maternal
great-grandparents, Clyde and Virginia Graves, Route I, Ray; Forrest and Anna Martin, Creola;
paternal great-grandparents, Rus sell and Mary Bobb, Leesburg;
paternal great-grandmothers, Thelma Bobb , Fort Mead, Fla .; and
Lucille Yoakum, Bainbrid~e.
Family graveside scrv1ces will
be Tuesday at I p.m. at Beech
Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy with
Rev. Clyde Graves officiating.
In lieu of nowers memorial contributions may be made to ihe
March of Dimes.
Arrangements are being handled
by Blower-Garrett Funeral Home
in McArthur.

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Maltl•bocriplloDO

!Dildo Molp C&lt;&gt;utr

13 w..u ......................................... $2l .N
!16Weob.......................................... ~ . t8

uw..u .......................................... ~ . 78

Oalololollol• C..atr
t3W•b ..........................................$23.40

=:::: • • • • : · · • • • • • m:

than $68,000.
Fourteen agreed to deals 10 be
placed in the county's communityservice diversion program, Coss
said. Under the deal, the charges
will be erased from their records if
lhey complete the program .
The grand jury investigated allegations that campaign money was
funneled from some college presi dents through the association to
influential lawmakers such as Vern
Rille, D- Wheelersburg, and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, RCincinnati.
The association is a lobbying
group for the state's 23 two -year
tochnical and community colleges.
Riffe and Aronoff said they
were unaware money was bemg
laundered through the group. They
have returned campaign money
they received from the group and
its officers.
Coss said a State Highway
Patrol investigation found "no evi·
dence at this time" that legislators
knew that they received publi c
money through lhe association.
Under Ohio law, it is illegal to
package campaign gifts unl_css a
group is a designated pohttcal
action commitlee. The law requues
that individual contributors be
identified.
The indictments stemmed from
an investigation to determine
whelher public money was misused

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 32 1/H
Ashland Oi I .. ................. 30
AT&amp;T... ................ ............. .43 l(l
Bank One ... .... .................... .45
Bob Evans ................ 16 5/8
Charmmg Shop .................. 30 5!8
City Holding.. .............. ... 19 t(l
Federal Mogul... ................. 17 112
GoodyearT&amp;R .................. 661/2
Key Cenrurion ................... 19 3/4
Lands End ....... .... ............... 32 112
Limited Inc ....................... 21 7/8
Multimedia Inc ...... ........... 28 l(l
Rax Restaurant.. ................ 7/8
Reliance Electric .. .............. 18 7!8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14 l(l
Shoney's lnc ...................... 21 1/2
Star Bank .......................... 35 1/2
Wendy lnt'l.. ...................... ll
Worthington Ind ................ 23 7!8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi o( Gallipolis.

TOILET SEAT GUITAR ENTERTAINMENT· Denver Rice,
Middleport, entertained tbe people attending Saturday's activities
or the Pomeroy Merchants Association during Heritage Weekend.
Rice provided a variety or music on his homemade toilet seat guilllr.

D OF A FLOAT • The Chester CCIUIK'il No. 323, Daughters or
America, participated in Saturday's poradt in PD~Mroy ror Heritage Weekend. The Pomrroy Mrrcbnts Association ond tbr
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society spoasored a •ariety
or activities ror the weekend.

Hospital news

Meigs squads respond to 22 weekend calls
Units of the Meigs Co unty
Emergency Medica l Service
re,lJOilded to 22 calls for assistance
over the weekend and early Monday morning.
On Saturday al 10 39 a.m. the
Middlepon unit transported
Woodrow Gammon from the station to Velerans Memorial Hospital. At 12:38 p.m. the Pomeroy unil
went to Lincoln Heights for Melis·
sa Howser, also taken 10 Veterans.
At 4: II p.m . the Syracuse un1t
went to Calaway Ridge for Gay
Fields who was taken 10 Veterans.
AI 4:44 p.m. the Middleport unit
went to South Front Street for
Robby Clonch, taken to Veterans.

The M1ddleport umt responded to
Lincoln Street at 5:05p.m. for
Shirley Roush who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 6:34
p.m . the Middleport Fire Department responded to a car fire in
which Walter Lee was the owner.
The Racme unit, at6:52 p.m . trans ported Phyllis Autherson from
Route 124 to Holzer Medical Cen ter. At 7 p.m . the Middleport unit
went to South Second for Jack Barber who was taken 10 Vetcrans. At
7:20 p.m. the unit wenl to Route
554 for Rcva Vanside, tak en to
Veterans, and atl0:50 p.m. the unit
went 10 Railroad Street for Judy
Mahaffey, also taken to Veterans.
On Sunday at 12 :06 a.m. the

--Meigs announcementsChester trustees to mert
The Chester Township Trustees
will meet Tuesday at 8 a.m. at the
Chester town hall. Oris Smith has
been appointed as a trustee.
Meeting and picnic
The Disrricl Deputies and Past
Co un ci lors Club of District 13
Daughters of America will have a
meeung and picnic at Kachelmackcr Park in Logan on Jun e 27 at
noon. Bring a covered d1sh, drinks
and table service.
Bible school
Racine First Baptist Church will
have vacation bible school June 22·
26 from 9 a.m. to noon daily . A
kick-off parade will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. througll lhe Village
of Racine .
Auxiliary to meet
The Women' s Auxiliary of Vct-

crans Memorial Hospital will meet
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. in the conference room at lhc hospital.
Guest speaker
Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis. will be the guest speaker at the
Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy
on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Public
invited.
Yard and bake sale
The Pythian Sisters will have a
yard and bake sale Fnday and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each
day at the Long Bonom Community Center.
Bible school
Racine United Methodist
Church will have vacation bible
school Jun e 22-26 from 9-11 :30
am. for ages preschool ihrough
s1x th grade. The th eme wdl be
··son Mountain."

J4 killed on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
At lea" 14 people died in traffic
accidents on Ohio roads th•s weekend, the State Highway Patrol srud
today.
The patrol counts fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday .
The dead :
SUNDAY
CLEVELAND - William E.
Merk. 19, Cleveland, motorcyclist
1n

a collision w1th a car on c ity

DENNISON - Terry F. Blake,
34, Cadiz . in a motorcycle crash on
a Tuscarawas County road.
XENIA - Ro~er L. Hughes,
46. Jeffersonville, m a one-vehicle
accident on Ohio 72 in Greene
County.
TOLEDO - James Reed, 49, of
Toledo. '" a two-car accident on a
city street.
CONNEAUT - Karen Bender,
7. Gahanna. '" a one -car cra.sh on
Interstate 90 in Ashtabula County .
FRIDAY
MANSFIELD - Ann Deley,
52 of Mansfield. in a car-train collision on Rock Road m R•chland
County.
COLUMBUS - Gary Sanders,
26, of Columbus, in a motorcycle
crash on a city street.
WALNUT CREEK - RobeTI
Weaver, 19, of Sugarcreek, in a
one-ca r acc id ent on a Holmes
Counly road.

street.
UPPER SANDUSKY - Gerald
F. Barth, 70, McCuu:henville, in a
two -vehicle crash on Ohio 53 in
Wyandot County.
MEDINA - Timothy E. Permelia. 23. Medina. in a motcm:ycle
crash on U.S. 42 in Medina County .
ASHTABULA - Brian A.
Mitchell, 31, Kingsville, in a onecar crash on Ohio 84 in Ashtabula
County.
SATURDAY
LONDON - Cynthia A. Cava- Man injured after
liere , 31. Warren, and Jennifer
Kn;skern, 17, Warren, in a onevehicle crash on Interstate 70 in
Madison County.
Mark Steele, Route 554,
NEWCOMERSTOWN
Cheshire,
age 26, fell approXImateKevin V. Couts, 24, Newcomerly
30
feel
late
evening from
stown, in a motorcycle crash on a the parking lotSunday
wall in Pomeroy.
Tuscarawas Countv road.
According to the Pomeroy
Police Depanment, which was on
the scene, Steele was climbing
v to;TERANS MEMORIAL
around
on the wall when he fell to
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS the
rocky
area below near the river.
Jessy Young, Middleporl; Gay
The
Pomeroy
squad, rescue ,
Fields, Coolville; Brenda Darst,
boat
and
ladder
truck
were called at
Pomeroy.
9:42p.m.
to
the
scene
and Sleele
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGES was
rescued
from
the
area
wilh the
Richard Knapp, Clarence Spurrier
ladder truek. He was transported to
and David Haggy.
SUNDAY-ADMISSIONS · Veterans Memorial Hospillll and
later was taken to Holzer Medical
Sarah Congo, Middleport.
Center.
II was reported he suslllined
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Clara Phillips and Michael Russell. a broken leg.

Middleport unll went to Second
Street for Charles Landers II who
was taken 10 Veterans At2•32 a.m.
1he Pomeroy unu went to East
Main Street for Guy Shu ler who
was taken to Veterans. The Middle port unit, at 2:32a.m .. went to
Route 124 for Burdell Black who
was transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital. At 5:42 p.m. the RaCIDC
unll went to Trouble Creek Road
for Mary Keams who was taken to
Holzer. The Middleport un1t . at
8:49 p.m , went to Route 7 for
Zac hary Carson who was taken 10
Vcte ran s. The Pomeroy squad, rescue boat and ladder truck. at 9:42
p.m. was ca lled to th e Pomeroy
Parking Lot for Mark Steele who
was transported to Veterans and
later to Holzer. At II :54 p.m. the
Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine
No. 2 for Buddy Kno1s who was
taken to Holzer and at II :55 p.m.
lhe Pomeroy unit transported
Steven Clarke from the station to
Veterans.
On Monday at 3:56a .m. the
Middleport unit went to Linco ln
Street for Margaret Wolfe who was
taken 10 Holzer. At 5:52 a.m. the
Rutland unil went to Meigs M1nc
No. 2 for Timothy Thompson who
was taken to Veterans and at 8:09
a.m. the Middlepon unit was called
to Bcoch Strecl for Roben Haggerty who was dead on arrival.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Junt ll discharges- Mrs.
James Adam s and so n. Amanda
BaiSden. S1cfahie Caldwell. Misti ·
Chapman. L1lhan Harper, Brittany
Johnson. Carole Landrum. Mrs .
PJul Moss and .;;on, Mrs . Brian

Sm ith and daught er. Lucre tia
Sm ith. Joshua Staten and Ehzabelh
Tmut

June 13 discharges- Anna
Ba il ey. Mrs. Robb1e Helm s and
sun. Jul•a Payne and Geoffrey
Ward.
June 13 births- Mr. and Mrs.
:..arry Stewart, son. Rutland
Junt 14 discharges - Mark
Clandros and Rebecca Ireland.

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Biggtct S1lt of 1992

Ingels

HELD

HElD

r--o_VE_R-fDrnifure-o_VE_R_

TENT IS

DOWI~ ~?

But We Kept The

Factory Trucks.

·'

0~5\f

ALL TENT SALE PRICES
GOOD 'TIL
7-92 at 5 P.M.

falling off wall

Hospital news

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I ........

16 14) ft•»U TOU fill Ill ·~~ lA I
L•Y+WIYII
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VIlli
INSTANT CREDII (Apply. Aocol¥0 lntllnl Cld TodoJ Quolllod c..dll)
CNdM Terme

�Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 15, 1992

RECONSIDERING MEDIA #2

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, June 15, 1992
Page-5

Chicago edges Portland 97-93 to capture NBA crown again
By BILL BARNARD
CHICAGO (AP) - The Chicago Bulls believe they gave away
both of the games they lost in the
NBA Finals.
The Ponland Trail Blazers feel
the same way about losing a ISpoint lead in the fourth quarter in
Sunday night's sixth game.
"We definitely gave it away .
Definitely," Terry Porter said after
the Blazers fell 97-93 Sunday
night, losing the Finals 4-2.
"They did a good JOb, but a lot
of it had to do with our rumovers in
key situations," the point guard
said. "We d1dn't gel any ca ll s,
especially any close calls . We
didn't make any shots anytime we
drove."
"It was a very disappointing
loss," guard Danny Ainge said.
"We did not play up to our standards. We made bad decisions in
the fourth quarter. This loss will
stick with us for a long time."
Starter Scottie Pippen and four
reserves did most of the damage in
the comeback, outscoring the Blaz-

ers 14-2 to pull within three before
Michael Jordan returned to the
game with 8:36 remaining. Jordan
then scored 12 of his 33 points in
the final 6:0 I as the Bulls pulled
out the game and repeated as cham·
pions.
The Bulls outscored the Blazers
33-14 in the fourth period.
"We did a good job for three
quarters," forward Cliff Robinson
said. "But thetr bench came in and
outplayed us. They did a good job
moving the ball, getting shots and
playing defense. We expected them
to make runs here in their own
building. We just didn't do a good
job responding.''
The game was the exact oppo·
site of Games 2 and 4, which the
Bulls lost after taking big leads.
Chicago coaches and players
angered the Blazers by saying the
Bulls gave those games away
instead of giving credit to Ponland.
"I disapproved of the way they
handled the series-in terms of the
derogatory remarks they made,"
forward Buck Williams said. ''I'm

tempted to use the words Chicago
has been using the whole series and
say we gave it away.
"But I'm not going to take the
easy way out like they did. They
deserve credit. They're an arrogant
team and I see why. They executed
better than we did. They had control."
Chicago controlled most of the
series. Portland rarely led in the
first five games but played its best
in the fourth quarters.
This time, that period provided
the setting for the Blazers' failure
- the biggest collapse in NBA
Finals history.
No other team had ever blown
more than a 12-point lead in the
final 12 minutes.
Portland shot 29 percent, commilled seven turnovers that the
Bulls turned into 16 points, allowed
Chicago to shoot 68 percent and,
after controlling the boards the
whole way, were outrebounded 11 -

6.
Portland coach Rick Adelman
did everything he could to thwart

ers Work \larder
Making Newspapd
.t
'ttion resu\t in sucteSS
matan pos
\nnovations tn ~~ Wendy falk BarskY
.

er Third .
nts with th e pap · nded
. teanl rccornme .
These poslllons me
med•a
heir re spectovc
each
21 Isl ands . h dvertiser the
"
[or I
a
new spaper
. of ad poSilion•ng . n.~ssibly offer t e ae f\e~ibility. new w r
· reattv
.
th e subject
d
to vanous , ,~
clients
to
"\:mcnted
a posi \e us
ultunate '" c . . ·n the Md·
These
stones
,
d
sale'
1
unp
rt to remain
. whose a
The island poStnonY'ork Stock F•nal\y. we
rus1.111ted
fe lt about
. no repo
k
new
spapers
.
than
Willing
to
h NeW
tion -trac ' o w the program
That's how we
art of
e more
d\e of I e, bles. pioneered by current on ho
. newspapers as p
staffs wer. l.flCkS
.
f
h
ualle.
0 t C
E~change ta
Advert•s•ng
ustng
Ad pos1uomng share thetr
. Mike Kelley.
was working .
to facilitate
th e Newspap::Cillng opportuour
media
mtx
tricuons
made
II
'
We spoke ~~rector at The
We found, w~~~ ds through
Bureau. ' ' an 11 ,slands set up our c\1ent s
and format re~le and exc•ting as promot•on s
to
gain
some
~ple First
1
For e~a... . .
aboUt as f\eXI\ \culus teacher. Courier-Journ\;
n•ty.
Add•t•~~~nY;
page
,
or
slm
into the newsnewspaper. k f Louisville
a high schOO ca raphtcs, time additional•nslg
as a d.agon am•d editon a\ (perNau onal Ban ~dvertiser to
ddle of the
a
.
Still. the dem~J,tonal environ- paperbusines\h this ,nforma- Ply f\oaton g, '
he [lf SI
was
I
..
d
po· &gt;~tlon on
5 the m•
spent reading. . cost effecuveaeros
. •s amacll ve to a pear in an !Sian
Armed wo
tact e d Jim haps
\old)
.
ar
e
a\wa)
ment. umel•ness\, envlfonment
e con
p
,, page .
. ·
II on. w
resident . adverthe siOC'
, CD campa•gn . Ill
nd \oca
the
ad;ertiscr
"
'
hol
e
USA
ness a
i nore.
Marchal. vice ~ouner- Journal
The bank s
was the only
alls " 1\ w1th thiS
) ) SI fl P
"'ere all hard t~gin media strat·
·paper
·
h' d 10 be cui
Whether 11
· brain · usong . at :he resent our ,deus Today has llon~e~t~er page. we which· news
used a
. s or creauve
To ellectl\e\y X d answer the
· . ·t of an unpreced to other medium
great 1deas lU htnl we nee e . 10sure to loom concept on ns
egy meeung .
c a resu1
. . st
a
\d e~te n
rt
..
. seSSIOnS,
sho ·'
· · a\es~•n JU·
.
ease
111
s
that was
I
stormwg.
d down to less·
knew It c~~ Coun er- ]ournal. dented mer · her
client.
. . "'What's in 1t or
were wh•llle . ns as a result quesnon
Anot
areas ol
e_ or maul news.
in
hts
m•nd.
weeks .
was able to
real e~ecuuo .
Uc h as com•cs e pages. ""'!le
than-g
. resuictlons.
s
"'
"
Churchill
Downs
.pcr
f•ve day s
meT'
. ed ourselves as
4) Consecullv (other than
of newspa~rs atives to newsh
ncwspa
h
.
We poslll O~ creati VItY and
d eru sers
run Ill I e
k by using t e
Often, a tem d s a way to
many
a
v
\
may
not
run
advocates fo
"deas would
e use a.
out of the wee. ads.
·1 . cco unts
1s on
· . formats and
whose •
ret
a•
a
tractiona
Papers wer
cost-effcc\IVC stoP t o. n many
. novallve
innovauon
I for current
or \d be worth preserve 1n
Wh 1\e we
·
wen
·
1wo full pages
k excltemen
W
.,
wou
As Hme
takino ad van. \ adveru se rs
e
ositionin g ,deads .our mtd ia spar
o
\'
P
and potentia
wspaper to one date,'.• the option of con- adv ert .iSer.s were . r-Journa
. nfo ce
s
tacihtate the
never sac
let down to challenged theb n\ et" of TV and while to o\ler
· Th Coune
.
,
pages
to
d
we were
I )
sec
. needs an . tage o l . c Co incidentally
goa l s.
re mtsslng out on match th e i]eXI I meet
. , . ·reallve
. uu ve
[lexob1llli ·
ra\ months
aclvertl'
knOW we we
. dvantagcs
·odvert!Ser' c
ded dollars .
\[tsevc
\
radoo stauons~oarcha l seemed '
"b\ exten
the Inherent a
qUite possl Y· .
Marchal not M~lfcha e d · he advertising
some of
ers' needs_. . to our unconvenTo our delight. r proposals \ ater to he~\ ~an nett new spa10 new spapers . 0 fmd a way to
very receptove . . We thought
nded to ou
.
ellorts of
tatic to sec
We decoded!
. k harder
f
. ogesuons.
unly respo
. tso posiuvely
W were ecs
1
ed1Ulll v.or
uona sub .
tomc be ore
.
Ia pcrs
c hi s responsiveness
l lvbuta
make the Ill
local paper.
'·
er-Journa .
sOineone of .
it would bchs~:e~ any uf them promp
W sed our
.
. 1 The Coun
Wh• c
for us. e_u. \\ Ky.) couner- we knew w c
spaper. has some nsc to the top
G.onncll
new
h. h II mu st
The (Louosv • e.! st situation
1
had a chance .
d
, feel about
t\
10
W
IC
Ewted
as
our
e
.
,
hoW we
.
h a week s
]ourna.\
d the ma]ont y
Our ideas 11\clutle . .
ThiS stantlar '
That
s
d
rtising
ID
oSitiOI\S.
11
We went thr o u~ d cntiqued
P ·
~
dhcre
,
al\o~~come
reality
1
ncr a ve
d.
11
FranchiSe
for
f papers an
.
ncwspae
w We're fin mg
antage .
"' our ,deas tal o thiS newfound
wort h o . . · determinon g is often a k eY adv
These
pn"
·
.
1
To responl I
, 1 steps LouiSville no 1 \aces [or stnp
ad po s l uon•ng . k better for us
sma\l erfractiOna~
· tate an
took scvera .
unconvent•ona p dress up the
· ,. neLe~ s '
hoW it could wor we identiEed ·
trc
cdom
.
we
edu\ed
meetings
ways to
.
uon s o\ ten , cv commitment
ac\s. zany
d most 1mpor At the same ume. ld be exciting
Flfsl,
we
sch
t
and
creat"e
.. page an .
upfront lrequen 'trrcnon II one
.
g new ways
new areas that cou
woth th e aceoun
know th e comics d. covenn
, , d &gt;ile res
kt th em
s lor exclu" voty
tantl y. "·
. businesses to
ads.
h l·ormat of and an a
gro
up
s
to
h
d
JUSI
mad
e
a
Places for·d't\ett
advertiser
hope.
s
conttnua\l
y
for
our
cli
ents
effectively
We d• n
. e
way .
space
1
news
paper
a\
\advertisers
t
more
..
h
et tn our
Because t e
he reader
"d lor oca
compe c . per actveru s1ng.
1
ement.
hu
ge
stn
e
d
we
set
up
the paper gffered suggesuons an atl vcrl"
through newspa
f that ?art•culle Secon ·
. aware o
LllUISV 1 .
d•a departInstead. we 0
· ht offer van ·
111
becomes
l"u\ e~pen ·
. 1ntra-me
ages m1g
.. .
A succos
an agency
stem tu keep
on hoW P . . 0
rtumtoe s.
hiS format is th e
ent
trafflc\ong
sy
bers abreast
ou' advertts•ng ppo contacted !.or spot
111
·
Additionally. we - ation nf en ce wllh t T1l f any ' sad · on all dcpartmc nt mem
nts
and
agree ·
Assoco
long-running
"\of The New
of
developm
e
the Amencan
.·,cs· and the h• gh-prof,\e Page ·
· Agenc ·
Advertis•ng
. · ng Bureau York Times
Advcrt•s•
Newspaper d articles written on
and receive

C Inside Media. January 22, 1992. ReprinttKI by perml111on.

