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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Elder Alert to be introduced New arrival
Nine-year-old banker
dispenses financial advice
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Dressed an adult co-stgner) and letling
in a suit and tie, 9-year-old Andrew paper earners and other kids with
J. Burns dispenses fmancial advice jobs deposit money in zipper bags
to children who visit hi s father's the way businesses do.
bank.
A teller window is low enough
"I ' m a kid. I understand bank· for children to reach and a ramp is
ing," Andrew said. " I know what being built for kids to stand on at
their needs are."
the regular windows.
Andrew is president of the Children's Bank at Enterprise Bank, a
Andrew. whose father, Randal J.
paid position he not only applied Bums, opened Enterprise on April
for but dreamed up.
10, comes in two or three times a
The children's bank itself was week, giving tours and meeting at
thought up by Andrew, who se his desk with kids who want to
innovations include making loans open accounts or transact other
of up to $100 .to youngsters (with business.

The Elder Alen Program will be
introduced at the Meigs County
Fair by the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center.
The program, which is being
sponsored as a community service
by Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, is a special free program designed to ensure the safety
of community senior citizens in the
case of a medical emergency or
fire.
The Elder Alert Program
involves providing interested
senior citizens with a complimentary Elder Alert Protection System
which includes a special emergency tube, an emergency medical
information sheet and an elder alen
protection system sticker. After
being completely filled out with all

pertinent information, the medical
mfonnation sheet is placed inside
the Elder Alen tube, which is to be
kept inside of the person's refrigerator. The protection system sticker
should then be placed on the front
of the refrigerator door.
In case of a medical emergency
or ftre, the sticker on the door will
alert emergency personnel that
important medical mformation can
be found in the tube in the refrigerator.
Senior citizens interested in the
program are encouraged to visit the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita tion Center's booth at the Meigs
County Fair. The complimentary
Elder Alen kits will be available at
the booth. For further information
contact Pam Triplett at 992-6606.

Umpires sue
Piniella for
$5 million

Robert and Tracy (Manley)
Lawson, Middlepon, are announcing the birth of a daughter,
Stephanie Nicole Lawson, on June
27 at Marietta Memorial Hospital.
The infant weighed six pounds
and was I8 and one-half inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Roben 0. Manley, Middleport. Maternal great grandparents are Rev. and Mrs. Odell Manley, Middlepon; Leona Eblin, Darwin: and Wendell Eblin, Middleport. Maternal great-great grandmother is Francis Davidson, Harrisonville.
STEPHANIE LAWSON
Paternal grandparents are Robert
Lawson Sr. , Reedsville, and W.Va. Paternal great grandmother,
Shirley Dunlap, Williamstown, Hattie Sellers. Pomeroy.

Pick 3:563
Pick 4: 6166
Cards : 5-H, A-C
A-D;lO-S
Super Lotto:
2-7-11-18-28-38
Kicker: 043498

PageS

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 cents

Vol. 42, No. 67
Copyrighted 1991

A Mulllmedia Inc. Newspaper

COPYRIGHT 1991 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. AUG 4 T~ROUGH SATURDAY. AUG. 10, 1991, IN Pomeroy

Panel studies AEP's
clean air strategy

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVE~TISm

mM POLICY- Each of these advenised items is required to be readily availab~ for
sale '" each Kroger Store, eJ~cept as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
w~ l offer you your choice of a comparable item when availabte
~efl~cting tho same savings or a raincheck which will entide you to purch~se the advertiseei
~tern at the advertised price within 30 days . Only one 'f'Bndor coupon will be accepted per

advenised item, we
11em purchased.

.

American Elecmc Power's
clean air plan, which could decide
the fate of Ohio's coal industry. is
under final scrutiny by the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio .
according to Wednesday's Columbus DispaiCh.
The commission completed its
final hearing yesterday on AEP' s
plan to comply with the federal
Clean Air Act of 1990.
The plan does not chan a definite course of action, but it leans
toward switching from high-sulfur
Ohio coal to low-sulfur out-of-state
coal, which could cost 1,200 Ohio
miners their jobs.
According to Dispatch statehouse reporter Alan Johnson, the
commission will accept writlen
briefs from AEP and other interested parties before issuing a decision,
probably in late September. The
commission held public hearings
on the clean air plan last month in
Columbus, Canton and Athens.
They were followed by seven days
of hearing evidence that focused on
the technical aspects.

Famous Westside
Jumbo 12 Size

California
Cantaloupe...""~~·
Each
FIRST TIME EXtnBITOR · Debbie Burke
or Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, registered ber I 4
entries in the Meigs County Fair photography
open class competition Wednesday afternoon.
Accepting ber entries here is Muriel Bradford,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Undercs~ouod water sources are
beginning to show tile·effects of the
drought, a state drought assessment
committee has been told.
But David Cashell of the Division of Water in the Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources said
Wednesday that the underground
aquifers are at adequate levels.
"We're not running out of
groundwater by any means at this
time. We're still about a quaner to
2 feet above where we were in
1988 at this time," Cashell said.
"Normally
groundwater
declines during this time of year
anyway. We've seen roughly two
or three times the normal rate of
decline than we would normally
see. That's just what happens when
il's dry, and thai's why we monitor
iL"
Cashell said about 42 percent of
Ohioans rely on groundwater for
their supply, and about 80 percent
of the public water supplies rely on
groundwater.
''So more people use surface
water, but more public supplies, a
lot of the smaller public supplies,
depend on groundwater. So it is a
very important source in our
state," he said.
The state needs 6 to 12 inches of
rain to end the drought but is
unlikely to get it anytime soon, the
drought assessment panel was told.
Meteorologist Lewis Ramey of
the National Weather Service in
Columbus said rainfall was expected to average near or slightly below
normal statewide in August. He
said precipitation normally averages about 4 inches during the
month.
"I personally feel that we'll
continue to (have) what we're having now. I don't sec a lot," Ramey
said.
He recalled that the drought of
1988 ended after fre{(uent rains in
July.
"We could bust out preuy fast,
but at the present time I don't see
that happening," Ramey said.
The drought in six of the state's

Young
Turkey Breast . .
(Limit 2 With Additional Purchase)
A

Holly rms
Pick of the Chix
Pound

c
RADED
GRAIN FED BEEF

FA
FROZEN DESSERT,
SUGAR FREE ICE CREAM OR

Cube
Steak

Kroger ·Deluxe
Ice Cream

Pound

%-Gallon

88

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
AMERICAN OR MUSTARD POTATO SALAD
OR SWEET OR CREAMY COLE SLAW

Summer
Salad Sale

who returned to assist in the fair board orfice
this year after retiring rrom the position or secretary several years ago. The deadline to enter
tbe open classes is 4 p.m. today (Thursday).

Eighteen witnesses from AEP
plus representatives of the Ohio
Consumers· Counsel, the United
Mine Workers, the Sierra Club and
other groups testified.
The company has not determined when it will make a final
decision on its clean air plan, AEP
spokeswoman Cathy Ferrari said.
The five-m ember commission
will decide whether AEP' s plan is
prudent. The utility, which serves
customers in seven states, must
reduce its sulfur dioxide emissions
dramatically 10 meet strict requirements of the Clean Atr Act, beginning in 1995.
AEP's sev en-state clean air
compliance plan is expected to cost
$4 billion , but the focus in Ohio is
on the Gavin plant in Cheshire.
Gavin, as AEP's dirtiest plant, will
require SI billion in improvements
to meet clean air requirement s,
company officials have said.
AEP is considering switching
fuels even though that would close
the company's coal mines in Meigs

County.
The alternative is putting m aircleaning scrubbers. which would
allow Gavm to reduce sulfur dioxide em1ssions while continumg to
burn Ohio coal. However, adding
scrubbers to Gavin would cost
$795 million compared to a $200
million price tag for switching to
out of state coal, AEP officials say.
State officials tried to innuence
AEP' s course of action by enacting
a law that will give a $1 -a-ton tax
break to utilities that use scrubbers
and bum Ohio coal. The law will
also expedite the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency process
for granting permits to dispose of
scrubber sludge and offer low-cost
financing for scrubber installation.
Although AEP is keeping its
options open, a top AEP official
said shortly after Senate Bill 143
wa s sign ed by Gov . George V.
Voinovich that the law provides
few incentives that would make a
difference in the company 's deci sion.

Underground water sources Commission reviews letter from
state agency on future funding
showing effects of drought

U.S. Grade A
Honeysuckle White
Frozen (4.. 7.. fb. Avg.)

U.S.

Partly cloudy. Low tonight
In mid 60s. Thursday , high In
mid 80s.

ASSORTED VARIETIES
GOLDEN CORN, SWEET PEAS OR

Del Monte
Green Beans

78

4-0Z. AEROSOL, 2-0Z. SOLID OR

Degree
Anti-Perspirant
1.HL Roll-On

78

ten climatic regions is rated as
eftreme - the worst rating on the
index used by the weather service
to measure dry spells. Three other
regions are classified as severe,
while southwestern counties
remain mild.
Three state parks have restricted
open fires as a result of dry grass
and woodlands.
No open fires are perm i ued at
Nelson Kennedy Ledges in Ponage
County, and only charcoal frres are
allowed in campgrounds at the
Geneva and Maumee Bay state
parks. Restrictions are being considered for Delaware state park.
The Ohio Environmental Pro-

The 1991 Charleston, wv
sternvwheeiRegatta*
sweepstakes Package ·For 2 Includes:
•Hotel Accommodations For 1 Night.
•A Ride on A sternwneeler
·
•VIP seating &amp; Backstage Passes To The
Saturday Kroger concert.

24-Pak Case
12-oz. Cans

S596

Shannon L. Scott. Middleport, received minor injuries in a
motorcycle accident on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Wednesday afternoon.
.
The youth was taken by the Pomeroy emergency squad 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was treated and released.
Pomeroy police reponed that Scott was traveling nonhwest on
Butternut when he struck a storm sewer drain cover. lost control and
the motorcycle tipped over. The accident occurred at 2:49p.m.

Henry joins Bank One staff
Bank One, Athens announced today that Roben M. Henry has
joined the bank as business development orficer. His responsibiliContinued on page 3
·

One
"NO

.,

"The reimbursement ponion of
my budg~t has been substantially
·Continued on page 3

State apportionment
board will meet Aug. 22
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovi ch set
Aug. 22 as the date for the first
meeting of the newly seated
state Apportionment Board to
begin its task of redrawing the
state's legislative districts.
The little-known board,
which normally meets every 10
years as required by the Ohio
Constitution, has the authority
to help determine whether
Repubhcans or Democrats will
dominate the 33-member Senate
and 99-member House for the
next decade.
Republicans will have a 3-2
majority, which usually seeks to
gerrymander - manipulate
boundaries to shape districts
favorable 10 its own candidates.

But federal court dec1sions
now set criteria that not only
requires districts vinuall y equal
in population but prohibits
effons to weaken minority voting strength or the needless separation of local entities such as
counties, cities and townships.
The board meets after each
federal Census to establish districts for the next decade which
stand, unless thrown out by the
couns to failing to meet the criteria.
Democrats controlled the
board in 1971 and 1981, creating districts that enabled them to
control the House since 1972.
However, Senate control has
seesawed, in pan because larger
districts are harder to manipulate.

-HIGHEST HONOR AWARDED· American Alloys, Inc., of
New Haven, W.Va., received the Q-1 Quality Supplier Award on
Wednesday morning. The award was presented by B.N. Landers,
left, General Manufacturing Manager of the Casting Division of
Ford Motor Company. Accepting the plaque on behalf or the com·
paoy is W .D. Beard, President and CEO or American Alloys, Inc.
Beard caUed tbe award the highest honor that could be received In
terms or quality. (See additional pboto on page 3)

Youth hurt in motorcycle mishap
Register To Win A Trip To

make up for the full reimbursement
bein~ paid for the next two quarters.'

UNJTED

....---Local briefs------.
v·

By BRIAN J, REED
tection Agency said the number of
Sentiq~ News Staff
water systems that have instituted
The Meigf~outity Commis usage restrictions to conserve sup- · sioners reviewed a letter from the
plies had risen to 24 from 19 a Ohio Public Defender's Office
week ago. But most were sparked regarding future funding when they
by distribution rather than supply met on Wednesday in regular sesshonages.
sion.
Agriculture continues to be
The letter, dated August 1, was
hardest hit by the dro~ght, but con- addressed to county commissioners
ditions vary.
across Ohio, and urges those coun"Although conditions are dry ties currently without a public
throughout Ohio and agriculture defender to appoint one due to
will be hun in general, it's still too forthcoming financial conditions
hard to make general statements within the state public defender's
about the entire slate,"' the Ohio office.
Cooperative Extension Service said
Currently, the state reimburses
in a repon to its county agenL~.
counties for indigent counsel fees
at 50 percent. However, Ohio Public Defender Randall M. Dana
advises counties that that reim bursement rate may be affected by
the state budget recently signed by
Ohio Governor George Voinovich.
'"The General Assembly has
funded my reimbursement accounts
at a reduced level, one which will
not allow for 50 percent reimbursement throughout the year," Dana
explained. "I have decided to keep
thts level at 50 percent until the end
of this calendar year. The first two
quarters of next year will be at a
much reduced level in order to

House Bill339
includes rural
• •

prOVlSlOnS
"The Conference Committee
Repon on the guidelines for state
and local government participation
in the fmancing of low and moderate income ·housing passed by the
Ohio House of Representatives
Wednesday includes important provisions for rural areas and small
cities," reponed State Representative Mary Abel (D-Athens) today.
House Bill 339 contains a setaside in the newly created Housing
Trust Fund that re{(uires at least 35
Continued on page 3
--1-

WORK CREW VISITS • Tbis work crew
consisting of youth from IIUnols and Tennessee
was bard at work at the Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative Parish on Tuesday, completing
work startt!d by another work camp from Union
County. Consisting of United Methodists and
youth of other faiths, the group is a part of a 32member leaDI working In the Athens/Meigs area
this week. Work crew members and local pas-----·-

·--

ton and laity are, left to right, Scott Medin, Jen·
nifer West and Rev. Florence Smith
(Snowville/Pearl Chapel Cbarge). Second row,
leO to rlgbt, are Rev. Kenny Baker (Southern
Cluster 0), Sam Brown or Flatwoods UMC near
Pomeroy, Bill Wertz, David Devoer, Catherine
McBride, and Rev. Kitty Ganzel, Pastor or the .
Fint United Methodist Church in J&gt;ark Ridge,

01.

---·-·- - - - - -- - - - - - -- - ---&gt;--

--·-·- -- ~..J-1

�Thursday, August 8, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DE VOTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON A R~

t,~MULTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and lhe American Newspaper Publishers Association.
1

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Real estate firms
await 'good old days'
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP BusiDess Analyst

NEW YORK - Confident they have the ideal concept, managers of real estate companies seem to await impatiently lhe market's return to normalcy, to lhe good old days when maldng a buck
was routine.
"They've got along wait," says Allen Cymrot
Once, real estate cycles were· set: market bottom, period of
· change, bull martel, and lhen a reaction 10 the bull market Each
cycle averaged two years. "You bought at 1he botiOIII, held six or
seven years and did well,'' he said.
Now lhe bull cycle is gone, and "real estate is just anotlter busi. ness to be run with sound principles and good management ''
Previous bull markets, he said, originated in shortages, some
: extreme, but there are none now because of overbuilding. Equally
important, 1he industry now has the ability to bring units to market
quickly.
. . The set ways of the industry - owners, management companies,
:' : ·developers, lenders and brokers - amazes Cymrot, who sees
:-: .opportunities for his Cymrot Realty Advisors, based in Los Altos
·; • Hills, Calif.
:. : · · Cymrot believes he can use his experience to help resb'Ucture ill
·: ·: companies and recently has been worlring wilh a major banking
house and forming an advisory board of experienced real estate talent.
:. • To begin with, ill companies must sit down and "decomponen;: :tize" - and lhen they must establish a philosq&gt;hy and a business
-; :plan, a marketing plan and a budget- and be accountable for it
··: . To decomponentize, he says, is to evaluate every item of opera·: · lions in six key areas: personnel, expenses and income, every line of
:: : the profit-and-loss statement, every asset, every liability, and every
: : olher general ledger item.
:. • "A ~blem with real estate companies is lhat lhey have a single
··: :_focus,' he said. "They need to discover lhemselves and their
·~ ·opportunities."
·
:
-Owners: There aJe no bailouts, so speculation must be minimized. "You buy things lhat are happerung, that are in place and
working," rather than buying on a promise of lhings to happen in
the future.
-Property management: The ttaditional managing fee is a percent of income collected. That isn't property management, says
Cymrot, since incomes of some hired managers rise while the values of buildings fall.
Malee managers responsible for the entire management of a
building, for maintaining its value ralher lhan simply its rents. Current systems, he says, don't always allow for sound management.
-Developer. Over the years, many developers have created
excellent controls on lhe collection of money and how to handle
financial floats that have value to olher companies.
In addition, as may be revealed through decomponentizing, some
: •; developers have lhe ability to spin off separate executive property
· ·• -management fmns.
;.
-Brokers. Though the market goes lhrough different cycles,
broker slllllCgies usually stay lhe same, says Cymrot
"In good times they talce responsibtlity for good prices and
. • quiclc sales," he says. "In bad times lhey blame lhe government,
.: - • and their advice to sellers is to lower 1he selling price in order to get
:;: a sale."
:-~
To him, that isn't marketing. "Brokers should be able to respond
to 1he question: Besides reducing prices, what will you do for me?"
":
It means, among Olher things, determining why a house exists. If
~; . it has many bedrooms, lhen it exists for a large family, and so you
~ . market to large families. You aim a rifle rather lhan a shotgun at the
.-( · market.
;:.. · . - Lenders. Over-reliance on poor appraisals caused many lender
-:: problems. Values mean notlting, for instance, if there is no liquidity.
' Lenders must use them only 115 guideliness, and go much furlher to
determine real value.
•

&gt;

=Letters to the editor
Appreciates support
- • Dear Editor:

.
On behalf of the Eastern Athlet:
: ic Boosters I would like to thanlc all
:: the people who donated lheir time
in making 1he Eastern Alhletic Golf
.. Scramble and Super Weelcend a big
• success. A special 1hanlcs to all lhe
•

..•. Dear Editor:

~

•
•
;
•

::
~

'

"

local merchants who donated prizes
and who gave other donations to
these events. Wilhout your help we
could not be successful in raising
lhe money for our sports programs.
Sandra J. Koenig
Secretary Athletic Boosters

Extends special thanks

ball rims for our outside facility. A
On behalf of the Athletic special thanlc you to lhe following
Department. student athletes and individuals for all lheir time spent
cheerleaders, I would like to extend installing our new football scorea very special thanlc you to the fol- board: Roger Hoffman, Gordon
lowing individuals for their help Holter, Bill Buckley, Terry Stethwith the athletic physicals at East- em, Leonard and Sandy Koenig
ern High School: Dr. Wilma Mans- and Jeff Parlcer.
To each of you we appreciate
field, Dr. James Witherell, Debbie
Finlaw, Melanie Stelhem, Kirk and your help.
Pamela A. Douthitt·
Karla Clievalier, Linda VanlnWaAthletic Director
.gen and Deryl and Doris Well.
Eastern High School
I would also lilce to thank Tim
Dawn for donaling 1he new basket-

Today inBy Tbehistory
Associated Press
Today in HisiOrY
Today is Th..-sday; Aug. 8, the 220th day of 1991. There are 145 days
left in the year.
Today's fijghlight in~:
On Aug. 8, 1974, faced Wlt!J further eroding support because of the
Watergate scandal, President Nu:on announced·in a nationally broadcast
address that he would resign his office 1!1 noon the following day.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 8, 1991

Military ,.co~cutting
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon is struggling to cut costs in
lhe post-Cold War era by closing
military bases and cutting jobs. But
a multimillion-dollar operation,
which has almost nothin~ to do
except tend obsolete equtpment,
has been saved from the ax.
The treatment of this dumping
ground for outdated machinery
shows lhat the Pentagon is willing
to make dozens of communities
around the country suffer by closing their hometown military bases,
but isn't willing to cut obvious fat
The agency that won't die is the
Defense Industrial Plant Equipment
Center in Memphis. It was created
in 1963 to manage lhe stoclcpile of
machine tools from all branches of
the military. Obsolete and surplus
low -tech equipment is sent to
DIPEC to be kept in reserve just in
case anyone wants it. Hardly anyone in lhe new, high-tech military
ever does. But that hasn 't stopped
the Pentagon· from spending millions of dollars a year on 545
employees who repair and keep
watch over lhe stoclcpile, occasionally auctioning off pteces or giving
them to vocational schools.

misses more than hits

Now the Pentat~on brass has
ruled that DIPEC wtll stay in operation, despite a r eport from lhree
branches of the military lhat says
they could save $20.5' million a
year by closing it. There is some
evidence that 1he person who saved
DIPEC from the ax may never even
have seen that money -saving
report.
Last year, some Pentagon officials decided it was time to rethink
DIPEC's mission and they came to
lhe logical conclusion - it had no
mission . The Army did a joint
study with the Defense Logistics
Agency - DIPEC's parent and lhe
supply store for all the services.
But after that study was over, DLA
wasn't convinced , as was the
Army, tllat DIPEC' s mission was
as obsolete as its equipment. So,
DLA did anolher study.
The Army officials saw the
handwriting on the wall and figured DLA would recommend lhe
preservation of 1he agency. So, the
Army, Air Force and Marines
experts wrote their own report that
concluded that DIPEC's number
was up . They said the Defense
Department could save more 1han

$100 million over the next five
years by closing DIPEC and letting
each of lhe individual services handle lheir own equipment
As e~pected, DLA issued its
report recommending that DIPEC
not only be preserved, but that 1ts
duties be expanded. That report
claims lhat it ''represents the joint
efforts of the military services.' '
and it doesn't even mention the
olher report or the recommendation
to eliminate DIPEC. Assistant Secretary of Defense Colin McMillan
ruled in favor of sparing DIPEC.
But sources close to lhe debate
told our reporter Larry Mastbaum
that McMillan never saw the dissenting report, or the statisti cs
about how much money could be
saved by closing the obsolete agency. A spokesman for DIPEC told
us that the report was sent to the
Pentagon, but McMillan's office
refused to tell us whether it ever
got to him. In fact, McMillan was
unwilling to tallc to us at all about
the reasoning behind saving
DIPEC.
The "new and improved "
DIPEC will have total centralized
control over . procurement of

Wl'fe.N Yoo·ve FiNiSHeD .

f\'€Di$C:~itl11 V0t.1~ MaliNess.
CoULD YoU Give Me

a HatlD ;~ Hel\'e!

...

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
machine tools for all lhe services,
meaning all branches of the mili tary will have to buy throu gh
DIPEC whether they like it or not.
And. under the new arrangement,
DIPEC will have even less equipment to' watch over. Under the old
system, DIPEC was responsible for
equipment worlh more lhan $5,000.
Under lhe new system , the minimum value of equipment under
DIPEC's jurisdiction will be
$15,000, which wiD cut lhe currem
stockpile from about 7,000 pieces
to about 4,000.
Less than 10 years ago,
DIPEC 's warehouses had a stockpile of more than 28,000 pieces of
equipment. Some of it dates back
to World War II and is still sitting
around waiting for someone to
need it. In the meantime, it is getting the best care lhe taxpayers can
provide.
EVERYTHING TO LOSE One of lhe biggest lhreats to refonn
in the Soviet Union is the panic
that is setting in among 1he former
communist elite. They once
enjoyed a life of perks and privileges. Now they're scrambling to
secure whatever material goods
they can in anticipation of Gorbachev breaking off from party rule
entirely. Among those with the
most to lose are the KGB. They are
also in the best position to do
something about it by sabotaging
lhe best intentions of Mikhail Gor·
bachev. George Bush now has to
worry whelher vital economic and
arms control agreements will be
scuttled, overtly or covertly, by the
KGB.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
State Department has pooh-poohed
all the rumors about Panama that conditions are worse there now
lhan lhey were under Manuel Noriega, lhat drug ttaffic and corrup·
tion are rampant, that the U.S .
invasion was a waste. Not so, says
Assistant Secretary of State
Bernard Aronson. Democratization
is "on track" in Panama, Aronson
told Congress. If money laundering, drug dealing and political corruption are evidences of democracy, then Panama must have had a
democracy all along.

