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                  <text>Page- D-8-Sunday Times-Senttnel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohto - Potnt Pleasant. W. Va.

Ohio Valley Bank ...
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FAMILY PRACTICE

, I

I

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

I

- OFFICE HOURS Monday &amp; Thursday
8:30 a,m, • 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday - 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8:30a.m. - 12 Noon
Saturday Appointments Available
New Patients • Walk-Ins Welcome
IPOINT PLEASANT MEDICN- CENTER!

Our Su re -"1

South ( f'ntral Ohw
dnd

llluruli •J s1n1 rn&lt;..

ll tg h lll !111• lmH'l Xrto:.;

l ll .tllU' of 1.1111 I ll Pl'll'l'nt
Exh' nd !'d hlrt'I'IL"'l
Monday through \\ P dne~da .\'
Unsrtlsonabh
cool wll h ,,
Ch&lt;.ill('(' o f ShO\H' I s Morul.l\ .Jnd
Tu rs d a\
F',ur
Wrrlnl' '-olL I\
Ht ghs durtng !he fWit Od mttlTJh
rn thl' ~O s LO\~S Moml &lt;l\ hO tn h~
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101 \Tt l ,\

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'-'

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
11 5 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY
~92-21 04

dild

\\-, dtl!''i dd\

(304) 675·1675

HUGE
SAVINGS!

