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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 10, 1990·

Pomeroy-" Middleport, Ohio

Homeless pay final respects to Snyder

Smoking threatens
diabetics' lives
DALLAS tUP!i - T he risk of premature death Is nearly
double among Insulin-dependent diabetic women who are heavy
smokers than lor their non -smoking counterparts, researchers
reported Monday.
In a study of about 550 diabetics, Universi ty of Pittsburgh
researchPrs found diabetic women who smoked one pack or
more of cigarettes pl'r day for flvp years or more, wpre twice as
likely to die over a six -year period as similar diabetic women
who did not smok e.
"A comparison of the death rates ... revealed a striking
pat tern of excess mortality for women who smoked heavily,
particularly coronary hea rt disease mortality,'' wrote Claudia
Moy and her coiiPguPS, In a study published In Circulation, an
American Heart Association journal.
Si nce diabPtics already face a death risk 10 times greater th an
non-diabetics, heavy smoking boosts a dlabPtic woman' s ri sk of
death even fu rt her. to 20 times that of the general population.
researchers said.
The study also found male diabetics who sm oke also increase
their chances of death, but t o a lesser degree. Wh ile
non·smoklng male diabetics are six times more l ikely to die
than thP general popul ation, thei r co unterparts who smoke
heavily are 10 times more likely to die.
Un til the University of Pittsburgh stud y, there had never been
sc ientific data to support the Increased nsk of smoking to
diabetics, May said.
"Diabetics are still smoking; they are not quitting." Moy
sa id . "More attention should be focu sed on smoking
prevention."
The American Diabetes Associa tion esti mates 11 million
Americans suffer from diabetes, which causes the bod y to stop
producing, or react abnormally, to Insu lin , the m aj or
fue l·regulatlng hormone. High blood sugar levels res ulting
from diabetes can severel y damag e the heart, blood vesse ls.
kidneys, Pyes and nerves .
About 10 percen t of dlabeties arc insulin -dependent and
require dally injPcllons of the sub stance.
T he Pittsburgh resea rchers studied 548 ln sull n·depl'ndent
diabetics, Including 284 males and 264 fema les ranging in age
from 17 to 40 .
Fifty -four patiPnts, including 32 males and 22 females, di ed
du ri ng the six yPars aft er the st udy started In 1982. Half the
death s In womPn , as compared with one-fourth the dea ths In
men, were caused by cardiova scular disease, the st udy found .
Cardiovascular disease among women ages 17 to 40 In the
general population is uncommon, May said .
" With an addltionah1 sk factor, suc h as cigarett e smoking.
you may be enhancing the effec t of diabetes In the women . ., Moy
sa id.' 'It 's a tragroy that nobody is focusing on reduc ing the r isk
of cardiovascula r dlsease in these pati ents."

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Peo·
pie whose Jives were touched by
Mit ch Snydpr - from the homeIPss to celebri ties- gathered at a
Was hington shelter Monday to
pay their last respects to the man
who drolcated his life t o the
downtroddPn.
One by one mournPrs, who had
formed a line around the corner
of the Community for Creative
!'o n ~ Violence
shelter Snyder
risked his life to crpate and
where he dlro, filed Inside past a
sl mple wooden coffin surrounded
by flowers for Snyder's wake . Hi s
funeral Is schrouled for Tuesday .
'' I sometimes just get the urge
to cry because I just don't believe
he's gone," said KPnya Smith,
en tering the shelter she ha s
ca lled home for six years.
Smith and others said they

believe no one can

replace

Snyder , the nation' s most vocal

champion lor the homPiess.
He spcured the city's largest
homeiPss shelter whpn he staged
a 51-day hunger strike tn 1984 tha t
forced President Reagan to turn
over a once vacant federal
building. Further lasts helped
secure thP funds needro to turn It
Into a 1,300-bed shelter Snyder
called a modplfor thP nation.
Snyder, 46 , was found hanged
Thursday In hi s third-floor room
at the shelter In what pollee sa id
was a suicide. A note lndlcatro he
took his life over a failed love
relationship with longtime com ·
pan ion and fellow homeless act!
vtst Carol FennPIIV.
Among mourners Monday wa s
actor Mar tin Sheen, a clo se
friend of Snyder's who portrayed
him In a 1985 t elevision movie,
" Samaritan: The Mitch Snyd er
Story."
Shpen, schrouled to deliver a

eulogy at Snyder's funeral , said
he believed Snyder didn 't mean
to kill himself.
" I think he struggled ," said
Sheen. "I don 't th ink he inten:led
to do what he did. I th ink he was
hoping someone would come In or
the phone would ring ."
" He just went so far and hP
couldn't gPt back, bull promlsP
you he tried to get back," he said.
" He was trying to say he had
been hurt."
Snyder's death came just days
after a major defeat In the City
Council, which voted to overturn
the city's Initiative 17, a land ~
mark 1984 voter -mandatPd law
guarantPelng Pmergency shelter
for anyone In nero .
Snyder had been lnstrumPnlal
In the passage of thPiaw, and had
vowed to gPt It put back on this
fall's ballot.
After his funeral Tuesday

outside th e shelter, Snyder's
coffin was to be taken In
horse-drawn carriage to the
District Building, which houses
City Council chambers. Homeless activists have vowed to fight
to reinstitute Initiative 17 as a
legacy to Snyder.
"Maybe now people fighting
against us will come closer
together. Maybe they will bend a
little," said Gary Morris, 46, who
has Jiv ed at the sheltPr 60 days.
Fennelly, dressed in black,
declined to answer questions
about her relationship with
Snyder.
''I am just running as last as I
can run away from thP grief, "
said Fennelly, who worked 13
years with Snyder. "Mitch Is
trrepla cpa biP. He was a magical
moment In time , and we can't
bring him back ."

avascu lar surgeo n, sa id theoper ·
atlon on Gina Franco was only
thet hird timea hea rtrepalr-lung
transplant had ever been pe r ·
f ormed In the United States .
"The uniqueness of this procedure is that In one operation we
repai red this patl ent 'scongenlt al
hea r t defect , and at the sa m e

SANTA BARBARA, Ca lif.
iUPii - Actor Howard Duff,
radio's original hard -boiled detec tlve SamSpadewhowent onto
play ruthles s wheeler -dealers on
"Knots Land ing" and other
prime time soap operas, di ed
M ondayufa heartattack. Hewas
72.
Duff was pronouncro dead at
11 3 a.m . in theemergPncy room
at St . Francis Hospital of Sa nta
Barbara. Hi s wife, Judy, wa s at
the hospital.
Jean Mangus, a spokeswoman
at St Francis, said the actor wa s
stricken at home and arrlvPd by
ambulance aI th e hospital a bou 1.1
a.m .
Born in Bremerton, Was h., on
Nov.24, 1917,Duffwasfirstta ken
with aeting wh ile still In high
sc hool In Sea ttl e and financed
acti ng lessons by working at a
local radio station.

lung," says McCarthy.
There have bee n two othrr
suc h procedures done In the
United States, both at Stanfo rd
Un i ver si t y.
McCarthy and a team of
su r geons and anesthesiologist s
comp ll'tcd the four -hou r proce·
dure at 8:30a .m . Aftl'r surger y ,

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Daily Number
633
Pick-4
3997
Weather

Pages 4-5

After sening in World War]]
as a correspondPnt for Armed
Forces Radio, Duff landed the
rol e In 1946 that Jaunchro hi s
career - Dashiell Hammett's
crusty detectlvp Sam Spade.
Devoted listeners heard Duff
close each episode with a dlc·
Ia ted report on how he solved the
latest "caper," sign lngoffwlth a
perfunctory "Period . End of
report ."
Durlnghlsthreeyearsonradlo
as Spade, hebega nhlssuccess ful
movi e career . Hi s first film role
came In 19471n the priso n feature
"Brute Force."
In 1951, he m arri ed actress Ida
Luplno, with whom he co-s tar red
In the 1957 television seri es " M r .
Adams and Eve." Duff and
Luplno had a daughter, Bridget .
The cou pl e's marriage. re·
k indled severa l times aft er sepa

rations, ended In dlvorcP.
Hi s film career Included many
supporting roles In major l ea·
lures as well as leads in "B"
movies. In the 1950s, he began
appearing on the small screen,
most frequently on telpvlslon
drama anthologies, among them
''Ford Theatre," " Rheingold
Theatre" and "Science Fiction
Theater."
In the 1960s and 1970s, Duff wa s
seen frequently as the vet er an
cop on "Felony Squad" and In
gues 1 roles on many other series,
particularly erlme shows.
Duff's other movie cr edit s
Included "Naked City," "All My
So ns." "Calamity Jane and Sam
Ba ss, " ·'Sierra Stranger,"
"Pa nic in the Cit y," "O h God!
Book I I," and " Krame r vs.
Kramer."
One of hi s las t feature films
was "No Way Out" with Kevin

! a~ nln ar flow room spl'ci flcal ly

designed to proteet transp la nt
recipients from infec tion.
' 'S he Is In serio us condition, but
doing well," McCa rthy sa id.
"She will r ema i n in the int ensive
care unit for about a week ."
Franco wa s on a wa itl ng lis t for
a hear t -lung transplant when she

so ugh t a seco nd opinion this
sprin g. T he average waiting tim e
for a heart -lun g transplant is
es tima ted at two yea rs
She had been emp loyed as a
secretary until November 1989,
when she became too ill to work .
"Her heart problem had lm·
paired thp functioning of her

was t r ansf errPd t o a

Beef Blade Or 7-Bone

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
"We do no t pla y poli tics in this
office'' was the respon se from
Meigs Co unt y Boa rd of Election s
Chair man Evelyn Cla r k. when
faced with angry voters a t last
night s' r eg u lar board meeting .
Clar k was responding to a llPga tions m adr at th e mepting th a t
political motives had ove rta krn
aclion on the rc -dls trict i ng of 1wu
Meigs County voting precincts .
Th rPt' mt•mbPr s oft hP Co mmit
tee to RPston• lht' Rt·Pdsvil iP
Voting Prec inc t W&lt;'rt' p rt•sent at
th e m eet in g. and once agfli n
appealed to thr hoard to recon sid er actio n rP-district i ng tlw
Reedsville• prrrinr t in to t wo
preci nc ts. T he• &lt;Jrtinn . l ilkPn in
F'rbruary of lYKq_ r·om hinf'd .t
po rtion of t l1P l{ppd svi llP i..ind
Long Bo tt om prrcinrts into a npv.

Sou th Olivf• prPr inct , and ('Oill
Drugs, was Jcwwtte Radlord. The tickets are
available at various locations around the county .

ON SALE - Meigs County Fair tickets are on
sale. Purchasing the n..,.t ticket !rom Linda
McKinney, right , employe•• at Swisher and Lohse

Meigs County Fair memberships
go on sale; event set Aug. 14-19
Membership tickets for th e
1990 Meigs County Fair. to be
stagro on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Aug. 14 ·19, went on
sale Tuesday .
The llckets which sell for $9 are
available at various location s
over the count y. In Pomeroy, th e
ticket s can be purcha sed at th e
Sugar Run Mill, Swisher and
L oh se Drugs, Gloe ckners. a nd
Dave's Exxon. while in Middle·
port the tirkrt s may be pur ·
chase d all he Midd iPpor t Depar t
m(' nt Storr and D . J 's Tradin g

Po s t

DAYTO N, Ohio tUPII - A
Cinci nnali attor nry who trains
lawye rs on the str ict new federal
guidel ines for se ntencl ng crim I·
nal defendants experts ba sebJ II
legend Pet e Rose to be sentenced
to a bout one yea r in pri son.
Ma rtin Pinal es sa id in a stor .v
Wednesday in th e Dayton Da il.v
News that the guidel in es ca l l for
Rose to rece ive a 1 0~ to 16-m onth
sen tencf'.
Rose ple aded guilt y to tw o
co unts of filing false in co me tax
ret urns and is to be se ntencrd
.l u lv 19 by U.S. Di strict Judgr S.
Arthur Spiegel in Cincinnati.
Pi na les, a crim ina l defen se
attorney, said Spiege l has a
reputation for bei ng tough on
wh i te-collar cr imin al s and wi l l
prob ably fol low the senten cing
gu idelines.
The guidelin es use a point
svs1em to determine sentences .
.iudges ma y a dd or subtract
points based on such things as th e
nature of th e offense, the defend ·
ant 's cri minal histor y and accep·
lance of responsibility.
Plnales sa id the offen se leve l in
the Rose case would total 14
point s. Pi nales sa id he deducted 2
point s because Rose accepted
respons ibil ity for hi s crimes,

The Rutland locatio n is Joe's
Country Market, and In Syracuse
tickets arc for sale at Baer's
Market. Other locations include
Waid Cross and Sons in Racine.
Kecbaugh's In Chest er, Whaley 's
Ma rket in Da rw in, C. and D
Penzoil at Five Point s. and
Baums Lumber at ChPstrr
Phyllis Lark tn s i s handl in g
tick r t sa les in Long Bottom . and
Nr ta .Jean Rrtchie in T uppl'rs
Pla ins.
ThP mrmbe r~ hip

t ickf't s CO\"f'!
adm lss ion to th e fair a II fi VI' d a\"'-'
as wrll as frf'( ' parkin~ dnd

leav ing him w i l h 1'1 J.Xlinh .
If Sp iegel departs frorn IIH'
gu id elines, he mu st statp h i~
reasons ford oin g so. a nd dt ·rPn SP
IC:Jwvers and f edera l prost.•cut or..,

have the right to app~.•;; l hi s
dec isi on, Pinales sa id .
Rose's Dayton law yer. H.ogPr
Mak el y , sa id at the tim e Rose
pleadro gu il ty that sever&lt;JI fac
tors should bt&gt; mitig ating cin·um
stances in th e sen tencing.
Makelv said the basebal l '"
gend had paid ta xes of $2 .Un .4E
on in come of $4 .660,368 fr om 19H4
to 1987; had no previous crimina l
offenses and wa s clea red of all
other cri mi nal a ct ivi ty of wh i ch
sever al peoplP &lt;H'CUSPd him .
made complet e restitution t o tllr
governm ent : . coope r atPd fullv
with investigators and wa s undPr
thfl care of a psychiatric s(X'cial
Is t for his gambling problt•m
But Plnales sa id suc h fac tors
wer e co ntemplat ed bv th e U .S
Se nt e ncln~
Co mmi ssion and
should not resul t in a point
reduction.
Th e Cinci nn at i attorney ,.,
pects RoSl' to be se nt enced to a
m inimum -security federa l pri ~
so n. The closest is In Ttnr
HautP, Ind . , where some• of
Rose's accusers also werP sPn l·
enced to pri son term s.

Ohio River won't be lowered

Better TOTAL VALUE!

July 1 1 , 1 990

~act ion.

14 Pages

25 Cents

A Mult im edi a Inc . Newspapef

Reedsville voters get
response from Clark

Attorney says Rose
could get year in jail

Better Quality - Better Service · Better Selection

2

Pomeroy-

Costner.
In recPnt years, Duff worked In
miniseries and teiPvlston movi es. as well as holding roles on
evening soap operas such as
"Knots Landing" and "Fia ~
mingo Road."
Duff had long aspired to play
wh at he thought was the consum~
mat e villain, Shakpspeare's Rl
chard III . But In 1981, when hP
recP ived a large check from NBC
for his work on " Flamingo
Road," he said, "I am happy to
settle (In the role as1 Sheriff
SempiP."
Hlslatesttelevl slonguestspot s
i ncl udro thP miniseries "War
and Rem embrance" and series
such as "Midnight Caller" and
" FalconCrPst."
No fune ral ser v ice was
planned, and a memorial wa s
pending.

lungs, ca using weakness and
difficulty In brPathlng,"
McCar thy said.
Franco became Ohio 's second
lung tra nsplant recipient. Phillip
Mendoza, 44, of Port Clinton,
Ohio, received a successful lung
transplant at the Cleveland
Cl inic Feb. 14.

Low tonight In the mid 60s.
Chance of rain near 100
percent. Thursday , high near
80. Chance of rain 90 percent .

•

Aaor Howard Duff, «Sam Spade' dead at 72

Woman has heart repair-lung transplant at cleveland clinic
CLE VELAND !UPII A
25-year -old Pittsburgh woman
underwent a lung tra nsplant
operation and surgery to repair a
hole in her hear t at the Clevela nd
Clmr c Fou nd a tion Monday ,
avo iding the nero for a heart
tra nsplan t.
Dr. Pa t ric k McCarthy. a cardi·

Ohio Lottery

American
League is
2-0 winner

Contrary to rumors among
boat ers on thP Ohio River, the
U.S. Corps of Engineer s does not
plan to lower the river by 12 feet.
Rumored levels of river lower·
lng have rangro from 1.2 feet to
12 fppt , and have been accredited
to th e recent construction of the
new Gallipolis Lock s and Dam.
Rick Buckley of the Corps or
Engineers said the Corps does
not plan to change the dam pools
due to the construction on the

new
lock and dam
n ear
Ga llipol is.
Buckley sa id i f the river would
ever be lowerro by as muc h as 12
feet , It would cause tremendous
damage. " Banks and roadways
would slide Into the river,"
Buckley explained
Buckley works In the permil
department of the Corps. A
public affairs pPrson was not
available for commPnl.

•

represent a substanual savings

to r es idents who fr equ ent the
fair . The ticket .prioe represents
a one dolla1 Inc rease over !aut

vcar
· As explarned b)' Marv Gil
morf'. f air board sPcreta r,v. there
is a n additio nal c ha rge for the
carniva l ridrs ovc' r th e mrmber ·
&lt;hip ti c ket pn ce. T hat is $3 a day .
HowP\" Pr thf' mem bers hip ti cket
does p r ovi de f reP arcr~s to all
Pn tC'r ta in ment on thP ground s. .
F o r lhOSl' who pay to get in at
thl' ga tr each da~' . thr prie r is$:)
for Parh adm ission but that p n c('
!ndud(•s tllr ridPs .

Parents may
be lwble for
serving alcohol
C' OL UMflt i S. Oh io !C PII T h(' Oh io Su prf'm f' Court rul Pd
Wpd nl'sday thai p ar ent s who
al low thrir r h ild rPn to pr ov ide
alcoho lic hrvrragf&gt;s to somro nP
undl'r thP lf•ga l drinking ag r rna\·
bf' Jiablf' for an.\ damagr rausrd
tJv 1hat pl'!"son
· The high rour t ru led on Jn
Ot wwa Cou nf\· r asf&gt; in whi ch t h~ '
pan'nls. Ha rry and Lind a Cor
drll. a llowl'd their ch ild ren to
havP a New Yt·ar ·s Eve party on
Dec 31. I !IH.'J. wh ile the\' were not
home .
Abo ut 111 ~~·np l&lt;' attended l hl'
party. :nos t of thPm under the
lega l dr inking age o! 19. and the
par e n ts said thPy knrw thr
guc s t!'i would "pr oba bl y h ave
some hPrr." a.ccord ing t o court
trs timony
Alcohol was ~erve d. and a
traf fi c acciden t occ urred lat er in

which Robert Hu ston. one of th e
gues '-"· was injured. Hi s parent s
sued th eCordells and some of th r
ot her youn g people and the ir
par ents, charg ing negligence.
The Cordel ls I nit Iaiiy were held
not liable by Ottawa County
Common Pleas Court in their
claim that they did not person ·
ally serve the alcoholi c
beveragPs.
B ut th e deci sio n was reversed
by an appellatP cou rt, and th e
Supreme Court sent the matter
bac k to the Common Pleas co urt
to dPtermlne whether or no t
ano ther youth was driving th e
car In which Huston was Injured,
whether th e driver was und er th e
lnfluPnce of alcohol, and II so,
who supplied thP alcohol.
Justice Herbert Brown wrote
tha t " liability ca n attach when
the Injury commtttPd by the child
IS the fores eeable consequence of
a parent's negligent act."

bine d lh P rPmaindl'r Of
Reedsvillr prPrlnrt v. ith

tllf'
thP

0 1ivP-Ora n gP prPci net, formin g
thp Nort11 Olivf' prPrinct
Member s of thP cornrnittPP
claimed that th P long dhtan rr&gt;
Reedsvil lP vo tPrs now had to
travel to vote wou ld cause \'O!P r
turn ou t in that commun ity to
dwindle. AI thr very lea st. the

grou p said, vo ti ng by abse ntee
ballot would Increase . One spa
kespe r so n from the R~ros\1lie
group said that so me absentee
voters did so. al though they
would prefer to have voted in
person . ThP d is tance, they said .
ma de that imposs ibiP.
A lett Pr on 1hr rna t tl'r ol
preci nct r P-dlstricting writtrn by
Ass istant Prosecuting Attor nry
Li nda R Warner wa s di stributrd
to board members at the mrr t ·
ing. The letter indi cat ed that the
board was not, in fart , prohibited
by law fr om acting on red etini ·
tion of preci ncts, stating lhat the
·'Board of Election will be within
its ri ght s to reconsider the
dl' t('r m ina tio n or a ny prec i nct s
wit hin thP co unty within 25 days
bcforr thr gPnrral elrctio n this ,
I all"
Accord ing t o Rrrdsvill r Co mrnittrf• Co -c h ai r m an M ax ine
Wlntchc&lt;Jd, the board had pre ·
vio usly stated to the committ er
that th ey were un able to change
the precinct boundaries for th e
rrmainrr of thr year
After a read ing of the lette r b\'
Clark. Mar y Hunter. a memller
ol 1hr boa rd . madt- a mo!ion to
tJ bi(' all ac tion on the r e·
di stTicting issue until December

due to w hat she termed th e
"political ramifica tions" of th P
let ter.
Th&lt;' vote on HuntPr's motion
was a tiP votP. with both
Democrat s on thl' bo;ud, Hun tPr
and John l hlc. voting for th e
motion and both of the board 's
Repuhl1can s, Clark and Henr~'
Wells. voting a ga inst.
Clark . statin g that shr felt
··compf' lled to gPt this mai!Pr
settled oncP and lor all ", then
made a rnoti on to resc ind the
o ri gi n&lt;~ l February action. Her
moti on. if approved, would h ave
ret urned the Rcrosvilleand Long
Botton precincts to th eir original
locations.
Be fore a vote co uld be taken on
Clark's motion . Mi chelle Jen
kins, a field representative fr om
the Secret ary of State's office.
remind ed board members that "
motion to table action on th e
m atter had not been resolved .
After telep honing the Secrc·
tar y of Stat e's offic e regardin g
th e co rrect procedure, Jenkin s
m!ormed th e board th at no
furth er action ro ut&lt;! be tak en
unt il Hunt er's motion was rP·
so lved . Huntrr then wi t hdrrw
hrr motion and Clark rP
Co nt in uPd on page 9

Principal and coaching posts
filled ·by Meigs School hoard
By CHARLENE HOEFUCII
Sentinel ~rws Staff
,\ princ ipal 's po st and se\'f'ral
coac hi ng positio ns were flllPd at
Tut&gt;sday nig ht 's meetin g of thP
:\1 eigs l ~oc a l Board or Education .
Hirt' d a s f'l C'm l'ntan· pri nc i pal
for onP yp ar a t thr PlrmPntan·
princip al'" sa la n w; t '- .·\nrhon _,.
Pnr\' wl1o romrs In thf' dis trict
from an l'lf•mf'ni;H-\" tr;~ c hrr" s
position in 1!11 · P:~inr \'alit'\"
Sc hool Dls tJicr in Bainbridgr . f h ·
will b(' JS'-' i g ned 10 thr Hu rl and
t~ n d S;_ !lt;m Cenrrr '-'Chon !...;
Amo ng thl' nev.: te ;tchf'r'-' hin •d
w as

.lotln

VHn

HePih

fnr

a

lcan1ing disnbi lit\· mu sw po " i
lion at thf' high "chou! nn a
om' \"l'&lt;tr ("O nlracT He was al"o
r m plo.vPd a ~ ;1ssis ta n t band
d in•rtor for tlw l !l~IO.fll sch ool
vr&gt;ar. &lt;.1 new po sition. nn lht'
suppl l'mPntar v SJlan· schrduli'
Sh irlry McD o n &lt;.~ld v.'as h 1re d as
a rPtJc hrr foronr vt.~a r at Hu tl&lt;.~nd
rrplu ci ng Kim 01 iphan 1who is on
a 1Pi1V(' of a bspncr . Su pplrmf'n
U\ r y con t ract" wrrf' awardrd t&lt; l
flw' pcr&lt;&gt;o ns af rr r thf' board
pa ss('d a resolut ion noting tha t
'&gt;P\'0ral coachi ng po s ition~ ;md a

c h('f' rlrC:JdC'r adv i sor·~ post coul d
not be filled from ce rtified staff.
I n that gro up werr Donn&lt;~
Brn tl r y, junior h ig h chf'€'rleader
advi sor. Phil Ha rri son . head
bovs' basketbJ II coach. Joe .John
'\O n. 13i11 Ro:--,s and .J im Nida y .
ass is t;-! nt
\"Jl·s it .\ f oo tha II
coa chrs for onP yP ar .
Th r rt.'~ignations of .John l3irrh
as head tt•;JrhrraiBradburyand
Chrry-1 Light frit z as J tPachrr at
thr Ss lPm C'P ill(' r ;-;c hoo l wpn·
,Jrc t'ptcd
I .i nd a Ft shr r a lso
rPsig ned ;t.., a .; ; ubstitulf' trachcr
" in cP shf' ha s accrptrd full ·t imc
Pm pl oymrn't
MPlva Shrr\· a·s n'signati on a"
a suh.-, titutr scnPt ary was ;.~c
c epted. Jnd L ynn r Crow wa ~
g ra n ted a o nr .vra r lra,·r of
a hSt' nCf' 10 fUrt hl·r llPf rdu cat ion
Mi..!tnnit .v IP.:l\'t' wa s gran ted 1H
M ar v Br.1urr .
Tht' boa rd JpprO\"Pct M orga n
M alhl•ws as a tuition st udPn l and
dC('(' ptl'd llir oko Ma ruki J'-' a
for t•ign t'.'\ Ch J n g' ' .s tudt.' n t
thro ugh th P ·1· 1-1 La bo F.xcha ngl'

rrngram
In uth f' l ac tl O!l, apprO\'al ~\· as
g i\'f' ll to Mi cha Pl Slaggs . football

c·o&lt;J\h tou sr 1:, 1nstruct1onalday :-.
for foo tball as permrtted by lht·
Oh io Athirt1 r Association
lt was votPd to join th1 ·
J.: cluc at iomll TC&gt;lP\' l ~ i on Prop ra m
of Sout hea stern Ohio 1ETS UI '
for thr 1990-91 .~r hool _\"Pdr at &lt;~
cos t of Sl ..1f2 . 2~ of which SX'i".l2:,
will comr ba r k to thr di strirt 1n

grants .
Ac ti on to mod if~· thr &lt;:~I tPnd
LH l Cl' po li c ~ · WLIS l akf'n at lht·
mrrt1ng and thP numbrrufda.\ ·-.,
w hic h a st ud r n t ma~ · br Jbsen!
a nd still rf' ta in crr clit s Wds
rccl urrd from 30 to JR . Tli r pol1 n
allows for thr adm ini stra t ion tfJ
usr discret ion in making {'.1\ Ccp
l io n. parti cu la l"!y to student s u:h n
hav(' sP riou s illnPSSf's .
The board a ls o ac cepted th• ·
rrcommr nd atio n of Supt. .lam f·:-CarjX'n tPr to change th r gr;1din~..:
period s fr om s ix to nin r H·rek.-, ~l\
the high sc hool aod Jun ror hr gh
school
Attending thr meetin g ~n·n ·
Sup t. Ca rpanter. TrPas urrrJ &lt;m• ·
Fry. and board members. Eolwrt
fiarlon, p rrsident, Rich &lt;ll d
Vaug han, LarT\" Rupr·. g1h
Snowdon. and Je ff \\'ern

Big Apple picked over New Orleans
.
to host Democrat's '92 convention
WASHINGTO'\ rU P ir - The
Democrat ic Part\· Wrdnf'sda_v
announced it had chose n NPw
York Cit y as thr sit e of it s 19'1'
nati ona l 'ro nventlon and Chi;i ir·
man Ron Brown sa id thf'.V wou ld
t r y new and crra ti\·e wavs to
reshape th e ga thering an d ~or
tray the part y as advoca tr s fn 1
·· work i ng
&lt;1nd •mi l' Pi rs s
Am erican s."
Brown form ally ma dP thf'
an nou ncr mPnt aftt.•r· wProk s ot
spec ul ation that thl' co nvP nti on
would go to th e Flig Applr rat her
t han Nrw Orleans .
" Whrn WP Democrat s h ave
fought for working citizens o[ I he
United States we have been at
our bes t When we have looked
the powe rful, th e corrupt , the
mean-spirited and irresolute in
the eye and challenged th ei r
narrow viPw of th e American
exper ience, we ha ve spoken for
millions of voiceless Americans
- th e everyday folks Republl·
cans too oft en for get, " Brown
sai d.
"What better place is th erP to
tell this story than New York ?"

he as kc•d Flrnw n called the
ga th eri ng. w h•• rr the part y will
nomrnate its Jqq2 pres identi al
ca ndidatr, · ·otJ v iousl y a televi ·
sion evl' nt " and sa id he was
studying a number of wa ys
in cluding perhaps sho r tening th e
convC'n ti on t n makP it more
intNes ting an d effective. "I'm
trying not to be res tr ictive , but
th.e n ' arr a number of cr ea tive
steps tha t could be t aken, "
Brown said
Brow n defended the dC'cis ion to
go t o liberal New York rat.her
than a mo re mains tream Ameri ca n ci ty and argued that what
wa s more Important to the party
was Its message rather then the
co nvention location .
" Frankly, I think the politi cal
co nsid erations are grossly over~
r ated. WP were supposed to
sweep the South In 1988" when
the convention was In Atlanta ,
Brow n sa id . "I think what
matters Is what is said !rom th e
podium, not where the podium Is
locat ed," Brown said.
It will mark the fifth time the
Bi g Apple will host a national

poli trcal co nventi on. All ul i ll&lt; '
previou s rour co nvP nll on~ hL· ld in
th e c it y have bern for Dnn 11
c rats, the las t tw o of w hirll - 111
1976 and 1980 - nomtn c&lt; i&lt; '&lt;l
Jimmy Car ter .
At leas t part o f the rr;-1'-.on tor
choosi ng New York was brca usr
of th e recent pa ssage h,. thl'
Loui siana Legisla ture of llw
toughest abor tion bill in 1h&lt;·
na tion, sa id sou r cesconnrctPd to
the party. Louisiana GO\·. Fludd,·
Roem er , a Democra t, ha ~ not
sai d whPther he will sign th r
mea sure.
However, sources added that
while Brown had come under
some pressure from abon ion
rights groups, other reasons Including the su ppor t se rvices
and hote l rooms avai lable ln New
York - were equally Important
In his dec isio n to hold the
convention there.
There had been ta lk for werk s
even before the abort ion
legislation passPd - that Brown
wanted the convention to go to
the Big Apple, where he wa s
rai sed.