START or finish ?_____co_n.:.__g._Cl_ar._en_ce_E_. _M_il_ler
Some are saying the recent bilateral Strategic Arms Reduction
Treaty (STARn signed by President Bush and Soviet President
Gorbachev in Moscow this past
weelc, is very lilcely the last accord
of its kind to be agreed to by the
two military superpowers.
Olhers remain more optimistic
lhat it is but lhe fii'St in a series of
long-range nuclear weapons reduction pacts . to be worked out
between our two countries. However one views the signing of this
pact, it should be clear to all lhat
the 750-page arms treaty that was
signed is an extremely significant
pact, one that augurs well for the
future of U.S.-Soviet relations and
for disarmament in general.
While the treaty, which was
described by President Bush as
"the most complicated of contracts
governing the most serious of concerns" will only eliminate some
4,500 nuclear warheads from lhe
existing 23,000 long-range nuclear
warheads presently in the arsenals
of the U.S. and U.S.S.R., it will

also redefine and restructure the
manner in which the remaining
arms can be deployed, thereby
greatly reducing the threat such
weapons pose to each of our countries.
Though I have not yet seen a
copy of the final pact as agreed to
by the President, it is only understanding that it contains the type of
verification provisions I have long
maintained must be part of any
strategic nuclear accord. These provisions, which are being billed as
the most demanding ever, will
allow U.S. and Soviet officials to
inspect missile warheads, monitor
weapons assembly plants and new
bombers and mobile missiles at
close range, and commits our two
countries to exchanging tapes of
data gained from missile flight tests
as well] as the keys to interpreting
such tapes •
The treaty, if approved by the
Senate, will run for a period of 15
years and is worded to permit successive five-year extensions if

C~Iifor~ia's

Caltfomta ~til be electmg two
U.S. senators m 1992: one to fill
the remaining two years of the term
of Republican Pete Wilson, who
resigned upon being elected governor last year and appointed John
Seymour to serve until someone
can be elected, and one to succeed
Dem'?Crat ~~an Cranston, ':"hose
term ts expUJng and who w1ll not
seekre-clecuon.
Seymour is runn!ng for the short
term, though he Will face Op)JOSI·
tion ~n lhe Re~ublican primll;fY. If
he wms ll:'e prunary, the bewng IS
that hts hkely Democ~auc opponent, former San Franctsco Mayor
Dianne Feinstein, will mop up lhe
floor wilh him. .
. .
As for the stx-year seat, 11 ts
likely (unless he runs for president
instead) _that. the winner of the
Democra!Jc pnmary may be former
Gov. J~ Brown, fondly remembered .as 'Oov~or Moon~,''
who displayed a bvely aPP!e;CtaUon
of the Zen aspects of Cahforma
gove~ment whenever. t!Jey could
get hun down oiJ the ce11ing.
.
That ':"o~d make the RepubbCJI!I n~mtnauon a ve9' ~';hsome
pnze ~ndeed, an~ Califonua s conservallves want It badly. For them,
there is some good news, some
even beltel' news, some bad news,
and some positively awful news.
The good news has been known
for several months: Bruce Herschensohn is going to make the
race.
Hetschensohn is a formidably
popular and thoroughly conserva-

agreed to by both countries. The of the lreaty. The U.S., on the other
specifics of the treaty deal with hand, has concentrated its ballistic
mobile, land-based missiles, air- missile warhead inventory wilh its
launched cruise missiles, subma- submarine fleet Under the terms of
rine-launched missiles and lhe treaty, our country· s sea based
bombers. It details the size and ballistic missile inventory will be
number of the warheads and the reduced by some 30%.
number of delivery systems that
While the accord is being hailed
can be maintained while spelling by Presidents Bush and Gorbachev
out the rules for verification and for as "lhe dismantling of the infrasthe deployment of such systems.
tructure of fear lhat has ruled lhc
In total, lhe treaty calls for an world," it is apparent !hat both paroverall reduction of some 2,600 ties to this agreement will retam a
Soviet warheads from lheir present significant portion of !heir existing
inventory of IO,goo, while reduc- nuclear arsenals. It can only be
ing U.S. warhead stocks from hoped that the spirit of Glasnost
12,080 to 10,360. In the process of and Perestroika lhat has contributed
malcmg these overall reductions, to this ftrst meaningful reduction in
the treaty calls for more of an the long:range nuclear weapons
equalization of each country' s mventones of our two countries
nuclear delivery triad.
will continue to. spur increased
Heretofore the Soviet cooperation between ourselves and
Union's triad has been heavily tilt- the Soviets, and lhat the just signed
ed m favor of land-based missile Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
warheads, which account for wtll mdeed signal the start of a proroughly 65% of their present nucle- cess that could lead to yet more
ar arsenal. This number will be meaningful reductions in the years
more lhan halved under the tenn s to come.

Republicans willBy Wzllzam
f~_ceA off
Rusher

live political commentator on Los
Angeles radio and television. He
·
..
•
sought the nomination in 1986, in a shapes up_as a battle between the ambassador to Mexico, film ·actor
field of one liberal Republican and San Franc) IS~ ~y ~ &lt;'f"pbeUd John Gavin, about entering lhe pria dozen conservatives and led lhe country an
os nge es an
mary.
entire self-defeating ~onservative envuon~ (strong_for Hersch~n Gavin is half Mexican and totalpack, coming in second to lhe lone sohn)_. w£t S~ DFego, _now a b!f ly _fluent in Mexican Spanish, and
liberal, Ed Schau, who proceeded ge~ ctty .an an rancJSCo, as u•e mtght make an interesting dent in
to lose the election to Cranston.
:mg ~g!Onh No~y, one would t!Je Hispamc vote in a general elecThe even better news is lhat Ibis
l~n ersc~ enJ:l n. . .
~on. ~ut v_ery few I:lispan~cs vote
1
time Herschensohn's fellow conutnow or ~postUveyawful
tn Califorma Republtcan pnmanes,
servatives are staying out of the new\,~0 !D~bod/m ~ashmg!Dn - so Gavin's only possible ~ffec t
race in recognition of his claim to posst YID e epu can N~llonal would be as a spoiler - drawing
a fak shot atlhe job. Great credit is ~~'!lmlllee, but probably m the off just enough o_f Herchensohn's
due to such conservative Republitte House
has dectded lhat Soulhem CalifomJa support to toss
cans as Congressmen Dave.Dreier He~hensohn would be_tooconser- the nommation to CampbeU.
and Bob Dornan both of whom ~auveb~· senator for lheu moderate
As of this wril!ing Gavin is
were entitled to lhlnk of themselves
epu tcan taste. So they have undecided whether to run. One can
as possibilities but chose to stand approached Ronald Reagan 's only hope that he sees in time how
aside rather than ruin Herschenruthlessly he is being used.
sohn's chances
1
Now for th~ bad news. Enter,
stage left, Tom Campbell, a bright
young (38) two-term Reoublican
Congressman from the liberal San
Francisco Bay area. Campbell, a
Stanford economics professor,
managed to pick up a few libertarian economic ~ciples at the University of Chtcago, but m~s ~p
for it (in liberal eyes) by h1s dtstinctly "moderate' views on_social
issues such as abortion. In his first
year in Congress, the American
Conservative Union rated him at a
mere 50 out of a possible 100,
while the liberal Americans for
Democratic Action deemed him
worthy of a 40- high praise (from
"I would like to marry you, but I'm al;aady
them) for a Republican.
married - to my JOB. "
The primary race between
Campbell and Herschensohn

Berry s World

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r-----Local briefs... - -....
Continued from page 1
ties in~l~de business development corporate product management
and trauung.
H~ was previously wilh First National Bank of Danville in
Danvtlle, Ill. for 15 years. He left as senior vice president and
cashier.
He holds a bachelor of arts degree in management and marketing
from lllinois Stale University. He is also a graduate of lhe Graduate
School of Banking in Madison, Wise.
Henry and his wife, Janina have two daughters, Taryn and
Meredilh.
Bank One, Alhens has nine offices in ·Aihens, Hocking, Meigs,
and Perry Counties.

Sheriff issues correction
There was only one female juvenile aPIJTChended late Tuesday
night for the brealcing and entering of die Glen Tuttle house on
Eagle RiiiF Road.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, 19 year
old Roy Withrow, a 15 year old male and a 15 year old female were
apprehended. The juveniles are described as cousins.
Charges are pending against the teenagers. Withrow appeared in
Meigs County Court on Wednesday and bond was set at $),000.

Vandalism, theft reported
Francis Sheets of Cristy Road near Reedsville reported to lhe
Meigs County Sheriff's Department that her Homelite chain saw is
missing from her property.
·
Mrs. John Bogard, meanwhile, of Smith Ridge Road in Long
Bottom reported that wilhin the past couple of days, someone shot
out lhe back glass of her Volkswagen bus. Bogard believes that
BB 's were used in the shooting.

EMS answers 4 Wednesday calls
Four calls for assistance were answered on Wednesday by units
of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
On Wednesday at 2:51 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Butternut
Avenue. Shannon Scou was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:46 p.m., Rutland unit went to Happy Hollow· Road for Andy
Richmond, who was taken to Veterans. At 4:30 p.m., Life Flight
took Peggy Schaub from Veterans to Riverside Methodist Hospital.
At 7:50 p.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to Keller Street for Mary
Offut She was treated but not transported.

H0 use...

Continued from page 1

percent ol 1he tunds to be used for
rural areas and smaller cities within
the state," Abel said.
Rep. Abel had advocated the
inclusion of the rural set-aside in
hearings held in the House of Representatives Aging and Housing
Committee earlier this year. In her
testimony she pointed out tbaJ state
legislatorll must pay special attention to the unique situation that
· confronts our small cities and rural
communities.
"A growing number of homeless
individuals in this state are found in
smaller communities of less than
50,000 and in rural areas like our
region," Abel said.
She pointed out that the provi-

sion of funding for low and moderate income housing has been
attempted in the past through the
National Affordable Housing Act
of 1990 and in the Community
Development Block Grant Program. However, she said, the need
to guarantee that all areas of the
state have access to funding for
affordable housing continues.
The inclusion of the rural setaside will help level the playing .
field in competition for public
housing resources. Without it,
much of the grass-roots support
that developed for this iniuative
would have evaporated," Abel concluded.

--MeigS announcementsBoosters to meet
Brlckles reunion
The Southern Band Boosters
The descendants of Dannie and
will meet in the band room Mon- Flossie (Meeks) Brickles will be
day at 7 p.m. All band parents are . held Aug. 18 at' the Old Holiday
asked to attend.
School Grounds, Gilkey Ridge
Takes tblrd
Road, Darwin. A basket lunch will
The Twirlers on Parade of be served at noon.
Racine took a third place in the Country music nl2bt
Dance Twirl Teams Juvenile at lhe
Country Music'Night at the Lotbaton twirling competition held at tridge Community Center will be
the Ohio State Fair.
held Saturday from 7 p.m. to midTwirlers from across Ohio galh- night All bands weleome. Refresh. ered at the fair to compete in the ments available. Public is invited to
annual baton twirling contest. attend.
· Females aged 21 and under com- Hymn sing
peted in 14 categories including
The Meigs County Ministerial
fancy costume and solo twirling.
Association will kick-off the Meigs
Donation reeelved
County Fair wilh an old-fashioned
.Soulhem Ohio Coal Company's hymn sing at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday
Meigs Division recently donated in lhe Grandstand area flf the fair$450 to the Columbia Township grounds. Songsheets will be disVolunteer Fire Department
tributed.
Mike Delcotto of SOCCo pre- Board or electiou to meet
sented the check to Fire Chief Jim
The Meigs County Board of
Gaston. Gaston said lhe money will Elections will hold its regular
be put into a fund to purchase new monthly meeting on Friday at 7
fuefighting equipment
· Football meeting to be beld
Students in grades 7 or 8 at
Meigs Junior High School interested in playing football should report
for an organizational meeting at 6
p.m. on Monday at the Meigs
Junior High School Stadium. Parents are urged to attend.

~~nslng

Storms strike Midwest; South remains hot
By Tbe Associated Press
Thunderstorms and showers battered the Plains and the Great
Lakes tegion early today, while
temperalures in the Soulh climbed
into lhe 80s before dawn, signaling
anolher day of oppressive heat and
humidity.
Rain fell this morning in lllinois, Nebraska, Iowa and Minnesota. Wet weather was expected
lhroughout lhe day in most of 1he
Plains and the Great Lakes region,
with patches of rain in the South
Ibis evening.
The storms were expected to
offer little relief in places like
Alabama, Tennessee and Mississippi, where temperatures over 100
were expected to combine with
high humidity.
On Wednesday. four teen-a~ers
were killed in North Carolina m a
traffic accident blamed on severe
lhunderstorms. The teen-agers' car
was struck by a IJ'Uck that skidded
on a wet highway.
The torrential downpours, hail
and high winds also damaged

Commission ..
Continued rrom page 1
funded in the past through a court
cost on all moving traffic and criminal offenses," Dana's letter stated.
"That court cost has been raised
from $10 to $11."
According to Dana, several public meetings will- ·be held on the
local level to determine the future
of local public defense systems. He
encourages counties now using an
assigned counsel program to consider changing over to the public
defender system, statio' that the
system - which was put mto place
in Meigs CoWJty in 1990 - is more
cost effective.
·
EMS Business
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services Director Robert Byer
attended yesterday's meetin~ and
requested, on behalf of the Middleport EMS and trustees, lhat a bid be
accepted from the Horton Company of Columbus for ambulance
refurbishment.
Bids on the refurbishing work
were opened 1hree weeks ago, and
tabled at that time pending review
by EMS officials. Upon the recommendation of Byer yesterday, the
commissioners accepted that bid.
Byer presented a proposed
amendment to the EMS bylaws
which addresses the issue of payment of costs for personnel who
withdraw from trainin~ courses.
The commissioners, after brief discussion of the payment process,
ilpproved lhe ameodment.
Byer also briefly discussed an
emergency preparedness exercise
that will take place in early
September, which Meigs EMS will
use to test their communications
system and techniques.
Other Action
Meigs County Highway Department Superintendent Ted Warner
and Office Manager David Spencer
discussed highway projects with
lhe board.
According to Warner, the
department will be$in the county
hot-mix pavin~ proJects on Monday with Htland Road near
Pomeroy.
The commissioners ap(JIOved a
$34 ,500 appropriation to the
department's equipment account
for payment of a new tractor.
The bids on the Middleport
Sewage Lagoon will be awarded on
Friday, as scheduled, and Commissioner Richard E. Jones described
lhe project as a "defmite go." Yesterday's discussion of the project
followed problems with funding
addressed at last week's meeting.
Besides Jones, Warner and
Spencer, Commissioners Manning
Roush and David Koblentz and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter attended lhe
meeting.

buildings, knocked out power and
caused minor flooding around the
state.
Highs today were expected in
lhe 70s in New England, lhe Great

Lakes region and along lhe Pacific lhe 90s and over I00 across most
Coast; lhe 80s in the mid-Alantic of lhe nation's soulhem half.
The high for the nation Wednesstates, lhe Northwest and the eastem half of the Plains; the 90s from day was 108 at Gila Bend, Ariz.,
California to the Rockies; and in and Phoenix, Ariz.

Q-1 FLA:G PRESENTED· An omclal
Q·1 rlag was presented to American Alloys, Inc.,
New Haven, W.Va., on Wednesday mornln11_ln
conjunction wltb tbe presentation or tbe Q-1
Preferred Quality Supplier Award by tbe Ford
Motor Company. Tbe nag will ny dally at tbe
plant. Pictured are John Robinson, President or

Local 51
Richard Young, VIce-president or Ooera.tlo1u
American Alloys; Mike Grimm,
Control
and, Quality
Coordinator; George
. Assurance Auditor; and Jan Leszczyukl, Manager or Quality Control.

37 fined, two forfeit bond in Meigs County Court

Thirty-seven were lined and two costs, six months in jail concurrent 90 days operator's license suspendolhers forfeited bond when Meigs wilh om charge, five years proba- ed, three days in jail, upon enrollCounty Court Judge Patrick H. tion, unsafe vehicle, $10 and costs, ment and completion of RTP
O'Brien heard cases last week.
possession of marijuana, $50 and School, $150 of fme and jail time
Fined were: William E. Ross , costs; William P. Robbins, Goshen. will be suspended; failure to conRio Grande, speed, $19 and costs; speed, $21 and costs; Mary Hall, trol, costs only.
Forfeiting bonds were Aaron
Timolhy Gaus, Rutland, seat belt Vinton, passing bad checks, $25
violation, costs only; Larry Sigler, and costs, restiwtion; Helen Hawk, Marshall, Massilon, disorderly conRutland, seat belt violation, costs Reedsville, no operator's license. duct , $80; and Mark Shaddock,
only; Jacqueline Dougherty, Lake- $75 and costs, three days in jail, Baden. Pa., speeding, $60.
land, Fla., speed, $29 and costs; suspended if court is provided wilh
Henry A. Salser, Syracuse, speed, valid operator's license within 90
$24 and costs; Donnie Standley, days, failure to control, $25 and
Glousi,er, seat belt violation, costs costs; Vicki A. Hanson, Middleonly; Derek A. Cremeans, Rutland, port, speed, $22 and costs; Freeda
s~eding, $25 and costs; Earl 0 . Chandler, Middleport, no operaPickens, Pomeroy, failure to yield, tor's license, $75 and costs, lhree
$10 and costs; Brian Carr, Gallipo- days in jail suspended upon valid
lis, stop sign. $10 and costs; James license in 90 days.
L. Hunt, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
Kalhy Elias, Middleport, failure
speed, $27 and costs.
to control, $25 and costs, failure to
Charles Uoyd Harmon, Middle- report escape of an llnimal, $50,
port, failure to maintain assured suspended, and costs; Michael P.
clear distance abead, $10 and costs; Salser, Racine, shooting a groundCharles E. Meadows, Jr., Mason, hog from a bUck, $I 50 and costs,
W.Va., Dill, $350 and costs, three fuearm returned to defendant; Raydays in jail, license suspended for mond E. Sayre, Pomeroy, no
90 days, upon enrollment and com- motorcycle endorsement, $7 5,
pletion of 1he RTP school, $150 of costs, three days in jail suspended,
the fine and jail will be suspended; one year probation; William ForTamara Stone, West Columbia, shey, Parkersburg, W.Va., disorAND
W.Va., Dll, ·$450 and costs, six derly conduot, $20 and costs; Shari
months in jail suspended to 30 Eblin, Pomeroy, failure to coniJ'Ol,
days, license· suspended for one $25 and costs; Charles Williams,
year, probation of two years; mv- Pomeroy , disorderly conduct, $25
ing under suspension, six months in and costs; Karrel D. Lemley ,
jail suspended to 30 days, $100 and Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $25
costs, two years probation; David and costs; Michael W. Clark, RutP. Smilh, Pomeroy, speed, $21 and land, operating a four-wheeler on a
I
costs; Dwi~ht Johnson, Nashport, public highway, $50 and costs,
~ ~
I
illegibly Identified wells (six three days in jail, suspended, one
I
counts), $100 on each, concurrent year probation; Michael Adkins,
after the fust charge, costs; John Minersville, receiving stolen propIII" Plllllllllllll
Imboden, Pomeroy, receiving erty, $100 and costs, restitution, 60
stolen property, 60 days in jail sus- days in jail suspended to five, 1wo
~- - ~~'
pended to five, credit given for years probation; and Michael Fros~
time served, $200 fine, $100 of Long BotiOIII, Dill, $350 and costs,
446-1018
which was suspended, costs, probation of one year, restitution; failure
to report a crime, $100 and costs,
60 days in jail suspended to five
13 .00
11.00
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
days concunent, probation of one
BARGAIN MATINE[S SATURDAY&amp;S U~DAY
'
,,
..
'"
"'
BARGAUI NIGHT TUESDAY
446 4524
wr•,r
year.
Herbert Grate II, Reedsville,
using weapons while intoxicated,
costs, 60 days jail suspended to ·
time served, two years probation;
"T1En•1m
Lester L. Stewart, Middlepon, seat
MillE
belt violation, costs only; Michael
C. Kennedy, Pomeroy, speed, $26.
IF 1IE 111111!"
and costs; Robert L. Liston,
...
'
.iii"""
Ravenswood, W.Va., no regis~­
tion, $25 and costs, having faulty
•
brakes, $20 and costs; Guido Giro~
lami, Pomeroy, left of center, $25
TODAY 7:20, 9:10
FRIDAY 7:10,9 :!0
and costs; Johnny Ratliffe, MiddleSAT . J :IO, J :I0, 7:20,9 :10
port, DUI, $750 and costs, six
SUN . I :20, 3: 10,7 :20, 9:10
Veterau Memorial
nionlhs in jail, five years probation,
liON • - THUR S. 7:
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS license suspended indefinitely,
- Heinz Coates, Polneroy; Ray- driving under suspension, $300 and
mond Reitmire, Racine; Kathleen
Tillis, Rutland; Edna Roush, New
Haven, W.Va.; Carrie Whaley,
Shade; Carl Morris, Long Bottom;
Willa Gum, Pomeroy; and Marlin
Morris, Long Bottom.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Vickie Boso, Paul Saunders, and
William Watson.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Aug. 7 - Myah
-LAYAWAYS WELCOMEBarnes, Julie Bolen, Ashley Myers,
Tony Riffle, Charles Weaver and
Doris Wood.
Births, Aug. 7 - Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Dorst, a son, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Frye, a son,
Addison. Mr. and Mrs. Barry
Sturgill, a daughter, Coalton.

The Failh Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have a hymn
sing on Friday at 7:30 p.m. featuring Mountaintop Gospel and Crystal. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public.
Equipment fitting
Equipment fitting for the Soulhem High Football Team will be
held this afternoon (Thursday).
The Daily Sentinel
Seniors should be at the high
school
at 4 p.m., juniors at 4:30
tUSPS Itt-HI)
p.m.,
sophomores
at 5 p.m., and
A DlviiiOI of Multimedia, Inc.
freshmen at 5:30p.m.
Published ~very afternoon. Monday
If unable to attend call Coach
through Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
David Gaul at 949-2611.
mer oy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vall ey Publishing Company / Multlmedla . Inc ..
The fii'St day of mandatory pracPomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992 -21!16. Setice
is Friday at 8 a.m.
cond class postagE." paid at Pomtroy,
Kindergarten meeting
.
Ohio.
meeting
will
be
held
Aug.
20
A
M~mber: Th £&gt; Assodated Press. In·
at
9
a.m.
at
the
Tuppers
Plains
Eleland DaUy Press Assoctatlon and the
Ohio New spaper Ass oci a tion. National
mentary School for 1he purpose of
Advertising Repre-sentat ive, Branham
kindergarten
orientation.
N(&gt;Wspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
If
you
have
not pre-registered
N(IW York, NfW York 10017.
your child for kindergarten then
P&lt;m'MASTER: Send address &lt;han(lt!l
attendance is necessary by 8:30
to ThP Dally Sentinel, Ill Cou~ St ..
a.m. Parents who did not attend
Pomeroy, Ohio 4571B.
spring
registration or who are new
81Jl18CRII'TION R.\TES
to the district will need to provide a
By Carrier or Molor Reule
One Week ............................. ...... $1.60
copy of their child's birth certifiOne Month ................................. $6.95
cate
and a record of the various
On~ Year ................................. $83.20
vaccinations
and shots already
SINGLE COPY
received.
.
PRICE
South-Central Ohio
Dally ................................... 25 Cents
For further information contact
Thursday,
partly cloudy with -~
Subscribers not desiring topay I he car- 1he superintendent's office at 985- slight chance of showers. High near.
rier may remit 1n advance direct to
4292.
85 . Winds e.a st 5 to 15 mph .
Th• DallySent!Jiel on a 3, 6or 12 month
ba sts. Credlr WUI be given carrier each
Chance of raiil 30 percent. Thursweril .
day night and Friday, mostly
No subscrlptlom by mall permitted In
cloudy with a chance of showers
areas where homE' (atrler service Is
and th.understorms. Low 65 to 70.
avalljlbiP.
High 80 .10 85. Chance of rain 40
MallSublcrlpllooa
CLEVELAND (AP) - There pettent Thursday night.and Friday.
laolde Melp Coual7
were no tickets sold naming all six
Extended rorecast:
13 Werils .. .............. .... ...... ..... ... fll.llt
numbers selec~ in .Wednesday
26 Weeks .................... ............ .. ~3 . 16
Saturday lh..Ouab Monday:
!12 Weeka........... .... ....... ,: .......... $84.76
night's Super LOtto drawing with
A cluince of shOwers and lhunOollolde Melp Coontl)'
13 Weri&lt;s .......................... ........ $23.10 · $4 million at stake so Satilrday 's derstonns Saturday and Monday
jaclcpot will be $8 million, the Ohio and f~ Sunday. Highs in the upper
26 Weelts ............. ... .... ... .. ....... .. ~5. 50
52 Weoks ...... ......................... ..._$88.10,
Loltely-said
70s to mid 80s, Lows in 1he 60s.

I

..

•

111" 11

~ . . . .. . . .

. ..... _

• • 0(

Lottery results

1£11

. ,.,., • •• •••• !lt'lll ••

,,

-=~;-~:i:

Hospital news

Weather

BACK TO SCHOOL

SALE

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20% OFF ·*A~!IU.~~o!!!!AR

NIKE • REEBOK • CONVERSE • KEDS • LA GEAR • DEXTER • CONNIE &amp; MORE

PlUS, There will be other SPECIAl PRICES on select styles of shoes
not listed. Come in and see what bargains we have, all at
SPECIAl PRICESI
) SEE OUR NEW I-SHIRTS FOR BACK TO SCHOOL(
~-

SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

•I

J

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

,,
.,

'I

'I

'

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�'
'

Tllursday, August a, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

In the majors ...
lulmiiM•IIIoo
W

SL l..ooio
..........
Now Yaok
.......
.........

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

.

61
57
S6
52
41
44

L

Pd.

GB

43 .5H
49 .538 S 1/2
SO .521 6 1/2
S4 .491 101/2
Sl .453 141/2
62 .415 18.5

TWLPd.
1M........
.
.
.
.
!0 46 .566
Aoi.a
......... .. S6 49 .533

GB

CINCINNATI

3.5

. 52 53 .AI!

7.5

S.. Frucioco '·· .. Sl SS .411
Sin Dillo ........ Sl 56 .477

9
9.5

-

14

......... 46 !0 .434

Now Yodo (!. lolwon 4-4) ll ChicoJO
(Femoncla S.l~ 1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Wcpun 6-6) at Baltimme
(Mllodd 7-S), 7:35p.m.
De~l. (Oullickam 14-6) at Toronto
(Cancli... 9-11), 7:35p.m.

