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                  <text>Wednesday, June 24, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-Tlle Dally Sentinel

Your Social Security

Community calendar
Commuaity Caleadar items
appear two days before 8D ntat
and tbe day of that evenL Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will have a joint meeting
Thursday. Dinnet wiD be served at
7 p.m. prior to the meeting. All
mem~ urged to illtend.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
Church of Christ will hold Vacation Bible School. through Friday
from 9:15 a.m to noon for ages
three through the erghth gmdc.

RUTLAND - Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rutland Church of CbrisL Jane Wise
will present the program. Each
church is urged Ill have represcnlauon.

RACINE · Vacallon Bible
School. Racin e First Baptist
Church, through Friday, 9 a.m. to
noon. Team Up Wrth Jesus IS the
theme.

RACINE - Racrne American
Legion Auxiliary will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home.

RACINE - RaCine Unrted
Methodist Church, Vacation Bible
Sc hool . through Friday 9-11:30
a.m. daily. Ages preschool through
sixth grade. Son Mountain is the
theme.
RACINE - Racine Church of the
Nazarene, Vacation Bible School,
through Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m. for
ages 2-13. "Set Sail With the Savior" is the theme. Pastor Tom Gates
invites the public.

By ED PETERSON
Social Security
maoager in Atbens
When most people think about
Social Security, they usually do not
think about the benefits that the
program pays to children. That' s
understandable. Because it is true
that people are min) likely to know
retired individuals who receive
Social Security payments than to
know children who get Social
Security.
However. our Commissio ner ,
Gwendolyn King, has recently
emphasized the fact that Social
Security is also a children' program.
Here's why.
Each month Social Security
pays survivor benefit to approxi mately 1.8 million children of
deceased workers, and dependent
benefits Ill another I million children of retired aod disabled workers.
I believe that survivors benefits
are the least appreciated aspect of
the Social Security program.
For all Americans born after
World War II, survivors benefits
are taken for granted. They are as
much a fact of life as tomorrow 's
sunrise. But it was not always so.
Until this cenrury, the death of a
husband usually meant destitution
for the widow or family. Life rnsuraoce policies were rare; the oppor-

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor Steve
Reed invites the public. Fellowship
follows.
MIDDLEPORT - Ballroom
dance Saturday, 7-11 p.m., American Legion Annex, Middleport.
Music by George Hall. Cost $5 per
person.

RACINE - Revrval at the Pentecosta l Assembly , Route 124,
Racine, will be held Wednesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. mghtly
with Rev. Jim Barrouse. Pastor
William Hoback invrtes the public
CHESTER - The Wrldwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Heidi
Elberfeld.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Tbe Meigs County Young Democrats will meet
Thursday at at7:30 p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Tbe Mergs County Library Board of Trustees will
meet Thursday at I p.m.
SYRACUSE -The Carleton
College Board of Trustees will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m . at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. All
members urged Ill aw:nd.
LONG BOTTOM · Riverview
Garden Club will hold a potluck
prcnic Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Nola Young.
POMEROY - Free clothing day
will be held at the Salvation Army
Thursday from 10 a.m . to noon. All
area residents in need of clothrng
are welcome.
POMEROY - The Rector and
congregation of Grace Episcopal
Church and friends and acquain ·
tances of Mark and Leesa Murphey
are rnvrted to slop by the Parish
HaD Thursday from 7-9 p.m . Ill say
good-bye

RIPLEY - Liberty Mounlaineers
wrll perform at Skateland in Ripley
on Friday.
ALFRED - Alfred United
Methodist Church will welcome
Pastor Sharon Hausman back for
another year with a potluck picnic
on Friday at 6 p.m . Public invrted.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
and square dance Friday, 8-11 :30
p.m., music by Happy Hollow
Boys. Sponsored by Tuppers Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 and Ladies
Auxiliary.
SATURDAY
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
will hold a special meeting Saturday at 7 p.m. Work in the M.M.
degree. Refreshments will be
served.
D~-Weekwdserv~es

al Danville Church of Christ will
be Saturday at 7:30 and Sunday at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill,
Foster, W.Va., will be the speaker.
Public invited.
KANAUGA - Liberty Moun ·
tarneers will perform al D.A .V.
Center in Kanauga on Salllrday .
LOGAN - District Deputies and
Past Councilors of Daughters of
America will have a meeting and
picnic at Kachelmacker Park in
Logan Saturday at noon. Take a
covered dish, drinks and table serVIce.

POMEROY - 1972 Class of
Meigs High School will hold a gettogether Sarurday from )-7 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.

Extension's comer
4-H tips for better living
Whw you were a chrld, did you
wish that your parents would listen
to you withour doing something
else at the same time? Did you
wish they would really hear what
you were tryrng lO say and understand what you were feeling? Did
you ever say to yourself, "When
I'm a parent, I'm going to listen
when my chrldren want to talk to
me.
Many of us have this good
intenuon, but the constant juggling
of our work and famrly lives chips
away at the time and energy we

have to listen Ill each other. Other
factors such as timing, temperamwt and mood can undermine our
ability to li sten to and hear what
sonu::one else has to say.
If we are not used to being listened to our selves, we may not

have the inclination or skilJs to listen Ill othm . Also, when we don't
especially lil:e what we are hearing,
listening can be trouble some.
Children learn how Ill listen and

not w li sten from their parents .
Here are a few quc stiQns to ask
yourself that mrght help you think
about and improve your own listening skiDs.
Do you interrupt or tunc out
your chrldren more frequcn~y than
you do ad oiLs?
Arc you often on "a utomatic
pilot" repeating phrases like, How
many times do I have Ill tell you?
Don't you ever listen to me?
Do you give verbal and non ·ver·
bal clues that show you are really
following the conversation'
Do you pay attention to your
child 's face and body language?
Do you use encollf1lging phrases
such as "Then what happened?" to
show that you really care and to
keep the conversation gmng?
Can your children count on having at least ten minutes each day to
181Jc to you without inlmllptions?
Have you had a heart-to heart
181Jc with each of your children in
the last two or three months?
Do you pay more attention to
your children when they are "bad"
thw when they are "good"?
Have you ever taped a conversation with your children and carefully listened to it?
Have your listening skills
improved since you were a t«nag-

er?
Would your children agree with
your respooses Ill these questions'
LAWN MOWER SAFETY
I. Read the owner's manual and

be sure you know how to stop the
engine quickly . All controls are
important so be familiar with their
operation. Before you operate
alone. have a check-out by a qualified operator.
2. Inspect the lawn before each
mowing to be sure any stones.
sticks. bones, toys or any other
debris have been removed.
3. Inspect your mower before
usrng it. Trghten any loose nuls,
bolLs and screws and be sure the
blade of the rotary mower is tight.
Keep all shields and safety devices
in place . Before inspecting th e
mower, be sure Ill di sconnect the
spark plug wire.
4. Wear long pants or slacks and
good sound shoes while using the
mower. Do not operate the mower
while wearing sandals, shorts or in
bare feeL
5. Keep everyone a safe distance
away from the area of operation
especially chrldren and pets.
6 . Service before starting rt.
Check the oil and fill to th e
required level if oil is needed.
7. Handle gasoline with extreme
caution. Fill the tank outdoors,
before starting and avoid spilling
any gasoline. It can be dangerous
Ill fi II the tank when the engine is
hot so take a break when it is time
to refuel.
8. AdJUSt the heigh I of cut, if
necessary, to fit the conditions
under which you will be mowing.
It may be necessary to mow the
dame area twice if grass is tall. Be
sure the engine is stopped when
making the height-of-c ut adjustments.
9. Disengll8e clutches and shift
into neutral before starting the
engine. Make these safely checks
each time before operating any
p&gt;wer mower.
10. Do not operate the mower if
someone comes into the area unex-

pectedly. If you have to stop to
visit with someone, shut off the
engine of the mower.
Be safe, not sorry.

tunity for women to work outside
the home was small; and there was
no program to provide income
replacement for survivors.
Children were usually parceled
oulto relatives or orphana&amp;es; widows had to rely upon the charity of
their own families Ill take them rn.
The original Social Security
Ac~ passed in 1935, .did not make
provrsions for survtvors. But rn
1,939 amendments to the act provrded for monthly benefits for widowed mothers with eligible children.
The program has expanded
since then, and today 98 out of
every 100 children could receive
survivor benefits if a working par·
ent should die.
In fact, the value of tltis protection a~ainsl income loss for a
worker s family is probably greater
than the value of his or her commercial life insurance.
If you would like an estimate of
the Social Security survivors benefits that could be paid to your family, call or visit our office to ask for
a Personal Earnrngs and Benefrt
Estimate Statement. It will show an
estimate of survivors benefits that
could be paid, as well as estimates
of retirement and disability benefits
and other important information.
Our number is 592-4448 and Social
Security's toll free is 1·800-7721213.

Too loud dog ordered out of town
COPING CAP- Brad Moore ropes with the beglnniug of tbe
work week by wearing a "coping cap," a paper bag decorated witb
foliage. Moore, rrom Portsmouth, created tbe beadp!Ke wbile working along the Columbia Parkway in Cincinati on Monday where be
operates an asphalt tamper. (AP Pboto)

Names in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Ringo
Starr says he has come up with an
album he can be proud of- final ly.
In the July 9 issue of Rolling
Stone magazine, the 51 -year-old
dnunmer said that during his postBeatle drinking days, he was content Ill exist as a "celebrity" rather
Lhan a musician.
''I'd be at movie premieres in
London with my bow tie on and a
bottle of cognac in my pocket,
mixed with some Coca-Cola so
people would thin~ it was just
soda. It got really sad," he said.
"Someone in England put il so cruelly. Tbey said, 'If there's an opening of an envelope, he 'll be there.·
That hit me."
Starr has since undergone rehabilitation for a drug and alcohol
problem, and he called his new
album, "Time Takes Time ." a
"beautiful piece of work. "
"I've done something I can be
proud of - finally, you know and I' m going Ill give rt my best
shot." he said.

Busy Bee Class meets
The Busy Bee Class of Middleport First Baptist Church mel
recen~y for its annual potluck picnic. Games and food were enjoyed
by all.
Attending
were Lillian
Demoskey, Beuy Denny, Gwinnie
White, Nora Jordan, Elizabeth
Slaven, Freda Edwards, Beulah'
White , Caroline Miller, Pooch
Brewer, Rosemary Lyons, Betty
Gilkey, Ruth Ebersbach, and
guests. Mary Beth Brewer. Brittany
Denny, Linda Cramer, Tyler
Wamsley and Rev. James Seddon.

FALMOUTH, Mass. (AP) ~ " Roscoe stays, the selectmen go."
Roscoe, a mongrel whose bark is Some carried signs saying "Babies
much worse than his bite, has been Cry, Are They Next?'
Roscoe himself joined the picket
ordered Ill leave town.
His barking upset the neighbors line. along with owner Tony Cameand the selecunw in the Cape Cod rio. "1 will do everything to keep
town of Falmouth voted 4-0, with him and prove he's not an excesone abstention. to force him out. sive barker," Camerio said lues- .
Now his support= are rallying.
day.
About40 people marched MonThe dispute with the neighhors
day outside Town Hall, chanting began about a year ago.

Pleasers Family Restaurant
691 WEST 111111

POMEROY

FAST MEALS PLUS DAILY HOME
COOKED MEALS
•DAILY SPECIALS
•BREAKFAST SERVED ALL DAY

Hymn sing slated
Hillside Baptist Church will
hold a hymn sing on the Pomeroy
parkmg lot on Saturday at 7 p.m .'
The Chrldren of God, Redeemed
Quanet, God· s Little Lambs, Joyful
Hearts and Lrnda Jones will per-

The first edltloo of The World AI·
manac, a UO·pac• volume with L2
pages of advertising, was published
by the New York World In 1868, 1.24
yeanr aco. AnnWII publication was
suspended ln 1878. Jooeph Pulitzer,
publisher of the New York World, revived The World Almanac In 1886
with the goal of ma&amp;lo&amp; it a •comptn·
diurn of WJiverul kDOWledge. • It hal
been publllbed annually lin&lt;e then.

Kicker:

1-7-3-8-5-6
Pick 3:

5-1-6
Pick 4:

Page 4

Vol. 43, No. 38

Copyrighted 1992

2 Sec11ona, 12 Peges 25 cent•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, June 25, 1992

A Multlmedil Inc. NeWioaoer

AEP threatens to withdraw scrubber plan
ATHENS (AP) - Amencan
Electric Power Co. may withdraw
its proposal to install scrubbers al
the Gavin power plant, a move that
could cost 1,000 jobs, the utility's
vice presidwt said.
Gerald Maloney, AEP executive
vice president, said the Wednesday
that the utility is upset with a slate
regulator's order separating the
Meigs County mines from its plan
lo clean the plant.
"It's not possible to separate
them in that way," he said.

The company submined the plan
to meet new requirements of the

federal Clear Air Act that lake
effect in 1995.
State regulators were to open
heanngs today on whether AEP
should install pollution-reducing
devices at the plant or buy cleaner
coal from out of state.
Maloney said that if the order
remains, AEP may revert to its initial proposal Ill use low-sulfur coal
from oul of state. jeopardizing
1,000 jobs at AEP mines in Meigs

County.
He said AEP plans to appeal to
a five-member commission for a
final ruling.
The order came from Dwight
Nodes, attorney examiner for the
Public Utilrties Commission of
Ohio.
He ruled that AEP's proposal to
use coal from the Mergs mines
shouldn't automatically be included in the plan to install smokestack
scrubbers al the company's Gavin
generating plant in Cheshrre, in

Gallia County in southern Ohro.
Coal from the Meigs mines cost
more.
Industrial Energy Consumers, a
consortium of large industries,
asked for the order. Attorney
Samuel Randazzo sard electnc customers could have hrgher bill s 1f
the Meigs mines are rncluded in the
utility's plan.
"We don't feel rt' s farr for the
ratepayers Ill pick up the nsk for a
business decision,'' he said.
Installing scrubbers at the Gav10
plant would cost $800 million .

County commissioners open
and award July asphalt bids
BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County CommiS sioners opened bids for bituminous
materials for the month of July
when Lhey met in regular session
on Wednesday m9rning.
Sealed bids for the various products were received from two suppliers: KOCH Materials Company
and Asphalt Materials Company,
both of Marietta . The bid of
Asphalt Materials Company was
accepted.
The board authorized Clerk
Mary Hobstetter to advertise for
bids for three paving pro!ects, to be
funded by 1992 Community Development Block Grant funds.
Sealed bids will be opened on
July 8 at I p.m. on the following
projects: Middleport Village widening and repaving on Nortb
First Avenue from Race Street to
Desmond Street and South First

PAUL GERARD

Avenue, estimated cost, $23.000;
Salrsbuf)' Township - paving of
Naylor's Run Road at an estimated
cost of $30,000; Rutland Village resurfacing Depot Street, estimated
cost of $9,000.
James Huff of Pomeroy was
appointed to fill a vacancy in
Meigs County's delegation to the
Gallia-Jackson -Meigs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services.
The board reviewed a letter
from Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, who reported that Jon Buck
had been appointed to ftlJ the tenn
of George W. Miller on the Meigs
County Metropolitan Housing
Authority. As mayor of the county's most populous village, Hoffman appoints members to that
board.
The board relayed a complaint
regarding drainage near Stale
Route 124 at Yellowbush Ill High-

way Superintendent Ted Warner.
Warner said he would investigate
the complaint and outline possible
remedies.
The commissioner.; also:
- Approved a $700 transfer of
funds within the Youth Services
Subsidy Grant;
- Approved an appropriation of
$671.55 into the Meigs County
Parks District's other expenses
account, earmarked as proceeds
from the sale of the Meigs County
tourism video;
- Authorized travel expenses for
staff members of Meigs County
Emergency Services, who will
aw:nd a Dayton seminar;
- Approved a citizens participation plan, required for the CDBG
program.
Present were: Commissioners
Richard E. Jones, David Koblenlz
and Manning Roush; and Clerk
Mary Hobstetter.

tom, Velma Rue, Middleport, and Horace
Abbott or Pomeroy. Fick was tbe winner of a
framed and malted copy of tbe bank's historic
mural, given away in conjunction with a stockholders' open bouse on Saturday. Rue received a
$100 EE savings bond and Abbott, a day's interest on $1 miUion, both door prizes during Sunday's open bouse. (Sentinel Pboto by Brian j.
Reed)

Paul Gerard is the new chairman
of the Meigs County Republican
Executive Committee, having been
elected to that position by the committee at their organizatiooal meeting on Tuesday night.
David Koblentz was re-elected
vice chairman, and Debra Chevalier, a new ccnua.J committee member, was named secretary.
Speculation surrounded the
chairman position, following the
recent annouocemwt by Richard E.
Jones that he would not see~ reappointment. Pomeroy Auorney
Charles H. Knight was the only
other nominee to the position; a
final tally was not available.

Gerard is employed as criminal
bailiff for the Meigs County Common Pleas Court. He has served as
a central committ«man for several
years, and was most recwtly secretary for 11JF central committee. He
and his wife, the former Niese!
Duvall, reside in Middleport. They
have a daughter, Erin.
Gerard is also the Republican
candidate for the office of sheriff.
Also at the organizational meeting, Bernard Gillcey of Middleport
was elected chainnan of the Central Commit tee; Patty Pickws, vice
chairman; and Debra Chevalier,
secretary.

Clinic receives parent education grant

Ronald P. Socdarelli, Conductor • Charf£5 Minelli, GU£51 Conductor

Thursday, june 25- 7:00pm. • Court~ p~ Ohio
The pubhc is invited to this Free Concert bring your folding chairs
for an evening of relaxation and beautiful sounds.

BANK=ONE
\Vhate&gt;.rr it takes.

Lows tonight in the 50s.
C hance of thunder.;turms.

4-5-7-0

Opponents contend it would be better to reduce pollution at Gavin by
swrtc hing to low -s ulfur coa l
obtained in other states.
Federal law requires electric
utilities to cut sulfur dioxide emissions by 40 percent to 50 percent
on average over the next 10 years
to reduce environmental damage
from acid rain.
The plant is owned by Canton·
based Ohio Power Co . a subsidiary
of AEP.
The first heanng was scheduled
today in thrs southeast Oh1o cny .

LEVY COMMITTEE - When voters go to
the polls in November tbey will vote on a onemill levy ror the Meigs County Health DepartmenL The levy will re~lace the current one-miD
levy wbich expires thrs year. At Wednesday's
planning session were from the lert, Norma Tor-

The Easter Seals Society of the
River Cities, which serves Meigs
and four other counties, has
obtained a $20,000 grant Ill provide
parent education at the Meigs
County Speech and Hearing Oinic
in the Meigs County Health
Department.
Easter Seals Society has financially supported the Meigs County
speech therapy program for. the
past two years. The new grant rs 10
add a parent education curriculum
plus related equipment aod sup-

The Publrc Utrlrtres Commrs ·
s1on of Ohro also scheduled hear ings rn Columbus on July 2 and in
Canton on July 9.
The stakes arc high for workers
at the Southern Oh1o Coa l Co .,
whrch supplres coal to the plant.
The mine will be closed rf the
PUCO reJects the scrubbers pro ·
posal, whrch IS pan of the utility's
cnvironmenta.l compliance plan.
J1m Tompkins, v1ce president
and general manager of th e coal
company . said that would put 1,000
people out of a JOb.

res, R.N., nursing director, and Jon Jacobs,
administrator, Meigs County Healtb Department; Jane Walton, levy chairman, Lillian
Moore, treasurer; T. C. Enin, R.N., Dan Harri..fii, Carol Guinther, ~retary, and Lenny Eliason .

Committee begins work on health
department 'replacement' levy
on a one-mill levy wrucn was first
passed in 1982, then renewed in
1987 . Instead of asking for a
renewal of that levy wh1ch would
be based on the 1982 tax rare col ~
lecuon, a "replacement" levy wrll
go on the ballot.
As expla ined by Jon Jacobs,
deputy health commis&lt;roner and
administrator of the Meigs County
Health Department . the "replace·
ment'' levy will mea n that a full

-----

Gerard appointed committee chairman

11Je0hio

'

1-10-27-2!1·34-42

WINNERS ANNOUNCED · Door prizes
were awarded to tbree local residents in conjunction wilb open bouse activities at the newly·
remodeled offices of Farmers Bank and Savings
Company in Pomeroy last weekend. Here, Jo
Ann Williams, far left, tbe bank's assistant
cashier and Director of Business Development,
presents the awards to Dick Fick or Long Bot-

Noise causes more
than hearing loss

-

Super Lotto:

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
A one ll)ill levy for operational
expenses of the Meigs County
Health Department wrll be on the
ballot in the November General
Election.
The commillee Ill promote passage of the levy met Wednesday
afternoon at the Meigs Multipurpose Building to plan its strategy.
The agency currently operates

ST . PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)
- Burt Reynolds gladly gave a
young fan an autograph and a hug,
but not his watch.
Reynolds, who has been in the
area r~ming the movie "Cop and a
Half." was at a bookstore paying
for $360 worth of books and tapes
Monday when a 10-year-old asked
for his gold wau:h. The actor gave
his autograph instead.
But the watch fancier , Andrea
Jessop, persisted, offering to swap
her plastic -band timepiec e for
Reynolds' gold one.
He looked at her watch and gave
her a hug.
"Gee, you smell good," Andrea
said .
"Thanks," Reynolds replied.
"But you still don't get the
wau:h."

WorldreaoWHCI

Reds
beat
Astros

ronn.

NEW YORK (AP) - Geena
Davis, who helped define the
female "buddy movie" in '"Thelma &amp; Louise," says she never got
lobe Madonna's pal while mak.ing
" A League of Their Own."
"We never got close. I mean ,
you know. she's had a different life
than the rest of us," Davis said m
the upcoming issue of USA Weekend.
The film, which comes out thiS
week, is about a women's profess ional baseball league that was
organized during World War II.
Davis plays a dairy worker who
becomes a star catcher.

Norse has been implicated in
other disorders besides hearing
loss. It has been linked as a contributor to coronary diseases, hypenension, physiological disorders and
emotional stress.

Ohio Lottery

·~

one m1ll, or $1 per $1,000 of property valuation. wrll be co ll ected
rather than 80 cents per one mill
which would be collected under a
"rencwaJ" levy .
The current levy which expues
thiS year generates $185 ,000 whrle
the replacement levy will bring in
$223,000. Jacobs sard, noting that
it will mean only a minimal
mcrcase in taXes for Meigs Coun (Conunucd on Pg J)

-- . . -

*

• A; -

I

-~

ISN'T THIS JUNE? • Many people In Meigs
County were saying to themselves yesterday
"Isn't tbis June?" following a storm that produced bail and large amount of rain. The hail
cut leave5 off trees causing roads, cars and bous-

es to become rovered in foliage. Here, Jessica
Hamilton sweeps away bail that accumulated at
The Beacon Station near Kerr's Run in
Pomeroy.

Storm causes damage in some areas

fall.
plies.
Easter ~eals activities in Meigs
The highly competitive grant,
which required a hearing in Colum- County are financed through sue~ .
Wednesday's storm in Meigs port were wrtnout power Wednes- following Wednesday 's storm in
Meigs County.
bus, was awarded by the Children's fund raising evwts as the A &amp;. W County, which produced pea-sized day evening.
According to Clarence Robson,
According Ill Ernie Sisson, area
Trust Fund through its discre- Root Beer float sales going on this harl and large amounts of rain,
area
line
supervisor
for
Columbus
manager
for Ohio Power, the bulk
weekend
in
the
Kroger
store
at
completely
destroyed
the
tomato
tionary fund.
and
Southern,
a
tree
fell
across
a
Pomeroy.
The
icy
beverages
will
of
the
outages
were in the Willis
The new grant is in addition to
and pepper crops at Harris Farm
line
on
Seventh
Street
at
about4:30
be
sold
from
II
a.m.
10
5
p.m.
FriHill
area
in
Pomeroy
and Tanner
and
Grewhouse
in
Ponland.
Jeff
the long-standing, children's trust
p.m.
during
yesterday's
storm.
Run area in Racine .. He also reponfund projects in Mei~s County and day through Sunday for Sl each. Harris, owner, stated the farm lost
does not compete wrth their fund- Because the root beer and ice 100.000 IDmaiD plants and 200,000 Workers restored power to the cus- ed rndivrdual tree limbs on service
tomers shortly after 8 p.m.
wires but other than that there was
ing. The grant covers a parent edu- cream are donated and the servers pepper plants due to the hail.
Reported damage minimal
Resldeats without power
no major damage . Power was
cation program for one year. A are volunteers, all proceeds benefit
A total of about 62 customers of restored by 10:30 p.m.
Approximately 100 Columbus
starting date for the new program Easter Seals.
(Cvntinued on Pg . 3)
and Southern customers in Middle- Ohio Power were without service
wiD be announced, probably in the

�Thursday, June 25, 1992

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

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/Controlkr

CHARLENE HOHLICH
General Manager

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subjett lo editing and must be sig ned wilh name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published_ Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

The forgotten saver
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - They are the forgotten folks in attempts by the Federal Reserve and the White House to get the economy moving again. They
are the savers, and they are getting hurt.
They are conservative in habits, believing it is their responsibility to
live within their income. They are traditionalists, inclined to do things the
old-fashioned way. Financial reSJXlnsibility is a mattet of pride and duty.
Ironically, these traits contnbute to their problem, which is falling
mterest rntes and an economic leadership that feels the only way to get the
coon try moving again is to push those rntes still lower.
This is hard for the savers to accept, and you can't blame them for
complaining. Low 1111es deprive savers and benefit borrowers, they say,
and that inc Iudes borrowers who ran up irresponsibly large debts and now
demand help.
Borrowers and debtors are mdeed getting help. In the past two years
the Federal Reserve has repeatedly lowered interest rntes, and now President Bush is urging the Fed to spur economic activity by pushing llltes
even lower.
A few years ago savers coold earn double-digit returns on their savings. Today, they are lucky if they can earn enough to pay their taxes.
Most savers are actually losing money after they account for taxes and
inflation.
The avernge yield thts week on six-month certificates of deposit was
3.46 percent, accordmg to a survey by Banxquote Money Marlc.ets of
Wilmington, Del. For five-year COs the lllte was 6.07 percenl
Why, say upset savers, inflation is at three percent a year, effectively
ernsing any return on six-month COs. Then, they point oot, while they
have earned nothing, they are compelled to pay taXes as if they had.
It provokes them to ask how sincere are those political leaders who
give one speech after another about the need for Americans 10 save and
build capital for economic expansion. and who warn about the dangers of
a low savings ral.e.
"The ta&gt;.ation of voter-taxpayer saving should be the prime issue of
the forthcoming election." says W. Thomas Kelly, the ootraged president
of the Savers &amp; Investors League, a 8J1ISS roots group seeking to promote
saving.
The ordinary income taX, he says, "'continuously removes invesunent
rerum and realized gain from productive enterprise.'' Defer taXes, he says,
and that money will help expand the economy - and the taXes. when
paid, will be greater.
In his view, the entire counll)', not just savers. would be bener off if
legislators insisted on a grea~y expanded and improved system of taXdoouctible and tax-deferred individual retirement accounts.
"These will permit free enlerjlise investment return to work its wondroos ways for taxpayers, for our government and for our nalioo," says
Kelly , an insU111llCC consultant based in Malvern, Pa.

Berry's World

MAARIAGE
C.OUHSELOR

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, June 25, 1992

your miSsing POWs, but they're
probably all dead now.
·
Yeltsin tells Bush that this
knowledge came with the recent

Sarah Overstreet
opening of Soviet archives. ADd he
claims that even the Russians have
yet to unearth our soldiers' histo·
ries, whether they are alive, and if
not, how they died. And yes, he
says, Gorbachev lmew.
How unbelievably sadistic. All
these years, all the heartbroken
families. the terrible unknowing
that never allows survivors a complete peace. What advantage was it
they were hoping to gain, that they
feared even 10 use it?
Next my rnge jumps continents.
If what Yeltsin says is true, there is

prise after surprise, and we coolinue to piece together the enormlly of
the cruelty and oppression of its
Communist leaders. Apparently,
that's something we share with the
Russian people. A friend of mine,
the Rev . Dorsey Levell, just
returned from a mercy trip toRussia to deliver food collected by
Missouri churches. He was struck
by the sense of wholesale betrayal
the Russians are feeling. "My most
overwhelming impression," he
says, · ' was that they feel like
they've been hoodwinked all these
years by their own govemmenL"
Watching the video Levell lOOk
in Russia deepens my belief that
the Russian people were rnped and
plundered by these horrific despots,
and my sense of "evil empire"
recedes to "evil band of old reprobates." Levell's pnceless footage
shows elderly Russians packing
food in backpacks for long walks
~IIU::R home in the cold. children of Cher@rn
ii'&gt;T nobyl dying alone in hopelessly
~1\Hiill · inadequate hospitals. Where are
,.,.,~. ~&lt;"
their parents? At home, working,
trying to keep the rest of their fami lies from starving in this land their
leaders gutted.
Legislators debate whether we
should promise aid and encourage
economic investment in Russia
immediately, or wait until the POW
questions are answered. The memory of the faces in Levell's video
places the question high on my list
of what I think this country shoold
be abouL With the trillions of dollars that we've put into intelligence
all these years, our leaders should
be able to figure the odds that
Yeltsin will encoumge democracy.
Aic the odds good? Yes? Then help
them. In the history or mankind,
has so great a number or people
ever had such an opportunity to
transform for the beller a beaten
and humiliated enemy?
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

no way U.S. intelligence could not
have discovered at least some of
the story. Yet as family after family
beseeched its government for help,
in finding POWs from Vietnam.
they were told their search was
futile. that we had thoroughly
investigated and believed no more
prisoners of war to be living.
And now the ruler of the nation
that devoured our men stands
before us to ask for help. Are his
confessions simply a carrot hung
before us to win our aid, or an bonest anempt to demonstrate that
Russia comes to the table this time
with all its cards showing, nothing
held back? A canny combination of
both? Surely Yeltsin knew what
effect such information would have
on us. and could have mapped out a
variety of possible plays.
The days since the collapse of
the Soviet Union have brought sur-

n

Lieberman for vice president
The Republicans will run
against Gov. Bill Clinton by painting him as "Southern Fried
Dukak.is.''

