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'
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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Middleport. Ohio
•

•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA '

arb .
~~ ~ .......:..-.,..,._c::l;=o

RO}IERT L. WINGET!'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Manager

PAT WIOTEHEAD
Asslsta,it Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
•
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words tong. All letters are subject to edltlng and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be J&gt;Ubllshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Gerald Ford's
transformation

'

By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON tUPit - Revisionist historians - who made
Thomas Jefferson into a rapacious slave-owner and Harry Truman ·
an American giant- are now at work on Gerald R. Ford.
If the process that was demonstrated at a recent Hofstra University
conference on the Ford presidency continues ..we may soon see Ford's
face added to Mount Rushmore.
Ford. heaven's gift to political cartoonists. is being transformed by
historians and former government officials - · Including himselffrom a unelected hapless.kluti who always managed to hit his head on
the helicopter door Into a strong-minded. decisive chief executive
who restored the nation after the Nixon nightmare.
His most controversial action remains the· pardon of Richard
Nixon. his first major decision after being thrust lniOJ&gt;OWer In August
1974. Ford explained the reasoning to the Hofstra University
conference of scholars. journalists and former government officials:
He said that 25 percent of hls time In hls first month In office ~as
spent in responding to questions about Nixon. and wheth~r he would
be brought to trial. It was disiractlng him and the nation from more
important business.
The clincht•r was a news conference in September 1974 when 30
percent of the questions dealt with Nixon and the ·possl·biltty of a
pardon. Ford then decided that he had to put the.issue behind him. The
decision was kept so secret that Jerald terHorst. his press secretary
who resigned over the issue·. was not Informed In advancesohew~d
not havC' to l.ie about it if pressel;l by reporters.
His approval rating In the oplnfon polls plummeted, but the Nixon
issue did recede. At the Hofstra conference. an Informal show of
hands after a heavily attended panel of experts discussed the issue.
showed 60 percent of the audience opposed the granting of the pardon
.
·
and 40 percent favoring it.
The lowest point in his presidency? He reeailed. voice choking with
emotion 15 years later. that the worst moment in personal terms was
when a docfor at Bethesda· Naval Hospital called to Inform him on
Sept. 8. 1974. that the suspicious lui)'lp In Betty Ford's breast was
malignant and Immediate surgery was required ..
In public terms. he remembHcd the anguishing moment watching
on te·tevislon as the hellc\)pters on the roof of the U.S. Embassy In
Saigon e\'acuated the last Americans from Vietnam.
"It had to be done and the nation sighed with relief," he recalled.
"But president or not, I 4o not like to see the American flag l?wered
anywhere, any timr. except In a peaceful sunset. Heallng .our land
was not done without profound personal pain."
·
·But Ford -who looks tanned and sUm and 15 years younger than
his 76 years- prefers to remember the triumphs. and they seemed to
grow with the telling at the conference on the F.ord.presldency.
Although hls WIN tWhlp Inflation Now~ campaign Is remembered
by most social scientists as a semi-humorous example of a
pollt.ltiall's ineffectual !ISe of publlc relations to tackle a serious
economic problem. · Ford recalls It differently.
' 'In the tong haul. as I look back on lt. my firm economic course,
Including close cooperation with the venerable chairman of the
Federal Reserve. Arthur Burns. may well have been my best
.
• accomplishment as president."
He did reduce inflation .from 12 percent to under 5 percent In hls 30
months in office and the prime Interest rate from 12 percent to 6.25
percent. But some of the austerity measures he insisted on, iJ1cluding
some sharp defense cuts, were merelydf1ferred rather than canceled,
and inflation came roaring back.
Asked at a meeting with high school students how he would like to be
remembered. Ford forgot the bragging and answered simply, "As a
nice person who worked at his job and who left the White House better
'
than he found it."

Berry's World

··~

..

Paga 2-The Deily Sulfn.. '
.
Pomeloy Middlaport. Ohio
.
····Tuaadey, Aprl26, 1989
'

I '

Navy reluetant to \give crash details ·.
WASHINGTON - Marilyn
Ginsberg has been waiting for
two years to bury her husband.
Than~ to the secrecy of the U.S.
Navy, she may never put to rest
the mystery of his death.
Capt. Daniel'Ginsberg was one
of the Navy's esteemed "Top
Guns." On May 20, 1987, his F-18
jet crashed Into the Sierra
Nevada Mountains In California
on a routine training flight. The
Navy claimed It spent 1,388 flight
hours searching tor the wrecl&lt;·
age. Then It gave up.
But Marilyn Ginsberg, the
·petite window with two toddlers,
wouldn't give up. The more she
read of the Navy's search records, the more ·hollow they
sounded and she grew determined to rind the plane herself.
A year after the accident she
did, and It
hours.
Using the same
the Navy had, Mrs.
reward posters and

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

raneer statllnis, at iran heads
and In sheriffs' offices. With
reluctant help from the military,
she Initiated a search. On June . more .than a dozen people privy to
18, 1988, after a half-day bike, a
the crash and the search. We
search team found the plane ea,t found convincing evidence that
of Yosemite National Park near the Navy may have known
the Nevada border.
exactly where the plane was, and
Flndlna the plane so easily decided to leave It there.
raised far more questions !han It
The plane crashed on a ridge
answered for Mrs. Ginsberg and behind Green Creek Canyon. The
the family of the dead co-pUot, Navy records show that no
Lt. Michael Mueller. Why hadn't search aircraft were near the
the 'Navy spotted It? Was the canyon on the day of the crash.
Navy hiding somethlnJ? Why Yet a hiker and a forestry worker
would a pUot, respected for his swear they saw Navy planes fly
caution, who had flown the 1986 In and out of the canyon just
bombing raid on Libya, crash on ' hours after the crash. Adeputy at
a routine !light across a nearby sheriff's department
California?
saw a helicopter equipped to pick
The Penta&amp;oil.· has locked the up wreckage a couple of days·
records of the ci'as.h In I(Yf.Ult for after the adcldent..
top secret inaterlill and will only
A hiker reported an "explosion'
• near the crash site and the
release a sanitized version of Its
last radar reading from the F-18
conclusions.
Our assQCiate Jim Lynch pored was less than three mUes from
over documents and Interviewed the crash site. But the Navy

11\eR@GoeS .

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CARS WILL Be FOWE~ReD

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To C~ATe FUSION.

focused Its search 30 miles away
on Glass Mountain. The Navy
stuck to the Glass Mountain
theory, even to the poiDt of
putting It on Capt. Ginsberg's
death certificate.
A Navy spokesman told us the
official search was thorough and
that the wreckage could not be
seen from the al~.
The Navy should thank Mrs.
Ginsberg. Untll she found the
F ·18, It was the only mUitary jet
lost Inside the United Sta.t es In
the past 10 years.
If the Navy found the plane,
why was If kept a secret? It may
have somethlna to do with
chronic mechaniCal problems In
F-18s, Including sporadic engine
fires. Three more F -18s crashed
after Capt. Ginsberg's lll·fated
fllaht. Five months after his
death the Navy shelved half of
the Pacific Fleet'.s F -J8s for work
on engines with more than 800
hours flying time. One of Capt.
Glrlsberg's engines had 1,482
hours, the other 955 hours.
Officially, !he Navy says an F-18
fire has never killed anyone.
A top Navy official, who asked
not to be identified, told us Capt.
Glnsberb made a dumb mistake
and dipped down outofthecloUds
for better visibility. That expla·
nation bothers ;lnother F -18 pUot
who had flown with Capt. Ginsberg for more than 100 hours and
called him, "real cautious."
The Navy Is still Identifying
remains taken from the rubble.
The Ginsbergs and the Muellers
hope to have It all sorted out by
May 20 so they cal) bury their
men on the second anniversary of
the crash.
''It bothers me to feel I have~
been Ued to," Mrs. Ginsberg told
us. "I want toknowwhy.Iguessi
feel it's going to~elp with the
grieving process. Until I have
answers I don't know what I'm
dealing with."

'

Today in ·history
BJ Ualled Pre. JaternalleMI
Today II Tuesday, AprO 25, tile 115th day of 19119 with 250 to follow.
The moon II wanlag, movtna toward Its last quarter.
"
The mornllle star 11 saturn.
.
The evnbli stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
, TbotM! bllra on thll date are under tbe sign of Taurus. They Include
Oliver CromWII, lord protector of England, In 1599, Guglielmo
' . Marce~nl,
lnwntor of the radio telegraph, In 1874, pioneer broadcast
Jounlalllt Ednrd R. Murrow In 1908, singer Ella Fitzgerald 1111918
(aae n1, actor AI Paclno In 1940 (age 49), and sctress Talla Shire In
1946 &lt;aae t3~.
J

'

Phi~

HERR TRIPLES - The PhiUies• Tom Herr slides salely Into
third with a triple as Aslres third baseman Ken Caminld leaps out
of the W"-V,wilh a late throw.!a the first lnnlnr of of Monday's game
In Houston. The Phlllles won 8-4. ( UPI~
.
.

Scoreboard ...
.........

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6'":!

Cable companies tune in a D}O~opoly
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark.
(NEA~ - This community Is
home to the University of Arkansas and Its vaunted Razorback
football team, but some local
residents say the real pigs in'
town are the operators of the
local cable television system.
At a public hearing late last
year, one tyJ&gt;lcally embittered
Warner Cable customer complalned that "its service Is pooF,
Its selection meager, Its prices
exorbitant, Its technology arc h a I c and its attItude
overbearing."
Another resident of this
northwestern Aiikansas com·
munlty called for a boycott of the
cable company while a third
compared It with the robber
barons of an earlier era.
"Warner Gets Miserable Ratlngs From Public," proclaimed a
headline In the local newspaper
the following day. "It's an
expioslve ·s ituation," explained
one municipal official.
The hostility toward the cable
company here Is matched In
other communities throughout

the nation, where customers
comphiln that arrogant cable
operators regularly Increase prl·
ces but seldom respond to tetephone inquires and complaints In
a timely manner.
Characterizing thecablelndus·
try as an "unregulated manopoly," a municipal official In
Dubuque, Iowa, says "consu·
mers too often have no choice but
to pay the price and tolerate bad
service" while the city government Is powerless to mandate
reforms.
·
Polltlcians In · Charleston,
W.Va., complain that the cable
company serving their city,
which had a pre-tax profit
margin of more than 36 percent
last year, then greedily increased Its rates for basic
service by 22 percent early this
year.
The General Accounting Office
found that251.a rgecablecompanles In Ohio Increased their basic
serylce rates an average of 27
percent during a recent two-year
period. Attorneys general In at
least five states are probing

alleged anti-competitive practl·
ces In the Industry.
When a Senate subcommittee
held hearings on the topic ea~u,er
this month, its chairman, sen.
The lack of competition be·
Howard Metzenbaum, D-@111o, came apparent to municipal
cited government figures that offlcals In Fayetteville late last
showed the cost of cable service year, when they solicited 28 other
In recent years "Increased at a cable providers as possible sucgreater rate ihan any other cessors to Warner. Not one firm
commodity or service in the displayed any real Interest In
entire United States."
bidding for the franchise, al·
Initially viewed as merely a though only nine responded.negameans of bringing broadcast lively. The others did not even
signals to remote rural. areas, reply to the offer.
ca.b letelevlslonnowlsubiqultous · State Sen, David ·Malope, a
and lucrative. It Is available to90 Democrat who represents Fay&lt;1t·
percent of the nation's house- teyllle and sponsored the first
holds, with 60 percent of those . , bill, says he hoped the measures
potential customers paying to might at least "give the city a
receive it. Gross revenues last little more leverage in dealing
year reacbep $14 billion.
with the cable company."
Economic concentration has
But taktna over cable operabeen Increasing In the Industry, tlons remains a daunting task
with the six largest companies few local governments are 'wit·
controlling more than one-third ling fa attempt. Malone notes
of the business. Although there that "there's been all kinds of
are · approximately 8,000 cable citizen outcry .... about the
systems throughout the country, outdated, outmoded system" In
competition exists In only about , Fayettevllie - bl\t . little has
40 of those markets.
chanll:ed.

UPISpecla! Report
Nationally the number of afterFAYETTEVU.LE, N.C. (UPI)
noon newspapers Is declining,
-The Fayetteville Observer has but In Nor!h Carolina those
a unique nicheln'North Carolina. numbers are growing - In rural
It Is the only afternoon dally In a
areas.
two-newspaper town to hold a
In 1977, there were 1,762
commanding l&lt;;'ad in circulation. newspapers nationwide, lnclud·
The key Is local coverage, say~ lng 1,435 afternoon dallies. By
1987, total newspapers dipped 6
Managlng Editor Bob Wilson.
"How
do
we
~eep circulation
percent to 1,657 while afternoon
•
up." he asks. "By flghling like editions plunged 17 percent to
helL We're aware of the trends of 1,188.
PM newspapers everywhere.
But In North Carolina dally
The potential for growth Is papers grew from 51 dallles with
stronger morning than after- 41 PMs In 1977, to 54 dallies with
noon. but we are trying to cover 43 PMs In 1987, a figure that
Fayetteville and Cumberland remains constant In 1989. That's
County better than everyone a6percentlncreaselnallpapers
else."
and a 4.6 percent gain for PMs.
Wilson's newspaper has 46,242
What makes for a vital afterdally readers compared with noon newspaper? Publishers
25,&amp;78 for the morning Fayette- agree with Wilson - local
ville Times. In most North coverage pure and !lfmple.
Bar t Adams, publisher of The
Carollna cities there Is only one
local newspaper.
Dally Record of Dunn, said his
But In Asheville, Durham, afternoon paper makes an effort
. Raleigh and Fayetteville, read· to mehtlon every big national
ers have a choice. Only In story - prlmarl)y In brief
Fayetteville, home to the Army's packages, but local news Is the
' Fort Bragg mllllary base, do key to his newspaper's success.
they ch001e the afternoon paper.
"We do an awfUl lot of wrltlne
"Strong PM newapapers are for scrapbookl," be aid. ''We do
traditionally found In blue-collar not print much wire copy. we
markets/' explaiDI Jack Glar- want local - If It 11 not local, we
row, marketlne dln!ctor for bo!h · are not lntel'elted. We keep It
The Fayetteville Oblerver and local and It keepa ua aolna. OUr
The Fayetteville nmes.
) readera c111 aet national news
. ''For thfO!WOrklng man our PM anyWhere...
,
newspaper Is somethll" he can
Stephen Woody, publllher of
read at the end of the work day " The Dally alld SUnday Herald of
Glarrow said. •'When they IFo~t Roanoke Rap.._ aa1c1 hla paper
"""
Brara soldiers) hit the field experienced i 8 percent clrcula·
dreued for troopexercl-.lhey tlon lll'IIWih In the put year.
don't have the opportunity to pt
''We're a paper more attuned
Involved In a morning paper." . 'to What our community WilliS to

San FriUidlK'fl (0. Rellln110n 0-1) ail St.
Lo11h• CHelnkel .. l ),ll: 35 p.m.
"' e~Q''I.I Gamft'.
IAN Allll'fi" ~ Chl~ap
Saa IHe.. :11 Plll.flh, nl•hl
i\Uanta a1 New \'ork, nlrohi

Tu~IQ''II G11m~

see In a local newsj&gt;aper and
what they want to see Is local
Greensboro, Winston-Salem and
t\ews," he said. Weare refrlgeraCharlotte have shut down their
tor journalism -by that I mean
afternoon daiUes.
you see something In The Herald
and you , stick It on the
Publisher Rolfe NeW says no
one ever gave a serious thought
refrigerator."
.
k
in h 1d Ch 1o N
To Woody, local coverage Is a
tQ eep . g t e 0
ar tte ews
and closing Its morning competi11
b
k
sacred .mission that rea s a
tor, The Charlotte Observer,
In
the commandmentsA taught
ft
Ins lead, Both papers were owned
journaliSm schools. t a ernoon by Knlght·Ridder.
dallies, he says, It Is just plain
1
.Although closing afternoon
l
wrong to stick to an .ed ct aga nst
newspapers In two-paper cities
running pictures of ribbOn
may make economic sense. Ills a
cuttings.
mixed blessing.
''This Isn't Raleigh's Research
Jim Laughren, state editor of
Triangle, where people are tranthe Winston-Salem ,fournal and
sient,"Woodysald. "Our people fonner city edltur of the now·
live here, they go to high school
here, they work here, they raise defunct Sentinel, says, ''T~e
d he dl h
blgaest gain hal been that when a
their kids bere an t Y e ere. . big story breaks, we now have
"We go local first, local sethe resources to ·tum loose on 11 •
cond, local third and our fourth
holce 11
But he acjds having only one
c
r.eg1ona1· If !here Is newspa-""'
a day means readers
anythiDg left over, we'll go
I''"
national," he said.
have' to walt for late-breaking
Chester Mlddlettworth, who
city loses' because it is 24
manages 38 Roy Park publica·
ttoDIID North CaroUna, said his hours before a newspaper ca~
newapapera also focua on the tell them what's happened," said
local ce~rnnnlnlties, frlllll runnlnJ Laughren.
achlloliiMIIUitobeiDgtllewatchThat was the case last July,
dop of tllelr commualtles.
when a gunman began ambullh·
"If we dldll't baw a dally lq motorl!lts on a quiet WIDBton·
I6J'YI the 1 al
Salem street. The ambush
paper ·
oc commun· atarted ahortly before mldnJ&amp;ht
lty, yauwau beamazedatwbat and when 11 ended, four people
local aowrmnenta and local
bureaucrats would pt away were dead and alx, lnclucllna the
with," be said. ''We keep !hem aunman. wounded.
straight and lt'a great to be~ part
Between the time the shootlnp
of that."
•
.
atllrted and the time allblcrlbera
B
bl Illes th let
received the news In !hetr local
ut In !he ac
• ep ure paper, 30 hours had passed. For
Is dramatically differ eDt with
all of that time, tbe 'story
afternoon newspapers taklq a
belonged to radio and telPVI!IIon.
'drubbing. Over r~ past d~ade
~

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·

"OAT BRAN hO(S d'oeuvres!?"

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
Rob Deer felt an obligation to
the struggling Brewers, and
handled his du Ues with enough
power to give Milwaukee a
last-gasp victory.
Deer slammed a dramatic
two-run homer with twooutln the
bottom of the ninth Inning, giving
the Brewers a 5-4 come-frombehind victory over the M!nnesola Twins.
"In this situation, when we're
not playing good, It has to take
something from someone to
hopefully pick us up," said Deer,
who struck out three times and
popped up In his flrstfour at-bats.
''I had to do something to get us
back."
The victory was especially
sweet for the Brewers, who had
lost two games over the weekend
to Detroit.
Milwaukee, which gave up two
runs In the top of the ninth to fall
behind 4-3, began Its rally In the

''

~

Local coverag~ key to afternpon survival
June Preston

•

Brewers rally, edge Twins; Indians lose

......

•

The Daily

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PhUu.df'lph611 :U Plltllllu ra:h. 11:115 p.m. •
Reston dl Montn&gt;ld, i : 3, p.m .

Rio's Rambo breaks
school discus record

•

A new school record In track
and field was set Saturday at
Stanley L. Evans Field when Rio
Grande's Travis Rambo hurled
the discus 143 feeL
Rambo placed first in competi·
lion, besting Urbana' s Don Kunz
in the event. Kunz threw thE' shot
127 feet. "heevent came during a
non-scoring meet held a1 Rio
Grande that attracted track
athletes from Urbana and Morehead State.
Rio Grande' s previous record
in discus was 141 feet, established in 198fby Bill Ross .
Rambo. a sophomore from
Columbiana, Ohio. set a new
record in shot earlier this season.
He broke a 20-year-old Rio
Grande standard In that event at
the Becky Boone Relays at
Eastern Kentucky University on
April I.
"He's•been improving greatly
since his Ires hman year," Coach
Bob Willey commented. "We
hope to see him as a riatlonal
qua I iller."
Overall. the Redmen and Redwomen track teams placed
highly In the competition. They
will take part In the District 22
Championships on April 29 at
Cedarville College.
Individual Rio Grande results
at the meer were:
Men
Shot - Rambo, first, 45 feet,
10% Inches.
Discus - Rambo, first, 143
feet.
4xl00 Relay - Rio Grande,
first, 1:45.1.
Long Jump - Vic Austin.
second. 19 feet. 3 Inches.
1500 Meter Run -James Peck,
second , 4: 13; Bob Fritz, third.
4:13.7.