Frlday'•1•mes

llecroil (Aidnld 0.1 and Tcaoll 7·I 0) II
Now Yodo (Taylor S-6 xnd SUidenon II·
Chi~•ao (Houah 7-6) at Bahimon
(Muoain• (1-1), 7:35p.m.

a..... (lleaUih s-2&gt; "r...... (WeliJ

S.."'""'"-I,AIWIIIO

-Yark7,PI-t
San DieF 7, Houlttm 4

Transactions

lVedneoday'socores
t.. Allplol:l, CilldnnaUI

l'lliiiMiolfhia S, CbiCIIo 4, II U1ninao

~I . Stl.aoiaO

A-.. . .
BasebaU

Today's &amp;ames

ChiC:~fO (Daaay lackloa 1·2lat
P!Wo'-lpl'io (Cox 3-4~ 12:35 p.m. '
lA A...... (M ..... 9-f) tl Clndn·
OIU(Boowoloall·~ l:l:lSpA
PIHahrae. (Dnbek. 11·11) al New
Yorll (\'lolo U-9), t:4t p.,.,
Saa Franc:i100 (Bwbtt J.S) n Atlanu
(Oiam14-6l. S:40p.m.
Sea DieJO (Beau 6-10) at Houston
(Bowm 1·1~ 1:35 p.m.
(lloaail-., 11·6) II St
Laoia ~ S.l~ 1:35 p.m.

Friday's games
Now York (Cone 10·8) at Chicago
(Maddux 9-6), 3:20p.m.
llonu.J (11 ..... 2-4) II PhiJodelplUo
(0... 1-4). 7:35 p.m.
St.~ (1. Sellll t-7) ol Pllllbu'lh

7135 ,....

tiJoohoioo 4-6) II Allonll (Av·

.., 1:1-~ 7:40 ,....

Chtd_.tl (Sanf'crd 1-4) 11 Su DleJo
(P•
:1-~ tt:ll p.m.
t..o. AnaelCII (Belcher 7-7) at San fran.
c:itoo(Wilioo 7-9), 10:35 p.m.

CAUFORNIA ANGI!U -

Releue&lt;l

Mil:• MoniWI, illlioldeMUdiolller. Purclwoollho coolrOCl of Clllil Cn&gt;o, ialiel4·
cr, from EG.mornon of the Pacific Co11t

LcocfD'CAoo WHm! SOX - Rccollod
Orec Hibbonl, pild.-,1\am vonccuv.. of
tho Pacific Coal\ Leaauo. Sent Man
Merullo, cau::her, to Birminpam of the

Soulhom Lcoauo.

Nallonol IMpe

CINCJNNAn REDS - PIICOd Morta no Dunan, 1econd baaeman, on lhe
15·dof clloable4 lloL Recallod Froddle
a--.
Nuh¥llle or
liM Amerlean Aaoc:lolklft.

-.,front

PITTSBIJRGH PIRATES- Slantd
Floyd YoumaUt pitcher, to 1 minorluau• contract with Carolina of lhe

s...lhtnt Leqtoe.
BasketbaU

NaUoallluketbaii.U.OClatlon
DENVER NUOOETS - Announced
lhe ntinmont of Billllanzl.ik, forward, to
become an aaiNnt coach wi1h the Chu-

I..,.Homeu.

UTAH JAZZ - Sipod Dtvid Benoit,
rorward, to a oao-yoar contr.ct.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
lulmiiMYIIIoo
TWLPd.
T......... 62 46 .574
llecroil
........... 55 52 .514
B•WIIl
.......... SO S1 .467
Nn&gt;Yaok
....... 41 S6 .462
lo61- ...... 46 61 .430
Boldmae ........ 43 63 .406
CL&amp;VILAND
35 71 .331

FootbaU

GB
6.l
ll.S
12
IB

II
:U

Ntlloftol FOCIIIIoU Ltaaut
ATLANTA fALCONS- Sipod Tim
Orccn, l.incbM:kcr, 10 a two-you cmtracot
and Ja~rio Tuulo.. linobadr.cr, to 1 (ouryear eontnet:-1Naivod Leatcr Brinkley,
deCcnd.ve end.

KANSAS CITY CIUEPS - Sianed
Horvt Williamt,
• bock.

~YORK~- Sipod My·

Wlllti'IIDIYklon

T-

WLPct.GB
....... 6S 44 .596
Cltiooa•
......... 61 &lt;5 .575 2.5
Ooltloool
......... 61 48 .5!0
•
T...
........... S6 48 .531
6.5
........... 57 51 .521
7.5
. ~City
....... 55 51 .519
8.5
Colifomlo ......... 53 S4 .495
II

lVedaeoday's acores
Ooklood 6, S.Olllo t

Colifomlo I , - I
Mllwoubo •• Babimono 2

r-s.Doaoi&amp;2

ClticoaoiO, New Yaok 2
"""'"'City 2. s...... 0
T-l:I,Cio•oiMdtl

•New Reclining
Chaise Rockers

toll

0u)10n, safety, to I t~yCUCCIIt:riC\..

PHOENIX CARDINALS - Wahed
Jon Hot\On, wide raccivet.

Hoc:key
Natloul Hoclr.ey Luau•

MINNESOTA NORnl STARS - An·

nounced Neal BIOWIII, center, will play in

Oemuny.

.PHILADI!LI'IIIA fLYERS - Sipod

Kimb1 Daniell,

rialrtwin

calla',

and Jamie Cooke

•

ST. L~UIS BLURS - Signed Steve
Tuttle, ri&amp;_ht win&amp;; DIVe Meckey, le(t
winJ; and Dominic Lavoie and Bri.ln Mc-

~"r'ii&lt;..

•Beachcralt

SALE

•lane &amp;
•la·Z·Boy
Rechners

'39

STARnNG
AT

I

lEG.$ \

12-6). 7:15p.m.
Cl...lond (Swindell 7-9) ol K.uuu
CIIJ (Gublcu 6-5~ 113! p.m.
Milw~ukee (Bclio 7-8) al Tuu (Joee
CNzmoa 7-4), 1:35 p.m.
Oakland (SW~wan 8-6) at California
(MoCuldll l-14),t0:35 p.m.
Minn&lt;oou (Weat 2-2) ll Soanlo (lohnaon 10.7),10:35 p.IIL
·

-

A'

RARE EXCHANGE - Ia ao excbaoge of civility rare ror him
these days, Reds maoager Lou PioieUa (right) discusses a lioeup
cbaoge wltb home plate umpire Bill Hobo dul\iog Wedoesda}'
oigbt's game agaillst lbe vlsidn' L.A. Dodgers, wb~ woo 2·0. Earlier io the day, Piolella fouod himself in bot water with tbe major
league umpires' uoloo, wbicb filed a $5 miUioo lawsuit against him
ror comments made last weekeod. (AP)

eara.nce

7), 2. 4:30p.m.

Wllltnl Dlwllloa

(-,u.~

PATIO
SOo/o to 75°/o oH
Reg. Lifestyle Price

54• FULL SO

289

.... $411-...........0tly 1

Odds &amp; Ends. Many ~·;,o•;ou;•••~··~'~;;;;;;~·2~2;:.t.J
styles front which •3 TIER SEntNG
TilLE • Hellloo11
to choose.
U.rry flllsbls ..... wltk delcate tenllgs ... pie
i':$\;.oo ~ OFF
s14900

•Serving Cart
•Patio Dinettes
•Patio End Tables
·•P.-tlo Umbr'ellas
.•P•Jio Lamps
•Patio Swivel Rockers
•Patio A~m Ch'alrs
•Patio Ciudse
•Patio Folding Furniture

j'antastic ,Safe!
fJ'i{t

fJ'a6fe

eCiearCUKe on
Simmons &amp;Stearns
&amp;Foster Mattresses
&amp;Box Springs

RACINE REDS SPECIAL AWARDS- The Racioe Reds' Ryao
Norris (left) tied for tbe most bome ruos in the Kyger Creek Little
League Tournameot. Here he staods with bead coacb Kenoy
Guiotber (ceoter) aod Jesse Mayoard, wbo bit five out or IS pitches
out to wio the home ruo contest held oo July 28 at the Kyger Creek
· Little League Touroameot. Norris also participated in the home run
coo test.

Dodge •s wz'n
I,

•MISC.
•Assorted Pictures$ $ ~
10· 15·1 19
eG••
Cabinet
As Low AS 50
•DI1ettes
Startlnt At '399

•Stctlo1al w/abstract rr•nt of
•••, colors. •••· s12
999

's:fE ,

eCASH &amp; CARRY ITEMS

•Disco•tl••• Style Peca1 Triple, 2
lEG.
Door Dr•ser w/llevelad •irror .
$171.00 1/2 Off leg, $1079 SALE $53950
SALE

$8900

IIW II"Mflrl

PIECIUST TillE Is • woederhl acceet besides a
1/2 OFF *264°
favorite cbalr or • bedside table.
$
00 ~--------Reg.$199.00
1/20FF

99

r.

POMEROY HEALTH CARE

RASS DAYBED
SALE!

224 EAST MAIN • POMROY, OH.

992-6418 or. 992-6588

THOMAS SPENCER, D.O.
Receiving Patients
Starting August 5

STARTING AT

$598°

•SOFAS
0 · .._,~&amp;cellnte.._._StrittAt '4Gtooa

only

OPEN:
MONDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
8 am-12 noon and 1 pm-6 pm
TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
10 am-12 noon and 1 pm-8 pm
FRIDAY ,8 am·12 noon and .1 pm-4 pm
SATURDAY 8 am-12 noon
Appointments or Walk-Ina Welcon1e

-

,.

.SUIJECT

TO PIIOR
SALE

CORNE'

Of.,.,01110.OLM45631smm

UWPOUS,

·.

·,.

&lt;f ...

seemed 10 make a difference.''
He had the Reds swinging at
bad pitches all night. Ojeda struck
out seven and walked three, allowing just two runners 10 reach second base.
. "He kept the off-speed pitchin.~
coming and kept us off-balance,
outfielder Glenn Braggs said. "He
Jries to get you to hit his pitch, and
tonight he succeeded. You want to
be patient against a guy like that.
We were aggressive and ended up
~etting ourselves ouL''
They didn't do any better
a~nst reliever Kevin Gross, who
pitched two hitless innings, or
Jtoger McDoweU, who allowed one
J!it in the ninth before getting his
fifth save and his second in two
nights.
; Ojeda likes what he's seen of
McDowell the last two nights. The
Dod~ters acquired him from
Philadelphia on July 31, and his
save Tuesday was the first for the
Dodger bullpen since July 7.
"I know Roger will do well,"
Ojeda said. "I knew if he got on a
ieam with thin$S on the line, he· d
come through b1g."
' Sharp!:rson gave McDowell the
save opportunity by finally breaking through against Randy Myers
(5-9), who went eight inrungs and
~brew 140 pitches in his longest
major-league outing.
Myers was in trouble in each of
the fust six innings. but pt1Ched out
of it Finally, Brett Butler walked
with one out in the seventh and
Sharperson lined a triple into the
right-field comer 011 a hit-and-run,
letting Butler score easily.
· Daniels followed with a fly ball
to deep center field for a 2-0 lead
; Sharperson was surprised that
Myers, m his fourth start after 293
relief appearances, ha~ added a
change-up and curve to hts arsenal.
He threw primarily a fastball and
slider as a reliever.
· "He kept us off-balance. He
kept me off-balance because I
couldn't just sit on the fastball,"
Sbarpt2son said
,
: It was a fastball that cost him
lfle triple in the seventh.
''He still had good zip on his
fastball, it was just up and out over
•'

(Continued from Page 4)

• • ·~--...::......:...--

~djustments," he · said. "That

SOME MIX·MATCH SETS.

