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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va,

Times-Sentinel

23.

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1989 ~
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Tr'ibune's Easter coloring contest win~ers

DO

PAY

;

5801
3·9-11-25·27 -31
Kicker 179528

,
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''We Want Your 8-usine·s s''
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Vot39 , No.244
Copyrighted 1989

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METRO· SPECTRUM
PRIZM

2.9°/o
FINAN~ING
OR REBATE

(

. • GEO SPECTRUM •

.'·' 12" NOW . IN STO

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer '
" This Is a perfect example."
stated Frank Porter, who heads
Pomeroy's Historic Preservation Commission, "of why Pome·
roy 's new historical preservation
ordinance is required -because
a private Individual has decided
to completel y ignore its

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o~

existence."
Porter, other members of the
preservation commission, as
well as members of the larger
parent group. the Historic Preservation Committee. are up in
arms over th e altempl by Pomeroy resident ~tile Turner to
excavale riverbank property

along East Main . St. where s~e
plans to· construct a private boat
dock. A bu.lldozer began excava~n ollhe Property on Saturday.
Turner, who co-owns the riverbank property with Jimmy Cain.
allended last Monday's regular
meellng of Pomeroy VIllage
Council to discuss her plans to
build the dock. She brought with

•

RETAIL •••·•••••••~.....................59,890.00
SAVER PAC DISCOUNT ••••••••••• 250.00
NET STICKER •••••~ ••••••••••••••••• 9,640.00
GM REBATE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 450.00 .

.'SALE ...............................
'

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her to the meeting, au thorizatlon
from the U.S. Corps of Engineer s
which stated that plans for
repairs to the riverbank lo
prevenl further erosion, and the
subsequenl building of lhe dock.
meel Corps' requirements. However, according to one sentence
In the Cor[$' authorization,
which was read at last Monday's
.meeting by Councilman Bill
Young, Corp's approval of the
plans does not "obviate the need
for local and state approval. "
Pomeroy Mayor Rfchard
Seyler and members of council
maintained at the meeting that
Turner does not own ail the
· property from "the road to the
low water mark of lhe river, " as
her deed reads. They believe her
property Is bisected · by Ihe old
railroad right of way which Is
owned by the village.
Seyler and ·council suggested
strongly that Turner postpone
plans lor Immediate excavation
of the site until the differences of ·
opinion regarding ownership
could be defined.
The existence of Pomeroy's
His lorlcai Preservation Ordinance was also mentioned to
Turner at Monday's meeting.
This ordinance, which was just
recently passed, requires thai
anyone wishing to excavate or
construct within· Pomeroy Village limits, musl presenl plans,

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S9190

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STOCK #1694

~-{-Pomeroy
'

IN VIOLATION? - A buDdozer began excava·
lion on Saturday on private property alon1lhe
riverbank on Pomeroy's East Mala Street. The
owner claims she's within her rlgjlls to Initiate the

THIRD PLACE WINNER - Cassie Sheets, daughter ol Terry .

OLOSMOI3- Lr
·•--

('UTI
ns('0
L
,_H

SliPn[ME
'- J r'il..
.

l•

STOCK #1544

James ' 'Charlie" Brown. age

35. Mlddieporl, was arrested In
Mlddlep6r1 after he allegedly
stabbed Dennis "Bucky" Tillis,
age 33, Rutland, two times In a
scuffle al the Cedar Bar in
Middleport.
According lo Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the
inclde.n t took place about 11 p.m.
Sunday evening. After it hap·
pened, Brown went to the Middleport Pollee Departmenl to turn
·
himself in.
On the scene were Sheri!!
Souls by , Chief Deputy Jimmer
Souisbv, Middleport Police Chief

InAIL ......................~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s16,516
SAVEl PAC DISCOUNT ........................ -390.00
Nn SIICDI...................................... 16,126.00
GENE JOHNSON DISCOUNT ........""'''''' 1,526.00
$)4,600.00
GM lilAIE ..................................... -1 ,000.00

ud Ginny Sheets was the third place winner in the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune Easter coloring contest. receiving SS. Plctl/red with her Is
Terry Glasser, manager of McDonald's Restaurant, GalllpoBs.

LAIGE

SAU PRICE ......................".

$1 3,600

STOCKI1679 ....:. RED

.................................................... S13,988
51¥11 PAC DISCOUNT..................... -1 ,400.00

Nn STICIII ...................................... 12,511.00
Rock of Age• offe.- you • choice of I different colored
gr1nh8. Whetever. your requlmnentt INY INI, complete
Atlafllctlon 11 euured whh Rock of Agel.
WINTER HOURS: Frldly 9:00 o.m.-4:00 p.m.
OttMr Houro by Appalntment-441-2327 or &amp;93-1181

SALE·............" .. ;..................

STANLEY A. SAUIDEIS

151 ftllnl An.

'

GENE JOHIISOII DISCOUNT .................... 711.00
511,100.00
GM lElATl ......................................., -100.00

I •

$11 I 000

Pl. 446·11:117

IIATCHIACI- STOCK #1571 •
.,

DON'T PAINT YOUilS&amp;J&amp;J&amp;
INTO A CORNER

..................,............,.....,............ •12,175.00
SAVD PAC DISCOUNT-............. ~....... -100.00
.-r SIICIII .....................~•••••••••••••••• 12,075.00
GEIII JOHNSON DISCOUNT"""'""""' -675.00
.
$11 ,400.00

11411 111111"1riE ........................................

~ewspaper

The department Is also invest!Sid Little. Investigator for Pro,secu tor Steven .story, Don L. . gating a report In which the
Snyder, and other Middleport outside toliel at the Morning Slar
and Pomeroy pollee oltlcers and Church was overturned Friday
night. Vehicles had reportedly
deputies.
Brown remains In the Meigs been driven lhrough the yard.
Charles Knapp, age 22, Hudson
County Jail on felonious assault
charges. He was scheduled to St.. Mlddiepqrl, has been cited In
appear in Meigs County Court Meigs County Court on charges
resulting from a hil-and-skip
this morning.
accident
that occured on Aprll9.
Bradley Robinson, Mulberry
Knapp
has
been charged with
St., Pomeroy, was arrested Sunday aflernoon on an assau it failure to maintain control, hitcharge, and Is In jail pending a and-skip, and driving under
hearing in the Meigs County suspension. He Is to appear _In
Meigs County Court on
Court.
·
Wetln~sday.

_jolynn·Butler sworn in as
new PUCO chainn3:D today

in ·writing, Ia a fi ve-member
Historic Preservation Commission. Within two week's time of
the submission of the plans, t he
commission mu st recommend to
council the approval or denial of
Ihe plans as submitled. However,
council has final say on the plans.
The mayor and council also
voiced to Turner In Monday's
meeting their wishes to relain
conlrol of lhe riverbank , which
lhey feel is the v illage's greatest
resource, for the purpose of
future development .
According to Frank Por ter ,
Turner was informed later last
week, after the Monday council
meeting, of the need to go
lhrough the Preservalion Commission for approval of her
plans. On Friday, Turner submitted plans to Bill Quickel. who is a
member of the larger preserva·
tlon committee but nota member
of the offlcal commission, Porter
said. Over the wel!kend, an
emergency meeting of the committee was called for tonight
' (Monday) . al which time Quickel
shOuld be presenting the plans on
Turner's behalf to lnltlale the
commission's review process. A
final determination on the plans
by the commission, would then
be required within two weeks.
However, Turner slarted excavating on Saturday, at which
IJmePomeroy Pollee Chie!Jer ry
Rought contacled Porter and

sent a deputy to the site to Inform
Turner and the tlozer operator
that they were in violallon of a
village ord inance and that excavation would ha ve to stop. When
construclion did not stop, a
warrant for Turner 's arres t was
Issued on the basis th at she was in
violation of the ordinance. Work ·
then continued of! and on until
8:30p.m. Sunday. ,
· Turner said Monday morning
lhal she had been advised that a
court Injunction halting further
excavation, was to be issued th is
morning. However. Councilman .
Bruce Reed stated late this
'morning that it was his under standing that an injunclion had
not been filed, and that the
'village could prevent furth er
excavation QY enforcing a " floodplain ordinance'' which had been
on the books In Pomer oy fo r some
time. The floodplain ordinance
requires approval by council
prior to any ailer ation of properly wlthl.n the floodplain.
Turner will al so be required t o
take appropriate steps through
the His lor icai Preser va tion
Commission.
Pomeroy Council has called a
"~clai meeting for tonlghl at
7: 30 lo discuss the problem
situation, Reed sa id.
The Historic Preservation
Commission is al so meeting in
special session tonight, 7 p.m. , at
the Pomeroy Chamber building.

Chamber ·.receives·· grant

'l'he Pomeroy Area Chamber of trlbution. It will promote the
Commerce has received a state hlsloricai, wild and scenic , natugran I of $5,000 to promote travel ral resources of Me igs County, it
was reported.
and lourlsm In Southeast Ohio.
Announcement of lhe grant
came today from former Slate
. The Chamber gran I was one.of
Rep. Joiynn Boster Butler and
four lourism grants awarded in
Slate Sen. Jan Michael Long.
Southeastern Ohio., totaling
The funding, . according to the $65,000.
announcement, will be used to
Of the total $35,000 wen I to the
develop a Meigs County largeted
Dairy Barn Southeastern Ohio
tourism developmenl strategy .
Cultural Arts Cenler al Athens
for the development of a multi·
In .ajolntstatemeni,Butlerand
· Lo.ng commented,' 'This year's
media. markellng program targrant program was extremely · getlhg specific arts and crafts
audiences via regional, national
competitive, with 97 organtzatlons applying for funding. Only
and International advertising
19 were selected by the Division
and public relations stralegles.
of Travel and Tourism. The
The Portsmouth Convention
ability of Pomeroy to earn this
and Visitors Bureau received
award demonstrated the
$10,000 to develop promotional
strength of the Chamber's
materials, and the . Hocking
proposal.
County Tourism Association reThe Chamber of Commerce
celved $5,000 for the same
plans to produce a four-color ·purpose.
brochure featuring coupons,
Arlsbrldge, Inc. received a
maps and photography, trageted
for In-state and out-of-state dis-

$10,000 grant for promotion of
America's River Heritage Trail
in Washington County.
Grant applications were reviewed a nd recipienls recommended by Grants Commltlee of
the Governor's Advisory Council
Travel and Tourism. Criteria for
the awards were projected Increase In tourism revenue , level
of job creation. avallabillty of
16cai matching funds; historical,
ethnic. cultural and tourism
value, and projected economic
Impact on locili communities.
The Southeasl Ohio grants,
admlnlstrered by the Ohio Department of Development's Dlvlsion of Travel and Tourism, are
part of a $300,000 statewide
competillve grants program.
The funds will provide support to
local non-profit visitor organlza.
lions and travel related activities
around the state for markeling
promotions.

Columbia Gas
seeks new
•
rate mcrease

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The governor said he was lng involved setting rules for Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio,
By LEE LEONARD
' "enthusiastic" about his choice deregulation of the telecommuniwithout waiting for a decision on
UPI Statehouse Reporter
of lhe four-lerm legislator to cations Industry, as enacted by Its year-old request tor a $22.7
COLUMBUS' - Jolynn Buller.
serve on what he lermed a the General Assembly last year. million rate Increase, has told the
a ,f ormer state representative
' ' consumer -oriented"
She said a line must be drawn state's public utilities commlsfrom Gallipolis, was sworn In
·on
what kind of business equipcommission.
Monday as chairman of the
sl&lt;lners II plans to seek a new
"I
think
you're
going
to
find
In
ment and technology Is regulated Increase of $60.5 million.
. Public Utilities Commission of.
Joi¥Rn Barry Butler ... an and whal Is not.
.
Columbia spokesman Stephen
Ohio.
outstanding
successor
In
a
very
sutler
and
Celeste
both
said Gerard said the average houseButler, 37, whose name was
tough position.'• lhe governor "lifeline" telephone service will hold's natural gas bill would go
Joiynn Boster until her · recent
said.
be a priority during her tenure on from $58 a month to $63 If the
marriage to Columbus atlorney
said
It
felt
''a
little
Butler
the
commission.
latest request Is approved by tho:
William Butler, succeeds Thoweird"
entering
tile
Borden
Lifeline
.service Is a minimal Public Utilities Commission of
mas Chema as chairman of the
five-member utility-regulating BuUdiJll, where the commission charge lor those who can least Ohio.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel Wilbody. She will serve a five-year offices are, "aftltr ail these years afford to pay. "We want to make
ol going to the St•tehouse. "I am sure all Ohioans have telephone liam Spratley says the com· term.
anxious to get right Into the job, service who need It ll"nd want It,"
pany's new request Is political
Gov. Richard Celeste adminismaneuvering, unnecessary and
tered the oath of office at PUCO Jnd I ille&amp;s I will this afternoon said sUtler.
.w ith my first commission
Both Butler and Celeste said
should not have been made unlli
headquarters w!tb a number of
they
expect a report by May 1
hearing.
after the pendlngcaselsdeclded
co!fimlsslon employees looking
"Let's get to II.'' she said.
from a task lo'r ce on lifeline '
To be tued within 30 days, the
on.
Butler's first commission hear- telephone service.
.
new request lncludl!l the pre.
Celeste was asiled about
vlous $22.7 million and an addiButler's IPP91nttnent In view of
tional $37.8mllllon.
her lack or 6revlous experience
The PUCO ataft has recomwith utilities.
".Sbe displayed In the General . mended the utility be granted M
. \
million to $6.8 mUllan at the $22.7
AJ~embly· . an ebiUty lo master
million reqUNt, but commissioncomplex
Issues
qukkly,"
!laid
A Pomeroy woman wu cited In a one-car accldenl Saturday
en
are not expected to act for
the ~GWrnor, expreellnl co nilat lO:fOp.m. lnRutland TownshlponT.R. 56, hal1amllewestof
several
more months.
deuce In Butler's abliltlea. ''She
C.R. 16, accord big to the Gailla-Melp Post of the State Highway
Under
alate law, the PUCO
hu "tile abiBty· to build a
Patrol.
m~Rt
take
action on a rate
consensus.''
Penny J . Williams, 30, of VIllage Green Apartments, was
reqUNt
within.
275 days, but the
Butler, a laywer, satd abe
cited lor !allure to control and not wearing a seat belt alter. her
commltlal(m 'lllllled the April 6
expects to benefit from her own
197'1 Chevrolet Camaro, which was heading eut; went ofl the
deadliM. on Columbia's first
a biUty to receive lnlonnatlon,
rtgbt side at the road and hit a fence. Sbe returned to the road
req11111t. Leplly, the cilmpany
11naly2ie It quickly and piCk up the
·anc! then went ofl the lett side of the road before going Into a
could have Impelled the tun $22.7
call
ber
·
mally
telephone
and
,
Continued on page 5
million. ·
contact• In 1tate aowmment.

----L~lnewsbnefo---­

EDUCATION IS BASIC

Adult o..JCI Education elaeeee are deeigned for
JOII).:,ta. adult. Improve your math, reading,
apellbtl. and other areae.
Contaet Gallia•Jaekeon· Vinton JVSD
'Adult Services
245-5336

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excavation. VIllage officials contend that excavation without prior council approval Is In violation
of a village ordinance.
·

Man arrested after stabbing incident

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A Multimedi a ln.c.

dock; historic group upset

VL- STOCK #1654

SE:CO,ND PLACE WINNER - Amber Brwnlleld, daughter of
Roscoe and Kathy Brumfield, received SlO for placing second in
the Easter coloring contest sp~ored by the GaiUpolis Dally ·
Tribune. Pictured with her is Nancy Graham at Friends Forever,

2 Sections, 22 Pages 26, Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Monday, April 24, 1989

.Work begins

.

THE NEW GENERATION OF
CHEVROLET$

1P89
.,1

Partly cloudy (on lght. Low mid
50s. Chance of rain 20 percenl.
Tuesday, clpudy, warmer. High
In the mid 80s.

•

WE DO! .

WE HAVE GEO'S

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Pick 4

Page 4

Gene Johnson ·'

~f&lt;,

351

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NOBODY. DEALS

·says ...

Pick3

Super Lotto

NO REASONABlE OFFER REF
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·Ohio Lottery

Reds drop ·
another tilt .
to Astros

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Patrol cites Pomeroy woman

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nu: KDIS n¥B IN .....,.. - '!liNe adlall Md two
· rw .. ldllllllala ,., Ia u .....,..... fiN Ia ltll e.
VI.._ wen lcleMUied 11 cv··t"a h 1*, I; llw INa••·
Derek, 8; tllelr IHlbtr, ..aJJ; aa lhlt Nlillll&amp; ofllle
I I I,
JefferJ Woatl ud a.,..._., IIQ _,, 1111 I• VitaM, •Va. 'l'lle
appm., .,..... tile ........1)' . tcwlllltloll
...-• !n•'• ,.nrHn lk'•·
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(UPI)

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DEVOTED TO T8E INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~

~~ .-r'L..I._~.,.,._=·ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.
General Manacer
PAT WHITEHEAD
A!lSistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, inland ·
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be tess than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with
nam~.

address

an~

telephone ":umber. No unslped letters wUl be pub~

llshed. Letters should beIng~ taste, addresslns luues, not peroonall·
ties.

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Page-2-The Deily s........
Pomeloy-Mic•lap.~L Ohio

Newspa~rs:

The·
battle for time

Air Force bras's gets
WASHINGTON - Air Force
Gen. Duane Cassidy may have to
learn how to live a simpler life
without. his sta!! car - a
midnight blue Mercedes Benz.
The four-star general has an
'-...appetite for luxury. He saw
'IIOthlng wrong with having the
car awaiting his every visit to
Andrews Air Force "Base. But
Congress did.
.
Last month, we exposed bow
the base . had paid for a 1981
Mercedes 240D out of the Morale,
Welfare and Recreation Fundm'bney that Is supposed to be
spent · for perks that the whole
base can use. Apparently Cassl·
dy's morale needed a boost when

be !lew to Andrews, outside of
Washington, D.C., a couple of
times each month !rom his post
In Illinois.
On the day our report ran, five
congressmen . wrote Air Force
Acting Secretary James McGov·
ern, Insisting that the Merceds be
sold.
"We were amazed to read of
the ' use of non-appropriated
funds to purchase a Mercedes
Benz," the lawmakers scolded In
the private letter to McGovern.
"Surely the motor pool at An·
drews Air Force Base can meet
this requirement."
The congressmen had a refreshing · sugl(estlon that may

sound fotelgn "to Air Force brass
that mistakes rank !or royaltyuse the money !rom the sale of
the car on morale, welrare and
recreation programs that all
5,000 people at Andrews can
enjoy. The Air Force has not
respoq&amp;led to the letter.
Andrews paid $1,500 for the car
at a government sale of booty
confiscated from drug dealers.
But It Is worth anywhere trom
$4,000 to $8,000. Maybe Andrews
could use the money !or books,
washing machines, fishing poles
- things the general doesn't
need.
The Mercedes Is just one jewel
In the crown of Pentagon excess.

Last month, the Newport News
(Va.) Dally Press exposed how
top officials at Langley Air Force
Base In VIrginia siphoned oft$1.5
mUllan ·or the uxpayers' money
to spruc'e up base goH courses.
The Air· Force Audit Agency
recently reported to Congress
that Sawyer Air Force Base In
Michigan had 24-carat gold·
plated bathroom fixtures and
custom oak doors In Its VIP
quarters.
Our associate Jim LynCh has
learned more about the lavish
trappings of !our-star generals.
They don't come , any better
decorated than Cassidy.· The
jocular and well·llked generalis
head of the MUitary Airlift
Command, a workhorse branch
of the Air Force that shuttles
cargo and supplies to bases
around the world. Cassidy not
only enjoys elegance on'the road,
but In the air too. ·

a

There Is
fleet of C,l41
Starllfters based In Altus, Okla.
All but one of them are basic
government.lssue- old and ugly
but serviceable. The one that
stands out has a gold·trlmmed '
blue line running the length of the
fuselage and ,extra large tall
numbers bordered In gold paint.
It Is the plane that carries
Cassidy on his trips abroad.
A spokesman for Cassidy said
there Is nothing to distinguish the
plane !rom the other Starllfters
at Altus. Tell that to the people
who work on It. To listen to them,
one would think It was fine china.
"You could eat off the wheel
wells,"' one mechanic told us,

Why .Bush isn't a ·star ·pupil:-, _ _J_ose_p_hs_pea_;.
After -89 days In my classroom
(I'm trying to beat the 100-day
crush), I would rate George Bush
somewhere between middling
and good. In my arithmetic class,
he'd be almost ready !or fractions. In my driver' sed class, I'd
let him on the highway, but I'd
keep my foot poised over the
auxiliary brake pedal.
The back of the report card
would contain these positive
comments: George Is eminently
sensible and not given to romping
with the rowdies. He has demonstrated courage, as when he
looked the gun lobby In the eye
and banned the Importation of
~mlautomatlc weapons. He has
shown Innate Intelligence, as
when he proposed a thOughtful
plan to rescue savings and loans.
Then I would list these negatives:
- When at play, Bush darts
around like a water bug on a
glassy pond, but at work he only
knows one speed: Crawl. Has
there ever been an administration that was so god-awful,

broadening the ban on foreignmade semiautomatic rifles.
If the Infernal things were
really hu·ntlng rifles, the entire
wapiti population of Wyoming
could've been wiped out while
·Bus~ was lllaklng up. hlfi ,mind.
- Bush has·demonst'ta ted an
oldschool loyalty, a stick-byyour-political-pals syndrome
that Ill serves the public, and the
John Tower episode was the
consummate example. No matter how qualified Tower was for
the top defense spot, no matter
how JllUCh be lusted !or It~ no
matter how ardently he had
supported Bush· over the years,
he should not have been
nominated. ., ·
·
.Just about everyone In this
A month later, the admlnlstra·
town bad heard of Tower's
tlon Imposed a temporary emweakness !or wine and women.
bargo on the Importation ot s()me He and Bush. both · knew the
assault weapons. On March 22,
background Investigation would
Bush declared "the time has be exhaustive. It was not a
come to do something" about question of Tower'.s examiners
automated .weapons On April 7, being holler-than-thou. It was a
Bush provoked an o'f.:.n rift with !"alter of degree: John Tower
the National Rille A;k~Iatlon by · was beyond the pale. And George
everything? After a month•anda·hal! In office, lor example, he
had nominated less than 10
percent of his top subordinates In
key departments. ·
Watching Bush eventually
come to the right conclusion on
semiautomatic "hunting" rifles
was llkl! observing an Inchworm
creep up Manute Bol's pant leg.
On Feb. 17, exactly a month alter
a lunatic using a Chinese-made
AK47 massacred five children
and wounded 30 In a California
schoolyard, the president told
reporters he woilld "strongly go
after the criminals who use the
guns" but he was "not going to
suggest that a semlautomated
hunting rifle be banned."

Bush would haiie been that had
he not been wearing his loyalty
blinders.
- Studied courage Bush has,
stoutness he does not. He needs to
find a wizard with 11 }lotion for
audacity. He pledged to be an
"education president," then announced an education budget
that Is · smaller than Ronald
Reagan's when adjusted !or'
Inflation. He promised ethical
reform In all branches of aovernment, then hacked. away from
asking Congress to proacrlbe the
bribes they refer to as
"honoraria."
Twel\ty-!our hours after the
Exxon Valdez began spilling Its
deadly gunk Into Prince William
Sound, George Bush should have
been In Valdez. He should have
federalized the cleanup effort. .
He should have excoriated
Exxon !or Its negligence. He
should have seen the scum,
smelled' the fumes, held a dead
puffin.
But that would have been a
bold stroke, and bold Bush Isn't.

'

Where environmentalists are wrong
about solar power. We have all
seen the brave arrays of solar
photo-receptor cells on the roofs
of small bungalows In ·Florida
and elsewhere, but they\are no
more practical as a major source
of pawer , than the dispirited
ultramodern windmills on the
hills east of ·San Francisco. .
Always leave your enemy a

William Rusher
line o1 retreat, goes one of tbe
oldest rules of strategy. The
environmentalists have forgotten that little detail, and In doing
so have made their own task ·
Infinitely harder.

Berry's World

'""'*· ...::.:

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~

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.

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-

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,_

~·

.

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

.

&gt; •

·-·

"

'

.

r

.

Pon•~-Middleport,

Scoreboard.".
Au....

... ...

10. &amp;.-t•-~t
1u Frudlln 1. LM MpiM .a

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

.......

.......

""'""'

. ....