They will say that Clinton is a
standard issue liberal Democrat,
like Michael Dulcalcis, Walter Mandale or George McGovern, or like
another Southerner. Jimmy Carter.
who was painted as "Southern

Fried McGovern."
Is Clinton a liberal? The cards
are out. At times, he acts like a
tough middle-of-the-road Democrat
who recognizes the failures of
recent liberalism. On other occasions, he dances to the tune of leftish Democratic special-interest
groups.
If the Lefty image prevails,
Clinton is a loser, even in a three·
way election. The most recent poll
(CBS/New York Times) shows
only 19 percent of voters identifying as "liberal"' - compared to 44
percent "moderate" or 31 pen:ent
for "conservative."
What can Clinton do? The most
important decision a presidential
nominee makes, symbolically and
substantively, is his choice of a
running mate.
Clin10n should select on three
critena. First is competence. Vice
President Dan Quayle is doing
well, but the perception lingers of a

boy sent to do a man's job. Clin·
ton's choice should be of sufficient
quality 10 make Quayle an issue.
Second, the candidate must be

Ben Wattenberg
seen as ""non-liberal." That does
not mean "conservative," which
would be unrealistic for the current
Democratic Party.
Third, the candidate should not
hail from the South or the South·
west, and not only because Clinton
IS from that area. To win,
Democrnts must show that non-liberalism is a national force in their
party. not just a regional oddity.
So who is not Southern, not
Southwestern and not liberal? For
example, there is Sen. John Glenn
of Ohio. But Glenn -my, how
time flies! - is now 71 years old.
Sen. Bill Bradley of New Jersey,
might qualify, but he has taken
himself out of the competition.
Consider Sen. Joseph Lieberman, lhe only non -liberal on Clinton's reported "short lisL"
He's from Connecticut, a mid·
size state (27th largest), one of the
most suburbanized in America.
This year more than half of the
vote will be suburban, and it's
Clinton's weakest area.

Lieberman, 50, is quality goods.
I remember him when he was litlle
more than a teen-ager, in his hometown of Stamford, giving rousing
Democratic speeches in public
parks, while the adults said :
"Someday, Joe Lieberman is going
to be presidenL"
He served as auomey general of
Connecticut and majority leader of
the state Senate. In 1988, he beat
Republican liberal Sen. Lowell
Weicker, running to Weicker 's
right. and capturing the votes of
many Republicans and "Reagan
Democrats.'"
Lieberman's record in the Senate has been eclectic. He isn't a
knee-jerk anything.
He supported the Gulf War, the
death penalty, the Mexican trade
treaty, tal&lt; incentives for business,
product liability reform and reduc tion of the capttal gains tal&lt; - not
an un-Ciintonesque stance. He is
strong on defense and tough on
crime. He is a vice chairman of the
Democratic Leadership Council,
the non-liberal voice of the Democrntic Pany. (So was Clinton.)
On the liberal side, he voted
against Clarence Thomas (after
originally supporting him), favors
labor on strilte-breaking, and voted
for the 1990 Civil Rights bill,
which President Bush described as

"a quota btU." He is a suong envi ronmentalist and consumerist, with
a long pro-civil rights record.
Congress-watcher Norman Om·
stein says, "Rarely has anyone so
new 10 the Senate so rapidly gained
such high regard from his col leagues. of both parties."·
Lieberman is Jewish. There is
still some anti-Semitism . But the
Jewish population in America is
concentrated in closely contested
electorally rich states - New
York, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Illinois. In a three-way
race, add Florida. Moreover, a
Lieberman candidacy could help
raise money from the big-giving
Jewish community.
Lieberman is an observant Jew;
he doesn't work on Saturdays. In
an election year, in this most religious of countries, when ""values"
may be the biggest issue, particularly to the Ointon campaign, sincere belief is a serious asset. A
Clinton-Lieberman ticket. Very
interesting. Clinton Liebennan may
sound like the name of your
internist. But it may be the forthcoming Democratic team because it
could allow Clinton to avoid the
Soothem Fried liberal label and be
digestible to moderntes.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Why don't presidents tell the truth?

Today in history
By Tbt Associated Press
Today is Thursday, June 25, the I 77th day of 1992. There are 189 days
left in the year.
Today"s Highlight in History:
On June 25, 1876, LL Col. George A. Custer and his Seventh Cavalry
were wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne Indians in the Bat~e of Lit~e Big
Horn in Montana
On this dale:
In 1788.the state of Virginia rntified the U.S. Constilution.
In 1868, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina and
South Carolina were readmitled 10 the Union.
In 1888, the Republican National Convention, meeting in Chicago,
nominated Benjamin Harrison for the presidency. (Harrison went on to
win the November election, defeating incumbent Grover Cleveland.)
In 1906, a love triangle carne 10 a violent end atop New Yort's Madi·
son Square Garden as architect Stanfond White, the building's designer,
was shot to death by Harry Thaw, the jealous husband of Evelyn NesbiL
In 1942, 50 years ago, the British air force staged a thousand-bomb
rnid on Bremen, Germany, during World War II.
In 1950, war broke out as North Korea invaded South Korea. The U.N.
Security Council, meeting in emergency session, issued a cease-fu-e caU
that went unheeded.
In 1951, the ftrst commercial color telecast took place as CBS trans·
milled a one-hour special from New York to four other cities.
In 1962, 30 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the use of an
unofficial, non-denominational prnyer in New York state public schools
was uncoostirutional.
In I973, fonner White House Counsel John W. Dean began testifying
before the Senate Watergate Commiuee.
In I981,the U.S. Supreme Court held that male-only draft registration

Friday, June 26
Ac cu - Wcather~ forecast for dayt tmc conditions and high tcmpcra1ures

On June 17, we comrnemornted
the 20th anniversary of the lessons
of Watergate in two ways:
(I) We read and watched an
orgy of reminiscences about All the
President's Men - Haldeman,
Ehrlichman, Mitchell, Dean - and
all the president's burglars, buggers, plumbers and co-conspirators
in the cover-up that cost Richard
Nixon his presidency.
(2) We read and watched news
that we just indicted another president's man, ex-Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger, for covering
up for yet another president ,
Ronald Reagan, in yet another
scandai,Inm-Contra.
ApP,arently, if we're ever to
learn iite lessons from these scandals, we must learn them the oldfashioned way - by rote.
-- -

-

Watergate and Iran-Contra loom
large in the contemporary American Gothic. But there's one vast
difference between these scandals

Martin Schram
that befell Republican presidents:
motive.
Watergate was about a pnesident
and aides who were motivated by
political greed that led them to
authorize illegal acts to win the
biggest re-election landslide ever.
ADd when caught, they tried to protect their president by covering up
- obstructing the justice system
we entrusted them to admirtister.
lrnn-Contra was about a president and aides who were mouvated
by patriotic objectives - free

is constillltional.
In 1990. the U.S. Supreme Court, in its ftrst "right-to-die" decision,
ruled that family members can be baiTed from ending the lives of persisten~y comatose relatives who bave not made their wishes known conclusively.
Ten years ago: In a surprise move, President Reagan announced the
resi$"ation of his Secretary of State, Alexander M Haig Jr., and the nominaoon of George P. Shultz to succeed him.
Five years ago: Pope John Paul n received Austrian President Kurt
Waldheim at the Vatican, a meeting fraught with conuoversy because of
allegations that Waldheim had hidden a Nazi pasl
One year ago: Following months of unsuccessful talks among
Yugoslavia's six republics about the future of the federation, the western
republics of Croatia and Slovenia declared their independence.
Today's Birthdays: Broadway producer George Abbott is 105. Movie
director Sidney Lumet is 68. Actress June Loekllart is 67. Basketball hall·
of-farner Willis Reed is 50. Singer Carly Simon is 47. TV personality
Phyllis George is 43. Rock singer George Michael is 29.

Americans held hostage in the
Mideast and defeat communists in
Nicaragua . Because their intent
was noble, they thought they could
ignore laws. And when caught,
they tried to protect their president
by covering up - obstructing the
justice system we entrusted them to
administer.
From these disparate scandals
comes a common pattern: coverup. And cover-up is a crime. Yet
we heard hollow thunder from the
Right after Weinberger was indict·
ed for allegedly lying about what
he and Reagan knew about the illegal arms sales and when they knew
it, and allegedly concealing the
existence of notes he wrote after
meetings where the sales were pur·
pon.edly disc!l&lt;lsed with Reagan.
A Wall Street Journal editorial
clucked that independent prosecutor Lawrence Walsh's office sought
to ''criminalize policy differences." But it's not a policy difference to swear to Congress you bad
no notes when you had 1,700 pages
of them; it's a crime. And it's not a
pulley difference to swear you had
no advance knowledge of arms
shipments to lnm when your notes
show you - and your president did (as prosecutors say Weinberg's
notes reveal); it's a crime.
Senate ReP,ublican Leader Bob
Dole fumed: 'Mr. Walsh has wasted a fortune in taxpayer dollars in a
desperate attempt 10 validate his
witch hunt." But it's not Walsh
who wasted our dollars - he just
fulfilled his duty after learning of
Weinberger's notes last fall. Our
money was wasted by the offiCials

we entrusted to lead our nation Reagan, Weinberger, et al. - when
they decided we couldn't be
entrusted with the truth; they
forced us 10 squander precious dollars to learn what they did and why
they did il
Foc Weinberger, this is especially unfortunate, for he was a rare
hero of Irnn-Contra. Weinberger
and Secretary of State George
Shultz repeatedly opposed the arms
sales to Iran in the private meetings. Weinberger reportedly
warned Reagan it would be illegal
to authorize the 1985 sales without
a formal presidential ftnding. (Reagan signed one after the facl)
Consider what would bave happened if, in 1986, Reagan had simply addressed the nation: "My fellow Americans, last year, in order
to free the hostages, I agreed 10 sell
arms to Iran. I was told it was, in
fact, illegal, but the fate of those
hostages and their loved ones back
home compelled me 10 act as I did.
After the fact, I signed the offiCial
authorization. I hope you will be
understanding and forgiving. I did
then what I felt needed to be done.
And I feel now that you deserve 10
hear to trulh."
Some Americans would have
shaken their heads. Others would
have shrugged. The rest would
bave cheered.
Now we can on! y ponder why it
is that, when the going gets tough,
our presidents don't ever employ
the Option of Last Resort Tell lite
truth.
(C)199l
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

MICH.

•

. Qll.

I Toledo I 76']

IMansl1eld I 76' I•

PA

Youngstown

•IColumbus I 78' I

•

W VA

~.~.~, cd[1~c@ {) a&amp;~
V1&lt;1 Assoc1aled Press

Snow

Graph~esNel

!ce

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Cl1 992 Accu -Weatt1er. Inc

----Weather---By The Associated Press
Saturday tbrougb Monday:
Fatr on Sarurday and Sunday . A
chance of showers Monday. Highs

mostly in the 70s . Lows m the
upper 40s or the 50s Saturday and
from the mid-50s to the low 60s
Sunday and Monday.

--Area deaths-George C. Rowley

Rev. Ralph Smith

George C. Rowley. 76, of 701
Fourth Avenue in Gallipolis. died
on Monday . June 22. 1992 at Veterans Memorial Hospital. He was a
coal miner.
Born in Mason W.Va. on March
10. 1916. he was the son of the late
Harvey and Bessie Estep Rowley.
Surviving are three daughters:
Sheila Wyall, Athens, Connie
Warner of Albany and Dotoe Yates
of LaBelle, Fla.; two sons, George
Rowley of Columbus and Dale
Rowley of Minford, Ky; and a sister, Sarah Mane Smith , Mason .
W.Va.
Besides hiS parents, he was precoooo in death by his sisters, Stella
Bush and Anna Young, and a special fnend, Betty Reynolds.
Graveside services will be held
al Riverside Cemetery at the convenience of the family. Arrangements are under the direction of the
Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

Rev . Ralph E. Smith, 81. 1353
Sktlls Road, Coolville. died
Wednesday afternoon, June 24.
1992, at Arcadia Nursmg Center in
Coolville.
Born in Shirley. W.Va. he was
a son of the late William and Clar.!
Bonnell Smith. He was a retired
millwright for the Union Carbide
Local No. 3-639 in Marietta. He
was a member of the Scioto Valley
Christian Conference, a member of
the 14th Avenue Gospel Mission
Church in Parkersburg, W.Va. He
pas!Droo in severn! churches in the
area. He was also a member of the
Coolville Masonic Lodge.
He is survived by his wife,
Edith Rogers Smith; five sons.
Rev. Ralph Smith Jr., Mansfield.
Rev. Wallace Smith, Princeton.
W.Va ., Harold Smith, Mineral
Wells. W.Va .. and Ted and Richard
Smith, both of Coolville; three
daughters, Kathryn Casto, Merit
Island, Fla., Shirley Barr, Walker,
W.Va., and Marian Sommerville,
Mineral Wells; two step-daughters,
Ruth Ann Anderson, Gay. W.Va ..
and Ellen Morris, Staats Mill.
W.Va.; two step-sons. Butch and
Bill Rogers. Gay. W.Va.; 27 grnndchildren and 33 great-grandchil dren.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by his first wife,
Glada Smith, in 1987; one stepson, Buck Rogers; one sister and
four brothers.
Services will be Salllrday at II
a.m. at the White Funernl Home in
Coolville with Rev. Danny Jeffrey
and Rev. Charles B. Barr offictating. Grnveside services will be held
2 p.m. Saturday at Parsons Cemetery in Gay, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funernl
home Thursday from 7-9 p.m. and
Fridsy from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m .
The Coolville Masonic Lodge
will have services Friday at 7 p.m.

Margaret L. Rupe
Margaret Lucille Rupe, 75. of
Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy, died
on Wednesday, June 24, 1992 at
Wood Center Nursing Home in
Miamisburg. She was a former
Cheshire resident.
She was born on October 19.
1916 in Cheshire, daughter of the
late James and C. Edith lfu: Ralph.
She was a garment factory employee. and a former employee of Quality Manufacturing Company in Pl.
Pleasant, W.Va.
She is survived by a son, Bobby
(Kay) Rupe of Pomeroy; a daughter, Mrs. Tim (Elata) Everhart of
Dayton; a sister. Virginia Ralph of
Cheshire; two brothers. Kenneth
Ralph of Vinton and Wesley
"Mack" Ralph of Middleport;
seven grandchildren: and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preccdoo in death by her husband.
Floyd C. Rupe; a son, Floyd J.
Rupe; a SISter, Gladys Ralph; three
brothers: James, Forrest and
Lawrence Ralph; and an infant
child.
Funeral services will be held on
Sarurday at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Grnvel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 610 9 p.m. on Friday .

Committee ...

(Continued from Pg II
uans.
The administrator said that the
Health Department operntes exclu·
sivcly with funds from the levy and
monies received from state and
federal grants. No money is fun neled into the department progrnms
through the county's general operating budget. Prior 10 1982 when
Golfer Craig Stadler was the lead- the levy was passed, a portion of
the money provided through the
ing money-winner on the PGA tour in
county budget to villages and
1982 with 1446.462.
townships went into expenses of
opernting a minimal-service health
deparunent.
The Daily Sentinel
(UBP8 111-1160)
Publi•hed nary at\emoon, Monday
thro~~~h Friday, 1 U Cow1 SL, Pomeroy,
Ohio by tha Ohio Valley Publi1hinr

Company/Multimedia Jnc •. Pomeroy,
Ohio 4516i, Ph. 992-2156 . Second cl.ul
po~Lap paid at Pw~. Ohio.
Member: The Auodated Preu, and the

Ohio Newepeper Auociation, National
A'h'erti1ln1 Repreaentative. Branham
Newspaper S.le1, 733 Third Avenue,
N._. Yorit, New Yorll10017.

l'OSTMAirrER: Send adthn cbanp. to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 4.6769.

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(Continued from Pg I I
The miss1on of Easter seals is to
help people with disabilities to
maximize their potential. Easter
Seals does this through rehabilitative therapy, equipment loan, social
and advocacy progrnms.
For more information about the
speech clinic, residents may con·
tact Jon Jacobs or Susie Heines at
the Meigs County Health Department. For more information about
Easter Seals services for Meigs
Countians, residents may call the
Easter Seals office in Marietta, 1800-93-EASTER.

sunny and dry for most of the
Buckeye state. However, a slight
chance showers or thunderstorms
will linger in the soulheasL
Lows tonight are expected
mainly in the 50s . Highs Friday
will be in the 70s or the low 80s,
about 5 to 10 degrees below average.
The record high on Ibis date in
Columbus was 101 in 1988. The
record low was 43 in 1979.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:04
p.m. Sunrise Friday will be at 6:05
a.m.
Across tbt nation
Thunders10rms struck much of
the United States on Wednesday.
bringing hail to parts of the Midwest and rain to most of the
Atlantic Coast and Pacific Northwest. A heat wave also sent tern-

,...--Local briefs--,

KY

Flum es

By Tbe Associated Press
Across Obio
Friday is expected 10 be panly

Clinic...

IND

Showers T-slomJs Ram

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-3

Thunderstorms strike much of nation

OHIO Weather

Our nation has a rare opportunity
The news carne as it often does,
flfSt thing in the morning with the
snap of my alitnn-radio coming on.
And as often happens, I didn't
know if I was dreaming the story or
not; in the haze of almost being
awake, I've dreamt stranger ones:
Boris Yeltsin, months after
assuming control of the Russian
Federntion and on a mission to beg
aid, admits 10 President Bush that
American prisoners of war from as
far back as World War II were
taken to Soviet prison camps and
mental hospitals. Some of them, he
speculated, may still be alive.
If a tale like that won't wake
you up, nothing will. My first
thought is how Bush kept from
coming across the table and grabbing Yehsin by the throat. How
long has Yeltsin known this? And
if he knew it, who else did? Gorbachev' Oh, by the way. we've had

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

With the levy funds, numerous
services for all age and income
groups have been initiated over the
past 10 years. Local money has
made it possible to apply for grants
where "matching" funds are
required, Jacobs said. He pointed
out that for every dollar genernted
by the levy another two dollars
comes in from grnnts ror health and
environmental progrnms.
At the meeting Jane Walton was
named levy campaign chairman.
She will be assisted by Carol
Guinlher, secretary. Lillian Moore,
treasurer, and Norma Torres, R. N.
Nursing director for the department, who will handle speakers on
the levy for organizations. Others
on the committee are Ferman
Moore, Margie Blake, Joan Tewksbary, Dick Owen, Dave Harris,
Bruce Reed, Janet Bolin, Howard
Frank, Becky Anderson, Mary
Grover, Jeanette Lawrence, Mary
Fowler, Homer Cole, Marvin Keebaugh, Susie Karr, Twila and Bill
Bucldey, Patty Pickens, Rhonda
Dailey, and Roger Grnce.
Another planning session was
scheduled for July 29 in the conference room of the Senior Citizens
Center.

Martin a"ested, charged
Meigs County Shenff James M. Soulsby reported Thursday that
Raben D. Martin, 26, formerly of Vinton County, was returned to
Meigs County on Wednesday from Morgan County, on an indictmem warrant for the breaking and entering at Whaley's Grocery.
Others involved have been arrested and trials are pending, Soulsby said.

Route 33 to be closed Friday
U.S. Route 33 south of the Hocking River in Athens Coonty wiU
be closed brieOy on Friday morning at 9:30a.m., to enable Columbus Southern Power to add an alternate circuit for service improverncnL

According to Administrative Assistant Jon Buck , the road w1U
probably be closed approximately 20 minutes.

Deer accident reported
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies probed a deer accidenl on
Wednesday.
According to a department repon, Rrchie E. Blumenauer of Dye
Road in Rutland was southbound on State Route 143 at 9:45p.m.
yesterday. when a deer ran into the passenger side of his Plymooth.
Moderate damage was reported to the car, and the deer was
killed .

Vandalism, prowlers investigated
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department took a report from the
County Highway Department that a grader parked overnight at Dexter had the tires flattened and the battery stolen.
Evan Burnem of Danville reponed that during the past three
nights, she saw prowlers on her propeny. On Wednesday evening.
her brothers who were staying with her for protection spotted and
chased a tall, black man from the premises. He disappeared into the
woods behmd her trailer.

EMS units answer six calls
Six calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs Emergency Services on Wednesday and early Thursday.
At9:06 a.m. on Wednesday, Syrncuse unit went to County Road
20 for Robbie Cooper. He was taken to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
At 12:27 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Locust Street. Lorie Oliver
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At3:03 p.m .. Middlepon
unit went to Lincoln Heights. Clarence Griffith was taken to Veteran s. At 4:01 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Nye Avenue and State
Route 124 for a car f1re. Terry Patterson was the owner. At 11 :33
p.m., Middleport squad went to Oliver Street for Rhonda Stover.
who was taken to Veterans.
On Thursday at 8:15a.m., Middlepon and Pomeroy squads went
to High Street. Dennis Hoclunan was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

perntures soaring in the West.
A tropical disturbance in th e
northwest Carribean brought heavy
rain late Tuesday and ea rly
Wednesday to Florida. Up to 10
inches deluged west-central Flonda's Manatee County on Tuesday
and Wednesday .
Isolated showers and thunder storms also dotted the Gulf Coast
states Wednesday afternoon. and
thunderstorms in the Pacific Northwest prompted officials to issue
nooct warnings for much or southem Oregon.

Court news
Judgment sougbt
A judgment action has been
hied in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Linda G. Bailey,
Dexter. against Herman L. Grate.
Rulland. The suit alleges personal
in jury sustained in an au tom obi \c
accident. The suit demands dam ·
ages in an unspecif1ed amount.
Divorces processed
A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Keith M. Krauller .
Pomeroy. against Ruth Ann Kraut·
ter. address unknown.
A divorce has been granted m
the court to Terry Lynn Tucker
from Ray Allen Tucker.
Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Michael Weldon
Bartrum, 21, Pomeroy, and Jen nifer Laurie Taylor, 19, Pomeroy ;
Christopher Lou1s Pine s, 38 ,
Pomeroy. and Gma Nicol Pellegrino. 24. Pomeroy; and lO James
Marcus Kelley , 33, and Mary Allee
Hart, 39, both of Reedsville.

Meigs announcements
Garden club picnic
The Chester Garden Club will
have a family picnic at the Karr
Co ttage with Dorothy and Hornce
Karras hosts on July I at6:30 p.m.
There will be an "around the table
discussion" on saving the earth and
an auction of garden related items
or "whatever" following lhe meal.
Collection
Tuesday is refuse collecoon day
rn the Village of Rae me. All refuse
must be bagged and m place for
collec tion before 8 a.m.
Dogs to be leased
Residents of Racine Village are
reminded that all dogs arc to be
kept leashed/tied according to a
codified village ordmance. Violators are subject to ftnes.
Garden club to meet
The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. James Nicholson .
The progrnm will be on "Herbs for
the Kllchen·· and "Roses."
Country music' night
Country music night at the Lotlmtgc Community Center w1ll be
held Saturday from 7 p.m . to midnrght. Refreshments will be avail able. All bands welcome. Public

The heavy storm activity kept
temperatures in the 50s and 60s
across much of the Midwest and
Northeast on Wednesday after ·
noon, but temperarurcs soared to 90
or h1gher in the southern Plarns,
So uthwest and Washington state.
In Gila Bend, Ariz., it was 105
by II a.m.
Overnight lows were m the 50s
and 60s across much of the country .

Mystery farm
winner named
The wmner of the June 21 myslery farm is Phyllis Lane of Gal lipolis
She correctly Identified Sun day's mystery farm as the Leslie
and Helen Sheets farm on State
Route 218.

Damage reported
A 1991 Chevrolet owned by
Gerald Rought and parked at the
Beacon Station, intersection of
Route 33 and 50, had body damage
es timated at $1 ,700 in the hail
storm which struck. the area late
Wednesday afternoon .
Rought. Pomeroy pollee chief.
sa1d that several reports of l!ees
damage and two incidents of broken windows in homes were also
received.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .3 1 3/4
Ashland Oil ................... 26 1(2
AT&amp;T....
. ......... .. ...... .41
5/8 Bank
One....
..44 1(2
Bob Evans ...
..... 17
Charming Shop..
........ 28 3/8
C,!1. Holding ...... ......... .... .. .2t
F eral Mogul. .................. 17
1/4 Goodyear T&amp;R ....... 66 3/4
Key Cemunon ............ ....... 19 1/4
Lands End ........................ 32 5/8
Limited Inc .
............ 21 518
Multimooia Inc ........ . .... 28 1/4
Rax Reslauranl. ..... .. .. 7/8
Reliance Electric...
....... 16 718
Robbins&amp; Myers . . .. . 15 1(2
Shoney "s Inc ...........
... 19 3/4
Star Bank ................. ...... .... 36
Wendy lnt"l... ..... .............. .. ll
Worthmgton Ind ...... .......... 23 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
o

I I •

I I I I I

SPRING VALLEY ,C_IN}~A
446 ·4524

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7

invited.

Board rules Athens County
can't leave solid waste district
Athens County cannot withdn!w SIOners oppose the diStnCt"s SOlid
from the Athens-Gallia-Hock:ing- waste plan because of its financing
Jackson-Millgs-Vimon solid waste and the belief that the county's own
district to form its own district the recycling programs are more
Ohio Environmental Board of advanced. In February. Ohio EPA
Review rule Tuesday, according to Director Donald Schredgardus
The Columbus Dispatch .
rejected the county's request to
The board found that Athens form its own district The commisCounty, with a population of sioners appealed to the Environ59,549, didn't meet a population mental Board of Review.
requirement of 120,000 called for
The commissioners haven 't
by law.
decided whether the board's deciThe board decis1on is con sid- sion would be appealed to the
ered significant because other Ohio Franklin County Court of Appeals,
coonties dissatisfioo with member- said Anthony J. Celebrezze. the
ship in their solid-waste districts anorney who is representing
were viewing it as a test case. said Athens County.
Susan Ashbrook, an assistant state
attorney general who represen~ed
the Ohio Environmental ProtectJon
Agency.
.
The Athens County Comm1s -

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
. Wilma Eynon, Reedsville, and
Pamela McKinney, Middlepon.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
·None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 24 discharges - Brenda
Detrick, Mrs . Kenneth Kiser and
son, Charles Lawson, Mrs. Bryan
Pack and daughter, Linda Schoeppner and Kristyn Wright.
June 24 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Rodgers, daughter, Patriot.

fRI, SAT., SUN.

THE HAND THAT
ROCKS THE CRADLE
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TONIGHT
JOHN GOODMAN
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In ' A l(AGIII. Of !HUt M'

�Thursday, June 25, 1992

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, June 25, 1992
Page---t

Cincinnati hands Houston 9-6 defeat
coach Ed Ott.
"Coaches are suppo sed to be
out !here breaking it up," he said.
"I don't know for sure what
happened. I was on the other end of
the pile. But I was trying to break it
up."

On and Astros staner Pete Harnisch, whose pitch behind Reggie
Sanders' back precipitated the freefor-all, also were ejected.
Luis Gonzalez, who homered in
each game of the three-game senes
for Houston. thought Cincinnati

Bartrum, Marshall ranked
among 1-AA football leaders
By DAVE HARRIS
Sen linel Correspondent
The start of the 1992 college
football season is almost two
months away , but the honors are
already starting to come in for 1988
Meigs graduate Mike Banrum and
the Marshall Thundering Herd.
In the preseason college football
edition pul out by The Sporting
News , the Herd is ranked number
one in Division 1-AA. Bartrum, on
the other, was selected !he number
one tight end in the Southern Conference and was also selected the
fifth besl player in the nation at his

MIKE BARTRUM

position.
The edition, which hit the local
newsstands Wednesday, stated the
Herd has "Fifteen angry starters
return to a team that feel to
Youngstown State in the 1-AA title
game."
Bartrurn a 6-foot -4, 240-pound
se nior. was selected by the coaches
to second team all conference last
season . In 1991 the former
Marauder all-state quarterback
pulled in 40 passes fro 435 yards
and one touchdown. The 40 receptions led all Southern Conference
tight ends.
Bartrum was not the only Marshall player in the 1-AA All-America rankings, 3SI\Uarlerback Michael
Payton and w1de receiver Troy
Brown were rated second at !heir
respective positions . Offensive
guard Phil Ratliff was rated the
number one offensive lineman , and
linebacker Donahue Stephenson
was rated seventh among linebackers.
Marshall will open the 1992
season on September 5 at home
against Morehead State.
Mike is !he son of Mr. and Mrs.
Weldon Bartrum of Pomeroy. He
will marry 1990 Meigs graduate
Jennifer Taylor on Saturday. Miss
Taylor, herself an excellent
Marauder alhlctc, is the daughter of
tv"r. and Mrs. Fenton Taylor. Taylor is the principal of Meigs Hlgh
School and wife. Jeannie, is a
teacher at !he school.

had the edge in brawn.
" It was a mess," said Gonzalez,
who looks slimmer !.han !he 6-foot 2, 180 pounds he 's listed in the
Astros' media guide. "There were
some big guys on the other side.·'
Two of the biggest led th e
charge from the dugout. Dibble is
6-4 and 230 pounds, and Braggs is
6-4 and 220.
The brawl encompassed every body, and it wasn't one of those
grab-his-arms-and-dance-w1th-him
affairs . Even home plate umpire
Jerry Crawford was limping after
the fight, and later had his arm
treated by the Reds· trainer.
"These teams don't like each
other," said Houston manager Art
Howe.
The bad blood goes back a long
time, and no one really knows why.
Piniella warned there could be
more trouble between !he clubs.
"Sooner or later !here's going to
be retaliation, I' m telling you
!hat," he said.
But he also denied that the Reds
are instigators.
"They 're throwing at us. We're
not doing the throwing ," he said.
"We'd like to put it to rest. We
don't want to get any players hun
from ei thcr side."
The Reds ' 9-6 win kept them
one game in front of the Atlanta
Braves, with a three-game showdown between the two teams
scheduled for this weekend.

Major league leaders

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutem Dh'lalon
W L
PtL

Tum
Pi• tahursh

.

....41 30

New Yart
... 35 36
SL l..wU .......... 34 36

CHICAGO (AP) - Roberto
Hernandez says h1 s trip to th e
minors turned him around.
" I had a horrible spring," th e
Chicago White Sox rookie said
Wednesday night after his third
career win and second in reli ef
since Sunday. The White Sm beat
!he Cleveland Indians 4-3 for their
fifth straight victory.
"I wasn ' t prepared like I was
the year before," said Hernandez,
back from a recent stint with Class
AAA Vancouver.
"I completely turned everything
around . I just became a better

WHt~rn

&lt;l.

