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Page-1 0-The

Ohio

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VMH reports admission, discharges
'
Veterans Memorial Hospital has anno11nced admissions and
discharges.
Monday admissions were Velma (Maxine) Dugan. Pomeroy;
Annie Dill. Pomeroy; Karen Gilkey , Middleport.
There were no discharges .

EMS answers four calls
Four calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Monday.
At 7:53 a.m. thE' Middleport unit went to Stonewood
Apartments for Iva Stewan who was transported to the Holzer
Medical Center; at 10:12 a.m. the Syracuse unit transported
Maggie Winebrenner from her College Road hOme to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; at 11: 23 p.m. the Pomeroy squad took Annie
Dill from Am eric are to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 2: 52,
p.m. the Pomeroy squad· went to an automobile accident near
the Hiland and Route 7 intersection. Bob Snowden was taken to
. . Veterans Memorial Hospital for treatment. Virginia Anderson
and Martha Grueser, also in the accident , refused treatment.

Middleport; Ronald L. Dalley. Pomeroy; and Christy D. Whl~
Williams. Gallipolis.•
·
Shock probation has been denied In the cases of State versus
Thomas Lee King; State versus Michael Lee Howard; and State
versus Ronnie Pickens. Reconsideration of sentence has been
denied In the case of State versus Renee Blanche Cosser.
In other ·actlon in the court. Autumn Rae Walker, Rutland Is
seeking a divorce from Danny Walker, Cheshire, and Dennis
Tolley, Pagevllle. is seeking a dh•orce ·from Barbara Tolley,
Creola.
Sharon Ihle, Racine, and Michael Ihle. Racine, are seeking a
dissolution of their marriage.

Letart man awaiting hearing
Stephen 0. Jenkins, 34, of Letart, is lodged in the Meigs
County jail pending a hearing in Meigs County Court on charges
of obstructing official business, escape and four counts of
passing bad checks.
·
.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Jenkins
was arrested at 1 a.m. Tuesday morning at his residence, Route
338. near Letart.

Judgments entered in cou~t
Several actions and entries of judgment have been filed in the
·
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
America's Mortg'age Servicing, Inc., Lisle, Ill., is seeking a
judgment of $24,154.44 in a foreclosure action against Brian
Friend and Mary Gibson. both of Pomeroy.
Bank One. Athens, NA. has been granted a judgment of
$22,679.43 against Dewayne Stutler. Martha Stutler, and Mary
L. Meredith in the confirmation of sale orders for deed and
distribution, and Nancy L. Griffith has beengranteda judgment
against Danny M. Griffith in the sum of $7,551.30.
Sherman White, Racine. Is seeking a judgment of $2,300
against Kathy L. Pierce. Middleport; Carol A. Hubbard.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of te:ae a.m.)
Beyce and Mark Smith
of Blunl, Ellll II Loewl

poor fashion that It's counterproductive to the village," Cleland
answered. "It's counterproductive to my business."
·
Councilman Bruce Reed suggested the possibility of working
out an arrangement whereby
parking would be allowed in front
of Cleland's frQtD 9 to 5 on work
days. "I'm speaking for myself,"
Reed noted.
"Who's going to maintain the
area?" questioned the mayor.
·'I've taken care of that piece of
ground In the neighborhood of 25
years." Cleland stated, "before
the city or anybody else was
cu tung the weeds."
''I wouldn't say it was taken
care of," the mayor snapped.
"Well I did cut It," said
Cleland. "There were just about
three places in this town up until
a few years ago that were cut.
The rest grew up in.horseweeds.
Across from Cleland Realty has
never grown up in weeds ever," Cleland contended.
· The mayor questioned why
Cleland or his father, who was
also with the realty firm for ·
many years, did not at sometime
in the past, purchase additional
property for parking when property became available near the
Cleland building.
After several comments from
the mayor as to why the Cleland
firm did not purchase additional
property, Cleland said to the
mayor. "I don't want to split
hairs with yo,u . I don't want to .
talk about the finances of your
business.
"We've gone over all the
possibilities," he continued: "Do
you think my customers are
going to walk three blocks to get
to my business? I don't have a
demand business.
•'I ·have apartmentS up over
my building and the people who
live in those places need a place
to park 24 hours a day. We've
parked in that spot for close to 30
years," he concluded. "My fa·
ther and I cleaned the parking
spot up and took 'care of lt."
"You were lucky," said the
mayor.
"Getting back to Bruce's
Idea," interjected Councilman
Bill Young, of allowing parking
during working hours.
"Personally," said Cleland, "I
don't want to get into that kind of
compromise because I don't