Home .teams prevail
in Stanley Cup aetion

SAX BEATS THROW ...:. New York Yankee
Steve Sax beats the throw lo second base on a
steal, while Indians shortstop Felix Fermin waits

for the ball during the llrst Inning of Sunday's
~arne In Cleveland. The Yankees blanked lhe
Indians 5·0. (UP I)

Royals 10, Red Sox 0
Important .:'
At Boston, Charlie Lelbrandt
Ryan, 2-1, struck out 12 an$!
walked three. He recorded. five pitched a five-hitter for his 13th
groundouls, three foulouts and career shutoui and Bo Jackson
seven flyouts. Todd Stottlemyre, hit his sixth homer to help the
Royals complete a three-ga me
0-2, was the loser.
·
The game marked 'the second sweep.
Orioles 3, Twins 0
time this season Ryan has lost a
At Baltimore, 'rookie right ·
no-hitter late In the contest. On
April 12. Ryan carried a perfect bander Bob Milacki hurled a
game through the seventh before three-hitter and pitched to ihe
Terry Francona singled to open minimun of 27 batters. Miiacki.
1-1. allowed three singles and
the~etghth for Mllwauk€e.
In other American League walked two. and be nefited from
games Sunday. Kansas City. four double plays. He also picked
trounced Boston 10-0, Baltimore a runner off base. Shane Rawley ,
blanked Minnesota 3-0. New 1-2, was the loser.
Yankees 5, Indians 0
York. shut out Cleveland 5-0,
At Cleveland. Andy Hawkins
Detroit pounded Milwaukee 11-3,
Oakland clipped California 2-0 and Dave Righetti combined for
and Seaftle defeated .Chicago .a three-hitter and Mel Hall hit a
bases-loaded double in the sixth
10-6.
· In the National League, It was : Inning to break a scoreless tie
Pittsburgh 6, Ph!ladelph!a 4; that lifted the Yankees to their
New York4, Chicago 2; Atlanta 9. first victory over the Indians In
San Diego 4: 'Houston 5, Clncin· six tries this season.
TIK"ers II, Brewers 3
nati 2; Montreal 9, St. Louis J;
At Milwaukee, Pat Sheridan
and Los Angeles 7, San Francisco
drilled a two-run homer and
6 in 10 Innings.

scored three runs to pace the
Tigers, who banged out a season·
high 14 hit s and broke the game ·
open with a six-run ninth. Tigers ·
s tarter Jeff Robinson was removed after three innings as a
precautionary measure because

of stiffness in hi s right elbow.
A's 2, Angels 0
At Oakland, Cafif., Mike Moore
outdueled Kirk McCaskill to lead
the Athletics to their fifth
straight victory. Moore, 2-1,
pitched 7 2-3 innings and allowed
three sin gles, all to Claud eli
Washington . McCaskill, 3·1, al·
lowed eight hit s in seven-plus
innings . He has allowed only
thr,ee ear ned runs this season for
a league-leading 0.99 ERA.
Mariners 10, White Sox 6
At Chicago. Scott Bradley
drove in four runs with a pair of

doubl es to lead the Ma r iners.
Steve Trout. 1·1. pitched five
innings for the victory. Chicago
starter Shawn Hillegas. 0-2,
co uldn 't s urvive the first inning. ,
as the Mariners batted · around
and scored five runs.

•

49ers get Vols-' ·linebacker ln NFL draft

Browns trade Hyner, Junkin

CHARLESTON, S.C. (UPI) -

over two clays on the alleaed·rule ··-after-noon Sunday.
vi_o latlons facing the Kentucky
"There's no doubt In my mind 1
basketball program, and Is ex- that whatever the judgement Is,
peeled to lsstle a ruUng In three to It will be considered a lona time
..tour 'weekll.
on their part and be very fair,"
.Sutton uld at the conclusion of
The charges range from
the meeting.
cruiting violations and academic
Asked If he expected Kentucky
fraud to Improper lnaUtuUonal
will be penal bled by the NCAA,
control over poe of the nation'•
Sutton 111ld, "! \)~'tauwer that.. ..
premllr buketball pi"OfP'ams.
That will be up the Intnettona.
'l1le laves Uaatlon, prompted by
Committee.''
the diii!:Overy of a cash-laden
UnlverJity President David
Roselle, who ended up at oddJ
packaee bOund ror a potenUal
recruit, baa laated more than a
with Suttoa durlna the controv·
year and llld to the forced
eny, also declined to dllc:uu
realpatlon of CO.eh Eddie Sat·
apeclflca.
ton and Ilia enUre staff.
''I believe tiJa University of
lllltiOII, who teaUfled at the
Kentucky wu given a JOGd,
bell'lq In a Charlelton hotel,
tborcueh bearIDa." Roaelle llld.

DR. JAMES P. CONDE
'IS IESUMING HI.S MEDICAL PIAmCE AT

155' NORTH SECOND AVE.

re-

.

.

his size 16·2, 2301, But in his
co ileg!a'te career, DeLong had
always come up with the big
plays tn ~ games against highly·
regarded opponents.
He had 125 tackles as a junior.
leading the Volunteers, Including
a season ending 17-tackle perfor- ·
mance against Vanderbilt. De·
Long was named All Southeast·
ern Conference his senior season.
"He's a classic linebacker."
said 49ers coach George Seifert.
"He has excellent speed and
makes the majority of his tackles
upfleld (behind the line of scrim·
mage! . That was of particular
Interest to us because there are a
lot of linebackers out there who
make most- of their tack.les
downfleld.''
As attractive as DeLong might
have been, the 49ers desperately
tried to trade up In the flrstrounq
when the likes of wide receivers
Andre Rison and Shawn Collins,
safety Louis Oliver and center
Brian Williams were around
after the 17th pick .
San Francisco went as far as to
call Oliver at his agent, Steve
Zucker's office late In the first
round. However, all the maneuvering proved fruitless as the
draft wore on.
"We tried to trade up through·
out the first round without
results," said Walsh, who
stepped down as coach this
season for a front office job.
"There were certain players
available late In the first round
who were very appealing."
Walsh said· the club went Into
the draft with a game ·plan
hinging on the given that DeLong
would be the best available
player available by the time they
got to ther 28th pick.
"Going In we rated Steve
DeLong as our No.1 pick," Walsh
said. "We felt when It came our
turn he was the person must
logical for us. He is an extremely
explosive and productlvR
linebacker."
DeLon~;: fills the only glaring

declined to comment nn any

The NCAA Committee on lnlrac- . specifics eovered the ciOied-door
lions heard 16 boun of '-tlmony session, which concluded shortly

''Sorry, sir, but thetw.'• no hiding from
junk maH." .
·

~inei-Page-3

a.•• Dl.-ltl

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
.
I)' \ lallrctPn'fuiiDIH•Ikl•l
were
t
lmes
In
the
past
There
..,.."
"
~
.uiEitJ('AN LEAGUE
.when you knew Nolan Ryan was
NN V•rtl-1 , 1-.1~. . t
• . I. Pt·l . Gl
A.du.. I, liM Dl.ep ..
capable of pitching a no-hitter
ll11lllmon•
I M .IS!t HtUUIM I, .,. . . . . . '!
Tornillo
M 18 . .tN lit
every t!rrw 01,11. Those days are
. . .,.lll.llt . IAWI
': I . IM l' t
......
......
1,
8u
Pra~tt·lll(
..
I
t
II
back .
Mlhr.'uulrt'
1 I ..19M 11•t
)
rlftfi.UUI
7 t .ua a•,
Ryan flirted with a no-hitter
.......... Gam"
, 11 .ut t
N.-w \'ork
R•
DI•P
(Twr•ll
•t)
Ill
-'1
......
Sunday
for the second time this
s·- t• .3U t
tUI........ ,.1: ap.m.
Wt"MI
but he was dented
month,
PIIW...... a t Frll"t!!ll• H) 1M 114ualhtJt
Tt-xMII
13 ~ .11$ (OIUM·~ HI, M: N 11.m.
another p)ace In the record book
U: I .M.t I
Od.... d
~.,·.. o•8
Kaua!iM cia)'
II 1 .tit ":',
when Nelson Llrlano tripled with
SMIIMI'
..
III
Plltlltllrak.lllidll
t , .Ill l't
~IIUI'IIU
AliiUIIa .. N.., l'erk, aiPI
one
out In the ninth Inning of the
C'alltornl111
t I .MI 11t
Mel!lft'.-1 111 C'llarl•••· al ,;ill
, St•llllllto
II II ,·tll .tl
Texas
Rangers' 4-1 victory over
lA• i\ltpiN ld &lt;'hlc.a:o, ,_,...,
&lt;'blt~&amp;P
7 II .3119 II' r
San Ftand*-'0 1U St. IAM111, al~
. ·
the
Toronto
Blue Jays.
Sllllurdlfl'll Itt·"· IIi
PllllldtipN" 1M Hou•o~~o alP~
H......, ( 'lty 1.1oN•S
Had
Ryan
retired
L!rtano
and
nftt'laad J, St'W \ 'orlr. 1
Tor•a -1, Trt~a~t '!
then Kelly Gruber to end the
1M roM I, 11411wa ...._, S
NA'I'IONt\L B.\SUTBALL AMID('.
game, the 42-year-old · right·
Oalalaul• ·~ . fa111or11111 :1
E•Wr•folff'l'f'••••
fhk•llJO I. Mrlllllfo I
A.tllallt· Dh•IIIIOa
bander would have had his sixth
ldlmon&gt; ~. !Minfl'tlulu I
\ti L Pd. GB
career
no-hitter and become the
J! • . ...,. ~··N•'"' l '•rlt
H~~on,_ ('lly
It, llo111.I
MIt .HI I
1-PIIII'p.. 11
~-··"
Rr"'*"
oldest
major-leaguer
to hul'l one..
s~-w \ ' urkl'l, ( 'lt'\"f'lllndl
u-11.:m••
ll·h&amp;on
fly
an
had
tb
settle
forhls
Instead,
Balllmon- l MIIU11'1tatl&amp; II
1\' 1111 . . . . 0 ..
• .a:: .4"11 It
Tt'llll'i I, Tor....to 1
~...-;fl'rfol')'
• If ..Ill ..
lOth
career
one-hitter
.
111'4 roll II , Mllw.• la•t• 1
• tt .tu :n:
l'tl..tollt&gt;
"I don't know how many more
Kl'llltk- lt. U.h·. .o I
hail raJ Dl\· 11~18•
Odia..d :l, C'allt.nb e
UII.'MII)'-DI't..a&amp;
I'm going to get." said
chances
MeiMIQ'MGUm,.
S1'U .• t i
•-&lt;11"'t'lllnd
Ryan, who would have replaced
Mln•'IOGIII i\'lolll t-:11 ~ 'lllwliU ...t'
I! J1 .lit II
X·AliMia
... Q .:1111 11
iBlriiM"~·k•l), ':p.m.
x-MIIwukt't'
Cy
Young as the oldest to throw a
s...,.· , .•,._ iC'Illlblarill '!-H ... fll'\r·
.n as .11:a 11
•·Oikai:o
''ill :s.a ,341 ;~,,
no-hitter tage 41 In 1911). "But
l.,atltBhu:k 1-~)~:Up. m. •
S.O"'II•• ·tLilapton '!·'!!) ul l'k'l"lit
" '" Mt'r'n ('o.,«'ft'Rl'l'
the way I've been throwing, It Is
t..\lt"XIinllll&gt;f' u t. i:;Up.m.
• .J
Mlct.·t"'IIM"illklll
IMUrMn' n~t:hmhM 1·11 Ill ( '11\Hnr·
II'' L Pl'l . (;I
certainly not out of the question
nh• c\bhvtt 11-·n. ID:tl p.m. ,....._ ·
)' -\ Jiw.h
"I :n .Itt that I'll get another shot. I've
45 :tt .Ut t
x-Hou.,on
Turonilo I Ka•y 2·'!1 Ill Oakblnd (Sh•WIU'I
x-Dt·nYt·r
H~.s:n1
been there before·, I'll be there
.&amp;-411 , 10 : 03 p.m.
•
~ n .aa u
0.1 ...
again
...
T\H'!o;dll,.\''" Gllnll'jj
'!I II :!H ;MI
SIUI ,\nlonio
St•11Uk• Ill lh&gt;tnll
n n .IM:t a~~
lllurtll
That's bad news for American
P11tiOt: Dlvi,.IU
Mind'"'"" 111 Mlluoawlw•·· nl~
League hitters, many of whom
. T1'tt:a!o ut ('lt\t'l...t. nl_..
)'· L,\ l.olllt'f'"
57 IS .IU ( 'hh·"•••id Bullton, nl..,.
x-Pho.'nlx
lA n .111 t
have never faced Ryan because
'lito"' \ 'orklll KlliiMlMflty.nl~
X~t•llllll'
-11 IS .i\1:1 Ill
he spent the last nine seasons In
&amp;lllnwn•lll fa.llfttrllia. nl1ht
x-GAI ..III'it .
U ;tt .UI H
T!,rutlllu ul Oukldnd, nljl;hl
" -Pnrtllutd
:JI 49 ..&amp;111 Ill
the National League. Hitting
"'"''ntnii'IMft
r. Q .3tt M
against a man who can still on
X,\TIO:'IIi\1. U :Am ·F.
LA fllppl'r"'
'!I tl .~H 31
t;..ott
ll-t·ll•·ht'CI ,...\ ... , twrtlli '
· occasslon throw 100 mph Is
M L Pt•l , (ift
:t-t.•ll•·t.N lHvbltD•IIIt
frightening.
( 'hit'IIJU
~~ .S !I MalMI'IIIO''Ii Jt.&gt;10ull"
ll M ..1!1 ....
l"hltu•t&gt;t,...a
Nt'W l 'urk Ill. N-· -l•rlll')' IR
Llrlal}o. however, was not
!\olnll~·.aal
Ill t ..Uti MI.-Ill, .......... ~~~
Intimidated. The second-year
K K .11qtl
' ·•
Phot'flix lfi,MiinAnl.-lolll
""·
......
.
lndtMaU 117, MilhnMI ... l' 1111
" 9 . 1':1 I
~'"'' l '••rk
Infielder hit Ryan's 1·1 delivery
II Ill , IU 11·1
l 'U.h Ill. (ioldf'a Niall' l:i
t•IU"'-'l{h
~t·ntmt'tllo IU, Lr\ t 'Up ...r".
to right field and the ball rolled
Sun t'rand.w:·u
Ill II .ll:i '!W ... ...,..,.Art~ till~
Into
the corner. Ryan lost the
!I II :ltl
't
c·lnt'lalll.ll
Bototon l:te. ('ltlll"lolet 1.11
18 11 .$'!'1
11
,\UIU1iil
Pklkull'lplllaiiS, W'.,..nlt(nn I l l
shutout one batter later when
I.a.. Uph.,.
11 !I .:wHI I
Llrlano scored on Gruber's
n•.,.,,..d M. n,,,._.. 11-t
II Ill .-17:1 l' ·t
~IUIIMt'llll
~ II . 1~1
:! 11
HlllhiiO.
Otot rull tl, "IIIUitM It I
groundout.
:\lll.rd~,. ·, K;·~~~ lllt,.
I,DIIo ,\lfpit'tl 1~1. Kt•lollllr 11;
"I don't feel like a bad guy for
Dalllallll!. Dl•nwr M
Plltfttl'lt:h I, Phlldt&lt;lphlll :1
P11rlbutd I., MIIN'Ilmf'hifll'!tl ( OTI
getting
the hit," Llr!ano said.
S•·" l' t~rk :1. Olit·a~''l
( EIWI ul r•• ... lw- IM'IWIMI
('llll·lnlltdl, Hnu!OII.. (lllnllinC"I
"It's not my fault."
The 31.473 fans at Exhibition
Stadium gave Ryan a standing
ovation at the end of the game.
"It's hard to have a game like
that and come out disappointed,
but that's the way lam," Ryan
said. "My goal Is to go out there
and win .the ballgame, but when
you
get that close. then the
rio Lemlr
fered two colll ..
By LL'IA HARRIS
no
-hitter
becomes very
sions, thE' ,
,J with teammate
UPI Sports Writer
Randy Cunneyworth early In the
With one playoff star re$ted
and another sent !rom the ice third period, and did not return In
the Penguins' 4-1 loss.
twice. the home teams prevailed
All best-of-seven d!vlstonf!nals
Sunday night, when the Boston
are
being played every other
Bruins avoided elimination from
night
and starting with Game 5, . ·
the Stanley Cup playoffs and the
By WILLIAM D. MURRAY
Philadelphia Flyers tied their will switch sites for every game.
UPI Sports WrKer
The Campbell Conference semlf·
quarterfinal.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. IUPII
lnals continue Monday, with I he
With Montreal goaltender Pa·
- The defending Super Bowl
Chicago
Blackhawks leading the
trick Rby sitting qut In favor of
champion San Francisco 49ers,
·• Brian Hayward against Boston, St. Louis Blues }I. and the
stymied in their attempts to
the Canadtens lost tbe!r first Calgary Flames leading the Los
trade up. selectl'd Tennessee
Angeles Kings J-0.
1. playoff game. J-2. and the NHL
linebacker Steve DeLong with
Its last undefeaied team. The
the final first-round pick Sunday
Bruins' victory prevented Mont·
The only teams In NHL history
of the NFL Draft.
real's second straight playoff to ·rally from a 3-0 postseason
The 49ers also of!!c!ally an·
sweep.
deficit were the 1942 Toronto
nounced Sunday the ret lrement
In the other Wales Conference Maple I.,eafs and 1975 New York
of tight end John Frank. who
·
semifinal. Pittsburgh centerMa· Islanders.
decided to persue his medical
career full time. Frank had been
the starting tight end for the last
two of his five seasons with the
49ers.
The Browns' front of!!ce lQst
Frank, wh·o took four years as a
CLEVELAND (UPil - The
confidence In Byner because he part-time student to get though
Cleveland' Browns unloaded
fumbled at critical times In big his first year of medical school,
some baq memories Sunday
games.
said, "I will be enrolled at Ohio
when they traded linebacker
It
was
Hyner's
fumble
In
ihe
State
Medical School In the fall. I
Mike Junkin and running back
final
minute
of
the
AFC
Cham'
won't
be with the 49ers. I feel I
Earnest BynQr.
plonshlp
game
In
Denver
that
have
bigger
and better things to
.J unkin, 24, a disappointing
kept
the
Browns
out
of
the
Super
accomplish."
·
first-round draft choice from
Bowl
In
1988.
His
unsportsmanThe
veteran
said
a
hand Injury
Duke In 1987, was sent to Kansas
like
,conduct
penalty
late
In
the
that sidelined him for much of the
City !or a fifth-round !!raft·
wild-card playoff game In De· 1988 season and the club's Super
'choice, which the Browns tmme·
cember was Instrumental In Bowl victory played key roles In
d!ately used to select wide
ellmlriatlng the Browns · last
his decision.
receiver Vernon Joines from
The 49ers, anticipating
year.
Maryland.
Oliphant,
a
late-bloomer
who
Frank's
retirement, previously
Byner, 26, one of the Browns'
was
21
when
he
entered
college,
signed
unprotected
free agent
leading rushers and pass rece!v·
3,601
yards
and
42
Jamie
Williams,
who
had played
rushed
for
ers for the Iastfour years, went to
touchdowns
IIi
four
years
at
!or
the
Houston
Oilers
.
. Washington for Mike Oliphant,
They
also
drafted
Wesley
Puget
Sound.
25. a running back and kickwas
drafted
by
Washington
of
Mississippi
In
the
second
He
Walls
return spertallst who saw limited
round.
Walls,
who
In
the
third
round
last
year
but
Is
6-5
and
duty as a rookie with the
246,
was
sh
lfted
'
!rom
weighs
played In only elgllt games as a
Redsktns last year.
backup because of a groin Injury. linebacker to tight end his senior
Browns General Manager~r­
year and caught 36 passes for 426
n!e Accorsl recognized the Irony
yards
and three touchdowns. He
of trading Junkin, the fifth player - - Spor18 briefs,-showed
·good stamina since
also
taken In the. ftrsl round, for the
Tennis
the
Rebels
used
him In certain
fourth player In the fifth-round.
Mats Wllander will be the No. 1
de!ebslve situations, too. He also
"We had hoped to get more," seed and Boris Becker will be
Is : considered . a good longAccorsl said. "I don't want to say seeded seCond In the $690,000
snapper.
anything negative about him. 1t Monte Carlo Grand Prix, which
However, general manage!'
. was a bad exper'Ience for him. It opens Monday. The 21st annual . Bill Walsh called him a "long·
Monte Carlo clay ~eourt . touma- · term project" who needs work on
was a bad experience for us. No
sense In perpetuating it. Our ment, considered a key prelude
his blocking and said, "It will
to the French Open, features five
coaches didn't think he could
take him at least a year to get
of the top 10 players In the world.
make our club." ·.
ready."
DeLong, a proven hitter, was
not considered a top-round pick
heading Into the draft because of

Majors

The Daily

Ohio

Nolan Ryan 'just misses' sixth no-hitter

NCAA committee hears UK testimony

Today in history

--t

'·

nothingA_n_de_rso_n_a_nd_~_a__;n:._At,--ta

THATs R~HTm
H~ I\EIFUSEIS
To BUDGe.

everybody' else has discovered
Most reasonable people are, I
the "greenhouse e!!ect," and
think,
glad
tha
environmentalBy UnKed Press International
now hl)les are reportedly appearIsm
has
become
a
public
Issue
In
:While newspapers across the nation worry about the lack of young
Ing In the ozone layer. These are
most
of
the
world's
major
'tndus·
readers, one Oregon newspaper has targeted the small-fry market In
the sophisticated environmental
trial nations. In retrospect, the
a\llg way.
anxieties of people who are
problem of disposing of ~astes of
'Mike Forzley and his wife Krls Linden, two educational
undersupplled with real things to
all sorts was bound to become
consultants, founded Young American In 1983 as a tool to help
worry
about.
serious sooner or later, and the
Improve literacy rates among kids and .to draw them Into a lifetime
growing Impact of a fastBut, even at a more Serious
habit of newspaper reading.
level,
many environmentalists
expanding
human
population
on
The monthly paper, published in Portland, Is sold as a supplement
the
globe's
eco-system
must
also
are
not
waging their battle
to other n~wspapers. It has grown from a regional Into a national ·
Intelligently.
How sensible Is It,
be
recognized
and
provided
for.
publication with a circulation of 4.1 million.
for
example,
to set oneself
But,
even
more
than
most
.Papers such as the New York Dally News, the Orange County
resolutely
against
any rational
runs
Issues,
environmentalism
Register and the Sacramento Union use the publiCation as part of a
solution
to
the
perfectly
legit!·
the
danger
of
deteriorating
Into
newspaper-In-the-classroom program. Forzley provides a classroom
sheer
crackpottery.
For
one
mate
demand
of
the
earth's
currlcu tum guide for teachers.
thing, the amateur envlronmen· growing human population !or a
His teaching plans have been so succ.e ss!ul that the Detroit PubliC
tallst
easily Identifies himself .correspondingly growing supply
School System Is using the paper In a city wide reading program.
wltb all the small, furry animals of ener!JY? Who, In the long run,
.Forzley got tte ltlea for the paper after working as a youth
In
the world, and bravel!' under- Is bound to win that battle?
·counselor in Chicago with troubled kids.
·
As for nuclear power, forget
takes
to defend them against
: "It all began with getting kids prepared to succeed," he said. "One
about
It. Remember Three Mile
(what
else?)
huge,
soulless
cor·of the common denominators for success Is reading and knowing
Island? (And Chernobyl?) The
poratlons.
In
his
mind's
eye,
hels
what's going on around you." .
defending a pristine Arcadia governors of New York and
But Forzley also sees a strong potential ma~ket that many
against
greedy loagers, Ivory Massac)lusetts have managed to
newspapers overlook. Kids. he said, !ftake up a $40 billion to $60 billion
close down brand-new nuclear
poachers
and oil tankers.
aeament of the economy and have tremendous Influence over other
Peter
Shaw
power plants, by refusing even to
In
addition,
as
·consumer groups, namely their parents.
points
out
participate In the preparation of
In
a
stimulating
artiCle
· · His newspaper Is full of advertising from Sears, Campbells Soup
In the April Issue of Commen- emergency evacua~lon plans.
and other national advertisers . .
OK, then -how about hydroetary, the !ree-!loatlna anxiety
• The newspaper focuses on news I• of Interest to kids, with heavy
•
that Is a permanent fixture of the lectric power? No way; a new
emphasla on sports and entertainment figures as well as aclence
psyche
of moderit man finds "the dam proposed by Tennessee
features. M011t stories are positive. An earthquake Is eliplalned not In
environment"
a superb roost Valley Authority was delayed for
lenni of deatll and destruction, but what cau$ed it.
when
more
lmmelllate
matters years by tlte charge (false, as It
L,Jndell, who Ia editor of the paper, shoots for a J-5 grade reading
turned out) that buUdinalt would
are
going
dlstre&amp;slnaly
well.
levi! and abort articles. '
destroy
the last known babltat of
major
war
Is
raging,
or
When
a
· •'We bave to compete with the electronic media -television, radio,
a
global
clepre11lon
Is
In
full
the
snail
darter and the furbish
video pmes reconli- where everything Is quick, quick, quick,'.' she
lousewort.
flower,
people
will
sensibly
IJid. "And you have to find out what realty. lnteres!J your readers.
What's left? Well, there's al·
ciiOole to worry about that. But
waya
coal·flred electric power:what
about
tlmea
like
today,
•
a atranee recourse for environ·
wh~ IUIIIIIPloyrnent II down,
loDJeYity II up and even the mentalllts, one would think.
Ruulana are too buay bold1n1 ·Allloq other. thlnp, auch plants
electlonlto
bolller aaybody el1t? are the primary IOUI'Ce of "acid
Ualle• ..,_ lllter..atouJ
rain.''
Today Ia Monday. April :N,Ihe 114th day of 1989 with 251 to follow.
In the p..t 20 years, Paul
It an environmentalist Ia
'11ie moon Jil wilnlnJ, movi111r toWard Its lut quaru!r.
Ebrllcb IJal wartJid Ill of the
forced
to the wall antl cornp&amp;lled
·,
,
'star Ia !latlll'll. ·
to
Off«
a conatructtve aq,..tson
poplllaUoll
;'
JIWJare Mereury. Venus and Jupiter.
on
tbll
subject (eometlllnl that
under !be lip of TIUI'III. They lnelnt'lt
happens
all too rarely), lie wt11
Eqlllll
....... • llloiit TroUope ht lBUI, aetar IMUt HIWV411
usually
make
some small nolle
"ntldear wlftter,"
W. . Oa~qln 191N (ap 85).
·
t
..
I(
.
I.

.-..-.life

~

....