LAND, 74; McDonald, Ballimure, 73 ,

RBI - Daulton , Phli tdelphu, SJ,
Sheffield, San Oiqo, 5(}, Murny, New

7l
7l

•

Divbion

San Dteao .
San Fnt~CliCO

37 34
B 36

521
478

Hou&amp;IB1 .
La&amp; Anaeles .

.32 39
17 39

451
409

10
12.5

Yort, 5(}, Gant. Allanll , 46: Jlcnd.leiDn,
Atlanu, 46 : McG riff. San Diego, 46:
Dnnm, Ow:tgo, 44.

Wednesday's scores

lilT S - Pendleton , A thnt• . 92:
Gwynn, San Otego, 89: K..ruk, Philldd phll, 87; Shdfu:Jd. San Di.eso. ! 3: Dun-

Mmtn:ll 8. Phi.ladelpNa l

Allan!• 5, Su Fnnciaco 0

o n, Ph.i..lt delphia, 83 , VanSlyke , Pltu OO!Jh, Ill; l.tnk.ford. SL lnua, 8 1: Finle~ .

ONONNAn 9, 1-IOUJtm b
St. l.ouLJ 4, Plruburgh I
New Yort 3, Chicago 2

HouAOn. 81
OOVBLES - 0\11\CUl, Pluladc.lph.ia,

Tcxlay's games
(h,u go (G lo.hddu1 7 -....·) at New

Yruna 2-6).1.-40pm

Sa n Francitco (Rtgh etu l -4) u S&amp;n
Dteso (}-{urst6-5), \0-05 p m
n OI.ulm (Jona ) -0) at Los Attgc: lea
(Marunez ]-4). 10 ]5 pll'l

Friday's games
f'tultdeiphtt (AbtKx.\ ()..8) II Cluc &amp;go

(Morgan 6-1). 3:20p.m
AtlantA (Avery 6-5) at C[NCrNNAn
(flroWI\I!lg 5-5), 1 : 3 ~ p.m .
1-'lttJburgh (L Smtih ."i-6) at Monou.l

(1)cnrua Ma1'tltiCZ 7-6), 7:)5 p.m
New York (Cone 7 - 4) u St . Lou\5
(Comuer 1-"1),113') pm
San Fnn cuco (Rlack 4- 1) 11 San
Oic:go (Leffert~ 8-j ), 10:05 p.m.
Houlton (Henry 2-6) 11 Lee Angeln
(Herlluser b-5 ), I 0-35 p m

20; Van S l~ke, PittsburK.h . 2:0; W1~ach,
Montrul, 18 : Btgaio. flou s\on , 17: W
Cluk , San Fnncilco. 17. Pend..lewn. A\ ·
\ant•, 17, Fi.nley, Ho us ton , 16: Gu~;e,
Oucago,\6; Oaultm, Ptultddptua , \6 .

TRlPLES

~

D. Suden . Atlam.a, 11.

FLnley , HouAoo, 10: Alice., St. l...o.us, 6-,
Hul lc:r, Lot A n8elet, 6 : Moundim ,
J'h,.h dt.~• - 4; OffC7TTian . Lot Anaela.
&lt;1. DeSNd.ds, MornJel.l... 4: Grace, OuC..I go. 4; ~hn•uin&amp;. San Funcuco, 4,
Van Slyke, Piu.abw-gJ! , 4.
H OME RUNS - Ronda. Pirubur~.
15: Sheffi eld, S&amp;n Dlea o. 14: McGriff ,

S&amp;n Cicco. 14: Dtulwn, Ptuladci!Wa. 14
L. W•Lkct, MonbU\, II ; Man Wtl..l.tiJTII ,
San Fnnruco, II : Perldlctnn. Athnl.a, II

STOLEN BASES -- Griuom, Mon t•ul, 37; Lankford . St Lou11 , 23;
Oc:S.hields, Montreal , 21: Lewis. Stn

Fnncuco, 2!i. Ganl. Allanu, 20: Robe.u ,
CINCINNATI, 20, D. Sanden, Athnta ,

" PITCHING

(9 dec utona) ~
CINCINNATI, M- 1, .!!9, 2.18,
Tewktbuf")' , St loutt, &amp;- 2, 100. 2 01;
Gla vin e , Atlanu , 1\ -), . 786. 2 61 :
Rankhe~~ d,

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dt,.Uion

w

Te1m

L

To ronto .
B• ltima"e

_4 ] 28

B01t.on .

31 36

CLEVELAND

zg

Wett~rn

""'"""

Miruxsru
TeJ.a
Chi~• ao

Cablorrua
K•nua C11y ..
Sultle

CD
-

600
ll9

l
ll
8l
9l
10
Ill

"'46l

. _]) )8

Oetroil .

P&lt;L
W6

...

.... A2 2!
... 36 32
Milwau.kee
Ne"" Yod ......... 34 36

389
"
Dlvlllon

. _/1 28

600

. .40
39
.. 34
.Jll

30
34
3l

l7l

2

l34

"

"

&lt;0

.29

40

.493
419

"

&lt;10
408

7.5
12
Ill
115

Wednesday's scores
MimCIOLI II ' CalifOffill 0
Ol!tmil 5' Dollot! 1
Otk.land 7, Sea.nle 2
Bahimore I, M1Jw1uk.ee 4
0Ucap4, CUVB..AND 3
Torm.ID 3, Texu 2
New York 6, X..U..U City]

11 Sean le

(Del.udo )..4), lO:OS p.m.

Friday's &amp;ames

au..ao

fM&lt;;CakUI ~~" N"" Y""'
(l.eooy l ·l), 7:30 f:m·
Milw1ukee (Boli o !li -4) at Bo1ton

. '-u

Cty (MI~~ 3-6)
mcn(~7-S) , 1:35p.m.

11 81ld-

Toranto {0u.Jmi.O 9- 1) 1t CLBVE-

u.ND.....,_:!-1), 7::JS p.m.
T..., IJiwN U) " Doln&gt;it (Oullidl·
•• ~). 7:JS p.m.
MinnaOUt (Bank• 1-1) at Olkl~nd
a.t-7~). tO::lS p.m.
Calitomil

CAb"bou 3· 9) al Se1Uie

(Walt•O.I),lO::lS p.m.

Ne• Yat, 7 , .636, 2.44.
STIUK.EOt.rrS - Cone, New York,
114; Smoi.U. Atlarlta, 104: S. Fcmandcr.,
New York, 99; Dnbd.. Pitui:Nflh. &amp;5,
Bene~, San Dieso, 79; G Mtddu1, OuCI!·
go, 77; R1jo , CINC1NNA11 , 76; Kenn
Groa, Loo Anacl... 7~
SAVES - Chulton, CINCINNATI.
17, Lcoc Smith, St. Louit, 17: D. Jonet,
llouatm, 16: Mik:h Willianu . Plultdd phia, 1j: Mytn . S.n Di.qo. 13: Welle·
!and, Montre~l , 12: Dibble , C INC IN ·
NAll, II : Franco, New Yod:, II

Amtrtcom League
RATTING - R. Alom ar , Toron to,
MinnCIIOU.,

318: Moi..Jtor,

319: Rordirl. , &lt;::&gt;uand, .) 17; Knobl.euch..
.301; Winfidd.. T~to . .:m.
RUNS - Pu c.teu, M i nne~ota, 54;
Knoblauch , MinnfLIOll , 52; Mad: , Min nuou , 5 1: MtGwire , 01khnd. 41 :
Philli ... OeuOO, 47; E. Manin&lt;z. SaW..
44 : 61ft tied with 43.
RB I - Md:J.W, Oakland. 60: Field·
er, l&gt;fltroi1, 60; Puckllll, Mimle&amp;ot1, .55:
Thomu, OUe~ao. 46; Fryman, Oetruil.
46; Anderton, Blitimore, 46: Carter,
Minne~C~U..

Ci11 &lt;0u'""'1-4~ Bl p.m.
MinnCMU (k.rucpr 7-1) 11 Oailand
(Wololl H),4:0l p.m.
Tuu (Brown 1o.4) l l DctrO.t (Groom
0-1),7:J!li p.m.

7::JS p.m.

nB. 3.0?:

M.Uw1u.Jtee, 320; 1: . Mutinc:t , Scaule,

Baltimore (Su~c ~) 11 Milwa\Uee
(llonoo 3-3). 2:3l p.m.
New York {S&amp;.ndGnOrl 5-5} II K.anu.•

~ ).3~

Swindell ONCINNAll, 7-l

Tomlin, Piwbur)h, IQ..l, .71A, 3 03, K.
Ulll , Montrr.al, f-4, _636, 2.62: Mulholland, Phila~a, 7---4, .636. 3.61 . Cone.,

.346; Puckett,

Today'sgamos

C tlifom i• (V1lera 4 -5)

man, ToJOOto, 9-1, .900, 2. 30, Mu.tllila ,

I

471
471
464

.325; Gnoe, Chicaao..322; W. Oui. San
Francisco • .315: Pl::ndlcton.. Allanll , .314,
McGt.c. San Francuco, .314
RUNS ~ Gwynn, San Dicco. 49 , Ri':
110.. Hou.l.on. 47: BmdJ, Pin&amp;burgh. 4 .
Orisaom. Ma~aul.. 4~. T Fcnwu.lct, San

594
STI

Yoril (A

20.
f"'TTUNG (9 decilicm) - Jum Ouz.

ACIOI.I,

S
8

6
6..~

369; VanSlyke, PituburJh, 33~. Gwynn,
Stn Oiqo, . 3~: McGriff, S1n Diegn,

..-41 28
41 )0

AtlsnLI

Rainca, Chicaao. 2 1: Knoblauch , Min -

D1eso, 45; Pl::nd1 eton, Atlmtt , 44; lAnk·
ford . SL Lw.u . 42: Hollinl. Philadclpba.

.493
416

33 37
....... 32 36
Philade.lptua ........ 32 37

BATTING - Kruk, Philadclpflia,

OUJ.nd, 24; Lituch, Mi.h"aukce, 23;

BaltimoK., l-2. .800, 2:45: Fleming, Scat·
~c. IG-3, .769, 3.35; McDowdl. Chica8o.
10-3, .769, lJJ; Jarrue MorriJ , Toronto,
9-J, .75 0, 4 22; K. Bmwn, Te1u, 10-4.
.7 14 : l l 0; Appi_cr, K&amp;nWI C:i1y, 7-3, .700,
l5 4 ;Smilc~ . Minneaau, 7-3. .700, J .Sl
STR.IK.EOUTS - Oemena , B01ton,
lOll: Juan Gu.rman, Toron to , 9(}, Perez,
New YOJt. 8.5: Appier, IUt11u Ci1y, n .
K. Bro wn, Te ~ u . 75: Nagy. CLEVE

CB

.577

Chicago....
Montreal

CINCINNATI .

Natlooal League

Toren~

46.

HITS - Pu~.kett, Minne1ou, 98 ;
Mack, MiniMIIol.l,
Buqa, CLEVE·

a.:

UNO, 13; R Alcaw, Tanno, U; Fry·
man, Detroit. n E. Martine~., Selllk\ 81 :
Molitor, Milwlllkee_IO.
OOUBI...F.S - Hall, New York. :M; B.
Maninoz, Seat\le, 23 ; Joyner, KeniJII
Chr.lO; YWd... ~..'*-ce.. 19; v~.
au...,, II; - . , , r ..... II; Mo.....

ly, NewYcd, II.

TR.lPLES - M*noa, Baltim&lt;n, 6;
DeveJUUl, Bahimore, S; R. Alomu,
Tormto, 4; Putba, Minnelou, 4: 13 ue
"""wilh l.

HOMB RUNS - M&lt;Owin, OUJ.nd,
24; Deer, Detroit, 21 ; Ju•n Gonzalez,
!!':!'J..!7; ..T~etGn,,Detroit., 17; _Belle.
l.:t..~:Yr.L.AI'U.I, 16; Fielder, Dcuoit, 16;
ea.- OUlond IS.

!TOU!N BAslis - t.c.'loo. CUNJ!.

LAND, 30; Andenon, ·B•llimore. 24;

Po\Mil, C•lifatnll, 24 ; R.

Her~dencn,

The braw I broke out in the f oflh
inning after Braggs had a two-run
pinch-hit double and Hal Morris
homered to cap a six-run Reds'
rally.
Pete Harnisch (3 -7) threw the
next pitch behind Reggie Sanders.
Sanders took one step toward the
mound and the benches emptied
immediately.
"There were six or eight guys
on top of me. I was underneath
everything," said Harnisch, who
den1ed intentionally throwing at
Sanders.
"It was a desperation pitch,"
Harnisch said. "I saw the whole
thing falling apart. I was just trying
to throw as hard as I could, and !he
ball just took off.''
Harnisch had held the Reds
scoreless on one hit through four
innings before loading !he bases on
a pau of singles and a sacrifice
bunt that Houston could not convert
Braggs balled for Reds starter
Greg Swindell and doubled down
the left-field line to drive in two.
Barry Larkin followed wilh an RBI
single and Morris hit his second
homer of the season to give the
Reds a 6-3 lead
The brawl ensued.
Swindell {7-2) had struggled
early but stayed around just long
enough to get the win. Norm Charlton pitched two shutout innings for
his 17th save.

Oakland, 13
SA YES - Ecicnlcy. OU: l•nd. 24.
Aguilcn, Minnuol.ll , 21. Obon, Balu
S ~.r;wart,

more.\ 9: JeffRuud..l , Te111, 19, Moo\·
pnc:ry, Kanu.a C1ty , 17: Tiugpat. Ch.Jca ·
go. 16: R.e&amp;rdm. Bol\at, 15

Transactions

B...balt

Amerk.an Lea1ue
MINNESOTA TWINS - St!llll'ld Gus

Gandarillu, pilcllcr, and Adrian Gordoo.
outftdder \.o mincx·lt..IIJUe

~ontnlc:\S

National Lua~

NL - Suspended Bobby Bmillt. w t
f1cldo, trom two game~ and fined hlm an
undudoaed tm ou nl fo1 hli role tn •

butch -clearing incidm and for thro
. wing
an umpire to Ute llf"WJ1d 011 Jlll"oe 24
CrNCINNA"fl REOS - Sm t Ttrry
McDulel rrora C hatt111oo1• of tht
Sou(hern Lu1ut to N••h•Hle of lht
Arnerkan A.ltoc:U.UOA.
NEW YORK METS - St'"ed John
fUrri• md Mull Mc:Ci Lnn. pilcht.r1, and
... Laned thern to !he Gulf Coast Lu.guc
•nd tia;ned Don Par'l er, oolfieldo, 111d
Ju1tin lvablin. p111:: her , to mln01"-le.ague
contrlct.l.

llasketbaU

NalkMI.I-1 Balblball A.uodallon
NEW YORK KNl CKS - Acquued
Rolando Blackmltl, pwd. frtm the Dal !u Mnenck1 f01 their 199 ~ flflt · round
draft ptck R~eucd K.t.t1 V&amp;nde-.eghe ,
forward

Football
Nalkwt.al Foolbtlll
KA NSA S CITY Wh.J~e, de:fWI VC tl'ld.

MIAMI OOI..J'HINS flttdM, ...te:t y,

to •

lua~o~e

Sianed Brent
S~ed

Bobby

muluyear conlllct.

Hockey
N•tiOft.llllocJu.y Lup
NEW JERSEY DEVILS - S1gned

CrliaBillinaton.. pltmder, lo • mul u year concnct.

WASHINGTON CAPITALS
Sipod Miehtd Bob.d, c:allc:r

~

pitcher. I started to mix up my
pitches, chang e my delivery and
keep guys off balance.''
Hernandez replaced Greg Hibbard after eight innings. He gave
up one hit in the ninth.
Hibbard gave up all three Cleveland runs in the third on Thomas
Howard's two-run single and Car·
los Bacrga's sacrifice ny.
Lance Johnson led off the ninth
with an infield single, went to second on Craig Grcbeck's sacrifice
bunt and took third on an infield
out.
Tim Raines singled in the first
and doubled in the seventh wilhout
helping the Sox. But batting with
two outs in the ninth, he singled to
center to drive in Johnson from
thord.
Raines, hitting with two outs,
batted right-handed against Kevon
Wickander, a lefthandcr.
"I was surprised they didn't
pit ch around me, but when he
attacked the plate, I was ready," he
said.
"There's no way I'm going to
pitch to Robin Ventura, even if he
is left-handed," Cleveland manag·
cr Mike Hargrove said. "He's hit·
ling .300 and Raines was hittmg
only .206 right-handed."
The Ind ians finished their road
Lrip 1-6 and have lost five straight.
"We were playing pretty good
baseball. We were not nearly as
good as we were, but sti ll, we're
not playing that badly,'o Hargrove
sa 1d.
"I wa s surpri sed they didn ' t
pitch around me,'· Raones said,
"but, when he attacked the plate , I
was ready."
Gwrge BeU hit his !bird homer
in three games, ca~ping a thrce-ruo
rally in the third onning that gave
the Wh ite Sox a tie at 3. Cora drew
a leadoff walk from Scott Scudder,
soole second and scored on Frank
Thomas' single. Bell !hen hit his
eig hth home run, a 416-foot shot to
left.
The Indians scored three times
1n the fir st. two on Thomas
Howard's bases-loaded single and
the other on Carlos Bacrga's sacrillcc Oy.

lvanisevic's wrong-handed rally good enough to beat Woodforde
By STEVE WILSTEIN
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- It was a comedy of terrors,
;(;oran lvanisevic' s 34-ace show
,.,ith a switch-hitting serve and a
:,wrong-handed rally.
·· It was like Roger Clemens strik_ing_out 18, pausing for a pie fight,
·tosmg control, then striking out a
1ew more to win.
• Power tennis, often derided as
Ule plague of modern tennis, never
:Was more fun to watch than the
.line] of speed and wit Wednesday
:111 W1mbledon between Ivanisevic
&gt;IIKI Mark Woodforde.
:: lvanisevic clocked 129 mph on

•

the radar gun with his sky serves,
recorded the most aces in a Wimbledon match in 16 years, and
finally prevailed 6-4, 64, 6-7 (7-4),
6-3.
This was a performance that
only the privileged holders of Centre Court seats could enjoy on a
day that drew most TV cameras
and fans to other matches.
It lacked the sex appeal that
lured squealing teen-age girls to
Andre Agassi's 5-7, 6-1, 7-5, 7-5
victory over Andrei Chesnokov,
and the drama that kept fans late at
Pete Sampras' 28-ace, 7-6 (7-2), 76 (7-4), 6-7 (9-7), 64 victory over

•

,·. . . .-Area sports briefs--.
Hunter education course Friday
A hunter education course wiU be offered by the Depanment of
Narural Resources' Division of Wildlife at Forked Run Sportsman
Club from Friday to Sunday.
The course is offered in preparation fo&lt; the I 992-93 hunting
license sale to begin on Sept. I. Ohio youngsters under !he age of
16 who have completed a hunter education course will be able to
purchase a special reduced price youth hunting license for $7.
In July, !he Outdoor Skills Section will conduct a drawing from
' the youngsters training in J nne. One of the youngsters will be
selected to receive !he forst number one youth hunting license at a
special presentation to be held in August
For further information or to enroll for the class, residents may
contact Meigs County game protector Keith Wood at 985-4400.

K-C Raceway action set

ChiS ox edge Tribe 4-3

Scoreboai"d
In the majors ...

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

At Wimbledon,

Sports
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Reds
manager Lou Piniella thought his
team got the worst of Wednesday
night's brawl with the Houston
Astros - Glenn Braggs and Rob
Dibble were eJected, and Bip
Roberts had to leave the game wilh
a sore shoulder aggravated in the
melee.
"I thought it was a little
unfair," Piniella said. He objected
to the wrestling match between
Dibble and Houston first base

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

]......
'·

*'

~'

MAKING A POINT- Houston manag~r Art Howe (rlglll)
makes a point with third base umpire Jerry Davis after Cincinnati
baserunner Bill Doran was ruled safe on a fielder's choice in the
fifth inning of Wednesday night's National League game in Cindn·
nati, which the Reds won 9·6. (AP)

Marty &amp; Joe Chips coming
to Cincy Kroger stores soon
URBANA, Ohio (AP)- What
began as lunch between a local
businessman and Cincinnati Reds
broadcaster Many Brennaman has
escalated into the distribution of
potato chips named after Brennaman and his paroner, Joe Nuxhall.
Marty &amp; Joe's Old-Fashioned
Kettle-Cooked Potato Chips, made
by Mumford's Potato Chip Co.,
w11l appear later this month in 89
Kroger stores in the Cincinnati districL
The chips w1ll begin selhng on
six-ounce bags, company owner
Randy Leopard said.
Leopard invited Brennaman, a
fan of Mumford's chips, to lunch
before a speaking engagement in
Urbana on January 13.
"We'd been looking at a num ber of ways of marketing our product in a larger area, a small company needs a niche, and I JUSt thought
that Marty would be a perfect
source," Leopard told the Urbana
Daily Citizen.

Brennaman contacted Kroger,
where he and Nuxhall have been
spokesmen for five years, and a
new product was born .
·
"With this new product, we'll .
have gone from 10 stores where we .
sell Mumford's in that district to
89," said Leopard.
The Cincinnati district stretches .
to Sidney, Piqua and Spingfield.
Brennaman said he was enthusiastic and optimistic about the new
product's voability. He and Nuxhall .
have signed five -year contracts
wilh Mumford's.
" Wilhout a doubt, Joe and I are
very excited about this whole venture," he said. "When Randy
approached me about this idea, I
was ecstatic . It seems like a natural
tic-in to !he olher things Joe and I
do wilh Kroger's."
Leopard said that Kroger will be
including the chips in ads featuring
Brennaman and Nuxhall, and that
the duo will add the chips to products they advertise during Reds
broadcasts.

K-C Raceway will host its annual Mid-season Championships
Saturday in each of its three racing divisions; Super Spnnts, Late
Models and Street Stocks.
The high point men in all lhree divisions will be competing for
the championship crown, and are expected to be joined by several
touring outlaw drivers tuning up for the third leg of Ohio Outlaw
Sprint Speedweek, slated for Tuesday, June 30.
Gates open at 5 p.m. with time trials at 6:30 and racing at 8 p.m.
For great, inexpensive family entertainment, come out to K-C
Raceway 's 3/8-mile clay oval, racing every Saturday evening.
K-C is located off U.S. 23 on Blaine Highway south of Chilli•
cothe at Alma.

Hartford LL to sponsor tourney
The Hartford Little League wiU sponsor a 16-team, double-elimination baseball tournament to run from July I to July 13.
The registration cost is $4 5 per team and two regulation base·
balls.
For more information, call Rex A. Young 811-(304)-gg2·2434.

Punt, Pass and Kick slated
A Pass, Punt and Kick competition will be held on Saturday, July
4 at Star Mill Park in Racine.
The competition, open to children ages 5-12, has an entry fee of
$5, with a plaque being awarded to !he winners. Entry forms can be
picked up at Southern Hlgh School.
For more information, call 949-2611.

Co·ed volleyball tourney set
A double elimination co-ed volleyball tournament will be held
on Saturday, July 4 al Southern High School.
The tournament will be limited to the ftrst 20 teams and is open
to all ages. Seven players will be allowed on each team and only six
can be playing at one time. The entry fcc f&lt;l' !he tournament is $35.
Entry forms are available at Southern Hlgh School. The winner of
the tournament will receive T-shirts.
For more information, contact David Gaul at 949-2611 .

Diamondfest set for July
The 1992 Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament wiU

stan on July 6 at King Field in Syracuse.
A 15-player rosier and $20 entry fee are to be mailed to the Syracuse Fire Department, Box 706, Syracuse, Ohio 45779, no later than
Friday, June 26. The drawing will be held at the fire station on
Tuesday, June 30 at 1 p.m. All teams are invited to send a represen tative. Individual trophies will be awarded to the top four teams.
Additional information may be obtained by calling 992-3402 or
992-7181.

Riffe to speak at SEORC tourney
Vern Riffe, Speaker of !he Ohio House of Representatives, will
be the guest speaker at the Soulheastern Ohio kegionai Council's
annual summer meeting and golf tournament on Thlnday. July 9.

The meeting and tournament will be held at the Fairgreens
Country Club between Wellston and Jackson, where golfers from
throughout southeastern Ohio wiU compete in the Calloway Handicap Tournament, directed by Middleport golf professional Bill
Childs.
To enter the tournament, mail $42.50 to SEORC, Box 271, Wellston, Ohio 45692. The forst 80 golfers to enter will play. Tickets for
the banquet can be purchased from local chambers of commerce.

GEl SOfi\E BREAD
WIIH AWANT AD

Todd Woodbridge.
It missed the upset quality of
Julie Halard, No. 23, beating No. 5
Arantxa Sanchez Vicario 6-3, 2-6,
6-3, and the near-upset of No.4
Martina Navratilova by Kimberly
Po in a suspended match .
Navratilova, the nine-time champion , was run ragged by Po in the
second set and looked ready to be
beaten at 6-2, 3-6 when she
requested a halt to play . Po, a
Wimbledon newcomer, defem:d to
her elder.
lvanisevic-Woodforde certainly
didn ' t rank among the highest
seeds of !he day- women's No. I
Monica Seles beat Sabine Appelmans 6-3, 6-2. and men's No. 2
Stefan Edberg beat Gary Muller 76 (7-3), 6-3 , 7-6 (7-4).
All the match between lvanisevic and Woodforde had, and it had
it in abundance, was brute force
countered by finesse, humor and
gamesmanship that produced
exquisite entertainment.
lvanisevic, a gangly giant from
Croatia, made his first mark on
Centre Court two years ago at 19
when he almost upset Boris Becker
in the semifonals. No longer a surprise, he served !he most aces in a
Wimbledon match since Britain's
John Fcaver's 42 with a wooden
racket in a five -set loss against
John Newcombe in 1976.
Newcombe watched Wednesday's match and recalled his own
battle against Feaver.
"That's a record I wouldn' t
mind losing, " Newcombe said.
"My arm was sore. I felt bloody
awful."
By the time lvanisevic served
his 15th ace to go up 40-0 wtth a 32 lead in the second set, Wood fordc felt he had only one choice to
make:
"You eilher laugh or cry." the
Australian said. "In front of all

~v

ATTENTION
POMEROY
EAGLES
CLUB MEMBERS
DUES ARE DUE
JUNE 30TH, 1992

Get a hot deal on Domino's
bener than ever pizzas.

YELLOW FREESTONE
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Wooforde at Wimbledon Wednesday. Jvanisevic
used the racquet handle to serve, but be still woo
the match 6-4, 6-4, 6-7 6-3. (AP)

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Jim
Jackson says he'll easily fit into a
Dallas Mavericks uniform - especially if it carries his familiar No.
22.
The former Ohio State All American was chosen fourth in the

NB A draft Wednesday night.
York Knicks earlier Wednesday.
He discussed how he'll fit in
Jackson, who wore No. 22 at
wilh the Mavericks, who had fewer Ohio State, said he didn't know if
victories than the Buckeyes last he would wear that number for
season, despite playing more than Dallas - that was Blackman ' s
twice as many games.
number.
" I will wear 22 if available,"
Jackson said he wanted to
Jackson
said. "It was my college
" learn !he system at !he two-guard,
number.
If I wear the jersey, I will
and then e•pand my role to other
wear
it
with
pride."
positions."
Jackson
,
a two-time Big Ten
"Dallas believes in young playplayer
of
the
year, was selected
ers and the rebuilding process," he
said. "At Ohio State, I entered into after Shaquille O'Neal, Alonzo
a rebuilding process. It takes time Mourning and Christian Laeltner.
The 6-foot-6 guard from Toledo:
lo become a championship team, it
averaged
19.2 points a game
doesn't happen overnight."
through his three years at Ohio
The Mavericks ind1cated Jack · State. He led the Buckeyes to Big
son would get plenty of playing Ten Conference championships the
time when they traded guard last two seasons and a combined
Rolando Blackman to the New record of 53-10.

1992 MERCURY TOPAZ GS

FOR FIRST OF THE SEASON SOUTH CAROLINA
WATERMELONS

a baseball bat, but got called for a
strike, er, fault
"It's not my sport, baseball,"
he said.

Mavs pick Jackson fourth in NBA draft

By SCOTI WOLFE
Eldora Speedway on Rossburg
Sentinel Correspondent
also has two additional spectal
As pan of the Parkersburg Area shows coming up in the near
Auto Dealers/Granger Select Rae- future; the Eldora Anniversary
ing series, six stars of the Show this Saturday, June 27 and
NASCAR Wintson Cup Series will the ninth annual Kings Royal, paybe visiting West Virginia Motor ing $50,000 to win on Saturday,
Speedway's Grand re-opening July 18.
anniversary Friday for a special
autograph session and match race.
In addition to the Winston Cup
promotion. WVMS will have a full
racing program of STARS Late
Mndels, paying $2,000 to win and
UMP modifieds.
Six of the top stars coming to
WVMS will be Davey Allison,
Michael Waltrip. Harry Gant, Sterling Marlin, Dale Jarrett and Geoff
Bodine. Allison has been the Winston Cup points leader and is one
of the top winners this year, along
with Gant. !he "Grand Daddy" of
Winston Cup racing.
Gates will open at 5 p.m. with a
special autograph session beginning at 6 p.m. Later the drivers
will race in a special 20-lap match
race.
Gant is looking forward to his
visit to West Virginia, using the
slogan that "Life begins at 51" aher
he and his Skoal Bandit Racing
Team won four consecutive races
last fall.
Gant recently won the Dover
Downs 500 in Delaware and is currently in the top five in Winston
Cup points. Each race Gant breaks
his own record as !he oldest winner
in the sport.
WVMS is located eight miles
south of Parkersburg off 1-77 at
Mineral Wells.
In other racing action, K-C
Raceway at Chillicothe holds its
Mid-Season Championship races
Saturday and hosts the third leg of
Ohio Outlaw Sprint Speedweek on
Tuesday, June 30. There will be no
racing on Saturday, July 4, in honor
of Eldora Speedway's $10,000
finale m Speedweek.