Weather

Am Electric Power ....... ...... 263,4
ATi:T ................... :............. 34~ .
Soulb Central Ohio
Allhlaild Oil ......... ............... 41%
Tonight: ~mlng partly
Bob Ev&amp;JII ... , ...................... 15% cloudy, with a low near 40.
Cbarmlll&amp; Shoppes .............. 15% Nortllwnt win~ becomiJig we1t
City Holdllll CO ................... 15
10 mph or Ins: Chance of rain is
Federal Mogul. ................... 50~ ~percent.
(ioodyear TI:R , ...... , ............ 52
Wedllesday: Mo1tly IWIIIY,
Heok'a ................................. % with lllglls between 60 and 65.
Key Centurion ..... ; .............. 13~
Lalldl' EDcl......................... 32~
Tlnlnda)' lbrouP
Umlled Inc ........................ 29%
Fair Thursday, with a chalice
Mulllmedla Inc .................... 98
ot lbowera Friday llld $a~.
Rall Rlltaurams.................. 21)(. HIJ)Ja will be betweea Ill ud 7!1,
RollbiU 1: Myers ....... , ...... -~ with Nrly rnol'lllJitlowlbet,......
. ~··-~- ....................... 8~ 40 and 45 'l'llursda)' .ad wtsJCen
WtllldJ''•lDU, .........................6 e 111c1 55 Frldaay llldlitWday.
WortbiJI&amp;tOD lnd ................. 21%

sa&amp;...,

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~ Vot39,

The Unity Singers under the direction of Sue Mathe!ly wiUbe
at MI. Herman United Brethern Church on Texas Road Sunday
at 7:30p.m. The public Is Invited to attend.

No injuries reporte in wreck
No one was Injured in an accident at 4:14p.m. Monday on SR 7,
0.9 of a mUe north of the Gallla-Meigs County line. according to
the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said the collision occurred when Andrea M. Enright,
35, Rutland, stopped in traffic. Behind her, Edward P. Ball, 58,
Pomeroy, was unable to stop. His pickup truck struck the back
of the Enright car. There was moderate damage. to both
vehicles.
The patrol cited Bali for failure to stop within the assured
clear distance.

Marriage license applications
The following have applied for marriage licenses in the Meigs
County Probate Court. Joseph Brent Woodgert, 22, 1&gt;omeroy.
and Hollie Ray Erwin, 22. Columbus. Harry Carry Roush III, 22,
Middleport, and Penny Ann Kesterson, 23, Pomeroy. Raymond
Nathan Myers. 20. Reynoldsburg, and Delores Faye Dorst, 18,
Shade.

nance with the variance inwork just 9·to 5."
cluded,"
stated Councilman
"It's to you.r benefit also to try
Reed.
to make Pomeroy look a little
Council also refused a first
better," said the mayor to
reading
to an ordinance to give
Cleland.
the
village
chief of police a five
Cleland responded by saying
percent
raise
and refused a
"I think everyone up through
second
reading
of
an ordinance
there has a place to park but
changiJig
the
hours
which the
me.''
income tax office would be open.
Bill Quickel, Pomeroy busl·
The mayors report of $2.937 In
nessman and member of the
fines
and fees for the month o(
Historic Preservation Commit· ,
April
was accepted. and It was
tee, was at the meeting as an
reported
that the village has
interested party. He tried to
granted
a
permit to Rita Morri·
enter the conversation at this
son
to
operated
a hot dog stand in
point but was cut off by Seyler.
Pomeroy.
·
Seyler again brought up the
point that over the y~ars, Cleland
or his father could have bought
other property for parking.
"If you don't allow my custo·
mers and my employees, and the
people living in those apart·
Wini&amp;ed Naas
...
ments, to park In the manner In
which they been P!lrklng for 30
Winifred &lt;!Yaas, 72, Rt. 1,
years, then I've ·got a real
Ewington, died Tuesday mornproblem. Your'e forcing me .to
ing at Holzer Medical Center.
fight with you, which I don't want
A · graduate of Stivers High
to do," Cleland said.
'
School. Dayton, Ohio, 1934, she
"It's either that or -we give the
received her bachelor's of
riverbank to everybody," said
science degree in ·elementary
the mayor.
education from Miami Univer· Quickel finally entered the
sity, Oxford, Ohio:
conversation and stated that
She retired as an elementary
even he believed that Cleland's
education teacher after 28 years ,
business would be "major lm·
ot teaching, Including 18 years in
pacted" by the ordinance, and
the Dayton City School System
f9r that reason. the variance
and 10 years In Salem Center
Cleland requested should be ·Elementary In Meigs County.
granted.
She pioneered the elementary
Asked Councilman Reed of television program, Chldren's
Cleland,
"If you would be Workshop, WHIO.TV In Dayton
granted the variance, would you from 1950-55.
She was a lifetime member of
be willing to limestone and
the
Vinton County Retired
maintain the parking area?"
Teachers
As50ciatlon. She was a
"Yes," Cleland answered.
member
of
Delta Kappa Gamma
"Bull! we're going to pass this
and
the
Pythlan Sisters of
ordinance." stated Larry Weh·
rung, "we've got to enforce it or Wilkesville.
Born Nov. 17, 1916 In Day ton,
we shouldn't pass it. If we Ignore
this ordinance that we're talking she was the daughter of the .late
about passing, then I say we Frank and Minnie (Kendig)
·
should just let the riverbank Huston.
Also preceding her in death
grow up. And I'mnotthe least bit
against Hank Cleland," Wehrung was her husband, William E.
Naas, In 1988.
added.
·
She is survived by two sons,
Cleland however didn't see It
Naaa of Murraysville,
Michael
that way. "What have I ever done
W.Va.,
and
Dan Naas of Alphato you?" he asked. "The point
you're missing is the need tor the retta, Ga., and two grandsons,
, variance."
1ieen and Mall Naas.
Graveside committal services
Asked the mayor, "What more
will be at the convenience of the
can we do for you?"
"A civil tone would help," family. There will be no
visitation.
directed Cleland to the mayor.
In lieu of flowers, donation
'IJ!e mayor then closed the
may
be made to the Humane
discussion and instructed Clerk·
Society
of the United Stain, 2100
Treasurer Jane Walton to call for
L
Street
NW, Waahington, D.C.
the second reading of the pro20037-9974.
.
posed ordinance.
Funeral arrangements were
The second re~ng never
under the direction of McCoycame.
iAI
Moore Funeral Home In VInton.
"Now we can Prt!P're a ordl·