Fast action. That's what you get when you advertise in newspapers. Only newspaper advertising gives you next day
results - more traffic, more customers, more sales. When
you want to move fast, make a fast move to newspapers.

LET US SPRAY - Cbicago rroolman Cliff
Levingston (rigbt) sprays some champagne on
bystanders and well-wisbers in lbe locker room

Scoreboard
In the majors...

AMERICAN LEAGUE
[uttm OJ,IJ;Ion
Tum
w L PtL

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eu&amp;em

Te-am

Dl~lllon

W L

Pitai)urgh

..... .36 25

PeL
.590

GB

~~

l
7

SLl...ou.i.li .. ........ . 31 ]0
OUcago ..... ..........29 32
New York.. .......... 29 ]2

.475
.475

:=~-

-~:

: : : :~ ;i

Wnt«m Dl"ldon
CINCINNATI... 33 24
593
Atl&amp;nu ...... ........... 33 29
B2
San Pnnciaco ........ Jl 29 517
Sanoqo .............. 31 30
~16
Lo. AnteJra ...
26 ~2
448
Houttm ...... ..... ..17 ~5
435

?

'

n

2

Oti.cago 4, Monuul 3
St. LouiJ 4, Philadelphi.t I

lloo.uM'! 4, San Franci100 I

e

at y

St Louil5, Phlladclptua 1
QNONNATI 5, Laa Ange.Jea 1

Tonight's gamts

-

l25

6

?l

.4)5

IU

A&lt;Jl

IU

IJJ1

-

l5&lt;J

J.l

.538
492

4

.426

II

.24 36
.24 3?

Sc...ule ..

400

7.5

7

m

ll

)9]

Saturday's scores

,

Ch.ic.ro
4, MinnCIIIXI 2
New oda 4, CLEVEl..AND 1
OU.Iand 7. T uu 1

Detroit 15, Ballimcre I
Califorru1 5, K.an111 Cu y 4
MJlwullloc 8, Sc:JLlie 7

Sunday's scorrs
Torutto 6, BIXI.oo 2
Ntw Yoclr. 4, CLEVEL\,"''D 3, 10 1n ·
lleuoL 1. B&amp;lumon: 4
MirultiOll 8, Cluc•go 7
O&amp;k..land 6, Tau I
C&amp;lifomia 5, K.anau C1ty I

Milwaukee 14, Seanle 4

bW'lh (Smith 5-4), 7:35p.m .
Loa AnJclca (Hc:nhiler 6-3} at Atl.a nta
{A..,ery 4-5), 7:40p .m.
Monuul (Gardner 4-5) t t New York
(Yooonl !~!· 7:&lt;0 p.m.
SL
· (Tewltbury 6-1) at Chicago
(Maddu16-6), 8:05p.m.
San Diqo (Ldferu 7---4) 1t Houlton
(Hmry l·l ). !Jl p.m

New Ymt (SII\dmm 4-4) 11 Bostoo

Tuesday's games
St. lauia (Clark 0 - 1) 1L Chic•a o

(BoWe ~ - 3), 2:20p.m.
Stn Fnnci1co (Hered11 2·2) ••
ClNCINNATI (1liJ02-5), 7:35 p.m.
Philadclphit (Riven~ 0 - 1) at Piuabursh
(1 . Roblnlon 1·0), 7:33p.m.
U. Anselet (Kevin IJrtu J-6) a\ Allanll CBiclcci..i 1-3), 7:40p.m.

Montr.li (Hunt 0-0) 11 New Yorlr.
(Cone 5-4). 7:41J?ii.
S1n ~qo (
l111T11
. · 2-4) at 110\11·
1M (BWrO.O). 8: p.m

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrluo of on Ordor of
Solo luuod out of tho
Common Plou Court of
Molgo CoiMIIy, Ohio, In tho
c•o of Govornmonl Notional Mortpgo Aoooclotlon,
PlolntlH, vo. Rlchord L.
Connolly, ol ..., Dor.nd8nll,
upon • Jud11111en1 therein
rondored, bolng Cuo No.
81-CV-132 In o..d Cour~ I
wYI otr.r lor ulo litho front
door of tho Courthou.. ln
f'onllrO¥, lllolga County,
Ohio, on IIIII 2oth doy of

Ohio 45718, with tho .... ling

oddr..o ot 45010 ll.oum
Addldon, Pomeroy, Ohio
45711. A oomploto leg1l
dolorlptloR ol tho roll
...... lo • follow&amp;:

lltu1tod In tho County ol
Molga, In tho Billie of Ohio
1nd In lho Townthlp ol
ChMtor.
Bolng In Friction 35.
Beginning oouth IQU7 r.ot

Tonlgbl's games
(l)opaoo 2·2). 7:35p.m.

- Aaltimure {Sutcliffe 9~) at CLF.VELAND (Boochc::r 2· 1), 7:35p.m.
Km~u City (Maanante 2·5) at Min ·

(Krueger 6--0), 8:00

Chicaao (McCukill

r·m
-5) at Seatlle

(Ocl..ucu I· J), 10:05 p.m
Mliw1uhc (Bosto 4 -4) 11 O&amp;kland

(Campbell2·0).

10,05 p.m.

Tcxu (Burn• 0-0) al Cahlorru1 (A b·
boU 2-8), 10:35 p m

Tuesday's gamts

New York (leary -4 ·S) a\ Boaton
(Oc:rneru 9-4), 7:35 p.m.
Deuoit (Gullid.aon 7-4) 11 Toronto
(K&lt;y 4-4) . HI pm.
Baltimon: (McDonald 7-3) 11 Cl.£VE·
U.ND (AnniUOfl3 1·7), 7:35p.m
Xa.nau City (Appicr ~ - 3) It ltofulnCIOll
(Bm.U 0- 1), &amp;:OS p.m.
Milwauloc (R , Robinaon G-2) &amp;L (hl .
bnd (Campbell2·0), Io,Ol p m
Chiua;o {Ftmandet l-7) 11 Seattle
(Knmed).O), 10.35 p.m.

Public Notice
ond out

480.3&amp; fHI from
the northweat corner ol
Fraclion 35, 11 1n iron pinj

lhonco north 17 dog. 21'
oasl tao r..tto on Iron pipe;
lhonco aoulh 72 dog. 3t'
-1120 feollo an iron pipe;
lhonco ooulh 17 dog. 21'
wool 180 fool lo on Iron
pipe, thonco north 72 !leg.
38' wut 120 fool to tho
pl•c•

of

California

Major league leaders

b•glnnlng,

conl'!lnlng .50 ocro. Boing
Lot No. t8, • ohowt~ on plot
of propoood Boum SubdiYiolon.
Excopl 1H Legal Righi of
Woy.
Reference De1l : Volume

157, Pogo 708, Molgo
County Doed R•cordo.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: S72,US.OO. Tho rHI
oolale c.,not bo told lor
!100 Ilion lwo-thlrdo tho
opprolood Yllluo.
TEAMS OF SALE: Cooh
on doiJv.y of doed.
Jo,... M. Soulaby
Sh«&lt;ll of Molga County
(6115, 22, 21, Sic

National LeaEUe
BATTING - Kruk, Jrhihdelphit .
.372; Gwynn, San Dicao. .lS4 ; VanSI_yke..
PitllburJh, .l47 ; M~. Sl.ll Franc11co ,
.337; W. am., San Frtr~c:iseo, .329; McGriff, San Dieso • .129 ; Pcndletoo , Atl&amp;nu. . .316.

Roston S, Toron w J

nCIOU

lt

I

San Frmciaco (Diad ).I) at CINON·
NA TI (Brownina 4-4), 7:35/.m.
Phil•delphi• (Mulhoilan S-4) II Pltt.l ·

lollojrlng Iondo onct lonom.,ll, loci!M III'OII*OY,

entine

35 30
29 30
Catifonua . ......... 26 35

Sunday's scores
PitubwJh 5, New York 4
Atlanta -4 , S1n Diego 2
Oucago 5. Monuull
H(IO,,~ton 15, San FrancUoo 7

GB

.lOO
.lOO

17 24
....... 33 27

&amp;5

ClNCINNA 11, Loa Ansel e. 1
Al.l&amp;nllo 4, San Diego 2

(i.J?

Te.au (Gu.r.man 6-l)

(Blylcvcn 2-0). 10:35 p.m.

Wnltrn Dlvlslon

Kanus Cny ..

95

2A
) I 28

"

4.5

4&gt;

.619

.. 30 30
... 29 29
8011.0n. ..
ll
lJetro1L .
CLEVELAND . .. 25 37

Mmneoou
Te1u ..
Ctucago

15

. 39 24

.. )7

Mi.lwauiot
r-..:ew York

Odland

Saturday's scores
Pitx~b.uzh 3, New Y orll:

Toronto .. .
Bah.imOI"': ..

!.5

Jill)', 1112. 11110:00 a.m. tho

•

shortly after tbe Bulls bealtbe Portland Trail
Blazers 97.93 to win tbeir second straight NBA
championship. (AP)

RUNS - &amp;nd1, PinsburJh. 47; Bt3·
110, 1-IOUIIM, 43; Gwynn.. s.n Diegn, 41;
T_ Fernandez, San Dieao. 4 1; Xruk .
Ptuladdphi&amp;, 40; _Gciucm, Monuul, 39;
Lanttonl, St l...ouU, 37; Gant, All.ant.., 37;
Pmdldtln, ALianta.. J1

RBI - O.Wioo. Pllilldolp/Ua. 47: ~k
Gnff, San Dieco. 44; Mwny, Ne• Ym,
4.4 ; G.nl, Atlanta, 43; Bond.J, P'iUJburgh,
43; PendldM, Atlanta, 4~; Bonill&amp;, New
York, 40; DawiOI\ , OUea.go, 40.
HJTI - Gwynn, San Dic;ao, 84; K.ruk.,
P'hiladtlph.ia, 81 ; PtndleiM, Allanta, 8\,
VanSI)'ktl., Pittabwp. 74; T. Femandc:.z,
San Diego, 7~; Finley, Hwaon, 72; lAin·
can, Phihdelphu, 72, McGrif[, San
Diqo. 71
OOUBLES - VanSlyke.. Pi.uabu!jh.
20; Ouncan, Auladelphla, 18; Pul.dlc:ton.
At lan\1, \6 ; Grace, Chic aso . _13 ; W
O arl , Stn Franciaco, 15; McGrif f. San
Die~~o. IS; Gwynn. San Dieso. 15 : John too , New Yorl , 15; W&amp;llach, Montre.al,

IS

TRIPLES - D. Sander~, Atlanta , 10;
Ftnlcy.llwa:LOn, 8; Alicu, St l.,.ooil, 6;
OfTermm, Lo. Angel~:!~~, 4 , Gn.ce, Ouu·
go. 4 ; V• nSiyke. Pittsbur&amp;h . 4 ; Butler.
Lo. An&amp;clca, 4.
IIOME RUNS - Booch, Piutbuig.h,
15, McOnff. S111 Dieao. 14; L Walker,
Mootn'lll, II; Mall Williuna, San f-nncia ·
co, II; Ptndlc100, AtlanLI. II, Onllwn,
Ph!ladcJ.phi• , II, Sheff1eld, San Dieso.
10.
STOLEN BA.SES - Oriucm. Moo·
lmll, 1(}. Lankford, S1. LoWt, 21, G•nt,
Atlanl.l, 20; Lcwia, S1n funcuco, 18 ;
DeShielda, Mon1rul, 17; Robcr11.
ClNClNNATI, 17 : 8CIIdl, Pittaburjh, 17,

0 . Smith, SLI...ouia, 17
PITCHING (I dc c1 11Dn1) Bankhc.d, CINCINNATI, 7-1, .173, 2.:M:
G ltvinc, Atlanu, 9 - ~ . . 7~ 0. 2.90;
Swindell, ClNCINNATI. 6-2, .750, HI;
Lc.ibrandl, Atl&amp;nta, f.o-2, .7SO, l69; Tom ·
I.UJ, p;111bw)h. 8-3, 721,118; HmhiJer.
Los Anaelea, 6-l .667. 3 38; Lefreru,
San DittO, 7-4, .636, ).61
STRIK.EOliTS - Cone, Ne• York ,
95; Smoht, At.llnu., S~ . S_ Fernandct.
New York, 81; Bcldlcr. CINCINNATI,
70; I&gt;nbak, Pitllbwah. 70; Kev1t1 Chou.
Loa An 1clcl, 10: B. A.urtt. s.n Dieao. 68 .
SA YES - Lee Smith, St. Louit. 17:
0 Janet, Houaton, IS; Charlton,
CNClNNA11, 14; Myen, San Dit£0. 13;
Mnch Willams. P'h.iladdphil, 12; "Bdm·
da, Pit~Jbwsh, 9; Dibble, aNCINNATI.
9; Wellcilnd, Montreal, 9; McOowe!l ,
U. Ana~. 9; Franco, New York. 9.

American League
BA TTI NO - Puckett , Minnesot.t,
.)'18; Bordick, Oailuui, .342; Moliun-,
M1.hnui.ee, .333; R. Alomar, Toronto,
.329; E. Martinez, Sunle, J26; Winfield ,
Tarm.to, .317: R. Kelly, N1w York. .316.
RUNS - P\lckeLt, Minnuot1, 49;
Mack, Minnelou, ~; McOwirc. Oakl.nd,
45; k._nobhu.ch, MinJ\CIIDlt, 43; Phillipc.
Detmit. 42; Uner, Torono. -40; E. Martinez. Seattle.. )9; ~iem , Texu, 19.
RBI - MtOwm. OUJ.,d, .53; P&gt;lck ·
eu, Minneaota, 32: Fiddcr, Daroit, 48;
Carter, Toronto. 43; Andcnon, Baltimo~

42; Sierra. TeUI, 41 ·

the Bulls' rally. He called timeouts
with 10:21,9 :31, 8:36, 5:57 and
1:39to play.
"Ch1cago's defensive intensity
picked up and we didn't handle the
ball well," Adelman said. "Our

guys JUSt ran out of gas. When the
game was on the line, the Bulls
turned the intensity up and took
control."
Unlike Porter, Ainge played for
championship clubs with Boston

and knows great teams when he
sees them.
·
"I'm satisfied that we gave a;
good effon," Ainge said. "Ther
outplayed us the last two weeks."
The best team won."

Bragdon among area winners
in furious KC Raceway action
By SCOTT WOLFE
Senlioel Correspondent
In four different races this year,
four different winners have graced
victory lane in both the sprint and
late model divisions at K-C Raceway, where Saturday night
Sharonvi lle driver Mike Bowling
bowled over the Super Sprint competition and Charleston, W.Va .
driver Rod Evans blasted the Late
Model field.
Portsmouth's Barry Bragdon
won his second consecutive Street
Stock main.
K-C Raceway hosted the Competitive Auto Racers fan club
(C.A.R) from Cincinnati Saturday.
That organization in turn presented
awards to the winners in each division and the fifth place fmishers in
each class.
Just like Saturday 's fast and
furious action, K-C's competition
this enure season has been very
intense, with no one person being a
dominant factor.
In the sprint car feature, outside
pole sitter Charlie Fisher blasted
into the lead, where he stayed for
the first ftve laps. All-Star Circuit
of Champions regular Byron Reed
blitzed Fisher on a restart after a
John Webb spin out, to lead the
next two circuits.
The intense mulit-groovc racing
produced some anxious moments,
both on the point and further back
in the pack. On laps 8 through 19,
all eyes were on the top spot, where
the usually rim-riding Mike Bowl·
ing dove low under Reed to take
th e lead, sparking a torrid high ·
speed, side-by-side battle that saw
Bowling's "Bowling Brother's
#98" gradually pull away at the
checkered.
Caldwell's Ronnie Myers made
a great drive to finish third, fol ·
lowed by top qualifier Jim Nicr,
Rick Holley, Mike Imler, Tim
Jodrey, Mark Imler, Randy Fink
and Tyke Kistler.
Nier and Bowling won th e
heats, while Nier posted a fast time
of 12:853.