·ON OVER,FO BOB'S•••
SWEET &amp;JUICY
RED RIPE

swipe at the next serve with his
handle . Ivanisevic responded by
JOkingly servong with the handle of
his racket, as if hitting a fungo with

CHANGE OF STYLE - Croatia's Goran
lvanisevic turns his racquet around during his
second-round match against Australia's Mark

Allison, Gant among NASCAR
stars to come to WVMS Friday

LC-/"
~v

those people, I'd rather laugh."
What Woodforde did, actually,
was llll1l his racket upside down in
a c_oncession of hopelessness to

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�woman dies each minute worldwide because of oomplications dur ·
ing pregnancy or childbinh.
But the U.N. health agency
report, titled "Reproductive
Health, a Key to a Brighter
Fulllre," said access to conlraception has increased rapidly in the
past few decades, giving women
m&lt;n control over their bodies and
their lives.
"Without fertility regulation,

women's ngnts are mere words,"
the report said. "A women who
has no control over her fertility
cannot complete her education.
cannot maintain gamful employment ... and has very few real
choices open to her."
The report says about 381 million people used contraception in
Third World countries in 1985-90,
up from only 31 million in 196065. The biggest rise has been in
east Asia, where contraceptive use

is higher than in mdustnalized
nations.
WHO says couples in industrial"ed nations use contraception in
aboul 70 percent of all sexual acts.
Women in developing countries
had on average 3.9 children in
1985 -90 compared with 6.1 in
1965-70, WHO says.
"The progress has rea II y been
quite striking over the past few
decades," said Dr. Mahmoud
Fathalla, aulhor of the report.
WHO described the 170-page doc·
umem as the most comprehensive
international study to date or reproductive health.
The report says female sterilization is !he most widespread form of
contraception , accounting for 26
percent of all methods of contraception. This is followed by male
sterilization with 19 percent and
oral con1raception with 15 percent.
In industrialized countries, use
of condoms is much higher than in
the Third World. Condoms are

most popular in Japan, accounting
Lhere for nearly 70 percent of all
contraception.
Despite the progress, about 300
million couples worldwide still do
not have access to family planning,
it says. Of the 910.000 million conceptions that happen every day,
about hair are unplanned. SubSaharan Africans have the least
access to family planning services.
Sub-Saharan Africa has the
highest fertility rate. Ironically, it
also has the highest rate of infertili·
ty. WHO said.
Infertility is often caused by
sexually transmitted diseases thai
have no visible symp10ms and usually go untreated in developing
countries. Worldwide, there are
about 250 million new cases of
sexually transmilted diseases like
gonorrhea every year.
The report eslimates there are
more than 60 million infertile coopies worldwide.
At· the same time !here are an

estimated 36 miUion to 53 million
abortions every year, it says. The
number or illegal abortions is
thought 10 range from 15 millioo to
22 million, many of them dme m
dangerous conditions, il says.
About 500 women die each day
worldwide because or botched
abortions.
The report calculates about onequarter or the world's population
lives in countries where abortion is
virtually prohibited. The 25 COUll·
tries with the most relaxed abortion
laws aoco:ml for 40 peittnt of the
population.
Despite all the advances. gre.aJ.
inequality between men and
women continues in most parts of
the world. it says, and cites female
circumcision as an example.
It says about 80 million wanc:n,
mainly in east and west Africa and
the Middle East, have suffered
"female genital mutilation," the
main aim of which is to prevent
women from enjoying sex.

Israeli Labor party celebrates win;
Rabin promises Palestinian self-rule
By ARIEH O'SULLIVAN
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The
Labor party on Wednesday celebrated tts upsel of hard-line Lilrud,
and leader Y illhalc Rabin promised
to let Palestinians govern them se lves and to cunail the building of
Jewish settlements.
U.S. and Arab leaders ealled for
quick resumption of peace talks.
Rabtn is almost sure to lead the
next governing coalition; Labor
and its allies fell just short of a
majority in th~ 120-seat Parliamcnl
" I believe that we can set up a
Wednesday. They met to discuss tbe fighting in
ALL SMILES- Russin President Boris
sUJble coalition, not dependent on
South Osetia, which seeks to unite with neighYeltsin (righ t) is aU smiles while greeting Georone party on the left but also on
boring North Osetia. (AP)
gian leader Eduard ShevardnadU' during their
parties on the other side," Rabin
meeting that the Black Sea resort of Sochi
told reporrers.
Rabin spoke at a relaxed news
conference at the pany's Tel Aviv
headquarters. The hall was festooned with banners and nags from
the election night pany, and Rabin,
in an open-necked shin, was in an
Econom1c issues were overshad- Ukraine, Georg.a, Moldova, Azer · uncharacteristic smiling mood.
By ALAN COOPERMAN
His national agenda, Rabin said,
owed by deep disputes among the baijan. Armenia. Bulgaria, Albania,
ISTANBUL. Turkey (AP) would
include peacemaking, solvGeorgian leader Eduard A. She - participating countries, including Turkey. Greece and Romania.
tng
unemployment
and other social
The Declaration on Black Sea
vardnadzc called today for the for- the fighting between Armenia and
problems,
election
reform and
mer Sovtet Black Sea fleet to be Azerbaijan over the enclave of Economic Cooperation lays the
improving
relations
with
the United
pared down and split up to solve Nag()fll()-Karabalch, the civil warm groundwork for gradually eliminat- States.
the dtspute between Russta and Moldova, and the Russlliii-Uicraini- ing restrictions on the circulauon of
In Washington, Secrelary of
capital, goods, and people among
Ukraine over ownership of the an dispute.
State
James A. Balcer Ill ealled for
participating
states.
It
calls
for
a
The centerpiece of the summit
powerful armada.
Middle
East peace talks 10 resume
Shevardnadze made the propos- was the signing this morning of an regional development bank for
as
soon
as the new Israeli governal in an opening speech 10 the II· agreement on economic coopera- communications and transport net·
ment
setlles
in. Bilateral peace
nation Summtl on Black Sea Eco- tiOn by the leade" of Russta, works.
UJiks had been suspended pending
nomiC Cooperation.
Tuesday's parliamentary election.
The meeting in a 19th-century
by
The Bush administration had
white marble palace of the fanner
strained relations with Prime MinEven the Nazis didn'tdo this."
By TIJOMAS GINSBERG
011oma n Sultans overlooks the
ister Yitzhalc Shamir's government.
The
army
threat
followed
RusBENDERY.
Moldova
(AP)deep blue waters of !he Bosporus
Baker told reporters the United
SI3n
President
Boris
Yeltsin's
The former Soviet army on
Strail
States
would work closely with
warning
that
he
might
intervene
Presidents Boris Yehsm of Rus- Wednesday threatened to shoot
try to "strengthen and
Rabin
and
sta and l. eonid Kravchuk of down any Moldovan warplanes that militarily in the unrest in the neigh even
deepen
the partnership
Ulcraine listened 10 Shevardnadze's try 10 bomb civilian or military tar· boring former Soviet republic and
United
States and
between
the
reports that Russian soldiers
speec h but did not immediately gets in Trans- Dniester.
Israel."
The army also appealed to pohl· already were involved.
reac110 his suggestion.
Balcer declined 10 say whether
ical
leaders
10
"resolve
the
senseIt was unclear whether !he forPresident
Bush would now be willI=
war
which
nobody
can
win
."
Ethnic Russians and Ulcrainians
mer Soviet foreign minister had
ing
to
provide
Israel with $10 bilMatnly ethnic Russian and fear rising nationalism 10 Moldova
dtscussed his idea wuh them 1n
lion
in
loan
guarantees
to help
Ukrai nian separatists in Moldova will lead to reunification with
advance.
resettle
thousands
of
Jewish
immiRussia and Ukraine have been have declared an independent Romania, which controlled all of grants from the former Soviet
quarrelling for month s over the republic of 600,000 people in the country except Trans-Dniester Union. Bush had blocked the guar300-ship fleet. !he former Sovtet Trans-Dniester, an economically until World War II. Outside of
antees to protest the building or
cou nt erbalance to the US . 6th valuable strip of land in eastern Trans-Dniester. Moldova is domiJewish
settlements in the occupied
Moldova that borders Ukraine.
nated by ethnic Romanians.
fleet in the Mediterranean.
territories.
Women and children are fleeing
The army officially is neutral,
The dispute has severely shaken
Rabin satd he would not freeze
the unity of the Commonwealth of the fighting, which has reduced but Russian officials have said settlements , as lhe United States
Independent States, whtch "'·" some areas in Trans-Dniester to some soldiers. without orders, are demanded, but support them only
helping the separatisl&lt;.
formed after the Sovtet Untun s rubble.
in areas essential to Israel's securi"Why?
Why
are
they
shooting
collapse last December
"I think we shou ld think about at us?" wailed 59-year-old Tamara
reduct" s the fleet in the Black Stankevicha in front or a pockSea," Shevardnadzc told the sum- marked building in Bendery. a sepmil. "Each Black Sea counlry aratist stronghold that has borne the
shou ld accept some quoUJ (on the brunt of Moldovan allacks.
"We've lived here for 37 years.
number of its ships)."

Black Sea fleet should be split to settle
Russian-Ukranian dispute- Shevardnadze

Moldovan airmen warned

ty -Jerusalem, the Jordan Valley
and the Golan Heights.
"I believe this policy that I
described ... will make it easier" 10
obtain the loan guaranlees, he said.
Rabin has promised the Palestinians in the occupied West Bank
and Gaza Strip autonomy within
nine months.
"I don't deal right now with a
permanent solution," he satd
Wednesday. "AI the flfS! slage we
are commtUed 10 auwnomy and a
five-year interim period."
Rabin, who led Israel's caprure

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After several days of enthusiastic campaigning the 55th American
Legion Buckeye Boys State moved
into sllltehood with the inauguration of the 1992 Governor.
Ohio Supreme Cowt Olief Juslice Tboma'l Moyer was present 10
administer the oath of office 10 all
elected offiCials during the inauguration ceremony.
lmmedialely following the gen eral election, all city, county and
state offtees were operating.
Participants from Meigs County

with the office they held in the
moclc government are as foUows.
Steve Swatzel held the office of
senator.

Carl P. Barringer held the office
or assistant secretary for the electric company.
Matt Michael held the office of
banker.
Todd L. Grace held the offiCe of
auomey.
Randall C. Johnston held the
office of public utilities comm is-

95

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• llglll oelglll

• lloiUd
• Full-ltmudge cleo •'II
• lnchldes atkx:hi•c•b

Linda Chapman resided in
Garfield City, Riley County, and
belonged 10 the Federalisl pany.
She was appointed to the position
of city recreation commissioner.
Heather Franckowiak resided in
Oakley City, Schmelzer County
and belonged to the Federalist
party. She was appointed 10 the
position of slate aide to lieutenant
governor.
Kimberly Dawn Jenkins resided
in Garfield Cily, Riley County, and
belonged to the Nationalist pany.
She was elected to the position of
state represenUJtive.
Elise MicheUe Manielce resided
in Coil City, Ray County, and

Rock Springs Grange members
were guests of Star Grange recent.
ly.
Patty Dyer, masler of Star
Grange, conducted the meeting and
Bill Radford, master of Rock
Springs Grange, reported they were
happy to be there.
Pat Holter, lecturer, Rock
Springs, conducted the program
showing an interesting collection of
postcards and history of Star
Grange. Bill Radford rectted 'T m
My Own Grandpa."

The chaner was draped in memory of Clair Nelson who died
recently.
Eldon Barrows, legislative
agenl, reponed on the importance
of voting.
Bury!, Evelyn and AniUJ Whtte
wiU be initialed in10 the chapter.
Winness in the state sewing and
needlework contests were: vest Rose Barrows, flrsl, Freda Smilh,
second; decorated sweatshirt Christine Napier, first, Bernice
Midkiff, second; crocheted bedspread · Opal Dyer, fl.r.;t; afghans .
Maxine Dyer, flrsl, Rose Barrows,
second; shirt or blouse . Patty
The Hemlock Grange was enter- Dyer, ftrst; stuffed toy · Rose Bartaintd recmtly by Denvtt Rice on rows, fusl, Maxine Dyer, second;
h1s toilet seat guitar. His music was dollies · Maxine Dyer, ftrst; Rose
Barrows, second; collars and han of the past 40s. 50s. and 60s.
The grange received an invita· kies · Binda Diehl, fll'St; baby set .
lion 10 visit the Harrisonville Rose Barrows, f1rst; baby afghan Maxine Dyer, first; latch hook Grange.
Refreshments of ice cream and Rose Barrows, f~rsl; needlepoint cake were served at the close of the Opal Dyer, first; miscellaneous Rose Barrows, fust; pillow cases .
meeting.

The Middlepon Child Conser- sented the Pixie Award.
vation League recently held their
Swimming and a potluck cookannual family picnic at the home of out were enjoyed be members, their
Bob and Brenda Blackston.
families and guests. Those present
Offteers were installed by dts - were Bob, Brenda, Jeremy and
trict president Jean Gillipsie. She Joey Blackston, Jack, Sherrie and
presented each officer with a bas- Emily Kane, Randy, Kellie,
ket of flowers tied with color rib- Brandy, and R.D. Snider, Jason
bon representing their office. She Knighl, Amber Blackston, Carl and
instrucled each offiCer of the duties Jean Gillipsie, Nancy Morris,
or ber offiCC and wished them well . Frank, Linda and Vincent Broder·
Mrs. Gillipsie read a poem that ick.
described the changes and feelings
The club's nexl meeting will be
a mother goes through in raising Sept. 17 al Rock Springs United
her ram ily and living her life.
Methodtsl Church at 7 p.m. There
Officers are Linda Broderick, are no July and August meetings.
pres1dent; Kilty Darst, vice-presi- Members will continue to save
denl; Nancy Morris, secretary; Scott UPC seals for suppon of the
Bonnie scou. treasurer; Peggy Har. Ronald McDonald House in
ris, reporrer; and Helen Blackston, Columbus.
historian. Helen Blackston was pre-

Lydia Council holds meeting

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MIDDLEPORT

sioner.
Carlton Drummer held the
office of deputy director of mental
health.
Heading the list of speakers
were Michael De Wine, Mary Ellen
Withrow, Thon1as E. Ferguson and
Governor George Voinoviclt
The keynote speaker was Randall Gardner, reprtsentati ve 10 the
General Assembly.
The commencemem address
was given by Congressman
Michael Oxley.

Meigs Countians 'elected' at Buckeye Girls State

Hemlock Grange

IIIJIIIEI., ~-~ Pa 7 5I
Clti-IICU C

I

MASON

Buckeye Boys State moves into 'statehood'

Middleport CCL holds picnic

. . 1111 111£11

nl-5592

afternoon. Cullen took si:J months to build th•
nve-foot-long model from scratch wbicb be sails
on a long kite string powered only by wind
caught in tbe vessel's sails. (AP Photo)

belonged to the Federalist Party.
She was appointed to the position
of director of public safety.
Counney Camille Midkiff resided in Catherwood ar:y. Ray County, and belonged to the Federalist
Party. She was elected to the posi.
tion of state CCIItral committeeman.
Stephanie Price resided in Janis
City, Schmelzer County, and
belonged 10 the Federalist party .
She was elected 10 the position of
county commissioner.
Bobbie White resided in Taft
City, Smith Counr:y, and belonged
to the Federalist party. She was
elected to the position of city
school board member.

Star Grange hosts Rocks Springs members

=--==·$199

2ND STREET

SUMMER SAILING -Taking advantage of
th• unusually warm weather, Dave Cullen of
Seattle, Wash~ launches bis model 16th century
sailing ship at Green Lake in Seattle Wednesday

The campa1gn slogans, songs
and promollons of all types wee the
scene at the Ohio American Legion
Auxiliary's 46th Buckeye Girls
State Government Seminar.
The mythical two pany system ·
Federalist and Nationalist · sel the
Ashland Universi1y campus in
motion.
Meigs Countians altendmg the
seminar were elected and appointed
to city, county and state government officials and positions.
Deborah Ann Alkire resided in
Janis city, Schmelzer county and
belonged to the Nationalist pany.
She was appointed to the position
of city school board presidenl

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of the West Bank and Gaza Strip
25 years ago, is commiocd to lrllding at least some land for peace.
Bul, like Shamir, he had pledged to
make no coocessions on Jerusalem
or permit Palestinian statebood.
Rabin did not directly address
the land-for-peace ques1ion
Wednesday.
Israel remains deeply divided on
the fulllre of the occupied tenitories, but more ready for Labor's
pragmatic approach than Sliamir's
ideological attachment to the occupied land.

MIDDLEPORT, 011.

992·2635

The Dal

Senti

Upset by news of deserted baby

WHO

Access to contraception opening more doors for women
By CLARE NULLIS
GENEVA (AP) - Sexual inrercourse occurs more than 100 million times daily, resulting in nearly
I million conceptions and about
350,000 sexually transmitted dis·
eases, according to a report issued
Wednesday by the World Health
Organization.
About 150,000 unwanted pregnancies end every day in abortion,
the report said. On average, one

Ohio

Thursday, June 25, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

The Lydia Council of the Bradford Church of Chris! met recently
with Carolyn Nicholson, vice-presidml, cooducting the meeting.
Prayer requests were given,
Mrs. Nicholson had prayer, and
offiCers reports were givm.
Devocions were given by Madeline Painter using the poems ''What
Aic Fathers Made 01'1" and ''The
Little Chap That Follows Me."
Cootboots are still av:.~lable at
acostof$4.
Women's Retreal "'ill be Sept.
18 and 19 at the ()b;, Valley Christian Camp. Helpers are needed in
the tildten few breakfast and lunch.
Bradford Church is in charge of
the program booklel covers for
WOOlen 's retreat

A vtsitors list was passed
around and the sunshine gift for
June 2 will be given to Helen
Miller.
The July 13 meeting will be a
family picnic at the home or
Delores Frank at 6:30 p.m. Table
service and drinks will be furnished
by the hostess. Members are to
bring covered dishes.
Hostesses for the evening were
Becky Amberger and Madeline
Painter.
Attending were Suzie and
Christi Will, Cherie and Caitlin
Williamson, Diane Bing, Jane
Hysell, Carolyn Nicholson, Paula
Pickens, Becky Amberger, Madeline Painter and Nancy Morris.

Dear Ann Landers: I saw a news
story on TV that said residents of a
"nice" neighborhood had discovered
an hours-old baby in lhw dnveway,
wrapped in a duiTel bag. Next to the
mfant was a note saying, ''I'm so
sorry. I'm only 14 years old."
Ann, I want that young girl 10
know that I'm sorry, 100. Her baby
was another missed opponunity for
my husband and me and other.; h kc
us . Why don'tlhese gtrls rcaltzc that
it COSIS a btnh mother nothing 10
place her child w1th an adoption
agency? If she tells her mint ster or
school counselor that she can't keep
her child. she can be assured of help
in ftnding it a lovmg home.
Three year.; ago, my husband and
I decided 10 have a family We
assumed that we would have no
trouble. We were wrong.
We tried for 10 months and !hen
went 10 a fertility specialist. We
worked with her for another ntnc
months without success and were
then referred to a reproductiv e
endocrinologisL
My husband has lestcd "norma l"
smce the begtnmng. I ha ve been
poked. prodded. pushed and probed.
have had injecuons and laser treat ·
men~ and was finally told I had
endometriOSIS and polyccptic ovartan dtsease.
Now we've been informed that
my msurance will no longer cover
tnfertihty treaunent. d1agnos1s or
drugs. The next step is a drug lhat
will cost $8,000, with only a 45
percent chance of success.
To the 14 -year-old gtrl who

and plenty of gooo bools, along

Ann
Landers

with a library card. We had a large
ponable pool in our yard so we
always knew they were within
arm 's reach, playing wtlh the neighborhood children.
We didn't coddle Oill kids -- they
had chores to do and we saw
that they did them. We were
firm but lovtng parents, aucnded
PTA mceungs and took part in
all their acuvities - scouting, Little
League. etc. My husband and I nevtt
argued in front of the k:Jds and tried
hard 10 be good role models for
them.
Now my son's counselor tells
me he tS ovcrwetghl because he
came from a dysfuncuonal family .
What dtd we do wrong? .. HURT
PARENTS r.\ PROVIDENCE. R.l
DEAR PARENTS Probably
nothtng. "Dysfunctional" is one of
those buuwords that happens to be
10 vogue at the moment. Telling
people thm parents damaged !hem
serves no useful purpose. Placing the
blame ts always counterproducuve .
I hope that counselor sees lh1s.
Gem of the Day : Keep yOill mind
clean Change 11 occasionally .
Plann1n g a weddmg ' What's
"8111 ' Wha t's wrong ' "The Ann
Landers Gutde for B'!des " will
relitw your aiUlery Send a selfaddres.Jed . lon g, bu.si neSJ · SlU

ANN LANDERS
"1991, Las An&amp;d..
Timet Syndkal&lt; aad
Cruton SyndicaW'

wrapped her child in llle duffel bag
Someone wi II want and need your
newborn. To the othe" who m1gh1
do something like thiS Please don't
Jeopardtz.e the health of your baby
by not plactng it dueclly m10 the
har•ds of people who wtll help you
and know how to contact couples
like US.
I'm sorry about the circumstances
that led !hal girl to give up her
child and equally sorry that I can't
have that baby ... INFERm.E IN
INDIANAPOLIS
DEAR INDIANAPOLIS Thanks
for a le11cr that coo ld change ltves.
For tho se who need help with
tnfertilily, send a long, selfaddressed, SUJmped envelope to:
Resolve. Inc., 1310 Broadway, Dept.
G.M .. Somervtlle. Mass. 02144 1731.
Dear Ann Landers: Please teU
us, what is a dysfunctional family '
My husband and I have been
marncd 3 7 years and raised four
chi ldren I thought we dtd a good

t!nvtlopt and a check or money

job

order for $3 65 (t ho tncludrs
pos1age and h.allli!Jng) w .· B"des .
clo Ann Lllllliers. P 0 Box /1562 .
Chi cago . Ill 60611-0562 . (In
CaMda . muJ S4 45 1

We d1d WllhOul many exuas so
our ch•ldren's needs would be mct.
They had good clothes, new shoes,
doctor and dental appointments

Joan Rivers 'dogs' CBS over piddling pooch
NEW YORK (AP) - Joan
Rivers says the people over at "60
Minutes" who claim her pmi-SJZed
Yorkshire terrier piddled on the lOt let seats at CBS are all wet: There's
no way Spike could do that without
falling in.
The dispute , which began last
week, had escalated by Wednesday
into a full -blown baule at the studios where "The Joan Rivers
Show" and the CBS program share
bathrooms on the same floor.
Taking the matter directly to her
audience Wednesday, Rivers used
a 10ile1 seat to demonstrate that
Spike couldn't urinate on a toilet
without getting wet himself.
She also threatened "60 Min utes" with "war" unless 11 apologized for making one of her assisUints cry dunng an argument over
the dog.

Larry Ferber, Rtvers' executive
producer, said the dog " doesn't use
the bathrooms. II gelS walked 10
limes a day."
Rtvers ' publicist srud that " 60
Minutes" e•ecuuve producer Don
Hcwin sent Rlvers a leacr of apology and that she was molhfied. But
Hewi11 denied apologizing and
accused Riv ers of " lying in her
teeth."
The public1sl, Hayley Sumner.
sa~d the trouble began June 16
when Susan Bieber, an as ststant
producer for "60 Minutes," complatncd that Rivers' rudes allowed
Spike 10 urinate on the wilet seats
in the ntnth -noor women's room.
On Tuesday, Riv&lt;n ftred back a
lcner, tel~ng Bieber her complaint
was false . Rivers also sent her
assistant. Robtn Bonder, over 10
"clanfy the misunderstanding."

" 60 Minules" reponcrs Morley
Safer and Ed Bradley "verbally
accosted Bonder as she entered the
office . reducing her to tears ,"
Sumner sax!.
Hew111. reached by phone. was
furious when lold how hts lener
was desc ribed . He satd he only
wrote 10 tell Rivers he Lhoughl she
looked nice when he saw her in
London last wed.
As for the dtspute, he sa1d,
" I've never been in a lad1es' room
m my hfc and I don't know what
goes on in there."

Camboc:ha:s

warnng

farttons

stnged a pea"" treaty on Oct 23 , 1991
It was auned at endmg the war. mass
murder. rore1gn occupation. starva'''"' and e1ile that had devasLated the
country over the past 21 year.;

Patty Dyer, first; wooden toy .
Eldon Barrows. first, Rick
Macomber, second.
Meigs County Pomona Grange
was announced for July 3 with a
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m . followed by meeting and inspection at
7:30p.m. Pomona Grange offiCers
wiU pra::tice at 7 p.m. Friday at the
Rock Springs grange hall.
There were 57 members, visi10rs
and juniors present for the meetmg.

Alfred happenings
On Father's Day Florence
Spencer, representing the women
of the church, presented the father&gt;
with tape measures and candy bars.
Nellie Parker read "Father's Day
1992."
Alfred United Methodist Church
will hold a potluck picnic Friday at
6 p.m. honoring the return of Paswr
Sharon Hausman for another year.
The public is invited.
Sunday school superintendent
Lloyd Dillinger presented Todd
Dillinger with a bible honoring his
graduation from Alexander High
School.
Marlene Donovan returned
recentJ y from a trip to Florida.
Sarah Caldwell atlended the
graduation from high school of her
granddaughter, Carrie CaldweU, at
Columbus. She is the daughter or
Charles and Peggy Caldwell.
Gertrude Robinson , Melvtn
Tracy and Nellie Parker went on
the senior citizens trip to Ameriflo.
ra r=ntly.
Aaron Williams, Athens, honored his grandfather, Clarence
Henderson, and falher, David
Williams, with a restaurant dinner
on Father's Day. Thelma Henderson and Linda Williams also

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Durst makes dean's list
Bryan Durst, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gary DIU'S!, Reedsville, has
been named to the Dean's List at
Muskingum College for the second
semester.
To qualify for the Dean's List a
student must achieve a grade point
average or 3.6 out of a possible 4.0
and have oompleted a minimum of
12 hours of graded course work.

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South Pole area, covering UOO miles
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locally owned •nd oper81ed by: Bill Hapton•btll
7U N. Second, Middleport

, ....: 992·2171

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 25, 1992

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

TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
and square dance Friday, 8-11 :30
p.m ., music by Happy Hollow
Boys. Sponsa-ed by Tuppers Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 and Ladies
Auxiliary.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT· Middleport
Church of Christ will hold Vacation Bible School, lhrough Friday
from 9:15 a.m. to noon for ages
three lhrough the eighth grade.

REEDSVll.LE- There will be a
teen dance at Eastern High School
Friday from 8-11 p.m. Cost is $2
per person or $3 couple.

RACINE - Vacation Bible
School, Racine First Baptist
Church, lhrough Friday, 9 a.m. to
noon. Team UJ" With Jesus is the
theme.
RACINE - Racine United
Methodist Church, Vacation Bible
School, through Friday 9-11:30
a.m. daily. Ages preschool through
sixth grade. Son Moun1ain is the
theme.
RACINE - Racine Church of the
Nazarene, Vacation Bible School,
through Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m. for
ages 2-13. "Set Sail With the Savior" is the theme. Pastor Tom Gates
invites the public.

LONG BOTTOM - Riverview
Garden Club will hold a potluck
picnic Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the
home of Nola Young.
POMEROY - The Rector and
congregation of Grace Episcopal
Church and friends and acquain tances of Mark and Leesa Murphey
are invited 10 stop by the Parish
Hall Thursday from 7-9 p.m. W say
good-bye.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will have a joint meeung
Thursday. Dinner will be served at
7 p.m. prior to the meeting. All
members urged tQ auend.
RUTLAND · Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rutland Church of Christ. Jane Wise
will present the program. Each
church is urged to have represenlauon.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary will mcel Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Lodge
No. 164 F and AM will hold a spec ial meeting Thursday at 7 p.m.
Work m the E.A. degree.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and si nging
Friday at 7:30p.m. PaSior Steve
Reed invites the public. Fellowship
follows .
MIDDLEPORT · Ballroom
dance Saturday, 7-11 p.m., Ameri ·
can Legion Annex, Middleport.
Music by George Hall. Cost $5 per
person.
RIPLEY - Libeny Moun1ameers
will perform at Skateland in Ripley
on Friday.
ALFRED - Alfred United
Methodist Church will welcome
Pastor Sharon Hausman back for
another year with a potluck picnic
on Fnday at6 p.m. Puhbc inviled.

Mr. and Mrs. Tucker purchased
the nower shop from Melvin Van
Meter who has operated it since
1981. Prioc w that time his parents,
Millard and Vera Van Meier operated the shop in the building which
they constructed in 1969.
Tucker has been employed for
sevrnl years by Van Meter.

DANVn.LE - Weekend services
at Danville Church of Christ will
be Saturday at 7:30 and Sunday at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill,
Foster, W.Va., will be the speaker.
Public invited.
KANAUGA - Liberty Moun taineers will perform at D.A. V.
Center in Kanauga from 8-11 p.m.
Square dancing and clogging. Public invited.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Senior
Ci1i1.ens Dance Club will hold a
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m.
with music by Smokey Mountain
Drifters . Public invited . Bring
snacks for the snack table.
REEDSVILLE - A co-ed volleyball tournament will be held
Saturday and Sunday at Eastern
High School. Open to all ages. No
more than eight players per team
and a $10 entry fee will be charged.
Call 949-2603 or 667-6785 for
information.
RUTLAND - Square dance at
the Rutland American Legion Hall
Saturday 8 p.m. 10 midnight. Music
by White's H.iU Road.
RUTLAND - The M-G-M District Cub Olympics will be held at
the Rutland Civic Center Saturday.
Registration is al 9 a.m. and the
coSI is $1. All registered cub seoul&gt;
are invited.

REEDSVILLE - There will be a
craft and card show Saturday at
Eastern High School from 10 a.m.
w 4 p.m. Tables are available for
$15 or two for $25.
REEDSVll.LE ·There will be a
hoop shoot contest al Eastern High
School on Saturday.
POMEROY - Hymn sing, sponsored by Hillside Bapust Church,
Pomeroy Parlcing Lo~ 7 p.m.
REEDSVll.LE -There will be a
chicken barbecue at Easter,, High
School Saturday in conJunction
with super weekend.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Descendants of the
late Alben and Eliza Hill will have
their annual family reunion at Star
Mill Park on Sunday wuh a carry·
in dinner at noon. All friends and
relatives arc invited.
RACINE - The 1992 Thie ss
family reunion comm iuee will
meet Sunday at 2 p.m. at 01' Ferry
Landing Park, Racine, to discus s
final plans for the July 12 reunion.