400 Meter Dash - Randy
McClay, first . 51.43: Austin,
second, 52.88.
800 Meter Run- Rusty Edens.
·second. 2:02.54; Jim Lute, third.
2:06.2 .
200 Meter Dash - Scott Hasbrook. second, 23.36.
500 Meter Run- Tony Fallca.
second. 16:03.2: Tim Warnock.
third, 16:15.
Javelin - Austin. 151 teet, 7
inches.
Triple Jump- Austin, third. 37
feet. 10% Inches.
Mile Relay - Rio ,c;:;rande,
first. 3: 37.~5; Rio Grande B.
second, 3: 38.6.
Women
Shot- Becky Kelly, 35feet,5%
Inches.
Qlscus - Becky Kelly, 98 feet,
2% Inches.
4x100 Relay - Rio Grande,
1:52.5.
Long Jump -Sherry Cooke,
first, 15 feet , 4 inches; Vonda
St lies, third, 14 feet, 4 Inches.
1500 Meter Run - Mary
Dowler, first, 5: 01.82; Gina Kilchenman, second, 6:32.03.
100 Meter Dash Lisa
Schmeltzer, 'first, 13.28; Stiles,
third, 13.71.
800 Meter Run - Atsuko
Yamazak'l, third, 2:49 .
High Jump - Schmeltzer,
second, 4 feet, 4 lnclies.
200 Meter Dash - Schmeltzer;
first, 27.28; Stiles, second, 29.52;
Lori Mathis, unattached, 30.31.
Javelin- Marcy Copley, first,
92 feet; Schmeltzer, second, 90
feet. 3 Inches; Cooke, third, 71
feel, 8 Inches.
Triple Jump- Cooke, first, 32
feel, 1% Inches; Stiles, second,30
feet. 6 Inches.
Mile Relay
Rio Grande,
first, 14:42.9.

ninth when rookie Gary Sheffield
he has given up In live appear an·
singled with one out. One out
ces this season.
later, Deer fouled off three
The Twins erased a 3-2 deficit
pitches before returning a 2-2
In the top of the ninth on Dan
pitch from relief ace Jeff Rear- Gladden's first home run and a
don410feet torlght-centertorhls
sacrifice fly by Kent Hrbek.
"In the ninth, we did some
fifth home run of the season. ·
"We played better, but II
serious damage against a very
looked like better was not going
good pitcher, but grounded Into a
to be enough, but It turned out to
double play to end the Inning,"
be great," said Brewers Man,
said Twins Manager Tom Kelly.
ager Tom Trebelhorn, who had
"We failed to get the guy' In from
satd he was embarrassed by his
third three limes."
team's weekend pertonnance
Milwaukee overcame ·a 2-1
against Detroit. "We didn't have
deficit In lhe sixth Inning against
atotalgreatgame,buttheguys FrankVIolaonsoiohomerunsby
really gave a good e!!ort."
Dave Engle and B.J. Surhoff.
Reardon, who fell to 0-1, said
Elsewhere In the American
Deer hit an outside fastball.
League, New York nipped Cleve''l got It up and away and he hit land S:3, Detroit blanked Seattle
It where you're supposed to hit 1-0, California edged Baltimore
it," said Reardon. "I didn't think 3-2 and Oakland squeaked by
he could do it. That pitch was Toronto 5-4.
hard to hit. I was surprised when
In the National League It was:
he had hit lt."
San Diego 5, Atlanta 2; and
Dan Plesac, J-0, got the vic- · Philadelphia 8, Houston 4.
tory, despite allowing the two
Yankees 6, Indians 3
runs in the ninth- the first runs
At Clev~land, Lee Guetterman

and Dave Righetti provided an
excellent three Innings of relief . ,
tor New York. RlghetU needed •• ~
only one pitch In the ninth to
pt:eserve the Yankees triumph
and gain his second save. GuetIerman got Yankees starter
Dave LaPoint, 2·1, out of a two
on. none out jam In the seventh.
The Yankees scored four runs In
the fourth off Cleveland starter
Bud Black, J-3.
nrers J, Mariners 0
At Detroit, Doyle Alexander
battled tor a sPVen·hlt shutout
and rookie Torey Lovullo hit a
sacrifice fly In the seventh Inning
to give Detroit Its third straight
win. Alexander, 3-0, walked five
and did not strike out a batter but
got his 18th career shutout, aided
by two double plays and several
base runners being thrown out.
Alexander has beaten Seattle
eight straight times and is 13·5
lifetime against the Mariners.
Mark Lanll:Ston fell to 2-3.
Continued on page 4

slnm Astros; Padres top Braves

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Spom Writer
The Philadelphia Phlllles have
improved drastically In some
aspects this season, but signs
from last year's last-place team
linger.
The Phlllles have gone from
being the worst hitting team In
the Natlona,l League to the best In
the first month. of this season.
The pitching still needs work
though.
· Philadelphia · overcame an
eight-walk game but Its pitchers
by banging out 12 hits to defeat
.Houston 8-4 Monday night In the .
Astrodome.
Ricky Jordan and Darren
Daulton each drove In a pair of
runs and Tom Herr scored three
times to spearhead the Phlllles'
at tack. The three combined for
eight of Philadelphia's htis.
"As a team, we've been swinging the bats real well and we
continued to do that tonight,"
said Herr. "Everyone has been
contributing and that makes It
run. We'v~ had some tough
breaks on this trips ... but we're
still playing good baseball."

Phliadelphla Improved Its
league-leading batting average
to .278 and that helped overcome
the walks Issued by three Philadelphia pitchers. The As tros
. stranded nine runners and com·
mltted two errors, while dropping to 3·7 at home.
"We had chances early," said
Houston Manager Art Howe.
"We could've had some big
Innings, but we didn't. It was not
from l.a ck or effort, though.
We've got to just keep plugging
away.••

Each team lost Its starting
pitcher with an Injury.
Greg Harris, 1~ 0. pitched four
Innings for the win.
Philadelphia opened a 1-0 lead
In the first. Herr hit a one-out
triple to right National League
batting leader Von Hayes, who
was 2 for4 Monday, followed with
a grounder to shortstop. Rafael
Ramirez's throw home was up
the line and Herr scored.
Houston tied the score 1·1 in ihe
first. Billy Hatcher drew a
one-out walk and was balked to
second. Bill Doran walked. Glenn
Davis singled to right and Hayes

threw home, but his throw hit Forsch, 1-l, was the loser. Glenn
Hatcher and bounced toward the Davis hit hls fifth homer tor the
dugout.
Astros.
Houston's Jim Clancy went out
In the only other National
In the second Inning. He strained League game scheduled, San
a hamstring after get tlng his first Diego defeated Atlanta 5-2.
major league hit, a single, and
In the American League, It
Bob Forsch relieved.
was: New York 6. Cleveland 3;
Marvin Freeman, brought up Detroit 1, Seattle 0; Milwaukee 5,
by the Ph lilies over the weekend Minnesota 4; California 3, Baltl·
when they disabled Steve Ontive- more 2; and Oakland 5, Toronto
ros, strained a trlcep In his right 4.
arm after walking Alan Ashby to
Padres 5, Braves 2
lead off the fourth Inning.
At Atlanta, Walt Terrell and
Greg Harris relieved Freeman Mark Davis combined on a
and pitched four Innings to win ·seven-hitter and Carmelo Marhis first decision or the season. t.lnez homered to ll!t San Diego.
Terrell, 2-2, surrendered six hits
over seven Innings. He struck out
stx and walked one. Davis earned
his ninth save In nine appearances. Atlanta 'starter Derek Lilliquist tell to 1-1.

Former Buckeye.
fined, sentenced
in agent scandal

CHICAGO (UP!) -A weeping
Cris Carter of the Philadelphia
Eagles Monday was ordered to
pay a $15,000 fine and perform 600
hours of community service,
becoming the first athlete to
receive' a criminal sentence for
dealing with sports agents before
hls college ellglblllly expired.
U.S. District Judge Brian Barnett Duff said Carter, who played
for Ohio State, had committed a
"serious crime" by lying to a
federal grand Jury about acceptIng money from agents Norby
to open the sixth round.
Walters, Lloyd Bloom and David
"It's obvious, " Willie Peete Lueddeke.
said. "Look what's happened in
Walters and Bloom were conthe past. If youdon'ts~e it. you're victed earlier " this month of
blind ...
conspiracy, · racketeering and ·
There have been few black · mall fraud for allegedly using
quarterbacks In NFL history, threats and Illegal gifts to sign
although three now start In college athletes to professional
league. Washington's Doug Willi- contracts.
ams was the Super Bowl MVP
The two agents s lgned 57
two years ago, and Randall athletes, 44 of w1lom admitted
Cunningham of Philadelphia and defrauding their schools of schoWarren Moon of Houston led larship money . All but Carter
their teams Into the playoffs and avoided criminal charges
made the Pro Bowl last season.
through pretrial agreements.
Wlllle Peete's contention again
U.S. Attor)ley Anton Valukas
raises the question of racial bias said Carter was subject to more
in a league with no black head serious charges than the other
coaches.
athletes because he was offered a
The elder Peete said the dlverslon·agreement and lied to
1
Packers did not consider draft- the grand jury anyway.
ing the USC quarterback because
Carter, 23, pleaded guilty to
there could lle problems with a one count each of mall fraud and
father coaching his son. But he obstruction of justice on Sept 16
said he rated his son as highly as and faced up to 10 years In prison
any quarterback available.
" nd $500,000 In fines.
"The thing that sets Rodnev
apart from all those other guys.
Is all the other so-called black
quarterbacks are option-type .
quarterbacks and quarterbacks '
put in the position because they
could run," Willie Peete said.
"Rodney Is a thrower that can
run, that's the difference."

Peete goes to .Lions
on second round pick
NEW YORK (UPI) -·Rodney
Peete's walt on the second day of
. 1he NFL draft was short. The
Detroit Lions took the Southern
Cal quarterback on the second
pick of Monday's session, the
!41st overall selection of the
league's 54th draft.
Peete was kept IQ limbo
through 9 hours and 43 minutes
Sunday when he was Ignored by
28 NFL clubs through the first
five rounds. Before the draft. he
was expected to go ln the second
round and given an outside
chance of being a · first-round
pick.
"It was disappointing Sun,
day," Peete said. "But this Is a
new day . I'm looking forward to
be going to and playing In
Oetroll.
·
Peete's' father, Green Bay
Packers offensive backfield
coach Wlllle Peete, questioned
whether hls son lasted Into the
sixth round because he Is black.
Peete was rated among the top
five quarterbacks In the draft
and many expected him to be the
second quarterback selected behind UCLA's Troy Aikman. Instead. he was the ninth to go.
Seven were picked Sunday and
Jeff Francis of Tennessee was
taken by the Los Angeles Raiders

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ecreta•y
APRIL 23-29

single.
Eastern committed four errors; North Gallla 10 and Eastern had 14 stolen bases compared
to North's seven.
Edna Driggs was the winning
pitcher with 11 strikeouts, seven
hits and five walks Issued, while
Spence and Pickens combined In
the loss for North Gallla. They
walked 14, gave up ten hits and
fanned four.
Eastern was 8-2 before the
game ·against Hannan Trace
Monday.

MITCH'S PRODUCE
MIDDLEPOITI 01110

NOW OPEN
ALL HANGING
BASKETS

$ 79 5

COMPLETE LINE· OF BEDDING &amp;
VEGETABLE PLANTS
HOURS: Mo!'dey-Saturday 9;00 A.M.-8:00P.M.
Sunday 11:00 A.M.-8:00P.M.

'

'

SHOW YOUI APPRECIATION FOI
YOUI SECIETAIY, WITH A GIFT
FIOM US.
WE HAVE A WIDE VARIETY OF
Gin IDEAS, PLUS CARDS•••TO SAY
THANI YOU.

"Stop I• ••• See Ue Sooa"

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
HJ....t .
271 IIOITH SKOIII

.
•

\

A Dlvt.loa of MaHimedla, lac.

Eagles beat Pirates 14-8
At VInton. Eastern's girls
continued to roll with a make-up
game this past weekend over
North Gallla, claiming the 14-8
win.
Eastern hitters were Trlsha
Spencer and Edna Driggs with
two singles each (both 2-3),
Tabby Phillips a hOme run, and
singles by Lee Gillilan, Toby Hill,
Lisa Golden, Julie Riffle and
Amy Murphy.
Nortli GaiUa hitters were Law·
son a double, Roble two singles,
Petrie a single, and Oller a

•

_..POIT, OH.

:

•

f

�.. -

•

'

..

..

...

..J.-

Tuu Ifey, April 26, 1989

Page-4-The

sl'a ms seventh inning
•
~Jiomer
·to
give
MHS
3-1
WID
..
'

By DAVE HARRIS
~ = · ROCK SPRINGS Eddie
,• Crooks slammmed a two run
~~orne run with nobody out In thE'
i: bottom o! the seventh Inning to
i-Sive the Meigs Marauders a 3-1
.;Victory over the Belpre Golden
:•f:agles Monday night.
•: • The Trl-Valley Conference win
;. upped the Marauders conference
~terord to 7-2. It was Meigs sixth
Cwln In a row. It Is also the second
. t:l'VC game In a a row that the
~¥arauders have won with a
•:seventh Inning home run. Last
~Friday, Vince Vanaman hit a
~ solo shot to defeat the Federal
~kocklng Lancers, 5-4.
It was a pitchers duel from the
~tart as the Eagles' Stephenson
~and the Terry Fields both turned
r,:l)l outstanding efforts. ,.
~ · The Eagles jumped on the
~lloard In the first Inning when
.,~andell singled with two outs,
~ !tole · second and scored on

f':

~:

TVE8DAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will meet at 7: 30
Tuesday night at tbe home of
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard. Judy
Snowden will be the guest
demonstrator.

Stephenson's base hit. The Ma- lleldfencetoclvetheMarauders
rauders tied In the bottom oUbe the 3-1 victory.
·
second when Fields doubled and
Terry Fields went the route to
scored when Keith Mattox pick up the win for Meigs, giving
singled.
up 6 hits, ah1klna out 5, and
Belpre threatened In the se- walking nobody~ Stephenson was
cond when Watkins reached on a the l011er IJlvlniUP 6 hits, 3 walks
base hit and went to third when and 3 strike outs.
the Marauder outfielder missed
Leading bitter for the Maraudplayed ltlnto lor a two base error ers were Crooks with his home
putting him on third with nobody run, Fields doubled, Wes Yo'q,
out, but Fields with some excel- Jeff McElroy·, Keith Mat1Dx, and
!ant pitching pitched out of the K~n Oller each had a single.
jam. Belpre put runners on Sandell led Belpre at the plate
second In the fifth and sixth with 2 singles.
Innings but once again the
The Marauders played without
Marauders ended the threat.
the services of Head Coach
Kevin Oller singled In the fifth Roger Foster who was called out
for Meigs advanced to second on of town due to a serious family
a balk and third on an error with Illness, Cliff Kennedy will serve
one out,but the Marauders were · as coach for the Marauders until
unable to dent the plate.
Foster returns. Meigs will travel
In the seventh, Terry Fields led to VInton County to take on the
off with a walk. Crooks quickly Vikings Tuesday evening.
put an end to the game as he Meigs ................ 010 000 2-3-6-2
deposited Stephenson's first B4;!1pre .. , ..... ,.;.... IOO 000 D--1·6-1
pltch well over the left-center

~Eastern
drops
8-5
decision
:-·
Hannan Trace Wildcats
.,~to
.

CHESHIRE - Gallta-Melgs
Comniunlty Action Agency wllJ
hold Its free clothing day for
low-lncom@ people, Tuesday, 9
a.m. to noon. Th.e ·a gency clothing bank Is located ln the old
school house building In
Cheshire.
'
DANVILLE - Revival services will continue through Aprll30
at the Danville Holiness Church.
The Rev. Amos TUII.s will be the
· evangelist and singers will be the
M.J. Dunn Family. Services wlll
be at 7 p.m each evening. The
public Is Invited to attend.
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, wllJ have Its annual
Inspection Tuesday, 7:30 p.m ..
Work will be In the .fellowcraft
degree.
NEW HAVEN, W.VA. -The
Wahama Alumni Executive
Committee !Nill meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Kenny's Restaurant
In New Haven.

.

~ • Gallla County's cat ·teams -

•

The Wildcats wlll host Oak HIIJ
..-Hannan Trace and Kyger Creek on Wednesday.
(.:- posted victories over Eastern Score by lnnlnp
· ;: and Southwestern, respectively, Eastern ........... 010· 001 3-5-10-4
: .In SVAC baseball games Monday · Hannan Trace .040 022 x-8-11-3
,, t-venlng.
WP - Brumfield .
~ ,: Hannan Trace 8, Eastern m
LP- Durst
,. .· At Mercerville, the Wildcats
~~vercame a 1-0 deficit to score
KCHS 11, Southwe81ern 5
l:l(alf of their runs In ' the second
At
Patriot, junior catcher John
~Inning off Eagle starter Jeff
Sipple
hammered a three- run
;. purst to put themselves in
homer
off
junior Josh Halslop to
~fosltlon to claim an 8-5 victory.
push
Kyger
Creek to an 11-5
..-. The Eagles started the scoring
victory:
~fb the top of the second after first
The Bobcats ~tarted the game·
.-t!aseman Wade McQueen filed
when
seci&gt;nd baseman Brian
!!Kit. Then left fielder Kenny
VInson
walked and stole second.
~Caidwell singled to left, and on an
Matt
Martin
grounded to second,
~error by left fielder .Scott Ca,dand
on
the
play
VInson took third.
1
Chad Johnson walked and stole
before Sipple hit a sacri_.-'Y shortstop Scott Fitch scored second
fice
fly
to
score VInson. Shortstop
Kenny Caldwell.
Mike
Reese
walked before first
Trace burst the dam In their
baseman
Mike
Holland singled to
half of round two when second
score
Johnson.
Pitcher Scott
baseman J.J. Bevan and first
sacker Glen Cline hit back-to- NeweiJ singled to score Reese,
back singles. Cline's single giving Kyger a 3-0 lead.
The advantage would not removed Bevan to third. A sacrl·
main
constant, as the bottom pi
fice fly by third baseman Brent
the
first
got started when HlgllUnroe scored Bevan. and
the
lander
.
catcher
Zane Colley
play Cline was thrown by Eagle
walked
and
stole
secondd.
Shortcatcher Jason Hager as Cline
stop
Joe
Hammond
struck
out.
was trying for third.
but
a
balk
was
called
·against
Brian Unroe continued the
inning for the Wildcats with a NeweiJ, aiJoW!ng Colley to go to
double to center field, foilowed third. Colley scored on 'a
grounder to second by right
~ a walk to centerflelder Larry
fielder
(later first baseman I
.r.&gt;rrell. Pitcher Tim Brumfield
Brent
Davies.
doubled to score Brian Unroe,
The Bobcats set the table for
which put Hannan Trace ahead
.
Sipple's
blast ':"hen Jeff Taylor
2-1. Then shortstop Brad Crewalked.
Vinson
followed by strlk·
meens hit a fly ball to right .
ing
out,
but
Martin
followed that
fielder Scott Mlller, who commitwith
a
walk.
Johnson'sgroundout
ted an error on the play which
allowed Jarrell and Brumfield to to third moved the runners ahead
90 feet, and then Sipple hit the
score.
The Eagles mounted a three- homer.
The Bobcats, recording their
run a·ssault In the top of the
seventh to cut the margin to third win of the season, will host
three. but Brumfield's stamina Symmes VaiJey Wednesday,
while the 0-11 Highlanders will
~nd control tall seven Innings.
seven strikeouts. one walk) kept host North GalUa for a doubleEastern In check long enough for header posslbly.conslsting oftwo
·
the Guyan nine to reach the .500 five-Inning games.
Score
by
Innings
mark at 5-5.
Durst. who struck out nine and Kyger Creek ... 331.. 010 2-10-10-3
walkl&gt;d four. pitched five innings Southwestern ..... 100 201 1-5-3-4
for the Eagles before giving way WP - Newell (Holland save)
LP- Halslop
to Lange in the sixth. ·

~:::: a\~~a~~~~~n;~~~~.nX s?:;~

on

Oak BillS, !Halben 1
At Racine, Oak Hill moved to a
two-game lead over both Meigs
County teams Monday evening
by defeating Southern 5·1.
. Southern drops to 7-3 In thi!
league for a second place tie with
Eastern, · while owning a 7-7
record overaiJ. Oak Hill Ill now
11-7 overaiJ and 9-11n the league.
Bruce Crabtree was the winning pitcher with eight strikeouts
and just one walk to his complete
game statistics, while also scattering just four hits along the
way.
Andy Baer was ' the Southern
hurler who· was near perfect
hlmself,m giving up just six hlts,
striking out 12, and Issuing just
one walk.
Southern took a 1-0 lead In the
third to break a scoreless deadlock, as Chris Stout reached on an
error and came home on a Todd
Lisle single.
In lh~ top of the fourth Oail Hill
came ba'ck with three and never
looked back as Phil Kuhn
walked, Crabtree reached on a
error, and both scored on an
error. Later Belcher, who had
reached, also scored on an error.
Oak Hill added single runs In
the fifth and seventh Innings. '
Oak Hlll hitters were Lewis
and Belcher with singles, Crab. tree with a doubleandslngle, and
Ward two singles .
For Southern Stout, l,lsle,
Mark Porter, and Shuler each
had hits, and Shuler a double.
Southern hosts Wahama
tonight.
·

WASHINGTON (UP I) ..,. Baseball Commissioner Bart Glamatli issued a statement Monday
!nan attempt to clarify a letter he
sent . to a federal judge In
Cincinnati on behalf of a key
figure In the investigation of
Reds' Manager Pete Rose.
The statement, wrlllen for
Glamatti and released through
·special counsel John Dowd, who
Is heading up the Rose lnves ligation for Glamattl' s office. said
the Jetter to U.S. District Judge
Carl Rubin was sent at the
request of a lawyer representing
Ron Peters.
The statement said the letter
was "sent to Judge Rubin In
confidence to protect the lnteres ts Involved In the investigation" and "makes no reference to
the content of Mr. Peters' testim·
ony, nor the weight attached to
such testimony.
"In my experience," GlamatU's statement continued, "such a
letter to a judge Is customary and
was Intended io be helpful to the
rourt. No request was made to
the. judge for leniency lor Ron
Peters. It Is solely within the
province of t~e court to accept or
reject lhe Information 11rovlded
In the letter."
Peters, manager of Jonathan's
Cafe In Ftanklln, Ohio, has
~lalmecl he was Rose's c hlef
bookmalu!l'. He Is presently
awaltlq ~e~~tenelng from Rubin
after pleadlll&amp;' guilty to charges
of dlatrlbutlna cocaine and Income tax evasion.

;'he letter said, "It Is my
purpose to brlng.to your attention
the significant and truthful cooperation Mr. Peters has provided
to .my special counsel, who Is
conducting the investigation Into
allegations concerning the conduct and activities or Pete Rose."
"Mr. Peters has ~n readily
available .at all times to my
special counsel and has provided
critical sworn testmony about
Mr. Rose and his associates. In
addition, Mr. Peters has pro, vided · probative · documentary
evidence to support his testlm·
ony and the testimony of others.
''Based upon other Information
In our possession, I am satisfied
Mr. Peters has been candid,
forthright and truthful with my
special counsel.
"In view of the confidential
nature of my Inquiry, I would
respectfully request this Jetter to
remain under the court's seal
until , the completion ot my
Inquiry."
·

WANT ADS bring
~Money

•
FORCED AT THIRD- New York· Yankees
third baseman Wayne Tolle&amp;on, who forced the
Indians' Brook Jacoby at third, watches the ball

·Brewers...

get away from blm while trying to doullle ap a
runner al first In the aevealh lnnlnl of Mond!Q''S
gaine In Cleveland. The Yankees woa 6-3. (UPI)

Continued from page 3

Angels 3, Orioles 2
.
run. Abbott.1-2, gave up two runs
At Anaheim, Calif. , Lance on four hits, walking three and
Parrish homered and rookie Jim · striking out one, in six Innings.
Abbott picked up his first major Bryan Harvey w'orked 1 1-3
league victory. Parrish led off Innings for his third save. Dave
the fifth with his first homer as an Schmidt. 1-2. took the Joss.
Angel, tying th.e score 2-2. Johnny
A's 5, Blue Jays 4 ·
Ray's RBI groundout later that
At Oakland, Calif., Tony PhilInning proved to be the winning lips lashed a two-run double In

The release of the ·l etter was
triggered by Its publication In
newspapers over the weekend.
Rose called Glamatti's letter
"very surprising," but .declined
to answer when asked If he
thought Glamatti $hould now
disqualify himself from ruling In
the Rose matter.
Rose's lawyer. Reuven Katz,
Indicated he had questions about
Glamattl's Impartiality.
"It's a very unusual situation,"
Katz said. "He's the man who Is
judge, jury and prosecutor, and If
we appeal, who do we appeal to?
Him? ... In effect, the man who
$Its as a judge has taken a
position on a witness before a
hearing has ever started."