�Wednesday. July 11. 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pom eroy, Ohio
DEVOTt:D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS- M .~SON AREA

ROBERT L. WI~GE'l'T
Publlsht'r

CIIARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT Wlll'l'E HEAD
i\sslstant Publisht•r/ ControiiPr

'

A MEMHLR of 'IllC Uni!C'd Prrss lnternJt iona l. I n lewd Dail v Pres s

Association and thp Amer ican Nrw spapcr Publisht&gt;r s AssociatiOn.
LETTERS OF OPINION a re WC' Icome. Thev s hou ld bt• lrss than 300
w ord!l long. All letters an• subj£'oCt to editing aftd mu st be signed wit h
namr. addrPss and tf'IPphon e nu m ber Nn unsignpd ll.'l ter s wi l l bf' p ubll_shPd. LC'tl('r s shou ld br In good ras tr. &lt;.!dd n •ssln g i ssu(•s, not (&gt;l'r sunal l
I If'S,

Foley foxes
the opposition
By ARNOLJ) Si\1\'I SL~ K

l iP I St•nior
WAS HI I\C:TO\ - Ba c k

1n

l&lt;~ ditnr

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 11, 1990

Spymaster weighs options
EAST BERLIN - F or decades, Markus Wolf was 1he
brilliant spy master of East Ge r many. Hewassogood at It t hai he
Inspired the character of the
flc11on al communist spv m as l er
"Karla" In John Le Ca rre' s
PS pionage novels .
Bur with the historic unr ave l·
lng of t he Iron Curtain , Wolf s
fl amboyan t career serm s to have
caugh t up with him, leaving him
only lhr&lt;'&lt;' choices· prison, defection or pPrmanent exllP In the
Sov iet Un ion .
Our U.S. and West German
int ell igenrP snurces say German
pollee are buildi ng a ca se agai nst
Wolf th at might charge him, In
pffpct. as an accf'ssory to IPrror·
1st assassi nation s.
The 66-year -old Wolf doL•sn'1
know how much t hP WP s! C.t•r
m ans haV£~ on him . But hr' -;
go lt en thP hi nt. and took an
rx trn dPd f ami lv vaca ti on to thP
Sovirt Union in February . v: hrrP
hr's sprnt much of his t imr sincP.
In 19~ 7. Wolf mvs rerlo us lv
rrt irrd aft pr .1.1 vra r s as t hP hrad
of Ea~ t C.Prmany's HVA fo rpi gn
f' splonagr ~ervi C'f'. part of thr

Min ist ry of State Security . fi e
ci ted Ill health for his dep arture,
though he was healthv .
Within t wo years, thr canny
Wolf h ad donned sheep's clo·
thin g. HP published m emoirs In
which ht• c rlliclzed hard-liner
chi ef o [ sta te E rich Honeck er and
sided with the reform s of Sov!rt
Prrmier Mikh ail Go rb a ('hl~ v
Hr br camP a cham pion of thP
East Ger m an oppos i1iqn th at
rvC'n t ua ll y ous tPd Hon Pc krr lflst
October and. followin g a Nov. 4
rall y in which Wolf was a
speak er. brought dow n the Berlin
Wall fi ve days later.
Wolf had good reason t o side
wit h the w inners du r in g the
struggle: he harbor s political
ambitions. PrivaJely he reckoned thai If Yuri A ndropov, a
forme r KGB c hi ef. could bPco mr
head of the Soviet Union , and
Gevrge Bush, a former CI A
dirPCtor. cou ld beco m e prrsident
of the Uni t ed Slates, t hen I herr is
a placr for hi m as t he leader of a
unified Ger m anv .
But Wolf has overes li matPd
the val ur of his lan r r-dav r eform ist C'I"Pdf'nt ia ls. Amrrican Rnd

West Ge rma n int elli gC'nCt&gt; off i·
clals t old us.
For one I hln g, the offici al s say
his com m itment to communism
Is "ver y deep.' ' He Is the so n of a
communist doctor who fled Naz i
GPrm any In 1933 to settle In
Moscow, wherp the younger Wolf
plckrd up flu en t Russ ian . As a
Jrw ar1d a communist. Wolf had
tw ice lhl~ rPason to fE'ar an d hatr
Hitler
Soviet inlrlligenre o ffi c ia ls
tr ained him and madC' him a
spymaster in the postwar East
Ger many. He sent aboul 80
percent of his srcrrt S('rvice's
information and dPfertors to the
KGB. "He wa s alw ays I he KGR 's
m ain m an in t he Ministry for
Star r Security. " a West Ge;·man
Intelligence official confided.
All or this makes Wol f's most
via bl e option exile In th e Soviet
Union as a hero of that stair .
whosr citizens hip hr' s nPvPr
r elinq uished .
For I he samr rPa son s. hP is
unl ik f'lv to defP&lt;'t to WPStPrn
i n t PI I !gPn ce agpnc ir s. C'\"f' n
lhOll gh I he !'X I en l of hi s know iPdgr of East \.prman a nd Sov H•I

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
Intelligence operat i ons I s
breathtaking.
Wolf likely wou ld prefer t o
conllnue leading th e life or an
author, celebrity and bon viva nt
In Berlin . Th ai could have been
possibl e If his pas t In espionage
- even outlandis h fe at s lnvolv·
ln g bl ac kmail and sexual tr aps were all thai stood bPtwPen him
t:~nd 1hl' Wes t
Bur West German officials
ha vp c-arne to bell evt' that Wolf
was in vol ved in ex t ra-espio nagP
ep isodes that cannot be forgiven .
There Is growing evidence th at
Wolf cou ntrnan cPd sEweral assassin atio ns and murders of
Wes t German c it lzens by his own
agent s or l eft -wing terrorisls,
som e of whom receiv ed cover In
th e Eas t. Ther e Is even evidence
that Wolf had advan ce knowledge or and maybe even assisted
I he Llby an·alded bombing or a
West Berlin dis co In 1986. In
which tw o America n s were
killed. One Wes t German Jn lelllgence offi cial tol d us, " He had to
have been part or the se real
crimi n £11 art s.··

rhr• I%1Js. lhr· Suprrrnf' C11 urr outl awed

mandatory pra yl'r in puh l1c sc hoo l c la ssroom s &lt;tnd IJrovoked CJn

uproar f'\ 'Pn loudcr th &lt;.w th r cu r rr nt hulla ba loo ovPr fl ag burnin g.
Thf' drf'i sion camr from thl' co urt lwadrcl bv ChiPf .J us ti ce Earl
WarrPn, sn it addt&gt;d to th(' ag it ation for his. rP mnval. including
bil lboards dPmanding his lmJX'afhmPnt
And. as in the presPn t siluati on. i t also ful'lrd J n pf fort tuarnPnd t hP
First AnwndmPnt to th r Con stitut ion. Thi s wa s i n &lt;J timf' when
co ngressiona I comm i I tee c ha ir m r n hPld nr a r [): u n lim itI' d powpr over
their own rPillm "· and Rrp . E m man uri Cr l ler. D !'\ . Y.. quic k ly m adr
clear his House Jud ic·iar v Commi tr r wou lcl ha\·(' not hing to do with a
pr oposa l to c ha ng&lt;' t he Flill or Highr s.
But supportf'rs of sc hool pra yrr v.-rrr not J bout to JC('P p ! ('pl[pr 's
r Pfusa l as thP lil sI wunL Thrv tJ r gJ n c i rcu Iat i ng a prt it ion to hri ng 1h£'
ame ndment to ttw Huu sl' fl oor vdth out tw nrfil of romm l tt('f' hPnrings
or end or semPnt.
So CeliPr gan• in and nnnoun ct•d ht· would hold hra rin gs Dn thf'
iss ur Lots of lwari ngs_ Y\'p(•k...; of hra ri ngs. HPar in gs t hr1t took
IPstimony from P\'Pr \' m.:Jjor rtli gious group and l aw sc hool th&lt;-tt
opposf'd t hr idPa and from th(' m os t f'Xf r rm ist .suppor!Pr s thf'
committee cou ld find
By the tmw tht• hrarings rnd('(J. oppo... it ion to thr amr&gt;ndmPnt had
org anized and hardP nPd and 1ht • support of mrm brr s w ho j ust Wlln tf'd
to be on l hf' popular puli tiral sid r h;td vanishrd . Crl lPr won thP war
H' l thou t fighti ng a hal tlr on the floor . wh rrr hr did not wa n t to he
Thr flag iss uP ncarl.v
\'f' ar " la ter presf•n tPd a far difft'rt'nl
situati On Th i.'i tillH'. !h(' .Juclici ~ t !" _\ " rommit Pf' c hairman, HP p_ Jack
Brooks. D·TPxa s. was commift('d t o m ove a flag burning amen dm pnt
to th e Hou sP f loor SupportPrs of thr amr ndment tigu rPd com mittPt'
hrarings on the proposal would g iv(' t hPm limP to marshal the su pport
or veter ans and othL•r g r oups bpforr the meas•J:T' camf' to a vo iL' .
Speaker Thomas Fo ley, o .v.a sh., CIUSSCd them up. ra iling l hP
am nendment to an imm ediate votf.• dnd pairin g it with a proposrcl
'l \Jtutr that su ppo.'&gt;cd l y would mPrt thP ob jf'ctions voicPd by th p
Su premr Copurt wht'n it struck do wn 1wo Parl ier laws banning flag
burning
T he s upporlPr ~ hi JWil'd. c harging Folr\' was drnying patri otic
o r~anization s thr o pportunit~· to l o bb~ C'o n g n~ss Thr~· u..-prp ri ght . of
CO UJ' SC' : thf' la st thi ng Full· ~· WJ nt PLi .""" 1'- bolrs 0f IPIIC'rS and
trlc&gt;grams and a blizzard of ph one tJI:s dr·scr 11 .._;i'1 l! on Capi tol Hi l l.
Hr go t hi s quick \·o tt • on thP &lt;.~me nd mr n t. which f;-t iJPd to gf't th(·
two· t hird s it nf'edrd . T hl'n . 10 takt' ttw politi c al cursf' off thrra tPnrd
Republ ican cha rgrs of \·o ting "'aga i n" t pro tf'c t io n of the flag. " th t~
DPmocra tic leaders c a llf'd up t hP proposPd statu tP undPr J procrdu n•
tha t a lso nppded a two -th irds vote .
Supporters of tht&gt; co n.s tilu tional am t•ndml'n t PI'Ott•strd that thr bill
had nrvrr bPPn co nsldf'rcd b.v thl' Judici ary Commi i1 Cf' and l)(&gt;sidf's.
i t probabl.v was ju st as unconst i tutionmal a:i thf' prf'\'iou.s two
mra surrs. Llkf' tlw arrH'ndmf'nt. th e tJill also LJ il rd to pass.
Thrrr is no way to know for o..;u n • whrthrr t hf' Rf'publican s will bt•
dblr to makf' J surrt'ssful ('arnpaign issur our of f lag burning . ThP\
h.tvf' said thr~· willtr.v . bul it is po ss ibh.' that Folr ~ - . by srtting up d
4ui c k voir month.'. IJpforP 1hr fa l l ca mpai g n and by g iYing th f'
ctrn Pndmrnt ·..., opponPnt s a &lt;., ubsti rutr flag prot rc ti on bill to \ "Oh • fur.
wok thr politic al po i...,o n out of thr iss ur. 1\ s th 1· ma n sa \S. Wt' shall
'-Olin "l:'f'

@

1990 by NEA. Inc

" Well, Fred, here 's to getting out of the
defense contracting game. "

.Storms continue to mar play in Hubbard LL tournament
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
SYRACUSE
The New
H,a ven Orioles and Syracuse No.
'1 won the first two bouts In
TuescJay's action of th e
Sy r a(use-BIIl Hubbard Memor ial Little League Touranment .
and the Middleport Dodgers
wer e leading Syracuse No. 2, 5-2
with just one more out to go when
rain and lightening postponed th e
·f ini sh of that game until tonight
at 6 o'c lock.
Monday evening, Syracuse
went on to claim a 14-0 shutout
our over Point Pleasant Peoples
Bank behind the pitching of
Robby Crow who fanned eight
and walked three In a fin e
pit ching performance.
Sy racu se brought it s sticks to
life as well as Cass Cl eland had a
triple and two singles, J ay Day
singled, Jay McKelvey had tw o
walks, Robby Crow had two
singles, Tyson Buckley a single,
Ryan Hill had two doubles, Kevin
Deemer had a double and single,
and Jason Pangia a single.
Craw' s four-hitter limited Jh e
hitting Jo three Josh Adkins
sin gles , a J ason Barnette single,
and two walks to Brad Lilly .
Five hit s, five walks, and a
coupl e Chester errors l ed Jh e
New Haven Orioles to a 7-5 win
ove r Cheste r .
Chester wa s leading 4-0 going
into the firth Inning, when with
one ou t Chris Brinker singled .
Josh Miller walked , Jerem y
Tuc ker s ingled, David Mit chell
walked, and Gabe Scott unloaded
a bases loaded single with an
ensuin g error . Heath Engle lat er
si ngled for the final RBI 's.
Jeremy Tucker was th e win nin g pitc her wi th 8 strikeou ts and
two walks, while despite a good
game Chri s Bai ley suffer ed the
loss with fr ve strikeout s and 5
walks .
Eng le had a double and sin gle
10 lead New H ave n, while
Tu cker. Scott, Cpris Mitchell,
and Brinker had the other hit s
Ches ter hitters were Bailey

and Pal Aeiker with a single and
double respectively, whill' Kyle
Ord and Robbie M urph y had
si ngles .
Although as Yogi says, "It ain ' t
over 'Ill It's over!' , the Middlepor t Dodgers are apead or
Sy ra cuse "H ubbard's Greenhouse" number 2, o2 wit h one out
remaining.
Despite 5 walks, Coheen had 12
strik eouts, st ri king out 7 or the
first nine he raced and giving up
ju st one hit , a single to Sy r acuse's Travis Lisle.
Kevin Fields walked three
times for th e hosts .
Four Mrddleport Dodger hit s
and lhree Syracu se errors helped
push the Dodgers into the lead.
The big blow came when Hanson
slammed a hom e run i n the third,
followed by a Pullins single.
Other hitters were McClure and
Fisher.
Despite a good effort Lisle
suffered the loss with fiv e strl ·
keouts and four walks.
Action continues this even in g
with the last ou l or lhls gave to
beg in the action.
Monday's Action
Rain and postponements
played havoc with the acnual Bill
Hubbard Littl e L eague Tourna m ent Mo nday night , bu t one
winner did eme rge befor e light ·
ening put th i ngs on ho ld for
anoth er night.
Point Pleasa n t PSM clai m ed a
16·o win over the H acine Red s'
No. 2 in the first game, wh il e
Hartford claimed a forf eit from
Ga JUpolis E lks who were a no
show . Th e final game or th e
n ight. sa w Sy ra cuse lake a H

lead in rhe lop or the fir st, before
lighten in g and rain postponed I hr
ntght cap to Tuesday evC'ning
S Diamond wa s hit by a pitch
and walkrd after trad ing thp
gam e of wi1 h a homl:' run for thp
Po in t Plea sa n t cl ub. J. Rou sh

l't ' llc hPd tw icr- on P!'ror s and
stngl ed. M . Ril'hmond sin gled
and wa l k&lt;'d. R Wil so n sungled .
M Ol iv er had a triple and single.
D Cochran a srngle and walk . •J
Li tch fie ld a single and triple for
thr winn('r s.

S_ Diamond w&lt;.~ s t hP w\ nn lng
pitc her . whilt• R. Wilson ca nw LHJ
in rf• liPf. ThPy l'!Jm binPd t o fa n I(]
;_md walk fivP . R~' an Norri s
suffpr ed lhP los s dps pitt' pitdJ\ng
well and fann ing IOh imse lf whiiP
wa lkin g five.

Racine hitt ers were A Roush a
single. M . Bradford a single, Joe
Kirby f our walks, Norri s a single,
Era~don Floyd tw o sing les, and
ll . Tacketl a double.

The Daily Sentinel
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Pubtls h(-&gt;d N' erv a ft ern oon. Monday
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lhrou gh

Pomcro~· , Ohl u ·15i69, Ph. 992-:H5b. St&gt; l·on d cl ass postag e paid a t Pnmf'roy,
OhiO .

Member Unlt(&gt;d P r£&gt;Ss lnt f'rnattona l.
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Subserlb('rs not drstrln~ 1o pay t h{'car ·
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Relative earnings merit reflection
F:.w h ~urn mrr r look fonA.' i.l rrlt o
Par ad(• magazinr's "Wha t P PO ·
plf' Fa rn " l'dition so 1 can S f'l '
how I o.;t a(' k up in thf' salar.\·
drp;1rt mp nt
Th! .; vra r, onrr agai n. m_
,.
standing w asn't f'xa ct b· f t::~nta s
tic . OK. r-c•sprr tabi P, but not
fant ao;; ti c Crrtai nl v nowhrn •
nrar thr top rarnrrs- folk s likt·
Hu o.;.,ril [ _ C' hr !s tiansrn. ;,;,, ;1
utilif v rompanv prrsid rn t from
Sioux C' it v. Iowa. ~·ho makrs
rn orr th an $2:&gt;0.000 a yf'Jr - hut
aLo.; tl nowhrre npa r M ar\ Prvtnn
iviP_\·rr . an R4 -vrar ·old ~ ubs tir u t P
IParh rr in St Prtrr . I ll . 1\"hO
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Rut rvrn morr than srrin g
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th(' llttlr s hock s I J2 Pt frum

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N s· job ~ I wa ~ su rpri o., r d tnlt • &lt;~r n
tha t ·11 ·\"f',lr -olrt .1rh ;u hnin is t r;l
tor Ba rb :n ;t Th om ;J n f SC'art lf'
r .trrw d onl Y ~ ~ ~ . 0(10 . 1.\'hil r H
_
vr&lt;lr ·olrl fP'&gt; I i\·,11 di r rctor ! Whar
kind of r, •o.,t i\·ai '' Thr \I atinn(l ]
Lotto Winnn s· Ca !:.J. mav tx&gt;) 1
Eli; ~-dw th RlaC'k of Milwaukrl '
P;H nl'd $Hl.l :100
,\nd ! was 'ilun nr d ro di srO\"f'l '
that :17 n •a 1· old Hand\' R Tincl lP
nf Hul':r tov.. n. A la . rarn "' $.17.000
it S ;1COLli mi nf'r 1\h o.; tN PO t\"1){' 0!
m ;~ l m 1nP rs is glranf'cl from
'&gt; tud v in g t hr indu stry· ., probl r m ~
- bl:l(' k lung di sr asr. yra rs ol
pm·f•r r_
v and hitlrr uni on battlrs.
co un t n · Jnd v..·c-s trrn son gs abo ut
d Pt'P rlungron s an d bri ng unablr
to di r hPC /-l usr thrir 'iOul s arr·

f'! lil ntrral at thf' companv sto r t'
.And what does th is all mf' an.
th is am ;uin g. amu sing scalr of
our o.; uppo sf'd worlh in r ompari
"'On to th at of our f p\J ow s~ I ' m
cL1 rnc-d if I kn ow .
Thi s iss uP is so mrthin g wt&gt;
hahv boo mPrs h avr bren st r uggl ing with al mo st from th e timr
wr WNt' old rnou gh to know " "hat
h;wln .c; a job mrant We wpre thr
fir sr g(&gt;np r at ion t o go toco llp gp In
drovrs and to pn jo v a smorgas ·
hord of carrrr options
Wr
wf'i ghrd our goals again st our
rn nsr l r ncr s th rou gh thf' id Pali s·
!j (' anli ·m at rrial i sm or thr '60s.
Thrn. in lhf' · ~n.s. Wf' wPrr
cast igatrd for ou r BMW s. bu si·
nrss lun r hr s and gold rrPdit
card s at bu s inrss lunrhrs whrrr
thr.v discu ss f'd thf'i r upcom inr

Sarah Overstreet
"r r ir s on ~· u ppiP .(.TT"PPd.
The samr wppk l hr "What
P('()p lr Earn " issuerameou r, thr
Ba l t imore Sun rPp or trd th at
many nrw rol lC'gP gradua tps arr
lea ving I he " Me !)prade" behind
and flrC' iniPrPstPd in sociologists
srf' the student s no t as starry eved. lmprarllcal appreciation
for thf&gt; joys mom•y ea n br i ng t o
l ivin g
Herr ' s l o Pqull ibrlum . And
nex I yf'ar when t hr "Wh at PPOplr
Ear n" Issues C'o m es ou t. may th f'
edito rs dr ci de to dPVO!f' at l eas t a
si debar ro jo b sat isfact i on. If
l hPy do, I hope there's at least
onr sPif-Pmpl oved jo urnali st on
t hf' li.st who registPrs i n thr
" Puphorla" ran ~e- and doesn ' t
rome In last among thP sa l ar iPs

CHAND FORKS N D rNFAl
·
· · · ·
- Fl ghi PPn months aft er rh e
la ndmark Free Trade Agrrr·
mr&gt;nt t&gt;Ptween th r Un ited Sta i rs
and C.1nada went Into rffprt . thr
New Fl ye r lnrtuslrlrs plant "' ·
empllflrs thl' best or the rwo
n at ion s' new Pcon o ml r
r elationshi p
New F'l .v Pr is a Ca n.:1d i on
com pany th at constructs Jnt re
city commuter busPs. lt s eorporate offices and one or two
assemb lv
. p lan ts are In thP
Provin ce or Manlloba .
Bulllll'otherassembl .v plan t is
In North Dakota, whrre
Winnipeg ba sed New Flyer In
recent months has been produ cJn g buses for ma ss t ra nsit
system s In both countries , !rom
Atla nta and Toronto.
Notwithstandi ng the growJna
'
number of sim il ar cases of
unrestrained bilat eral co m merce. the Initial Jl,~ years tha t
the trade accord has been In
effect have not been without
trava il. A lthough three-fourth s
of all Ca nadians supported the

r oncrp l whe n il was firs! pro.... ..-~
o
.
pos n, In 19oo. a public optnlon
.
po ll ronducled r ar l1rr I his vea r
.
found that sl!g htl v mor r t han htllf
.
·
now opposr Jt.
Thr Canadi an L abor Co ngrPss
savs I he lrear v al r eadv has
.
rrsui! Pd tn the loss of alm ost
100,000 jobs north or I he bo r der
"Ca nadians get to wa tch as frf'f'
trade dismantles our industries
and surrenders ou r forests. fi sh,
mines, energy and water to U.S.
Interests," ad ds th e un ion
federation .
Canad l an s h ave anot her rea ·
son to be r esen tful : The morf'
th an $160 billion In goods and
serv ices exc hanged annuall y between the two countries Is
r oughl y ba l an ced only because
U.S. aut omobil e co m pa nies produce vas t numbers or ca r s In
Ca nad i an assemb ly plant s. l hrn
ship Jhem sou th ac r oss the
border l or sale.
" Ameri ca ns have to sla rl
spending their money In Can ada,"saysHaro ld A.Gershman,
a progr ess ive Gra nd Forks bu sl

11Pss.·rnan . "We must address t he
..
lradr lmba 1ance.
Gers hm an I s a member or an
advlso rv co mmitt ee workin g to
·
rP.s tort th e north -sou th tra de t hat
flourished du ring I he 1700s . AI
.
I hal I t m e I here were no borders
todlscourageEuropeanfurtrader s from engaging In ex t ensive
com m ere£&gt; w ith Ojibway and
Ch ippewa I ndians throughout the
Red River Ba sin .
As the Northwest Regional
Developm ent Commlss ton. In
nearby Thief River Fal ls. Minn .,
notes, that era l asted for only
·
about a centurv .
"
" When the boundary betw een
t he United Stales and Canada
was for malized In 1818, the
lradlllonal norlh-south tra de and
f amily networks began to break
d ow n. D urln g I he nex ll50 yea r s,
separ ate cul tures and histories
developed and the bonds or
co mmunit y were brok en."
"The rel atio nship Is very complex and delicate." he says . "To
a great ex tent, It' s a matt er or
learn ln ga boutea chother. Amer-

•

Rolbel r,ll wlhallerls

IC

tr c
"'eansh arr 1yp 1ca y P 1 nocen
be
avp o ear n o
m or e
cu u It ura
..
11 v srns 111 vr.
Th
· dl
· N
P 1ra ng area
age 1 envl·
sio s
d
th
1 1
·p ~n· nlcl ul esl morelh an 700
M ·000
.:vp
e
v ng n sou ern
ant
1·
ob
d
t ,ru
ld
a an a1mos .xn.1000 res ent s
ap l
Ml
t'
d N h
ece o1 nnPso a an ort
D k t
a 0 a.
An ex pl ora tory conference
held In Gra nd Forks In March t o

1

advan ce th at con cept was E'X ·
pected 10 al tract f ewer than

50

government. business, civ ic and
h
ot er leaders from I he province
and two slates . More th a n 200
show ed up.
A meeting In Winnipeg In M ay
was attended by represent atives ·
r
o all six major Canadian banks
and t hree banks apiece from the
two
sl ates . Among the Issues
h
t ey plan to ex plore Is the
Int egra tion or automallc teller
machine networks, enabllngdeP:
osltors on both sldesof theborder
10 have around -the-clock access
not only to their own accounts but
a l so to both cou n tries'
currencies.