Chillicothe's Jeff Houser
Jumped into the lead and held off
challenges from Rod Evans, Del ma s Conley and Craig Leist as
close action highlighted a superquick Late Model A-main. Evans,
in the Burning Springs Farms #R-1,
used the high side to ftnally slip by
Houser on the I Sth go-round.
The West Virginia invader then
d1splayed his talents with a master[ul JOb of working through trafftc
to secure the win. A race-long battle between Conley and Jeff Houser
put the local fans on tbe edge of
th eir seats, with Conley ftnally get·
tmg by Houser at the ftnish. Craig
Leist was fourth, followed by Greg
Stevens, Jackie Boggs, Charl1e
Sevmour, DoMie Kennison. OIUck
Waddell , Chris Diddle and Mark
Frazier.
Evans rold K.C. Raceway
announcer Roy Salt in v1ctory lane,
"We've got a home town chassis
and an home town motor in the car.
We've built her all ourselves."
Evans runs a BASS Chassis.
Heats were won by Donnie Ken ni son, Leist and Conley, while
Duane Ackley took the B-main
over Clark Van Hooten. Paul Coyan
of Jackson had fast time of 15:048.
Kennison edged Evans and
Racine's Chris Diddle, who has
been doing a great job since mov ·
ing up to the Late Model ranks .
Diddle's #55 McDonald's -J.D .
Drilling entry placed ahead of last
week's winner Jackie Boggs.
AvOiding a collis ion in turn four
cost Diddle some spots in the feature, however, he still finished a
strong tenth .
Racine's Scou Wolfe, third in
points at K-C, was offered the ride
in his brother Bryan Wolfe' s #5.
Needing to place sixth in his heat
to make the feature, Wolfe drove
the Wolfe Body Shop-Eber's
Citgo-McDonald's car from last to
sixth to make the field behind
Leist, Ron Adams, Frazier, Throckmonon and Seymour.
Barry Bragdon had a clean
sweep in thC Street Stock division,

Esiason looking past
football playing days
ClNCfNNA Tl (AP) - Boomer
Esiason once said he probably
wouldn't continue playing past age
35. That gives him four more years,
but he's already lookmg ahead to
his next career.
The Cincinnati Bengals quarter·
back has spent tile past two years
as a color announcer on the USA
Network's cable broadcasts of
World League football games.
"That's why I'm doing it. I'm
using it for the future, to develop
my resume," Esiason said.
So far, he 's getting good
reviews from his TV boss, Gordon
Beck.
"He definitely has a future. I
feel very strongly about that," said
Beck, vice president of production
and executive producer for USA
Network.
"I thmk you're looking at
somebody who, when his playing
career is over, he's going to serve
somebody's football announcing
team ex crcmcly well."
Esiason was in the TV booth a
week ago in Montreal when Sacramento defeated Orlando in the
World Bowl , but he returned
Wednesday to the Bengals' voluntary workouts at Spinney Field.
"If you can explain 1t in reasonable terms and be somewhat funny,
you can be reasonably acceptable,''
Esiason said.
Beck said Esiason has a chance
to be more than jusl an "acceptable" announcer because his personality comes across well on TV.
"I think he's a natural," Beck
said. "He's cocky, smooth, articulate. He 's an aggressive athlete
who 's got some brains and it trans·
lates well to the booth. He's com·
fonable with the camera."
The hardest thing for Esiason to
get used to was keeping up with the
action on the field while having
statistics shoved into his hands and
directions yelled into his headset
"I had to stop talking when the

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producer talked in my ear," Esiason said. "Now I keep my train of
thought going and I keep talking."
Beck said Esiason always
showed poise, but his timing and
focus also quickly improved.
"We were very surprised how
well he started off," Beck said.
"There wasn't dramatic progress
from a complete neophyte to some·
one pretty good. He just seemed to
have a knack for IL"
Esiason says he tries to find a
balance between humor and criti·
cism. He doesn ' t want to be too
critical of the players, considenng
the league's level of play .
" I just want to be kind of
humorous," Es1ason said. "That
was easy because there's some
things that happen lfl that leag ue
you don't see anywhere else."
Esiason broadcast II Monday
111ght games last year. But because
of the birth of his son and prior
commitments, Es1ason cut back
this year to the World Bowl and
three Saturday night telecasts from
New Yorl:.
USA Network has two years
remaining on its contract to broadcast WLAF games. But the future
of the league is uncertain.
"The Jury is out on the World
League, but we would love to have
Boomer back if we do it agam,"
Beck said.

engaging in another battle of a
year-long war w1th runner-up Carl
Coleman.
.
Third was Mike Wilson Jr., fol·
lowed by Bob Callahan, Jerr~
Bragg, Bill McElfresh, Brian Conkle, Richard Johnson, Fred Hard barger and Larry Brisker.
Bmgdon defeated Bob Callahan
in his heat, while Coleman edged
Brian Conkle in the second.
This week marks the ftrst visit
of the STARS super din Late Mod;
els, who were ramed out earlier in
the year. The nation's top din stars
will lock horns w1th the local racers
for the running of the third annual
U.S.A 50 paying $5,000 to win out
of a $20,000 total purse.
The Late Models will also be
joined by the super sprints.
SUMMARY
Super Sprints
Fast time: Jim Nier 12:853
First Heat: Nier, Byron Reed,
Steve McCann, Ron Myers.
Second Heat : Mike Bowling,
Mark Goodtleish, Tim Jodrey and
Charlie Fisher.
FEATURE : Bowling, Reed ,
Myers, Nier, Rick Holley , Mike
Imler, Jodrey, Mark Imler, Randy
Fink, Tyke Kistler , Boone Davis,
John Webb, Charlie Fisher, Steve
McCann, Goodfleish, Kevin Stone
and Steve Dickson.
Late Models
FAST TIME : Paul Coyan
15 :048
First Hea t Donnie Kennison .
Rod Evans, Chris Diddle, Jackie
Boggs.
SECOND HEAT: Criag Leist,
Ron Adams, Mark Frazier, Tony
Throckmonon
THIRD HEAT: Delmas Conley,
Jeff Houser, Jon Osman, Chuck
Waddell
Consolation: Duane Ackley,
Clark VanHooten, Mark Queen,
Rob McCoy, Jeff Grimsley.
FEATURE : Evans, Conley ,
Houser, Leist,Greg Stevens, Jackie
Boggs, Charlie Seymour, Donnie
Kennison, Chuck Wadell , Chris
Diddle, Mark Frazier, Sean Smith,Ron Adams, Tony Throckmonon,·
Scott Wolfe, Duane Ackley, Jon ·
Osman, Buddy Lane, Clark Van-·
Hooten , Paul Coyan.
Street stocks
First Heat Barry Bragdon, Bob
Callahan, R1chard Johnson, Dave ·
Greeno.
·
Second Heat: Carl Coleman,:
Brian Conkle, Mike Wilson Jr .. :
Bill McElfresh.
FEATURE : Barry Bragdon,
Carl Coleman, Wilson, Callahan,
Jerry Bragg, McElfresh, Conkle,
Richard Johnson, Fred Hardbarger, :
Larry Bnsker, Barry Brisker, Don ·
Greeno, Dean Osborn, Roy Coder, :
John Reeser, Bob Denny, Butch "
Owings, Brian Hammond, Steve
Bobo and Perry Smith .

The Problem

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, June 15, 1992

•The Area's Number I
Marl{etplace

Monday, June 15, 1992

Page-6

Employee asks for some courtesy
Dear Ann Landers : I am 42
now and have been followmg
your column since high school. I
notice that you have stood up for
forefighters, waitresses, policemen,
bus drivers, school teachers, nurses,
truck drivers, bank tellers .• the list
is endless ·· but I have never seen a
word about the most abused segment
of society •• dbose of us who work
for a telephone answering service.
I've been at this job for 18
months and have developed
stomach problems from the
aggravation. My doctor says I
should quit even if I have tO
clean offices at night, but I am
hangmg in dberc, hop1ng to learn
how to cope.
Why doesn't the public understand
that we are dbere to help db em?
We are expected to handle at least
75 lines. which is a b1g load, but
11 wouldn't be difficult for an
experienced operator if it weren't
for the garbage·moudb cranks who
make us miserable.
We have instructions to be CIVIl
no matter what people say to us.
Well, how would you like to have
someone yell, "Get the hell off dbe
also with John Riebel, Meigs County suj)erinten·
RECEIVES AWARD • Robby Wyatt, Meigs
dent, and Carroll Meadows, president of the
line. I'm calling long-distance and I
High School graduate, was the rrcipi•nl of the
Ohio County Superintendents Association, spon·
don't want to talk to an answenng
Franklin B. Walter All-Scholastic Award at a
sor of the recognition program.
luncheon held in Columbus. Here, left to right,
service!"
Wyatt is presented a plaque by Walter, pictured
I've had people ask me, "Is this a
recording?" When I say, "No, it is
not a nx:ording," they say. "Prove
it!" I ask you, Ann, is db1s the he•ght
of 1~norance or what? How could a
The scholastic award program awards, personal goal statement, recording respond to a qucsuon?
POMEROY · Robby Wyat1 .
You would be doong a lot of
graduate of Me•gs H1gh School . was established by dbe Otuo Coun· leuers of recommendation . grade
pomt
avera
ge,
and
ACT/SAT
was the Meigs County nx:1p1ent of ty Supenntendems Assoc1auon to
the Second Annual Franklin B promote student achievement and score.
Wyau wa s valedictorian of dbc
Walter All -Scholastic Award.
to recogruze oulstandmg students.
The award was pre sent ed to
Th e appll cauons from candi." 1992 graduaung class at Meigs.
Re c1pient of the Fmt Annual
Wyatt by Franklin B. Walter at a dates were evaluated on a po1nl
· spcoal recognitiOn luncheon held sys tem wuh each of su categoncs Franklin B. Walter AII-Scholasuc
recently at dbe Radd1son Hotel m having a possoble fove pomts. Award wa s Aaron Sheets, also a
Columbus.
Those catc goncs were actlval•e s, Me1gs H1gh School graduate.

Wyatt receives scholastic award

Ann
Landers

people a b•g favor 1f you printed
my letter We need to get the
word out and you could make a b1g
dlffcrcnce. --N .Y.C. OF COURSE
DEAR N.Y.C.: People who arc
abusive 10 telephone personnel are
really cowardly. They know they can
be nasty and not have to face the
people dbey've been rough on. As
dbat old song goes, "They are more
to be piLicd than censured." Give
them a hasty disconnect and put a
smile back 1n yo•r vo1ce
Dear Ann Landers : Wow' I
knew you were popular, but never
imagmcd how well read until you
published dbe name of our bank,
the Savings Bank of Rockville. I
had wrouen to let you know that
one of your columns had prompted
a customer to return $50 thai he had
mistakenly recc1 ved from our bank.
You printed my letter.
I heard from college classmates.
fonmer employees, fam1ly members
and strangers from coast to coast.
My Aunt Agnes sent me a letter that
says it all. Please share it with your
readers ... WILLIAM McGURK,
ROCKVILLE, CONN.
DEAR MR. McGURK : Thanks

for lcLllng me know dbat a leuer on
my column sent shock wav es
through dbe family hot hne. It was
fun and I will indeed share your Aunt
Agnes' letter w1th my reader.&lt;. Here
iLlS. And won't she be surprised!
Dear Bill· You ccnaonly electn·
f•ed the family and created a swell
of activity. I'm sure Marianna has
told you that Marion phoned
ewtedly from Torrance. followed
by Jimmy from San Diego. Next
I had a note from Aunt Mardba.
She said Muncl called Paul al work
when she spoued your letter. Paul
promptly called his mother. The next
day Mike called from MJssoun to
say Nan had phoned him at work to
read him your leuer. And. of course ,
I called Shc1la.
N1ce lcucr. You 're famous. Way
to go, B•ll' Love. Aunt Agnes
DEAR AUNT AGNES: You
sound lokc a hvmg doll . Thanks for
helping my readers end the week
with a smile.
Gem of the Day : Vacauons arc
wonderful social equaliZers. People
come back JUSt as broke as theor
neighbors who couldn"t afford to go.
An alcolu! I proiJiem? How can you
help yourself or someone you love ?
"A/cohn/ism: !low 10 R'cognm /1,
How 10 Deal Wllh It, How to
Conquer It" w•Il give you the
answers Send a ulf·addrtSsed.
long, bus1ness-si:e envtlo~ and a
check or molll'y order for $3 65 (I his
includes postage and handling) 10 .
Alcohnl. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
/1562. Chicago, III. 606/J -0562 . (In
Canada. send $4 .45 I

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

RATES
Days

ad
Call 992-2156

COPY DEADLINE

MoN. thru FRI . 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.8-l2
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ada ouLude Lhe county your ~td run a mwt be p.-epa1d
• Heeeive d~te o unl fo.- ad1 paid in advance.

Gallia County

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
PUBUCATIOfj
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNlY, OHIO
BILLY JOE TROUT,
Pia inti"

576-Apple Grove

843-Pordand
217- L.etart FaUa

773-M .. o"
882- New linen

949- Racinc
742-Rutland

9.17- BufTalo

Marc Quinn, Sr., who••

lut known llddr... wu ln
tho tllilt of Colilomla, you
•• hereby noUiled that you
hove named delw!dont
In 1 togal ICUon ontltlod
Billy Jot Trou~ plalntlll,
vorouo Booky S. T1ou~
defendant Thlt action hoe
. .lgnod Cast No. g.

"You can't get bouer over these
setbacks. You just have to make
sure the rest of your life is 10
order," she said.
"I have more to accomplish m
film. I want to keep on work1ng
and learmng, but the most ompor·
tanl and constant dbing to me •s my
relationship with my husband
(songwriter Robert Reale) and
ch1ld."
NOSTALGIC MUSI C · The Classics, Bill
Ward on the tenor sax, Junior White on bass, AI
Windon on drums, and Rita White on the key·

board, presented music from tbe forties and
forties for the Meigs Museum's "Good Old Summertime" themed Heritage Weekend program.

RUTLANDFOURTHOFJULY
PARADE ENTRY FORM
1\ame or Group: - - - -- - - - -- - - -- -Name of Person to Contact: - - - - -- -- - - - Address:
Phone No. : - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - Category of entry : - - - - - - - - - - - -- - Send To:
Box 11, Rutland, Ohio 45775.
For more lnfotmatlon call Kim Willford, 742-2103 or Marie
•• Birchfield, 742·2178.

News briefs
An Argentine grandmother's 10·
year search for the abducted grand·
daughter she had never seen was
successful because genetic profil·
ing proved the child's identity with
99 .98 percent cenamty, according
to Nanonal Geographic .
An internauonal m•litary tri·
bunal in Nuremberg. Germany,
found 22 top Nazi leaders guilty of
war crimes Sept. 30. 1946, and sentenced II of them to death.
Joszef Cardinal Mindszenty of
Hungary flew to Rome Sept. 28, .
1971, endong 15 years ofasyhun in
th e U.S. mission compound in
BudapesL

ATLANTA (AP) - President
Caner says Atlanta is a Clly d1v1ded
bet ween rich and poor. but he sees
a way ouL
"We're divoded because we
basically ignore each other," he
told about 400 residents of the
Summerhill neighborhood dunng a
prayer breakfast Sarurday.
Carter quoted from the Bible m
urging residents of the black corn·

Heart.''
·'I'll be honest, I don'tthink

·Achy Breaky Hean' makes much
of a statement," Tritt said then. He
al so eroticized the accompanying
v1deo as being overdone.
Before taking the stage Saturday
mght, Triu said:
"If anything I have said has hurt
B1lly Ray Cyrus or his family. I
apologoze. But I don't apologize for
my opinion."
Cyrus performed at June Jam
several hours ahead of Tritt, mak·

DOWNING CHILDS
MULUN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., P0111eroy :
YOUR INDEPENDENT :
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

hom M1r11:

HOUSE FOR SALE
Mulbeny Heighls, Pomeroy
2 BR, 2\', baths, central air, gas
heat, near Senior Citizens ,
churches, hospital &amp; schools.
Call 992·3424 for appOintment

DEBRA CHEVALIER

510 IJo rth Sc10nd Ave .,

Republican Central Committee
Chesler North
Paid lor by the C.ndklllte

SERVICE
Middl eport
OP[fJ 11 'l f.lorr rr1
'l lu 1 ~l, Jill!cl.ry

24 HOUR TOWING
992·345 I

A..:r eage

41 - Hou•e• for Hent
42- Mobile ll ume.l for
43-- farm 1 fu r Hcn t

R~nt

MEHCIIANDISE

I

Tr~~.de

FAHM SL 1'1'1.11- . ~
&amp; Ll\ I·:S·TOI.I-.
bl 62 63--64-----

rurm [~uipmenl

Wtmtl'!d to fluy
L•veJ! loc k
HaySi Crun
65Seed
&amp; Fert1hzer
1

TH \ \'POIIT \TI&lt;l\

41-- Apartme nt fo r Rent
45-- Furn11hOO Uooma
46---- Spac t: for He nt
47- W,.nt rd to H('nt
48-- E'lUipm ent for Hent
49-- For V:ue

51 5253-54-5&gt;---

For S•le or

llouaebold Good.
Sportmg Goods

Ant•quee
M111c Mr.re handu e
1l uold1njl; Suppl.cti

7 1- Au tot for Sale
72- Truck1 for Sale
Van.ll &amp; 4 wo·~

In-

i 74-- M o ton: yr lf'~

, 7&gt;--- Uoal.l &amp; Moton for Sale
I 71:;-..- Aut o PartJ; &amp; A
" '" '" ""
77- Auto R"pa1r
178-- Camp•ns Equtpment

l

SEH\ ICES
Homf! lmpor•emenb
PlumhmiS &amp; ll c•lm@:
83- Excavatm,;
84-- [ \cc tn ca l &amp; Rdngera

81 -

82-

1

8J-- Ccneralll aulmg

JBb-- Mob1le llom ~ Re 1wur
87- L ph o l ~ ter y

WICK'S
HAULING SERVIa

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Pomeroy, Ohio

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wi11dows
Room Additions • Roofing

36970 Ballut Road

ltopond It required by lht
Ohio Rul11 ol Civil
Public Notice
Procoduro, judgment by
dafoult will bt rondtlod
ogllnal you for tho roUof ala and equipment necea11ry
demanded In tho mollon oo complooe tho project

Public Notice
after bid dale. Checks shall

be made pafable oo oho Vii·

known as Bridgeman Street

dotod.
lMry

E.

Sptncor

lage of Syracuse, Ohio.

Storm Sower and Street

Each bidder Is required lo

Clark ol Courtl Repair, and al oald olmo and
(6) 8, t 5, 22, 211; (7) 6, 13, 6tc place, publicly opened and

Public Notice

LEGAl NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

•

519.95 A DAY AND UP
CALL (614) 446-9971 (KELLY)

•SAND -GRAVEL oOIRT
oUMESTONE

(No SundaJ Calls)

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

(6141992-3470

511 51'92/1 mo.

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

ATTENTION
\ lohilt• 1\ I louhll'll idl' I Inull'

(hi Ill' I"'

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Apprand Mm•fudurtd
H011sing Produds.

'

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
614·949·2202
4/22/92/1-

Water Heaters.

omH-P.ri-WIIdllft

read aloud.
The eatlmated project

furnish with 111 pro~sal, a
Bid Guaranty and Contract
Bond In accordance with
Section 153.54 of the Ohio

Conlracl document•. bkl

Rovlaod Code. Bid oocurlly
furnlahod In Bond form, ahall

coso Is $17,600.

aheeta, pion and opoclHco·

be l11ued by a Surety Com·
pany or Corporation llcen Md

tiona can be obtained aiNkl

oHice on Juno 111, 1992, ol
$25.00 pe&lt; oeo, which
Mayor, Municipal Building, money will be refunded to
Third Street, Syracuot, Ohio, the un ·uccreJolut bldde&lt;a
• untlf 4 p.m. locol lhfto on upon the return of the com·
Thursday, July 9, 1892, for pleoo aet In good condition
turnlahlng oil labor, motorl· no more than len {10) daya

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK

992-2269

Public Notice

lrrogularllleoand torelecoanr
or all blda.
lnlereooed therein. Each bid·
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE

or parties eubmlltlng the
propoaal and all persona

der must aubmll evidence of
Ita experience• on pro/ecte
of similar size and complex- (6) 8,
Ity. The owner Intends and
rBqulrea that thlt project be
completed no later than

Seplombor t. 1992.
Bidders are reaulred lo

comply with the Mlnorlly
Bualnon Enlorpriao (MBE)
requlremenla eel forth in

Section 164.07 of ohe Ohio
Rovlsod Code, and Rule 1641-32 ollhe Ohio Admlnlllu·

Janice Lawson,

15 2TC

Clerk· Treaaurer

Public Notice

RE-BID NOTICE
Tho Bo1rd ol Truot- of
lotarl Townahlp, Moigo
County, will oHor f01 oalo 1
t 1178 Chovrolal Von, Sorlal
No. CGL2SBU16&amp;t8t, to ooll

•••
Soolod

bldo will bo
thalony blddor,lo tho noeno accoptod 11 office of clerk
that It •ubcontracta work, until 7:00 p.m. July 6, 1192.
shall award aubconlracta to Bldo wYI be oponod 11 lhlo
otote certllled Minority Busl· lime. The trua .... r..erve
tho right to rojoct ony or Ill
ne11 Enterprlaea In an ag·
tlve Code. In part. thla mean•

gregate dollar value of no Iell

bldo.