SPRIN[l VAll f v r:rNf \'!A
446 4))4

By ERIK LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
Wayne Gretzky could only do
so much.
The Los Angeles Kings' cinder·
ella season came to grinding, yet
Inevitable halt Monday evening
when the Calgary Flames be-

came the first team to advance to
the Stanley Cup semifinals by
defeating the Kings 5-3 and
completing a four-game sweep of
the Smvthe Division Final.
In the Campbell Con terence
final the Flames will own t.he
home-Ice advantage against

HORNER SINGLE'! - Eastern's Jell Horner hits an Infield
single lei third Jiaae off Hannan Trace hurler Tim Brumfield Ia the
third Inning ·of Monday's SVAC game In Mercerville. The bit was ·
Horner's only one of the game, aa the Wlldcatswon8-5. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

either Chicago or St. Louis. At
Chicago, Steve Larmer scored
the winning gual with 4:19
remaining In the third period to
carry the Blackhawks past St.
Louis 3-2 and extend their lead
over the Blues In the Norris
Division final to 3 games to 1.
The Flames applied the finishIng touches to Gretzky and
company on enemy territory
behind Joe Mullen's two goals.
Joe Nleuwendyk broke a 2-2 lie
when h~ added a power-play goal
with 48 seconds left In the second
period.
With the score 4·3, the Flames
.held off a Los Angeles o"slaught
In the final minutes, getUng an •
empty-net goal from Gary Rr .
berts with three seconds to play
to seal the victory.
Gretzky, with a power-play
goal !n the first period for the
Klilgs, tallled his 86th career
playoff goal and became the
NHL's aU-time leader, surpassIng former New York Islander
winger Mike Bossy. II was
Gretzky's only goal of the series
versus the Flames.
The Wales Conference semifinals continue Tuesday night,
with the Montreal Canadlens at
home and holding a 3·11ead over
the Boston Bruins, and the
Phtladelphia Flyers taking on
the Penguins In Pittsburgh with
their series tied at t)'lo games
apiece:

LOREN JOE HUMPHREY

Humphrey birth
Senior Airman Joe and Jamie
Humphrey, Mountain Home
A.F.B .. 1dahoareannounclngthe
birth or their second child. a son,
Loren Joe, born April 3 at the
Mountain Home A.F.B.
The '~' Infant
weighed eight ·
~ "' ~
I '
''• •
pounds, six ounces. and was 20 ·
and a half Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
James and Bel ty Acree and the
paternal grandparents are Gene
and Pat Humphrey, all of Pomeroy. Paternal greatgrandmother Is Myrtle Grover,
Pomeroy. and maternal greatgrandparents are Melvin and
Mae Roach. West Columbia,
W.Va.
,
The Humphreys also have a
daughter, Kandls Jo, 17 months
old.
I

6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE OF ·.
DEPOSIT
· Substantial Penalty for Early Wit~drawal

RATE 8.7$ /o-9.11°/o
0

ANNUAL

YIILD

The Bank That Makes Things Happen
GAWPOUS
441-0802
.._llerFOIC

MIDDLEPORT
992-6861

•

SYRACUSE - Revival services will be held at the First
Churc.h of God In Syracuse
Wednesday through Sunday at 7
p.m. J.E. Hossler, pastor, will be
the speaker.
POMEROY - There will be a
meeting at Meigs High School In
room 202 at 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday
to dlileuss plans for the activities,
sponsored by the parents ot the
juniors and seniors. before and
after the prom.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Post
9053, Veterans of Foreign Wars,
will meet at the Tuppers Plains
hall Thursday at 8 p.m. Members
are urged to attend.

penj~mi~

COOLVILLE -A ramp dinner
will be held by the Coolville Lions
Club at the Coolville Volunter
Fire Department headquarters.
Serving will be from 4 to 8 p.m.
and the menu will Include ramps,
fried potatoes, ham, beans, and
corn bread.
. POMEROY- The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
will sponsor an open dance at the
Senior Citizens Center, Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m. Caller will be
Jerry Harbert. All western
square dancers are Invited to
attend.

J. Sol, M.D.

I

.

Now Accepting Patients

Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
There's no way to tell who11 become addicted. But
one thing is certain.
No one who is an addict. set out to become one.

(304) 675-3400

Sex with coke is aJTl8Zirt

DJ.J PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Cocaine's powers as a sexual stimulant have never
been proved or disproved. However, the evidence ·
seems to suggest tha:t the dru~s reputation alo~
seMS to heighten sexual feelmg;.(The same thmg
happens in Africa. where na~ swear~ powdered
rhinoceros hom as an aphnxhstac.)
.
What is certain is that continued use of cocaine
After nearly a decade of being America's glamour leads to impotence and finally complete 1055 of
drug. researchers are starting to unro.Er the truth
interest in sex.
·
about cocaine.
It's emerging as a very dangerous subitance.
C'mon,just: 0DCe
burt }U\1.
No one thinks the things described here will ~r
happen to them.
.
Cocaine hits }UUr heart before it hits }Uur head.
But }IJU can n~r be certain. When~r and how- · Your pulse rate rockets and )UUr blood Pre5SI!re .
ever )UU use cocaine, you're playing Russian roulette. soars. Even if you're only 15, )UU become a p~me . .
candidate for a heart attack. a stroke. or an epileptic"

The family of professionals

Drive, Point

Wll 25550

At The Prescription Shop
Prescriptions Are Our Business!

can't

•Fast Service &amp; Low PreHrlption .Prices
•OIIality Prescripthtn Drugs
•Full Line of Generks Available ·
...st IMurance Carries Accepted

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building

Office Hours
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
New Patients Welcome

(304) 675--6015

PLEA~ANT

VALUY
HOSPRAL

Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550

t

•

, Sheryl ThOma , daughter of
Ellen and Guy Thoma, Rutland,
and an eighth grader at Meigs
Junior High School, received a
superior rating In the State
Science Day held this past
Saturday at Ohio Weslyan Unl·
verslty, lor her project "Solar
Energy, Solar Roller."
More than 800 students took
part In the event, which was
sponsored by the Ohio Academy
of Science. More than 600 professionals In medicine, education,
Industry, and science Judged the
projects.
.
Thoma qualified for the state
competition by receiving a luperlor rating In the district compel!·
lion held at Oblo University.
More than 180 special awarda
were presented from over '15
professional 10c:letlea, corporations, unlveraltlel, alld govern·
mental agenclea, with a tots!
value of more than $70,000. ·

~can't get aMjctr11 to cocaine.

Fne Delivery to llldtl~rt, Po1111roy,
Bradbury, ••nv••· lutlcmd, Syracuu,
and Mason, w. Va.'
If you f11l you have lllln paying too MUch for
your prllcriptlons, give Ul a can. We •• quote
you prlcnlll

SHEBYL THOMA

Suite 12

•

POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, will met Saturday at
7: 30 p.m. at the . M.lddleport
Masonic Temple. Annual Inspection will be held.

Suite 215
Pleasant Valley HQspital
Medical Office Building

D r. Ayers

11ft

SATURDAY
RACINE - A .round and
square dance will be held Satur-day from 9 p.m. to midnight at
the Racine American Legion
hall. Music will be by the True
Country Ramblers. The public Is
Invited to attend.

Obstetrics..&amp; Gynecology

\

Thoma gets
•
supenor
·rating

••

.-

End-Time Prophetess, will be
holding a weekend revival at the
World of Lite Church, Bur·
llngham, Frlday'througli Sunday
evening, 7:30 each evening. The
Rev. Ray Laudermllt, pastor,
Invites the publ Jc.

!

MIDDLEPORT - The Big
Bend Pony League meeting for ·
The planning session for
coaches of the Meigs and Mason
Church
. Women United's lunteams will be held at 6: 30 p.m.
cheon
May
fellowship will be at
Thursday In the Middleport Vtl·
1:30·.p.m.
on
Saturday at Sacred
!age Councll chambers.
Heart CathoUc Church. All key
RACINE - The American · women of the churches of Meigs
Legion Auxllary, Racine Post County are urged to attend.
602, will meet Thursday at 7 p.m
Revival
at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT - The Hobson
Church
of Christ In Christian
MIDDLEPORT - April birthUnion
will
hold revival services,
day party for patients at the
May
.1-6
at
7 p.m. with Norman
Overbrook Center wlll be held
Taylor
as
the
speaker.
Thursday at 2 p.m. Family and
friends are Invited to attend.
Special meeting
POMEROY -A special meetPOMEROY - Free clothing
day will be held at the Salvation Ing of the Meigs Local School
Army, Pomeroy, Thursday from · Dis trlct Board of Education has
been called for Wednesday at 7
10 a.m to noon. All area residents
p.m. Purpose of the meeting Is to
In -need of cloth tng are we !come
discuss personnel and to consider
to come.
any other business wbleh may
lawfully be transacted at the
FRIDAY
meeting.
POMEROY - Pat Eason.

Edward

t3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO, N.A.

"

WEDNESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - A miss lonary service 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.

IV'l

I.

SPECIAL

·•

American Association for University Women will meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at theDow!l Under
Restaurant In Ga!Upolls, for a
joint Installation with the Ga!Upolls Branch.

.,.,.

Pediatrics &amp;
Internal Medicine

THE CENTRAL TRUST

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

992-2156

'
the ninth to lift the Athletics
to
their sixth straight victory. The
Blue Jays took a 4-3 advantage
into the ninth, but Tom Henke,
1-2, could not hold the lead.
Reliever Gene · NelsOn won his
first decision. Fred McGriff
ripped . his fifth home run for
Toronto.

Flames advance to NIJL Cup fmals

Coal Grove 10, GABS 3
AI GaiJipoils, Price hit a
two-run homer In the sixth Inning
to add some Icing to a 10·3 Hornet
victory over the Blue Devils.
The Hornets hammered the
Blue Devils lor three runs in 'the
second and four In the third,
while the Galllans' runs came In
the first, fifth and seventh
Innings.
·
The 6-7 Blue Devils will play
Warren Local at VIncent today
and host Ravenswood
Wednesday.

Giamatti issues statement on letter

POMEROY -The MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch of the

The Daily Sentinei-PIIg1

Pomeeoy-Middleport. Ohio

Community Calendar

.~~rooks
~-

•

Cocaine was once thought to be non-addi~.
because users don't have the se.ere physical withdrawal symptoms commonly associated with .
heroin-delirium, musclK!llffips. and convulstons.
Howeo.er. cocaine is intensely addicting
psychologically.

· In animal studies, monkeys with unlimited access
to cocaine self-adminiSter until they die. One monkey
pressed a bar 12,!!00 times to obtain a single dose.
of cocaine. Rhesus monkeys \\Qn't smoke tobacco or
marijuana. but 100% will smoke cocaine, preferring
it to sex and to food-even when starving
Like mon~ like man. .
.
If you lake cocaine, )00 run a 10% chance of addtclion The risk is higher the )OOnger }00 are, and ~
may be as high as 50% for those who smoke cocame.
(Some aack users say they felt addicted from the
first time they smoked.)
When you're addicted, all you think about is
getting,and using cOcaine. Famil)! friends. job, home.
possessions. and health become unimportant
Because cocaine is expensive, you end up doing
what aU addicts do. You Steal, cheat, lie, deal, sell ,anything and everything. Including yourself. All the
.. .&amp;;.:t.. \Fill risk imprisonment Because, never forget,
~~illegal
·

r-~--------------~---~-------1

I

!
I
I

1

1
I

•COUPON•

.

I
I

.

s3oo OFF

ANY NEW 01 TUNSFEBED '

I
I

Pnsc11moN

Explral April 30, 1989

I
.

type fit

It

~-------------------------~-. Jua bring In any new prMorlptlon Ill' prMCriptlon bottle
troll! any ar• pharmaey with the 1bov1 ooupon and
rec~lve t3.00 off our llr.ady low pr-lptlon prl-11

PIESCIIPTION

.'

'

. ..

In the brain, cocaine mainly affects a pnm1tive part
where the emotions are seated. Unfortunate!)( this
•
part of,the brain also controls your ,heart~ lung;.
A big hit or a cumulative cmrdose may mtenu~t
the electrical signal to your heart and lung;. They stmply stop.That's how basl&lt;etball player Len Bias died.
If you're unlucky the first time you do coke,
)UUr body will lack a chemical that ~reaks down the
. drug. In which case. you11 be a first lime 0.0 1\vo
. .lin.: :es::_WI::.':::..ll:::kil::,;lyou!.::::·:.._----:--::-...,..-----

It'll make )00 i:el great.

Cocaine makes you feel like a.new man. the joke :
goes.The only trouble is, the first thing the new man
wants is more cocaine.
It's true. After the high wears off, )UU may feel
a little anxious, irritable. or depressed. You\t) WJI the
coke blues. But fortunate!)( they're ea5'J to fix. with
a few more lines or another hit on the pipe. ·
·
Of course, sooner ot later }00 have to·stop. Then..:.
lor days at a time-)UU may feel lethargic. depressed.·
even suicidal
Says Dr. Arnold Washton. one of the oountry1
leading cocaine expel1s: "ItS impossible for the nonuser to iffiBIPne the dee!&gt;, vicious deplession that :
a cocaine addict suffers~

•

•

�••

Reader has more believable version
of woman in compromising simation

Ann
Landers
4NNLANDIR8

,,

-PROBATE
- --COURT
- -OF - r TII•COUNn
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF WAtD CROSS
RECYCLING