By CARRIE MUSKAT
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO !UP II - The wait
for Julio Franco and the Am erican League was worth It Tuesday
night.
Franco w as on his way to the
plate In the sixt h Inning ,..,lth
runners at first and third to face
Jeff Brantley when the steady
r ain falling on Wrigley Field
became too much for home plate
umpire Ed Montague.
"All th e t i me I wa i ted Insid e, I
kepi stretching," Franco sa id . " I
jusr wanted to concen trate. "
Si x ty-elghl minutes later and
a ft er some qui ck spr inklin g or
dry dirt, the Texas Ranger s
second baseman rapped a two·
run doubl e orr Cincinnati's Rob
Dibble In the seventh Innin g
Tu esd ay night to give the Amerl ·
can Lea gue a 2-0 victory.
&amp;cause of his heroics, Franco
was named winner or the Arch
Ward Trophy as th e ga me 's Most
Val uable Pla yer.
Fra nco slapped an 0·2 pilc h to
right cent er fie ld, which roll ed all
the way to thP lvy-covPred wa ll
Both Sa nd y Alomar and L ance
Parrish scored on the hit .
Di bble. a s tri keout specialist
and one of Ci nei nnati's "Nas ty
Boys," had repla ced San Fra n
c!sro·-. BrantiL'Y. who com ·
pial ned of stlffm•ss In his left side
after go ing ou r to the mound.

ava \l ab! l'
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finished first In thr 1990 Big Bend Minor Leagtlt'
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"EvPr y body sa id he rDibbl el
threw hard," Fr anco said. " I
knew he was go ing Jo throw a
fas tb all because he rook a long
tim e to wa r m up I ju st wan red to
hit it to righ t f ield "
Even NL m anager Roger
Craig k new Dibbl e would th row a
fa stbal l - and didn't w ant him
lo
"I was ju st sayi ng t he bad
thing abo ut a power pit cher Is
th at when they get behind, they
thr ow a raslbal l right down Jhe
pla te." Cra ig sa id , "a nd j ust as I
was say ing thai, he (Dibble)
threw t he b all down I he plate and
he (F'ra ncol hi t II for a double."
Franco Is th e fir st Ranger Jo be
named the All-Star MVP since It
was Introdu ced In 1962, and only
the second at his position since
Jo ~ Morga n won in 1972 .
Fra nco wa s making hf s second
All -Sl ar appearance - he wa s
elect ed to the AL s tar ting learn
last year, the Rangers first
starter si nce 1978. He led all
major lea gue second basemen In
hitting lasl year with a .316
average, and end ed the first half
or 1990 wllh a .292 average and 41
RBI.
Franco finished 1 for 3, grou nd Ing out In his first at -bat In the
firth and flying out to right to
leav e the bases loaded In the
"lghth . He had pinch hit for
'roronto pitcher Dave Stleb In the
ltfth and remained In the game at
lecond base_

SEfMlliM.

@

. , ~0 1

In

Sf'rvlce Is

MVP of 1990
All-Star tilt

U. S.., Canada exlpore open border

q;. . . . .~. . &amp;ll:ii...
.
.
7-A

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Franco named

:w

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405 North Second Avenue, MIDDLEPORT
·-·---·

---·-·--~---------------

_____

.....,, ____ _

�Wednesday, July 11, 1990
Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. July 11. 1990

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

In Tuesday's AU-Star Game,

With Franco:-; two-run double.

Nobody there to save Brantley

AL dream team beats senior circuit 2-0 in All-Star Game
By MIKE TULLY
UPJ National Baseball Writer
CHICAGO iUPli - The Lone
Ranger came to the rescue of an
All -Star Game that was in danger
of resembling a World Cup

soccer match.
Julio Franco. the on ly representative from the Texas
Rangers. doubled home two runs
In the seventh Inning Tuesday
night, breaking a scoreless tie
and giving the American League
a 2-0 victory over th e Nationals.
Following the longest rain
delay in All-Star history, Franco
hit Dibble's 0-2 pitch i nto the
light -center field gap, brea ki ng a
scoring drought similar to the
ones that plagued the recentl y concluded World Cup.
"1 knew ht• was going to throw
me something hard ," Franco
said. "I just wanted togo to right
netd _"
"It was right down the middil'
. of the plate, rig ht down l:lroad
: way ." Dibble said. "We dis
:cussed It and what I wantPd todn.
II was a mutual agrPPmPnl twit h
catchf'r MikP Sciosf'ia :1 I wa s
going to throw a pitch up e~nrl in ,

but I threw right down th(·
middle "
The AL nm~; owns it s fir ~ t
thrPe-g amP winning streak si ncP
HIP T ruma n Adm in islrJtion and
its fir st shutout i n 44 yea r s.

Franeo' s

ef fort s backed

a

record -set ling performance b~'

the AL pit ching sta ff. With th&lt;'
wind blowing in at 16 mph, the
crowd of :!9,071 wat ched thP

winning staff allow ju s t two hil s
to win its third game in a s man:v·

tnes at Wrigley FiPid
"Yo u' rr not going to b('a t man v

people with two hits. " sai d San
Franci sco

Craig.
No one had

mana gpr
scon~d

Rugrr

at Y: i i p.rn

COT. whpn home pla tP urnp irL'
Ed Monta gue called tim&lt;' with
runn ers on fi rst anr1 third and
none out i n I he Sf'\'Pnlh .
Onr hour a nd eigh t minutPs

la ter, D ibble replaced Jose1 ,J,,ff
Bran tley and got two strikrs on
Franco. But th e next pit c h gavt'

lire! Saber hagen the victorv and
made Oak land sk ipper To ~ .v La
H:ussa the first ALmanagcr sinn•
Casey Stengel to ptlot two
stra ight All Sti:.lr win s

Th e American LeC:tgue used six

pit chers to handcuff the NL and
brea k the previous low -h it game
of t hree hits. es tablished four
times . Denn is Eckers ley worked
th e ninth to notch his second
Ali -Star save.
" I think this thing wa s all
hyped up to be, ·wrigley Field.
wind blowing ou t, "' Eckersley
sai d.· 'As it turned out. we had an
entirely different situation. "
Franco. playing in his second
All -Star Ca m e, was named most
va l uable player.
" I knew in the ninth I was the
MVP if we held the lead, " he
sai d .
A ft(•r tw o drcades as a punch -

ing bag , the AL has taken four of
th e la st fi ve. though it sti ll trails
t hP s(•ries 37 -23-1.
Only a f i rst-inning si ngle by
Sa n Fra nc isco's Will Clark and a
ninth i nning singlP by Lrnny
Dy kstra span.'d th l' \JI. thf' first
no-hittrr in All Star history As it
wa s, rlw \ I . Sf'! a rrrorrt for
f&lt;•wf'st hits , t.tnd P.-..: trnded it s
rr&gt;cf•nr futility .
RJin dPI&lt;JyPd ltH • gd rnP for 17
minutr.s at th f' s tart , makin g i1

the fourth A li -Star matchup
affected by precipitation.
In 1952 at Philadelphia's Shill€
Pa r k, rain delayed the game 20

innings .
Tuesday nig ht marked tlw
second time rain spoi lPll a
showcasP event u ndPr thf'

minut esa llh£&gt;s tart , thenPndedil

Wrigley Field lights. On Aug . R.
1988, thu nders torm s ra ined out
the first nigh I game ever pla yed

after five Innings with the National League ahead 3-2. The
second game In 1961 was called
after nine innings, resulting in a
1-1 tie. Rain postponed thP 1969
game In Washington, requiring it
to be played the next day.
Sandy Alomar Jr. opened the
seventh wi th an Infield hit on
which he slid Into first base. With
Alomar moving on a full count.
Lance Parrish lined a single to
rig ht -center. putting runners on
first and third .
Then came the delay . Brantley's side sti ffened. bringing in
Dibble. After Franco's hi t, the
NL produced Its only highlight of
the game. With one out. Jose
Canseco fli ed to rig ht , where
Darryl Strawberry caught the
ball and fired home to nail
Franco.

AL pitchers have now allowed
th e NL ju st 29 hits in the la st five
Ai l -Star Games. The NL has
seared in just fi ve of the last 49

:All-Star Game more like World Cup soccer
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO t UPl i - Th e Al l
. Star game- wa s a snor&lt;'. Or was
· there more ?

Memorles? For six innin gs . the
: only thing th e 1990 Ali -Star game
· at historic Wrigley Fi eld rc
- minded anybody oi wa s Wor ld
.Cup soccer.
It was 0-0. and the on ly thin g
_ -rplssing was the penalt y kick to
~ decide the winner .
: : You co uldn't help but think of
::: ll)l the people in Europe. South
~ ]ltnerlca and Centra l America
; who may have been tuned tn to
~~ tie game on television .
~ : - They had to feel the same wa v
: '!loout our baseball as we Ameri : cans did of their futbol- a good
~ way to fa ll asleep. Enough even
:: to make an insomnia c nod ofl
:- oner- or twice.

• T he All -Star game was won bv
: the American Lea![Ue. 2-0. a ft er~
•· boring rain delay of 1: OH j us t

~ beforf' rhr AL scored il s two runs

; in th e top of the seventh .
:
But as a futbol a ficianado
~ would be more than willing to
.: explain, there was more. The
:;:ga me did have it s subt let ies.

·.

Thr winn i ng run v..~ _-, put i n
pla C'P by a SpPcial -;i tu at1or1
Sand_v A lomar ,Jr. wa~ on f i 1·..,1
Jfl(' r brating out J IPJ dul f singl1·
tu ~ hurt. !..:: mer Parri....,h to11k
thrN• st ra i g ht b;Jib wi th
Alomar s t J~' ing in plac\' on till

three p1t chl's .
Dut Wht•n ./('ff l:: hcJtltlt•,\

l\\'11
str ikrs on Pa rrish tor a :~:.! c1nm t
AL manager Ton_\· l.a Hu-,-,a
s tart(~d Alomar r unn ing HP wo1 "
looking 10 &lt;J\·o id tht&gt; duub lP pb _\·
wi r h nobody out.
Thr m O\ 'P was i:l p lf'l"l ·of h('a u r\
)-:fit

\~" hl' n Pa rris h l inPd a sing lr

to
right. A lumar wound upo n third.
l 'J ITis h \\'41" fir·sr - and all a r a in
ddct .\' of 1: OX m ran t wa s it krpt
t tl1• 1\;J iiunal Lt.•aguf' fr om th f'
lni'\'ii ;Jblf' Jur 1· 08 .
,\ftf'r pia .\· n·sumPd, &lt;J nd stri ki'IIUI artist Rob D i bblr replac ed
Hr&lt;~ n tlP_
v , .lui io Fra nco las hPd an
0 '!. pitch to rig ht rl' nt r r· for .:1
tWO · I"l!rl douh l1 •
ThP ddt•nsi\'t' g('m of th e g&lt;.~mr
,~ , l ciPd thi' inn in g NL ri g h t
llf'ldPr DaiT~-1 Strawbprr_
\· put a
!l fJ hop thrnw in lo catchrr Mikr

tht· [)ptroit Pistons tot wuco nstT
utive NBA tit irs. sa idTursda\ h1·
hasagrePd t o a nPwrontra c l ~·itll
rl w tP &lt;Jm , spu rning of f0r s ()O t d
! P~I'\" i s i on

carrf•r.
Da ly said pic king bpto.\.('{'n tlw

Pbt on s and a nPt work IC·Jc·,·i.-, ion
job was "'r·as i lv I hi' mo.st ditficutr
drcisio n I P\"l'f ha d tom;lk(' 1n m'

lift'."
hr .,~_lid t hP "' lu n · 11 f
coac hing,· · and panirularl_\' t111 •
Bu t

Cllii nC I' 10 win a third t\BA title .
\~ · m1 (Ill! in thr rnd .
l'i str1ns g Pnr ral ma nagr r .Jac k
\1d'Jo..;kp_v sa id &lt;:lgrrrmrn ! wa s
n•adll'd on a multi -yrar co n
tr;l('l IJut hr dPc lin r d to rPl rasr
d1•tail" .
ThP 0P t ro it F rrf' Press quolrd
-,ou rct'S &lt;JS sayi ng Oah·'s basP
_..,;dan· nPx t season ·will b('

Sii'&gt;ll .ljltl -

$2011, 000 more than

I; 1st st'a son and srco ndonly to lhf'

$7r)n.ono rarnrd by Sa n An.tonlo"s
La r 1· ~, Brown . Thr

papf'r said

there .
Nol sin ce 1946-49 had the AL
tak en as many as three straight
matchups. and not since Ste~ge i
accomplished the feat in 1957-58
had any AL skipper won two
stra ight .

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CH ICAGO

pr·1· Y,T' &lt;Jr on•r four yea r s.

Natu re

lent

iUPit lh t·

Moth c·r

AmC'rican

League pi tc hing sta rr a hl'ipin g
hand they m ay not ha vr nPPdPcl

FLOOR

Tu esday night.
A 16 mph w ind wh ipp('d in of f
. Lake Mi chigan into Wrig iPy
Fte ld as AL pitchers conti nuPd
their recent domination of Ni.
bats, limiting the l'a ti onal
League to just two singles as th• •
American League posted a 1 II
vi ctory In th e 61st annu al AI I Star
Game .
Until Oakland's Dl'nnis Eck

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GALLON

FRANCO CONNECTS - Julio Fran co , of the
• &gt; Texas Rangers, connects for a two-run douhle in
'
: ; : the seventh inning of the All Star gamr Tuesday .

Th1• 1\.L won , 2-0, and Franco was named th1•
Mvf• . ( 'af&lt;•ht•r Is Mikf• Scioscia of thf' Dodgers .

.
...
::;.;.·------- Sports briefs----...

·~
Olympics
;. In an effort to bring the 2000
~Piympic Games to Berlin. a West
t 13t'rlln official was named hea d of
~ a:JI " Oiympics-bureau" to join tly
·- ~present East and West Berlin.
;,:~~e decision to crea te the panel
:~e luded months of effort l o
•tfl:lrd lnate the separale cam : pi!tgns that have recently
~ merged in both halves or the
~pnce- dlvlded city .

~
.._.
,

r

Soccer

·English socce r teams ma y
( f1&gt;!urn to European club compet i~n this fall after being banned
!for live years because of their
•l lolent fans . However. UEFA.
~ropean soccer's governi ng
:'9dy. said the ban will apply to
&gt;(he Liverpool club for three more
:&amp;ears because of Its fans ' Involvement In a 19&amp;~ Incident In
Belgium In which 39 people died.

HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

Foothall
Ar t Sc hlichte r . quarterba ck ol
th e Detroit Dri ve. wa s na med
player or lhP WPl'k in th e Arena
Football League_He threw seven
touchdowns in ()(•troll's 50-21 win
over I he New York Flreblrd s las t
week.

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Tt•rl \-\11.'ihlllj[ltm a.~.-l~ta nt dlrPJ1or for
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-I&lt;Lr md l ;r.-o·n ~ nd Durrtl Tlllm11n
llo·lttti l - SI(ITit'd ;J dr~fl dlOitt·~ : "Ilk
Ut'IIH'f

th rir affiliatl' in the American

Hoc key

League Anzalone. a
3~&gt; - yrar - o l d Nrw York nati vE'.
recently fini shed his seve nth full
Sl'oson as head coach of the Lake

Super ior State Un iversity ... The
:\rw Yo r k Ra ngf'rs acquirPd
cront er Brian McR ey nolds from

-

'iiKn•·d

the Winnipeg Jets in exc hang e
for center Simon Wheeldon

oeen harder to see for tht•
hitters."
Dibbl e f ailed to reproduce
Brantley 's stopper effeet from
the previous Inning, and JuUo
Franco resumed the game by
smackin g a two-r un double to
right -center.
" It wa s fa stball right down the
middl e of the plate,'' said Dibble ,
also making his first All-Star
appearance. " Probably the best
pitch I could have thrown htm ~
right down Broadway."
Brantley , in his third major
l eague season, could only sit In
the dugout and watch .
Dibble got out of the seventll
without further damage, but the
NL hitters managed only one
more hit after Will Clark singled
with two out In the first. Len
Dykstra singled to lead off the
ninth.

Pomt&gt;rm

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was over.
·That wa s the ideal situation to
be ln ." Bran tley said . "Getting
the leading home -r un hitter In th e
majors to pop out with the bases
loaded ."
Th e NL hitters aga in went
down 1-2-3 in the bottom of th e
six th. and Brantley returned t o
the mound in the seventh, only to
find himself In trouble with ju st

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Innings.
"Pit ching alw ays ou tdors hit
ling," said Kansas City's Bret
Saberhagen. who worked two
hitless innings.
But, he admi t ted. if the Wri
glry Field wind had been blow ing
ou r. rather than in. ··a few of

those balls hit up in the ai1 cou ld
have been home runs ."

Eckers ley, pitching his first
game und er the Wr igl ey Field
lights. sa id the wind had diPd
down before he ended the game,

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" I w~ s hopi ng it Wllu id ki '('!J
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" Bu t it kind of diPd . I thought if
so nwom• ll .:.t d hit ltll' ball har d in
that la st inning . it migh T havt•

Jumped out ·

Ca lifornia's Chu ck Finlc\' , wh o
wa I ked one ba t tPr in his innin g of

work. sa id no pitcher of AII Sta 1
cal iber would a djust his sty lr to
accomodate a S!Jt'Cifi c stndium .
· ·J don' t t hink anvonr is goi ng
to go &lt;.~wa y f rom thei r stylr of
pi tching for one ga mr. no matt er
whrrP it is or what the wra rhrr
is,'' F'i nle_v sai d
!\skf'd if hr wJs surpri sed b_\

th e tw o-hitter. he laughed
"A w in 's

il

win- a tw o-hittf'r, J

fl vP -hittN or a Ill-hitter, " he
sa id .

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POMEROY, OHIO

u!

In the pa st five Ali -Star games.
th e National League ha s ju st 2'1

to L enny Dykstra to open th1 •
ninth, the Nationa l L eague had
Will Clark's first -inning singl e to
show for their nigh t's wo rk
If\ bE' tween it was dominJt ion
by AL hurlers. somethin g that

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W h d 1~'\'f'r t ht ' wra t he 1 ro nd it ions. hr addPd. ''Thr hit trrsarP
at a d!sad\-'Jn tag(• "
Chw ago White Sox' closr'r
flobb~· TliigpPn. who pit ched a
pC'rfPct Sf'\"f' nlh tnmng. r r tu srd
to g ivr I hr v.·1nd .v, damp wrat hrr
full cred it for the stalf' s suceess .
"T he wea ther kind ol helped ."
hf' !-&gt;a id . "'Rur if was bl owi ng out
for our ,~:;: u ~·s ! h il!rrsl too anfl
lhr~' srrmrd to romt~ up w i th thf'
key hit wh r n thcv needed to . ·
" \V r justlhrPw our br st st•Jff. ··
Thigpf'n sa id . '·wr havr somf'
good arms in thi s lr agur , too. Rut
I was glJd wh•~n m _v innm g wa s

er sley surrendere-d a solid si r1 gh•

EQUIPMENT~~

PICKENS
:·

to

llockey
The Toront o Maple Lea fs an ·
nounced Frank Anza lone as head
roach of th e Newm arket Sa in ts.

UPI Sports Writer
CH ICAGO (UPI) - Jeff Bran ·
tley rescued one of his fellow
pitchers Tuesday night, but nobody was there to save him.
The San Francisco Giants
reliever, making his first AliStar appearance, was charged
with two r uns In one-third of an
Inning, making him the losing
pitcher In the American
League' s 2-0 defeat of the National League In the 61st All-Star
Game.
Brantley was selected by his
manager, NL skipper Roger
Craig, to join the NL squad after
putting together a 3-1 record with
13 saves and a 1.52 ERA In 40
appea rances this season .
With the game still scoreless,
Craig called upon his own pitcher
with the bases loaded and two out
In the stxth. Brantley took over
fo r the Astros' Dave Smith, who
started the inning and got Into
troubl e with a sin gle, a walk, a
doubl e stea l and an intentional
walk.
Detroit's Cecil Fielder. th e
majors' lead ing home run hitter
at the All-Star break. pinch-hi t
for Mark McGwlre, and Brantley
rescued Smith wi th his fir st
pitch. Fielder flied to center on
an Inside fa stball. and I he innin g

17 more pitches_
The 27-year-old right hander,
normally a closer, allowed a
leadoff Infield single to Cleveland's Sandy Alomar Jr., who
advanced to third when pinchhitter Lance Parrish of the
Angel s followed with a solid base
hit to right.
Brantley won a brief reprieve
from his troubles when home
plate umpire Ed Montague
called for the tarp because of
rain . Brantley returned to the
mound when the rain subsided, a
little more than an hour later, but
a recurring stomach muscle pull
sUffe ned up, and Cra ig replaced
him with Cincinnati 's Rob
Dibble.
"I would hav e rather stayed
out there and pitched with the
rain pouring down," Brantley
said of Montague 's decision to
stop the game. " It would have

Pitchers, rather than ballpark,
dominated 61st All-Star Game

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Th e 59 yrar-old Daly had com plai ned about thpgrindofcoach ·

reportedly

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Look for and Try ...

The first came when Nl.
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Wade Boggs int entional!) with

- Sports briefs-

Scoreboard ...

mul .'in/&lt; ' / ·." 1'1' 11 I!'"

Th r r r wrr r two mom ent s of
drama rarllPr.

pickoff atwmpt In th•• All Star game Tuesday .
(UPI)

LARKIN BEi\TS THROW - Reds' Barry
Larkin dives back to first beating a third inning

July 14th-15th

Daly signs new pact with Pistons
AUBURN H ILI .S Mll'h r Llf' l 1
- ('hue k Da I\·. who ha s C'Od r hc·d

By ROBERT J. MURPHY

" ll 1· lri .&lt; h t/11• (;nl/in-ilf&lt;'iK·' .fi'l'"''

Sc iascia ' s m itt to nail Fran co a t

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

tWhttl Alignments •Oil Changes •Brake Work •Tire Repair
I .

Bl TL \ \D TIBE

MAIN IT . RUTLAND OH

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bl4 t 742 308 8

POMEROY I OHIO
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�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy - Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 11, 1990

Vining birth

Community calendar
TH\IRSDi\V

ltocksp·

Whi te will be playing old tim e

rings Grange will mrrt for it s
annua l inspection on Thursda\
eve ning at 8 p.m. MPmber .. . an•

favor it P .-.ungs for entPrtainmPnt
beg inning at ti p.m . ThP public is
invi 1Pd l u i.i ltPnrl .

ROCKSPRINGS

-

urged to a ttPml tht• mrPti ng

Jt

Pa s tor Steve Reed invifPs thl'

pub! ic

of AA anll Ala non will meet on

Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred

POMEROY - There wt ll b(, a
dinner at the Metgs Countv
Senior Citizen' s Cen ter onThursday with sPrvi ng bPginning &lt;:~ 1 :1
p.m . The cos t will be $J(X) pe1
person with a menu ol baked

CHESHIR t:

Heart Ch urch in Pomeroy. Fo r
mo rf.' informa t ion . c alll ·800-JJl

Ga llia Mei gs

old

high schoo l building in

Ches hirf' from 9 a .m until noon

will nwrt on Thur sda~' at R p.m
&lt;J I tllr pos t home.

BURLINGHAM
and

FRII)A \'
l.O~ G

-

Commun it y Ac t ion Agency w i ll
hold its free cloth ing day at th e

2051.
TUPP ERS PLAINS - Th e
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 90o:l

ma shed pot&lt;:Jtoes and
cream ed pt1 as. tom J to
biscuit and beverag e. Jet·
wil l be ava i lable at extra

Hall in Burlingham. Anyone
interested can bring hi storical
it ems and pictures .

ens, and oth er local talent.
Re fr eshment s will bP sc r v('d

POMEROY- Pomeroy group

the GrangP Hall.

stea k ,
g ra vy,
s lices ,
cream

be a hymn sing a t the Fai th
Gospel Church In Long Bottom on
Pr iday at 7:30 p.m. with the
Dailey Families . the Panel Maid -

cos t for dessrrt. Junior and Rlla

Lodi

-

T ow nship

Bedford
Hi sto rv

Croup will mePt on Friday a t 7:$.0

BOTTOM -There will

p.m . at th e ModPrn Woodmen

Mr. and Mru. Greg VIning are
announcing the birth of their
third child, Patti Lynn, born on
J une 8 at Holzer Medical Center .
The Infant weighed six pounds,
12 ounces and was 191nches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Patterson of Spraggs ,
Pa, and Mr. and Mrs . Leo VIning
of Pomeroy.
The couple have two other
child ren , Jennifer and Amber .

Si\TURDi\V

LO NG BO'l"!'OM - Th e Lo ng
Bo ttom Communit y Association
will have ak old - fas hioned ice
cream social on Sat urd ay at the
Long Bottom Comm unit y Building . Serving will begin at 4 p.m.
and will continue all evening . In

Biggs' Reunion
i

additi on to severa l lee cream

The annual Biggs' family reunion will be held at the Chester
Firehouse on July 22. There will
be a basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Allhfrlends and relatives are
welcome.

fla vors . th ere will be sandwiches
and pie for sa le. There will also
be music and prizes during thl'
t&gt;vening.

PATTI LYNN VINING

Wednetday, July 11. 1990

Please come home early;
now he understands plea

1990

WE RESERV [

NO~E

SOLD fO

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10 liM il C)UANl ll lt S

~E ALEH S

AOYfRTISEO IT EM POliCY I t.~ lh , 1
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c h~c k

whiCh wtll ent ,tle ~ ou 10 pur Cil.:tSC lht• .t tl vi'f li'&gt;f'l1 ttem ti l
1h e adllt!rltsed p •,ce wtth n JO t1 dV" Only ont• ""nflor toupttrt
Wtll ht• &lt;I C U~I)ted rw• ot o·m Pttlt IM \1'11

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INSPECTED FROZEN t4 7 LB AVGI

Young Turkey
Breast

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Pick Of The
Chicken

Pound

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U S. GRADE A PERDUE

White
ss Grapes

Pound

Pound

c

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limit Two With Additional Purchase

BUY ONE

FROZEN !EXC EPT BEEF, FISH OR HAM I

6 5-0Z. BAG ORIGINAL, BBQ OR RANCH

Banquet
Dinners

Keebler
Ripplin's Sn

BJS-111-oL

GET ONE

FREE
.................
Of

0.

Chicken The Sea
Chunk Light Tuna

:l

0

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COUPdN

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6.5-oz.

0

For

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LIMIT 3 CAlliS WITH COUPON &amp; 111.11
ADDITIOIIAL PURCHASE

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III&amp;IICT JV WLICMU IIATl t lJCM. TAW

V~E

LIMIT ONE COUPON PEA FAMILY
~--MYHAf..IIIY"l.