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- State repre~entatlves rose upon their hind legs last
week and demanded an answer to the question of how Ohio consumers
could be gouged at the gasoline pumps for an oil spill 3,000 miles
away.
Rep. Jerry Kruptnskt -D-Steubenville, said the price of gasoline bas
risen bY 25 percent "right before my ey'es• • In the last two weeks. He
swnsored a resolution calling lor a congressional Investigation.
Krupinski and others can't understand why, since Alaskan crude o!l
Is sent mainly to the West Coast, the gas price epidemic should spread
to Ohio. Or why, since the Exxon Valdez belonged to Exxon, GuH and
She!l should be raising their prices. ·
,
Rep. Robert Corbin, R·Dayton, said economic conditions were
right for a price hike, but even he couldn't explain It away. "Maybe
it's time to take a look at bow they run their business," he said. ·
"]hey (Congress) should work diligently until they get to the
botlom of this national disgrace," added Krupinski.

Imagine having to keep track of 1.7 million sets of fingerprints
manually. That's the chore of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investlga)lon In London, Ohio. ""Under a bill approved by the Hou~e last week. the bureau would be·
hooked up to an automated system of fingerprint storage and
retrieval.
·
.
Rep. Marc Guthrie. D-Newark, sponsor of the bill, said the system
Is the same as one which enabled authorities to Identify the
"California night stalker" within minutes once they lilted a print
from a victim's car.
.
Guthrie said the Buckeye Sheriffs Association, the Ohio Association
of Chiefs of Pollee, the state attorney geqeral and the Fraternal Order
of Pollee are solidly behind the ·legislation.
.
Offering the only resistance w11re small-county 'lawmakers who
objected to the use of a $5 Increase In court costs to pay for the system.
They said mayors' courts can't charge any more and that local
governments will have to pay out of th~lr operating funds.

... . .....

'

Mondrf, April24. 1989

·Lawmakers hot over
•
•
gas prtce
Increases

Medicaid, the state's program of health care for those who cannot
afford to pay, Is eating up the state's budget. It has reached$5.6 billion
!or two years - almost one-fourth of the entire state budget - an
amount greater than the expenditure for any program except
education.
The Ohio House took steps last week to get a handle on the program,
passing a bill that sets up a legislative oversight committee to look
over the Department of Human Service's shoulder in administering
.
' Medicaid.
Some members are reluctant to have the Legislature shadowing
the departmeht like that. They believe there are already too many
oversight committees duplicating effort and wasting money.
Emergency status for the Joint Legislative Committee on Medicaid
Oversight was withheld , for lack of a few votes, meaning the
committee will not get sta~ted promptly unless the Senate puts the
emergency clause back ln.
Without the emergency priority, It would be illmost autumn before
the committee could start work. The Medicaid budget for the nexi two
years will be in place by July 1, establishing spending practices and
m«f&lt;Ing cost-&lt;:utting more d!!ficult.
·

~:-

Monct.y, April24. 1989

111 Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

-

..

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
EFFECTIVE APIIL. 3, 1919
TO SCaiU APPOIIIIMilt1'S
'

PH •.992·6100

weakness ihe defending cham·
pions had. AI the inside. the 49ers
need help with the oft -injured
R!kl Ellison. veteran Mike Wal·
ter and steady Jim Fahnhorst at
the position;
Walsh said he felt DeLong
could break into the starting
lineup next season.
.
The roo)&lt;ie injured a disc in hi s
back and was forced to miss two
games at the end of the 1986
season.
"Our doctors examined him
twice." Walsh said. "He is &lt;l
slight risk, but our docforsdid not
feel it was a debilitating type
problem."
Delong has been compared
with Jack "Hacksaw" Reynolds ,
a former Tennessee linebacker
who starred with the -49ers early
In the 1980s and was a key pla yer
on the 1981 Super Bowl
champions.
"! think our instincts are
probably very similar," DeLong
said. "A lot of people around he
compare us, but I don't know
because I've never watched him
play on film and didn't see him
play when he was In the league."
Delong was the second player
taken In the first round who
follows his father into the NFL.
DeLong's father, Steve, won the
Outland Trophy back In the 1960s.
Cleveland took Eric Metcalf, son
of former St. Louis Cardinal
running back Terry Metcalf. '
The 49ers chose running back
Keith Henderson, a 220-pounder
from Georgia', in the third round.
Henderson sat out his junior
season because of academic
Ineligibility and had a !\.7 average as a senior and was a good
receiver. but spent most of his
. time blocking for Tim Worley,

The Daily Sentinel
cUSPS 1411-911f)
A Division of Multlmedl., Inc.

Published every afternom, 'Monday

through Friday, 111 Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publtshlng Company / MuUtmedla, Inc.,

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Ohio.
•
Member: United .Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the

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Newspaper Sales, 73.1 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
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Duri"ll all of 1919 wt are eel.;.
ellrattng our 40th yeor at bringi"!l litHer hearmg to our
fritnds-clitnts. It ill gratifying
ta knaw that wt havt devtl·
optd a reputation .for integrity
IN depllldlllilitj. We were
here ylltertlay, expect to lie
here t_,ow; (IIIII ow tllllgatiolt to. you is to 1!1 avttilallle
l"wy tlayl as you 111111 Ul, with
the - ' up-to-tlatt technalo11 that is to lie found. Hearing

. ...~"'' Hearing aid ,.~~~em?.
'Call lilt rellllllla - WE
CAlli
II!E Ul I!ACH
WEDNI!IDtY IN THI! "PM"
AT HOUI!II CLINIC
CIALUPOUI, OHIO

DILES HEARING CENTER '

16141 594-3571 .

J26wm•ONPIIir

..•

I•

the running star taken by Pitts·
burgh in the first round .
The49ers ' fourth pick was wide
receiver Mike Barber of Mar·
shall, the NCAA Division .I·AA.
Player of the Year last season. At
172 pounds, Barber appears too
small for the pms but his career
209 catches for 3.520 yards and 20
touchdowns warranted a look .

•·

TOII..flllll OliO

�...

..
-·

Monday, Aprl24, 1989

Pomeloy-Midclaport. Ohio

Veterans sh~e in Major

e

Monday, Aprl24, 1989

•
act10n

contlnued from -page 1
ditch . She put the car back on the road again. but went off the
right side of the road again and Into that ditch . .

Reds to one earned run and four pace the Astros. Knepper. 1-3, tie-breaking, two-run homer In
UPISportll Writer
hits and earned his first victory struck out three and walked four. the eighth to lift the Pirates t~ a
A coUectlon or slumping, big- ortheseasonlnHouston's5-2wtn. Danny Jackson,1·4, suffered his come-from-behind victory. Loname players around the Na"My tempo had been too quiCk fourth straight loss, giving up gan Easley ,1-0, the third of three
tiona! League, victimized by
this year. I was hurrying my nlnehitsandfourrui1.Boverseven Pirate pitchers, pitched two ,
their own early-season lneffecdelivery . •Today, I slowed down Innings. He Is 0-4 lifetime against lnninga for the victory. Loser
Steve Bedrosian, 1-2, surrentiveness, came alive Sunday to
and it made a big difference" Houston.
,
dered Bonilla's lowering hOmer
spark their respective clubs to
Knepper said.
E:ql08 t, Card•n•l• a
vk:tory.
At Shea Stadium, McReynolds
At St. Louis, Spike Owen had to right.
Meta 4, C!lbe I
The group of top perfonners,
and Carter attempted to alter four bits and three RBI and Bryn
At New York, Rick Aguilera
which lnclud.e d the likes of Dale tllelrslow starts as they homered Smith scattered live hits over
Murphy, Bob Knepper, Kevin
in the Mets' 4-2 victory over the seven innings, leading Montreal. came on in relief to earn his flrtt
McReynolds, Gary Carter and
Cuba, and BonUia homered for Owen bad a triple, a double and win of the season and McReyBobby Bonilla, took the afterPittsburgh in a 6-4 trlu!l\pb over two singles. Smith, 2-0, allowed . nolds and Carter homered to
noon to rediscover the methods of
Philadelphia.
two earned ruM, five hits and two spark New York. Calvin Schl·
their past productivity.
Elsewhere In tl.te NL, Montreal' walks and struck out two. Crls raldl, 1-1, surrendered McReydropped St. Louis 9-3 and Los ' Carpenter, 0-1. took the loss for nolds' game-winning, two-run
Murphy, the fanner NL most
homer. For Chicago, Andre Daw·
Angeles edged San Francisco 7-6 the Cardinals.
valuable player wbo entered the
son hit a 400-foot blast to left in
game with a .149 average, . in 10 innings.
Bravest, Padres 4
slugged his. way outtbedoldrums
At Atlanta, MurphY hit a the seventh for his 300th career
against San Diego by going 4 for5 · In the American League, shutwo-run homer for his third orthe homer.
Dodten 7, Glaata 8
with a home run and six RBls In touts preVailed as It was Kansas
season and tied his personal best
At Los Angeles, pinch hitter
Atlanta's 9,4· victory over the City 10, Boston 0; New York 5,
with six Rills to power Atlanta.
visiting Padres.
.
Cleveland O:. Baltimore 3, MlnneMurphy added a two-n~n single Jeff Hamilton drew a .bases"It's good to hit some ground sota 0; Oakland 2 California 0;
and a 'two-ruil double. Tom loaded walk with· two out in the
balls for a change," Murphy Texas 4, Toronto 1; Detroit 11,
Glavlne 3-0 surrendered eight lOth Inning to carry the Dodgers.
said. "Those pop-ups and files Milwaukee 3 and Seattle 10.
hits ave~ 6 2-J Innings to earn the The Dodgers spoiled Will Clark's
don't help much.
Chicago 6.
victory. Dennis Rasmussen, 1-3, 5-for-5 dayk, which included a
Knepper. who altered his deltv·
· Astros 5, Beds z·
was dealt the loss.
home run. and Atlee Hammaker
fell to 1-2. Jay Howell pitched two
ery and in the process broke a
At Cincinnati,' Knepper went 6
Plra&amp;es 6, PhiiUes 4 \
· personal three game losing
1-3 innings and Glenn Davis
At Pittsburgh, Bonilla hit a innings to earn the victory and
Improve his record to 1-2.
·
streak. limited the Cincinnati slammed a two-run homer to

•
•

'

EMS has 13 iveekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports 13 callS
over the weekend; six Saturday and seven Sunday.
Saturday at 5:20a.m:, Pomeroy to Village Green Apts. for
Brandon Hill to Holzer Medkal Center; Middleport at 5:49p.m.
to Palmer St. for Dwight Wallace to Holzer Medical 'c enter:
Pomeroy at 10:10 a .m. to Lincoln Heights for Fred Faris to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Racine at 10:27 a.m. to State
Route 124 for Robert RJ'ffie to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy Fire Department at 1: ~p.m . to a brush and shed fire
on Enterprise Road; Olive TowMhip Fire Depariment at .4:10
p.m. to a brush fire on the Gieen Deeter property at Long
Bottom.
Sunday at 10:19 a.m .• Pomeroy to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Nola Young to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 10:26 a.m. to New Lima Road for Genevieve
Shumate to Holzer Medical Ce!!ter; Tuppers Plains at 11 :41
a.m . to State Roule 681 for Gerald Barringer to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at :12:14 p.m. to Front St. for
Jennifer Scarberry who was treated but not transported;
Rutland 1: 50 p.m. to Salem St. tor Freda Davis to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10: 49 p.m. to t~e Cedar. Barl
for Dennis Tillis to Veteran.s Memorial Hospital; Mlddlepor\Mt'
11:48 p.m. to BaileY Run for Marie Thomas to Veterans
Memorlal.Hospltal.

---Area deaths.___,;.,-

NBA 's regular season play ends Sunday

•

.

A LITTLE TOO LATE- The Astros' Gerald Young into second
base a little too late, as Reds shortstop Ron Oester fires the ball to
lirst for the double play in Sunday's game in Cincinnati. The Reds
lost to the Astros 5-2. ( UPI)

Eagles -win two
no~-league outings

By TOM WITHERS
UPJ Sports Writer
With the eighth and final
playoff spot In the Eastern'
Conference hanging in the balance Sunday, the Boston Celtlcs
received an · Inspired performance from a rookie, and a big
assist !rom a long-time rival.
Rookie Kevin Gamble scored
23 of his season-hlgh ·31 points In
the second half to lead the Celtlcs
to a 120-110 victory over the
Charlotte Hornets.
"It's good to be going Into the
playo!!s knowing I'm a part of
the team," said Gamble, signed
out of the Continental Basketball
Association in December.
tie started Boston's final six
·games ,when · Dennis Johnson
went down with a sprained 'lefl
ankle and averaged just under 23
points.
Meanwhile. at Philadelphia,
Charles Barkley was scoring 31
points. grabbing 16 rebounds and
dishing out 11 assists as the 76ers
ended the Washington Bullets'
playoff aspirations with a 115-106
triumph.
Charlotte Coach Dick Harter
was relieved when he heard the
Bullets had failed to win their
game.
"Good. I · feel better now. I
would have felt bad if they had
won and we couldn't have helped
them out,': he said.

He is survived by his wife,
• Teresa Diamond LaComb. one
daughter, Mary Yoho, ' Tuppers
James Darrel LaComb. 67,
Plains, four sons, Vince. Tuppers
Tuppers Plains, died Sunday at
Plains; Anthony. Marietta; Philthe Lexington V.A. Hospital.
lip, Reedsville; and James, Jr.,
Born In Flat River, Mo.,hewas
the son of the late Daniel Winford .Athens. and three grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he. was
LaCdmb and Marth Aldlpe Cenprecede!!
in death by seven
ter. He was an operating engisisters.
and
one brother.
neer and tow boat operator. ·a nd
Funeral sefvlces will be Thursyeleran of World War JI.
day at 10 a.m. at the Catho,liF
He was affiliated with the
Church in Tuppers Plains. CatBelpre V.F.W. and Belpre D.A.V.
ling hours are 'Wednesday 2 p.m
He received a gqod conduct
to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at
medal and purpJi.o heart, and was
the White Funeral Home In
a member of Our Lady of Lore! to
Coolville with rosary services at
Catholk: Church In Tuppers
7: 30 p.m. ~ith Father Frank
Plains.
Talala officiating.
Burial will be In the Coolville
•
Cemetery.

James LaComb

Boston won 15 of Its final 16
Lakers edged Seattle 121-117;
Western Conference for the
home games to flnjsh 42-40. The
and Dallas housed Denver 113-96. eighth straight year. begin their
Celtics will open the postseason
Caval len 90, Bull8 114
quest for a third s.tralght NBA
Friday night at Detroit against
At Chicago, John Williams title ThurSday night at home
the .Pistons. The Bullets, 40-42, ·scored 19 points, and rookie against Portland . The SuperSonfinished with the ninth-best reRandolph Keys scored a season- .tcs, 47-35, who hall their eight• •
cord in the conference and a spot
high 19, leading Cleveland in an game winning streak snapped,
in the draft lottery.
opening-round playoff preview. ' meet Houston in their !lrst-round
"It wasn't In our hands to get
Cleveland finished second in the series beginning Friday at the
Into the playo!!s," Washington
Central Division with a 57-25 Seattle Coliseum. Jabbar closed
Coach Wes Unseld said. "It was
record, Its best In franchise out his regular-season career
In the hands of Boston. I think we
history. Chicago was fifth in the with an NBA-record 38,389
played well all year long. The
Central Division with a 47-35 points.
guys hung in there together."
Mavericks 113, NU!!IIell 96
mark. The Cavaliers swept the
Boston has not missed the
At Denver. 'Rolando Blackman
teams' six-game series. Michael
playoffs since the 1978-79 season,
Jordan scored 25 points aild scored 21 paints and Roy Tarpley
the year before Larry Bird joined
finished the season as the -added 20 points and 20 rebounds,
the club. Bird was placed on the
league's leading scorer for the· powering Dallas, which failed to
playoff roster but may not be
. make the playoffs when Portland
third consecutive year.
recuperated from heel surgery
later beat Sacramento In overPlsfDI1.B 99, Hawks 81
that has sldelliled him since
At Auburn Hills, Mich .• Vinnie time. Denver, 44-38, finiShed
November.
Johnson scored 23 points and the sixth in the Wester'n Conference
Since the Cel tics franchise was · Pistons finished the season with a
and will play Phoenix In the
established In 1946, Boston has
opening round. The defeat
league-and franchise-best record
missed the playoffs only seven
of 63-19. Atlinta ended up third in snapped' Denver's 19-game home
times.
winning streak. Fat Lever led
the N:BA Cent~al Division with a
In the battle for the final
Denver
with 33 points and 15
52-30 record, Its fourth straight·
playoff spot In the Western
50-plus victory season. The rebounds.
Conference, Portland needed
Trail Blazers 126, Klnp 120
Hawks begin the playoffs Thursovertime to down lowly SacraAt
Portland, Ore., Clyde
day at hOme against Milwaukee.
mento 126-120 and grab the berth
Reggie Theus led Atlanta with 21 Drexler scored 40. points and the
instead of losing it to Dallas.
Trail Blazers needed over!lme to
points.
·
The 76ers will open ,a best-ofhold of! a late Sacramento surgeLakers 121, SuperSoaics 117
five playoff series against the
At Inglewood. Calif.. Magic . alter let ling a 13-point lead
New York Knlcks Thursday
evaporate ln. the fourth quarter :
Johnson scored 29 points and
night.
before recovering in overtime. '
equaled a season-high 21 assists
Elsewhere in the NBA, CleveDallas had beaten Denver ·
to lead the Lakers In the !lnal
land nipped Chicago 90-84; De113-96 earlier In the day, forcing
regular-season game for Ka·
troit rocked Atlanta 99-81; LA
Portland to win to earn the '
reem Abdui-Jabbar. TheLakers.
with the best record In the postseason berth.

EAST MEIGS- Host Eastern
and hits by Time Bissell, Chris
swept a twin bill from the WaterLance. Kenny Caldwell. Scott
ford Wildctats Saturday afterFilch and Howie Lawrence.
noon at Eastern High School,
Heath Quinby led Waterford
where the 9-3 Eagles claimed 8-4
with three hits, while Scott
and 13-8 victories in the nonTeters and Tony Miller collected
league baseball affair.
two each.
Saturday's games resulted In
In Eastern's 13-8 win in the
48 hits overall · by both clubs.
second game. the Eagles took
including 27 in the last game .advantage of a 6 run second
Itself.
Inning. then went up 13-1 before·
In the first game Eastern won
yielding to a late game WHS
8-4 behind the pitching of Scott " · rally. 15 Eagles saw action In the
Fitch. who collected the win with
nightcap.
Tim Bissell. Jeff Horner.
three strikeouts and · DO walks.
getting one-third inning of relief
Kenny Caldwell. Scott Fitch, and
from Kenny Caldwell who closed
Chris Lance each had two hits
the door.
apiece. while Michael Smith had
The junior Southpaw Caldwell
a double, McQueen a double.
started the second game and
Brian Bailey a single. ' scott
•
collected the win with seven
Miller a single, and Chris Adams
strikeouts and no walks before
a triple. Jason Hager had an RBI
By Ualted Press lnteraatlonal
the Redbirds.
making way for Wade McQueen.
single.
•.
Razor
Shines
ex
tended
his
Royals 4,.Bisons 2
another lefty. who fanned two
Despite playing errorless ball
hitting
s.treak
to
12
games
with
a
At
Buffalo
Stan Clarke, 3-1,
and walked four. Chris Lance
against Oak Hill late last week
A 10-game losing streak for the the loss for Urbana.
seventh-inning
homer
to
power
pitched the win for the Royals . '
· was the stopper. collecting the
Eastern dropPed a 7-5 declsio~ Rio Grande softball team was
The Redwomen advanced on 11
Rick Reed, 1-3. took the loss for '
last two outs.
after having taken a 4-0 lead decisively snapped Saturday hits and had two errors. while the Indianapolis Indians to a 12-3
victory Sunday over the Iowa
the Bisons.
·
•
McQueen was 3"4 in the first
against the league leading Oaks. When the Redwomen defeated
Urbana recorded eight hits and
Cubs
In ' the American
'
Chiefs 8, Mud Hens 0
game. leading EHS from .a 1-0 .
Eastern is now In second in the · Mid-Ohio Conference rival Ur- ·five .errors. ··
.
A~soclatlon.
At Toledo Alex Sanchez :
deficit in the second inning.
SVAC at 7-2, while flaunting a 9-3
bana 7-5 In the first hal! of a home
Earlier, Ward had contributed
Indianapolis' Tim Barrett, who
pitched
the winning game for the .•
Behind McQueen's fine hitting
overall mark. EHS plays at
doubleheader and rallied to edge to the Rio ladles' two-run defeat
dOubled an'd scored. pitched five
Chiefs.
He Is now 2-1. Kenny ~
was Scott Miller wit~ two singles.
Hannan Trace tonight.
the Blue Knights 14-13 in the oi the visitors In the opener by
innings and Improved to 1-2.
Williams, 0-1, took the loss for the
nightcap.
pitching a three-hitter. Couch, Roger Williams, 1-1, ·was the
Effective defensive play and a
scoring on a triple, was the loser. The Indians tmprqved to Mud Hens.
Tides 7, Red Sox 4
host of runs contributed to Rio leading hitter as the Redwomen 11-4, whlle Iowa fell to 7-9.
At Pawtucket. R.I . , Kevin
Grande's resurgence In the se- netted four hits and committed
Marty Pevey drove in tllree- Tapanl pitched seven scoreless
cond game, which saw the two errors. Jean Twehues was
runs on a pair of singles lor the
innings to lead the Tides. Tapanl.
Redwomen up 11-5 by the end of Urbana's top hitter with a
Indians. Hector Villanueva hit a
2-0. scattered eight " hits and
the fourth inning.
double, while Mayher pitched !or two-run h(lmer to give the Cubs a
extended the Pawsox!s scoreless '
Urbana . which entered the the visitors. Urbana had four
3-1 lead in the fourth Inning.
A set of weekend hisses has
seven hits and a pair of errors. On
· inning streak to 37. Pawtucket
twin
bill
0-7
overall
and
0-4
In
errors.
Elsewhere in the American
the mound for the visitors was
dropped the RioGrandebaseball
finally scored two runs In the •
conference play. regrouped by
The wins were particularly Association 'ames: Nashville
Dave Amburgey (freshman. Ra ·
tea m's overall record to 500 and
eighth 'inning off reliever Jeff
capitalizing on some of the hosts' . gratifying to Rio Grande after
beat Denver 9-5, Oklahoma City Innis and two runs In the ninth off
cine). Gary NisSl'n started for
Coach Dave Oglesby is hoping
errors and was up 13-12 by the , losing two to Capital In games
topped Louisville 6-3 and Omaha
Malon~&gt; and was relieved by Rick
that the seven-game losing
Jack Savage.
' '
bottom of the fifth. !twas the first
played Friday at Stanley L.
defeated Buffalo 4-2.
streak the Redmen are carrying Vaughn.
time the Blue Knights had seen Evans Field. The C'rusailers won
In the International League:
A competitive battle in the
will come to an end this week.
the lead since the second Inning. 12-3 and 10-'4.
Syracuse
~at Toledo 6-0, Tideopener
against
Central
State
saw
"Our
team
is
playing
embar•
Renee Ward and Betsy BergBeredoll led Rio Grande's
water overcame Pawtucket 7-4.
Becker bat in two home runs. one
rassing baseball." Oglesby rehitting in the first game with a
Columbus downed Rochester 5-1,
of them in the fifth inning · doll, ·Redwomen. freshmen from
marked Sunday.· ·if we have any
Gallipolis,
both
connected
at
the
triple.
The Redwomen had four
and Richmond topped Scrantonfollowing
a
homer
by
Sharfecharacter. we can turn this thing
plate
to
tie
and
then
lead
the
hits
and
six
errors
to
Capital's
12
Wilkes Barre 7-1.
naker. But the Marauders, 6-8
awund and have a winning
llarl A. '••hr . • , CPA
visitors
·by
one
going
Into
the
hits
and
three
errors.
Ward
took
Clippers 5, Red Wlnp I
entering the twin bill. slipped
season. Our playoff future is in
818
EA8T MAIN 8TREET
s lxth. The Redwomen held the the loss while Sheila Ralph was
past on nine hits for the one-run
the hands of somebody else at
POMEROY,
OHIO
At
Columbus,
Ohio,
.
Scott
lead for the remainder of the on the mound for the Crusaders.
victory.
882-7270
- this point."
Nielsen, 2-2, beat the Red Wings,
contest. boosting their overall Capital's top hitter was Trlna
The Redmen lost to Central
who
collected only four hits. Curt
record to 3-19 and 3-51n the MOC. Nisbet with a triple.
· Brian Sandlin had two base hits
State7-6, 2-0onSundayatStanley
eACCOifmNG
Schilling
fell to 2-1.
Rio Grande had last won Aprilll
In the finale, Capital's Stacey
for Central State while teamL. Evans Field and fe ll to
Sounds 9, Zephyn 5
with an 8-7 lower half decision Miller hit a double and the
mates Darrell Wakefield and
Mid -Ohio Conference rival Ma·
At
Denver,
JoeOilverhomered
efiiiAIKIAL STA1UIINTS
over Ohio DominiClin .
'Crusaders' pitching held Rio
Shawn Pittman. added a pair of
lone 2-1, 5-2 on Saturday In
in
the
sixth
helped Nashville.
Bergdoll
and
Jennl
Couch
Grande
to
three
hits.
Kathy
Bell
eiAIIS
.
Canton. Overall, Rio Grande is
doubles to the hitting. Byrd was
Mike Roesler, 2·0, was the winner
(sophomore,
Pomeroy)
were
.
(freshman,
Wheelersburg)
hit
a
ePAYIOLL
the winning pitcher, while AI
16-16 and 15-15 in District 22.
and Tony Fossas. 0-'1. took the
leading
hitters
for
Rio
Grande
In
·
pair
or
singles
to
lead
the
home
Against Malone. Herb SharfeSleradzki (senior. Westerville)
loss.
the second game. each hitting team hitting, while Ward comnaker (sophomore, Columbus)
was on the mound for the hosts .
89en I, Redbirds 3
triples. Mayher recorded a triple pleted pitching dudes after reand Donnie Becker (sophomore.
Sleradzki relieved Jerry Hester
At
Oklahoma City, Mike
lievlng Fottenbury.
for Urbana.
(senior, Greenfield) In the fifth
Middleport) each had base hils to
Berger
hit hla first homer of the
Capital had eight hits and
lead the offense for Rio Grande In
lnnl!ig.
season
In
the seeond inning for
On the pitching mound, Ward
neither team committed errors.
the first game. But the Pioneers'
In the second game, Sandlin was credited with the win. Ward
89ers.
Scott
MI!Y took the win. 3-1.
The Redwomen will be at
Keith Troyer and Herb Jones
pitched a three-hitter against Rio
Scott
Arnold
got the loss, 0-1, for
had relieved Couch late in the
each exploded for home runs to to
Grande as Central State scored game after Couch spelled Julie Concord, W.Va.,opTuesdayfora
2 p.m. doubleheader and are to
on a pair of home runs. The first
~
edge the visitors by a single run.
Fottenbury (freshman, St. Paface
Shawnee State Thursday for
came in the opening Inning from
Rio Grande connected on four
iiOW OPIIIII
ris), who pitched the first five
a
4
p.m.
twin btu on the Bears'
Brian Howell, followed by innings. Terlka Tumbleson had .
hits and had no errors and
field.
·
Johnny Sturdivant In the sixth.
Malone had three ·hits and no
Jon Gibson (freshman, Chesaerrors. Darrell Marcum (sophopeake), Shawn Haning (freshmore. Hamilton) was pitcher for
Rio Grande and the win was
man, Logan) aJ¥1 Bob Young
, .....,. OM.
(sophomore, Utica) each recredited to Steve Cunningham.
Wid ... St.
corded one hit for Rio Grande.
Herb Jones-had another homer
ftl-1114
•· iI
The Marauders. 110w 5-5 In the
and o.ve Jones recorded two
••
:,&gt;;"
district, had eight hits and no
bale bits to help the Pioneers
I
216..CII . . IM
IK8VIJRD
erflll'a, Ducky Spindler · lsenlo~.
advance In the lower half. Scott
ChiUic:othe) pitched for the hosts.
Gheen (senior. Middleport) and
Now 6-4 in tbe MOC, the
Jimmy Kearllll (senior, McGuf·
Wlnll ... Plllt
Redmen will face their final
fey) led tbe hltdng for Rio
conference opponents on the road
Grlllde with two and three·hits,
thiS ~k: Mount Vernon Naza- '
SIOI! 0111
,;---~-- ~~~ had tive-hlts ancf'" rene on tuelday and Walsh on ~~i..·;;:.·;.;.;_J!!~!!~:!
-0111 ll ............
Saturday.
·
two ei'l'or1•111d f,falone recorded