' "''' 1

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Hurrv
While
Selection

COOVERSE
" I n•

DYN'IMIC

&amp;lfP~I

A.ll{'.H

l'fi1J(VIf

I \Oil I' ll I•Q

~~~~~fR

01rf' l!lf

Lasts!

FREE T-SHIRT
WITH PURCHASE

\ln onl\oll• ~ • • •l •

• 11
rl"

•p I

" "

MON &amp; FRI nL
8 P.M.
TUES .. WED .. THUR TIL
7 P.M.
SATURDAY TIL 5 P.M.

\tntnln
I •

Aff i\J I( f

thl'n hrf'Pd

1n

Ohto

lm~In\.t' mt ' nl

[\Itn

Herd

AssDf'tatton

" t,mdtngs
lloltel'o.., H nb ll 'l O F cu\Tio.., had ,1
1ollm g hl'r d d\f' r .1g!' of FU~O
pound s )WI &lt;'OV. w11h a hund n'd
&lt;'O"- ht'td To qu.JIIfv f01 th r
,m ,nd d dall\. ntu~l f{•t •d Pu!lncl
clllfl br In thr lOp fl\!' j)( J(_l'nllfl
m tl k pr odu1'11Dn tn lhPII "ldtl'o..,
JH{J ,\ st.tnd1ngs
Hoi1PJ .., HobiPln l '.r1 m~ II'

ce 1vrd a plaque and pen '"I and a
sp&lt;'rlal rN !Iflcatr 1n rerogntt ton
Of lhC'It &lt;.!Ch!P\'Pn1C'nl
T hr dWel l d \\as presrntPd b\
C'Ia tg MPranda du11ng a rrcrnt
VIS it IO lhP fa rm

"On!)

a se ler i

few dall'lrs

quaiLfV f0 1 thtsav. d td."Mrrandd

'I I' " awatdrd na11onal l\ 10
onh th C' top milk p1 oclucrrs"
llol l rl s has bE'f'n dati v111g -tX

No

details of the head on
co lll ston arP a\oat!able
Seeling Y.as employed hv
.James Davidson Consu-uctot s of
Dickinson, T&lt;•xas. and workrd as
a supe r visor for thf' com pant ll r

had been In Texas slncr hiS

Mat tv

Seelig, F'orl I.,IU(If'&lt; da le Fla a
half -sis ter. Cindy Roush , Ru
il and . h is grandmother Mr s
Dol olhv Cl,n k Rock Springs.

thr

Roush.

Seel ig , F'orl I.&lt;Iudei dail'. F'ia .

Sf'ellg.

dnd Mtndv &lt;Jnd A.J t on B1anham.

son

of

Ruiland.
Sla&lt; kr F'lc~

Suf'

c~nd

Ann

.lark

tw o nephews .111d

il

ni£&gt;C(l, Austin

Ohio These meellngs ~&lt;ilh lhP
gubr 1nat anal candidatps w1ll

with lhP SoulhPaslf'r n Ohto HP
g lonal Counrll Highv.:a ~ C'omrntt
tee on Thu ISday. Aug 1o
According to the rommttlf'(' s
1-\Pnnf't l::iush
c hairman. (;
Cclebrrzw w1ll add! rss t hr
SEORC mC'mbeJ sh ip at tJ dtniwr

SEOfU' ra&lt; li P&lt; 1n the vrnr
Rus h sl.r tPd Parllf'r that hr v.as
r i.JI!'d th at both ca ndlddlrs a c
rrptPd mvttatlons to mrrt w ith
I he hlghwa1 romm lllcr and the
grnr1al membershi p of I he
SEOR(' 'OUI highwa y nerds ar e
gtP.Jl .lrHl wrll dorumenlrd ThP

us an opportunity lo rPgrsiPI
at th e htghr:-s tl ev£'1 ou r runcPr ns

meellng following lhe h1glm.n

Cf'lr s tf•

comm ittee ronferPncf'

adopt ed much of lhr SEORC
highway agenda and has pr o
g1ammed severa l of I he p1 ojrcrs
for

adm in ts tratt o n

co ns II uclton

lhrough

h as

thr

m1d n!n e11es
Complellon of
lhrsP projects ts \'Jial to thP

reo nom Jc growth of southeastPrn

I AT!t~l MIT)f('lo l1
T~M

mt

R~l

filiA l fP
IIHIIU

• • "&lt;l'l

r

SMITH GMC TRUCK
CENTER

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

135 PINE ST.•GALLIPOLIS

SOO E.MAIN ST.•POMEROY

(614) 446-2532

(614) 992-2174
I

By BRI!\N J. REED
Sentinel News Stall
Two cr iminal defendants were
se ntenced and another pled
gu ilt y to drug charges In the
court ol Meigs Coun ty Common
Pleas Judge Fred W Crow, Ill
this morning
According to Prosecuting AI
torney Steven L. Story's offic e,
Becky Davidson of Pomeroy pled
guil1y 10 trafficking In drugs, a
felony of the fourth degree
The charges stem from David
son's sale of a half pound of
marijuana to an undercover
officer on Ocl 25, 1909 The

undercover

operation was a

coopera tive effort of the Meigs
County Prosecutor's Ofllce, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart
ment and the Tiffin Pollee
Department.

Judge Crow ordered a pn•S&lt;cn tenre lnvestigalion and St'l
sr nlenring on the matler lor Aug

20
Davidson was represenlrd In
ro ur l ihls morning by Altorncy
D Michael Mullen, who was
acti ng In the pla ce of Meigs
Co unt y Public Defender Charles
H. Knight.
Edd ie Patrick. who was found
guilty by a jury on charges ol
domestic violence two weeks
ago, was sentenced to six to ten
years on the two felo ny counts
this morning
According lo Don Snyder, the
lnvesllgalor lor the Meigs
Coun l y Proseru tor's Office,
Crow's sentencing of Patrick was
In
line wllh Story's
recommendation.

h 1ghes1 slate of alell. I he dlplo
mats ll'llOl ll'd
Saudi At abtan nt•w s serVJCE'S
an no uncrd d full mobiltzation of
thP nation's .umC'd forcrs. which
~o.IJ()(J

has aboul

troops and

top 1 JngP fight er o.; suppl!Pd bv

the Un llecl Sta le s
Th e srr -..irf's stttd S,1urit offt
Cials h.Jcl
author 17Pd S,JUdl
vouths of mtlttar v s(' r vtce age to
c arryatms a ndt hata llrPsPrvPs

had been railed up
Weste1 n diplom.Jt s s.JJrl S&lt;Jud1

sr iPC lrd unit s on a ]('r I should a
US co ntrngf'ncv plan beenactPd
tf I raq entered Saudi tNntorv

live from Washington and placed

positions WIIh Iraq and Kuwatl
apparently becau se 11 did nol
wan I l o provoke Saddam and hrs
I m illion sl rong army
However, few poiltirai ob
se rvers belteved Saddam would
mvade Saud1 Arabia because of
likely US m1111ary rela i tallon.
and mosl analvsts belteved
Baghdad' s slra legy was to con
so i 1da1e all er l esti ng lnlerna
ttonal reaction

Wlinesses 1n Kuwalr quoled 111
Egyptian newspapNS reporled
h eavv

ovPrntght

movement

so uth of Iraq i tanks and earth
movrr s down a seafron t hi ghway
that lrad11 toward lhP neutral
zom•
Oil indu s trv SOUit'&lt;'S SJ id l r&lt;Jqi
troops WP I E' dt gg mg lrenehf's
around 01lfit'lds in sou thprn
Kuwait
West e1n sou1rPs satd aer lal
IPfonn a issanrr showpd m.Htv
Iraqi unit s 111 lhf' arPa WI'II'
staltr . appaiPntly li..tktng dl'fPn

s1vr pos1t1on s
Sa udi Arabia

Washington 's

ha s long resJstrd
1rques1s

US

lroops br stat ioned on lhP kmg
dom '.s soli. and ! hr US sources

sa1d Chenev would put a rase to
K1ng F'ahd s1a11ng there was now
a c l ra 1 Jl( 'f'd f01 a L S m1lttary
prese nce

spec 1ft r~

of Ohio 's commu n rt 1rs

tnnr tn O h io. sai d C .J PrPnt1 ss,
" memb€1 of the sla lr Doard of

res i s with Its sc hools- and 1hr
fu turr of r clucallon ISm the hands

Fclucatio n · 'As go\.·rrnor vou
bPCOmf' th£' moral \ OIC'f' fOI thl S

of the nrxt govct nor
state
Pducators and buslnPss leaders

klndoflhlng '
While !Joth Vomov1ch and Ce lr
h1ezzr say they a1 f' comm!ttrd to
cd u ca tto~. o n!v VotnO\ ich h as
made public delalls of whal
pol1rles he' d like lo pursue

a t totnP\- ~Pnrral pl a ns 10 drtatl
hts p10gram nrxt month
around th e sta r t of the new schoo l
vcar - and JU St two monlh s
befon• r i('Ct JOn dav
DPspltr hiS sJIPnCP CrlebreZ7.1'

The

pnr and follow lhrough on the
reform s rC'rrn!lv pas•&gt;Pd by thP

leglslaturp
T his yeaI Oh1o laxpayc1 s will
IIIVPS I mOll' 1h,Jn $7 J billon 111
PdUCHIIon of lll '.1 rh '2 mllliOil
l'lcmcn!Jr v

.Hill

sPro ndaf\

sp hoo lchllur en
l hr larges l
chun k Oh1o sp1•nd s on any acfl\'
11y, The Cil•vei.Ind Pla1n Dralr1
reported Sund ay
T he maJor lssuPs fartng thr
next gover nm lncludf' mcrrasJn g
Parly ch lldhocxl Pdu cation. tm
piOVtng l flP 4U&lt;Ifil y of teaChlllg ,
cH!drPs sm g lhr ronc('pt of open
Pnro llm enl and commg up with
rrea tlvP ways of financing
"The govrr nm has to Sf'l the

Kennrr Bus h We nPed tn lnsurr
the co mp!Ptton of lhf' program

the

admm 1sten:d bv Iraq and Saud t
Arabia
Thl' St~uch dtt for c(l was a! ll s

Xtr actto n zone admmtstC'rrd bv

pledged lo b11ng 1ls schools up lo

and highway needs '
F:.u lil'r. Robert L
lllohl
Fva 1s. prcsldPnl of !liP SEOHC.
co mpllmenlrd Bush and hiS
comm ittPr for many VI'.! I s of
hard work rl'sulttng in bPIIPr
highwHvs for sn u!hPa siPI n Oh to
Evans sa id " I agree wllh

hv

The ronlesred area 1s shared
bv Sa udi Arabia and Kuwal! and
SIIsonlhePerslanGu lf Asecond
zo ne m the desert to th(l west ts

Arab1a. Egypt and PPrsian (,ulf

and h!s oppone nt Democrat An
thony Ce lcbJrzze say ed ucat1on
Is a majo1 issue Both men have

g 1vr

sc heduiPd

the maneuver s

states Sat urda y hPedPd a dHPc

sav
Bolh Rt' publlcan gubernaloi
1.1 1 randldalr George Vommlch

s1•rvu·ps arr tx&gt;mg
romp leiPd by I h&lt;• F.w1ng Funer ,&lt;1
Home
Fun('J,Il

Hrpublwan randtdafr. Mavor
GPorgr Vomov1ch mrt with

last night, " a Middle Eastern
diploma! sa1d
One reporl sa1d between 200
and 300 lanks were mvo ived In

overnight and were deplovcd on
lhe edge of a neutral 011

futur e

SEORC highway com_m ittee
will meet with Celebrezze
Anlhony J Ce!Pb&lt;CZZl' .11 . ilw
Democrat rand1datr fo1 &lt;:ovrr
noroftheSiateofOhio v.:\11 nwft

no1 crossed lhe !&gt;order In to the
neutral zonP. bu I their reconnais
sa nee units went In and came ou t

armore-d co lu mns moved not rh

CLEVELAND tUP i l -

Pataskla

O!hl'l ~u J vl\ois mcludr hi s
wtfr·
Barbc~rJ.
Dtcktnson
'I rxa~ J. ~ l stP r Beckv Branham.

"The armored columns ha vP

Saudt Arabta had piPvtouslv
PschewPd an y military rPactlon
or movPS to rPmforrP 1ts bordPI

Future of education a maJor
concern of next governor

g radudlt on
frorn
Mus km gum
C()l lrgP v.. hPn' ht' n·cPt\.l'd "
dPgr(lr m prtrolPum engmPPI
tng He was,, g t aduatr of Metgs
H1gh Schoo l
BmnonMalrh2.1 l %1.hewas

a h1 othPr.

T he Saudi movements appa1
ently were aimed al showing
Riyadh s resolve l o reSISt l raq1
PreSiden t Saddam Hussem

•

H'm s tn Mrtgs Cou nt v

Pata skala

slon force that overran Kuwall

Th ursday and se1zed lhe llnv
sheikhdom
Reports from Kuwait bciiPd
Baghdad s claims lis 1roops had
star ted to withdraw and sa id
mU!tary movement began on 1hr
Sa udi side of the border
Western and Middle Easl diplo
mals based in R1yad h sa1d Saudi

Kuwall and also possessed by
Saud! Arabia

For mer resident dies on highway
Hoberl R S&lt;·Piig, 2~ . of fl1ck1n
son . TPxas. formprl\ of l'o m('
r ov. was ktllcd Jn stan tl\. 1n a
two r a1 are ident tn Di ckm son
C'ariY Satu 1day mornrng

side lraq 1-ocr up1 ed KuY.all
Iraq I forces 1eporledlv were
pOised lnstd e Kuwa 11 on I he olhel
s1de of the neulrai zo ne
Defense Secrelary Dick Chr
ney arrived Monday In Sa udi
Arabia. where sources sa id hr
would seek permISSion 1o pIa cr
US lroops 111 I he st rategic
Persian Gulf nalion lo repellraq1
forces should thev l aunch an
all ac k from Kuwall
President Bush sent Cheney 10
the Middle East aflerexpress1ng
skepliri sm over Iraq's clai m
Sund ay !hal 11 had b&lt;'gun wllh
drawing the 100,000 strong lnva

(1

s&lt;~ td

Begi nnm g m Mel\, thr f ormer
Clf'v£'1and mavor Jso.; ur d a senPs
of four pos tt ton pa pPr s covN mg
to pics from .J cco unl abi l tlv dnd

Hrad Start to schoolltnancc dnd
drug rducallon
Votnovwh's p latfOI m would
gi\.C p.I!Pnts staff' tax drductton s
for f' dlw.J t ion rxpenses. 1nclud
ing pltvalf' school tUition Jl(l
would al so tmpose a "no pass.

no plav ·pol iCY linking academ ic
pt•Ifurm.mrr 10 ex tra curri cu lar
.lC'I IV II\'
Volno v!ch sa id hf&gt; \\-Ould res
toJP rduration to 10 petcrnt of
~ 1a1r sprncllng and fund nrw
tnttial tvr s by ltJmmtng: pro
g rams r !Sf'ow hrlr tn thP budget
Cf' lebr C'ZZC' ha s satd education

" one of t h&lt;' sla tes lop ihree
tss urs. but has ye t to offer

Cam pa 1 ~n s pokPsv.o
man Melmda Swan said lh~

h c~d brcn endorsed by I he 100,000
memb&lt;'r Ohio F.dura11on Associ
alton . rhc "iatf''slargestteachers
U\11011

OEA \'1 re Prr Si denl M1rh ar l
Bi llirakiS drrlinrd 10 diScuss
whal Ce lebrrz;p told I he union hr
would do about ed ucallon
Votnovich supporiPrs say CP ir
brPzzr's s ta lling shows hr has
ltttk commitmenl 10 rducatton
But Swan sa ys Celrbrezzr 1s
scPk lng Idea s from many sour

res She has rn tl rlzed Volnovlrh
for his hand s off approach 1o
CIL•veland' s lroubled schoo ls du 1
ing thr 10 VPMS hP was mayo r
But \'01no\ trh m.unlatns h(
had no legdl .J Ut.hoti!V ovPr th r
schools Th r schools wt'l (' f ound
guilty of srgreg.11 1on 1n th(' ldtr
1970's and plac1·d und f' r .1 fr'(:I(' Jal
t'Our l ordPr thHI s till s l,mds

Contlnurd on pagr 10

l'e lrslr

admtm sl r a lion '

Rain ending as workweek starts

Thr SEORC RPgrona l H1ghw.n
Conlln urd on page Ill

By Unlwd Pro•ss International

Drug defendants sentenced

iEL/OLO

t:trm" A ~II
~rlnlllt l li_.oiHnn\ollo o

A lo&lt;dl cl.nn

The mrrllng w1i i IJf' held al the
F'alrgreens Cuu nlry Cl ub m.fack
son Coun l y Th e H1ghway Com
mitt ee ml'f'ling will begin dl ' 1
p m followed by .1 hospitaltt\
hour and thP dlnne1 mePtlng

Z,•nh I "t(l
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Bolfo ... , ,,,, I''"'' illll I ll to.r lt-.. I h~tnlhrr ,
t, • lli utiU&lt;I;III&lt;of't l•m""'"lwotol SHi lotinl•

Holstein Farms receives
outstanding milk production award

J)('J(rnt tn mtlk ploclur tlO n fnt

YEAR END
CLEARANCE
NOW IN
PROGRESS!

~prdali~t.

Holter~s

dnlrv flnlshPd 1n lhr lop fl\&lt; '

GMC:TRUCK

Amf'rl{'a award PlcturPd are (from left) Marvin
Galsgo, Purina agent: Roy llolter: 1\.llan Holler,
Ed Holter: and fraig Meranda. Purina dair)

D!\IRY RECOGNIZED - Holter 's llol,trlll
wa..' n•rt•ntly rt•fogmzed for
outstanding milk production when tht•y n•rt•Jvrd
Uw rurina Mill~ OistingUI~IIl'd ll.ur,vman of
farms in Pomeroy

w.1 s n'rl•ntl\ a\htrded thr Punna
M tlls Compi..tnV s 'D ts llnJ:!UIShf'd
OJ II ym.tn of Amf'J ICJ award
Holtrr s H o \slrln Fdrm s o f
Pomrr ov 1 PCPtvrd I hP aw.1 rd f o1
outstanding mtlk p1odurt ton
Thf&gt; farm wa " nommatrd !01
thr &lt;~ward bv ( r a1g Mrrdnd ,l.
Purtn.a dairY spPC'Idllst. \1 lwn thr

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

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r.JI"' J t ! 1 l 'u1! ll1ltlhun l· •lht"~' ' II I

armor£&gt;d co lumn s nL•x t to a
neutral oii ·Pxt r actlOn zonP br

\

i{&lt;~u· oon

,I ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

rn'"

llnpt' ,

By 1\DI\M KELLlliER
United Press International
Dip lomats Monday reponed
full -sca le Saud i ml illa rv mobll i
zatlon and thr dPp\ovml'nl of

l lll' l(l'll

J rdJ dtt LI

M.11 kt•t of Htpi!'Y $.11)()
S Jam](' Montgom1 1., :Vlt 1
11'1\ JII c• \\1ldcats. F.umt•to.., 111
h.11 &lt; n \\ .urhouse of Rlplr\ $rl'1ll
lJ
Hobt•r I Smllh
Mur h• l ll
li."'i&lt; " S1,1r Da nk. $21111
111 \\ P"il('\ SaundPts R.1rcllnr1
Hrmd1ro.; Hunllngto n P1tdl' 1n
l u h . I C'C'O

~

Weather

l'tnl'fL;Cil~

Il l' I l tl ll l..; I ]ill'

26 Cents

Saudi troops move
toward Kuwait border

\XI e V(: be{'!l ,1rr1und 1 I1Hl~ rtlll t' J rltl 'H'tl' lf \nur .11sposJ I )(,') d.1" . \'t'.ll ~ I h n1rs .1 d.\\ \Y), il.llt' 111 t'\tC IIe nr H e dlilLJrt· reJ tll "lCJ !H.ltnt.: h\ :ctdv !( lt! t\{'\OU riK·tr
he&lt;.,! Ill htHJll[tl\V!l 1Llrl{}U!ldJtlL;S \V./c ll'
fHJ&lt;.,fJtf.iJ
where ',llU .trl fl1&gt;! j ltsr tnurh( r t1utnhu V~nrr· l t&gt;ll t' 11f
us .1nd \\t rv l!• &gt;rnc ro t:t\( tllt t Il l 111 rll .Jktrl~ •,•&gt;u r \ l,t\
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W e ..1rc t.qutppt d .tnd re.td\' 111 lJ r t· 11 n \ I HI t fl .1

r:h

:\1h Saundf'J s
H nH dtf' o..,
Rlplr\

I ' II Ill

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S!U

1 SectiOn, 10 Pages

A Multtmedta Inc Newspaper

\llll! HnrtH.ll }\\11 Ht•"-tptul

(onllnurd !t om D I

honon·d for st•n i&lt;·t·

JUwn Ill •• f&lt; I " "
h
\ldo•rlli HIItll &lt;•"" ' '" ' ' \I""' ' ' •I lo .. l.
ore (nlnmhn • ' " Hmll1 "••••I ,, II "''"'
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IJfta.k•n ~1'111 lhn ll11rnoll• k """''l h &lt;oll , ,
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1.111 hrm &lt;t

ll nru&lt;l• "''"'"

Vol40 , No315
Copynghted 1990

HL·.ilthl.Ht

Kentucky ...

Gallia t•mplnyt•t&gt; i!'l

""~"''It-

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POMF.ROY -

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nom! I \udll I iC11u I U\II !IH 'I fl
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JC Ve((_' Llll ..,

Page 4

Partly cloudy through Tues·
day, with a slight chance ol
showers today. HIghs will be
in the 70s and lows in the 50s.

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W e're lik e &lt;111 "tdding n~ctchine:
Y ou cctn count on u.1 .'
Yt.., -

Plek-3· 77l
Plek -l · 0739
Cards: H-Q; C-A;
D -7: S-7
Lotto 14, 18, 21,
22. 2~. :l9
Kicker: 319301

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Turner starts own realty
business in Middleport

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Ohio Lottery

U.S. women
win Goodwill
gold medals

wmpkit' i ll·Jiilll.llt Llllill'. vd willcl '.~&gt; u m·td "'"

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August 5, 1990

After anoth er rnJsrrable ralniweekend, Ohio's wf'ather was

ex peeled lo bl•gln clearing alter a
partly cloudy day Monday A l ew

Pat ric k Y.as also rrpresenled
1n his lrlai by Allorney Mullen
Jerry Markm, Albany, re
rel ved a one year dclermrnalc
sentence and a $5,000 l orfelture
on cha rges of sale of marijuana
this morning
Markin's arres l last year was
also the resull ot an undercover
operallon . Thai Investiga tion In
voived the jolnl effo rts of the
sheriff's depanment, the prosecutor's office, lhe aduil parole
authorlly and lhe Athens Pollee
Department.
According to Snyder, Markin
sold one pound of marijuana l oan
undercover agenl al Markin's
residence on Slate Route 681
Patrick and Markin have l&gt;oih
been remanded to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department .

showers Wl're experted to linger
over
the e.Is tPJ n co u n ti es

lhrough the day
A co ld lr onl moved through
Oh io Sunday evenmg and cooie1
air behind It caused showers over

parts of northern Ohio during th e
night. They were diminishing al
dawn, but widely scaltered show

ers were to occur across the state
Monday, since conditions were
still quite moist .
Early Monday morning, heavy
ra ins were laiUng in parts ol
Ottawa, Sandusky, Erie and
Huron counties. At 4. 50 a.m. , the
Huron County Sheriffs Depar t
men I said the rains were causing
widespread pondlng of water ,
especially in the Bellevue area
There were, however, to be
glimpses of sunshine as well

Sunday

o nly .l mtnutes of sun

shinr wa s n•corded at Cl eve land

Hopkin ' lnlri nail una! Alrpon
At dawn. temperatures were In
the 60s Highs In the low lo
mid 70s were the besl to bt'
ex]l€clrd Monday. bul highs ne a1
lhe Ril degree mark are forecas l
toward the end olthe week
Skies will be partly c loudy
through Tuesday Highs Tuesda y
will b&lt;' In the 70s with lows
Monday nigh I in the 50s WednPs
day, Thursday and F'rlday will bt'
fair, with highs In the 70s afld
lows In the 50s.
The cool tempera! ures and
partial sunshine were expecled
to significantly limit drying rates
Monday and Tuesday . Only 0.15
to 0 20 Inches of evaporation Is
expected both days Dew should
be llghl Tuesday morning and
heavy Wednesday and Thursday.
Poor drying and winds of more
than 12 mph through Tuesday
will hamper application of pesti

cldes and furrgtcJd rs Foi!O\\IT1g
posslblr SI'.JI!rrcd showers Man
de~y, ha y producers ca n expf'ct

rain fn•e conditions through Fri
day Allhnugll drying of rul ha v
will rema in limi ted Tuesday due
to pa1ilal cloudiness abundan l
sunshine Wednesday through
Friday w1ll aid hay curi ng
Armyworm and corn borer
acllvlt; will be slowed this week
due lo roof temperatures Res1d
u.11 dampness within the ca nopy
and rooi condllfons co uld In
crease blight infecllon on corn.
which can be damaging to yields
II evident above the ea r leaf
during tasseling
On the early morning weather

map, a cold front was over
western Pennsylvania to Ala
bama High pressure was ern
tered over the Plains The cold
front will move to the Allantic
Coast by Tuesday morning while
the high pressu re gradually
builds across Ohio.

Get Quick Results! Place A $5 Per Day ·sulletin Board· Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section.
I

I

'

�Monday, August 6. 1990

In Cubs' 3-1 win over Expos Sunday,

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

(Jrb.

~m~

r"""rL-J..____,..... f"'T"E!!d•~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maoa1er

A MEMBER ofThP United Press International, Inland Dally Pre5s
Associat ion and the A.merlcan Newspapt'r Publls~rs Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

t ress Debra Winger.
But looming over any White
House aspirations that Kerrey
may have are mistakes in
Nebras ka that show his decid ~
edly unh eroic side.
The most recen t involves Ker·

name, address and telpphone number . No unsigned letters will be publis he-d. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personali-

rey's support for development In
Nebraska or a radioactive waste
dump - a pol!tlcal and ecologica l time bomb. Some Irate
Nebraskans are fighting the
project. But Kerrey 's brother-Inlaw and a key polit ical a ide are
helping to promote It through a
compa ny that Kerrey helped
start.
A fiv e s tate gove rnmen t
agency known as the Central
Interstate Low Level lladloac·
liv e Waste Compact Commission, Is pushing th e proposal In

Gubernatorial nominees
lock horns on abortion
By LEE LEONARD
UPI StatehoUBe Reporter
COLUMBUS- Like a pair of giant s umo wresllers, gubernatorial
candidates Anthony Celebrezze Jr . and George Volnovlch circled
each other warily last week, looking for a takedown on the live ly Is sue
or abortion .
Democrat Ce lebrezze summoned reporters to complain that
Volnovlch was "all over the lot" on whether he would sign or veto a
strict bill as passed In Louisiana and later vetoed by Gov. Buddy
Roemer.
''George Volnovlch doesn 't want Ohio voters to know where he Is on
the Issue or abortion and choice," said the attorney general. "We need
a governor who will tell the people what he will do. "
Republican Volnovlch Immediately responded with a vldrotape
a nd 99 pages of news clippings reminding reporters that Celebrez;:e
had fllp ·flopped on the Is sue last December, goi ng from pro-life to
pro-c hoice.
"My opponent's campaign Is In deep trouble," said the former
mayor or Cleve land. "How believa ble, how trustworthy is an
Individual who for 16 years took the opposite view and then changed It
for political expediency?"
For the record, Volnovlch Is opposed to aborUon except In cases or
rape, Incest or to save the life of the mother. He says It would be up to
the Legislature to Initiate any restrictive legislation.
Celebrezze, who says he sUII personally opposes a borUon, adds that
"a bunch of politicians should not be telling a woman what to do" a nd
he would veto any legislation restricting a woman's right to choose an
abortion.
The attorney general, In trying to force the Issue last week, said
recent legislation In LouJslana and other states, and the resignation or
JusUce William Brennan from the Supreme Court have brought
aborUon to the front burner .
He said he would rate It second, among other health care Issues,
only to economic development and jobs. For those who have jobs, It
s ho uld be first. he indicated.
Volnovlch, on the other hand, rated abortion far down the list of
Important Issues In the campaign, which he c-haracterized as "proven
records, problem solving, management In government, economic
development and education."
Naturally, Volnovlch wants the major Iss ue to be the last eight
years of Democratic rule under Gov. Richard Celeste, which he hopes
to exploit Into a throw-the-rasca ls-out camva lgn Talk about abortion
only sidetracks that Idea.
Celebrezze apparently believes, along with other Democrats, that a
majority of Ohioans favor the "choice" position on abortion. and that
he ca n win by e mphasizing it.
But It Is ludicrous to believe that the people of Ohio regard abortion
as more important than economic development, educa tion and the
rnvironm ent

And despite the common thread with prenatal and newborn care,
a nd medical coverage for poor wome n. characterizing abortion as a
health care tssue is as outragrous as saying cap ital punishment Is a
hea lth care Issue .
Abortion co uld be a deciding factor In a close gubernatorial
e lection . But to make It count, Celebrezze first must make It a close
race on the issues Votnovlch Is talking about. So far, he hasn't done
that .

A thought for t he day : British poet Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote of
life that : Every moment dies a man, Every moment one Is born .

Berry's World

. ~
~veo
F-A
"'NEA. tnc.

"Now that we've mellowed, we're like NATO
and the Warsaw Pact - armies without
sdWJrSBries. "

'

Nebraska. To help raise support,
the commission hired Bates
VIdeo Production to do a promotional video that Is clearly
designed to quell fears about
radioactive waste dumping.
Kerrey and his brother-In-law,
Dean Rasmussen, were original
Inves tors In Bates VIdeo In 1987,
along with their friend Rodney
Bates, who handled publicity for
Kerrey's 1988 Senate campaign.
When Kerrey decided to run lor
the Senate, Rasmussen bought
him out of Bates vldro, but that
was after the deal was signed lor
the video promoting the waste
dump. According to a spokesman, Kerrey opted out of Bates
Video to avoid a conflict when he
decided to run for the Senate.
Rasmussen told our associate
Scott Sleek that Bates runs the
business and does not consult
with him about choosing particu lar c lients.
Kerrey has only recently decided that s trong support of a

said there were too many unanswered questions . Crlllcs said
Kerrey Is belat edly t rying dis·
tance himself for political

Kerrey trusts him to manage his
money with business sense, not
political motivations.

reasons.

the list or politicians wtth their
hands In the savings and loan
scandal. The Republicans are
looking for more Democrats to
blame, and White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater recently
put Kerrey In that company.
Fitzwater's reference was to a
major banking crisis In Nebraska when Kerrey was gove rnor. Two state-c harte red thrift s
In Lincoln, Neb .. failed. William
Wright, an owner of one of them,
Sta te Security Savings, was also
one of Kerrey's financial and
po litica l adviser s.
While the Nebraska S&amp;L Industry was on thedownsllde, Kerrey
and Wright formed a partnership
with others to use State Security
Saving s as a way to buy commercial property. In 1984, State
Security filed for Chap ter 11
protection. A comm ittee of Nebra s ka lawmakers who investigated the S&amp;L failures concluded
that Wright and others "m ilked
and drained" the thrift s

This Isn't the first time that
Kerrey has mixed business and

nuclear waste dump in one's

politics. In fact, he has admitted
that he used poor judgment In
some business ties he made early
In his career.
In the mid-1980s, a busines s he
owned took a low-Interest loan
from a financing pool that he
helped create as gover nor In
1986, at Kerrey's urging , Ne
braska lawmakers crea ted the
Nebraska Investment Fi nance
Authority to give low -Interest
loans to homrowners, farmers
and certain bu sinesses.
One of the businesses was
Kerrey's, which got a low~cost
loan to build a SJX)rts renter in
Lincoln . Nebraska Republican s
raised a sti nk. but the state
le gis l a t ure declined to
Investigate.
Rasmu ssen handles the trust

home state Is not a smart Idea.
He had been firmly behind the
compact's proposed dump s it e.
but t his month he backed off and

Interests . He told us that Kerrey
knew the company was applying
for the low -cost loan. But he said .

that manages Kerff'y's bu siness

Kerrey's name also belongs on

years."

What Rodgers did see In the weekend series was his team being
outscored 23-7 by the Cubs. He also witnessed a pitcher who evened
his record after having a losing one at the All-Star break.
Greg Maddux, 4-8 at the break , hurled a five-hitter lor his fifth
straight win. Maddux, 9-9, struck out six and walked three In pitching
his second complete game of the year.
In his last five staris, the 24-year-old right -hander has allowed just
four earned runs and 28 hits and struck out 26 over 42 and two-third
lnnlngs lor an ERA of 0.84.
" I have n't changed my delivery . I haven't changed my approach . I

haven't changed my routine. I haven 't changed my thinking,"
Maddux said. ''The only thing I tried to do Is I opened up a little bit
more. I think I've tried to concentrate more."
Boyd, 6-4, took his first loss since June 10, though he allowed just
five hits In seven Innings while striking out seven.
Trailing 1-0, the Cubs scored twice In the sixth. Walton walked and
moved to second on Ryne Sandberg's deep lly to center, Mark Grace
ripped an RBI double down the first -base line. Andre Dawson
followed with an RBI triple.
Grace extended his hitting streak to 15 games and Dawson raised
his average to .342 with two hits.
"We're playing well as a ballclub, and that's what's Important
now," Dawson said. "Our Incentive Is to get back to .500. There are
two teams !Montreal and Philadelphi a) In range of catching In the