Area deaths

••

MOTHER'S DAY SALE

MAY 3-May 13

REGISTER P:OR MOTHER'S DAY GIFT

'IIGM DIPAII.i STOll
a• it CA.tiiiCAIID -VIlA
Mf·IIOO
-.eMil OliO
- GOLOIN . .CICM

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r-

•

COMMENDATION - Cole's Sohlo bas been presented a
certificate of commendalloo by AAA South Central Ohio in
recognition of providing emergency road 11ervlce for the Tuppers
.,.Iaine area for six years. Shown receiving the award for .Cole's
Sohlo Is Homer Cole, owner, and Steve Rake. Presenting the award
for AAA South Centeral was Bruce Spriggs, ERS Field
Representative.

School subsidy payment
The AprU State School Foundation Subsidy payment for Meigs
County Schools totaled
$723,136.94, according to a report
from the office of State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
In the Eastern Local School
District, the total amount of
basic and transportation allo·
wances was $146;226.32, less
$5,019 for sc}\ool employees retirement, and $15,3I5 for state
· teachers retirement leaving a
net payment to the school district
of $125,892.32.
In the Meigs .· LOcal School
District, the total amount of
basic and transportion allowances was $392,084.16 with $13,904

-·.

[School levy defeated

•

•

•

for school employees retirement :
and $22,051 for state teachers ;
retirement leaving a net pay- ·
ment to the district of $335,014.16. ;
In the Southern Local School :
District, the total amount was "
$153,330.22 less si.706 for school :
employees retirement and :.
$22,051 for-state teachers retire- •
ment, leaving a net payment of :
$123,573.22.
' .
'
:
The direct allotment to the .
county board was $31,496.24.
•
Of the total payments to Meigs •
County, $26,629 went tor school :
employuees retirement, $80,532. ;
for state teachers retirement, ·
$31,496.24 to the county board . .
leaving a net payment to the ;
school districts of 5584.479.70.

•

J\feigs voters approve .two of. three tax levies
:- By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
::,._
Sentinel News Staff
" · Two new tax levies were
:llpproved by voters of Meigs
; county subdlvlsons In special
.•elections held Tuesday .
~;:; In Scipio Township. voters
· : approved a new five year,
•.one-half mill levy for cemeteries
' ~y a vote of 72 to 47.
::- Pomeroy Village voters gave
[strong approval to a new one