Mrs. We ars led devotions by
reading Psalm 148. She read the

A spr ing open house was held
at the recent meeting of Ohio
TOPS 570 when the group m et a t
the Coonhunters Lodge a t the fa ir
grounds.
The meeting opened wlth a
welcome by Lennie Aleshin• who
also introduced the officPrs and
assistants. Progr am book• were
given to everybody, the " m onograph diet " was discussed . and
Peggl Vlnnlng showed a short
film on the organization .
·
Four new member s were take n
In, ·and three members were
reinstated. There was also group
singing wlth the words per ta ining to losing weight.
Bernice Dur s t , charter
member, gave a short history ?f
TOPS 570 from Its beginnings m
Middleport ln 1967. TOPS was
originally founded .i n 1948.
Mrs. Vlnning, assistant leader,
presented a skit on we ight loss
entitled, "A Day In Cour t" with
group members Mrs. Vlnnlng,
Mary Martin, Dreama Pickens,
Julia Hysell, Shirley Wolfe, Bonnie Johnson, Ola St. Clair.
VIrginia Smith. and Lennie
Smith taking par t.
Preceding the event the group
walked and from 6-7 p .m . Mrs.
MarUn, weight recorder, and

~~~!~~~~::rt'i!·
~U:AP.H~~:.~~~::!ts

lor~&amp;lootthelowofti-of

_
992 5114

North 75·40 Eut 15 loot.
and oloo It tile Nort.._
corner of .._..,,, Brown:
thence running alo~g · the
boundory of Lowlt Brown
south BB-21 Eott 480 1011:
thence SOUth 3·311 Wilt
58.6 toot; thonco south
es.2&amp; Eoot 2BBZ feet 1o tt.o
aaot tina o! Fraction No. 2;
thooc:e North 11·50 Eut
1070 feet' follOwing .tho

ACI'-.

taining 76
more or lila.
of which, 73.37 """' .,. In

Frection No. 2. end 1.113 oa•
er• In F18ction No. e.
EXCEPTING, train the olo·
reooid d•crlbod rut •tote
such coot end mining r\tlht

lNG auc::h coat and mining

rights excoptacl In tho chlln
of tHte.

NOW OPEN FOI
SNING SEASON
Complete Line of Vegetable
• lecldlng Pienta. Aul• Fruit Tr-. G~ranluma,
H111glng BMU!a, Shrubbery
andTr-.
. . . tMYtAMTOSM

. su1•n 1.. s .
lu"•d'sG.......,..
ttt-5776

Be ttJe nme more or '-•

but subject to ell logol high·
wava.

FURTHER

MAY 4, 5, 6, 1989

••t ....

==~nk.,d

dHcribed in Votumo 241.
Page 711 of the Melgo
County Oeod Recorda.
FURTHER EXCEPTII!IG o10

foot ingren and egre11 ea-

""'"nt oo told to

=.........
............r.:llaloiB

=rz1!F-E

Ohio

'I

...... ,_.,.,
mo.

BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES
"At ha1011alllt Prim"

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949·2160
Day or Night

NO .SUNDAY

BILL SLACK

:l''!!J~"i:~t'JN!F~

992 • 2269

HOUtiNo •NC
.,.ET.."ooJ£cr,
51
"" 9
Dll!l' n. STaCII•

EVENINGS

MOIII.J
..1 PARI
1 ,.
·
•Mobile Homa Pam
•Moblla Hi)me
Relitll8
Lot
R nt 1
0
I I
•

992·7479
It, 33 Norf. ef

VAUGHN'S

AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

SYI ••us• OHIO
"" ~
Mooi Foreign ond
Dom••• vo~o~ct..
A/C IOrvicco
""Motor &amp; Minor
R.,..,,.
NIASE Cortlllod Moch.,lc
· CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
C,nlllllf Llconolld

LINDA'S
PAINDNG
MIQIOI-EDIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

t•• .._ pabt
aut of
let . . de
...II.....

It fer

rou.

YRY IIASONUU
HAVE IIRIENCE

614-985·4180
2-15·'88·1 mo.

WANTED

DEAlt 01 AUVE
•W•Iher• •Dry•a
•Rt~nae••F..-.••

...........

•Refriger1to,.
.......,

IE.N'S APPIIqiCE
SBVICE
985·3161

ALLEN'$
.. HAULING
We Haul end
Spread
Limetltone
Dirt, Sand lit
Coal Delivered
1,000 Gal. Water
. . Service

992-5275

W• Sen•ict~l,t~

3·2R· 'RR· l ~~~ ~-

acr.. aold to the St.te of

Ohio and their righU 11 contained in Votumo 244, Ptva
227 of tho Moi111 County
DHd Recorda.
Subject tO ell ._ea, euementa and righta of WIY .of
record.
'

DEED. REFERENCE: Votumo ·t 68, Pogo 48, Molgo
County Recorder' 1 Offlc;e.
AdvertiHment of uid ule

shall be pubtiohed In tho

992

l

-· •••

•

··-4·•· .,..... .

-.

-

--·

_..,

- ~

Daily Sentinel once 1 week

IOOFING

NOW OPEN FOI
IUSINESS

NEW ...;.. IEPAII

14.. &amp; .... St.
p............. v•.
\ Wo Buy AtumiNim
Co~•· GI•o. B-•·
Coppor end MOI'o
MON•..fiL: 9 am.6 pm
SAT" I GIW·12 tlftn .

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

I

68

mo.

soine dey of lila week. Sold

property ia appraised for

&amp;20.500 end cannot buold
for le11 th'en' th8t amount.
Sate to tho hlglleot biddti.
Terma of .... ere OMh in
hand on cloy of toll or proper
security for ute pricel. Sale

lllblact lito to opprovol of

the Meiga County Problte
· Court.

Approved
I. Carson Crow
Crow

a. Crow

Attorney· at L..w

Clore Humphrov,

i

Admlniatretrlx of the

Eototo of Weid Crou

MOIIIS ·
EQUIPMENT
. •ZETOR,TRACTORS
•HOWARD
ROTAVATQJiS
•MANNIS TtLYERS
•INTERSTATE
BATTERIES
LAWN &amp; GA"DEN
StlPPliES

742-2455

Salo• St., luiiGIIII, 011.

2

DAY 01 EVENING

w-•--rt

Mastk _ (csrtllinttotl*
Vinyl Siding
525 No11h Seeond
S.OMit Guttcsr
Middleport, Ohio
Replacement Windows EVERYONE WELCOME
Blown IMUiation
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
Storm Doon &amp;
SUNDAY 7:00P.M.
Wt'ndowt
WEDNESDAY 7:00P.M.
FREE ESTIMATES
Putor Jameo E. Kteeee

Calf992·2772

~"'

In Loving Memory Of
• WILMA
ANDERSON
April 25. 19815
God 'Called y,o u home
one nig~t: ·
We never underatood
why. '
but someday we'll
meet you there
And nevermoro will
we cry.
TheJamH
Andereon Family

1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished.
Housekeeping Room
By Day, Week, Month

614-949·2526
HI· I mo. pd.
Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPSREPAIRSOVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS.
ROTOTILLERS.
ETC.

DAVE'S ENGINE
IE PAIR
992-6506

ALL POPULA'R""SIZES AVAILABLE

Quall•ty
Stone .Company

3

Mile East of

McArthur

U Se SPRINT
0

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P. 0. Box 337

Happy Ad• ·

992-2371
4-26-'89·1 mo.

POMEROY

·PUBliC
AUCTION

CARTER'S

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT .....:6:00 P.M.
HOWE'S GROVE PARK
lolpre, Ohia
AUmONfiR

PH. 304-428·7245

Roger Hysell
Garage
II. 124, Potl!t'oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o. Tr••••lul ..
PH. 992,5682
.or 992-7121
4-25-tfn

The Heat This

3 BR, 2 bllh, 111d111 tub.
Nict h011e. LoCIItd n•
H•~risonville. Sli500 Cash.

CALL 992·5114

4-ZS:ft.lllo.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT Of
FIDuctMY
~ Aprlt 1l: till. In tho

M- .

L-::::

C.ulllw

Prt1111t

Court. C.a No. .Q'IQ;

.,._te
'flldae
clno, Ohio 41171. IIIIth

.Ht,g JOI6
BIHUtgl
l•re,

"1:. ""~-of

••

I .'- fitlinli. 2141e
Rot~~.

Roap.

paintod Eu..,trltt of tho oo-

of lleulelt L lredford.
· ....County,
of R. D.
fl•
cine. ·
Melva
Ohio.
411771 .
Robin E. luoli,
Proboto Judge
K. NulllrOid. Cr.rtl
11. 1B. 21, Ita

•

'"

•HOME BUILDING

...... lupJIIy of .....

•KITCHENS • lATHS
•ROOFING

, • • • • • OIIIB

Cllitact llaiM Taylor

hrMl••·

MT-or M~T A&amp;CP

.

Mutt rollte Ill poellio,. .,d '
aeetlol'll. 0.11 P1. .1nt ValliS¥
HoaDitel. p•aon.- office 304- · ,

1711'4340. AA-EOE.

Cook lftd Wlhr- poeltion, , ,;

n•=•••-v.

•Pirience not
d•lr•
Swain' s Fwnllure 10
ttem•dwork. For nlerv'-v w ..

Olivo. colt 304-875-8788.
,
W•tllf lmmodl,.oly : Ouyo &amp; ....
Junll C.rs with or without Gill, w.m to .-n mon., · '.,,
t ..ldng7 Boot do I hate •lob-.. ,: ·
~:~"i":io~' U"Y Llvoty- 81 .. you.
Coli 304-1711-1342 to.
tween 10:00.12:00 •. m. Md
&amp;

::=:~': ::~:":0:~-:J:,:V F~

rl:b.,.ngptidCIII

81 44
4- ti-

1:0()..4:0'0; 8:00.8:00.

,....

=~":!".:.~:.:..~~: ·~

buy or
oppoolooIPPII•oa
.,.thlrogl between
r.,utrtd. Allocol
dollvori•.
Col · ..
Antlqu-.
furnltuN,
10:00..12:00,
1:00ett8tll. 1Ut01. oomptete home 4 :00, 15:00·8 :00. 304-175-" ""
furnWtlng1. M•llnWidem1¥er. l342.
·I
114-245-5152.
lPN "' RN'~ port lime.,. lui
Utod "r"""" by '"' ploco or limo. P•oer.. olvo t 38 bod
entire hou.-hold •o selling. T.C.F.Ieneflts: 11 v..:•tlon· ~

814-742-2418.

d.,,, 11ticlct-•doro. t2potd " {
hoiiHta:. hutth m.u ... ce &amp;'
ro~tr_.. co.......... eilloo- ·
Oullto
tlon
promoiod. Contlicl Loictn . ·,
Pre1940 qullll. Any concfttion. Ho 1 ptt 1 1, Lakin. wv. Opal ,.
Cooto ootd. Colt 814-992-11167 · 30 ,._ 87 5- 3230.....
or lt4-&amp;e2- 24&amp;t. ·
42.
Uood turooltuoo .. d hou..toold Ir:r:;~iii~;===

•PPIIMtcel. Phone 114-742· I~

2048'

lovlllmont ... Cell
~"

Wan1ed
''
114- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .. -

frM

.-hook-up. Clll114-742·

2373.

3 Announceman1s

•REMODEUNG • REPAIRS

I'IIOIE DAY 01 .,.._.,.

Wrlio Hootrt-cil. a.. 51441
A-.o. DH 45701 .
llln.,flll Sport..... Club. Spoclll Meeting. Noon Sunday,
April 30th.
JOHNSON·MOORE FAMILY. i
am ...,china for lnformlll:lon 01
pk:l:urn of lumM Johnaon
{1838-1914t Dr hil wHa. M1ry

Moore (1840·11271. PI•••
- • S t _ J _ t1DPI•·

litton Pl.:&amp; Perry, Ge. 31011.

=~ogJ:!=~=

ot'-

GIIBM. CONOACYCIIS

15

Schools
'• .,
lnstructi!)n
----~-------- ··
lo·' l
RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEABTERN BUSINESS
CO UEOE. 128 Jookloo Pika
Calt448-4387. 11og. No. 81-11·
101lt18.
.

[ IIIIJ luyllll~lll

Halp Wanted

&amp;ay Work! EJCIII.nt hyl A•
•.mbleprocktt• at home. Call for
Information . 1504-149·0170

17 Miscellaneous

..t. 313.

- - · n - imnoodioioly.
ApplieoiloilliNololoi•BurtloOI
:30-..::...:4:.:
:30.::...;:Mo:.:...n._·F.:..~·-­
1_eo::.;_• .:.7:.:
D)'IMIIc

•y:;:;w•weight on.ble
p. .

m~n..,- tor

control

=.:~eer.:.:.•:-ci;::.com":

pr.,_,_._

nav-lal • pariWIOII
Send r-.me to 327 E. Main St.
Jlckaon, OH.,IMO.

).::.::.:=...::...;:..:.::..:.;.:.___
tJOVERNMENTJDBSI

Now hiring thl•

•

••I 110,213

TO '711.471 lmm..••

:r,;:

ln-1 C8ll trllundebltl 1• 15I ' D i n t - 7~80112 EXT F273ZA. FD&lt;
Regilt•. 200 Malin lt.• Point ] .' "'_....,.
__
llltlntt......;:..·_ _ _ __
Pl_..t, WV 25110.
Att...,lon R .N ,'1 • LPN' •I
Am..-.•~mlr'Oy' h• ..,.,.....
cl.,. -lngo on ol ohlfto.
4
Giveaway
~':l,etltlv• ulary. fl«ible
lng. ond toonolttt of··
,
f•lld. C..-. Lollue Hll, RN·
Mille puppy. Approxinmety 10 DON, Amerfcer•Pomeroy,
wb. old. Whlt•withiOI'MbiD. 31789 litocMorfnll Rd .• Pom•
Colllt4-317·D185.
ray, Ohio 411718. 114-812·

I !lOti. Eqoool

Opportiiilfiy

Em-

2puppt•.
lomotoCall114-251-185t.
totocto Lob • Cottle :P:.:'.,.:.:~:::r·------­
Uc. LPN 10&lt; Poil,.,o Duty 3.
lolott.. cot • lolit- Ooll P.M.-1I P.M. thlll. 32 ton. o
114-4411-7741 lOft• tlpm.
- · Clll 814-441-tltl81 or
114-445-1008""
- -· '
VorbNr• tefrier I YMrt old.
t i p - &amp; loou• brololn. Colt tloll ·ooptono, momory
S14-37tl-2301.
wrll. . •t•-•Ofliooor
1'\0io

ve• old mote

trlovlf.

. _ , . btolillound ..- - -

Ololo -•arv. ... d of
•-cloCiatiDotly Trlloolno. 121 Tlotrd
· 304-175- .. Gotllpolt. Olo ... 411131.

Ool... flo.

Coii814-IIZ.II74.

2 flo....... 1 1121.

, _ "'""'·· bo ..lllot bloc*
Lobrlldor; MotonCDUIIiY ANmol

........ 304-171-1481.
2 mote pupplot, port loogto .,d
- doo loogt&amp; pllo. . 30417ti-78tl.

INt: ---·llfillhlltlr.

n-·ta-'ill-tfa

'l.

m•ll. 114-28&amp;-

5248.

P-21. In - • of

114-742-2171.

915-4141

·

brns. 8lu minurn. 'lrlnlmiMion 4483.

1nd

rom.-caf Me• your m1U:h )..:.....:.::..:.:.::.;____ _ _ __
through our tinal• newark. Truck Orlv•ra / Maintenenee

31111

'

hour. 114-H2·2413.

EARN MONEY Ro-g booktl
A. A. 1·800-333-11011 .
t30.000/ yr. lnaomo ~.,.tot.
Calobrtto '"'"'' wMh • nM ~~tiJ~IIOti-187·
ht.

··-·-

•ROOM ADDITIONS

~':."eCht!t::'o'~"::.':.w~
(198111
' •:
•a · pir ·

'
Will dO - - • worlc, pori · '
ScriP Iron •d m. .l. copper, dm•orful11me. Cllll14-9815- : '

61•1-245-9557

,..........

HANDWOVeN
WMVInl BupPIItl
llgnup-forhtklll
W.VlngCiat'ito
OPDIIOST SATURDAYS
18:00 1115:00

GAWACO.AUA

8 lotlt and Foond

IASIITWIAYE
IAIItETS.

tiOVERNMENT JDBII

·
·
Jobt ..d opp-loow. coli I· . ,
I 111-313-2127 • t P 845.

Wanted To Bw

coat
&amp; Auction.

w..,.,,

BU-2848.

hlrlna too your .,... both
tkll.t 1nd unsldlled. FOr a ht rA'

~·.:..'t;:'A'I! :!!In~

11

Summer With
Central Air!
1911-14x70'
MOilLE HOME

Public N otk:e

-=...:.:...:.:.:____ __.:.._ ., '-.

0erv1ces

Beat

'----.;,;4· ....

rfenc:.. Phone 304-273-3447

3-10-'81· 1 mo.

UVING
A
BUDGn?

IIDIIUPOIT, OliO
OPEN 1:30·6:00 P.M.

STONE

$7.50 PD TOii

4-l-19· t mo.

550 .... 111111

••n

ear• or mora. mo.tt, fl... with hotpbl. E.,..lenCid.

FABRIC
SHOP
110WESTMAIN

PATRICK H. BLOSSER

GEUY
IOD'f SHOP

·

Edwin

416/t0/1-

AT THE

319 So. 2nd Ave.

108 Hlp St,...,
Pom.,oy, Ohio 45769
l'looo• (61f,) 992-2922
'
2- ·'89tln

.Call Anytime

tor .··

Jutt Wlnt to
a IIU. •t..
morw,'7· Or would you Ike lo
lwve 1 c.•? Either way Awn
eM hllp yau blithe belt yau c•
botH Colt Morltyn
304-

t..nd •ound llull•d .;.._ -~
====~ 992·11818.

DEUVIIED &amp; SPIUD

PH. 949·2101
or liS. 9119·2160

RELATIONS

Now ICC..,.Ina eppllcetiont

drtv .... Mult be 11 or older.
Inquire It Domino' 1 Plza In

~===;:::========4=·1=4=·=8=9·:1:m:o:.~~ Witt

CONSIGNMENTS WRCOM£

PUBLIC

S,l. 50

on

AIIIIOU II ce Ill en Is

614·662-3121
Author~d John
D-•· N- Hotlend.
Buth Hog F•rm
Equpment De•lw.
Ftr•E••It•lll
lal•&amp;l1nl11
1·1-'H·ilc

•bl•

Tlolrd
814-445-3159.

PH. 596·4756 or 992.:.6637

992-6282

Lee&amp;a Mui-phey
&amp;:. A880clateo "

V•d S.l., Luc. C..e. Tuea.
Wed. lhu ra. Sh..t•~
cloth
and tote mite.

LIMESTONE.FOR SALE :;;2. Golllpollt. c.n 11.. 4411-

Middlaport,

11. s. n. so un
GIIYSVUI, OIH..

of.....

TOP CASH pllid for '13 madill

"Free Elllm.-•''

SERVICE

-

1nd nM« u.- can. Smith
Buic:k·Pontiec. 191 1 E•lt«n

9&amp;2-2196

BOGGS

...

9

PAT HILL FORD

NO SUNDAY

tlrovot
HNI Rolld off Rt. 7. 8808.
c~hln oo1 w11·
10'/0 Eq. uot Opportunity ~•,
Fil'cil'f le~.~ ~·not• Thuro. _EmP__
r._ _ _ _ _
· :-:
Siyloio -~~~- F~t or -: •
Nortlup. Second houM ocrou ptrt·ti- S..dr.....,.to: TOil ·.·
bridge to Northup. Thurtdl'f &amp; olthl811in,111-2nd8t.. :•:
Frtdl'f. Vtrtoty
.,.PI&gt;_.,...:::.."':.:.·:.:.Oh.:..lo..::...:".:;7:.:.1.:;1·;___ _ ·: :: '
Frtdl'f ontv. Rolli betide old Ad.,tlc City. tlolllng Qillt In •.
-•II School. Clothing. ol .,.,_tk aHt ollop. tllrlt dor· : •
-tnt.,., to ockllil. BllrV 1
mhory on ~--• _,-., •'
bod.
mmodloio ompt.., 11 •ol·¥"•1¥- ..•
"'...,....,. "'""'1111•....,_, t:JOO--;·:
Writ• 10&lt; tnfor-lon ond •
.......pt.Pliiaiianf..... f:I'~~=C.:.":'tc.•:,:;;~ ~'l:
N.J . OUOt.
'
&amp; Vicinity
1-:--:--:-:--:--

Rwenwaood, w.v•.

TUXEDO RENTAL

cor1 radiators and
heater corn. We con
aho acid !toil and rtHI
out radiat\ws. We also
rapair Gas; Tanlls.

&amp; Vicinity
;~~~N. ~-t:.=::.::; 3
.................................. :~5':,":""'~'if R:·; t"Hr. ;;

AUCTIONEER

Oh. 45713 .....

We con r~air and ,..

:· :
. •,

.......Galliiiolis __________ :"';J;:::."::"~~:-:...~~~-::.:

v.tnt• now booking
sDrina 111•. 17 ye. . •pe.

!===~!=~~~~~!!

.SERVICE

Po.,...,
h• - • · lngo
lof po~ R.N .'o on al

Ohio : Uquidltlons.
,ISUI•
•14-2411-5152.
.,.., ofestM•.
antlqun • .tc.

existing mortpae.
.
No reftnancin&amp;. A
Mort111t .Consultant
Service
Call 1-800-422-9010
Ext· 4051
. 4-tJ.I mo. pd.

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER
CAMP
GROUNDS

::

n:;· - ..;.

Coli Morfin Wodom-. Auctfo. AVONIII•. . IIIhiri.-,Bp....
n•. Ucennd &amp; Bonded In 304-875-1429.

Save lhOUS&amp;nds On

SAlES &amp; SIIYICE

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

.

~=~-~· !/,~ ~=.

AVON · AI • •· Colt Merlyn
w• .,., 304-182-2145.

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

WATER
I ,000 GALLONS

Found: 01block
Poo&lt;lo.
tiErIIPAID
FOft
~EI'- ~-.· '
Found
Doll•t..,.;o
lion-.
tOt Tilt
UOO.
OOMAJLINtl
. . .. Wrh"
PAlE·
33J,
111
•
Una~~-v,
North.~~ ..- . 1~80142.
- ...;
•
••
0 0 vERN MEN T J D 8 • ••--:
7
Yard Sale
tte,040.- t88,230

•St. tMont..r Runt. Pom•
ray. Colt 814-192-1073.

POm•ov.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

IN.SULATI ON

·

In Memoriam

5

IIi

MORTGAGE
REDUCTION
SYSTEM:

3/ 3118811 mo.

Humphrey, deceased

(41 18, 21. (61 2, 3tc

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

INSTAWTION AND SEIYia OF HElL
ENEIGY EFFICIENT HEAT PUMPS, 111
CONDITIONING AND 95"fo EFFICIENT
FUINACE.
985•4222
•

BINGO
PO•IOY-EAGUS
CLUI
E.
224 MAIN ST.
992-99711
TilliS. E.L 6:45 P.M.
SUII. 1.1. 1:45 P.M.
zH.O. ;r..:::•'r.;and
h
I · H Pa~ ·
lftllt . , . man. .. ..,..
. ·lflt. lim~ I coupcn por cusIDIIIIII* biiiJ) 18SSIOn. ·
. Wo , , ISD.OG P• Gamo ·
Ovor 10 Pooplo 165.00
P,r Gamo
u, '0.01-ll
2-3-Hn

How.-11 L Writ..t

· IECYCUNG

for three conMcutive weeki
before the dey of the ule.
each inaertton to .be on the

•
(

-

HEATING
COOLING

FURTHER EXCEPTING .23

'f(tltj

,

110

Fuel and GM Company.

••
••

t~e

5

_..
=te

FAIIIC SHOP

EXCEPTING

0 .083 acr81 of real Htlitll•

:::::::=z

LARRY D. KENNEDY, D.D.S.
Will Be. Closed
For Continuing Education On ·

-·- ·a-..,.
......... .. _

USID SIWIIIG MAOIIIIIS
AITEllliONS
SIN"'~I H WillE
"'
SEWING MACIINJS
SINGEI KNITliNG
MACIINIS

heretofore conveyed, and

FURTHERMORE EXCEPT·

--------

.....

scISSOIS SHAIPENII

and privil,ea• in and uncter
u :id , .., •lite .. have bttn

.-:

THE OFFICE OF

1UifDO \IINfAl
DIY (WilliG SEIVICI

Fr~~ctionLinetotheNorthe.t

corner of
Mid Froc:tlo.n;
thence North 811-2&amp; Welt
2948 iMt to _.ar. of tho
rood: u.- following ftlod
South 45-38 Woot 387.8
foot: th*'oo South 27-110
WMt 394.11 .toot to b lntor·
soction with qld rood from
fW(o Run to Fllir Ground:
thence· following oold rood
South 8-27 E01t 381 Ioiii:
thence South 14-31 Wilt 8
foot to piece of~ ....

.,.,c.

ANNOUNCEMENT

•

r

ROUSH

.c;uaTOMKJ'ICHINUIATNI

center of old i'oed leading

from Korr' 1 Run to Rock
Sprinva Folr Ground from

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

&amp;

Cil.• •

IS.bfoctto
WRhout
Noliatl
# 1 co-n
" ·-..... IJ.OO 1 ~
#2 COPPa-........ 10• I~
CUAN Al!. .IUM
Sllln •.- ....- ........ 52 1 I~
CUAN AlUIIINUM
CAST - ...............- .. 40' 1~
AlliiiiiNUM
.VfiAGE CANS_.,, 50• 1 ~
IIONY
.SlEET _,......... 5• lo 30• ._
IONY CAst •• 31 •• 20• 1~
SUNIOII.ESGl~S-S·-;T· ·,.
-...ES.2m0' IlL

Crow and Crow ot Wilt So. cond St. end Mulberry Alii.,
PomO&lt;oy,Ohioat10:00AM
on Fridoy, Moy 12th, 11188.
iho tottowing d•crlbod root
· Htoto.
SHuotodintlooTowiilhipof
Sotltbury.
County ondboing
of Molge
ft
ft
andStoteofOhio:
in F,.Cilo~ No. 2 end No. I.
Town No. 2, RongoNo. 13,of
Loc-acl Off ay 11111
tho Ohio ComfJM'y'o Pu~
••
a
chMo,
bau.- tnd ellAt
of Ate.
ocri-• followo:
143. Po•nerC'fV,
Beginning ot o otokoln the i:;:;;;:~;

Alf/'LJ/1 well lfi'LJ-hlfl'nsentnd
.t'

,_,._

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

CHESTER, OHIO

•FIREwooD

April 1a, 1989

whicfi a tarli oak tr" .,...,

••t

•SHRUB • TREE
TRIM and RE
MOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

9 AM • 7 PM

Paying today

Plaintiff
CLARAVSHUMPHREY. out.
DefondM!tt.
CASE NUMBER 211882
LEGAL NOTICE
OF SALE
. Tho undtrolgnod wll offer

three pounds e ach. All four are
now at home and keeping everybody busy.
Adding four babies to a house·
hold where both pare nts work
and there's already a three
year -old, hasn't been ea sy, but ·
Taml and Dale are making it
work because of the support they
receive from famlly and.frlends .
. Both sets of grandparents help,
along with aunts, Including
Karen Grimm and Debbie Kinnison o( Langsville who pitch ln
occasionally. The parents have
adjusted their work schedules so
that one is thereallthetlme. Dale
'works at Jack Helm Ford,
Lancaster, and . Tam! at the
Smead Paper Co. Logan.

port on Easter ln Mozambique,
where Christi anity ls growing if ~U.
Itt f c;, f ~
c;-1
rapidly. In a new building. 2,500 ·
attended serVIces with many
'
week television survey . Ain't
By BOB HOEFLICH
standing outside .
Not only did Fred Brown, that swell!
Mrs. Follrod had the opening
According to the j)ostcard, we
formerly
of Meigs Cou11tY, at tend
praye r . and Florence Ann
wlli
receive a long distance
the
recent
Volvo
Spencer had the closing prayer.
World
Cup
telephone
ca1r·1o explain this
Special blessings were asked for
exciting
opportunity.
The survey
Equestrian
Fes,
the sick ln the community which
tlval
but
we
will
give
us
the
chance
to express
included Dorothy Robinson, Sara
were also reour views about television proCaldwell. Nina Robison, and
.
presented
by
gramming to the executives who
Arthur Spencer.
plan TV programs.
Sandy Hoyt,
During the social hour Ger·
And there's more. According
Route
33,
of
the
trude Robinson and Charlotte
to
the postcard, our household
Shade
area.
VanMete r served refreshments
may
have an effect of the
Traveling
via
plane
to
Florida,
ALISHA JO MARKIN
KE1'111 DUANE MARK~
. to those mentioned and Martha
programs
shown
on
TV
In
the
Sandy
attended
the
festival
held
Poole and Nellie Parker .
at the Florida State Fairgrounds future . That's swell too.
Hostess for the May meeting
However, the postcard arrived
Exposition Hall for five days and
will. be Florence Ann Spencer.
over
a week ago and the
was
able
to
get
a
birdseye
view
of
Mrs. Henderson will lead the
telephone
call didn't materialize.
many
celebrltles
who
were
on
program, "Growing Through
hand
for
the
world
famous
bad,
and
we had some choice
Too
Unite d Me thodist Women."
to
offer
on the anything
opinions
activity. Sandy also was able to
get the autograph of Ian Millar of goes, after all, It's 1989 !lllltude
Canada, winner of the festival.
that shows up on show after show
This fesUval Is considened by after show for all ages to watch.
many to be the epitome of Is there absolutely nothing left to
equesirlan events.
the tmaginatlon these days? But
While ln Florida. Sandy was a what the heck, as they say, If you
guest of her aunt, Mary Jane don' t like it you can turn it off.
Jenkinson, Lakeland, Fla., for- Many times, that's just what we
"Ten Commandments for Par- merly of Middleport, and her do. Some days enough Is enough
ents" and had a Bible quiz.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Is enough.
It was decided to give dona- Curtis Jenkinson of Middleport,
tions to Bethany Mountain Mis- who were wintering ln Florida.
Amazing! Those strange looksion and the Brownies.
ing green things hanging onto the
Prayer requests were taken for
For the first time, Veterans trees will one day soon be leaves.
Cltllord Jacobs, Larry Balley, Memorial Hospital this year Is Don' t think about the raking ln
Frances Goegleln, BUI Kennedy, staging career days for high ·the fall; just keep smlllng.
Becky Guinther, and Mary Hy- school students who are lnler·
sell. Mrs . Folmer led in prayer.
ested ln entering the healthcare
Plans were made by the group field.
to co nduct the morning wors hip
The demand for healthcare
service on Sunday and to have people in Ohio and across the
Election Day refreshments.
nation ls overwhelming these
Mildre d Jacobs dismissed with days and the hospital feels that
prayer and the group adjourned the careers days are beneficial In
to the church fellowship room for encouraging young people to
re fres hme nts a:nd ·a social hour.
enter the field . There are jobs out
there.
Capable Rhonda Datley, director of nursing at the hospital, Is
heading the tours and assignment of students attending the
events. . Stodenls are given
tho center of llld ro..t
Mrs. Hysell, as sistant weight considerable attention by departPomeroy, otong
north 1111 dogre• - • 78 tho Vltlll(ll ol
to
tlte
1outheailt corner of
IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS
ment
heads
in
fields
where
they
rode:
.._.. oouth 10 t-for
tho
oum of
recorde r , were ln charge of
COURT OF MEIGS
1.1-ototofWitllomc,
..
have
expressed
special
Interest.
d1g,...
Hit
31
rodl;
•11.000.00 ...m tho Wotor hort; thence north t r II'
weigh -ln.
COUNTY, OHIO
Dop
bn.-.
end
•1.000.00
So
far,
students
from
Southern
lOUth 2
- t 14
_ . 310 t•utongllld 1.1
FARMER&amp; lANK AND
Mrs . Martin reported that the
~
thence aouth 12 from tho Fire 0opMbi ..'lt. •
High
School
and
Eastern
High
acra lot to the northuat
SAVINGS
COMPANY
bes t loser was Mrs. Pickens, with
. . , _ - · 78 rode; ....... corner
of llld tot; thence
School
have
taken
part
In
the
Plointltf
for
tho
·
thence aouth 35 deilr- men' • Compeneetlon cte- oouth 117'
three people as runner-up, PhylV
I
511' w•t 28.3
lls Dreyhel , Grac e Stout, and career days and Meigs High MARY L. MEREDITH. Ill ol. - t 22 rode; thence w•t duc:tod by tho Moitll County foot along the north llno of
eo
roc11
to
tho
ptoco
of
Auditor
on
tho
llom~Annuat
Hid 1.1 ooro lot; thence
•
Delondtnto boglnnlng. contoini"ll 31 " - " " - o f Tox•.
Sylvia Neece. The best teen loser School will wrap It up on May 10.
Now, hospital depariment
Cote No. 88-CV-141
was Cry s tal Smith. ·
·
- 2' 20' woot 70 toot:
Thlt
Nloiutlon
PIIIOd
Kfll, more or •••·
NOTICE OF BALE
thence north 11• 37' - •
Roforonce
Died:
Volume
188B.
Aprl17,
The surprise gifts were won by heads will do a survey through
At Shariff of Melgo
179.71eottothe-lnoof
.Juanita Humphreys and Diana school administrators to deter· County, Ohio, t hlrtbY offw 281. 1'11111 1111, Volume Jono -on, Clerk-Tre•.
Ello ... E. • Vlrfl(nlo V~oo
300, Pqo 4117. Melva (41 211 1tc
Ferm; tt.lce aouth e•
Herdman who received two mine If, perhaps, the career days for Nlo 11 10:00 A.M. on County Deed A -.
377.4 toot to tho ptoco of
tickets for the miniature golf should be conUnued but for FrkW(, tho 12thcloyofMoy,
Public Notice
Bubject toll-·· - •
boglnnlng. containing 1. 1
younger students with the Idea 1188, A. 0., on tho front mend righto of wey of
course In Middleport.
ocreo. mo.. or lou. EXCEPT
lllpo of tho Mlitll County
that
they
can
select
their
areas
of
Re fres hments bf diet soda and
Court Houot, P..,.rvy, Ohio.
ott !ego! rlghto of wey
NOTICE OF BALE
Bold r i l l - Wouthof
coffee were served to all high school study with more tho fo-lng - - r i l l tho Chwry Rldtll Rood ond
By vlrt,.. of on Ordar of ond -onto. EXCEPT·
knowledge If they feel they would
end RESERVING t""'oa ttending . .
Ml- Shodl River; Bold Solo loouod out of,.,. Com· lNG
lrom
ott minorota.undarlying
like
to
follow
the
healthcare
path.
Bhuotoln
tho Townlhlp of
mon
PICourt
'
o
f
Melva
rill -tolt baundsd on the
Ohio TOPS 570 meets every
o ..n(ll, In tho County of hot
the
obovo
-crlbod propby Middlo Bhodl AlvM'; County, Ohio. In the- of
Tuesday night at the Coonhunerty
whh
tile
right to mine
Moitll
end
•
of
Ohio.
tho
Former•
Bonk
a
Bovtnva
We have an exciting opportun- end bounded .,d -illed on tho Iouth by tondt now
lnd
remov•
the uma
ter s Lodge at the fairgrounds
Company,
Plotntlll.
va.
Charor toon•ly ownod by Jom•
without
en~mbrence to the
• totlowe:
too
L.
Noutdng.
ot
Ill..
Dowith walking from 5-6 p.m., Ity coming up, a~rdlng to a
HuHmon ond Jom•
PARCEL 1: loingln a- 0.
Notfy, end on the - t by 1 _,_., upon 1 Judgmont aurfece, The above d•cripweigh-in 6-7 p.m., and the busi- postcard we received In the mall.
tlon
33,
Town
4,
Rongo12,
Perhaps, you received one too.
forty-flvo ocro porcel.ot rNI Ill...., Nnllorod. boin9 Cooo tJon was P"'P•red by Homer
ness meeting at 7 p.m. MemberHylllt, A. S. No. 2274 par
Ohio
Com
pony'
t
Purch-.
Our hOl~Se has been chosen
• • owned by O.Weyne No. B8·CV·2BII In Mid
IUMI'f of April, 1976.
Beginning ot o 'point 1Q2 ship Is open to everyone.
Court.
I
witt
ofllr
for
tole
ot
end Mort.,. Btutlor.
lobe a Nielson Family for a one
The point of beginning It
rode n - of thli IOU~
the
fyont
door
of
tho
Court·
Bold rill •tote wu
tloo locotod oouth 2100 loot
corner of llld hctlon 33. In
·hou•
In
F'-ov.
Melva
Ill
T - - County. Ohio. on tho 22nd tndw•t 1100footlromthe
the Eott lno of told uotloii; --'*
th~~--d
dolton cloy of Moy, 1111, • 10;00 northeMt corner of Section
.._ce - • 101 rodtono (U3.000.001. Blld rool
•·
12ondthonceaouthllr 30'
line porollot to t h o - Hno
Iondo, _