··········I·l····l-

Ann
Landers

I
I
I
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NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE ,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Kroger Deluxe Natural
Flavor Ice Cream

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola
24-Pak 12-oL Cans

%-Gallon
For

48

Kroger Gr. . A Llrve Egp lt-CL .. He

Kroger
Skim Milk
Gallon

88

I
I

I

I
I

SHERBET . SUGAR FREE FROZEN
DESSERT, FAT FREE CHOLESTEROL
FREE FROZEN DESSERT OR

31% frM

a- Ptldr Ultnt Sim Fat
11.5-oz. . . lUI

IN THE DELl -PASTRY SHOPPE

Deli Style
Cooked Ham
Pound

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, GRAIN FED
BEEF, "UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE CUT"
110-12-LB. AVG.) CAP-ON

Whole
Sirloin Tip
Pound

78
~rlr··

.. lUI

Membe rs ol Ohio TOPS Clu b
:l70 of Pomeroy were the guasts

of Cheshirr TOPS Club 1383 on
Monday for Cheshire's Rally
Day Tllf' even t was held a t the
Ch;·shire Baptist Chu rch
At the meeti ng, Chesh in•

" lll89. l..o .. 4n_.,(,.,
Tlm t"to ~ \· ndiMtt r 1nd
fr ,.al....:.. "i~ndl nt~

know that you've helped a 101 of
people today by sharing a real love
story.
Dear Ann Landers: Your lovely
Mother's Day column broughl 10
mind a favorite story I read in an
ancient copy of Reader's Digest.
Here ic is:
A Mother of th e Year was bcrng
interviewed and was aslwl abom her
sizable brood. "Do you hav e a
favorite"" th e interviewer asked.
"Of course I do," was the answer
"Every molher docs."
The interv iewer was surprised at
lhis mother's ca nd or and asked.
' Would you mind telling us which
is yours? "
"Not at all," came the soft reply.
"It is lhe one who is sick-- until he
or she gets well, and !he one who is
gone -- until he or she gets home."
-- FROM lRVING, TEXAS
An alcohol problem? How can you
help yourself or someone you love '
"Alcoho lism : flow to Recognize II.
How to Deal Wah It , How 10 Con
qucr II' ' will g1ve you 1he answer.r.
Send a self-addressed. long, bu.ri ness-siu envelope and a check or

trwney order for $3 .65 (thiS include s
poswge and handling) to: Alcohol.
c/o Ann Lander.r, P.O. Bnx 11562.
C/u wgo , Ill 6061 1-0562 (In Cali ·
ada, .lend $4 .45)

Snyder would have wanted it that way

,.,

oil Cd ( ll K ro q!'l S i tllt'

iHJve n tS ed t[CII1 WI " 'N! II u lf1•r Y&lt;l\1 VI lUI t h Oo(t' td d I Olfi(Odldbh ·
•rrm . wt11~11 available re tlec lonq tilt! Sdm •· ~dvtn g s Ill d •.J tn

·ll

anylhing out of the ordinary. We
enjoyed the kids and the grandchildren. We listened 10 music, read !he
paper and had meals together.
Sometimes we would just talk about
how !he day had gone.
Now I know why she asked me to
"please come home early." She
wasn't just lonely; she was lonely
for me. When she passed away a
shon time ago, I learned firsthand
what loneliness is all aboul I have a
supponive family and many good
friends . I'm free now 10 go places
and do lhings, bul I'm lonesome.
Lonesome for her.
Now that she's gone, I've found
!hat Lime to "come home early," but
there is nobody 10 come home 10.
There is nobody to do those simple
little things wilh, such as walehing
the evening news, listening 10
music and reading lhe paper. And
nobody cares how my day went.
If I should get a call from the good
Lord 10 "please come home early," I
won't fight iL -- LONESOME IN
K.C.
DEAR LONESOME: How sad
!hat so many of life's lessons arc
learned afocr it is too late to put !hem
into practice.
I'll bet !housands of hu sbands who
are asked to "please come home
early" will look upon that request in
a different light after reacting your
poignant letter. And they may even
do iL I hope it will be a comfort to

WASHINGTON I UPI l - MIt ch
Snyder planned his funeral many
times during the hunger strikes
he undertook In his !lghl for the
homeless, and would have
wanted the event to turn Into a
political protest, his friends said.
About 3,000 people attended a
tw&lt;&gt;-hour service In sweltering
heat Tl!esday lor Snyder and
then defiantly marched on the
City Council - as Snyder would
have done - to protest plans to
dilute a city law guaranteeing
shelter on demand .
"He was polltlcs," said Carol
Fennelly a fellow homeles s activist and Snyder's longtime companiOn. "He breathed it, he ate II.
he lived It, In every I part) of hi s
body and every place of his life.' '
Fennelly made no apologies for
the "polltlcal nature" of the
funeral, which Included prolest
songs and threals agalnsl the
political careers of council
members who refuse lo reverse
their stance on the law.
Dorris Francisco, 64, who
works with the Delaware County
Jobs with Peace In Chester, Pa ..
and came to Washington for the
funeral. called the day 's acllvl·
ties "Mitch all the way ."
"II was very political." Francisco said. "A Jot of hype but a lol
of sincere feelings, too."
Snyder, 46. lhe nation's pre·
mler activist for the homeless.
was found hanged Thursday In
his third-floor room at the shelte r
In what pollee said was a suicide.
A note Indicated he took his life
over a failed love relationship
with Fennelly.
Fennelly said Snyder had
planned his funeral during many
hunger strikes when he wa s near
death. and had asked that Martin

Sheen. Jesse J ackson. Mayor
Marlon Barry and others speak .
The memorial service took
place outs ide lhe 1.300-bed Com·
munlt y for Crea ti ve Non Violence shelter !hal Snyder
secured from President Ronald
Reagan wlih a 51-day hunger
strike In 1984.
Hundred s then followed a rid er less white horse th at led the
way for Snyder's simple pine
coffin as II was pulled by
horse-drawn carr iage through
clly streets to the Distr lcl BuildIng , to protes l the Ci iyCouncll!or
Its decision lasl month to gul a
landmark 1984 voter -manda ted
law ca lled Inlliative 17, which
guara nleed emergency hou si ng
for anyone In need.
"I loved Mitch Snyder with all
of my heart , and this world Is
going to be a much smaller pla ce
without him for me," sa id
actress Chflr, who occasionally

worked with Snyder during specia l eve nts In Washington. "He
found people to be beautiful aryd
worthwhile that everyQne else
St'ems to have wrlllen off. and he
thought there was a worth iness in
evt-ryone .··
Jackson. who presided at the
funeral. called it a time lo
"celebrate the life of service of a
brother ... who challenged AmerIca to fulfill Its hlghesl and
noblest aim : 10 house the homeless, to feed the hungry and to
clothe the naked ."
"It was an honor to be I here. "
said Heather Baron, 28, a res 1·
dent of the shelter. '' He wanted It
this way and he go lit the way he
wanted II ."
" He was a man with a heart."

sai d sheller re sid ent Rick Shnw
" I remembPr when Milch le n!

•

Comedia n lurrwd soci al ac ti
\' iSt Di ck Cn..gury rompar rd
Snyder' s work to th JI of Martin
Lullwr King .Jr · 'Til l' iiOrTll'il' '-'had a placr tnf'ome. hut he did n't
have a p lacr to go,, . lw sa id .
" It 's not possibiP to rom pn •
lwnd Mitch' s passing an ,v mun•
than it is possihlf' toro mpr f' hr nrl
the vf' r y grra t and wond C'rou s
m_v strry or his li fP." said ShPP n. a
closr f rie nd of Snydpr 's who
por tra_vp d him in i::t 19R:JtP lPvls io n
movif', "Samar i tan . Thf' Mitch
Snyder Story .'"

"We ca n only givc• thanks dOd
pr ai se that such a g ia nt. uncom ·
promi sing and r ompass iona1P
voice for peace and soc ia l j u sti ct:.
chose to live and work am ong t hr

poores l of the poor in lhr citadel
of I he world' s power and wral ih
ch ange a ll our li ves
fon•ver," Sheen sa id.
Karen Sau nders. a homeless
wom an who li ves at thr sheller.
spoke 10 a crowd that Included
mourne r s i n suit s and homeless
and

people In shorts. T-shlrls a nd
bandanas . man v hold ing white
ca rna tions and sitting on folding
c ha irs.

"I thought of him as being like
a ra lnbow.a man of many co lors.
and he was al so a man of m any-

moods," Saunders sa id "But,
people, !here's no denying thr
Impar t he had on each and every
one of us and this co untry...
Barry , on lunc h break fr om hi s
trial on drug and perjurvchJrgrs
In fede ral co urt a few hund red
yard s from the shelt er, sa id
SnydN " believed strongl y that
ever y hum an br in g wa s mad r in

God's lma gr . ... Hr rrmi nclrd us
that if ~ ·o u havf' Ph . D. or no 0 \ ·o u
i:i r e st i ll a human !wing in C od·-.

Judge blocks Learn/are program
MILWAUKE E 1UPil - The
federal judge who halted lh e
"Learnfare" program in Mil waukee criticized the city's method.of monitoring school at lend
ance but did not faull lhe
program . the centerpiece of the
state's welfare reform plan .
The lemporary Injunction ,
Issued Tuesday, suspended the
program that links school al tend a nee by children to welfare
benefits for their parents or
guardians because bad school
record keeping unfairly penalIzed some !am Illes.
Gov . Tommy Thompson. who
lnlroduced the program as part
of his welfare reform plan. sa id
the decision pointed out problems In the Milwaukee Public
School syslem. He said the judge
did not at IJ!ck the mer lis of the
program .
"We can 't do the record
keeping for the schools," lhe
governor said . "This !declslonl
doesn't go lo the merit s or the
program at all."
Judge Terence Evans said In
his ruling It was In the public
In teres I to reduce welfare dependency and encourage teenagers
to go to school, but there Is a
"clear Interest In ensuring that
subsistence benefits are not
terminated Improperly and that
families are not destroyed In lhe
process."
"This Is a situation where the
survival and the dignity of
IndiVIduals are Involved," Evans
said .
Last week the non -partisan
Legislative Audit Bureau issued
a study saying the program was
being undermined by administrative problems, Including poor

rnP bu s far P so 1 £'o ulcl gu look lo 1

a job."

record kf•rpin g. Th e audit ga\'t'

par tl r ul ar rmphasi s to tru ancyo
n•cord keepin g in the M i lwauket·

sc hool system.
Learnfa rr requirrs sc hool at
h.' nd3nce by the .10,000 Wisconsin
teena ger s who Pither recrivr Aill

to Families with Dependent
Children benefits or whose par
r nt s receive lhe br nr fit s. Fam i
lies lose benefit s if lhPi r teenage

children have had tO or mo re
un exc used ab sr nrrs in a
semester .

The program began in 19HX lor·
welfare reclpien ts with child rrn
ages 13 to 19 . Und er the plan
governing 6- through 12-yearold s. the family mu st get involved with a progra m designed
to solve the truancy problem or
lose bene!lls.
An average of 2.125 sludents in
Milwaukee were subject to
Learnfare penalties eac h month
from November 1988 through
June 199(] .
In his ruling Tuesda y, Evans
also granted class-action statu s
to the six families who brought
the suit, which means an estimated ~.200 AFDC recipi ent s
who attend Milwaukee public
schools or have children In the
district can join I he lawsuit .

eyes ight."
Af ter the srrvicr. J hors('
drawn carri agP carryi ng Sn.vd

rr's casket led several hundred
follower s to th e Di s trlrt Ilui ld i ng.
and wha t had b ef'n mourn ful
dirge s turned int o politi ca l
c ha nt s as thr procession ap

proac hed th&lt; · huildin g
About 100 memhers uf th&lt; '
CCNV were allowi'd to enter the
bu i l clin~

;-11

&lt;HiJ Ti of thPm ln' l"l '
rrsted for unl av:ful ('ntry .

S r~ y d P r ·s

bod\" was tJkrn awa_, .

to br cremi:l tf'd shor !ly· aftPr thj •
ra lly bf'gan His as hPs wrrf' t o tw
p!Jc ed in thP CCN\. shcltl'l'

Sentinel ~ Page - 7

TOPS meets

-~~ LA~Il[RS

Dear An~ Landers: I recently
los1 m~ wtfe, a warm, loving
compamon fa- nearly 60 yean. I am
now sOiling through 'her belongings
and came across a scrapbook or
clippings she especially liked.
Among lhem was a column of
yours. I have no idea when it was
publ~. She rtad you every day
but I did not (Now I wish I had.)
When I finished reading that
column I was pretty choked up
because I realized lhat the reason
she clipped it was because she saw
me as the man in the column.
I now know what it is to be loved.
Please, Ann, print that column again
for other husbands who are s1ill
lucky enough to have a loving
woman at their side, Uke so many
others,! ditl~ ~late what I had
until I lost her. - J.G., BOSTON
~ss.
DEAR J.G_: Thank you for asking. Here il is:
Dear Ann Landers: "Please come
home early." This was !he most
unreasonable request ever made by
my wife of almost 40 years.
She didn't make !his request
often. It came mostly on Saturdays,
Sundays and holidays , but it seemed
that I always had so many !hings to
do !hat in spite of her gentle urging ,
I rnrel y came home early.
. I don't want to give the imprcsston that I was never at home. I wa~
a1 home a lol. We rarely did

·

CO PYRIGHT 1990 THl KHO G!:R CO ITEM S AN D PR IU S
GOOD SUNDAY JU L'T8 THR OU GH SA TURDAY .JULY 14

The Daily

lt&gt;ader Janrt Thoma s welcomed

tlw

Pomeroy club. Pomeroy

lea der

Lf'nn iP Aleshire

intra

duced the Pomeroy officers
Al eshire was presented a medal
by Thomas and games were
played . As ide from those me ntl·
oned, Pomeroy me mbers at tend
rng were Ch arlotte Sm ith, Crystal Sm ith, Amy Sm ith, Julia
Hysell. Pear l Knapp, Kristin
Wa r ner. Diana Herdman, Mary

Tomblin. Phyllis MeM illin, a nd
Mary Ma rtin .
Ches hi r e mpmbers in attend·
ance werf' T ina Jus tis, Benny

Dean. He len Peck , Hazel Peck.
Rhonda Peck, Emogene .Johnson. Virglniu Vo ight, Catherine
Lillie, Ed itll Gard nl'r, He len

WINNING BIKES - Winners of the Middleport Kick-oil Day

Parade bes t bikes calegory were Max Brallon, lelt, with th e
Coac hes Choice award and Amber VIning with the Most Original
a ward .

Truul and .lf'an M ull i ns.

Wild horse adoption
planned in Ohio
Abo ut &lt;O wi ld ho rses from the
public rangelands in Neva da a nd

Correction
In Fr iday's rdition, the ma r ·
ria grs listr d in the Harden
famil y rpu nion sto ry should have

Ohio and th e)·' re in need of good
homes l'hl' animals wi ll be
availab le for adoption beginnin g
July t:l in London. Oh io. abo ut 3ll

Yuu J!so nrrd shPi trr for t hP
&lt;:J n irna l. ample co rral space and
transportation for thr animal
from the adoption crn trr .
Adopti ons arP ar rangrd on a
first co m(·'. firslhsrrvrbas is. You
arP as krd to selec t your ow n

milf:'s Wt'st of Co lumbus. ThP

animal. a nd if vou don't find the

adoption fee IS $125 pPr hor se.
F'edcrall v pr otect ed wrld

right horse to· suit your needs,

Cal ifornia will soon be arr ivi ng in

hor srs ar r pt' rim1i ca ll y rounded
up on publi c ran gel ond s out we s t
t o h umanely kE·ep thei r popula ·
I ion i n cheek SinL'P the Bmeau o f
Land Managrnwn t st ar!Pd t he

program in 197:1, nParly IIHI,OOOo f
the animals havt• tJef'n p] &lt;l('f'd in
good h o mf' ~ ntll inmvi dr.
Thrse anim als arP known for
thrir r cm arkabiP Pndurance and
inte l l i~ f'nrr. sa id Curt .J ones.
direc tor of thC' EastPrn Stat es

Office of the Bureau of Land
Mana grment . "Th e~· hav e been
traJnrd t o du anything norma ll y
f'1&lt;&gt;per lt'd of a dom(' stic horsr.
and somPt imr ~ thry Ci:ln do Pvrn
bf't trr ··

To qua it!) to adopt one of these
vou nj2 and hral th y h orsPs . .vou
nrrd ,1 n OUf si dP li fOOl high frnCl'
madt· of wood or p ipP since thl'
animal s arf' unf amiliar with
barhrd win., or r l('t'l r i c frnr i n g.

Completer reJidenq
Dr . Dr n n is NPwla nd of RrPd ·
v illt• has comp lr trd his thr rf' ·
yf'a r residenr\· a t Charleston
J\rra Mr dlca l Crn tN in Char lPS·

ton. W.Va .
Those attend ing the gradua ·
1 io n wpre Mr. and Mrs . Fr it z

Marlene a nd Joe Kuh n,
Helen. Mike and Patr ick New la nd and Phyllis Ne wla nd .
New land will have his fam ilv

Go~be l .

pra c l iCP at Ro sr mar Clin ic in 3

Parkersburg, W.Va

you ar r und er no obl iga ti on or
prr ss urr to tak e one home
For more informat ion abo ut

th e Adopt·A·Wild Horse Pro·
gram. cont act lhe Wild Hor ses
a nd Bu rro Adopti on CentN in
London at i\'i2 -0090

Farewell
set for doctor
A gel -logrther of rmp loyrl's ol
the Eas tern Loca l School District

to honor Su perint en dPnt

Dan

A pii ng who is leaving thl' di stri et

on Aug. I wil l be he ld on the
eve ning of July 19 Ot her a ssociates and frie nd o.; t~n• ctl so
in vitPd to at tl' nd tht' fan 'V.' Pi l
rve nt.
Rese r vations fo r a d inr1 rr
ho nori ng Dr A pling arp t o hC'
made wit h DdJhil' Ro~r. ~SJ- 'I:l~l'!

or Eloise Bosto n. 9H" &lt;:m. It is
r eq uestrd th at

rPsP r v&lt;.~ lion s

be
mad e as soon as poss ible so tha t
arrangement s for th0 dinner can

be compl eled.

CLEAN SWEEP
SALE
FINAL CLEAN UP ON ALL
SALE SHOES
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fr om Antioch r\r w Eng land
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Un ron lllgh Sc hool and Will be
cltl(' nclin g lthJl'&lt;l Colkge in
l ltla ca.
N.Y . to maj or in
com mun ic J I ion.
Thr Wi ght s wrrf' jomPd b.\
T am ara 's par Pnt s and hr r

brother. Stephen. and h1.s wife .
Debbie. for t h~ gradua tion a nd
for

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of

visi ting

celebra ling tn their home

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�Wednesday. July 11 , 1990
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Commerce, Scienee and Transportation called the hearing to
investigate a defect in t he $1 o
billion Hubble telescope' s mirrors that produces blurry im
ages. and fuel leak s that have
grounded all shutlies since May .
" The common denominat or is,
in my view, inadequat~ tes tlng ."
sa id Sen . Albert Gore Jr , D

Tenn. who chairs the commiltre.
"In beth cases the tes ting pro
gram . . was not handled in a way
that caught things which ha ve
now shaken the publtc·s view of
how this i s betng managed . '
Although the long-awa ited,
highly publicized Hubble tele
scope underwent extens ive test ·

ing before being se nt into space
April 25. the Instrument tha t
scientists hoped would r~volu
tionize astronomy was never
tested as a whole.
In addition, NASA's William

Lenoir. associa te adminis trator
of space flight, sa id lea ky fuel
sys tem parts on the shuttles
Columbia and Atlantis were
among 18 of 2i unit s- incl uding
seven In a row- that did not pas s
initial tests.
But Lenoir stressed that the

units passed subsequent testing,
al though he said those tests may
have been flawed because they
did not exactly simu late the
conditions the hardware Is exposed to on the launch pad and In
flight.
"l don'! think there is any
question that any probl em that
we encounter we can't trace it
back to some fundamental issue
associated with lack of testing,"
said Thompson .

"I'm as convinced as you are
tha t more testing just has got to
be done. But each day we are
faced with these decisions and we
make what we believe is th e right
judgment at lhe lime," he sa id .
Lennard Fisk, associate adminis tralor for the office of space
science and applications, sa id

the telescope was not tested as a
whole because it would have ber n
too ex pensive and risky for I he
sensi tive mirrors.
But Gore sa id it was routine to
co nduc t suc h tests and poin ted
out that one company that bid to
build the mirrors said i t could
have conducted such a test for $10
million .
"People say , 'My word . Wh en a
car comes off the assembly plant
. someone gets in and turns the
ignition to see if it goes va room or
w hatever.' i t's hard fora layman
sur h as myself to understand
why the space telescope was
nPvPr tested as a total system,"

added Srn Larry Prf's slrr, K
S.D . . a comrnitll'e mrmlwr .
In ret rospect. s uch a tPst
'·co uld have been donl' a nd
should have been don~ . " Thomp
son sa id.
GorP also questioned whether
the Natio nal Aeronautics and
Space Administration had
adopted a· shoot the messenger"
attttude i n which of ficial s dismi ssed nega t i\'f' or pessimistic
IPs I results .
Gore cited a stud_\' that esd
rnatrd there was a strong chance
tha t a spacP shurtle and crew
would br lost within thfl nrxt four

years.
"NASA shoots the messenger
and says, 'That study's wrong.
Don't believe It,"' Gore said.
"We're no longer going to be
satisfied with NASA saying,
'That testis not to be believed . ' "
During l he heated exchange,
Thompson denied officials had
"the wrong mindset al NASA"
and acknowledged there was "a
very real possibility" of "at
least" the need to abort a flight
after l aunc h, a dangerous
situation.
The possibility of such a
mishap has raised questions
abou t NASA's plans to build the
$30 billion space sta tion Freedom. wh ich would rpquire nu mrrous sh uttle missions
"I have staled that It won't be
too long hefore we have a nother

acl'id Pnr."

Thompson

said,

which promptf'd Gar£' to respond: "Wait a minute . Are you
sayi ng t ha t you aCCPpl the [act
that ther'l' is an H8 percpnt chance
of losing a shutt le and crew wl t h
the number of missions nt&gt;eded to
build th e spa cr sta t ion ""
Thompson said: "Senator. I'm
not going to get i nto the numbers
game, but . let me just say this
because J 'm going to come damn
close . At the time of the Chal lenger accident the relt abilit y
was 96 percent. At the fli gh t rate
over the nex t decade of 100. 120
m1ssions. vrry clearly at tho se
unrPliabili11rs or rPiiabilitiPs
wp' rf' going to losP anothpr onf' . ·'
ThP commit !Pt' also hear d
1ps ti mony from officia ls fr om the
Hughes Danbury Optica l Syst{'ms . Inc. of Da nbu ry•, Con n .
which built the mirrors. and thP
Lockheed Missiles and Space
Co , In c , which bui lt the
tel escope
Joh n Rich, president of Hu ghes
Danbury, satd the co mpany but it
the mirrors to NASA's spec ifi ca t ions and the agency approved
evPr.v as pert of the construction
and testing

Summit spouses split up for
separate Medical Center tours
HOUSTON iUPli
ThP
_spouses of leaders attending th&lt;·
•economic summit went (rom a
~:!lily of Texas history to a study of
. ; modern technology at t he Texa s
: ~edlcal Center In the final day of
;, !)leir shadow gathering.
~ . Barbara Bush, who led a
:~onllngent of spouses on a fes tive
·:trip to San Antonio Tuesday . was
•s lat ed to visit the U niv ersi ty of

"': TPxas M .D. Anderson Ca ~crr
-: Center while the othPr spouses
: each planned individual two:. hour tours of t hPir choosing from
·· among thP rentpr's education .
·'.- research and trPatmenl
: programs .
: The spraw l ing medical ce n
.· ter's 41 -member institutions. n_
'
· -nowned worldwide for their
: cancer and heart doctor s, r ou
;_ tinely trea t s leaders and celebrl : ties from around the g lobe

On Tuesday, Mrs. Bush led
Sachiyo Kaifu of Japan, Danielle
Mit terrand of France. Mila Mulroney of Ca nada and Livia
Andreotti of Italy on tightly
scheduled visi ts of select ed fa
vorite spots In the city nestled In
Texa s' famed Hill Country .
Denis Thatcher , husband of
British Primo Minister Margaret
Thatcher , opted against the San
Ar:tonio tnur and was bl'liPvPd to
havp gont' inst('ad to Dalla ~;. to
visit his son. daughter -in-l aw and
grandson. Hannelorc K oh l of
West Ger m any did not attend t he
summit
Th e vtsi t to Sa n Antonio ended
with a stop at the Alamo. the
shrine to Trxas indPpenden ce
where 1R9 defenders held out
against man~ than 4.000 Mf'xi ca n
troops for 13 days unt i l their
deaths in March 1831&gt;

'Gallipolis airshow to
be held this weekend

L-tryptophan illnes~ .linked
to single manuf~ct~rer: CDC

NASA acknowledges testing
flaws led to Hubble trouble
. WASHINGTON IUPII - Tests
could have caught the mistakes
that crippled the Hubble Space
Telescope and grounded the
space shullle fleet, NASA officials said, but they denied the
agency has a "shoot the messenger" philosophy.
AI a crowded and sometimes
tense congressional hearing
Tuesday, top space officials
defended the agency's quality
control efforts but acknowledged
that better testing could have
prevented the problem s.
During one heated exchange,
NASA Deputy Administrator
James Thompson al so said that
there was "a very real possibility " of another major spa ce
shuttle accident wtlhin the nPxl
decade.
The Senafe Co mmiltPP on

Wednesday, July 11. 1999

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

On April21 at th&lt;• Battle of Sa n
Jac into. Texans under Gen . Sa m
Hou ston defPatcd Gen. An tonio
Lopez de Sa nta Ana and won
ind ependence for Texas .
" ! wanted to show off a
different part of Texa s." Mr s.
Bush sa id . "I wanted them to see
a side of Tex as that vou might not
see anyplace else .. a wonderfuL
exci ting. thrilling city ."
With about :100 onlookers rhrer
in g beforC' thr touring spouses.
Mrs . Bush sa id. "Nobedv cap

BOSTON tUP!) An epidemic of a potentially fatal blood
disorder linked to the food
supplement L-tryptophan apparently was caused by contamination of material supplied by a
single manufacturer. federal researchers said Tuesday.
Dr. Laurence Slutsker of lhe
U.S. Centers for Disease Control
said an as-yet unidentified contaminant In certain lots of
L- tryptophan, made by one of six
Japanese suppliers to the United
States, seems to be the cause of
an outbreak last year of
eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome.
or EMS.
In November the Food and
Drug Administration ordered a
recall of products made from
L-tryp tophan , an amino acid that
occurs naturally in many foods,
aft er it was linked to outbreaks of
EMS, which can cause muscle
pain, fatigue, breathing dilflcullles and In severe cases heart
failure and death .
To date the FDA has received
reports of more than 1.400 cases
of EMS In the United States and
19 deaths that apparently resulted from L -tryptophan inges tion. No cases have been re ported to have occurred sincP
February .
Sl utsker said a probe In Oregon
found tha t among 46 EMS vicllms whose L -tryp tophan products co uld be t raced back to the
original manufacturer, the material came from one Japanese
compa ny in 45 Instances.
Among 41 other people who
took L -tryptophan but did not

become Ill, the source of the
supplement was the company in
quesdon in only 18 instances,
Slutsker and colleagues reported
In the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
The researchers also found the
co ntaminated lots were likely to
have been produced between
January and June of1989, shortly
before the peak of the epidemic.
They said in Oregon, the majority of EMS cases occurred In
September and October of 1989.
Although L -tryplophan retail
products were sold under dozens
of labels In Oregon and elsewhere
In the United Slates before the
FDA recall, the raw material in the form of a crystalline
compound - was supplied by
only six companies, ali of them in
Japan. Siutsker said.
He declined to name the
manufacturer of the suspect lots ,
but said company officiais are
cooperating wllh investigators
from the FDA and the CDC
Ot her researchers from Mi nnesola' s Mayo Clinic have prev iously sing led out the source as
Showa Denko of Japan.
Although L -tryptophan can be
made through a chemical process, Slutsker said the lots thai
apparently were contaminated
were made by a multi -s tep
bacteriological process !hat in volved fermentation, purlflca
tion and chrystalllzallon.
"We're not sure what changed,
but something did change" when
the contaminated material was
produced. he said. "We're not
talk ing about contamination in
the sense of somd hlng dripping