RIBBON CUTTING - The new owners or the
Pomeroy Flower Shop, Wendy and Larry Tucker are pictured here as they cut the ribboa to
officially mark their purchase or the shop rrom
Melvin VanMeter, pictured behind the couple.

Extension's corner

e

II Jill

Phones have been ringing thiS
week With mqumes concerning:
Defoliation of pine trees . Check
for sawny caterpillars feeding on
the pnor years needles, will completely defoliate all needles on the
tree.

Circular 1(2 inch holes in wood
siding - Check for carpenter bees
which chew into soft wood siding
or gutters on dwellings, barns and
garages.
Blackening and/or burnt-like
leaves and limbs on apple and pear
trees - Probably the end result of
fireblight - a bacterial disease
spread from diseased plants to
healthy plants during Spring polunation.
Green scum on ponds . Check
for duckweed and/or walermeal
tiny aquatic plants which proliferate when water temperatures
increase and soil nutrients leach
into ponds and lakes.
For further infonnation slop by
the extension office for the appropriate Home, Yard and Garden Fact
SheeL

"American, We Are Fam1l{' is
the theme for the July 4 parade w
be held at 9:30 a.m. in Rutland W
kick-off the annual celebration
there.
The days events include a pie
baking and cake decorating contest
with enUies due at noon and auc uon at4 p.m.: a garden uacwr pull
at noon: a celebrity auction at 4
p.m. with item s from Lionel
Cartwright, Mario Martin and
Hank Wiluam s Jr.: music by Country Misr.ts from noon to 4 p.m. and
White's Hill Band from 6-10 p.m .
There will be craft tables avail·
able for $5 each: games: food
including roast beef, hot dogs,
sloppy jocs, cole slaw, popcorn, ice
cream, couon candy, snow cones
and pop.
To register for the parade or for
a craft iable, call Kim Willford at
742-2 103: or Marie Birchfield at
742-2178.

34 attend Star
Grange fun night

~ ~I
l. .

the convictions of our entertain ~

ment industry leaders," Quayle
said.

Employees, Meigs County Chamber or Com·
merce representatives, and several area businesses gathered at the shop ror the ribbon cutting. (Sentinel photo)

School school children, grades
five and six, of Hope Baptist
Church. Middleport, recently beld a
class cook-out at the home of Dick
and Jeannie Owen, Pomeroy. Mn&lt;.
Owen is teacher of the class.
Water games and fishing were

THE CANDIDATES:
-GEORGE BUSH : Announced
he will no longer re cogm ze
Yugoslavia's ambassador to Wash ingtOn and ordered its consulate in

Chicago closed w protest Serbianled VIOlence in the shanered nauon.
- BILL CLINTON: Said hi s
economic plan was the best hope
for restoring industrial might but
would require management to curb
e_xccutive pay and give up mccn -

NEWS OF NOTE:
- Perot and Republican
National Chairman Rich Bond

tlves for moving jobs overseas .

Business Services ~--C® "House
.

JAYMAR ,WHALEY'S llUTO .

(all614·992·6637
S
]
I. Rt.
(h esh'tre, OH '

---------J
1121 rtn

FOR SALE

SHOES

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

304-273-5555
~LINDA'S

featured.
Allending were Dick Owen.
Jeannie Owen, Jonathan Owen,
Rebecca Owen, Lee Williams,
Bran Williams, Chrissy Williams,
Adam Williams, David McClure,
Sonny McClure, Rhojean McClure,
Nancy Marlow. Rachae! Ashley ,

Judy Riley, Jason Riley, llnan Justice. Jackie Justice. Matthew Justice, Jessica Justice, Mary Bryan
and DaVId Bryan, pastor of the
church.
A cwrent class project is saving
money for the church "Buy a
Brick" campaign.

To place an ad

COPY

I 00 p.m. Sat ur day
l 00 p.m Mond;:~y
1 00 p.m Tuesday
I 00 p m Wc·dm'SI:b y
100pm Thursday
I 00 p.m. Fnday

Wednesda y PaJ)('T

Mo , , thru FHI. RA .!1.-5P.M. - S.-r.R-12

ThUP.id&lt;~y Papt'l

Friday PafX'r

CLOSED SL~ IM Y

Sunday l'a~r

POUCIES
• Ad a oul..'lode the county your ad run t mu ~ l be prcp111J

C/a.&lt;.&lt;ified page.&lt; covu I he
follouing relephone exchanges ...

run 3 •l•y• 111 no ch a'l)e .
• Priu: of 11J for all capi111 ll ctt•:n

11 double pr iu: of ad C(Ni l
• 7 pomt line type only u1ed
• Se n1.nd it 001 retponsibk for errors a her fir 5l day (c hed.
for ~rrora ru ~ t day ad runa m pafW:r) Call bcfon~ 2
p . m.
day afler publ.r:ation lo mak e co rrr.o::t .on
• A&lt;h 1ha1 lfttiJI\ be pa1d 1n ad,.llnu: art"

Gallia Coun1y
1

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Happy Ada
Yard Sa l e~~

placed 1n I he CB ihpol11 Dady
Dllipl11y , Duameu Card lH Lcg.l
Not..:et) -...lla~o appear 10 the Point Plca .. nt Regia tcr and
(l" l Ce pl C la ~a •fietl

446-Callipolil
36 7 - Cheahire
3Ba-Yin\on
245-...Rio c,.nd,.

Q92 -~1idd lrpn rll

lt7:J- rt. fll,•a111nl

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985-Chellf'r
843 - PuMIMnd

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24 7-Lel.rt FIIU I

643-Aubia Oi-l.

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576-Appl e Cro~e
77:1 - Mun n
882-New II• ""•:••
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?37-llufflllo

379-"\ll"alnul

'Toi:o 1h P• O..t 01 P•lillg
- Lot U1 Do II lor y,.•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTER10R
FREE IITIIIIATEI
HAY! REFIR(IKII

l-•

6141121111'0. pd.

742-Rullllnd

CARPENTRY
PLUMBIII&amp;, WlRIIIG,
CUSTOM IUILI
BATHROOM

Days

Worlllllll ,.,, , , , _ , . , - ·
,., semtl, 1111 , . , fllllf:kl!

COMPUTER VALUES
CLEARANCE CENTER
Tandy 1000 RL·HD Home PC.

Reg 89995 125·1451 . lfow399.95
r..dy 2500 smo wrlh 85MB nard
dnve Reg 1299 00

m.41Jn . .

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CM-5 13" CGA Calor Monitor.
Reg 299 95 N25·1043 . lfaw99.95
VGM ~ 200 W Calor VDA Monitor.
Great graph1cs

Reg 499 95 &gt;25 4041

Noo 299.95

1" ·thin WP2 Laptop Wordproceuor.
Per1ecttor 5thool

~

PIIOfES Alii AIISWEIIER
FOR YOUR HOME OR llff1CE
Maylllr'"" Phana. Sleek desuJn

N••

Reg 39 95 N43 350
27.88
Answering Machine . Answers w•tll ~n s
or woman's '!'DICe
Rejj 59 95 N43 393
Noo29.95
Conllns Trim·fan!l'!'.
No cord from base to wall

Now49.95

Reg 99 95 N43-570

Speoierphone.
30 memones and flash ounon

NDW39.95

Reg 69 95 i43.608

Spealerpllone.
Hold . speed &lt;hahn&lt;J and conlerence

Now59.95

Reg 349 95 •.26 3930. No• 249.95

Reg 99 95 N43 ·615

Portabl1 WP"100 Prinllng

All phones have tone /pulse ctlahng

Wordprocmor.
Reg 599 95 126 .3950
DMP ·135 Prinler

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keyboard aM wr1 sts rest

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Acoustic Prmter Cover.
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Great Game Softwarelhat" s
fun lor the entire 1am1ly
Mickey and Friends,

RC VEHICLES, TOYS
AND OTHER GOODIES
PGpTimo• Wllth.
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Re&lt;J 26 95 160 11193

Kings Ouest V,

Reg 7 95 160 1137
LCD

Each 29.95

Other Software
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ADO VALUE TO YOUR CAR!
AUTOMOTIVE BARGAIIIS
Slim Mobile CB
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Locking Cower -Up.
Reg 8 95 111 · 1364

Now1.99

Car slereo EqualiZer- 7 bands
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Now19.95
7-Band EQ BltOIIer wnh CO Jack
Reg 59 95 111 1935 .
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Electronic: Car CtmpiU.
Reg 5&lt;1 95 163 · 641
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mounted remote

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Now13.88

LCD DinoWar~ ·· .
Reg 7 95 N60-1136
Pod;et LCD RICI!!Wif .. .

Now

Noo .71

FM Wireless Mlie.
Re&lt;J 6 95 160-11119
Electronic Rifle.
Reg 9 95 N60 1105
LCD Tabletop Space Allen.
Reg 14 95 N60 -1231
LCD Tll&gt;letap Baeball.
Reg 14 95 160 ~ 1133
LCD Tallletap Faatblll.
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Collec:ton Game PICk,
Reg 59 95 115 1804
Chuck Yeager,
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(NOI ava •lable where proh lbrted
101 sale by state law 1

You Won't Rnd &amp;ery Item In
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Prices n•s lleflnltety Worth

.....1.., *' u ...,

~ IIDst . _ CllrJ' •

YIIIITIES

NDW1.88
Now6.88
Now2.77

Reg 6 95 N60 1307

WIC Turbo ShiH Buggy.

Now1.44

Reg 4 59 160-131 1
Dancin' Feel.
Reg 9 95 N60 -1317
Show 'n Lllrn .
Reg 1195 160·1318
L.oak 'n Lt1r1'"
Reg 4 95 160-1335

Now2.88
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Now1.88

Jr. Dba1gn Lab

Now3.88

MIQit Numbers.

Reg 3 99 160 1354
EIKtrook l..aak 'n Learn .. .
Re&lt;J 1995 160·1401

Re&lt;J 12 95 160-14116

RC Wild Turllo -SOnio· .
Reg 59 95 N60-4047
RC Rod Anow• .
Reg 69.95 N60 ~ 4077
RC Turllo 1" Ford.
Reg 49 95 N60-4085

Now .99

ancl on·SCJetn dlsJUy

13· TVIYCA combo t:s

rust the

lhrrlg

Reql'J900116804

114

1070

~Space

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-599.95

No• 29.95

Nn9.95

.........

Nw19.95
-19.95

--'"""~

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

q p

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
Mowers • Cltail Saws
• Weedeoten

614·949-2804
;

H-- M()to rcy clet

fk.al.l &amp; ~f o l on for Sail'
Auto Parl.l &amp; Acccuo rt e5
i\uto fl cp11r

-:':t7!7778---

Ca mpmfl Equ•pmenl

81 -

ll ome lmponemt!nll

•

, . N·

18• Ga ls G.all 11~96-98111 (Dial

_ ___

Systams OHica).·

Chapel
In
The
Valley:
(Gatlinburg'• Original Wedding
Chapel) Fr•• Pari".lng. Thought·
lui S.rvica I• R•nd•rad Through
Mus1c, Flowers, Photograph•.
Videos And Reception• 614-

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

436-7903, 1:800:922-4573.

4·4-97-lln

NILSON'S

Coma Calebrat• Th• 30th AnnlntSI')' Of The Mountain Slate
Art &amp; Craft F1ir July 1:6 At
Beautiful Ceder Lak . . , Ripley,
WV For lntormatton Call 3()4,
3n.7000

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

POWEBWUI

D1sney Ar•a &amp; Florida Beach
Vaca11ons RI7NI!a $159 Pack·
age&amp; 413Nile S99 Delu•• Holels
For Par/Room Prien . Call Us
Today 1 FIOfki• Slate Travel 407826 -5761 Hrs 7a.m.-9p.m

BULLDOZING

Truck•
Tractor -TI'IIilera

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: limeslone,
Oirt, Gravel and Coal

Hou1ea

Mobile Homea
Equipment Cleaned &amp;
Degreaaed
45765 Fiolwoodo Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 192-2418
(614)192-G575

D1~orce

Auct wn
()_ \\-'.rated to Buy

17- MliccllMneoJ.a
18-- Wanted f o Oo

5 152S.J....Yl--

~e

_S 1gnaturt Divorce, Mihlary,
Spouse,
Etc ..
·uncontested And EKcludes
MrsSing

Gow-"1

1HJ-- Exuva l•ng
B4-- Elcr tncal &amp; R cf rt~~;rr nl ln

Anlique•

B:r- Generalll au ling

"i •c Merch•nd~tt
j~ llud1lml( S upplu~

81).-

, f\ 7-

Mohtle Home lirpur
L rh n l~ lrr)

BO..\RD

-===================:!
Real Estate General

r

OFFICE 992-2886

budget Or~orc• .

~---------1~2~-5~-lf~

1-714-662·7037
Un, One On an.

omea-Peta,WIIdllte

Gl11inburg"s Utue log Chapel.
Charming , B.autilul
Border•
Nalional Park. A Or&amp;~~m Wed -

TEAFORD GOLF
AND TROPHY

Molorcyclei-Etc .

· 'l(atfiryn

'Meadows

din~ To Fit Your Budgerl. No
Wa1tlnq, No Blood T•11. 1:800-

554 -1451

985·3961

"SPEClAUZlNG IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39a15 Gold Ridge Road

G11 Merried . Beautllul Chapelkl
Smoky Mountslns, GaUinlK.Irg

Lessons 5l2.SO
6 Lessons 560.00

Ohio 45769

Wedding

E!eganl.

Trop~ies,

Custom Paintings

Public Notice
NOnCE OF APPOIHTIIENT
OF AOUCI.ARY
On June 3, lste-2, in the
Mtiga County Prob•t•
Court, C... No . 274n, Solly
J. Savogo, 28310 ApjM
Grov•, R.. lno, OH. 45771,

Plaqles

MyrUe Baach Ruort Vae~Uon
Rent1is, Oc. .ntront Condotr
HouMkeeplng
Included
1~
door/Outdoor
Pools
Whir!_pools, Saunas, llghl.d
Tanms Courts, Putting G,..en•

5126/t mo,

Avalla""ble. FrH
Brochur• : 1-300-448~653 .

Myr11t B~a.ch, Motel1 From $45.,
Condomlmum• From S79 {2 ·
Adults
&amp;
2
Child~)

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addltlona

-Gu-Work

-Eieob"ical•nd Plumbing
-Rooftng

Oceanfront, Ocunv-l.w Rooms
$\Illes, Condominiums, lnd*

ALl MAlliS
Brl•g II lo Or Wo
Pick U~­

IO!Jtdoor POOls, Whirlpools
CioN Amusements, 1:300-lll ~
Jl1311-800-528-0226.

SERVICE
992-5335 or
985·3561

Myl1te Beacl"l, SC, luvury Con·
domifliums,
Ocoantrom
1
Oceanview. 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms
Pnvate Balcon~s. F,... 32 Pag~
Color Yac•tton Br~tlure On
lodgmg And AHordab'- Rates . ·

KEN'S APPLIANCE

-lnllrior I Elctorlor

P1indng

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

C1U Buetoot Yacations t:$00..

.&amp;cron h . . P•l Offk•
217 E. S..oH 11.

, 992-621S
Pomeroy, Ohio

845.0837.

POMEIOY, OlltO

Myrtle Beach, SC, Room• And
EHiciancin From $45/[U .. r-Ot"
S\lmmer Pool, CCTY, • J~st
Slept From Th1 Ocean h'1 The
P1rtec1 Get1way Can Yirglni•n

3/23192Mn

3·13-92·11n

l-000:968-a988.

a..

ch, SC Luxur}
Nonh Myrtle
Condos/Homes.
Oceanlront/Oceanvft Spec iat
Am•nllles
Wllh
All
,t,c,
comodatlons . Summer Sp.clal1
From $75/0ay Free Brochura.
Call Thomas R11ny . HI00-8430645

Pro4ect Your Lo.,ad em.. Wllh A
"[)o.h,YourMtr· Living Trutt .
A¥o6d Cosily Proba1e And E• ·
penli¥1 Attomay FM. Fr ..
Recorde-d Message. C.ll 614-

COMMERCii\L nml RFSIDI:NTIAI.
FREE FSTIMi\'I"FS

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

393.0166, EI1101.

(Ho Sunday Calls)

REWARD lor lnlormaHon about
lhe duth of my Cllt, contact
CharH• Sl • yter, 304-6~-1413 .

2112192lfn

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

rotor of lho "'"'"'of No&lt;o B.

Puraon,
dtc:Grovo,
...ed, Racino,
Ill• or
28310
Applo
OH. 45771.

E. Buck,
Clerk

(6)11, 18, 25 31&lt;

have a
CHICKEN BAR-8-Q
Sunday, June 28th.
Serving Starts al 11 :00.

PUBUC HEARING

20 Yrs. bp.

dueled 11 lhe Municipal

Bulkli"ll on July 14, t992, •t
7:30p. m . All inter•tld real~
denls ar• inYiled. The
bUdget will be availabl• for
pu~lc lnap.ctlon from July
15·18, 1m allhe Municipal

Buiking.

Janice Uwton
Clerk· Treaurer
1lc

RACINE -What a gv.at money maker a business alrea ·
dy established 11 a buldtng yoo can rent or buy VIdeos,

Overbrook Center, the area's newest and finest
Skilled Nursing Facility, currently has employment
opportunities lor CERTIFIED OR TRAINED
NURSING ASSISTANTS .
Come lor a v1sil, talk to us about your experience, and we will talk to you about our wage and
benefit program which begins at $4 .60 per hour
PLUS experience compensation offered in whal is
truly a "Stale 01 The Art" Nursing Facility. II you
are Interested in becoming a part ol a responsive·
caring team of protessionals, slop by lor an interview or call us al (614) 992-6472, and let us show
you that all nursing homes are not alike.

lflw5.95
lflw6.95
lflw7.95
-9.95

OVERBROOK CENTER

All n- Mjlct 11 ,.,. 1111.

333 Page S1ree1. Middleport, Ohio 45760
EO.E.

- - uy 110 ......

'

CHESTER - Scout C.mp Rood -

~===~~~~~~~~~~====;!
I A (:J A I
.

$28,000

MIDDLEPORT - lf you want privacy near town with a
great view taen we hava the place for you . On this 6.77
BCntl you can buikJ your dream homa .
$17,500

MtODlfPORT -Mople SL - A noco homo W11h 2 bedrooms upstain, a cuW kitchen down with • dining room,
and a lov.tv tiving room . It also sits on a great comer
50x100 lot tvon has o ~111• garden spot
$11,1100

DOniE TURNER, Broker ........... ....................... 992-5692

BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................992-3056
DARUNESTEWART........................................... &amp;92-6365
SANDY BUTCHER.............................................. &amp;92-5371
SHERYL WALTERS, Cheohlre............................ 3674121
JERRY SPRADUNG ...............................f304) 882·3498

.

AUTO RENTAL, INC.
519.95 A DAY AND UP

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

\ lohih- ,'\ llouhll'll illl' 11&lt;&gt;111l' 01111l' r'

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
ISBOTER

THANA
GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

"1rrr DfWN
.:n 1ncnm.

A Olno•onco' AYUSA lnlomo- ·
liOJ\111-800-765-4963.

4

Giveaway

1 YHr Old .:·:~le Dog To
w•r To
Hom.. Call
Arler 5p m 614-441 -1'017.

Gl~..

2 dog• fM!rl German ~pherd &amp;

S.n..-, l04-895-3823.

'----

klll•ns, 2 allver &amp; whlt 1
lemaln , 1 male silver. 304-67521'10

3

4 Klllens : g WHks Otd, 2 Bt•ck
/White Twin Main, 1 Bt•ck

Cule Beagle pup, blk &amp; white
femat•, mah good rabbi! dog,
fTM to good l'lorne

ATTENTIO~
, IITrD'I"UrDIII

Excha~ga

Student?
Why
Not Sludent•
Host AnFrom 20 Oitlerent Countr._s Scandinavia
Sol:'th Amerlet., Europe, Jap.tn
Am~lng August. \'ou Can M•h ·

IFemal•, 1 Black !Whtt. Female
614:25(i..l291.

-

MIDOL£PORT - Uncoln StrMt - look at tha pnce on
this 3 bedroom. 2 ttory home on a niCe street Has matn 18nanc:o lrM siding and storago borlding.
$18,000 •

lrailor krl

Floats, Whilewat•r
Fishing
White Water lni~Uon po'
243, Glean J•an, WV 25846. ·

6-18-lln

$14,900

SYRACUSE- 4th Str•t- Need an eKtra income? You
can have it if you buy this -4 bedroom, 2 bath Duplex
kx:lted cloM to the park &amp; pool , al90 included ts an 1xtre

Refer..ct bailable

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

acr.. ol land with

nice buikJing sit11. Has pasture land a.nd wooded land.
Also Elec. &amp; watar available.

Wnita1u1ar tniOfmal ion: 1..&amp;00782-RAFT. Trips For All Group.

CALL (614) 446·9971 (KELLY)

S37 ,1100
30

5566.

614·742·2328

Syr~euse

Budget Ho•lng wNI bo con-

(6)25

Tlm1
Stwro
Units
A.rtd
CampgrotJnd Memberships. Dl•trnt Satn, Chaap 1! Worldwide
Selections Call Vec•flon Nelworll U S. And C1nad1 1-8()0..
7J6 -82~ or lll5-56fi..2203 . Fr..
Renlel lnlormatlon
305--563-

"Satl1hctltn Cuartnftt4"

Tromm Builders

"Special Care for People Who
Are Special to You·

~row31.88

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

Public Notice
The Village of

Raw•rd o "ered for infonnal!on
or return ol 2 fernele whtla
Husky puppl" 51~., from 01.1r
tum Jur"lll 21s1, 6"14-9!iJ2,5"144
0t¥id Mort
'

fREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy Fire Depl. will

C&lt;&gt;medy 1o ThriNoro.

TO

!=lower.,

7!15

111d Badges

614-992-2242
41219Vffn

Simple

From

Phot_ogr~phs,

l imO , RBCipllOrtS, Lodging. Of,
dainld Ministers, No Blood
T1S11, No Wailing 1-800-242,

Clvb Repu,

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

Lono K. -.olrood,

MIDDL£PORT- This spactous 3 bedroom home 11 just
what th• family needs. It also has a large Irving room,
mce size kitchen with a cute little nook. Has new roof,
new wiring, and even a new heat pump' JUST $23,100

Frte,

FreaAduiiTalk Une.

S.l4·92-1J.

Probolt Judgo

RACtNE - Appro.: . 60 acras Whal a ~autifu_I_Piace t_o
start a farm, just outside town, butldiOQ Stta, utll~s av~ll ,
able. 20 .c. tillable, 20 ac. pasture, and 20 ac. tlmber,bm ,
berod aboul10 yoar..go A18mfic boy lor oo~ $51,700

Toll

1-800-547-9900

PH. 614·992·5591

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Rot.~!

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Fees. CaB

(9a.m -9p.m ),

Licensed and Bonded

.......

82- Plumbing &amp; ll eatm,;

ll ou.uhold Good1
Sportm,; Good.

S68' A.nd Bankruptcy

S140' C?&gt;ver• Children, Property,

G

.1---.,.--~

vldeos, videos over 2 .000 from D1sney to Horrors or

Dolby· LabOr atones L.cen&amp;~"Q Corp Mo!t t)attery.powered nems e~Ciudt ttanenes SWJTCHABLE fOtJCH... TONEJ
PULSE phones wo•~ on bOih tone aoo pulse lrn&amp;s ThereiOI'e tn a•qs haVIng ontv pulse(~) llnM.
sl•llyse servrces req1..11nng Iones FCC rtg!IIIKtKI NOI 101' pany Of com hnes Wf! S8MCe what .,. Nl
· rou C8l1

~

14- Bw; ine.st Trai nin,t;
I;;...._ S( hool1 &amp; 1rutruct1on
Ill--- Radio, TV &amp; CB Rf'pa•r

PRICE REDUCED!

F-·

Req 27 !6 163· 50;7

~l

P.O. loa 194-WIA• Aloy
UON£, OHIO
IFor.wly Eatlo RWp lrool
Eoglool

49- For Leur:

b- Loll 11nd Fnurul
7- Lou a nd Found
ij.._ Puhl,.., Sale &amp;

Tho price has been redoo9d lo $68,900 and
Gwmtr IMlanclr-9 ol UJl to 80% of purd1ue
amourt may be posllble !Of QUallytng pet'·
son lo buy very nice home on 3Y. aaes In
Racine 4 BR, 3 b•th! . 2 garages, rented 1
BA apl Property lnck.ldes 4,800 5Q ft larm
bldg.
Galll14-992-7104tor

t.tlMy r , !; .

Aulotlllililol-.

CLINIC

48-- Equ•pm r: nl for Rent

Help WantaJ
S1tual10M WanlM

BULUTIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON

Req 24.95 163-642
~row12.95
hi s.otliot Ace.
Rejj 49.95 163-67!1
lrlw29.95

Req 14 95 163-671
LCD Tlllrlo Alni ClloL
Req. 12.95. 163-745
-CIIoL
Rejj 21 'l&gt; . 163-1105

fo r Renl

13-- lnaurance

Bl!JJ.ETI~

Happens Oily Once a
Year
Don't Miss Out
On this hlcra•• Event!

Rejj 4995 165-966

Call Your Date : Meet Someon~~
Special! Dial 1:90~737--4444 For
Datrng, Romanc. And Fun .
$139/Min. All Ut.styln. Agn

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1woo •ppolntod Admlnlat- , . . . . - - - - - - - - . : . . . - - - - - - - - ,

Re~ 199 'l&gt; 142 1360. -119.95
Pocket 5leno

..... lltsl .

I I· 12-

NDW19.95

perfect 101 surrOlll(! S)"jtems

s-~·Reg
l3 95 114-1071

Announcc m~nlJ

1--- Ci_.u ... ay
S- It apry Ad~

Wirelou SpaUr Syslem

115()

1

4 7- 'il' anlcd 10 flenl

show

KiHy Cassette

For Sale or Trade

Rates arc fo r con5('("uttvc run s, broken up days wdl be

4 5--- F'vrnu.hed !loo m •

Req 99 'l&gt; 141·3035
N... 49.95
Pocket -rolie" ..,.
antenna keeps you ll'lforl'l'lert
Req 21 'l&gt; 112 111
llow19.95

Req 19 'l&gt; 111178
Collllllio
Req 21 'l&gt; 112.998
Dot Rlllio.
Rejj 11 95 112 999

RA(INE MOWER

Fru ilfl &amp; Vcgc1able.

6

4J....- Fum • for llr:nt
44-- Aparlmenl fo r Ren l

Req 169 'l&gt; 1415017. -119.95
ll~ma Sttnn• nq..eoe,gy
l~hl

Mwlcslln t trumenlfl

PI'I.IES
&amp; 1.1\ ESTOCK

31 - Uornu for Sale
32- Mob1lc 11ome• far Salt

05/day

A Wonderful Family e.pen.nc..
Scsndlna~Lin , Europun, South
Am•rlcan,
Japan... High
School Exchange StucMnt1 lr·
riving In Aug ..!. 8.:: c m. A Horll
Fam"riAIMrican
lnlercuftur•t
Studenl Exchange. Can K.alhle
21~50:961{1 Or 1.a:&gt;O-Sibllng.

All•~

Check Your Phone Book lor the Radio Shack Store or Dealer Nearest You

·---·
--

$

Pell for Sale

F.\H\1

E~T\TE

ing. 1-800-262,5683.

mo.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

2·7-92-lln

Chaplla.

Provided.
Mo.t
Reasonabl•
Pric•. Pho4os,
Vld«&lt;ti, Mu•ic, Flowers, Umo,
Cabins. C•H Ut hlore O.Ckf·

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

985·4473
667·6_179

Wldc:ling

Enrythlng

GoU PacllagH

•

WJTtleJrphone
Rejj 19 95 111119
···9.95
Steree Cawne With J band
equaltrer and auto -stop

tile IU!tl

~

$130/day

HL\1.

~'i:!'-1

FRU UTIM.(JES

.
: 1LT:..:•:.:··:.·
-~--~~~
WIIM"

Oelm l'o&lt;let AIIIFM Radio

Req 29 'l&gt;

..,..,2·1 ...

TH \\"POHT.\TIO\

Req 499'l&gt; •16411; N.,.J99.95
I• Zoom ~ With case
and ac'essorJeS

Now8.88

N.. 28.88

$13.00

RVs ancl Vans

l'rlllill c...,.....

N.. 38.88

$ .42
$ 60

-199.95

Req 399 'l&gt; 116253

Now9.95

Now 37.88

21- llu.ineu Opport"nily
22- Mon ey 10 Loan
2l-- Profm.~ion•l Senlcea

56--575859-

charged for each day as sc paratC' ads

NDw1.88

Reg 4 95 160·1347
Executive Conhlltlnl.
Reg 9 95 N60 ·1348

$4 00
$600
$9 00

1

Req 149 95 116 159
.... 79.95
zo· Stenia tiler TV With rerTWJte

Rejj 29 95 114

WICDI,....r.

Kitchen Set.

z· LCD Color rw.

(lfogramm.able merrory

Now5.88

Over 15 Words
$ .20
$ .JO

~row49.95

Now5.88
Now5.88

Rate

MounUIIn

992·3838

Welcome Slates
$20.00

949·2671

iWLUMNH~INGSCONTlNUED

u.;mm ....... controti IJI) to
8 separiite C"0Jr4)00el1ts
Req 99 'l&gt; 115 1900

Now4.88

Now5.88

Reg 12 95 160-1303

dogot~

tuntOg and dual casselles
Req 649 95 113-1143 . .... 399.95

Req 19 '15 114 1071
, . . _ CD " - wnh

Now3.88

Relrltjoratar Pig.

ll&amp;k :;,_ 11211 wrth

Sttrel tassene w11t1 auto stop
and llo11Jy• 8 NR

Now3.88

Reg 7 95 160·1138
LCD lnvBion Force·· .
Reg 1195 160·1146
WIC SUtebaonl .
Re&lt;J 4.99 160-11913

CHECK OUT THESE
AUDIO/VIDEO VALUES

Now3.88

Now3.88

Kong fu•

II$ I _..fillet

Words
1
15
15
3
15
6
15
10
15
Monthly

A Pert.ct Wedding In Smoky

LANDCL£.ARlNG,

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Pomeroy~

UCIIIE, OH.