mill, five year, levy for fire
primaries In Pomeroy and Midprotection by more than ·a two to dleport VIllages Tuesday, only
one vote. The levy was approved,
1,520 of the 6,497 registered
283 to 137.
voters turned out. Cost per ballot
Again voters In the Meigs , cast was $2.75, accofdlng to Jane
Local School District soundly Frymyer, director, Meigs
defeated a new five year, five
County Board of Elections.
mill levy tor current expenses.
In- the Middleport Republican
The vote was 341 for the levy with Primary where nominees were
selected to run for four seats on
1.144 against.
In tfW 17 precincts voting in village councll, Dewey Horton,
special elections and Republican incumbent, r,ecelved 152 votes;

~~~

Lottery _
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:

By United Press International
Voters In the financially strug·
gling Warren City School District
defeated a 17.55-mlll property
tax levy In Tuesday's primary
election.
The vote was 8,601 against and
5,320 for the levy, final unofficial
results showed.
Warren has borrowed more
than $4.6 mUiion from the state to
keep schools open and state
officials said severe stall cuts
would be neccessary If the levy
failed.
Warren voters approved a
U·mlll emergency levy in 1986
and l'etlewed II a year later.. Since
then, tour levies have failed. In

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stateholl8e Reporter
COLUMBUS The Ohio
House of Representatives passed
Tuesday and sent to the Senate
legislation aimed at curbing
teepage pregnancy, but not before lively debate over what the
state may order local schools to .
teach about sexual behavior.
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Jane Campbell, D-Cieveland,
cleared on a 68-24 vote after
supporters beat back an amendSPRUCING IT UP'.:.. These klda of the Therapy
8lld Junior Garden Club are teylng to beauUfy the
: · ou~de of the Rutland Civic Cealer b7 pllllltlnl
::~ pine trees. From left Ill ril~ an Carl Buckley,
- ;, Calvin Phelp1, Jenny Gare7.- II10Jd Clellllld,
.._

~.

,~

Peany N.,per, 'l'osllaJude llldJamllba Wlllferd.
Adulla In the picture are Pea- Kn.,p, D.R.
teaeber at Rutland Elementary, and Kim
WIUfonl, represenllug the Rutland Frlendl7
Garden Club.

Judgment a~tion
for 8300,000.is
filed in court

•Fast Service &amp; Low Prescription Prices ·
•Qualty Prescription Drugs
•Full Line of Generics AvaHable
• . .t Insurance Car,rits Accepted
frM hllwery to lllddleport,· POIHroy,
Bradbury, lUnenw•, lutl•d, Syracuse,
CHid Maten, W. Ya.
If you fHI you hawe ...n paying too much foryour 'pr01crlptlons, glwo us a call. We wll quote
you priceslll

r--~--~-:c~u;~~:---------~-1

I

$300

.t

PIISCIIPIION

!
!

OFF

I .ANY NEW 01 nANSFERIED ·

l.

ExpirN

Me~ 31, 1!89

I

_

1

-------------~~-----~-------Jult bring In any new prllcrlptlon Ill' prucrlptlon battle
phernulcy with the above coupon end
raelve e3.00 off our elrlldy low priiCrlptlon prloeall

from any -

PIESCIIPTION ·

225 votes; William A. Young,
incumbent, 179, Betty A. Baronick, Incumbent, 169 votes, and
Thomas J . Werry, 167. The four
Republican nominees will be
opposed in the fall by incumbent
Democratic councilman, Larry
J. Wehrung.
.
Defeated in their bid for
nomination to run for Pomeroy
Village Council were John W.
Biaettnar, 157 votes, and Steve
Price, 126,

November. Warren voters
turned down an 8.5-mlll pr(lposal.
The district's tax base has
shrunk In recent years because of
the closure of a large LTV Steel
Co. plant In the area.
' 'Their tangible personal property tax base (from business)
has evaporated," said James
Van Keuren. dlre~r of school
finance for the Oh Department
of Education. "Th used to rely
on that and they c n't rely on It
any more.''
Van Keuren . said Warren
schools received an added $1.1
million from the stale this year,
but · local _. tax growth was
negligible.

The Warren levy was the
largest of 180 schOols Issues on
ballots across Ohio TUesday.
Elsewhere, a 2.3-mlll opera!·
lng levy In the . Patrick Henry
Local School District In Henry
County was approved, and a
5.9-mill additional operating levy
for Napoleon city schools was
defeated.
Patrick Henry voters approved their levy by a 7~- 268
margin while the Napoleon levy
was rejected by a vote of
1,642·1,517.
Meigs and Gallipolis voters
also rejected school ' levies
Tuesday,

After lively-debate, Ohio House
passes teen pregnancy bill, 68-24

Meigs jobless
figures released

At The Prescription Shop
Prescriptions Are Our Business!

county bOard of elections. He Is
E. F. Glass.
Bruce Fisher will fill the
vacant seat on the Middleport
Board of Public Affairs by virtue
of his vote in yesterday's primary. Fisher received 172 votes to
Robert W. Duckworth's 72.
In the Pomeroy Republican
primary where voters cast their
ballots tor VIllage council' nominees, Mary R. Powell, in her first
bid for a public Oftice, received

. -.

building, $382.45, · no disburse- :
ments, $1,089.46; cemetery per- :
petuai care; no receipts, no ·
disbursements, $5,069.77; .ceme- :
tery endowmenet, no receipts, no :
disbursements, $17,825.11; police
pension, no receipts, $728.39, no :
balance; building fund, $117.55, '
no disbursements. $635.10; re- :
creation, no receipts, $357.37, :
$963.03; perm-issive tax. $721.61, ;
$830.05, $657.26; bond retirement,
$721.61, $830.05, $657 .26; fire
truck, no receipts, no disbursements, $1,716.64; Main St. sewer,
no receipts, no disbursments,
$500.
.
Total receipts for the month of
March amounted to $57,553.46,
while disbursements totaled
$68,497.49. .

The Oh!Q Bureau of Employ- ,
PICK-~
ment Services has announced the