Bldo con be oant to olftco
than live percent (5%) oltho
prime contract. Bidder pro- of clark ot 23231 Hill Ad.,
culomont ocllvltlea, to tho Raclno, Ohio 45771 (614)
exlent that the conlractor 247·3125.
Bo•d of Truopurchaaael malerlala and/or
Wllllam D. Grllham,
aervlcea, ahall reault In the

992·2259
608 fAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICE REDUCED! Grant St.· Middleport· 3 bedroom•.

newer rool, furnace &amp; hot waler heater, full bsmt. carport,

lronl porch. shed. fencecllol GREAT LOCATION! WAS
$34,900 NOW $26.0001

award of procurement con·

Chrlotopher T. Wollo,

troctad to aO.lo cortlfled MI· Cltrk: Joyco WllitoDon A. Hill
norlty Bualnn• Enterprise•
In 1n aggreg1te dollar value (6) 15, 22, 211, 31c
of nolle.. than two percent
(2%) of tho prima contracl.

NEW liSTING- Peacock Avo.· 1 112 slory newly mmodeled home with 3 bedrooms. side deck. fronl porch, added
1nsulabon, lull bsml on 4 lolsl $32,500

All contractor• 1nd aub-

NEW USTING· VACANT lOT 1n Minersville! 80 x 100

oontractoralnvolved whh thla
proJect will, to the extent

would make a good lrwler lot NICS location- beautiful view
of the river ASKING $6,500

pracllcoble uao Ohio Pro&lt;f..

uota,mlterllla, aervlcea, and

labor In tho Implementation
olthlo project. Additionally,
controctor compllonco with
tho Equet Employment Opportunlty requirement• ot
Ollto Admtntatrattvo Code