RATES

3 Announcements

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

KERWOOD$
HOME REPAIR
SERVICE

66 7 -Cuu lv1llt:

the D1uly Senllnrl, refldung over \~,000 hornra

~~U~s,.:~

FREE ESTIIIIATES

lolon 6 P•·
Mos10p
Ah• 6 p.-. 614-985-4110

Announcemenls

SE~~~~MS,

Mason Co., WV

Area Code 611 Area Code 611- Area (ode :l01

oo

TnbuDe

DAY BEFORE I'UBLICA TION

Monday Pa per
Tu€'Sda y Pa fX'T

CaU 992-2156

Card of Thanka
In Memonam
• A du11f1e..J advl'r ll&amp;ement

DEADLINE

tJ" PAINTING
' . &amp; co.

R£ADYUSII

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and mACKHOE WORK

992 7013
.
or
992·5553
OR TOll flUE
1 800 848 0070
• DARWIN,
· ONlO
•
7131191/lln

4-~tln

• fr ee Ada . C•veaw•y and Found ad. under I S wordt .... 11 be

Radar Detector w1th w1reless front ·

WEDNESDAY'S AD SHOULD
HAVE READ SOFT SPOTS, NOT
SPORT SPOT SHOES.

Agriculture
lime

~ ·: ~ :~=': :

WARD
EXCAVATING
H

Quality
.
PARTS
Spedallrlng
In Cu~tom
Slone ( 0•
Frame Repai 1
SIZED LIMESTONE
NEW' USED PARTS
FOR SALE
FO~ ~~mt:Es

UPCOMING ON TV
- Perot appears on CBS's
"Street Stories With Ed Bradley"
at 9 p.m. EDT Wnighl.
- Bush and his wife, Barbara, 1.
appear on ABC's " 20-20" al 10
p.m. EDT on Friday.

At Wednesday's ribbon cutting
were Paula Thal.Cher, Meigs County's economic development direcwr. several members of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce,
represenlatives of area businesses.
and shop employees, Suzanne
Richmond, Donna Bradbury.
Sharon Hudnall, Michael Van
Meter, Janet Broadwater. John Harrison, and Sam McKinney.
Refreshments were served.

• Rf'cr1~e du;;cnllnl for alit pa1d in ad~anre

RFD announces
July 4 theme

Thiny-four people attended the
recent potluck supper and fun night
activities of Star Grange.
Members were reminded of
LONG BOTTOM - Darren Pomona Grange practice on Friday
Smith will perform Sunday at 9:30 at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs
a.m. at the Mt. Olive Community Grange Hall and also of Pomona
Church in Long Bouom . Pastor Grange potluck at 6:30p.m. and
Lawrence Bush mvites the pubhc.
meeting and inspecuon at 7:30p.m.
July 3.
Tbe next regular meeting of Star
Grange was changed to July II due
to the July 4 holiday.
Star Junior Grange will hold a
bake sale July 3 at 8:30am. at the
Rutland Department Store. Protelevision si tcom "Murphy ceeds will be used to help sponsor
Brown."
Juniors to camp.
Then he drew a laugh when he
LJ,,.rl'! tlu· Cln&lt;&lt;;J/,ni •
added, ''I'm envious of Murphy
I• r1 • La~" aBrown . At least she is guaranteed
_..--'"' .
W come back next fall.''
Quayle then launched mw criucism of the media, citing a recent
-~
study by the Center for Media and
Public Affairs in Washington, D.C.
"I ' II tell you what is not a
laughing matter are the slaustics on

CHA

lr311:

engaged in a televised shouting
match over Perot's charge that negative swries about him were ~ener­
ated by a GOP "dirty Uicks' campaign. " Tbere are no dirty Uicks in
this Republican Pany," Bond said,
demandmg proof. "I'll pick my
time, I'U pick my place" w reveal
his proof, Perot shot back.

Hope Baptist Church children hold cook out

for 'Laughing at America'

4ft\

' 'We may have differences of opinion,'' he told the National Association of Manufacturers. "Bull want
you to know that I believe this
country has to produce in order to
be greaL"
- ROSS PEROT: Continued to
deny charges he had investigated
members of President Bush's fami·
ly or had set out to probe Bush's
finances and other dealings. ''I' m
not running around like Sherlock
Holmes," the likely candidate wid
NBC.

'

Quayle raps 'Sophisticated Folks'
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Vice
President Dan Quayle wid a bowling proprietors group Wednesday
that "sophisticated folks" in the
media are "laughing at America's
greamess" when they make fun of
traditional moral values.
"Our country is only as sucmg
as the family and the values they
live by," Quayle said in remarks to
the Bowling Proprietors Association of Amenca 60th annual convention.
"When the sophisticated folks
laugh at those moral values, they
are laughing at America itself,"
Quayle said. "They are laughing at
America's F.tness·"
Quayle JOked that he became a
TV critic last month, a reference to
nap over his complaints about the

By The Associated Press
Here are Wednesday's developments on the presidential campaign

owners of The Pomeroy Flower
Shop, had an official ribbon cutting
ceremony and open house at the
Buaemut Avenue shop Wednesday
afterno&lt;JD.
·

The Dally Sentlnei- Page--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Presidential campaign activities

Larry and Wendy Tucker, new

SATURDAY
CHESTER · Shade River Lodge
will hold a special meeting Saturday at 7 p.m. Work in the M.M.
degree. Refreshments will be
served.

LOGAN - District Deputies and
Past Councilors of Daughters of
RACINE- Revival at the Pente- America will have a meeting and
costal Assembly , Route 124 , picnic at Kachelmacker Park in
Racine, will be held through Sun- Logan Saturday at noon. Take a
day at 7 p.m. nightly with Rev . Jim covered dish, dririks and !able serBarrouse. Pastor William Hoback VIce.
invites the public.
POMEROY · 1972 Class of
POMEROY - Tbe Meigs Coun- Meigs High School will hold a gelty Young Democrats will meet together Saturday from 5-7 p.m. at
Thursday at at 7:30p.m. at the Car- the Senior Citizens Center in
penter's Hall in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE - The Carleton
College Board of Trustees will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m . at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. All
members urged 10 aneod.

Pomeroy Flower
Shop opens under
new ownership

Thursday, June 25, 1992

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Approvocl M-ladurocl
Housing Praduds.

2592.

'

304-ti-rs.:

Din•Uet•ble &amp; 2 eMirs. Roehr
raclln..- 814 448 6955.

B£rn:,:~

Ouabty Hi EHklency Air
CoHitloners, Heat
f1110ces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
Bennell8 Mobile Ho~oeJl~og

1391 Safford School Rd.
CaU (6141446-94

u

· Klltens niHd a good home 304 -

1 675-3801.

'

' Scrap Iron; refrlpratOJ run.
hot water tanlrt , 614,185--44ot. '
Stripped C.Uco kitten to • good

home, 304~~SwMt htl. ofd t.m.lle puppy,
.Aulhllll•n
SMpt...rcUGokltft
Rl:lrtiYW, nMda • fOOd home
814-NS-4443.
'
To Good Hom., Owner C.n No
Long Ctr• For: 1 "••r Otd Part

SiameM Cat. 614-256-1211,

�Thursday, June 25, 1992
Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

6

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Lost &amp; Found

31 Homes for Sale

FOUND IMnale Slbllrian HuP.ey,
blue •Y•J blue coUar I le••h,
304-eT!I-4•41 Hlckary Cllapol
arM.

All tlec, 3 btdroom, 2 batt.,
dining room, great room,
calhlilrel ceiling, exc cond, Appie Grove near Goodytlr plant,

~-5~80e.

FOIOnCioBlack Oooy Tlgor Striped
Y01.1ng Cat. Around Lincoln Pika
Ancl Grollam School Road, Oal-

BE
AUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Ht•oric•l ArN Corner Lot • IJ16
Main St. Pl. Pteaunt, W. Ye.
Completely Asnovtttd: 2 Full
B1ths, 3 Llrge Bldroomt, New
HVAC, New Clrpet. Available
June 15 114-441-~5.
Atntll Proper1y: houH lnd 4
mobile hom. on approxlmalely
l/2ae,.., Good tocatlon, good
condlllont 1pproxlmatelr 11DOO
per rnonln Income. Wll return
inYMiment lea thin !I years.
Poulble ownw financing. New
Haven, 304-882-2466 tnytime .

llpollo. 114-4411-3312.

Found: camer11 In Sy111cuH
Porto, ldontlly to claim,
eell 814-t12-el88 after ~Rm·
FOUND: Dog -1'1111111, omall,
long htlr, All wtMte. Brown COl·
llr. Vwy ITiendly. MhcMII Rd.
614-441-6837.
German

Found:

Shephard

Around bans Heights. 614-4462918.

LOST t.mate Blk Lab wearing
.-.d collar, coi'Mf ol At. 2 &amp;
A•ybum Ad, 304-675-7246.

At. 180 North, 3 BR, like new
condhlon, $36,000. Call for appointment &amp;l4-388-i115 Of 3888711.

Losl: D1 nv illt I t'M, Sorrow
Phllly, white blazt t.ce, 2 whho

s1oc:klngs.

Rh'ard,

614·742·

3 room houst f\.111 baHment , LDt
601150, C.mdtn Aw. tt4,000 .
304-67S.TTT1Ielvt mes11ge.

3054.

"Speak 1ng of strik 1ng out. how'd
your date go las1 n1ght? "

Yard Sale

7

---------- 1·=========:,-=====:::====1
Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

11

~ •-t
M ot B p ld 1
Al L Y''"
- •• u
EAOLINE 2• 00a n

Adwance. 0

:

:

p.m.

the dty before tM ad Is to Nn.
Sunday edition • :l :00 p.m
Frida~. Monday tditlon • 2:00
p.m. aturda y.
Cenlenllry Townhouse :? Rain?
Shine. Friday And
8· ·
Household, Air Conditiontr,
furniture, G....w1re, S1er1t0's
J-ot• Morel
H•ndm•d• A.fgh1n1 , Old Dlshu,
lotanr, Misc. Things. 2 Milas Out
Add son Pika. June 25th, 28th.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Yard Sal•, June 24-25, ~.d­
Thurs SIO Ch1ndl.r Dr, Cmdy
Jones' Houu. lntanla, girl, boy
I ledles clothing, tots more,
~111 day It rein .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
I llmlly yard aale1 children 1nd
adun clothn, baoy bed, wedding rtngs 1nd miK. Aret houM

9n

B1llly Run Road on 124 and

C:rotsro.ds.
All Yard Salel Must B• P11d In
Advance. Dudll.-.: 1:OOpm the
day beto,. the ad It to run,
Sundey edition· 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
edllion
10:00a.m.
Saturday.
June 26-27, dishes, cUf11lns,
~anhlll,
loola, lots mote,
Zuep~n
Ro.d ,
Gilmore
rHidenc4.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rldl Pearson Auction Company,
Ml lim• auctlonMr, compltlt
IUctlon
stf'\IICI.
Uc ensad
166,0hlo &amp; Wtat Vlfginia, 304·
'(73-S7B5.

9

Wanted to Buy

DOn 't Junk It! Sell U1 Your NonWorking
Majof
Appliances,
Color TV's, VCR 's, Microwavss,
.l,lr Conditioners, Elc. 614-256·
1238.
CMd rmrblu , toys, comic boo'~ I,

lanterns, pictures and tumltUta,
Osby Mat1in, 614-992·7U1.
Stendlng limber, wilt pay fair
priesa, call Jerry Runyon , 614 992-2681.
Used Mobile Home s. Call 614 446-0175.

90od

cond, op•ned
Q)- unopened, 304-882-2079
Used .. ,.,,

_,1ntad To Buy : Junk Aut os
With Or Without Mot01 s . Call
lArry lively. 814-388-9:103
Top Prien Paid : All Old U.S.
Cblnt, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop ,
151 Second Avenue, Galllpol it

We Want Your Pool! Trad.. ln Or
S.H Us Your Pool. Clll ''Tt'le
Flvoi
Man"
(ltie!1)

1-800-59-Pools

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

S350!0ay Processing
Phone Ordere! People Call Yo
.u
No E•perlenca Na c.sta f"1
)1S..73l-6062.

·AVON' ALL AREAS! Sh~re your
time with us . You' ll love the
company. 1-800-992-6356.
AUSTRALIA WANT S VOU
hc-'lenl
Pay,
Benefits ,
Tran1portation,
407 - 292 -4~7.
Er t
571
9a .m.·10p.m
Toll
Refunded
AVON ! All Areas

! Sh1rlev

Spe~~ . 304-6~1429 .

Bandt wanted, acctp«ing •';ld,IUon It pet a t1er 4:00PM lrn11 •
Sport• Lounge, Galllpolit Ferry,
l04-67~7Bil .

Covana ntTr an•~

'School • 6 Mot. OTR
"Min. Ago:r.J
'Team Pay 27-2i Csnts
"Sinsrl• Pay 19-22 C•nts
'High Mileagt Bonut Miles
' Mol1l ~yovet
'Loading !Unload ing tOaadhead
'Paid Ins.
1-800-441 -.094
CRUISE SHIP JOBS Hiring
-$21)0()1\fo
Summer
iYaar
R~nd.
Bartenders !Casino
Wortterw /Gi h Shop Sales !four
Guktet lttc . FrM lr~'olel. Hawai i
IC1 rlbt.an IBshlm11 !'E urope .
No Exp. Necnsary. 1-206-n67000 Elt1 .15iMN2. Refundable

FN
CnoiH Sh ip Jobs- Hiri ng $2000/mo. S ummer/year round
9artenderat Culno Workar st
Gin Shopf Sal../ lour Gulda at
ate. Free travel. Hawaii: Ca ribbean/ lbhamat/ Europe. No
arp MCHIIty. 1-206-736-"TDOO
Ext. t617N2. Retundabls Fee.
Delivery P..-ton Must B• N11t,
Trustworlhy, Good Wtttl Publ ic,
Able To Lift. S.tesperton, Mus t
Be Able To Deal With The
Public Able To Hi ndle With
Money'
And
Paperwork,
Prna nlable AI Al l Times, Apply
At Vl'ra Furniture, In Cenltna ry,
614--446-3158.
Dietetic Technlclt n : ChiUenglng
And Rewarding Position At
Par1 -Time Cllnrc11 Oltt Tech·
nician In Long Tern Carl. Outlet
Include: Developing Nutrllionll
A...nments And Ca re Pl1ns.
Somt Trnel M•r. Be Raqulrsd .
Potential For Fui -Time . .Apply In
P.rwon Or Send R•s um• To:
Scenic Hille Nutslng C•nter, 311
Buck Rldg• Roed, Bldwtll , OH
4561•t

-

-----

Help Wanted

11 Help Wanted
----'------I

A. Better Job, But No High
School Diploma? Finish Yours
AI Home By Mall, 2-e; WMkt,

Si9 .00

Total.

Avalllble.

P~rMnl Plan
1

O-l3B·S55l'

Columbus, FOt lnlorrnallon.
Orivars

~rienea.

.

Thursday, June 25, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1 Year

OTR

Ex·

Proll! Shari ~ , 401K,
leage, Sa fety, An
Fual
Bonuses. Run Midwast, So uth ,
Southeast
Home
Ragular.
Haartland Erpress, Inc _ 1-800441-4953.

E11y Work! Elcetlent Pay! As·
umb,. Products At HorM . Call
Toll Free, ,-800.,..67-5!&gt;66, Ext.

313.
RtiOCJII And Make Excellent
Pay! ConetrueUon Worbnl
NMdtd For All Phasa. Bonus,
Ptld Uvlng And Tra~ El:p.tn·
.... Clll Nowt 407-645--2"140 EX1 .

tlOO, 9-8 EST.

Rio Grsnde PoUce O..rtmenl
I• Accepting A.ppilcal{on• For
Part -Time Help. A~leltkm•
· f:'r
Drivers · Celadon Is Adding New Msy Be Picked Up rom t-3
Conventional Tract ors Weakly. Mondsy Thru Fridlly, AI 1'M Rio
Need Drive rs For Truckload GrandiMuntdpil Bulkllng .
Oper1tion. We OHer Exc. Traffic S.a The Country AM Get Paid
Lanes, Leu Than 11% East FO&lt; hi. Patriol Off.,-. Oullll~
Coast Frt I9 hi ' Llbo ra I G8 I unom• Truck Driver Tr1lnlng In Only
Polley, E.c. Be~llls &amp; Miln, WMkl! Clll 1 800 3881150.
Miles. 1-800-129-977'0, 24 Hrs A Financ:lal
Aaalatance
For
Oay, 7 Days A WMk (Leave
A"""'-k:a
M•ss•g• Aflsr Normal Business Ouallft.d ... ,... nit.
H
ours).
Up To 26.5 C.nts Per Mile, Plus
Drival"' Wanted. Sou thWest Benefits Over 100 New Conven!lonals On Order. Owner,
Motor Frel~ht, Inc . Star1ing Ope,.lors .80C Per Mila , No
THm Psy 2 112 Ce nt s Per Mile Uptrant F..., No Rek)eltkan ,
Medical/Life Insurance. lnad- C.U V•mon Milling C&lt;l., Inc.,
lng/Unloadlng
Pay.
SC 1
·964-1712 Or
Layover/Stop
Pay.
Satellite lluNns,
--8001-aol-682... 280.
Communications
Excellent
Benelit &amp; Bonus Package . It You Wtnllld someone to t•r down
Have 1 Year OTR Experience, old house tor rNisrial, 304-67'5Clean MVR &amp; Age 23. Ca ll 32.0.
Todaw• 1-600-321 ·20&amp;4.
WE' LL. PAY YOU To l)'pe Nllmee
Drivers Wanted. U.S. Xpreu, And Add,...• from Hornl!l
Inc. StartlnP. Team Pay 28 112 S500.00 ~ 1000. Caii1-I00-816Cent Per W111. All Conventional 16M (11.41 lllnltllyn.•) Or
Fl..t . Sat IIIli• Communic ations. Wrllt: ~ASSE · 33B, 161 S:. UnMedlcei/Ute
lntu rance. colnwey, N, Auror1, IL 60542.
layo'ltr/Breakdown Pay. J.s slg·
ned Tractors. It You H1v1 1 Yur 14
Business
OTR Experlencs. Clean MVR &amp;
Minimum Aga 23. Call Vanguard
Training
Mtnagemenl Sanict Today l 1·
800-321-2084.
Retrain
Nowi\ISoulhN.t.m
Bust._.
Cottogo,
~f"~ Vollay
OrlYit"IIOTR NHded By TLC
-4367!1
New
EqWpmsnt
Arriving Plaza. Call Todly, 6
OailrtAnnual lncrees•&amp;mi-An- Regllleratlon IV0-05-W.B.
nua
Bonusas1Pa1d
VICI·
Schools &amp;
IIoniHealth Ins. We Need Drivers 15
With 1 Year Ellp. Recsnt Driving
Instruction
Gt"'d!Grad With A Few Months
hperlence Caii1-300-73S-8524
Canlllod Englloh 6 Hillary
Drlv1r1 : Taka Charge ... or Your TMC:htr. (7·12~ Will tulot In my
CarHf And You life. Drive Fot homo. &amp;14-441-0738.
J .B. Hunt And Earn Top Pay And
Benefit s . Wt Pay For Your OTA 18
Wanted to Do
E~~:pelience Up To $0.28 Per
Mil a . 1-i00-2J B-HUNT
EOE Will Babysit In Uy Home. F.nced In ""-Y l,... RstwencM
."Subjsct To Drug Screen .
Avaliabte. Rodney A.nla. C.ll
Experienced llal bed drivers lor &amp;14-24$-5887.
lnlar.t111 operation,
approx
$00 mile radias, steady haul , Georges POI'tabfe Slwmlll, don1
home most WMkends , lop pa.,- · htul your ~s to lhe mill lull
good tquipment. Wu~l - ba 25 yrs call JOW75-1957.
of age with 3 yrs venltable OT R H1ve e.are In my home for lnexperience wlth COL li cense, VIIId, R1cine srea, tlperlenced
solid drl~lng record &amp; work his·
tory. Must pats road last and care, rNtona~ . 614--948-2381.
drug acrNn . Cell 800-228-6658 lntetfor ••t•rior' root painting,
1
tor details.
wuh aawn hau• &amp; 1,.11.,._ 12
tru a.tlmates,
Friendly Home Part ies Hu y,.. •:a:perietiCI,
304-e75-2701.
Openings For Demonstrators.
No Cul'l lnvsstm•nt No S arvlc t Ltwn Mowing, I Odd Jobs,
Charge. High Commi!lslon And RNsonatMI . 614-446-1859.
HotliSt Awards Two Catalogs,
Ovsr 600 hms. Ca ll 1--800-498- Yisa Psutt't Day c.,. Cenl..-.
Sail, aHotdable , chlldel,.. _ M-F
4875 .
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ag11 :2~10 .
Gel Hired : Easy Learn How To B•tore, after tchool . Drop-Ins
Get Employers To Ca ll You And wlkome. 614-446-8224. New In·
Givt V01.1 The Job You Wa nt ftnl Toddllf Ca,.., 614-446-6227.
Free
Results
Gua rant eed .
Recorded lnlormat 1on 317-624- Will ca,.. tor the •lderly In their
home, INOd inqulru to P. 0 .
1533.
Box 312, Pt. Pi&amp;a11nl, WV 2M50
1
GOVERMENT J OBS Now Hiring
In Your Area. Bott'l Skilled ' "a Will do any type of houR or
Unskilled . For A Currsnt List 01 oHice painting. 304-675-5330 or
Jobs And Application, Ca ll 1· 675-5947 anytime.
800-467-4567 Ext . M-128.

Financial

JOBS AVAILABLE
(Sal1ries range belwMn $50$385 WMkly) "Full or Par1-Timt.
Due lo the high cotl or factory
space,
lnt~urance,
worbr 's
compenuUon, and other comPinw ••pen... . meny compJnltt ca n sne lhounndl of
dollars In production lime wtlh
people IIHmbllng Mry simple
products at home tor lhlm.
Specl1l skills or e•P"rien« nol
nMd.d beciUM lnslruclions
and meleriats ars Mnl to you .
Aher you complete wortf., And
11 b.lc k tor payment. The mcwe
work you do, lhe mor• you 11m.
Just 20-4/5 mlnU1tt • d1y wort.ing at home ,
can Nm tome
~•ry lmptHS VI Wlgel. Kreger
Publishing hit a lltUng of 1
variety of difterenl worl lh1t
suits bolt'! men and women.
Bnt of all, you wortc when you
w•nt. (Ons company It paying
$342.00 per wMk to Ultmble
simple ptant hangers.) For mort
Information and a F~EE tisli"G
of over 60 comp11nt.• ~Mntly
hiring, wrHe to: Kreger PublishIng 30i Lothrop St ., OHMH,
Ta~nton, MA . 0278(]. K,.ger
Publishing don requl,. Jl.IKl
ror postage end hlndllng tor
lllltlng. O..ders cen not be lllled
wllhout pot11ge and handling.
Allow J..4 days .

lou

21

Business
Opportunity
INOTlCEI

OHIO VALLEY PIJBUSHING CO.
.-.commend• that you do bull""' witt'! people you know, and
NOT to send money lhrough the
m1U until 'fOU hlv. Investigated
thl oHering.

S$ 0111 Fot Oollart $$ Recei'llng
Paymsnts Of ANI Ealata? We
Psy Mors Fot Contraclt!Trutl
o..ds. Call Naw!! Skip Fou El
AI1-80C)..t37-36n.

VENDING ROUTE . Got Rich
Quick? No Wayl Bl.lt Wt H.lv. A
Good , St11dy, Affordable, Buelnns. Won ·t last 1-800.2848363.
V•ndi"G Route: Local. W• Haw
Thl N...lt Uachlnee, Ualr:lng A
Nice St..rty C.sh Income. 1aoo..gM-0354.
WoiH Tinning Bed•, New ComUnits
From
merlcai·Homl
$1W .OO. lamps, Lotions, Acceetoriea. Montt-tly Payments Low
As 1'18.00 Call Todly Hew Fr•
eotor eaoaoog. t-400-m.em.

Real Estate

Med~any Treined Pwson• with
exc ventpunc1ure skills lo com·
plett insu,.nce lllrnt frof na· 31 Homes for Sale
Uonal paramedical lirm in your
er11. Applicant must like pride 2 bedroom. 114,500. 30«75In their reliability ' aklllt, haw 8621.
an etfklent car, enjoy llnib~
hours &amp; desire to .. m part lime 2021 Marquette Ave , 5 yrs old,
lncom•. Send handwrtn., repty all brick maln1enanct frN
lo ASB Medttut, At. 3, Box 22f, home, 4 bedrooms, tmall llvi"G
room, dlnlngroomffamlly room
Rlploy, WY 28271.
comblnatiCN'I, ktlchen, uutlty
Need 2 Uc•n•d Insurance room, 111 one level, cowred
Agents: W• H1ve Mort LMdll J*lo In back, privacy line•,
Tf\an We HI~• Time To Swvlce. ganoe, lhown by 1ppcHntment
Nallonll ComJ)Iny Expand!~ . Ollly 304-4115-1231.
Tr.mendout Mtnloemenl op.
portunlty F0&lt; Tho Righi Po.-., 'NT Kelley Or., G1llipoUs, Ohio
GrHt Frtng•, $-40 000 To 45631, Telephone: 814--446-3385,
$75,000 Am Yoar POtontlat. Prk:e: W,aoo.oo. Uvlng Room,
3 a.drooms, Family Room, 1
Call : 1-800..55&amp;-6420.
And 1/2 B1throom• 1 Car
OWner Operatort To Pull 48' Garogo , Brick F""'t Whh Cedar
V1ns Throughout Ohio And Siding.
FrlnQH Of Surrounding St1t111.
Orfver Frt•ndly Frslgtlt. Home 3 bedroom - - homo
MOll Nights. Paid Permhs. Call outoldo Galllpollo chy llmHo.
FNOCh doot'l hygh IP'Pf'OX
1-800-13?-5700.
20120ft una11Khtd
IIIIIQI,
Regl.t..-ld nuru netdltd tD central 11~ gas heat, new e~r­
provid• In hams perwanal care. pets, lpplttncae, riding mower,
Aueasment and planning lot' s-45,000. tor appolnlnnt 304aduH psychlllrk: p1Uenta. Hoi 87&amp;-5201 after !f:OOPM.
to excttd 17 t-tNIWk. Salary negotiable. WY llconoo roqulrod. HouH FOf S1le: 3br, 1 Bath, AI·
PrHtera C.nler.t. 313 V1lley Itched O.r1g1, All Ea.ctrtc, Will
l&gt;rtve, Point ~Nnt, WV Consldet Rent $350/rna . 814211550. 304-17!1-23&amp;1. AA.£0E
448·1358.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

'CP

1PI Duke 14x65, 2 Bedrooms,
Fumlshtd, CA, Underpinning.
s-t ~r. 614-446-0782.
_
Sh • • .... 2bl Ll 1
b....
u z "'5x""
k • ng
Room With Exp1ndo, lichen,
Dining Room, l:lalh, CA, Toll I
El~tetric ,
Storm
Windows,
$8,500. 814-371-2464 .
~ Sch H •• II 1
2
1 ~
u z .... '"• • • ec,
bedrooms,
uc
cond,
must
be
.._... ""4..a9S-35M
mo~, ..·
18M
l4x52
Forrul
Park
d
mobilehome, 2 porches an un·
derplnnlng,
18500,
OBO.
Locatltd In Pomeroy. Mlk• Ohllnnw, Albanw. 614-698-4192.
· ·.1gst Redman Oanvlll•.t. 14~~:n,
2br, Total Electric, Htduced
Price! C.ll 614--367-0'lli Aher
5p.m.
19t1
Indies
House, 2x64,
Eltctrich 4bf, 2 Baths ; 1990
Friends lp 28x70 4tH-, 2-112
Balht, fl1~i662.

1

Repouetud Ooublawldn : 5
Available Onty $1,000 Down .
Repouet:Nd Singles: 31 Avail abla Only S500 Down With Approved Credit. C.ll 1-800-5395110.
$500 Off Purc:hne Price Ot Any
N. . Home At EIMI Homs Cen·
1«, Gmt Sellc:tlon, FrM Set-Up
And Delivery! Clll614-m-1220.
Av1111b~ Juty 1.t. 1411'70 3br
Mobile Home, On 3 Acru , a
MUtt From Town On 218. Will
Cons~er Land Contract For
Appointment : 614..J88-9fM6.

HouM trai...-, $3,500. C1ll 614·
388~696

34

Business
Buildings

Urgent W• Sell Two Quonset
Slyle Steel Buildings. Never
Er1C1ed 42 '154', 55'do·. Eu:ellant For Commarci1l Or Farm
UN. Call Mef11n Collect : 41 9659-5904.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
$2,900 lor Iota on Happy Hollow
Line-water, road &amp; electric .
$2,450 lor Clmp Still II Bns
Benet • ulllllles. 304--516-2894.

Nice mobile home IPICI I VIII·
able, call Max, 1-300--437-3233.

Rentals

6144~9~0.

1br House Fumlshtd Locat ed
At : m RNr Third AtJenue , Gallipolis. $160/Mo. $'100 Del)osil .
614-446-387'0, 614--446·1340
2
bedroom
In
Pomeroy,
$250/mo. plus utilities: deposit
snd ,.ferencn raquired . 614H2-750l.
2br Ctty Schools , $350/Mo. Plus
UtiiHitl. Reference And Otposlt .
6t4 m 4447.
Brick, 2 bedroom beside Post
Oftlce Hendsrson , WV. 304-6753331, 8 : 0~ : 00 , $275 . monCh
plus $150. deposit
Nice eHk:~ncy couagt, un ique
and bNulltul , 304-675-6042

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bedroom trailer Pt P!t, heat·
pump, new widows, doors &amp;
carpet, avsllable J uly 1, Hud ac cepl~ . 304-ti75-214S or 67573S6

2 bedroo m lra ll•r. St7Simo plus
utll itln. 614-992·1257.
2 bedroom, AC , washtr-dryer
tumlshld , $200. mo plus
utllllln, ret &amp; dep , 3CI4-'7~874
2 8R lurnlsMitd or unfurnished .
c • .,. •. 1ir. Overlooking Ohio
River, K1nau111 . Clean &amp; QUiet.
Foster's Mobile Home park. 6 14·
446-1602.
3 BR tra iler lof r•nt 6 t4-446t1n or 446-g251
4br On Cora Mill Road Off
Rt.325, No Pats, Oepos ll &amp;
Reler•nce Required . 614-2455622.
In the country, gas supplied
from well on properly, ci t.,wal.,, Columbus and Soult'lern
power, 614-985-3813
Nice 2bf, Mobile Home, 8 Miles
Down State Route 218, Releren·
en &amp; O.posll Requ ired, 614256-t251.