540.
Ohio county unemployment rates
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled for March, 1989.
$1,439.910, with a payoff due of
Meigs County's labor Ioree
$466,892.50.
estimate : 1s set at 8,100 with
PICK-4
employment at 7,400 which
8854.
shows a 9.5' unemployment rate
PICK-4 ticket · sales totaled for March, 1989. For March 1988,
$246,439.50, with a payoff due of the unemployment rate was 11.6,
$65,800.
according to the OBES.

Robert Pooler. 144, and Paul
Gerard, incumbent, 141. Robert
Gilmore, a valid write-In candidate as certified by the Meigs
C\)unty Board of Elections, received 15 votes. Only one was
required to be named a Republican council nominee.
In the fall general election, the
Middleport VIllage Republican
.nominees will be opposed by the
only Democrat candidate whose
pelltlon was validated by the

Warren District voters
defeat school ·tax levy

Meigs .treasurer's report made!
Pomeroy VIllage reports a
balance of $145,191.52, as o!
March 31, according to a monthly
statement prepared by Clerk·
Treasurer !Jane Walton. Re·
ceipts, disbursements and baiances in funds comprising·the total
budget include the foUowing:
General, $19,277.69, $26,532.25,
$20,502.10; safety, $600, no dis·
bursements, $10,633.89; street,
$5,093. 73, $12,894, $12,316.59;
state highway, $228.57, $758,
$2,729.37; fir.e, $112.23, $1,004.69,
$477.14; cemetery. $1,435.50,
$406.98, $6,535.30; water.
$21,026.29, $18,353.30, $48,095.22;
sewer, $7,822.84, $3,578.76,
$15,987.58; guaranty meter, $735,
$475. $14,326.67; utility, no receipts, $2,578.70, $9,516.62; sale of

2 Se&lt;:tiona. 16 Page&amp; 25 Conti
A Multimedia Inc. NewtJPaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 3, 1989

.

10'1'. OFF

TO AIU ...........CIASI
LADIS :Willi PUISES .......... a~IMI....NOW S1C)91
WAllET 1U11A110N CA1D$ I IEf8AL riD'IAD CAliS

:

No.211 .
:tcopyrlgln... 1981

A garden tractor pull sponsored by the Scipio Township
Volunteer Fire Department will be held at 1 p.m Sunday at the
fire house in Harrisonville. Refreshments will be sold. In the
event of rain, the pull be held on May 14.

•

at

"""·'
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,

Garden Tractor Pull slated

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Unity Singe.rs to perfprm

Clear tonight. Low near 40.
Thursday, cloudy, chaoceofrain
40 percent. IDgh in mid 60s.

Page6

The Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet at 7:30 pm.
· Wednesday at the high School. Refreshments will be served.

~()[lrlCil ••• _:_________-~&lt;~F~ro~m~c~o_UN
__c_I~~p-ag~e-1_1______~,--------------~------------~----lion up there that you can find for
parking for your bUsiness? If
we're going to let one person park
then we might as well let
everyone. I think you have to
,agree the river bank looks the
best it's ever looked." Wehrung
said.
Wehrung and the mayor both
suggeS1ed surrounding businesses which might be willing to
provide parking for Cleland
Realty.
·
"I'm totally astounded and
taken abac~ that you're taking.
that' position," Cleland responded. "In my situation.
· there's no place else but the
' sldewillk or the riverbank. I'm
Impacted more by tills ordinance
than anyone else."
·
Cleland admitted that a vacant
' Jot. beside his realty business
"has been discussed with the
owner for years abOut! he possib• lily of purchasing." But accord. lng to Cleland, the owner's
· selling price and monthly rental
. prlce are "astronomical" as ·f ar
as he's concerned.
"You're putting me In a
position with that kind of attitude
to either fight or flight," Cleland
said. "I don't want to do either. It
would be counterproductive to
take a business that's been here
for 25 . years and move to
Middleport just for the sake of
your silly no parking on the
riverbank ordinance."
Cleland reminded Council al)d
the mayor that seven years ago,
he chaired a committee for the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce which dealt with riverbank beautification. historic
preservation and usage of the
river. "I presented a report in
writing at the end of that year's
. activity which stated a number of
thi~ that should be done,things
that are going on now. I'd like to
take credit for having a llttie---'-lomethlng to do with the positive
things that are going· on In the
• village," he stated.
•'Then why do · you want to
discredti It now?" ask,ed Seyler.
•'Because I never meant for the
. poWer to be delegated In such a

Pick3
973
Pick 4
1634

Expos

to

Eastern Boosters will -meet

Olive trustees will meet
The Olive Township Trustees will meet in regular session
Friday at 7:30 •p.m. at the Reedsville Fire Station.

Ohio Lottery

Reds lose
6-4 battle

BEAtiTDkJATION - Members of the Rutland J'rlelltiJJ
Clab pllated lhele tul.,.ln enler te beutlfy the out.lde of
the Balland Clvle Center. The P'OUP Iiopes to enter &amp;be Dower bed
, in a slate competl&amp;lon.
·

A judgment action for $300,000
has been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Jim
Hayes, Pomeroy, and Cindy
Hayes, Pomeroy, against Carol
Smith, Syracuse. The action
stems from an April 24, 1m
motor vehicle accident In
Rutland.
According to the complaint,
the plaintiff, Jim Hayes, was
eastbound on State Route 143 in
Rutland when thl' defendant
failed to yield while making a left
tum. The defendant coUided with
Hayes' vehicle.
The plaintiffs are charging
negligence on the part of Smith
and are requestiJII $300,000 for
medical expenses and alleged
permanent pain, damages and
sutferingtoJimHayesasaresult
of the accident. A trial by a jury
ot eigbt has also been requested.