Consumers petition FDA over valve
WASHJNGTON tUPli A
consumer group asked the Food
and Drug Adminis tratio n Wed nesday to order the maker of
pot e ntially defective heart
valves to i ndividually warn pa tients wllh valves still implanted
in th eir ches ts.
in a pelltion to the FDA, Public
rlttzen Health Research Group
said at least 56,000 people world wldl' - about half In the United
States - still have Bjork -Shiley
hea rt valves and should be
notified abou t the risk of lifethreatening failure s.
In May, a Ca l ifornia judge
dismissed a lawsuit filed by
Public Citizen agalnstthe valve's
maker. Sh iley Inc . of Irvine.
Calif .. and Its parent, Pfizer Inc .
of New York. citing a
technicality .
The suit had sought a court

out of the ceiling into vats. lt
could be that something that had
been taken out In the purification
process no longer was."
Slutsker said differences In the
amount of L-tryptophan Ingested, or individual dllferences
In metabollsm, could explain
why some people who took
products made !rom tbe apparently contaminated material
developed EMS, while others did
not
"From what we know, dose
seems to be an important factor.
People who took more of it
seemed more likely to become Ill.
But that Is not to say that host
factors such as metabeliSm do
not also play a part," he said.
Slutsker safd it also could be
the contaminant was· unevenly
dlstribu ted in the raw material
supplied to food supplement
makers, so that some of the
eventual retafi products were
more contaminated than others .
Although L-tryptophan had
been used as a treatment lor
ailments such as Insomnia and
pre -menstrual syndrome,
Slulsker noted that because they
were sold over-the-counter, L tryptophan products did not have
to undergo the rigorous testing
the FDA requires of prescription
drugs.
Federal ofllcla Is es tlmate 3
percent to 5 percent of the U .S.
population was taking the supplement before II was recalled.
Sl utsker suggested the time
may have come "to review the
regulation of the food supplement lndusO'y. I don't think II is
too he. etical to say that the whole
process needs to be looked at
closely."

order forcing Shiley and Pfizer lo
warn people who have the heart
valves abou t signs the valves are
fa iling and what steps to take to.
lessen the chance of death.
About 86,000 people were im
p lanted with the Shiley "convex concave'' heart valve, which was
voluntar ily withdrawn from the
market In November 1986- five
years after the first reports of
life-threatening valve fractures.
The manufacturer sent warn ing letters t o surgeons who
implanted th e devices. but Public Citizen con tends each patient
deserves direct notification.
As of January, 389 of the valves
had fractured . leading lo 248
deaths. Shiley offlclais said.
Congressiona I lnves tigat ors es II
mate those figures may be 50
percent too low

\ \ i t l l l l l \ \] tl\11

"'II'

446 ·4524

d

:: The Middleport Fire Depart .. ment received a total of$1,580 in
~donations toward the purchase of
I" the fireworks display on July 4.
:
The !Ire department would Ilk~
"!to thank ail those who donated
Ztoward this project. The Feeney~ Bennett Post of the American
l:iegion made the larges t donalion of $500.
. Other donors were : Fru ths
:Pharmacy, Middl eport Flower
:Shop, Manley's Marathon, General Tire Sales, King Hardware ,
'Drs. Mateo P. and Z.B . Dayo,
• Prescription Shop, Blue St reak
' Cab Co., Bahr Clothiers. Ingels

------7:J()' 9:45
Cll\ lll

DIE HARD
2

.
1
II

t'urnlture, Central Tru st Co,
Mill Street Book Store , Quality
Print Shop, Mill End Fabrics.
Fisher Funeral Home, Cart er ' s
Plumbing &amp; Healing, Pat Hill
Ford &amp; Chrysler, Blue Tar tan.
Dr. Larry Kennedy, Valley
Lumber, Columbus Sou thern
Power, Columbi a CasCo .. Kenny
Byer, John Koebel, and Mr. and
Mrs . .Jack Satterfield .
Total cost of thP fireworks
disp lay plu s Insuran ce this year
was $3,935 wilh the fire depart ment and the village sharing thf'
difference between what was
donated and the t otal cost.

EEMS responds to nine calls Tuesday

: 111\ FI\i i \ JI\ \ \ I..f)\1·

Units of the Meigs Co untv
Emergency Medical Service re sponded to nine calls for assist ance Tuesday .
AI 4:11 a.m., the Middleport
unit was called to South Third
Avenue for Rick Hall who refused treatment. At 4:56 am ..
the Pomeroy Fire Department
reported to Mapl e St reel lo a
report of smoke in a bu lid lng . No
lire was found . At 8: 14 a.m .,
Rutland went to Sta l e Route 143
lor Bessie Graham who was
taken to O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital. Athens .
1
Rutland aga in responded to a
:· call at II: 12 a .m. at Meigs Mine
~ Number Two for Barbara Willis
" who was taken lo O'Bieness
: Memorial Hospital. At 11 .36
:· a.m ., Pomeroy went to Chesler
·: Road for Rose Lee who was

;. transported to Veterans Ml'mor: Ia! Hospit al.
" AI 3:31 p.m., the Pomeroy
squad went to Bas han Road for
; Jonathan Newell who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
' and then Life nigh ted to Ch ild-

2 year Certificate of Deposit
$5000 minimum deposit

8.

%

Meigs driver cited
Debra J . Lively ,33, La ngsvil le,
was cited for failure to maintain
an assured clear distance ahead
Tuesday when she was in volved
in an accident.
Llvel y was traveling eas t·
bound on SR 124 when she
rear -e nd ed a car driven by Diana
L. Starcher, ~0 . Langsville
Sta r cher wa s stoppf'd for a
construction flaggpr.
No one was Injured_

GRADES KINDERGARTEN &amp; 1 THRU 8
Meets All State Requirements
Minimum Standards
REGISTRATION NOW OPEN FOR
1990-1991 SCHOOL YEAR
For Information and Manual
Write or Call

%
ITl imited Tune Offer! Getthe Sav~ er's Soecial at any BANK ONE
office in Athens, Perry, Hocking and
Meigs counties.

614-992-6249

Eighteen

ren s' Hcs r al. At 3:47 p.m ..
Pomeroy went to StatP Rout r 14 3
for Millard Swar!J who wa s
taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
T he Syracuse squad responded
to a cal l at 4: 11 p .m . to Town sh ip
Road 221 for Jason Cu ndiff who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 5:20 p .m .. the
Middleport Squad went to Ru lland Street for Wendell Price
w ho was taken to Holzer Medtcal
Center.

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

Effective Annual Yield

'

vich's support .
At torney General Anthon y
Celebreese, the Democratic can didate for governor, will meet
with the SEORC Highway Com mittee Aug. 16 a t th e same time
and l ocation. An additional an nouncement will be made as
details are available.
Following the highway meet in gs each candidate will address
members of the Sout heastern
Ohio Regional Counci l following
a banquet.

J$1,580 in donations for fireworks

' ' .

Sfl th is is V£'r.v 'i!X'Cial."
Sa n Antonio M ;L_vor Lila Cock ·
rP i l bt's lowt'd hono rary mayorial
stat us upon the group, prompting
Mr s Bush to joke about how the
number of the state' s fema le
mayors had ju st soared .
In fac t , Texas t hree larges t
cities ha vr female m ayors .

992-2178

The SEORC Highway Commi t
tee Chairman, G. Kenner Bush.
will detail the SEORC Highway
Agenda 2000 for lhe candlda t ~.
and members will seek Volno-

'
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Put comfort underfoot with carpet in our complete selection of slyles, colors
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9:30- 6 :00 Mon .• Tues .• Wed ., Fri.
9:30-2:00 Thul'l. S. Bat.

Mayor George Volnovlch, Rt'publlcan candida te for governor,
wlii meet with the Highway
Com mittee of the Southeas tern
Ohio Regional Council on Thursday at the Fairgreens Cou ntry
Club in Jackson County just of
the Appalachian Highway between Jackson and Wellston .

~Middleport Fire Department receives

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

C'Offif' to Trxa s wi t hout see ing thC'

S19!!

SEORC meets with Voinovich

I!'

20o/o
OFF
ALL
STYLES

$7!yd~

availab le.
At 11 a.m. the start of the air
rally kicks off this aviation
weekend, as well as a spot
landing contest at 3 p.m . , an
awards ceremony at 5 p.m ., and
the hot air balloon r ally at 6 p.m .
Following the balloon ral ly,
spectators can take a short drive
down to th e City Park and enjoy
the sounds of the United States
Air Force Bannd Concert at 8
p.m.
Sunday I he gales will open atlO
a.m . and the highlight of the
aviation weekend, the bicenten nial airshow begins at 1 p .m. T he
performers, nationally known
aerobatlc pilots, Include Bill
Le!f, Lou Manyak, Don Jliorrls,
Ken Hadden, Ray Luttrell. Ha rold Johnson and Bill Ca rper
with his radio cont ro lled aircraft.
Closing out the evening will be
prizes and an aerobatic A T-6 ride
with Bill Leff at 4 p.m.
Also sc heduled throughout
both days In downtown Gal lipolis
will be the Corps of Engineers'
Towboat M/V George W. Bri tton
which will be docked on the Oh io
River at th e parkfront

•

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Everyone will be flying high at.
the GaiUpolis Bicentennial Airshow, July 14 and 15 at GalUaMelgs Regional Alrport with
activities and displays lor ail to
seeaccordl~~&amp;toDr. Mike McGin nis, airshow chairman .
Fly -ins will begin Saturday at 9
a.m. along with registration for
the spot landing contes 1 and
special awards for youngest/oldest pilots and the farthest di stance flown.
Gates will open to the general
publiC at 10 a.m. Tickets for the
alrshow, good for both days, will
be adults, $4; students (6-15), $2;
and children under 5, free.
Eefore looking up In the sky,
look down to earth at th e many
displays lining the airport
grounds . The displays Include an
USAF F -16 "Fighting Falcon",
the Piper Museum, a piper cub
owned by Jim Burdette of Huntington, W.Va .. and model airplanes. Regardless ol rain, the
exhibits will still be on display
both days.
For those who want to do more
than look , tether balloon , plane
and helicopter rides will be

REJOICING LIFE
CHRIST!AN SCHOOL
333 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 457~0

Who Care.

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NAtA PAIITOI' THfCAIIINO TEAll
Athtnt. Ohio
Member FDIC

I

The Daily Sentinei - Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Reedsville...

Lon ttnued trom page 1

introduced her motion to re.'lCind
the board 's ac tion
Clark' s motion to return the
precincts to their origina l locations was then voted upon by
board members wi th Hun ter and
!hie voting against and Wells and
Cl ark voting In favor of the
motion. Since the vote was a 1ie,
the final decis ion now rests with
the Secretary of State's office.
Following the board's action,
Whitehead slated that the matter
had become a poli tical issue. Shr
sta ted , " l think that's verysad "

Jan e Frymyer, director of the
board, indic ated to lhe Reeds ville committee that thi s would
be a final decision, anrl t hat the
board could take no further

act ion on the mat ter after Sern•tary of Stale Sherrod Br own
rendered a decision.
According to .Jrnkins , Brown
would "decide the matter on it s
merits".
Frymyer report s th at the
Reedsvi ii P committee's only recoursP after Brown's decision
would be "litigation" .

Middleport village funds total $195,363
A total of $195,363.72 was in ail
Midd leport Vi llage funds al the
end of June, according to the
report of Jon Buck, clerk
treasurer .
Receipts for th e month Iota led
$97,219.97 while disbursements
were $126,574.01.
In the general fund I he re was a
defici t ba lance of $'.488.11, with
receipts totaling $31,932.66 and
disbursements $ 14.838.47;
safety,
disbursement s,
$21,950.1i2; Income tax, dlsburSt' ·
ments on ly, $4,089; street main
lena nee. receipts, $10,217.61, dis bu rsem ent s, $12,787.83 with a
defi cit balanceof $1,33123; min i gotl, r eceipts, $1,596.80, disburse ments, $1,532.65 with a bala nce of
$2,345.53.
Fi re equipment . receipts, $~11 .
disbursements, $1,.301.4~'- with a
balance of $18,246.96; f i re truck.
receipts. $2,023.86, di sb ur se
ments, $4,892.61, with a balance
of $72,271.99, economic dev elopment. receipts, $1,i09.40, disbur sements. $868.46, b alance, $6,1i2.
Public transportallon. rr-

Stocks
Daily stock prices
( 1\s of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electri c Power ...
AT &amp;T .......
Ash land Oil .
Bob Evans ....
Charming Shoppes.
City Holding Co
Federa I Mogul.
Goodyear T&amp;R
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Land s' End .
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Multimedia Inc
Rax Restaurant s .
Robbins &amp; My ers
Shoney's Inc .....
Sta r Bank.. ..
Wendy's Inti .
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.. 1 5 11~
'" 17
..... 28 1; ,
.... 12 \\
. 16 V,

ceipls, $13,160 :43, disbursements . $13,136 .19, balanc e,
$8,471 .78; water system improvement, balance, $60,736.43 ; water,
receipts, $3,704.83, disbursemt'nts, $19,852.47, balance,
$8,406.24; sanitary sewer , re ceipts. $11,745.91;
disburse ment s. $19,055.01. balance,
$3 .601.87.
Swimmi ng pool, receipt s,
$4,272.:!.1, di sbur se ments,
$5.072.17, with deficit balance,
$4.382.99; cemetery, receipts,
$2,566 . 64, disbur se ment s,
$2,n0 .49, defic i t balanc e,
$233 .89; water meter trust s,
receipts. $755, disbursements,
$485 72. balance, $17,289 .5 0;
Issue 2 monies, receipts , $2.979,
disbursement s, $1.500. balance,
$1,479; arts co un ci l. receipts,
$55.50. disbursements. $246 .72 .
balance. $304A 8: i ARC hou si ng,
no re ce ipt s. disbursemrnts.
$1. 99115, balanre. $7.174 .16

. 'l l.ts
22%
I er 14;
. 20

. n~.~

... :.!:Pt~

South Central Ohio
Occasional rain and a chance
of thunderstorms Wednesday
night, wit h heavy rainfall possible. Lows will be in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain is near 100
percent. Occasio nal showers and
thunders torms Thursday, with
high s near 80. Chance of rain is 90
percent.

Apling honored
A get -together of employers of
the Eastern Local School Di su·ict
to honor Supt. Da n A piing who Is
leaving !he di strict on Aug. 1 wilt
be held on llw evr nin g of July 19 .
OthPr associates and fril•nds are
a !so invited t u a1tend I he f &lt;.~ rl'well
event .
Reservations for a dinner
honoring Dr. Apling are to be
made wi th Debbie Rose, 985-4292,
or E l oise Boston, 985-4331. It Is
requested that reservations b e
made as soo n as possible so that
ar rangem ents for the dinner can
be comp leted.

To end marriages
Ac1ion s for divorce have been
ftlad by Tammy Carol Tibbetts .
Middleport. against John Ed ward Tibbetts Jr .. Crystal L ake,
II L, and by Teresa Sue Delong,
Pomeroy, against Robert Cecil
Delong, Middleport.

Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of showers in the
eastern part of the state Friday
and Sunday, with a chance of rain
statewide on Saturday. Highs
will be mosliy In the 70s each day,
with overnight lows ranging
from the middle 50s to the middl~
60s.

Seven fined in Mayor Hoffman's court
SPVl' n people were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Bruce Bellamy,
Middleport, $50 and costs for
resisting arrest and $425 and
costs for DWJ ; Richard Kriley ,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs for
disorder ly manner; Rick Hawley, Middleport, $25 and costs for
disorderly manner; Chris
Becker, Middleport, $16 dollars
and costs lor speeding; Shane
lngei, Middleport, $10 and costs
for fictitious tags; Curtis Ray -

Clarification
ln the June 28 edition of the
Daily Se nti nel , It was reporll'd
th at t he Meigs County Commissioners approved the proposed
annexation of
property in
SyracuSE" to ailow the construr~
tion of a low -to -moderate Income
housing proj ect. Greg Bailey,
one of Ihe project's partners,
clarifies th at the project is a
low-to- modera t e income housi ng
project for elderly residents.

Granted dissolution

..... 24 \1
71

-----Weather------

Disso lution s have been
granted to Frances Sue Hill and
Clarence E. Hill, and Wanda Lou
Wolf and Clarence C Wolf Jr.

burn, $10 and costs, no eye
protection while riding motor('}"
cle and Tina Butcher. Middlepo;t, $50 acd costs for driving
under suspension and $25 for
failure to control.
Forfeiting his bend was Thomas Brooks, $60, for running a
red llg;1t.

Hospital news
Veterans Meemorlal
Admissions - Thomas Frye,
Middleport; Linda Brunty,
Racine.
Discharges- Mildred Harris;

Corredion
In Friday's edition, the marriages listed In the Harden
famliy reunion story should have
read "Deborah Harden and
David Sappington of Raeford,
N.C. and Judy Harden and David
Von Krieger of San Dleg~.
Callk."

l.Alttery numbers
CLEVELAND iUP!i - Tue~­
day's wfnnlng Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PlCK-3

633
PICK-4
3997 .

Deadline is Sept. 15 for academy requests
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum. D Ohio, recen tly reminded stu dents they have until Sept. 15;
1990 to request one of his
nominations to the nation's mli llary academies for 1991 .
In order to be eligible, an
Individual must be at least 17
years of age, but not yet 22 by
.iuiy 1, 1991, and must have
comp leted their high school
st udies by thai dale. Applications
for nominations must be completed and returned to Sena tor
Metzenbaum' s office by November 1, 1990 .
"Each year, hundreds of
Ohioa ns seek these prestigious
n om !nation s," Metzenbaum

said. "We have set these cu toft
dates to ensu re that eac h applicant receives the attention he or
she deserves."
Nominations will be made to
the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.; the U.S. Air Force
Academy, Colorada Sprtngs,
Co lo .;
the U.S. Military
Academy at Wesl Point, N.Y.;
and the U . S. Merchant Marhi:e
Academy, Kings Point, Lortg
Island, N Y .
Requests for applications
should be sent to : Senator
Howard Metzenbaum, ATTN;
MIHtary Academy Coordinator,
Russell Senate Ol!lce Building,
Washington, D.C. 20510.

- - - Meigs announcemenlS - - - Plan Hymn Sing
Faith Gospel Church in Long
Bottom will host a gospel si ng on
the second Friday of each mon th
The sing will feature local talen t
gr oups. Those wanting to sr lw
dule an appearance should ron·tact Dolly Reed at 3781~:17 nr
Mar y Folme r at 843-54 16.
Plan Informational Meeting
All boys in grades SCI'Pn a nd
eight this fal l who are Interested
in playing junior high football at
Southern Junior High Schoo l
should rt'port on Thursday ni g ht
at 9 p .m . to the high school

cafeteri£1 . Inform at ion a00u1 the
upcoming seaso n will be dis cus sed Those i ntPrested but
unable to a t tend a rt' asked to
con tact Coac h David Ga ul at
992 -56:16.
All boys in gra des 9-12 who arc
interested in pl aying high schoo l
football at Sou thern High School
should r eport to the hig h schoo l
cafeter ia al 9 p.m. on T hu rsday.
information abo ut the upcoming
sPason wi ll bf' di scussed. Anyone
Interested in participating but
not able to attend should co ntact
Coach David Gaul at 992 -5636.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

DELl MADE

SHREDDED '2 .19 LC.

CHOOKED HAM .••.••••••~~'!~.~;. S1. 99
ECKRICH
TURKEY BREAST ............ !!·... S2. 99
BULK
HOT DOGS .................... !!~ .. S1.09
SUPERIOR JUMBO
RED BOLOGNA •••••.••••••• !!-••• S1.19
PARKAY
SPREAD .......... ..l1.9L. s1.69

PEACHES.............. ..L.L•• S9'

KRAFT

HEAD

MOZARELLA

LETTUCE ............... !!!~.~ .. 69'

VALLEY BEll

GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES .................... 2I 69'

CHEESE.. ...........~.9!.... $1.09

COTTAGE

CHEESE ............ .1~9-L. s1.7 S

JUST A REMINDER THAT WE ARE
NOW IN OUR NEW BUILDING AND
INVITE YOU TO STOP IN.
Plenty of
Convenient Parking
on the Side
Parking Lot

BANQUET

n oz. Sl •49
TV DINNERS ••••••••••••••••••••
MINUTE MAID
LIMEADE .................... !~.~~-. 51.09
ORE·IDA

TATOR TOTS ..............~t~~-.51.99
KELLOGG'S

RICE KRISPIES ............ !~.~~-. 52.59
VLASSIC

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Friday
9 A.M.-8 P.M.
Saturday
9 A.M.·3 P.M

WE INVITE YOU TO STOP IN
TODAY AND OPEN YOUR OWN
PERSONAL CHARGE ACCOUNT.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

992-6669
253 North SecorKI Ave.
Middleport, OH.

SAUERKRAUT ............. ~~.~~-. 51.29
DEL MONTE
WAX BEANS •••••••••••••••• !~.~~·... 69(
DEL MONTE

STEWED TOMATOES ..... m~~!•. 89(
OCEAN SPRAY

CRANBERRY JUICE ....... !~.~~-... 99(
KOOL-AID •••••••••••••• ~-~.~!.2 fS1.69
IVORY LIQUID
HAND SOAP ••••••••••••t~:•.... S1.19
IVORY SNOW ..........~2.~!•... S2.09
''BULK GARDEN SEED

1/2

PRICE"
;

'\

�Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. July 11, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~Wednesday,

July 11. 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

· ,-------------~

"SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS
GATHERING DUST,
"ADDq DOLLARS
TO YOUR POCKU

BULLETIN BOARD

BIG BEND ...Your Family Owned
LOW-PRICED
SUPERMARKET.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

MOVING SALE
3 HP air compressor, ant1que
wheel horse, new 4 hp Kohl er
eng. w/deck, 1968 Yardman
new eng., 011 drum s, chams,
casters. kerosene heater, push ·
mower {N/R), tool s, many othe r
1tems.

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS - SECTION 00010
Sealed btdl
be received
bv the Maig~ County Public

w•

• Ubo-ary at 218 W. Moin St.,

ALL MEAT

12 OZ. PKG.

12 oz.
PKG.

I
I

99&lt;!

limit 4 with Coupon .
Good thru 7 -14-90.

L------~
BIG BEND FOODLAND COUPON

I
I

15

CAN

HAMBURGER CHIPS

69&lt;

, m•.
··

99(

3201.

JAR

limit 1 With Coupon.
Good thru 7-14-90.

Lmti 1 With Coupon .
Good thru 7-14-90 .

BIG BEND FOODLAND COUPON

LIBBY

OROX BLEACH
HOLLY FARMS

89&lt;

PLASTIC
GAL.

CHICKEN BREAST
QUARTERS

~iENNA

$
16

oz.

Lim1 3 With Coupon .
Good thru 7-14-90.

LUCKY LEAF

WHITNEY

.._ .. "'RRY PIE FILLING

PINK SALMON

~-

89 (

LOAVES

8.8. Chicken Breast Quarters ...... II. SJ 19

SAUSAGE

,;~$1 00

Limit 1 With Coupon.
Good thru 7-14-90.

2101.
CAN

Limit One With Coupon.
Good thru 7-14-90 .

Armour Treet

'

I
I

:

$1 69 !
I

14'1&lt; oz.

CAN

limit 1 With Coupon .
Good thru 7-14-90.

I
I
I
I

INSTANT

L
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE II
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
12 oz.
I
I
IOZ.
CAN
I
I
limit 2 With Coupon.
I
Limit 1 With Coupon.
I
Good thru 7-14-90.
I
I
Good thru 7-14-90.
I
I
~------------------------~-------------------------

89&lt;

Pork

&amp;

Beans

2 99(
~!N~z.

ASST. REG. &amp; UGHT

Dan non

Yogurts

CREAM ,,, GAl.

--=----Public Notice

·- - - - - .

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given
., that on Saturday, July 14.
: 1990. It 10 A.M .. 8 public
., ule will be held at 106
,. Union Avenue.
Pomeroy
: Ohio. to sell for cat h. the fol :
.. lowing collateral :
• 1986 Ford
Escort S~
·: 1FABP0769FWI 197B1
'; The Farmers Bank &amp; Sev . ings Company , Pomeroy ,
• Ohio. rnervea the right to
.: rfliect any and all bidt sub·
.. mitted .
-; Further, the above colla·
... teral will bfl sold in tt'le con.... dition it is In, with no ex ·
~ prftsed or implied warren ·
"\ ti" 9iven .
;-. 17111 . 12 . 13 3tc

*'

;' ~S

.....
-

.."-.

' "";; •O~OI

:'t:'.t 'ILM

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259
TUPPERS PLAINS - Morlan
Addrtion - 3-4 bedroom
ranch rn excellent condrtron
on a lar ge I acte bt AIorge
fa mrl~

room mak es hvmg here

am Electrc 8.8 heat plu s
wood buoner Large ~orage
shed. Call lor apporntmenl
$41.000 00
MIDDLEPORT -

Wou ld

make a great ren!al or a home

lor a youngcouple Has 2 be d·
rooms. dmrng room. one floor

ot corpeted. new roof. and 2
bls. $14500.00
SALEM CENTER - Anrce 3
bedroomShull! mo~l e home
14• 70 wrth an ached l amr~
room Eleclrrc he~ pump plus
cod!