44

Apartment
tor Rent

1 bedroom 1p1, qood locat ion,
101 Slflh &amp; Mam St. Newly
remodeled with new appliances
Uli1111n not Included ," deposit
rsqulr.d , 304-t75-71 31 or 675-

!936.
2 Rooms I Bat h, Oown atalrs,
Clnn,
No
Pelt,
Oultt,
Reference And Deposit R•
qulrtd . 614·446 ·1Sii .
2 BR apartments In Mlddltport ,
newly remodeled , low utlll1iaa,
no pelt, $220 per month ,
da~tt requlr.d, 614-992-2381
dlyl
2bdrm. apls., total elec tric, lpplianc•• lurnlshed, laundry
room lacllilr.., cloll to school
In town . AppllcltiOnt IVIIilble
11: VUiagt Grwn Ap4 t . 149 or
calllt44112-37tt. EO!i.
BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jackson Pike
from $1iZimo, W•lk to shop &amp;
movies. Call 014-446·2568. EOH.

'

I

IT's W~AT (VEALWA¥5 ~EARD..
TIMING 15 EVER'I'TJ.lrNG ..

FREE INSTALLATION

Onty :~~=n~.:~tflAbove
Ground 19131 x4 Pool lncludH:
filter Deck, Fence, Ladde,..,
Etc. Don't Bellev•lt? Call BPI
1-800-548-1923

47 Wanted to Rent

G11 Hlltlf For In-Ground Pool.
C.ll 814-388-9711.

Nice, e~n 2 ot 3 bedroom
houtl, pr•fer private Htllng,
814-H2-2428, IN'II mtUigt lf
nOIO.Wir.

Genesis NU1rltlon Products
fNiuring Amino Acid Body
BulktlngJ welgnt lou 1nd t1t
burner rormuflt. Av1111ble axctuolvoty 11 Rtto Aid Phormacy.
The ute way lo diet.
Gold pl1ld ch1ir and couch, $75,
614-62-5815.

Merchandise

====================I
Household
Goods

19 .3 cu. fl . upright frMzer;
Msytag wringer wuhtr. G1U4&amp;4192.
30" Classic Gts Rang•, Ken-

mars Microwave, Living Room,
Fumltutt, Good To Excellent
Condition, 814--448-13U.
Air Conditioners, Re~alon,
Dryer &amp; Washer,
T.V.,
MlctoWIYI, 614--2511·1238.
In Stock.
Up. Mallohln
~mlture,
114-446-'H44.

Savlngo On All VInyl &amp; Car$5.00

GE built-In dlthwatMij__aVOCido
gretn, same •• new, Jl00. 304675-18'11.
GOOD

USED APPLIANCES
dryers, rstrlgeniOJ'I,
r1ngn . Skaggs A.pplllneet, 7tl
VIne SltNt, C1ll 614-44&amp;-73i8, 1-

Waaha~ .

Gravely riding lawn mower, 50"
cut, Ins than 3 ye•rs old, top of
tht line Grav•ly, $3500 firm, 614-

99N320.
KillS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
Floa KHiorl lor poto, homa I
ytrd. GuarantMd etfsctlval Buy
ENFORCER at : Baum True
Valuo Storo, 11 Woot Moln
Slreel, CAts1er Oh. &amp; Vlllty
Lumber &amp; Supply Corp .•. 5SS
Park Stroet, Mlddl•por1, Oh
KILlS FLEAS I
Buy ENFORCER Flu Killers for
Pttt, Home I Yard. OuarantMCI
EHac11vol Buy ENFORCER At
Browns Tru.tworthy Hardware,
Sl1t• Routt 160, Bidwell, Otllo.

Nlw horne QrOwn csbblge, $5 I
cr~te, brfng own container, 614241-4212.
New Whirlpool e/r condlllon.r,
7500 BTU, Avery Goegl"'n, 614 -

800-4H-34!19.

!192-6830.

Good Used Aelrlgsra.tor For
Sale, f100. 614-448-1756.

011..,11 2500 SP typowrttor,
Fujlt.u Dex 9 F1x, both nc
cond, 114-441-t 1511.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Complete home fumlthlngs.
Hours: Mon--Sat , f.5. fiM-4460322, J mllu out Bulavllls Rd.
Fret Delivery.

Piano;
chest
frMZer;
,..frlantor. Before 5:00 814·
448-0'725, efter 5:00 446-i'l-43 .

PICKENS FURNITURE
NewAJaed
Household tumlshlng . 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd . Pl. PIN.. nl, WV,
call 304-615-1450.
R. &amp; S . New, UHd and AnUque
furniture, Mason, WV. 30-4·7735341.
Solid Wood Glass Top CoffM
T1ble.1. l'No M1tehing End Tabtn
Twc tlriSt lamps. 614-367·13-52,
Anytlmt.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 82
Olive St., Gallipolis. Naw I UNd
furniture, he1tars, Wntem &amp;
Work boots. 614-t46-l15g_

Plnsburgh ptlnt 1111 now In
Calling polnl $8.99
gal, 11t.,lot white latel $13.911
gal. Burpee seeds 50"1. oH. Paint
Ph•, 2415 Jackson Ave, Pl. Ptl ,
304-e75-4084.

P'09'"'·

Pl1stk: And Medal Culvert 6 Inch
Thru 60 Inch In Stock . Ron
Ev1n1, J1ekson, Ohio . 1-800537-8528.
large Sldt by side refrigerator.
ANI nice. 304--67!-1084.
Signs: Por1abla lighted sign
$2111; Non-llgh1od l25i. Frao
lettera/dellvery. Plastic lelllrl
$47.50
box. 1-800-S33-34S3
1nytlrnt.

55

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-448-3158
R•nt -2..Qwn
Washer And Dryer S17.68 WMk,
Bunk Bed Complllte, $8.29
WHk , 4 Ortwlr Chellt Sl.12
WMk 1 Recliner 15.24 W"k,
Sofa And Chair $10.38 Week.
CASH
AND
CARRY
Relrigeralors St1r1lng AI 138i,
Reclinerw $149, 218 Sunk Beds,
$99, Dinette Sll Whh 4 Padd.d
Chalro 1129. OPENo Mond~V
Tt'lru S..turday aA .M. To 6P.M.
Closed On Sund1y. LOCATED: 4
MIIH Crt Route 7 On Route 141,
In Centenary, 114 MUs On Uncoln Pike.

52 Sporting Goods
Naw Shlpmtnl S..ma Prtces :
Naw SKS Rlflu, With AcceellOrill, $11!. JaMings All SIMI
380 Pistols, New $10!. Ammunition Avall1bl1 Also . 614-446-1822
KHp Trying Ws're In And Ou1
Alol, Or Stop By AI : 2310
Eulem A~enua . IOI.m. To
10p.m .
Sat of Nortt1wn1ern goll clubs.
3 metal woods, 3 PW. SISO. 304·
882·2383.
Wlnchn
·-::,:::,:-;;
, .,:::
od::c,:::,-:..,;;-;S:;;:::;
ho1gun,
Old U/11t1ry Gun , VGC, S.rfous
lnqulrtn Only. 614-245-5823.

Antiques

::----.:--;::.;_;:::"-:-""::'"'"::::'
Buy or •etl. Rl'llrlnt Anllque1,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Houn: U.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to UIO
p.m"J. _Sundliy 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614-9¥2-2528.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 lot h.trdbolrd tiding, vinyl
tiding, wroughl iron, brown
carpet,
shut1ers ,
toldlnw
1111rwty, lruek tool boll, 40
moWIIt fo r Gravtly, 3~~~
4004.

10,000 BTU Gibson •lr conditioner, Alv1rsz classic guitar,
Gamtboy with 4 ta~ , ceae,
tiOOIIa., 614-192-6111.

-:--:-c:=

18 H.P. Sears Riding Ired or, 42"
mower, blade , cM1rns , walghta.
George White , 6l4 -9i2-293i.
22,000 btu Gibson tlr cond,
1200. 30H15-4424 or 304-8822316.
Boys 20" Huffy blcyc&amp;e, hand
brake, excellent condition, $80,
614-tm-2428.

Block, brick, HWer ~pes, wlndowl, lintsls, 11c. Cl1ude Win·
ltr1, Rio Grande, OH Call 614245-5121.
STEEL BUILDINGS o FICIOfY
Olacount!r Deposit For11ets,
Oddl &amp; t.nds, Save $$$ 1,200
To 20,000 tq. ft. Llmhad Supply
Mullt Sell By 6130192. 614--446ont

56

Eaoy Glklor, Excorc~2o Now
.

Elac1ric 3 Whoolod -~~~ lndo«/0\Jt-, Now 6 Uoad. Uft
Chllra. Bowm1n'1 Homecart
11......7283, t.a00-458 8844.
Elac1ric lurnaca, 531?"0 BT~1 _3
1!2 yeara. aid, btsl on.,, l14-wol!3&amp;84 or 114-102-1534

Pets tor Sale

Groom ai'Mi Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brMds, aty~s .
l1m1 Pet Food Dealer. Jull•
Webb. Clll 614.W~ .
AKC Reglller.d 811Mtt pups, 7
weeks old, hat had flrlt shots,
utn~ nice, $125, 61~7-68!l7 or
614~7- 3856 .

AKC Reglatered Buala Pup•,
WormKI, Shots Slarled, PO.
c.u st • .,., Daw•. 814-446-4tn,
Or 814-256-1819 Anytime.
AKC
Registered
Retrelv..- puppl .. ,
p,tpetll, 614-'742·3034.

Labrador
&amp;

th~s

AKC Seottleh Tsrrler t.rnate
JMJP9ill, shota, wor~Nd, piper
tnlnedl'$250/et., 614--594-7111.
BMgl1 puppies, I mo o4d, full
btooded1_125. each, ev•nlngs attor 4 oOO •M 304-11~91 t.
Ottgonwynd Canery : CFA Peralal"'l &amp; Slamue Klnene . 614446-3844 After 7:00p.m.
El.t., Bunnlu In June, alao
good tor 4-H &amp; Folr P'olac1o.
304-675-1872 ahar 7:00PM.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Avs .
Point Plea .. nl, 304-675-2063,
full lin• Tropical llshl blrdl,
ama111111m11s and supples .
Golden Retrilover Pupe. 614-4467123.
Happy Jack Tabllcks: Prevent
Flelt Mother Halure't Way
Wllhout Pestk:kllll. Chewable &amp;
NU1rious Tablll. For Oogt &amp;
Cats. At TSC StorM.

58

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

STRAWBERRIES • Yw Pick, Wo
Plek. Con111nera
Provided.
0pon a.e ~. Sat 8-6, Ctoaad
Sunday • Ttylor'• Berry Ptteh,
Kon Rd. &amp;14-441-11112, Or &amp;t424UI78.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Concrete I
Plalllc Septic
Tanka, Jet Aera11on Ttnkt.• Aon
Evans Enterprlstl, Jackson, OH
1-400-537-0528.
DP M•onum 450 Walal'd Benc:h
WHh Wslahtt, Bn~nd ~w. 2 Ninlendo'• With Many Tapes. 814448-4441.

Building
Supplies

61 Farm Equipment
John O.ere Combine De L.anl
Mllkere Vacuum Pump 425 Gallon Milk Tonk Compt..-,
Timer
&amp; Miters. IM-24S-

152S.

Bo•.

KUBOTA

SaiM Parte Sorvlco
HURST tRACTOR SALEB
21 HP 4 WD $8!195; 20 HP 4 WD
$8,!195, Route 7 Ncoth, llo~ono.
814-374-1151

61 Farm Equipment
Ford 4000 Trsctor W'rth R•k• ,
B 1 1e~J_ Mowing MtcAin•, $5 ~00;
600 l"ord With New Bush ,og,
$3,100; 1992 ten. Stock Troller,

1

12,195. 1514-288-6!522.
New Holland hl{c ~ne, New Hoilind auper 717 orage h1rvester.
Gthl a5 grinder mlur. 3li4-2734215·
New Hol/dand h1y bll•r; Dodg•
dump truck; track loader; gas
welder. 614-367-7031.

Jutr 1 deadline, Morg•n'a FanTI
wll p1y 25 cents lor Muon
County Quota, 304-937-2018.
Sorr.ll Western Mare: 14 hands,
gentle. Broke to namns &amp; uddlo . saoo. &amp;14-367-17110.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

,.,.--,--~---;--:::::-:-=

H1y lor ule, round bales $20.
11ch, squirt btlas $2 . up . 304815-39110.

Premium Alfalta/Grest, rolls
$2.5. Morg1n Farm, Rt . 35, l04~
i37-2018.

Transportal ion

n

Autos tor Sale

ti87 CLASSIC MERCEDES 250S ~l•ctor value bttwHn
$8,000 lo $8,000. Must sail
11,500. 30H15-509t.
1974 Uncoln Mark IV, vtry good
460 e~~~ runs good, body haa
ru.t,
5-68114 .
1975 Ch•vy Nova, 66,000 1ctual
mn.. , runs good, good thape,
614·742-2648.
1978 Ford 314 ton true~ ullll1y
body, $1000; 1980 \,;utlau ,
rtbulh englns, dec•nt shape,
tl100; 1888 Hisun S.nlrs, excellent condition, $2100; 614i92-6166.

1982 Chevy Capric•, Air, Crulu,
No Ru.t, NHds Paint, 305 En·
gin•, New Exh•ust. Excellentlnltrlor, $1 ,000. 614,..41-0830
li84 Jet11 GL Diese l, 5 Speed ,
11,250; 1969 VW Bug , $650. 614 367-0106.
1985 PoniiiC 6000 ,
11.1100. 614-441.0nt.

Asking :

1881Att le 5000 S 1 Owner, Erna
Clun,
Fully
Loaded,
All
Malnten1nce, Records. 614-38887'60, 614-388-8240.
1911
Chevelte,
eulomatic,
powtr steering and brakts, aiJ,
tiOOO Urm, 614~2-2396 .
18815
Oldsmobile
Row111
Broughlm V-6, AC, PS, P8, PW,
Power S.1ts, AMIFM Stsreo
C.asetle. loaded \ All Black,
Jl,OOO Mlln. $6,100. C111 Pal
Boyer 614-446-741'9, 614-4464223.
1916 Pontiac Grend Am, very
good condition, new paint,
12700, &amp;14-1192-3883.

1987 M1zd1 RX7l.. Cruise, Air,
POWif !klnrool, 5 •pood, ~.200.
814-256-1270 .
1!l87 Monla C.rloJ. low mileage,
$8000 finn, 614·!19&lt;-3411l.

1987 Plymouth Aell1n1 , 49,000
MIIM, $2,500; 1988 Chtvy
Sprln1, 46,000 Miles, $2,500. ti14256-6f13.
1987
Plymoolh
Sundance ,
Autom1tlc, Cruise, Till , 63,000
Milas, Rtal Good Condition,
$3,200; 1986 Nitsan Pic k-Up
Good Condltlan, S2,200_ 6M256-e251.
198'7 Plymouth Turlsmo, Good
Condition,
$2,000;
1988
Plymouth
Reliant
Slatlon
W1gon, Rul Good Conhion ,
$3,600. 114-256-e25t.
1988 Olclt Toronaeo, 614-4461118&amp;, 114-446-«&lt;J'O.
1!l89 Pontiac Rreblrd Formu11 ,
rsd wfgr~y Interior, T·tops, 111
power acc:norlee, 41,000 m/111,
$8,500. 30'~75-n56 or 67S..
4636 evenings.
1992 Volvo DCO , black/ camel
INlher lnlerior, all option•,
1,114MI., riaht ~de damage,
l15,250j 11111nflnhl G-20, boiJIOI
beige IM1htr Interior, all optlorit, 11,530MI., front dlm1ge,
$!.200; 1885 Corvette, sliver/ silver l. .lher Interior, 43,4t1MI.,
mlnar right tront damegt ,
$8500; &amp;14-140-21100 "'"" 5pm,
&amp;14-1411-2644 after 5pm.
Shop Kanny'• Aulo C.nler For A
Good O.n U•ed Car, Upper
~J .. r Rood, Galllpollo, 114-44e-

llm.

72 Trucks for Sale
19e0 Lowboy trtllelr 1977 lnternatlonol troctor truck, $&amp;500 tor
both, 114-1112-2361.
tHO S/4 ton Chivy FOR PARTS,
350 mciOf, 4 opd., naw tlru
$250, 114-3117-7710.
1181 Chevy 4x4, Rldlo Stick,
Robulh Trano, 6 Hubo. S1,7V5.
&amp;14-4441-4141 After I P.M . 0..
Wookondo.

-- ·

IBWO!IdTodlr
IDBitmln

S UD U E N

I I 1 I' I'
7

8

IZI Up CioN
llll New Zono Stereo

::-~AIYIQ
Bllr Trell

IB~rHne

llll The W1llon1

.

,... .

~

35Ft. Tr1v.. T,.l1tr, Part Model,
Now AC, Now Awning, $3.11~;
•2filt. UoiOf' Homt Fully Equlp.
pod, 20,000 ....... 18,!195. 114441·1102.

01e

Home
Improvements

a

E-XCITING .

All twpes m11onry, brick, block
stone. FtM ntlmltM. 304-TI3-50S2.

(2:00)

a

BASEMENT
WATEAPROORNQ
UnconcUUonal llfllima g~ran-­
tM. Loclll rllfmnct~ turrMhed .
Frt1 esllmat... Call COUICI 1814-237~ ,
day or night.
Rogan &amp;.11rnenl Wet•proe,......
finQ.
....
Cur11t Homt lmpN~emtnls :
YNrl Experience On Okler &amp;
Newer Hamel. Aoom Addltklnll,

Roollng,
Khchenl And B1lhs. frw b-

1;30 ()) •

••

timaiMI Referenca, No Job
Too Big Or Smalll 1114-31~1 .

I 5f'RAINE0MY
AN KLE, AND I'VE

HI ,
KEVIN .

GOT' A HEAD.ALHE ...

Hlck'a Rootklg : Frtl Eltlme1Mi
Phone: 614-38l-1914.

AND I FELL AND
C LJT MY KNEE AND
MYGE!&lt;I31L DIED..

I HATE IT 'NHEN ALL I
T TCI ~y 15" HI/ KEVIN ."
I

I

Home Remodeling, Vlnyt Skll~,
And Onrhlng. )0 'f11,. Experienced. FI'M Esll rnete•t 114446.0826.

\
....

"'-~ '

BARNEY
...
I'M ALL
EARS If

Com-

THAR'S A
NEW FAMILY
M&lt;JVIN' IN
TH' HOLLER 1!

'O•u~~l 1719.
Work
61

YOU KNOW
WHAT THAT,

MEANS!'

)) BRAND
'/ NEW
&amp;DSSIP II

Ron's TV Service, spec:lalltlng
In Z.nllh 1110 Mrvlcina moM
other bra.ndt. HouN cade, aiM
oomo oppllonco _ . , .. WY
304-578-23!11 Ohio 8~46-2454 .

Will build patio COVtrl, cltcb
.c:reened rooms, put up .wl
siding Ot tr~ller tklr11ng. -i~
245-9152.

ASTRO.QRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ganonl Work, Any Klndl 114'

311-2278 Anytime.
tW RaniJir H, With Alr1 4 1:::---:-_..;.
_ _ _ __
Spooct Overdrive, $2,&amp;118 · 1o80 87
U holst
FOfd F-100 &amp; Cylinder, 4 SPMCI,
s2,ooo. tt4-#e-m7, ~~ .._'"'., Upholotortng fl'!lo·
lng lrl caunty .,.. 27 yean. Thl
1891 Ford Comanc:he ~k uf&amp; 2 best In fumltu,. UphOtlttrlng.
whMI drl~e, 3,000 mil.., Sll, o. ~mall !,4475-f'IS4 I« he M304-e7s-t7t8.

nn.

1

ery

Astro-Graph predict ions loday by mail- s io nalloy . il's necessa ry to tak e a ca\cuing $1 .25 plus a k&gt;ng. self-addressed, . rated ris k in order to advance one·s instamped envelope 10 Astro-Graph, c/o 'terests . Today. be bold In situa1ions
this newspaper . P .O . Bo)( 91428, Cleve- where boldness is required

land, OH 44101 -3428. Be sure to stale AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. II) This

level.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22) Barriers
could be removed Ieday in situations
where you prevlou~y encountered sllff
resistance. Make your moves now while
Lady Luck is busy engineering the
lormat.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) This is a good
day to inaugurate changes you reel
June 21, 1982
could be of beneflt to you, as well as Ia
those with whom you've Involved .
.Changes for the better, both socially
You're on lhe right track to success.
end financially, are strong prob8bUilles
SCORPIO (Oct. 24--Now. 221 Although
In the year ahead . However , certain
you prefer to operate Independently of

PISCES(Fob. 20-Morch 20) You could
be very fortunate today in situations

\

We
Do H1uling Anrtlml
Anyp-, No Jolt Too llg Di
Too LHUo. B o - Ctoonln&amp;

In the year ahead . Send lor Cancer's CAPRICO~N (Doc . 22-Jon. 191 Occa-

could be a very productive and reward· ing day tor you ; you're not likely lo start
lhings you don 't Intend to finish . It will
be your persistence that gives you the
edge.

Fourth and Pint
G1lllpolls, Ohio
614-448-3888

9 6 9 Trooh o Wookly Plclt-Up.
&amp;14-388-8813.

+KI
Vut nf'r .lble East-Wes t
D&lt;&gt;a ler East

illl. BeVerly Hlllt, 10210
Brandon falls tor a college
gi~ whose dod Ia develOping
a mall. IR) Stereo. C
il) MOVIE: Portly' I (A) (2 001
Nolhvllle Now Stereo.
IZI Top Renk Boxlna Junior
Welterweight bout: Rodney
Moore(30-6-2, 15 KOa) vs .
Ramon Zlvll1(18-7. tO
KOs), 10 rounds. tram
Phlladelphla Ill
18 Llrty King Uvet
llll Sclracrow lnd M,.. King

A\ "Your

, ~'Birthday

"tendshlps you'll establish might not be
lUcky for you in commercial dealings.

~ANCER

where you deal with others on a one-toone basis. Your honorable Intentions

will be per&lt;:elved, appreciated and
reciprocated .
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll II) Focus on
situations today where you have good
probabiiiUes for enh(lncing your materi-

at position. You could be lucky adding
to what you already have.
TAURU8(Aprti20-Mor 20) Without betng condesCending. you can be a very

.eHectlve proponent - not opponent others. your greatest benefits today are tor the Interests ot others today . Make
likely to come from partnerships. You things easy on yourself .

(June 21-Julr 22) Arrange- might get Involved In two or more.
GEMINI (Mir 21-.1- 20) You 're In a
BAGtn,UIIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Es- better flnanclal position at this time
Mve a strong, enterprising ally could ·oabllsh objectives today that could on- than you may realize. Takestock of your
turn oul to be e xceptionally lucky ones.
hance your material well-being. Condl- situation today; you might find appor-

i-nents you enter mto today where you

t.et your counterpart guide your endeavors . Get a jump on life by under \ landlng the influences governing you

we have ~ Don ' t send a boy to do a
man's job . ~ In a bridge sense. th1 s usu-

South

West

North

2+

r&lt;=IS-,',

4.

s houldn't ruff low
and nsk an ovcrruff when you can

tions are ripe to help you bring about
several things for which you've been

hoplng.

tune areas
overlooked .

you 've

neglected

or

E.a~ !

••

All pass

:1

Opemng lead •

ally mea n.s that you

sa fely ruff hogh. But on the deal 1n the

diagram . there is an alterna tive

Inter -

pretation . Study the hand to see tf you

can s ~t rt
South's two spades was a weak

Knowmg Eas t had to have t he dia-

mond honors for h1 s opening bld, South

jump overcall. showtng about the ie&lt;l the doamond two: three. eight.
queen . What could East r eturn ? If a di equivalent of an openmg weak twobid: a good six-card suit and some 6-10 amond, it would be mt o dummy's A-J
high-card points . North bid what he

hoped his partner could mak e Howrv er . because of h1 s heart ktn g . Norlh

might

jumped mstcad to three

have

no-trump. That contract. when played
by North . ts tmpregnabl e, wherea s
four spades can hf' beaten wtlh best
def ense

Wes t

led

the

hear t

thre€ East won

with the queen. cashed the heart ace
and exited with h1s trump. Dec la rer
won m hand . cashed the club king,
played a club to dumm y's aCt' and
ruffed the club eoght m hand

tenace. If a heart . 1t would concede a
ruff-and -discard . Either way , South very luckil y - was home .
East was understandably disappointed 1n his ~artner (f oo ly West had
put m the doamond nine l or 101. the
endplay wouldn't have worked II
dummy plays low. West can lead a
second diamond. And rf dummy covers
Wllh the jack, East can win with the
queen and safely r eturn lhe s u1t
Somet1m es you must play sec-ond
hand high.
@ 1 - lii(W. . APER (MT(-Il A.lltt

The World Almanac 00 Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

An1w1r to P,.wious Puule

37 Supporting
tower

1 North AII an·

38 Drools
4 t Boast at
burdon
42 Wane
43 Greek toller
45 Brainstorm&amp;
48 Ratflo
52 European
apple
53 What drink ·

tic bird
5 Put out or

sight
- terrier
Sac
Unusual
Gave signal
to
15 AI well
16 High nolo
t1 Agalnat

8
t2
13
14

ers say

S. Inter _ ,

16 Triple

amOni
olh1rs

20 Actro11
Oleklnaon
21 Dawn
godde11

55 Graln·
grlndlng

22 Hole
23 Informed (11.1
26 Darkroom

56 Companion

products
31 - - Lucy
33 Sound ot
hesitation

34 Comedian
Jay-

35 Fo&lt;klor tower
36 Mn. or Min

place
of aah

57 Speech

1 Shoot

Impediment
56 Cut
59 Printer 's
measures
60 Asian oxen

Maclach la n
3 Sowlet Union

DOWN

reparation

I ln11cllclde
8 Sporstly

2 Aclor -

Iabbr.)

9-

tu

10 Abomlnlblo
SROWtnlln

4 Make
5 Throaty
6 Lazily

11 - Adamo
19 Flnl-rate
(2 wdl.)

20 Rlvor lolond
22 Card ~1mo
23 Snake 1
IOund

!Ill Hom4l Firea
!Preview) ~nne glves Jesse
advice concemlng his
girttriend. Stereo. r:;l
10:00 ()) • ((II LA. lAw Benny's
ablllty to shelter a homeless
bOy lll!ll,ued In court. IAI
Stereo. 1.,1
1:30 ()) •

24 Bon••
25 C.nVIII
21 Sudden

br"ZI
28 Contlollotlon
29 Adam'•
grandton

301111ochlldton
32 ClpabJo ol

PrtrneTime Live

S'tereo. l.iL.
!I) Uvi"!! Wllh Klhr Boea
Alrtcanlzed bees, kUlera at
humans on several

your zodiac sign .
LEO (July 23--Aug. 22) Your c hances fo r
s uccess in dealings you have with impor1ant individuals are better than usual
loday . Meet the big shots on their own

Cat1~r'• Plum~Mng

RttldlnUal
« commercial
wiring, new loltV6ct or rep&amp;lrs.
Ma.ter UoenMd lfectrtclan
Ridenour Ellelrical, WV00030e.

StrMt StoiiH

(J)-

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

tlaliD

!I). u

Soptlc Tonk Pumpl"!! stiOLGollil
Co. RON EVANS ENTIRP"ISEB1
JackiOfl, OM 1-t00-63M121. "

Sow-Yac
SOnt4;
Oavlo
Ooorgoo C,..k Rd. Pa~o. '"""
plln, p4ckup. ond dollv.y. 114446.0294 .

Q

a

·

537-1528.

Whltley learns her roots
through first-hand kno~
of slavery. (R! Stereo. !;I
liD • O..aotl 1 CIIM Drexel
and Roscoe meet on the
basketball court 10 seltle a
rtvalry.(R) Stereo. C
llll You Allied lor II, Agllr1
Stereo.
1:00 ()). ((II ChHfl Stereo. Q
(JJ. , . Commllh
Tony enllste the aid at a
visiting Los Angeles
datecllve. (RI Stereo. Q
&lt;Yl &lt;Il MyaWyl Oalgllesh
learns how Sir Paul spent his
last hoii'Pt 6 at 61
Stereo .

J .W. Con.truetlon. Room . .
dlllans , Root., Decb, Sldlna
And All Typoo ot Extorlot W ,
Interior P1lntina. WUI Qlft Low
JET
Aorotlon Mot0&lt;1, ropalrod. Now
I , ..built moton In thxk, ROW
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. t-400-

101 DHI-1 WO!Id

!I).

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Wort.,

B5 General Hauling

a•TopCopoM

TIMt Slmpoono The
Slmpsons help Homer's boss
with his campaign tor
~ovemor. IRI Stereo. Q_
il) MUlder, She Wrote Q
Crook """ a....
18 PllmtNIWI Q
IIJ) Thet't My Dog Stareo.
1:05 (I) MOVIE: Bid Boyo (AI

· ~1 WfJJT OJT Wl111 A
lHEORETKAL ~KIST
LA)f IVGHT .. ---Hcw
------c:~

'

on

R•

Services

30H7!1-1788.

+ AJ I0 954
• 10 8
• j 6 2

Contmum g the t'hche th eme. toda y

undercover cop poses as a
Chlnese gang loader. Stereo.