LOCATIONI $17,000

POMEROY· I floor ~arne home 2-3 bedrooms. gas FA
heal. full bsml with garoga. newer paint and repairs inside.
Friendr location, close to shopping Asking $28,000

~~~~.!~!:o~~:"n~~

COMMERCIAL BUilDING- M1ln St. Oilers lots olatoraqe
space, olficelshowroom area . A small building with' big
potentiall ASKING $15,0Q0omake us an ofler ... OWNEA
WANTS TO SElll

Govomor'o E1ocutlvo Order
8.4-8 ..... be .-qulrocl.
Blddtrl MUll comply with
tho pCIYaiHng wogo ,.... on
Public tmprovomento In

ClELAND REAlTY.•THE NAME TO REMEMBER
FOR AlL YOUR HOME BUYING
AND SElLING NEEDSI

MotgoCounty~ndlhtVIlloge

ol Syr~~GUM, Ohio, 11 dttof·

HENRY E.CLELAND...........................................te2-e111
TRACY BRtNAGER............................-.............84$&gt;24311
JEAN TAUSSElL ...........................................-.Nli-HfO
OFFICE...............................................................tt2·2251

:::'or~~~...O:~.I:/'.!~:

,.

Th• YllltJ• or Syroou••
,_,..., dot right to nlvo

BULLDO~~ 1_!1ACKHOE

ond TRAC"""E WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAilER SITES,
lANDCLEARlNG
DRIVEWAYS INSTWD
UMESTONE-TRUCKJNG
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

4·4-92·tt.

lain \he full name ot tho party

Real Estate General

%eadows

USED RAILROAD TIES

In lha Stata of Ohio to provide said surety.
Each prOPQaal must con·

received al the office ol lhe

'l(p. tfiryn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

6-f.~'-

o.

·avJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.
t12ltln

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

"H•ipi.rt« f - To RecoNr
y....,,.....,..,., ••

Furnaces &amp; Now

2112192 tin

GALLIPOLIS OH 10

RACINE, OHIO

0

Quabty Hi EHkiency Air
Co1dltioaers, Heat PunJDs,

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

COMMERCIAL and Rt:Smt:NTit\L
FREt: t:STIMt\T£.11

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

MOiorcycles-Etc.

NEW LISTING- Commlfciol Building- W. Main in Pom-

MANLEY'S GARAGE
&amp; WRECKER

Au ction
9- Wanted to Buy

Bennetts Mobile
1391 Safford School Rd.
Cal (614) 446-941

eroy-Former gas station with apartmenl overhead . GOOD ,

Thank You For The Vote Of
Support.

895- Letarl

Jlll:fiUitr'lltf.

In caaa of your faUure to
anew er or otherw lee

women.

Lou &amp;

II ENTALS

ll- Help Wanted
12- Silualloru Wanted
13-- I naurance
14-- Bua1ne.u Tr a iOinfil
l S--- Sdroool1 &amp; I natrucllon
I f - Radio, TV &amp; en Repair
11- Mucellaneoua
18-- W11ntcd To Do

f£TT£RBVD£SION

t 1192, and tho twonty-4ighl
(28) dayo lor 1n1wt1 will
commence on that dm.

FORT PAYNE, Ala. (AP) Country singer Travis Trill isn't
apologozmg for hos dishke of the
song "Achy Breaky Heart," but he
said he was sorry if his criticism
hun Bolly Ray Cyrus, who made it
a No. I hit.
Tritt talked about the song,
Cyrus and hunself before appearing
at the band Alabama's I lth June
Jam, an annual benefit show.
Last week, Tntl said he didn't
much care for "Achy Breaky

3-- AnnouncemenlJ;
4-- Ct"eaway
5- Happy Ado
6-- Loat and round
7- Loat and F'ound
8--- Public Saie &amp;

lrn:'DTUI:DIII

will be mad• on July 13,

PLAINVIEW, Texa s (AP) Steve Martin and Debra Winger
have residents starry-eyed over dbe
shooting of "Leap of Faodb ...
Both stars amvcd 10 Plainview
last week to begin rehearsals and
Marlin was spotted catmg at a
Furr's Cafeteria.
A
Paramount
Picture s'
spokesman sard Martin plays a
preacher who has lost his purpose
m tife. He travels 10 a small Kansas
town for a rev1val, accompamed by
his touring group and Ius road man·
ager, played by Winger.
The drought-ravaged town and
its residents help Martin renew his
faith, the spokesman said.
Shooting 10 Plainview starts
June 21. Crews will then move to
Groom, about 80 miles north.

CLASSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS • FAST!

675- Pt . Pleaaant
458-Leon

, 5~

Business Services

at the
Hammond Organ
at the Moose Lodge
6-10 P.M.

wttb. Tho lut publication

ong an mdiroct reference to the crit icism while on stage .
"I don 't care what anybody else
says. From the bottom of my 'Achy
Brcalcy Heart' I love all of you ."
he told the crowd of about60,000.

35--

36-- Heal Ea um Wanted

667-CoolviUe

for 111 (6) IUCCiaaiYI

munuy to help the poor overcome
'thw sense of hopelessness insulled
by goverrunent leaders who frul to
fulfill promises.
Residents are working to redc ·
vclop dbclf blighted ne1~hborhood.
The Olympic stadium woll be local·
ed there for the 1996 Summ er
Games.
" Summerhill's efforts arc the
thmgs that measure greatness,"
Carter saod. "Those are the thmgs
for which we should strove on
bnngmg a d,v,dcd city togedber"

31 - Home~ for Sale
32- M a lHI ~ ll omc1 fur Sal 1•
3J.- Farm i for Sale
34-- Bu.s 1neu Dudd1ng1

Maron Co., WV

992-Middleportl
Pomeroy
985-Cheller

57- M UitCB I I rutrumr.nll
58- Fru1U &amp; Veget..ablu

HEAL EST\TE

2-ln Memory

446-G..Ilipoli•
367-Chelhire
388- Vlnton
245--Rio Grande
256--Cuyan Di.l.
643-Arabia DiAl.
379-Walnul

FREE SENIOR
CITIZENS DANCE
55 &amp; Over
Monday, June 15th
"George Hall"

O.lendont

CASE NO. ~123

Quinn, Sr. to BINy Jot Trout
Mdlorcoata.
You lrt roqu Ired to
1nawor lhlo motion within
twenty-eight (28) dayo liter
tho lut publication of thle
nolle• which will bt
publlohod onco oach wttk

NEW YORK (AP) - Pregnan ·
cy has been a m~&lt;ed blessmg for
actress Kate Nellogan.
At 41, after two years of tryin g,
she os overJoyed to be expeCling
her first ch1ld. But, Nelligan says.
her pregnancy has dried up her
clout to pick her scnpts.
"I fmally had the chooce of pro·
JCCts after struggling, and I lost 11
all," she told Parade magazine in
an interview published Sunday.
Nelligan, nominated for an
Academy Award for "The Pnnce
of Todes," said U.S. filmmakers
arc reluctant to hire a prc~nant
woman. so she has been working in
Canada, which has laws bamng
d• scflmmauon against pregnant

2~ l'r o ff'J;~ I O nfll Sc rnc ~

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

vs

I

---People in the news---

22 -

charged for each day as separate ad s.

Mei~• Cmmly

56-- Peu fo r Sale

llu&amp;IMU Opportunlly
\1 oncy to Loan

21-

Rates are for con secuttve run s, broken u p day s w tll be

1.00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m Thursd ay
1tX) p.m Fnday

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

BECKY S. TROUT, ET Al

Marc Quinn

Club. Exhibiting were from tbe left, Oavid Robi·
nette, Nathan Robinette, Gerald Shuster, and
Dick Freeman . Brian Justice also had some
equipment on display.

$ 600
$900
$13 00
5130/day

15

FINANCIAL

$ 20
$ JO
$ .42
$ (,Q
$.05/day

$4 DO

15
15
IS
15

1.00 p.m Monday

BlJLLETI\ BOARD

DA-123 and It pending In
tho Court of Common PIIn Melgt County, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45768.
The object ol thlo motion
io to chengo tho pormanont
cuotody ol Ploul Quinn and

MOOEL TRAINS ON DISPLAY • Among
the many exhibits at the Meigs Museum for Her·
1tage Weekend was an extensive display or
model trains by the Southeast Ohio Railroad

Over 15 Words

I

-

HERITAGE QUEEN AND COURT · April
Hudson, 1992 Heritage Queen, and her court,
were recognized following Saturday's Heritage

Rate

I Oil p m. Tuesday

Classified pages cover lhe
following telephone exchange.1 . ..

• Free Ad. : c.vcaway and F'ound ad. under )5 worda Will be
run 3 day• at no eharge
• Pr1ce of ad for all t:apitallctl.erl 11 double pr1ce of ad COIL
• 7 pomtlme type only u1ed.
• Sentmel11 not reaporuuhle for errore after flnl day (chedl
for crron f1nl day ad rune m paper). Call befoR 2 00 p m.
dtty a her pubiM:at.i()n to m11lr.e corcecllon
• Ada th11t mwt be pa•d m advance are:
Card of Thanlr.a
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A cla.uit.ed. ad" ertuemenl plated in the GallipolU Daily
Tribune (except Cla11it.ed. Oi.lplay, Bwineu Card or Legal
No Licea) wJI!al.o appear in the Point P\euant Rq;ilter and
the Oady St!ntmel, reachmg o"er 18,000 hontCJ

'f

Parade in Pomeroy. Members of the Heritage
Queen Court are Love Batey, Amy Searls and
Michelle Laughery.

1
3
6
10
Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 00 p m Salurday

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fnday Paper
SW1day Paper

Words

949·2627 or
1-800-837·1460
Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, WHding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
A•ldentiof &amp; Commorci.t

CARPEIJRY
PlUMIII!t WI~IIIG,
cuno. IUilr
UJHROOII
VlllnJES

Millwood, W.Va.

304-273-SSSS
4-9-tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Ramodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FlUE ESTIMAlES

985·4473
667·6179

949·2671
UCIIIE, OH.

2·1·92-tln

6-3-'92·1

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORK a•d
LIMESTONE
DEUVERJ SERVICE
ioEASONAB'L&lt;r RATES
K

992 7553

•

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
Bri:!11 ~1J: wo
Pick

'

985·3561

So-14-92111

Announcements
3 Announcements
"Romantic

dlngs"

Candiejlgh1

-smdty

Wttd-

w~ntalns

'Clergy
'EI~ant
Chapel
"Photographs ·~toralt 'limoa
'Video
'Accommodlltktn1

'Uod.st Prlc"! Charo- Ill •No
Walling,
No
Blood
T1st
•Gatlinburg, Tenn..na '1-aoo..

WED-RING .

A Wonderful Family ExPIIrience

Seandinavtiln,

European

Yugoslavian 1• South Amwk•n'

£.:

JaPfln•• t1lgh School
change Students Arriving In
August
S.com.
A l4ost
Family/American
lnlercununl
Stud1nl Exc:htngt. C.tl Kathie
216-650-9619 Or 1.aGO-SibURQ
Call Your Datt: MHt Som.one
Spec1al' Dial 1~100-13'f..4.«4 For

Romance And Fun
S1 39/Min All Ut..ty._, Agu

Dallng,

18-.. Gals Call 215-896-98~ (Dial
Swstems Office).

FEMALES--M•s• Wett VIrginia
USA Pagenl Hire, tot c:ootnlanls For information write : TrtStllt Headquer1trt, O.pl 8, 347

loeusl Ava, Washington, Pa
1530'1. O.adlint July 18th.
Free Adult Talk llr..
l·N-682-7'037
Uve, One On On.

ut!.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

-

.

Lime
Rt. 2

KERWOOD$
HOME REPAIR
SERVICE

614·949-2804

Agriculture

VAlLEY INC.

614·992·2242
412/92/tln

lofoal
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowers • CW. Saws
• Weedeaters

FOR SALE

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

Custom Painting•

RAONI, 01110

(l....ty IItle IIWp ...

Free E•lim•le•
4126192 tin

"SPEClAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

Welcome Slates
$20.00

P.O. kx 194-W..• Mey

Mynlo Bmh Ruon Vocollon
Renlole, Oc:IOn • .,.. Condo•

HouHkeoplng

lnclucl..t In:
POOls

door/O.. doo'
Whirlpools, Sa•.mas,

•
lcr••• Fr. . P•t Office
Ught.d
Specializing In (U$IOrn
H.
I. lacalll II.
Tonnlo Courta, Punlng G"'""*·
217
O
POMEROY.'
PO.EIOl, OHIO
Golf Packagea AvallttMt Fr..
Frame Repair
5-11·'92·1pd.
3/23192/tln
B'oehu•o. 1~48-.5653.
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
L.------...;......1 f1~;:;:;:~~;:;::===~~ Campground
Timt
Shere
Units
And
FOR All MAKES
Membershlpa Dl•
&amp; MODELS
tress Sales, Cheapll Woridwkte
Call 'ltcallon Net·
TEAFORD GOLF S.leetlons
992-7013 or
~LINDA'S
work IJ C3. And CaMe~~ 1-800992·5553
136-8250 o' 305..S6f..2203 Free
~PAINTING
AND TROPHY
R1n111 Information 305-563OR TOll flEE
5586
1·800·848·0070
.
&amp;
985-3961

...

DARWIN, OHIO

7131{91/tfn

.J1go IJXJkillf-lli Allillllte WAITAiJf.
I
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

co.

'Tob llo ,.. Oort 01 ,..,

- t.r u. Do '' ,.,

r.·

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FlU ISnMATES
HAY'I RIFIIEIKlS
lol•o 6p.a. LMtrollosSJIII

'"• 6,... 614-915-4110
11411211 -

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BEAUTIFUL LOCATION
Nice Place For Doublewldea and
To Raise A Family

BULLDOZING

or 304-773-5186 After 5
ASK FOR AL

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

a.bRepc*,
Trop~les,

Plaq.es
CIICI Badges
512611 mo.

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;

HAur~~?~~!~one,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenaed and Bonded

Whtlewater Rafting, w... Virginia 't New And Gtu~ AI.,.,..
Call Today For FrM Bnxhure 1800~33· AAFT. Orttt..A-Btt , Inc:.

P 0 . Bo• 885. FayeUevlne,
25840.

4

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addltlona
-GuiiM WCMk
..flealrlcol and Plumbing
-Rooftng

_.~:,:-ror

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
, 992-6215

p
Ohio
PH. 614-992·5S91
orntroy,
L---------1~2~-5~-tl~n~ IL--.-----3-·13-~--~~

wV

Giveaway

2 Black/Calico Klttena, 1 W•k•

Old. 61H4H4TI After 4 Pll.

2 1m1U loveable dogt, to good

homa

""

LOTS FOR SALE

PHONE, WATER • ELECTRIC ALREADY
AVAILABLE
Will Sell Part or All
Call 304_n~- 5118
"'

Lessoas 512.50
6 lesSDIS 560.00

304-6~.

3 Ftuffy Klttant, Gr.y I Whha
Black &amp; Whhe. 8 WMkl, Liltai
Trtlning 614ool7'9-2517.
3 Klttena • 1 Pup. 114-311 8100.

3 tmall ll.ln~ m1~ and
female, IM-M2~ 7
Black, gray, CIIICO khl- ID a
llood hOtnO, 5 -ks old, 114-

m.aw.

Golden
Relrl..,.r/Auatrttlan
Sllophonl pupoloa to • IIOOd

home, 3 male, 2 tema .., 114-IU-

4443.

KIHono To Good Homo. I WOld. Wh~o, Black All Cal'*l
614-2""11'93 And Ltavo "~~"-

�8

Page

4

The Dally Sentinel

Giveaway

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

32

SNAFU® by Bruce Bealtie

Manrtts &amp; box tprtnga. 304615-1314.

Mixed Chow I Cclllo To A Geed
Home On A Farm. Lova
Child,., . Good Hunter. 814-37'92518.

Lost

45

1975 Hollyhllle mobile t\ome, 2

Furnished aparlment av1B1b~
by
WHk
with
cooking

1m New Yorbr, 14x70, New
Carpet, ~ Hot W1ter Tank,
New Fumtcl, And New Applilnces. 614-388-9261.

6 14-446-0~4 .

1

rented lot, 614--992-5800.

$4,000.-firrn. Also
old coR botllaa 1nd ot~ar old
bonia• . 304-882·3755.

Rewndt t.o.t: Se1 Of Key~.
Grape St!'t'et OJ Vk:lnHy. Call

Yard Sale

1988 14x70 2 bedroom, 2 bath,
gu fur. and llove, 614-992-6981.

Pomeroy,

14x70

1989

Ottaway

model

BrldQepor'l, with 2 porchn, air,
no llrnltu.... Muat mo~a. Cell

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

Clarence Y . Yoon.y attar 6 p.m.

614-258-1510.

All Yard 511.. Muet Be Pakl In

Advance. O..cllnt: 1:00pm the
day bttor. the ad Ia to run,

R•poeseaMd Doubltwldn: 5

Monday
Saturday.

oblo Only $500 DOwn With Approved Cradh. Call 1-«l0-58~
57'10.

Sunday edHicn- 1:OOpm Friday,
edhion

10:001.m.

Moving ea.._ 41860 Kingsbury.
June U:, 13, 14, 11-7pm. Guns,
ilnliqu..,
•ppll•nc:n,
T.V.,
lewelry, mlec:.

Gallipolis

Aclvlnc~~. DEAO~E :

Pay? Do You Wenl Mor. Milts?

a. Paid In

p.m.

2:00

the day belonl tiM! ad .. to run.
Sunday edHion • 2:00 p.m.

Frtdoy. llondly edHicn • 2:00
p.m. Stturdly.

6

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rlck.Pe.lrson Auction Company,
full time tuetlona.r, complata
auction
tarvlce.
UcanHd

166,(lhlc l W001 VIrginia, 304173-1785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Don't Junk h! Sail Ut Your Non-

MIJor

WaRing

Applltne ..,

Color TV'•, VCR'•, Mlcrowavaa,
Air Condhlonera, Etc. 814·256·
ma.

Good
•~-:U::-o--;----o
od M;-:c
ot «--;1-,.-:d:-:Ec-xor­

cyc '-· 814-446-3129.

Old rnarb..._ toye, comic books,
lanttml, pk:tur.. and furniture,
Osby

Help Wanted

Mtr11n, 614-992·-.,.1.

St1nilng timber, will PlY fllr
prlc:ae, call Jerry Runron, 614m-~687.

Want. to buy radiator tor '87
cnavy S-10 automatic. 304--882-

2563.
Wtnt to buy uud trailer bat·
ween $1000 I $2000. 304~755621.

Then Clll J.B. Hunt 1-8(JC)...:i!JB-

HUNT EOE!Subloct To Drug
Se,...n.

151 s.conc1 Avenue, Galllpolle.

Employment Services

Good Work Htbltt, Rtfaranc•
And OWn Transportation, Sand
R.. ume To: ClA 224, clo GtlllpoUe Daily Trtbuns, 825 TtNrd
Avanul, Galllpallt, Ohio 4S631.

"One Day Olal'' lt Erplodlng In
Billion $ lndu.try. Dtstrlbufors
NMdedl Commilllont And
Qvarr~ Pald W11kly. lbrkatlng Plan And FrM lntormatlon
Peck, 1~00.3"Jit-8491.

··Mun.a11 Tr~nsportatton , Inc."
Wanted :
i&gt;rohtulonal
EJparl•nctd OTR Drlvlf"ll . btterad :
Dignttr, And RHpact . Olhtr
Bene! ta: Comfortable Eamlng
EquipPolanlltl
•Excelltnl
meot/Easy To Drive 'Sec ura
CompanyiOrMI Cuttomar BaH
"friendly P.apla *S.fety Flm
·Pa~ And &amp;onUI For E.J.p~~rilnet . If Yau Arw l..ooklnljl For
A Slable Envlronmtnt Where
Yo u Can Enjoy Tt\t lndtpendRnc• 01 Driving, The Comfort
Of Ont To Onlt Man1gaman1
And Appreclattan For Your
Talant, The Coma To Munson
Proud, Progmeiva And Par-

llculer. II You Quality, Call Today
1-801).423-7821.
'AVON* All AREAS! Stwt your
time whh ~. Yoo 'll tovt lht
company. t~H2-t356 .
A Nof'lhend, Columbut, Ohio
W•b Printer 11 Looking For 2nd
And 3rd Shift Oaptrtrntrd Ptr10nat. Mutt Have Expariance In
ea,...,a, Stripping And Pltle
M1ldng
Optratlona.
S.lery
Comm.neuratt
With
Ex·

E1call«lt

Banatill

Whh A Large Wall EatabUthad
Co. Send Ffnuma To P.O. Box
554 WHiarvllla, Ohio .3081. All

Repn.. Conlktential. E.O.E.
AppllcaUona .,. now being
tekan tor pllr1·tlmt Nur~ng Ald.
Must ba avallabla tar all ehiftl.
NurM Aid cllu wtn bt ofttr.d
with .mploymtnt Wllt 1110 accept 1ppik*lonl lor C.N.A.'e.
Pomway Nut'lln; and Rtheb
Center
31ni Rockeptings
Rood, Pomoroy. No phono cons

pleua.EOE.

AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
Exc.l..nt
Ply,
Banellts,

Tr1nsportatlon,
407·292 ...~7,
bt. 511. ie.m.-10p.m. Toll
Rtfundad.

AVON I All AI'Nt I Shir1ty
:JOU~M211 .

CRUISE

SHIP

-$2,000/Mo.

JOBS

Hiring

SumrMI'

fYu r

Round. Blrtandtrl ICaslno
Worka,.. !Gift Shop Saln flour
Gu*•IEtc. FNI Travel. Hawaii
/Caribbean 18thlmae !Europa.

Friendly Homa Per11u Has
OJMnlnga For Demonstrators.
No Cash lnvntment. No Service

Charge. High Commlaslon And
Hosie.. Awardl. Two C.taloga,

av... 600 lltma.

Call 1-800--'88-

4875.

FULL TIME LPN POSITION
In Gillie County

nallabta

(G.IIIpolltiBidwell). Cumnt LPN
LicanM (lntlflm Permit acctplabla), Pharmacology Certlflea·

304-&amp;7~3005 .

Owntr!Operator
pres• Wan..

HI-Cube Ex·
You!
1()()%.
Qwn.,IO,-n~tor. Wa Provide:
'All MilH Paid, All Jlermlte Paid
"Minimum MIIH
'Fuel Carel

Guaranta~

'All Ntw Tral~r Flatt
You NMcl ·
'1982 Or Nntr Tractor In Good

Condition
'Llvt In 100-MIIt Radtu. Of
D1y1on
""2 Yre. OTA Experltnct, Good
MVR , Good AHhudt . Call John

Broady M~ At 1-800..354-2823
Or 317-54t-4251, Hi-Cut. b prtu, Inc ., P.O. Box 19040, lndlanapolle, IN 48219.
PTS Is Loaklng Far t::Mner·
Operators Wlth 1984 Or New.r
Tandem Tractora With Sleaptrs
To Run Tan Cantril Slat•. We
Offer You The Opponunlty To
Be Home Ev~try WMktnd With
Plenty Of Work YN r Around At
Good Pay. For Mere Into CIH
Our R.cruhlng Dapt. At 1-800-

428-7798, Or 1-aG0-428-1024.

Registered Nurw1: IF lnterfilted
In A Potltlon To Utilize Bdh
Clinical And Aaaumtn'l stdlls,
PlttM Stop By : Setnle H!Us
Nu~ing Canltr. Thlt Quality
Nursing Cant• It lDCIIId At:
311 Buckrtdgt Road, BkhNII,
Ohio, Or C.i1614--446-n50.

Sat Tht Country And Gal Paid
For II! Patriot othtrs OuaU!y

Truck Driver Training In Only 8
WNilli CtU
1-800·388-1150.
A.. tstanca
For
Fin1ncl.al
Qualified Applicanls

Stale Appro~ed Nursing Assistanlt : For A Rawardi:.'9. Job At a
Quality Nursing Facility, Plene_
Stop By For AJ)plicatkmt At
Sctnlc Hillt Nursin9 Center, 311
Buckrldga R01d, Bl.dwtll, Ohio
Or Calt614446-11SO
Truck Ortnrs, American Prtsi·
dent Llntl, TM ln~OUH Carrier For A Fonune 500 Company,

Hat Openings For Top Prottl·
eloniil Orlvtrt. You'll Gat 25
Ctn!s!MI
To Start. Great
Btntll!t, Most Weekandt At
Home, And Rcxk Solid Job
Security. Min. 3 v,.. OTR Exp.
Your Fut ure Is Htrl . 1-800-8882781. Otpl. AE-67.

Truck Owntt.Oparatort: 12,000
Sign-On Bonul For Sate,
Orl~ere

With 6 Monlhs
Onr-Tt.Road Erperlenca.. Tuition Reimbursement (Up To
$5,000) Avallabta For Driving
School Grad1. TuiHon-frH
Training A~ailabla For Thoea
With "No Ex perlanc1. You
OutUfiAd

Who Do N~ Atraadr. Own Ona.
WI Prowldt Tht Trtl ar And Find
Your Loadt. Mu.. Bt 21 YNrt
Did, With A Good OrMn~

Gift Shop' 8ololl Tow Guldoll RIIOOI'd And Wctk Hl1101"f. Huotec. FrM trl¥11. Ha. . lll C.rlb- band/Witt T11m1 Welcome. Call
bltnl BINrnai Europe. No Todar For Full lntorm~tlon!
axp. n
try. 1-208·7'3&amp;-7000 RtiOCIItlon Serlvk:11 Ol~lalon
Elt. 1817NI.
(Houtthold Goods Hauling) Of
Ortvan: 00 To Work lmmtctlltaly NorthAmarlcan Van Lin... 1·
Roedrunnor Olo1~butlcn Sor- 800-348-2147, Dop1. E41.
vlcM, Inc. TN-1-100-444-8147. Up To 2&amp;.5 C.nt1 Plf Mila, Plus
TX·l-800--285-1287 11-ICJO..ti77· S.nefltt O¥er 100 New Conven·
!146.1 Compotltl,. Poy Now Con· tlonalo On Ordor. Ow.. vtnUonall
lleckll
IOtntal Opar~~tors, 80 c.n.. P.r MUe,
N~~e.~tlcn E1c .. !119n On &amp;onus No Up~on1 F-, No Roloca11on.
EOE.
Coli Vomcn llilllna Co., Inc.,
Holp
Wan1ed:
Covenon1
lou....,, 9C 1_.00-lM-7272 Or
Dr1'...
1-aG:HIH:ZSO.

~~e...._ orR

l -w:..:.=n1=-e=d-:=M~.=In1"-ono
'--nco--:E:-n-g:._
:--r.

'Min. Aao 23
• TNIO Ply 27-211 Conto
"Singlo Poy 11,22 Canto
"tllglllllloogo eonuolllloo
"Mal.. Llrowt .
"1,0ICI1ng IUflloldlng llllldhNd

Mull bo ololllod In hN11ng, olr
condHionlng,
oloe!rtcal.
Oporotlono ln owlmmlng pool &amp;
-•a• trM1monl plonl holplul.
Ply corn.....-urata whh ••·
portonco. Roply: lex CLA 223,
clo Oolllpollo Oolly Tribuno, 825
Third A•o., Oolllpollo, OH 45631.

'Pold 1n0.

1--13M.

Registaratlon fiO..OS-12749.

Have Opening: My Country
Home, For Full Clrt Eldtt'ly,
With Prtvata Room , 12 Yttrs
Eipartonca. 814--256-1076.

re•renCQ, ~nl-5155

Will Do Babysitting In My Home
Prtftrlbly Ages 2~. Call 614·
9!12-5135.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
8 tel'lt overlooking Pt. Pn.
$3,900. Hatt acre or larger latt In
H1ppy Hollow1 trallars1ccepted,
county wllar a3,900. C..mp situ
In B11t Band ctmp ground,
county water, 12,700. 304-51'62894.
lots tor salt, trailers acceptable. 304~5-2722 .

Orlvaw1y,
Rural
Waltr,
Electricity, And Phone Service
Av1ilablt. 3 112 Mlttt From Hoi·
zer Hosphal, $39,000. 614-446-

4127.

Rentals
41

Business
Opportunity

Houses tor Rent

3br 1-112 Bath, 600 Block Of
T~lrcl

Avanua,
GaiUpoUt.
RalerencH Requlr9d , No Pets.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Ctll 8:00-11 :OOA.M. 614-446-1734.
teec)mmendt that you do bustnus whh paopla you know, 1nd G1UipoUs FliT)', 2 story, 4 ~­
NOT to sand mon•y t~h tha room , 1 bath, redecorated older
air
cancl,
stove,
mall until you have ln~1111gattd home,
rt1frlgarator, no lnsldt pels,
the offering.
$2~ ma, I1SO. H&lt;:urhy depl &amp;
2 FCA 124 Fl WOLFF TANNING rahlrancas, 304-675-7859 attar
BEDS For Sale. Sold Together &amp;:00 PM.

INOTICE I

Or Sapartaly. 614-441·1029.

A 81.11II\IU Opport.unlly : Will
Your Employar Give You A
$'10,0001Monlh AlliN? $1,000?
$200? Glva Yoursalf A A1ise. I
can Shaw Yeo How. Fret lntormltlon. $35 ln~utmtnl . Call
R.cordtcl Mnuga, t-600-299 -

Nice

atticltnc~tage , unique

tnd balutiful,

Vary nlca 3 bedroom house In
Pomeroy, &amp;l4-667..J271.

800-153-8383.
Tannin~

Beds, New Com-

From
maticai·Homt
Unlll
$199.00. Lampe, lotions, Acces·
aor!u. Mont~ly Paymantt Low
As $18.00 Call Today Ntw FrH
CcHor C1talog. l-800-228-6292.

'
Real Estate

2 bedroom country homa in
aru, 4 milts !rom Ohio
AIYir wllarga blcxk bldg, good
tor email bus1ntts, city w1tar,
full basem•nl, $36,000. 2.71
acrta , 304-89S-3(J04
woodt&lt;l

2 bedrooms, comer lot , priced
In 20's, 107 Locust St, Hender·
son, 304-675-76t9.
2

Bedrooms, Family Roam, Full

Sin BaMmtnt, Wocdbumlng

Flrwplact. 614.....46-3699.
2021 Mtrquena Ava , s yrs old,
aU brick melntenenu tree
homt, 4 bedroom•. •men living
room , dlntngroomlflmlly room
combination,

kJtchan,

utility

room, 111 ont level, covered
pttio In back, prlncy t.nca,
Qlflgt, ehown by appointm•nt
only 304-67S-1238.

291 Kall•y Or., Gallipolis, Ohia
45631, Tel•phona : 614-446-3385,
Price: $52,000.00. Uvlng Room,
3 Badroome, Family Room, 1
And 112 B1throom1, 1 Car
Garage, Brick Front With Cedar

Siding.

Itched Qaregt, All Electric, WIH
Conelder Rani $350/mO. 614·
«6·1358.
8 Room Houu On 1 Acr11 AI
Kerr Ohio. (Galli• County) 614·

446-9637, Or 614-446-4166.

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hletorieal Araa Corner ltlt . 816
Main St. P1. Pltt11nt, W. V1
Campl.talr Ranov1tad: 2 Full

Bathe, 3 large Bldrooml, New
HVAC, Naw C.rpat. Availeblt

June 15 614-446a22o5.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

14x70 Trall•r +2 Ac,.... Exetlllint
Condition, Trealtd lumbar
Porch, 12x8 Btrn Building In-

Merchandise
Household

full size large four poster bad,
complete, dresur with mirror
and Ylntty stoat, ct\..1, $600
080. must uU; Oobbt: lolld
oak dining room HI: solid oak
double pedestal labia with 2
lea v.., 8 chairs, bought al
$3000, will 111111500; plut ott.r
tumllure, kitchenware ltame,
Tup~rwlrt, ate. All •xctllant
condlllon, 614· 992-7995.

25" RCA larga console talavl·
sion, old but good, $60; console
4sp. RCA record pltylr, $40;
Phone Bob Hoamch, 614·992·

2 bedroom, AC, wuh.,-dryar
tumlhted,
$200.
ma plua
utilities, rat &amp; dtp, 304-67S4874.

Frea Delivery.
New Curved Glass Oak China
Cablnatt. lighted Mirror Back,
Gllll ShiiYH, lAtded Glue In
Door, Several Slzaa. 614-446-

4316.

PICKENS FURNITURE
Naw/Uaad
HouHtolold furnis hing. 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pl11unt, WV,

call304-675-1450.
R. &amp; S. New, Uhd and Antique
tumltura, Mason, WV. 304-m -

5341.

FURNITURE. &amp;2

Olive Sl., GeUipolls . Naw &amp; UMd
furniture, heaters, W•stem &amp;
Work boots. 614-446-3159.

BARGAINS GALORE!
614-446-3158

44

614--446-NTJ.

Apartment

surplut=

{,.rial

5 miiH Eaet 1-77, Al.v.nawood,

by Sondyoillo p. . Olllco, Fri,
So1, Sun. Ncon-6:00 I'll, cohor

S111no, Ocloro, For_ C.rpoto,

Would Ukt To Haw Or Buy
Totophono · f14-258-f301.

55

Building
Supplies

Bleck, brlc:~ -

olpoo, win-

Pets lor Sale

Grooming. All - . 11yloo.
lame Pal Food
r. Juna

o.a..

2 red t.ma .. Chow CMw puppiH, full tMoodtd, I weak~ okf,
S.SO each, 6M-M-63o40.
~

t.m1la kll1ana, 3 Hlmalaylln, 1
Pt,relan, CFA Regtstar.t, I
weeki okt, 614-~2"-3144 tftar
7pm.

52

AKC Bc1tr Pupploo, $200 Eoch,
Wtllaton, Ohio. 614 384 5t'll
AKC Rog. English bulldog puppin, $45o,
11-F, 8-4pm, JoM
Wamar, 30~2 wtotkdaye

AKC

2bdnn. apta., total aieclrlc, tp-•
pllancll furnl1hed , laundry
room f1clliU. . , close Ia school
In town. Applicatlont evl.llablt

at: VU!agt Grwan Apia . t49 or
2bt Apartment Upstalrl, Stew•.
R1trlgarator, Wetar Fumlehed,
Located: 466-112 Fourtn Avenue,

Gallipolis. S240/mo. $100!0tp.
614....46-3870.

Antiques

Buy or sell. Rl~erlna Antlquae,
1124 E. Meln Strait, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.l .W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m , Sunday 1 :00 to 6 :00 p.m.

614-992-2526.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

,5,000 BTU Air Conditioner Aocl
Fun Set Ot Judy Rankin Golf
Clubs, Wlt t-1 El"lrat! 614-446-

Alvaralaa

$111f. C.lll14·112-'1'711t EOH.

1172 Froedcm 12&lt;55. All oloc1rle,
llow, r~lrlg•r~~tor, air con-

North Fourth St. llld&lt;lopo&lt;t. 2
BR
tumlohod
opor1mon1.
Deposit I referanca. 30~2568.

dttlontr acrHned porch, cur-

On• badroom apt tor l'lnt, 304·

&amp;75-2218,

,.gl.ttred full grown
Coeur Spaniol. 304-I~T7L
Orogonwynd C."wy: CfA Poreltnl &amp; Sllmeea KlniM. 114446-3844 Altar 7:00p.m.

Fleh Tank, 2413 Jackaon Ave.
Point Plt11a~ , ~2083,
Ml lint Troplcol l1oll lllrdo,
email anlmate1nd euppil.l.

Goldan Ratrtev., Pu,_ Far Sa.._
614-446-7'123.

AOHA Brooding Mars For Salt.

botly plgo. -

. 014-,.2·

oso. 304-t'1S-5332.

1975 Buick 4dr HT 23,000 MIIH
On 455 Cu. ln. Robulh Englno,
TrtM, PSJPB, Air, CruiN, Tlh ,
C1cth ln1. $2,800. 114-388-8l'la.

111n llorlio Corio, $450. OBO,
304..75-1. ..
1111 Dodge Wagnum
peltl, tMq Df Nil, 1-pe. lo a
comptete c.r, fM.MI-2613.

1fl'll Cedliloc. Fair Condition,
Runo Good, $600. 114-448..7S1.
1981 Ohio~. $'1110. 114-24~
1111
1981 Toyota Collco GT 5 Spood
w-nh Air, Geed CcndHioft, $900;
1171 Oodgo Yon.._318 W11h Air,

Goad ConGfUon, 11o1,D00. 814-446-

898t.

1183 Comoro Z-28. 305l AT, PS,
PB, AC, bpt. ucollont
oanditlon. Mull ... to tp304-812-2115 attar

c::,t.ate.

1N4 Jeep Charak11,
Wook, $1,100. 114-25f150l

1117 Cadillac s.dan O.Villl All

- . 21,000 lllloo, Aolllng
S1 \000.114-446-4752.

614-448-2510

tMEGRAM,

S7

Mall

With
Aftot

Musical
Instruments

EIIC1rtc 3 Scocloro lndoor.IOutdoor, Haw • UNd. Uft
Ctlalra. Bowman't Homac:l,.
&amp;14-446-7283, 1~ 458 8844.

Poo

1111 fllalln Santra, 2 Door, 4
I'JIInt Condltlof\ LDw
- - f14-44WIIOII

·

s...,_,

o... o.n., - Y1roo. ·E...,_
11n41 Condition. 1114-38~1.

Bicycling

8

EEKANDMEEK
W MOTH£R MUST

AH lypas matonry, brick, block:
&amp; stone. Fr11 HllmatiS. 304-

lumlehad.

614-237.()488, day or nlvJlt.
Rogtr1 Bu.mant Waterproe&gt;

11ng.
Curtlt Homa lmpro'llmlnt•:
YNrt Experience On Otder &amp;
Newtr Hamel. Room Addhlons,
FoundaUon Wortt, Roofing,
Kitchtne And Bathe. Frat £s.
tlmat•! Rafwane~~, No Job

Tee Big Or 9mall1114-387-051&amp;.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Homa Ramoct.llng, Vinyl Siding,

And Overhang. 30 YNrt Exp.erianc.d. F,... EttiiMtlll 614·
448.092t.

LA5T NIGHT I SAW

Ptlntln~ .

Gl~•

Will

UNDERWEAR .

Low

JET
Aafltlon Mdora, raptlr.d . New
&amp; rlt-bulft mo1ort In etoc:k, RON

EVANS, JACKSON, OH . 1-800537-!152a.
Quality home lmprovemanta,
carpentry, and remodeling at ell

no

'·
'.

Job

too trT'IIII
RU1001blt l'ltH, call anytime,
814-)12-1400 or 614-992-2756.

Rollobll Wollpoporing,
marclal And Rllldlntial.
"fr11 E.tlmttae

r ,.. ,., .. ,

HOOT IN'
HOLLER'S
GONE

6~=~~Work
rna.

UPTOWN!!

Aon'1 TV hrvtct, tpaclai:!'J
in Z.nhh aleo MrVk:lng

-

S1loCb,

1-

Qood Ccndi11cn,

$1,100. 0.1.0. 1114-381-8758.

FruRI

&amp;

Vegetables

Ook 1-0 _
... 1111: 4ft,
5 ft, I R.j 111noh . . . $1 po&lt; aoun. ~~-- 2
Eurclu,., Rower I S.I-Up mlloo al -polio on M1.
Bench, Bop Scooter, Golf Balli
STRAWBERRIES
• 'lou Plcl1, Wo
l Nln1ondo Topoo, 114-4411-1'181.
Ptclt Conlllnln Prowldl d
Aecondltlonad
wa1hlr1
I Opon ... 11-f, Sl1 1-1. drytrt, uch 1100 and up. Wa Sunder • To.,._ Bony Pitch,
11rvlc1 all makH. The Wtther I
K"" lid. f1"- •112. Or 111424W171.
Dryor Shoppo. 614-448-21144 .

YEP 11
WE GOT US A

DRfVE-THRU
CLINIC II

9opllc Tonk Pumping $110, Oollio
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jacillon, OH 1-800~37-fS:ZS.

S.W.Vac
s.tvlea,
CIHk Rd. Porto, oup-

plln, pickup. 1nd dellvllf'Y. &amp;1•·
448.02114.
Will build patio covara, deekt,
.crwntd roome, put up vinyl
siding or trailer eldrtlng. 814·

ASTRO-GRAPH

&amp;

Plumbing

1t11 ~ 414, Rodlo Sllc~
Tnlno, I Hubo. f1.1115.
lftor I P.M. Or

w

I

. .

-CIIooy - K I Sthlo~
.... 111, ...... $2.400. ,.,.

~ 1on pia"" $100. -Dodgo PI IH1CI 314

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

C.rtar'e Plumbing
Fourth and Pine

Qolllpot!_o, Ohio
ll14-441N888

&amp;

:'"'!'_'

Me•r UC\Inled lltctrtcltn:
R - r Eloctrlcoi, WV00030t

304-1'11-17811.

85

•

m'Your

W'Birthday

General Hauling

Slnd1 Gro•ll, Umootor-. Dirt

Wick-.
•leo, llmi
8oH Run~~
R
P!"MJJY,
Ohio
451111,1
.

:~. Nc~ngToo~~

Too LIHie. 8111m.n1 CIMiitng,
0onoro1 Wo&lt;k, Anr Klndl ~~
!71-2271 Anytlmo.

,frr--,-U.:,p,_ho_;lst.;._e:.;,ry.:__ _
Mowrey'• Uphol1111ring
lng 1~ aoun1y 1101 27~ro. Tho
-.
will oftlr,
Nil · · -•~ In lu m HUfl up laterlng.
15,000.
or blllt
3C).4....895.
.-...
C.ll 304.e75-41~ tor frN ...
kin

rl:\'1Ndl
:: 1oiidod,
cond. 1m
-·'*Po
I, ootf

-•leo

good

_.....,

\

Refrigeration
Rooldon1iol 01 COtnmon:lol
wiring, ,_ MfVIeo 01 ropolro

limiiH.

t AJ 9
+Q9865

PHILLIP

le"

e

9

WEST
+K8 4J

ALDER

EAliT
+Ji09 52

'1'109 82
• 764

'1'75
t K Q 10 5
+ w4

+l2

SOUTH

+76

'I'KQ 64

Switch
the road sign

• 8 32
+A K J 7

Vulnerable: Both
Deale:· South

,.

By Phillip Alder
A favorite plot lwist, especially in
car loons, Involves the villa in being

Soul~

w..1

I+

Pass
Pass

chased by the hero and approaching a
"Road Closed " sign, or something sim -

Juno 11, 1112
Your financial trends look reasonably
good tor the year ahead, provided you
don't Invest in situations you know very

little about. Gambles could prove
COS1iy .
GEMINI (Mor 21.June 20) Disengage
yourself !rom an arrangement today
Where the financial requirements burden you rather than the olher party. II
thare isn't parity, It's a bum deal. Know
where 10 look for romance and you'll
lind 11. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

instantly reveals which signs are,roman - SAGinAAIUS (No..-. 23-Dec. 21) Be
tically perfect for yOu. Mall $2 plus a cognizant of details in your commercial
long, self·addressed , stamped enve- , dealings today; !here's a chance some
lope to Matchmaker . c/o this newspa. l small glitch might turn a profitable

per, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, OH proposition into alos1ng one
44101-3428.
. CAPRICORN (Doc:. 22.J1n. 19) 11 you're
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) There's a · negolia11ng an 1mportan1 matter 1oday,
possibility you could be unreasonably be sure everything that is agreed upon
suspicious of the motives at others to- Is put in writing. A verbal agreement
day. You may read things into their ac- could
lead
to
a
luture
tions which are entirety unfounded
misunderstanding.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) II the tasks you AQUARIUS (J1n. 20-Fitb. 19) If you 've
face today don't require too much men· tailed to take care of something you
tal effort, you'll perform them effec11ve- said you would, be lorthrlghlloday. Tryly. However, where real brain power is ing to cover up could cause you serious
necessary, you're apt to be impatient ; complications, not to mention a great
and careless.
deal of embarrassment .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A friend ol . PISCES (Fitb. 20-March 20) II you play
yours. who has a tendency to talk about ravorltes where friendships are conother pals when they aren't present, earned today, someone might get hurt
might try to bend your aar loday. Keep In the process . ~nd over backward Ia
in mind thai this Is an lndlvl&lt;lual who treat all your pals equally.
may lalk about you When you're not ARIES (Morch 21-April 18) Do not onaround.
derestimate your competition today in
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It's bes1 lo developments Where your sta1us or cakaep outsiders out of private family

matters tOday, especially those which
have1o do with your children or your Inlaws.
ICOIIPIO (Del. - ·· 22) Be careful
Wl1alyousay1odayloaclosefriendwho
asked you to be honest . In reallly. lhe
last thing this individual may want to
hear is the truth.

reer Is concerned. An egotistical evaluation could work to your detriment.
TAURUS (Aprtl ~J 20) Forego 1he

lncllnatiOfl today 10 pretend lo be more
knowledgeable aboul something 1han
you actually are. There's a very good
chance you'll be challenged by someone who Is well-informed .

Nortll
4 NT

Eas1
Pass
All pass

5+

Opemng lead 'I' tO

ilar. He hops out of his car and moves

the Sign 1n front of the open road. He
then drives off. confident that the good
guy has taken the wrong turn.
Sometimes a bridge player can try
to produce the same sort of effect. A
well -limed false-card may deflect an
opponent from the winning line.
An example occurred in today's
deal. After North barreled into SII
clubs, West led the heart 10. Declarer
saw that he had l wo potential losers in
diamonds and one in spades. But he
had some finesses he could take, and a
discard was available on the fourth
heart.
After winning the first tnck in the
dummy, declarer drew two rounds of
trumps ending in hand . Then he ted a
diamond, flnessing dummy 's nine
If East had won Willi the 10, Soulll

would have been forced to make hiS
slam . He woutd have discarded dum my's diamond jack on his fourth heart
and fallen back on the spade finesse .
wllich, as you can see. was working.
However, East did ...,II, winning
with the diamond king, not the 10. He
could see that the false-card couldn't · : ·
cost and migbt gain. Now declarer
misguessed. He tried a second dia mond finesse and finished one down .
Have you noticed that South could
bave done better' U he bad cashed two
more rounds of hearts before I messing
the diamond nine, East would have
been unable to mask the position
RMdtn an ill'rifed to fiMt! card-pU1 .,.,_
t.ioas to ptj}Jjp A.ld!r. iD ~(? of W:J ...../W'"
rw, CMJ llr MfW't!rfid oalf f6rvup 1M roJIItM

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

An•w• to Prenoue Puzz ..

poem
37 Aerial nnlg•
tlon 1yotom
39 Take at

1 Small tilling
Vtllli
7 Valuable fur
13 Toke
14 Tidier
15 lrllh

ont't own

on

40 Moot modern
42 Jopanoee

OIOh

language

45 lllllllry
oludont
46 Pon poinl
49 llodllalt
51 Woollr
53 :klomont

16 Ended
17 Shon lor
Suun

1S Dloh ol
gretne
20 Harem
apartmonl
21 Untulod
23 Watorsofttntr

tuba
S4 Bum abo•o
door
55 Condlbono
Showt scam

S6

tubltanee

27
31
32
33

Start from Excited
Conoumo
Amoltur
34 Slipped
35 Comodlln
Spori&lt;o
36 Long horolc

DOWN

......

5 Phonograph

1 Houlo

lnvenlor

2 TWO'Ia.d

6 Rovlow
7 llldebeltor

ololh
3 HIJih lpirftl
4 Guy's

SSe~

9-demor
10 LeiYt- -

counterpart

11 Nec-y
12 Goddeu ol
Hrlh

....