i

In the Melgs County Court of against Donnie E. and Marjorie
Common Pleas. an entry has Stone, Middleport.
been filed ordering Runyon EnIn other matters Involving the
terprises to pay MGM Farm McArthur Savings and Loan Co.
.City, Inc. a sum of $20.805.04. and Claire A. Turner, et al, the
MGM Farm City, Inc., has also · defendant, Turner . has been
been awirded a judgment · of issued a judgment entry and
$3,662.19 from Martin Trucking, decree of foreclosure.
Inc.
·
Onice F. Hunt, Tampa, Fla.,
W.Va. Electric Supply Cofl)- has flied suit against Southern
pany has been awarded $6,901.37 Ohio Coal, Lancaster, James L.
from defendant, Miller Electric, Mayfield, administrator of the
and lnanothercase, Patricia Ann Bureau of Worker's Compensa·
Bissell must pay a sum of lion, and the Industrial Commis$4,269.47 to Beneficial Ohio,, Inc.
sion ·of Ohio, Columbus, in a
Central l~surance Companies workers compensation claim In
. and Rutland Furniture have been whlch Hunt received back
awarded $4,100.39 , In a suit
injuries .

EMS answers nine calls
~

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to nine
cslls on Friday.
At 6:02 a.m. Tuppers Plains
transported William Grueser to
Holier Medical Center. The
Chester Fire Department, at 7: 2o
a.m. was called to New Hope
Road for a possible structure
fire, but no assistance was
required.
At 8:23a.m. the Tuppers Plains
squad went to Chester for
Duayne Williams who was
treated but not transported, and
at 12:06 p.m. the Rutland unit
responded to a call at Meigs Mine
No. Two for Clyde Potter who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 3:05 p.m. Racine and
Bashan fire departments were
called to a · brush fire on Durst
Ridge and Bald Knob . .At . 3:52 ·
p.m. Racine went to Portland
Elementary for Melinda Persons
who was treated but not trans-

Am Electric Power .......... : .. 26~
AT&amp;T ............................. ,... 34%
Ashland Oil ............. ........... 42%
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Charming Shoppes ............. .14%
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul.. ...... .'........... 51~
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... ........... ..48%
Heck's . .. ............................ .. ~
· Key Centurion .................... 13%
Lands' End ......................... 31%
• Lln'lited Inc ....... ................. 30~
Multimedia lnc .................... 97
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers.. .............. 16%
Shoney's Inc ...... .................. s~
Wendy's lntl ........... ............. 5'liJ
Worthington Ind ................. 21 ~
(Goodyear Jnc. tint-quarter
Bet Sl.64/lll!are vs. $1.67. Umlted
Inc. arrees to sell Lerner women
unit.)

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Dear Friends:
On April 4, 1989, I was named
by Governor Richard F . Celeste
to succeed Tom Chema as Chair
of tbe Public Utlllties Commission of Ohio. Regretfully, I must
resign from the leglslat'ure In
order to assume my new
responslbiitles.
Although I am eager to face the
challenges confronting the State
In the area of utility regulatioh,
the decision to leave the legis Ia-·
lure was not an easy one for me to
maki!. My tenure In the Ohio
House, as your state representative, was exciting and rewardIng. I have enjoyed the job, as
well as knowing and working
with the people of the communi• ties which comprise Athens,
Gallla and Meigs Counties,
During the past six ¥ears, by
working together, wj have ac.compllshed much fof Southeastern Ohio. Our econqmlc fUf,ure
looks brighter, and~ per~.aps

even more importantly, we have
begun to gather the special
attention from state government
that we need to continue our
. progress. I feel a special sense of
pride In having helped establish
tpe Governor's Of!lce of Appalachia, a dream of our region that Is
now reality.
!leave' the legislature jus! as I
started - as an optimist, bellev.
lng that if we work hard, a nd If we
work together, we can. accomplish anything. I thank you for
your wllUpgness to work with me
tor the benefit of our region.
Although I will no longer serve
as your state representative, you
can be assured that Southeastern
Ohio remains In my heart. I will
. continue to be a strong and vocal
advocate for the needs of the

area.
Sincerely, ·
Jolynn Boster
. State Representative
94th House District

Hospital news
Veterns Memorial
Saturday admissions- Sharon
Riggs, Rutland; Fredrlcka Faris, Pomeroy; Dorothy Barrett.
Rutland; Coralee Bailey, Rutland; Orner Dailey, Racine:
Clifford Ic enhower, Coolville .
Saturday discharges -None.
Sunday admissions - Freda
Davis. Rutland; Dennis Tillis.
Rutland.
Sunday discharges - Bessie
Heck, Herbert Sh lelds, Dorothy
Barrett. Homer Delong.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice ·is given that Teleconnect Long Distance Service and Systems
Company has filed an application with tho Public UtHities Commission of Ohio (Case No. 88-1064-TP-ACE), requesting authority to
furnish operator assisted. intrastate long .distance telephone services
on a statewide basis throughout Ohio. Any interested person, firm.
corporation. or entity who can show good cause why this application
not be granted should file with the Commission a written stadetailihg the roasono on or before May 10, 1989. Unleuthe
ssion receives a written 'statement to that effect and an ac. companying request for oral hearing on such issue. this m'a tter will be
· decided on the basis of the information containttd in the application
and the affidavits to be submitted by the applicant. Further information may be obtained by contacting the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, 180 E01t Broad Street. Columbus, Ohio 43266-0ii 73.

Weather
By United Press ·J nternal ional
South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low In
the mid 50s. Southeast wind 5 to
10 mph. C"ance of rain Is 20
percent. Tuesday, partly cloudy ·
and warmer with a 30 ·percent
chance of showers or thunderstonns. High in the mid 80s.

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

Complete Line of Vegetable
&amp;. Bedding Pienta. Azalus
It Fruit T1-. Ger~niuma,
Hllnglng B•kets. Shrubbery
andTr-.
OPIN Ill.Y9 All TO 5 I'll

Revival 8ervices
r Revival services will be held at
the First Church of God in
Syracuse Wednesday through
Sunday with services at 7 p.m
each evening. The Rev. J. E .
Hossler. pastor. will be the
speaker. The publk: is invited to
attend.
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lawn tractor

• ~~~""·

SUNDAY ., te S

Hubbard's GI'HIIhouse
992-5776
ACUSE, OliO

Dr. Jack M. Levine
General and Gynecological Surgery

..

Seelnt patieate ·
MoadaJ' tbroqh Frlda,.

•

8:30 a.m. • IS p.m.

Suite 211, PYB lledlcal Office BulldlDt

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(304) 675-1460.

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Dd PLEASANT VALLE.Y110SPITAL

IVl

The Family ol proleulono/1

Yelley DrJn; Point PI mint, W.YL ~
••

AND l==~u•24;
- .... u3

I

. --. . ....._ 21 88 ·~---'
.......... 47 88
LAWN

GAIIDIN

..oOIDIPING

,_.

Eager to face new challenges

. Charles (Brownie) Payne, 76,
qf Middleport, died Sunday night
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Funeral services will be announced later by the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home.

IEBLEI
BUSINESS SEIYICE

......

.

Charles Payne

DailY, stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smith ·
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewl

Malone,. Central State
top Rio over weekend

PIZZAS
$12.95

ported. The Rutland Fire Depart ment, at 4: 43 p.m. was called to
Bryant Road for a structure fire
at the Cecil Wise residence. At
5:27p.m. the Scipio Fire Depart-·
ment responded to a brushfire on
Goose Creek Road , and at 7:36
p.m. Tuppers Plains went to Mt.
Olive Road for Ruth Stephens
who was taken to St. Joseph' s
Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va .

Letters to the editor

Stocks .

Rio ladies snap·string · Clippers defeat Red Wings
with defeat of Urbana

P.SI'S

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

..-Loc~ news -briefs.. e - Common Pleas Court news

B7 Da IL LIEF

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'\

DEIPCTCLE

• Morifte!ltV. •

l'owtrfll~

retiable.

•With

AnW:

uu.n

IIHCir·l60,,.

4f..

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72 MONTH !JV

.::.';".::.:""49.
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The Daily .Sentinel

By The. Bend

Monday, AprH 24. 1989

Boys. S~ate
.
parttCtpants
selected
.

BOND PRESENTEDmaaacer
, In Rulland, presenls a SilO
lo Teresa Patterson,
• presldenl of the Rutland Elementary P .T.O.,In supporlollulldlnc
lor.lhe new chain link fence lhat will he put up on the school
properly. Chairman lor the lund raising projecl Is Lillie Kennedy.

AA UW installation set
The Middleport· Pomeroy Area
Branch of the American Assocla·
. tlon of University Women will
have a dinner meeting Tuesday,
· 6: 30 p.m., at the Down Under
Res tau rant In Gallipolis. The
meeting will be a joint lnstalla·
tlon meeting witb the Gallipolis
AAUW Branch. Installing officer
will be Mary Lee Powell, State
Women's Wor'thWomen's Work
chair.
Lois Whealey, state

Dean's list includes local student
Patricia Eagle of Reedsville.
who Is enrolled fulltime In thE'
·executive secretarial-word pro·
CE'Sslng program, madE' a grade
· point averageof3.5orabovetobe
UstE'd on thE' Mountain StatE'
CollE&gt;ge' s dean's list and honor
roll for the recently completed

winter quarter.
Cathy Spencer of Long Bottom,
enrolled in the mrolcal assis tlng
program, made the Mountain
State:&gt; College honor roll for the
past quarter. To be listed on the
honor roll students must achieve
betweE'n a 3. and a 35grade point
average.

.Alexander birth being announced
BradlE'y W. and Stephanie
• Alexander, Rt. 8. Marietta, are
announcing the birth of their
second child, a daughter, Carol
'Ann.
The infant. born March 21 at
'Marietta Memorial Hospital.
weighed eight pounds. four and a
half ounces. arid was 20 inches
long.
Gr)lndparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen B. Houchins. Mid·
dleport; · and Mr. and Mrs.

Jimmy W. Alexander. BOkeelia.
Fla.
Great-grandparents are Mr·
and Mrs. Victor Casto, Vinton!
Mrs. Dollie Alexander. Lompa·
sas, Texas; and Rufus Kirk,
Man. W.V,j,
·G reat· '!;feat -grandmother Is
Mrs. Bertha Proklivich. Stirrat,
W.Va.
The Alexanders have another
daughter .. Katharine Virginia.
age two.

·. Meigs County honor·· rolls

Literary Club meets

·Bookmobile route sec

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Community
Calendar
TUESDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will mel at 7: 3o
Tuesday night at the borne of
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard. Judy
Snowden will be the guest demon·
strator.
. CHESHIRE - Gallia·Melgs
Community Action Agency will
hold its free clothing day for
low·income ~pte ; Tuesday, 9
a .m. to noon. The agency clothing bank Is located In the old
school . house building In
Cheshire.

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BRl\CYKORN

WEDNESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - A mis·'
s ionary servlce will be held ·
Wednesday. 7: 30 p.m., at the
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on
State Route 684. Speaker will be
Rev. Steven Skellett, of Port au
Prince . Haiti. Everyone
welcome.
SYRACUSE - Revival servi·
ces will be held at the First
Church of God in Syracuse
Wednesday through Sunday at 7
p.m. J.E . Hossler. pastor, will be
the speaker. ·
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Post
9053, Veterans of Foreign Wars,
will meet at the Tuppers Plains
hall Thursday at 8 p.m. Members
are urgro to attend.
Revival
MIDDLEPORT- The Hobson.
Church of Christ in Christian
Union will hold revival services,
May 1·6 at 7 p.m. with Norman
Taylor as the speaker.

Hospitalized
Mrs. Albert Roush, Bailey Rlan
Road, Is a patleat In tile Cardiac
Care Unit at UnlventtyHolpbl,
Columbus. Solie wu admitted
there on Tuesday for treatmellt,
and Friday flllilly memben
reported that abe nmaiDI Ill
critical co'!41tloa.

Korn, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Korn, Pomeroy, a junior,
is vice president of the Computer
Accounting Club, member of
Teenage 'Institute and Hugs, and
the marching band. He Is youth
group president and member of
the Sacred Heart Cathollc
Church, junior member of the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment, and Is employed part-time
""

Sorority

with the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service.
Schull, Humphreys, and Korn
are sponsored by Bank One In
Pomeroy, the Farmers Bank,
and the Tuppers Plains branch of
the Farmers Bank.
The American Legion Buckeye
Boys State is held at Bowllng
Green University from June 17
through the 25. ,
,

o,fficer~

'

Ne w officers were installed at city council representative; and
Mrs. Don Lowery conducted the the recent meeting of the Xi Susan Well, p_a rlimentarian.
Least Coin. and read an artlc.le Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Eeta
A communication from the
entltlro "Prayer" by Isabella A. Sigma Phi Sorority when tile
Ohio
Eta Phi pledges was read
group met at the home of Vicki
Johnson of Africa.
requesting
permission to ·use a
Mrs. Francis Anderson, devo· Ault.
sweat
shirt
in a fund raising
Officers for the new year are
tiona I leader. read an article
project at Founders Day , Xi
"HI&gt; ad of Household" by Patricia Kathy Doidge, president; Judy
Gamma
Epsilon Chapter Will
Lorenz from the guidepost, a . Gibbs. vice president; Darla
'also
have
a fund raising project.
poem by Helen Stehter Rice, and Staats, recording secretary;
·
Sonya
Wolfe
reported on fair
Mrs. Ault. treasurer; Susie Hill.
closed with prayer.
ads
and
areas
were
outllnro and
Mrs. Morris · served a salad corresponding secretary; Shelly
materials
were
passed
out to the
Duboise, historian; Patsy Ogdin.
course with coffee.
volunteers.
Mrs . Gibbs reported that the
family the group sponsored for
Easter was very pleased to
receive their baskets and ham.
Mrs. Doidge will read the
welcome from International at
Founders Day. Thedinnerwlllbe
at 7 p.m. with tours or the hotel at
6:30p.m .
Since the news letters were
such a success this yE&gt;ar, Patty
Pickens, Linda Faulk, and Mrs.
Doidge will continue them nel(t
year.
The Ritual of Jewels was given
to Mrs. Hill and Mrs. Duboise,
and Kathy Cumings was given
The Order of the Rose.

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PRICE RfDUCED - IIID·
DLEPORT - GOOD STREET
-This nice l'h story home
features J.4 bedrooms,
modern kitchen w~h dining
bar. all storms and many
other features. Includes
trailer lot. Call for appoint·
ment. $25.500.00.
POMEROY - 24' x60' trailer
3 bedrooms. 24'x20'
I am1Jy room aaaed on,
carpel, 16'xll' pQ!ch and
sat ellite ·dish. $51.900.00.

(jEW LISTING - RACINE ·
- Doublew ide. 3 bedrooms.
2 baths, carpet, refrigerator.
ran ge, I car garage w~h full
base, and storagebu il din~ 3
yrs. old. $39,500.00.
H111ry E. Clel111d
992-6191
Jean Tru$sell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692
Jo Hill .............. 985-441i6
Office ..... .:... ,..... 992·2259
NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe hiVe buyers for llti&amp;S
County Pr9perty. list with
us for bes.t results.
f

DAVE'S ENGINE
.· REPAIR
992-6506

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

. ...

,.. ._5ecllllll

PI.UMIIN&amp; &amp;

161 North
Midlll•ort, Olio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PubliC Notice
· ------~
· ~··----------

'

LEGAJ NOTICE TO
. BIDDERS

•

..

Sealed propouls beering

~the

~

tjtle of the work and the
name of the bidder will be re-

• ceived in the office of the

Treasurer of the Board of
• EducatiOn. Southern Local
' School Diatric:t. Box 176,
Ra.clne. Meigt County. Ohio
. , light Savings Time on Mav

8 , 1989 for the inatallation
of a new heater and modifi·
cation of the Warm Air Heat·

ing in the preaent Syt·•cu•
Elementary School, Syracu ... Molgo County, Ohio,
all in accordance with apeaifie~~tions on fila at the office
of

DBIYUD &amp; SPIUD
&amp;IIUACO.IIU
S7.50 ,. TOll
COIIf•t . . . . Teyler

nu,.., end Ill who •
..-..~ in hla core; the ,..._

""" Emer"":::,l";::

ond elf the
• who
. oant flowers end food,
Thanks to the ' men
who took core of open·
ing and ctoaing the
grave end the pollbeor·
ers. · ..
· The Fogl11ong Fun•

you.
Moy God blau each
of you.
Wife, Margaret Fox:
Son and Doughtar; in·
Jack and Betty
Fox:
Grandchildren.
Mrs. Sue Bornitz and
Mra. Mory Woodall

1-.
2

In Memoriam

tion.

The information for Bldd·

era, Form of Propoul. Form
of Controct, Bpociflcatlona
and other ContreC1 Documents may be ••aminecl In
the office ol tho -nor.
• Bidders requiring a.,.cifice·
1
, tiona moy ob11ln them from
the own. at Racine, Meiga
County, Ohio 45n1 .
14) 10, 17. 24, 3tc

Its the same commttmenl he s made at Pleasant Valley Hospital, where
.
he's been an Emergency Care Center physician for tlie
··
· past four years and where he continues as an active ,
member ol the Medical Staff.
A West Virginia native, Dt. Trent graduated from
Marshall University with a degree in biological and
general science. He earned his medical degree from
the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in
1~83, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
Clly Osteopathic Hospital in Michigan before
, •
re-focating with his family, wife Linda and children ·
Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
Dr. Trent Is lookin~ forward to bringing a
--""--' . continuity of care to hts patients and their families,
. and wo~king with. the community for the good health
and welfare of allJts restdents. Appomtments and walk-ins are welcome
from9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesd'ay, Thursday and Friday, and 9 a.m.
• to noon Wednesday.
·

In loving memory
of my husband.
ROBERT N. CLARK,
who passed away
April 24, 1980.
Always so true, unselfish and kind.
Few in this world are
equal to find.
A beautiful ' life thlt
came to an end
He died as he lived, evttyone's frisnd .
Loved and sadly
missed by wife, lola
and son, laf'IY' a!MI
flniily.

• Auction

.

10:00 A.M.

Located on Main Street, Ia Polllt PllauRt, WV.
Will Be SeJUna The ConteaU Ot
The Ben Franklin Slioe Store,
Which Had Been In Bulnea Since 1903.
Sewrat hundred pair olahaeo· -.'I, -..en 'I·, boya', gifta';
wotk boots, brand name ohoes·Fiorsheim, Converaa, Nlkl,
Poft Parrot, and More. An shoes sold In aecliono in bulk; nice
showcaoaa, oountlirs, ahelving,
fie cobinltl, walnut offioe delk. oheiro, eiDOla, Undel1011d !ypomlloo Md
atand, Poll Parrot-.lidvlrtl... lhoelfgnl, N.C.R.OIIII
regilllri
l!illbd Fittcll ..... ....
Salllo
l'&amp;;.alllt ......... ....
IUitique Altadln ...... _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·
AUCI'IONID NO'I'Bs C.. PI
311011 btllldiJIIo _...,.1.__... ·'lniiL

:reo..-........
... •r..

4-

tnd,

Mt-.

AUCTIONEER: RICK NARIDN
wv
• 7'J1.Illlll

~

Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

EXECI!TOJS: lEN PJlANKLIN •.., TOM FRANKLIN

(

•Waallera•DI\Ierl
•R•nges •Freezers
•Retrlgeretori

......, ....,.,.It"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
915-3t61

Wo Service

TIRM11 Colli or~- Ltl.
7 h Jlor A:dd'd· ar U. rl PlaplltJ

Nol.R 1

______,..
----~-,

- ---

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

Save thousands on
existing morteage.
No refinancing. A
lllortgage Consultant
Service

Quality
Stone Company

ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

3 Mile Ealt of McArthur on S.R. 50

caut:so0-422·9010
Ext. 4051

PH. 596-4756 or 992·6637

4 -14·B9·1 mo.

4-IH mo.

&lt;!'

Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sltles &amp; &lt;:.nrir,.
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
::1: '(614} 446-7619 or (614} 992-2104
z 417 Second AVIIDUe, Box 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
.or
Veterans Memorial Ho:spital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy,

MASTERS TUXEDO lENT AI
DIY (lUNING SERVKE
S'ISSOIS SHAIPENED
USED SEWING MACHINES
AlTEIAnONS
SINGER AND WHITE
SEWING MACHINES
SINGER KNmtNG
MACHINES

~---~~ CliioA 'f/V ....

f'f'•·
W.•inv aon ... Wed., April
19 In MiddltpOrt . . .. Call
11+H2· 1903. R-ord.

7

Heward L Writesel

ROOFING

Yard Sale

.......Gallipolis ..........
8t Vicinity

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

4-10·'19-1 mo.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction '

FAUIC SHOP
I 10 W•t Mloltt, Po11•oy
.992-7711A

t

THE
BASKET WEAVE

992 • 67·7 2
Call 992-2772
==7,~:7:===1IT;;::====3·:2D:·:·a:8·:""::~

Cllll Merlin Wedemever. Auction•. Licensed &amp;. Bonded in
Sttle of Ohio: UquKh1tion1,
f•l'nl. ettates, anttq~. etc.
81+24&amp;-5152.

AUCTIONEER
Edw in

Vtllnter

now bookinG

v•... •

spring ul• . 17
peritnce. Phone 304-273-3447
Rwenweood. W.VI .
W.Va. StMe Ch~m~Jion Aut·
tloner. Alclc P•••on. Ucensed in

Ohio ond-V~glnlo. B_,g
Auctions. 304-773-5781

9

Wanted To Buy

OPEN 7 DAYS

NIGHT-6:00 P.M.

April 18, 1989

PATRICK.H. BLOSSER

ISubjict to Ch111p Without
Notkt)

. A.P.cnONIER

# 1 COPPER ......... II.OO t~
#2 COPPIR-........... 10• IIi.
ClfAN ALUIIIIIUM
SHEETS . ................... 52 • t~
ClEAN AlUMINUM
CAST . ....................... 40' I~
ALUMINUM
lEV RAGE CANS . .... 50' I~
liONY
SHEET . ........... 5• to 30' 111.
.ONY CAST-· 3• to 20' IIi.
ST AJNIESS . .............20• tb.
NO GlASS AT I'IIESENT

4-5-19-1

TUXEDO RENTAL
AT THE

1'10 WEST MAIN

&amp; Aoooeiateo

PUBLIC

RELATIONS
Hl~h

992-5114

s,,...,

Pomnoy, Ohio 45769

Phon•

949-2969

FABRIC SHOP

.
Leesa Murphey

We

Haul

and

Spread ·
Limestone
Dirt. Sand &amp;
Coal Delivered
1,000 Gal. Water
Service

992-5275
3·2M· 'RR· T mo.