next couple days."
Elsewhere In the National League : St . Louts ripped New York 8-3,
Phlladelphla beat Pittsburgh 8-6, Cincinnati stopped San Diego 6-2,
Houston rapped Atlanta 6-2 and Los Angeles slammed San Francisco
12-6.
Cardinals 8, Mets 3- At St. Louis, John Tudor scattered six hits
over eight-plus Innings and OzzleSmlth rapped four hits, scored twice
and drove In two runs to lead St. Loui s. Tudor Improved to 11-3 while
Sid Fernandez, 7-8, took the loss after allowing five runs tn four
Innings.
PhUlles 8, Pirates 6 - At Philadelphia, Von Hayes broke a
sixth-Inning tie with a two-r un homer to help Philadelphia snap a
three-game losing streak. Hayes homered off Scott Ruskin, 2·2, forhls
12th home run of the season. Don Carman, 5-0, pitched two hitless
Innings for the win and Joe Soever notched his 11th save.
Reds 6, Padres 2- At Cincinnati, Jose Rljo scattered five hits over
nine Innings and Hal Morris and Billy Hat cher hit home runs to help
Cincinnati snap a three-game losing streak. Rljo, raised his record to
8-4 . Calvin Schiraldi, 3-4, took the loss.
Astr08 6, Braves 2- At Houston, Danny Darwin drove In a run,
scored twice, and won his fifth straight start to lift Houston. Darwin,
7-1, was touched for seven hits In fiv e Innings In Improving to 7-0
llletlme against the Braves . Steve Avery, l-6. dropped his firth
straight decision.
Dodgers 12, Giants 6 - At San Francisco. Eddie Murray belted a

pair of three ~ run home runs and Kirk Gibson added two more homers
to power Los Angeles. Mike Hartley, 3-1, gained the win In relief lor
the Dodgers. Giants starter Rafael Novoa, 0-1, gave up seven runs
over three and two-third

•

White Sox beat Brewers 6-1 for serles sweep
THlS NeW

By DAVE ENGELDRUM
UPI Sports Writer
For Lance Johnson It was a matter of
pretending . For Milwaukee, the result was
all too real.
Johnson drove In three runs Sunday with a
triple and a s ingle to pace Chicago to a 6-1

weSTGe~hUN
, MARK R.elLL~
H~S lMIHEISS
~A\IN6.

victory over the reeling Brewers and give

the White Sox a sweep or the five -game
seri es.
With the score tied l -11n the fourth Inning,
Johnson laced a two-run single to put
Chicago ahead to stay. Of Johnson's 40 RBI
this season. 21 have come with two out .
"I pretend I'm leading oil and there's
nobody on base and just try to get a hit,"
Johnson said. "If I don't, I make an out."
The Brewers, however, ca nnot pretend th eir record speaks for Itself.
The club was swept In a live-game series
a t home for the first time and their 0-8

FUTURE SITE OF

Tlf NEW

EAST GERMAN
UNEMPlOYMENT OFFICE

homestand

Potty parity would relieve us all Sarah Overstreet
Is there a woman with a heart so
Now I know there are some
co ld and bl adder so toug h she men reading this with horror at
doesn't sympa thize with Denise the thought of going Innocently
Wells?
about their business In Men 's,
Wells was at a George Stra it . only to look over and see a female
concert In Houston on July 7 coming through on her way to an
when she had to go to ·th e em pty stall. I share your conbathroom . She stopped by La- cern, believe me. I'm not crazy
dles· and found an extremely about enco untering a male while
long line . She decided she could I 'm In Ladles'. But read on.
walt. When she fin a lly couldn 't before you make up your mind on
walt any longer, s he went back to the Issue :
Ladles', hoping the crowd had
This Isn't a new problem to
thinned out. In s tead , the line was lawmak ers. The New York State
even longer . She looked over at
Legislature passed a law last
Men's where thrre was no Hn e. sum mer requiring all new public
She weighed the urgency of her buildings to provide an equal
need and her optio ns, and then
number of "sanitary fixtures" In
stepped Into Men 's a nd used the
men's and women's restroom s. It
toilet .
was nick named the "Potty Party
Shorlly thereafter, pollee ar
Act." The old state law only
rested Wells a nd gave her a
s pec ified that men's and
tic ket that could cost her $200 for
women's restrooms mus t have
violating a c ity ordinance forbid ·
a n eq ual number or "toilets" ding members or one sex from
by Inst alling multi-use urinals as
usi ng restrooms reserved for the
"toilet" units, the number ol
other . When the Houston Post
places where men could go to the
published the s tory a co upl e or
bathroom was Increased by
weeks lat er , well ·wlshersoffered
several over the available slots In
to pay her fine and call city hall to
the women's restrooms .
complain In her behalf.

In Devnve r , City Councilwoman Mary DeGroot round that
clly building codes Inherently
di scr iminat ed against women
res troom -goers: The code required an equal number or
"water c losets" for eac h res ·
troom, but extra urin als for the
men 's rooms . DeGroot led an
overhaul of codt•s to require an
equal amount or toilet fa cilities In
women's and men's restr ooms in

a ll restaurants a nd pub lic
assembly places .
Studi es done by researchers at
VIrginia Tech and Corne ll found
that men can ge t In and ou t or a
public restroom from 35 to 46
percent

f aster

th an

women.

Sandra Rawls of Virginia Tech,
who co nducted the researc h a s
part of her doctoral dissertation,
noted the ex tra time taken by
women wasn't due to excessive

time spen t in rront of a m irror.
Whlle most or the men's
restroom trips require only one
zip or clothing and can be
accomplished sta ndin g up ,
women's req ulrP pulling up of
blouse s and down or skirts or

was

the worst

In Brewers

his to ry.
" I made three or four mistake pitches and
I thInk that's basically what got to me, " said
Dennis Powell, 0-3, who allowed six runs and
seven hit s In six and one-third Innings In his
first start since being called up from the
·Brewers' Triple-A affiliate. "The team
didn't win again. That's the bad part. We've
go-t to go on the road and losing eight In a row
Is not a good situation to be ln."
Johnson wasn't In the best situation to
begin the contest, but he made the most ollt.
"At the last minute,! found out I was going
to be In the game." Johnson sa id . " Your

'
at-bats are going to count whether you're
~repared or not, so you might as we ll do the
best you can."
Johnson was a late addition to the lineup
because hot-hitting Ivan Calderon had a
jammed finger and was unable to play th e
outfield. Calderon, who was 8 for 20 with
three homers and eight RBI In the series,
moved to designated hitter.
Jack McDowell , 7-6, tossed a five-hitter,
needing just 89 pitches for hi s tcam ~ hlgh
third complete game or the season.
"They were putting the ball In play ,"
McDowell said. "Luckily, they were not
get Ung good wood on a lot of them . They had
a lot or jam-shot flyouts and groundouts and
end-of-the-bat things. I made good pitches
and they were putting them In play early."
Chicago extended Its lead to 6-1 In the
seventh. Johnson belted an RBI triple, Ozzle
Guillen contributed a run-scoring single ,
and Robin Ventura lofted a sacrifice fly.
Chicago took a 1-0 lead In the fi rst lnn:ng
on Calderon's RBI double and Milwaukee
answered with a run In the first on Robin
Yount's sacrifice fly.
Elsewhere In the American League,
Detroit bombed Boston 7-2, New York
clipped Cleveland 5-3, Oakland beat Ca lllor ~
nla 4-1, Seattle blanked Minnesota 4-0 and
Toronto tripped Texas 6-4. Kansas City at
Baltimore was postponed by rain .
Tigers 7, Red Sox 2 - At Boston, Dave
Bergman stroked a two-run single and went
4 for 5 to help the Tigers snap a 10-game
Fenway Park losing streak. Dan PPtry , 9·7,
posted his fourth win In his last five

President Bush's nomination
of Judge David Souter to replace
retiring Justice William Brennan
makes conservative control or
the Supreme Court almos t lnevl t·
able at last.
It has been near ly a quarter of
a century since the American
people tired of liberalism . Bust
as Robert Whitaker noted, the
Supreme Court Is traditionally
"the last bas tion or dying es tabllshments." The liberals, thanks
In large part to Justice Brennan,
have managed to continue ImposIng many of their views on a
reluctant nation, by discovering
them hidden In previously unsus~
peeled clauses of the Constitution. With any luck, that sort of
nonsense Is about to end.
But It probably won't end
without a light. In the battle over
Judge Robert Bark's nomination
by President Reagan , Sens.
Edward Kennedy, Howard Met zenbaunB and Joseph Blden
tlrauecl the once-d lgnlfled process of le!Uitorlal advice and
COIIMIIt llljUIJ"ely Into the poilU-

cal pit, and there It will fester
unUI high-quality men and
women a re elected to the U.S.
Senate .
Even If these experienced
mudgunners are disposed to let
Judge Souter take his seat
without undue delay, the screamIng battalions of the abortion
activists and their liberal allies
wouldn't let them . They have
learned, or they think they have
learned, that a court nominee, no
matter how well qualified, can be
defeated 11 subjected to enough
high-octane biUings-gate. They
have already decided to block
Judge Souter, and they can
probably Induce the Senate's
liberals to resist his
conllnnatlon.
On the evidence to date, there
Is every reason to believe that
Judge Souter Is a brilliant Judge
(he was, tor one thing, a Rbodes
scholar), a "strict constructionIs t." alld a sol ttl, sound Judicial
consel'fttlva.
I

That Is quite e nough to rouse
the venom of the Senate liberals.
As the first nominee over the
parapet, he will probably be
treated to the worst down-anddirty trashing that the fertile
minds of Kennedy, Metzenbaum,
Blden and their leftist staffs can
devise.
It may turn out (as It did In the
case of Chief Justice William
Rehnqulst) that he was a poll
watcher tor Goldwater In 19&amp;1
and got Into a quarrel with .a
black Democrat. He may have
been spitting on the sidewalk
outside an ERA rally. Somebody
may be found who will testily,
truthfully or otherwise, that he
once saw the judge, as an
underJITaduate at Harvard,
smoking a marijuana cigarette.
With that much stimulus, Democrats who know better, like
Howell Henln of Alabama, will
probably sell out again to tbelr
black constituencies. Such nearbeer Republle&amp;DI as Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania will once
mort! foliDw their supple constl-

jl•on s , sitting down and getti ng
up, and then re-pulllng and
tucking In clothes .
If it' s a public place we have to
take our purses with u s, and that
necess itates fining someplace to
put them. Many times, there are
no hooks or shelves, and we' re
left e ithe r trying to pull and tuck
our c lothes while holding onto
purses or setting them down on
q ue s II on a ble· to-outright -wPt -or.
dirty fl oor .
Sm all kid s , even boys, usually
go to women's restroo ms with
their moth ers, addi ng more
bodies to the line. And I'll stake
my reputallon on the fac t that at
least 50 percent or toilet stalls In
women' s restrooms In thlus
cou ntry have loc ks that don' t
work, meaning more time spent
trying to gel the sta ll door to stay
shut .
So here 's to Potty Parlty,long
may It prosper. And until It
becomes the law or the land , may
pollee officers have mercy on

By BRIAN SPOORS
UPI Sports Wrller
LONDON tUPI) - Rueben
Mayes and Gill Fenerty ran for
touchdowns and the New Orleans
de fe nse held off a fourth -quarter
comeback attempt Sunday, leadIng the Saints to a 17-IOexhlbltlon
victory over the Los Angeles
Raid ers.
The game at Wembley Sta ·
dlum was the fifth In the NFL's
"American Bowl" series to be
played In London.
Th e Saints led 7-3 at halltime
and scored 10 points In the third
quarter to take command. but
had to hold off a Los Angeles rally
In the llnal period.
Dave Wilson drove the Saints
78 yards In only five plays to give
New Orleans a H -3 lead .
Wilson was sacked by defen ·
slve tackle Mike Wise on the first
play or the drive and a Bobby
Morse run was held to three

yards. But Wilson countered with
27-yard and 54-yard passes to
Brett Perrlman to move the
Saints to the Los An~eles oneyard line.
Fenerty bowled over on the
next play to give the Saints an
11-polnt advantage with 5:13 left
In the period.
New Orleans added to Its
advantage on Its next possession.
as Morten Andersen kicked a
27-yard field goal with 3:08
remaining alter Wilson fired
three Incomplete passes from the
Los Angeles 10.
The Raiders stormed back
with 10: H remaining when Elvis
Patterson blocked Tommy Barn·
hardt's punt and recovered In the
end zone lor a touchdown.
The Saints could have put the
game out of reach with 1:04 togo,
but Andersen's 27-yard field-goal
attempt hit an upright.
VInce Evans drove the Raiders

poor women whose bladder s are

about to burst .

tuencles down the well -worn path
of liberalism. Across the land,
liberal megaphones like Norman
Lear's People for the American
Way will lndu lge I again I In
techniques that rven Kennedy
a nd Metzenbaum can' t bring
themselves to use.
I don't envy Judge Souter his
forthcoming ordeal , or predict
his confirm ation . Sheer political
dishonesty ha s It s victories, no
less renowned than war's. This
Is, however, a game that President Bush Is bound to win In the
long run - just as President
Reagan won the last one by
ultimately nominating Justice
Anthony Kennedy, who proved It
anything to be more slightly
more conservative than Judge
Bork might have been.
For when the smoke has blown
away, It Judge Souter bas been
rejected, Mr. Bush will send the
Senate another name. And It Is In
the nature of sucb Grand Guignol
theater as Kennedy II Co. speclllllze In that It can't be repeated
rlibt away .

decisions . J erry Don Gleaton notched his
fifth save to help halt Boston's six-game
winning s treak . Mike Boddlcker, 11-7,
suffered the loss.
Yankees 5, Indians 3 - At New York,
Roberto Kelly hit a two-run home run In the
bottom of the ninth Inning to lift the
Yankees. With one out, Wayne Tolleson
reached on an Infield single and Kelly
followed by belting pitch from Steve Olin.
1-3. Greg Cadaret, 4-4, recorded two outs fo r
the win.
Athletics 4, Angels 1- At Anaheim, Calif..
Rickey He nderson homered and Mark
McGwlre capped a three-run eighth lnnln~
with a two·run single. McGwlre"s two-out
single broke up a tight pitching duel between
Dave Stewart, 15-8, and California starter
and loser Chuck Finley, H -5. Dennis
Eckers ley notehed his 35th save.
Mariners 4, Twins 0 - At Seattle, Billy
Swift, Gene Harris and Keith Comstock
combined on a three- hitter. also snapping
the 25-game hitt ing streak of Minnesota 's
Brian Harper . Harris. 1·1, earned the
victory aft er replacing Swift, who was hit on
the forehead by a line drlv~. Comstock
gained his first save. Minnesota starter
Allan Anderson dropped to 4-15.
Blue Jays 6, RMgers 4 - At Arlington.
Texas. Fred McGriff scored the go-ahead
run In the sixth Inning and came up with two
of Toronto's 12 hits olf Nolan Ryan, 11 ~5, to
help end th e Rangers' six-game winning
s treak. John Cerutti. 8-7, gained the victory
and Tom Henke co llected his 23rd save.

. ..

~
.... -d

rnc4

·-

SECOND COMPLETE GAME - Reds hurler Jose Rljo
scaltered five hits In pitching hts second complete game ol the
season and leadlnK the Rhlnelanders to a 6-2 victory over the
visiting San Diego Padres Sunday. (UP!)

New Orleans hands LA. Raiders 17-10 loss

What Judge Souter is up against William Rw;her

I

I

WASHINGTON - Democrats
are fantasizing about their
dream ticket for the 1992 presi dential race - New York Gov.
Marlo Cuomo and fres hman
Nebraska Sen. Robert Kerrey.
For charisma, the duo would
be hard to beat - Cuomo, the
thinking person's candidate, and
Kerrey ,' the handsome heroic

By PAULDEFEDE
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago Cubs manager Don Zimmer has been Involved In more
than 2,?00 major-league games as a player and manager, but
Sundays victory over Montreal featured something even he hasn't
seen before.
Shawon Dunston scored a run on a bizarre play In the seventh
Inning, helping the Cubs to their 3-1 victory and three-game sweep of
the Expos.
With Chicago leading 2-1 In the seventh, Dunston singled and
advanced to third on a sacrifice and a groundout. With Jerome Walton
batting, Duntston took off for home but was tagged out by Montreal
catcher Mike Fitzgerald .
While the Wrigley Field fans sighed, Dunston headed back to the
dugout. But home plate umpire Harry Wendelstedt ruled Dunston
sale because Fitzgerald stepped over the plate with the pitch on the
way.
Fltgerald was charged with catcher's Interference, giving Walton
first base and allowing Dunston to score. Alter consulting the rule
book after the game, pitcher 011 Can Boyd was given a balk.
Zimmer and Expos manager Buck Rodgers agreed Wendelstedt
made the correct call.
"I guess In 42 years, I probably never saw the play called, even
though It was called right," said Zimmer, who played 1,038 games In
the major leagues and has managed 1,652 more. "The catcher has to
let the hitter have a chance to swing at the ball and, man, he was way
out In front of home plate."
Rodgers said: "I haven ' t seen anybody do that In a thousand

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

Democrats dream ticket

words long. All letters are subJect to etlltlng and must be signed with

ties .

Dunston scores on rarely-seen catcher's interference

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 6, 1990

Vietnam vet who romances ac-

PAT WHITEHEAD
A88lolant Pobllsher/Controller

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

In the final minute, but was
After a scoreless first quarter.
called for a delay ·of ·game pe· . John Fourcade drove the Saints
nalty with seconds remaining to a touchdown the first time they
broke Into Los Angeles territory.
and his desparatlon pass from
the New Orleans 43 fell lncom ·
He carried seven yards to the Los
Angeles three and Mayes scored
plete at thP final gun.
two plays later to give New
"I have a lot of respect for the
Raiders," New Orleans coach Or leans a 7-0 lead .
The Raiders pulled within 7-3
Jim Mora said. "I think they are
wlth II seconds left In the half on
going to be a real good football
Jeff Ja!',jljlr 's 31 -yard field goal.
team this year and the fact th at
"I t 's always nlcetowln," Mora
we beat them says a lot about our
said
. "The whole purpose or
football team . "
here was to play this
coming
Los Angeles coach Art Shell
If you can come away a
ga
me
and
said the Raiders " had a lot of
winner It caps it."
opportunities but we didn't put
the ball In the e nd zone."

Edberg beats Chang
to win Volvo crown
LOS ANGELES !UP]) - Ste·
fan Edberg overcame a root
Injury midway through the
match to defeat fourth -seeded
Michael Chang 7.6 (74), 2-6,7-6
(7-3) Sunday and capture the
llnal of the $225,000 Volvo Tennis·
Los Angeles .
The top-seeded Swede rallied
to take the fir st set In a
tiebreaker alter Chang held a 5-2
lead .
Chang, 18, of Placentia, Calif..
levelled the match, helped by a
twisted left ankle that Edberg
suffered In the sixth game with
Chang ahead 3·2 and serving at
30-15.
Edberg, the reigning Wimbledon champion who captured
his fourth IItle of the year and the
$32,400 winner's check, changed
his serve-and-volley style and
began playing .more from the

DOWNING CHILD.S
MUl~EN MUS.SER

'

-.~

baseline In the final set.
Without a service bre ak, the
two ba t ti ed to a seco nd
tiebreaker.
Edberg rifled In his fifth ace to
take a U advantage. Chang
battled back to 5·3 before the
Swede captured the title as
Chang netted a pair or
groundstrokes.
.
"It's taken me a couple or
(See EDBERG on Page 4)

OOPS! - lndluns t~t·nler ­
llelder Alex Cole (lelt) was
given an error lor dropping
lhl• lly ball In right cenler
lleld hll hy New York's Bob
Geren In the second Inning of
Sunday's gnme In New York,
which the Yankees won !1-3.
(UPII

INSURANCE
111 S.ond St., Pomtroy

·'''·

·'.

LOOKING FOR DAYLIGHT - New Orleaa1 rtllllllDJ back
Dallon WIBard looks lor runniDC roam apl•t lhe Loa Anples
Ralden' defeue In Sulldll,f'l exlllblllon same ID Wemble7
ll&amp;adllm Ill Lo1111a, EIIJiud. Tile 8alllll- 11·10. (UPI)

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•••

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
.Jionday, August 6, 1990
Page-5

Gilkey family gathers for reunion

88/BS TOURNAMENT WINNERS -

The
team of Guy Guinther, Delbert Russ, Jack Smith
and Nonn Snyder posted a victory In the Big
Brothers/Big Sisters chapter of Gallia, Jackson,
Mason and Mel~s Counties In its annual

The 20th family reunion for
descendants of the late Tommy
and Mllda Jane Hudnall Gilkey
was held recently at the roadside
park on Route 33 near Darwin.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Gilkey, Lancaster; Lorreta
Carpenter, Craig Mouser, Marcus Allen Mouser, Logan; Mr.
and Mrs . Jordle Varner. Pamela
Varner, Tamela Varner, Duncan
Falls; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Gilkey, Amber Moore, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Judson, Malta; Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Sudduth Jr .• Sam
Sudduth III, Freeport; Penny
Bingman, Brook Bingman, Jes ·
sle Bingman, Kyl Bingman,
Amesville; Samantha Moore,
Dante lie Moore, McConnelsvUle;
Mr. and Mrs . James Duncan,
Jason Duncan, Iva Powell,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Thoma. Sheryl Thoma, William

tournament at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis
on July 26. Shown are tL·R) Smith, Guinther,
Charlie Huber, BB/ BS vice president; Don Olnt•y,
Cliffside golf pro; Judy Sofranko, BB/BS
exP.cutlve director; and SnydPr and Russ.

•
AI Unser Jr. claims victory tn
$1 million Michigan 500
By BOB TRIPI
BROOKLYN, Mich . tU PI J
AI Unser Jr. is bl'{_'Omlng a ra cr r
ofextrPmes, but the end re sult is
becoming the same - winning

t:nser took the lead with 161aps
remaining Sunday and held on to
win the $1 million Michigan 500 in
the fastes t 500 mile time in
history .
His average speed of 189.727
mph was th e fas tes t ever in a
500-mlle race. Two weeks ago. hi'
captured an Indy-car race in
Toronto in fhf' slowC'st avpragr

winning speed of 75.997 mph .
"I prefer to go fas t," sa1d
Unser, who collected $172.684 fo r
the win. " I just drive what il
takes to win the race . The speeds
may be different, but thl' ra ces
fell a lot a like. I'm jus t happy
that we can win at any speed "

Unser's speed bettered Ane
Luyendyk's Indy -ca r reco rd
cloc king of 185.981 mph in winning the 1990 Ind ia napolis 500.
The all-time 500-mlle reeord wa s
set by NASCAR's Bill E lliott in
1985, when he averaged 186.288 in
the Wins ton 500 .
Bobby Rahal finished In second
place. 25.459 seconds behind his
· Galles- Kraco Racing tea mmCJI C',

and Mario Andretti was thi rd,
one lap behind the winner .
Edd ie Cheever was fourth,
followed by Roberto Guerrero In

tilth and A. J Foy t in sixt h
11 was mor p luck th an SJlPf'cl
thi.lt gavr Unser his LHh victory
of hi s ca reer. his first in J
rJ()(l -mi le ra C'e and fourth of thr

srason.
Cnscr. 18, of Albuqu e rquP.
1\ M .. look over the lea d on La p

2:15 a ft er Rahal. who had bcr· n
leading s tnce Lap 2 1 ~. went in for
his final pit s top . A yel low

GB

Toronto ....... .57 51 .528

I L1

Baltlmon' ..... 53 54 .495
Detroit ......... 5l 5H .172
Cleveland .... .49 5R .45R

.I
1'1
9

Mllwaukee .... U 61 .425
New York ..... -12 6.J .:1 96

1 2~
15 1 ~1

Either Rahal or Unse r he ld the
lead during th e final 100 la ps.

and there was

a

bunch of oil on

the ground and I a lm ost los1 it
" I Cam e SO C]OSf' to los ing it . [
did a big, old laok s l a ~p&lt;.'r- back
and forth . I W&lt;' ni'Whoa . s hoo t~ · I
Ihe n slowed the field dow n."
Rahal acknowledged tha t thr
ye llow flag cost him the victory
" He got the yellow a nd I
d idn' t," sa id Ra ha l, w ho has
fin is hed in seco nd pla ce in five of
this yea r 's 10 Indy-ca r races . " If
I co uld forecas t when the ye llow
is ('O ming out. I wouldn't be
driving r ace cars.
"Thai wa s the dec iding fact or .
T he fat lady hllthe wrong note. "
The 250-lap race became a race
of attrition . Brazil' s Emerson
FlttJpaldl who star ted on the

w~t

Chicago .... ... 63 41 .606

Texas ........ 56
Sealtle .......... 57
CaiH ... ......... 52
Minn ........... 51

59 A54 U

West
Clnn ........... .. 62 44 .5R5
San Fran ...... 58 ·HI .5-12

21'1

51 .523 II
52 .523 II
57 .171 16
5R .16R 17

Kansas City .. -19 57 .t62 17 1Az
Saturda)r's results

..t ~'l

I.. A..... . ... .. 54 52 .509

H
San Dlego ..... IX 5R 453 14
Ho11ston . ...... 47 61 .4:Js IG
Atlanta .. ...... 40 65 .3~1 211"2

Kansas City 9, Baltlmol'&lt;' I
Chicago 9, Mllwaukf'P fi
Texas 3, Toronto 2

SeaUk&gt; 4, Mlnnt&gt;sota 3
California 6, Oaililand 5, 12
Inn.
Sunday's results

lletrolt 7, Boston 2
New York 5, Cleveland 3
Chlcii.Ko 6, Milwauker I

Oakland 4, CaiUomla I
Kan888 City al Baltimore,
ppd., rain
Toronto 8, Texas .J
Seattle 4, Minnesota 0

San Francisc.·o 2. l,os /\ngf'l ('s
Pittsburgh 3, rhilad elphitt 1.

10 Innings
Chicago 10, Montn•al 2

San Diego 7, Cincinnati 3. II
Inn.
Houston 6, Atlanta 2
Sunday'.!i n·sults

Philadelphia 8, Pittsburgh 6
Cincinnati G, San Diego 2
Chicago 3, Montn•all
St. LouJs 11, Nrw \'ork J
Houston 6, Atlanta 2
Los Ang('lt&gt;s 12, San Fran ·
f'i9CO 6
Monday's games
Pittsburgh (Tomlin 1J.O and
Reed :1-3) al Philadelphia (Mul·

hoUand G-1 and undrrlded) ,

5:35p.m.
New York (DarHng4-5) at St.

touis (H1112·1) , 7: 35p.m .
San

Francisco

( R9blnson

B-1) at Houston (Portugalf.-9),
R:35 p.m.

Monday's games

Cleveland (Swindell Hit at
New Vorl&lt; (Hawkins 2-9), I

p.m.
Milwaukee ( Roblnoon 4-3) at
Minnesota (Smith 5-9) , 8:05
p.m.
Chlcqo (Perezi0-8) al Kan·
... City (S. Davis 1-7) , 8:35
p.m.
Toronlo (Steib t+31 at Tex..
. (Hou1h II- 1), 8:31p.m.
Tuetlda)''• 1amea

I
I

Te.ao at ClevelaDd, nl1hl
Dell•ll a1 Toronto, nf1ht
Milwaukee at Mlan-la,
nilht
Chlc110 at Kan... City,
· nl1ht
' Booton at CaiUomla, nllbl
llalllmore at Oakland, nl1hl
New Yon at Seattle, nl&amp;hl
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaat
Team
W L Pet. GB
; New Yort. ..... &amp;J U .581
• Pitt.............. 411 43 .587
: Moatreal ......55 IS .518 8

h

&lt;.1

blown Pngine.

T hf'}' traded places sfven times

du ring th a t stre tc h.
Only 12 of thr 26 cars that
star tr d l hP rarf&gt; wen• running &lt;l f

Tuesday's ~:ames

Philadelphia al New Vorl&lt;,
night
Montreal at Plttshurgh ,
night
San DI"!:O at Atlanta, night
St. Louis al Chicago, night
Los Angeles at Cincinnati,

night
San Francisco at HoU!iton,
nlcht

Calendar
Rodeo
Edmonlon, Alberta - World
Champlontthlps
Roller Skating
Penucolll, Fla. - U.S. Indoor Speed Championships
SkUng
Mount Hull, New Zealand Men'• World Cup
Tennls
Cincinnati - Men's St02
million ATP Champlontthlpo
Montreal Women' s
1100,000 Canadian Open

WE ' RE NO.I- U.S. eager Teresa Edwards (41
celebrates with her teammates and head coach
Theresa Gn•ntz I far Iell) shorUy after th••
Americans beat the Soviet Union 82· 70 to win lh••

Hy STEPHE'I; RUTKOWSKI

ha s used its j ou rnf'ys overspa s to

i&lt;'a d c hanged ha nds 14 times

keep the gold medal at home .

amo ng four dr ive r s.
U nser - who Par lier i n thl' day
drovf' i n t hl' fin al racf' of t hr

Inte rna tiona l Race of Cha mpions
serie s a nd finished fifth - lead s
lhe CART stand ings with 126
points. Mtchael Andrelli , who
fini s hed 15ih. is seco nd with 104.
followed by I-t irk Mears with 102.

Jaite claims
U.S. Pro title
timf' r unner ·up at the U.S. Pro

Te nn ts Cha mpi onsh ips . finall y
capt ured the tillrSunday ,defeat ·
ing qual~ le r Libor Nemecek of
C' lec hos lova kia 7-5. 6-3.
J a lt e, ranked l Oth in th e wor ld .
has reac hed the final s of six
tournaments In the las t 11
months a nd won eac h final. The
llrgf'ntine hit ju st 47 perce nt of
sa ted by commg to net 19 tim l's
and won :J5 of thosL' poin ts .
N~ mecrk , ranked No. 2~ h il
9.1 pPrce nt uf his firs t sp r ves in .
Bu t his sr r ve is so soft he won

only 42 pe rcent of those points.
Jai te broke Ne mecek In the
lith game of the firs t set and held
servf&gt;

to w!n

the

set.

wl!h

Ne me ce k missi ng a drop s hol on
Ihe fin a l point.
In the seco nd se t, .I aile got th e
dec isive brea k 1n the e ighth
ga m P, taking Nemecek's serve
a t love when the Czec hos lovakia n hil a fo rehand wide . T he
Arg entinr th en servf'c1 out the
mat ch at druce to l'a rn the

$50,000 winner's check .
" I t wa s ver y Import ant to win

the fir st set. " said J a lte, the
second seed ·'I was ti red aftpe a ll
the m a tc hes I played at night.
The s un wa s very hot ioday a nd
wllh a guy like Nemecek, you