to to be ...... for not .... o.m., tho
. 111 feet to the boginof lllld -ion: ....... """" th• two-thlnto (2/31 ott...
101rodtonolneporoltolto .tor tkl apprlll1ed value. tocal8d II 31774 ....... nlng of the flrtt cou••• dot.,...inod by tho Moiva
tho - · .... of ..... -""': C:.h tn ...,don tho Plo ot Creok Rood. Mldiltp art. County Engln-.
.._.,._tonollill...,..ol
Ohio 487to. A-~~- toRef.,_ D-: Volume
to tho oouth tine of MidBold _.. lo MIIIIIOI to • · gel dOlO lplkll of tho rwt ... 302, Pogo 347, Motva
lion .to tho cNifl - · .. pro¥11 by tho c-.onPI- IIIli -~1 le ...
County DMd R - .
....... Bhodl; ....ce In • Court. Molgo County, Ohio. of tho mollilo homo
Along with • 1174 FlJ-M.aoutoby -lod on t h o - - • • lngo
-Mifol.
Mobh Horn&amp; MIIIUfllc&gt;
.Iowtna
.........
8hodoionCNok
B...,tffot
....... S.ill ,112133711.
In ht -dsrlntlt to tho
8ftuotod
In
the
T-nthip
Melva County, Ohio
of told -ion; APRPOVED:
of Ruttend. County ·of Modll '0D70f3JOFM. with
Certlllof
Tltlo
thonoe toutll on tho- 1M FreoiW.CI'GW,
Mol.., end B•t• of Ohio.
of lllld -ton to tho point CROW Md CROW, Anorney
Jlelng tn leatton No. 12, ft301348811, which It curof boelnntne. oontllntne
T-1. Ron(ll14. Autlond rtntly tocotod on tho obavo
71.11-•.-•rllla.
To-thlp, Melva County, d-rlbod rwl •toto.
REAL EITATE AND MO·
PARCEL2:A_of._d , _ . , , Oh
Ohio. d1i ~ ••d • followe:
'
BILE
HOME APPRAIIEO
......,. tn thiCouiity,B- 141 11. 1B. 21. 3tc
.......... in tho of
MdT_......,eliiNtlld: letho Lu•I B Creok !toed No. AT: *13.400.00. Th• root
inl tn P...aon II, T - ...
a, ..._Hid
Jn. llt8te'ond motlllo homo-NEW SUMMER HOURS
not be toljl for loot then two" - 1 I. Ohio CaM; If" I
. _ _ tho ....
,......
lllfllhl
.
.
.
. tho •proleod VI·
Beginning May 1, 1989 The Office WHI Be Open
tho 1'01111. of lilt. E. Vlteo t... RUOWTION
of .....
TERMB OF IALI: C•h
8:30 e.m.-6:30 p.m. Mondey thru Wldneedey
4-11
- •d
I. Vltetoo
od In DMd on dollvory of 11oM.
IT RIIOLYID It¥ tho Form d
·
11:00 e.m.-7:00 p.m. Thundly
~:.'::\.-,.,-:..-:: ICoo•nalt of tho VIII... of , . 1oo11 No. 211. , ... 821,
.L.
J - M. Soutoby,
t1horlll of Melge Coun1lt
CLOSED FRIDAY
IMI'O¥· Ill maa&amp;1r1 ooncur· DMd II_,. of Mlltll
·""County, O~lo: touth (411B, 21: (II 2, 3tc
Second Seturdey Mch month 8:30 e.m.-1:00 p.m.
17• 30' ~-4 feot
IConti,..od '" Pogo 71

d--

~

---·----

OPEN 7 DAYS

g~~~~u~a~rcft~~~

Beat of the bend

TOPS spring open houJ:e held

•

r:;=;===:;::=iir~~~~~~~~rrF==:s~~=aut.Ft~~~~~~~~~::::7.::::::;:;::=~==i1

HUMPHREY , DECEASED

Rock Springs UMW meets,
elects new officers for year
Election of officers took place
at the'tecent meeting of tile Roc k
Springs . United · Me t hod ls t
Women when the group m et at
the church.
Office r s include Doroth y
·Jeffers. president ; Sharon
Folmer. vice-preslMnt ; Fern
Morris, secretar y; Norm a
Baker, treasurer; and Frances
Goegleln and Virginia Wears,
cards.
Groupslnglng of " At Ca lvary"
and "Just a Clo!;er Walk With
Thee" opened the meet in g .

·-·

Services Off

Public Notice

Former Meigs residents
quadruplet grandparents

Scripture readings fr om the
books of Colossians and Gala lions. opened the program
"Fruits of the Spirit " at the
recent meeting of the Al(red
United Methodist Wome n whPn
they met at the chu rc h.
A discussion of hunger, homelessness. and neglected health
problems followed. The s ocie ty
voiced these conclusions. people
must help ln a spirit of love, mu st
support good church and government programs especially those
which help pe ople h e lp
themselves.
Nineteen sick calls were reported. Osle Mae F'ollrod ha d the
prayer calendar and chose
Teresa San Iiliana, who Is in laity
work ln Peru. The society s igned
a birthday c ard for her. The lma
Henderson gave a mi ssions re-

~

~T~v-~da~v~.!~~·~2~&amp;~·21r9!&amp;9~--~--~----~~----~-:----~P~~~~o:v;::M~i~=:~~~·~o~No~·~~:--------------r~~~~;nw~o~•t•v;;~~~~~7~:E
·"'&lt;'
!Continued from 1'1ogo &amp;I
6 Los1andFoond
11 ~-pWint.t

-

.. l919,t..A•
.•
Tl_.,.
... _. _

Dear Ann Laaden: I was front becau11e of your pot belly. . llamptd bu•inr.u- siu envelopP (4 5
cents po•ta~f'J roA nn Lander f, P.O.
fascinated by that letter from " C Whlle his clothes were drying I
Box /1 562. Chicaflo. Ill. 60611-0562.
-In Oregon" who gave such an gave him lunch - the cuserole
elaborate explanatiOn when his you missed last night because
wife came home and caught him you decided to go out with the
making love to a strange woman. guys after work. He said It was ·
I have written a scenario th11t Is the best home-cooked meal he
much more believable. - DDD
had had ln months. I told him It
Dear DDD: Here's your story, was the first cqmpllment I had
which beat out about 500 others. received about my cooking in
Mr. X came home from work years.
Former Meigs residents, Marearly and found his wife In bed
"We talked while I pressed his
vin
and Josphlne Markin of
with a handsome young man. shirt and It was wonderful to
~adcllff,
have become experts at
Just as Mr. Xl.vasabouttostotm have a conversation with a man
handllng
two babies at a timeout, she stopped· him and said, who seemed Interested In what I
not so easy If you've ever tried lt
" Before you leave, I'd llke you to had to say. Suddenly he noticed
- since they've become grandknow how this bapjlened.
the Ironing board was wobbly. I
parents to Quadruplets.
"When I was driving home had asked you a dozen times to
The Marklns, who spent sevfrom shopping this afternoon, I fix It, but you were always too
eral years here while he pastored
hit a hole In the pavement. The busy. The man fixed the Ironing
the Sliver Run Free WIU BapUst
hole was fllled with water. Great board In 10 minutes and then he
Ghurch, are regular sitters for
, blobs of mud spattered all over actually put the tools llWBY.
Keith Duane, Craig Daniel, Trl·
this man. Without a trace of
"As he was about to leave he
sha Jane and Allsha Jo Markin,
anger· he looked at me and said, asked with a smile, "Is there
born on Jan. 23, at the University
'What rotten luck. I have a very anything else your husband has
Hospital,
Columbus, to their son
Important ·meeting this after· neglected lately?' And that Is the
and
his
wife,
Dale and Tam!
noon and just look at me!"
end of my story! "
Markin,
Logan.
"I told· him that I was terribly
How much do you lui ow about
sorry and offered to clean him por1 &lt;oc,oit~e. LSD, PCP, cra&lt;h.
The four babieS were born at 31
up. He seemed grateful and I ' .tpet&gt;d and downPr6? Think you con
weeks
and weighed just over
brought him home.
hondlt&gt; them? For up-to-the miniAit
"He undressed In the bathroom informal ion on dru.R•· write for
and I handed him the bathrobe I Ann Um,d tr•' newly revi1ed boobought you for Christmas a few klt&gt;t, ..Th,.· Lowdown an Dope."
years ago. It no longer closes In s••d 13 plu• • ~ti/-Gddr.ued.

. . . ·'

.

c..r.e.... !yftdlclk

,Alfred UMW meets

-

- -·------·----------------·------------

Pon'aoy-Middlaport, Ohio

CRn.D ABUSE PREVENTION WEEK- Pomeroy Mayor R.W.
·Saylor has deslgnaled lhls week as Child Abuse Preyenllon Week. ·
Community Assault Prevention Services of Galla, .Jackson, and
Melp 6ountles, aloag with. the League Agahwt Child Abase, the
HantiDgton Banks, and Kroger of Pomeroy, are sponsorial the.
Amazln1 Spider Man on Saturday from 10: 30 a .m. to 2:30 p.m. at
Kro1ers lo promote public awareness during this week of.child
abuse prevention. Carol Edwards, director of Community AMault
'Prevention SerVIce of GaiDa, Jackson, and Meigs Counties
displays the signed proclamation dedarlng this week as Child
Abuse Prevention Week.

"Jo

fiao-

3 houH tr..ilr - · ·· 10np.tl

'a' ''\

· noo. eo1 814-31..., •.
8119.

18 Wanted 10 Do

.,

Wit"'"".. In 1111'- Ro~"f - .
• • E1111ellll'lt IWf•~nc.. C1ll· '':..

.,

114-245-8788.

Ne•d yoUr

' '

tawn mowed?

awn· .

lawn mowtr &amp; w . . ..e: • . C111. ·:

114-992-HK

v.w bebr•• mv home ..... 1-s...

Golllpofto ..... Col 114-448, ,
3307.

-.nllioo Top tloopol • -- ..
.,.Ina •all.n ..ts to.

•• now

,!fng. For mote lnformlllion clll

114-992-3112. 814-848-29t2· '
"' I 14-1411-30110.
Day Care for working mottwt. ,,t
Mondly ·

Fridlco

In

my l!omoln· "

Svr•cu ••· Wtll 1upervl11d, •

pltnn.. actlwMI-.

l•ee

pllfi

• •· Aef•ence .,llllble. 114- ,··

848-30211.

'•

--~-------- oiyllot nolldlld opply KOitlrt ."•'

Kui .,d Kurt or colt 30&lt;4-8711-- •
4347"' 875-3081.
Llrrvs Gun Rlpllr. louttwlde. ,

Colt lcor oppolnj._, 30,.;178-' :;
1457.
•

'"

-

btlotottln 1111' loomeJoclcoon
A... Mon. . iloru Frldo!l. Agoo
n_....n to I yra aiel ..._.,._ . .,.,
bl• rlttl.
1

•IMri•'*" ,.,... ,

ce~ provided. non-tmoldng. o.tr'
30~875-1273.

~

·

�•

•

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

Page 8-The
21

Ohio

Sentinel

8UIIneu
Opportunity

LAFF-A-OAY

51

OALLPDIS AREA
............... lace-

7iS

' lwll•nd
Moton for •••

BORN LOSER

..,.

••-eu•

Sol• ond cholra prlood lrorn.
•385 to •el8. Tobl• teo ond
up to t1211. Hldo-o.- UIO
to .....
t225 to
U78. t...po ue to tt21.
Din- • 101 ond up to Mil.
Wood tobt•w-8 ....... Ullto
t7BI. O.k t!OO up ;. U71.

Ro-

, . _.. . oorN-.ce store. O.a.

0~2.

..,lao. . .lau. lnq ....... Col

114-31,.0M1.

Hutch• ..00 .-.d up. Bri
bedl
w-matb •

co,..._•
t211Mdup1DUII. Ioli¥-

linn.,..

qW., DDn'tfNI"d . . fmm11 I..,_

ning be*· S.Ve ta 110 p•CMt·
Prla• ft'om •249. Ulmp•·
lotlons-Acc .. aorl•• · Call
t.,._fr.. color Clllatog 1·800-

422·1010 - ·· 4051 .

l-OVE: M'( ~~~!

M

TUES.,

Tobocco booo lor - . Coli 114-. . .17....

Epi-o
.Ill Ill •
ii!Ntwt

12 -114-448-t411.
_...,. u1llty - - ·
Coli

tD Long Ago l Far Awor
(!) Matti LHmlng Hour

WH'T' ARE 'T'OU ALWAVS SO
ANXIOUS,JO CRITICIZE ME?

I JUST TI-t INK I I-lAVE A
KNACK FOR SEElN6 OTHER
PEOPLE'S FAULTS ..

• liD Hoppy Dayo

IIJ Sho·Ra
6:05 (I) Aile&amp;
1:30 ellJ IDl NBC Nightly Nawo

ABOUT '(OUR
OUIN
FAULTS?

V.-y 1ttrtctllla .. ldl4 bediooom,

2 bath, famly room with fir•
pl-. formtl dining. lire- llv lng
raom. 30ft. cultcm Ollk kilch•
cablnlll. oak woodwork. fin•h
bMtment. 2 c• t•'De. l.,el
hwtdlcep«&lt; lot. 4 mil• from
Holzer Hoopkol off Rt. 35·

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Nlce1 lA unl.lrn'.ct. apt., • •

33
Farms for Sale
---------

Oetu••
3
OwiiW

74acr•. ·8 room

5104.

to~cco

b•a

1752.

hou•. 5 BR,
C.ll 114-2116-

35

lots

&amp; Acreage

Buyeu Guide. (1) 1----~~---8011-687·6000 Ed. S-10.189.

plut.

eeanit.Jl a.-clou1. brick-vinyl
colonl• 3 IR , 2 loti. lbave
••ega quality bulft. In d•lr.t
lac.tlan. C.ll614--44&amp;8118.

Enjoy fia:hing.and rvt•lng in
vour own 15~elall•fronthome
lnFioridl. otOrrin. tDtt.blach,
will oonakter trade. Clll 9-2
wttkct.v•.aft• 10 an wn-

kerull, 114--446-0201.
1981 14K70 moble,.hama • 3

1/2 •cr•. Cell 11+38&amp;-9011

.rt
, • 15 P.r.t ,
1

2woodedbuldinglota.ApprOKtm•et¥ 2 acr• tech. O.J . Mite
Rd. Call 814-2411-11898 after

brick 5_:_3o_P,_._M_.~:--:--::-;::
e.ome 1 YJ..,111b•4h. -oom
ltl bll ement 1

(l;ollty

wkh 20x21 kwvetr' finilhed farn- Land tor ..... Oneto.,•acr•ln
ity room whh fireplace •d Rutland Township. Ctll 114olldlng gl•o dooro 10 potlo. AI 9:-s-::"'-3_m__,_
..._•_I:-::O:-o:-p_
.m_. :hardwood ftoors, plenty of 11 ~
7
alat«.,datcnges--. 15x28 81Jidino ell• and lata an R..,-

a•'U• Ram• &amp;rldllr..P-in

•lng room .-.d ..ont door side
louvers. plentY, ofln1ulltionwlth
double
wlndowe. mwbee
11111. tlectrlcheat. 2300aq. fr:. of

II••

lhfing•a Locat~lnUkeDrivt

adcltion- FUo Grande n• Rio
Grandt oolleoa R*llt tee to
appr«t•e. · Call 814-245-15418
or 814-2411-1201 lur .,pointment. Pricera..ctdtot87,000.
AadmpriniJIII•• Cultetinbult,
1 owner home on •prCM:. 3
aCI'• I bedroom~. 21fz bath. 6
flreplactl. intercom tYII.-n. inground pooL guebo, lots of
extrJI. .!riced to MM. For more
info.,....tlon, cell 814-992-

3254.

tann Road. 304-171-&amp;2&amp;3.

•trll u•aae

bo•.

tor c.np•.

Me. Elegent inside lnd OUl

Gil.,.

atout 30minu. . toPirk. .burg
or Ath-. 1mong
lovefy
homtl. Own• wants to f'llkt.
Clle. Cell Wah Ack•rntn 114192·1900.
Price rMllcedl S~ ve• old
tri-IIJt'el. 4 acr• ctote to Pome-

rar. 814-982-1874 or 614-

7 42-2880tor moreinformltion.

din'"'

4 bectoorne. 2 bM hi.
g
room. 'ftrepl.ce. lovefv interior.
Ownw tr1n1ferred. Cell 814-

992·6709 oft• 8 :00p.m.
3beci"oombrldc homewit.h!•ge

lot, Mid Wllf 0 ~e. NBWrH..ven.
Good cone!. 304-773-8981.

3 bectoom IWidt, priced 60' a.

extr1 nl01, M•acbwbrook Additior\ Clll aft• I;OO Md w ...
k ..do 304-8711-7438.

HouM tor ul&amp; Second Str ....
M11on. wv. 2 ttorv. 3 bedroonw. one bM:I\ bMement.

garage and carport .
U9. 800.00. Coli 304-7731028 .... 1:00.

32

Athton bea~t;lil one ecre lots
wtthrilfer1rantag&amp; publlcwat•.
Clyde Bowen. Jr. 304-87112338.

814-4411-1102.
1988 Rodmon 8octiono121xll.
3 IR. CA. To bo movod . con
814-44&amp;-SB94ott• &amp;pm.
1971 Convontry 12x60w/8ft.
oo~do.
01000. Coli . d~o
814-371-2410, ovo'o 241·
1171.
lETTER USED HOMI!S . Elo•
Home Cent... I loaltlor. in
OttO. W. fin.-. .. what we aetl.

c•To.t.r 1--.szs.0112.

1114 . . llno. 1 4lt 70. 3 BR, IY•
~h. •oell.nt aoncltlion. Fin~ndng avalllllle. Frtnct. Cit¥
8ral a;&amp; Cal 11+44&amp;-8340.
1181 7d1
Noohuo
- -·
14lt60
wlh
..........
2 BR.
ol
• • · . . . tub, mutt mew•
!tom lot. Col 814-3811-9748 01
3111-1898.

r_ . . . . . . . . . . .
1172

-Ia. 12x16. 2 bocl-

t.:!'

oin lvlnll room. olr •
Good oan.,lon. • - 114112-3111.

Now ICCeptlng

-..M~iona for

2 bl~oom ..,_...._,., fully
c•pBted, appll.,ta, wM• .-.d
tr•h pl'*"pa prouldod. Mointon., .. fr• living close to lhoppinQ. blnka .,d schools. For
more lnfrorrMtion Cllll 304-882·

3718. E.O.H.

One bldroomfurniahtd.Pt. vet'¥
nice 1nd clean, IG..IItt only, no

304-8711-3100 or 8711-5609.
Nort~

4th Ave. Midil_... 2
room ..,lrtment. 1·304-882·
2668.

Htlf aoelot compl•e hook up,
Routh Ferrell Road. Camp ConIt¥. Point PleMant. 304-17&amp;-

Carpat.t. Nlcentling. ....,ndry
,.cillti• avlillble. C.ll 114-

Rentals
41

Homes for Rent

--------::-:--:-tkll.lrnilhed hou . .. 3 be"'oom.
Aadntrt ViiiMgt II t2150. Call

814-«1-«16 tft• 7 P.M.

Seii/R.,t 2 BR ra'ld1, •nit lilt
condiUon. L•v- f.,ced ylni
n.w Carpet, Bidwell School

dlttrid:. Call 614-441-8320.

2

bedroom

Apts.

for

r•t.

992·3711 . EO H.

Gracious lYing. 1 and 2 bedroom lpartments It VilltGI
Manor and Alv . .ide APifl:·
menu In Middleport. From
flU Call814-992-7787.

2 bUoom, furnished. Remo-

del... • - ploygr ... nd. l•go
patio.

Sea.~rhy

.

dtposlt. CAl

814-992·6181aft• &amp;p.m.
1 bectoom IPI. for tent. t226
month. deposit required. 814-

992-8119.
Furnllhed. 3 room ep.-trnent.

Arat ftoar, pr1Y1te .,.,ence, no

42

poll.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Coli 814-948·2258.

1 bedroom ~~pt. In Mldcleport.
Total IIIIICt:rlc. fultr c•peled.
kitchen •d weter furnished.

Futtv

Coli 614-992·3117 or 114992-5170.

DtP. Also 3bedroomtr•ll•. Clll

1 btdroom apwtrnent tor rent in

furnished u•ag• ept. AH
utMttl• paid IICCIIIPI tlec:lrlclty.
Newtv ..clecor8ted &amp; c•p«ed.

814-4411-8658. 446· 6860.

No• Locta. 2 BR . Rof. &amp; Dop.
Req'ed.

t126 / mo.

Garden

opoc:e. Coli 8t4-4411-775ot or
Ul-2844-

2 br. furnished .
$210/mo. dep, N.7 jJMa. w.ter/ Sewer peld. Ref r~. Eatt•n
A... In city. Coli 4411-3171 lor
epptt. .tt• 6 P.M. evening~ .

MiddepcHt. f121. P• month

oluo utlitla Doyo. 614-992·
&amp;545; evenings, 114·949·
2217.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent.

2 BA moble home. Fwntshld or
untnrMahed. Ref. • dep. r•
quired. No pets. CaU 814-446-

ton. 12kl50afflcetrall•for••·
304-1711-3218.
2 be&lt;i'oom traM• In country.
c.rtr1l tir, t200.00. ref•nct

(!)

Hot ... 81 4-4411-8&amp;80.

Sleeping room1 with cooking.
Alto Trail• IPICI. AM haolf. upt.
CAll oft• 2p.m. 304-773-

114-3117-78110.
2 lA. ••.. n.., ptulh c•pll.
n.,r.lnl· 1111111• portlolly pold.
•17 o mo. Coii304-87S.I104.
8711-1388.

parl;lng • A.C. llol. .........

1111
-··
l
o ---1111110
a • lotlo-Hov-.
to .... ta.IOO.OO.

01r... - .

,,..,

.......

r_, , .
..... ......
................ _........

8843.

H.-ry'a Bergaln Hou11. Furni-

ture. ol....-re. gift itana a
mlac. J1ck1on St. k't VInton.
Hou,.: MondOY-Thurodoy 10·1.
Frldoy &amp; Sotuidoy 10·7.

Ch•t type free21r. EKCetlent
condhlon. t13&amp;. C1ll 11•·4484083.
Used tppllencn. Wuherl, dry·
••· rtngea. Nfriger .. ors. micra.,... ovans. ,teen•• Appli.,ce,
217 E. 2nd St., POm.-oy.

114·992·5336 or 814·181·
3881.
W11her and dryer, O.E.• avec·
ode. hewy duty, metchrrig w1n
c1binet, exe shlpe. *400.00.

Antiques

10 It Sotolh dlo .. ·o11 Droko
•ectronlcs. ffne tta.a . . for
......... nso.oo. 304-67112700.
Rolir Ropw - r :-

...,n

mower. Ladl• 28 M- M.....,
bicycle. VIto Molt•

••cloo
z..,llh AM ·FM ooNOio

"''"lo.
oter•. Coli 304-1711-3271.

t-

Auta wes-. and•drpn t100.
.,d n21. oodl. ' It - • t180. Cluioon atzo bod
complet:• til. nw.. weed
- · 304-8711-6812.
'
Pool •ttte with II acceasoriel.
r49Jiat6on slle. •300.00. MC

cond, 304-8,1 2·3•10.

Girlt .Ummer •d winter cl4&gt;
thing. lin 2 thru '7, 52
1ity LM&amp; Point fll_
. .unt. W.Va.

I hp Troy Built~- t171.00. I
It truck t - uoo. oo. eon

304-87S.3281.oft• 4:00.

Courttrv Moblla Home Park.
Route 33. North of POm•ov.
I..Dtl, lllnteta. pwtt, .., • . Cll
814-892· 7479.

64 .Misc.

Merchandise

Wh•ctt•• .,_. or uaad. 3

49

whHI• electric scoot. .. C1M
Roe- Modlcol
1· -MII-

For Lease

2104-

For lo•a: A - nM~·
-atod. 2nd llaor. corSocmnd•Pin•Oolllpolo.On•
be*oom ltove • rlfrtgerMor.
- t • proAdod Dopool ond
rol•on- .......... t226. por
mon1h. Coli
114-44.. 4249.
4411-4428.
or 448-2328.
for , _

z. _...,

lunlohoil

mo..o ho- nsa.oo ..,.....,
pl;o ut.loo. ... Hud,
30 4-17. . . 12 or 1711-11100.

SWIMMING POOLS· t1188
~ly bird • .,..... on 88 POOio.
Hugh1h311tpoo1Hughdod&lt;
fanoe. flh•. • wwranty.lftlttl-

lotlon.ftn.,dngwollobleCol

.,.....

55

Building !S upplies

f ' II I ! I ,"\

I '

JI

I ill

(\ l I \11 ' 1,11 ~

Block. brick.

..w•

•c.

tn.

~d

ordeHverv.MMonllncLGIII •
lit Blo'* Co .• 123'h Pine ••
Oolllpollt. Ohio. Coli 814-4411-

2783.

56 •

Pete for S•le

Groom ond a..pply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All brNdl_... ~II
oiyloo. lomo Pot Food Dool•.
Julio Webb Ph. 814-448·0231.
~........

Cottory ~nol.
....ian and llern- and Hime-

a.ow

·-----no...........
JD 30

"""""lie llolotjootor, J D

o - - • · noo.oo.
l'hono llr4- ItS. 34111.

"77

"78 G..,d ,.., 301, n.80o. oo.
Phon• 304-17&amp;-2419 .rtor
1:00.
.

72

~.:Z:4:hro.::!:·:II:00:•:34:11-:08=4;1.:::;;:;.l.:::::::::::::::::::~
... by 8 ruce D--tti
SNAFU..,
...... e

..;·..·- -.."""=~

•::-.=1
•

1Ill Chwy llick· up 'n!on. 380
.,t;o.
"·Pl. MO.I14-....
22. ·
·
·
198S Mutlo pi'*· ::t:- w .h

·c·. ••

opt

......

w...... - ...

An-I ...,lOr lilt lolo:
,_.0 c.. , ....0117:30
....

I'M,
_..,gtonCaurtfD;oo.lolllng
•~~omp­

/Duroc crotl-brM•. Rem.nbor2outii11.. p•3voanr
thoCh.......... - . 1..
Ohio I t - Folr Jr. -o

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

-·., ....

. . _ on;

,..

.......... old -~· Col 114tl2-7488ou.......

66 Saecl lk

Fertiliz•

Dooolb - " .. d ollolla
- · 1114-1711-!108.

Ie

I'
I

UNSCRAMBLE .FORI
.ANSWER
•

(LI

tD Ill TIMi AIDS Quartafly

-

•.30 rilGibe•I])
hears the conlesalon
(1:38)

H... Foltlt Father

304-178-22111.

liM Ford XLT . . . , _ Mini

------,::-..,..---1

. . , _ NM ...... lllil ......
COI.14-742-3141

-lngC-or;y
w. ........
_ _ lrrt_ ""

MllglcTouah

I 1M qc&gt;IN&amp; 10 eE EA.TINEf
A LOT' Nefl.Fi: V6GETAI!LE5
FROM NOW 0-.1 ...

1

r-•teriDr. 011 lc. 104-87117 CMv 110. ....... oyl. luol 7237, 111. 1· lloi; 10 A, l'oln1
lnloctod. 11-op.. ·tlr-. 3 ....... W. Yo. 21110.
_.. . u,.mlled ml-.e ltft an
:wo;roniy. 304-171-11111.
·· ..:-:..;.;OJ:-:N-,.-,,.::-:od-:-;:ill-;lo::no.::-:...

·..=

:
'
'•
:;

port&amp; . . . . . Wid ..... ,,..

t1

MY MeN. FUT6EAT BEI..TS
ON !He DIN IN&amp; ROCW\

of an araonill. 1;1
Ill Poll Awatda -

Crook
and ChaH Lorlanne Crook

CHAIRS.

.:roc~lm::::':..:;;;·CI~IH;30;;;4-~M~..=34=ZS.= :1;

Motorcyclea

ii

71S;auldOIIIOE.- ...1oh
coblo. 11roo.
~II. 7100 .... MIO. Doll
"104-87.. 1413 .... &amp;pm.

Plumbing
&amp; Hllllting

1118 Horitlo Miano V-30, 1ooo
1200 .... Call814-248l217' ............ 114-24111114.

TODAY,
JUGHAID

WHAT DID
YOU GIT IN
'RITHMETIC?

8
PLUS I!

'

A I PLUS,

Awards 10 talk wllh the
w!nntrs.

II Ruatlut

10:00(]) 700 Cluli
ellJ IDl NBC Nawt llpaclal

river
IOBelglum

better than whfto alhletes?
Tho debate hu lleon
whispered about In
lockarrooma ond press .
boxao, and by professional
an.d armchair athletes lor
decades. The conlrOversy
has now 11ecomo cauoa lor
clebeta 1mong blacks.
whites, IOCfal sclenUata,
raca-reiatlons experts and
tntllropoloalate. Tom Brokaw
oxplor1a thls laaue~ C
ril
llllrlr.....lfl
Mt11111'1 grandn'Mher U&lt;get
1o join the lamlly bualneu.

VARMINT II

TOO II

.I])

Por ••••·1174 Corvette

I .....,. - · AC.
T.............. .... Hoo
.... _ .......... ··-COl
114-44•7441 • 114-44..
1411.

, . . v .......

- - - • •1100. G...,
Wlh rodlrrt-. COl 814-.1-

ftM
..........
..
·
- · · f7IIO.
CootLoolll
t1800.
......
.., 114-112·
lttlo. -.,..,
to ·
0 glr\
COl
...

nc..-....- ._... 11!104

:;11:.:31.:;..-~-:--=:=--:-::-­

27 2 l'olr88CI;oity=ol&amp;-3lo. Col.
to
•
1\
•
114-448-·:~or
114-44S.9800M.P ..I.
~~. · O..Bo.
1171 -

..... ·;,:;.r..1M -*•
' ....mi-.-

-

M ........

nt--

171

e--. ,...,.IIY,

1 117 ICDO - - Vory
....
oac PI n. c.ll 11 ... M2-

IOIIewa•o•dWIIk-en•

eri14-981-Amwooli-d~o.

.

.

Onral Hiiliing •
BERNICE ,,

J·J--=-........
•.... -

BEpEOSOL

oleUM'III. WtQe. lftlfii,H IIt•

•
. . t'

.

. . .• =""".......

_

1.aooor
p - 104-

~-

no
•Dop. IOII'od. Dol
114-...... 1111.

.............
1111 or 114-

.

Price Wt Pey

• fJ) (I)

...

. ,... c.n ......
11:afl.! • .c ......

~=~JnrMW
·~sc-:s.==.,
...
Sony

lOAf ....... lllllt"!!Y -

~

1~

=1a1181111iCII98B

ffi IICMI: NIUIId 10J

l:t~ 8198tOIC.CIII-

'

(I)...._....,. ......

•• •

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

••
~·

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • K

club at trick two would not work, since
a double squeeze would then develop,
wltb West needing to save the club ace
and East having to hold diamonds. ;.,·
a result, neither defender could guant
spades. But the spade queen played at
trick two would cover all the bases. No:
doubt much perspiration would beproduced as declarer played out his .
hearts, but the ultimate result would
favor the defense.

lnllfl!dlent

~·~~~~

,_;.,;;"Be

. weJaht

IILONGP&amp;LL~W

ill fw •d l.ln U. . . . Aluled
fwlbt .._ L'l, :1111'4111 two 0'1, tie. 8qle leU Ills·
: ' 11 'w,IIIIJaclll_. r.vdln al tbt WCJidaan Ill
ladldqhe.lllsUUIIredlffer•ll
C81PNIIUOIE
SR

(I) a:~..,

.......!U!I=
;s..-.....::..1.

3+

Pass

...

eo'-- Cetoi&amp;CIIOI•

u..................
-·oa
....... - . 1·114-.
.2·
1111.

2.

. 011e latteul

Ill • Ill

f1) Ughllr llcl8 ollpolta

......

2+

4 Stonri
center
... _
II Garment
YNteJUr 1 .....wer
covering II SchooiiiUbJ. Ill Moleskin
8 Play-·
18 Mr. Cosby
color
aectlon lll c.prtcom 17 Pitcher'a
7 NIII'IJer)'
symbol
plllce
tile
lll Scutett
18 Loop
8 Ew1hy
O'H....,
21 One kbid
10 s,tng up
for one
of tube .
11 JI'Wplno 18 Siucy
84 Day (Sp.)·

.·

(J)IIgnOtl

IIJ=IItll
fiJ
Vloe

Nordl . Eelt

jJYDLB.U:IB

11:00(1) RIIIIIIIJIINI ltHio

1.000 or &amp;aoo...... o1o11u ory.
0011108-171-1170.

a.,..,.
...,.,. •
. ..,.,...........

Tho UnMiftlly Family

.......
....... .I])

•
lpinlt your better
IUdQmlnt.
'
.
IAelnAMUI ( - . 11-Dao 11). Your
.,.,..ielr may lie fiOII• nad todly by lila
blllawtor
wltll .wllom you'l ba
-'ling Jn claM con~unct~att. II IIIey . .
unc*'~IM. It wll M1 the tone lor

of'*'*

k ......
""· 114'

..... __ ..............
......

141-1211.

- 1 to Ulirory

II C..,

1fl:3oCD .,.,_...,111_: Tll4l

W..l

8 Slllldwlch

IIJ lv.nlng ......
• VldtaCot abt
10:11CIIIIOVII: Banda of Jwo
.lilltl INRI (1:50)

acCIIII'ICi coat. 101 •••· 221 a. ...,
c.Niul...,_dlng rnon&amp;l' matters1oday.
O,.lle at liOIIf own pee lltd don't let
~ ooeroe you Into milking lmpul-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

.•

IICoU.rllt)'le
Mlloa
17Brrttee
IIZoundl

815

SOUTH
+l
.AKJ98632
.,. ~2
+J

~..;:

. QJJ

Taylor ltlmpllcal8d In I
murder; Allx'l lnvelllgatfon

114-,._..01 . .
11'111 DHie Dirt Cu_,.

Hou11hold Gooda

.

80Grus

~ .......loti

r®~9....

tQI0976
+Q62

+AK' 8743

lll..lvtn&amp;
17 CoclltUI

Roal-lol • - - d o l w...,.'
lnll
...... ot........
.... u ......
olaclr....
304-1711-1711.

..

.Q

II Duck

111 • 111 Tour o1 DulY .

•

•••
.J

river

IIButly

•-loa!.

EAST

+KI088

II Wilder
orKeUy ·
II Sword
handle
lll Corn twe.d 17.--t--tNFount

111 llradlhaw On: Thll FHIIIJ

;111-Y·.. Moan&amp;•o

.......

17 Wimp

~=:teelrla. hlldtnll.. or •;
OCJm
II. 24. hour _...loa :•
Coii814&lt;37.. 11U.
•. ·•

....... 10+....,,...-

• - Callet4-.... 98111 . .•

Ill Chin•
foUower
18 Finery
14 Ending

l l - jacet
18 Blubber

l'ffiUII'

THEN I GOT

rune

for cow

Black Athletes: Fact and
Fiction . Ale blacl&lt; olhletes

TH' TEACHER LET ME
WATCH HER GRADE
OUR TEST PAPERS

r

and Chlrtla Chaoa are live at
lhe party following lhe 2nd
Annual Vlewero' Choice

•

1111 400cuotorn. 8400
••uol ·rnl...o. COII14-44118411.

"Silent
Spring"

ol tile

=a...Lival
•
· 11J llptOVIE:· 8liort Clfcult IPOl

houM a .. l eervlcfng OE, Hot
Point, . . . . . . . dry.. lf\411.

WI!ST ..

DOWN

10 canon of

This epioode tocuus on the

"'R""o"'N'::I-AP=P-:-:U::-NI::.=ce::-:-SEII=V:::IC:::-E. ;;

tKIO
+•o 9 s
+QJ932

problem

e

medk:alu~s

.754

II Agreement 1 NUe dam
• Destroy,
site
as a
ll - Boothe
dragon
Luce

(I) R - . - A body
language taat shows Dan
soma lhinga should be loll
unsaid. IR)C

,.

=.,.,::r.-oo

1871 BlAde llleaa •D. IDncl,

ril

_ _ _..odo...olfl&gt;r. '•
,_,,.. • • and III'VIoe. 304- ,.

-do...,..

t11100. Coll14- . . . 1301.

lhree taenagora. g
Tap R... lloliJi1g

(!)

f .U-11

by IHOMAS JOS£PH .
ACROSS
81 Ogle
I Tooth
.

an unknown drunk drlver kills ·

.

1811-3802

.

I:OOefJ) IIJ)In iha Hall ol lila
Nlgltt A town grieves when

,

Rotory or coblo tool drlllntJ ::

82

1111 G._,d Am. 2 dr.• AC.
MO., Pill'S. AMIFM r - .
lAw ....... EiC. oond. Tolto
or wll ool
&amp; Cd 81-..441-7172
or 448-1110. .

OOylriend. (R)I;I

NORTH

CROSSWORD

Kevin IICis 11 emissary

between Winnie and her
Rolri-Palnt•. Alworkguo- ,

IIII

lrol

+!. 1 s

South needed very little from North
to have a play for slam, Of course he
remembered a very good rule: If you
need specific cards from partner to
make your contract at a very high leY·
el, be won't have them. South hoped
that just maybe North would .have a
black ace and perhaps the K·Q, K·J-10
or Q-J-10 of diamonds. It was proba·
bly a lot to hope for, but that was his
excuse for bidding the slam. ·
Since the slam shouiObe set, East·
West did well not to bid six spades as a
sacrifice. They also did well not to
double, since they proceeded to
misdelend.
West led the king of clubs, and East
unhesitatingly signaled f""outagement with the six-spot. West blithely
continued with the ace of clubs. That
made 12 tricks a cakewalk for declar·
er. He ruffed the second club and ran
all his trumps, keeping dummy's remaining 10 'of clubs as a threat card
a1ainst East, who had to keep the
queen. Unfortunately, to keep that
club queen, East had to discard dia·
monds, and declarer eventually took
the 12th trick with his lowly five of
diamonds.
The right defense is tricky . A low

1:30 ril el]) The W-r Yaara