'S

,.............. ..
..... ,_
...tsll... let -

de

YilT IIASOIIAIU
'IAYI ...IaCI

61 ..·915·.. 110

(614) 992-2922

NOW OPEN

Oltlttl¥0
CMP
GROUNDS

1 llldr00111, wry
btautHul, furnlsllltl.
HoaM1optn1 Roo11

By D1y, Week. lonth

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
. . . _ loollt

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

"FrH

'

Furnilu,. end JPpli•ce~ bv the
piece or entire houtehold. F1lr
prices beingplid. Clll 014--4413188.

Will buy or lp:pnli•e anything!
Antiqueo. lurnilure. oppll., ....

1 .......

Wed..,.,.,,

furnilhingt.
M.-lin
.utot.
compl«• home
81 .. 2.&amp;-5152.
by tlw/&gt;1-

Ouittl
Pre1940 quitlt.

or

•oiling.

Sp.•••'

Juat went to ••n a littltl Mtf11

monev7 Or would you like to
hwe • c•eer? EltW way A von
Cln help you bet t. bMt you Cll'l
bell! Call Merilv n We•er. 304882·2145.
Beb;'sltt• needed'ior 2 childra"'
as• 4 • 7 . Pref• 11t my home.
Dayshift. Aept,o MJ: BoxC-22, Pt.
llt....nt, WV 2&amp;510 in c•e of
lhe Register. Camp Coni,.,.,...
GOVERNMENT JOBSr
Now hiring In vour ''''· both
sklled.,dunslcllid. Fora list~
jot. end ~~ppllcMions. call 1·
615-383-2127 .... p 84~.

MT or MLT ASCP
Must rotlte Ill podlona and
sectiom. Cell Pl. .ent Vlllltrt
Ho•pil•l. p.-.onn.. office 304·~ 4340. AA-EO E.

'

WMted lmmedi•ely : Guys •
O.ls, want to earn mon..••lking1 Boy do I h.,e •lob for
vou. Colt 30+ 1711-8342 between 10:00.12:00 a.m . .snd
1 ;0().4:00: 1:00· 8:00.
Wsnt ed lmmecH .. ety: Ughl delhiiiV pertan. Clr or motOfCYCie
required. AH loc.l dllhferi•. Call
b o t - 10:00. I 2:00, I ;0().

4,oo. l :oo.a,oo.

1342.

condition.

ln'tlettment property . Call 11 ,._.

992-5858.

,

5

30•· •75·

.

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLI£GE. 529 Jockoon Pike.
Cell 4411- &gt;1387. Reg. No. 811-1 t .
10!568 .

Scrlip Iron .,d m;.... oopper.

bf••· aluminum. tr.nsmilslon
1nd other metals . 114-28152olll.

Employment

Servtceo
11

Help Wanted

17 Miscellaneous
For Sale: Cemping ~ipm.,t,
gn ""'ig. , 3 bur,.. o• stoVe.
portable patty, tw020glllonpro
pane tanks, &amp; reguiMor. Vllued
over t2SO w ill tlke 1125. Cell
4411-79t4.

3

hou•• 'trail• •1•. ton"-'• a.

whooll, 0300. . Colt 8t+38JI.

1819.
Euy .Work! EJCeltent P.-, I A•
aemtlle produtt at home. Call for

Information . 104-149-0170

3 Announce'mants
A. A. 1· fi00.33J.Il051 .

Oyn~mie
pereonlble
m•ea• for
weight control
etlnic. C.r.., oritnted . lnaome

Cetebrat• spring wflh • n.w
Milt

your melch

through our tktalw nttwork.

Eltimate~''

Write He.n... c~t . Boll 1141:
Ath... 0 H 41701 .

NO SUNDAY

4/ 8/ 89 / tfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

4

MOBILJ
HOME PAll

SYIACUSf. OHIO

'
NIAIE Cenlfi .. Mech.,la

•Mobile Home~
..
P1rt1 .. .
•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rental•

CALL 992·67.56

992·7479

MoM Foreign end

Oom•tc Vthid•
A/ C l•vice
All M..ar &amp; Mtnar

""''"

2 liiolo-2 Qr, . . . . .
d/ .. -·puptlloo..
wilL ald. 2 .......-tM/2 , ..
In cator If lnlawl.. IIIII 11424.H78. ·

Molo puJiPY. Apptonn- 10
-old. --h-toloclc.
Colt 114-317-0111.

2 ..,... blodl Lob. • Collo
JIIIIIP)ol. Coiii14-ZI.. tlll.'

_Gor_ ........ -..

,..-------·-·

'

18 Wanted to Do

-·

I zan
IT.
II -.U.ta4SP&amp;
I -.u.114J P&amp;

1

r ....":,...d

!IlK~-

"'"',,.lr ..........

~.

~

I tic. ....
1 --~-'

.

INI·
-lei ......._ , ........

Sond-to327E.-St.
Juki:DII. OH 41140.

OOVE~NMENT JOI81
...., .11111 . . ., 110.213
TO 17S,4 3. lmmocloto opon·
intJII Coli (rollndoblol 1·31&amp;733-80&amp;2 EXT F2732A. F.,
wrrent lining.
'The Down UncMr R.....,rlnt il
currtnt._, eccepting IPPIICitkuw
far V~Mttr-. ...tllrlr. bus ...,..
toni. lnd .......... A.DDiv In

P- .. •.. o-• ·on...
fl11teurant . 300 Second
.......... Oollpolo, DH4113t.

p-

Mllllt
................
...
mellll _
_ .,_ b ..... ....

•

. -ilolltoltlgai-··

...-.~ liUt not '"'

. Good "•nefllt.
1_ulred
_._wololilootGollo
Milrl

lty,

~J.

711 I HDitlllna AUIMr:1. ...... Dlt 41114,

cal .W.a:l&amp;1. Aptlftaollonooo·

•oduntHMo, t.

LPN•M''-,..-•Y

of lliR. ft.C. I'JJa..
I IDfiPIII

'.,1 lfilp-J:. ••
.. ~~s&amp;T. ...

ntiDfirlble. Sal• •dlor

conrete work done
pattos. lidewllkl. drivaweys:
o•tl9•· porch.. pole b..n ••
etc. CaR for estimate. c.n
814-446-etl91 .. 342· 1 173.

Wll beb;'stlln my home. flodn'er
EJ£811 ... ref•encea. Call
114-245-1786.
'

•=·

Need vaur tewn mowed7 Own
lewn mower • wH&lt;IrHter. C1ll
81 .. 992-e&amp;a•.
Tudor·c.rtlfi_.t•ch••v•lllble
for tudoring Wring surnm•
months (grid• 1·1) C.ll 6142111-8011 .
WIU ba~slt my home; IV• 1·&amp;.
O.lllpolls • •· Cal 614·448-

3307.

Mau ntlin Top Gospel Singers
•• now liking engagements to
aing. For more lnform~tlon call
81 .. 992·3982.114· 949·2112
.. 114-94.. 30110.
O.y C1re for woridng mothers.
Mondoy • Fri...,. In my homo In
Syracuse. Well supervlslld,
pl..... ......loa.
otev

141-3021.

H... otylot -od-KotJtro
tcut .,d 'kuol

.

-·

u

-

1-3-111
'

'

01

coll .Jb4-1711-

•:w7 .. 17&amp;3018.

Rot&gt;•·

LMiv• Oun
loutholdo.
Coil for oppolntmont. 304-1711-

t•n

""'"·
'':="'"
... 21
T.C.P .....
: tl ,..
v-lo11

lloltdlw•.
• ,. •
....
tllllll~n··
::-;e....
~
"""""" _..,.
...... .......
. t;il,

':r.• •1~

• • Aef•enca •II

l.otlp.M.

1
I . .

2 H.D.

81J::I •

An tvJM

fNO to IOOd ho- 1 "· old
_ ...... 11~187·:Malfl•

Naa
BINGO

I

Giveaway

7 ....- okl mlleldttent. Lltt•
troinod. Colt 114-317·0201.

It. J3 Nertlt ef

"DOC" VAUGHN

EARN MONEY Rooclng bookot
'30.000 / yr, lncoJM - t i l l .
Dotoh. !11 8011-887·8000 Ext.
Y· I0189.
Truck Driven / Maintenance
Wurkoro - . . . lnonodtotoly.
Appliallkl.. evllilllbl•llwlleOI
co. 7 :3().4:30 Mon.· fri .

romencel

PH. 949·2801
or Res. "'t-2860

EVENINGS

ROUSH

Announcem~nts

•VINYL SlDlNO
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•LIGH-T- HAULING

CertHied Ucensed Shop
1· 21 ·'11·tfn

,AVON Ill • ·111111 Shirl~
304-875-1428.

ext. 313.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

ALLEN'S
HAULING

388· 8303.

Uud furniture and houMhold
applilncet . Phone 114-742·
2o..a.

CONSIGNMENTS WBCOME

108

h• tmmecl•• open-

fur ~rt dme R.N! a orull
shifts. Competiltve ul.-y, fl•ibfe schec:klling, end ben.rtts
aff•ed. Contact La Rue Hilt
AN-DON. Am•i'*'•Pomwoy.
3&amp;7159 Aodcspringa
. Rd., Pome...,, Ohio 45789. 114-992·
1101. Equel Opportunity
• &amp;nployer.
.

Coak .. d ..,.ltreu Position.
•perience not nec•aerv. dMire
to 1-n and work. For Interview
coli 304-6711-5719 .

Paying today

DPEilMOST SATURDAYS

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU JNGINE

HOURS: Mon. 9· 7
ru11o .. s .... 9-5: CloHd

v••·

Junk C.n wh:tt or wilhout
motors. C.ll L..rry lively-814-

81+44&amp;-3159.

9 AM. 7 PM

Weaving Classes

.

VISA · MAIURCHAROE

GOVERNMENT JOII
t18,040.- t51.230
Now
hiring. Coil II FILE ERROR
Aftentlon R.N .'slll! Am•lctr..

Oenllemen wouklllke to have a
ledv to lve in 19• 45 to 70.
2304 Mad•on A\11., Ape 1.
30.. 175-7879.

CIOh pold. Coil ""' 992· 5857
a&lt;l14-592·248t.

HOWE'S GROVE PARK
Belpre, Ohio

PH. · 3G'4-42B-7245

OIIGOII IAIS, CIWIIS
IIIII SRVICE CEIIlit
Parts &amp; Servire On
AI llaltes

to e/ Q Glllipolis D•ltv TribJne
Box cla192. 826 ThltdA~o~tnue
Gotttpolio, Ohio ollll31 .
'

a.

U111d

EVERY THURSDAY

10:001115:00

Compl•• houlllholdl of tJrfti..
ture • .miqun. A..o wood
coli hMtert, Swtln's Fwnitun
&amp; Auction. Third • OtNe.

Til• COUNTY
llrnhun
;;';74'2-z='d •·
RECYCLING
Arry

PUBLIC
AUCTION

PAM !MHO IN • OW Nil

I AIDIIAN MOWIIS

r•ume with ..,..., NQUirtmlfttt

AVON· All ar.... Cell Merltvn
We111er 304-882-211146.

c••·

Mastir - Certointead®
Vinyl Siding
525. North Seeond
Seamlm Gutter
Middleport, Ohio
EVERYONE
WELCOME
Rtplaromont Windows
SUNDAY 10:00 A .M •
Blown Insulation
SUNDAY 7 ,00 P.M ,
Storm Doors &amp;
WEDNESDAY
7 ,oo P.M.
Windows
FREE ESTIMATES
Pa8tor lame&amp; E. Keesee

Weaving Supplies
Sign up noW for Basket

ECIIO sAws &amp; miiiH•s I

typen ... ty end acc:uratetv. Send

. Heir Styhts 'NWittd. F~l or
pert-time. Send reaume to: Top
of the St.lrs. 111 We.t 2nd St.,
ClothM. whll· nots. 111• grill,
Pbm.-av.Ohla 45789.
bed elothH, curtains, home
Interior. April 24 &amp; 25. 8-.....ille
Ad . mlkeriohteft•goingundw Atltntlc Ctty. Selling ;llts in
Bo•dwllk g ift ahop. Girls dor·
over ~··· f :OQ. 7
mitory on Boerdwalk lnduded.
Gr1Yef Hill Road off Rl. 7. lmmedl•e emplovrnent· YI•tv
Clothing toolswhlt·nott. Thura, or •nnmer. A\llragesal-v t300
wHk. Write for lnfurmetlon an~
Frldov &amp; Slluntov.
eppliCIIIon. lrat•on and appl,
1239 BoerctNalk. Atlantic City
N.J . 08401 .
,

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and nM• uHd
Smith

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

INSULATION

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS
Largo Supply of Baoket

NEW- REPAIR

officewlthaut ~~t~pervlllionMdto

PonwO';'
in•

AYI .. Gotlipoill. Colt 614-44112282.

J&amp;L

3·

FREE ESTIMATES

+(304) 882-3134

·----........ --·-

DEAD OIAUVE

MI.OI-111&amp;101

Family Practice

....a.~~- -:.....--

WANTED

PAINTING
Thursday, April 27, 1989

Lott : HorN, w ... ing blueh.tt•.
81+ 742· 2t79.

Btack·Pontlilc. 1911 Eut•n

"8-...,P.-u7br.Hc...,S,...a""'le--

Daniel R. Trent, D.O.

MORTGAGE
REDUCTION
SYSTEM:

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS.

CARD OF THANKS
We would like to think

dog. 8 momM old. Mlnorovll~
tW.-cu• or Forllt Run ••·
114-H2,7131.

............ " .... ----·- -------....

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860

1 Card 'of Thenka

memory

Poalljon Avehble few S.erete·
.y/ llocoptlonlot. Dud• lncluclo
tr.nscrlblng dlcl ..ion from dlctaphone. typing. flllng. -w•r·
lng teltPhon•. schtoeklllng IP•
polntments. mahalnlng office
booltl, M~ prep•lng monthly
rllpOfla to '!llrioue governmentll
~~g~nclll. Mutt M llble to hMde

41 5/ 89 / 1 mo.

"At Reasonable Pritts"

3-1 0· '88-1 mo.

985-4222
DAY 01 EVENING ..

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

614-245-9557

pita!,· Dr.Memorlel
a._, H.,.
Dr.
Lantz, Dr . . Simon. the

•

'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

STONE

"""'Yorte
who helped
during the •ic:kneH end
death of our hu....,cL
father. grandf8ther.
,EtvW G. Fox. '
·
we would o1to like to
think the people of V•

ht• E••lp•ut
. .......

the Treaurer of tltid

Bpard.
Bids witt bo publicly
opened and rea~ aloud at
. 1 :00 P.M . Doytlght Sevinga
Tilna on Moy 8, 19B91n the
office of the Board of Educe·

T~at's what Dr. Dan Trent brings to the people ol the Bend Area
w,1th the establish~ent ol his, private medical practice 'in New Have!'·

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
•MANNIS TILLERS
•INTERSTATE
BATTERIES
LAWN 1k GARDEN
SUPPLIES .

742-2455

45771 untH 1; 00P .M. Dey·

commitment to providing
.
your family
with quality.health care.

MORRIS
· EQUIPMENT

Ooore, Now Holland,
Buoh Hog Farm
Equpmant Deeter:

Sell x• at cop._.,

8 lost and Found

c.•

Lo.a : Siberltn HUiky with blue

INSTALLATION AND SERJ!CE OF HEll
ENERGY EFFICIENt HEJ'r PUMPS, ·AIR
CONDitiONING AND 95"/o EFFICIEIIII
FURNACE.

114-4411-1009for tnt . .low .

t-.cWrlg btdtground pr.t•red.
Ohio -Mary. lond ton. . of
lnt.wt .,..,,.,.c/ oGelllpaMs
Deily Trlbun•. 121 Third
"""""•· G.. lpoilo, Ohio ollll31 .

Lo.l : April 18th. Mile AedbOnt

CHESTER, OHIO

tor Prt\11te DUlY 3
P.M.-11 P.M. ohlft. 32 ln. o
week. CIU 114-446-Hit or
Uc. LPN

GNt to good home--country I
PGiaible- Mtlt Otrm.~ Bh•
P•d. 1 yr old.
114-317·
Oeo4.

Bathen Rd. 11'1 d At. 124 irel.

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Help Wanted

wtfl: . . &amp;f .. mtchln•. Offlceor

Coli 11 4- 84.. 21 10.

Oh. 45783

I. S. IT. 5I UST
GUYS~W. OliO
61o4-662·3121
Author~ed John

992-6282

8728.

Found: AprU llih. bloclc ..... olo
Cook• Bp.nlil ty,- pupPy.

S«ott Anderson
P. 0. lox 337

SAlES &amp; SEIVICE

Sale• St., lutland, Oh.
~===3=/31 / 88/ 1

Gilland and hia wife.
Brenda, for their kind·
neu and conaotlng
word a.
I hope we didn't ml11
anyone: if 10. thonk

•

for more info wrilt:

BOGGS

3-20-'81-1 mo.

rei Home and Rev. Larry

II

138 Main St., New Haven, West Virginia

CARTER'S
PLUMING
&amp; HEATING
.

11

BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPREsENTATIVE

1 1 · 111-':RR..tfn

Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPS.
REPAIRSOVERHAULS on
LAWN MOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS,
ETC.

.

Fr.. to good home. Gentle big
..-low dog. Mil e. Call II 14- 2156-

Part Time Job With Network 2000
In Network Marketing
Coo~ '184°0 (lncludea training &amp; materials)

GENERAl CONRACTOIS

'

POMEROY - 21 acres with
24'x37' new barn, electric
ava~ l able and TPC water.
$39.500.00.

"

Giveaway

Aloe Pl.,t1. C.ll 814-.UI1787.

ANarlca's only 100-fw fiber Optic Long
Distance Netwark
COMING TO TIIS AIEl SOON! ·

985-4141

992-2198

w~h

.A
TROPHY WINNER- Melissa Brewer, Pomeroy ktndergarden
student, and dau11llter of Mr. and Mrs. Terry Brewer, Is seen here
hoklln11 her trophy for first place In the recept science fair. She Is In
the alteriloo• klndergarden class at Pomeroy Elementary School.

rtllht.W lltd

4

' . U. S. SPRINT

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS -BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EYENNGS

Middleport,

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT- Bar and Restaurant
for sale. Building and all
equipmenl complete and in
operat iop . ASK FOR
DETAILS!

Offered

CHIS'IO, OliO

heater cer-. We Clll
also acid Mil uti nMI
out ri.Hatan. We also
repair Gca T.....
PAT HilL FOlD

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - A I\\ .story tram e
home wrth 8 room s, 3·5
bedro oms. 2 baths, fire-·
place, part basement and a
nice level lot. $23,500.00.

named

'

•

Ctrl

NEW LISTING - 2 story
block home. 3 bedroom~ 2
baths, refriger~tor, range,
disposal, carpe\..aRit hilfd·
woad floor~ $29,000.00.

'

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM. will have its annual
inspection Tuesday, 7:30 p.m ..
Work will be In the fellowcraft
degree.

POMEROY -The Middleport·
Pomeroy Area Branch of the
AmeriCan Association for Uni·
vetsity ,Women will meet. Tues·
day , 6: 30p.m. at the Down Under
Reslauranr In Galllpalis. for a
joint installation with the Galli·
polis Branch.

POME..OY. OH.

NEW LISTING- POIIERO'f
- This 2 story lrame home
has 2 bedrpoms, 2 baths,
completely remodeled and
washer and dryer,
and chair, f&lt;~chen
chairs go lvrth the property.
$32,000.00.

DANVILLE - Revival servi·
ces will continue through AprU 30
at the Danvllle Holiness Church.
The Rev. Amos Tillis will be ihe
evangelist and singers will be the
M.J . Dunn Family, Services will
be at 7 p.m each evening. ThE'
public Is invited to attend.
·

NEW HAVEN, W.VA . -The
Wi!hama Alumni Executive
Committee will meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Kenny's Restaurant
in New Haven.

w.-.r. . lllldrt·

-- .

-~-

The fifth six weeks grading Tammy Kennedy , MikE' Martin,
period honor roll at the Rejoicing Bobbie Price. Jayne Ann Ritchie,
Life Christian School has been Chris Spencer , Trisha Spen·c er,
announced. Making a grade of B Joy Swain, Mike Weber .
Grade 11: Janeene Wilson.
or above in all theirsubjectsro bE&gt;
Sherr! Bissell. Jay Blackwood.
namro to the roll were:
. . KindergartE&gt;n: Chasidi Biggs. Elizabeth Bryant. Shawn Bush.
:. :l:achary Bolin. Margorie Brat · Dor Ha rris. Melissa Miller. Jill
ton, Adam Bullington. Benjamin Rey nolds. Greta Riffle. Dan
Call. Caleb Jones. Isaiah Ke hler. Tripp.
Grade 10: Andrea Cleland.
·Alicia Kersey, Jenny Long. Rose'
Edna
Driggs. Billy Johnson ,
Schrock. Debby. Searls. 'Brandon
MaryAnn
Kibble. Mark Murphy,
Werry and Budd Smith.
- Fir:, , Grade: Tawnv .iones . Leigh Ann Redovian. -Aaron
. Joseph McCalL Tiffany Rich· Wilson.
Gradr 9: Steve Barnett . Jen· ·
mond and CandacP Werry.
Second Grade: Rachel Fo r bes. nifer Deem. Tiffany Gardner,
Adura Gaul. .Jacque Hall. Rac hel .David Gumpf. Sheila Lattlmer.
J l'nny Ma s ters. Toney Maxey ,
·Pangle and Melissa Werrv .
Third Gra de:' Sue Ellen Barn· Lorre Osborne. Marv Jo RE'ro
hart. Tara Davis . Aaron Pangia Da nny Short, Keith SpE&gt;nce r:
Amy Well, ShE'rri Wolf.
and Steven Rice.
Grade 8: Carrie Morrisey,
. Fourth Grade: Adam Barret 1.
Jeremy
Buckley . Lisa Hoffman.
Filth Grade: Todd Davis.
NicolE'
Ka
na wal ski. Elise Ma·
Shawn Rice and Tracy Shaffer .
nick€',
Michelle
Met zger, Kim
- Sixth Grade: Emliv Asbeck.
" Joey Barrett. Mand)• Jones and Michael. Matt Michael. Karen
Morris. Mike Roush, Sherri
Jason Pangia.
Seventh Grade : Emily Smith.
Grade 7: Adria Frecker. Tyson
Heighton.
The ihlrd nine weeks grading Rose. Ambe r Well. Jaime
period honor roll at Eastern High Wilson . .
' School has been announcro.
Making a grade of B or above in
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Mrs. George Hackett. Jr. re·
Grade 12: Amy Hager, Kris
the play "The Iceman
viewro
Heines, Tammy Leachman. Lisa
Cometh"
by Eugene O'Neill. at
. Pooler. David Rice, Mary Ed·
the
recent
meeting of the Middle·
wards, Heather Finlaw, Michelle
port
Literary
Club held at the
Garfield. Mechele Hughes ..
home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
According to Mrs. Hackett, the
play takes place in a bar·hotelln
POMEROY - Bookmobile
which the occupants are either
Schroule - April 23·29, 1989.
drunks or disreputable charac·
!Jookmobile Service Is provided
ters. The two day play consls ted
~ Meigs County by the Meigs
of four acts. Mrs. Hacketthandro
·..:ounty Public Library under
out two pages of the play and
contract with the Ohio Valley
read some of It so It would be
· Area Llbrarlft.
better understood.
. Mollday - Keno, 2: 4().3: 10;
Roll call was answerro with
~- (Fire Statton). 3: 3().
members telling of a character
4:a Buriii!Pim (Mobile Home they thought they could play.
Pirkl, 4:30-5:D; Harrllonvtlle
Mrs. Hacketl also spoke of her
(CIIIHCbl, 6:15-7:00 p.m.
recent '!rip to Rusala and pre&amp;·
Wedaeaday - Reedsville ented each member wttb a gilt
(8eed'a Store I, 4: 40·5 : 10;
from !he country.
. PlaiDI (Lodwick's 1,
Refreshments were served by
.
lD p.m.
Mrs. Carpenter.

....

Mrs. Harley Brown conducted
the Bible study from the book
"The Lord of LoVE'" by LeRoy
Lawson at the recent meeting of
the Middleport Presbyterian
Church Group Two held at the
home of Mrs. William Morris.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall presided over the meeting In which

8011
E. MoiO

IIEW LISTIIIG- RUTlAND
- Nice ranch w~h a large
lot that' is level. Near deck,
one car garage, vinyl siding
3 belltoom~ 1~ baths. hugll
pretty kitchen. Two heat
.sources. $,37,900.

NORMAN (JAY) HUMPHREY

--

SERVICE

99j-22119' '

Group··2 meets recently

nominating chair,'will be a guest.
Mlddepor t·Pomeroy officers to
be Installed are Joyce Ritchie,
vice president; Sibley Slack,
treasurer; and Sharon Hubbard.
r ecording secrE&gt;ta ry . Local
members are askro to turn in the
membership survE&gt;y sheet which
was in the ·March bulletin.
Members are also reminded that
dues are payablE' now and In
May.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

MQnday, April 24, 1989

Matt Schull, Eastern High
School, Norinan (Jay) Humph·
rey. and Bracy Korn, both of
Meigs High School, have been
selectro as delegates, and Ernie
Baker, Eastern High School,
Roger Alkire, Dan Kennedy, and
Michael Parker, all from Meigs
High School have been chosen as
alternates for Buckeye Boys
State by the Drew Webster Post
39 of the American Legion.
Schull. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Schull, is a Junior taking
college preparatory classes and
MATT~BULL
·plans on majoring in mechanical
engineering when he attends
college.
and architectural drawing, art,
and
hunting and fishing.
He Is treasurer of the National
Humphreys.
son of Randy and
Art Ho110r Society, has attendro
the Govenors Summer Scholars Judy Humphreys, Pomeroy,ls a
program at Ohio University, and junior involved in football. bas·
Will be a part of the Ohio ketball, baseball, student coun·
University Upward Sound pro- ell, Fellowship of Chrfstlan Ath·
gram again this summer. He Is a letes, and Teenage Institute. He
member of the Little Hocking $!tends the Rocksprings United
Church of Christ, and enjoys Methodist Church and plans to
reading ,science fiction and fan· major ill engineering at Ohio
tasy books, music, mechanical University.
'

.-

0

�--.. - -

•

Page 8 The Da~y Sentinel
21

64 Mile. Merchandile

7&amp;

LAFF ·A:UAY

Cou.ny ._... .._ Inc. Gaod
uttd . ,....... •d 1V ,...
(lp'"
BAM to · Mon
. .. 614-441-1811.
127 ttwu
3rd.