have to play all the points . He' s
not going to ma ke easy mistakes .
" It was Important for me to be
very c a reful. I know I'm better
th a n him ... bu 1 his game Is very
diffi c ult to play well against. He
has a good ret urn, he puts no
pressure on you, you have to put
a ll the pressure on him ."
Nemecek, whose $25,000 check
Is the largest of his pro career,
ca lled his week on the clay courts
of the Longwood Cricket Club
' 'the greatest week of my life." In
the quarterfinals of !he 28-player
draw, the Czech defeated top
seed and defending champion
Andres Gomez, the reigning
French Open champion.
Nemecek said Jalte "was
playing too fast for me, I was
trying to make him play a little
slower. He put pressure on mehe was always coming In and I
had to pass him . II was a little
windy and It was dlttlcult to hit
passing shots . I was getting a
little tired and couldn't win the
long ralites ."

gold medal in the Goodwill Games in SeatUe.
Edwards scored 16 points to pace the hosL• to
victory, the 41st straight win for the U.S. women .
tUPII

U.S. women cagers win gold
at Goodwill Games Sunday

thr Pnd . T hPre WL'rc no accident s
fo r lhL· f ir sr ti me in th e 10-year
llis tory· of the race, but there
wP re eigh t cau tio n fla gs . The

his first servrs i n. but com pPn·

Boslon 3, Detroit I
Cleveland 17, New York J

\~·it

CHESTNUT lllLL . Ma ss.
tUP ! t - Ma rtin Jaitr. a two

Saturday '!'; rPsuHs
St . Louis i, N(&gt;w \'ork 5

Oakland ...... 6X 41 .ti ll

CART

and my firs t tho ugh t wa s 'Oh
good. this is go ing to help ... Unser
sa ld. '·A nd then I WPnT into Turn 1

St. Louis ...... H

East
Team
W L Prt.
Boslon ...... .... :;s 49 .Ill

year's

an d the n It blew ."
l.uvendyk, who led lti or the
firs t !50 Ia ps. went ou 1 on La p 14 1

Phil ............ &gt;! 53 .190 10
Chicago ....... 51 57 .472 12

AMERICI\N LEI\G UE

la st

caut io n f lag f i ve la ps latrr
rna bled U nsl'r to bu i ld a cu shion
and ma ke his final furl stop.
" I was go ing, 'ypJ Jow , y el low ,'

Scoreboard ...
Majors

lap s of ttw rar e. He was fore('d
out o f lllf' r&lt;.~ ce when he blew an
eng in1• whih.' go ing around Turn I
nn La p l~l~ .
"Thr car was beautiful." said

Fittipaldl.

Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey.
Charlene Mustard, Jonathan
Mustard, Cash Mustard, George
Young, Tony Gilkey, Audrey
Sharpe, Amanda Stanley, Mr.
and Mrs. Scott Wolfe, Amber
Wolle, Myrtle Gilkey, Tina Dou·
glas, Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Hudnall,
Loydle Hudnall, Randy Hudnall,
Eric Hudnall, Richard Hudnall,
Athens; Fonda Gilkey, Earl
G!lk!'y, Desire a Gilkey. Glouster; Rita McKibben, Rick Gilkey, Daniel Gilkey, Courtney
Gilkey, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Brlckles, McArthur;
Margaret Canter, Vera Gilkey,
Effie Maffln, Stevln Maffln, New
Marshfield, George Gilkey, The

Plains; Mr . and Mrs . Kermit
Gilkey, Justin Gilkey, Tim Gilkey, Darwin; Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Young, Shade; Lenora
Hudnall, Glena Wade, Bill Wade,
Esther Matheny. Andy Matheny,
Michael Matheny, John Ma·
theny, Mr . and Mrs. ShebRutter.
Albany; Mr . and Mrs. Dwight
Sturgeon, Brandon Sturgeon, Ra·
cine; Maxine Wiener, Parkersburg, W.Va.; Tara McLean, J .C.
McLean, Nelsonville; Haley
Young, John McBride, Stewart ;
Mr. a nd Mrs. Jody Varner and
daughters, Philo.
Music and entertainment was
provided by Guy Thoma, Kermit
Gilkey, Junior Wlblln, Penny
Bingman. Loyd Hudnall, Ray mond Brfckles, Sheryl Thoma ,
and Amber Moore. clogging.
Garold Gilkey broughl pictures
of the family to share.

Rutland Garden Club meeting held

polr. co ntroiiPd 134 of the fi rst J;,o

cham pion who is wmlPss thi s
seaso n. " It wa s well ·bal anced
and everyt hing was r unning
smooth. I was running s ixth gear

Young, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Wlblln, Pagevllle; Cindy
Gilkey, Shawn East, Brandon
East, Columbus.

UPI Sports Writ"r
SEATTL E tUP!i -The U.S .
wome n' s basketball program

"One o f thl' reasons that wr·rr

doing wha t we are rig ht now Is
beca use of th e players who a r r
p lay ing overseas and the oppor
tunlll es that they are having,"
American roac h T heresa Gren tz
sa id Sund ay aft er the Amer icans
ca plured the Goodwill Games
IItle wil h a n 82·70 victory over the
Soviet Union.
The American s havl' SL'veral

who play lnte rnotlonally, gaini ng
ex perience again s t professional
players th a t I hey can not receivr
in this co unt ry .

" How man y limes do pro plr·
say the co lle giate game and the
NBA are two diffPre nt wor lds,
guys havp to really adjust to it ."
(;rent z sa id . "T hC' same thing
ha ppen s here, where yo u have
these Inter nationa l tea ms play
lng together You arp talking two

play c•a ('h olh Pr morf&gt;.
"Thr mon"' ol tPn Wf' p!Jy th( •
Unit rd Stairs, it will not only bf'

co miJtn&lt;' d for .1 1 of the 43
fir st-half point s . McCl ain had
srvr n r e bound s i n the fl rs t half
a nd fm is hed th e lea de r with 14

bPtle r for us but the USA as
wf'll, " Come lski sa id . " I bel ieve
the USSH me n bt'came Ol ymp ic
champ ions becauSP they go t a lol

"I Iike to think I ra n dom ina te a
gamr o n lhP boards." sa id
McCla in . whose t; foot 1, 175-

of PX prrlencp p li.J _v i ng aga i nst 1hP

pou nd t ramP gave t he Americans
big advant age on the inside
cluring th &lt;&gt; tournam(lnt . "So. I go
t'&lt;.Jc h ga me and co ncrn tratr on

Unilrd Sta tes "
The Un ited Stat es . ahead 51-JR

.:.1

ea r ly in the second ha If, wPnl 011 a
20-4 run an led 71-46 with R 44
rema ining . Six II .S playt•r&lt;
scored durin g 1tlf' spurt

rebound in g."
U.S. Se nator Bill Bradley, a

form er s tandout player in the

Edwards, McC la in a nd Orr .
t lw lhrPP lea ding scor('rs for thr
American s durin g thr r. J mf' '

NBA, p rese nted th e women with
!lwir go ld m()da l s.

~cllJ~r~··· -----' ~C~on_t_in_u~e~d_f_ro~m~P--~·g~e~J~I_____________
y Pa rs, but I f inall .v got to win
he rr," said Ed iJl'rg .. who w:J\
chrt.' rf'd on b_
v a capacit .v crowd
of 8, tJ7 fans. who ga ve bo th
playrrs a st anding O\·ation for
l llC'ir ~ h o u r, '27 min utP effort

from thf' backcou rt be fore . From
thf' final se t o n. Ste fa n pla yed
grr•at tf' nnis. l stayfld with him

but he was rea lly toug h from the
back...
Chang. who co llected $19.090,
wa s a bit puzzled in the third set.
" In the third se t he wa s dolngll
a ll from the baseline. I know he's

· I though t abou t defa uili ng ...
sa id Edberg. who twi s ted the
in s1 dr of hi s it'll a nkl e c ho sin g
dow n onr of• Chang's bld zing

d iffe rent levels .
" I t's tuu bad th ey ~wom c nf
don't have an opportunity to play
In 1he Un ited States. Th ey ha ve In
go 10 Ja pa n or Ital y and th at
rea lly ma kes U.S ba s ke tball In

g r oundstokr w innrr s.
J·:dbrrg rr s lrd on t hL• ncx t
C'hangcovrr and wa s trr a trcl by

Change ·'B ut th e re he was doing
It all fro m the base line, hitting

i\T P Tra ine r Hill Norr is.

forr hand

thr sumrnPrtim e {when Amcri ·
can s re t urn and play i n the ma jor

oO-oO &lt;ll th ai point, " he said .· I

cven ts t t ha t much better. ·
Gre nt z sa id .
Teresa Edward s. w ho pla ys In
Japan . de livered 16 points a nd
Kat rina McC lain co ntr ibuted 15
for th e American s, who rPcorded
their 41st co nsrcutlve inlt'r na ·

tiona I victory. dating back to the
1984 Olympics .
' 'We ha ve sev·c n pla yrrs who
are play in g overseas. for six or
seven mon ths minimum," suid

Lynette Woodard. a two-lime
Olymp ia n a nd sen ior member of
the U.S . tea m . " We know the type
of com pet ilion we are facing. We
see these players a nd play
aga inst the m . We know what to
expect, we havp no fear ."

T he Ame rica ns de fea ted th e
Soviet Union for the second time
In th e tournamen t and Improved
to 5·0 over the Soviets since the
Americans bea t them for the gold
medal at the 1986 Goodw ill
Games.
The curre nt s treak Includes
go ld medals al the 1984 and 1988
Olympics , the 1987 Pan American Games and two world titles .
"There Is no ques tion thai Ihe
United States Is No. I In world
basketball," Soviet coach Evgu e nl Gomelskf said . "The United
States has good tactics , but I
believe Sunday was not a good
game for the USSR."
VIckie Orr scored 9 points and
for the second stratghl game
every player sco red for the
United States. Irina Chevtchouk
led the Soviets with 17 points and
Natalia Zassoulskala added 13.
GOmelskl said the Soviets must
Improve their playmaklng skills
to be a powerful team a t the 1992
Olympics In Barcelona, Spain.
He also said that the United
States and Soviet Union, which
before the Goodwill Games last
met at th e 191!8 Olympics, should

a sprvf' a nti vo iiC'y player and has
sor t of a weak fore hand," sa ld

"' I co uld hav L' stOPIX'd . It wrl ~

wlnnrr s all over the

place. You have to ta ke your hat
off lo hirn ."
Ch ang , who

though t how bad v..·as II ! thought
! 'd try Ia go on a frv.: m orr ga mes.

numerous
bout s with leg c ra mps, sa id he

It was n't swo llen. If It bothered
m e. I wou ld have st opped. "
11ut it d id not srem to hamper

h as

learned a va lua ble lesso n In the
fina l "Do n' I play Stefa n Edberg
when he twis ts hi s ank le."

his p ia ~· and hr was srns a!ional
frnm the b&lt;1 se lln r
·' I j ust had to go for il and do

some thing diffe re nt. " said f:rt
be rg who co m milled 47 unforced
errors to Chang 's 23 . "Somehow

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

It wo rkrrl ou!. w hic h was luc ky i n
a way

5? 15 6AIG#IIN IU.TIICEE5 SAT/SI.JH 'liED .
!UU!N NIGKT 11JESDAY

446 4524
(liCVT

In the tirbn'a kr•r. Edberg sa id
he d id not th ink abou t muc h.
"You have to keep yo ur co n-

;,

~: :·:, . :·

· ~r · )

centration, and go for i L You

can 't really

play

sa fe in a

tlebreakrr."

Edbe rg, ra nked No 2 in the
wor ld behind Iva n Le ndl, had lost
three previous finals In the la st
fi ve vears at Los Angeles. where
C ha~g . ra n ked No . II worldwide.
has been runnerup twice In a row .
Chang, 18. was Impressed with
th e way Edberg played In the
d ecidin g se t .
" He played really welL I've
neve r seen him play that well
Pomf'rn'

992-2124

Hours;

II am to M1d Sun -Thu".
ll am

lO

I am Fn 6,z Sat

Plck-U~ Onlyl
LARGE

1 ITEM PIZZA
PAN OR
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$599

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•XI 00 Oei"'-"Y •••lll'ftited ro - . "-'•d •1 ""''COfll-''"1 •-10111 IIIMY lei• Ulo ad*t..._. .. ,... "'plllc..,.,
TIME AND CAftUIII O,O,.TUNfTti!S NOW AYAILAILI!r

""'n

The Rutland Garden Club
toured thl' flower gardens of
Janet Bolin before the annual
picnic at the home of Pauline
Atkins.
A meeting was held with Mrs.
Atkins having devotions on
"Grandma's Garden" and
"Summer" from Ideals.
A le tter was read say ing the
club had received a superior
rating on their publicity book.
The combined flower show by
the Rutland Clubs will be held
Sept . 8 and 9 at the Rutland Civic
Center. The show was discussed
a nd schedules were handed out .
Pauline Atkins attended thl'
50th anniversary meeting of lhe
Middleport Amateur Garden
Club.
Margaret Belle Weber, Neva
Nicholson, a nd Pearl Canaday

reported they had weeded the
flower beds In the Rutland mini
park .
Stella Atkins. Pauline Atkins,
Eva Robson a nd Neva Nicholson
furnished flower s for the
ch urches .
Janet Bolin, an associate
member of the Rutland Garden
Club will a ttend the Ohio Associa tion of Garden Club's convention
and will receive the club' s
awards .
Dorothy Woodard had the hint
on c ut fl owers. It Is to keep them
as cool as possible In a refrigerator. She cautioned not to put with
apples because they contain
ethylene gas which will put the
!lowers to sleep.
A workshop was held using the
Meigs County Fair Flower Show

schedule . Five arrangements
were made, two In class lhree
using leather, one In a leather
shoe using yarrow and rutabaga
and one In a tall container using a
le ather belt and flowers with
dried material.
In class four, a modern design
was made using pussy willows,
fantail willows, and roses.
Class eight design was pottery,
featuring an orange container
with butterfly bush .
Class 29 featured a modern
design Including copper tubing
with sausavera and white glads
and vine.
Class 40 featuring ruby, used
red glads and roadside material.
Eva Robson furnished the
arrangement at Overbrook Nurs Ing Home.

Rutland gardeners meet recently
The Rutland Garden Club
toured the flower gardens of
Janet Bolin before the annual
picnic at the home of Pauline
Atkin s.
A meeting was held with Mrs.
Atkins ha ving devotions on
."Grandma's Garden" and
"Summer" from Id ea ls .
A le tter was read sayi ng the
club had received a superior
rating on their publicity book.
The combined flower show by
the Rutland Clubs will be held
Sept. 8 and 9at the Rutland Civic
Ce nter . The show was discussed
a nd schedules were handed ou t.
Pauline Atkins attended the
50th anniversary meeting of the
Middleport Amateur Garden
Club.
Margaret lll'lle Weber. Neva

Nicholson, and Pearl Canaday
reported they had weeded the
fl ower beds In the Rutland mini
park .
Stella Atkins, Pauline Atkins ,
Eva Robson and Neva Nic holson
furnfsh!'d fl owers for the
c hurches.
Janet Bolin. an associate
member ol the Rutland Garden
Club will attend the Ohio Assocfa ·
tfon of Garden Club's convention
a nd will receivE' the cl ub's
awards .
Dorol hy Woodard had the hint
on cut flowers . It Is to keep them
as cool as possible In a refrige ra tor. Shecautfon!'d not to put with
apples becau sE' they co ntai n
e thylene gas which will put the
flowers to sleep.
A workshop was held usi ng the
Meigs County Fair Flower Show

sc hedule .

Five

arrangements

were madE&gt;, two In class thrE'P
using leather, one In a leather

shoe using yarrow and rutabaga
a nd one In a tall conta iner using a
leather belt and flowers with
dried material.
In class lour, a mod!'rn design
was made using pussy willows,
fantail willows, and roses.
Class eight design was pottery,
featuring an orange co ntainer
with butterfly bush.
Class 29 featur!'d a modern
design Including copper tubing
with sausavera and while glads
and vine.
Class 40 featuring ruby. used
red glads and roadside material.
Eva Robson furnished the
arrangemen t at Overbrook Nurs·
in~ Home.

Quirks in the news_______
Nightclub cancels topless car
Wl\8h

INDIANAPOLIS tUPII - A
nightclub manager ke pt hi s
promise and cleaned up a sc heduled topless car wash .
Brad Hi rs t, manager of Brad 's
Gold Cl ub, was forced to cancel
the event he advertised last week
as a fund -raiser for the Nobles·
ville Fire Department Christma s
drive.
Hirst had planned to use
dancers from his club, clad In
T·bottoms and pastles to avoid
violations of the Ind iana public
Indecency law .
Fire Chief Jeff Reveal. when
told of the nature of the weekend
fund-raiser, said he would not
accept the money. Hi rst then said
he had found a n alternate char·
lty, which he declined to Identify .
Hirst ca lled off the event after
getting a call from Lt . Jerry
Barker, assistant vice commander of the Indianapolis Pollee Department. Barker said he
asked for the cooperation In
canc!'llng thew ash, regardless of
Its lel{allty.
''There was no hostility at all
1from Hlrsll ," Barker said . "I
was very pleased about the
outcome. Probably the only ones
not pleased were those who
wanJed the more- than - avera~te
car wash."
Seeln&amp; double In Twlnaburg
TWINSBURG. Ohio tUPI)
Nine s!'ts of twins from the Soviet
Union were among about 3,000
pairs of siblings at lhe 15th
annual Twins Days Festival.
The world's largest annual
gathering of twins began In 1976
as pari of Twinsburg's celebra·
tlon of the nation's bicentennial
and to honor the northeasl Ohio
city's twin founders. Aaron and
Moses Wilcox .
This year's tndval kicked ott
with the Double Take Parade and
!Miuded a variety of twin
contftg,
•'For all of you.lt Is a very 110011

tradition. But for our twins, It is
the first time ever that Russian
twi ns take place In such a
compelllio n." said Marina Pa rushnlkova,

the

owner

of

n

Moscow modeling agency and
sponsor or th e Soviet delegation.
"Thank you for welcoming us
to your beautiful cou ntry ." she
told a cheering crowd Saturday,
speaklnl{ throug h an Interpreter .
Twins from Pakistan, India,
Germany and England, as w!'ll
as almosl every U.S. slate, were
expected at the fes~val.
"Usua lly If you're a twin, you
have to constantly explain that
you h ave a twin," said Greg
Wide ne r of Lancaster, Ohio.
"Bu t here . II you're not a twin,
you have to explain why you're
not ."

C reg a nd his brother , Da na,
were ce lebrating their 34th birth·
dav at the festival.
:.Everyone who Is a twin
should come here once." Wid·
e ner sa id, "and everyone who
comes here once will come twice,
a nd they'll keep com ing back .
"We've had nothing but fun
sine!' we've been here ."
Crayola to Induct eight colors
Into hall of fame ·
PHILADELPHIA !UPIJ Binney &amp; Smith, the maker of
Crayola crayons, will be Induct ·
lng eight colors Tuesday Into the
Crayola Hall of Fame.
At the ceremony, complete
with 5-foot replicas of the
crayons and an appearance by
Miss Pennsylvania, the colors
mal:re. raw umber, lemon yel·
low, blue gray , violet blue, green
blue, orange red and orange
yellow - which have been
retired from "active duty" will be honored.
Brad Drexler of Binney &amp;
Smith said the ceremony IJ being
held to recognize that crayons
touch a chord In young and old
alike.
·•we recot~abie lots 01 people

havp strong emotional attach ·
ments to some of I he colors. "

Drexler sa id by telephone from
Binney &amp; Sm ith 's fa ctory near
Easton. Pa . " We wan ted to do
someth ing to preserve the s trong
memories

or

people who were

upset by the retiring of the

colors. "
Bl nney &amp; Smlt h has received
thousands of telephone ca lls and
letters since It a nnounced the
retirement of the colors, which
are being replaced by the more
vivid shades or dandelion, wild
strawberry, vlvld tangerine. fu·
sc hla. tea l blue, royal purple.
jungle green a nd cerulean .
The c hange was prompted by
c hildrens' preferences for bright
colors . "The kids tell us we made
a good dec is ion," Drexler said.
"Crayons are mainly for kids ,
and most of the protesls ha ve
been from adults."
AI leas t one of those protesters
plans to pic ket the Induction
ceremonies

Tuesday,

Drexler

sa id.
"We didn't expecl that we'd
have as many protest groups
form as have." Drexler said.
"We knew we would get a
res ponse from a lol of people, but
we have gotten a lot of calls a nd
letters , mostly from adults, di s·
appo inted by our decision ."

Communtity calendar
MONDAY
RACINE- The Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m . at Star Mill Park.
RACINE - The Racine Chap·
ter 134 Order of lhe Eastern Star
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m.
There will be Initiatory work.
Officers are to wear c hapter
dresses . Potluck refreshments
will be served and all members
are urged to a tte nd .
POMEROY - An ln!orma·
Ilona! meeting will be held on
Monday at 7 p.m . for all township
trustees. village oltlclals and
county office hold ers who are
Interested In applying for 1991
Issue Two !uods . The meeting
will be held In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Courtroom .
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts said that he would assist
those Interested In filling out the
applications and would deliver
the same to Marietta .
REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Monday at 7: 30 p.m . a t the
Reedsville Fire House.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible

Harrisonville
happenings
Mrs . Mlmmle McGrath, The
Plains, visited Mrs. lll'ssle Graham, the Eshelmans and the
Alklres recently.
Ray Alkire, Columbus, recently spen t a weekend with his
parents, Mr. a nd Mrs . Bob
Alkire .
Mrs. Ester Brandee, Vinton,
spe nt the weekend with Mrs . Lola
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs . Williams Rapp
have sold their hom!' here and
will be moving to Florida .
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Ball,
Co lumbus, visited Mrs . Frances
Young recently.

Helping
Hands
group meet
Marge Purtell conducted the
program a t the recent meeting of
the Circle of Helping Hands of the
Zion Church of Christ held at thf
hom e of Lu cille Allen .
Mrs . Purtell used a "Fa mily
From the Bible" co ntest for the
progra m a nd discussed the
Meigs Count y Fair a nd many
remembrances were told by
thoS&lt;· attending from the opening
religious program to the other
even ing programs to th!'enter ln g
of crafts for judging. Closing th e
program was a "Facts About the
Fair" and two special fun

School will be held at St. Paul
Lutheran Church, a long with
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church and Trinity Congrega -.
tiona! Chu rch, Monday through
Friday !rom 6: 30 to 8:30p. m. The
theme Is "Journeys with Jesus. "
Contact Rev . Laura Shre!fler for
further Information.
MIDDLEPORT - The Hope
Baptist Church in Middleport
will have Vacation Bible Sc hoo l
Monday through Friday from
6:30 lo 8: 30 p.m. Classes will
provided lor age groups, nursery
through and Including a dult .
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
will hold vacation bible school
through Friday from 7- 9 p.m. at
the church. All ages are wei·
come. Rev . Roy McCarty, Jr . Is
the pastor.
POMEROY - The Meigs Local
Band Boosters wl II meet Monday
at 7 p.m. a t th e high school band
room. Tuberculin skin tes ts will
be g iven for fair worker s.
SYRACU SE - T he Sulton
Township Tru stees will m eet
Monday at 7: 30 p.m . a t the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
LONG BOTTOM - There will
be revival a t the MI. Oli ve
Community Church Monday
through Sunday at 7 p.m . nightly .
Pastor La wrence Bu sh Invites
the public.

PORTLAND -The Letart
Township Trustees will meet
Monday at 7 p .m. at the office
building .
RACINE - A meeting for
parent s of students who will
entering the Southl'rn Local
School Dis trlct kindergarten will
be held at 7 p .m . Monday In the
high school caf!'terta. Birth certificat es a nd Immunization re·
cords are required for those not .
already enrolled.
RACINE - The Southern Loca l Boosters will meel at 7 p.m .
Monday at the high shcoo l to
di scuss plans for the Meigs
County Fair Booth.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post American Leg ion will meet
Tuesday. Stud ent representative
from Buckey Boys State wlllglve
reporl s. Dinner wi ll be served at
7 p.m .

RACINE - Full band practice
lor Southe rn Band will be Tues·
day, Wednesday , a nd Friday
from 9 a .m . to noon . Majorette
clinic will be Tuesday and
Wednesday from J- 3 p.m. Flag
camp clinic will be Tuesday and
Wednesday from 5: 30-7:30 p.m .
POMEROY -The River Valley Herba lists will meet Tuesday
at 7: 30p.m . a t the home of Diane
Karr on Whipple Road . Linda
McCoy will have a program on
ha rvesting and drying of he rbs.

POMEROY - The Laurel Cliff
Free Methodi st Church will have
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlevacat ion bible sc hool Mond ay .
through Friday from 6:30 to 8: 30 port Arts Countl l will meet
p.m . nightly. The public is Tuesday a t 7 p.m. for It s regular
monthly m eeting .
Invited 10 attend .

Long Bottom group meets
Dorsel Larkin s and Har lan
Bal lard were elected tru stees tor
a period of four years at the
recenthmeetlng of the Long
Bottom Commu nit y Assodallon.
Melody Roberts conducted the
m eeting whic h opened with
prayer and pledge to the fl ag .
It was decided thai by-la ws
will remain thP sam e as past
years .

Larkin s di scussed the posslbi l
tty of tiling th e floor in the
community building for the
group's next prol ect .
Thank you ca rds are to lle &gt;en!
to Bill Thurston a nd Dave Ko·
b!entz for donations a t lhf' ice
cream soclal.
Ballard Is to order .1R new
c hair s for the communit y

building .
The group sa ng Happy Birth·
day to Phyllis Larkin s and a card
wa s presented 10 her .
A smorgasbord dinner IS
pla nned lor the near fu ture .
A SJli'Cia I m eet! ng for pta nn lng
the dinner wi ll be held at the
hom e of Phy llis Larkins on
Wedn esd av a t 10 a.m.
Altending were Judy Holter.
Mae McPee k. Dorset La rkins .
Mary Andr ew, Phyll is Larkins ,
Alta Ila lla rd . Ken Bissell, Bran
don Filch. Ruby Brewer. Ada
Bi sse lL Harlan Ba llard, Melody
Roberts. J a n ie Fitch, Delores
Hawk .
Hostesses for the August meet In g will be Ada Bi sse ll and Mae
McPeek .

The Meigs County Heart
Association would like to
thank everyone who made the
5th Annual Golf Scramble a
big success.

con tes ts.

Lucille Allen presided at the
meeting with me mbers a nwe rl ng
roll call by reading a bible verSP
with the word " willing ."
Ida Murphy had d evotions
using two a rticles "Blocking the
Road ." a nd " Worshiping God."
Reports were given by
members who had a ttended the
quill festival at Bob Evans
Farms and those who provided
the dessert for camp.
The group will p rovide the
drinks for the hom ecoming on
Aug . 19 a t the church .
The Meigs Coun ty Womens
Fellowsh ip will meet Aug . 30 at
the Dexter Church of Christ.
Th e next meeting will be Sept. 6
at the home of Grace Warner
using the bible word "blessed."
Als o attendi ng were Ginny
Wyalt, Helen Eblin, Carrie
Wears, Peggy Boles. Dorothy
Reeves. and Kathryn Johnson .

Now you know
By United Press lnternallonal
Just as a group of fi sh is a
"school" and a group of lions is a
"pride," a g roup of crows Is a
"murder."

Riepenhoff Dis!.
Turnpike Ford
Jaymar Golf Club
Bill Childs
Bob Freed
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Powell's Super Volu
Kroger
Downing, Childs,
Mullen, Musser, Ins.
Home Notional Bonk
Herald Gus
Meigs Health Services
Ingels Furni lure
Oscar's Restaurant
Bank One
Dr. Larry Kennedy
Dr. James Schmoll
Fruth Pharmacy
Presuiption Shop

Fred Crow
Bernard Fultt
Pot O'Brien
Plea sen
King Builders
K&amp;C Jewelers
Phil Simon
Andersons
Farmers Bank
Daily Sentinel
F.O.E.
Clark's Jewelry
Gloeckners
Dan's
Valley Lumber
Bohr Clothiers
Locker 219
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Rick's Fire &amp; Safety
Santa's Country Kitchens

Also a big thanks to June Freed, Nancy Hill,
Becky Triplett, Cathy Ruchi, Belville Miller,
Janet Nibert, Goren Snyder, Robin Wayland,
Kim Sayer, and Deb Miller.

Under New Ownership

Classic Cuts

by

Becky

Styling and Tanning Salon
Formerly Brenda'! Boutique
318 N. 2nd
Middleporr
992-3667
REBECCA RIFE - OWNER

THANKS ONCE AGAIN TO EVERYONE,
SANDYINNARELLI

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.---People in the news·----------_,
By United Press International
GIRLS ARE KID STUFF: As the New Kids on the Block well
know. meeting lots of girls Is one of the side benefits of having hit
records. "I got more girls liking m e than I ever had In my life, "
New Kid Donnie Wahlberg told People magazine. "When you
have a few m!l!on girls who really like you, you don' t want to
disappoint them. My sister, Tracey, always tells me before a
tour. 'Don't make no babies.' She wants women to be respected.
She doesn't want me getting girls pregnant all around the
country." A teen Idol !rom another era, Fabian, has some
advice for the Kids when It comes to girls. "Your ego gets
- lnllated and you think you are some macho No. I , butlfyou are
: with someone for a night, remember, that's their claim to
: fame," he sald. "You don't want to treat them badly . Groupies
: are still people." Fabian also advised the group on how to
maintain a degree of humility: Do their own laundry once a
month.
A PRINCE'S RANSOM: A court In Venice, Italy, ordered the
seizure o! $1.3 mUllan belonging to rock star Prloce at the
request of the organizers of his Italian tour. The tour organizers
are suing Prince for losses they suffered when he canceled
:concerts scheduled for Turtn and Udlne after he had drawn
:disappointing crowds at two earlier shows.
_ · TIEGS GETS FITI'ER: Model Cheryl Tiegs Is trying to roust
- the couch potatoes from their lethargy . She's spearheading a
: fitness challenge sponsored by a dairy products company that

wants to encourage people to learn more about nutrition and
exercise. ·'I f you've never exercised a day In your life, walking
Is an easy way to starl." said Tiegs, 42, who Is 5-foot-10 and
weights 135. "It's low Impact. You can do It on your own time
and set your own goals. It you jog 10 miles a day, you can still
take the challenge and maybe take up tennis or swim a few laps