•LA•Z•BOY &amp; STEARNS &amp;
;,::"~~.::-::·7•
~~~~Z·Ioy Dual Reclining Motio•
FOSTER SLEEP SOFAS
§~~~~~ ..
1/2 Off leg. $1249 SALE '624
w/Deluxe IMerspring
._....~.,~...·---~--_.
•BUNK BED
Mattresses. . •CLASSIC CHERRY FINISH QUEEN ANNE
Reg. SS29.00 0

Kee. dcfcnacmen.

managers and players disagree with
their calls or decisions. I overreact·
ed in anger and frustration, but
have discussed the situation with
Bill White and we both now consider lhe matter closed.''
White left Riverfront Stadium
without meeting reporters. League
SJ?I?keswanan Katy Feeney said he
didn't learn of the lawsuit until he
left the stadium.
"We caught him at the airport,"
she said. "We don't have any com·

ments about a lawsuit. an ongoing
legBJ action.''
PinieUa, too, was unaware of the
lawsuit until reporters informed
him following the meeting with
White. He declined to go beyond
his formal statement
"I have nothing to say about
anything else. That's the only state·
ment I'm going to make," he said.
PinieUa's remarks about Darling
came after the umpire overruled
Dutch Rennert, who had called a

Tribe squanders six-run
lead, loses 12-10 to Texas
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
AP Sports Writer
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)Things looked so bad for the Texas
Rangers that owner George W.
Bush left his field box in the fourth
inning.
Bush missed the Rangers'
biggest rally of the year as they
overcame an 8-2 deficit to whip the
Cleveland Indians 12-10 Wednesday night in a wild 28-hit affair.
Brian Downing delivered the
killer blow, a two-run single in the
bottom of the eighth inning that
capped a three-run raUy.
Mike Jeffcoat, 5-2, earned the
victory wilh two innings of perfect
relief while Jeff Russell notched
his 22nd save of the season. Shawn
Hillegas. 2-3, took lhe loss.
The Indians lost the series two
games to one although they scored
27 runs and the Raogers pitching
staff had an 8.33 earned run average.
CJe·.eland won the opener 9-0,
and lost I0-8 Tuesday nij!hL Cleveland hit .377 in the senes to .330
for the Rangers.
Cleveland, the lowest scorinj!
team in the majors, lost although tt
had 12 hits and homers from Chris
James and Albert Belle.
Ruben Sierra led Texas' 16-hit
auack with a triple and double and
three RBI.
"This isn't a basketball game,"
Sierra said. "We can't do this
every night. "
The Rangers are the secood best
hitting team in the major leagues
behind MiMCSOta.
"Sooner or later we· ve got to
get some pitching," Sierm said.
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said it hurt to get a lot of hits
and runs and no victory.
''Eric King pitched a great game
for us in the opener but we just
haven't done the job on lhc mound
the last two nights," Hargrove
said. "But Texas is a great hilting

" I honestly feel that Darling has
ball hit by BiU Doran a home run.
bias
against us and won't give us a
Darling, the home plate umpire,
said the ball hooked in front of the call all year," PinieUa said Sunday.
"It's time he gets his act together
foul screen, making it foul.
Piniella went wild, kicking dirt now. We have more complaints
on home pla~and first base during against him than against any other
an argument that brought his ejec· umpire.
"As far as I'm concerned he's
lion. Paul O'NeiU also was ejecled
for throwing a drink cooler on the not a good umpire. He's biased
field , and the game was delayed against us - it's obvious."
Phillips, in the interview Tuesseveral minutes because fan s Iii·
day, said Piniella went too far m
tered lhe field.
·
It was PinieUa's most publicized accusing an umpire of bias.
"That
pushed
it
over
the
line,"
outburst against an umpire since he
uprooted first base and threw it he said. 'You always take the
twice last year during a ~arne at position that if a manager or a playRiverfront Stadium agamst th e er wants 10 question an umpire 's
call, they have the right to do so,
Chicago Cubs.
One day after his latest outburst, but not to question the umpire' '
integrity."
Piniella lashed out at Darling.

Texas scored three runs in the
sixth inning to cut lhe Indians' lead
to 10-9. Ruben Sierm hit a two-run
triple and Kevin Reimer singled
him across, all with two outs.

1101t
SCHOOf.
.
. a ASS
All SiUulium· Designer Series Styles
OFFER

ENDS
AUGUST

25,1991.

GO ADAM! - Adam Brown,
11, of Gallipolis, wbo represents
Meigs Couoty Ia the Kit Car
Divlsioo in the S4tb AII-Americao Soap Box Derby arrived on
Saturday for five days of actlvi·
ties leading up to Saturday's rKe
at Derby DOWDS io Akroo.
Browo was the WUIDer or the first
Meigs County Soapbox Derby in
Juoe.

FREE CUSTOM
INCLUDED. A value
of over $50001

09'

~eflelers
212 E. Main- Pomeroy

team. It

$19

aoy styles ••• colors •••
11 r..IK. . prltolo

..

available for comment In an interview Tuesday with The Associdted
Press, Phillips said the union had
never taken such action over a
manager's or player's comments.
"We've come close. This would
be the first," he said of the lawsuit.
Phillips also has asked NL president Bill White to severely punish
the Reds mana$er for questioning
Darling's integnty.
Piniella met with White in
Cincinnati on Wednesday, after
which Piniella issued the following
statemenc
"Major lea$ue umpires have a
very difficult JOb aod sometimes

Today's 1ames

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Tta~~

PHILADELPHIA (AP) National League umpire Gary Darling and his union rtied a $5 mil·
lion defamation suit against Lou
PinieUa on Wednesday becawe the
Cincinnati manager said Darling
was biased against lhe Reds.
The suit, filed in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas,
alleges that Darling's reputation
was "severely damaged" by
Piniella's remarks made after the
Reds' 7-3 loss to the San Francisco
Giants on Satwday.
Richie Phillips, counsel for of
the Mllior League Umpires' Association, who ftled the suit. was not

SEMI·ANNUAL

Scoreboar£1
PrrTSIUIGH

Umpires' union files $5 million lawsuit vs. Piniella

Thursday, August 8, 1991
Page-4

REDS HONORED - Tbe Racine Reds little league basebaU
team receotly held its awards ceremooy aod picaic at lbe Racine
Sbriae-Star Mill Park, where Matt Bradford (left) woo lbe "Jeremy
Gulolber Award" for sportsmaosblp aod bustle. With Bradford
aod Adam Rousb (right), last year's winoer, is bead coach Dick
Wamsley, who coached the late Jeremy Guinlber aod who fouoded
the award. Not pictured is Greg MtKinoey, who woo tbis award
this year aDd last year ror tbe Racioe Orioles.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the plate," Sharperson said. "It
was a hit-and-run, so I was just lr}'·
ing to put it in play."
.
Piniella openly feuded w1th
Myers when the left-bander struggled in relief this season and then
demanded a uade or a chance to
start. Piniella has only complimentary things 10 say about him now.
"I'm very proud of him,"
Piniella said. "Even if he never
wins another game - which he
will- I'm proud."
There wasn't much else for the
Reds to be proud of Wednesday.
Piniella had to dodge questions
about the $5 million defamation
lawsuit filed by the umpires' union.
Duncan pulled muscles in his right
side while swinging the bat in the
second inning, and was placed on
the 15-day disabled list .. And
Schottzie' s death was announced
just as the Dodgers were raUying to
win .

Texas moved within 6 112
games. of frrst-place Minnesota in
theAL West.
The Indians chased Texas starter
Brian Bohanon after three and onethird innings with eight hits,
including a homer by James in a
three-run fourth i11ning.
Cleveland built 8D 8-6 lead with
two runs in both the fllSt and sec·
ond innings and a single run in the
third inning. Mark Whiten drove in
two runs with two doubles and
Martinez knocked in two with a
sacriftCC fly and a single.
Belle's homer came off Wayne
Rosenthal in a two -run Indians
sixth.
The Rangers made a game of it
by scoring two runs in the second
and four in the fourth inning. Steve
Buechele knocked in two runs with
a sacrifice fly and a double.
Cleveland starter Mauro Gozzo
lasted three innings, yielding five
hits and live runs.

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

I

:i
.I

Tourney slated
There will be a Men's Class D &amp;
Softball Tournament at the
Mason Ball Field August 9,10 and
II, sponsored by the Mason Family
Restaurant's Team. Entry fee is $70
and hil your own ball. For more information call 773-5086 or 7735339.
E

1111 TEMPO GL

1911 COUGAR LS

IMallufac:turet'l Suggested Retall........ .l12,321.00

Manufacturer's Suggested Retall.........'17,864.00

llmlok:e.................................................-......... 11,181.1 o lnvolce.....................................................15,624.50
Free Tank Of Gas.............................................. o.oo .
.....................................................................49.00 +......................................................................49.00
Rebate..........................................................1,OOO.OQ

.P. Everyday'low Price.....'1 0,230.1 0

P. Everyday LowPrlce......'14,673.50

I'

I

!

.I

�'

Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Thursda~August8,

Eastern football camp ends
The Eastern High School coaching staff held the first annual football camp for grades 5-9 recenUy at
Eastern High School, where 24 participants were subjected to various
football skills, competitions and
relay games, in addition to and a
punt, pass and Icicle contest.
Participants were Wally Rockhold, Eric TutUe, Robbie Reeves,
Robert Hoffman, Jeff Rankin,
Travis Friend, Todd Schaffer, Matt
Marcinko, Billy Schultz, Eric HiU,
Wes Saunders, Chance Watson,
Matt Bowen, Brian Bowen, Kyle
Ord, Michael Laughery, Shawn
Seth, Josh Hager, Adam McDaniel,
Todd Jackson, Aaron Abbot, Jason
Sheets, Shawn Long and Matt Milliron.
Each camp member received a
sportsmanship certificate and a
camp T-shirt. Relay winners were
given a personal pan pizza coupon
from Pizza Hut in Pomeroy and the
others received coupons for a sundae atMcDmald's in_ Pomeroy.

1991 :

EASTERN GRID CAMPERS:
- Pictured are those who com·
peted in the Eastern Hi&amp;h School
grid camp along with coacheW
:
Roger Bissell, Dennis Eichinger;
Randy Churilla, and Ron HilL'
Pictured In no particular order~
are W,ally; .Rockhold, Eric Tuttle,.:
Robbie Reeves, Robert Holl'mad;•
Jeff Rankin, Travis Friend, Todd·
Schaffer, Matt Marcinko, Bill~ .
Schultz, Erk: HID, Wes Saunders,,
Chance Watson, Matt Bowen ·,
Brian Bowen, Kyle Ord, Michael·
Laughery, Shawn Seth, Josli·
Hager, Adam McDaniel, Todd.'
Jackson, Aaron Abbot, Jason:.
Sheets, Shawn Long and Matt
·
Milliron.

The top three placers tn the
punt, pass and kick contest in the
10-11 year-old group were first
thru third; Billy Schultz, Josh
Hager and Travis Friend. The top
three finishers in the 12-year-oldplus division were Matt Bowen,
Jason Sheets and Brian 'Bowen.
The camp was formed by Eastern head football coach Randy
Churilla and organized by the Eastem coaching staff. Speakers for the
camp were Doak Markley,
Williamstown (W _Va .) High
School head football mentor; Jay
Long, Marietta High School assistant coach, and Dennis Eichinger,
Eastern High School assistant.
Assisting Churilla in the camp
were Ron Hill, John Sheets, Roger
Bissell, Gary Holter and Joyce Otto
in addition to various members of
the EHS high school footbaU team.
Sponsors of the camp were
Kroger's, Powell's, Pizza Hut,
McDonald's and Baum Lumber.

ELDEST CAMP WINNERS - The winDers in the 12-year-oldplus division at the Eastern High School football camp's Punt, Pass,
and Kick contest were Matt Bowen, Jason Sheets and Brian Bowen
(L·R). Campers received in-depth instruction f'rom several guest
speakers and received camp T·shirts compliments of Kroger's,
Powell's IGA, Pizza Hut, McDonald's and Baum Lumber.

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, August 8, 1991
Page-7

Video Views~--- Ricky Harris new youth

minister at First Baptist

, celluloid transport us into the
By Jeff Hilleary
nightmare of Paul Sheldon, creator
of
beleaguered heroine Misery
The month of August marks the
and the private hell of
Chastain,
The First Baptist Church at
fact that another year is nearing the
Annie
Wilkes.
Racine
now has a youth minister.
end. Yet, dear readers, two excelFrom
start
to
finish,
the
film
is
a
Ricky
L. Harris who for the past
lent films offer what has to be two
of the best reasons to enjoy the masterpiece of acting and cine- three years has served as the minismonth. Both are suspense dramas matogrsphy, it is incredibly _loyal to ter of youth at the Emmanuel Bapbut only one has been graced with the novel. Even the cast ts what tist Church in Roanoke, Va.,
an Academy Award for Best you expect. James Caan is what moved to Racine in mid-June to
you envision Paul Sheldon as look- work with the youth in the congreAcaess.
mg
like. But Kathy Bates, as the gation of the church pastored by
First is an upcoming release
hopelessly
crazy Annie Wilkes, is a the Rev. Steve Deaver.
from Academy Entertainment that
The youth minister is now in the
is in the style of Die Hard , yet still certified delight. She jumps from
stands strong on its own merits. sanity to insanity with the ease of process of developing special programs and activities for the chilThe Last Hour , starring Michael an accomplished actress.
Misery,
new
from
Nelson
Enterdren
and teenagers of the local
Pare (Eddie and the Cruisers.
tainment
and
New
Line
Video,
is
church.
Philadelphia Experiment), ShanA Wednesday night Bible study
non Tweed (Steele Justice and past my choice for top video release of
and
recreation program has been
1991.
Playmate of the Year) and Bobby
' .
To
recap:
The
Last
Hour
is
started
for the teenagers and plans
Di Cicco, is a nonstop action
rated
"R"
for
nudity,
swearing
and
are being developed for some toteradvenrure that pits two men fighting to save the woman that they violence. Due out in stores in Octo- denominational activities with
other area church groups.
love fwm vengeful Mafiosi who ber, it is weU worth waiting for.
Plans are being formulated to
Misery
,
already
available,
is
are holding her hostage in a high
begin
a special worship service for
rated
"R"
but
is
a
lovely
and
8riP.rise. While this has many of the
RICKY L HARRIS
children
two years old to sixth
ping
Hitchcoclcian
thriller
that
will
elements of the aforementioned Die
Hard, this movie has a tighter hold you long after the ending grsde.
Harris will be assisted in the youth since 1984.
scri~t, subtle acting and a habit of credits run.
Harris has had a variety of relatvarious
programs by his wife, Jeri,
Our Nintendo tip for the colgetung hold of you and not letting
ed
experience
with youth including
umn is a fulfillment of a promise who holds a social worlc degree and conducting several
go.
seminars on
Take it from one who has seen made in an earlier column. In the a masters of counseling.
dating
.
He
has
also
conducted
The youth minister graduated
this, The Last Hour is the best Game Boy game SuperMarioLand,
retreats,
and
been
pulpit
supply on
medicine for those who are nursing at the end of the ftrSt world before from Liberty University at Lynch- occasions. His interests are varied
a broken heart because of the fact you face the giant Sphinx, you burg, Va. with a bachelor of sci- and include karate, volleybaU, and
that it shows you that nice guys do have two invisible elevators. Jump- ence in church ministries and a guitar.
ing on these can take you to two minor in business, and a masters of
get the girl.
He and his wife have two chilMistry, however, shows that places where you can get coins. religious education. He has been dren, Phillip, 10, and Jennifer, six.
once in a while bad girls get the One is right at the beginning. I ump involved in working wiUl church
good guys. Stephen King took up at the base of the wall and a
every celebrity's worst nightmare black coin box appears. Ride
and gave it shape in a novel about a through that to the top and run
romance novehst who is injured in along the ceiling gening the coins.
a car crash only to be rescued by About halfway through, on the bothis number-one fan, who is a psy- tom (and her you have to be Super
chotic mad woman who subjects Mario), defeat the ftrst Sphinx and
him to torture and then addicts him break the block before the mystery
block at the end. Hit up once more
to a pain killer.
Rob Reiner, who made the fabu- and there is your last elevator.
lous film Stand by Me, has outdone Easy, hug?
That's all for now. See you
himself. He and the write WiUiam
Goldman, just in the confines of soon.

Money owed social
security may be deducted
People who owe money to
Social Security as a result of Social
Security benefit overpayments
should be aware that a new rule
authorizes the Internal Reven ue
Service to deduct what is owed
from their Federal income tax
refunds.
This authority, len own as the
Tax Refund Offset provision, was
mandated by Congress in the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1990. It provides the Social
Security Administration (SSA) an
avenue for recovering overpayments from individuals who are no
longer receiving benefits. and who
are delinquent in repaying their
debt.
When people on the rolls
receive overpayments, Social Security generally deducts the amount
of overpayment from future
checks. However, for people no
longer receiving benefits, the agen cy can only request voluntary
repayment. If the overpaid individual was unwilling to make payment
or could not be located, SSA had to
wait until he or she became reentitled to benefits before recovery
could take place.
Under the new law, SSA will
send notices to former beneficiaries
who have not repaid overpayments

to provide them an opportunity to
arrange for repayment or request a
waiver of the overpayment. If no
response is received, Social Security will notify the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) who will withhold
the amount owed from any Federal
income tax refunds due the individuals.
SSA records show that there are
approximately 300,000 former beneficiaries who meet all the criteria
for a tax refund offset. Of this num ber, about 75 percent are former
recipients of student's benefits.
Beginning in August 1991, SSA
will mail the tax refund offset
notice to these former beneficiaries. After receipt of the notices,
some individuals are expected to
make voluntary payments to avoid
being referred to IRS for offset.
These voluntary payments, along
with the tax refunds that wiU eventually be offset by IRS, are expected to generate $47 million in fiscal
year 1992, and again in 1993. All
monies recovered will be returned ·
to the Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance Trust Funds.
For further information contact
the Athens office of Social Sec urity, 592-4448 or call toll free, 1800-234-5772.

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YOUNG PROSPECTS - Winners of the Eastern High School
football camp punt, pass, and Kick competition in the age group lOll were third-place rmisher Travis Friend, runner-up Josh Hager
and winner Billy Schultz (L-R). The campers were introduced to
various in-depth techniques in the fundamentals of football.

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FRIENDSHIP RENEWED - Don Roush, Portland, is pictured
with AI Hoffman, a friend from Antigo, Wise. Roush visited Hoffman in Antigo and it was the first time the two men bad seen each
other since serving with the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean
War. They made lnc:bon landing together in September 1950 and
served time in the same unit for about one and one-half years
before returning to the United States for reassigoment. Contact
between the two Marine buddies started witb plans for a reunion
held in NashviUe in 1990. They plan to keep in touch.

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Seven members were voted on
when the Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America, met recently with JoAnn Baum, councilor.
The pledges to the Christian and
American flags, Lord's Prayer, roll
call, and the singing of the first
stanza of the Star Spangled Banner
opened the meeting. Verses from
Psalms were read and minutes of
the previous meeting were
approved.
The District meeting will be
held Saturday with lunch being
served at noon. Everyone is to
attend and wear white.
The next meeting scheduled for
Aug. 20 will be canceled due to

FRIDAY
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state session. The eats committee
will serve the first meeting in
September.
The Past Councilors Club will
meet at Long Bottom with Mae
McPeek and Ada Bissell as
hostesses.
Attending were Ethel Orr, Marica Keller, Doris Grueser, Thelma
White, Jean Fredrick, Mary Jo Barringer, Mae McPeek, Alta Ballard,
Faye Kirkhart, Lora Damewood,
Opal Hollon, Bulah Maxey, Katheryn Baum, Everett Grant, Betty .
Young, JoAnn Baum, Elizabeth
Hayes, Esther Smith, Dorothy
Ritchie , Erma Cleland, Goldie
Fredrick and Charlotte Grant.

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WE REPAIR ALL 'MAKES
SWlTCHABLE TONE!PULSE phones '1'10f11 on botfltooe ~00 pulSe l.nes Therelore. tn areas l\av1ng only pulse (rr YdraJ) lines. you
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OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
391 WEST MAIN STREET
992-3524

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Stor. houro: 1:30 o.m. to I p . m. ~ thtOUgh Frktoy,
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1:30 o.m. to 7

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~The

Dally Sentinel

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before au enol
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD In ad\'aoce
to assure publication io the cal·
eodar.
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Vacation Bible
School will begin at the Rutland
Church of God Monday through
Friday. Classes are held from 6:308:30 p.m ., To register call the
church at 742-2060. The program
features Bible study, crafts, activities and music.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School at the First Southern Baptist
Church in Pomeroy will be held
through Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
The public is invited.
MIDDLEPORT - .. Around the
World with Jesus" is the theme of
Vacation Bible School at Victory
Baptist Church in Middleport
through Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
nightly. Public invited.
POMEROY - The Meigs Local
Band Boosters will start fair booth
clean-up on Thursday at 6 p.m. All
boosters are urged to attend.
MILTON, W.VA. - The Golden
Wolf Chapter, Muskies, Inc., will
·meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Milton Volunteer Fire Department.
The public is invited.
GUYSVILLE - The Ohio Valley Church of God, U.S. Highway
SO East, Guysville, will be present. ing films on Thursday and Friday.
Films on Thursday at 6 p.m.
include ..Thief in the Night' and
. _ "Distant Thunder." Films on Friday
::: at 6 o.m. includ~ "Image of the
Beast~ and "Prodigal Planet" Pastor Donald Combs invites the public.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
· 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for further
· infonnation.
FRIDAY
CHESTER - The Chester Township TruSieeS will meet in regular
. _session at 9:30 a.m. on Friday at
· " the town hall.
POMEROY - The Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road in
.Pomeroy will have youth revival

Thursday, August 8, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly. Carl Ward will be the
speaker. On Friday there will be
clowns; on Saturday there will be a
weiner roast; and on Sunday
Tabilha and the New Life Singers
will perform . Clyde Henderson
invites the public.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Southern
Golf Team is sponsoring a fourperson scramble at the Meigs
County Golf Club on Saturday at 9
a.m. Entry fee is $35 for non-members and $30 for members. Teams
will be drawn prior to tee-off. For
more information or to sign up call
992-6312 or 992-3671.
RACINE - Car wash sponsored
by Southern Band will be held 9
a.m . to 3 p.m . at Eber's Gulf in
Racine, Syracuse Fire Station and
Pleaser's Restaurant in Pomeroy.
The price is $3 for outside and $5
for both inside and outside. Vans
will be washed at an additional
cost
POMEROY - There will be a
hymn sing on Saturday at 8 p.m. on
the Pomeroy Parking Lot Stage.
Singers performing will be the
Children of God, the Redeemed
Quartet, God's Little Lambs, the
Joyful Hearts and the Willing
Hearts.
POMEROY - The annual
Samuel Allen Eblin reunion will be
held Saturday at 6 p.m. at the park
on Route 33, left side of the road
going toward Athens. Those
attending bring a covered dish,
table service, and gifts for the
games.
REEDSVILLE - There will be a
special meeting at the Reedsville
Firehouse on Saturday at noon for
the purpose of reviewing resumes
for the position of Clerk of Olive
Townsh1p.
WELLSTON - "Head Dizzy"
will present a concert on Saturday
in the Wellston High School Auditorium. Doors open at 7 p.m. and
music starts at 8 p.m. Admission is
$5 per person and tickets are avail able at the door. Proceeds will benefit the Big W Club Girls Basketball. For more information call
384-3850.
RACINE - There will be a
Southern Junior High Football
meeting on Saturday at 10 a.m. at

the Southern Football ·Building for
those interested in playing Southem Junior High Football.
BARLOW -The Barlow Volunleer Fire Department will have an
ice cream social on Saturday beginning at 4 p.m. There will also be a
baked steak dinner, sandwiches,
salad, pie and cake. Miss Flame
candidates will be presented.
RACINE - Entertainment at Star
Mill Park on Saturday at 7 p.m.
will include Mountaintop Gospel,
Harvest Time Bluegrass and CounttyBlend.
PORTLAND- There will be a
hymn sing at the Freedom Gospel
Mission Church on County Road
31 on Saturday featuring the Dailey
Family singers. There will also be a
weiner roast
SUNDAY
RUTLAND - The annual Davis
reunion for descendants of Orlando
and Katherine Sheline Davis will
be held Sunday at the Eli Denison
Post NO. 467, American Legion,
Beech Grove Road, Rutland. A
basket dinner will begin at noon.
SHADE - The 67th annual
Hayes- Young-Holiday School
reunion will be held Sunday on the
old school ground. Everyone is
welomce and dinner will begin at
12:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Guest speaker at
the First Baptist Church of
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:30 a.m .
will be Eddie Buffington. The public is invited to attend. The church
is located on East Main Street in
Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAJNS - The 56th
annual Parker reunion will be held
Sunday at the Tuppers Plains Elementary School. Basket dinner at
12:30 p.m. All welcome.

Prisoner who committed suicide
was erroneously arrested

Grandchildren should be kept
at a distance from grandfather
Dear Ann Landers: As a child
and teen-ager, I was sexually
molested by my father. When he
came to my room at night, I
prelended to be asleep. I was so
afraid of him I couldn't tell anybody
for fear of what he might do. My
!JlOther knew, but she wasn't strong
enough to confront him either. We
just didn\ talk about it. Two days
after I graduated from high school, I
moved out.
At that time, I despised my
father. I am an adult now and have
worked through my anger. We live
in the same town and I have a better
relationship with my parents than I
ever thought possible. Now, my
problem: I have two daughters. They
love to stay overnight at Grandma
and Grandpa's house. They are
getting older and I am becoming
worried. I don't let the girls stay
overnight nearly as often as they
would like, nor as often as they
are invited. I've said 'no" a lot this
last year and the girls haven't
complained. I think they have lost
interest and prefer slumber parties
with their girlfriends, which is just
fme with me.
I don't want to withhold the
children from my parents. They all
love each other so much. But I don't
want my father to touch them.
Of course my husband doesn't
know about any of this. He gets
along well with my parents. If he
knew, it would be the end of the
relationship.
Is it safe to assume that my father

has changed after 30 years? Should
I confront him? Should I tallc to my
mother about it? Should I be vague
about the reasons if my parents
become persistent and simply say
no 10 all overnight visits? llrUSt you.
--AN UNEASY MOTHER
DEAR UNEASY: Do Mt permit
your daughters to spend the night
under the same roof with your
father under any circumstanCes. I fail
to understand why you took such a
risk when they were younger. Since
your mother did nothing to protect
you, it's safe to assume lhat she
wouldn't protect them either.
I find it quile remarlcable that you
have such a loving relationship with
your parents. My hat is off to your
therapist. If your parents should
become persistent in their requests
lhat the girls sleep over, it would be
perfectly all right to spell out for
them the reason you will not permit
it Once you give them chapter and
verse, I assure you, they will stop
asking.
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to "N.J. Reader and
Carrier" who outlined the negatives
of being a newspaper delivery
person. I'd like to tell you about the
way we do it, which eliminates a lot
of problems.
Subscribers to The Newton
Kansan pay the newspaper office in
advance and a local "paper boy" or
"paper girl" picks up the papers at a
drop-off point and delivers them.
The Wichita newspaper has the same
system.

Ann
Landers

of Elvis Presley En1erprises Inc.,
said Wednesday.
The Presley residence draws
more than 600,000 visitors a year
and is the centerpiece of a 32-acre
tourist complex lhat takes in some
$12 million annually.
Graceland's staff has been
working on the Tokyo project for
two years and is being assisted in
the search for investors by the
Japanese Development Bank,
Soden said.
" The Japanese have a warm
nostalgic feeling about this era, or
this perceived era, in the United
States," Soden said. "The

'CH~RLESTON, W.Va. (AP)

led Will! failing to 114~ a $1.25 lOll

suicide in the Kanawha County Jail
was incorrectly arrested on a stolen
vehicle charge and should have
been let off ';'ith a $10 fine, the
county prosecutor said.
The only crime Ernest R. James
Jr., 21, of London, Ohio, commit-

Prosecutor Bill Forbes said
Wednesday.
In addttion, Forbes said, the
warrant cbargin~ James with auto
theft was defecuve and would not
have held up in court.
James, who was being held

- ;\li Ohio man who committed on the West Virguita Turnpike,

i\NN Li\NDERS

"1111, Lol Anl'elea
nm• syndleato aad
CreaiOI'I Syndlea&amp;e.II

When this system is used, the
carriers are spared the job of going
around to collect and they are
assured that every paper they
deliver will be paid for.
I don't understand why every
newspaper in the countty doesn't
use this delivery system. Maybe
you can suggest it the next time
someone writes to complain. -- M.L.,
NEWTON, KAN.
DEAR M.L.: Thanks for enlightening me. What you have described
sounds so totally sensible lhat I, like
you, cannot understand why all
newspapers aren't delivered this way.
Perhaps some subscribers would
prefer not to pay for their papers in
advance, but if the system were
implemenled, they would have no
choice.
Lo~~esome? Tafct charge of your
life and turn it around. Write for
Ann LAnders' new boolt.ltt, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a st/f-oddrustd, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or monty order for $4.15 (this
in£/wks postage and handling) to:
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
ll562, Chicago, I//. 6061 UJ562 . (In
Canada, send $5.05 .)

Names omitted
The names of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Yost were unintentionally
omitted from a list of people
attending the recent picnic held by
the Minersville United Methodist
Church.

Golf news
Winners after 18 holes of play
in the Tuesday Morning Ladies
League at the Meigs County Golf
Course were Becky Anderson, low
gross; Donna Nease, low net;
Becky Anderson. low putts; Norma
· Custer, chip-in-hole.
The group was reminded of the
mixed scramble to be held at the
club on Sunday. 1t will be a potluck
with meat furnished.

New arrival .
Steve and Denise Hendricks of
Lo~ are announcing the birth of
thelf ftrst child, a daughter, Jessica
- Anne, on July 31 at the LancasterFairfteld Community Hospital.
:
Grandparents are Nondus Hen. dricks, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Roben (Janice) Curry, Middlepon;
and Norman Deem of Syracuse.
Great grandparents are Gladys
. Deem, Racine, and Joseph Stafura,
Pittsburgh, Pa.

:: Sing slated
The Meigs County Ministerial
Association will kick-off the Meigs
County Fair with '111 old-fashioned
hymn sing at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday
in the grandstand area of the fairgrounds. Songsheets will be dis-

uibuted.

Birthday observed

. . A birthday dinner was held Sun. day hoaorins Evelyn McCaskey on
Iter 78th birthday.
.
Attending were Betty Oliver,
Randy II1CI Lucille Allen, Rutland;
• Vincent Oliver, Barb, Clay and
· Bobby Stone, Middleport; Gloria,
Candy and Sarah Bradshaw and

Mike RobinsOI. I'Omfl'Oy.
Gary and Elizabeth Hutton,
W.ilkeSVillc; Stan Hutton, Deb and
. ·J .on Pierce. Dexter; Everett and
:. Gloria Huuoa aud David Hutton,
. AJbllity; SI8Cy VIUgbn, Torch.
Afternoon guesiS were Charlie
. .'Barrett Jr., Rutland; Dorothy
· Nicholson, Coolville; aild Manha

Nichol!an. Florida.

'

re{&gt;Orter faces up tO 10 rears in
pnson after being convicted of
staging dogfights for the cameras
for "sweeps" week.
A jury deliberated 7 1/2 hours
Wednesday before convicting
Wendy Bergen of dogfighting and
conspiracy in a case one news
executive called "perhaps one of
the most serious breaches of journalistic ethics in local TV news history."
Bergen, 35, a fonner reporter for
NBC-affiliate KCNC in Denver,
was accused of arranging tWo dogfights for a four-part series called
"Blood Spon," tften lying about it
to a grand jury. Dogfighting is illegal in Colorado.
The reports ran in April and
May 1990 during "sweeps" weelc,
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)- Veteri- legs won't hold weight. ·she tried when a station's ratinj!S are meanarians worked to save Bernadine, several times to get up. Right now, sured to help set adverusing rates.
Prosecutor Ray Sharpe claimed
a white rhinoceros injured when it we're hoping these treatments will
that
Bergen tried to ~et ~enuinc
feU from a ledge at the Toledo ZOO. help her. It will probably be a coufootage
of pit bulls ftghttng, but
The animal tumbled off a ledge ple of days before \Ve know more, ••
when
those
efforts failed, she wantat the zoo's African Savanna Ms. Nap1erala said.
ed
the
story
badly enough to pay
exhibit Tueaday and landed on its
Bernadine, one of the zoo's . money to set up
fights.
back. It has been unable to stand three rhinoceroses, was sitting up
The
jury
convicted
her of three
since the accident, spokeswoman Wednesday af1emoon, sbe said.
counts
but
cleared
her
of
six others,
Patty Napierala said Wednesday.
"She is able to sit up on front
The 22-year-old rhinoceros is legs. But she has spent most of her including perjury. Bergen, an
being trealed with anti-inflammato- time on her side," Ms. Napierala Emmy-winning reporter who
resigned last September, could get
ry drugs and muscle relaxants, Ms. said.
up to 10 years in prison at sentencNapierala said.
ing
Oct. 4.
As the rhinoceros tried to get
Defense
attorney Lee Foreman
up, it rolled into a moat, which has
said,
"There
is no way you could
been flooded with warm water to
make the rhinoceros buoyant, she
said.
Students in grades seven or
ZOO officials are doing their best
eight at Meigs Junior High School
to save Bernadine.
"She can move her legs but her interested in playing football
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
should repon for an organizational - Tracey Ullman has given birth
meeting on Monday at 6 p.m. at the to her second child.
~eigs Junior High School StadiJohn Alben Victor, 8 pounds
um. Parents are urged to auerd.
and 13 ounc.es, was born Tuesday,
a spokesman for the comedian and
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) her husband, producer Allan McKGospel singer Shirley caesar says
eown, said Wedneaday.
she won't seek re-election to the
Ullman's ftrst child, Mabel, is 5
Durham City Council so she can
years old.
concentrate on her job as pasta in
HOUSTON (AP) - Outgoing
Ullman is best known to AmeriRaleigh.
Miss Texas USA Christy Bogard is can TV viewers for her now-canMrs. Caesar, who has five suing beauty pageant producers in celed Fox network series, "The
Grammy Awards, said Tuesday she a $9.25 million federal case, alleg- Tracey Ullman Show."
didn't have time 10 continue serv- ing she was snubbed by not being
ing on the council, where she is inviled to crown her successor.
wrapping up her first four-year
Miss Bogard and her attorneys Women's group to meet
term as at-large member.
contend it should have been her job
Mary Ann-Sorilen will speak on
The singer was installed as pas- to crown the new beauty queen and
lOr June 'l7 at Mount Calvary Holy they filed suit Tuesday aaainst her 1990 trip to China at the
Church 'in Raleigh, which is 15 Miss Universe Inc. and Crystal monthly meeting of the Women of
St. 'Paul and St. John Lutheran
miles south of Durham where she Productions Inc.
lives.
"The two most important Churches at 7 p.m. on Tuesday at
Besides, "I'm going back to moments in the reign of Miss the SL Paul Lutheran Church, 231
school to get my master's of divini- Texas USA is the night she's E. Second !ve., Pomeroy. Marty." she said.
crowned and the night she relin- garet Blaeunar will bave the devoAmong Mrs. Caesar's awards qUishes her crown. So she's been tions. Refreshments will be served
was a Gram my for "Martin," denied lhat opportunity," attorney following Mrs. Sorden 's talk and
which commemorates Martin Warren Fitzgerald Jr. said of his slide show. Women of all faiths ate
inviled.
Luther King Jr.
client.
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - A
federal judge has ruled lhat school
officials violaled the rights of a disruptive boy by requiring his parents
to give him behavior-controlling
medicine.
U.S. District Judge Martin
Loughlin ruled that Casey Jesson,
12, is entitled to 7 lfl months of
compensatory education after he
finishes high school or turns 21.
Loughlin also ordered the Derry
Cooperative School District to pay
his ~nts' legal fees and begin an
indtvidualized education plan for
him this fall, subject to review at
least once a year.

School district lawyer Matthias
Reynolds said he plans to appeal
the ruling, which became public
Tuesday. Reynolds argued that the
drug, Ritalin, helped Casey's
hyperactivity and that it wasn't
until he was taken off the drug in
1987 that his behavior and grades
slipped.
The judge commended school
officials for their overall handling
of the boy, who had been transferred in and out of regular classes
because of behavioral problems.
The evidence showed that "authorities at the school acted with the
patience of Job,'' Loup;hlin said.

Vets work to save rhinoceros

Football meeting
slated Monday

Ullman gives birth

Caesar won't
seek re-election

Miss Texas
sues producers

pleased with the verdict as well.
"The decision reached shows
that the people of this state are
accountable to the law regardless of
who they are," Sharpe said.
Police began building a case
against Bergen after Dusty Saunders, a Rocky Mountain News TV
critic, reported a KCNC source told
him the fights were staged.
Bergen claimed she had
received a tape of a pit l!ull fight
anonymously in the mail. However.
prosecutors detennined that two
station photographers made the
tape and mailed it to the station.
Juror Dan McGuire said he was
swayed by evidence showing
Bergen bought dog muzzles before
one fight.
Charles Kravetz, assistant news
director at WCVB in Boston, said

TO-PLA(E AN AD ULL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

Meigs. Gtllit or M11on cou!'ti• must be pre·

•Price of ed tor ell cephal IMiers it double price of ed cost.

•7 point lint type only u•d .
·s~tinel is not responsible for eu011 tfttJ first: d~ . ICheck
for e"ors firu cl-v ed runs in paper) . Call before 2 :00pm
dl¥ ah• oublic1t10n to mtkt contction .

•Adsthlt must bt Plid in advance are
Cerd of Th.,ks
In Memoriem

COPY DEADLINE MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIOAl PAPER
SUNOAV PAPER

\

•

4 - Giveawav
6 - Happy Ads
6-Loat end Found
7 - Vard Sale (paid in advance!
8 - PwbUc Selt &amp; Auction

S 1~rvtt:I! S
11 - Hetp Wented
1 2-Sttuellon Wented
13-lnsurance
14-Butin•s Training
16- Sckools &amp; l"ttruelio"
16- Aadio. TV&amp;. CB Aepa11
17-MisctUeneous
18- Wanltd To Do

R,!~ l

Eslale

44&amp; - Gallipolis

992 - MiddiiPOrt

675 - Pt Pleasant

32 - MobileHom .. for S1le
33-Firms lor Stle

843 - Artbil Oist

379- W•Inot

676 - Apple Grove

985 - Ch•ter
843- Port'-nd

773 - Maton

247- Letarl Fells

34- Butin•s Buitdmgs

36 - lots a. Acreege
36 - Rul Ettete W1n1ed

882 - New Heven
895 - Letart

949 - Ricine
742 - Rutland
667 - Cootvate

937 - 8ufttlo

RuuJtc Fast

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICA-TION

BASEMENT SALE
EWING RESIDENCE
MECHANIC ST.
FRI. &amp; SAT.
ALLDAY

FOR SALE: Round Table
with 4 upholstered
chairs, good condition.
$75.00.
CALL 949·3066
PRICE REDUCE()!
Partial owrer fimnci1 ~v;~b~ The prce
has been reduced to , $77.900 and
owne1 fmancing ol up to 80'\\ of purchase
amounl may be possi~e lor qualilymgperson
to buy verJ n1ce large home en JY! acres in
Rae~re. 4 BR. 3 baths, 2 garages. renled I BR
apt ProtErtY inclllles4,800sq. H. Iarm bl~.
Caii614·99HI04 for Appl .

8

PubliC Notice

'.
-:
;;
.·

****
A atudy from Finland indicalea1hal
vitamins Aand Ecan eaaelhe auffaring lhal cornea wilh rheumatoid arlhr~ia .
More folka eround the country****
ore awilchlng from water oupplild by
!"u.niclpel ~alar aystema. to botded_apring water. Since spring water
11n I fluoridated for cav11y protectiOn, many donliata now recommend fluoride supplemenla ovailllble as rinoeo, lablelo, gel a or drops.
·~
:~

PUBUCNOnCE
seated propoull wUI be
received by th• Ylll•ll' ol
Middleport In the Office of
the Meyor, 237 Rece St.,
Middleport, Ohio, until 4
P.M. Aug. 23, 1ft1, lor Ihe
followhig work to be ·performed at the boat launchlng facility on Walnut SL:
(1) Provide alope protec&gt;
lion and eroelon control 11
w•tar edge of romp from
Walnut St. to Coot St. and
elong entire upper bank
from Coal St. to approxlmallly 100 ,_.down rl(2} Replace und-atar
launching ramp
(3) Raplact atalrt
deacendlng from upper
bltnk II Cool SL to romp
(41 Replace well utencf.
lng (rom e181re to approx·
lmatlly 71 feet up ror'np to

-,

-ondery-~
(5) Rllut'- and provide

·•
,. ;;
':
,·,
:,
,
·•

curbing for ecceea • • to
lllunchlng runp
(I) Fill 1nd gr•d• ehlll
•long water edr• below
lounohl~g end 0 f'!lmp to
exterid to 11•.- St. ·
(7) Provide oourt••Y
docka - r lailn~~ runp.
PNIIminlry conftrucllon

to be performed In your propoael muat be outlined In
your propoaal whan
aubmlnld.
The VIllage r•-•ee the
right to rtlect eny or all bide
and to welve any lnformalillea In bedding.
Freel HoHman, Mayor
Vlilaga of Middleport
(II a. 1s 21c
Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Melga County Boe•d
of Commlaelo-• ieeccept·
Ing wrltlln -led blda lor
lhe purah- of cerlaln ,..,
property •• dllcrlbed be·
lo;rtuen aeeild bidl mull
bl received ,In 1111 Mlill
County Commlaato-• Offlee. Mel- County eounhoun. -Po.-ov. Ohio.
411711, no lelar lh111" Wld,_.,ay,.A\Itluet 21, 1.11,11
4:30.P.M; Nolll.deWIIIbeeo-·
..,.., poltdlllecl ,.., tlutrt
Auguat21, 1111 : 'the.wrltc.n INied 'bide ~ld ln-

cludelhelllclder'e name, adMiiljlhorit ......,...;, •

deel::tiootio,;
', dleg.rame •r• available by
.1 con tooting am ·Miller •t
Village HilL
.
·
· lllcle *'II be aooepllld lront
quallfted colllraofj)ro lor 1M

·.=r

Pf1114!ct.,..~ny

"n

53- AnlfCiula

64 - Misc . Mtrchendtle
55-Building Suppli•
56-Pitl for S.lft

57 - Mutictllnenuments
58 - Fruits&amp; V-t.t•bl•

59 - For Sale or Tr1d1

F~rm Su pplt l!~

41 - Houses for Rtnt
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
44 - Apertment tor Rent
46 - Furntshed Rooms
·48- Spece tor Rent
47-Winted to ~ent
48-EQuipmern for Rent
49 - For L••• ....

PubliC Notice
Perce! No. ; : The following dncr!Hd reel eatale,
lllueled In lhe Townaltip of
Col1,1mbla. in lhe County of
Melga ond Slete of Ohio, 10
wil:
The aouthWIII comer of
lhe aouthweet quanar of
SICIIon Number Thirty-Two
1321 In Townaltip No. Nine
191 of Renge No. Rfleen 11111
of me Ohio Compeny'a
Purch- conUiinlng Forty
140} ecrea more or leu.
Alao, me following deacribed real e1t11te, com·

menclng

11

tho nonhwnl

comer of Section No. Thirty-

one 1311 of Townlhlp No.
Nine IB}, Ringe No. Fifteen
(1 &amp;}, of the Ohio Compeny'a
Purcheae; lhance 1111 Forty
(401 rode. thence aoulh
Forty 1401 roda; thence weal
Forty 1401 rods; thence
north Forty 1401 roda to lhe
place of beginning, conuoinlng Ten 1101 ecroe more or

&amp; liVI!qiJt:k

LEGAL NOTICE
Wa, lho Board of TruoiHI
of Olive Townahip, Melga
County, Ohio, ere eccopllng
eppllc:eliona for lho pooillon
of Townahlp Cleric. All reaumea mull be given 10 1
Trunoe prior lo noon, Augun10, 1991.
By Order of lhe Boord of
Trunoeo of Olive Townahip,
Paul E. Ufe. Joe E. Lentz,

81 -F.,m Equipment

&amp;2 - W1nted to Buv
63 - liveltoclt

64 - Hav &amp; Gr1in
66 - Sttd &amp; F1rtililtr

71 - AutOI for Sell
72 - Trucks to' Selt
73- Vtnl 6 &lt;4 YVO ' s
74-Motorcvel•
76 - Boata I. Motatl for S1le
76 - Auto Per11&amp; Acc•sori•
77 -· Auto AtPiir
78 - Cimplng Equipment
79-Cimpers• Motor Homes

Erne1t 0 . Barringer.

181 7. B. 9, 3tc

....

Excepting from lhe Forty
(401 ecre 1ree1 ebove deacrlbod, one (1} rod, Slxtaen
118} feat wide on lho eu1

lidt,· belna • rlaht nf w11v
now owned by Loui1 Cot·

trill and wife.
Said Reel EIUIIe having
parcel number 06-00617.
Parcel No. 2: The following deacrlbed r..l eaUIII, oiluale In lhe County of Vinton, in lhe Townaltip of Vinton end In lhe Stele of Ohio.
lo-wll:
Being lho Ohio Compliny'• PurchaH, and being

lhe aoulh helf of the
aouthetal querter of Section
No. Two 121 of uld Townaltlp No. Nine 191. Renge
Slx-n (111, excepting
forty (401 acrea olf lhe weal
end ol aald premt111 aold by
E. P. Devla to Leender Col·

I, Ronald E.
Atkins, am not
responsible
for any debts
other than my
own as of
August 7,

85 - General Hauling

86 - Mobils Mome Rea•''
87 - Uptlolnlfv

Public Notice

County Died Recorde. Vol·
ume 83, Pege 1174 end Volume 139, Page119, VInton
County Deljl Recorda.
No warrantill ere mlde ••
to eny Ilene, mongegoa or
eneumbrenc11 on lhe above
Reel Eatale.
The Boord of Commlaalonera mey reject eny bida
end re-adverti• lhla property unllellauch properly It
aold or t..aed.
Terme of payment •re u

followa: 10% of pu1cheaa
price peld lmmldielely by
ceah orbenkcheck. Remaining belence duo within lhlrly
1301 doya of ule.
Melp• County Boord
o Commialionen
171 18, 26: (811. a. 41c

J'

1991.
GOING OUT OF
IUSINESS SALE
AUG. 1·7, 1991
Cakt, CalMly Shop, SR
143 Hlll'l'ilonwillt

more or

Ia••·

Alao Thirty 1301 ecrea off
me north end of lhe 811!1 hell
of the aoulheul querhlr of
Section Two (21. Townahip
Nlnel81, Renge Sixteen (111
In lhe Ohio Compeny'a
Purch-.
Alao • ernell lnct of lend
attueted In lhe above nemld
Townaltlp ind County, conla(nlng a eprlng of llock watar 'deicrllte! •• foliowa. betng at lhe nortfl end of th•
the
· one-helf ofofSection
Townaltip
Slx..n
, Ohio
~~~pel~;~ ;Pu,.~~:.;..