-

~~~

22Unf011Iion23 Fiber
24 Amoroua

lool1

25 llloko muddr
26 City In Utlh
28 Stono't

a

304-1111-2:1111 Ohio 814-448-2454.

Goctvoo

e

(1) Glory ond tho Power.
FundomoniiiNom• Obaorvocl
(I 00) Stereo . !;I
91111 IIJle Murphy 11n1wn
Miles asks several therapists
10 help him with his 1eellngs.
(A) Stereo. C
I!) WWF Priliie Time
Wretalng Texas Torna&lt;lo vs .
Repo Man.
Nuhvillt New
8 Lt1TY King U•ol
aD SconiCrow ond Mra. King
9:30 9JID II) Ill Grepovlno
(Premiere) Three friends
gossip and interact with
couples . Slareo. 1:;1
I 0:00 CD ShiRl! of the World
Stereo. Q
(1) P.O.V. Stereo. £;I

othlr brlndt. Houae cede, atao
aoma applltnce ,.pairs. WV

Dlvlt

Croooflre
7:351]) Major League ~18boll
Los Angeles Dodgers al
Manta Bra•es (L)
8:00 (2) II IIJl Freoh Prince of
llti·Air Hilary takes a
catering job after her credit
cards are destroyed. (A)
Stereo. C
(!) MojorL.ngue Baaeboll
St. Louis Cardinals at
Chicago Cubs (L)
Ill II (I) II FBI: Tho Untakl
S-1 Christopher Bernar&lt;l
Wilder goes on a bloody
cross-country rampage . (R)
Stereo. 1:;1
CD (1) Logacy Stereo. 1;1
9JID 11J E"'"lng SMdo
Harman is
to watch tile
Newton kkls and their
friends. (A) Stereo. C
illlW MOVIE: The Gilner
Como (2:001
I!) Murder, She Wrote
a Ctook and chol..
1121 Major Loogue Baooboll
(LI
8 PrimoNtwo C
aD Prince Vollooif Stereo. Q
8:30 (2) II IIJllllotiOfll Blossom
winds up speechless attar
she joins the debate team.
(A) Stereo. 1;1
Ill II (I) D American
D o - Pollee officers in
Freemon!, Calif. , conduct an
invast~tion . (R) Stereo.
9l GD IIJ Major Dod Tlie
Marines help prepare an
imponant shipment (R)
Stereo. Q
aJ)IIIack SIIIHion Stereo. 1:;1
9:00 (%)II (IJJIIOVIE: 'Dorllmon'
NBC Monday Night It ...._
11011101 (R) (2:001 S1ereo. 1;1
III 0 (I) II MOVIE:
'Scruploo (PI 2 of 3)' ABC
Novel for Ttlo"llon (2:00)

fil

~

BARNEY

Com·

'Exptflanced

Electrical

n-.

TO GROW UP.

Bld.Liconood. 614-24~50711 .

2233.

1fl'll Ooctgo ~. Now

IT NADE ME. V&gt;ONDER
IF I REALL':'r' WANT

MY DAD IN HIS

J.W. Construction. Room AddhloN, Roofl, Dtcks, Siding
And All Typal Of Extarlot And

Good,

w_,_

&amp; A RX.ITICINJ

FrM ... lmat11. C.ll collact 1·

101 Chny 112 T... Pick-Up, &amp;

Boo.. ltul ludwig a- - .
Rocon11y R...-, E I Cuoihy. Aolllno ..__ W1l 1117 G11C Tfi.Altll 15 R. Alum
Ccna1dor Po~lil ,.,.. For 8od
Bod· tm
9mallor Plono P1uo CUh. Col GIIC 1100 s.too Whh A~ Uft
Deily AI: 1-1121.
Chell•, Csl After 7 P.ll. 6.,._

S/-1£ WMJTW M£. 10

HAVf. !-lAD 1\J:j.j. ..

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
UncondlUonal llfatlma guaran-

rtterwncn

c

a

&amp;

Improvements

Baldwin plano, blondt cdot,
good condhlon. $500. 304-41W-

58

ALLEYOOP

Home

IM. Local

7:30 (2) 11 C.lebrate Arnerfca
(0:30)
(!) Andy G~Hith
III fJ Enttrtlllnmont Tonight
Stereo. 1:;1
(I) Clllama'o Fomlly
9) Ill Wheel ol Fortune t:;1
II)
Family Feud
iW Jeopardy!
8a a Ster $Tereo
1121 Secrell ol Speecl

e

Heating

-·-

'.

up camper fOf a.ale, 614-

82

72 Trucks for Sale

~~:Rune

Ttl~ HILL.

7

984-3~1.

1,....,..,....,......,,...,-:,.,--2 mixing bolrde for M sptam.
2 Boa• 100 wt powW' """*Yam~ha
epaa..,..
1
microphones. 304-611-40:13 ..3«M.et5-24t8.

OvU

&amp;

245-f152.

1-&amp;00-537-gs2a.

Couch $40; Color T.V. 175; 10
9pood Blk!z_ $60, Or Boo1 Oflof,
&amp;14-24S-16n, 614-24S-5326.

$3500. 814-

112-31U

Fomolo.
4:00P.M.

Br.cl

Yorker.

$2.9!15.114-~ .

24Ft. Pontoon Boat With Naw 35
HP Yamahe Molar; 2 Weltam
Saddtn. 6t4· 24S-5m.

To

Marq~o~il,

302. Y-t. Automlltc, Full Powtr,
Cullom W....., Vary Shtrp
C.rll3,100. fM-448-7215.

Ragt.la....cl

J

6~T

304-178-2233.

Runa, aorta.

:toOSX.

]

B1 Hl-lo Starc,.fl camP«. 18 n.
long. $2500. Good condHion.

Interior

1183 Codltloc Ccupo doVIIIo.
Excolonl lhlpo. $2800. Coil
304-1~1126 onor !lpm.

1987 NloMn

51-0w I-Y IT wil-tT At::f Mf
l-ONG~~ TO

773-5052.

New

IT

21Ft . Cobra Chevy Wator Home,
Loaded, 15,000; 1085 700 Honcle
$1,400, O.B.O. &amp;14-38HI06.

81

'II Chovrolo4 Colobri1y. loodod.
Hlqh m l - Asking $2800

1885 Man:ury Gtand

TAt::~

Motor Homes

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

Ctwylltr

_...

15 IF I

Services

AulDS tor 5ale

1181

------

&amp;14-9112-12113.

Campers

Transportation

N•-

Hlmat.ran

Concrtft I
Plalllk Septic
T1nke, Jet AaraUon Tanka. Ron
Evant Enterprl. ., JacktM, OH

and

Bitcli.

286-6395.

Weriad:

Downtown Modem, 2br, Complat• Kitchin, Wtst\tr, Dryer.
C.rpo1, CA. &amp;14-44&amp;-0139.

Apar1mante In Mlddl1porl From

Anqua And eN-Angus

Bulls• Roucnobly Prlcod. Sloto
Run t-anns, JackiOfl, Ohlo, 114·

Tti~O~Y

Accessories

2017.

71

MY

Starertft 12ft V bottom
alumn boll wJ2 motOrt one Sea
King l5hp 10 gal lank I Mlnn
Kott alae 281b lhru.e, tok:i down
Matt. $600. 304-576--2318 after
1:00PM.

40 • 60 lb. plfl1o&lt; Nlo, &amp;14-1141-

=o

FRANK AND ERNEST

Moneyllne
Busch Gardena: See
World Summer Selorl
Celebrities try to increase
people's awareness of the
animal kingdom and &amp;how
enons being made to protec1
endangered wikllile . Host
John F'orsytlte. (1:00) Stareo.
7:05 III Beverly HlllbiNloo

~1&gt;1!