~~~~~~--=-~=--

74..

.

11)1 PrtmaNan
.
11J Mu-, llha Wrote
rll Vlawen' Choice AWIIrda ·

:
Hau• cilia an ,RCA, au..r. ,
.......--....
· - - · Gl. . .oclolln' In Z..ll\ COl ,.
lato
. t2411.
114-1811-6711.
304-1'7.. 231 or 814-4411- •:
•
li7B C...., CIO 1niOk. 20 It 2414.
f t - nM onaln&amp; - oeod
Troo Trlmlrin• ..,.,. ::
oond. .1.100.00. 304-175' Fottv
r..,_l. COI304-6711-1U1. ,,
187a '

Van . E ••ll•nt condition .

Nova Follow eight

·Moula C
etlll M'OVIE: Movillfl
Yloliiu- (P013) (1 :30)

::11-:0:::N~'::-1-:T::-o71ou--:'lo-;lo-n-::S::-o-:rv71c:-o.

d-.

(!)

medical studenla a1 Harvard •
Medical School. Q
·
'I ll • 91 MOVIE: 'IIHd ~·
Rlldn' CIS Tualday

1177F180,ord,.....up. Hoooy
...., holt 1on. A...... VB. ...

Show. plu1 mlft\l' county
wlnn..._ Roo•IIMI•. 8uiM'I&amp;
Col 114-113-2381.

Good
- - o d ......
hor- Col lf4-•B-98t1 or
.........2:1.
....... _ _ _ .... foroolo.14

~

COII14-18J.2318.

.....0 lor 1 - · Dol
114-441-0ia

- .llof.

•I])

business ties betwHn ~ ·
Angela and his gall partner?

rln'I...S. lnt•ior end exterior. :

Vane&amp; 4W.D.

•

Cllamplonshlp from Raleigh,
NC (fl)
.
ril
Who'o Ilia lou?
Can Tony help make

w••..-u

3843 ...........

:..oa:~t..r::r.