or do something else that's different.'' Tiegs already hikes,
plays tennis and lifts weights, so, to fulfill her own personal
fitness challenge, she's going to add fruit to her diet.
ON THE SIDE OF THE ORANGUTANS: Rue McClanahan of
"The Golden Girls" and Top 40 radio king Casey Kasem
testified for the animals In a multimillion-dollar defamation
suit flied by trainer Bobby Beroslnl against People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals . MeCianahan took the stand In
Las Vegas Saturday to deny a claim by Beroslni's wife, Joan,
that she had worked closely with McClanahan In the past.
Kasem, host of the syndicated "Top Forty Coast-to-Coast," said
that he had nothing to do with having Beroslnl's animal act
yanked from the lineup of the "Jerry Lewis Muscular
Dystrophy Telethon.'' Beroslnl claims PETA damaged his
reputation by releasing a secretly made videotape that shows
him allegedly abusing his orangutans. After testifying,
McClanahan and Kasem expressed concern that the judge
hearing the case has ties to the Boyd Group, which owns the
Stardust Hotel , where Beroslnl and his animals perform.

Probe to unveil cloud-shrouded Venus
&lt;::APE CANAVERAL, Fla.
ways, to end up the 900-Mgree
(QPI) Streaking through
Infer no It Is today, the apparent
space at 24 .600 mph, NASA's
victim of a runaway "green house effect."
Mi!gellan radar mapping probe,
launched 15 months ago from
"The spacecraft is currently
planet Earth, will sa lt over the · working fin e. We've had a
north pole of Venus Friday and
number of problems ... all of
plunge out of sight behind the
which have been resolved. The
cloudy planet .
bottom line Is, we are go for orbit
At exac tly 12: 45 p.m. E DT,
Insertion and the start of mapwhile the spacecraft Is out of ping," sa id Magellan project
contact rollers at the Jet Propul·
manager Tony Spear of the Jet
slon Laboratory in Pasadena,
Propulsion Laboratory In PasadCall!., an on-board computer Is to ena, Calif.
execute a command that will fire
If successful, Magellan will
a 4, 721 -pound solld-fuel braking
revolutionize knowledge about
rocket bolted to the base of the
Earth's sis ter planet and give
scilar -pow£&gt;red probe.
NASA a much-needed morale
Blazing with white-hot fury,
boost alter weeks of public
tin&gt; compact rocket motor will criticism over problems with I he
push against Magellan with $1.5 billion Hubble Space Tete·
17,750 pounds of thrust, slowing scope, delays In the shuttle
the space probe by 6,200 mph In program and trouble with the
ttie most critical maneuver for agency's planned space station.
the $550 million project si nce
It the rocket does not work.
launch from the shu t tl e Atlantis Magellan will sail past Venus and
orl May 4, 1989.
the mission wlll be a failure. But
11 all goes well. the &amp;hecond engineers are confident the
rocket firing will put the robot spacecraft will work as advertised, reca lling how an alert
spacecraft Into an egg -shaped,
technician discovered a wiring
elllptlcal orbit tilted 86degrees to
foul -up before launch that, had It
VPnus's equator, with a low point
not been co rrected, would have
of a bou I 170 m lies and a high
prevent ed the rocket from
point of about 5,000 miles.
Igniting.
After checkout and ca l!bra·
Magellan, named after th e
lion, Magellan will begin firing
16th-century explorer. Is the fir st
rada r pulses at the planet below
new U.S. Interplanetary mission
around Sept. I. p roducing
since
1978 and the first In an
photograph -like !mages that
armada
of high-tech robot craft
may hel p determine what ca used
thai
will
ex plore Venus, Jupiter,
Venus . similar to Ear th In many

Saturn and a comet during the
1990s, what NASA science chief
Lennard Fi sk calls a new
·'golden age ' ' of space
exploration.
"We are essentially, wi th Ma·
gellan. entering Into the second
golden age of space science," he
said. "You will have a U.S.
planetary program In which
there Is a mission In It s prime
exploration phase continuously
from 1990 to the year 2006. And
never again wlll anyone question
U .S. leadership In planetary
exploration."
Built with spare parts left over
from other planetary programs ,
the 7,600-pound Magellan wa s
designed lo map up to 90 percent
of the surface of Venus, using
radar Instead of visible light to
see through the thick clouds that
block the planet's suriace from

view.
"Ven us Is of special interes t to
the geologist for the contrast It
presents with Earth and for the
clues It provides concerning
Ea rth's origin and evolution."
wrote Michael Carr and Ma gel·
i an proj ect sc ien ti st Stephen
Sa unders In a book titled "The
Geo logy of th e Terres trial
Planets."
"Bo th bodies are of sim ila r
size, composition and dista nce
from the sun yet they havr
evo lved to remarkably different
stales; one developed Into a
prolific haven lor life, the other

Into a sterile Inferno. Unfortu·
nately, we are far from under·
standing why this happened ."
Radar data beamed back to
Earth from Magellan wilt be
processed by powerful compu ters to create photograph-quality
Images of Venus's surface, show Ing features as small as 350 feet
across, about the size of a football
field .
Magellan also wtll be used to
learn more about the planet's
Interior by pre cise ly monitoring
how th e spacecraft's orbit Is
affected by the planet's gravity,
which provides an Indication of
In terlor mass dlstrlbu tlon.
The end result will be enough
data to flit some 500,000 library
books - enough to 1111 a shell 10
miles long - and keep re·
searchers busy for years to

come.
The project Is fund ed for a
243-day mapping mlsston. the
length of one Venusian "day.' '
But sc!entlsts hope to gain
approva l for an ex tended missio n
expected to generate data
through 1995.
·'This Is not a Voyager encounter." said Stephen Saunders,
Magellan project sr!entist al
JPL . "This Is nn l some thin g
where we' ll havr a lot of
exc itement for a few hours and
see pictures lhl•nex t day.It' s not
going to be like that at all. What
we've got here Is not a sprint .
It's more lik e a ma ra thon ."

Enola Gay bombardier: no regrets, apology
CHARLOTTE, N.C. IUPII TUe bombardier who dropped the
atomic weapon that destroyed
Hiroshima 45 yea rs ago said he
haS no r egrets or apologies,
because his action ended World
War II
Thomas Ferebee, 71, told the
Charlotte Observer In an Inter view published Sunday that he
did not know the blast he
unleashed on Aug . 6. 1945, would
wipe ou t th e city and kill an
estimated 140.0QO p eop le
Instantly .
Nor did he know that It would
~an irrevocable turnin g polnlln
hi• tory .
j'hat sum mer mornln~ 45 ye.
ar&gt; ago, Ferebee, then 26, a
native or Mocksvil le. N .C., knew
he was getUng ready to drop a
special bomb, a secr et weapon
that could end the war .
"People have to go back and
' tudy the his tory of th e war and
th~ attitude of the people at that
lime," he sa id . "Everybody

wanted the war to end . That's
what I wanted the most . I wanted
the bomb to work and end the
war.
"So 1 fel t good, since the first
time we used 11,11 worked. I don ' t
care how much confidence you
have In science, until that bomb
goes off, you're not certain." he
said .
After the atomic bombing of
Nagasaki. three days after Hiroshima, Japan surrendered. end·
tng World War II on Aug.15,1945 .
Ferebee, now a resident of
Wlndemere, Fla., joined the
Army In 1940. After two years of
flying sc hool In the Army Air
Corps, he was assigned to be a
bombardier .
After flying missions to Europe
and North Africa, he was as ·
signed In 1944 to a B-29 bomber
air crew with CoL Paul Tibbets.
the pilot. Cap t . Theodore
"Dutch " Van Ki rk. the navlga·
tor. and nine other men .

" Th ere was no way that I was
going to get Into an airplane
without Ferebee and Van Kirk ,"
Tibbets said . "They did exactly
what they were supposed to do
when they were supposed lo do it.
We were all young kids ... , but

white- and 11 was spreading out
in all directions . Then , finall y,
the stem formed completel y and
the top was the re and 11 kind of
broke off."
The Inferno killed 80,000 lo
200,000, according Ia assorted
they were as professiona l as
es timat es. reducing victims
anybody yo u could possibly
neares t the bl as t to blackened
find . "
sha do·Ns on walls . Ferebee and
On Aug. 6. 1945, the bomber
Tibbets were blinded temporar ·
Enola Gay l i ft ed off while two · lly because they neglected to
technicians armed the huge.
wear their dark glasses .
strange-looking bomb . About two
hours from Hiroshima, Tibbets
Van Kirk, 69, left the Army Air
told th e crew exactly what they
Force in 1946, re turned to college
were carry ing, but Ferebee
for a master's degree In cheml ·
didn't hear. He was asleep.
ca l engineering. From 1972 to
It took 43 seconds fo r the bomb
1978. he lived In Charlotte. Today
to fall and make li s mark on
he liv es In San Franci sco.
history.
Tibbet s stayed In the se rvice.
"At first, I saw this boiling on
retiring In 1966 as a brigadier
I he ground and the stem tof the
general AI 75, he lives In
mushroom cloud) was going up
Columbu s, Ohio.
and you co uld see buildings going
Ferebee did not retire until
up In the stem ... Ferebee said .
1970 after flying as an observer
" It was al l co lors. You can
on bombing mis sions over
Im agi ne, I think - brown. red.
Vietnam.

The color of money may be changing soon

'

.I

WASHINGTON tUPII - Th&lt;•
foreign co untries.
greenback cou ld be i n for a color
"You've got to use every
change under plans being co ns!· weapon you ca n to stop drug
dered In Congress and other
traffickers ," Regan said In an
government c ircles.
Interview . "To me. the reason
Legislati on now before the thai most people go Into selling
Senate would order the Treas ury
drugs and dealing In drugs Is the
Department to study the posslbll· profit m aUve. Anything that you
tty of changing the co lor or size of can do to Interrupt that prollt
u:;. currency to thwart drug chain has to Interrupt the drug
dealers and money launderer s chain."
wbo are draining thl' nation of
Regan estimated that the U.S.
billions of dollars annually.
··underground economy'· o! drug
Donald Regan, who was treas- money, organized crtme prollts
ury secretary and White House and other "off-the-books" In·
chief of staff during much of the come Is about $JOO billion annu ~agan administration, Is a ally, meaning the government Is
sttong backer of the concept, and
being deprived of about $100
tht&gt; Drug Enforcement Admlnls· b1111on In taxes per year .
tratlon Is actively pursuing such
The change would be unprece·
a plan.
dented . Paper money has been
"I believe It would be devastat · green throughout U.S. history.
tng to the drug traffickers," said according to the Bureau of
Sl!n. Alfonse D 'Amato, R·N.Y ., Printing and Engraving. The last
who Introduced the money mea - major design change came In
sure In the Senate. "You can't 1927 with a size reduction and
just do business as usual.
standardization or artwork.
They've been beating the
The logic behind the proposal Is
system."
simple: Virtually all sates of
D'Amato's measure Is part of
narcotics are conducted In cash.
broader legislation cracking even wholesale transactions that
doWn on money laundering that Involve millions of dollars.
Due to restrictive currency
w4s approved In July by the
control laws In the United States,
Banking CommIt tee and headed
major drug trafficking organlza·
for action by the Senate. The
lions must export their Illegally
study would focus on the posslbll·
gained
money, often by smug·
lty of al terlng selected denominagllng, to be deposited tions of U.S. currency or only
"wasbed" or "laundered"- In a
u.~. currency In circulation In

bank In a country with weak or
non·exlsten t currency controls .
The DEA has proposed to
Trea sury officials that the go.
vernment print two forms of
currency, one as lPgal tender
exc lusively Inside the Uni ted
States and one as legal tender
exclusively outsid e the United
States, said David Wilson . who
heads DEA's anti-money laund·
erlng efforts . The two form s
would be Interchangeable only at
a U.S. -controlled flnanclallnsti ·
tution. mea ning drug traffickers
could no longer exploit weak
currency control laws In foreign
banks and smuggled money
w ou ld be worthless.
" I hope It will make the
American drug market an add!·
!tonally unlrlendly environm ent
and It will cause traffickers to
say, 'Youknow,whydon'twesell
our dope someplace else,"' Wilson said. "They have It their own
way now by being able to go
overseas . I want home-court
advantage. It's as simple as

that."
Regan's Idea Is slightly differ·
ent and would target Illegal cash
holdings by drug dealers, tax
evaders and other criminals.
Regan argues that ,the govern·
ment should print $20, $50 and
SlOO bills with a new color on one
side and, with a warning of about

10 days, declare th e old bills no
long er acceptable as legal
tender .
As Americans exchange old
bills for new, banks would keep a
record of exc hanges over $1,000,
with the information forwarded
to the Internal Revenue Sen1ce
and other federal agencies. That
would mean that those possess·
lng large amounts of cash would
either have to lega lly declare It
or swallow It .
" From my point of view . you
have to do something sudden and
dramatic," Regan said. "To
change the color only on one side,
I think, would do it. Why bother
with both sides? You'd still have
the so-called greenback. But you
might have a yellow face. Or you
m lght have a green face and a
yellow back. This doesn ' t have to
be one hue. It doesn't have to be
just pink or just blue. It could be a
m lxture of colors."
Regan acknowledged that his
plan would Inconvenience mil·
lions of Americans.
"On the other hand," Regan
said, ·'I think all of us are In this
drug fight and In this fight
against crime and In this fight
against tax cheaters. To be
Inconvenienced by having to take
whatever stash of biUs you have
to get them exchanged at the
bank Isn't all that great a deal."

Monday,

6, 1990

Classifie

• The Area's Number 1 Morketploce

RATES

TO PLA(E AN AD CALL 9q2-21Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

3
6

10

tti
tti

Monthly

'Ads oulsldc Me i\IS. Galha oo Mnun counloes mu s t bu pre

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13 .00

t6
t5
t6

Announcements

Over 16 Words
'
20

Rate

Words

Days
1

POUCH:. S

30
42

1
3
4
5

60
05 / day

51 .30/day

p .. d

run 3

TODDR. KING

DAVID L. LOCKE

'•,•

MRDD hires, promotes

aiM Jlilld 1ft i!ldvillltC
Grve111wily ilnd Fou11d ids uOOI!f 1!) won.h will be

ca rrer informatio n co mpany,
sugges ted the lowered number of
applications mean I hat the long·
term decline In the number of
18-year-olds In th e population Is
now having an effect on the
co lleges .
And, in what could point to a

reversal of recen t 1rends. many
of the sc hools r eported Increases
In the number of appilcations
fr om minorities.
The survey, known as the
Co mpetitive Co llege Survey, Is
co ndu cted annually by Peter
son's. a nd this year's res ult s
WPre basPd on responses from
137 of the approximately 300 the
firm ldentlfi!'d as co mpetit iveor prestlge - schools . It was
released Sunday .
or those S&lt;? hools responding, 64
percent sa id there had been a
drop In the number of appl!ca·
tions received from potential
flr st·year students. About 28
percent said there had been an
In crease, and 8 percent reported
no change.
Larger schools seemed to have
suffered more of a drop In
app lication s than smaller
sc hools . the survey said, with 73
percent of Independent schools
with an enrollment of more than
1,750 reporting declines, while
only 58 perent of smaller colleges

drsvl"'f .

Busm""'~

Daily

s lltlllllel (1!11

Gallra Coumy
Area Code 614

CiMd omd luy.&amp; nolu.:ttsl

w1ll 1rlur ri~HH: illl 111 the PI Pluillaul Rtr\JIStllf amt lhtl Galh
prrh li O,lrty Trrl1titlll, rttilchn19 owt:f 18.000 hom tt"S
COPY OE AOLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESOM' PAPER
W[ONFSOAY PAPER
lHURSOAY PAPER
~HIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

r Itt'

11

12
13

•••

367
388
24&amp;
256
643
379

OAY BEFORE PUBUCAIION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 DO PM MONOAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY

1 00 PM WEONESOAV
2 DO PM THURSDAY
2 1)0 PM FRIOAV

Galhpoha
Ch•twe
Vrnton
Rio Grande
Gu..,.n Drtl
AniMa Dill
w•nut

992

PomM'O'f'

985 Ch•tl'r
843 Ponl.. d
141

•••
141

&amp;67

.,
....
'"
•••

Area Code J04

Mrctdleporl

lelolrt hils
Raane
Rutland
Cool\ltlle

,,

Busmeu Tr&amp;U\11111
Schools &amp; lna trucuon
Radto . TV &amp; C l! Rup;w

17

M"ceu • .,e(llrl

,.

Muon Cu. WV

Merg• County
Aru Code614

lnsuran c~t

14
15

n

2J

Busrneu Opporlurrrly
Monev to l o1n
Proi Msro nal S e•llr Ctt!o

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

CHARLES SNIDER
and Chrissy. The family attends
the Word of Faith Church In
Belpre.
David L. Locke has been hired
as th e Director of OperatlonsBuslness Manager . He Is a 1982
graduate of the Ohio University
Sc hool of Ruslness where he
earn ed his B.A. In Business
Admintstrallon .
Locke ha s relecated fr om his
home In Marietta to Syracuse. He
ca me lo Meigs MRDD from a
position as retail manager and
sales representative for a na·
tiona! golf equipment chain . He
also operates his own accou ntin g
l irm, "Co mput er ized Accounting
Services" .

The fi rm also said that most of
the prestige colleges use waiting
lists for Incoming students and
most of them expect to dip deeper
Into the lists than they did last
year.
According to the survey. 48
percent ex pect to enroll more
students from wa i ting lists than
they did last year to fill this
September's freshman class.
while just 27 percent satd they
expect to enroll fewer on their
waiting lists.
While overall most of the
pres tige colleges and universities expect a stable enrollment
size despite the drop In applications, Peterson's said there Is a
slight Indication of an enrollment
shift away from the expensive
1ndependent schools to the less
espe nslve public Institutions.
Independent schools expect a
decline of 1.1 percent. and public
sc hools project an Increase of U
percent In enrollments.

________
__ ....
MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
_.._.._.._.._

,_ '

_....

Do you qualify for
assistance to buy or
rehabilitate
a home?
'
...
237 lao Str•t

Middleport VUiage Offices
Phone (614) 992-6782

.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
BID FOR TRUCK

The Tuppers Plaln•Chet ·
ter Weter
Olttrfct h11
achieved compliance with
the quarterty monitoring requirement• for YOIItlle or·
genic chemicals (WOCt) in
raw and flnlthed water ••
outlined In the regulations of
the Ohio
AdmlnistratNe-

CodojOACi.
Tuto 3746·81·32!8) of

39&amp;81 Bor 30 Rood
ReedovMto, Ohio 4&amp;772
Phone 614-985-3316

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbut, Ohio

Placed in yout busmess. You te ceive a 10% commission on eve•
ything sold. Installation and setvice p10vided at no cosllo you .
Call 992-2554-Boyer Vending

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

-·

ere no ttreet• baundilng tha
property on tiM ••• and

......,.," known'" 2273

S.Venth StrMt. Svracu ...
Ohio 48771.
The r... ..tate hll bMn
Mlign~ Auditor' 1 Parc.4
Number 20.00118.
8tid , ... 111811 ,, tubttct'
to accru~ 1180 Ntf •tate

.....

REAL
EITATE
APPRAISED AT: 111 .000.00

The real ntate cennot be
told for &amp;tie than two· thirds
the eppl'litld value.

TERMS OF SALE' Cath
on delivery of dHd.
Jam• M. Soulsby.
Sheriff of Meigs County

(71 23. 30; (8)

2

""'i..~~~;:.:'~~matic

Power Brakes

Power Stetrlng
Rubber-vinyl Floor Mato
Rear Step Bumper
H~evv Outy Vinyl Seat
Red in color

Mud. Snow Tiro•
6 cyl. Fuel Injected Engine
- 4.3 or 4 H&lt;er
Oome tt
Ught
Cl
U ht
A~·~:d~o g or
Two bldt are requested.

dty, Augutt 9th al 2'00 P.
M. at the District oHice
loarted at 39681 a.. 30
Road . Reedsville. Ohio.
The District reserve• the
right to reject any and/or all

bldt.
171 24; 181 1. 6, 3tc

leg~

e.

3tc

In Memory

Sealed proposal• will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation. Col ·
umbus. Ohio, unti110 :00A.
M., Ohio Standard Time.
Tu"dly. Augutt 14, 1990.
for lmprovementt In :
Meigt County, Ohio, on
MEO· 7-t0.00-2.111. Stttt
Route 7 , Meigs County, by
r•urfaclng
with asphalt
concrete .
Projec:1 and work length :
32.472 fool or 8.16 mltn.
Pavement width: verlout
"The date ut for compl•
tlon of thl1 work 1hlll be as
1et forth in the bidding pro·
pout .''
Each bidder thall be required to file whh hit bid a.
c:ertlfiad check or Cllhler't
check for en amount equel
to ftve percent of his bid. but
in no event mort than fifty
thouNnd doilart, or a bond
for ten per cent of hit tNd.
payabtt to the Director .
Bldd•t mustappty, on the
proper form•. for quellflcatlon 11 leett ten days prior to
the date HI for opening bldt
In accordance with Chapter

DIRECTOR

IN MEMORY OF
THE BIRTHDAY OF
ROBERT ESTER SMITH
AUGUST 3 1945
WHO DIED tASTER
WEEKEND
MAY 3, 198t

dtllth.

A -ktnd lllltd whh ho-

llnns;
Gone eway to 111 him to
nrHt of goldnaaa.

985-4473

66 7• 61 7a..,
1·31.' 90 ttn

USED APPUANCES
90 OU WAHANTl
WASHlR$-$100 up
DRYERs- S69vp
REFRtGERAIOR5-SIOO up
RANGES--Gas-Dec.- $125 up
FREUER$-1125 up
IIICRO OVU$-$79 up

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
POMROY 1 OliO

Neat as a pen" desc1ibes this two bed1oom home with an
equipped kilche~~. c a~port. and part basement. Ha s a floo•ed
attic and 50•288 Coot lot.
125.000

.

$27.900

Mobrl~:~

87

llp~olsterv

Hum u Rcp a u

!f/JJVJ/Jf)J

'LIGHT HAULING

*FIREWOOD

Bl ll SLACK
992 -2269

USED RAILROAD TIES

t·12-' U -tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Homos loilt

"Free

EJtimataa··

PH. 94q.2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNOAI CALIS

4·16·86-Hn

PLUMIING &amp; HEA nNG
Ntw loca1ion:
161 North St&lt;ond
Middleporl, Ohio 4S760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C.,.y Fit hint Suppll•

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hera
,.-,r ·'• IUS!Nil! PHONE
(6 141 '1'11-6!!0
,lE!tDINCI PHON!
16141 "'2-71!4
I ! i'!! i rlfl

SER~ICE

POMEROY,O .

992-5335 or 985-3561

99l·22H

Aaoss from Post OffiCI
217 E. So&lt;, Po-oy
POMEROY, OHIO
3/ 6/'90/ Un

Middleport, Ohio
l ·IJ.H,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

R. 1. HOLLON
TRUCKING

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

E. Mou•ll.l.&amp;ait

SHADE - N1 ce counhy
buildrng lotsare ha1d to frnd
but we have 8 beautilullots
)US!wa~trnglmyou . Smallest II
" .94 we and l11gest 1s
1.54 acre Electnc on each
s~e and T.P.C. wate1 taps
available Secluded. beaulf
lui v1ew!. 10 mins. from Po·
meroy. and 15 mrns. to
Athe11s. NO !RAILERS. Start
rng at $6.50000
POMEROY - Two Apart
ments wrth 1entals o( $300.00
a month. as! alxlut ttns one
Sll50000
POMEROY - Older 2 story
home. go•geous woodwor•
liteplace. nrce kdchen cabt ·
nets 3 bedrooms. eq~~~~~:~l
ktlchen. cenhal 11 .
and stotage , ,,,uu' w .

DEITER - Rali10ad Sheet
- 3 bedroom. I bath. I ~

,,---------t
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Roosonabto Prien"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 94q·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-16-86-Un

FLATWOODS ROAD - 1
3 bed10om. I bathmodularl
home sitting on 1.11
Carpet &amp; vin,llloortng
heat pump and central "
$39,900.00
POMEROY- 40' xll2'
1 ftoot home. wrth
bedtooms, I bath, carpet
Full baseme~~t, gmge in ba·
semen!. $17,900.00.

We

PAT-HILL FORD
992 -2196

CHESTER, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT All

985-4422

1-11·90 tin

TRI-COUNTY RECYCliNG
OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SEIVE YOU ....
POMEROY, OHIO' Rt . 7 S. S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt . 60S. S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY : 9 8 m .· 7 p.m . 7 Days
ALBANY : 10 8.m. ·6 p.m. 6 Days, Ctoaed Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY. MAY 29 , 1990
# 1 Copper 90¢ per lb.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 35¢ per lb.
Clean Auto Radiators, 40¢ par lb .
WE BUY All NON FERROUS SCRAP, BATTERIES.
STARTERS. TRANSMISSIONS. AlTERNATORS , ETC

2-6114

slo•y msulated home. has
bay w111dow n · · room. 2
stmy cella• hou se.
buildin~ with e!lra
$19,500.00.

w~h

MIDDLEPORT - Gteat neghborhood - COl net lot AH on
one ftoo1 plan. 2 to 31ledtooms,large pantr1. and a p•rt ba
sement Enclosed Iron! sitting porch and a nice lot.

Dfi

con repair and recore radtolors and
heater coret. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

RACINE - Ranch Home on
CR 35, 5 miles ~om Racrna
7 room , 3 bedrooms. family
room wdh fi•eplace. mud
room. utility, heat pum A/C
2.15 acres
Reducetl
$41 ,90000

........

Gunllfal Hauhnu

All MAKES
Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

!8) 1. 6. 2tc

~ - ~--

EleC1trc.t &amp; Rt!h t\IUfatron

85

MICROWAVE
OV,EN REPAIR

Roller Boom

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992 -2886/HOME 992 -6692
DOTIIE S. TURNER, BROKER
POMEROY - 1647 Lincon Hts. - "Cute as a button -

E ~~.c._..alm!J

04

lt. 33 Nerth of
P
omeroy, Ohi0

l0/30/'8911n

6" Width H.D. Frost Chsln

{~'·\
I -.I4a .f
'\...:_,,..,.·

Of goodbye. eoon would
hiW onjoyed thltrldn
Sunday of our lord' •

8J

,..
qq2.7479

48" Depth H.D. 1Arg1tolt

Real Estate General

Remember 11ch dey;
A emile on hie ftct;
A word of hello,

Free Estimates

The Tuppert Plalna-Chn11f Water Dlttrlct It Inviting
111led bidt for a Trencher
with the following •pacifica ·
lions :

bids.

Homc lm p r ov~;~rnent,
Plumbmg &amp; Htrll\.riiH

P.&amp;f'1l
•Mobile Hom~
RPnfllls
•Lot· Ron'"ls

PUBLIC NOTICE
BID FOR TRENCHER

StabUizer~

81
82

•Mobile Home

om e.
ltmodlling
Stop &amp; Compare

Public Notice

for backhoe 11·
tachment
Addltiontl horllont1l boring
anachment
Alto. separate bidt are re·
quMted for a du11l wheel tih
trailer.
The District offart for
trade a Ca••Oavls 1976 20
+4 trencher which can be
6&amp;25 Ohio Aevlttd Codo.
viewed at the office bet·
Pfant and s~lflcatlons ween 8 :00 and 4 :30 Mon·
.,eon file in the Department day through Friday .
of Transportation and the of·
Bids will be opened on
flea of the Dlttrict Deputy Thurtd•¥· Augutt 9 at 2 :30
Director .
p.m. at the office of the Dis·
The Director rese,..,.e the trict located at 39681 Bar
right to reject any and an 30 Road, Reedsville, Ohio.
The Di1trlct raterv" the
bid•
BERNARO 8. HURST r~ht to rejeet any 1nd / or

(71 30; 181 6. 2tc

•Garages
e(
p1 t

AaMs F,_ Pott OffiCI

drive

Ca mpers &amp; Motor Huomt!lo

--

992-5335 or VU-3561

Ditch Cleaner
Rear Wheel Welghtt
Beckhoa tttaehment wHh
12" backhoe bucht
Engine - Dauu F -3·l 101 1
Air-Cooled Diesel. direct
injection whh Individual
cylinder Injection pumps
Hydro static ground drive
Hydro static anachment

Campmg Eqrotpnrttnl

79

I~========;ti========:;rr=::::===:::::::1
BISSELL &amp; BURKE
COUNTRY
SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
CONSTRUCTION
MOBILE
•New Homes
REMOVAL
HOME PARK

ond the oecond with four
whoot drive.
The District It also trading
In a 1 98fi full abe Che~Jrolet
pickup truck. which can be
•en at the office.
Bidt will be opened Thurt-

1R

Business Services

one with two whoel drive

Copy No. 90-913
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Pub lie Notice

and the IKiltlng northertv
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of en Order of right of way Nne of 1 fifteen
S.ea l..ued out of the Com· fool olloy: !hence N. 88 dog.
mon Pia• Court of Meigt 00' 00" W. along the granCounty. Ohio. In the cue of tor's south propen..,. lint M'd
Diamond Saving~ 8t loan the ealttJng northerly right
Comp.tny. Plaintiff. lr'l . Ro· of way line of 1 fifteen foot
bert W . Crow. etal .. Defend· alley, 98 .50 feet to an Iron
ants. upon Judgment ther• pin Mrd the real point of bein rendered. being Cesa No. ginning for the land herein
90-CV-07 in ..id Court. I d•crlbed; thence N . 88
will offer tor 11le It the fronl deg. 00 ' 00 " W. continuing
door of the Counhou• In along uid line, 98.50 feet to
Pom..-oy,
Melga County. an Iron pin tM grantor' •
Ohio, on the 24th day of Au- touthw•t prop«ty corner;
guoL t990. II 10'00 A.M .. thonco N. 2 dog. 00' 00" E.
the following lands and ten· along the grantor' 1 wnt
ementt
located et 2273 property line,100.00futto
Snenth StrHt. Svrecuae. an iron pin the grantor' •
Ohio 46779. A comoletelt· northwut prop~ corn•
gal detcriptlon of the real and the existing toutherty
right of wey line of Seventh