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
perfect burldrng srte wrth
hee

~as.

waler anrl

elec1r~ c

avarlahl e. Call lor rnlorma·
ttOn
RUTLAND - One lloor plan
wrt h 3 bedr oo ms. I'; baths.
dmmg ar ea. large level yard

garage. and wood shed RE
DUCfO $32.500 00
RUTLAND - 26 2 aue; rn
Ihe counlty 6 room . 3 bed
room home Pr rvate and se

eluded. Needs some wmk
$28 .000 00
TWP . ROAO - 348 - Ap
pro.( . 93 acr es of vacant
land wrlh 2 story barn
stocked pond. old hou se srte

to Limit Ou1nitttea • Price•

thru

tndWIC

OUR SALES VOLUME HAS
BEEN GOOO ANO WE STILL
HAVE BUYERS LOOKING
FOR MEIGS COUNTY PROP·
ERTY. IF YOU WANT TO
SEll. CALL
CLELAND
REALTY TODAYIIr
WE NEEO LISTINGS'"
l990 Ohio Hoosing Issue
Now AWJilable. Fixed Rate
7.75% 1st yr , 8.25%
throulfl 30th yr. Call Cleland Realty today. We will
Help you find • Qualified

Miscellaneous

Merchandise

CANNING SEASON IS HERE:

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
3• S14
41412 -11910
EAST
Wt A&lt;Ctpt

Food Stampt

d-v lhe&lt; pubhe.lton to milk• co rrec t oon
"Ad• lh11 mu11 be ..-HI rn ldv.mc~ lfl!
C1rd of lh~nlu

-1 1 OOAM SA TURD AY
2 00 P M MONDA Y
- 2 00 PM TUESDA Y
- 2 00 PM WEDNESDA Y
2 00 PM THURSDAY
- 200PMFR10AV

PAPE~

53 - Am,qun

1 54 - Mite Me,chand••"'
! 55 - Bu•IO•na Supplt•
56 - PAts lor Sllf'
7 - Yard Sere IDIH1 '"advan ce ·
57 - M"' .,cel lntuumentl
8 - P u bl• c S •te &amp; Auclo on
58 - Fru•U &amp; Veg~lbl•
9 - Winted to Buy
59 - For Slit or lflde
5 ~ Happ~

AC I
5 - Lost t n d Found

Farm Suppl ies
&amp; L1ves1ock

15

61 - Far m fQ1.upmen1
62 - W•nte d toBuy

Scnooh &amp; l"'""'ctoon

16 - Rtdoo. TV &amp; CB Rap• n

17 - M•s cella neou t
t8 - Vunte O To Do

lihfUIHtll

Transporlalion

21 - BuSintl!lt Oppor1un11~
22 - Monl'l' 10 l0111

7 1 - Aul OI for S1le
fo• S11e
7 3 ~ vans &amp; 4 vyo s

72 - Truclu

23 - Prot•ttonlt Serv&gt;Cfl

Real Eslate

74 - Motorcvcll!l!l
I 75 - Boau &amp; Mo1or1 for S1le
76 - r\ u to P1rt1lo Acc••or••

J 1 - Homes lor S1lf
32 - Mobd~

Cla ssified paf!e-' cntrr r h ('
o U ~u·inf!

telephone cxchant:~'·' ··

Gel loa Cou nt v
Art a Coot 6U

Area Code 6lt.

A,ea Cone 304

446 - Ga llo polrJ

99 2 - MtddiiiOOfl

67~ - P 1

Me•9 • Co"'nt ¥

367 - Ch• h" ~

Mu o n Co

G58 - Leon

Poml'fo~

388 - Vonton
245 - RIO Gr•ndl'

985 - Chester
843 - Portlan d

266 - Gu'fln Drs:

247-letar1 Falh

576 - Apl)l f G'Ovf
773 - M uon
882 - ~ e .... Have n

G4J - A,Ibo• D •I I

949 - R•con e

89~ - Lellrl

J?9 - WitMOI

742 - ~ulllnd

9 37 - Bullat o

,,

Home5 tor

Stlf'

J J- f• •m s to r S11f
34 - 8u1rnes Burltltng s
JS - Lou &amp; Ac re119f
36 ~ Aul E.ttltr W•nl• d

'
7 7 Auto Rep1rr
I 78
- Cern p •ny Equopmen1
'

7 9 - Cemp ~s

e;mnmtt

WV

P ! teUn '

63 - LrveJIOdl

1 64 - Mav I. Gratn
65 - Se~ L J:er1~1ler

House5 tor Rent
4 7 - Mobr lp Homes tor Ren1
4 3 firms to r Aenr

Services

41

44 - Aparlment lo• Ren1
4S - Furnt t hed Room s
46 - SP•cr lor Aen 1
4 7- V\-Imed 10 Rer.t
48 - fauopment lor Aen!
49 - for leMI'

&amp; Mo tor Homes

B 1 · Home lmpr o,..mlll'ltt
B2 - Piumbmg r. Hell•ng

8J- Eacl\ll1•no
84 - E1ee1uc1l &amp;, Aet...g.-IUon

6 5 - Gen!l'll Hauhng
, 86 - Mobole Home Repeu
• 8 7 - Uph o lsterv

.

Business Services

r----------y---------,---------'""1---------~---------

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

NOrl OPEN

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Fret Estimates
985-4473
667-6179

30 Sessions-S3Q
Co. Rd. 28

PAT HILL FORD

Appointment

949-2794

SPECIAL

Watch For Signs

RACINE, OHIO
6-71 -' 90 · t mo.

Help Wanted

We are looking for people in
Meigs County who are willing to
share their home and provide
friendship to two adults with
learning limitations . We train you
and can add up to $18,000 a year
to your income--and still work at
home . High school degree, valid
driver's license and good driving
record required .

For more information call
1-800-531-2302 no later than
7I 16/90;
ask for Jorji .
Employer .

SER~ICE

We &lt;On repair and recore radiators and
lteoter &lt;orn. We con
also o&lt;id boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Call Now To Make

5·3 1· 90 tin

Do you need extra income but
still want to be at home?

~eTRAVEL

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
l·lHc

Reservation / Tickets
Ask for Konda

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl
·uGHT HAULING

(6141 742-2027

•FIREWOOD

PURSUIT
Airline

'"Your
conn;;tionQ
···

All

-·

Types of
Travel "

11- 11 -lm..

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT .
•ANYTHING

AT All

985-4422

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

flow Hom11 Built

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

992 -53 35 or 985-3561:
Across Fro~~~ Pott Offi,e
POMEIOY, OHIO .
10/ 301'89 «n

NO SUNDAY CAllS
1-16-86-dn

SIDELINES
SPORT CARDS

ZETOR
TRACTORS I LOADERS
MOWERS, IAIIES
AND UDD(IS

Buy - Sell
Trade

367-0588

Repair All Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery

RUTLAND, OHIO

5-21 '90-1 mo pd

742-2455
619'90 1mo

6-12· 90 tfn

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

RANGES-Gu-Eiec.- 1115 up

fREIZIR5-It25 up
MICRO OVENS- 179 up

" Free Estimates"

USED RAILROAD TIES

CHESTER, OHIO

90 DAY WARRANTY :
WASHER 5- $100 up
ORYER5- I69 up
REFRIGERA10R5-11DO up •

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY
MORRIS EQUIPMENT

BISSEll
BUILDERS

USED APPLIANCES

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM .S IDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BILL SLACK
992-2269

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

1· 11 -90 dn

8

I !'12- Sponing Goodl

·- G •vi!!Wil~

DAY BEFORE PUBli C.D. TION

TUESDAY PAP,EFI
WEDNESDAY PAP ER
THUASOAV PAPER
FRIDA~ PAPER

SUNO.A'Y

t.

1 2 - S it ul\oon W1nted
1 l - ln11.H1nce
14 - Bus.neu T rttnon Q

"A c laSIIft.O adwert-mlll'l t place&lt;ltn Th1D 11Iv Sen1 •ne111•
cept -:- cl•ail•lld dtspl.., . Bu1rn•• Card 1nd legal no to CAS
Will 1110 appear on th1 P, Pl••anl Reg•lll' an o oh~ G• ll.
pol•• Dilly Tflbune. teachrng OV11r 18 .000 homes
COPY DEADliNE -

15 t - Houo..,OidGoodo

Mem o r~

1 1 - Hero Wan1e0

Happ y Ath
Y1rd S1lm

In Memora.,T1

1

HENRY E. CLELAND
991·6191
JEAN TRUSSEll ... 949·1660
MAE HUPP ... .... .949-1157
JO HILL . ... .. ...... 985-4466
OFFICE ...... ........ 991-1159

ventory.

MAIN
POMEROY

11

.

f----------

Equal Opportunity

~
.....

Food

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 5. 1990. in the
Meigs County f»robate Court
Case No. 26681. Maurice
Earle Steiner - 1796 W11t·
view Dr .. N.E .. W•rer1. Ohio
44483 and JamM Steiner .
7600 Apple Blosaom Lane.
Chetterland. Ohio 44026,
were appoint ad Co-E ~:ecutors
of tt'le estate of lola Marie
Eblin Steins-, dece•ed. lite
of 652 South Third Street.
Middleport Ohio 45760
Robert E. Buck , Probate
Judge
lena K Neuelroad. Clerk
{71 11 . 18 . 25 3tc

$60.000 00

...
.

GAL.

2 - tn

"Puc. ot ad to r 111 capnal I.e:,•·~ os doublt p'&gt; c~ o t ao co 11
"7 potnt ion• type only u~ed
"Stn11nel •• not reaponsrblp1 o• ~rro" 1t1'' lust d~ l( he~
for •rror• It~ at o..., eCinms on pep1r 1 Ctlt tol't o r ~ 2 00 om

MONDAY PAPER

g.-..

wrth well Approx 25 acr es
tr ll able wrth balance rn trm ·
tier, abu nda nce a! walnu !
Get a retur n on your rnvest·
men! lrom salr of lrmber"

•,

1/l

Public Notice

aroor $1950000

~

MINUTE MAID

the affidavits submitted by
the aoplicent . Fvrther infor ma1ion may be obtained by
contacting the Public Utili tiM Commission of Ohio .
180 East Broad Stutet. Col ·
umbus. Ot'lio 43266· 0573.
171 11 1tc

Equrpped kttchen. Slori!lie

.

49&lt;

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is given that Pho netel Technologies. Inc. (Phonetel) h~t~ filed applications with
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohto in Case Nos. 90 940-TP-AAC and 88·943-TP-ACE to expand the service
territory in which it currently
provides
intrastate inter·
exchange message loll serinterim inter ·
vices end
exchange fllernative opera tor services. Pt'lonetel propotes 10 expand these ser ·
vices into Adams. Ashland.
Ashtabula ,
Athens. Au
glaize.
Belmont . Brown.
Butle r. Carrol. Champaign.
Clark . Clermont. Clinton.
Cotumbiena,
Cost'locton.
Crawford. Defiance. Delaware. Darke,
Fairfield.
Fayette,
Fulton. Gallie.
Greene. Guernsev, Hancock.
Hardin.
Harrison, Henry.
Highland. Hocking. Holmes .
Huron. Jackson, Jefferson.
Knmc lawrence, licking. l oMadison. Marion. Medina. Meigs. Mercer. Miami.
Monroe. Morgan. Morrow.
Muskingum. No~e. Onawa .
Paulding. Perry , Pidutwey.
Pike. Prebla. Putnam. Rich·
land, Roas. Sandusky, Scioto.
Seneca . Shelby . Tusc.-awes.
Union. Vinton. Van Wf!lft.
Warre n.
Washington. Wil
liams. Wood. and Wyandot
cou nties. Ohio. Arry interested person. firm. corporll ·
tion. or entity th&amp;t can show
good cause why either of
these applications should not
be grantad should file witt'l the
Commission a written 111at&amp;ment detailing the reaasons
on or before Juty 30. 1990.
Unless the Commission re ceives a written statement
to that effect end an ac companying request for oral
hearing on suct'l issue. this
matter will be decide d on the
basis of tt'le information con tained in the application a nd

burldmgs, orchard and grape

Ground Cinnamon ......................... 4 ot. .77
•• Ground Cloves .............................4 ot. s 1.33
" Whole Cloves ................................. 4 ot. .82
"""
.... Ground All Spice ......................... 4 ot. . 79
•• Celery Seeds ................................... 4 ot. .47
Mustard Seeds ............................... 4 ••· .73
Pickling Spice ................................. 4 ••· .S7
Alum ..................................... 4 oz. .62
E Fruit Pectin Sure Jell .................. Pkg. .92
....
Farmer Brown Season SaiL.... 4 ••· $1.75

4.4 oz.

Public Notice

com tmh:m stove

Home from our existin&amp; in·

$ 19 9

... $199

6.S OZ.

Orange
Juice

EAST MAINI.ii.lilli6....

Spjces Found at 0. V.B. Foods

3 DIAMONDS

Tuna

ic'EOW GOLD

$299

Bids will be r&amp;ceived for all

:: worh under Lump Sum Bid.
: The price will include all
; _labor. materials, tools, and
., miChinas requir8d for renove ;. tions including minor electrt,. cal and General Tract• lt&amp;m~ .
:: Plans and specifications
,. for the proposed conatruc,.. tion work are on file in the
•: office of the Architect and
;. the Ubrary and may be ob~ · tained from the Architect.
' . Richard E . Dittmer, Inc., 13
-,, South Fourth Street. Zanet·
~, wille. Ohio 43701 , upon de·
• posrt at S25 .00 fully refund ·
:_ a~e minua pottage being re·
... funded to all who bid andre-· rum plant wHttln ten dayt
:-t 1101 of bid dated .
\ ' Bidders thai! note that the
l: pr.,aUing wage rat" pub·
.&amp;. lis had by the Department of
~ lnduftrial Relations are to be
,... complied with throughout
h rhis project.
:: Bidders thell also note
a rhat the Rules and Regula!': tions on Equal Employment
.,.,Opportunity shell be made e
"" Part ot this Contract. No bid·
;~ der may withdraw his bid
:. wtthin 30 dty1 after the
'. actual date of the opening
t thereof
~
If. in the opinion of the
r- Owners, the acceptance of
·· the lowHt bid it not in the
~ . belt inter81t of all con · · cerntd, the Owner may ac t cept another propotal so
., opened, or reject ell propo ) tals and advertise for other
.• blda .
•' By Order of the Secretary
; Mary Kay Yo1t
_,.· Meigs County PutHic Library
' {71 11, 18 2tc

limit 2 with Coupon.
Good thru 7 -14-90.

FRUIT DRINKS
GALLON

r• in the office of the library and
: the Architect. Rich•d E. OKt-

29&lt;

oz.

VLASIC

FRUIT '
DR INtiS

:; ing&amp; and &amp;pecific.tion on file

PPLE SAUCE

SPRINGDALE ASST.

\~•tNtJ.O"If

· 46780, according to drew-

LUCKY LEAF

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

~01

Public Notice

Merchandise

3 - 4nnou c ement!

run 3 diYtll no ch•oe

Public Notice

Third St .. Middleport. Ohio

Y

[llld

THURS.-FRI -SAT
JULY 12, 13. 14 -9-4 PM

of the M&amp;lgt County PublicU..
· brarv loc•ed at 178 South

CLOSED

fcUJ, It! IUI3Q,UQ,t£1
1 - C1rd ol Th1nk1

"Rec..-w' I 50 d!I CQunl 101 101 pao d '" •dv• .,cr
"free ed!. - GtWIIWI~ and Found 1d~ undp 15 WNO\ wot l Of

Watch lot Stgns
Furniture. Clothin g. etc

------------------------BIG BEND FOODLAN.D COUPON

8 A.M. unlil NOON SATURDAY
' AOf Ouii!Cf Me•gt Gatll1 or Ma1.on count •ea m u11 bl! pr !!

YARD SALE
HEMLOCK GROVE RD.

: Pomeroy. Ohio 46769. unt~
. 12 :00 Noon Local time. July
· 26. 1990 lor the renovation
·· to Middleport Branch library

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992 -21 56
MONDAY tnru fRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

992-2156

47159 Eogle Ridge
949-2969

SLICED BACON

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

WITH A
CLASSIRED AD

JULY 14 &amp; 15

TENDERBEST

Classifie

TV-

SALES AND SERVICE

Foe tory Authori~ed
Sfniu (enter For MMt

Makos

ond

Modols

Fast wll ., rrrv

RE

"A I Reasonoble Prices "

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS .
l - 1 6 · 8~d n

Public Sale
&amp;

Auction

ESTATE
AUCTION
Saturday, July 14
10:00 a.m.
Located at 2902 Meadowbrook Drive,

Point Pleasant, wv. Watch lor signs.
The estate ollhe late Amanda Caudill will be sold.
ANTIQUES: Round oak ta ble wrth lions heads and claw
1eet , 4 oak captains chairs. beautiful mahogany 5 pc .
Hunger Ford Poster bedroom su1te. fancy 5 pc dinene set
with Hitchcock type chairs . handmade 12 pane corner cabi·
net , Victorian mar~e top table. 2 small marble lop tables,
marble top ootfoe table, Victor1an oak table, large mahogany chest on chest. Victorian walnut table. Pressback
rocker, wicker table , c hest. lloor la mps, mirrors , painting
signed Ben Hagen. stone ch urn. lnd Carnival pitc her and
gJas6e,, Pink Depres sio n covurod di sh .
MODERN : 4 pc. Hard rock maple bedroom suite. 3 pc
Mainline bedroom s uite, RCA 25M color TV remote contro l,
Kelvinator Fros t Free relrige rator, Maytag auto washer,
frames .' fans, pots &amp; pans. good lawn fur mture .
TOOLS: 8' Montgomery Ward lable saw. Power Crall 1/2
horse motor, w- Crahsman Radial Arm saw with stand,
Craftsman 3.5 Reartine tiller with 14" plows. same as new,

21" Taro mower power drive, 8 HP Craftsman trader 50" cut
with grass catcher. Mitsbushi 20 HP tractor with Woods 5'
mower, 3 cyl. diesel only 6 hours, same as new : 150,000
BTU gas furnaoo and a coil Luxair.
BOAT; 16' Slarcrafl, 75 HP Evan Rude Johnson motor rmd

railer
CAR: 1983 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham , loaded, real
nice.

Auction Conducted By

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
Mason, WV 773-5785
. becutor: John caudJll

Luneh

T111111: Cull or ChiiCk with ID
Not Raponllble for IICCidtnll or lou of property
Llotnotd l Bonded In Ohio, Ktnluclty ond Wool Yll!llnla I tl

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home

P,l!(!s
•Mobile HointJ
APr, tats
• Lot• RenJals

992·7479
Rt. 33 Nerth of
Ponteroy, Ohio
l· l1."88-tln

MICROWAVE
0\'EN REPAIR
Bring It In Or We

Pick Up.

FREE ESTIMATES

New lo,ation:
161 North lt&lt;ond
Middloporf,

Ohio

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cat"V Fishing SuppliM

992 -S33S or 98S -3561

,...,.••'-. IUIIN!ll PHON I

Across from Post Offiu
217 I. So&lt;. Pomoroy
POMIIOY, OHIO
3/ 6/' 90/ dn

16 Ill 997-6SSO
IIIIDIIICI PHON!
16 Ill 997-7714

Pay Your Phone
a nd Cable Bills Her e

l i f'Sf ll!o

FENCING
FREE
ESTIMATES

·-..··--r

PROFESSIONA
INSTALLATION

Take the pain out of
pointing.
let u• do it for you.

SEARS

VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCES

MIDDLEPORT

(614)

985-4180

Announcements

45160

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

&amp;

992- 2178

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

ALl MAKES

LINDA'S
PAINTING

co.
INTEIIOI IITIIIOR

788 N 2ND AVE
MIDDLEPORT

788 N. 2nd

992-2

3 Announcements
GOLO
CREDIT
CARD
Visa/Mastercard gu1ra n1Md, no
security depoail, 1·900-963-5100,
lei, co. bills$49.50 IM.
GOLD

CREDIT

CAR D

VlsatMastarcard QUifllniMd no
s.curltr deposril 1·900-963-5100
lei. co . bUia 4g.so IM
Slnglaa inlorm111on and a dtg nlt!ed option for finding 1
partner. H11rts11rt:h: P. 0 Bor
1043, Gltlllpol!a, OH -456Jt.
Weal VIrginia Department ot
Agriculture will 1ccapr ualed
bids on •pprowlm•taly 18t,OOO ft
standing llmbtr loealld on a SO
acre t111ct •long At . 62. B~s
mu.t he NCe!vld bltor. t :OO
am, August 10, 1HO. For more
Information e111 304-348-2Z11.

Giveaway

4

6 Ft. Cheat Fr...uer. NMds
minor repair IM-446·7268
Sf'IUIII bi1ck tem•t• hou• dog
Good watch dog. tM-912·2817.

6 -18 '90 -1 mo. d.

Two blk &amp; white long haired kit·
lena, 7 wltl old, 304--!15--5451 .

YAIDMAN I ECHO

OUTDOOI POWEI
PIODUCTS

SALE
Puth ltawors &amp;
Rldintl Mowers·Twin Cvl.
Rltllir All loka &amp; lodols of
Chlin Saws .,d lftn • - •
Saw Chains lor Silo
PICKUP l DlliVIIY

MOIIIS EQUIPMENT
741·1455
IUTLA.., OliO
&amp;-29-'!JO.I mo.

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS 10 SERVE YOU....
POMEROY. OHIO : Rt . 7&amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 50 8o S.R. 143
NEW HOURS :

POMEROY: 9 a .m.-7 p.m . 1 Dayo
ALBANY : 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 6 Oayo. Closed Sunday

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90C per lb.;
Clean Ory Aluminum Cans, 35C per lb .
Clean Auto RadiMors, 40C per lb.
WE BUY All NON fERROUS SCRAP. BAmRIES.
STARTERS. TRANSMISSIONS. ALTERNATORS. ETC .

(614)992 -6114

3- t J.'IO..n

6

lost &amp; Found

$200. Reward for ,..turn of 2
ma.. Blue Tick Coon Houndl.

Lost' C.mpelgn Churt:h .....
304-615--N15, 114 -4 .. 4114
Found: llcycll In •r• of IIIII
Ck. and Ealt•m Ave. ConiiCt
Gallipolis Pollee Dept ·
1313.
'

Lost: ............ Hound

lr+l

collar) Trl~or. OYer WMbnd,
Kanaugl
Ort-.ln
riclnlly.
A.w1rd. 114-4~1-1121.

Lost 'Horotonl
- · Rod and
O.rt~rlt.lnQIVflle .,.._
114-JII2·2GOO'.

-··ct.

while. In

�Page-

6

12-

Lost

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-

LAFF-A-DAY

&amp; Found

KIT 'N ' CARLYLE® b)
35

$'100. rewtrd for Hfl l'ltum Red

tamalt o..hund, 304-67'5-2718.

Whotwtr

borrowlld

Lots

&amp; Acreage

49

For salt. Comer lol -N:•n 2 trailer
hook ups In Mlddlepc.u1 . $8000.
614-992-3194.

Seon

Wolft't Rac:lng Helmet pltllt

rttum II.
7

One acre lrallar lot with water
snd Mptlc syatem, $3,i00. 304·

Yard Sale

675-2n2.

1

'\

~{

1:. 0 \ '.

3 BR Home, Jackson St. In Vln·

LJ~ \.__

ton lor $300. Per. Mon. Dep.
S300. 614 -388-9360

( f}lllk·\t.Mn

Garage Sale, Set. July 14th. 184
Ann Drive, tallow roult 7 tor 8
mllu south ol Gllllpollt. Right
an Raceoon CrHk Road, 4th
house, Clur VIew Subdivision.
High Chllr, bodroom Sullo, II ~
trciM blkt.

-t'VV"~'WJY

1 11

• ........ . .., .•, ···

WJll. 1p s JH:' ,s w a I (' I1111
. g
'Bold and BPauli fu J' and
'y Ollllg a II( I I}t('S( I('SS ,'

I. II('

u

Glan1 Garaga S.lt·234 Jackson
Pika 9 · ? Ollwsday &amp; Friday.
Boy to AduH Clo1hn, curtalna,
dishll, Toya,lota of AntlzuH
Dolla. rock••. l•mplftc.

likPS

pl'&lt;ll'f~'

Iflp

sll&lt;'

and qniPI ."

Burkhart Lane, Gallipolis. 3 BA,
$300/mo. plus deposit. 614-44&amp;.
4222betweeng&amp; 11tm.
Furnlsh.d houn, 1 BR, located
73.5 Rnr, Third Ave. $150/mo.
115/dap. 614-448-3810 o• 614446-1340.
.:..:
Ho.:_
u..
= ,.::_r ..
_-1.-o-r 1-. .-••- ..- ,-h -ap.
lion 1o buy o 3 BR, 1 112 balha, 2
"' uni111Chod gan~go. Ao1 umablt mortgage. Appllcanc:n
luml•hod.
Ra11.. ancol
I

~==========:-r===========i security
deposit
. 37
Portsmouth
Ra~~d,required
Gallipolis.

Moving
Salt, Entire HouH-Fur·
nhure,A.pplllnc:H,
Houuhald
Items, Ect.1 112 mi. out 218 on
laft. S1artaWoct. 111 all 11om• or• 11
gone.
Ml)vlnq Salt In Alley Bthlned
Layton t
Garage. !'luly 1213Furnhurt, HouMhold goode,
,Clothing.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Ftmlly Vard Stlt, Friday July
14, Jtfflrwn Ava., 8:00 till? .
New Yard Salt, 2110 t.bdleon
·Ava, Thurt and Frl, boy• and
91r1s clothea. Much mor11.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
5-famlly ytrd 11... 12th-13th14th. Rain or ahlnt. 3 mlln oul

1&lt;4ew Uma Rd ., Ru11and. Watch

.for tlgnt . Bu Wood 614-742~790 .

·Big g.raga ult . Off 143 just out
of ~arrl.anvll .. on Colt trill Ad.

.tth d•lllng on tnt Moh. Jatta
Bollna. Everything n~ and
clttn.
Moving

.... . large

Broyhill

dlnlngroom Nl, waaharldryet",
.relrlg, freezer.&amp;. tlr comp. and
·more. Elata 111dgt. July M-15.
614-~•2G6•.

Sofa tnd Lo'#tl SNt cott.e
l.lble, labia and chain, bMi
·~•d•1 curtelns.LshNtt, ciOCh·
lft9 ana misc. n!l Sye~~mora,
July 111h·141h. t-6. No checks.

Vlrd Nit. Roc:kaprtnr. Rd.
.Thur.dl)' and Friday. Ju y 12-13.
CioN to nuralng home.

a

Pub lie Sale

&amp; Auction
Rlclc Pearson Auction Company
now boolllng auction1, ••·
parianc. mekes the diHertnca.
UcenNd Ohio, Kentucky, Wut
Vlrglnla, 304-77'3-!785.
CALL • BOGGS AUCTION SER·
VlCE. AUCTIONEERo DAVID
BOGGS. IM ... 4&amp;-7750.
C.sta'a Auelf.on S.rvl~, Buffalo, WV. L.lcenl.d Ohio and
Watt VIrginia. 30 yur1 axperienct. For your All call us.
Goldin Casto 304·937·2276 or
JISPif Casto 304-g37·2121.

9

Wanted to Buy

Family looking tor small tarm ta
rent or buy on LAnd Contract.
614-992·2463.
QuiHs
An1iqut or new. Excelltnl condilion only. Prompt piymtnt. 6149Q2~651.

Employment Services

11

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Experienced
hardware
Altsptrson to wortl In local
rtltall hardware. Send r11ume to
Box Cia 038 c/o Gallipolil Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631. Experl•nced
people only piu .. r
Hurtland of Jack.an L.PNIAN
full-time position avallab ...
100'J. tul1ion relnbc.uNmtnt.
Send r..umn or call tor an appointment. EOE.. Gall Rawlins,
DON, 8&amp;68 St. Rt. 93, Jackson,
Ohio 4M40. 614·286-502fl _
Hourlr, Clinic Aide ntldtd partlima n family planning otficQ
In Malga, Gallia 1nd Lawrence
coun11n. Mutt havt high
echool diploma equlvlltncy;
good communication skill a; accun~cy with tlgur"; medical
oNica experience helpful; will
trsln matu,. lndlvldutt who 11
sensitive to reproductive health
nMdt of clt•ntt. Looking tor
someone who Is .. it-motiVIted
and can grow In the potltlon 11
nHd triHt. Position r.qulrn
reHab.. traneportaUon; will·
lngn... to travel to other
PI'"SEO oHICH. WMkday, tvtn•
ing 1nd Saturd•y hou111 are to
bt ••peeled. Send tener ol ln·
ltrnt,
rnuma tnd two
employment
releranc••
to
Plennad
Pa,.nthood
of
SoU1~NI1 Ohio, 396 Rkhland
Avenue, Athen~-~lo 45701, by
July 16, mo. Eut~tSP.