•••••

•

•••••••

WE DO

oiUY oSEU 0 nADI
OPEN
Tuoaclly ttwu saturday
10:00·•m-6:00pm
7 2.

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMA YES

•20 Years Experience
•Quality Homes and
Custom Remodeling

742-2328

11/ 22/ lfn
':=:;:;;=;;:::;:::;:==rr---...;,
..
.
.
;
.
·.·;,.;.··;.;;..·.:..::;:;.J
I

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIP! NO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

liiDIPINDINT
· CAIPU CUANII5
-~ ftlE f 001 CA E
a....
L
I
•Reasonable Rate•
eQuality Work
•Free Eatimlilea
•Carpel Haa Fall Dry
Time

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
.
llew .._. lllllt
"Free Eatlmat.ea"

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

•High Glou on Tile
Floor Finiah

PH. 949-2101

MilE lEWIS,

ow-

BILL SLACK

· or ltl. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

tt. I, lutland, OH.

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L
INSULATION

742-2451

992-2269

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•lnaulatlon

Roofing, Vinyl
aiding, Paiatiag,
and Home repaira

ittmt V1 price.
Also, &lt;Gtt fountai111, tltow-

Speciolilint in
Custom frcot1e lapalr
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
fOI ALL MAKES &amp;

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
IUIII ST., MASON, WY.

MODELS
992·7013
or 992·5553
01 TOll REI
1·100·141·0070
DAIWIII OliO
7131 / '91

1-(304)·
773-9'560

Medical • Surgical • OB
&amp; Pediatric Registered Nurses
EXPERIENCE PREFERRED

Opportunity To Cross-Train
In Speciality
CONTACT
PERSONNEL
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
POINT PLEASANT, WV
(304) 675-4340
EOEIAA

tfn

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

7-15-91· 1 mo. od.

742-3033

Help Wanted

3 Killen. lo good home, phone

NEW ....... REPAIR

7/lf{t-. ...

USED APPUANCES

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 « 915·3561

(614)
696-1006

Auou from Pool Offke
POMEROY, OHO
I0/30tl9 tin

6·6·'9t

Licensed Practical Nurses
Our rapid growth as the area's newest and finest
Skilled Long Term Care Facility has generated opponunltles for RN' sand LPN' s to become a part of a
well managed, employee orienled Health Care De·
livery Team .
Come for a vis II, talk lo us about your expect&amp;·
lions, and we will talk to you aboutouremploymenl
benellts which lncl11des the following and are offered
In whatls a truly "Slate Of The Art' Nurstna FacUlty
which supports the efiectlve delivery of responstve
resldenl services:
-Choice of 8 hour, or 12 hour, shifts
-12 hour shift compensation Includes worktng
~hour,~, and paid for 40 hours, for any three
t2hour shifts work~ In a 14daypay-perlod.
-Experience compensatton,, shl!t differential, paid IN ADDmON tocompetttlve base
hourly rates of $10.50 for RN' s, and $7.50 for
LPN's.

.

Stop by for an Interview, or phone Sally
Gloeckner, DON, at (6141 992-&amp;472 , and )et us show
you that all Nunlng Homes are not all)&lt;e.

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

AI.L MAUS
Iring It In Or We
Pick Up.

(amplete

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

s~~t'~(®i~c~.E~trtt~~so

Owner &amp; Optratar

614-992-6820
Pomeroy,

"

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON
•Now Ho-•
•Garages

•Remodeling end
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

•Complete

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

··-.Wing

Stop I Compare
FrH ' Estimates

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or

985-4473

667-6179

691-686.
; . ,,4,'11-lfft

__

YOUNG'S
UIPENYEI
.. _,..
,SERVICE ·
-ounorwortt

- con-•wortt

"41 .........1. Prlctt"

-tlooflng

-1-IE-

'IIInllni

(FREE EITIMATEII

.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
(USTOM I!IILT .
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

-E-el •ntl Plumlling

Pomny, Ohio

.

PIL 949·2101
or ••· 949·1160
Day or
..
NO. SUNDAY

11-14-'90 "" "=--~=~~;;
I.

FrN kHtano, whha 1 black &amp;
whllo, 814-378-1348
lrlt bulbo, 304-t75-3020.
Lergo Trector Tlr•il llak• Good
Flowor Bod Hu - Painted.
514-4411-1147a.1
Mele Bttgle, :J yeare old, v.ry
friendly, 304-185-3430.

Old menraaa and

304-t7$-73411.

box

aprlnga

•

5
Happy Ads
CIVIallen lady looking for
genneman trlllndlpen pal; Wrllo
~~

27. New Hlwn, WV 21211.

lng blue collar wllh 10 logo.
&amp;and Hillaree, 304-41711-8120.
7

Yard Sale

Sm. Toola.

Grooming

For All Breeds
EMILEE MERINAR

992·5335 or
915-3561

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 '

lent, Ftmelt. 114--446-8325.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Z Femlly Yard Sllle: Sllurday,
Auguet 1011t, e:oo - 5:00 eo VII•
Road, Bidwoll. (1 IIIIo Will 01
SR 1101 Knlok Knoolte, Clolhing,

3/6/90/tln

TO: Registered Nurses

304-117!-nn
4 Pari Rolrlovor Pupploo 1
llaloa, t Famale, 8 WMka Old
814-24$-5e85 Ahor 5p.m.
'
Adorabl• Long Haired Gray Kit-

90 DAY WUUNn
6 Lost &amp; Found
WASHII5-S 100 up
LOST- Lergo herdboclc Readora
DIY15-~oy "'
OIQHt, of claniC81 mualc, Nonh
llffiiGIIATOIS-$100 up
I Walnu1, Rewerd, 114-IH·
UIIGIS-Gas-O.C.-$125 up · 3rd
3897
fllfEZI15-$125 up
'
LOST-Female
German
•no OYP15-$79 up
Shepherd, nemed HBaKn• WNr·

lcroas Frertt Pest Office
217 I. Semttl St.
I'OMIIOY, ONtO

Carl· fur Peoplr Who Ar&lt;· Special To You ··

2, LRvt

2 Rabblla, 1 Cocltellil Bird. 6t424S-S3g2.

ROOFING

742·2656

4
Giveaway
1 Ueod Admlrel DMp Fro-r. 25
Cubic FHI, lluol a. AIM To
llova K Awey. 814 448 0!77.
2 Doga, I IIIII l.ona He Ired
Sholfftlld Type, Wall tleMtred
And Houaebrolte. 1 Tan I Wltito
haglo Typo, Frlo~~lo Good
Heme Onlyl 614·2
M•...SI•·

l wrnr••

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

and display radtt

&lt;IH

lUYO PARTS

COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Announcements

I will nol bo roaponolble for any
d•bl• olhor lhan enythlng In lho
name of Floyd D. W -.
Slnglt aorvlco and llftllelter
tor aroe llnglft. All agta. Con·
lldtnlial and anordeble. WrHa:
Slnglea, P.O. Box 1043, Gil·
llpolla, OH 45031.

639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

A&amp;B

1-12-90-lfn

3 Announcements

992-2n2 or
742·2251

After 7:00 p.m.

USED RAILROAD TIES

I

JAMES KEESEE

667·6611

On SHelnstalation
FrMEstm.tes

R.N.'s

· ·s peci::~l

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

,JROMM BUILDERS

1.

O.or 400 pans, 600 mold&amp;
and wadding tapt. Mot!

••••••••

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

4 2421

Enfirt ttock cc*., tandy,
wed.ng su,.ll•.

••••

•·

S1EWARY'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPliES

l1stalla Cellllar
Plto1es, (• St•eos
or Radios, CB's

11'111 .

Alao lhe north half of aaid
M&gt;ulheeal quaruor ol aaid
Section No . Two (21. excepting whel E. P. Oevia
aold end d"ded lo Lttendlr
Coltrillerid John Merk. containing tiVOnly (701 ecroa,

•

3 Announcements

AdtiCrlpllon of tha work

•

614·742·2904

7-2S I mo

81 ·- Homelmprovtmenu
82 - Piumbing 6 Htlling
83 -E acweting
8-' - Eiectric.t &amp; AefrigM'I1ion

11

••

Public Notice

l;bldifil
43-Firms tor Rent

•

61 - Houeehold oOocl•
12-Sportlng Ooodt

Transrwrl alton
21 - Bulin•• Opportunity
22-Monf'( 10 Loan
23 - Prof•lioaal Servicn

31 - Homei lor Sale

458-Laon

lhruba, snow remove!, etc.
The caretaker mun hove
available the necea•ry
equipment and loolalo perfonn me• oervicea.
If lnlerelled in providing a
quoUIIion on lhe• aervicea,
. contact Farmero Homo Admlnlllrellon al 10233 AI. bony Rd.. Athena, OH.
· 411701 bv Augun12. 1991
for e requen for Quotation
Peclcage. Phone: 692-8821 '
1811, 2, 4. 3tc

f lllliiiiVIIII!lll

Mason Co . WV
Aret Code 30'

381 - Vinton
24&amp; - Aio Gr1nde
266-Guvan OiSI

ourgery. Fat is moved from lha abdomen to the cheat 10 create a
brea11 form said lobe more naturel-looking than the silicone version.

an

1-Cird of Thtnkl
2 - ln Memory
3-Annoucements

mowing, trimming

IUCh II

Mcrch ,ulll i5 1!

Area Code 614
Pomatoy

nance; yerd maintenance,

0

Located Oo Safford School I d. off It. 141
(6141446-9416 or 1-100·172-StU

locka: replacing window•
21/r MI. outside
end doora: removing treah
Rutland on Now
end debria from properly;
winterizing aervic'a: routine
Lima ld.
inapecliona: interiOr malmo- ~~====~~~~

e ads

MeuiJ• C oynty

367- Ch•hi'e

New type of reconstruction for mattectomy patients is ..free-flap"

'

Aet••r•

fnr tar.h

Gillie County
A,..eCode614

Public Notice

••••
Whatever your denlial rocommendslor good dental hygience you'll

exchan~es ...

Jollou:ing telephonP

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

find il at Swiaher-Lohoe Pharmacy.

OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2'00 P.M . MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M . TUESDAY
- z ,OOI'.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2,00 PM THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M FRIDAV