51

r*'"- .......... :

, ... - - Coli ... _
1.-814-237·CMel. illl' or night. , .
Aogere111emen1

ml•.

WANTED: 3 pt. hltolo ldt for
Supw
2 ,.,. o1n
8:80.18 llli4- for Farmol
'H'. Coli Jo'* 30,t-773-14211

71 Auto's For Sail
brod O.m., 1-------::--:-~=

Flett Tank. 2413Jeaban Aw.
Point P l - l 304-17&amp;-2083.
10goloot~·14.18fll410gol
•
21
comploto
· ·
AKC roglot..... -liou\Oidl.
c .... l i p - .. d lhlh-au.
- . . wor•!iod. cliooliod.
304-1711-2113.
,
AKC roglot- cooli.sp.,lol.
. 2y.. alil.molo.~foratud
- · h•
'hod ol
lhotl. eZOO.OO.
~3110
ar878·38141aouo-o.

.... l.oCif

.

IDl Matlock A

renowned journalist is
accused ol murcleri"2_a
international model. r;J
(!) lloclrbttlldlnll JuniOr USA

'

WATMI'ROOPING
I
Unaoncltionll '"-11,.. eu•~n-- •

TiUc:kl for Sale

18 Poril 150. 41,000
Tpp,_. nM 11r-. VB. 4 opood.
A-rno loon; Doll 114·387·
0421.
f

Aeg. . AK C Yor...-a Terriar

tie. Coli 814-742!2632.
'
111181
Mal• Blua Front Arn•an Perrot
.,d cogo. Colll14-143-1371.

(1 ;38)

ellJ

•nd auirplus vehial• from
•100.00. 'ortlo. Chovyo,
Cotvett-. I'IC. 1r:t your W.l&amp; For
Info aoll IO•MJ. 1011 • t
2808.

stud ..,..

R1 gl tcuad Mtllbu H...W.. g.,_

Qll Crook and Chooa
1:00 (]) MOVIE: Norwood IG)

:

·-~

3 kloll• bolo
Dol
114-218-1011.
Holl...t 7 It ho\1 blruL IIOod
concL oJ04-273-4211.

vi... Coli 814-4411-3844.rt• 7
PM.

0889.

HOlM
Improvements

IUY GlOVE~ NMI!ANT •olaod

UTIUTY llDO. IPL;30'1140'ol"
..,... 1-1~ ..... ...... •or.
1---·-.MIII:TIO·
IRON HOlliE ILDIII. 1143:12·6748.

200holidolo....

·
pip-. win-

81

'12 ·......
- Roaiil
Limited.
..., . - - - - - - - good
,. ...,
... 304-

17th

6 wliito puro
Shopliordpu-. Fomolof78.
molo t!OO. .• 14-742·21181 or
814-742·310".
r

Good condhlon. e 180. 3048711-4819.

'12COI-. 4arl.,..h72.000
...... 1114-.,.. 78a7.

noon.
• C
Un.,.,.. ~btfort
;:=::;:;;:::;:;;===I AM-II'M ......
~
•d •n ruof.
814-982-:ntU or 114-112·
83
Llv-_...ck

l.,-. kittan1.

AntiQue upright pl1n0 for tilt.

11)1 Croullre
9 Mljor LHgua Beoaball

l .. f propelled 22: 6n l•n
m.-. 3'hhp . . 80..glnaapprox S houn. t12&amp;. 00. 20 fl:
lodd• t48. oo. 304-87112385.

COnctett blodi:IL 111

53

l!ll .1121 IDl Jeopwdrl
.liD M'A'S'H

Ooll'*'bo- Iron;; 3tlwuP .W.
AntiQuo -blo dod&lt; Fill bod
....... 304-8711-1604-

Molllhan F..-nMu,. and Cirptt.

Bring thlt ad tor eddftkN'Ial 10
per Gent diaoaunt (20 ydl
minimum).

e (I) USA Toctay

ELECTROLUX AorD claoo out
-lol. 304-8711-1417.

dowL lint•.
Claude Winters. Rio Or•cl&amp; 0. Clh 814245-5121.

Two locotiono 122 Vl.,d St.
Point Pl ...ant. W.Va. 304-1711491. Uppor R- Rood, ICo·
........ Ohio 814·448·7444.

. y

By James Jacoby

From Biloxi, MS

oolleator..... Rklae MlcMIIIY

King size water t.d hMdba•d

AnJOV. MOnllll"'to,

Vegetables

1nd Tools. 304-18}. 3131.

Good antique ear~ ; 11158 Ed••
J.w; 1919 Z·door Edeel 1adan.
Wlltrodo 1o&lt; picl;up truak. ohart
-bod. ProlorChouy orOMC
wtth air, pa, pb. Cell lftw 4:00
p.m. 304-8711-3288.

For Rent: Laroe one-c• a• age.
,... of bull*'g on car.., of

&amp;

Qll Tap Card

Woodworking m-ory; •blo

book atse wtter heater
t1 25 .00. Pho ;w 304-171·
8158.

Scotch GUird Stain RtiiUe.

•

.Takil'lg advantage
of misdefense

. 7:05 (I) Andy Orlffltli
7:30 e fJ) Family Faud
(!) M-tar Truck Cliollanga

-.·
....
. ........
joint...
.
..
. - ltlh-.
.........
.

Building Mototlola

No. One carpet. diiCOUnt price,

·

Cll Major LHIJU&amp; Baoallell

304-871-2700.

St•ln~Nattr.

•

Ovemeard in a psychiatrist's
waiting room: "The trouble
with experience 1e that tt usuaJ..
ly teaches you·somethlng you
really didn't - 1o - . "

BRIDGE

ril Entartalnmant Tonight

puppin. Clllll1'ftlme 114-387·

Space for Rent

J...... ,...

11ll ..,,..., mo ... homo.
...,., with 71121 .........
,., ... .,..141.

Moving Sal ell Twlnllunlc beds,
campu"tar with tcceltarill Md
odds &amp; ends. Ctll 114· 28&amp;-

•

~

Wiggle - Opine - Drunk - Excess - · SPEEDING
"l got a 95 in accounting and an 84 in political science, "
bragged the girt. Softly she added, "And a 79 in SPEEDING!"·

(I) Currant Allalr
(!) MIICNall/ La.....

II) Miami Vice

jealr.e. PI•••• hh:Dh. •trM.
·
- ala. tUCID. 1114-1711-~ .
4184.

FNh

58

lkinlfl&gt;r 1 to 8p.m. 114-992·
2128.

Furnlollod olfi...,CJt. 807 ao.
oond. Clolllpolo. t110. lllwt
both. Col448-4411.rtor71'M.
F,..,.hod opt.· 1 Ill . 243
e221 • mo.
UtiiiiiM oild. eon 4411-4411
aft• 7 I'M.

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

46

Green Terrect Mobile Home
Pork·loto OYollobla Coli 1144 4f. 0254 or 4411-3843.
·

w
.... - · • tn.h lndudH.
8t.,lng at Ulll ,... mo. Col

room tutt"·lllt. Caffee end
.,d tablll-175 a ••. P.d~
Btntwood rocker · •sa. 95.
Gnndftther cloak Ill. 98, llue
dinette 1at. 8 chairs· t419 (in·
cludos hutch). Khdl., chair"
• 19915 ltrgt veriety, curio
cabin•· 1279, Y.,dl.,.. lauet
oolo Md choir· t198. loooot
recllntrt-1249. SOFAS·It.wood group.t389. TRAD ·INS
TAKEN.

f)

SportoCantar

9Choorl

1177 A - -ol ...... 23'

Buy or Sell. Atverlne Amtques.
1124 E. Main Str_., Pam•oy.
Hours: M.T.W 101.m. to ._.m.,

~;:::::;;===:::::;==
44 Apartment
for Rent

T•• Townhou11 ap ...mentao 2
BAl. , . 1'1:1 b.._hl, CA.• dlt·
........... dll-t prime ...
ctoo_. pallo, poot pl~ground.

o.r-

,.

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWERS

IIJ~ylno

156&amp;1. Maon WV.

Second .. dPino. GoiiiDollo. CoH
814-4411-4428. 814-oMII-4249
or 114-4411-2328.

BENJTIFU LAP ARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK '
SON ESTATES. 131 Jo'*oan
Flee from t192 a mo. Walk to
. . . . . . d ....... 114-44S.
21M. E.O .H.

Full 11M
olio
meur..-•75. twin mMtNII. •
••· 191, mMMUe~ mldt b¥
lmp.tel. Vtu ...., le•tt bed-

m-·f48.18.

,'

NoftHour

lncl1. whhe. oyo 1 -t'l71.
Sl&lt;- Appll.,-. Upp• RIY•
Rd. 814·448· 7398

lndudlnt bidding.

•

Ill • 91 1m Wlifti,Of
Fortuna 1;1
II liD Tllrea'o Com.,.,,

30

otorting at t17t-

.

ril •

lllion-. Horvoot001;1-t1711. 30
lndl oloctrlc r..,... •111. 30 lndl ,
............... 5. 30
lndt electric r~nge. h.,_
110kl-t71. Roll'laorotor, lroat
fr•. ooppert:ona-Ill. Nefrlatretor, frastfree. ~•t110. "•
hi a•ra• or. aide· by· tl de,

..,,. -

I
.
I

'7:00 fJl Our Houoa
ellJ PM Magazine

Hotpolnt~r·tii5.GEwullor.

4 dr. chaot. H4. 91. 1 otvl• iii

:A N C E T

l--nsr.-'-nl&amp;r-r- T--I
1 1 1

6:35 Cll One Dar A1 A Timo

Maher· e71. kenmora weaher.
auocodo- tel. Norgo ....,..,71.

vrRA FURNITURE
...P,UANCES
.
Rt.1411nCant.,.-y. 1/4ml.on
Unooln Pill&amp; ODen 1 d.,. •
- · IIAM-IIPM. Call tor oppi.
Aftw hou,.l14-4411-3189.

IIi

Hl 4w( cl

Complete the chuckle quoiod
•
•
by filling in tt-.1 missing words
L...-L-.L..-L-..1-....1.---1 you develop from step No. 3 below.

11J Cartoon E - u
rll Naw Country

tD

IMtCada- t240. Gil ,.,...

IT

• liD WKRP In Cincinnati
11)1 ShowBiz Toclay
9 WKRP In Clnclnnlli

Vllllrlpoal woo._ &amp; tlryor aot.
whtte. Nice HW· t300. Kenmore

Roonw tor rent· \Welt or month.
lt. . lng at t120 1 mo. Gellle

and deposit required, phone
. 304-8711-1926.

. 1171 12x10 U!Jortv. •4000.
COl 114-742·2714 - - ·
.rt•I:OOp.m.

1171.....11mollihhori!o. 2br.

Fl.wnlshtd ..,.,ment for rent in
- n. can 814-4411-,.23.

Furnilhed one bedroom 11n.
•200.00 plus electric. phone
304-8711-3900.

Ferry. 5 room apMtm.rt, Clf·

12&gt;70. 3 BR .• 2lullbot ... oww
House type window..
undlrDinnlng. Prlaed tor quick
..... f!081.-aMobii•HonM!PIIrk.

rent. Gellipoftl·
/Point Pl••ent. Call 114-44&amp;8221 .

Alhton, l•ge buldlng lots,
mobile t.:Jm• ,.-mitted. pubUc
wet•. prices raductd. Ctyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-67&amp;-23311.

2 ._droom 'haull!,. CWiipolit

C*l)lt.

A~menh for

ApwtrMnt 4 JOOIIII •d b .. h.
utlll:i• J*d, t80.00 week.

0805.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

d..,-s-114-446-"'01 or avenlng;o 114-44&amp;-1627.

ci.-g with t&amp;OO.OO down,
304-468-18715.

1•. 000.
before &amp;:00

Goo;goouo4be~oomo.3b•ht.
·2 cw lltaehld g•age. Huge

Broolcllde A pert menta: f1P8C6oua
llv lng,
kltcften. with hooku p. Total alectrlc. no pete. CaM

...... phol\0 304-8711-1 388.

.._.mlnum lillng. t
114-992-5272
p.m.

Furn'td all elltdrlc. 1 lA. LA.
ldtch.,, lg. porctt, centriiV
lo.cated. rtf' • · Sec. dep.
UOO/ mo. Col 814-4411-2231
0&lt; 44&amp;-2111 .

4 acr• on County Rd 60

(Gunvilltj. Po~tibleowMrfinen-

75&amp;8.

2 bed'aome. Carp•ed. o•

g•bogo pold. Dooook ""''od.
.coli 814-4411-43411.

•ae

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Veh&gt;
cl• from t100. Forde. Mer·
· cedel. Corvette~. Chwy•a. Sur·

r•lg. furn'IHI., W•• .,d

•

.9

J

S K A WN y
1-.,-.,.,,,'"..,.1-nlar-TI·~·'1--1

.
ril el]) ABC Nowol;l
tD lk&gt;dr Electric
l!ll .91 CIS Nawo

wertlnp.

-•brook Subdlvloion. Coli
t14-4411-4189.

lA . hou• for •••·
fln~nca. C.l 304-871-

partmen
for Rent

·

~ lporttlook

PICKENS USED FiJRNITuRE
comptoto houoollold lurnlohlng;o. 'hmllwarrlcho. 304-17111450. 114·318-1773,

t

1;1

IS! Focto Of Uta

WJ.IAT

I

"Marvin, take Mr. .Jenkins
out back and give him his
suhst.anlial penalty for early
vo11~ F...,ku..o
New and uMd tur~r. and
l.
oppllcon-.
Coli 114-448·
f-..,;.Wit.htlraWa
__________
.....,_______--17872.
Houro 8-1.
A

I~

Triwto 10:30)

~~::~?..'m;~•aluptot81.
..blnel1.

44

Ill • 91

(I)

(!) . _ , lowl of Sporte

Truck • - lb lrl allolr\ICL
Coli 814-2411-tzOO.

tt

=--;==:-=-:=«::;::-31 Homes for Sale

to s Aj;
r1 1 1
MI

1:00 CD a-naa: Tho loot

•·

"

1

M

25

APRIL

I!VI!NING

t&amp;O, Goad Hlootlon iii

228-IZI210H087DI.

biN CDntol...ion. C. I 1· 80().

W.'( '?/&gt;..'/? l "55IQ.W

•1 10. M _ o r .... ""lng;o
'"" 0&lt; tuuln ....
lrld
Queen ... •210 • ~P.
UIIO. 4 d - ohoat fl8.
......... e. e &amp; 10 "'"
melb
• • • t41.
lram• no. no • King

T'"'"'g

The Daily Senmal-

Television
·viewing

(~~

LAYNE'S FUIINITURE

-1-.
Ohio lmto. D-1 •
. . . ....... -d . food

BOft'ow by mil. au•lnt.-d
buo-llnMdn!lllpoclolroln

Pomeroy-M.idclapcxt. Ohio

,...

c - - •· 114-441- nte.

·
- -room.
for •lo:
F'"'ll¥ lloo/O...o
Good loOo'tlo"
COII14-38'7-7810.

a . -.

Tuudav, Aprl26. 1989

Merc:handiM

ran ....
AppllancH.
- dryoro, -......... .. ... lid. booldo .....

·
- - t;IOO-tlOOpluo
... nwthlnew~.
Mutt .... ca•
··--1018•ll81.
.

1000 WaiH

154 Miac.

0000 USED APPUANCU

VENDING ROU11!
... -

Houaehold Gooda

Olk

BUOBCK

UBFR

LG

XNMGIMXUR, . IJIK XNNGIMXUR
QRMGZ
MK

FIR

PIBP

XDGIFDBUJIFC
FMWI . ..

•

�._.'

10-The Deily Sentinel

-Local news briefs.__,;......,
_Board to hold special meeting

Meigs..,.EMS responds to 3 calls

WiUiams ...

--Area deaths--

· Richard Roush

The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
at the home of Katherine Miller.

Clari6eation
The Tammy Lyons of Middleport who appeared last week In
Meigs County Court on a charge
of passing bad checks Is not
Tammy Cremeans Lyons who
resides In Racine. Tammy Cremeans Lyons asked for clarlflca·
lion on the name In The Dally
·
Sentinel.

Stocks
DaiiJ alocll prlcM
(AIOflO:M a.m.)

Bl')'ce ud Mark Smith
of Blua&amp;, Ellll A Loewi

Richard Lee Roush, 40, of Cross
Lanes, died Sunday:·April23, 1989.
He was born in Gallipolis, Ohio,
the son of the late Riclwd P. Roush
and Francis Wedge.
He was a stockbroker.with Dean
Whilter Reynolds in Charleston. He
was a membf% of the Full Gospel
Men's Fellowsru&amp;!mtemalional and
a member and
of the Pelrow Presbyterian Church of Cross
Lanes. He was a 1970 ~llale of
Monis Harvey Colle~e m Charlestoo and a nalivc of Pomt Pleasant
He is survived by his wile,
Patricia; two children, Jaime Leigh
and Jennifez Megan, both of the
bome; and oae lister, Leisa Wedae
of Point PleasanL
He was preceded in dealh by hill
step-father, former Muon County
Sbcriff Bivin E. "Pete" Wedae; and
his farber, Rlchlnl P. Roush.
Scnk:ea will be ~' 1
p.nl., 81 Perrow Prestiyterian
Chllldl, Croa r-, wldllhe Rev.
JtK!k Mawell, the Rev. Robert Fultoo: and 1he Rev. David AndeiJOII
' ofllciari'lll. BINI will follow in

Am Electric Power ............. 26~
AT&amp;:T .................................34% · Tyler
Ashland Oil ........................42% Goa __

l'!':llin

Bob Evana ..........................l514
Cbarmtne Shoppes .............. U%
City Holdlna Co ................... 18.
Federal Moeul .................... 51~

Good)'earTU ...................48%

Heek'a, ........ .'....... , ............... %
ICe)' Cellturtoa •..:................. 13~
I and•' I:ICI .........................31"

lJmllild Inc ........................30%
MvWmedla lac .................... 17
a.,x Reltaurillta.................. 2"

MemOI)' .Gardens,

·Friendl may call at the W"abon
Funeral Home, 420 W. Lee SL,
a.1e1taa, Cll Tuelclly, 6-10 p.m.
1D lieu of II~ 1he flmily ~&amp;o
Dillie to the
Prelb)MIIIM O!Uidl.

=ch.,_lie
WUda BrinkEI'

Ashland losses total nearly 114 million .

t
Continued from page 1
Proln
rer Y···-------,.....
that this riverbank work Is done near the river Is being moved In

correctly and compUes with the
floodplain ordinance. Other peo·
A special meeting of the Meigs Local School District Board of
ple have had to comply with the
Educaflon has been called for Wednesday at 7 p.m. Purpose Is to
ordinance, Including the Rite Aid
discuss personnel and to consider any other business which may
store. " he a dded .
lawfully be transacted at the meeting.
"That's our position," Reed
. continued. "We want the work
done properly to protect the
beauty of Pomeroy for possible
..
future
development."·
The 1\!elgs County Emergency !VIedlcal Service -:esponded to
Reed
alsci pointed out that If
three calls on Monday.
Turner
should
go ahead at a later
At 11:18 a.m .. the Chester station responded loa brush fire on
time
to·
construct
a commercial
the property of Tom Durst on Keebaugh Road and the Rutland
as
she
Is
hoping to do,
boai
dock,
station. at 12:22 p.m. was called to a brush fire on Hysell Run
such
a
venture
would
be 0! great
,Road at the Ralph Stewart property. ·
to
everyone
and
there·
benefit
At 4: 12 p.m. the Racine squad went to Elmwood Terrace lor
fore, the bank must be protecte!l
Lucille Dill who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and
as much for her as for anyone
later transported to Holzer Medical Cen't er.
1se
e C~ln pointed out that he and
Turner tried to follow all proceconttnued from page 1
dures they were supposed to
follow "even down to calling this
held on May 19 at Athens, 1:30 announced a Memorial Day
town to make sure we didn't need
p.m . at the HeaLth Department parade being planned lor the
further papers to go ahead
any
l'vfemorlal
Day
weeMonday
of
Building. He reiterated council's
with
what we wanted to do."
kend
beginning
at
5
p.m
at
the
objection to being put Into a
Turner
said she called the village
Park.
He
General
Hartinger
ri!glonal rate structure Which he
to
see If she needed a
office
contends takes control away noted that the guest speaker will
building
permit
and was told she
be an officer of the American
from the local community.
did
not.
She
said
she w11s told by
Noting that the rate ordinance Legion, Department of Ohio, ancl
Annie
Chapman,
who .Is a
with Columbia Gas has expired that the new monument to
member or the paren) Historical
and making reference to certain deceased veterans at the Legion
Presevation
Committee, but 11ot
Park
on
Mill
Street
will
be
iaws which give the village the
a
member
of
the o!!lcial His tori·
dedicated.
power to establish rates, Mayor
Preservation
Commission,
cal
The
sign
at
the
Dave
Diles
Hoffman proposed that Council
that
her
proposed
plans had
Park
was
again
discussed
with
go ahead and pass a rate
nothing
to
do
with
the
historical
Councilman
Jack
.
Satterfield
ordinance for service from Co·
ordinance.
proposing
that
It
be.
In
place
lumbla Gas and then "let them
''This floodplain thing Is new to
before the July 4 celebration.
file an appeal with the PUCO."
me,"
Cain added.
Is
Mayor
Hoffman
noted
that
he
The mayor Indicated that he
Patrick O'Brien, act.
Attorney
now getting estimates on the ·
would have a rate ordinance for
Jng
as
legal
counsel . for the
Council's consideration at the 'proposed sign, a brick wall with
village. since the village does not
large brass letters Imbedded. .
next meeting.
Council
referred
a
request
for
have
a solicitor, o!fe~ed Turner a
The Fourth of· July fireworks
copy
of the ordinance for her
pulling
a
hot
dog
stand
Into
the
display was : discussed with ·
study.
.
·
park and other areas around
Mayor Hoffman reporting that
"I'm not obeying anyone's
town during the summer months
ihe cost will be $3.800 plus
ordinance
but the Army Corps of
to
the
Recreation
Commisson.
Insurance of $700. He noted that
Engineers',"
Turner responded.
Attending
were
Mayor
Hof·
the Middleport Fire Department
Turner
tried
to present pic·
!man.
Clerk·Treasurer
Jon
has been taking donations and
three
other
locations In
tures
of
Buck,
and
Councilman
Gilmore,
currently has $1.800 on hand. He .
the
village
where
excavation
Is
Satt.erfleld.
Gerard.
Dewey
Hor·
also said that the department has
underway
at
one
location.
dirt
ton and William Walters.
agreed to split the balance of the
cost with the vUiage.
The $200,000 bid of the Middle·
port Housing Corporation for the
.village property at the corner of
were the late Elwood J. and Luella
Dorothy Harley
Race and Third occupied by the
Belle Ohlinger Ueving. She was an
Meigs County Department of
employee of the New Haven Por·
Dorothy Bryan Harley. 95. a
Human Services was accepted
resident of the Ohio Masonic celain Company and Tutlles
with the rental from the building
Electric Company of Kirtland, lll.
Hoine. at Springfield. formerly
'to come to the village as payment
She was llleCeded in death by hez
of Middleport, died at the home
~n the purchase prl~;e.
husband,
Elmez J. Brinker in 1988
Sunday.
'
·· It was noted that only one bid
and
one
daughter, Rimona Belle
Born In Chicago, Ill .. June 17,
:was received on the property.
Weaver. Also preceding her in
'J;he sale was necessary to bring 1893. she was a daughter of the death were tJwc brothers, Carl L.,
late William E. and Frances
·the village Into compliance with
Paul C. and Charlie J. Lieving; two
.Q law that puts constraints on one Dumble Bryan. and a de~~cendant sistm, Opal C. Capehart and
public entity leasing property to of the !lrst settlers . of Meigs Wilma
L.
Roush;
one
County. She was a lifelong
another public entity.
granddaughter, Valerie L. Weavez
, . Presentedatthemeetlngwasa member of the First Presbyter· ·and one grandson, Matthew M . .
ian Church, Middleport, where
· copy of the application flled with
Weaver. ·
HUD for · ·$60(),000 In housing she served as an elder and
Surviving are three sons, VU'gil
trustee. She was also a member
rehabilitation funds. Mayor Hoi·
M. Weaver of New Haven, William
of the Return Jonathan Meigs
!~an reported that the appllca·
M. Weaver of Middleport and
tlon had been prepared by Chapter of the Daughters of the David L. Weaver of North Little
Middleport Policeman Geqrge American Revolution, as well as Rock, Ar.; tow' step-daughtm,
the literary club and the garden Katherine L. SlOne and NortJIII Ann
Miller and Council passed a
club In Middleport.
resolution of appreciation to him.
Fredrico both of Fresno, Calif; one
Mrs. Harley Is survived by a step-son, James E. Brinker of
It was noted that any project
funding would be administered son and daughter·ln·law , Dr. and Oakland, Calif.; three sisters, Olive
through the Community Action Mrs. John F. Harley, M.D .. V. Lieving and Ada R. Oldakez
Spinrg!ield; two grandaughters..
,
Agency.
both of Mason and catherine· L.
Ann
DeFranclsca, of Wilmette,
· The assistance of Rep. Jolynn
Paris
of Kirkland, lll.; IWo brothers,
Boster during her years as · Ill. and Frances Patton. of Bernard H. Lieving of New Haven
representative wa~ acknowl: Cincinnati; a grandson, James. and Donald 1. Lieving of Water·
edged and council passed a M. Harley. of Lexington, Ky.; ·: man, lll.; 12 grandchildren, 8 great·
and four great grandchildren.
resolution of commendation.
grandchildren
and
6 stepShe was preceded In death by grandchildren.
Councilman Robert Gilmore
her husband, James E. Harley, .
Funeral services will be held
In 1953.
Wednesday
a1 1:30 p.m. a1
·Mei~ announcements
Services will be at the conven· Foglesong Funeral Home with the
lence of the family. Burial of the
The Ell Denison Post 467 of the
Rev. David Fields Jr. officiating.
ashes ' will be In Middleport Burial will follow in KiJidand
American Legion. and the Ru·
Cemetery . Memorial contrlbu:
tland Fire Department Is spon·
Memorial Cemetery in Point
lions may be made tp the
Pleasant.
sorlng a square, round, and slow
Friends may call Tuesday
Springfield paramedics. Arran·
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
dance on Saturday from 8 p.m. to
gements are by Jackson, Lytle
home.
midnight. Admissions Is $2 and
-.J~lld Coffman Funeral Home,
there will be a live band, snack
Springfield.
bar, and refreshment stand.
Charles Payne
The Southern High School
senior play will be Thursday at
7:30 p.m. In the gymnasium.
Admission Is $2 per person.