MMicheirs-MW or Ultd. 3;
whllled tleotrlc ICIODI... Cal

-------------------;

--ell

r Nona r .
0110 VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
thol Y'"'
do bualn• Wllith people vou

flo--

Aw. lloltlpollo. OH.

IIODD USEO A"UANCI!I

knaw. Md NOT to tll'ldmo,.,
through tt. m .. unll you h.,e
lnY ....... edttwoff•lns.

_.. -

W.l*'· .,_., ,.. luwwtors.

•700t&gt;ll•

oon. Ohio. 1-800-137· IWI-ING

LAYNE'I RJANITUIIE
Bof• ond dloln from
1391 to lHI. Ti- liiO ond

lotion
• ..,.,..,~w!"ol......
· - - · ·Col
Z4 frro. 1·800---

Ikotin., for tolt: Fomly A..,.
room. Good loClOIIon.
Coll81oi-3117-718G
For life , convlmOI'at()r&amp; 0..,
gro""lto. Ohio Lotta. D.1 &amp;

0·2, btw lilf'le&amp; t1nd toDd
· ll«lovo lnq. on..,. COli

Ret .. bualn- b .... Mid&lt;l•
port, Ohto. Johnson'a V•IIIY

1,000 Ill. t I

11 .. :Jn.Z114

1:"'
...., - - •• • •e.

Store .flen F,..k~ . 1-304173-1301oltor 6:00p.m.

.._..prom. .
Colll14-446-:1217

bedroom IUh••m.u~
...........
120. t30Cltbtnll&amp;
• lOng
- - ,30 ond up to til.
9o Dovo ;;;;;·;;;· . .h wllh
oporowd croclt. 3 Ml• aut
Ad. Opon 11om to 11om
Man. thna .... Ph. 81 ......
on2.

-.,""" -

.,__.lilt, 2

c• u•-ua lwtll

h n - ... lat, 4 ml• h'om
Holler _,.,.. oft At. 311Port•brook Subc~Wilion . Cltl

1114-446-4189.

. far !Rant

ilohkltlond ,...,lno In
your own I ecrelek1front horne
in Florida. 40 """· to the beech.
wll conaldlw trM• Call t-2
wMkct.ra.•ft• 10 on w..
k.. cll. 81ol-441-0201.
2woododl&amp;ll..,gloto.Appct~f

Pelu••

m•llv 2 ac:r• MCh. Cell 81424&amp;-9118101tor 1:30 P.M.

1104.

LandforMie. Oneto.,.ecr•in
Rutl.,d Townohlp. Col 114-

3 BA . hou• for •to.
Own. fln.n01. C.l 304-175GOVEANMENT SEIZEO Voh&gt;
C:t 11 from • 100. Fordl. Mlf·
ctdll. Carven•. Ctuwys. Surplut. Buyen Guide . C1)
8011-487·11000 ht. S-10188.

3 BR, 1/4tcr&amp; onRoulhRd ..
Ch•l*o. Ohio. Coli 1114-387·
;nss. "'387·1119.

992·3143 oftor 1:00 p.m.

BLMclng sM• end tote on RI'Y·
bArnRolld. 304-17.15213.

I
IUUTII\ILAI'AIITMENTSAT
IUDGI!r PRICES AT JACK·
IDN EITATU. 538 Joaklon
l'tko from 1113 o - Wllk to
llllop ond ~-· 114-44621118.E .O.H . I
T•• Tow~M .,..tmtnts- 2
lllo .. 1'h bjotho. CA.. dlo·

aortlng ot · - por mo. Col
114-3417·7811'0.
Dow..OWII 11 BR . ... now"'

..,.._ q,.llty buill. In d•i&lt;od
ioootlon. Colll14-446-8118.

C"'do 8 - Jr. 304-17623311.

2 8A ..... , _ .... oh c•P..
nM - · ...
,
. . port....., pold.
t 17hmo.
304-816-110"
1176-83111.

1181 14K70 moblt home a 3
1/ 2 -··Coli &amp;14-31.9011
tltor I P.M .

..,....,-....-.,..,.-ao-.,..1&amp;1-:1:-:..,:-a-:-iot-:-o.

Furniohod offtdon.,. 1107 So·
oond. GolitJoBo. .,110. Sh••
b•h. Co1446-4411oftor7PM.

mo .. • hDrr. plf'mftted, public
- - C"'do
- · · · ..-1Jr. 304-176-2338.

•cr•.-

11170.'
2 bedroom•. C.rp•ed. g• hest,
•km"num llclng. t14,000. Clll
114· 192-5272 before 5 :00
p.m.

Renlals
41

od

1701

1 BR hou•knlllt
tt ,
Chutnut. '1 40 / mo. ,

*75/Dop. Coli 114-446-3870.

1114-446-0338.
Glrtg• •

J3 .,rn'ed. roon. •
Wllthlr, dryer. tlr, d ....

bll:h.

no pota, Rot. • Dtp. req'Od. Col
1114-44a.1119.
Efftd•ct i !lpt. kle.. for 1
p . .on.. Moble home bllow
town ov..to alllng
CA •

0.0rgiOUI4 bedrooms, 3'*hl.
2 c.- IIUched g•ege. Huge

bo•.

••,. ••ea• fot cemper.
ttc. Elea•• m.~ ~d aut
tbout30mfnutiNtoP.k.-..rg
or AtMnL tmOf11 other lovetv
hom.. Owner wents 10 , .
cate. Ctl Watt Ackermtn 814-

IVniohod . ... 1 lA . 2•3
Jtclcson Me. e221 • mo.
Utnt. pojd. Col 441-4411
aft• 7 PM, ,
Fwn. Apt. n•t to Llburv
plrklr1g · ~ A .C . Ref. r ..'td.
8.1ttlblt for 1 penon. 0111

Homes for Rent

ho... Rof. Col

rW•.

114-~0338.

Furnlohod ollld-. fiiiO. utilitit~ pd.. · .......
701 "'"
Golllpolo.
!Col
1114-446-44111
m .. ?PM,

42 Mobile Home•
for Rant

192·1900.

.,,,.hod goiogo opt. A.l
Price rtduc:edl Sbc ye• old
trj..lllllel, 41G'• e;loef~ to Pom• utllltl pold •oopt oloctrlclty.
-~ Ndooorotod &amp; -poled.
r~ . 114-tt92-1874 or 11~
Dop . A too 3 bootoomtrol•. Col
7 42· 2110for morainfornwtion. .,
.. 466-1558, 446-118110.
Fully

Furn61htd Apt., 1 IR, t24D.
utftlt1 pd.. 120 4th.llol=Coli 114-446-4411 oltor
.

a b..h. dlowiWtOin opt.,
unlJrn'fd.l A...aoblo Mev 1ot.
Colt &lt;10Vtl14-4e6-1172.olt• I
PM4 .... 198G

3 AM

!'to or Lodo. 2 8A . Rof. &amp; Dop.
Reefed. t12B/mo. · O.rd•n
Owner .,.,.,..,.,. C'AII 814- - ., CoM 114-446-7714 or · Nice 1BR1unllrn'td. ept .. ..,ge
843-21144.
992-6709 oft or 1:00 p.m.
• refrlg. furn' ed .. Wlttr .,d
For rent, 2 br, furnl1hed.
IIIOboll• \~~ Dopool roq'od.
3 bedroombridri tan.wtthl•ge •2•~;
d N ~ Wot
Colt 114•341.
·
~.-HO¥on.
~ "'"· op. •~
•·
lot.Midw.. o ...,..
/Sewlll" ~d. R.t rtq. Ealltm
Good cand.- 304-773-5881.
Aw. 1n dty. Coli 446-3171 for
Furn'Od Ill o!octrlc. 1 BA , LR.
kitchln.
pordt, csntrllltr
3 bt«oom rench. priced 50's.
tft• 5 P.M . wenlngL
loctttd, r•f"•· lee. dep .
extra nice. M. .dowbrook Addl· One
hou• tral• fOt'
1200/mo. Col 614-446-2231
tton. clll 1ft• 8:00 .,..d w . . r.-.t or Mle e121 Nnt. t1250 or 441-2lf11 .
koncto' 30ol-11711-7438.
oole. Comptaolv fllrnlohod. Fi&lt;ot
80 ft. Country Aondlor. 3 clll 3811-8175 38a.8834.
45 Furnished Rooms
beltoonw. Z b .. lw. 2 bea.ttful 2 bedroom trell•. pentr fur·
atone ftreplec»~, 2 c• a••ga nilhed. •200. Oepostt NqU•td. AuorN for ,.,..._....._or month.
1 . 1 ecres . M•nv extrll . ,._, own utlltl•. 114-982aortlnti . . . 120 • m.. Iloilo
0112000.00. 304-458-1839.
24111
HatJtrtt441-9ti8G
Houtt' for •le. Second Str...-. 1-==----=-~
2 bt«oom hou•. (JIIIfpolil
Mooan. WV. 2 otory. 3 bod- Forry. 6 room lll&gt;ort-.i. Cl~
rooml, one bath. b•...-.t. ·ton. 12k·SQ..officetrllltrtor•l•.
gerege end cerport . 3 04-I75-3fll.
U9.500.00. Colt 304-773- _:_:__ _:__ _ _ _ __
50211ft•I:OO.
2 b1utoom tr•il• In courwry,
cartrtlelr. t200. Rtf•.,ce -.d 46 Sp~ ~Dr Rant
dep oslt required. 304-87132 Mobile Homes
19211.
'
for Sale
For Rtnt :!' Urge o.r-c. D... l.
4 btd"ooms. 2 b•tw. clning
room, flrepl.ct, lowly interior.

:lg.

•pt•.

••oom

12&lt;7G 3 8A .. 2 hill botho. now
c•p«. Houte tv.. wlndows.
u .-Dinning. Priood far quick
Mle. !!ott•'• MobileHOmePIIrk.
II 14-446-IIO:l
19811Aodmon Sodlonol28x56,
3 BR , CA. To bll moved. Cal

1114-446-8194 oft or &amp;t&gt;m.
1971 conven1ry 12xeo w / 8 ft.

.,. pendo eaooo. Colt d.,•
e 14-379-2410. eve' . 2451678.
.

44

Second ond Pin" 11o11f.'t- Col
114-441!4425. 114.249
or 114-446-23211.

for Rant
Unfurnilhtd 2 BA a•IICieiPir1·
mint . Stovs snd refrig . .
t200/ month. t100/S.c. Dep. ,

Aof. ,_,•oot. Colt 114-4468017.
BrooklldeApwtmsntl; ..,adou1
living. l•ge kitchen. with hookup. Total tiledrlc. no peu. Cll
dtrtl-61~441-4108 or •en-

lngo 114-446-1821.

Aap01 111tCI 14x70. Nl.:. 88
Far..t Pll'k 3 bedroom. Glt
h••· t500down. 221 J*mo.
Frt1 Dtttvery. Ohio ~• 1-

800.821·0752.
BETTER USI!O HOMES .
Hom•

c.m... •

Elo~

toc.tions "'

OtfO. w. fln.,cewMtwet ...
Colt To&lt;IOV HIOCJ.826- 0712.
7
1 2&lt;110 2 -oom M.H. llrntlhld. nswc•pet. AC.eppUsnc• • eccettorl•.

Will.._. •

d,..r. Coli 614-4411-1036.

1972 Schultz. 12&lt;81. 2 bodroonw. porch. umt.plnNng. tipout lvlng room.lir «tnclllioner.

an ......oom"r""htd•t. ¥lrY

North. 4th Aw. Mldcl-. 2

room ap.-tment. 1·304-182-

Good oondltlon. ltiOOO. I 14812·3111.

2511. .

1171 12&lt;110 Uberty. UOOO.
Colt t11ol-742· 2114 -cllyo
oftor 1:00 p.m.

2 -........ forLoundry
- ·
CllfP•od.
Nlcouttlnl
foc:lkloo llllloblo. CoA 1114192-3711. EOH.

'3 bodr_,
wMh 111&gt;11«&gt;•
one aa"ll.,d. 30+87&amp;.1375.

Grodouo hlng. 1 .,d 2 loedroom 8p.tmtntl It Vllt~ge
- o r ond lllvorolde Aport·
mente In Mlclcl.on. From
t112. Col 114-H:Z. 7717.

-liz

1171 l o - mobile homo.
141&lt;70 with 7&gt;121 •pondo.
304-1711-11141.
1111 -Moon 10.110 troll•.
lootted on 1at In New Hwen.
,...., to ln.
1100.00.
304-182-3733.
.

•a.

1172-.. moblohornl. 2111',

·-pin-

tlp.....,l In ..lng room. pard!.

olr oond.. IDDII
oond. t8.000. 1 -1114-112·
3111.

oppllcon .... Coli 51•· •41·
7572. Haurol-1.

· 2 btctoom. ..,,....., ftem~
doled. .,_ plor.,...nd. lor'"

1-10. Col

t~====::::::::;::;;;~~~~~;~

PICIUNS USED FURNITURE
Cornptoto hau•hotd "rnlohln• . 'Armlle.Jorr-. 304-117614110. 1114·381·9773 .
t~ttnlngs.

68

•

Hotpolnt dr'(or-088. GEwoohor,
llkonow.-llol&lt;i-l171. 30
Inch electric ron...., ttl. 30 lndl
'!:'.i.. 91 30
llealrlc l'lftgt.
Inch oloclrlc rongo, horvHI
gold- i71. Rofr-ar, fran
froo, copporton.l88. Rofrlotor. frootlroo, wllll•nso. Ro·

lrto- "' -

lrnporiol.
v............
room sutt.-tllll.
Caffee bod111d
end llbl•t71 a Itt. Plidded
Bentwood rockor· tl9.
Grondfothorciod&lt;JI8.H. lllo
din.._
lincludoo hu!ohi.
KM-. choir,.
t1115 torr. voriotv. curia
c8bln•· t2 I . VsuaMnle••
oofo .,d oholr·H88. lou«
roc:lln-l249. SOPAII· 8 p i woodfoup-t:ln. TAADE·INS
TAKE .

56

chMI . . Nftg&amp;. -ofiMtgrey

eon 4411-46118.

DrogonwyrMI

Uood opptlon . .. W"'!horo. dry·
. .. .. no•. refrlgerltors. mlcro....v• ov••· Ken'1 Appliance,
217 E. 2nd St.. Pomoroy.
114· 982·1338 or 114·91113511 .

Puppl•-11 - · old. port Lob.
Brittany 8pon. • Oorm.. lh•
phord. To Good ho- only.

,.,..

•tt•tve.
l11/oo. Colt 814--0010

pu-.

1124 E. Mlin Strllt, PomtrQV.
Hour~~: M.T,W 10s.m. to lp.m.,

olio utl•l-.
occoptmo
Hud.
moblo
homo. wll
t111.00
.. h
10ol-ti71-H12 or 1711-3800.

Goad .,lquoc. . : 1118 Edson

Wll trodolar pldoup truck. ollort

.....

304-17.,., oft•llpm.

11180111 171...uld. ElC . oond.

1 - -·
•m. Col ....011011.
315-1744.

dlrtilllo.

- - Col81 .. 446-1104

71

Auto'1

,.., Cll 110 In -

...... "

- ........... _,...1or
....,. 1:00 .........,..,..,,

For Stitt

blo-.

w - bod. Pr...ch..,orGMC

Oollo pupo, Ml
1
woolco. .., w - . ltll. 304176-29811.

wllh tlr. PI• pb. CeH llftlf' 4:00

p.m. 304-1711-3219.

Antique upright pltno for .-Ia

AKC rog-odC"'*orSDonlol.
mole 2 yro. old.
vory
unuouol. oolor • m•klnao. ..,.
lowlbiL hM
Ptllcl

-lor.
::J:'•

Good cancltlan. l110. 30ol571-4519.
Mile. Merchendise

AKC r.,tot•od Dooilou¥Nio.

Cock• Spen. . ll'ld Shih-tzu.
lhotl. wormed. WI att.llced.

304-8711-2191

57

M111ic1l
lnetrumenta

••=

•w.tt

lbonoo olotrlc gulalr Lof Pout
Pll'.,bl I •••
omp. ~t"'l'*d•holt-MOOoa2
'"'*' •• fer
·
tlllnglo tn -l..,j ....,.,
Coll446-7114.
lndlv~-~:..t::~I - begin.-.
•

t:,:

r,-· '"'~
:fldloW::Z: :.:.::.::~~

Boll pror,:tod 22 In 1-n

• ..._8077. Limited........,..

1111 Hondo 400-am. 1400
ootuol ........ Col 814-441:1.:41.:.:':·:...,..--:--:-:----.-:-

1171 llloll llooll. ••· oond..
• 1110G Coll1,... . 1301.

·

For loloPlriY 10
Wonted: PIMID
Roo-'bl•
tok eon _ ..._"'
mon II••.,- .,._.,
on p l -. loo
Col
monoger •• ID0.838-7I1 1

10 fl· htelllile chh. •• Orllkt

lo.....,.

~=27:00::.=======J~""'=d="'"=·=======-~
........

~-:.-"t..,ta;1':"-ut~O:,:..old.
_ _ _ ,.81 ...... 01
4111.. _
... l r n - l o - -

t 118.

--In-

-11111. -AJIGin ... dod.Onfot
1800 mla l'urrt lko o ldnon.
t1100. -Iaiii.. 814-II:Z.
12112.
_;;;..:.________.,.,...--::= t
, . . Y8mllht ni-Moto 171

ltln-· whit"- tire, AC.
T·l- ............... ion. IIIIo
,,_Col
1114-44• 7441 ar 114-44f.
IQ1.

with Pill......,, Cellt4-•:a.
1131.

RM, uiMI v.; ....._ llloftlld
to o girL Col 114-HI-187"
==----:-~:=--:-:--1 WlldiiWoM
,_,m•oy.
18 Chwy ........ JZ7. 2 - · Ohio.
Folr to good • - C111 1117 10110 114-441-11110olta8:,.._or
· Vory
114-441-IIOOM.f l tl.
.,... eo • ..... c.ll 114-M21088 - • •d ......
1173
or814-MJ.HIIO-dlioto.
lllv•.
ill!"""· 1 4 m l - . g o o d • · - - - 1111-V·81 ..... a•c
114-44f.GI77.
oonll, . . . . . 3011.

e.._

C..•..,.,
Dow•*·

1170 Dodeo Dort Corel111.000 orte. '1~,...
,a_-~!l!'
..; •••
_, oor- -.'!-ott~
-C.5p~"'.;:·::-:·:-:-::--:--:-::-;:::
1111 Pard 1-rt. •1.000
mla. •GIH• &amp; • ...., with
Coli
114- a.1111ofl•.,.,. .

11N-CIIoo.c...
--,

li"' - · •-·

76

Coupo.l
__
1118 Oldo
c_
-dltloll.lltiB
•VI.AC.--1B.OOO ...a

80111a •nd
Motol'l for S•ltt

..

_

.........

1 .... _

..... In -

......

Tocol " ' - • .,., - o d .
......,.,
ond •..• •
Col 814-1182-3117
.,...
111-1170.

'

Cl lllllbyNEA,Inc.

IJol.:

Corponlri worll don-=. ly job at
haur. W* dD ....,dlllng. niW

==-=:rr.a.'"JJ&amp;"

--~t•.
Alworkgue·~ end attrlor.
Col.,. 882-2358. .
.

r..-tad.

RON'S Televleian S1rvlce.
Houtt Ctlfl on RCA. QUUIIr,
GE. IDoc:l~lng In ZonMh. Col
304-1'7a.2398. or 1114-4462.54.

,.,...... Colt 30+175-1331 . · :

Rot.., ... oo.,.IIIMI•..,•...,_.
-· otlllng. '
lool
MoM welt
"'mp • • md servk38. 30~

..;

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE . ;
houOI ooll oorvlolng GE. Hot
Paint,
drytn 1nd
· - 304-17a.2398.

w•hlr•.

Mllglc Touah

-In·~"'''
•
l8t ut DDIOr '""' wortd. Int.-. 1
r-orct-. CoR ...., 30ol-17a. '

7237. 111. 1 8.&lt;01 10 A. Point :·
....... W. Yo. 251180.

82

MAYBE IMNO
I&lt;OBERT REDR::l!&lt;D...

'

BUT IAA NO FREDDIE:
KRU~E:P-1

EITH5R.

.ft:;

~/

(!]) Pock* ()(Hope
II) Larry King Uvet

•

YE GOT TO
TELL PAW--

o.•ta:-·

84

11J Prfml Tlml Wlftlllng
e:30 111 e!D Dellgnlnt woihon
Charlene talks her boyfriend
into sowing wild oats. (R) 1;1
(!]) To 8a Announced
121 VldooCounlry
10:00 (1) 700 C!ul
Nowowotch
(!) Wtaenct 'Tu- Comt
i11J ea Newhlrl Michael's
sanitarium stay turns him into
#
an instant guru.
• (!]) ArMIIio Hall
II) Evening Nlwl
1BJ NtWI
10:20 (J) MOVII!: Rolling Tltu-

ENNYTHIN&amp;

CARTER'S PW-ING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Plno
Ohio
Phone 81ol3918 "' 614- '
4 .... 4477

e

Ye. CAN
TILL Mf!!

m

Electricel

• Refrigeretion

Eloctrlc. Aool-111 or:
oo.,_.dol. 2• hour ...leo.,,
_con_ll_1_"-_371___1_1;:_31
___~-· :.

86

a

(~)(1 : 39)

General Hauling

BERNICE
-2 .... 121111.
.......... -

· I'll. 014-

Htullng .

Coll304-57.211t.

17

Uphohrtary

..

----------~-------,

1111. ,

SEpEOSOL

year. Send lor yaur Aitro-Grljlh pre- ICCIIIP10 (Ocl. - · 22) tmJiorlent
dlctlono tod8y. M.U S11o Al1ro-Gr1Ph. fln8nclll arr•ngernenll .,.. lll&lt;ely to
c/o thla MWIJIIIPIII', P.O. Box 91428, work oul be1ter lor you tDd8)' thin they
CleYelend, OH 44101-3421. Be .,,. to willlomorrow. See II you cen tj:hedule
otlleyour zodiaC olgn.
things IICCOrdlngl)'.
onzl:l (*r 2 1 - . ) TM rlghl ·IAGITTAIIIUII ( - . as-o.c 21) Per·
lypeof~lortwiHhllppi8CIIIeyour oon81 •mbftlons cwa be t l d v - tor•INI'
toclay. 8eloct 1 perky d8)', provkltld ,au do nolle! pwipheral
partner who elmllar !n-1e d...,opjueuta slow you d-. . Don't lei
and iOOUid 8110 Uke 10 _.,._ lod8y'a diiii'Ktlona _ .. You lo tlke rout eye

uro-

rou-.
.
CAIICIJI(JiiMI1......,111You'rellk•
I)' 10·do your bell worlc tod8)' I! you're
lnvo!wd In oome 1ype of cr•ll"' enTry to flnd 1hlnga IO do lhl18re
b01h
8r1d ellmut•t• ,our
IINglnallon.
LIO ,...., ••111 II) You're • rather
cller ilrllltlc pti10fl to begin """ 111!1
~
Ml! b e _ , . .
,_.," -..-·
.-,s lORy. wt.aer you 10 you .,.
not 8p1 to be outtia 011111.
V11C10 (Aile. II llflll. II) Condlllont

ott
your =('.;._ -- ...... 11) y •
CAPIIIC
-.--·
oure.

lkely to l8re beller1Dd8Y II you malnl81n
a low prottle..,. 118)' In the .,_ground
1 bit. Keep In louclt -u, bul
don'l lllempllo letld them.
·
.11) .:!.~
AQUAIIIU8 (.lin. li!O , . _
tltould function
1~,
...... ,our group - - . . ...
CGI-...d. SO'IIIIhlng
bel til! I.....
Ill COUkl
__._.......
c
reou1t lhrlugh .....,._ - ...
lnt-111 In I'OIIf _ . lllllta.
~I (M. • "
Ill . , Two or
1Mtcontrlbullto)GtlrclomUIIc-.rl- more ~~...- fllj U... CIM be '
1y .,. t1
i1nD 10 11rm up more llllillt 8Ciiflllecltoday I yau 111P1V ,aur .._
111111. II All, wMI'8 - n n g m8)' p!oper1y. ltl81fyou-~IIU18wly
nol be
Ylllllltt lor • While.
to ,.......... dove~~~.
IJIIIA (
• Del. lltTry nOt to In· Alllll ,...... " ... .. 11) Uertall)'
vohe youtMII today In 801ivHIIt you you're,lhe o n e - - up- the
ooutc1 lind too I'M1I'Icllw lifller _ . . , btlgltllll .... moll nove! IUJIDIItlonl,
or phJIIIIII), You'loperlll much more · but toclltp, !I you'l (illen Olollly to ofh.. 1
efllell¥11)118 • " " eplrn.
..... llilgltt ..... IdeM tliel you'l

.vor.....u

exh••..,

....... -·""'leo

'

10:30 (l) Buckaroo 8arll
1111 e!D 1&lt;tt10 .a A!tle Lou
begs, ond blaclimoila. Kale
into accom_penylng him to •

.