Phttbotomltt
or
M.dlcally
Trained Per.onnel To Complete
Mobllo lnaunnca ham•• Part·
Time In Ollila County. Gall t ·
800-458-04161n Dunblr, WVt.

Tlt...

,..pond.

-

Ful1-llmo

• • • " '·

Magic Vears Day Care Center
reasonable,
dependable,
lic:elllt, qu1llty child cart1. Moo·
day thru Friday, 7:30 till 5:30.
For more lnform1Uon or to
regltter 304-67!5--.5847.

ThrH Bedroom, untumlehld
houat In Pomeroy. 614-992·2218
attar 8 p.m.

Mill Paula'• Oay Care Center.
S. .. , 1ftordablt, childclrt . M·F
6 a.m.. ! :30 p.m_ Agu 2 ·10.
Befort, attar school . Drop-Ins
welcome. 614-446-8224.

Unfurnished 3-bedrooma, full
bastmtnt, two atouge building .
Pomeroy Nye Ave. $250 permonth. Reterenct and deposH
required . 614·949-3027.

WUI B1by 1ft In my home. Have
Good Rtfertncu. 614-388-8114

42

Will Baby Sit in my Home near
J1ckaon Pike Bulavlllt Rd. Ex ptrtlnc" and R•f•rance 61"·
4462646
;;;;:;---;--:~--

--

Will care for elderly In your
homa or mine, 30 yeart experience, good reterenc ... 304·
&amp;75-4102.
Will do Interior and •rterlor
painting. Proftulon11 worM tor
tmatuer pay. EMperlence 10
yNrw. 614-)12-2127.
Will
pour
drive
ways ,
patiOIIaftbra, all typee concrete
wm and fHd tots, aide walks.
61 4-142.2t2l
1;,::::--"-:::=.,-- - - -- --,
Will wa•h &amp; wax your car and
cl.. n Inside. f14·388--t9'74.
Financial

Real Estate

31

Homes for Sale

3 bedrooms, 2 full btlhl, 24 • 36
gar~ge,
1112 acr...
Plica
reductod. 1!14... 4~248, 44&amp;0365, 446-8127.

County Appll1nce, Inc. Good
uatd tppllances, T.V. sets. O~n
8 l.m. to fl p.m. Mon ...Sit. 614446·16911, 627 3rd. Ave. Gal·
llpolls, OH

Gardner's Verlety &amp; Furniture
Shop, 1415 Ealltm Ava. Buy,
S.ll and Tr.c». Low price.. &amp;1444&amp;-6226

·
USED APPLIANCES
Wuhora, dryara, rafrlg•••lora,

GOOD

Crest Mottl. c1 u&amp;14-44&amp;.739B

for Rent
I clean, livi ng person. 614 -9923181 .