Dewayue Stutler and Mary
Stutler, Atheni, are requesUn1
judgment of S8,400 from James
M. Bentz and Mary E. Bentz,
Racine, in a complaint for
forfeiture and restitution. 111e
plaiJitltfschargethat the defend·
anta bave paid less than 29
percent of the total pure base
price in a property contract -with
tbe plalntlf1a.
Capital . Savtnp and Loan
Company, Pomeroy, Ia request·
1111 a S2,718.06 judgment from
John Trout and Carolyn Trout,
Rutland,
Also llated as defendants in
COnlin~ on .•1e .16

•
f:
.
.
a
news
ne
S
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We I
b

Car recooered in Pitts_bur,uh
o

··

A 1982 Pontiac Fireblrd rep_o rted stOlen from Wright Street In
. Pomeroy late Tuesday afternoon was recovered in Pltlli~I'IJh,
. Pa. at 1: 59 this morning.
Aqcj~rdlng to Pomeroy Pollee, Pauline Miller reported her
car" ilolen at 4:52 p.m. A teletype bulletin waa put out
immediately and the car was recovered and the juvenile
apprebencted early thta morniJig. It was also reported that Cllrts
Hetherington, 19, address unknown, waa also In the vehicle
when It was stopped.
·
L-

B ure, au
, to. Cr~nge hours

Tbe Melp ~:~~~~~~~ Ucen11 Bureau, Po~roy, announcn a
chanee of
Will now be open from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. on
, Tbul1day and Friday; from 9
on page 12

1

.

ment that would have required
schools to teach, among other
things, "honor and respect lor
monogamous and . heterosexual

marriage."
Unan lmous approval was
given another bill, sponsored by
Rep. Samuel Bateman, R·
Mjllord, providing specific rights
for grandparents to visit their
grandchildren, particularly in
cases where the parents are
separated. That bill also went to
the Senate.

Campbell's bill, · which grew
out of a governor's task force on
teenage pregnancy, is designed
to encourage young women who
become pregnant to finish school
and see that young people re·
celve Information about paternity and child support.
Local boa~ds of education
would have to adopt written
pollcy on encouraging youngsters to complete their high school
education, and the boards would
COntinued on page 12

Tree-trimming job is a continuing
operation by Ohio Power Company
Temperatures climb and windows open to the sounds of
spring.
Among those sounds, although
It's actually present all year, is
the buzzing of chain saws used to
trim brancHes from nearby
power lines.
''We're concerned primarily
with two Important things when
It comes to trimming trees,"
explained Doug Kelly, a professional forester who oversees tree
trlmmiJI&amp; operations for Ohio
Power Company as right of way
maintenance supervisor at the
utility's Canton headquarters.
"First, we remove branches to
protect our facilities and prevent
interruptiou In service to Ohio
Power customers," he said.
"Second, we trim In the interest
of publiC safety."
Ohio Power's tree trbnming
program, which is carried out by
75 to nearly 130 contract crews
throughout the company's service area, Is a continuous undertakiJI&amp;. "Ohio Power has roughly
20,000 miles of distribution lines
that must be kept free from
Interference
trees," Kelly
said.
Trimming work - · plan ned,
sopetvlsed and inspected by Ohio
Power employen in each of lla
seven operatlq dlvlalou cuiTI!IItly II performed by Nelson
Tree Service Jnc. of Dayton and
AllpbUlclb Tree Expert Company
wbleb lllllntllu a regional cifice
in Columbus.
''We try to notlty all property
ownera wben crewa will be
trimmlq In their area," Kelly
explaiaed. "When lt'a a routlae
job and cntWII cannot contact a

ot

·-

resident, we leave a card hanging on the door. When the work is
more involved, we leave the door
hanger and ask that resident to
call .us. By and large we receive
very good cooperation from the
public because people under·
stand that tree growth interferes
with Ohio Power's ability to give .
reliable electric service."
Despite such efforts, however,
trees were the culprits in 2,800
service disruptions during 1988.
This number represents tree
branches or whole trees contacting power lines or falling through
lines- actu&lt;~liY 17 percent ofthe
company's outage problems last
year.
"Each tree Is trimmed to
provide clearance for at least
three years of growing," Kelly ,
said. "We've chORD the natural,
or drop-crotcb, method of trlmm lng bee'a use by cu ttlng back to
another lateral branch, we leave
the tree as natural as possible
and t'elluce the amount of sucker
growth."
For the contract crews, trim·
mlng poses .special hazards such
as wildlife (aqry raccoons,
opossums, hawks and bomets),
Ice, rain, bigb Wlndl and htah
voltage. 111e crew1 are experienced at tree triJrlnllll&amp; and
know · correet Jll _.ree for
wortlq around powe1 linn.
"We uk people to elll ua for
help ratblr tblln attempt a
trimminl job bf tlllmie~
when branellel are...- power
Jinl!l," Kelly latd. "Tbll ldvloe
is consistent With our otber
cautions about keepiJIIIIdderl,
tools and televislon·radlo anten;
nss away from power line.
•'Ideally, trees and power lines

•

should exist together in harmony. Proper tree selection and
planned planting are the keys In
something we refer to as 'smart
planting.' Good choices In tree
selection and location minimize
conflicts with power lines and
avoid house damage, broken
sidewalks and clogged sewer
lines."
Actually, Ohio Power shares
the public's love for trees and
wildlife.
"If you look around many of
our facilities, we maintain plantings that are both attractive and .
functional," Kelly said. "On a
bigger scale', Ohio Power planted
more than 40 million trees In
Southeast Ohio as part of reel&amp;·