.

• ~

.

.

I1

SECEXS

a 95

" I got

in accounting

and ... 84 in political sctenca...
bragged Ilia girl. Softly she
addad, "And a 79 in 1"

I

1--T-...;..I::.,;.17..:.r;lll=.,-l-;-

Comp lete tho chuckle quoled
V' by fill ing in tht missing words
L.--.1--L--.L.......L--..__._ you develop from stop No. 3 below .
. . PRINT NUMBERED
Ql lETTERS IN SQUARES

6

12

I'

I

I''

11 15 I'

13

I

I

I

I

I

J
II

III

UNSCRAMBLE FOR .
ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS

AN~WEIS

"
TRUMPET

Junior - Inept - Femur - ZIIB/ol -

'1 ·l!

.

Alter a romanlic dinner, my date, who was a musrcran ,
broke the spell by whispering sweetly, "You have a beautrlul
mouth . 1 bel you could play the TRUMPET."

~--------------~
NORTH
•·••·II

BIUDGE

+82

.Q5

Putting on
the pressure

0.1.8732
4o!0642

WEST

EAST
+10 7
.KJ 9
OQ 105
. • AKJ93

.54

By James Jacoby

• • 7 6432

No one has a gun pointed at your
head forcing you to bid fou r spades
just because you have R solid seven·
card suit and a side-ace. It 's fu lrom
certain that a partner who passed will
have two tricks for you. Bul some·
times one trick in partner's hand will
produce another as the opponents are
pul under discarding pressure. And il
all you can take~our eigbt tricks,
perhaps the o
nls could have
made somethini hem.selves.
East made a good decision at trick
one when he played his lowest club on
partner's queen lead. A shill at the
second trick to either red suit would
cook declarer's goose. But. West was
blind to such subtlety and blithely continued clubs. East won the second club
and would no doubt have now led a diamond U he could see all the cards, but
he played a third club in the hope that
partner might have someth1ng like Q·
x of spades. No such luck. Declarer
rulfed hig!l and now began the parade
of trump winners. In fact he played
out ali bls trumps, leaving dummy
with Q-5 of hearts, ace of diamonds

OKH
.Q$

SOUTH
+AKQJ963
• A 10
064
4o87

Vulne ra ble: Neither
Dealer: West

W.ot
Pass

Nortli
Pass
Pass

Pass

Eoot
1• .

Sootli
4+

Pass

Opening lea d: • Q

and the 10 of clubs.
This approach forced East to keep
the K-J of hearts, queen of diamondo
alone and a club honor over the dummy's 10-spot. Declarer now .Played a
diamond to dummy's ace and led the
club 10, on which he discarded a diamond. East won the trick and had to
lead away from the king of hearts to
let Soutb make his contract.

=
at

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Cater·
pillar's

39 Hebrew
meBBure

40 Pub game
Item

hair

5 Walt
Kelly

41 Bold

possum

9 Nursery
Item
10 Happening
12 Weapon
(Fr.)
13 Warship,
In naval

slang
15 Kind
of deer
18Tease
17Sumrner
(Fr.)
18Gmnan
toast
IOSUent
21 Congo

DOWN
I Steep

slope
Z Diamond

. naw?

3 Antiquity 14 Very poor
4 ActOr
18 Pottery .
Vigoda.
oven
5 Dreaa size 19 Flshing
II Roman
net
poet
zo Morning
prayer
7 Army rank

.(abbr.)
8 Story

start
11 Shred

28 Slow,
In mll8ic

a• F1y

25 Ache

river

23Anclent
language
25 BuUdlng
level ·
21 English .

river
271nvent
28 Wldeepread
UShowy
81 SchOol
of whales

83"--Gotta

Be Me"
U Ellclle '
II Indolent
170ne kind
of dream
18EnroU

DAILYCR\PIOQIJOIU-IIere'l._towertll:
'

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONOPBLLOW

11 :DO (1) RamlrtgiOn . _

eC2J

w e&lt;ll

• e!D

(J) ......................

~~~(!)
T1le 'ddlaWII lraltt T8kl
a 1011r ollhti rn1111 prollllt;
m•nuiiiCiurtr ond u - ol
drugo In 101.- ·lhti

taumon 1n1n. a

.(!]) " - CeNIMIIon

OMDM ....

S=IIIIIRirw
ill
VIlle

.aYoueonii•IW

liw:Q· ·.
ell

IF.Jif:..
c-..t
aNcNn•n't
Clllllt 11111 ClltiBB

(diminish}

81 Bring
to bear
sa Elbe
tributary
31 City near
Tokyo
a7 Style
of mll8ic

II Mimed

111w Counlry

1111-

27 Hidden
30 -- off ·

~..,......,...

wedding. ~;~

a

... 01 c --•1 11:30·=·
tlt-..C•'"*

lind .......

(

themselves surrounded by
natives: (R)
18 (!]) Rolalng Good Klclo In
lod Timet See Dicli And
Jane Lie. Cheat. Steel
1!11 PrlmoNowo
1BJ Hunl For Slolon War
T....tUM Hunt For Stolen
Treasures will track priceles~
.art seized by the Nazis
·
· during WWirwhlch have
remained hidden for
decades.
IIJ Mu-, She Wrolt
Naahvllle Now
1:3011 (1) 1!21 Ne8rfy Dlporltld
Grant is accused of bigamy
Ill' Claire . 1;1
llJl Nlckltus Touch
e1121 Holrllond Johnny can 't
shoot Bambi; Gus can 't give
up his pet pig. 1;1
t :DO II .C2J iiJJ MOVIE: 'Tough
Guyo' NBC - y Nlghl at
tho Moviea (PG) (1 :44)
(I)
(I) 'Gideon Oliver'
AIC Myele'Y Movie Money.
drugs and po1111cs collide In
murderous Caribbean
·
conflict. 1;1
(J) Ill Leamlng In America
Are lupayers getting their
money· s wonh when It
comes 10 education? 1;1
1111
Murphy Brown
Murphy realizes her lime is
running out and decides to
have a baby (AI C

e

'

Plumbing
&amp;. Heeting

-1o •.ooo
.....
lly,
.... _2.000........
wollo.....

~~~=:=
tan1 .i..!."•
.-·"
" h1 heater
• a•d
beok
wlttr
• 1ze.uv. - - 104-171-

7:35 (J) Major Loegua Baoeball
8:00 (1) MOVIE: Oliver Twiol (NAI
(1 :45)
D C2J 1!21 ALF ALF Is sure a
tabtold story about an alien is
about his cousin . (R/1;1 ·
(!) Cotloge BaMbll
(I) Ill (I) M8cGyver
MacGyver must prevent the
assassination of a foreign
president. 1;1
(J) CouotMu't RedltCOVIIIY
ol lhl Wortd (NAJ
(!) Advanlure Adventurer
· and composer David
Fanshawe searches for
trJlditional.muaic. D
1111 • 1!21 Gtrlleld 1n

eo

""·-·- ..........

_..., .,• ....,.,, G.! ......

II) Crooollre
IBJ Nlghl Courl
18 Crook lnd ChilO

a

---~--~-.,..---- ·
Fftly Tr• 1Hm,...g, •ump

W1ttW1on'1 Wet •

-Cllll14--1111.
' " • up. ~-a
.., "'"'·

(I) Enlorlalnment Tonight

. II (I) USA Today
iiiJ IIIII) iiJJ Jeopardy! 1;1
181!ll M'A'S'H

when tl'le fat cat and Jon find

":rl.

-too. .

- · Dooloo. - . . . -.......
ol .....
tlmiMI.
N .. W;pleua
.......
Ill.

.

1 1 I'DK1 1.~!.
URN

to a tropical isle turns into
the ulllmale beach party

dry
- · '*'mlllnt oloctrlcol, romoco ....... Coli 114-4467
.

Mldko w•• HM111ng
1.000 .. 2.000g• . ~~~~~ ......
t t - 104-57a.2111 « 814.... 4011.

UIID-"-. · -- -

; Mapzine

Par1diH Garfield's vacation

c................. ,., ..ln.

II • R - .. lorvioo. Paolo.
olet•rnt, Wtll1. lrnmlldl•••
1.000 ar 2.000gollonodollvory.
Col 304-1176-8370.
1•

..

'~~, .

tlo Co. RON I!IIANI ENTER ·
PAISI!I• .-,...,, Ohio 1·801).,
137· 1521.

1!!!!.!"'
...~-·oltnJ!olloll
jj;,';ftl..,...,._;
IIIOr• J. J Wolw ..........Swimming

r _ _ _ , . . . ·· - .. o..loo. IUIIJ. 114-=
2141 (laro.l ,, ........1 ,
!laorMI.

J

(&gt;.

llllm••

_.....,_,. _ _

-- -..... . . 00-·· ...

..... Col 114--2211.

L.fFT, ~rur evE~YflOt&gt;Y
SB~MS TO THINIC
n,% 'Jill PffiNITEJ.Y
::.,....,~
oFF cENT,F~.

BAIEMENT
WATER PROOFING
:
Un •ndltlonll 11«1_. guor.,. •
tFrw
• l.ocol · · - ~bniohod.
oalect •J
1' 114-237·0488. dliot or night. ~
R o 1 t r 1 B • • • men t J
w••...-a.

it~1BI~il';~~Coll~l~,._~....
;~l1~10.~~ I:;;;;;;~~~
liM C11ooy ct t1 n. *• • l-1ti71M .... 1r1"

S-IN
.
· AUcnON 8 I'URNITUR! 82
1 bedroom opt. for - · l225 Olive .,.. llolllpoBo,
monlh. d-1 required. 1114- NI!W· I flO. • ..,,. t381.
IIZ·Ittl.
U.lng. · - .................
• ..... - w i t h -... '148.
Apt for-· l171por month.
Pill o1a m - • tollndotton
Utllloo ln ...........rlly ...... lllrtlng- etl . Atolln•r•
... -dod. CoM 114-112· otortlntl- 181.

,.... ,_,.,...........

o~

n• .... hlln•t. ..... n,t. R•ldmtllf or oornfMrdll wlr-1
:10:.4-:..17.:.:..:•:..18~H:::::O.:-:-:::---- · ins• ...,~
- or -·~ ..., .
,oond.
VPlOO
~
•c
UConood
olodrldon.
Rldonour
88 ~- - · •
I.
Sectrlotl. 3048'75-1711.
81
,.. __ - ·

potlo. locurlly - • · CAl
11 4-n:Z.I888 ott or &amp;p.m.

2371. '

81

=1 -..

...J:::: =.-:n'.:'J:::
:0.~
..._ . , _ - .,._ bor,

_ _ _ All ..... -

Houaehold Goode

.:t PoN T !&lt;NOW WHfTtf!R
I'M PoLITfGALL.Y ~ltiHT
1

81d • • • • Ill ....... wlndINtkL 1'Wo .,, flOe IMinMia.

Por . . It~ 1174 Corvette

11

a

Sel VICI:S

~Cor..:",.=='&amp;:O:, !=:...i.'.;'.:·,~....!~~

For
9 pc. wne .... /drur'ftl
very good oondltlbn. Alto 100
wstt pre-- ..., _. e1 10 pc. For
1900. Coll446-~14.
copy.

1173 22 ft. Sh- cornpor ,
lle~p~ I utf conalned, 1-c. •
n. ooo. 304-771'11828.

1111-3102

!:'::~~~:J;.o ;,."":,':. ::-:.;.•N:U": ':~
3514. I.e•• m - •
- - Hwy. 1110 • mL 814-44f. ...lor.44a.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

51

, . . _ ..._ _ Col

0..~

Floh Tonk. 2•13 J - A...
Point P I - 304-81a.2081
10aotHt .. .,4.11'"d 10pl
co ....... t43.211.
.

1-w; 1188 2-doar Edt-' sed1n.

~~ -

siiid • FertiiiZ•

.......

WKRP In Clnc:lnnall
II) ShowBiz Today
1H1 WKRP In Clnclnnlll
11J Corloon bpreoo
18 Ntw Count'Y
6:35 (J) One D•y At A nmo
7:00 (1) Our Houoe
11 (1) PM Mopzlne
(!) Spori.C.nler
&lt;IJ Ill (I) Curren! Affair
(l) &lt;!J M8cHell/ Lehrer
NewoHour
1111 .II) iiJJ WhMI 01
. Forluti&lt;ll;l
(!]) ThrM'o Company
II) Moneyllne
1BJ ChMro
11J Miami Vice
ToP Cerd
7:05 (J) Andy Griffith
7:3011 (1) Family Feud
(!) Major Ltlgut Ba11bttll

e

....,.-,~-,---=----··

Jlm'o Odd Jab'o. Sun-.. '
ol..,ll Plintlntl rootlnp . ..,...
••· bulllng.· dol• war1c. Frw
..~--.Col 814-379-2411

Motorcycles

71 .........110! .-

lit. Colt ..... 742·2132.

1 to 8p.m. 81....,992-

1877 A - - trolor. 23' •
Mlf oonlilln•. • -c. ewning.
I1Ck1. R••• hitch. ellltrll. ,
lloopo .... 02.100. 304-17a. .
.144.

-lono.do.... artlarHdlnr.•
.. - l n . Coll14- 170.QII. , , . Eotl-•
:

-·-·
-Not--,_ -ul_d --.........

~~·=•=Z.~7:tl:•:..~'"~t•;•go.~;;;;;;:;:;:

--071.

R1gklaud Mllllal H~

25211.

oloctronlco. fino ........ - for
yourMif. liiO.OO. 304-8Va.

74

' whtte pure bred Germ1n Docllb - n ond olfollo
-304-8111-11101.
Shophord
mole l100. ·114-742·21111 or
514-742·3100.

Buy or Stll. Rtv•in• Antklues.

23111

Colll14-7G-11U

lir·eo~r onvt~m•l14-3117·l----------

Antiques

Far rom 2 bedroom llntohod

·

11118 •Ferd JILT _ . _ Mlol
Yen.
l•eftent
.. _ _
_ _ ooncfltlon.
--p.

""'lod Hor-d larft for- 1•
rnonlhl old. gorotla Col 114-

8&amp;

...,pin, trol•.

loptlc Tonk Puml&gt;lnv- t90.

114-311• •28. .
Clubplgolor•lo.Coltt14-28a.
81187.

Reg. AKC Yor-· Torr*

ELECTAOLUX
April dooo a.o
.
_.... 304-176-1457.

·-·

o- - -

.:•.,:.1"'.:,.:.'.::'1:..2:..1:.:'..
.:-:::---:::~= '
tilt
tltiO.OO. ·
- b o o - 20HIQhl.,dA...
30...76-71.7.

. . c - Ad. Coli 1114-·
:
441-0214.

.._
.....,_- C O l i 814-••-1 or

Portion Mldll...,_.,dH-

~vlcl. Coli
tl14-441-1844oltor7
PM.

wet• prOYkled. Dlposlt end

..""'""'·J
.

-nol

MOving Sololl Twln/l101k-.
computer with •cceuortes .nd
oddo • ilncto. Coli 1114-216118&lt;13.

Ere wv. Jundlon lndl!&gt;onco
Rood. Old At. 21. Fri. Sot. Sun.
Noon til 8:00PM. Now Armv
light wolght. Armv Com.,ftoge
...n. ....
lor Turko¥ -ontA.,112• · Moy
114-882·7471.
'
. .
201 BID end Whitt C1m•·
ftoge. 304-273-1851.
47 Wanted to Rent
Reinbow Vecuum d.., .. wtth
o1t1Chmonto. Nno like now.
t189.00 cah or ternw ,,.
2 or more hctroom home or ... god. 304-1711-4416.
trill• wkh ever-oesllt ysrd-5n
Kygor C - Sdlool Dlotrld. Woadwartdng mochlnory; •lrle
Coll614-317·0404.
.-w. twldlarw. . . . . . . Jotnt•a.
........ tolhoo. - " " '· "'"
ooiiiCtor.BiuoRidooMichlnory
ond Toolo. 304-1182-3&amp;31.
49 .For Leese

!'52~ l22tl por
r
monlh.'
Col
441-4425, or 44 •••249.
325.

eott..,

1113fald - n - •.11-·

I . Nlw CIIIIVII top. Glt rtlfrlgerltor. ltove. Good aondltlon. ;

Cle. . _., ont half milt up

...••

Peta for Slle

1111 • !D CBS Nawo .

SWEEPER end IIWing miChtnt
ropolr. porto. ondouPPII•· Pld&lt;
,. ond dllvory. 0 - "-um

/Duroo trooo·b r -. Ro·
rna t•2•altMpeetiYtR
tM Ch.,...., - - • tho
•
(IIIIo ..... l'olr Jr. Groom Mid tlupplw -p-Ilot .......... ot tM _ . . , Pitt
Grooming . All brNdi ... AII lhow. 'lue ... ..,. ooullty
otyloo.
Doolw. --~~---...
..
..... _ 1 -........
111food
.._0231.
Colll14-11:.231e.

Conning l-l2.110 dol. KM·

·I3 hours,
hp81o8onaln•
- fl
appmx
t12&amp;.0C). 20
etllp Wcter t41.00. 304-175-

Vana• 4W.D.'

~2;;713.;:==::;;;::;:::;:;:;·;:;::: ~-........,c-•-•
200 of D - • ~

Country , Mo.. e HDmt Plrk.
Route 33, North of PDm•oy.
LDt-1,
1*11. - . . Csl

Lo.:,"

73

"30

':'!••• _.....,, -

lurplus. Armv. 'Rentll. Denim
ototNng. Sem Somtrvlle's, Nu

For
Aponmorn. now"'·
docorotod. 2nd floor. - tlocond
:• stow
Pin&amp; Oolllpok
On•
bectoom.
• nf,lg•llor,

114-MI-at22 .. 114-n2·
Haofterlp.m.
.
11
1118
ceo lrUDk. 20

1'7'th Annullllntt., .Pie ... e::
:Mih.
PM, ~·Co. ....._ ...

lit • .Co0h..lo.1 ~
~·
Gollli&gt;ollo. .
- 0 11 ~~

I ...........a

opt- A.C ...... - AM_,. • - .,d Min roof.

11118.

ConatM•
1 l!_e- . , .d
ordlllwery. Matonlllnd.GIH~

91.

1--.. . . -.. .

UvllltOck

e (I) ABC Nows I;J

I~

. . (!])

•

*•-

!II! 12J i1JJ HBC N!ihlly Nowt
ilJ SponoLoott
(I)

.,

====---------1 :::.~a-v
t7."'ac:.i0~ ;x.r,~
83

1:31\

• Can..,_..

-w._....

• ,.,., 110. 41.000 . . . .
Toppor. w-. 'Itt. • opood.
A.,_ ..... Clll . 114-3117·
043.

--ond71tflorlolru&amp; .....
110._27S.Q11.
WANTED: 3 .... Nloh kit for
'C', - 1
_..
11 • d -~..:: fer ,
••a
·w: Col . - _._71,• _
-·-

Building Supplies

4 dr. chttt. t44. 88· I otytoo ol Bull- M•orioll
bunk ltortlng ot t176Block, brick. - • ptp-. wtnlncludlno t49.91.
bo-g.ouFul ibO
""" · - .. lntllo. «c. c1.. ...
~'"""""·
·
mettreM· t75. twin mllftr.... 1 t.n, Alo Or~n• 0 . Cell 814oot·lll. milt- modo .., 245- 1121 ·

64

1:--•

=

1:05 (J)~IIct

w 3-2·1 c~ 1;1

72 TIUdll for Sale

, -~ r
UTILITY ILDG. I
..,. . , . , ...... , . . . . . . .
1·..0C~MMI.IRI!CTID ·
IIDN HORII ili.DAI. 114332-1741.
JD 30 "'*"'Ho~o~~totor. JD
rowfronlmou.-au...,.tuoa.
4 lddlor _
... Col
3l!4-211.1011.

oo_.

••

l1l IlDdy Eltc1rtc

1171 lulol&amp; llooll. Y· 8
Mo.· 1171 .....
Y· l
llrlvo. 304-17171111.
.•~h7• 000
'12~.-orlwh •
mW.. ID+t'7a- 7187.
•
.•~ flotlol Urnhd. • 11 1
304.

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

&amp;1 F1nn Equip~!

..... 304-tl7a.11104.

66

ea

Whalls sell-esteem . what
can II do lOr you, and how
can:"~i1?D
&lt;!J R
Rainbow 1;1
(!]) Happy Dayo
1BJ F8CIIOI Ute .
11J 8lti·R8

Far S•le

fltae-nf" ,_,., -·

==::.:.'W:i!'.i

Lin-

a.n-

•

_ . . . . ,._.

Gun. I Hilildgu .•200.
114-848-23.1 ott• .;Ollp.m.
QUILTBWANTEO
Buying old quitO. bo 21
.,..,or . .. tt.nd.,lt.. orW.
Anyoon.,ion.Po,.lnatapdollor
cMhl Colt ootloot ' 304-4725192. W oome to you.

frigerator , slde·bV·IIdt,

53

-

H•lllnl b , Ia. tloWwl •d

NlnlondoC-PocllondU~

· - - • u o. Gn . rongo. 30
Inch. white. eye 1-·•171.
a~~gg~ A. .l.,oes. Upp• Rlv•
Rd. 814-4411-73118
Vi'IIA RJANITUAE
• APPUANCEB
llt. 1.1lrlc-.....,.1/4ml. on
Plko. OHn 7 dorvo •
- . BAM.ePM. Coli foroppt.
Att•h- 114-441-3158.

1111

Trlvll (0:30)

'MGf
ohofpiCol
.... 1:00PM. 304-77:n2•4..

lit.---·Joob- "'' •-

,.,.,

304-77S.I115.

wnn•• ·

boako.

71 Auto'•

Vageqblel

•

Homea

low to lorrn !our olmplo wordo.

mTM Power of Choice

--tl-

Fruit

•"*•

Whirlpool _o,_ • dryer oot.

,79 Motora

•

Losbod.201t. • larnko.lllonM.
0811(). 11 ft. ft. llod ctlmp.
ltiO(). 11":-118•11101.
8ft aw+ood ..... - . laG
Co11114-118Z·3111 .
Met111
1115. IMge wood
- . . en · 114-81:Z.

'

nice 1nd c1 .... eduttt ontv. no
p .. o. phone 304-176-1381.
Apertment 4 roomo ond ·bah.
.Oikl• pol d. liiO.00 - .
304-11711-3100« 8711-1109.

.a.DDnd.

Truok t - lito tiM olio truck.
Celll,4-241-1200.

N1W M'ld uMCI furniture end

r.. of .... Icing on corner of

Apartment

.301•

•w

e

::_•011"'
;-,.:"t::; :;;:..:.: =~~~~~.~~-=-~= 2111
- · · - • ·' •t,.hln&lt;*l- . IVICodo·tti.Norgodrvw-l71. 2 Prom D - for ..... Col

r•IDI'Ited, l..carpM. oomplll:t
4 1(11'• on County Ad so · ldtohon.'AC. ""'klnll No polo.
(Gurwllti . Poetlbltow,.-lnlft" Dopoolt. Collj1114-44a.0139 .

dong with ltiOGOO dawn.
_3o_..
_4S_a.__1a_7_5_._ _ __

*lb.

lear range letttrl of the
0 !our
ocromblod -•do be-

(!) Iuper
iiJJ
- · Bowl ol Sporto

3331 .

12 foot fow.boy......., .......
Colt tl14-44a.Mte.

Voli"" FumMuN

Beatttful. soedous. brick--.inyl · Alhton bea~ttlll oM N'e toft
ooloni-' 3 8A. 2 krt-, tbovt with,._,., •ontaoe. public wet•.

Aacklpring~trM. Cunombult.
II OWMf ho,. on IPpt'OJL 3
1 tJ.m-()()IM, m b.th. &amp;
finpl.:.. lnt1r0111m ~YM:tm. ln•ound pool. guebo, _ loU of
utrts. Priced to ••· For more
informetion, Clll 304· 773·

:u ,...,

:l::::tr::.,o:;,.~mo_.:.e~

=---:,....---,.,-,;C:O:-- L~:;:::::;~=~=~r;;;::==;::;;F-=.~=11ul""Mto
31
Homes for Sale
r35 Lots &amp;. Acreega
44 Apartment

Enjoy

-

~··

EpiiiOdet

ew w

Da - ... C11

1-•.......,, -

.,.,.. 110. Gaod •-'tctk n at

"Work? 011 my 1-ml~ry'?"

room. 30ft. custom Olk kitohen
~blrl•a. o• woodwork. finilh

Coli

PUZLII

1:00 ()) aon.nu: The Loet

PDOR BOYI nilES
twldlrlan. W.Vt. Now doing
from end .Ugnnwdl 111.elf."
Mid uood tlroo. 304-87a.

arbor!...... lfciai;~~;;;;";;;;c;i

11oi-317· 0IU

Vrt IHrlldlvl bride 4 be*oom.
2 both. fomtlv room with fir•
. , _ formot..,lntl torao tlvklg

•

-ton-.

1·801).
·
T o - - for ront.
Cllll14-311.8184.

MON. 1 APRIL 24 •

••••
••••

flll1 NaY

EVENING

-IIT-::1-11_1\__
..;....rr_l-!o-o.-::IIT::-::1.,.-:10 ;.
"Qcwc ' t 1M IV71T Campi••!.
........ M2TTA ~-·.,. ,.
ein• KW Gldortdo. IOMO 4. 11
out· all. 2 3 7 - E.....o. Col ·
........ 101. .
•

lwl;;;= _,.. ft1aa. .....,
bird
o1 011 H -"· Hut~~
11• • ...... Hut~~
Ill• • wwrwoty. 1001- •

..,.,..,a\:'""...,•

•

·
- Col ~14-:Jn.2220 .. :•
10+17•~

PDQia •

~on

up to t121. HldH.- 0310
to o . . .. Rod,_. U21 to
t371. Lomps Ul to l1211.
Din- fiOIMidupto e481.
- d tobto w•tl cholrt Ull to
l711. Dook •1oo up to e37a.
- ··
..,00 ond
up. l r i
.,_.
ca,..._e
w-m•cu
t211onduptot•5.1o..,_
t110. Mltlr
fill
ar twin lit. firm ·~ ond
tl8. Queen llltl t210 • up.
lOng *3110. 4 " ' - - t89.
Gun e. 1 • 10

;o.n.