Classified paf(eS ,cm-er 1he

BY YOUR

****

OHIO 45775·9626

vi•··
bul ...inklel
nol
limitedinclude
lo, perfonning

0

BENNETT'S

IUTIAND,

~~~~t;a.~~'~"1 ~~~:'k~in!'r~

conMCYtive runs. broken updfYIWill btChlf'ttldl

9- WM1od 10 Buy

cept - clasified clispll'f. Rusin-.• Card 1nd leg-' noticnl
wiH also appear in the Pt . Ple.,nt "egie .. r end the Gelli·
polis Daily Tribune. reaching over 18.000 homa

PHARMACY
TOPICS

.

10
Monthly

••••

1,625 UL- US·S45
It, I, lOx 71·A

7-24 lmo

Ov'r 16 Worda
Rote
.
.20
a4.00
.30
88.00
.42
19.00
.eo
113.00
.01/ dey
11 .30/ day

Words
15
15
15
15
15

3
6

•A clauifild actvertislment pieced in TheDailv Sentin .. te• -

breaches of journalistic ethics in
local TV news history."
KCNC anchorman Bill Stuart
said the case "gives ammunition
for people to say or to thinlc, 'Oh,
reporlers do lhat all the time,' when
that's not how it works."
Mark Labriola, who was
charged with helping stage the
~ghts, received immunity and testifted he acted as a middleman
between Bergen and dogfighters.
KCNC photographers Jim Stair
and Scott Wright, who ftlmed the
fights, also were charged but
received probation for testifying
against Bergen.
Pit bull breeder Guy Phillip
Walker, whose dogs appeared in
the film, made a similar deal with
prosecutors and also testified.

Army reaearchera are dweioping a new way 10 deliver anlibiolics direclly to a wound: aprinkie-on, aullained·raleeae mlc:rocapaulea.
One doae would leal up lo six weeks.

,

DIVI

AIR (ONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNA(ES FOR MOillE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

POOU,
ClmiNS, EIC.

CARETAKER SERVICES
The Ferman Home Ad·
mlnlllretion, U. S. Deport·
men1 of Agriculture, Athena
County Office. will be con·
trectlilg for ceretaker oar·
vices for 1heir inventory and
cullodiol properties in

RATES

-,; • .,.,.,· t .tiO discount tor tdl .,.id In advance.

•free ads - Oiv81wty and Found edt und..- 1! words will be
run 3d.,, 11 no ch•ge.

Dean.

tacka in people with cloggocl arteries, Harvard researchers found.
Porticipents in the study actually took bell carotene supplements.

·siGNS

--

,_
-·-

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

C.tCAtlllt

llrviCBI, IUCh .. : changing

Japanese just haven't worried
themselves with whether Elvis died
of drugs or all that nonsense, Elvis
alive, Elvis committed suicide
Elvis was an FBI agent. They jusi
don't concern themselves with
that.''
Plans for the Tokyo project call
for a 4- to 6-acre domed park representing a 1950s American town
with souvenir shops, theaters ,
nightclubs and exhibit halls.
Exhibits and movie festivals are
to include other American icons
such as Marilyn Monroe and James

••••
The beta carotene in carrots and broccoli may help prevent heart at-

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

TV reporter convicted of staging dogfights
Group to meet Hyperactive boy's rights
see this except as a strong defense of the case: "People all over the
The Roberta Circle will be held
By PEGGY LOWE
verdict"
countty are interested in what is
. at the Pomeroy Chapter No. 186, violated by required medicine
Associated Press Writer
The
prosecutor
said
he
was
perhaps one of the most serious
· Chester. A potluck meal will be
GOLDEN, Colo. (AP) -A TV

- held at noon on Thursday, Aug. 15.
· 'Rolls and drinks wiU be furnished.

The

pending $50,000 bond, liagged
himself with a sheet Monday night.
by 'llclr ltiOill'lt~
Forbes called the case "a
tragedy at every step of the way."
James and two other men. Nor- . B~rby
wood Harman Jr., 59, and Brian
~UALITY
Keith Ask, 31, both of Norfolk,
Va., were arresled by a state troop- , Poirtt Ptnsan~ . n
er Sunday.
PubliC Notice

Classified

Japan in line for a big hunk of Elvis

By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Elvis
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport is alive and turning to Japan.
Pastors and congregations will
Managers of Presley's Gracebegin Operation Intercession on land estate are looking for Japanese
Sunday, "Blow the Trumpet in investors for an $80 million theme
Zion."
park based in Tokyo and focused
on Elvis, and 1950s and '60s
ROCK SPRINGS - The Modem . Americana.
Woodmen of America Camp 7230
" We're receiving such an
will have a melon supper for the enthusiastic response, I think we'll
Meigs County Fair opening on have a deal put together and be in
Sunday from 4:30-7 p.m. at the serious construction design within
Rock Springs Fairgrounds by the a year," Jack Soden, executive
Grange building. Family door prize director of the Graceland division
awarded. The public is invited to
attend.

ohio

1991

2 Family: 17 Belmonl Oriv•.
Augull 8th I IOih. Fumlluro,
Houllhold !lorna, Iliac Ciolh·
In g.
2 Family: Lincoln Pika And 141,
Auguat Oth, 10th, N. Collective
ttemt And Moral

3 Femllloa Yard Sllio: IIIII Croak
Rood, By Tho Underpeu. Frldey
And ..IUrdOJ.
s Famllr: t1114 Second Avenue,
Thuroday, Frklay, 10 Pc.
Norllah China, tlllO; FumHuro,
Mite.

s Femlly: Augulllllh, 101h; 11).5.
Mono Wcmana, Childrana
Clol~1rtt•
looka,
Old
MagizlnM, Ql...ware, Comfor·
l•r, llellroea And Spring Sol,
-•1'.'{-

RUI

Rodnoy

O.LIIIo 1 lid lhoppo.

AI

3 Famllr: hlurdlr. Augulll101h
I a.m. 111 lrellor On Left Paai
Hennon Trece·High. Lillie Qlrla,
Adun Clt11htl1 Crolle, Horne In·
lllior, Books 11 Morel
ALL Yerd Slllla Muol It Paid In
Aclvenoe; DIADLiNE: 2:00 p.m.
lho day bolore lho ad II II Nn.
SUndar edlllon • 2:00 p.m.
FrklaJ. llertdtoJ aclhion - 2:00
p.m. klunlliJ.

�D-The

Sentinel

fOr Sale

Guage Bolo: Thunday, Friday,
Soturdoy. •1 Acrooo From Boptill Chun:h, V1n1011. Fumnwo,
Hou..tlold

MeM,

lltme, Women.,
CloU••, Toya,

Chlkl,.,.

Bumper Pool Tabta. Toolt, Fane
Glaaw. ., SW•pera, Llnene,

g:ra. Whll Nolo, Anllqull.
And DMk Chalrw, Ml.c.

Fumhlll't, Lim.-. Largest Sale

Evorl

llrge S.le: Olaaware, Fuml·

tuN, Clolhii\Q. Etc. 2 1/2 MIIH
Mill C,..k Rood. Friday. Salur·
dey.t-6.

Court Houle. 1

Augual llh1• 6 10th. 101 Flrol
Soulhoulom Equlpmonl.

room, 2 rooma,

3 roomo, 4 room&amp; All nlcoly
docoratod, air oondhlonlna,
yow wllorl biU IN palil.
lloko your cholco now. No
quctoo tho phono1 you
muol - • - · Phone .., on
oi&gt;DOintment. 114-441-7188 dey,
. . .uteva.

Moving Sa.. : Frid1y, Stlurdly,

IUinauga.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Apartment
for Rent

Behind

Porch loll: Fridav Aug,.t llh,
81.1n. •7 4 ~m. Lincoln SlrHI
(c- •·0 p Hut)
Th,.ldoy,
And Friday Auauot
8th a lith, u. 148 Woodfond
Drivo.

"Am I looking lorward to this vacation?
He's got poison ivy lotion, bug spray,
mosquito netting and a snake bite kit!"

35 Lots &amp;Ac~
. ge

a

ocroogo oV.IIabto lor
new homo conatructlon on
~~-...,::-:-:-:-:--=--::~
Rlybum Rood.
rood,
Th..oday,
Frldav ... From Por· t=========~=::========i county
woter Povod
--·••·
lor Go I Milo bOwn Bulavlilo 11
Help Wanted
18 Wanted to Do
rutriCtlona. Ccti.p~o.;Tni'.;;;
Pike, Booko, Clolhlng, Cll'lalno,
lion 111111iod .., req,.at, 30W71J.
Ho-noktllloc.
AVON I All ANOo I Shlrioy Will Do Babyollllng In lly Homo, 5253, Jolin D. Clorloch, no
Yard Solo Firat Tlmal A~uot 8, Spoa,., 304-4178-1428.
1 V2 11110 Out Rl. 211, Ro....,. olnpleowldo lrlllora, plouo.
9, 10. 84 Sycamoro Slrw , Ga~ llaluN Babyollter In lly - · 114-4,...7585.
2 oc,. lot, Aohlon, WV. Comllpollo, Ohio.
Homo In Tho CHy of Galllpollo.
Pillo Hptlc ayatom and walor.
Yord Solo: Solunloy, Auguat Prolor Somaono Who u- In
Coli 114-441-1205 or 3114-571J.
101h, 111.10. • 3p.m. Air Con- Town. 114-44WII12.
2057.
dhlonor, F,.nHuro, Mloc. lorno. EARN IIONEY ft-adi"J.:&amp;.-•-j
2 Building_ Lola, 011 Rl. 71,1n
6th Put Toano Run
~
Cloor;taw Subcllvlolon. OM ....,
Rood. Silln Pootoct.
130,0001 ¥&lt;· Income
orrilal. 21
Business
w.tor Top. 114-441·1417 Aftor
Dotollo. (1) 105-1182-1000 Ext. Y·
1
101ae.
Opportunity
p.m.
Ea:,t·Work I E1colilnl Payl AOo
40 ~- With llobllo Homo.
-•ucto AI u.~ ft•ii
INOTICEI
114-317·7054.
Pt. Pleasant
..m I. P•~ ... OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
For lnlormollon. 1104-641-8003 .....,mondo thot you do buoJ. 111~1 lubcllvtolon, 2.8
&amp; VIcinity
Ell. 311
n111 with pooplo you know, ond mllol out Sand HIU Rood, hoi
GARAGE SALE • Wodnlldoy, Equoi O!ll&gt;oflunlty Employer. NOT to oond monoy througn tho ,.otrlclod building loti lor
Thwldoy.
Friday.
Planll, Non Smoking a DiuG Freo en. mall uniH you havolnvoollgatod u low u 18500, and ono ..,.
glluware, summer clothes, vlronmonl. m y.,. "Enoraotlc, tho ollorlng.
loll lor alnalo
IYIIioblt
dolla, """"· 2218 Joff...on Sollllolhralod, Willing To r.oom
11110, 304475-3400 or 87H100.
Wloh
To
111
Raoognlllod
Fot
Arthur'o
Chain
Unk
Fonco.
t.nd
Avenue.
Your P a - 1 Wo WIN AHidonllal, Com...,.lal, !no Ill,..., Bolt- luiHIIvlolon,
GllllliiO Solo, 5 mlloo """' Rl. 2 Toach You To So A llombor Of · duatrlal, , _ Eotlmotool Com- Olll . . . . loll, Rl. 2 lronlago,
l1rlco raducod, chy wotor, 3114on Jeny'1 Run Road. Apple
lnlllllallon. Phone: 114- 5711-2338.
Gro'lll, a&amp;r bnpact 1nd power Our Totm. "-lbllllloo 1no
cludo
Admlnlotrolhra
FuncUon
m.
toolt, ~rt, boat motort,
tumh,.o. clothing ltomo. Auguol In A Cono-r Flnanclol Soro VENDING ROUTE: Gat Rich Troller Lot For Aonl. 3 IIIIo Oft
vlcoo Ollloo, With One 01 Tho Oulck? No Wayl a.. We Hovo A Rl. 7 on Butovlll Plkl. Nice
8, 8 • 10, 1-5 pm.
.._., In Tho Financial Soro Good, Stady, Allordab!_o1 luoJ. Quilt Country Lot. a14-24t-M21•
vtcaa lncluotry, n You Novo Ill· nooa. Won~ Laal 1-ou0.214Pomeroy,
cel,.._ Ad-raiiYI llkllll VEND
36 Real Estate
t.nd T"8at NotcH Phono llkllll
'
Middleport
Wanted
""::
23 Profe,slonal
&amp; VIcinity
Would Uko To Buy 3bf Troller
eono~c~orollon.
Services
Dr HouH In Hon,.n
Or
1 1/Z milo ll0f1h· ol Choolor, FriCUllom lutohorlng, 8 deyo a Blctwlll bl;irlct 114 m 1117.
So~ t-5. Antlquoo ond mloc, 114- Full.tl11111 night oook pooiUon
Aftor5p.m.
NI-4311 for more Information.
open.
A11111Y
In · PIDI
3004 w11k. Coon, Hoge, DHr, 30of.
JackiCit.
Avonue.
Vlllago
1824353.
3-Fomlly yord oalo, e.10.11 lrom Inn.
Rentals
e.s on Sl. Rl. 143, V4 milo ol Rl.
Real Estate
GET PAID lor Compiling Nomoo
7.
and Addra- MOO por 1 000. '
:).family yard oalo, 1 V2 mll11 Coli 1-1100-241-3111 l$0.ftmln)
north of Cheater on Sumner or Wrlto: PASSE IIW, 181 Sollth
41 Houses for Rent
Rd,f.5pm, Wodnotdey lhrv Uncolnway, North Auror~~, IL 31 Homes for Sale
10542.
Fridoy
1 Bedroom
-·
Roducod To Soli: 2 ·Story 3bf 731
Roor ThirdFumlohod
AYOnuo, $1110/mo,
S.lomlly, largo womono oluo, LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST: Comor Lot In Choohlra, Ohio. $100 Doaollt, 114 441 3170, 11411ko now, 2 compound bowl, ln- liLT WICPI Dr Equhralonl For Eloollont Condition. Flananclng 448-1346.
lonl a todcler clothing, oboul 3 _ . , Clinic La....... County Available With Pay Polnto. 804'
1br Houoo, 131 Filii Avonuo,
·' ridlel out 124 Thuradey.f-rkloy, Branch At ProclorvUio. FUI~ 832.aN&amp;, 104-832·7170.
T111111 Poolllon. ~ Frldoy 12 yr old. 3-BR, 2-bolh homo. Ovortookl!)ll Rlvor, P.,IY Fur·
Aug. a.f, 1:00.1?
lloillry, Eocellonl Daylight -~ 1..cro, nlohod, Rotor- $1Uimo.
All YOid loloo lluol Bo Pold In ~""'·
Bonolko. lond R-mo To: p.,. dftil'l~
localt&amp;on, rww roor, 114 .441 1031, 114-441-1111.
,. t.dnnco. Doocllno: I :OOpm tho ...... Dopa~~ llo'now
3-cor
gngo,
lntlrlor naoda 2br In Country VInton ANL
: clOY bolore tho od II to run, Ctlnlc, P.O. lox 344, Galllpotlo,
tlnlohlng, 2Im loahon Rd, Wallr t.nd.Trooh P""!, Slovo 6
,. pulldoy oclllion- 1:00pm Friday, OH 451131. No ""- Cillo.
Aaclno, OIIL$17,000. Coli 114- Rolrlgoralor
•umlohod,
Monday odHion 10:00o.m.
l.lcerJood A I H AgantaNoodod 812·7305 or M8.a'l84.
120111mo. Doooolt t.nd Aoforan.
lmmodlaloty to woik modlca,., 2 atory, 3.SR houoo localod at -.114-318-MU.
~ ~~·-Y·
hoathh ond lllo marklt. 304-75'1- 112 Grant St. Middleport.
3 bodraom houoo rtar11 Drtvo,
2757 or 1...,.1003.
Sltuotod on largo double lol Point Plooiant. ~otortllCII I
15t'll28e1
with
2
....
11
•
horao
llopMII, 304o471-1242.
lla1urw lolmlltor - d lfn.
·" Frl-lot Aut e.10c 453 Grant Sl. medially In lily Homo. llondoy bam w1£h attached flldll111ck
. llfdd'Jp r1, ....717
Thrv Friday. Doyohlft. I Yoor room and flncod paddock. 3br Living Room a Don, 2
Houoa hoo tun buamont with Bathe, GoNion Tub, WW Corpol,
llloc. 1-, 101M -hlng, VII• Old, t.nd 2 Yoar Old. Non new root, fumance, w•t•r Dlohwuhw, CA. 2 llocko From
lond Rio- To: CLA
· 111M, Ill holl'prlco. Smokor.
c/o OalUpollo
TriiMina, holler, and oump pump. llay bo Chy Schoota. ·14-441·140V, 4, Ti1lllodly-Frtday, 104, telt Un- 085,
125 ThlniAvonua,
pollo,OH - · by coiling 114.fi2-3015. 7p.m.
Aoklng $40,000. 011.,. occoptod
Holghta, P-nty.
451111.
F . . . - a A_, Cottago OM
at 1-41t-447·7230.
Solo Aut ~10, Rototill«,
Bod,_ In Town. NO . Plio.
-t.dull R
To = ,InDoDondlblo
lly Homo 3br Home, 25 AcrM, 1 Mile From R o - Rlqulrwd, Dopoolt.
-..... - IUmll
.....
all
'!'llllhla. .....: Fl... For Ulo.. h
a14-44H417 A~ C"l ~~mho. Will Conoldor Trado. 114 441 2541.
houol pool CIJUidJ, Choolar.
et 4 1340.
lorlp.m.
Houoo lor nnt, Union Avo,
Yonl loll, 137 PM~ Streol, llklTolll~~g AHIIcatlono ot 3bdrrn 1 112-ltary an 11cre, -.y, Oh. Coli oftor 4:00pm,
dllpoll Thlndllyololllldly,
31140 1 1/2.ofory leO cabin, 114 tt2 1:1111.
Domlno'o Pliu, Gaillpollo.
nowly buJ~ 33050 Now Umo,
Yonl
·
bolore
you
got to Pa/1~111111 holp worriod. Apply at Rutland, urt1
!.ovoly 1-IA, Bullamut Avo.
pool In IJ!IICUH, Olgn lri yord,
Wect.Thur;;f'rl, n&amp;ce, oiMn, cllt. Ouko Cloonwa, 2418 Jacklon 3br Largo Khchon, LR. Laundry -.y, Porllolly turnlthod. 11· ....,.., I new llenw, ,.In eancel Ave., Point P..._nt, between I Single Oorago. Rodney Yllloto monlltl - · Socullty tlopoalt.
om-3pm.
Rotor- 814-143-6445.
:
12, $37,500. l'f4.441..1358.
Pa,_,.l
Contact
So111
Spoclalllt: Entry Lavol Pooltlon 4 bodroomo, 1 ocN lol, tully 42 Mobile Homes
Public Sale
·8
With Abova AYOrago Earning corpetod, hoot pump, 10112 out·
fOr Rent
&amp; AuctiOn
Potlnllal lllod On Ellort And building, 10 mlnutoo lrom town
Abllhy.
Up
To
$1,000
Por WHk, on Rl. 21 raoaonobly prlcod, 3114- 12lcl0 bodrocm unfur·
lilcll ,.._, t.uollon eompany, lluat
.
110 Aaarllllwo, Por· 875-218•.
nlohod mobile homo, halt milo
oonoblo. Aallalilo Anll Hovo
_ .limo
. . . .---·
~
Olllo, Dopondablo Tronoportotlon. II 5 room cozy home, extra lot, poat -~L~poolt and
lull
·
Clifton, alumn oldlng, lronUbock
.Vlrlllnl .. 304·77W1U.
You Aro A Sail Sll~or And Sail porchel, 304-7n-I23S IHVI .... ., 3Q4.171.2330.
llotlvotod, Soncllriol Work HI• meuage.
:9 Wlnted to Buy
tory To: CloOIS, c/o Galllpollo
14x'IO 311&lt; CA, Kllmpor Dolly Trlbu!!!1 125 Third A-uo. S.room houoo lor oalo In uppor Rood, iiciO mo. Pluo Dopooll.
: W.ntod al Junk ond ocrop mol· Galllpollo,
114-441-71103.
..., 45131
Tuppor Plalna,114-tl2·5830.
.... 304 ... llo31.
Pliny Truck Slop Roolauront A Fr1me Home, Sbr, Priced For nnt or - .. 2 bclrm troller,
· W.nlod to buy, Slondlng limber, now accepting eppllcatlon. for Rlghll 614-258·1188.
Ohio Alvor """'P Ground,
loll Wlllomo I Sono 114-812· • -k. Colil04·,117-8357 bol·
Rlclno, OH 1114.f4•25211.
1441.
WMn 8 am-4 pm; or 304-137- Flotwoodo Aroa, p....,oy, 2
Story Homo. Now Khchon 2br '-led In Evo'a'::•
T• , _ Pold: All Old U.S. 2312.
lothroom l Corpotlng. 1'1 $175tmo. Pluo Dopooll, e
3187, 114-24H22i.
With Acrao.814-44W35t.
· Colne, Rlnao, Dlllmo~~ ~ptloniOVSocralary
~~- Col!lo. S'lorlln;,
Provon
Olllce
Sklllo.
1811
Ptr·
llobllo Homo Noar
Co1no. II.T.S. Coin Shop, 1St oonol Syolom Computor/Word For Solo By OWnor: Ouollty 2br
_..A...... Oalllpolla.
Proc1100r. lluol EnJoy IIMtlng Brick Aanch Clou To Holzer Ev"'l'""· 114-3'1t-2178.
t.nd Working With' Pooplo. H01p1t11. 4br, FYII Bailment 2"!. Air, Coble, Now Corpot, Nloo
·A-nt Woilllng C..dnlono. Largo Shodod Lot. 114-441-0147 a "loan, llluUiul Rlvor VloW In
Employment Serv1ces Bond Rooumo By Auguat 11th aftw &amp;p.m.
KllnaUIIII. , _ . , llobiiO Homo
To: Rocoptlonloi/Socrolary, Box GOVERNMENT HOliES From $1 Pork. -.1002.
485, c/o Tho Galllpolla Aroo (U R11111r1. Dollnquonl Tu
Chamber Of Commerce, a... Propol1r· RlpOIHIIIono. Your 1-bdrm, 1..tloth double wlda, Ia
Help Wanted
2...,r ,.,..., I ml bock ol
llpollo, OH 4154131.
Araa (1 -2-8000. Ell. QH. yard,
Rlclno
$37 mo, $271 tlopooJt
AVON • t.ll ~.Coil liar llyn ~ to cora lor 4 mo. old, 10181 For Currin! Rtpo Llo1.
rol. roq.
WMv• 304-112·-5.
prolorably In my homo bogln- HOUSE FOR FREEII lluol move
tumlohod, wo-/dryor,
ADOREnEAS W.lHTED I,.. nlng Sopt, 3, .....,.~or, rll. oil lot In llldcloport. Fill In 3-BR,
rnocllalolyl
No Exporlanco
buomont, nod and aiiOW. IIUol AC, 114.ft2-a&amp;OO.
· tlloiMMJ.
Proa.~
FHA Someone lo move houNhold olgn contractl 2·8R, Largo LR. 3bf Troller For Ronl, on Morgan
aoodl one block. Mull: have DR, loth, hu now roof arid gut· Slator Rood. 114-3711-2311.
!Wundo.
Work
Hollli. Coi1-40WZ1-3014. AI fNCk. 304.a71J.1102.
lor, now- ond PVC plui1Jb.
lng, nood oomo _.. You pay Fumlohod 2br No Pita, Viator
AIIITRAUA WAHT'I YOU
lor tho movtnal Only Hrlouo Paid, $300/mo. 1271 Dopoolt. V2
SHuatlon
CIIIINI Coli IM.fl2-20n lftor IIIIo Eoat Of Portor. 114-388Ex""'· . llanollto. 12
ttiS.
7:00pm.
".....,...,.......
407-212-4'1111.1
wanted
Ell. m. ll.m.-tGp.m. Tot
·llobllo ·Homoo For Rant, con32 MQblle Homes
IINCIIon workora ond Hud woJ.
como. 8~5011 or 445-132\
tor Sale
Nice 2 bedroom mobile homo,
UOO RobotoOn Any 1100 Or &amp;arae
private lot, w/ctnlrll air,
1881 Lot Modol AI El111 Homo Ganlpollo Fony orao. 30W71J.
Conlor. FNO Sol Up l Dollvary. 1221.
Coii1.8Q0.5811-S7'10.
14
Business
Apartment
"'ll Now IIOOf!J...] bodroom, 44
Training
13,1500. 30W78-ln0.
for Rent
Rotroln
Now111Soutl1ooolwn 1te8 12lcl0, 1br, Fumlohod, Eo·
BuolnMa Colltgo, Spring Voller cellon!
Condhlonl $2,500. 114- Nlcaly Fwnlohod, 2br, 0.,...
Piau. Coli Todoy, 114o44f.438711 31~2.
Aportmont. No Pita, Controlly
Cull~n• ..rvlol R.,...re..
Rotlalorlllon -121111.
~od. 114-448-2404.
.
llvo.
1170 LlllriY 12d6 Wlbult ""
acldlllorl 12000, Konmoro etack
18 Wanted to Do
Waohw/dryor oat 1:100, 114-112·
·fiiJIII 1 ....,
our lnlluoiT;, 1o oooldntl a Cuolomor Buoh Hog Sorvlca. Ro-noblo 1271
......, ....,_.olhra tor our AIIH. No Job To Smolll 114-.Han. A - 371·2142.
IMiudl providing Ch
.
lor our
rlotlan mother wUI bobWII
o11101, IIMI
- - · deyo 111d onnlngo. Coli f04.
..,... ..,...
Accounll 1711-8411.
1111 ihillll .,,,..,.,.. Tho Ounlawy \Yoking 8hcp. Will do
Ill nU • II lo wilt how llllllM )Obi onil monutocture
olllcecr omo11M-.304-837.zm.
uq •-.aowpm
Loll

W-

=

•=.:

~:0:1 ~

11"

Tr-.

g:':r,

.........

- ·-

-~·

..

.....

.,_,

..........

~P-'•· 114-

Hovon, · 2 bodroom fur·
nlohod lportmonl, clopooH and
rattronco, 304-112-211t.
Nlca 1br, Khchln, loiJ1... Wolor
And Truh Fumlohod, .,.40/mo.
Pt,. DopooJt. 114-4.........
Nlca clean curron11y avallablo 1
bodroom opt, lor lnlllpallvtng; llddWlym,
ho.ndLowlcapplnoomood
ond
dmoy quell 1 lnoorno 1o unlllr
$11,350. par. Eloctrlc, wat•,
tolbogo lncludod with nnt.
Rorri 11311% cl oclluatod ,.._.
RJvor Bond Pl-m;N•w Hovon,
WV. EOE 304-112·
•
Complatty Fumlohod mobile
homo, 1 milo bolow town ovor·
looking rlvor. No Pall, CA. 814441.0338.
Not1h 3rd'SI, llldcloport, Ohio, 1
bodroom tumllhod apl, ,.,.,..,.
- ond dlpooh roqulrod. 304182-2!1111.

r -1

s:7~ II $1201mo. Gallla

1580.

Holol.

Slooptng room• whh cooking.
Alacl troller opaco. All hook-upa.
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·713leSt, llaiCHI WV.
··
·
46 Space for Rant
Counlly llobllo Homo Parle,
Routo U, Nor1h of P-nty.
LAQ, nntolo, porto, oaloo. Coli
114-812·'11171.

Merchandise

, ~" ~~

1&gt;1!'"""'

c,M~

e 1•1 Dr NEA. 1nc.

r

52 Sporting Goods

- -... 2211odol B41.S Vegetables
1n ......
~c
ox. p•-·
•...: $425; -lum
can
I p-·~11 bit
llado B,_,l!'il 12 Qaao; 32
n "I - - now ova 1 •
lncll FUll Choki, 1ont Alb, EJ. oliO 111~1111 Poora and Pruno
cellon! Condition! $510. a14-441J. Pt- Ill• In A:_ Coil 13413.
100-447-3710 lor pr
BOB'S
IIARKET, 1111011 « Galllpolla,
OH.

53

Antiques
;;:::-=-.::F;:;::::~~=B,'Z .. IIIII. Rlvorlno AntlqUH,
1
E. lloln 811011• P-roy.
.Houra: II.T.W.10:00 o.m. to 8:00
1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
l
2521.

P:itf'.'"""'.
54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 Kina waadlcoll burner ltove

~ Clll ofter 1:00pm, ·-~~-

61 Fann Equipment
0.17 IIC, Olooal With
eunt.nc1 Grain Drll!,
12,t111; 0.14 lotl W-h Ao;
Laodor, $2.111; M AC, Supor
Sharpl ....10; 424 lntomllllonol
DloHI Troctor With I R. luoh
!!&lt;&gt;g. $2,111. Ownor Will
Flnil-. 114-21141122.
.llm'o Form Eaul-niLSR. 35,
Woat OaliiDolll, 814..,.1J.1777;
Wldo -lon now I uood larm
lractora l lmplomonll. Buy,
oal, lrodo, I:OH:OO w-yo,
Sol t i l l Botoll llltzlbuohl troctor, 2Shp,
2-opood PTO 2-opood trono,
"'"' good, iiioo, 114-247-42!12

11,7tlbr!-

.,,....,..

Transportation

1-

1 HP PUIIJP, Sond FIRer,

Hoooh 'VKcllll llruoh, IIIH.
-1210. 114-44WZBO.
- B o o t For loll, Uvo
~&amp;,10 Clftto A Pould. 114PtUibunlh Palat lnlorlor IIIli WIII
paint $11IAI gol, lntorlor oomlSlUt aal1.. ollertor 11a1
polnl fft.n. M15 JICII·
oon Avo, Point P-~ Pt. Pit.

c.

-·

-blo llghtod c_l1ar1gooblo lot·
oiQn
$2M.
F,..
doll..ry/lolt- Plaatlo loltoro
$47.50 IIDL ,_1133 3453

••

R----._ Dryoro.

Guarom.d prvmpt MrYicil lot
Ill mokoo, -·Tho -hor
Dtyer Bhoppo.l14 441 21144.
Sago Ganlolo Enlortolnmonl
Syatom, Pluo olx g - $150
114-tl2·2i41
.
Tan-. whb pump and V2 hp
motor "" Cl~llod water woll,
$125,81444M211

Autos for Sale
1111 Comon: Runo Good,
$1,000. 114-31J.7054.
1m Cutlall n 2 dr, honl top,
dual oxhouol, ll.irp, 1825, 814, 247-4212
1m Pontiac VOnlura, 350CIItwy onglno, $500, ...,
~ 114-.fl2-2077 .,
1171 Uncotn 4dr Town Cor.~.f.oif;
CClndHion, 11,1500, Or Boot unon
114-441-'1104.

1171 Chryllor Corclobo aeo,
IIIlO, now -r!hlng, $1400.
dllyo 114-tt2·215f. ollor 5:30pm,
caii30W1Htlll.
1171 1101111 Carle, T·Topo,
CNIII, 1111, -y. 30W71J.4185. ·
1110
I cyt. runo
good, raal aood cond, f800 coli
.... 4pm, t1'14-IIW112t.
1111 Cad. Coupo DoVIIIo. Auno
G...ll Looko Good, 70,000
111111. $2,000 Or 1.0. 114-31'111581

-rd.

...... Carle, 304-fl'!-1501.

1g13 Oklo Dolto tl, 13400. 304-

175-4001.

55

Building
SUpplies

=:::-:=~=::-:::~~~
Block, brick, -er Dlpoo, wln-'-llntola, olo. Cloudo WinIWI, nlo ar.-, OH Colt 114-

m.am.

56

Pets for Sale
;;;;;7-f'i~;;j;;;;;;
Groom ond ilu!IDIY lhop Pot
Grooming. t.11 bi.r• otrto
liN Pal Food ~r. Ju~
Wobb. Coli 114,441 11231, 1 :119.0221.
7 llonllt Old Garmon Shophonl
IIIIo, F..l Blocdod, Boa ..llul,
lnlolllgont Oog, $25. 114-245-

11187 Nlooan King Cob, v.e,
Solid, Air Condlllonlng, 43,000
llilao. N,15D.I14-311-me.
1887 S.10, 4 Cycle, 4opcl, 13,800.
114-441.o731.

1184 lzuou, 4 cv1, 4 opood,
AMIFM oaulttl, u 1000 mll11,
aood body, motor, &gt;2100. 304I71J.3514.
1185 Comaro lroc, Burgundy,
With Rod lnlortor. 85,100, Or
- 011tr. 114-31a 1353.
1185 Comoro -~.._'"!~!!~· oxc
...... 14,100. - -·

1185 Clwlfltr 'llrpa 10 t.utomotlc
With Air, M,OOIIIIIIio. Excllllnl
Condition. 11,000. 814-441-0124.
1111 Hlloan aoo sx. Sop,
lood!!ILoxc- cond, coli 114112·111111 ••• 5prn

1421.

1111 Aonoul Alllanca, ••oollonl
-~.
$1800.
_ _!.utO.:~._
,..1.....llr, Allll'll,

1181 125 Hondll 4-whMter, 114-

WELL, IF l'Ho\T'S ONE OF THE ATHENI-'N
CITY·STAlCS 0\/Eit lHEIU:, THE... rD

&amp;loY THiiY MIGHT BE GETTING READ'!'
10 ATTACK IT!

!.'!!!1 "'"' groat~•
now.
. -. Will Trade,
78-tlll.
1187 tOR XR moton:yclo, oxcolilnl oond, 114-1112·2441
Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories

7Ut Chavrolol truck hood
$80.00, 73,81 Chovrolol bodoldo,
paooang~~r lido, $80.00 814-M2·
1125 tftor 5:00.
ludaot Tronomloolono, Ulld &amp;
Nbull, etarUng 1t $Mi Al.lto
Po~&amp;
114-24J.II77, 114·37g.
22113.
Covw lor tun o1u Chowy truck,
on olumlnu'!!..."!!'!!! lho 11181J.
up. Coll304-t """""'·

1HtY'k'£ li:nlr-JG
roR A IXSI~TfD
HITI£1&lt;

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Services
Home
Improvements

'THI6 IS "11--E. LAt5T TIME

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllonal lllotlmo guaron·
IN. Locol rol.,.ncn lumlohod.
F,.. ootlma111. Coli oolloct 1·
114-237-0488, day or night
Rogere Bailment Waterprootlng.
Corponlry and romodollng ol all
10111. Roaaonoblo ro111. Coli
onytlma, 814-742·1400 or M2·
3440.
Compioll llobllo Homo Soi·Upo,
RIPIIro: Commorlcol, RHidon·
tlal lmprovomonto. Including:
Ptwnblng, Electrical. lnouranca
Clalmo kooptod. 114-211·1611.
Cu~lo Homo lmprovomonto:
Yoa,. Elporlonco On Oldor I
Nowor -·Room .t.ddhlono,
Foundollon Wortc, Roofing,
WI- 6 Siding. F,.. Eillmolool Aotoroncoo, No Job To
Big Dr Smolll 814-441.()225.
JET
Aorollon llotora, riPIIrad. Now
l r•buln motoro In olock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.8QO.
13'1-8521.
Ron'• TV SII'VIce, epilclallzlng
In Zonhh alacl 1111VIi:lng moll
othor bllndo. Houoa calli, alao
aomo_. oop•PIIonco JeP~~I,.. WV
304.aJW3tl Ohio 114-4....2484.
Rooting, lhlngloo, And Trailer
Roof Cooling. Rluonoblt
Rltoo. 814-441-2203.
Soptlc Tonk Pumping sao..Dalila
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPniSES,
JackiCit, OH 1-IOQ.637.e521.
Davto
-Voc
SwYico,
o--g. Clook Ad. Po~o, IUf&gt;'
t."::~.kup, and dltivory. 114-

IN '1"1'"£ HOr SON ...

1

1 LL.. SIT R:ll&lt; HOi..lRS

-w

- .!"'*.2.~1:'
· i~

•

lliill -

~-•••• w:JIIft

ON._,

':;T:, ~
~~~~LLGAS,
-UIIIttl

ondHOIIIllll
FCU&lt;1hond .Pino
Galllpolla, Ohio
.