estate It 11 follows .
Situate in One Hundred Street; thence 8. 88 d~tg .
Acre Lot Number 297. Town 00' 00" E. along the gran 2. Range 12. Suhon Town· tor' 1 north property lint and
thip. Village of Syrecu ... the existing touth.,fv right
M~gt County, State of Ohio of w1y line of Se-.-enth
and being more fulty d• Street. 98 .60 feet to en ifon
pin; thence S. 2 deg. 00'
scribed as followa:
Commencing lit a point In 00" w . along aline. 100.00
the tc&gt;uthwut corner of Lot teet to the point of beginNumMr 64 of Carleton' ning and containing 0 .228
Second Addition to Syra· ICret
Subject to all 1-oM night cu.. as rtcorded in Plat
WIYI
and e11ements of r•
Book 2. Page 38 in the r•·
cordi ot the Meigs County cord.
hceptlng therefrom. thll1
Recorder' 1
Office. uid
point elso being on the tKitt· portion of the reeletta1e coning eMterly right ot WI'( lint yeyed by dted recorded in
of College Str81t thence N. Volume 276, Page 829 of
2 dog. oo· OO" E. otong 1he the Meigt Countv Deed Re ·
e•ltting euterty right ofwav cordt.
The real Htate above deline of College Street and
tcribed
it bounded on the
the wnt line of Hid lot
Number 154. 1115 . 00 farrt to nor1h by 7th St,...t. on the
an Iron pin In the grentor' 1 Iouth by a 115 ' aNey. alto
southeatt property corner .. nown at Been Alley; there

Small
- lon~ bed
lowingtruck
specifications:

s .. l ..

liJfh941

jr)!' a!!l/!l!!(!f..ftjnn(J !l!li(fj..

The Tuppen Plalns· Chll ·
tar Water Dl1trlct 11 Inviting
..... d bldl for a 1991
Pickup Truck wtth the fol·

July 20. 1990
Contrsct 811181

you?
CLASSfiED
ADS

-

'Jbh aervlce Ill provided llnup lhe jolal effortll of the VUlate of Mlddlepart and the Govl!rnor'a Offtce of Appal~ehta.

TO BUY OR TO SELL
Free Gift with Sign-up
Skin-So-Soft Available
992 -7180

can~

_.._.

-~~~~~nJlt!.!~~

AVON

WH0-0-0-0

----Contact Jean Trussell
---.-~-

NOTICE TO CONSUMERS
OF TUPPERS PLAINS·
CHESTER WATER
DISTRICT

W•-

I

rates .

PubliC Notice

the OAC requiret that the
owner or operttor of the
Tuppert Plalnt· Ch81ter
ter Dlttrlct Jtotlfy the con ·
sumers of the water that
they may obtain copl.. of
the above mentioned rnutts
upon reque~t . To obtain copies of auch result.. contact :
Robert H . Harris,
Treatment Plant Operator
Tuppers Plain•Chetter
Water Dl1trfct

PEPSI MACHINES

re ported decreases in
applications.
Among public Institutions with
an en rollment of more than
10,000, 78 percent reported declines, while only 44 percent of
sma ll public colleges showed a
drop.
By contrast. 70 percen t of the
pres tlge colleges reported an
Incr ease In minority student
applications, with 73 percent of
th e lndependen I schools and 56
percent of I he public Institutions
rPportlng increased numbers.
Peterson 's said size of the
sc hool was not a factor In the
minorit y student application

Public Notice

Auto' tor Saht
lruclol s lor

Van• &amp; 4 wo · ~
Motorcyclus
75 8011t5 &amp; MOI OH lor S•ttt
76 Auto P..-t, &amp; Ac~~$-UI'IUS
11 Auto Repau

5 1 Househo ld Good~
52 · SpDrt ing Goom
SJ Anlrques
5~
Mrs c Mofch an drse
55 Bmldrng Supphe5
56 Pets tor Sale
57 Mus.~ cal ln l l!urn.,rl s
51! fru1ts &amp; 'Vego'llbl o:s
59 For Salt!orlr~tlt:t

Wanted l o Do

lihEIUHgl
21

forlease

71
.,7
7J
74

Merchandise

PleMilnt

576 Appltt Grove
713 Mason
882 New Haw e n
896 lltUUI
937 Oulla6o

49

46

lnteUod•
Hay &amp; Grant
Stted &amp; ferlrhlt!l

Trans Oflation

47
41!

4!i

Helo Wanted
SttuaiiOn Wart ted

Want~dlo8uy

flunt

f 1u m1 tor Rent
Apanment lo r Rent
furnn,futd Room!&gt;
Space lor Rem
Wanted to Re nt
Equrpment tor Ru111

44

~

Survey says premier
colleges keep status
WASHINGTON !UP !) -Des ·
pile an overall drop In the
number of applications. thl• na·
lion's prestigious co lleges and
universities say they are main·
tal nlng freshman enrol lment lev el s and qualit y , a su r vey of th e
sc hoots said .
But officials at Peterson's, the
Pri nceton, N.J., education and

ct.s~rloud

fill!(&lt;' ·' &lt;'l ll 'l'r

Farm Equrprnunt

62
63
64

Houa~ts

43

Services

( .' /a.-.-i.fit•tf

61

6~

•;emma

tot A eflt
42 Mobile Homes lor

~mptoyrnent

followi It!( f I'll' I' ht lilt' t •xclwrr J.[t'L .

• A c l •• ~···()(· oldvt'riiSUIIh.'lll pl..tt:llll 1ll 1 ht'

'

Happy Ads
lotliind found

n.,., al no ch•ge

'Pn cu ol •d to1 •II upolild 11!1ter s 11 doubhtl.!fiCe ul ad co~ l
· 7 l)mnl lme type ontv used
·s~n tMluiiS 1101 r•sp&lt;M1slblelor errot sill llcr lu sllll#f (Chijclo.
lor errun hul d.., ad runs m fJ&amp;pm l Ce~l1 hetor e 2 00 p rH
dw JIIIU!t publ1cauon to rnak !lconec trurl
·Ads that rnusl bl! paul oro adv1ncv •'"'
Cond ol Th;trl k )
Ho~ppy Ath

utpl

Gove~ay

41

lro MumOfl81'11

The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation Developmental Disabilities has announced the hiring of several new
employees and the promotion of
other employees within the
district.
Todd R. King has been pro·
moted from lhe position of
Habilitation Manager which he
has held since late 1988 to the
position of Adult Services
Director.
King, or iginally from Kent,
moved back to Ohio In 1983
following his attendance at
Texas Christian University
where he earned his degree In
Secondary Education. He Is
currently pursuing his masters
degree In Rehabilitation Counsel·
lng at Ohio Universi ty.
King resides In Middleport
with his wife, Joy, and their three
children, Luke. Janie and
Jordan.
Charles Sn ider. Workshop Spe·
c talist I. has been promoted to
Production Manager.
Following his graduation from
Middleport High School .In 1968.
Sntnder joined the U.S. Army ·
Infantry and served a tour of
duty In Qu in Nhon, Vietnam . He
spe nt several years working In
Co lumbus in maintenance and
sa les poslllons . In 1986. he
became the propri etor of Village
Cut Rate In Racine. which he
operated for over two years .
Snider and his wl fe Jennifer
live In Racine with their four
daughters, Angel, Heidi . Kellev

3 1 Hontes lor Sahr
32 Mobi le Humes tor So~l e
JJ fafms lor Salt
J I Busrneu Ou~dongs
35 lots &amp; Acreagt
Jfi Rul f 1111e Waull!ll

6
1 Y.vd Sale lpatd rn adv•ncel
8 Publr c Sale &amp; A.. clron
9 Wanutd to Buy

Raleaaro lo r co n1oerulrwf! runs. brakP.'flupd~s.••ll be ch•ged
lor uch d.-. oiS separate ada

Farm Supp lies
&amp; Ltvestock

Rea l Estale

Card ot Thank'
In MemOty
Annoucement s

1

'Ail CIHYI! 5 !)0 diSCOUnt !01

'Flee ;ub

The Daily

Ohio

,, ... .,

Ht~nd

(u ..tmn

Tufrin~

614-992-2328

We Say Whot We do. We Do What

nrllfH' -~

We

Say.

36 YRS. EXPERIENCE
7-23-1

HENRY£. CLELAND
STORY RUN RD. - Wllltt Sllllchtr- live in the house
wdh 3 bedrooms and equipped kitchell. Work in the ili'lie
and big workshop, and tell! lhe 3 bedroom mobile homa
Country setting wdh 21+ acres.
$34.500
IIACIIE - Join the Rent Rebellion - live in this neat
12K65 mobile home with two bedtooms lo1 less than •ant
payments. Has a beautilullswn of appro.. I+ aa&amp;Sll.SOO
FlATWOODS ID. - A Jrowing a•ea. ApproK. l acres w!h I
t'llllayinJ buldlng site Of mobtle home sit TPC wll•
millblt Electric ~n es moss the property. Almost ready to
&amp;0, just needs yOII.
$t.OtJO

WE NEED

992·6191
Joan Trussell ... 992-266[
Mae Hupp .. ...... 94!1-225J
Jo Hill ........... 985-4466
Offico.............. 992-2259
tUR

SALES

VOLUI£

HAS

t££N QOOD AND WE STILl

MV£ IUYUS LOOKING
~lt IEIGS COUmPIIOPIRn. IF' YOU WANT TO
SUl CAI.l ClfWID
I£Aln TODAYIII

Is

Your Roof Ready For Another Year of fct
and Snow?
Now's Tht Tine to Find Out.

CALL JACKS ROOFING I
CONSTRUCTION
992-7762

For Old 81. Nliw Roofs, Shlnglea

Repelrs, Gutters
Building end Remodeling
We Gulll'ant~ Your Sotltfertlon

We 11tH Lletlllt•l
I

FREE ESTIMATES

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Announcements
3

Announcements
$100. REWARI) for lnlonnotlon
loollnatotho orrMIIIIdtion or penon or ~ van.

PRESCRIPTIONS

44M25\

SPECIAL flctory to you111111, 2
or 3 btdroom14x70 modale at

tho

lng,

Fronoh CIJy

11340.

B~ogo. 1 -

1151,

WY.

Good butldl"9 olloo. No MJ.,..ol
rlghta.e~.

Ona aere trailer 101 wllh county

water, •pUc: tank and alec:trkl
hook up. On lop ....d.
PortloliY fonood. Owner will po~
tlalty nnance. $2,i00. uklng
priGo. 304..75-2722.

"H ey, Bernie.
' I A fleW feCOf d ,f
, le ye ll OW pills for
E' ight lIt.t

Routt 2 A•hton, 1 ICN

lotalc 3
l.oo o,

mil• ooulh Golllpollo
water, no r.atrictlone,
oomo wnh " - trontogo, -

publle

$92.75! ..

516-2338.
Wooded 1011 on Raccoon Crlek.

~==========-,"==========l All
Takt
$90 ...
par teoo
monttldown.
payman11.
0 ~.,utllltt

for findng_
nltlad
pa.nntr.opCion
H..rttearc:h:
P. 0 . Box•
1043, Gllllpollo, OH 45131.
Two otudon1• nood rlclo to 111,_ _1_1_H_e_l:....p_w_a_n_ted___
shall fall Hmeattr, p..aH f:AIII AUTOMOTIVE
TECHNOlOGY

INSTRUCTOR · Otllvor qualhy

lnatrucllon and auparvialon In

clua and laborato"', utlst In
4
Giveaway
acadamk 1dvlalng 1nd prof••
2 111 white kh1ena, has 2 dlt- tlonal f.lannlng unlit, 11alat In
terent color~~ of .,-n, may be eurrlcu um development. AppUcantt thould hava 1 llrong
k)ng halrltd, 614-446-Q256 .
background In the a,..at ol
2 s'lory houu, tom down I troublMhootlng and Npalr of

8&gt;4-4811-1341.

12

Woot. 114-245-i441.
Country llobllo H'""" Porte,
R - 33, North of Pc&gt;mon&gt;y.
Lolll~'"olo, porto, uloo. Col

114-.....11171.

Rentals

.

Reapontiblt OWnar Optn~tor,
~lng tor work, rellabte 22tt
Mack Truck, 814-441..Q711

41 Houses lor Rent

SAVE $5Jhr. Reconciling ehaek-

2br, houN In ctty1 ~utta~ lor
two ~a, ~MMB.

4394 anytlml.

Of

call 614-44e- Taehniel!l College, Hocking
P.rkway, Nalsonvflle, OH 4.5764

8·1.

oomplo4o with

man,_ 1215 and up to 1311.

6141753-3591. Ooadllnolo apply

FrM klt11n1, 304~56-1056.

box
lull "'IWin
bobyoprlngo
bldl SilO
I l l 171.
" -nrm
or
Sll, ond $111. CluHn- 1171 I
up King $3!0. 4 dro- 18t. Gun Coblnoto 1,
1 10

a.

lnlmoo ~••auso,. S351 Jclno lnlmo - Clood
ooloctlon of "'loccr..- oulloo,
motll ooblnolo, holdbolnil UO
and up to IIllO deyo oorno II
oooh w"h 1pprovod oro&lt;ll. 3 mi.
out Bulovllio Rd. ~ 9 A.M. lo
• ftM lion ~.
I Co" ...
•

•

Houee tor rent In Middleport. 3

phon• 304-!7'5-4873.

Fiiday 8.11 :30 a.m. Of" t-4 p.m.

Found : Bugle Doa, VInton, Rto
Grandt~ Vk:lnlty, 6tW88-9664.

EXCELLENT WAGES tor tparo
lima a. .embly. Eaty wort. at
homt. No experience nMded .
Call 1-.504-6411-ma Ert. 5214.
Open 24 hourt, Including Sun-

Lott :Ladtea black clutch bag 11
Vaughane. No money. Lot oflmportant pa~r11. Pia... return.
Reward. 114-eU-t313.

7

d.oy.
E.wpariene.d heating and cooJ.
lnatallar. Must be wilting to
work. Sand ,.tuma to P.O. Box
7290, Pomeroy, ott.
101)

Yard Sale

6M-894-785Iii,Ext01.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, US
Custom1, DEA, ale. Now Hiring.

Coli (1) 80H8HOOO Ext R·
3 family gtraga ..... A~7,8 . 10"189.
341 Rutilnd 94., llldd
.
Sonny Hud10n ,.idenee.
n Oualllltd
rag!Mw.d
nuraa

EYorythlf19 muo11101

t\Mded lor 152

t.t

facility (long

term) located In Ftotnt PltiHnt
Mite. Jlema., orfglnef Crllftl. WV. Admlnlsnatlv-a akllta and
r ... ectay at a..m. LM .....denca. wort~ twperlanea nK. . . . ry.
Tyrw Blvd, Racine.
Compethlva aalary and benaflta.
Fr11nk
Toppl~ ,
Yard Ua. FirM time avar. Toys Contact
T.V.,

ehlld,.n

Carehaven of Potnt Pt.esant.

and

adutt wine.,. clothae and 00111,

VMl&amp;Qe Piua Inn, Nght cook

ele-ctronic gamea, gluawart,
appllance, ant~IM hom. decor,
d.. porioo.
Aug,
~y.

nMC:fad, apply In peraon, 3004
Jaekeon Ave.

Aug.7-TU.dly. los South 5th Vocal... tor Rock
!M.,IIIddloport, OH.
""" aga 11 and

8

Band, bet20, 304-7135gQ6 u"k tor Chrta, Nrioul lnqulree only.

Public Sale

Want~ :
Cook, Matu.-. Individual to tpply In periiOtl at
Galllpollt StoCk Yard, S.t, B-4.

&amp; Auction
Rick "-oroon Au&lt;11on Compony
auction1, n ·
makea tha diH•renc•.
Llc.,Md Ohio, Kantucky, West
Vlflllnlo, -773-5785.

nowt

booking

Wanttd: Person to p«tom1
NC,.tart•l • off~ managemant
dutlu, tor construction oHk:t.
Muat ba •bit to word proea..,
lila, &amp; convarH well wftl'l

~·nee

Wanted to Buy

9

othet'l, PINH Nnd r.aumH to:
P.O. Box 128, Rio Q,..nda, OH

45674.

Claw foot ot .tmllar atyla bath
tub. Good condiUon only. 814--

WANTED :

1102-7&amp;03.
W.nled To Buy: Junk Autoe
whh or without motors. Call
LofTy Uvoly. 814-388-ilOl.

MITUIW· 2 hl'l to ba

ttatf meeting; or 11 ol'*wiM

oohodulod. BOTH: HIJ!h ochool

CREOll dtgi"M, valid driver 1 llctnH

and good dri'tlng racord , good
communication and orgefliutlon akllls, punctual, and abla to
vanctl. 1-800-473-1087 ut . wor1lat part or a tum requlr~ ;
G2524.
allpatltnct worttlng wtth per·
AVON _ All areu, Call lbrllyn .ont with mental retardation
and dav-'opmantal dlubllltl"
WNVIf 304-882-2645.
pnftrrad, but not raqutred .
Alrtln• Jobt Olrl(:tory. GUIIrln- Sllary: SA.2alhrl to 11111. S.nd
tood Emptoymonl, 304-344-53115 re1uma to c.clla BaUr, Buekaya Community &amp;arvic", P.O.
Ext. A-1.
Box 604, Jackeon, OH 45MO;
AVOM I All Artas I Shirley pl...a ~ity which potllion
Sjlolro, 304-6 75-1429.
apptylng tor. Oudllne tor apllconto: 8114190. iq ..J Oppor·
eo.metologi.C nMded! GuJrlln·
plid IIIC.IIOM. 814-

r.untty Empfoyer.

W1ndy'a Now Hiring, tor day

-72fl1

•hlft. Apply In perwon, 8unDental baJI1anl NHded, S.nd Thun between 2-4 p.m. E.O.E.

,.sume to cit Bow Oot1t O..lllpolla
Dairy Tribuna, 825 hlrd Avt,
QoJJipollo, OH 45831.
Income

pot•ntlal.

NOW hiring. (II 905-687-&amp;000

E.t. l45112.

Eam money by tht WHit. Jain
lha numiMra to demonatrate
"Ctvlstma•Around-Th•Wor1d".

EARN MONEY R.. dlng Booktl
QO,OOOfyr.

Business
Opportunity

44

I NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
reeommandt th•t you do bualnHe wltt-1 people you know, and
NOT to und monty ltvough lha
mall until you ha¥1 lnvHifgatld
lht ottarlng.

July.O.Cambtr.

1

LNv•

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

WANT
ADS
WORK!
614-992-2156
304-675-1333
614-446-2342

~

apt Htndtrwon, 304-

875-tm '"" 5 :00.
1 bedroom apt. Stov., rttrig.,

nice. Conlt.:t.r Human S.rtk•
or HUD. 402-112 241h St., Pl.

PI-nt, W. Y. 114-1182-1158.

equlp~d

Tovwn °to.
- o"'
ol:o-.,.
- -:-Joo- oo
--:l-nc-ll::-:-ld- 2 turniohod otflcilnc:Joo. All
Shire bath. SiO or
dleport, Ohio. Apt onrhNd. utllhNO. 111 Sooond Avo. 114-&lt;4e304-&amp;82-3362.

rid..

3N5.

-

54

61

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
-

---

•-- Solo:-=:~~
~Syt401ft, aDO. - 1.
1 9oun4f Fo~

Kenmore automatic waher,
whlto, IH; Konmoro -he!.~

$100. Call eftar 8:00p.m. 1!114-381-

ture at low prtoaa. thotck ue out.
114-&lt;4e-l'l«.
PJCI(EHS FURNITURE
New/Uood
lumlllhlf19. 112 mi.
Jo.,i&lt;:ho Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WV,

coli 30U75-14.!G.

RENT TO OWN
114-418-3161
I pc. wood g""'p $14.01 por
WNk. 4 poet•r bedroom lVII•,
oomplolo $15.20 por -lc,
dlnotto with 4 cholro SUO por
wMk. Magk: Chef w cu. ft.

Uood lumfturo,

IOio, ~~:"do~

after 7p.m.

Folio. 614-247·3743.

11111. Coll114-tlll2·771t EOH.

7 room• 1 112 blithe, country
llvlna but cloee to Wtlga School
and town. Rt. 33-4 line,
Townahlp Road 27. Arat road to
right. Call &amp;14-992· n18 or 1-384-

Middleport, Ohio, BNoh 91. Ont
bedroom tumllhc&lt;l ape., depoen
l reference required, 304-88:Z·
2568.

Modem 2 BR unlumllhed, CA &amp;
~ut . No pate. Ideal for eoupft.
Country s.ttlng. 4 bedrooms, 2- Sat et 541 Four11'1 A'tlflut.
1/2 batht, c~nfrat Mat and air, $275fmo. 814-446-2300.

Top Cooh pilei. Old turnl100
eubolnft,
qullte,
ort.nt...
palntlnot, ~. Of enUre
coli ootroot :104-521-3271, "' 3CJ4.
52UM4.

•at•

54

Raterane" and cs.po.lt
qulrld. 814-593-&amp;m.

Nicely Fumlahld Mobile Home
In chy. CA. Sultlble for 1 per,... ton. Rat. &amp;Dep Aaqulrad

•14-

446-4338

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Big 1 bod""'"' linn -.o butl4
on your lol. 136,11118 I up. 114-

881-7:11t
CIHnnce

SaM

Hulqunm1

tl'tmmare, 10% Olllf' coet. Pam~
Phil, 304-111-4014.

Ounoon Pllyffo I pc. dlnlf19""""
Home and tral~r lot tot Nle. Ona bedroom
for
14.1"'
· drop IMf table. claW fMl,
$18,000. 614-HH8&gt;48.
1221 monlh. OopooH &lt;oqulrod. 1 cholro, gino, I door hutch
614-992-2211 attar 6 p.m.
· llohod bulloL Clood
Ho~~~e In Norltlup, 8 roorne &amp; a
a nd '_.....

"*·

bath, 614~~24&amp;1.

45

Furnished
Rooms

'*"·

condltl-. 114-112..1J0
FOt . . .,.., _
- . .,

Land c:onlroot. Lot'o olld
dool on o newly romodolod
lhrM
bedroom house in
~
•
Roomofol'ront-woo.ormonoh.
Po
Will •·k
moroy.
- • oun, ..,, ~=~t::p 11-. 0oll111Holll.
uvek, bOll, ....,.cyclo, ole. tar 8
8580
down payment. Malta en oft•.
e1.t·992-2S54.

-

;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:::JE:::::::.;:::;::;:::;;:;;:;;:;;:~

1 ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:
.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes
for

r

with - .,..,.,. o1 ~:::uo a.lolvM ond tiiU..., wlh
_...,
moo. - l y - · onct Ill•
qul-111 to hlndla
- . 114-tt2-22t2.

sale

Uood G.E. -hor 1 HoiJIOinl
dryo&lt;, S38loor:h. 114 :141143G.

.;,..._

S5

wl,..
dowol..llntolo, otc. ClaUdl.
WI,..
•lo Orondo, OH Colt 114-

I.,..

24U121.

56

P,po,

AKC 111(1. lhoo.Apio, Coc:br
SponiiiJo, Doohundl pupploo

oloolll -

olld

hiiKh

AKC Roalotorod Cac:lcor Spo~!'J

:J:'d~~.:.--

I--·

--All-

Oroom and Supply SltOII Ptl

Rea., 11oog1o " - 1 mamho
NO - . llWM-1111
onyllmo, 114-441-4172 ..... oolc

Hay &amp; Grain

_:;_;,_;,...;___

otrow tor

lluJch hoy ""' lllo, .10 por bolo.
Apptox, 1,228 · fM.4411-1411

S1

c. (.)

()

----

G

1111 Dodgo Chorllor Holchboolc,

a _.t. PS, Pll, , _ tlroo,
c:-lng
00 - ·
lloNnd ·- - - ....J..odaO
In 111,0011 mUao, • ..., lloolno. 0onn1o IIIL fl4.Mt. 12,100, J04.475.21fr
2111.

1181 Dodge Clilrgor, ouiOCIIIIJe
~ tOINian
far ...._ a Ill', AriiiFM ••rto oe...na,
8rlngown-.114-34J. --.12100.114-441-

:net.
17111.
CoMing .....- . Brtng .... 1181 l'ord LTO !Motion Wlgon,
tolnoro. ~~~- l14- Cloon, S\110. 814 441 1112.

~:M?-.::---::--::-::--:--:---c:-

Oldo Clillo. E l l - - .......,.._,. Condition, ..... -~
ploo, prodUM II. II. J, I nolloo
1181 Pontillo Grind Prill. 21ono
"\':~41 ~ cor, .,.,000 nog.
7111.
-Rl. 181 &amp;Ill
- ol..........
all II. I
Alboily. Wo ...
1. . llad c-. 1 OWner, VI
grotn-. ...... ~ l'uol lnl. Oood Rolollll Cor.
.._. oom 11M1 totMI-. ..7 MOOCL Cal -.-11 or 114_ , . . , Anyllrno

-hoi.,_._

-...
=·-........,·-

...,..

oom. TOIMI.... -........m.

HO&lt;nolt:: -r:-lor
-ool~ 1 ~~~ ny o1zo ,..

oom,

oucmblr. 2 mitt

•.ooa
Loodod. tlt,IOO. -..:ao.

or Trade

QCMI-EHT ,IIIZID-

__
.-"-------1
_. ,,,_Ext.

1lll'l Ooordon F - 121185. 2

bochvom, Conlrol Air PHI
ohown by oppolnt- 114-448·

72 Trucks lor Salt

Fdllll Suppltcs

&amp; L~Vc:,lock

1W7 Soulhwlnd Motor Ham.. ·
Clna A, 28 fMI, 38k Mllet,
,.,_ l 4KW ONAN ~lor,
fulf1 _,t-conlllned1 _exc. eond,
oolclf19 tii,!IOO. 814-4411-45a
1f117 Starct~~b P . .up eamper.
Starmaller I. Good C(ln(ftlon.
$1300. CAn eM-912-701&amp;.
For S...: 1990 WUdemt~t;;; 18ft.
camper, wllotl of aldrM. ~- .

Suntrack• Pontoon 10&amp;4, 24ft ,
wtth tr1iler and aatety equipment. Mercury ~ot, 35 hp.
Can t. ..., It o.n lpoHt Boat
Clut&gt;. 11,100. 8~3115.

aanger . (A) Storeo. t;J
l!liiD 21 Jump Streel

lWvWIJ'T IT Hi'1JE BWJ
GR..£AT IF SOME. ~ 'THAT
SAVIOOS &amp;, WAIJ MO/..l.Y
1V£AJT IIJ!O BUIWiffi
~WJ

B1

,.... lmiO, 010. fM.44I.

, .,.. -11-110, ..... - . 114-

gill·--

''How did I rlllllll lim "*ldle·agld? llllrtlcl
liking the WI)'
halta dNa"

babies. (RI Steroo. 0
1ft Murder, She Wrole
® Gospel Jubilee
ID women'• Pro Beach

. ..PRISO!JS AR£ BLILT
Wf'T'H RJBLIC. /JaJE:.Y

Volleyball From Manhattan
Besch, CA (T)

PRISOIJS ~

a

\?
\

I

l

I'

,.

scours the city when her
best friend is kid na pped . (A)

Stereo 0
®On Stage
9:00 Ill 0 1!11 MOVIE :

MORK
YEAH ... IMAEriNEG;OiNGe,ACK 10 501X&gt;L A WHOLE
MONTI-\ EARLY .

'1. · ~

NORTH
• 6 7::,2

Last May our team - John Moha n.
Kay Sc holle. Gaylor Kasle and I reached the finals of lhe champwnsh1p
tea m·of-four al the Scluth Af r ican
Bridge Federalion (SABF) Congress
held '"the African kmgdom of Leso·
Lho. Although we won the match. we
had our share of luck y dea ls. mclud ing

S-6-tO

"K 109
• J9 3

+ an

EA.IT

WEST

+6

tA KJ

•s
J2
• 10 7 2

• A Q A4
t A Q H6 5&lt;

t K Q 42

• 96

this one.

SOUTH

When Scluth , my pa rtner. opened
one spade, I responded one no-trump
forcing - a doubtful aclion Altho~gh
l intended to setlle 10 two spades. fo:ast
doubled lor takeout . Wesl wound up ·
doubling two spades. and with bolh
club honors and the heart queen poorly
placed for declarer. we gave up 500 .
points to the opposition . How were we
lucky'
AI the other table. North senstbly
passed his partner 's one·spade open·
mg. East doubled and West jumped to
two no·trump. With a long diamond

+QJJ0 91

• J16

tK
+AJJO J

Vulnerab le. Both
Dealer: Soulh
Soulh
1

Wesl
Pa«

2t
Pass

Obi

+

Nortb

Easl
I NT'
Obi
2+
P a"
All pass

Db!

•forcmg on ~ rou nd

Openin g lead. + K

suit as a source of tricks. and reasonabl e h1gh·card strenglh . East bid lhree

fortunate to hnd the heart kmg m the

fi

Wattrpr~

Comploto llobllo HOtno 101 upo
• repair~, alto plumb!~ I

E•lmataa.

Q] at Alien Nation George

LET ME OUT
OF HERE,
SHERIFF II

oomo opolilnoo ropolro. WY

MY TIME'S
UP II

sou~• Ohio 1&gt;4-4411-2454.

Rooflng ond 94dlf19. Trolto•

roo..

pt~lnttd.

and Sikes follo w a tr ail of

BARNEY

114-2M-1111.
Ron'o TV BINVloo, opoolollzl"9

In Z..nfth 1110 Ht'"Yiclnt mOll
attwr brands. HouM calle, at.o

NOT TODAY,
OL' BUDDY

YO'RE HELT OVER
AN EXTRY WEEK

THINGS HAVE BEEN
SO QUIET IN TH'
HOLLER SINCE YOU
BEEN LOCKED UP

BY POPULAR
DEMAND

Frw tldrnNs..

Rotary ot cabfe tool *ildng. ·
"-1 ... Ia compW:ad aa.mt day.
and ...,te., 304- ·

::Smf.o:t..,..

Sof'lic Tonk Pumolng StOLGIIJio
Co. 11011 EVANS lNTERPHISES.

84

Anthony o vercomes
obstacles to make 11 to his

Malchmaker instantly reveals which

ASTRO-GRAPH

signs are romanTically perfect for you .
Mall S2 Matchmaker . c/o this newspaper . P.O. 8011 9 1428 . C~veland. OH

44101-34 26

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Strive to be
logical and practical today instead of
basing your judgmenls upoo your emo·
lions and feelings . If you let ttle latter
prevail ,
the
r esults
could
be

be a mis1afoce 1odBV to depend too
heavily upon a recently acquired ally .
This association needs more seasoning
before putting it to the lest
PISCES (Ftb. :ICI-Morch 20) II you are
performing a servtce lor another today .
don't take It upon yourself to destgn
what should be done. Your employer
might want you to build a horse while
you have a giraffe In mind.

undesirable

ARIES (M1rch 21-Aprll 19) lnvoiVC!·

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It isn' t neces sary tor you to lry 10 match the spend ·

ments comprised ol chancy element s
might not be your long suil today. so try
to minimize your risk taking . it the odds
give you less than an even c;;hance, bid It

ing ot persons with whom you 're In vot-ved socially today il they c;;an afford
to do things you can 't . Don't even try.

adieu.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-HoY. n) Your TAURUS (Aprll:l&amp;oMiy 20) This is not a

85 General Hauling

chances for achieving your objectives

good day to let your 88Signments or re-

lodey look good. but there is olso • pos- • aponalbllllles pile up on you . t1 could be

AU Wllor Dollvo.y. 2,11011 gol.
_.,. IMo117-l'301.

_ _,..

UphOlstery

Water Ski Tour From

Wichllo. KS (T)
a! Larry King Llval
9:1Q lZJ Enltrtalnlng Tho Troopo

graduation (A ) Sloreo. 0

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

.~.

The Rockers vs Demol1tion

® Nashville Now (L)
@ Mlcholob Dry World

World War II. (I 50)
9:30 11m i!2) (I) Designing WO&lt;nen

\

1~521.

~· ·

bOOoes (AI Sleroo. Q
OJ Prime time Wresttlng

Follow a tribute to lhe
perl ormers who ass1 sted the
Am erica n military both at
home and abt'Oe.d during

Frod Manco, 304-77W111.

Jockoon, OH

American Master•

0

ling.

RaltrancM.

by fHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I One of the
Churchills
6 Sladium
in Delroil
11 Sparta's
markel·
place
12 Pimola

DOWN
I Chef's
creation
2 Frisky
3 Actress
Rulh
4 Greek
nickname
5 Tomahawk

13 Aeslrict
14 Basic

6 Add up
7 Island

........., 1,1110

Your earning abilitieS should be quite
good In lho year ohead. You might not
ge1 certain @as you desire. but you will
bt compensated l!lf thll wtlh a blgge&lt;

li=

D-Aurl- 22) Therlill posalmight
111 taken In today by a
011
y y w110 his good from but tHIIe
Approadl ,_ acqlltllnlwtlh 1111 open mind lnd a critical
~noW ""'"' ro lOOk tor romance
you'N nnc1 H. Tho Aalro-Graph

bill!

::::.C.

=

siblllty you may do things In a way oth· 1eYen harder at 8 later date to do that
. 81'$ will lind offensive . Mind your P's and ' · which you neglec:l to do in lhe present

a·a.

SAGITTARIUS ( - . 23-DK. 21) The
persona you oro likely to Jlslon to loday
mlghl be the ones wllh ell the wrong answera. Bear In mind that locts and oonvlncklg phrues ere not synonymous.
CAPfiiCORN (Dee. 22-.lan. 11) ~you're
In . - o1 financing lor aome type ot enlerpr!M or venlure at IIIII ltrN, tl might
. be wtae to go 10 o u - . rather lhan
your friends. H the goes 1001r. 10
could 1ho retatlonlhipl.
ACIUAIIU8 (~.,.,.... 1tll1 could

GEMINI (MIY 21-June 201 Oon'l tlaun1
your knowtaclge II you're involved In an
arrangement today with o person who Is
not ea bright u you era. 0"""'-• will
be sympathetic to your targel. rather
ll\8n lmprOSied by you.
CANCER (.U. 21-oiUir 22) Jual be,.,_you haW a lot or Ink In your pen, It
. dCMIIII'I -you llhould go on I Cheek
:writing""" today. Tllllil a tlmllo try
,to reduce ai&lt;p111111Huret. not eniWge
:thlm.

10:00 (]) Great Performances A
young Hollywood .director is
seduced by a fadmg movie

stor. 1:;1

®l

23 Fashion 34 S . Amer
24 • - Sung
cattle

26

19

28

24
26

29
30

(Fr)
8 - and
Ionic
9 She
raised Cain
10 No longer
active
WWII
(abbr .)
Navy
17 Cui down
plane
20 Reclined
Stilch
21 Mongrel
Car
22 See 46
Sleersman
Across
Temptress
Gulf of

Yesterday's Answer

belief
15 Wing
(La()
I 6 Oriental
tea
18 Animal's
dwelling

25

Newsman Edward R. Murr o w
was a true pioneer 1n
1ournahsm. (P1 2 01 2)
®l t1ll (I) Murphy Brown Jim
and Murphy find themselves
s tranded t~e tha r 1n a hotel
r oom. (RI [,1

FrN llllmiiM. Call colltct 1-

INOI

Aohoo' NBC MondiY Night
AI Tho Movloo (2:00) 0
ill C1J 0 MOVI~ : 'From
Monday Night Moille (2:001

114-237_,, doy "' night

oloctrlcol, """1119, romodollng,
Olliol l doc:ko ole. REMODEL·

'Hiroshima : Out 01 The

no-trump

Ruaeia With Lo~e· ABC

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondhlonol IIIII- guo..n,... Local ralarencn tumiiMd.
Rogeta .... mant

PrimoNOWI
MOVIE : Mllea To Clo
(200)
8:05 ill MOVIE: Bullln (PGi (2:15)
8:30 (!) Major League Baaoball
11m t1ll (I) Sydney Sydney
~

Home
Improvements

I-.
,. . ,. . 4--.._
-

tori:OO.

Penhall falls in love with a
girl suspected ot smuggling

11 CCU..DkYT HM I

Services

==-=~~~:..,:::;:.::..._..,I
w."' Houll&lt;&gt;g,
'1171 Ford 114 Mn trw~&amp;. a-d ruun1biJ rat-. wofume dliWIOIIIO
IIOior I
to wotlo
4,000 ·-~
1M ... 1111
ollllmil.2,0011
-DOOle.
~.
.

-_1_

uctiiMI cand, call m.3273 •~

I

Major worries abOUt U
Holowachuk's quest tor

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

......... ea.ooo.
wr. llriH.

I

79

andHMtlna
Dodgo pick-up, - · oond,
Four1tl and PTne
miJOogo, 11,000; ""
Dodgo OoytOno, Exo. cond, low
Golllpollo, Ohio
114 4413888
114 3111811.

For Sale

I

8.388-9062.

Dom P1rt1 buying junk care.

-

oor, llanlo
ml\a

I

IA

I

CROSSWORD

Tote;yo raid in WWII are

Clrtw'e ptumblng

-~Town

I

eyes . C
11m ~ 11J Ma)or Ood The

legendary and crippling

S&amp;O mo41ora. TWo 350 ·
tl'alnwnltetone . 304-875-1!111.

82

. . . !Wgo Colt, Eox. oond,
114 ... 2151.

I

l

'

\'

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQ UARES

Vlnlon Auto Sa1Y1ge. Fot11lgn &amp;

NOT IF WE DiSTl&lt;IOV

best known for leading the

iGII

Fonn: llllh

Complele lhe chuckle quoled
by fdl1ng In the mi ssinQ wo1ds
you develop from slep No J below

(!) Adventure Adven1ure
takes a look at a a China
long off-limits to Western

... niEY WILL ONLY

r.o

JIR_._

T--

.)tMPJ0 N

THf $T~Ef'r ?

44U294.

-

114-

IAFT

Monoyllno

Bewllched
(I) Enlertalnment Tonight
CllllJ Memo's Family
@l ~(I) 1!11 Jeopordyl t;J
l!liiD M'A'S'H
@ Motorwaek llluotraled
a! Croaallre
7:36lll Sanford And Son
8:00 Ill 0 1!11 NBC Newt Spec:lll
Expoee
(!) Sox PreGame
ill Cll 0 MocGyvar Serving
jury duty, MacGyver doubls
the guill ot lhe accused (R)
Steroo. 0
lZl Jimmy Doolllllo: An
American Horo The lite and
achievements of the man

ChoYy

1111.

Video

(!)

GOoP, W/'IY 1$

•

ch•oniCled (1 :20)