IIDN

t1111 .
Eortv
lotrd
on
88
poolo.
Huth1hafl~,.... Hugh~

prn. loc:e-

tio ... pot. -·~
, .. m8CIWttwlltr. MUll ..... CIP
1 ·80tJ..41.1018 ... ~8.

AI -

EYANI INTd,...U. Jecllt.

ron-. tlkoggo Appllon-.
UI&gt;I* A,_ Ad . bolide ltono
Croot -ol. 114-446-13118.

VENDING ROUTE
GAI.LPOII All EA

Prl-.•n•

............
- · t_. ,
........&amp; ~-4·-- ,
..,_.,.•••cvciO.,._ lwtq -.u 'nh ne fo,.

Fer Bolo · Con-o Md PI-

The

'

Television
Viewing ·

IUDGIET TAANdttiSION- :
Uhtl • rotrullt ott typoo.
Wanattw • ...,..

1·800-BBa.

2104.

'

.Pomeloy-:-MidtlaPG". OhiO

•

Household Gooda

61

Opportunity

A.l n.w mecNn-.

Monday. April24, 1989

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

B111iness

TH£

,,

.
.
.
.
=
.....

•

· One 1ettar 111• for ._...... In IIIIa 111J1P1e A llllled
fai' the line L'e, X for the two 0'1, etc. Slncle letters,

llll._....udlaa•U..Gfthe wordlarelll
.._,._
__ JI'.eduiQtbeeaW'r a... clfl41md.
CWIFI-IW

·r

QXDE ZTSM VCZWDEEVl TDX
GWX

AEEM

AED

--

REEf

sz

. .,

I•

UEMZ.
PQEN(;I
YH
GWX

�I

'
Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By WIU.IAM C. TROTf
United Press International
SAGAN SAYS UNITE: Scientist Carl Sagan says ifs going to
take an international effort to
save the Earth. "Molecules don't
have passports," he said in an
address ·tn Richmond. Va. "All
the creatures on Earth are in this
together-. We · need a· primary
allegiance to the species and to
planet Earth. Nothing short of
that Is going to solve our
problems.'' Sagan ticked off
' - - - - - - - - - - - -.. problems like the greenhouse

People·
in the news

Resign yourself to fact
natural father has rights

pffect and chlorofluorocarbons
and didn't slop there. "There are
other pro!&gt;lems.'' he said. "Every one of them was made by
people and can be addressed by
people."
MONEY AND OTHER
WEIGHTY MATl'ERS: Gold records~ money and public acclaim
are nice but Dolly Partoa sa)'s
getting her weight under control ·
ranks right up there with the .
greatest accomplishments of her
life.
The 5-(oot·2 Pal'ton has

dropped 40 pounds l!J the past he also meant lor·me to use good
four years and now weighs in at sense wllh II," she says: "And
100 pounds. "The battle I had was that means good business sense.
within myself," the singer told There Is no such thing as !DO
The Nashville Tennessean. much money for somebody that's
"Anybody with a weight problem as poor as we were. I need to have
wlll know exactly what I. mean. money for all the thllljls I want to
When you don't feel gOQd about do lor the whole county and for
yourself, nothing else seems to my famUy."
work right."
MORTON'S . I,MAGE
On another weighty matter, . CHANGE:
The kinder and
Parton says she doesn't mind gentler Morton Downey Jr. says
admitting that she's In show he won't be making any more
business to make a buck. "I bellicose attacks on homosexuals
figure if God gave me this Ia lent

1

tanders

Mostly cloudy tonight. Low In
60s. .Chance of rain 40 ·
.,~·r.omt.
Wednesday, partly
lclo,ody. IDgh In mid 8011. Chapce
30 percent.

•

ANN LANDEitS

.. 1989. I.. Anpl•
Tl•a Syadlale UHI

.'

•

CLEAN-UP OHIO WEEK- This Is Clean Up
Ohio Week. The Meigs County Utter Crew was In
Middleport on Monday when this picture was
lakeD,. The collection crew, under &amp;be supervision
of Harold Brewer, slandlag al &amp;be door ofthe _van,
will he Involved In clean-up projects In all live
villlage&amp; of the coWity. Tuesday Is Pomeroy Day,
Wednseday Is Racine Day, Thursday is Rulland

IILUTTE

RWIY
SHAVE
CREAM

..

-.

...... ...
,

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
·Tlle . position of recreation
director for the General Hartinger Park was estabt~h~ by
ordinance and Roger Williams
was hired ,for the job during
MO.n4A~· D!illt~S. !Jl~lng of 'Mld• -·· dl~porrVttfage·eotrr~tn. •· ·· -~-­
. Acting on recommendation of...J
the Middleport Recreation Com·
m lssion, council gave all three
reqUired readings to the ordinance which not only established
the position or recreation director at a S900 a month salary for
•

m

BODY
I'DWDER

•••

the summer months, bu 1 also · Coucilman Paul Gerard voted
established the position of head against the increase.
life guard at a $4 an hour salary. ·
As pointed out by Mayor Fred
Dulles of the recreation direc- Hoffman, there has been no
tor WIU Include operation of the increase In the rates since 1980
mlnl' golf course, the swimming and last year the cemetery fund
pool, s~hedullng ball games and had to be subsidized QY $7,200. He
supervising all park actlv!l!es. A noted that the decrease in lriter,WUii! definitive ~~-ci'lptionls estori the perpetualciuefunds Is
to be prepared by the Recreation . a factor In th·e overall financial
Com'l"lsslon.
picture of the cemetery
A second reading was given to operation.
an ordinance which would InMayor Hoffman announced
crease burial rates from $150 to that a PUCO public hearing on
$250, and the cost of lots from $300 Columbia Gas Co. rates wlll be
to $400. As on the first reading
Continued on page 10

..

Ohio Power will save $768,000
annually
under
new
ICC
regulation
.
.

CIIIICIIUIED

...

I.AUTIVE

Ohio Power Co. will save
$768,000 or more aimually In coal
transportation costs under a new
Interstate Commerce Commission tiCC) rule that Is expected to
lower the future cost or shipping
coal to power plants.
Charles Heller, president of
Ohio Power, said the savings will
result because railroads must
now subt racl savings from pro·
ductlvlty lmporovements when
calculating annual Increases In
rates due to inflation.
Heller noted that such fOture
savings will be passed on to Ohio
Power customers through semi·
annual .changes in the fuel
adjustment. clause In Ohio Power's present rates with regula·
tory ·aP.proval.
"This Is a change we've been
·seeking for some !lme because
we are to some degree a captive
rail shipper," Heller said. "More
than 50 percent ol the coal burned
by the American Electric Power

RIIESSE

SIIAMI'IIII DR
-Ctll&amp;l. .
11 Ol.

SAVINGS EVERYDAY ON
COCA-COLA .PRODUC'IS
AT Rm AID

2 UTER BOTTU

99~

System Is moved by raiL In many
cases, we have no choice but to
ship by ·rail."
''The important point is these
savings are cumulative," he
added. "As a result, we expect
the benefit to lower rail costs to
grow over the years."
Heller said American Electric
Power's campafgn to get relief
for captive rail shippers Is
another example of the com.
pany's effort to control every
cost of providing electric service.
Ohio Power Is . an AEP
subsidiary.
Heller gave credit to Clnclnnatl Congressman Thomas A.
Luken for hls outstanding leadershiP.., diligence and aggressive
actions in seeking the change to
benefit the coal Industry and
consumer.
"Congressman Luken made a
personal commitment to seeking
this change," Heller said. "In hls
position as chairman of the

House.Energy Committee's Sub·
committee on Transportation, ·
Congressman Luken guided and
supported legislation In the congress on behalf of the captive rail
shippers. This legislation and
Congressman Luken's dedica·
tlon in this effort haq much to do
with this very favorable · ICC
decision."
He added that Senator John D.
Rockefeller IV, D-W.Va., was a
leader on the Senate side In
seeking more equitable coal
transportation rates for the cap·
live rail shippers.
''Shipping charges are a stanlf·
!cant expense," Heller added . .
"This change alone will result In
a $2.4 mllllon savings across the
American Electric Power Sys.
tern. We appreciate the support
of Representative Luken and
Senator Rockefeller In helping to
achieve this savings lor our

customers."

Durable orders
up ·i n March

HfD'S

Pop Corn
4.5 OZ. lAG

79C
•
•

RilE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
306 UST MAll STIED
, OliO

'

PHAIUCY PIOIIE: 992-2586
.'

.

NEW PUCO CHIEF - Gover110r Richard Ce~te 1wears In .
Jolynn Barry Butler of GaiUpolla u &amp;lie cllalmtlll ,of tile
Public UtUitlea Commlllalon of Ohio, Monday mornlnJ Ia
Colambus. ( UPI)
'

' .
(.

'

Day, and Friday Is Syracuse Day. Many
volunteers, lncludlns- Girl and Boy Scouta. f·H
clubs, neighborhood groups, and Individual
clllzens are assisting In the effort to cleu up
Meigs Couaty. Kenay Wlgglu, director of the
Meigs County Utter Control Program, wearing a
white cap, Is standing ID back.

Williams .named Park
•
recreatlon director

. SIIDWER

EX·LAX

#

'

1 Section. 10 Paget

April 26, 1989

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newl!peper

Property owner says··
she won't comply with
Pomeroy ordUtan

'

WIC program
pickups set

..

Pick 4
7695

••

water, a combination of water nitpick untlllt blows over."
By Untied Press International
from Quincy Bay and seaweed,
The controversy over Dad's
Pu_pples make freak call to 911
tiNCOLN, Neb. tUPI) - A was In poor las te and did not has been mounting steadily since
dispatcher taking an emergency result in the healthy promotion of the coffee shop opened in mld·
February In a small shopping
911 call was puzzled when the tourism.
Technically, the lone gift shop plaza off Main Street. Finally,
caller said nothing but only
selling the product was In v)ola- last week, opponents gave bo·
growled.
tlon
of a regulation requiring rough council a petition with
Dlspalchers traced the call to a
approval of all ,ltems 1,100 signatures protesting the
Massport
; house and when pollct- arrjved,
·
sold
as
.
concessions.
McAlpine coffee shop's presence· in the
they found a snarling 2·year,old
said
the
giltshop
promptly
pulled community.
' pit bull named Sheeba and two
the
harbor
.water
and
replaced
It
Borough Administrator Tony
· puppies, Lt. Lyle Roberts said.
with
another
product.
·one of the puppies had the
Romeo said the borough decided
But would Massport have ap- to cite Dad's after advertisetelephone receiver In Its mouth.
"There were no humans in the proved the product In the first ments began appearing In a
place?
Scranton newspaper, promising
bouse," Roberts said.
"No," says McAlpine. "We customers an "all-day blast"
Dusty Blankenship, owner of
the dogs, said Sheeba' s puppies, cannot allow a concession to have with the likes of "Topless KimVlnnle and Kruger, were teP. a potentially negative Impact on berly" and "Topless Colleen."
Romeo said the Issue was not
thlng. They had chewed on other (businesses) . For Instance,
furniture but never before bo- a local seafood restaurant main- nUllity or obscenity but Whether
. thered the push-button telephone tains a fresh fish bar at the the coffee shop provides enter·
talnment ' and , ·t hus requires a
that he left on a cushion on the airport.
"There a liabl'lity Issues, too," zoning exception.
floor.
Blankenship said a police of· said McAlpine. "What If some- Elderly woman just says 'no' to ·
fleer told hlm that boisterous one opened It up and drank it? robber
TACOMA, Wash. (UPI) - A
play by the pups resulted In a• Someone's cute gimmick might
"freak accident" Tuesday in not be cute to someone else. We 76-year-old woman walking to
which the 911 buttons on the are a gateway for Boston and are the beauty shop was ac~osted by
promoting tourism."
a man who threatened to shoot
phone were pushed.
Irving Kravetz, a retired truck her If she didn't hand over all her
Blankenship said he had stern
words for the canine driver, says he Is not getting rich money, but she told him to forget
on hls idea, but he is having fun. It, poll~ reports said Sunday.
perpetrators.
"It started as a Joke between
•'I told them not to make prank
Tacoma police reported the
phone calls to . the· cops any- my wife, Selma, and me," says woman, whose name was not
Kravetz, 64, who S&amp;Y.S he got the released, not only refused the
-more," he said.
Idea when George Bush llsed the threats of a would-be robber, but
Translenl rescued from Inside polluted harbor as an Issue also gave officers a description of
·against Democratic Gov. MI- the man that was good enough for
garbage lruck
AUSTIN, Texas (UP!) - A chael Dukak Is . In last ..year's them to find and arrest him.
transient was tossed . into · a presidential election.
Pollee said Saturday's Incident
"We waited untl~ after the began when the woman got off a
garbage truck and remained
there Thursday until a passing election because we did not want bus near Wright Park in down·
'pollee officer heard the man's to slap Dukakis," said Kravetz. town Tacoma and headed for her
''The harbor's been polluted for appointment at a beauty salon.
cries from beneathll.the com·
300
years, I eat· the fish out of II.
pacted trash, au thorlftes said.
But before she got very far,
pollee said, she was accosted by a
The man, who apparently was I'm not affrald of it."
Kravetz said when he gets an man less than half her age who
sleeping in a dumpster when it
was emptied Into the truck, was order he goes down to the harbor said, "Give me all your money.
pulled out of the trash unharmed and rms the bottles with harbor I've got a gun and I'll shoot you If
and taken to a shelter for the water, throws In a little seaweed you don't." ·
homeless, said Raymond Cole· and seals the container. Kravetz
The woman told the robber to
man, · a lire depa.rtment . says It reta,lls for S3 or S4 in a few forget it, pollee said. All she had
locations, Including · Quincy In he'r purse, she said, was the $7
··dispatcher.
Market, a posh shopping area for her hair appointment and she
The incident was re110rted
nea'r City Jlall.
wasn't going to give it up. .
about 2:27a.m., when the officer
The man followed her for a
pulled up next to the truck, Cheap &amp;brils at $2 a cup?
couple
of minutes, but finally
DICKSON CITY, Pa. (UPI) collecting garbage downtown,
gave
up
with the warning, "Next
The man who owns Dad's Coffee
Coleman said.
time
you'd
~Iter have more
"He heard yelling from inside Shop Insists that a topless waimoney
or
I'll
shoot
you," she told
the garbage truck," said tress serving coffee and pie Is not
entertainment, but local officials officers.
Coleman.
The woman .r eached her
The officer ordered the truck to disagree and want Tom Wasley
beauty
shop and called police,
pull over and called In the to cover hls staff up.
and
a
shorl
time later officers
One thing Is certain: At two
firefighters and paramedics.
arrested
a
.
35-year-old
man tind
"They climbed down Into the bucks lor a styrofoam cup of
took
him
to
Jail.
·
.
garbage and removed some of coffee, a visit to Dad's hardly
The
man,
whose
name
has
not
the debris that was compacted on qual ifles as a cheap tlirlll.
been releal4!d, reportedly told
orttclals In Dickson City, a
top of'blrn and dug hlm out," said
Lackawanna County borough of the arresting . officers, "I only
Coleman.
7,000, say bare-breasted wai· asked her for a couple of bucks
and J.dldn't use no gun."
8&amp;a&amp;e liMe sale of 1Ift water tresses are entertainment, and
have
cited
Wasley
for
a
zoniDg
~
.
BOSTON (UPI) - You can't violation and given him until
drink It, you shouldn't swim In it Friday to either apply for ·a
and DOW you ~an't even sell it- special excepUoD or be subject to
a $500-a-clay flue.
In at leut one place.
May WIC plclnlp data have
Wasley said the citation Ia
Tbe l&amp;le of water from Bolton
been anno~ · by the Melp
Harbor, packqed in 5-ounce bueleas and will chaQtnge It In
County HealtliJu Department.
·
bottlel u a joke Jltl, hu been coun. ·
• They are 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3
''My glril aren't danclnc or
llullld trOIII Logan lnterliB·
P·lll· on April '11 and 28, aad May
UDaaJ Airport, otflclala ll&amp;id what"er It Ia !boroueh officials J 8, 15 aud 22, qlllf' bolln, as
think conslihatft eatertaln·
Tllui'IIIIY.
makeup d.-tea. · Sllet 4atea.
'rerwa ~.a apokelwo- metlt," Waalll)r araued• "Tbey accordiDg to QDrllaa Rltrlt1 ADP
CoordlliBtOI'. are ..., •llld 30, 9
IIWIIor die M:dt!IMIII Pon serve coffee. It' 1 a political thing.
Aulbority, ..ld
.ale of harbor They know I'm IIJal, bul they'll to 11 a.m. ud 1 to 3 p.m. I'

... ,

' ..
Indians lo8e
Page 3

;,_._-Quirks. in the· news---

- .....

Pick3
\ 987

Ann

Dear Ann Landers: My wife and I
What is the best thing to do? Crnt . . SJndlc*
Jt;lve been mar·ried for five years. TORN IN RESEDA, CALIF.
We get along pretty well, but this
DEAR T IN RESEDA: Accept the
fact that ,this man is going to be in
last year 1didn 'rtreat her as nicely
as 1 should have. There was no
the picture whether you like it or it illegal for me to let Paul stay in
not. He could sue for visiting rights my house and receive his own
physical ab.use or anything like
that. I just didn't give her the love and probably get them. If you Medicare and welfare benefits?
allow him to support the child, Please check this out for me. I need
and attention she needed.
however, you are going to give him to know soon. Thanks for helpi_ng,
· We separated in September and
stayed apart until Thanksgiving. an even stronger position. I recom· Ami.- WORRIED IN NEW ORLE·
We separated because my ·wife had
· AN.S
mend that you not do this.
an affair and became pregnant. She
In my opinion, the best course of
DEAR W.: We spoke to the Social
was feeling a lot of guilt and action would be for you and your Security office in New Orieans.
decided to leave.
wifct. to stay together and be gra· (They also handle disabilitY cases.)
I love my wife very much and we cioll5 about the father's visiting We were told that your fortner
'are back together again. I have privileges. I strongly suggest that husband can live with you and. it
forgiven her for seeing another you two get counseling because will not interfere with his benefits.
man, and 1 agreed to accept the · there are bound to be some serious
If you have any questions, call
baby and raise it as my ·own. The problems and you will need to Social Security. They were extremeproblem now is that the other man know how to deal with them. Good ly cooperative.
.
is very excited about becoming a luck to all of you.
'
DEAR READERS: Here are a
father. He wants to support the
Dear Ann Landers: I was married
couple
of thoughts worth consider·
child and have a role in raising it.
to "Paul'' for 18 years. He was
ing:
. My wife cannot make up her mentally ill for 10 of those years. He
(I) Courtesy is cheap. Use it
mind about ¥~hat she wants to do. could not hold a job, so I had to
freely.
She says she wants ·ro stay married work hard to support him and our
(2) It is nice to be important, but
to me, but she doesn't feel it is right child.
to take the child away from its
Unfortunately. the child inherit· it is more important to be nice.
natural father.
ed Paul's mental illness and I found
What are rhr signs of alcoholism?
I have told her that if she wants a . it impossible to care for two sick How can you rei/ if someone you love
divorce. I will give her one. but if people sd I divorced him.
is an alroholic? "Alcoholism: How to
she would like t\) stay married to
Paul is now homeless because no f?ecognize It, How to Deal Wirh /r,
me, she must make it clear to the one wants to share living space with How to Conquer li" will give you the
other man that he cannot be in the him. I can understand this perfectly answers. To rrctive a ropy, send $3
picture. I don 't see how I can be an because he is ex.tremcly difficult'to and a self-addressed, stamped busi·
·
authority f~gure if another man have around.
ness-si.!e envelope (45 rt!nts IJO$tage)
supports my child and is hanging
I would li~e to help. him, but I to Ann Landers, P.O. Box JJ561, Chidon't want to remarry this man. Is cago, Ill. 60t}J r:&lt;J562.
around our -house.
' '

......

Ohio Lottery

Padres
Phlls wib·

and says his hostile· attitude In
the past develope\1 after a doctor
abused hlm when he was ,12.
Downey, an Interview with
KPIX·TV In San Francisco, says
he started undergoing counseling
seven months ago. "I won't make
a blanket indictment of any
group ever again In my life," said
Downey, whose brother has
AIDS. "1. want to get some
professional help to understand
why· I was reacting to certain
situations the way r did."

-~-----

WASHINGTON !UPI)- Sales
of aircraft pushed up new orders
for manufactilred durable goods
0.8 percent or $1 billion In March,
the Commerce Department said
Tuesday.
Orders for durable goods de·
cllned 2.8 percent last month
when· excluding transportation
orders and dipped 1.2 percent
when excluding orders by the
Defense Deparlment.
DUrable goods are big ticket
items, designed to last several
years.
The overall Increase In March
followed declines of 3.6 percentln
February and 2.8 percent In
January, the department said.
Durable orders last month totaled $12•.9 biiHon.
Transportation orl!ers jumped
10.4 percent to $36.8 billion wit~
the huge Increase In aircraft
orders offsetting a decline In
motor vehicles. Noll-electrical
machinery orders rose 1.4 per·
cent to ~.1 billion, the depart·
ment said.

By NANCY'YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
''I won't comply with that
ordinance, so if you want to lock
me up tonight, go ahead,"
Pomeroy resident Dottle Turner
stated firmly at Monday's night's
special meeting of Pomeroy
Vlllage Council.
"I think we can accomplish all
this without going that route,"
answered Councilman Bruce
Reed. "That's why we had this
long executive session. We came
to an agreement here that would
be benefic a! to all of us," he
added.
·
''It may be beneficial to you if I
file all these stupid papers. but
you know .yourself that I'm doing
this work according-to the Army
Corps of Engineers' plans, and
the Corps knows much more than
any or you people, a bout fixing
riverbanks, regardless of what
you say,'' Turner said.
That was thetoneoflastnlght's
special council session which
was called to discuss Turner's
plans to repair a slip and
construct a dock on her river· ·
bank property along .East Main
''St. In the village.
·
Turner was asked at last
Monday's regular &lt;councll sE'sslon to postpo,rie plans forexcava·
lion of the property while council
researched. the situation.
However, Turner refused to
postpone the work because she
felt since she had a permit from
the Arrny Corps of Engineers to
. do the work accordlqg to corps'
specifications, that she was
within her rights to start the
repairs.
· When dozer work commenced
this past Saturday, Turner. and
property co-owner, Jimm:t Cain,
were served with arrest war·
rants lor failure to comply with
Pomeroy's new historical preser·
vat ion ordinance. The two are to
appear In Pomeroy Mayor's
Court tontaht on the charge. ·
. However, In lastnight 'sspeclal
Council session, failure to
comply with the village's flood·
plain ordinance was brought to
light.
After a one and· one-half hour
executive session, Turner and
Cain were invited to return to
open session of council. Council·
man Bruce Reed, as spokesper-

QUESTIONS COUNCIL'S AcriON - Pomeroy resident DotUe
Tumer, shown at Monday night's special session of Pomeroy
. VIllage Council, asks why all resldenls In the ylllage are Dot being
made to comply with the same ordhumces she's belag made to
comply with. Councilman Brian Shank Is also plclured.
son, attempted to explain council's position on the matter.
According to Reed, by going
ahead with the excavation on her
property without having filed an
elevation certificate and an application to develop within the
floodplain, Turner violated the
flood plain ordinance and must
be cited for !allure to comply. In
the meantime however, Reed
said that council would allow the
repairs to the slip on the bank to
be · completed, since dirt has
already been moved and Council

is afraid that this soil will quickly
erode If work Is not finished right
away.
Council also asked Turner for a
copy or her corps' permit for
their file.
Mayor Richard Seyler attemp·
ted to give Turner the necessary
flood plain permits but Turner
refused to accept them.
"We wanted to be able to sit
down and talk and settle this
tonight," responded Councilman
Reed. "Our concern is to ensure
Continued on page 10

Heat records

fall in South
By United Press lnlernatlonal
Thunderstorms ripped through
portions of Wisconsin early Tues·
day and a severe thunderstorm
watch was in effect for parts of
the Great Lakes region. ,
Thunderstorm winds downed
trees near New Giarus. Wls. , and
dlme·slze hail pounded southeastern Minnesota and southern Wisconsin. No Injuries or
property damage was reported.
The severe thunderstorm
watch covered portions of northern Illinois, a small part of
northwestern Indiana and portions or southern Lake Michigan.
Elsewhere, several cities and
town~ broke or tied records for
high temperatures Monday.
They Included AmarUto, Texas,
(91 l; Colorado Springs, Colo.,
(79); Concordia. Xan., (98), DH
Moines. Iowa, (89); Dodge City,
Kan. (98); Fort Smith, Ark.,
(90); Goodland, Kan., (89); Har·
rison, Ark., (89); Kansas City,
Mo., (90); Lamoni, Iowa, (89);
Lincoln, Neb., (94); Omaha,
Neb. (92); Ottumwa, Iowa, (88);
Pueblo, Colo., (89); St Joaeph,
Mo., (92); St Loul.s (90) ;. Spring·
field, Mo., (86); Topeka, Kan ..
(94) and Wlcblta, Kan., 90.
• However, a now fell Monday
over Northern California, south·
ern Oregon a_nd New Hampshire.

•

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lmprovelllllllla 111 Ute '-'acb faaliiiJ.

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