NORTH
+A Q
'I'AJ3

1121 SporiJC&amp;nhlr

s..,.

&amp;14-24~56n,

BRIDGE

8
aD

BO.\TERS
J.S. Marine Service Ntw Mer·

63
Livestock
~------~--~~ 79

Q

Chlldnin C
9)111 JeoPardy! t:;l
illll8 Slllr Trek
liZ Enttrtlllnrnent Tonight
Stereo. C
I!) MocGY.,er 1:;1

=

1191 1rol*' 1!171 Joop pickup,
runo good, 814-fl2-2043.

Auto Parts

UNSCRAMBlE l[TIERS I
fOR ANSWER
.

e

Hud,

Budget Tnnsmlulor., UMd &amp;
,.built, starting 11 Sii; ITont
wheot4 drive ltartlng It $149.00

c

IIJl Wheel of Fortune

(I) II Married ... With

EJ:cellant

W.nlad: finn IIIIIChlnary of sll
kinds. Got wryttdng rou wtnllo
0111. Col &amp;14-:!56~.

...,...... no

675--4153.

1171 C.mbridgo 12d5, 2 room
1212-4 addhk)n, tic cond
wuhtr I dryer, underpinning, 2
porchM, ntW mlnf blinds.
se,ooo. or wlthotA addition
$5,000. 304-137-2832 or ~72280.

M1nor

only.

lnc6aad

76

Rogl111ored luU .,_,., block
Pomoronlon. Aolllng $1110. 4
mon1ho old. 304-815-JIIl!i.
11111 01do CU1to11

Towtr

4,

\illl

New1H0111

New Holland 419 hayblna~ Sus-r
717, 2 row wldli and ck up
c...
wldt
frounl wMhiWtlhoul Ktlly hyd.
. . . . 114-112-7302..

20x46 It grHnhouN trama with
tent, lhuttat11 &amp; btow..- or will
ull frame llp«tlt. i tt lllellllt
cli !h with Uniclen controlt. •304·

Printer, $150; 814-892~25 .

Gracloue lfvlng. 1 and 2 Md·
room aper1mente at Vlhat

can

7:00

PR INr NUMBERED
lEITERS IN SQUA RE S

SCIIAM.lfTS ANSWERS
' .1
Flinty - Flash- Quart - JoVIal - SITUA T/ON
Envy, if nol so destructive, would be a very comic sm.
II is usually based on a total misunderstanding of
another person 's SITUATION

(jj Night Coun C
III lllnalde Edrilon 1:;1
CD (1) MacNeil/Lehrer

Trained 9o"leo. &amp;M-256-1160.

s...lco

9220 .

M0060,

Aftar7p.m.

Porta

Raglstartd Boteler Collla, Mill,
1 Yur Old, $20. 6~7'075..

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jeckton Plica Boye 20" Huffy bleycla, hand
from tl921mo. Welk to shop &amp;. brake, ax ctl'-nt condition, $60,
&amp;14-9!12-2428.
movies. Caii614-446-25M. EOH
Brookside Apanmanta, 1 Bad· Carpal La at n., Work Ieite, Carroom,
Slovt
Refrlgtrltor, pat Tool L..athtr Bane &amp; Mall
W1shar, Dryw Hoak-Up, 614- 9ags, Naw LNthtr For Salt $15
Or Both $20. 614-258-1!12.
44&amp;-1&amp;27.
Centenary ArM Or Rio Grandt: Computer.: Compaq P0111bla
Nice 2br 91ove, Rafrlgarator, &amp;40KRAM 20HO, $900; IBM
Wtllf Furnished. No Pate. M0025, color, 1FD, $550; 18M
M0030, color, 2FO, $700; IBM
$235/Mo. 614-446-8038.

Fumloned Apt 1br, $235/llc.
UtllhiH P•ld, 607 Second
A~anua, G1lllpolls. 614 446 4416

-

HURST tiliCi'OR SALES
28 HP 4 WD $69!15; :to HP 4 WD
S5,1Kt5, Rout• 7 North, Mariana.
114-3JH151

1811,
Urina

Subfloort /Jols... Ragard..11
Agol 24 Hr. Tol1-froo lftlo
IOrdorlng. Roldol1 a.omtcolo

SOCif.fY'

CUP l.A'lttY...

1988 22Ft. s.a,.y Mid Clbln,

Transmlaton Coolar. 614-311Urine, &amp;est,
Sinctl
GutnntMI
Aemcwll

'COUbf~U

I

€)

I!) Scooby Ooo
1121 Up Close
aD New Zorro S1ereo. 1:;1
6:351Ii Andy G~lfllll

porto. $900 OBO. 304-175-2881
Stt.pe

8

IIJ 111 cas New• 1:;1
l!llll Anclr 0~111111

l HAVWf Uf»D MY

I

I

i' 111

1962 15ft. Quick Silver trl-hull/ 2
19&amp;4 80hp, Mercury'e. Onl or

Lotided With Extras!

I

\11

Fe&lt; Sol• Moped, Hondo Ex....... 304..75-13114.
Honda 250 tour whHitr, $1,500.
304·773-5452.

K RAT S

A man in my neighborhood
was always busy on environ. .
_ . . .
mental comm1ttees and joining
.---------'''-., demonstrations. One day I told
S URE I C
h1m that a true activ1st was not
f..,,...,.::__.:;-l..:.;..l,.:~,....l.:...,.l-1 the one who states the
. . . . . _
problem but the one who
-······· the problem

a.

~ : 30 pm.

I

1-'1"'5--,1.---,1..;6--;l.---l :

World Today
aJ!Batnuln
6:051Ii I Love Lucr

Appll
Rad 4,600
Mllu,
Excai1987
Honda
Magne
700,
Cindy
lant Candhlon,
12,750.
C.lt Anar
'PP.II. 114-44&amp;-1062.
·

CATUE

TV Stereo.

Flag

8

cury Engln• In Stoek. P1rt1 &amp;
Acceaorles In Stock, Faetary

KUIIOTA

87'18.

53

2 BR apar1mentt In Middle~r1 ,
nawty remodeled, low utiltties,
no pats, $220 par mon1h,
dtpoelt raquirad , 614 -992·2381
d1ys

81~3-

Fof ....: mWature vtatnamasa

AKC reglstMid BeUtnhtut~
Germ1n Shapktnl pupPas,
rtadr to ~o June 211h, 114-3'716455.

quired. 814-446-1519 .

Brushhoga, can dallv11,
521e.

Trollor Towing Equip. 10,000 LB
R...a Httch Racelvw Ftftdtr
Moun1 Ctoonp-&lt;ln Mim&gt;ra. Ami.

1 Room Efflecltncy, U111Uias
P11d,
Excaj:M
Elec1ric
Daposh/Rataranct~.
$1M/Mo.

2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Downstairs,
Claan,
No
Pate,
Quiet ,
Rafar•nea And Dtpotlt Re-

AtmoM New s· Fln61h Mower,
$650. 114 ~48 054l

8~3111242.

$151100. Jan.1lngt 380 Auto Pitlola, N•w $105, 2 Brande Am·
mllnlllon: t1611t'll?1 $20/1~ Call
10 A.M. To 10 P.M. KMp trying
We're In And Out Conttantly.
614-446-1822, 7 Otyt WMk .

2722.

1121 Checkt

l

vEER

K0

I~I'~II:_;,_I'

6:30 (2) II 11JJ NBC Newa C
(!) Now It can
Tole(
Ill II (I) II ABC Newo C.
CD Wild Amertc. Stereo. t;l
Square One TV Stereo.

1991 l.aw11 John bolt, 14ft. and

doyH!curo. ~ -

OPEN: 7 Days A Weak, 9 A.M. · 6
P.M. Sundi] 12 Noon · 5 P.M.
Rt. 141 4 Mil.. OH At. 7 In Centenary

Goods

I

•

~ Aucll~linbow
0
seQ

illlW Full
I!Jl Smurla

NOT

1 --~~~~W~E~?______

Ccndl11on, 614-387-o&amp;51.

W1bb. Call 6M 441 023l

256·1521.

1olno. Ml50. Good condHicn.
304.e75-2101 anar epm.

bOots

otortlng prlco $12.- . ploc.o
Som -.lllo'o, our 281h ,_,

300 lnl:'l tractor wtth finish
mower, $2350; 810 Dlvld
Brvwn, $2150; I6G Ford $29!15;
285 M• w l - y loedor $9850.
6*2118521.

$99 S.1.

Tl'l8.

1872 Fr..cJom 12155, all alec ,
.. ave, refrigerator, air cond,
ecrNMCI
pore~.
curt1lns,
$4,150. Good ...d. 30U~2101.

St-.

Fann Equipment

Groom and Suppty $hgp Pwt

40HD, 1FD, $1100; 1811 C1ono
Mld!ower 3860X25, 6MEGRAM,
60MEGHD, 2FD, Modem, $1500;

1872 F1lrmont trallar. 4 room• 1:
bo1h. $3500. 208 ~ S1.
Hondoroon, WV 30U~1528.

KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
Floo Kllloro 1or polo, homo l
yard. Gual'lntlecl •fftdtwt BUy
ENFORCER at: Blum Trw
Y1lue Store., 11 W..t llaJn
Choo1or Oh. I YoNoy
Lumbor l SuPPlY ~. 555
Pori&lt; S1-. Mlddllipon. Oh.

61

Bunk Btds S99
Drawer Chest ot
Drawers $44.95; Twin Manrass

Sperling

ALMOST AS IF WE'RE
FL'I'IN6 AT ALL .

tor Sale

BEDROOM ·

$12~

IT'S BEEN A SMOOTH R IGHT SO
FAR, Tl-lOUGH , 1-lASN'T IT ?

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1m Font Thundorblrd, $&amp;50;
1t83 Yl •to, 1100 or l...d. tar
Fo..--lllroko. 1114-:ISHflQ.

Dtlun 1br, 2 Car Geraga, CA,
Fl,_. Ave, GlllipoUt, O.poeh &amp;
Reterancn, Available 6115. 614--

cluded. 814.f9H7114, f14'448-

Nutrftlon Prod~•
1oo1uring Amino Add Body
Building, wolght ond 1o1
bu,.... mnnufn. Available U·
cluslvalr at Rita A6d Pharmacy.
The Nft WIJ to dW:.

for Rent

2 bedroom 1pt, $350. month all
utllill• paid, no HUO, 304-615--

Fa rmSupplies
&amp; L1ves1ock

56

Chairs

IF WE'RE FLYING TO ~OLLYWOOD
WE 5HO~LD BE 601 NG OVER. .
SOME MOUNTAINS PRETTV SOON,

Motorcycles

Genaia

New SKS Rlfln, With AccH·
sorln,
S1 15.
Ammunhlon,

814-44&amp;-7'130.

._._ v
Ow
Steaxbe:mal1 P,our
n.
Col a.- Wlnloro,
Ric
- . . . O h i o . -·

Rocktrs $79.

DINETIES Wood Bar Stools
$14.Q5l26") Tablt And 4 Padded

~Square One

711 Hondo 50014. Runo l toclul

1m a

4

letters of th•
four
words below to form fo'"r simple words

ro Charlel In c~ 1:;1

aooc1. $550. -~2056 bot«•

dowa, llnttll, etc. daude Wintarw., Ria Grandt, OH Cltl 114245-6121

LIVING ROOM · Sofa And Chair
$179 And Up ; Coffee And End

( 2r6);

Nice 12x&amp;O 2 bedroom, lg . yard,

Vegetables

FREE INSTALL.ATJOfrt
SWIMMING POOLS
Only $7!11.00 Booutltul Ground
1ix31x4
PoDI Includes:
FIHa&lt; Docie,
Fonco,
loddoro,
E1&lt;. Do.;~ Bollovo H? C.U BP1
1..eoo.641-,a23

VI'RA FURNITURE

448-1602.

Kana~o~ge,

FruRs

Miscellaneous
h ndl
Mere a
se

llmHed UOO 58 ERASE.

Tabln 11'9 And Up; Swtvel

s..

54

KILLS FLEAS!
Buy ENFORCER Kll1on For
Air Conditioners, Rahigarttotl, Pats, Homt I Yard. Gw.md..d
Dryer I Wuher, Color T.V., E"octl,.l Buy ENFORCER A1:
Microwave, 6,4·256-1238.
Browne Trustw&lt;Nthv' ~.
Apar1mant Sl.za Dryar, Fencing State Routt 160, BkfwaM, Otlk).
Twin Bed, Flexlb~ Drain, O.k Plnaburgh paint .... now In
Crib, Oak library Tabla, 1986 _..... Coiling point 111.11
Ch•vy Cavalier, 614-446-0115, gal, ext..-~ wtllt• lttu 11111
614-446-0137.
gal. BurJM~IMda SOY. oft. ~
Big S,,lngo On All Vinyl I Cor- Plus, 2415 Jaekaon Ave, Pt Pit,
pet In Stock. $5 .00 Up. Mollohsn 304-4;75-4084.
Furniture, 614-446-7444.
Plo111c And - I Culvw11lnch
Thru 60 Inch In Stoct. Ron
GE Drytr, good condlllon. $75
E~ans, Jack.an, Ohkl. 1~
304-t7S..S1 10.
537-9528 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhars, dryers, ratrigtretora, Peel Toblo, Good Ccndltloft,
rangts . Sk1ggs Apptlaneas, 7S c.u 614-367-mo, Or 304-IJS.
Vine StrHI, Call 614-446-n98, 1- ~4
800-499-349!1.
Surph• Army C.mtlluga clolhtng, Small combat gear, llatt.r
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

2 B R tumllhed or untumlahtod.
Cable, air. Overlooking Ohio
Rivar, Kanauga. Clttn &amp; qulat.
Foster's Mobile Home park. 6,4-

2br MobHa Home With Larga
Add.Qn Room, Private Lot ,
Garega,
Cloea
la
Town,
$325/Mo. Ptue IJ1UhiiS &amp;
Daposb. 614-446-4314

~";'';"'~";"';·;"';;;~
~~========:::r;~;~;c
&amp;
58

5292 attar 5pm.

Complete home tumlehlngs.
Hours : Mon-Sat, 9-5. 614-4460322, 3 miles out Bulavitla Rei.

0 ieorronge
scrambled

III II (I) II 9lllll
IDII IIJl Newa

814-9!12-5429.

::::

blunder

29 Rttflng whip
30 Party giver
32 By ourprise

38 Go bock
~Rooc:h

41 Poddloa
42Chooloo
43 Cultlng

dllf!IOnd

9JID IIJ e Nol1hem

44 Frelhwllor

46C'f:
Nathan

Expooura Holling turns to
Chris tor help when his
delinquent taxes are due . (R)
S1ereo. 1:;1
illl• Hunllr C
Emmytou oTthe Rymon
(1:00)
8 World Newo
aJ) 700 Club Willi Pat

47 Aom1n

46

a

hlghwoy
Unlll of
IOUnd

50 Polloi 52 Compooo pt.

Robtrllon
10:351Ii MOVIE: Gunlighl al the

O.K. Carrol (2 30)
11 :00 ()) D (!)

III II (I) IJ
®Jill 112111 0 Newa

CD Nowawotch
~•

ArHnlo Hoi Stereo.

0 lllcOyyor C

11 Crooll

Eta~

1121 llllseboll Tonight

K=~n .JOIImal

CDE

(I)

a Nlghlllne C

1121• 'SWeeUnghllohl'

' XRR
R p

XZD

X Z D

aD MOVI~ : Colomlty Jane

ond Sem Ban (2:00)
11:35 (2) II IIJl Tonight Sllow

I

o•••--~lr'OII'I•
a.ctp~W....,.

N B L

Crime nme Afllr Primo

:-~
8 Moneyllntl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
,..,.......,peoop~a..,_...,~
. . . .,.
tor...,.__
r-.,.-.._'.,.... a

~CipMru;;

ond Cfhese

8 Sporlll Tonight
® Blllmlln
11:30 (!)

'

-----~ ldltod ~y CLAY I . 'OUAN _:.__ _ __

8:00 (%) II

1985 Honda 500 Shadow, IIC
eond, $1,275. 304-57ti-21108.

1937 Waterl1ils bedroom •uha;

2535.

eaii614-Gi2· 3711. EOH.

HouH For Sale: 3br 1 Bath, At·

32

1 bedroom tl'lll~r. p.ty own
utllttln plua deposit , 304-615-

2 BA tralltt' In Handlrson. Will
rent wllh HUD . 304-17'J..5248
enytlma

10 1cres, 3bdrm houH, barn,
utility building , 1mt. from Mid·
dleport . Handymen •P«
. Ia!, law
twantias, 216-l95-2399 .

Nica, clean 2 or 3 bedroom
houso, prolor p~nl• oonlngi
614-9!12-2428, 1.... mOOAgo I
no onswor.

AUCTION I

for Rent

Vending Routt: local. Wa Have
Tna Ntwast Machlnn, M1klng A
Nlc. Steady Cash Income. 1·

Wanted to Rent

CofldHionl

74

-:-cc---:----:--c~

47

MON., JUNE 15

S©\\Q{}lJ-~£~s·

TIIAT DAILY
'Ulllll

EVENING

1989 Attro Van AT 8,000
$13,500; 1986 C1maro AT,
$4,500, Both E.xcellant Condi·
lion, 814-446-2510 After 4:00p.m.

Country Mobile Horne Park, Rt.
33N., under new manag.,_,t
lata, $8.5 ; home rantele , $235;
614-9!12-21&amp;7

SWAIN

42 Mobile Homes

1321.

Wolff

75'-6042

LON&lt;&gt;

1187 Joop Chorvkoo, 5 Spood, 4
WD, AC, Ont Owner, 814-4461721 For Dotty Or Clarence.

Space tor Rent

Goods

85 acres, nla 4 bedroom farm
house, centr~l hNI 1nd air condltloffing,l7'0,000; 614·742·2n4.

lllnl

5G51, M1100 WV.

Farms for Sale

Financial
21

Muet Ill to lppri!CIIII.

51

68 acre country alfate with
pond. VInton. Colonial farm
howe newly l'lmodaltd. 2 larga
bllme, eummar houH garage,
studio, t\unUng Cllbln. By ownar.
Agent• weJcome. 01n Bilek,
614-388--8210.

&lt;:.aN&lt;&gt; iO eE A

$9!10. 304-67S-221a.

SINplng room a wh t\ cooking.
Al10 trailer apace. All t.Dak-ups.
C.ll allar 2:00 p.m., 304-m.

Mx70, 3 BR on 1
pri~1t1 acre. flhjor appllancae.
Apple Grove. $14,500. :104·575-

33

Television
Viewing

IfS

1i82 Ford Ecotlna V1n E-150,
1985 Ford Bronco II 4x4. Exctl·

nl~

2783.

SIC.H'.'i

DI\YOF

us 3398.

$500. 114

614-446-1580.

46

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

.

li69 Ford Van, 302 Engine, 3
Spted Transmi11lon, Atklng:

Roome tor rani · weak or manlh.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

latayella Mall. 614-446-4222.

Taka Clrt of llderly In my ~· ..1 Nice mobile home tptce evail·
state approved, home cooua
rMtlt, glva gaod kiva end care, tblt, call Max, 1-&amp;oo-837·3238.
&amp;14-912-3324 01614-992-6940.
O .J . Wt-llta Rotcl, 18 Atret,
Will btby sit In my home, Mostly Woodtd1 Wlth A Beautiretponelbla
IMnegar
with ful Building S1ta. Nice Laval

tlon,

Operate Your Own Tractor, OutNo Exp. N.ceaury. 1·206·736- .tandlng
LN ...PurchiN
7000 Ext.15HN8.
Program Available For Thole
iCrulM Ship Jobe.. Hiring$20(10Jmo. Summer/rear rouna .
Btrtanderll Cellno Workarll

Rtlrain
NowttiSoulheltltm
Buelness Cott-a-. Spring Valltl.
Pilla. Call Today, 614-446-4361.!