.Upholstery

. lhltNIIIIlltl

Gollljl 11, 01141111

Equli Opportunity.,.._

' I

•

HERE COMES
UNIC SNUFFY II
AN' HE'S SDPPIN'
WET II

tJ

Co~or'o PtumiJint

...........

,.,..c_o.--o~~'",.· o~_.
5~_v.--E
I 1 I I
,...

. ~

6

a

8 Lerry King Uvtl

I JEST FELL IN
TH' CREEK, MAW!!
l AIN'T HURT It

Bumper slicker thai should

be on any car driven in a big

city: "Don't Learn Traffic Laws
. - - - - - - : - - - . , By ........ :

I

RUZQAT
1--ri...;..I"''~I;--.,,Tij"""TI--l Q

I

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

e
o ~~r:~~!~ER

CompleJo lhe chuckle quoled
by f1lling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMB ERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

,

LETTER S

I IIIIIIII

SCIIAM-I.nS ANSWrRS

AN' I JEST FINISHED
WASHIN' AN' IRDNIN'
THEM DUDS !! ·

1:30 I]) D tDI Wingo Joe's stuck
playing nursemaid to Helen.
(R) Stereo. t:;1
10:00 I]) D II)) L.A. Lew Kuzok is
conlused by a murder
suspect with multiple
personalities. (R) Stereo. t:;l
(JI Nawo
(i) (I) !Prlmotimo Uvt
!&gt;tereo.
&lt;D (!) A ve From Off Center
Stereo. t:;l
till
Sti:pban Klng't
Golden Yaere Harlan and
Gina separate with plans to
reunite later. Stereo. t:;1
liD 18 Star Trllc
8 World Naw1
0 700 Club WHit Pat

AQUARIUS IJan . .• feb. 18) Making
decisions lor your male today when
your better hall isn't present could ere"
ate complications. Your partner's point
of view might be diametrically opposed
to yours.
PISCES (Feb. •March 201 You may
make an ernotlonalludgmentln a situs·
tion that calls lor a logical. objective assessment today. II your heart is ruling
your head, you've got the wrong organ
thinking lor you.
ARIES (Merch 21·Aprll111 Be on guard
In social settings today; someone who
likes 1o take potshots at others could
have you In sight.. And this Individual
knows how to magnlly small laux pas.
TAURUIIApril 20-May 201 Be sensible
and salely·mlnded about your driving
habl1s today. Belnt a lew minutes late Is
much better than courting a mllhap en
route 10 your deslinallon.
GEIIIINI lllaJ 21-.lww 201 You're not
likely to have much luck today trying to
sell others on ld- you're not com·
plelety IOid on youraell. To be aftettlve,
your pr-tallon must be llncere.
CANCER (olune 21-.lufr 221 II you are
contemplating ln-lng In a new enterprise, proceed cauiloully at this time.
Oon't let your enthullum urge you to
take shortcut• that could prove costly.

NORTH
.Q70

BRIDGE

• 10 9 3
• 97 6

PHILLIP

EAST
.AH3 2
.K 986
• 72
• 10 3

WEST
• K 10 8 6

ALDER

.Q t04
IKQ865

+2

.J.9

SOUTH
2
I AJ4
+AKQJ854

Watch

dem Epson spots!

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East

By Phillip Alder
Basically, bridge is a simple game.
Although it takes longer than a life·
time to learn everything, most hands
are readily solvable. However, every·
one has a blind spot occasionally.
Take today's hand . which was board
eight of the 1991 Epson Worldwide
Pairs. Cover the East·West cards and
plan the play in three no--trump on the
lead of the spade six.
North's double was negative. in
principle promising 4·4 in the majors.
(He decided to lie a little.)
The Epson is an annual tournament
held in clubs throughout the world. Af.
ter playing 24 hands, every contestant
receives a booklet containing an anal·
ysis of the deals. This year's booklet
states that if South is in three no·
trump, he will probably be lucky, be·
cause West will lead the diamond king
rather than a low spade. This implies
that a low spade lead is fatal to the
contract, but the commentator over·
looked the exact spade spots.
On the given auction, West is unlike"
ly to have five spades, so his fourth -

Soutb

West

Norlb

1+

I•
Pass

Obi.
Pass

3 NT

Opening lead:

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Smooth·
spoken
5 Happy
9 Over (poet.)
12 Govt. larm
agency
13 Melon. e.g.
14 Ear (comb.
lorm)
15 Towering
16 Healing
chamber
17 Young dog
18 Plant parts
20 Tee·21 Soli drink
22 Ru111an no
24 Large ponds
26 Gravel ridge
28 Every seven
days
31 llrt. Dick
Tracy
33 Caviar
34 Exchangs
premium
38 Quiz
39 Betrayer (sl.)

AniWII' lo Prevtou1 Punle

40 Hurried
41 Employment
44 Monk's title
45 Marcus-,
M.D.
48 Indirect
allusion
50 Eggs
51 Greek letter
54 Tyrone 57 Wealern
homlophere
Olg.
58 01 aircraft
60 Source or
Umber
61 Insecticide
62 Set up (goll
ball)
63 Gain by labor
64 Uh·huh
65 Otherwloe
66 Locallon
DOWN
1 Oaring (ol.l
2 Future allyl.'
exam

3lazlnetl
4 Like a warm
tprlng day
5 Mall canter
abbr.
6 Rachal't
slater
7 Part ola
church

8 Whit's the
ttory? (2
wdo.)
9 Tea typo
10 lluolcal
. compooltlon
11 Strong cordo
19 llake a
germenl
23- Haute
25 Indian maid
26 BIHball
~---4~
playarMelr-+-+-4 27 Blthop'a
..,
provlnca ·
29 Partalnlng to
"
dawn
30 Two-matted
VftUI
32 Uta a knllo
35 Enclose In
decorollve
PIDtr
36 Comporallvo
IUfflx
37 Herem
apartmanl
42 Whirl
43 Canlnt crj
45- Allen
48 Avoid
47 Survive•
4g Jot• down
52- 11111101
53 Raw mlneralo
55 Architect Saarinen
S&amp;LIIse
payment
51- to Joy

&lt;DNa-IICh

liD ~runlo Hall Stereo. t:;1

~On~tereo.

ID llllbill Tonlglll

ra ..... Tonlgltt

. . . . ChlmplonaiiiP

:==:-

11:31 ([)a-. t:;l
11:45 tDD 'fly 1!Y Night' CIS
L11e Nght Stereo. t:;1
12:00 (J) It Into the Nlllltl Sta(eo.
II]) D l'lrly Macliine WHit
NIIPHPIM

+6

@ 1111 , NEWSPAPER INTIJIItltiH AIIN.

IIJNaws
1!1 Twilight z-

lllghlglill
• Amarlcln Mullc IIIIOp

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

best lead means l!:ast has the 1J118de
four, three and two. There are two
critical situations: West has eit)ler
four spades to the A·K or four spades
headed by the ace or king. With the A·
K, he is likely to lead a top honor ralh"
er than a low card. Therefore, East
probably has the spade ace or king. So
there is no point in putting up dum·
my's spade queen at trick one. It is far
better to duck and play lor the spade
suit to block. Indeed, as you can see, it
does.
.
However the defenders play, West
must win the fourth and last defensive
trick with the spade 10 or eight. l'lus
400.

a

l ~'&amp;.reo. Q

8·8·11

• A 7&gt; 3

10:30 &lt;D (!) New Telavlllon
Stereo. t:;1
Croolc anti Chau
10:45 ~ MOVIE: Gold of the
Ame&amp;on women (2:00)
11:00~D (I) &lt;llD ill CD

0 Bol-w and MN. King
1 1:30.1]) D 11J Tonlgltt Sllow
Stereo.
(J) Magnum, p.l
&lt;D Alrfcan..a.-tcan Joumll

9 ·7

Ornate - Venus - Eider - Nudism - ADDRESS
" Sir." I said to the postman, "you are giving me the
wrong mail ." The postman corrected me, "No, you're
just at the wrong ADDRESS."

Aobortaon

H~lng

.·:':_,.....,... ,.·,

1,, ,

N.J. (L)

governing you in the year snead . Send
lor Leo's Astro-Graph predictions to"
day by mailing $1 .25 plus a long, sell·
addressed, stamped envelope to AstraGraph, c/o lhls newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 ·3428. Be
BERNICE
sure to state your zodiac sign.
BEDE OSOL
VIRGO IAug. 23-lepl. 221 Guard
against Inclinations today to underesti·
mate your abilities while overestimating
those of associates. The lrulh lies
somewhere In the middle.
LIBRA (lepl. 23-0cl. 231 Be realistic
regarding your llnanclal position today.
~ lhe money Isn't In the bank, don't kid
yourselllnto believing that ll's there.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-ltjov. 22) There Is a
possibility you will be a lrllle unreason·
able today, which could create prob·
lema lor you In your relallonshlps, espe·
clally wllb authority ligures. Lighten up.
Aug. I, 1811
IAGITTAIIIUI (Nov. 23-Dac. 211 Even
Two acquaintances who had IKtle con· though you leel very strongly about cer·
· strucllve value to you )llltllade lrom the taln views, you'd be wise to keep your
scene In the year ahead . They'll be ,.,.. opinions .to youraell today. Someone
plaCed by new lrlend5 with whom you'll looking lor an argument might·take you
on.
h•ve much In common.
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 221 II ~r ego Is al· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 111 Funds
lowed .to govern your motlvea ..~, be- you've .earmarked lor necessities
havior today, you could be •Biting lor · ihouldn'1 be .aquandered on lrlvolous
trouble. Vanl1y mustn't be gratllled at expenditures today. Later, when you
·someone else's expense. Get a lump on need them, you could lind yoursellln a
·
Hie by understanding the lnlluences light squeeze.

tot.,., Iller - · Drop-lno

r·,111:;;;2·-:21:::12.=~,....--..,...,...

..1-1

a.

Electrical &amp;

wolcome. 114-44W224. -Infont ToddllrCarw,l14-4414227.
WUI bobyoH In '"1 homo on tho
Rutland oru. eon onyiiN, 114-

lOCOMBour•.•

a

DWRIN65UMMSFl.
VACATION •

BARNEY

tf~· :c::
..~ ~.:.:=..:.:rJ.:..~
• ; • .,..... I "·"' • 5:311 p.m. Aaoo ~10.

~ vc:rn ·OIIIuy
.... ., aM........., pocll•

OIJT€&gt;1DE THE eaa:L,
WA.ITlNEi FOR 'MNTHROF'

I

Plumbing&amp;

1 7.
•·

7:35 ()) Andy Orllll1h
1:00 ~ D i1J1 Colby s - Clift
llnds hlmsell biddlnt on a
rare jazz album over the
phone.JRl Stereo. Q
1!1 MO IE: Slick (R) (2:00)
(i) (I) D O.brlel'a FIN Bird
goes undercover In a mental
hospital to prove patient
abuse. (R) Stereo. t:;1
&lt;D On 1M Waterwoyo
Stereo.
(!) Kennywood Memarieo
(1 :00)
till a21D Top Copa A
policeman Is shol alter
pulling over a suspicious
driver. (R) Stereo. t:;1
liD 18 '!'he Slmpoono Homer
and Marge head to the
mountains to work on their
marriage. (RI Stereo. Q
iiJ Murder, She Wrote t:;1
Q!l On Slagt1 Stereo.
8 PrtrneNawo
0 MOVIE: Tho Gembler
From Notchea (2:001
1:05 (!) MOVIE: Conan the
li:rblriln tRI (2:40)
1:30 ~ D i1J1 DIH~N~~I World
Whitley decides between
work and graduate school.
(RI Stereo. D
trn• True Colon Sara
spends her birthday at nome
with a house lull ol Freeman
men. (RI t:;1
Amorlcan Muolc Shop
8:00 ~ D iiJI Chearl Sam
devises a plan to keep
•
Rebecca lrom purchasing the
bar. Stereo. D
(i) (I) D Father Dowling
Myoterlel Sister Steve learns
Dowling Is the next target ol
a priest killer. (R) Stereo. t:;1
&lt;D (!) My1teryl Polrot
discovers a murder In his
own apartment building. t:;1
till
D Trlalt of Rollo
O'NaiH Rosie Is shattered
alter learning her deed lather
had an aH81r. (RI Stereo. t:;1
liD 18 Beverly Hilla, 10210
Brandon befriends a young
boy who has been abused.
Slereo. D
i1J MOVIE:: Ooath Hunt (RI
(2:001 Stereo.
Nethvllla Now Stereo.
ID Top Rank Boxing
Heavyweight bout Bruce
Seldon (18-1 . 15 KOs) vs.
Bert Cooper (24·7, 21 KOs).
10 rounds. lrom Atlantic City,

a

1tet Slarorall Pop Up m/:,
Good Condhlon, f450, I 4
1130, 814 441 4312.
11172-Coochman Codot com1111r
lrllle~ now awning, good condl·
lion, o14.fi2.aota.
•,

114 4411111

A. .~. .rR. . ~. i·_ .1--lll
E

IL..

8 Cro11flre

ALLEY OOP

Yilil dO iMioclollng, rooilng,
llulldlna. lrM trllrimln(l ona
ramovol; houM painting. For
lrlo ootlmoiM, coli Goorgo ol 1·
114-112-6752.

='J&amp;9.,!',:V~~ ~!t~rgoo
Po&lt;t~obloto'r::W~

INCOME

iAXAWAy.

848-2858.
1811 Kllwooalll Zl 800, now

81

~1 i~l,UriN' 1

(L)

CAN
~EEp up wtTH MY
OU'ft'O, KUT
NOT WIT'H MY

74
Motorcycles
1180 Honda 710-K, now llrao,
battery, llal NConrocl, lull
tunocl, 111CIIIorri oondHion, $800.
304478-1872.
'
1813 Hondi llogno VU 710cc,
good condlilon, lOw mll11, $1100
wHh holmot. 3Q.4.578.21114 or
578-2158.
1885 ~ Rider Horloy Davloon,
~ llllell 85,000. 814-448-2485.

79

•

the
be·
to form fovr simple words .

tow

&lt;D (!) MacNaii/Leh,.r
NewaHour t:;1
till IIJ D Cu,..,l Aftalr t:;1
liD D Night Coull Q
iiJ MaGCI'yvor t:;l
1D Spor18Center
8 Moneyllne
0 Scarecrow 1nd Mro. King
7:05 ()) The Jeftoraono
7:30 ~ • II)) "-rdyl t:;l
00 Andy Griffith
(i) IIJ D Entertainment
Tonight Stereo. t:;l
(I) D Mama'o Family
till Wheel of F-ne t:;1
liD D M'A•&amp;•H
Ia 8e I Slalr Stereo.
1D PBA Bowling LaMode
Classic lrom Green Bay. Wis.

----- MY

lAIII

O four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

ilJ Night Court Q

18M Dodgo D-10, 21,000 lllloo. 5
811ood, Elcollont Condition.
Slterp Trvckl $14tllmo. 114-4456751.

WOlD

~y

Cll CllD lnolcla Edition t:;1

· :-:::-:=-=;;,...::-:,...,.,::-:c:c-~
"'

76

EVENING

PUIILII

8

9'

71

:=:..s•e .......

call

ANICE DAY"?

OMI

Tic-.

~"t.~

.- I " nfntlludo
allllo, . _ . . ,

WHAT IF l
Jl}5T SAID,'' HAVE

FROM THAT STUPID
D06 OF '(OURS!

18110 Ford F·250, XLT Lariol 414,
loodod, 17,500 mn... 304-175Connln; lomootoo olroady 2214.
plckod or pick yo,. own at - - - - - - - - Jolln1011'ollrm, 1 14-24'~- 2861.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'S
Connl"" Tomot-11 Picked $41
··•
1180 Ford F-210.1...4 drlvo,
304-170o3185. 2207
:~
$3. Slhrar $1,000.
~
Corn II "'"'' Raymond W.ohlnaton
Ava.,
Polnl
"
- 114o24'1-4212.
Pt-nl.
81- Quoon oom, $2.00 cloz, 1187 Plymo.. h Yoyogor LE.,
~ ooll « •umlng llave,
Eloollont COndhlon, v-e, 72,ooo
.... 1300. ....... 114-'1112· lllloo.
114 441 3281.
--JI24t21
1111 lronoo UXLT,:'_!:, PS, PI,
PW, PD Locka, """'II Storeo
Cuulta, 1 Owner, ~ lllloogo,
FJim St.ppl1es
Cloon Elcollln! CClndhiOn, ·
&amp; Livestock
llany 11018 Fulwool Phono:
114-441.ostt . . _ a-10p.m.