~~~~·!!4~·~~~~~4~·~.:....-==

h••-:r==•
.............
MH&gt;11

)0

i~AC.YJ

_

BRIDGE

Ill! Scarec;;row &amp; Mrs. King
t;J
7:05 Cil Jerteraons
7:301l) D Family Feud

}TILL OUT' ON

Davt1
S...V.a
SaNtee,
Cowollor Z-24. Low ~
Crook Rd. Porto, oup, _ booM 110. bu ,.. - · l.8ia-. Colt·- oJckup, lnd dlllvo.y. 814plolc, wo pick 114. lllvor au- 1171, Ito a p.m. olior I 114-441-

If {)ICft

I

Valued - Flush - Weary - Cowboy - BELFRY

@ SporlaCenter

)

.

My old aunt always s aid that anyone. who IS alw a ys
raising the roof usually didn't have mu ch In lhe BELFRY .

NewaHour

FRANK AND ERNEST

.

SCRAM· LETS ANSWERS

Cll 0 Current Affair
11m ~ (I) 1!11 Wheel 01
Fo11Une C
l!liiD Night Court
1ft Miami Vice

a

.

@) ~~tc:~~~~~ LETIERSI

6:35 lll Andy Griflllh
7:00 Ill D PM Magazine
(!) Andy Griffith
illlnalde Edition
lZl Ill MacNeil Lehrer

• .,..........1ol, 8M-3"7't-Z1110.

County '"" lpoclot. ..... oft • ... $1660'. ~6-67!11.
'"IUI!r I~ Elldl 11. JIM Pllno s.moo. Coif IIlii 1181 Chov- 4dr, .........tic •
Wonl 104 IIU3211.
atr, AmiAI lt.,_ caMilla,
l1.110.114-441-t781.
Aolond TRIIOI drwn Chovy lmpolo. 4 -~
oodon, llko - · All tho oquil&gt;
mont. 101 VI. 12800. 114-IGFruita&amp;
11'11.

e

®Top Coed

!21 Mualc Row

·

Famous proverb: "Treat
your guesls as a guest for the
first two days, and on the third
day hand --- · a --- "

North hand . If Scluth had held the heart
Declarer guessed to first play the king and North the dtamond king,
ace of diamonds. dropping the king, Wesl would have been easily set in
and later took the heart fin esse for three no-trump . Instead . our minus
nine tricks. Of course our teammates 500 turned out to be a gainer when
were expected to play conLracts in an compared with our lea mmates' plus
expert manner. but our side was ver y 600 in lhe other room

wflpprox. 1,000 hra, exc. cond ,

1114 DodGe Coft auto 1 2ck. Rune

I

L._ ,_......._..__._..._~

a) SportsLook

tm Starcraft, 16 \'2 I . 15 EvanMio, 'l!IIIFQ 17 R. llolor Bool

Pll.

,__

Instruments

1

·

_

Cll 0 ABC: Nowo t;J
lZl Body Eteclrlc
Ill 3·2·1 Conract t;J
®l ~ (I) CBS Nowa 0
l!liiD Tllrae'o Company

lf' ~ A
GIU~OrEIGHP

G&lt;:f UP! G&lt;:f UP

12Fl. llohlng boll with now U

_.. .... $1011. - · -·

tiM Bulok Skylorlc, good
ohopo, high mlloo, woo.•,..

...alcal

NUCED

HEALLT
f--rf-1•
....:;~~7'-rl::....:rl--,-1--j 0
\

(I)

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1.......1294.

ftOO.- .._
Cui lol Chovyo. '"""'"'

1NO Scllullz 14x70, 2 bodroomo.

motorcycle racing. (0:30)

~Newhart C

-

no.

RETRIEVER.

HacdcaoHo And
McCormick t;J
6:05 llJ Beverly Hlllblllao
8:30 Ill 0 1!11 NBC NlghHy News

ts Johneon molor, 304-«75-289t
Transportation
NOW ON SALEII YAMAHA
WAYERUNNERS. Soloo, Porto,
Acc.uor... Serv\ee. RIVER71 Autos for Sale
.:...:.....:..:.:.:::..:...:...:..:..:.:..:.._ SIDE MARINE, Rl. 7 loo•19111 Novo. 414 onglno, 400 lrom K-llarl) Gllllpolil, !lh. 114Turbo lronomlalon, -'llvo 446~424
lroctlon roor..,.,. Biook l..orior. 7S
$1,200. 814-1'12·22!1.
Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

1111 Mont1 eo.to, good condi,..... _
- - ... ond tion.
I'M .-2140
·
AKC.
AJoo
t
i
n
y
loyo.CooiYIIo.l~
blue Hondo Civic wogon,
AC,~MIAI, ooncl, 40 mpg,
...... mlloa, 12.000. 1104.f7J.
Slit,

I

r- -- ----"'c...,

~

complete top new uphola1try.
Call h4-211J..1lt&amp; 1flar 1:00 p.m.

24HIM

MOFLAR

·

Maiers gives comprehensive
coverage of all facets of

ml!ft...L.oiO. oond, ulclng 1100.

304_.75-2U8 1o1'
oppolnlmonllo -

I

'I IC IIT IH HIs I:

OH•Man

a! World Today

Nio.

lor .......

59

1012.

ME ... I'M 601N6 HOME ..

for Sale

ole(

tlll'l Comogo 2Br., 2
bllh, 12JSI, M,OOO. 114-441-1!11.

1lll'l K l - 12dO 2BR,
oonc1. NIOO. eu ue 112.

'1'0U THIS NOTE ...

Allllyioo.
..... Pil Food Ooolor.
;)uMo 1181 Oodoo Omni good oond, Houoo Bool, 34' Flborglooo 1m
SUO. IOW75-1!'13 ollar 6:110 Nauta.tlne
Wobb. Coll&gt;l-441-4231.
UO
angina,

behind NIIW Hawn, WY UNorl
Rood.-..m7.

m.kl ort.r, 1-614-~71J8.

A GIRL ASKED ME IF I'D 611/E

l14- OUibol•d I lrollor. Muot ooA.
Boot .n... l14oo44B-1881.
Hoy tar Solo. Clo- I nmoUIY. 1872 1T rt. Stare,.ft Trt4tufl
Round BalM In the Fitlkl. e14- ao.t. 125 HP, Eltlnrude E~IM,

Bioolc, brick, -

- . 30U75-21111.

64

etoon 112-7302.

Building
Supplies

IIGIIt~~,

tm Mobfl• homt 12110 on~
acra land, walar and tlect;l,c. Rt.
2 North, Thomoo Rldoo Rood,

W~AT A WEIRD NAME .. ANVWA'/,

1,.....,.21114.
:=::::-7.-'-:--:;-;;~;;;;;;;;-;;;;
M011no V-45,_ 11 11011 ·00,
good oolld, 614-388..,.41.
IIIII HI~Oovldoon. FXRS.
·~- .__....

oho'.f,oolhol como. Phono 3114-

•

a) Motoworld Host Larry

ck,

882 5112 "'

tAMI

br ClAY • . POLLAN

low to form fov r si mp le words

l!liiD Andy Grifl1111

THAT HAPPENED
''DEAR BROWNIE CHARLES,
iO
ME ONCE WITfl
NEVEl': TRUSTED ME, DID
A
GOLDEN
. ! THOUGIH '{QU ~·~c• . 1

doy -

Chompton"'"a':'..2~e~m'." ::::~=:::I:::

Hotlllin

IIIWII1.

-'oll10~

PM only.

flE~ IS i'OUR NAME SROWNIE CUARLES?

1a11 110, '"""'""' 5,040 octuot

t::1

44Htll.

I--.
lind

urn Sehullz, 12ll:50 two bedroomt, good cond, $3,800. firm.
304-882·2649 batWMn 5:01)..8:00

WHERE DID SHE
60?PE66'1 JEAN?
W~ERE ARE \'OU ?!

worro:r;.,

11.201Doulc"-"~ 4110 poundo, l up.
1 ~.._
RoQiotlrld pollod ho,.ford buN.
Enforcor breod. 4 yra. old 114-

Vegetables

2097.

b.aNmlnt, allachtd garage. 20
mlnuttl from Athena!.. 1-112
miles to Melg1 High ~hoot

=
00011

n.

WOlD

Rearrange letters ol the
0 lour
Krombled words be·

examined . t:;J
Ill Reading Rainbow t;J

PEANl JTS

Motorcycles

wHh tho ollroo, 1nd hoo 1,000
mlloo, tho other hoo lUll ovo• ·
2,000 mlloa ond hoo ,.. .Indo•
olloclory
n- blkoo
lll(l'od quortor oo1c1 "" .,.. s
.... r:::oo
=·Tho:
St..., lor aale. aN will cared for blknd
• I
e•

C'H990 rv L!I L.-.gLoc r1 W\:wlll

-

Page 9

ecosystems are closely

~lido,
-·~· • ..._.,, .
Lito moclol 10110 Fanl Dloool
Jon """"'· 1,000 mlloo. ,
114-11112-7714 Of 114-t1112.flll0.
TroD!!!, 11110; 111 MF ~,JIII!Ij
NO ... AOUIIII hior, U,IIW; "" 1"- Hondo !00 ...... $1200 .
Ill' wlh 5ft. hog, SZ,III;
-.
.·
114 211 " "
eon
~..1411.
2-1188 Honda Shadow Mallor63
Livestock
cryoloo IOOcc • ono lo Joodod

Bocouolful AKC rogill- Pilei,..
puold. 18711 VolbwtQon Rabbi, Oraat
Sholo oftcl · 1110. 114- wort
oert tao nrm. •~
1111 ........ "'114 4.. 1323.
1m Chovrolol :10 Stotion
Rolrigorote&lt; $12.115 por woo1c. II
Wogon,
lully oquloood ""' .....,
cu. ft. lrMHr. $10.110 por
tnAort--.. CoU.•14-4411-ml.
wiNk. VI' Ra Furniture. Rt. M1, 4 Orlgonwtnd C.ttary Perttan,
mtt.t on Rt. 7.C.ntenary.Open 7 Slo- ond llmoioyon klllono. 1m Monto Cor1oc u,ooo OIIQ.
ctoyo 0 woolc.
mlloo, ortg. point,_... Ilona Ill.
114 ttl 3144 after 7 p.m.
sa
11 Clnomo, ..,100, o.a.o.,
811 pc plno living """" IIUIIOj Floli Tonk, 2413 Joe~ Avo. ~230&amp; after 3:30p.m., 814eota, ohlar, rodtw, con.tl..a PohoP-,:104-m-:1013,10 a~-.
lobloo, good ...... 30U7U811. gol 101 up 114.11 ond 10 gal
tm Pontillo ~. 2« PS,
oomplolo .,.1.2!.
SWAIN
aood oond, MoO.
AUCTtON I FURNITURE. 12 Full bl did t.Mie IHale 0PBilout..,.llo,
. .0.,111-041~
Olivo St., Ga!Qpotlo. Now I Uood
120. 11 wko. old. ~~
tumttura, heat~r~, WMI:Mn &amp; 0311
-lp.m.
ta~~ Buick LMibro, sao. 4 ""··
won.-o.I14-441-S1H.
aulo, O.D. tn111., 11 door, "'ce

Fumilhod Efflcloncy, $175,
UIJJHJoo Pold, O.Qipolil, 014-

Grac:loue living. 1 and 2 bMroom 1pertrnent1 11 VUtage
Manor
and
Rlvlnldt
Apti,ment. In Middleport_ From

44 1

olm'o Fum ~~:" ~~ ~~
Will OoHI
,
;
Wldlfinn
trodoro 1 lmplomonto. Buy,
1111, nda, 1:004:00 - y o ,
SoL 1111-.

Booro riding -~~~- • lor, oloo. 01111, good -.1, f4!0;
- o r . Hkl now, 180: go.
oon 4 ,.,_ onglno, NO. 114-

Pets for 5ale
Mollohan Cll"pala Upper Rt. 7 AKC Rog'od Oolmotlon
North OuoJHy Co'I&gt;Oio ' Furni- s-7380.

8536.