mallon work on our surface
mining lands."
Reclamation laws since have
cbanged the practice of planting
trees. Nevertheless, trees · Ohio
Power began planting more than
40 years ago have mat-ured to
become a valuable forest and
wildlife habitat within a 30,000acre public fishing, camping and ·
hiking area known as Recreation

Land.

.

''Bealdn me, there are four
other foreetera at Obio Power,"
Kelly ..ld. Tb,e otbera .Primlrlly
are Involved In 1M aclmlllltratlon of con\fleta for blnlltln&amp;
treea tblt IP'OW Oil compuy

mlninllancll.
Powil
wooc1 ddpa tor
ew.taalll'l,

OhiO

·

Wllliillree

PtvZ......

to
lly

aald.
ltl
call their aeareat Ohio Power
otnee, be ..ld, to arraJ111 IDr
crews to leave wood elllpl for
retideniB before the eblptl ere
baultd away.

•

�The Deily Sentinei-Page-3

'Commentary_

••Ni
l
Pometoy-Mioi"IJIG'\, Ohio

Page-2-The o.lly Sa
.

Golden State beats Jazz. 120-106 to gain
series sweep;
Detroit
eliminates
Boston
•

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Wadnnlily. Mlly 3, 1989

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The Daily

S~ntinel

lll CQurt Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

a~

~fj ~. . . . . . . ......._c:l.=o
ROBERT.L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man~&amp;~er

Publisher

PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inllind
Datly Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·,
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and tf;'!lephone number. No unsigned let~rs will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not personall·
ties .

,New· defense words

Helicopter is the' beSt

]dck Anderson and Dale VanAtta

wASfiiNGTON -The Army's
When tlie Apache was recently
abandon Its high-tech turkey.
prlzedAH64Apacheattackbellc· tested In mock battle, In the
The money has produced 453
opter IS billed as the best weapon desert, the guns !ailed bait of the
Apaches. Another 520 are on
In the sky since St,:perman. But time and the air filters gagged on
order !rpm McDonnell Douglas
take away the hype and the Army sand. In the Army's own words:
which can tum out 10 a month.
Is left wltb a fleet of flying lemons "Within three days after arrival
Tile Army has )ost five Apaches In filght since the helicopIn the desert, 50 percent of the
- $13 million lemons.
The amazing twin-engine whir- AH64 mission had to be aborted
ters first rolled olf the usembly
lyblrd "sees" at night and zaps duetosandlnlestlon,"That'sno
line five years ago. Two more
burned on "the ground. The entire.
enemy tanks with Hellflre mis- problem, as 16ng as the United
sUes, but only when It works. States never 1oes to wa~ In any
fieet has been grounded three
After testing the gold-plated country with sand.
times. Army memos Indicate the
Apache In war games, a North
Top Army brass are exasperApache spends too much time In
Carollna Army brigade com· ated. Three generals met with
the shop. It costs about $5,000 In
mander recently told his super· McDonnell Douglas, which
maintenance for every hour an
tors that, all things considered, builds the Apache, in late FebruApache helicopter ,files.
he'd rather go to war In some- ary to discuss the problems. The
The Apache's ailments start at
the top with Its 22·foot main rotor
thing left over from VIetnam.
Army\s repart !rom that private
· The Army has refused to meeting stressed that the Army ·blade. Its major naw Is that It
publlcly detail what's wrong with could no longer afford to have a · falls apart. Fort Rucker In
the Apache. B11t our assoeia~ . helicopter called "the best In the
Alabama replaced 166 blades In
the past year at a cost of $63,257Jim Lynch has obtained lntr!rnal world" If everyone wants 1o add
Army documents that reveJI the "when It works." ·
·
each. That's 10.5 million wasted
on faulty blades at Fort Rucker ·
secrets about the Apache. It Is
"Thehest"hascostthetaxpay·
alone.
the Army's version of Murphy's ers $7.4 billion to date and there is
The Army grounded the whole
Law. Almost anything that can no Indication that the Army will
go wrong with It does.
fleet In 1966 when It found cracks

By ,ELIOT BRENNER
WASHINGTON i UP!) - Here are a couple of defense words for this
· year: V·22 and F·14D. Remember them because they w111 dominate
: defense news for the next live months .
Now .let's add three more: Bell Helicopter. Boeing's helicopter unit
and Grumman. Now toss in Marine Corps. and finally. the names of
every member of the House and Senate from Texas. Pennsylvania,
Washington and New York hi general and Long Island In particular.
Defense Secretary Dick CheneY, had barely pulled up his seat at the
·: witness table las I week to detail the $10 billion in defense budget cu Is
· he. had to make when the crtes of the gored ol(en began.
· In fact . Cheney had been heselged for two weeks by advocates of the
two aircraft. concerned about rumors they were hearing thai their
projects were on the block.
Irrespective of the merits or demerits of the two programs. they
provide a case study in how the defense budget moves and changes in '
Congress. and in response to what pressures . And they provide a look
at how this year 's defense debate will be shaped .
, The V·221s nicknamed the Osprey and Is a tllt·rotor troop transport
· able to take off lik!" a helicopter and fly like an airplane. It has
significant potential commercial uses. and Is being developed jointly
by Bell of Fort Worth. Texas. and the PhiladeJp)lia helicopter unit of
Boeing. which has headquarters in Seattle.
Some $2.5 bllllon In tax money has been Invested in what- at least