HQ.I~ ~ Fl~T

•

privllogu. 304-&lt;182·256&amp;.

Rapouaued Slngl•: 31 Avail·

Very

Fl1tbtd Company Drivers Yfdh Ml11 Plult'a Oar C.r1 Canter.
COL Naldad · P1ld Mlln A Solo, •"Drdoblo, chl-ro. M-F
LlftiHeallh lntUI'IInct · RicMr &amp; 6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. A~ 2Yr10.
Bonu1 Programe Provided· Bator., 1fter echoot DroP"-'ns
Prater Stttl "I Aluminum Coil walcoma. 814-446-8224. New InExpartanca Call1-800-395.3510.
fant Toddllr Care, 614-446-6227.

'Prompt, Raliablt Wttkly Set·
llamant1

Help Wanted

9pooro,

Training

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlq_

Rooms

Rtt1U Or Office Space Avalt1blt.

And Doll•oryl eau 614·m·1220.

-=-_

Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S . Needad- CertiiMid nursing aulaCoins, Gold Rings, Sllvlf Coins, tam tor ICF 68 bed tacllhy. Call
Gold Colnt;. II.T.S. Coin Shop, Carahaven of Polnt ~aunt,

parlance.

Business

15, 1992

Furnished

Avolloblo Only $1,000 Dcwn.

$500 ott P1.1rc~ase Prlca Of Any
N•w Home At El~a Home Can·
ttr, Gru.l SaltcUon, FM S.t·Up

Drivers: KlLM 1 Inc. Cincinnati
Terminal It Aading Equipment
And Long H1ul Orl~tra With
Roeon1 lroe101 Trailer Ex- 18 Wanted to Do
porioneo. Coil 1-l!00-925-5556, _:::._..:.:.::;.:.:.:..:_ _ _
Monda't'·Frtday.
Will Babystt In My Momt. Fenced In P11y ArM. Refartnc:es
EARN UPTO li.OOIHR!
Avallabla. Rodney Area . C1ll
Join Amerlca't Nawat1 Hom•
CIHning Company. Opportuntty 614-245-5887.
For Advaneamant Into Man1g• Gtorget Portable S.wmlll, don't
men1 loe1Uy. Fltxlbla Oay!lma haul your logs to tha mill just
Hourt Mon-Frl. It You H1v1 c.U 304-675 · 1~7.

~•tiel drlver'alanse •ncl
good drl~lng r.cord required.
Houn11: 12..,pm, ThuB-Mon; or
Wanted To Buy AnhquiS: a• othtrwiH tc:hecMtd. Sal1ry:
Fireplace Mantles, Victorian $8.00/hr. to ttart. Excalltn1
Fumltura,
Bookcaan,
Slda benefit packlga. It lnttrH1ed,
Boardt, Light Axt~o~rq, Ar· ccnt1et C.cllll 11 1-800..531chhaeturel tteme, Antique Pool 2302, no lit• than 6119192. EOE.
Tabtat. Wooden Nlckll Anli·
quas, 14,0 Cantril Parkw1y, Hertel Exper~ Heat Pump
Cincinnati, Ohla &lt;t5210. !ll-241- S.rvk:a Man. Muat Know HNI
Pum~. Fumacet, Air Con2985.
ditioners, Sand Wort History
W1ntld To Buy: Junk Autot To: Cl.A 222, cJo Galllpolia D1lly
Wilh Of WhhOIA Matott. C1U Tribuna, 825 Third 4vanua, Galllpcllo, OH 45631.
Larry Uv~r. 6M--388-9303.

Want to buy- Slckla bar mower
tor 1.-.etor. 304-475-2917.

11

14

Ortven : Oa You Wanl Batlar

&amp; VIcinity
All Yard S.lea Must

11

Polnt PINunt, nD p.t•,

19?4 Duke 14165, 2 Badroomt,
Furnished, CA, Undorploolng.
BH1 OHvr. 614-441H1782.

Trucks for Sale

1989 Dodg• Ram 150 V-6,
Au1omollc, Air~ AMIFM 91eroo
43,700 Mlln, Huns Lilla New 1
614-44&amp;-1358.

One bedroom tumlshed
675-1386.

bedrooms,

&amp; Found

12

for Rent

1m 14x64, lbodrm., tumlohod,
no bede, undtrplnned, llapa. on

814-448-257'1.

Monday, June

15, 1992

BORN LOSER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment

tor Sale

Large Ulxed Garrn•n 1 112 Year
Old Ma'-, All Shda I Wormed.

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Page4

Vol. 43, No. 31

Copyrighted 1192
COURT STREET SCENE - This was the
scene Saturday during Heritage Weekend on
Court Street in Pomeroy during activities sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 16, 1992

variety or music ror aU tastes. Saturday's activities on Court Street were sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association.

ENTERTAINMENT - Dee and Dallas entertained during Heritage Weekend activities in
Pomeroy. Tbey provided tbose attending with a

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The crowd here bas gathered to watch a perrormance by the Sbady River SbuiTlers and a western square dance demouslration by the dance
class or Gerald Powell.

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Council to buy
Pomeroy police
new
uniforms
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MEIGS BAND PARTICIPATES- The Meigs
High School Marching Band, under tbe direction or Toney Dingess, participated in Satur-

day's Heritage Parade sponsored hy lbe
Pomeroy Merchants Association ror Heritage
Weekend.

COSTUMED VISITORS -Women Ia costume or the 1880's were prominent on the streets
or Pomeroy over the weekend. Most were a part
or the Auxiliary or the 9lst Ohio Volunteer

lnrantry Civil War Re-Enactment Organization
which was ill town to participate in Heritage
Weekend activities.

----Names in the news---LOS ANGELES (AP)- Comedian Jerry Seinfeld says he was
ouuaged by the Rodney King verdict, and he plans a benefit to help
victims of the riots.
" I felt like doing a linle rioting
my self when that happened," he
said. "I was extremely frustrated
with the racist, social ignorance
that caused that to happen.''
Four white policemen were
acquitted in the videotaped beating
of King, a black motorist.
Seinfeld, 38, star of the NBC

series "Seinfeid," is scheduled to
appear Thursday with comedian
George Wallace to 11l1se money for
riot victims.
"I thought this would be the
best thing I could do as far as making a dent in the problem - probably not a dent, just a scratch. H I
was Ross Perot, I could send a
check," he said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rita
Moreno, Vikki Carr, comedian

Paul Rodriguez and Mambo king
Tilo Puente were among those
entertaining President Bush at a
fund-raiser for the National Hispanic Scholarship Fund and Ford's
Theatre.
The hosts for the show were
Jimmy Smits of "L.A. Law" and
"Fantasy Island" star Ricardo
Mom.alban.
ABC will air the show July II.
Bush seemed to have Congress
tn mind when he addressed the
audience.

There's only one individual in this picture
who can't do something about drug abuse.
EQUESTRIANS - A group of equestrians
reaturing people on horseback and this horsedrawn wagon were part or the scene ror Satur-

cers. Dinner at 7 p.m. followed by
meeting at8 p.m.
POMEROY - Mei gs County
Golf Course Youth League wdl

Riffe to speak at SEORC Meeting
Speaker of the Ohio House of Representalives Verne Riffe has
been named guest speaker at the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council annual summer meetin'g and golf tournament July 9 at the Flllfgreens Country Club in Jackson County. His address will be given
during the evening banquet, for wh1ch uckets may be purchased
from local Chambers of Commerce.
Golfers who wish 10 compete in the Calloway Handicap Tournament a1 the meeting may enter by mailing the $42.50 entry fee to
SEORC, Box 271, Wellston, OH, 45692. Tee times begin at 8:30
a.m. The tournament will be directed by golf professional Btll
Childs of Middleporl.

MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
First Baptist Church, Vacation
Bible School, Monday through Friday. 9 a.m to noon daily . "Team
Up With Jesus." For children ages
four through sixth grade completed.
RACINE- There will be a meeting to organize an antique tractor
and small engine club for Meigs
County on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
Southern High School. Everyone
welcome.

Youth cited in accident

That's right: Spot can't prevent or fight drug
abuse. But everyone else can, including you.

MIDDLEPORT - Bethel No. 62,
Imemational Order of Jobs Daughters will hold initiation Monday at
1 p.m. All members urged to

To help , you need facts . And you can get them
from us.

aacnd

TUESDAY
POMEROY - American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
meet Tuesday for eloction of offi-

A Letart, W.Va., youth was cited after a two-car accident on
West Main Street ncar the Pomeroy -Mason Bridge around I: 12
p.m. Monday.
According to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department,
Aaron Grate, 17, of Letart, W. Va., driving a 1988 Pontiac, came
off the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, rumed right and then attenlpted a
left tum into a private drive.
Grate's car struck a 1989 Oldsmobile driven by Helen Kitchen,
49, Mason, W. Va., in the left-front
Light damage was sustained by both cars.
Grate was charged with failure to yield the right of way.

•

ENTERPRISE - Enterprise
Uni!OO Mell10dist Church will hold
bible school Monday through Friday from 9-1I a.m. daily. All children welcome.

RACINE · Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m . in council
chambers at Star Mill Parte

The $112,500 projoct of improving Middleporl's boat launching fac;lities will be completed l:uer this week.
Final blacktopping of the levee was underway Monday. Resurfacing of
both roadways approaching the boat landing from Front S~t bas already
been completed and all that remains to be done now is reseeding the bank.
The levee is expected to be ready for boaters on the weekend if everything goes according to schedule, D. B. Weber of Weber Consb1Jction,
Reedsville, the conuac10r, said.
The 450 foot section along the ramp where erosion has been a maJOr
problem has already been repaired with large stone being packed along
the slope. The same trealment was used along another 500 feet below the
ramp. Guard railing on the river side of the levee has also been installed.
At the end of the blacktop on the levee approach, there is a nexible
concrete mat which extends out into the water about 40 feet
The project has been paid for with a grant of $75,000 from the Department of Natural Resources, Division of Waterways, and $37,500 from village funds and business and personal donations.

OUTHOUsE RACE - This team l'rom Bank One Ia Pomeroy
that participated in Saturday's outhouse race weren 'I quite quk:k
enough to make it across the finish line. They did however give It a
good try. Three teams competed in the race: a group or Boy
Scouts, the Sheets brothers and Bank One.

The American Council for Drug Education is a
nonprofit organization dedicated to informing
the public about the health hazards of using
alcohol, marijuana, cocaine. crack, inhalants,
steroids, prescription drugs, heroin,
ice and

LSD.

Block Grant monies, council was
granted funds for the demolition
and removal of two dilapidated
houses within the village that contam asbestos .
Black top wtll be purchased by
the village to fill existing potholes
in the town and it was also stated
that the paving of Main Street
would most hkely begin sometime
August.
In other matters, council voted
to amend an cxistmg ordinance
regardmg signage within the village and also to purchase new drain
covers for exisLing sewers.

In Mayor Bruce Reed· s repon 10
council, he stated a total of $4,075
in unpaid fmes had been collected
for the month .
Council's next meeting will be
held June 29 at 7:30 p.m. The flfSt
regularly scheduled meeting for
July will not be held.

Miller cuts lead by two
votes in six counties

Patrick J. Cleland, Pomeroy, has been hired to work nt the
Zaleski Civihan Conservation Corps Camp. located in Vinton
County.
The CCC offers on-the-job training for 18 to 24 -year-old men
and women. Employees gain varied work experience while perfanning much needed conservation work . There are residential and
non-residential camps throughout the state.
For additional information on projects or the program in general,
residents may contact the central office in Columbus at (614) 2656423. Complete infonnation can be obtained by writing the Ohio
Deparuncnt of Natural Resources Division of Civilian Conservation, 1855 Fountain Square. Building H, Columbus, Ohio 43224.

POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church, Vacation Bible School,
Monday through Friday, 6-8:30
p.m. Call992-6768 for a nde.

Approval was granted to purchase new summer uniforms at a
cost of $701.65 for officers of the
Pomeroy Police Department at
Monday's regular meetmg of
Pomeroy Village Council .
An emergency ordinance was
passed by council for the purchase
of radio equipment for the police
deparun cnt from Bob's Electronics,
and for the ftre deparunem from F
&amp; L Electronics.
Second readings were given on
ordinances regarding matters of
su pervisory salaries and the salaries
of regular village workers.
Council was notified that the
village's water line replacement
proj ec t submitted for Issue 2
monies had been rated third out of
all proJects submitted in Meigs
County.
During a hearing Friday regardin~ Community Development

Boat launching facility
to be completed this week

Cleland to work at CCC camp

hold an orgamzational meeting
Tuesday a1 I p.m. for children ages
9-I 4. Call the golf course at 99263 I 2 or Carol McCullough at 9925322 for information.

PAGEVILLE · The Board of
Trustees for Columbia Township
will meet in special session Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the fire station
to consider OTA group rating for
workers compensation.

rrom the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division or
Waterways, and with Middleport village runds, and contributions
from individuals and businesses.

.----Local briefs-____,

day's Heritage Weekend Parade in downtown
Pomeroy. The parade was sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association.

Community calendar
MONDAY
BRADFORD - Vacation Bible
School, Bradford Church of Christ.
Monday through Friday. 9-11:30
a.m. dally.

FINISHING TOUCHES - Blacktopping on the Middleport
levee Is expected to be completed today (Tuesday) and ir eYerything goes weD, the launching racilily should be ready for use by
boaters Ibis weekend. The project has been financed by a grant

Lowlonlght In mid -60s.
Wednt'sduy, p11rll)' cloudy. High
In mid Klls.

Vehicles recovered, impounded

Call today, roll-free, tor more information and
our tree catalog of affordable pamphlets, videos,
booklets and other educational material for chil dren, teenagers and adults.

An older model Dodge Coachman camper was impounded on
State Route 338 near the old Ravenswood ferry landing last week
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
'
The vehicle had no license plates and the vehicle identification
number plate ha~ been removed. Deputies believe the vehicle is
from West V~rg.rua because a West V~rguua sticker was on the side
of the vehicle.
Authorities from Jackson County, W.Va have not received any
stolen propeny reports, according to Soulsby.
Soulsby also said that a 1985 Pontiac Grand Prix repo:ted stolen
from Charleston, W.Va. on Thursday was rocovered on Monday
Continued on page 3

the American
Council
for Drug
Education
Fight drug abust with facts.
1-800-488-DRUG

PRESENTED PLAQUE- Elmer Pickens, commander ol Racine
Post 602, American Legion, displays a plaque won by the post ror
contributions to the "Girt ror Yanks" program. The post contributed $500. The plaque was presented to the district in recogni tion or its contribution which represented the District's largest
percent or goal in its membership category.

Free enterprise speaker rips
portrayal of business in media
Portrayal of business and busi- and fostering corruptiOn.
Pike blamed the negaove 1mage
ness leaders in the media is biased
of
business on a basic misunder and it's tlll1e to change the negative
perception the American public is
Continued on pa!!f J
getting, an Ohio insurance executive told the American Free Enterpnse and Leadership Conference
Monday at the University of Rio
Grande.
"Don ' t accept verbatim what
you read in the newspaper." Larry
R. Pike, chairman, president and
chief executive officer of the Union
Central Life Insurance Co., said as
keynote speaker at the conference
banquet. "Turn it over and think for
yourself."
Quoting the report Watching
AmLrica: Wluu Teltvision Ttlls Us
About Our Livts, by Roberl and
Linda Lichter of the Center for
Media and Public Affairs, Pike said
that since 1955, only 37 percent of
the television portrayals of busiUNFAIR P
nessmen have been positive . The Larry R. Pike, chairman, presiremainder of the TV dramatizations dent and chief executive officer
has them responsible for a fifth of or Union Central Lil'e Insurance
the crimes and a third of the mur- Co., criticized media portrayals
ders seen on the airwaves, in addi - or business and business leaders
in a speech to the American Free
tion to an increasing emphasis
Enterprise and Leadership Consince the 1980s sbowin~ business
leaders exercising abustve power
rerence Monday.

'

'

Dy The Associated Press
U.S . Rep. Clarence Miller has
narrowed U.S. Rep. Bob
McE wen's lead in the 6th Congressional District Republican primary
by two votes, according lo volecanvassing from su of the district's
14 counties.
Unofficial return s from the
entire district had shown Mi llcr
trailmg by 269 votes out of 65,703
votes cast.
Some boards of elecuon m the
d1 stri ct canvassed results of the
June 2 vote on Monday. Under law,
board s of elccuon are required to
check the accuracy of the vote
totals of all races in a procedure
called canvass mg.
After the secretary of state ceru fics the resul ts as official, a recount
of the 6th District Republican primary would be required if the difference 1n the race is less than 0,5
percent of the total, or 328 votes in
this case.
McEwen, who is completing his
m th term , dec lared victory m the
race the day after the eleeuon.
Miller, who has been in Congress
smcc I 96 7, has not conceded.
The focus on Monday was on
Highland County's official tally,
where there were Miller disputed
some of the ballots.
Monday's count showed
McE wen beating Miller 2,601 to
8 I I in Highland County, for a net
ga in of 17 votes for McEwen and
five for Miller, said Joyce Harvey,
director of the Highland County
Board of Elections. The unofficial
count had McEwen leading 2,51!4
tO 806.
McEwen gained seven votes in
Hockin~ County, where Miller
gained etght; 27 in Jackson County
to Miller's 12; 32 in Scioto County
to Miller's nine; 25 in Washington
County to Miller's 69, and 14 in
Athens County to Miller's 21.
For the six counties, Miller
gained 124 votes to McEwen's
122.
The new totals include walk-ins
who voted at board offices and
absentee miliwy ballots.

•

The race was the only one m the
nation between two incumbent
Republican congressmen. The two
faced each other because of redistricting, which resultc&lt;l in the loss
of two of Ollio's 21 seats in
Congress.
Miller had questioned the validity of 50 to 150 votes m Highland
County that had to be duplicated.
He asked Secretary of State Bob
Taft to look into the way ballots
that could not be read by counting
machines were duplicated.
On election ntght, two board
members repunched ballots that
could n01 be read by the computer
onto new cards so they could be
processed.
"We fee l that cvcrythmg we did
was very accurate and above -

board," said Ms. Harvey. She did
not know why the computer
refused to accept so many ballots.
There 1s no way to check
whether votes were copied correctly because the dup!tcate ballots
were mtxed with regular ballots.
Ms. Harvey satd board members
co mpared the accuracy of the
duplicate ballots seve ral times
before puttmg the cards with the
regular ballots.
Bill Klucas, Miller's campaign
manager, said he fell the Highland
County Board of Elections wasn't
responsive.
''We asked to sec the soiled baJ.
lots that were duplicated, and the
hoard refu sed to allow us to do
so," Klucas said. "We asked to
run them through n machine to see
if the machine would take t~em,
bul they refused to do so."
Barbara Briggs, McEwen's
campaign manager, said the drawn
out proceedings and the questions
by Miller's campaign maligned
election volunteers and officials.
"We apologize for the inconvenience thai these officials and volunteers have had to endure during
this tedious process " she said
"U nfortunatel y - and unnecessar:
ily - many have felt there was a
question about the integrity of good
people, and that's a shame."

r
I

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