Tua1day, Apri 26, 1-989

Pomeloy-Middlaport. Ohio

Charles Andrew (Brownie)
Payne, 76, Middleport, died Sun·
day at Veterans Memorial
Hospllal.
Born In Middleport, he was the
son of the late Fred Payne and
Kathryn Motrls Payne. He
worked lor the Ohl,p Transports·
t ion Department.
He is survived by his wile,
Beatrice Hutchinson Payne; one
son, Don C. Payne, Dayton; one
daughter, Kathryn Payne
Hayden, Dayton; lour grancf·
children and
six
great-grandchildren.
Other than his parents, he was
preceded In death by two broth·
ers and two sisters.
·
Funeral service&amp; wlllbeThurs·
day at 2 p.m. at tbe Mt. Mariah
Baptist ·Church with the Rev.
Edward Buffington and the Rev.
Gilbert Craig, Jr. officiating.
Burial will be In the Middleport
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call
at RawUnp·Coats-mower Fun·
eral Home 5 p.m. on Wednesday,
with the family present frc:rn 7-9
p.m.

ASHLAND, Ky. - Ashland Oil .
Reven'ue was $4,0i2;694,000 vs.
reported Its losses lor the second $3,857,741,000.
quarter, ending March 31, as
Ashland 011 said Its results lor
another.andanoldhomelsbelng
being
$13,776,000,
as
opposed
to
the
latest quarter were hurt by a
torn down In the third. However,
Its
net
or
$20,577,000,
or
rapid
Increase In crude oil costs
she was told by the mayo~ that
·
and
a
major maintenance turna·
$.37/share.
she was out of order and that all
The
latest
quarter
rncllldesa$9
round
at its Catletlsb\Jrg, Ky.,
that would be discussed was her
charge
from
an
arbltra·
refinery.
million
specific problem.
tton award In a dispute between
It was again pointed out by
Ashland's Riley Stoker subs!·
Reed that Council's concern now
diary and a customer.
Is the floodplain. ''This has
nothing to do with the historical
In that period the revenue was
$1,908,640,000, as opposed to
preservation ordinance."
$1,877,501,000 for the same period
Turner maintained that she
last year.
·"
followed all procedures she was
The slx·months net - was
told about. She went to the Corps
$82,103,000, or $1.48 vs. the net
for assistance In preparing the
from operations, which was
repair plan, she contacted VII·
$60,579,000,
or $1.08.
A buii11U11 lniUrance pack·
lage hall to see If a building .
In
the
same
slx·month
period
permit was needed and was told
age, that Ia. lt'a SERIES
no, she then got on the agenda lor
last year, a $40,193,000 gain from
ONE, a brold·--ve.
a change in accounting for taxes
a council meeting. Andatnotlme
competltlvllv· priced plan
made the final net$100,772,000, or
during those contacts was she
for mall 1t0res, offlcea,
ever told about the floodplain
$1. 79.
churchea, apartmentl and
ordinance.
Divorces
sought
.
drug atores. Call 111 for a
While walling for last night's
propoael and qu011tlon.
Cledlth
Schnabel,
Mlddl~ort
executive session to end, Turner
has
filed
in·
Meigs
County
Com·
told Dally Sentinel that she had
tried to attend an earlier Council · mon Pleas Court for a divorce
from Paul D. Schnabel,
meeting but was iold by Mayor
•
Oakwood.
Seyler to go-· home because she
Kenneth K. Snyder, Langsville
wasn't on the agenda.
•
and Virginia Snyder, Pomeroy,
214 EAST MAIN
Councilman Bill Young said
have
filed
lor
a
dissolution
ol
that council did not understand at
POMEROY
their marriage.
Last week's meeting the scope of
992-6687
the work she wanted to do on the
riverbank and that Council
needed more Information.
So&amp;lll Central Ohio
Cain pointed out that the corps
' Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a
knows what they want to do
chanpe of showers and thunder·
because they issued a permit for
storms.
the work.
"Do you have someone down
there giving thhe specs on the
work right now?" Young asked
Cain.
· •,•we don't have a yard stick
down ' there measuring if that's
whatyoumean,"Calnanswered.
"Well, that's what's needed."
responded Young.
Turner accused council of
having a vendetta against her
which goes back to the purchase
by council of the former railroad
property through the village.
Turner believes the property was
actually \1 "right of way lor
railroad purposes ,only," which Is ·
what court records.state regard·
tng · the parcels of land which
Turner feels she owns, because
when the railroad 'line went out of
. business, the right of way re·
verted to the property owner.
· "Everytlme I come here,"
Turner added, "there's a new
law. You try to make me comply
with historical ordinances, flood·
plain · laws, building permits maybe. Tomorrow you'll have
another new law."
Reed assured her that there
would be nothing to comply with
after the floodplain ordinance.
"We're here with legal counsel
tonight. It's not going to be
another thing," he sa,ld.
,
Alter aU the discussion, Tu'r ner
and Cain still contended that they
were not willing to . postpone
excavation and construction of
'
;
their private dock while the
village researches the situation.
"Where are ypu going to get
your Information?" Cain asked.
"You're going to .go to the Army
Corps of Engineers just like we
did and get t11e same Information
992-6669
we dId. And we're going to walt
around while you do this? That
271 NOITH SICOND
MIDDLIPOIT, 011.
makes a lot of sense."

Partly cloudy tonight. Low In
50s. Thursday, parUy
lcl•~ud.Y. High In mid lOs.

••
Vo1.39, No.248
Copyrighted 1989

•

PRESCRIPTIONSHOP

'

CARPET· VINYL·

INDOOI..OUTDOOI

CAIPEI .

NO-WAX VINYL

595

"IIDGEWOOD"

' S695SQ.Y~

SQ.

In the Metp County Court of.
Common Pleu, James Clifford,
of J &amp;: F Contracting, Pomeroy,
bas flied a forecW.ure action In a
cue lnvolvtne Grea B. Roull), of
Rolllll Conatructlon, Syracu•, In
the 1um of $21t0N.77.

highway maintenance needs,
and urges, In particuLar. a bond
Issue for new highway
construction."
The "key to a better ·f uture for
the people of Southeastern Ohio
Is a highway system on a par with
that of the rest of the state,"
Blos~r stated. "This means
accelerated planning and funding for construction of long·
awaited lmprovemenis along our
most important regional

...........

Hospital news

Blosser listed this area's high·
way priorities Including the
16·mlle conl)ector. ·r oad linking
Route 33 with Interstate 77 In
West Virginia.
"We do not want to see recent
progress on these projects side·
tracked for lack of funding,"
Blosser told the subcommittee.
"It simply would mean history
repeating Itself, more plans
gathering dust on the shelf and at
least another decade of delay.

·'

----~-

. . .,. __ ....,__ ___ ..,...,...__ . . .,.,.c._ -...

2 Section~. 12 Page&amp; 26 Centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

'

'

'

.
PLANNERS ENDORSE GASOLINE TAX The Melp County Regional Planning Commls·
slon gathered Monday at lhe Farmers Bank and
Savlnp Company bulldlnr for their regular

quarterly meeting. Pictured, len to right, are
Sleven Story; Lee McComas, commIssIon secre·
lary; Fred Hollman, president; and John Lentes.

Trio pleads innocent; requests
move to Meigs County court
.

'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Although Dottle Turner,
Jimmy Cain and bulldozer opera·
tor Terry Matthews. pleaded
Innocent Monday night to Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler of
charges offallure to comply with
Pomeroy's new historic preser·
vat ion ordinance and requested
their cases be transferred to
Meigs County Courr, they were
found guilty anyway.
Attorney Charles Knigbt. who
represented the trio in mayor's
court. reports that he told the
mayor of their desires to plead
not guilty_and have the cases
transferred. Knight says he
asked each defendant separately
how they wished to plead and
each pleaded not guilty.
· Knight says . the mayor then
said he was finding them guilty ,
not only of the violating the
historic preservation ordinance
but also of violating the _village's
floodplain ordinance.
Knight says he (s now in the
process of 11ppeaUng to county
court. "although I'm not sure
how to appeal a case in wMch no
evidence was ever presented."
At the conclusion of Tuesday
1 night's court procedure, Knight
says he told the mayor that
Turner and Cain intended today
to provide stone lor their river~
bank. as Pomeroy VIllage Coun·
ell had told them. In special

.

.

'

session Monday night that they that time', " Chapman contends,
could do. and that they didn't "that If anything were done to
want their truck driver arrested. those two pieces of property In
Knight says the mayor said they the way of (jemolition or changes
did not have permission to put the In landscape, the proposed
stone nn the bank. but Pomeroy changes had to be presented to
Pollee Chief Jerry Rought then the Historic Preservation Com·
said ihat Council did give perm is· mission for review and subse·
slon for the stone.
quent recommendation to Pome·
Knight said he expected to hear roy Village Councll. Council
from the mayor today as to would then make the final
whether the stone could be decision of the proposed plans."
delivered or not ..
Chapman says she explained to
Knight stated that Turner, · Turner that denial by the com·
Cain and Matthews were not mission "was usually based upon
fined In last night's court pro· whatever hlstorlcal Importance
ceedlngs, only declared guilty. the property had," If not his tori·
He said the three have never cally Important, then the com·
been required to post a bond mission would probably approve
either.
plans for demolition of structures
'
When contacted
Tuesday after· or changes In landscape around
noon by The Dally Sentinel, structures.
Chapman says she was adamAnnie Chapman, a member of
Pomeroy's . Hl$torlc Preserva· ate In saying to Turner that all
' tion Committee, stated adam· such plans have to tie presented
ately tha.t she did not tell to the commission.
And In the rourse of the
Pomeroy resident Dottle Turner
conversation
which centered
that her plans to repair her East
Main St. riverbank property and around the properties which
construct a private boat dock were purchased by Turner's
would not fall under the village's client, Chapman says that
new historic preservation Turner mentioned to her "someordinance:
thing about a boat dock." ChapChapman says that her only man says she again stressed to
conversation with Turner re- Turner that "no matter what you
gardlng the preservation ordl· do, you have tb go through the
nance was In connection with two comml$slon."
Chapman says she suggested
pelces of property which a real
estate client of Turner's had to Turner to read 1he ordinance.
bought at auction. "I stated at "And I offered to br lng her a
copy. I was trying to be helpful."
Acccording to Chapman, the
conversation with Turner 'took
place at Turner's place of em·
pioyment, In front of other
employees.
Brenda L. Venoy, 22, Racine, escaped Injury In a one car
"I just don't understand the
accident at 7:50a.m. Tuesday on CR. 26, 0.1mllessoutho!SR. 7,
problem," Chapman says, "you
according lo the State Highway Patroi. ·Troope._ said Venoy
have to go through such proceswerved to the right to avoid a cat on the road. Her car went off
dures In other places."
the highway Into a ditch. Damage was minor. There was no
Turner stated at Monday
citation.
night's Pomeroy VIllage Council
meetlna that she understood
frc:rn Chapman tbat plans for her
riverbank repairs and conatruc·
Informational j~lckets from ihe Meigs Carpenters Local
Uon of a boat dock would not fall
brQUCht work to 11 staadltiU,at the construction site of the new
under
historic preservation
Contlqued on page 12
guidelines.

•

I

Jones stated that he has (O,Uesti· exchange in Meigs · County and
oned the company in the past and New Haven, Hartford and Mason
been told that the property "was exchanges in Mason County; and
purchased for long· term plan- voted to write a letter of support
ning and future development." to the state encouraging appro·
But Jones and other commission val of Middleport Village's
members encouraged Hoffman $000,000 grant application for
to make a contact wl th the housing rehabilitation, street
company to see if he could garner and sidewalk lmprovment.
additional Information.
A report was presented to the
Hoffman also brought up the planning commission by Leesa
proposed Columbia Gas Com· Murphey, of Leesa, Murphey
pany rate Increase which Hbf· As.sooclates, on procedures fol·
!man sltys will, If approved by lowed In the publishing the new
the Public Utilities Commission, Meigs County travel brochure.
take away local control of rates. The planning commission and
Commissioner Jones reported Meigs County Commissions
that a public hearing on the jointly sponored the brochure
proposed rate increase Is to be which has been well received
held May .19, 1:30 p.m., at the throughout the county.
Health Department Building In
Charles Blakeslee, execu live
Athens.
director of the planning commls·
The plannll)g commission also · slon, commended Murphey lor
voted to support efforts by the her efforts on the brochure.
Bend Area Development Com.
At Blakeslee's suggestion, the
mlttee to secure toll·free tele· planning commission voted to
phone service between the 992

expend an additional $1,000 at
this time for another, more In
depth brochure project.
·
Mary Powell, tourism.director
for the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, reported on the Gov.
ernor's Conference on Travel
and Tourism which she attended
earlier this spring.
Brief reports were also pres·
ented by Kim Sh~lds, county
development directOr, and Vljay
Gadde, of Buckeye Hills· Hocking
Valley Regional Development
District. Written reports on
Elder Care were dispersed on
behalf of Eleanor Thomas, exec.
utive director or the Meigs
County Council on Aging, who
was unable to attend Monday's
meeting.
·Finally, -Hoffman asked
members to contact him before
the next quarterly meeting of the
commission with any sugges'·
!Ions for meeting content.

Storm damages homes in
Xenia; pmver · kn~cked off

'·

Informational pickets on site

....

Maintenance. of what we have,
Important as It Is, Is not enough.
We need a bond Issue ear·marked
specifically lor new
construction.
"Economic development of
our area Is dependent upon
breaking down regional Isola·
lion. There Is no other way to a
better life for the people of
Southeastern Ohio."
Brought to light by Fred
Hoffman, president or the plan·
ning commission, was the fact
that Columbus Southern Power
Company has owned prime land
In the Great Bend area ol the
county for 13 years, without any
development of the area. Hoi·
frhan asked planning commls·
slon members If they feltlt would
be appropriate lor him to contact
the company to see If they have
development plans In the works,
or how long they plan to hold on to
the property.
·
Meigs Commissioner Richard

arteries."

woman escapes injury in wreck

-

'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County's Regional Plan· .
nlng Commission voted Monday
to support a ~tate gasoline tax
.Increase and bond Issue lor new
highway construction, with the
stipulation that If the measures
pass, the money would be speclfl·
caily allocated throughout the
state, Including Southeastern
Ohlo.
· Frank Clelan.2,._ member o~ the
Southeastern - Uhlo Regional
Planning Commission's High·
way )Jsers Committee, read a
copy of tes tlmony of Donald
Blosser. vlce·chalfman of the
Highway Users Committee,
which was presented to the·
House Flni!Jice and Appropriations Subcolnmittee on Aprllll.
In testimony, Blosser stated
that the Highway Users Commit·
Ieee "endorses the proposed
increase In the state gasoline tax
to. better lund Ohio'~ critical

·Local news briefs--

·Court ·News

Wilda L. Brinlrer, 74, of Now •·
Ha1'lll clled Sanday, April23, 1989 ~
D . . lfl
••u,. Jn "-n
).r.e
.........l ·
u.-:
..o,
,.q
• -.. ....._
- ..- ......................
....
-·-·-·
-Monday a4mllllou - Merle
. ~ IDe •••••••••.••••..•.•••.• ·'" ~OJ, CJIIio.
Tho11181, Pomeroy. '
'
u..............,.......... 5Jt
Sill WM .bom Seiit 7,1914 in
Moaday dllcJwaea - Clifford
wor • r •IIIII .................21" : aru. Slllloa, W.Va. Her . . - Icnho?ur: FNda Davll. f

w_.,...e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 26, 1989

Planners endorse gasoline tax 'for highways;

We've Got A New line. of
Wood Gift Ideas For Your
Home or 1o Give To That
Specicil Some~ne. Now In
Stock and More Arriving
Each Day!!

CONGOUUM

Pick3
656
Pick 4
0957

Weather

....

Ohio Lottery

Reds end
hitting slump
in 6-1 win

XENIA , Ohio (UP I) -Several using the shelters early Wednes· trical and telephone service was
homes were heavily damaged · day , the chief said.
interrupted at Central State
and electricity was knocked oui
Beason said the storm brought University.
In about half of the city Tuesday back memories of a killer torSome of the storms ·produced
night as severe thunderstorms nado that hit the city 15 years latge hall, gusty winds and heavy
pounded the area.
ago .. Much of · the city was rainfall, the National Weather
One home was demolished destroyed and 34 people were Service reported. There were
while roofs wqre blown off and killed in that 1ornadq.
· report1 of one·hall lo one·lnch
windows broke'n In s~veral other
Thunderstorms aUo pounded- ha11 arld rainfall of up to three
residences when a s'!brm hit the several other ar\'aS of southern Inches.
southwestern Ohio city about and central Ohio Tuesday night.
Heavy ralnlallln south central
9! 45 p.m., said Fire Chief Charles.... Minor pr9perty damage was . Ohio prompted NWS to Issue a
Beason.
reported In Cedarville and elec· flood watch for that area.
One woman suffered a broken
leg and two other people were
treated at a local hospital for
abrasions sustained in the storm,
said nurse Charlotte Lynch of
Greene Memorial Hospital.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Lu· anyone that this was going to
Beason said weather officials
cille Ball, the red· headed queen happen," Jill, said. "Everyone
·believed the damage was caused
of comedy, died Tuesday morn· , had been quite encouraged." he
by sheering type winds rather
lng at Cedars·Sinai Medical said.
than a tornado. a(though they
Center, eight days after emer·
Ball, .who had been moved oui
. planned to tour the area after
gency open·heart surgj!ry. She of the hlgh·rlsk cardiac Intensive
daylight Wednedsay before mak·
was 77.
care unit at the hospital earlier
lng a final determination.
Ball, whose career spanned six
The storm also downed dozens . decades, died after suffering a this week and seemed "well on
of trees and utility poles and fuU cardiac arrest at about 5 the road to recovery," un'der·
went the open· heart surgery last
caused power outages that af·
a.m., hospital spokesman Ron Tuesday, Wlse said.
fected about half of the city's Wise said.
. Her husband. Gary Morton,
25,000 residents, Beason said.
Doctors had initially been
Utility crews were working early optimistic about Ball's chances had brought her to the hospital
after she began to experience
Wednesday to restore power.
for recovery from the surgery severe chest pains at their
Most of the damage was and the de;Uh was a surprise.
Beverly Hills home. . ·
CQnflned to a residential area .
"It was totally unexpected,"
After a bout seven hours In
about 100 yards wide and one· Wise said. "There was nothing In
quarter mile long.
the previous week that would surgery. doctors said Ball's
Olficlals opened a National have Indicated this at all. The aorta, the body's main blood
Guard armory and an elemen· response (by doctors) was In· vessel, and her aordc valve had
tary school to house .a few stantaneous but they were un· been replaced by tissue donated •
by an unidentified 27-year·old
residents left homeless by the able to revive her.
man.
storms. but none of them was
•'There was no~~lng

Lucille Ball dead at 77

•

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