2 Br unfurnished mobile home.
No pels. $175. per month. $100
depoalt. 614-446-3617.
~~~

Two trailers, ret.rence required,

tor appointment call 304-8953400 or 304--882-3626.

44

:'

Household

.()

II

11

I \

Apanment
for Rent

1 bedroom apt Stove, rtfrlg .,

nice. Con1ldar Human Strvlc"
or HUO. 402-112 24th St., Pt .
PINaant, W.V. 614-i92-S858
I
bedroom furnished. All
utllttln, beautiful river view. $80
wk., or $300 per month. 814-i.fi2526.

2 Apt . uch 4 rooms &amp; bath. 1
tum, 1 unturn . Ref . &amp; Sec:. O.p.

No pets. 614-44&amp;-0444
2 BR apar,nent, etove &amp; ret.
tumlahtd . Upstairs. Walar &amp;
trash tumlshlld. Upper Rt 7,
Upper River Rd. 614-446-3~0 .
2 furnished tftlclencltt. All
ulllltlt~ pa id. Share bath. $90 or
$150. ilg Second Ave. 614-4463Q45.

2BR, furn'ed , csntrally ioeated.
Adune preferr.d. No pets
$225/mo. plua sac:urtty deposit ,
NMranc•. 6l4-446-2236 at 614·

44$·2581.

gal'lgt, full b11ament. Price
Reduced . 614-446..0390 or lBB8652.
3BR In Chtahirt. C.ntrtl Air,
new ca~ and eppllanc...
ba"ment end caf?Ort . $36,000.
814-44H265/e14-446-0963.

Furnished Newly remodeled .
Naw carpet, new msllrsu.
Upaltlrel 1Br., utlliliae pa.ld .
Second Avanue. 614-446-'i1523

3BR, 1112 batha , FR . LR, lully •
qu ipped kitchen wl dining tree.
2 car garage, In-ground pool.
614-«6-n31.

Grtcloua liv ing _ 1 and 2 Mc:J.
room spartments at VIllage
Manor
and
Rlvtrsid•
Apartments In Middleport. F.•om
I! room hou1t, 3 mi. from town , $1116. Call 614·t'H12 -T7B7. EOH
W.B. flrepllct, lull basement, Nicely Fumlahtd Mobile Home
clly Kh00e . 61 ....46--0365, 614- in ellv. CA . Suitable for 1
446-1456.
son. Rat . &amp;O.p Re£1u l r~ 6147 room• 1 112 baths, country 446.0338
living but ciON to Meigs School Nlctly furnished mobile home , 1
and town. Rt. 33-4 lane, mill below lown, ovartooklng
Townthlp Road 27. Firat road to river, CA, hNI, Ral. 614-446~.. Call 814-~2-7118 or 1·384- 0338.

.,_r.

One bedroom xpls . tor rant
Must Sell: 2BR L.og Home. $225 month . Deposit requi red .
Newty carpttM, etonM h..rth 614·992·2216 ahar 6 p m.
wood-bumtf,
10'x24' O.Ck,
12'r12'
building.
Rlvtrv .... Racine. 2 bedroom, appllancu .
Make Otter! fi14-446-4DOI or 614- 0" llrMt parking. Available
August 1. Da~ 614-992·2151
256-1982.
Eve ningstwtekends
614·742·
Price R.ctuetd1 Porter Brook 21112
Subdlvlelon, 3BR, 1 112 Bath,
F.R. ScrMned·ln·Porch, 314 acre 45
Furnished
lot, City School. 614-446-1965.
Rooms
32 Mobile Homes
Rooms lor rani · watk or month
Starting 11 t1201mo. Gsllia Holti
for Sale
614--446-QiSEIO.
12x60 with room addllion 3
acr11 mil . Will conalder land Slupln~ rooms wit~ cooking.
contract . 614-";'t2 - 2~4 tvtnlnga. Also trailer space. All hook-ups.
Call after 2:00 p.m ., 304 -rTJ..
1974 Kirkwood 12x60 2BR, nc . 5651, MISon WV.
eond. $6800 . 614-446-il782.
1975 12x70 3 Bedroom Mobile 46 Space lor Rent
Home, Nice Trxlltf 12500.00 2 1011, tor rent , Call 614-167·~38
080. SM at 31945 Wtlchtown
Rd . M!nnersvllla, OH or call 614- Country Mobile Home Park,
446-6117.
Routt 33, North ol Pomeroy.
loll , renltla, parts, NIH. Call
1983 14x70, good cond., 3 Bt., 614-Q92-i'179.
CA, deck, underp~, cona~&lt;* lfl~lnt. 1!1"·
lB.
47 Wanted to Rent
HIBB Aeetwood14xn, 3br, Iotti
Nice lwo bedroom apartmenl or
elec. 814· 24&amp;·5900.
small hou .. tar tldarty couple
1i88 Schutt with npand , 3 bed- In Pomeroy, Middleport arta .
rooms, 2 batha 1 heat pump, un- Relerenc" evsllablt. Call 614derpennlng ana conc,..ta 11ape, m -2a47 or 6,4-992-31n.
304-576-2m.
Wtnted to Rtn1 : a houH within
SPECIAL Factory to youtHt, 2 ebout 1&amp; mil• of Rio Grtnda.
or 3 b.droom1411'0 modale at Prtl1111bly rur11. 1114-687-1262.
tht unbe lievable price of
$12, gC)Q dtllvertd and Nl up .
Call 1-8Q0..729--4045 tor delalle.

PICKENS RJRNITURE
NawiUa.d
HoUH~d tumlahlng . 1'2 mi.
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleaunl, wv,
11 304-675 450
ca
·l
·
OuNn
tilt
water
bed,
headboard, padded tide ralls,
$200. 304-675-3117,11 na anawar
ltave mtiSI~.
RENT 'TO OWN
614-448-3158
6 pc. wood group $14.01 per
WHk . 4 poster ~room auha,
compltl• 115.20 par w.ek,
dinette with 4 chtlra 17.50 par
wHk. Magic Chel 14 cu. ft.
Rttrlgerslor $12.95 per week, 15
cu. fl . h"Hnr, $10.Kl per
wtek.VI'Ra Furnl1urt. Rt. 141, 4
mil•• o" Rt . 7-Cantenary.Open 7
days 1 wHk.
Roof &amp; house paln11ng, thin·
gllng roots, hou1t . ,.,.lr. 614·
388-11766 an., sp.m

I

I :

I

7S 900 Kaw. Mag rims, Good
u.... , el.ctronlc ~~~~r~ Newer
carbt. $825. 114Slz.
Kewuakl 1987 KDX 80, Excel-lent eondhlon. 614-44&amp;-4113.

75 Boats

r~=========~::========:!:~
54
63

Plano $75., Arllllclal Chrlatmll
lr" $10., Old sofa $20., Nice
large doghouse $50 ., Portable
sewing mach ine S60., Rot o-f Iller
$8.5 ., Washtrfdrytr $200 ., Clll
614-9112~7559 o• &amp;14~992-3049.

1i86 Baja 1111nder 180, A·1
cond, Inboard 140 hp, 1811 walk
lhru wlndlhJtld, lift jackets, 2
Mia of tklt, all covert and pull
COY.,, drlve on lrtUer, 304-&amp;755448.

56

Pets for Sale

JACK
GARDt++
All metal patented device controla fleas In !he home without
PESTICIDES. Results avernlght
BIDWELL CASH FEED ll&amp;J
GROCERY &amp; J O NORTH
PROOUCE.

Up"~hl tr•zer 18.3 cubic tt .
Froa
Condition $325.
Microwava, medlum size, Tapp1n 11!0. Zenith Color, lloor
et T.V. 25". 1125 _ 614·985- 16

3 AKC Reg . Bugle gun dogs. 1 1981 Corvtllt. Whitt on t»ack.
malt , 2 female . 4 mos. old, $50
ion
tach. If lnlernltd cal l 614 _245- Mirror T-Top1. All opl 1 . 1114gs 78 _
992~190.
1982 Buick L.e11b,.., 4 door, ln
AKC Basset puppies. Shots
condt!lon . Call 61 4-IQls1art~ . $125. ea ch. Francn
Vtntdum 6l4-667.JB56.
101 lftet 5p.m.

:::oo

Whirlpool Wllhtr $95, GE
wuher U5 , GE Orytf $75, Hot·
p&lt;Mnt rtfrlg. $95, WestlnghouN
$9~ OE rt1frlg. lil(e new
• ld b
ld
L)
h
$150, s • W' 1 • rtn g ., ar·
vest gOld, nice, $250., ei•c.
rtnga 30" 195, Whirlpool tl•c.
rangt :K)" 195. All In axe. cond.
and guarantHd. Skaggs Ap-pllancll. 614-446-7398.

,.,..l,..

53

Antiques

Buy Of sell. Riverine Anllquu ,
1124 E. Ma in Stttal, Pomeroy.
Hou111 : W.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lo 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6 :00 p.m.
614-9512 · 2~26 .

LUNCH BOXES. IC. Idl Only!
Paying up lo $150.00 lor Jetson 's bc)l. Highest pliea pald
for vinyl and met1/ boxn.
Bators you throw It eway give It
away Of sell It to cheap. Ctll
614-!}92-5657 Mare Fultz.
RECOROS. 33't-45's -78's·EP"s·
SO's-60"1
Jass-Ciassical·
Country.'a lg Band-Rock. 614 992-5657 Marc Fultz.
Top Cash paid. Old furn iture
euboards ,
q ullta,
Oflenlel,
paintings , 1oys , or entire tllalt
call collaet 304-525-3275, or 304·
523-6654.
54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

12 hp wh ... horu lawn tractor.
42 Inch mower , Hldrostel
lraneml11lon . New, completely
rebuilt engine, tu.rt tiru prk:t to

Mil. 614 ·902 · 2~1

18,000 BTU Am•na air-con·
dltloner $~ . AI1o Unlco large
chest trttzer $125. 614-ig2-3701
after .5 p.m. weekdays .
30 inch Copp.srtona g11 range.
614-446-4336.
8 His of Shuttare. If lnter ..ttd
call 614-446-;l968_
Air Conditioner 22,.500 BTU 1
yt.lr old . Under Warranty. Uka
new. 614-4 46-4606.
End of Season Clearance all
lawn mowert and string trimmart ln 11oc k no rtaaonable of·
fer rtll'uNd. Sldtrt Equipment
Company, 304-675-7421.
OE high '"ldency air eond, like
new, uNCI one summer, 30C67&amp;-211!i.

+++HAPPY

1i80 Chevy 4 wh"l drive pick·
up, 1~01'1 lttp aide . 1976 Corvett• Stingray. 1m Flreblrd
Formula. tf14-985-430fi or 814FLEA ~2-256i ask for Jim,

Lots

&amp; Acreage

'

Hood

1983 Cadillac Coupe, Ot VIlle.
1982 Cutlalt Supreme. 30ol-8752403.
1983 Oldt Cutlalt Clara, 4 door,
AIC, crulu, PS, PB, AM-FM
"lte. Asking $2000. 3l MPG .

AKC Reg. Miniatu re Schnauzer
pups, (aalt &amp; pepper) 5 wka. old.
!I female,1 male. 614--446-3493.
AKC
regie! orad
puppiaa,
Oashunds, Cocker Spaniela,
Pomeranian!, :104-675-2193.
C..ll 304-7n-D546.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED vthlcltl
from $100. Ford•. Mercadtt.
Dunrovln Fruit Farm. J utt off ot CorvettH. Chevys. Sufl&gt;lut.
Sr 681 E..t ol Alba ny. 614-6ga. Your l'ret. (1) 805-e87-tOOO EII.
6298. We ICCtpl food ltlmpe. 5-10189.
Amlt~ products, strawberriu,
peachea, green baana. 9-7 dilly. Wrecked 1184 Flaro PontiK. All
parte for ule, motor, llllna-t.Jia.
Cktnd Monday and July 4.
doore, ate. Phone 8M.tV2-3242.
Vegetables

Farm Supplies

&amp; Livestock

new horne conltructlon on
R1ybum Roed. f)av.d I"OIId,
county
water,
NMOntblt
realrlctlone. Information mtll.d
on requ•l. 304-675--S2!i3, John
D. O.rtach, no alngl•wldt
trallere, plea11.

Lt1e modtl 80HP JO dltMI trlctor 16950, 241 lnl'l round balar
I23H, 165 MF lraclor I3HO, 5211
MF round t.ltr 12495. Owner
will finance . e14·86-4522.

N.w Hollend 273 B11ar. New Hoi·

2 lata. Vaufta and Mldltonn at
Malgt
Memorial
GardanaVIIn,. Secllon. C7A L.at• 3&amp;C.
13,000 lor all. &amp;14-153-8444.

50 acrw le1ar1,
tenclng,

pl~ty

34 pa81ure
Wlttr,

wtlh

304~~

Cntom Molding. Dnk and t-lot
Tube. Call Ev•n1ngt. Bob Oavla
114-«a-3141Bob

111112 ac,_ Trlbbl&lt;l AoadOcl~d
Maton Countw-. Rem
no.... drilled well, vary nice,

Fcwmer Kindergarten lu.ehw of..
t.nng chlldc1,.. In my home. FT
ot PT. Structured aetlvltl... Cen·

304-122-3841.
1111211 Lol on FlavJOf BNCh Fla.
Wilking distinct to beach.
Blllw- O.morid Baach I 91.
Augut11no. Ownor -111152,
Local No.IM-«e-Gm.

61 Farm Equipment

12

1981 Chevy 3f4 lon Sllvendo
4xC loaded. 1a84 Prowler cernper 24' with air, awning, T.V. .,..
l.nna, ca.,.c call aft• 7 p.m.
114-:156-117'1
Vans

1981 Ford 414 4 ap, F·1110 381
ang, t3,500. 11111 Chav. Sl~
we,-.do, 4x4, auto trtne, JSO
eng, 12,500. 304-815--113i.

62

Holzarctlnic.

Wanted to Buy

1183 Chivy BMuvllte 7 pl.-n-

7~

/1

ANtS,___ _ _ __, r r - - - - - - . , . . . - - - - - - , 1

GLllf? GLUB

Campers

NtwaHour

Ill)) Cunenl Att.lr
Ill • az ra Wheel 01
FCMtuno
1D I!J) Night Court
(])) Moneyllne
II) Mloml VIce
1211 Mutlc Row Video
D Andy Gr1tflth

/

['lo, THAN~). l'M
r-IOT VtflY GIG 0~
fTHNIC fOop.

[ C A~NOT 1ELL
YOU HOW LONG I
HAVE WAITED FOR
THIS MOMENT,
FRIEND!

PHATSOUGI-\' S
e&gt;Aic.~

SHOP

44H221.
HENRYS ROOF PAINTING, 304175-6831 or :J04..57&amp;.21111.
HouMhokl
Malnttn~ne~ :
Aoollng, now"-lr, aiding ,
n-lrapalr, carpamry, odd lobo.
•tlmat•. 114-37'1--2820, eN tor
Uhch.

I'VE DWDED1l:JMAKE~ 15
A D'.Y OFF FOR AU...
FRIE:NDSHW CLLJ8 MEMBERS.

lODAY 'rtJLJ ~T
HAVE IV BE'
"'- F RIENDLY. /
~

THAT WAS A PRETT\-1
6 TlJPID IDEA .

-1

'

"

.. , J "

"' -.JJ' '· . . .

8fl5.,3802.

S.pCic Tonk Pumolng StOcO.lllo
Co. RON EVANS ~NTERPHISES,
Jockaon, OH 1-800~31.. 521.

BARNEY

PAW!!
DON'T OPEN
THAT--

&amp;

C.r1tr't Plumbing
andHN11ng
Fourth 1nd Prne
Oalllpo11a, Ohio

ASTRO-GRAPH
&amp;

Refrlgerat lon

General Hauling

A I A WoiOf Sorvlco. Poolo cl..
twne, wile. lmmedtat~1.000 or
2,000 gallono dallnry. Call 304-

18,000 mn... 11,400. 304-112.
3308.

Wltlllf"'In'l

18113 ford Cargo Von. 83.000.
814--441-1111. Before 5 p.m. or
con10C1 Clortontl Sorvlcoo Dapl.,

COUn1a, 2,000 lo 4,000 capocilyl
cleteme, DOOia, wella, •o. Cal

Wtttr

BERNICE
BEDE

OSOL

~'Your

~'Birthday

Hlull-.,

ret•, volume dlj.

304~-nl~t

Upholstery

1987' Ford Atro.l•r nn, er011lln1 condHion. I.A&gt;odod. NIIOO. -rar·o Uphollllorlnt 1988 Ford 1110, 4 drlve lng 1~ 001011y .... 28 ,..... Tho
lruck. Excollant condHion. In fllmfturo upiiOIOIIIing.
63
Livestock
optlone. SHOO. 114 441 8830 af. . Cllll :IOW1S-4154 lor ... ...
,., !lpm.
Um•t•
Purebred srmmental COWl &amp;
calfl with ragl.t:11tlon p1pere. 2 1188 Ford lui ala con'llrakH!
yNr old Slmmental bull. f*h- van. 12,1110 mlloo. $15,000. 814- Orohom UpltolaiOIJ Clln1•, :103
HIIHop Dr. Call lor il!ol!"mlltta
vlch b&lt;Ndlnt. &amp;14·3&amp;7.0483.

' ......... Cotl114-4411411.

a

Juty 12. 111110
More trave l than usual is a possibility in
the year ahead. There is a likelihood you
might lake a lrlp of some distance to a
place you'volong desired to visit and It
wm live up to your expectations .
CANCER (Juno 21.Ju1y 22) Whal you
can' t accomplish on your own today
can be achlevod with competent partners . You must be sure, however. both
parties have a harmony of purpoB&amp;. Try·
lng to patch up a broken romance? The
Aatro-Graph Matchmaker con help you

cermng two unre lated IO¥Oivemenls.
One perta•ns to something of 8 social
re ll:tiiOn Sh!p work . Ma1 1 $2 to Mat ch·
nature and the other is associated with
make r. P 0 Box 914 28 . Cleveland. OH
your
material aNairs .
44101 · 3 4 28
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Your g reat esl AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. II) You COIIId
successes to da y are li kely to come !rom be more fortunate I han usual in material
situation s vou manage lor others . For- ventures today . not only for yourself,
tunately. you 'll share in the benef 1ts or but tor people you ' re associated wl1h as
well.
advantages or those you aid
PISCES
(Fob. 20-March 20) Usually
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) Today you
might be called upon to arbitrate a mal· you are a reasonably caullous person.
ter between two diSSidents. You ' ll know but todav you might be inclined to lake
how to bring these parlies together in a a risk . Others may think of II as a gam ble. but you'll know It's more like a sure
manner that w1ll nullify their differences
LIBRA (Sept. 23- 0ct. 23) Some1hlng In lhlng .
whi ch you're presently involved can ARIES (Marcl1 21-Aprll 18) 11 lhere Is
yield a greater return than you first sus- something special you need today,
peeled . Analyze this matter again today don'1 keep It a secret. Poop'- you've
helped In th&lt;l past will be happy to asslsl
with an eye toward Improvement.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NGv. 22) Soclol con~ you now. Ask .
facts could be extremely helpful for you TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) lnslead ol
today. Someone you know might open 8 complaining aboul your pr-nt cirdoor for you thai you have been unable cumstances, take time to review all of
your oppor1unltles and benefits today
to jar loose.
and
you'll diiC&lt;lver you ' reln pretty good
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) Don·:
get rallied If It looks like you've invested" shapa.
In an early business skirmish today, be- QEM1N1 (May 21-Juno 20) You are cacause you are a stronger closer than an . pable of rather remarkable achievelpener . Be tenacious and you'll come ments loday, provided you are properly
mollvetod. If you think about how you
out OK .
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan. 18) Happy can lmpt'ove your material elrcumtidings could come lo you to~ay con· atances, this Should do the Job.
t o under sta nd what to do to m ak e the

1 Ooatl Cil 700 Club Wltlt Pat

kn ow that

EAST

four diamond tricks and the ace Of changing direction . It 's barely

Instead. to set the contract. West was trying to lure West into a terrible
needs to ftnd East wi1h one spec1fic error. But that would give South a
card - the queen of clubs . By shiflmg hand w1th only 12 high-card points.

to the lO of clubs after winmng the Pereentages favor East's holdmg the
fl,..t spade trick , West plays to defeat club queen. and West is right to go for

the contract. Yes. there are pitfalls in that contingency;.
. ..,.,....,...

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

44 Dutch

1 Speed

commune

6 Average

45 Put lorth

9 'The
Tempes r ·

DOWN

role
10 ··sonanza "

1 Abominaled

role

cresl

3

12 Lead · tm
alloy
Sanla s

5 Ennoble

reindeers

6 Covenant
7

I
8

16 Dog s do c
18 Altar

of

Zone

t t o30 (J)

Gaor90

Wllhlngton fPI 3

Of 4) (HO)
11 ~ 8 tonlgh!Show
Stereo.
(I) tlpOrlaCantor

oac-..Q
(I) American All Forum
Q

(])) Sporta Tonl,ht

81 G 'Stlngnlr CBS late
Nigh! SHngray trias to find a
deadly 8mallpo• agenl. (R)

a an s~~ga

D M1911111tt, P.l.

12:00 (!) lleNIMIM T'::f"

·~ ~
Tonlgllt
P.l.

Ill Magnum,

• II]) Love CornnoiiCIIC!IllaoDIII

iiJ NewaNighl

I!! Clime Story Luca
attempts to use a strike to
gain oontrol of Las Vegas.

23 C ust o m

33 Pr o vide

motion

24

Is lamic

Sport s

food

selling

34 E nglis h

25 lll1nois

river

c tly

36 Analomical
nelw01 k

es labh s h e d 39 Mod e rn

14 C andle

27 C ann e n ·s

t7 Old

1

note

41 King

29 Aunl ( S p

,.-,-:--r.,-,-:--1":'-

22 Tell

C aesar

lover

fTHJSIC8i

2t P1 c kpock e l

-

Com-

of s heep 26 Long

DD S
( sl

32 C enlury
planl

11 81eed

lation
f9 P~rt

20 V e tc h
seed

monlh

c on s te l ·

I

(Lal . l

glanc e

23 Subs &lt;d e
24 "L o ve ·

L'

in Leghorn
I~

27 Giver
28 Func l1on
29 Fashion
30 Ancient
limes
3t Whole
35 In s e c t
36 R e 1gn lnd1 a
37 Needle
fi s h
38 Flavoring
40 Speec hify
42 Exude
43 Age s o f

man.

by

number

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES -llere's how to work

] i 11

it :

AXYDLRAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One

Twilight

Yesterday ' s Answer

a s c ore

15 Summer

(])) Moneyllna
II) Mloml VIce

D

Lorele &lt;

4 Hall

t3 One of

(Fr

E&lt;-f'it~

2 Mounla1n

aa

12!1 C o n - With Olnah

possl-

clubs - in short . lricks to burn . And ble that South held only J · x of spades
th e conlract would succeed
and the quee n of clubs . and !hat South

·~
11(1) 1111
IIIG 8 Newo
ID I!J) Arunlo Hell

Stereo.

+KQ5
+A J;

changtng

.1 6;
+AQ 2
able to modify your plan of attack as '1'108 42
e 1ther declarer or defender, when you • 10 7 4
• 8 62
r an..., the necesstty .
+Q43
K 10 9
Aller South gol to three no· trump.
SOUTH
West made the normal lead of a heart.
.KJ
East won the are and returned the
.K J 6
three-spot, won in dummy with the
tAJ93
queen as South played the jack. South
+a 762
now played a spade back to his jack .
Vulnerable: N e ither
West took the queen West could now
Dealer
: South
safely return a third heart. selltng up
his tO while he still had the ace of
F..a.sl
Wr st
Norlh
Soutb
spades as a sure entry . And what
Pass
Pass
I+
I+
would the heart return accomplish '
3 NT
All pass
I NT
Pass
The defende,.. would take two heart
tricks and two spades. Declarer would
O pening le ad: 'I' 2
end up with nine lricks from among
three spade tricks. lwo heart !ricks, L----,.,--,----,--,----!

11 oatl (J)IIebnan

• (I) NtghUino

1~ UN

•Q;

horses in midstream 1s not wise. But at WEST
the bridge table it 's perfeclly accept ~

l2ll Quantum laap

1111 Night Coull

__----,

NORTH
.10 9 843

James Jacoby

Eques lrians

a

9o30 II ~
Ooar John John
dreads breaking up with a
single motner and her
daughlel. (R) Sloreo. C
fl
D I)) B-ator l&gt;tace
Kiswann 2t sl bortnday pany
sets the stage lor a
showdown . Stereo t;1

10o30 (I) American Palchworl1 Visil
dancehalls and parades 1n
New Orleans · back streets
1D crJ1 To1l
1211 C100k &amp; Chaae

Heating

Common:lal and R.-lal
wlrtng, new MrVIcl or rtpalra.
Lic«~Nd Elocblclana. Pooqoal&lt;o
Elaclrlc · 1 - . m l.
R... Mnllel or commertlat
wiring, new wvk:e or rwpalrw.
LlceriHd eltc:trielan. Ridenour
Electrical, 300.e1!-1181.

si~ing

Sam must stop 8 lovely
political revolutlona_!l from
bombing a lab. (AI t;1
Ill MOl/lEo Pat Qarmt And
BIUy The Kid (AI (2 05)
111211 Q (I) China Beach
McMurphy and a marine see
who can eat and dnnk the
mosl. (A) Slereo. Q
(I) Newtwetch
Ill Man-Made In America
Figure In A Landscape
1111 •IDI Rucueo 911 A
high schoolteacher sa~es
students from 8 lab
a&lt;plosion. (R) Sweo Q
18 crJ) New Twllk;tht Zone
(])) Evening Newo
(12 Newo

R.......dollngo llobl'- Homo
reptlr1 roofing, concrwta work.
tleclncal, ,.umblng expll'itnc:e.
Reference. lneurance clelrne
.x:epltd. IM~101t

81"-'446-3888

By

M.D. Ooogie saves 1M lila o1
111&lt;1 coolesl dude 'n the
school. (A) Slareo . C
illl • G Jeko And The
F1tm1n While in~eSI!QBtlng
an auto accident surprising
e~idence turns up . (AJ
Sl8feo . C
IOILarry 'King Llvel
II) MOVIE o Wheels Of Torrar
(2 00) S1ereo.
Naohvllle Now

II~

Davia
S.W-Vac
Sa."Yic:e,
G.orgH CI'Mk Rd. P1rt1, ·~
plloo, pickup. and doll-r. 114448.0294.

87

Night Caur1 Mac 's

Raber!SOit

Rooting and Siding. 'Trailer
roor. painted. FrH estln'lltte.
Fred Utrb, 31)4.113-8111.

NatOnabMI

a

a

\

Ron'e TV Service, apldtllzlng
In Zan~h alao MfVIclng moat
other brands. KouM calls, 1110
aoma appliance rapalra. WV
304~-ni-2388 Oblo 814-14&amp;-2454.

Rotery or cable~ tool drilling.
Moat well• compl.ted Amt dey.
Pump 1tltt and INI"VIca, 304-

BRIDGE

group, lhe Slarlighls . (A)

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS'
fOR ANSWER
.

~.........:....::.:._

11a DI]J Doogle Howaer,

Unt-

lE Tl[RS IN SQUARES

"The tough thing about true humility," complained the
stuck up fe llow, "is you can't BOAST about it."

thinks her rota as mother is
ending . S1ereo. l;l
1211 On Stage
9oatl II~

Complete the chu ckle quoted
by f,llrn g in l h t~ mium g WO(dS
you develop I. o m step No 3 below

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Treaty - Noble - Youth - Nudism - BOAST

gets nervous when she

reunited with his old

Gardner'• Home lmprovemtrll:
Rn. I Com., Rooting, p1intlng,
gutter, patio dtcka, and ll:c. 1114--

e

a

TRY OJ? IJIJIJ
ALL- CIDCCX.Ai£
£¥£Kt'I)E 131rtrt£

.

&amp;lo PRINT NUMBERED
{:II

8o30 (I) MaJor League Beaebaa
II Ill]) Heed 0t The
Cloao Slereo. l;l
1111 1D G NonNI LHt Anne

EEK AND MEEK

.

L_.l..-....L._l.._.l..-~.L.......J

loOS Ill MOVIEo Apach&lt;l (155)

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondHionll llfatlrn~~ guarant •. Local retarenc• l\lmiahtcl.
F,.. Htlmat11. Call collect 1·
114-237-4488, day Of night.
Roglft e...men1 WatMpr~

85

raincarnatod. (A) Stereo. Q
II a Ill)) Growing Paino

a

Home

Electrical

ol a woman who claims to be

(])) PflmaNewo
She Wrote
Canvorutlan Wltlt Dinah
D MOVIE: SUck (AI (2o00}

Improvements

84

a2 llewllched
7o35 Ill SllnfOrd And Son

I!! Murder,

1185~418 ~

Plumbing

az a

lii!J)
MOVIE: Barfty (A I
(2:00)

1983 ToyoCa Dolphin ~or
home. Elty on ga•, tow miLaat,
IC, ~f contaln.d. $11,500. ~~

-. 114-«a-~13.

a

Slareo. Q
(I) Ill Ltve From Lincoln
Center Gerard Schwarz
conducts Mozart's opera.
The lmpresano 12 00)
Stereo.
1111 Ill G Till a Ia America,
Che~lo Brown, Pall 6 (0 o30)

11114 S1arcraH pop-up campo..
SIMpt! I . Good condhion .•M!Mt-2480.

Camping trtlllr tar Ilia or rent,
Mcdanihan'a Tr11ller Court
wv. 304-1T.Wa48.
Hunter Spacial fold out camper

7o30 II~ Family Feud
(I) U.S. Olympic Foollvol
Q
Entartalnment Tonlglll
Ill)) Marne'• Family
1111 111
Joopardyll;l
Glilll M'A'S'H
(])) Croaoftre

a

&amp;

.

.

+

loGO Cil Gaorvo Woohlngton (P1 3
Ot 4) (1 :40)
II ~
Unoolvld
Myotorleo Examine lhe story

7- (I

.

A famous comic says you
can tell people almost anything once you get them

•u1 3

1o05 Ill Jofferoano

II

I

~--,~~,-=,~.....::...,;;1'-.:..:,I.....:.:_TI--4 Q

Mogulne

Ol.l Al.lTh.

FRANK AND ERNEST

A VHy E

..-~-G-E-0-1-N-N-...,,

11) Spa~oCentor
tnllde Edition
(I) IIl MacNeil Lehrer

Dtl-3844.

82

.

1!/ Scarecrow &amp; Mro. King

II a

WAfER

Outchcren, Mit-contained,

81

I

NBC Nightly Nowa

5PITTI~

goad condl1ion. $1200. Cal IM-

-7.

a

iS~ PM

Motor Homes

1m

2

DNewhlf1
8:35 Ill Andy Grittlth
7oatl

Wa,. lo bu~ radl.,or tot 1m
Ford pick up 302 engine, 304IJ'$.5165.

79

1I I I I

~~.--r~-rr~t-,1-TI--1 ~

181!J) Andy Qrlftlth

Budget:
Tranemlulone; All
Typn, UMd I RebuiH, 30 dl.,.
to 1 year wlrrlnly, own.r: Bill
Flowtrt. 614·24s-&amp;677 or 1'14319-2263.

17S-8311).

441-2700.

1

II a Ill]) ABC Newtl;l
Etectrtc
ContiCt 1;1
illl ID G CIS Nria 1;1
18illl TllrM'o Company
1211 Top Card

&amp;

OW van, cu10111 Interior toeded,

Wanted to Buy uNCI UobUt
Homn. Call 114--448-017&amp;

· wouldn ' l you kn o w 1Lwe o nly g e t
16 miles to I he gallon .

&amp; 4 WD's

11111 Dot1110 4 wltNI drlve
olckup, $1,500. 1~ ·~
I•UO.

11nd N B•l•r. John O..ra Raila,
manure tprNdtre, moww• cui·
Uvatof'IJ Oliver com plckars,
o1har 1lald roady aqulpmon1.
Hown Farm Machinery, At. 124
I Mayhew Rd., Jackeon. 0,.._
288~G44 .
'

Auto Pans

be·

REHUGS

I

(I) Body
1Il3-2-1

Accessories

Trucks for Sale

1981 Chevy Slapsldt . ~0.
fu~*ll• Grut Cond. 114-

73

76

I

II)) WOfld fodoy
II) He-Man
D t Dnlam Ot Jeannie
8:01 Ill lleve~y Hillbillies

Mercury M1n:rul11r Spaclallst.
Factory trained, bonded. Prtcl·
alon Mobile Marin•. We comtto
you! 614-259-.5m .

Services

ru::

Jlm'e Farm Equipment, SR. 35,
West Gall lpoila, 1114-448--1777;
Wide ltltcllon new &amp; uud firm
tractorw &amp; lmpltmtnta. Buy,
1111, trade, 8:00-5:00 w•kdeyt,
Sat. till Noon.

Lott &amp; ecretgt nallablt for

ca•

Oragonwynd Can art Perala n, 1D83 Oldt. All poM~r, In good
Siamese 1nd t-tlmalayan kltttnl . shape. 814-1192-n17.
614-446-3844 aH•r 7 p.m.
198A Chrysler E Sert.., air, Ill
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ava . whMI, cruiM, low mllnga, no
Polnl Pltuant , 304-ti75-2063, tO rus1 . good wo"'. c1r. ef4..4C8..
gal ttl up $14 .99 and 10 g•l ~90--~·_ _ _ _ _ _ __
complete $43.25
-1984 Cutlasa Sierra Broughsm.
Groom end Supply Shop-Ptt Dtnel, loaded, all Oflglnal. Sell
Groom ing . All breed s. All S1yl... for payo". 614--446-2308 or 24&amp;-lams Pal Food Oealar_ Julie :11611
::.4::.·-,--,- -- - , - -Webb. Call 614-446-0231
1984 Olde Delta, excellent con. Peking••• puppies. AKC R~l• dhlon. $4QOO. 132 Butternut,
Shots and wo rmed . Pomeroy, Ohio.
lered
Mother.'Father on preml• es . 614992-2600
1985 Chevy Cavalier. Al.llo., AMFr.t stereo casutte. 12800. 114Rad &amp; Wh ile Copper· Nosed 885-4418.
Beagles . 8 Weeks old $65.00
1985 Chrysler New Vortler. 4
Eacfi . 614·256-627S
door Sedan. Every o~lon .
Slbtrlan Husky pup. t1 monlht 36,000 actual mllee. S1me ••
old . Spay.ct. 614·992 -"76.
new. $6,100. 614·i92-&amp;ng.
Squlrrtl Oogs mala Cur, 2yra 1985 Ranaun Alliance OL, 1.7
old, good $6&lt;10. Male Mounllln engine, $1,275. 304-882-3793.
Fleat 1 12 1tarted . Female
Mountain
Flnt 1 started. 1987 Z-28 lroc C.maro. l..oadtd.
Female Mounta in Fiell 8 month. $11,000. 614-1192·2421.
304-875-6132.
1988 Oodg• Colt. Excellent c~
dltlon. l3gso. 61M46-235i.
57
Musical
1988 Ford Tempo, aulo., air,
Instruments
loaded. )5,000 mi. $5200. 6
Regular J&amp;r.t Customara alwaya 441-0411.
recelva more than ltuty 'ra ehar- 1989 Chevy Bitzer. .lppro1.
ged lor. J&amp;M Piano S.rvlct . Bill 28,500, AJC, running board1,
Werd 304-862·2325. Ask ma custom Uru. 614-";1112·2603 alttr
about "J&amp;r.t".
5p.m.
Studio Plano by Baldwin . Good 1989 Dodge Datana, mull .. n,
condUion . $400 Or bell offer. call 304-615-3000 mon-frt g....e
614-992·7062 eher 7p.m.
p.m.
VCR $100. Guitar and amplifier 1989 Plymouth Reliant, 2 dr.,
$40, cei ling tan $15, Maytag 20,000 mi. Good eondlllon. &amp;14Wringer washlf SSO, rlnH tube 379·2n&amp;.
S20. 614-94!i-2526 .
1gag Thunderbird tor Nit. Taka
ovar ptymtnle. 614-247--47'93.
58
Frulls &amp;

Kanrno,. dryer. Excellent eondi·
tlon. Almond color. 614-H2-7175.

...., '' .,,. . .

1gso Sun bird, rtbuiH ~lne,
runt good. $600. 614--379-- l
1981 C.adllllc Sedan Dlvllle.
Good condition, tlr, till, crulu,
AM -FM caaun •. $2200. 614-3677885.

:,:c86:0-B:-a- y-;:ll-na-r-=c=-.-pri
7C14
:-:-:1c:-c
12 ft: -,-o:
50
hp. 304-875·2039 after 5:00pm.
... ...... p
ft
1wv• rocraft 18 Hah and ekl
88hf Evtnrl.ldtl, 304-fi75-1988 If·
tar :00 PW.
_ __ _ B_OA
_ TE
--c-R:-S- - - -

the

low to form four simple words

(D SporlaLook

1978 Glutton 17 ft. lrl·hull,
Clean wheat SffiW, $1.50 per 100hp, In botrd outborad, uc
bale. 614·256-6011.
cond, $3,895. 304-675-6470.
1978 S11Star 1• V2 ft . trl..flaul10
Hay for Salt. Clover &amp; Timothy.
&lt;#
Round Bal.. in the Fiekl. 81 4-- hp, M•rc., All equip. Call after 7
p..m. 614-446-i243.
2• 5-5593

llghled marquee •ign '83 Renault Reliance, 4 door,
W!lattart S299. Free dallvary. aulo, good cond, 64,500 miiH,
f)lastlc lttlers $37.50 box. AAA $1,350. 304-675-4585.
algn1 HJI)0..533-3453. An '(lime.
1910 Ford Falrlant 500, tn~lnt
Sharp limon l"Vk exercise blk•, 302, two door, actual m I"
dart board, li • new. CW 81,"2, after 5:00 PM 304~75-recorda, mav be collectable 5956.
Items. Car· 70 Chevrolet Malilw
Station Wagon . 614·446·1681
tV'S Pontiac 52,000 actual
mllea, good running cand $600.
Single bed with box spring and 13 ft .("mana deep tr..zt. )(M.
ma1tres1 . 4 tires P185-75-R14 675-1595.
$50. 1985 ford Temps XL.. 304·
882·2796 after 5:30.
197&amp; Chevy Nova. 37,000 tasy
- - -mllte, n.w tlrat, gas shoeka,
SP"d Queen washtr for s ale. comple1t brakiS, alignment,
Naada minor rapairt _ 614-Qg2. new AM-Ht cassette with
1175 .
epeaktn, 6 cyl., PS , GrAI gas
rnlleage. $3000 firm . e14-99255
Building
5657.
Supplies
1978 Thunderbird Exc: . Cond.
low mlluge. 614·367-7061.
Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude Win· 1979 Oldl Cutlasa; runs good,
ters, Rio Grandt , OH C.U 614· $500. el 4 -66~lS1!1 ahar 5 :oG.

WILL KILL YOU

lo30 "~

Hay &amp; Grain

Autos for Sale

8

(I) Oegraatl High Caitlin
dramatically discovers that
Claude 's commitment is a
lacade. 1;1
Ill Reedti1g Rainbow 1;1

Bl!T THOSE LINE DRIVES

&amp; Motors

L.umber Hlloned and plain, 314
to11f2 Inch . Red and blaek oak,
wild cherry, WilmA, poplar, aah,
and maple also baltboard,
eating, jams, etc. 614-446--8038.
Nl
1
1
ct 1/4 d amend cluster, Ill n
10 f( w-allow gold. Size 6. $200 .
614-446--4054.

245-5121.

''TI-\OV SMLT NOT BE AFRAID
OF THE TERROR B~ N16f&lt;T. NOR
OF T~E PESTILENCE THAT
WALKETH IN DARKNESS ... "

,IIW'I

71

R.arrange letters of
0 lovr
Krambled words

aa Ill)) 1111
•az
SNow•
11) tnllde The PGA Tour

1m 17 ft . S11rcr11ft 111-Hull
Boat. t25 HP, Evlnrudt EnSine,
Livestock
compllll• lop, n- upl&gt;ot• ory.
Clll &amp;14-286-1318 after 1:00 p.m.
u-ut.tlna ho...a bolt. 34
Registered polkHf Hereford Bull, .. ,"' ,_
2yeart old, $900. 304-675-3988.
ft. Ex. cond. 1114-446--4109 or 1114_3-N'-'-2:.CJ-'-'
IIO .- - - - -- - -

64

11

WOlD

UMI

- - - - - - - l~hd ~y CLAY I . POLLAN

Mc:Connlctl I;!

lor Sale

ID !991:l llf NEA. Inc:

Merchandise

13

•~

11185 Honda 100 llagna -

Excellant condition. A•
king $1200. Can 614""46-M&amp;&amp;
botwollrt 5o30 I toOO pm.

JULY

PUULII

1:00 (J) Hardcaatte And

u,....

Miscellaneous

Page -

S@\\~lA-&lt;Z£!rSs

TIIAT DAILY

EVENING

1183 Suzuki Tempt«. Exc.tltnt
condition. 5400 mi.... Alto lncluct. twlmel. Call 1ft• 7:30
p.m. 614-62·7175.

Save 10% on all carpet In stock
witfl ad In p1per, Mollohan Fur·
nlturs 614-446.."J'I44.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Ollvt St., Gelllpollt . New &amp; Uud
tumltufl, haattrw, Westem &amp;
Work boot e. 6,4-446-3159.

'" '·Good

WED.,

ti,&amp;OO.

llrm. !04-175-2072 averdnga.

I II

S"'AFU® by Bruce Beattie

35

ped, 1,200 ICIUII mlltl,

0

u;:.-:· Riv:·RS~ Be~fct''St~~·· f)orta~e

Mobile Homes

BEAlJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from t1921mo. Walk to ahop &amp;
movies . C1ll 614-446·2568. EOH .

3 Br. r.nch, gaa fumiCII, CA,

1183.

AnonowOocl co,. Conlor; Cllll Ooorgoo Ponab'- S.wmlll, don~
304~·- lor Pllzlllo.
houl [uol caii:J04.411-1H7.

dtpoalt, school but roult, 304·
576-2309.

2 roomt &amp; bath tl75fmo. office
space S1001mo. ell utllltlaa In cluded. Latayet1a Mall, 614-4467133, &amp;1H46~222 .

114-114~2202 .

lenary 114-441H1230.
lloiOIJ

614,.46-025-1.
h:c
ou_•_• _· c3-cbod
-croo
- m
- •.
$200. month $100. clllning

"s1-'-,c.r.::
ooc.m=

Wanted to Do

173-~46 .

··DRIVER SEMINAR·•
COM TRANS, INC will bt hold·
ing an open houN umlnar In POSTAL JOBS
t18,3i2.S87,
conjunction
with 125fyr. Now hiring. Call p) 60S.
MOUNTAINEER
TECHNICAL. 687-&amp;ooo Ext. P-4562 tor current
SCHOOL on THURSDAY JUL.Y lilt.
12, 1g90 from 1:OOpm to S:OOpm READ BOOIC.S FOR PAY I $100 t
and 7:00 pm to 9:00pm al
Call
1--t00-847.7878
11wo oECONOIDDGE
($0.ttlmln) or wrt1ao PASE -33E,
3U Jackaon Plko
Gllli~lt, Ohio
~Si Llncolnway, N. Aurora, II.
Wheth• you ,. 1n experienced ·k r =--:o--::---::---::--:-cc-c
driver or have no axptr~ 11
ephone SoticHor. Evening
til, we encour1ge you to hours. Hourly plut generou1
Transportation II hart comml.. lon. Serious lraquirn
to atay tnd COMTRANS CAN
1 614 092 7TI 1
GEl" YOU STARTED!FOR MORE on y. . .
.
INFORMATION CALL;1-800-456- Warned. O.ntel Rtctp!lon ist.
6092
Progr... lva Dental prtctlca
COMTRANS
... ~dng fritndly, outgoing ~r·
Genertl Freight division of aon to join their denta l taam In
Not1h American Van Llnu.EOE
providing qlllllity patient cart.
O.n1tl and Computer experinea preferred. Pltau 11nd
AVON · All erus, Call U..rll~n reeume to Dr. Larry kennedy,
WNvtr 304-a82-2645.
«1 G.nnl Hartinger Psrkway,
All· S.ar Watarbttdt It now lllddl&lt;lpo11, OH "'JGO
hiring tor lt't MW etMI In Ohio Wtndy'e now hiring tor au
River Plaza. No Elparience Shlhe. Apply In P.,-.on. Sun . _
neceeNry. Must bt •n•getlc, Th..n. Between 2&amp;4 £ .0 .£.
hard working &amp; entoy working
wHh peopa.. Salary ph• Com-.
12
Situation
ml ... on.
Apply
at:.~II-Star
Wtlt!Wdl, Ohio Riv.r Plau,
Wanted
Gllllpolla,Dh.
Care for ttdtlrly In my home
Amateur photog111phara wan- Men or woman. Must bt am·
ted! No 11. Up lo t1,800 dally
Also
accapt
Call 1·1100·230-36311 (U91mln.) bulatory.
or write: PASE·517G, 161 S. Un- AlzMI"*- palltnll . 614-667·
1183.
CG~nway, N. Aurora, 11110542.
Day care Provider has
Anernbte product• al home 3C.rtltild
opanlnga tor children ot any
urn up lo $400 Mtllly, no ••· age. H you live In Melg1 or
perte~J 11ay wont. For mort
Athlne CountiH you m1r, bo
lnfarmahon call 1-504-813-t111M eligible
for fr• babya ning
Ext. 1150.
through the Department ol
AVON I All ArHa I Shlrtey Human s.rvte... C1111tled In
Firat Aid and CPR . SR 7, TupSpoara, 30U75-1421.
pert Plains, Oh. 114-6&amp;7-6Jzg or
Babylttter neeMd In my home 3 eM-187..&amp;183.
•v•nlnp a WHk. OccaaakNal/y
Roommate
fat
6
Sol. Momlnp. IM401.o811
monlha.Fumlahtd, Neat, NonCOOK, mutt N •vallab.. for all Smoker. lnltrvltw Erqlrtd. 614·
houro IJIPIY In paroon Holiday «HeM
Inn OOIIIpolla, Ohio. 450 Pika
91, kanauga, Ohio.
18
Wanted to Do
Eam mont!' by 1ha WHk. Join
th• numb«a to dlmonttratt Car I lawn mow« rtlptlrt, pick''Chrfstma•Around-The-Worid ... up and dtllnry. Moblla homes
Juty.OeCember. Leiva name, unblock.d I rtblocktd, roota
add'"l. and phone number on p1lnted. 304--578·2818.
anawarlng urirlco.l14-182.e31t. C.re tor elderly In my hom•,
EARN IIONEY ANding bookal 304-113-5248.
UO,OOOIYr. lncomo po1an11al. Cu81om mad• Country curt1lna
Now hfrlnt. (1) 105~7- with 1 or 2 rufflll, FHtoone
Ellt. Y..Qf.2.
Flagl &amp; C..c1dn, uph~•te.:ed
Comlctl. Any tlze, any f1brk .

EJdlrty woman army _vetertn
good ciMnlng 11c1J 1o do
bllh"""" and k110hln, 304-&lt;IJ'$.

18

Immediate opening tor pan-lime 21
Business
nurelng auietant. Mull bt llnOpportunity
lble and willing to work all
lhUt•. Prater certlll.d but will
INOTICE!
11111n. Apply In peraon at
America,.
Pomeroy
3675g OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO.
Rocktprlngt R01.d Pomeroy, recommends that you do butl·
nna whh people you know end
Ohio. i:OE.
NOT to a.nd money thro1.19h the
Opening tor elderly care In my mall ur'llll you have lnvullgtltd
home. Good reft..-.ncts. 31)4. IMoHerlng.
ParHime Patient S.rvlc• ...._
tittlnt to WOJk In flmlly plan·
nlng centers in Malga, Qalllt,
ancfltwrtnc:t countl ... Mutt be
experienced In medical onica
pntCIIcn and client rtlatlona.
Responelbll petition lot a m...
lu,. Individual wtlh good
Judgemtm •nd HnliHvlty to
,.productlv• hearth needs of
woman end t.mltl... Mual b4l
will
organized;
ha va
dtmonalraiiKI compettnctl wfth
flgurM
and
recordkNplng.
Mutt be ab._ to wort. under
guldtllnll with minimal eu~r­
vislon end htvt luptt'lof verbal
communleltion ekllla. RequlrH
,.ueb.. lr~~naportatlon; flexibility of time and ablltly to trevtl
to othtf agency ofrlcea 11
needed. Evening, Saturday and
wMkday hourt are to bt ex,.c·
ltd. Send rHuma end rwo
tmploymant
reterenc:es
lo
Planned
Parenthood
of
Southtlll Ohio, 3M Richland
Avenue, Athtn~ Ohto 4510"1, by
July 11, tHO. EuEIESP.

'

$45. Btd tnm• $25, Outen
gun. Baby
manr
.....
&amp;
Slul35
&amp; king
frtme
$50.Sla
Good
Nlldlon ol bodroom aul111,
mat1l cabinets, headboards $30
antt up to $65.90 day• eam• ••
cath with approved credit. 3 mi.
out BulaviUt Rd . Open 9 A.M. to
5 P.M. Mon , lhru Sal. Call 6l4446 3:l2.

8

1183 Honda C8X50, luHy equip-

I ,I

The Daily Sentinei-

Television
Viewing

1182 Yameha 750 Maxim. Rtd.
axe. cond. $1,000. Eve'e 8,.._371-21111.

I

Ohio

Middleport.

3711-21114

Merchandise

LAYNE 'S FIJRNITURE
Sofa• and chat,. pricN from
$395 to $995 . TabMit $50 and up
to $125 . Hld•a·bld• 1390 to
$595. Recliners 1225 to 1375 .
L.amps $28 lo $"125. Dtnet111
1'109 end up to $495. Wood table
w-8 chalre $285 to $795. O.aka
1145 up lo 137!. Hutchla $400 &amp;
up, bunk bedl comp ..te with
m1Urtt1 1295 end up to $395.
baby bedl $110 Matt,.aHt or
box eprlnp full or twin 178, llrm
.$38, and $98. Queen Hts $275 1!.
up, King $350. 4 d111wer chnt
169. Gun C.blnetl 6, 8, &amp; 10

Pomeroy-

1181 1!&amp;0 Yamaha he. Cond.
!1,030 Actual mil• 1725. 614-

Goods

41 Houses for Rent

1990

Motorcycles

1980 Kawatakl 750, $400. 614&amp;&amp;t-3S15 afl• 5:00.

446-4425.

Rentals

.....

74

Unturn!ahtd,
one-bedroom
IPflrtment. Second lloor, corner
Second and Pine, Galllpoll1.
Stove and r•lrlg1111tor. Water
provkttd. No pela. Ralerer~eu
requlr~ . $225 per month. 614446-4249, 614-446-2325 or 614-

51

2

ALL. Yard Sal11 Must Be f)ald In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the da~ bator• lht ed Ia to nm .
SundiW' edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. MDnd1y edition • ~ : DO
p.m. Saturday.
Big Yard Sate 120'112 Tens Rd.
Thursday July 12th 1hru July
14th g.7

11 .
Larry Wright

For Lease

Routt 2 Asl'1ton, 1 ICrt lotak 3
mlltl lOUth Gallipolis Loc 1,
pubUc water, no restrictions ,
some with river frontage, 304·
511-2331.

~
c,1,!;~

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Wednesday, July 11 • 1990

Middleport . Ohio

letter stands for another . In this sample

for the three

L's, X

A is

used

for the two O's , etc . Single letters ,

apostrophes, the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hinls . Each day

the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

H

Z F LT

VRKBMLTETV

IZRDMKMIZTE

5 ZFS
CT
R K,

SWEPK

V M

RPSM

" IFH

F K

K

5 ZT

K5MI'l ,

TLTEII S ZRPQ
Q

R S

MDV

HMW

-

QM

.

KMWEBT
MGKBWET
Ye•t•wd•v'•Cryptoq•ote: LIFE IS A FLAME TUAT
IS ALWAYS BURNING ITSELF OUT, BUT IT
CATCHES FIRE AGAIN EVERY TIME A CHILD IS
BORN. - G. B. SHAW
() 1990 by King FAaiUUtS Syndicate . Inc

�</text>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35873">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
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              <text>July 11, 1990</text>
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