Livestock
63
UUood;;di4•iiHooj;;;_;oG;;;aa;;.;;.n;;IICdk;-;T~ro;iiui;.,
p,.. $1,111; 12 Fl. t.nd Stock
Soolon ~Inning t.uauotlth 1 Troller,
Horoa Slant
SiH011. 114-211·1217, ~; ~,'N Big ~.JI":::'.i
1A:p~W Z281.
A- llore ShoWn By 10 Yoar
Cclmlllaer 1811 compollble 40 Old Boy·~Nico
2 Yoor Old Gold110 ltD, I 114 1.2m, 3 V2 t4m in!l, 311
o Rldl~n11111 t.nd
" - VGS -or. Printer, SliDwn In
,
Fobrullry
...~1s.m2.
·
14, 11110 Chootn~~:T:i Yoorlng
Point Filly. 114-2
•
. C:OOW.o 1 ~ ooptlc .. ,..,
Ron e..... Enlll'Drlooa, Jack· 64
Hay &amp; Grain
- . OH 1~-tm.
~~~~~~-:-:~::=
c..amotlc
chair
bluo Good hoy, round boloo, 114443uDholotlry, good oonclhlon. 304- All
l14-fi2.711Z.
a,_no Footbot

== . . ·="'=
•
_....... 5'S
=
" f I'

Fruits &amp;

58

THU., AUG. 8

S@\\~lA-2££trs·
- - - - - - ldltod
ClAY I. POUAN
1MA1 DAILY

8:00 ~ D (I) (I) D till a21D
IIJI Newt
1!1 Andy Grllll1h
&lt;D Club Connect
(!) Rndlng Rainbow 1:;1
liD 18 Andy Grtflllll
iiJ Cartoon ~..
ID TllofouahiiMd Olgetl
8 World foday
0 Aln nn nn, K"9 Cop
Stereo. 1:;1
1:05()) llewtlclled
1:30 ~ D iiJI NBC Nawe 1:;1
(!II Drum of ,_nnla
([) (I) D ABC Nowo 1:;1
&lt;D Wlkl America
(!) 3-2·1 Contact
till 1121 18 CBS NaWI &amp;:;I
liD 18 WkRP In Clnclnllllti
ID Up Close
0 New Zono Stereo. 1:;1
8:35 ()) Andy Qrlfflth
7:00 ~ D iiJI Wheal ol Fortuna

I ~========::;;::========-~ 1885
Pick-up, AMII'M
Rodlo,S·15
Air, GMC
814-4464729.

51

Household
Goods
1
deybod
w/moll,..o,
bodo-d and pillow ohomo,
llko now, $150 llrm, 114·812·
6105.
County Appllanca Inc. Good
uood oppllancoo, T.V. otto. Opon
8 Lm. to I p.m. llon ..Sat. .,._
441·111!.1 • 121 3rd. Avo. Gal·
llpollo, ""
GOOO USEO t.PPUANCES
Woohoro. dryorl, r~l..,..
,.ngoo, SUaaa ADDI~
Uppor River Ai. Booldo ltone
C..olllolll. Coli 114-4411-7311.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complatt homo lumlohlnaL
Hourw: lion-Sol, e.1. 114-44
0322, 3 mllel out lulavlllo Ad.
F... DoiiVOI)'.
Lon loot, good condhlon,
quick oala, goOd prica, 114-112·
8523.
'PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uood
Houoahcld 1\imllhlng. V2 mi.
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PINoanl, WV,
caii30W71J.14110.
AENT20WN
114-448-31511
Vl'ra Fumnu,.
Solo a Choir, S11.10 Wllki
Roell-, $5.47 Wook, Swlvoo
Rocker, 1113 WMk.Bunk Bod
Compillo $1.41 WMk, 4 Dr-r
Choot, 13.21 Wllk; Poator Bodroom Suho, 7 pc., $11.87 Wook,
lncludoo Boclcl
. lfli.Counlry Plno
Dlnotto Whh lloriCh a 4 Cholro,
Stu• Waok.OPEN: llondoy
Thru lotunioY, lo.m. to tp.m,
lundoy 12 N- TIH lp.m. 4
llloo 011 Aouto 7 on Roula 141,
In Contonary.
Solo on All Corpot 1 Vlnyt floor
Covorlng In Stockl ll'ollohon
ca,:r.to, Rl. 7 Not1h, 114-441111 ·
•
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olin St., Galllpollo. Now &amp; Uood
tumh,.., hoalora, Wootwn &amp;
Work boolo. 1-3158.

fiARDLY ~I 1-lAYE
litO DESIRE TO
LISTEN TO SOME
80RIN6 TALK

1885 louzu Pickup. Mull - to
approcla10 u,ooo.oo. 4 cyt, 4
, ......, now rlmo muddera 111d
h;;d;,., hood ilnora, roll bor
ond log llghlo, $2,500. or boll
ollor. S04-571J.2141.

a....

I

•

1175 Chevrolet 1-ton, V-B atan·

Not1h 41hlullldd~l Ohio. 2 ,..,..~...holt, ........
1"*-:-.itlrlloc
bodroom mlohod 1p1, dopoolt cholro,
1 ,_. ~O!dl.c!
lA
and ~~- ,.qulrad, 304-112· Momo,
331 Latut Filii, oiwot.aoo
ZMI.
Ono
and two bodroom 1341ch oo1or TV 110. 1241~~ge
pump ohal_ pt $110, King
opa~monto lor Nnl. ldoal lor
email lllmllloo ond olngloo. 3114- Zophyo 8u ~ Ac!UIIIc Q!illlr
W-, IIIII now 1111, 1111 Pon1711-2053 or 875-4100.
tllo -ltr hOG, 1111 Dllta
one bodroom turnlohod opt Oldl $7110, and uood .._.. 114lloln s~ ,.,...... and dopooh '1112•2445, 10omo7pm,
roqulroa, 304-675-2330.
11!11 .lolln Oooro llodol I
One
bedroom
unfuml1hlcl Robullt, Eacollont Cclndhlonf
go..go opo~mon~ goo hoal, air Hvolor 4 Sligo Fork U11, Dock
eon.t:1 Jl!lvol!, vary nlca quill p(oto, 3 Trallir Allloo, l Troller
nolah_....... $210 month. 3114- ltd. I'M 441 ZIH.
875=1550or814-441.ot85.
W.nlod To ~=:"'lng Tl,..
Loj)glng,
Unturnllhod 3 room opa~mont, bor, Trocy
114-3117·71111
Aftor 7p.m.
104 Spring Annuo, P01111roy.
Coli 814-MHtol.
40-illl battlo aoo ho4 wotor lonk
loralo $100, 114-.fl2-8514
45
Fumlsh.ed
wnh glaoo dlnllto, wnh
Rooms
lour uphOIIIorld c1111r1 $100,
Room• for rent. week or month.

LUV!

0

doni, good condlllon, si!lo 814843.a221.
11175 Ford Rong!!J.. F·100.o. Truck
Cub Cop With 1vto V.a c.nglno.
V2 T011, PS, PB, Ani. Two DOort
~h Lay Down lack Boat Fair
COndHion, Coli .Anytlmo. 3114458-1818.
18'71 lntemat1on11 Trantatar II
Hml, modol 40708 400 c.....
mlng1, exc cond, $6000, 11-t.
815-3384 aftor 5pm.

_.

...

=~ui

u,.., 350~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Television
Viewing

72 Trucks for Sale

W.=="'·

••
• -11114-112·
EOH. All
Laioyotte
llall~:~ 2 •Sotho.
UIUhloo lncl
• f421imo.

Pomeroy-Middleport, 9.h)o

1m F·100 Ford Plck·UI! Rangor,
Aluminum Slot llogo Black In·
tide A~d Out, $1,1500. 614-448oan.

Fumlohod o-.cy wi810ft a
..~r~pno~or, bath. 811 2nd
AYI.
All UIIIHIM
Paid.
'
Graclouo living 1 and 2 ....
alR l =
"Pa~monll In llldd~ Fram
..
,...
11

•

8, 1991
YOO· HOO, "'l . P'['M Sf~£0; WH~T'O
I'M liJM£,
YOU N#£ ~

V.f, $18!0, 814.el2.e711.

C\'~~~~·,.:1~

= aplll::r'"

71 Autos for Sale
option, llkl new, new

llpollo. ~ t.aer tp.m.

'

Thursday, August

1112 Oldl t1 Aogoncy,
lrou(lhom, 4-dr Mden, ovory

Nlcoty Fumlohod Aparlrnonl,
11111 14x72, FIMtwood, :Jbf, 2 1br, 11111 to Ubrlry, porklng,
botho, Ioiii oloctrlc, 114-245- CO!IIral ~~~~ olr .~1nnco ,..
1
5100.
qulnd.-.o....
11111 llno bodroom, 141170, Gl!l Fumlohod
Aportmont:
All
• ..., ,.lrtawdor woohor I IJIUMioo
Paid, 1 lodroom
dryor, bod, $1,1500. :io4.a71J.411S.
Upotolra, '"-&lt;1 Avonuo, 70 pluo ....., ,..elf lor ~19m~, CArpal, No ...... 114-44WUS.
cny - ·buyo
· ... Jnobllo
hwrifnv.-homo
s21,ooo.
ElftcloncJ, $175/mo.
$4,000.
oJ. Fumllhod
UIIIHioo Pilei 701 FCUf1h Av ..
raody"" propo~y. 3114-4.,.1522. Ganlpollo.
lu 441 4411 Aflllr
7p.m.
34
Business
Fumlohod E~, $111/mo.
Buildings ·
IJIIIHioo Paid, Shirt Botr ' :
Socond Avo, Galllpollo, I 44
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on 441a All• 7p.m.
2nd Avo., Galllpollo. ~ to

NlcN-1
Giani Yonl Bolo: 441 Spruce
Sl- Exlonllon. Augutl t-12, 8
To 1 p.m. Boby FumhuN'-Gu
And Eloclrlc Rlngoo, 1oyo,

Avenue,

44

32 Mobile Homes

8, 4991

Thursday,

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Gallipolis
&amp; VJclnHy

. .. ·"

.

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher cryptogr~ml ate created from quotiiiOOI by flltiOUI people, Pllllnd preleflt
belt 1e111r rn IN ct~ ttandl tor another . roday·• clw: 0 fKIIIIII M.

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ZYAKZI

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CGSCSYD.
PREVIOUS S.~LUTION: "A good review from a critic is just anolher stay
of execution. - Dustin Hollman.
·
~ 19ft by NEA. Inc: .

8

·'

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend....
by Bob Hoeflich

Perhaps, you noted that Mayford "Jack" Sensenbrenner who
served as mayor of Columbus and
was highly regarded for the direction he gave the city died a few
days ago.
But clid you remember that he at
one time during his career as mayor
of Columbus did visit Pomeroy?
Mrs. Jean Moore of Middleport,
who is a cousin of the late mayor,
recalls that at that time there was a
big dinner held in Mr. Sensenbrenner's honor at the Pomeroy Elementary School. She and her husband, the late Harry Moore, were
present and also attended a reception honoring the Columbus mayor
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Simon.
Jean and Lillian and Ferman
Moore visited the Long Funeral
Home in Columbus Sunday to pay
their respects. Jean reports that
there was quite of bit of memorabilia at the funeral home mementos of Mr. Sensenbrenner' s
terms as mayor and also there was
a police honor guard at either end
of the coffin.
By the way, Jean has e~tremely
good things to say about her
cousin, the late Columbus mayor,
who was always kind and thoughtful to her and her parents.

their daughter, Patricia Circle and
the late Melvin Circle at the time of
their high school graduations. Figuring they would probably not he
around when their other four
grandchildren - ranging in age
from four to 16, children of their
daughter, Jennifer, graduated the youngest in 2005 - the
Blakeslees took the four children
and their parents, Jennifer and Jim
Butcher on the graduation cruise.
The group i'Iew to Miami and
boarded the NCL MS Seaward
there. The first stop was a private
island, Pleasure Island, owned by
NCL. Other stops included
Jamaica, the Grand Cayman
Islands, Playa Del Carman and
Coxumel in Mexico. Shore excursions included swimming, snorkeling, Dunn's River Falls, a sea sub
underwater vessel from which they
viewed the colored fish and coral
reefs , the Mayan Ruins and other
sightseeing. The only accident on
board was a fue in the kitchen but
there were no harmful effects except some psychological ones on
the pan of the passengers. There
were special events aboard ship as
well as on shore for the youngest,
for pre-teens and for teenagers.
The Blakeslees and their guests
returned home much in need of
rest.
Edith Cogar of Syracuse has had
Earlier in July, the Blakeslees
some meclical problems and under- were invited to attend the 55th high
went 12 hours of major surgery last school class reunion of the NewWednesday at a West Virginia hos- berry High School where Mr.
Blakeslee taught from 1933 to
pital.
If Edith gets along as expected 1937. This was in Mrs. Blakeslee's
she should be returned to her borne home area - Michigan as I recall.
here next week to recuperate . She and Chuck used the trip to
Cards may be sent to her at the retrace part of their honeymoon
West Virginia University Hospital, route.
Room 873, 8 East Wing, Meclical
Center Drive, P.O. Box 6401, MorEntries in several open class catgantown, W. Va, 26506.
egories for the Meigs County Fair
must be in place by noon Saturday
Four grandchildren of Charles and judging will even be held in
and Daisy Blakeslee of Pomeroy some areas on Saturday afternoon.
received early hij!h school gradua- Don't be mad at me about it - I
tion gifts -Cam bean cruises yet.
don't make the rules, I just tell you
Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee had pro- about 'em. Do keep smiling.
vided trips for the two children of

Patty Dyer
is re-elected

MOUNT GILEAD, Ohio (AP)
- · A man whose truck slammed
into a horse-drawn buggy and
killed six members of an Amish
family was convicted of drunken
driving last year, a newspaper
reponed today.
'
Douglas A. Lyons, 26, of Fredericktown, was indicted by a Morrow County grand jury Wednesday
on six counts of aggravated vehicular homicide and four counts of
aggravated vehicular assault, county Prosecutor Howard Hall said.
State Bureau of Motor Vehicles
records show that Lyons was convicted of drunken driving June 21,
1990, in Morrow County, The
Columbus Di~atch reponed.
His driver s license was suspended until Oct. 21, 1990. But
because Lyons did not pay a $100
reinstatement fee or provide the
bureau with proof he has insurance,
his suspension remains in effecL
Lyons was driving between 55
and 60 mph in a 55-mph zone
Monday night when he hit the
buggy, State Highway Pattol ttoopers said. Beer cans were found in
his truck, they said. Lyons refused
to take a test that would have determined if he had been drinl:ing, the
pattol said.
Killed were the driver of the
buggy, Aden Yoder, 28; his wife,
Esther Yoder, 27: her mother,
Sarah Miller, 54; the Yoders' son,
Eli Yoder, 6; Mrs. Miller's daughter, Clara; and her son, Noah, 14.
Four of the Yoders ' children
were injured in the crash Monday
on Ohio 314, about 10 miles west
of this north-central Ohio city.
Allee Yoder, I, and Anna
Yoder, 2, and Susie Yoder, 5, were
listed Wednesday in fair condition
while 4-year-old Lydia Yoder's
condition was upgraded from critical to poor, a spokeswoman at
Children's Hospilal said.
Their parents, brother, grandmother, aunt and uncle are to be
buried today.
Lyons was treated for minor
injuries. The horse that had been
pulling the buggy was severely
injured and put to sleep.

Don and Mary Barnett were
welcomed and gJVen the Fourth
Degree Obligation.
Catherine Colwell, Women's
Activities Chairman, thanked members for their participation over the
past year and for their cooperation
and support. Her safety tip was on
proper sitting.

SUNDAY SERVICE$:
Bible School ................... 9:30 A.M.
Worship Service ............ 10:30 A.M.
Potluck Dinner ........................ Noon
Homecoming Service ........ 2:00 P.M.
Robert E. Purtell, Minister

Heist for hygiene
SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) - He
probably could have become the
best-smelling shoplifter around.
Police were looking for a man
who swept all the deodorant off a
drugSIOre shelf and into a shopping
bag Monday before dropping the
loot and running aflel he was confronted.
"He was just piling it in the
bag, • • Rite Aid Discount Pharmacy
Manager Becky A. Albrecht said.
•'He just had it stocked full.''
Allncht said the man apparently ltad been in the surer~ 10 to 15
minutes and already had set two
12-packs of beer near tlte front
door ~f(ll'e employees spottc:d him
swiping 70 $3 to $4 sticks of
deodorant and confronted him. ·
No arrests had been m&amp;4e by
thiS morning, police.said.

25"

In mid-60s. Saturday ,

I28th MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

cloudy.

AUCUSTI~13 - l~l~l~l7

Vol. 42, No. 68

S49' 900
YOUR CHOia

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services an.d Emergency Managment Agency will participate in a
hazardous materials exercise
involving three states on September
7 designed to test federal, state and
local plans for responding to hazardous material incidents.
The exercise, referred to as the
Ohio River Exercise, is one of the
ftiSt full-scale tests of government
hazardous materials response capability in the county. The exercise
was planned and developed by the
Emergency Management Agencies
of Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia.
The exercise will involve 19
counties bordering the Ohio River,
eight of them in Ohio. The plan for

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I

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)Relatives of one of 17 men who
police say Jeffrey L. Dahmer killed
filed a $4.5 million claim, accusing
police of failing to halt the slayings
and mutilations.
The claim was filed Thursday
with the city clerk on bebalf of parents of Man Turner, 20, one of five
victims who died after three police
officers visited Dahmer's west-side
aparunent without realizing it contained human remains.
Police Chief Philip Arreola suspended the policemen amid public
complaints that they were disinterested in investigating Dahmer
because they assumed he and a
naked, bleecling, 14-year-old boy
he took to the apartment May 27
were homosexuals.
Dahmer, 31, is being held in lieu
of $5 million bond pending an
Aug. 22 hearing on 12 counts of
ftiSt-degree intentional homicide.
Police said he picked up some
of his victims at gay bars and on
the street, drugged and killed them,
then kept body portions in his

CARPET SALE
SCULPTURED CARPET

S13'' SQ. YD~N~~~~:D
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INSTALLED

BERBER CARPET

$1299 SQ. YD.

INSTAllED

TRACKLESS SAXONY

$1 899 SQ. YD.IN$TAUED
WIPAD

.-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) When Gov. George Voinovich
served lunch at the Oh10 State F811
to promote agriculture, he did tl m
style with a menu of lamb and wme
_Ohio lamb, Ohio wine.
Voinovich presided and helf?ed
with at least some of the cooking
during an event for reporters
Thursday at the Ohio Departm~nt
of Agriculture's Heartland CuiSine
display.
.
b.
"We're selling Ohto lam m

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING
SALE

$549 SQ•.YD.

freed.

U.N. Secretary-General Javier
Perez de Cuellar acknowledged the
development could complicate
matters, but said he still hoped
another hostage would be set free.
"I hope that the American - I
still don't know which one - will
he released," he told reporters.
"My prayer is not that it will be
Terry Anderson. My prayer is that

it will be all of them," Peggy Say.
sister of the American journalist,
said in Cadiz, Ky.
Diplomats in Beirut kept their
embassies open for a third night,
but there was no word of another
release as the Muslim sabbath
began this morning. Speculation
continued in Beirut that Anderson,
chief Middle East correspondent
for The Associated Press, would be
released next.
On vacation in Maine, President

conducting exercises associated
with hazardous materials response
evolved from the passage of the
Title III Superfund Amendments
Reauthorization Act (SARA Title
III). The SARA program established the basis for state and local
emergency response agencies to
develop plans, train appropriate
staffs and responders and conduct
exercises dealin~ specifically with
the uitiq_ue .IUQI;IIems associated
with hazardous materials.
Past experience has shown the
necessity for improving coordination and communications between
elements of emergency response at
the local, state and federal level.
The river exercise is designed to

Bush told reporters, " I think those
who follow this most closely feel it
is likely an American will be
released.' '
Islamic Jihad, the pro-Iranian
group that freed McCarthy and
holds Anderson, American educator Thomas Sutherland and Briton
Terry Waite, said in a statement
that it was sending McCarthy as an
"envoy" to Perez de Cuellar.
McCarthy told reporters he carried a letter for Perez de Cuellar

suggesting the remaining Western
hostages be freed in exchange for
hundreds of Shiite detainees held
by Israel and an Israeli-allied militia.
Israel came under mounting
international pressure to free the
detainees, but said any deal must
also include seven Israeli soldiers
missing in Lebanon.
The 34-year-old McCarthy,
looking fit and elated, said Thursday that until two days hefore his

release he was held with Anderson,
Sutherland and Waite. Anderson
and Sutherland have been captives
since 1985, Waite since 1987.
McCarthy was driven to Damascus after his release. He later flew
to England on a British military jet,
and spent the night at the Royal Air
Force base at Lyneham.
Meanwhile, a dark vigil began
in Beirut for Medecins du Monde,
or Doctors of the World , a ParisContinued on page 3

strengthen these clements as well
as provide practical training for
participants at all levels of
response.
The Ohio River Exercise will be
used as a pilot project by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in developing guidance
on the conduct and evaluation of
hazardous materials exercises
nationwide.
Other Ohio Counties participating in the exercies are Adams,
Athens, Gallia, Lawrence, Monroe,
Scioto and Washington.
Meigs County, and most of the
other agencies tnvolved in the
September exercise will conduct a
dry run on August 10.

refrigerator, in a closet and even a city clerk on· behalf of Turner's
filing cabineL
parents, Waddell and Rosa Fletcher
Investigators from Summit of Flint, Mich.
County, Ohio, where bones were
Authorities say Turner died after
discovered in the back yard of the meeting Dahmer June 30 in ChicaDahmer family's former home, go. Had police realized May 27
said they would be in Milwaukee that Dahmer was on probation from
this week to question him further a child-molestation conviction,
about comments that his ftrst vic- they could have prevented the
tim was an IS-year-old hitchhiker.
"wrongful kidnappmg and death of
Police in Columbus, Ohio, said Man turner," the claim said.
Thursday that Dahmer has denied
·Many of the victims were black.
any involvement in a local 1986 Milwaukee has seen demonstramurder-mutilation case.
tions and rallies the last few weeks
Dahmer was asked about his by people who say police show
activities when he lived in Ohio anti-gay and racist bias.
and during a brief stint as an underPolice went to the apartment
graduale student at Ohio State Uni - again July 22 after Trady Edwards,
versity in 1978, police said.
32, ran into the street from the
They wanted to know if Dahmer apanment house, wearing handhad anything to do with the mutila- cuffs and saying Dahmer threattion-slaying of a Columbus man ened him with a knife. It was then
whose body was found wrapped in officers discovered the body parts
a blanket and stuffed in a trash con- of II victims.
tainer near an apartment building in
A judge set $1,000 bail ThursJuly 1986, Sgt. Clifford Davis said.
day for Edwards, who was taken
The city of Milwaukee has 120 into custody Wednesday after Mildays to reply to the $4.5 million waukee police learned he was
claim filed by a lawyer with the named in a Mississippi warrant.

Ohio agri-products get
boost from Gov. Voinovich

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the Lebanese capilal and threatened
to kill him if another hostage was

l

l

M:ilwaukee police cite,d in $4.5
million Dahmer case claim

ALL TABLES CHAIRS
and HUTCHES ARE ON
SALE NOW!

$949 SQ. YD.

' DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)The families of Westerners missing
in Lebanon waited anxiously today
to see if kidnappers would follow
up their release of Briton John
McCarthy by freeing another
hostage - this time perhaps an
American.
But hours after Shiite Muslim
kidnappers ended McCarthy's
more than five years in captivity on
Thursday, another group said it
abducted a French relief worker in

Meigs EMS, officials to take
part in Sept. 7 training session

DINING R

Doug &amp; Sherry
Shamblin

A Multimedia Inc. Nowop.oper

Families wait to see if second hostage is released

-On-Screen Display
-Remote Control
-2 Styles

SUPER
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3 Sectlono, 54 Pogoo 25 cent•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 9, 1991

Copyrighted 1D91

COLOR CONSOLE

Route 143 (37420 Zion Rd.)

7:30 P.M.

Pick 3:497
Pick 4:· 4319
Cards : 4·H, Q-C
J-D;S-S

•

Cbtitl

Doug &amp; Sherry Shamblin

Meigs County
Fair tabloid
Insert

Zion Cbut~b of

Evangelist &amp; Song leader

Ohio Lottery

Mosll} cloud}. Low tonight

HOMECOMING
REVIVAL ·

AUGUST 16, 17, 18 -

Eldon Barrows, legislative cochairman, reported on Nuclear
Energy for Power Plants, Oil
Exploration and Legislative Redistricting.
A resolution was passed sup;
porting the .50 Mill Tuberculosis
Levy for Meigs County.
Pauy Dyer, fair booth committee chairman, reported that Star
Grange received ninth on their subordinate display at the Ohio State
Fair.
Sixteen members and juniors
enjoyed potluck refreshments following the meeting.

..

Jury indicts
pickup driver

Patty Dyer was reelected as
Master of Star Grange when the
group met recently at the grange
hall.
Other officers elected were
Larry Montgomery, overseer;
Eldon Banuws, lecturer; Ray Midkiff. steward; Rick Macomber,
assistant steward; Maxine Dyer,
lady assistant steward; Freda
Smith, chaplain; Waid Nicholson,
treasurer; Opal Dyer, secretary;
Alan Halliday, gatekeeper; Rose
Barrows, ceres; Bernice Midkiff,
Pomona; Jan Macomber, flora; and
Don Barnett, executive committee.

Opal Dyer, youth chairman.
reported that the Star Grange
Youth Group received first place
on their display at the Ohio State
Fair. She also reported that the
Meigs County Youth Group will be
having a clisplay and a pop stand at
the Meigs County Fair.

Thursday, August 8, 199t

'

Ohio and selling our wool products
right here," Voinovich said in
lcncling promotional support for the
Ohio Sheep Improvement Association.
Then he lifted a glass to toast
Ohio-produced wines, samples of
which also were available.
"I really believe that once people taste our Ohio wines _they're
going to be really commttted to
them," Voinovich said.
The menu included barbecue

r---Local briefs----.
Charges filed after altercation
Attempted aggravated murder charges have been filed against a
Pomeroy man following a domestic altercation on Thursday in Rutland Township.
Philip Del "Dale". Call, of Sta~ Rout~ 143 nem: Po!fieroy_is
being held in the Metgs County Jail pencling a heanng m Metgs
c;ounty Coun
.
.
Accorcling to Metgs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Call and
his 18 year old sister-in-law, Gina Arnett got into an argument and
Call began to choke Arnett. She then left the residence and he followed her to the roadway. After returning to the roadway with a pistol, Amen ftred five shots at Call. ·
. Miss Amen was not struck and Call was arrested without resisuince.
Continued on page 3

Iamb served with Ohio-produced
barbecue sauce on Ohio-baked
buns, and coleslaw from cabbage
grown in the garden at the rear of
the Governor's Mansion in suburban Bexley.
Also offered : potato chips,
apples, wine, and sparkl~ng spring
water, all produced m OhiO.
The state ranks 14th nationally
in sheep and Iamb production.
There are about 270,000 sheep in
the state that produce about 1.8
million pounds of wool per year,
the association said.
Sheep are found on about 7,400
farms statewide. Total value of
sheep and Iamb production last
year was $8.4 million.
Grape production in Ohio
amounted to 8,000 tons in 1989,
with most of the crop used for processing purposes. Eigh! vin_eyards
offered samples of thetr wmes at
Thursday's evenL
.
This is the ftiSt time Vomovlch,
who lOOk office Jan. 14, has presided over a stale fair.
"I'm just kind of learning about
the fair, frankly. This morning I
was over there with the cattle people. Let's see, I found out. about
herefoids and, let's see, short hom?
And angus," said Voinovich, who
has spent most of his life in Cleveland and Columbus.

CHECK PRESENTED - Tbe Farmen Bank
and Savings Company hu made its annual contribution to the Melgs/GalllalJackson/Mason Big
Brotllers and Friends 4 Youth programs. Pictured witb tbe $250 cbeck are, left to rlgbt,

Donna Schmoll of Farmers Bank, Judy
Sorranko, Executive Director of the program,
and Bruce J. Reed, Vice President or Farmers
Bank.

Storms slam southern Ohio
By The Associated Press
A storm that swept through
southern and central Ohio left boxing fans at the Ohio State Fair in
the dark, felled power lines and
tore the roofs off barns.
An unconfirmed sighting of a
funnel cloud near Washington
Coun House also was reponed during the Thursday night storm.
The funnel cloud was seen
about three miles north of Washington Court House in central
Ohio, said Fayette County Sheriff's
Deputy Dale Butler.
The National Weather Service
said the funnel cloud was spotted at
about 6:20 p.m. No serious damage
or injuries were reported. but
power lines were down and trees
were uprooted, Butler said. The
roofs of several area barns were
stripped by winds of up to 50 mph,
the weather service said.
Shane Jenkins, a spokesman for
the state fair, said a boxing match
at the fairgrounds in Columbus
Thursday night was halted for
about 15 minutes when a tree limp
hit a power line.
Large hail was spotted in the
city of Xenia in Greene County in
southwest Ohio.
In Warren County, Lebanon
firefighters said they handled a few
small fires caused by lightning

strikes, and said a few trees and
power lines were down. No injuries
were reponed.
A Clermont County sheriff' s
dispatcher said the department had
received reports of trees down,
minor accidents and lightning
strikes. but no injuries. The Butler

County sheriff's department said
only a few trees and live wires
were felled by the storm.
No damage was reported in
Hamilton County.
More rain was expected
statewide today, the weather service said.

Voinovich seeks Ohio
agriculture disaster aid
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich has
asked U.S. Agriculture Secretary Edward Macligan to declare
the entire state an agricultural
disaster area as a result of "the
relentless drought.' ·
His request on Thursday fol lowed a stmilar request submitted two days earlier by the U.S.
Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation Services and other
farm agencies that make up a
state emergency board.
The board said farmers in at
least 81 counties already have
lost 35 percent of their crops,
which qualifies them· for lowinterest loans and other assistance that a disaster declaration

I

(

would make possible.
State officials say farmers in
the otber seven counties al so
will qualify in the near future.
In a letter to Madigan ,
Voinovich said that for Ohio,
"losses are no longer a matter
of projection or speculation.
Indeed, losses are real and
mounting daily."
Voinovich said he hopes to
receive a response by early next
week.
Some rain fell in northern
Ohio Thursday afternoon and in
southwestern and central Ohio
Thursday night. But the National Westher Service rain showers
that were heading east would
end statewide by this afternoon.

New schools chief sees change in time
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's new state school superintendent says parents and teachers
probably won't notice any immediate changes after he takes office
OcL I. but they will eventually.
John "Ted" Sanders, U.S.
undersecretary of education in
WashingWn, has been hired by the
State Board of Eaucation to succeed Franklin B. Walter as the state
superintendent of public instruction. Walter, who has resigned,
leaves office Aug. 31.
"The truth of the mauer is most
parents don't even know there is a
state superintendent, much less
who that person is if we were to
take a poll,'' Sandm said in a Jelephone news conference on Thursday.

He said he hopes parents will
notice the effects of a proposed
redefined relationship between the
state and local schools that focuses
not on policY., but on accountability
and what children should know.
Sanders said he would be a visible su~tendent.
"I m going to do whatever it
takes to get the job done. Yes, I
inlend to get to lcnow the key political leaders and others in the state
who influence public policy and to
work with them, but I also intend to
be visible about the state," he said.
Sanders said he brings with him
"a fairly good knowledge of
school finance'· and an undel'Sianding of the tough political questions
involved.
. But he has no predetermined

t

solutions for school finance or
other problems.
"The last thing I want to do is
cause people to believe that I've
got some kind of a canned program
or canned se1 of policies that I'm
going to bring to Ohio and try to
shove down people 's throats,' !
Sanders said.
.
He said neither the State Board
of Education nor Gov. George
Voinovich asked during the job
interview for his views about
whether the board should be elect~
ed or appointed.
..
Voinovich favors replacing the
elected state board with a smallet.
panel appointed by a governor. A
bill that would accomplish the&gt;
chan¥e has passed the Senate and is
pending in the House.
.
:

,.,

-

.

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