Prowler 24 fl, Nil conttlned,
...eps e, AJC , tum~e~, TV antena, e:a:c cond , t.ndem sxle,
new spa,., 304-67!-2784.

p

By Phillip Alder

!Ill Coebr 8/low Pam,
Lance and Charmalne enlist
Clair's~l adlllca . (R)
Stereo.
(J) MDVI : One Cntzy
Sumrnet (PG) (2:00)
(I) D (JJ D Young Rklent
Teaspoon and Hickel&lt; draw
on the wisdom at an old and
Jng black man. Stereo. []
Koce to lllve the Pllnli
tereo. []
&lt;Il Fl,. the ~lm CulllJres
hove used myths and
legends as a means ol
coping with Ufe. Stereo. C

304-ln-:ma "'

84

Be 1 Bllr Sfereo.
IZI PIIA Bowling From Las

1;00 W •

'

soo-m-s5a5.
79 campers&amp;
Motor Homes

82

You go up,
he goes down

18 Croufl,.
7:35 (I) Bln!Oid ' Son

+ Q 10 7

SOUTH

lieges ll)

,._rt.,
u,..._

• KQ5 I

+J 9 61J

(J) A..,; ~tlflltlt
(I) Enlellllnmenl Tonight
Stereo. r:;l
(JJ • Ml11111'1 FomHy
101• F1mtly Fltld
IOIJeopoAtyiC

a

&gt;
&gt;

New gu t1nks, body ~. one
1on \ruck wheels, ,.cl..otl!,
floor m~-~1 etc. 0 I A AUlD,
Rtptay, wv.
o-

R•Uab.. Wallpapering,
men::: ill And Rniderl:lal.
·F,.. Eltlmates
'Eiporioocod

ALDER

EAST
+ 2
. AQ942

• 10 9 3

a

''

Bid. llconnd. lt4-245-a071.

WEST

+8
.J 76J

7:30 ~0:,..1111-f ~ of

Budatl Tnntmlulor., UMd I
rabullt, atartlng al SH· Iron!
whaol drivo llortlng 11 JMI.OO
114-24!1-51117, 114-3711-:DU.

FOIOnCiatlon

PHILLIP

7:05(1) Beverly Hutbllleo

Hercull• Trailer, In ExceUenl
Condhlonl &amp;14-388-01116.

81

• AJ B

o"l:co~Q

-

&lt;-!&gt;-t!

+A8 2

IZI tlporWCent8r

Two 1990 Ysmah• Jet Ski'a And

196i 314 ton Chevy lar
350 motor, 4 spd., new
$2.50. &amp;14-367-7760.

~ORTH

+K QHJ
• K5

~· E-lnment Tonlghl

b,ooo.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

I'

BRIDGE

0•

304-eYS-2864.

76

Q

MltrleCI ... With

AcceuorM In Stock, Factory
Traln.d Serv~ . 614·25&amp;-tMO.

6 traitor

PRIN T NUMBERE D
lfTrHS

The new mother called her
husband and held the
screaming baby to the phone.
Hours later the husband called
back and said . "I was in a
meeting and got a message
that my ---------."

ANSWERS
Jackal - Tangy - Gloat- Unused · SON CALLED
The new mother called her husband and held the
screaming baby to the phone Hours later the husband
called back and said, "I was in a meeting and got a
message that my SON CALLED ."

1:35 (J) Andy Orfffttll
r:ao
IIJ
o1 Fortune

BOATERS

boat

2

il) 8cooby Doo

~- -

ment, Good Condhlon, $3,100.
614-245-5585 After 8P.M.

Yamaha 40 hp onglno,

I I' I I 1
AGOLT

~~...
W.

1m Mercury Cougar, new par1s

1nd new llres, tslrly good
thlpe, nMds minor wor1t Make
oftef, 614-i92·238J or 614·992·
3336, mu.t sell.

--

1916 B•J• 18' Open Bow Boat,
170 HP M..-cruiur, 110, Eqloll~

Flohlng

KAJLAC

I
I=I&lt;T.:"'- '-1·=I=I :

*Ji Bortlot PGA

JZIIntltrJe
Tour

~ Nlaltl Court []
(I) Dlnllkll EdiliOn

J.S. Marine Sei'\I'ICe New M..-cury EnglnM In Stock. Parts I

L...l Ch•nce to luH tobacco

Biri'"f::Q r:;~

I'•
a•cBS-Q
illl. Andy Gtlflltlt

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

ll
k
63
-.,..,---:c:-:-v-::e:-s~to:-;:;c;:-;::-::;;:-:
Big AOHA Gelding
For Sale, 614-446-4J21:J Can After
4p.m.

I

Iii• w-

1986 Kaw. J•t Ski 650-2, Good
Condhlon, C.ll After 5p.m., 114446-7017

1o Y11r Old

8

1:30(1). IIJNBC- C
(J) Now It C.n 81 Tota
(I)D (JJ. ABC- Q_
!I) Wild Amlltcl Stereo. Q
lljlquo,. One TV Stereo.

For Sill or Trade, 198'1 Honda
Robo1250, llko - . 2.100 ""'"
11,300. or trodo tO&lt; good car of
tqu11 value, 304-77'J.6011 or
n3-9565 .

Wanted : Farm machln•ry ol 111
klndt. Got anything you want to
Nil. Clll 614-256-6040.

CLAY I . ,OLlAN - - - - - -

ltttars of tht
four tcro mb led words below to form four simple words

1:05 (J) I Love Lucy

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;;;;;;;~;;;;~~ cond,
$950. 304-57'1!1i-2903.
~~~~~~~~
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

0 Rearrange

~r

WOIO

~ aq...,. One TV Stereo.

toad

934 Honda Sabrw 70D,

....

S@~~lA-

- - - - - - ldlted

w• ••
o•
101(J)ChlrlnlnCitlraer:;l

1982 Vsmaha 750 CC, Best Of.
ler. 114-446-0182.

1

THU .. JUNE 25

'UlZLII

11

1:aow• (I)•

1877 H1riey Davklllon Sportl1er,
loti chrome, 4 o,.r, good COf'ld,
$2,300. 304-882-3453 lftlf' 4 :00.

10 111u bJ ~&lt;o~u 1nc

TIIAT OAILT

EVENINO

Motorcycles

74

Countrv Mobile Marne Parit, At.
33H., under new manag•ment.
Lole, $85; home rentals, $235;
614-092-2167
R•IIII 0t- Office Space Avtilabie
Lllay.lle Mtll. 81~222.

Cortdhlon, CaiiiM-441

•

1986 Toyol1 414, •ttended cab,
topper, n1rt ttrH on rims ••·
cellenl condition, call aft..- fipm,
614-992-!518'1.

46 Space for Rent

53

Viewin2

FN.WlOOT!

1986 Ford Ranger 4x4, 5 speed
XLT toodod, STX pkg lift kit,
neW 11m , exlr• ntce, S4,100.
304-e7S-2260.

I'

5651, Muon WV.

41 Houses tor Rent

HA~TN.l.

1i86 Bronco II, XLT, Asking:
$4,200; 198i Bronco II, XLT, A.king: $8,000. 614-441-0Tl'l.

-ping roomo whh cooking.
Aloo troller opoco. All hcok-upo.
CaH • 1 •' 2 :00 p.m., 304 -773--

I

ROOF I

$195. 30~7!1-2218 .

Furnished
Rooms

51

1'11( ()..()

The

T~levision

AT~T~~~It(,(£5 ~

18ft Blue Yamahl 400 Speei1t,
~ood condition, new tins,
~bit, chain, S100, 114-9112-

Sl1rtlng at 1120/mo. G1lll1 Hotel.

tllc cond, 3 bedrooma on
ri
1
11enc.. ,
pr vale acr., ma or
Iota of ertr111, App • Grove ,
$14,500. 304-676-2783.

~ ALOT OF SOOW &lt;ll~

1982 Ford Ecollnt Ven E-150,

Wedge Aptl, S06 Burdette Sl,
Polnf PIN lint, no pets, 1 and 2
bedrooms, 304-67~20n after
5 :00.

t2x65 On 1.625 Acrn, Addloon

14~:70

'&gt;QIIW&lt;£

304-5764037.

FumltMed Apl . 1br, $235/Mo.
lJIIIIHu Paid, 607 Seeond
Avtnue, Gallipolis. 614-446-4416
Aftsr 7p.m.
Grac1ou1 living. 1 and 2 bed·
room 1partments at Village
Maoor
and
Riverside
Apar1men11 In Middleport . From
$196 . Call614·992·7781. EOH.
Larg•
Furnished
Eftlciency
Apartment, LRJBR, Kitchen,
Dm.tts, B1th, eamral Heat, Air
Conditioning,
Rede cortt.d .
Phont1: 614-446-2602.
1:-::-::--:-:--:-;:;----,
Small lumlshad etflency 1pt,
prlv1t1, extr1. nice, good focilion. 304-675-2083 or 675-6689.

Rooma tor rent • WMir: or monlh.

Plko, Nowty Romodotod , Total
Elactric, 116,500, Nogottonablo ,
6 ~ 3088 A her &amp;p.m .
14x70 H~i'l Kerwood 3bt" UncMr
$3,500 Pending. NMds Some
Rtp.tlr. 8' 4·24S.5679.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I

3 bedroom ap.artm•nt In Middlaport, 614 _992 _3187_

45

BORN LOSER

1978 Ford Van, tiC body, tJ,500.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

,...,.enctt,

Help Wlnttd to 1111 AYOI'I Ill
ov•r aru 6l4-4~l358

44

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

being
canceled
36 Aetr"' W01t
37 AHontioft.
;eHing

occasions, progress from

sound

Moalco Into the Southwell
region at the United S~s .
II :00)
&lt;Il Undtr Fife

39 Force
40 Exlondtd
perlndo

a~• a•lloclleaol

44 A country

a ana-.
oa w011c1 N.n

48 Zoo onlnool
49 Director
Kuon
50 Hazord

45 Bolloll
48 Ruin 12 wdo.,
II.)
41 Author

Ewldance Stereo. C
illl. ltotl)wooef ~ 811011
Tho ~at names from this
summer s hottest movies are
lntervlowed. (1 ;00)
IIJ) 700 Clull Pll
Rabaf'IIOn
10:05()) Clllh of the CNtmpiono
10:30 (J) W11t vtrgintl A-'
• Touo C..woectlon
11:00()). ()) • . (JJ. tlalD

Gardner

5 I Blrkl lhrflly

~ty

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CIPf* O"'JJI!lgl'- IN tr'Mitoel from quat-=-

by ftlmout PIOPII. pall .nd pt'eMnl
&amp;ell~-~ tM clpMr MWidl tor II'IGtflaf TGCMy 'l Qlw. C ~ 0

=·

' YA A

A•

ZNNZVMFYA

a

MLZJ ' OZ

(J) , .101llolt8y111001111'1
!I)-ArHnlo HIM Stereo.

aJ croo~o
MICOyver []
IIKI ~..

53 Gord1t1ln1
Implement

P C B Z UF YV N

L Y D l

POYVWFVZNN

H K V V J

YM

yv
F H

YAA

~~~Tonight

• 8porta 'ronlghl

o..-

11:30&lt;D Dlnnll Miler
&lt;Il John McLIIfthlln'l One
on One
(J) •

Nlghtilne

C

X Z 0 0 J

NZFVHZAU .

PREVIOUS SOLUTI ON : " I love dancing . From the age of six I have not
thought of anything else." - Rudolf Nureyev

25

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 25, 1992

Your Social Security
By ED PETERSON
Social Security
rr.anager in Athens
In millions or families, both the
husband and wife now hold full ume jobs. Many or these families
are hiring household workers to
help them care for pre-school age
chihhen, or to keep up with daily
household chores.
What these increasingly typ1cal
American families may not know IS
that when they hire household help,
they are probably required to pay
Social Security taxes for the person
they employ.
"Family 'employers' may not
even realize that they are employers," says Social Security Commissioner Gwendolyn S. King. "And
even those who arc aware of that
fact may not know that their household workers are sacrificing valuab le Social Security protection
when Social Security taxes aren't

paid and when the employee's
wages aren't reported to Social
Security. These workers could lose
their ehg1btlily for survivors, disability, retirement, and Med1care
package." benef1ts-the entire
Social Security coverage
How does a family who hires
household help know if they are
considered an "employer" under
the law'
Generally, if an employer pays a
household worker $50 or more during a three-month period , that
employer must also deduct Social
Security laltes and repon the wages
to both Social Secunty and the
Internal Revenue Service.
Also, people who hire a housecleaning fum should check to make
sure that the company is meet
Social Security taxes for their
employees.
A call to any Soc1al Sccunty
responsibilities of paymg to the
Internal Revenue Service can clarify individual situations. The local
Social Security office can be
reached at 592-4448.
Why is the issue of coverage so

Jerome
Brown
killed

important for domestic workers'
All Social Security benefits are
based on a combination or how
long an individual works and the
amount or wages reponed for him .
or her by each employer. Even
part-time, seasonal, or temporary
work can increase the furure benefit amount for workers and their
families. It also may provide current insurance against loss of
income if the fatnily breadwinner is
disabled or dies before retiring.
Social Security officials note
that household workers should
make sure that they are getung
proper credit for work and that
Social Secunty taxes are paid on
their behalf. They can check their
wage records regularly by asking
the Social Security Administration
to prov1de a free Personal Earnings
and Benefit Estimate Statement
that shows year-by-year figures of
the actual wages reported to the
agency by employer.; since 195 1.
This statement also projects
what an employee's retirement
benefits may be and estimates what
Social Security benefits may be
payable to his or her family m the
event of a disabling injury or death.
To receive this Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Stale·
ment, call Social Security's toll free number. 1-800-7721213, busi ness days between 7 a.m. and 7
p.m.
"It's truly important that both
employers and employees under stand what payment of Social
Security laltcs and accurate reponing of wages mean in very personal
terms," explained Commassioner
King. "Social Security laltes do not
go mto general revenue. They go
directly to our trusl funds for use m
very speciriC programs.
"And Social Security benefits
are perhaps even more unponant to
domestic workers than to other
workers because they are so much
less likely to have a privatc pension
program or other financial
resources to draw on.
"It's not just the right thing to
do, it's the law."

the first "Batman'' movie came

out thieves have made off with
BaUnan Street Signs following the
release of the sequel, "Batman
Returns," last week.
·'Every time they put one up on
this comer, it's gone," srud Beny
Heaton. who has lived on Baunan
Street smce 1944.

$463°
13" COLOR
TV
oRemote Co1trol
•Perfed for Bedrooms

$233°

Rheumatic and Anhritic
Pain can strike the joints
1n any of the indicated
areas (ser arrows on chart)

$243

0

19" COLOR CAMCORDER

TV

•2 LUX
•8:1 ZOOM
•Vilea Ugh oCcue

•Remote Co1trol
oO.-Scree• Gro,.ks

0
$799°
$263°

0

0

Only 1 To Sell

41" Stereo Monitor, 3·1n·1
Remote
Color P.I.P.
46" Stereo Monitor, 3·1n·1
Remote
Color P.I.P.
52" Dolby Pro-logic Monitor
Color P.I.P.
Remote

$1759°
0
$1949°
0
$1969°

0

61" Dolby Pro·loglc Monitor
Color P.I.P.
Remote

SERTA
PREMIER COMFORT

::~

Fun, ea. pc.
5

108

88

5

PERFECT SLEEPER
EXQUISITE
FULL SET

QUEEN SET

$449 $559

I

SLEE,

!(r ' llP f~r:;;t t rr e o ve 'n1~ t"ll temp or ary
re ,er !rom the pa1n c l artr,r ii •S. ~ur s 1 l 1 5
rhc umai iSr'l so renf.'SS Sill i ne ss Jus t ' U ~

REG. $11.00

,-:.p,Jcelullv aga1 1 And wna ts more 11 w1ll ro c I
~ ll 1 n or sme :~ r c ()'~ • ng or bed sneet 5

Frtandty S.n~tcl
Pom•O¥". OH
Open Week Nighu ' tit 9

FREE DELIVERY
&amp; REMOVAL
OF OLD
BEDDING

9r!r~LID

A Long Bouom man is in critica l condition al Grant Medical
Center in Columbus following an
apparent armed robbery.
Howard Lawrence, owner and
operator of Lawrence Grocery on
Dewitt's Run Road in Long Bot1om was found lying on the floor of
the establiShment, bleeding from
the head, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Lawrence was found at 8:30 p.m.,
but the lime of the shooting is
unknown.

John Skmner, Thornville, said
Perry County's Peabody mine
closed down because a Michigan
power plant would not install
.\Grubbers . According to Skmner,
the ol'ffecls of the Peabody closmg
mcluded a decrease in the work
force throughout the county, lower
property laltes and less revenue for
businesses. "The consequences arc
probably not the nightmarish ones
people dreatn abou~" he said."Bul

11 is not fun ."

Skinner said he and others like
him care about the environment.
but kecpmg one's family heallhy
and stable takes top priority. "If
pecple can't eat and cannot get the
self-estcem from having a job, ...
Ihen the environment doesn't mean
a whole lo~" he said.
State Rep. Mary Abel (DAthcns) said scrubbing the Gavm
planl and closing the mines "will

I

TRACKLESS CARPET

BCI Agent John Perry IS assistRacine emergency squad and
sheriffs deputies were dispatched ing the department in the investigato the scene, and it was first tion of the incident. Soulsby
believed that Lawrence had fallen requests that any customers who
and struck his head on a box in the visited the store after 7:30 p.m.
slore. When Lawrence was talc:en to contact him so that the time of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital, how- incident can be dctcnnined.
ever, it was learned that his wallet
to
Soulsby,
According
was miSsing, and X-rays showed he Lawrence was the victim of an
had suffered a gunshot wound 10 armed robbery in 1991. At that
the head . He was later taken 10 time, Soulsby said, Lawrence
Grant Medical Center by Life attacked the shotgun-wielding robFlight.
ber, but was struck on the head.

•I DDUylon
oScoldtg01d Stain Rele011
•IHalorl

$

SALE

99

151:i1~D
2/,.A

REG. 11.00

SAXONY CARPET

SR-124 GETTING A PATCH JOB • Local
Ohio Department or Transportation workers are
busy this week and next surface patcbing State
Route 124 rrom Minersville through Racine.
Work started Thursday and will continue

IN STOCK

Green, Brow1,

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING

The Executive Committee of the
County Democratic Party
named Sue Maison to be that com-

.~lcigs

Gray

20 PAnERNS

SALE

SALE

$6t~L

$4~!rL

•7 Colan
t/l~allel Nylon

SALE

$

131:irlk

22 STYLES
ON SALE

lflfit/"~01( ~
FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
992·3671

99
2/,.

15.00

DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

SUE MAISON

CARPET

at lhe h1gh school.
The board authorized, by resolutiOn, membership in the Ohio High
Sc hool Athletic Association for the
high sc hool. It 1s agreed that the
~ast ern Local Schools w1ll conduct
1heir athletics in accordance with
the constitution, by-laws, regula tion s. interpretations and decisions
of the association. The resolution
will be in effect through the 1992·
1993 sc hool year.
The board wa1ved the second
read ing on a policy regarding
Paremal Involvement in Education
and adopted the proposed policy .
The board also waived the second
readmg of the policy regarding mdisrrict open enrollment and adopt-

ed that policy.
The board also:
- Agreed to the OAPSE Chapter
proposal to mainlatn the current
conrract withoul changes, effec uve
through Aug. 31, 1993:
- Approved Rick Saunders and
John Sheets as volunteer assiStant
rootball coaches and Denms New ·
land as volunteer football team
physician:
- Agreed to procure lhc scrv 1ces
of the Coa lition of Rural
Appalachian Schools at a COS( or
$250, approved payment of 55
cents per pupil for services and
materials provided 10 the d1stnct
from Educauonal Technology SerI:Conunucd on Pg_ J f

through most or next week. Some additional
places on Route 124 beyond Racine will also be
repaired. This is part or ODOT's regular main·
lcnance work in Meigs County. (Sentinel pboto
by Charlene Hoeflich)

mittce 's chairwoman when the
rany organized on Thursday mght.
Maison is the deputy regiStrar
for the Ohio Bureau of Motor
Veh icles. She served as chairwom an of the executive commince until
December of 1991. when Mary
Hunter was appomted to the positiOn.

SCULPTURED CARPET
•AnH Stat.

nf bands at Ohio University, perrormed for a
large crowd on Court Street Thursday evening.
The concert is sponsored by Dank One.

Maison named committee chairwoman

15.00

$16!.~.

STORE HOURS
Monday 8:30-8:00
Tuelday-Saturct.y
8:30..5:00

The Eastern Local School Board
reviewed athletic schedules for the
upcoming year, as submitted by
Superintend ent Richard Sm1th , at
thCif regular meeting on Wednes day.
Free athletic physicals hav e
been set for July 25 al 9:30a.m . at
Hoi7.Cr Clinic in Middleport. Coac h
Randy Churilla will hold football
camp on July 17 from 5 to 8 p.m. at
1h e h1gh school for grades 5-9. A
S I 0 participation fcc will be
charged, with proceeds benefiting
the Eastern Athletic Booslers. Each
participant will receive a l-shlrl.
Sm1th also reminded the board
th at the athletic boosters' Super
Weekend will be he ld June 26-28

2/,.

PORCH &amp;
PlATO TURF

have a disastrous effect, not only 10
Southeastern Ohio, but on the
whole or OhiO as well ." She Said
eliminating the coal industry in
Me1gs County would mean consid erably less tax revenue a1 both local
and state levels.
Abel sa1d keeping the Gavm
plant and the Mc1gs mmes open
will do three things for local and
StatCWidC econOmiCS.
(Conllnucd on Pg 31

Eastern board reviews athletic
schedules; resolution approved

$14:nlo

SALE

REG. $17.00

SALE

E Mat.,

I ,000 Meigs mine jobs.
Barry Redman, Point Pleasant,
W. Va., a 15-year veteran of Southern Ohio Coal, stressed the need
for scrubbers at the Gavin plant. He
said the scrubbers are necessary for
the survival of Meigs mines, and 1f
the mines closed, fatnilies like his
would be financially devastated. "I
think scrubbing Gavin and keeping
the Meigs mines open . .. is the
right way to go," he S31d.

Long Bottom man critical
after apparent armed robbery

•20 Colors
•S!oidtgord
tContinuOUI Rlomenl N~on

tOuponl Stalnmaster
•18 Colan
oShow Mork Oualilyl

Ron lid H•nn1ng. R Ph
Mon thru S8t 8 :00am tof!OOpm
SuodiiV 10 00 • m to 4·00 ~ m ,
PRESCAIPTIONS
PH 992 -29&amp;!

Miners and mine supporters tes tified at Public Utilities Commission of Ohio hearings at 3 and 6
p.m. Thursday at the Athens City
Building in Athens.
In sworn testimony at the 6 p.m.
hearing. they !Old PUCO that
scrubbing the General James M.
Gavin power plant and keeping the

Meigs mines open is vital to the
socioeconomic health of SouthcastcmOhio.
This· comes in the wake of a
lhreat by American Electric Power
10 withdraw its proposal to install
coal scrubbers at the Gavin plant. If
;1 state regulator's order remains,
'cparating Meigs County mines
lrom the plan to clean the plant,
AEP may use low -sulfur. out of
state coal, lhrearcning more Lhan

5399

SAXONY CARPET

•100" Arnoro Continuous Rlomenl Olefln
•170! 15Ft. Widths

Paifl ·Bust All ~ cre &lt;:~ m y Dalm o ~ er the aflected

AVA I LAB L~ A T

Dy JIM GLAUNER
Sentinel News Staff

GUEEII, sn

REG. $16.00

LEVEL LOOP CARPET

·~o·.....

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Sworn testimony given during PUCO hearings

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2 Section, 14 Pages 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newtoaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, June 26, 1992

SERTAPEDIC SAVOY PWS

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BUST•R 11

Vol. 43, No. 39
Copyrlghled 1992

COMMUNIVERSITY BAND • The Ohio
University Communiversity Band, under tbe
direction of Dr. Ronald P. Socciarelli, conductor

•24 Colan

·· -

9-2-9-2

Tonigtlt, mosUy clear. Low in
the mid 50s.

00

SYLVANIA PROJEC,ION ft's

said in a statement
The duchess's books about
""Budgie," a lit~e helicopter that
rushes around rescu1ng people ,
were first published in 1989 by
Si mon &amp; Schusler of New York .
The first two titles sold more
than 100,000 COpies.
The duchess separated from her
hushand, Prince Andrew, m March .

Where Arthritis Pain Strikes ...

Pick 4:

•2 Head •Remote Control
eOn·Screen Programming

Wit. Remote, 2 Styles-Pe. or Oak

At one comer, UJe villains even
made orr with the whole bat pole.
But Heaton's strongly against
renaming the street
" It had never been bothered
before, and Baonan's been popular
for years," she said. "They should
JUSt wail unul all the publicity dies
down before they put up the new
ones."
Res1dents say th e street was
named long before the Batman
characler appeared in DC's Detective Comics in May 1939. It was
probably named for Samuel Batman. ajusuce of the peace in 1837.

Read the
CLRSSIFIED RDS

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Duchess signs 'storybook' deal
LONDON (AP) - The Duchess
of York signed a deal making her
storybook creation "Budg1e the
Helicopter'' a TV star, producers
said Wednesday .
The former Sarah Ferguson,
known as "Fergie," granted
Sleepy Kids PLC an excluSive
opuon to animatc and merchandise
c hara c ters from her hooks, the
indcpcndcnl te levision producer

Pick 3:

Page4

'Batman Street' signs disappearing
DUGGER, Ind. (AP) - Where
is Baonan when you need him '
Officials, tired of replacing Batman Street Signs, are conSidering
changing the name to thwan
thieves who have mvaded this tiny
metropolis.
Just as they did in 1989 when

Ohio Lottery

Maison and her husband,
Robert, reside in Tuppers Plains.
She has served as an ex-officio
member of the executive committee since the early 1980's, and was
recently named by Ohio Dcmocrnt" Party Chairman Eugene
Brans tool to serve as an at-large
member of the Ohio Democratic
Pany Exocuuve Committee. She is
a 10-year member of the lOth DIStrict Democratic Action Club, and
" a member of Xi Gamma Epsilon
Chapter, Beta Sigma Ph1 Sorority.
She serves as secretary of the Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Dis trict.

"It's time that the people of
Meigs County see a two-pany system here," Maison said . "As
Democrats, we feel that co mpcti II On is good and healthy, and
encourages growth in the commu n 11y ."

Other officer.; named last n1ght
were: John lhle, chairman or the
central committee; Gary Ph1llips,
vice chamnan of the central committee; Connie Dodson, treasurer
or the central committee; Melody
Roberts, secrelary or both central
and executive committee; Mary
Hunter, vice chairman of the executive committee; and Jane Frymycr, IJ'easurcr of the executive committee.
Up to 10 ex-officio membe" arc
10 be appointed by Maison to the
execu tive commiuce. and Maison
reported last night that those
appointments will be forthcoming
at the committee's next meeting, on
July 16.

Riffe denies playing politics
news conference following ThursDy ROBERT E. MILLER
day's
House session.
Associated Press Writer
Voinovich
criticized Rille a day
COLUMBUS - Speaker Vern
R1ffe denied charges by Gov. earlier after his decision to oppose
George Voinovich that House - and effectively, kill - the govDemocrats to~ his increases . crnor's plan to raise taxes on
in "sin taJtcs' to curry favor with cigarettes, beer, wine and whisky
voters in the November elections.
to help deal with a projected $520
Riffe, D·Wheelersburg, said he million budget defiC1l
and his caucus opposed increases
As a result, the Republican gov·
1n alcohol and tobacco taxes ernor said he plans to go forward
because they were not convinced of with an earlier plan to order $370
the need at this time for any tax million in spending cuiS at the stan
increases.
or the new fiscal year Wednesday.
"I've never played politics with He is counting on an improved
the budget," he S81d at an informal economy to make up $1 SO million
.I

or the shortfall.
Riffe earlier raised questions
about the amount or the governor's
cuts; specifically, whether they
might exceed the amount allowed
by law .
He said Thursday he still
doesn't have an answer to that
question.
Riffe said he has a memo from
the Legislative Service Commission that says $370 million in cuts
may be excessive. He said the 2week-old
memo
contends
Voinovich can only cut the diller·
(Continued on Pg 3)

HONORED· Jean Roush, f'ront left, was honored ror her years or service to the Meigs County Public Library with the presentation or a
plaque by the board or trustees or the library.
Presenting Mrs. Roush her plaque is Pat Holter,

president of the board. In back, 1-r, are board
members, Cbarles Blakeslee, Iva Sisson, Pat
Mills and Don MuUen . Absent for the photo was
hoard member, Wanda Eblin.

Sludge from East could come to Ohio
COLUMBUS - New York and
New Jersey arc considering Ohio
land rills as site.' for dumpmg some
or their sludge, officials say.
Daniel Stohs, an actomey representing the Athens-Hocking Reclamation Center, a landflll near Nelsonville in southeast Ohio, said the
center has laken calls from New
York sludge brokers.
Stohs sa id the landfill can
accept 450 tons of sludge a day.
The brokers want to ship thousands
of tons a day, he said.
Jay Roberts, vice president of
Mid-American Waste Systems,
said the company has received
1nquiries about whether the non hazardous sludge can be dumped in

•

l11&lt; company's Ohio Iandf1lls. He
sa1d the company has a policy preventing acceptance or out-of-state
sludge at the sites.
New York City and eight other
~ew York and New Jersey communities that surround the city are
under federal court and federal
Environmental Protection Agency
orders to stop dumping sludge in
1he Atlantic Ocean by July I.
Mosl communities surrounding
New York arc trying to gel out-ofstate landfills to accept their
sludge, said Rich Cahill, a
spokesman for the EPA's New
York regwnal office.
Cahill said the dumping created
a rive -square-mile "dead sea" off

the coast of New York.
" It was a very cheap method of
disposal that was very detrimental
to the environment,'· he said.
Ian Michaels, a spokesman for
the New York City Department of
Environmental Services, said the
city intends to build a compost
plant to handle sludge, but it will
take at least six years before the
plant can start operations.
In the meanume, most of the
city 's sludge will be sent out of
New York, mainly as fertilizer or
ground cover. Some of it may be
sent to landfills, he said.
Much of the sludge is being sent
to Illinois, Colorado, Texas and
Virginia, he said.

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