rr

446~418,

tlni.
114 441 2'"
~~~--·

-a-

Fann Equipment

6

- -

6:00 C2J D (I) Cll D ®l ~ Cll
1111 Nowa
(!) I Dream Of Jeannie
lZl Wild America Prairie

19115 Chevy S-10, BlUer 5'1000
mil•, 0111 •"• nun. oo~
111M.

oUIIAIHondo
llpO

J:lblo

tabJM, 2 t.n/!'t 1
Turn,.ay Bualnttt. H1ndllng
rocker, ona 13 ca~lar
T.V. with
3
tumlshad
apertrnenta,
1
hal
Frtto-La~. Eagla, NabiiiCO, Mara,
remote, rea10n1ble
. C.U
&amp; slmlllar food producta. Slr'i'· 2br, The other two hu wnher &amp; aft• 8p.m. 814-441.
lng eomptny Hewed )ocatlona. dryer'a, 1bf, &amp;M-446..f725.
No Mlllng. Natlonel CentUI 31 Wool Apl. 2br, I both, privolo Whllo Woollf19houoo - - l
Flgurn al'low avenge arou In- anctoeed petlo, CIOIIIO grocery dryor, $100. IIWI7o7200.
come of l40,5.e0
ytar. R• stores I a~ng center, welar,
qulrn tpprox.
houri par ....,, tilth provlded, $26511'no. ZoniCh :zs• oolor TV,
304~ .
wMk. You will nted 115,000 114-441-1108.
cath tor aqulpmant. Call t-8CJO.
447-6811 1xt. 1021 anytlmt, BEAl/TIFUL APARTIIEHTS AT 53
Antique&amp;
d1ye, niiJ~II, Sundaya.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON =---,,-:,.:..,--,--::-ESTATE~. 531 Jookoon Pike Buy or Hll. Rlnrino AnliquH,
VENDING ROUTE : Loool. G- from $1v;urno. Walk to 1hop &amp; 112.t E. Main Btf'MI, Poml~
artn~
lncoma. hlgtl tnffk: movlllo . Coil614-448-. iOH. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 un. to 1:
locations. Prtetd tor quick Mtl.
p.m., s...doy 1:00 to 1:00 PJn.
1.000.833-91118.
BNUIIful comploilly lu•· 814-M2.:WI.
nlahecl apt. P•ritlna, ttoraga, No
VIdeo Rtnlal atort and but!·
WNCH BOXES. Kldl Onlyl
nHa for ul•. Backstt'Mt Video, Polo. 1300/mo. All. l Dop. 114- Poyl119 up Jo $150.00 tar JotPom•roy, Ohio. Sarlool lnq. 446.0338.
oon'o box. HIQ,_ prico pilei
only. 614-Ui2.-l6.
Fumlthed Apt 807 Saeond Awt, tar vinyl onil molol bouo.
Gollloollo, S2ii; UIIJHJoo pold, Bo- you llvow K OWlY glvo I
aw.,. or MU II to ott.p: Call
1br, 614 U8 4411afttr7p.m.
Real Estate
814-M2-6157 Marc Fullz..

nam.,

addrnt, 1nd phona number on
anawarlng ..rvlce. 114-tol-!310.

Apartment
for Rent

beauty ahop,
Get Into bt..ltlnua reaaonabla. 2 8R ePirtment, IIOVI 6 ,.t,
Beside Summar lmagt on 160. tumlahad. Upatalrl:. Wettt •
O.yt1 : 81~6-9753, Night : 814- trooh lumilhod. Uppor Rl. 1,
Upper River Rd. ft4.448-3MO.
246-1173.
Fully

112 .crt, 8 rooma with ba...
rnon1l new hNI pump, garag•. 2
build ngs. Locatad Ill Letart

cARO!Gosr•nt ..d sama day
approvtll Al11o quali fy for NO
chlpollh VlSA!MC and euh ad-

tNCf wagM,

Fumlehtd 1 _2_br, V2 mile aut ot
Portar on ~- 114-388-Hil.

Jackaon: (1) 26 h,..,.k: 4-Sp.m.,

och;;duJod Su-W; 2-hou• -kly

Help Wanted

2515.

31 Homes for Sale

Bp.m.

$2 500

Financ1al

homt
tor persona wfth
davtloprnantll dl11blltUH In

hrll'wk : la.m.-4p.m., Sun; )..

or 304-173-6271.

304-SU-3128

part-lima

M-F; 4 tn to bllleheduled Y-F;
2·hour weakly ltaft met41ng; or
11 otherwlae aehaduM&lt;t; (2) 28

Employment Services
11

Two

potiUotw In 1 communt1y group

,..,.,.nee requlr.d,

Hartford,

614·~2-

Will do painting lntarior, ex- 2br, no pet1, 322 Third A111, ef4.
terior, cleaning, wNkly, apeelel 446-!11$8 or 614·251-1903.
jobtl, Glenn McC ..IIan, 304-175Anllablt 1st of month 3 BR.
'7660 attar 4:00.
Trellar, B mllta balow Gr.lllfMl'ls
Would like lo btbyaft tor young on 211; 814·388-9M8
bab,_ 1nd toddler.. 114-iUChanning 2br, mobile horne,
32&lt;42.
Upper Rt . 1, $21~mo. plus
uiiJHioo. O.p I All., 814-&lt;4e-

21

ALL Yard Salea Must Be Paid In
Advanca. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Grocarv ctlri, experience ha~
IM day balorl the ad It to run. tul. Resumelrtf~ ca,.. of
Sunday edttlon • 2:00 p.m. P.O. Box ngc, Pomeroy, OH.
Friday. Monday edition • 2 :00 Huwy aqulpmenl and truck
p.m. Stturdav.
mechanic, mu.t h•ve own 1~.
no phone e11 .., 410 Fourth Avt,
Kanaugtl, Otllo, 8:00 till 4:011
Pomeroy,
Monday thru Frtdly.

tumlturt,

Grove .,.._ Call

Federal .Iobei
Eam $28,()00..$86,000
All occupatl008 ne~ad .

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

e&lt; ohlnol

lock
6567.

bedroom, partl•lly tumlahed,
required.
depoeltJrer.rancM
1250 per month. Phone 114-i92·
2608 or 614-1182-5883 1ftor &amp;p.m.

o •""'

111

MON., AUG.

S©\t.{l1J-~t~S"
- - - ldlted

TIIAT DAllY
,UIILII

EVENING

dock,
~~========~r:====~~~~~ 3112/AIIar
tNO
Civic,
2
olr,
6 p.m.
~7&amp;-1621.

0.Vor Sot, HoNoal Gold, bau;
13 1990. AN QUAL 8550.
G.l Eloclrlo Oryor, IIIII: Q.E.
Half blond labrador ,.trl1v1rs. OPPORTUNllY EMPLDVE R.
Eltctrlo Dryor, 171; K1111110111
Megic YNre O.y Care C.nter
F.-... Cont1ct Bobb6e Karr. 614O.yor,
S75; F.laldolro Oryor, 171:
reasonable,
dapendablt,
£.AHN MONEY Roodlng boolull
11112·2219.
Inch Ettctrk Rango eoo....
$30,000/yr. lncorn• potential. lice,.., quality child care. Moo- Why Pay Rent? Homea for 11.001 30
lono, 171: Eloc:trtc Ringo Tcip I
Mix~ BrMCI dog , good wlk.lda,
Now hiring. (1) 805-687-6000 day thru Friday, 7:30 1111 5:30. Benk repoa, tax dtllnquenr Bot1om Ovon, Coooortono, $150;
For more lnform11tlon or to
needt room to run, male. 614- E.J:t. Y-1016!1".
properiiH,
ao:vemnwd Eltclrlo Rongo 20 lnoh Whllo,
register 304~7S.M47.
446-7470.
glveawey prognma. For Infor- $7S; Eltclrlc Rongo, SO Inch,
Echoing MNdOWI. An ICF
P1l Whit• A•t with c•g•. 614- pM.R. It cuntnlly •nklng 1 fuiJ. Mite Paula'• Oay Care Centar. mation call 1--604-f.41-ma bt. us; Portoblll Dlohw.- US;
;llJ8-0:IOII.
tlmt AN or LPN tor afttrnoon S.r., aHordablt, ehlldear.. M·F RS214. 24 hourt.
Rohlgorolor, Ho.voot Cidd, US:
Chttt Fruer, 20 cubla foot,
ahlft wllh Friday and Saturday 6 a.m. · 5 :30 p.m. Age• 2-10.
$150; Skoggo -Jonoo, Uppor
on. lntarettlid par11ee pt.... Before, attar .chool. Drop-Ina 42 Mobile Homes
6
Lost &amp; Found
Riv-er Road, 1.......1-7398.
call 614 -594-3541 or apply In welcome. 614~48.Q224 .
for Rent
FOUND- EUack I whil1 kinin, parson al !19 W. Union StrMI, Will do babytttllng or cake
lla1l:hl"9 couch, choir bolgo,
Main Slreel Point Pl1aunt, Athena Ohio 457'01. Monday- daconllng .., my t-toma In Hem· 2 bedroom rnoblla home locMed brown tlonl p.~nem exc. cond,

11 August

lHE MOrull.l6!

74

•ar
~~tz.'Coil~

Rar. 814-446-2543.

ttal llllok 8-10 Tohol PU.
Loaded wllh taclory eptlone.

1984 Chov., 3/o4 ton Cargo Yon,
57,000 mUte., V-1, 1lr I cnite,
t4,500, ftrm. 814-4411-85111.

Pel. Roollnoro 1225 to 1111.
Ltmpe $28 to $121. DIMR•
$101 ~nd up to 14111. Wood loblo
w.t Clullro 1285 to $711. Ooob
$141 up to 1371. Hulchoo 14001

' -•

H~AI(f"

'5T}Jq'W IN

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

to $125. Hkfl a 1!1d1 $300 lo

• r. ·

•

6@"1\jfi 01...0

lp.lft.

~~ oond, 1200. 114-

Household
Goods
LAYHE'll FURNITURE
Solu ond chliro prJood INm
Uti to IHII. T.- 110 olld up

.......

Child cart priWidad In my Rio
Grend• Home, daya. Exc. cart,
wlruaonabla rattt. 614-245-

W~:Kourw

hopl truc:k.

Aluminum Toppo•,

5I

'""'I•·

Evane H•lghta

:~--

1t8'7 Ford Ranger, S-TX, 4r4, 5
opel,
Exo. oond.l. t7~j

~322.
G-lllo. ··-I oholn- choln
Appl- Inc. Clood . . -•
«1~708.
3br, I both portillly lumlohod, -Couniy
opplil....,
T.V.
Hlo. Ooon rogulor fl!lco aot ono FREE.
locatMf In town, 814-446-4108, Of 8 1.m. lo I p.m. llon ...Sat. ,.,.._ SIDEII04ARI .!.~
ctean1d up tor lumber, also automotive ch11olo ouboyolomo 18 Wanted to Do
814-:m.2!40.
446-11~. 127 Srd. Avo. OoJ- ~·--·
large lrn rMnav.cl tor Hrewood. aDd tha principle~ of autcmollva ':"'"---::-:--::::::::::-::=
614·256· 1058.
NI'Vk:t m1nagemant and auAnyone na~lng q..,.ltty typing 3BR, 01t In kllcho'), Jiving room, Jlpollo, un
. _ lllclroo, -o
pervlslon. Minimum llva yaart such 1 s rHumt't, ,.porte, Ill· cerportJ.. $3'10/mo. ~,:~II Tope Fur· GOOD USEO APPI.JAHCI!S ond CD Pta~~IIOO. Col olior
3 llnta klnana, to good homes, or experience In the treda n~ tars,
ate.
In
IAkldltoport nltiKa, a14-446-0&amp;IO.
Wlohoro, d~ -..-lloro, lp.no. 114-:MI-G2S
614-446-3797.
qulred.
Bachelor'•
dagrH Pomaroy, ~adnt 1nd RIAiaml
··-·~ ·-·.,...
Fumlatltd
email
hou•
ona
bedA~nooo, - . .
-hof. S150.
1 h.•llhy puppies for giVIIWiy, pr•terred. Appileanta mu•l hold area Call bttwatn ta.. m.o.!p.m. room, ciNn, nlca tor ona parASE eertlflcttion . Conlaet the or attar &amp;p.m. 814-742-2435.
approx. 2 moa. old. lnquiN 3'1 PertOnntl
.an or couple. No ptta. D.p. l
..,.:.":'" &amp;14-1112Office,
Hocking
booko (bonluo ohorgo $10).
Butln..... or lndlvktuala. tl-&amp;-

"- 6COO, SfiFF

-~471

$41. Bod

Wanted

Television
Viewing

P11a IJ)OI1 IINo ond wlloola,lool
box, Nmata burglar alarm 1nd
lUI hood Jlghlo. f4HI. CIH 114-

gun. Baby mon- S3l I

Situation

tm QIIC 7000 Choolor Axlo,

Sp.m. or 811 448 1633 attar

Common:IIJ !Mgn Spooe Rt. 35

up, bunk -

BORN LOSER

, _ F·IOO Feed olck..p, rory
aood oond, 814-4411-4m boforo

46 Space lor Rent

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

427, ga, 512, 13-112 ft. tiUiftmum

Merchandise

38 aer• 2 mllu tram VInton.

:1341.

304-8e2·2341.

eondblon.

e....
Mo-

Trucks for 5ale

Monday. August 6, 1990

I" fVrn IJJb Ll Ke

3 lots In New HaYWI, uUittiH
available, 304-173-6808.

Call collecl Evenings, 201-427·

01

good

·72

Atlo lr11ller ..,... All hook-up&amp;.
C.ll
2:00 p.m.. 3Q4..1la.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

wormth • offtctlon, tlnonollliy
uowe, .... help .ach o«Mr!
11-oUL.oaol oxpon- pold.

304-875-1360, 304-713-5858

lie~,

Kff 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

llloopl"9 roomo whh oooklng.

Collto800-7211-40451or dllllil.

Skyllno tm 14x7V 2 BR,
Eloctrio, lg. boy wllldow, oklrl·

ADOPTION
We'd IO'Ie to .,.,. our hHN I
home wtth Infant. Will otter lon,

Slnglea lntormetlon and 1 dig·

ol

prlco

$12,i00 dallverM end Ml up.

will lclonll , ploMo, rooort Info
to Muon
niY Shorfff'o Dop&lt;
0&lt; Choolor lllrt1n, 541 Copltol
Blvd., Elkhort, Ind. 4&amp;511.

Notice Warnn Ston11 whoee

unbollovoblll

Furnished

Roome

:llw, 121«1 lolllllloc. 11,200.114-

dollln9, 11.-oldng IIIII llllry.
"llllnil on ow ptOpOtiJ lndllln
Lob llood .,Minion Rldao".
MaiOf'l County. Pra.,.n, tahn
7110x11 IRICk lifeo _...0
with rltno, wtno oonnoctoro
whit• In color. One Sha"-pear
trolflng motor Model 101P8 ot
11011 LPS. Ono Cr11tomon WICker Moct.l 211 78HOO. Onl
Homtl.. choin NW wlh 20" bor
and chaln~cov• Super Xl12. I

ntme Ia pelnted on Uood wall 11
4th St. behind hDI ... PIMM con.
loci W.R. Stono, 300 Hlghwoy
203, Mldlaon. Ill a20SO.

45

32 Mobile Homes
for 5ale

Monday, August 6, 1990

27

29
31
33

Blue ·
Aparlmenl
(s l)
Bridal
"OK "
Exlremity
Cardigan ,
e .g
Tiny
colonis l
Bizarre

35 Counted

36

39
40
41
42
44

up
ltsy-bils y
Plelhora
Pale
Fellow
(sl. )
Lamprey
Ac tress .
- Dawn
Chong
,o

II

31 Be ard

Jl

o n grain
32 Shucksl
34 Turner
or Cole
37 Japanese
verse
38 C hemical
suffix
39 .. - Bird
of You(h "
43 Do
business
45 Avid
46 C ons umed
47 Point
ot view
48 Prepare

15
B

OAIL VCRVPTOQUOTES- Here's how to wort it:

~(I)

Face To Face Willi
Connie Chung Slerao .
I!]) 111 New Twilight Zone
@ Bells Surfing Claoalc

AXVDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

From VIctoria , Au stralia {T)

Q! Evening NtWI

~ 700 Club With Pol
Roblrtoon
10:20 llJ MOVIE: Bonnie And
ClydtiPGI (2:151
10:30[]1 111 Paid Progrommlng
®Crook a Chooo
@ Surlor Magezlne (0:301
10:40 lZJ New1watch
11 :00 lllG Cil CllllJ llll ~ til
t1ll Ntwl
'

One letter stands (or another. In this sample A is used
(or the three L's, X (or the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and (onnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diflerent.

CIIYPTOQtJ011!8
BPEK

IPURKCAK

[]liD ArttniO HIM

UBRCOM,

[tMiamiVIce
® Gospel Jubilee
@ IIIHbllil Tonight

8 P E K

VGU

SRUB

PVV

KMIKARPVVF

IPURKCAK

S R U B

Q!Monoyllnt
~

FTGDMKVX.-MU

(!)Newt

ZK
MPVKM
YNterdQ'• Ca 1pi1N1Hte: MARRIED MEN HAVE
BE'ITER HALVES, BUT BACHELORS HAVE BETTER
QUARTERS. -SOURCE OBSCURE
C&gt; 111111 by ICirlg , _ Syc-.....

1111mon
11:10lZl ,,.. z - Democracy
MeeiB The Nuctear 111rea1
11:30 IIlG 11J ToniGII1 SltOW
Sl8reo.

~i";i..o

ill Night c-1

I

XDPCARM

,.

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. August 6. 1990

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

r---Local news briefs------------.
Carleton enrollment slated
A program of Meigs Mental Retardation Developmentally
Disabled will be conductin g enrollment lor the 1990-1991 school
year between the hours of 9 a.m. and 2 p.m . on Wednesday .
Parents of pre-sc hool and school age c hildren who are eligible
may call Joy Sauer, case manager. or Bette Hoffman. program
director, al992-6681. or write to: Meigs MRDD, att: enrollment.
1310 Carleton St .. Syracuse, OH 45TI9 .

EMS answers assitance calls

Representative to visit
II. representative from U.S . Rep. Clarence Miller's office will
conduct an open door session from lJ a.m. to 1 p.m . Wednesday
1n the cour t house in Pomeroy.
. Anyone having questions concerning the federal government
IS Invited to stop by to discuss them with the representallve .

Health care workshop set
A workshop for health care providers wlli be held from 9a.m .
to noon Thursday at Overbrook Cen ter In Middleport. This three
hour seminar . Using Restraints Safel y and Effectively, covers
the resu lt s of an extensive review of the lll eralure, surveys of
local facilities and Information from the experts on using
restra int s on the elderly.
The program is co-sponsored by the Ohio University College
of Os teopathic Medicine CHEAO and Overbrook Center.
Pau la Minerd. RN, BSN, assis tant to the medical director at
Athens Mental Health Center and nurse consultant to area
long -rerm care facilities will be the presenter . Registered

-Area

Billy F . Mercer, 56. Little
Hockrng. died Su nd ay at St.
.Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg,
W Va., following an extended
illness.
Born in Vienna, W.Va .. he was
th e so n of thr late Melvin and
Orp ha Ktng Hick Mercer. He was
se lf employed as the operator of
Mercer Trucking in Little
Hoc king.
He is survived by his wile.
Ma rjo riP Colt' Mercer; one son,

William Mercer. Cutler; two
daughter s. Deborah Ingram. Lit ·
fir Hoc k ing; and Katherine Hin
son, Centerburg: four brothers.
Robert Lee Mercer, Johnnie
MPrl'er . and Jimmy Mercer.

Richmond , Va.; and Darrel l
Mercer, Greenvllie, S.C.; one
sister. Lera Jones. Sandston,
Va . ; stepmo ther . Evelyn
Mercer, Richmond, Va.; and
four grandchildren.
In addition to his parents. he
was preceded In death by one
brother. Ber.1ard .
Services wilt be held Tuesdav
at lJ a.m. at the White Blowe-r
Funeral Home In Coolvi lle with
Rev. Larry Kennen . officiating.
Buria l will be in Success
Cemetery.
Friends may cal l at the funeral
home on Monday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
In ileu of flowers. contrlbuUons
may be made to the American
Cancer Society

Stocks plunge early
Nf.W YORK 1UPI1 - Stock
prices plunged again In ear ly
trading Monda y as the tension s
in the Middle East and the
wsulling surge in ott prices
con tinued to wreak havoc on the
market.

The Dow Jones industrial aver age, which sank 54.95 Friday,
was down 73.76 to 2735.89 at 10

am .
Declines overpowered advan ·
ces 1.285-163 among the 1.644
tssues cross ing the New York
Stock Exchange tape. Volume
was heavy, amounting to about
41.1 9 million sha res during the
fir st 30 minutes of trad ing.
Diploma! s Monda y reported a
fuil sca le Sa udi military mobili
zat ion and the deploymenl of

armored ('U iumns next to a
nPutral oil ·extractio n zonP adja cent to Iraqi-occupied Kuwait .

forc es reported ly wen:

poised In Kuwait on the ot her side

of the nP utral zone .
1\.s for ott prices. In New York.
oil futures for September dellv·
cry soared $2.66 on the ope ning
Monday .
On Friday, the Dow seemed to
be headed for a disastrous day at
mid -after noon. when the average
turned sharply lower amid rum ·
ors that Iraqi troops In Kuwait
were within five miles of the
Sa udi border.
The market erased more than
half its toss almost as sudden ly
when the Soviet Union and the
United States demanded Iraq ' s
Immediate withdrawal from Ku ·
walt , as Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevard nadze said
Baghdad had assured Moscow II
would pull out the Iraq i t roops
"very shortly ."
After th at news, the Dow
rebounded to a loss of abou t 60
point s and picked up slight ly
more grou nd as th e session
wound down

Helicopter resrues
woman from Niagra
BUFFALO, N.Y. iUPl i - For
the second time In tess than two
weeks, a Niagara Fal ls tourist
helicopter pilot savPd somronr ln
danger of being swept over fa lis.
Rainbow Helicopter pilot and
owner David Ba nks plucked
Ailee Goldman, 38 of Ontario
from the Niagara River less th an
50 yards from the brink
Goldman allegt'llly attPmpted
sui cide by jumping in the river
from a pedestrian bridge on
Grand Island on the Ameri can
side of the falis. Niagara Parks
pollee sa id .
Goldm an changed her mind

once In

the watrr but was unablP

to swim to sho re and grabbed
so me rocks about 30 yards from
the brink . pollee sa id .
Poilce ca lled Ba nks. who ho·
vered 4 feet above the river.

allowing Goldman to grab the
chopper's landing struts so
Ba nks cou ld haul her to shore.
"T here's no doubt that the
rescue would have been very
difficult without the heilcopler. "
said Niagara Parks Police Of·
fleer Ron Privett .
Residents living near the !ails
have become crlllcal of the
tourist choppers. saying !heir
noise Is a nuisance.

BEND. Ore. tUPli - Weary,
heat - baked firefighters
struggled Monday to douse a
3,300-acre wi ldfire that raged
through a centra l Orego n resorl
area. burning about 28 homes as
thousands of residents anxio usly
waited to return home.
Temperatures c lose to 100
dewees were expect~d again
Monday, hampering the effort s
of firefighters tackilng the blaze.
which was 50 percent co nt ained
Sunday night . Aut horities did not
expect to contain the fire until at
least Tuesday even ing. They
hoped to have II undercontrol.by
late Thursday.
More than 2.000 homes were
evacuated during the weekend In
a residential and resort area
sou thwest of Bend as the lire
spread to an area 6 mil es long
and a mile wide, sta te Depart·
ment of Forestry spokeswoman
Doug Decker said Monday .

burned down In three subdlvl·
sto ns nes tled among scenic
lodgepole pines In central Oregon' s high desert country, about
120 miles southeas t of Portland.
Oregon forestry of!lclals sa id
the Awbrey Hall blaze had
ca used at least $5 million darn·
age and was the state's most
destructive wildfire In 60 years,
since a fire that hit Bandon on the
sou thern Oregon coast In the
1930s.

that tn thr past decade billiions
inv(•s ted in rducatlon are yield ing too littiP in retur n.
Un ivPrsit y professnrs com plain about th e poor preparation
of high school graduates in
everyth,ing from the humanities
to basic science. Emp lo yers
despa ir at the inability of new
hires to write. clear. understan dable prose.
Tests show that American
schoo lchildren Jag behind other
industri:Jiill'd eountril's in
mathematics. geography and
virtua lly evf'ry other academic
discipline.
But the problems go much
deeper.
An estimated ~II perct&gt;nt of
Ohio children never finish high
sc hool A growing percentage of
public schoolchildren come from
poor or minority harkground
groups that t ra di tionally have

Tickets for the dinner meeting
with Celebreeze may be pur·
chased from the Chambers of
CommercP in New l.rxt ngt on.
Logan. Ne lso nv ille . At hens,
Pomeroy , Ga l lipolis, South
Point. Portsmouth, Waver ly,
.Jackson, Wellston. and McAr·
lhur. and from Bernard Fultz.
Ri ll Lavelle, Morris Tipton. Tate
C'lme. and Carl f)ah lbcrg

con nector road from

1wo

sect ions of

:u

from north

NP isonvillr a nd two feasibility

Weather
Partly cloudy through Turs
clay. wi th a slight cha ncr of
s how er~ tod a!·. Highs will be in
th e 711.s and lows in the 50s.
Extended forecast
Fai r through the per iod . wtlh
hi ghs in thr 70s and lows in the ·

;-

UPI

l Os

WEATHER MAP - A cold front will bring showers and
thunderstorms along the entire East Coast, liS well as along lhe
Gull Coast. Moisture feeding Into the southern Rocklnewlll trigger
afternoon thunderstorms In Arizona nad New Mexico. t\ large high
pressure zone will bring lair and mUd weather to mostoflh1• rest of
the country . ( UPI)

Storms cause Texas flooding
By United Press lnlernatfoDlli
Heavy ra in In Texas kept
rivers and streams flooded Man ·
day as scattered storms swept
the Southern Plains, while l ighl
showers teased drought -parched
California and crews battled
raging forest fires in thr
Northwes t.
Isolated storms roiled through
eas tern New Mexico and southw
estern Arkansas Monday as
heavy ra ins in west Texa s
prompted flood warnings for the
Pecos. Rio Grande and Devils
rivers, the National Weather
Service sa id .
Heavy rainfa ll fl ooded rivers
and s treams in southwest Texa s.
closin g roads In Val Verde
Cou nt y . Widely scat t ered
storms. some with heavy rain.·
pushed ove r the northeast Mexi·

Trace

£~mounts

of ra in wen'

reported in Los Angeles and
nearby suburbs .
Thunders torms rattled along
the Co lorado River in Arizona.
bringing strong wi nd s and heavv

rains

before

moving

So uthern Ca lifornia .

towa rd

__

Coun ty:

studif'S. A st ud~' of a Portsmou th

.......

information system will bees tab·
I !Shed to provide annua l reports
of district data . Categories will
include studC'n t performance,
clas s size. employee information
and expend itures .
- The state boacd is to set
performance standards for dis·
tri cts. then use them to identify
"excellent" and "deficien t" dis·
triers. Tile "deficient" districts
co uld be subject to state
takro ver .
- Kind erga rten will bemanda ·
tory for admission l o first grade

Easr by -pa ss and an improved
north-sou th rou te linking the
Chesapeake and Lawrence

four -la ning RoutP

~

A sta tewi df' management

Agenda 2000 in cludes completion
of the Appa tac lan Highway in
Pike and Athens Co unties; construct io n of Route 35 in Ga llla

of Nrlsonville to sout h of Logan
as part of a long lrrm by -pass of

~

-

Contin ued from ,:__:__
pagr I

Portsmouth ;

.

not farPd wf' ll
The key elements of Ohio's 1989
education reform ac t adopted by
the legislature Include:
- A $90 million Education
lmprovemt'nl Fund will be
creail'd to support promLsing
programs in preschool educa·
lion. pregnancy prevention,
teaching training and classr oom
tec hn ology

SEORC... _ _ _

Routr 35 in Jackson and Ross
Coun ti('s: a two-sta gt' projPrt

South Centra)
Tonight : partly cloudy. wilh

lows of:;:) to 60 and north winds 10
10

1:, mph . Tuesday parlly
witll high s in thr low 70s .

~ unnv.

Sun S('! Monda~': K ·10 p m
SunriS(' Tur sday : ti : 2.S a .m .

Divorce sought
An act ion for divorce ha s bern

filed in Me igs County Common
Pleas Court bv .Jeri's. Mat son.
Pomrroy. agains t. .Jrrry F:.
Mat son. also of Pomeroy .

Cou n ty arPas with .Jackson.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Volunteers utilize telephone

1)'H

Robbins &amp; Mye" .............. ~0
Shoney 's I nc ... .... ............ 13
. .. 18
Star llank . .. .. .. .. ... .
Wendy's Inti ... ...... . ....... 5'~
Worthington in d .
. ... 22%
rAEP and Bob !-:vans
bo th exdlvided today t.

A

sevP rP

W('r('

Volunleers In the Meigs
County Retired Se nior Volunteer Program (RSVP) utilize
thei r telephone as a tool to;
comfort. spread cheer, add
security, visit and keep In
touch .
II Is less expens i ve th an
driving one's car for a
friendly visit to friends and
neighbors or. hopping a plane
to keep In touch with distant
families.
Onp confined RSVP volun teer, who Is no longer abl e to
walk and visit with neighbors.
and unable to afford postage
and greeting cards. now ob·
serves every holida y by ca l ·
ling neighbors to wish them a
'Happy St. Valentine's Day,
or Mother 's Day', et c. Instead
of becoming a reclus e to his

confinement, his brief mes sage of greetIng and lnqu Jry
retains a neighborh ood
toget her ness.
Meigs Cou nty RSVP volu n·
leers can be proud of the
hund reds of hours accumu lated by telep hone visitation
over I he past six months. The
benefit is two fold. Volunteers
elevat e their awareness of
their fellow human being's
circumstances and the recipIent Is encouraged and uplifled by the vol unteers's
concer n for them.
An excerpt from the Crime
Prevention Association New slett er/ Vol. 2, No. 9 relates
add itional information for you
to co nsi der .
!Continu ed on Page 21

NEW VAN- Pictured Is Lloyd Blazer, President of our Board of Trustees with the new
Vllll the Center received this past month with 1fi.B-2 1undfng from the Ohio Department of
Transportation. The van Is equipped with air condltlonln~ and a wheel chair lift. It will be
strictly used lor medical appointments. II you need the van for this purp!Hie please contact
the Center at 446-7000, 24hrs before the appointment.

In Meigr Cnunty

Support group meetings

thunderstorm

dumped up to 4 Inches of rain on
Fort Worth Sunday afternoon
"Sometimes you don't get that
much ra in In !hat amount of time
during a hurricane," said Greg
Dia l . a NWS meteorologist.
Officials said sli ck road s
ca used a f)allas Fire Depart ·
ment engine to skid Into a ditch

Caring, loving, and sharlns h1111 been the motto olthe Abhelmer'sDiseaseandlor Reialed
D!Borders support group meetlnp held at I he SenlorCfllzens Multipurpose BuHdlnglocoted
In Pomeroy. Pictured left to right- (slUing) Pauline Ridenour, Don Maurer, Betty Maurer
(slandlng) Helen Hicks, Crestlyn Hill, Janet McKee, Lula Toban, Marilyn Martin, Mary
Sigman.

and over tu rn Sunday. No onP was
Inju red, officia ls said .
Southern California. suffering
from a four -year drought. go t a
teasing taste of rain Sunda y nigh t
from a series of lhunderstorms

mov£&gt;d across thP area .

Hospital news
VMH
Saturday admissions- James
Bowles, Pataskala ; Mary H.
Cleek, Portland .
Saturday discharges - Rodney Tuttle, Don G. Cuilums.
Sunday admissions - George
Thacker, Ewlngton; Connie Morris, Racine: Jeffrey Werry,
Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - Terri
Currence.

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 23, 1990
RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

992-2156

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

"WE HAVE HEARINS AID$"

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1S, 1990

(304) 67 5-1244

AUGUST, 1990

In Gallia C o u n t y - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

In M eig r Cou Ill)'

Am Elecl ric Power ..
.. .~8';,
AT&amp;T .
....... ............ 3H,
Ashland Oi I ...................... 3I
Bob Evans ............ ........... 13%
Charm lng Shoppes.
... 8y8
Cit y Holding Co .. . ........ .. 15
Federa l Mogul
.loy8
Goodyear T&amp;R .
... 23'1;
Key Centurion . . .. .....
12
Lands' End ...
... ... .. . .14')1,
Limited Inc .
.. .... 18
Multim edia Inc .
.... .... ..60'1,
Rax RPstauranls .

An Ohio VaUey Publishing Company Publication

The showers were remnant s of
a band of powerful thunder·
storm s that battered north T1·xas
Sunday. leaving some Fort
Worth streets under 4 feet of
water . Several ve hicles stalled in
the high water, and Fort Worth
f irelighters were forced to
rpscue t he occupants of on£' car.
authorities said .

PLEASANT YAUEY HOSPITAL

I

VOL. 2, NUMBER 6

ca n coas t near Brownsville.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

Authorities said 2l io 28 homes,
some worth up to $300,000,

'

In Ohio. "'\\'PI I a' the nat ton .
1h(' ]'(' has bt·en a grow ing sfln se

Roulc :IJ in Meigs County to the
Ravenswood Bridge: bypass of

NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 3 PM EDT 8-7-90

that

Oregon wildfire slaws

I

Nine calls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services .
On Saturday at 1:30 a.m .. Middleport sq uad wws called to
South Third lor Lora Cleland, who was transported to Holzer
Medical Ce nter . AI 11:09 a.m .. Syracuse squad transported
Rose Lee to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4: 58 p.m.. Pomeroy and Middleport squad s were
dispatched to Lincoln Hill for Ann Griffith. Griffith was
transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 4:06a.m . on Sunday, Pomeroy squad was called to East
Main Street for Tim Coates who refused treatment . AI 7: ]3
a.m., Pomeroy sq uad transported Mark Proffit to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
At 12 :58 p.m., Rutland squad was called to Sta te Rou te 124 fo r
Vlckler Frye who was transported to Pleasant Valley iiospital.
At 3:40p.m .. Middleport unit was dispatched to Sta te Route 7 for
Waller Chartlger who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 5:46p.m .. Racine squad went to Sta te Route J2q for
Oscar Price, who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and at 6 p.m. the Racine sq uad wenl to Letart for
Connie Morris who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

deaths~----

Billy F. Mercer

Iraqi

nurses will recrive 3.2 eontatt hours of continuing Pliucatiun
credit through lht• Consortium for Health Vcluratiun in
Appalachia Ohio which is approved as a provider of continuing
nursing education by the Ohio Nurses Association.
The Ohio Nurses Association is accredited by Eastern
Regional Accrediting Committee of the American Nurses '
Association.
The fee Is $10. Registration is lim it ed to 40 participant s.
Additional information may be obtained by calling 593-2292.

D ture ... ________
lontineued from page 1
ru
_

Caring lor an Alzheimer
patient often leaves the caregiver with lltlle time to look
after himself or his other
responsibiliti es. to thi nk
about his health, his social life
or his own feelings. This
promotes feelings of anger,
lear. depression, contusion,
and a feeling of being
overwhelmed.
Knowing where to look for
help can be as Important as
knowing when It Is needed.
The family doctor and clergy man may be good sources;
but, they are limited In being
able to understand t he frus tration of a caregiver unless
they also are caregiv ers.
Alzheimer' s Disease and
related disorders affect an
estimated 4 million Ameri cans - one In ten Individuals
over the age of 65, and som e
people In their 40s and 50s .
M ei gs County Is not an exct'p·
lion t o the given statisti cs.

Caregivers.

family

members, and friends of I has!'

with Alzheimer's Disease are
offered a place to meet with
others In slmlllar situations .
An opportunity to share their
experiences and exchangr
coping skills . Car ing for a
dementia patient requires dlf·
ferent tec hniques than those
needed In caring lor a pat lent
who Is n ot cognl tl velv
Impaired .
·
Support group m eetin gs arc
held In order to prevent the
caregiver of a d!'m~nt Ia pa·
I lent from becoming a vie t Jm
of the Illness . MeE&gt;tings at t hr
Senior Cit lzens Ce nter Mull ip
urpose Building locat ed In
Pomeroy, arE&gt; held month!\
under the supervision of
Sharon Wright L. P .N.. For
further Information contact
Sharon thru the Meigs County
Council on Aging Inc. at
992-2161.

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