[.or ' the moment - would have been a $27 billion Marine Corps
program.
The F ·14D is the most modernverslon.of the Tomcat. a Navy fighter
: made famous by the hit movie "Top Gun. '' It is built at Bethpage on
· Long Island by Grumman.
· Cheney. trying to save money. canceled both programs. Production
of the $75 million F ·l4D would cease after 1991. and older planes would
be get new engines and other gear to upgrade them to the D model at
half the cost of a new plane.
Bell was first out of the gate. spreading word before Cheney
. testified that it might soon have to lay off up to 2.500 workers.
: Grumman Jet it be known it would have to lay off about5 ,000, and Long
· Island officials began protesting as many as 10,000other jobs might
be at stake.
,
Texas and Pennsylvania representatives in the House. and the
ex·M,arines on the panel. promptly plugged away at the Virtues of the
·V·22 and demanded to know how Chene)' concluded it sliould die. Rep.
Tom Downey. D·N. Y.. long an advocate for Grumman projects.
;. showed up at the House Armed Services Committee, a panel he does
;: not serve on. to listen to Cheney .
•· " You are putting Grur.tman out of business·. " protested Rep.
•· George Hochbrueckner. D·N .Y.
Cheney was not particularly moved. although he signaled that as a
,. former congressman he knows what he proposed may not necessarily
;; make its way intact through Congress.
Illiteracy Is a problem In our
·· "I'll stick by the decision . .. . The only way I know to cut the defense
society which often carries the
.• budget Is to cut the defense budget. ... Some bases. some pr'o grams
baggage of unemployement,
are going to bite the du st." said Cheney, chaflenglng panel members
crime. drug abuse, and teenage
·to find the $27 billion the V·22 would cost over the program's life.
pregnancy. The results of 1111ter·
': For weeks. said Cheney . he had dally gotten calls. from worried
acy are not only tragic tor those
:..-members saying. ·'Whatever you do. Dick, don't cut that, don't close
affeeted but If left unaddressed,
my base . ·
•
It can be very costly to the
.. What is going on Is nothing new. It Is the way the system works. In
taxpayers of Ohio and take the
:: fact. the last time a major program was junked like this- Grumman
form of additional revenues
lost a jet trainer in 1986- Sen. Alfonse D'Amato. R·N.Y . , kept the
needed for prisons and· wellare.
Senate up overnight with a f111buster timep to shut down the
These are resources which could
government . The trainer died a nyway.
·be better utlllzed for Improving
•
The only question this time Is whether either program has enough
on our children's education.
poUt leal clout to survive and if so. where the money will come from.
It Is estimated that 11% of
So. remember the names of 1he programs. contractors and
Ohio's population Is 1111terate.
congressmen. You 'll be hearing a lot about and from them until both
Nationally, Ohio Is the 17th 1)\0st
.• the defense authorization and defense appropriations bills are
Uterate state. In Southeastern
·• completed.
Ohio,
across the state and nation·
.•
ally. Incidences of Illiteracy and
the social IJJs associated with It
•
•
will continue to rise unless more
adults are taught how to read and

In the blades of 13 new helicopters. McDonnell Douglas and the
Army say the blade problem• are
not a threat to life., But a
confidential Army report aays,
"Fort Rucker recently had a
,(main rotor blade) dlslntell'a·
Uon In filght that could easily
have cost us two more lives."
Among · the litany of Apache
problems are wire and cable
breaks, oU and water contamina·
tlon, tall rotot failures, com pres·
sor failures and rotor strap
breaks.
When the Apache does what It
Is supposed to do, the Army still
thinks this 24·carat bird can be
the best defense agalnat Soviet
tanks. A McDonnell Douglas
spokesman told us the Apache Is
new teehnology and that. snags
·are to be expected.
That excuse Is no comfort when
453 of the helicopters are already
In service around the world.

'

"l

'r,

I DIDN'T FAIL
MI.J H@ALiH ieST...
OUR .SCHlbL DID.

Baseball briefs... ·

Oral Roberts seeks
NAJA affiliation

Battling illiteracy

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Berry's·'World

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•
•

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(_)
•

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write.
Recently. a bill to combat
llllteracy passed the Ohio House
of Representative Mlller (DColumbus) . creates the Ohio·
Literacy A~vlsory Board whlchl
would he responsible for making
grants to ~catlonal agencies,
libraries, volunteer organlza·
tions, community·based .organl·
zations, or any coalition or these·
groups .for the . support and
expansion of llteracy programs .
Currently. the state spends
about $2.5 million annually on
adult basic education classes In
Ohio schools, but provides no
support to the estimated 300
private, nonproflt agencies that
operate literacy prOgrams.
. Private, nonprofit literacy programs currently rely on private

foundations and private fun·
dralsing drives to raise money .
but those resources are enough to
serve only about 10 percent of the
need In Ohio.
Existing programs serve only
about 80,000 of the state's estimated 1.2 million Illiterates
which represents approximately
7% of those who are functionally
Illiterate. These people are
adults who cannot read above the
fourth·grade level.
· The types of programs covered
In House Blll 26 provide one on
one tutoring In environments
which the non-reader Is best able
to learn.
States ·such as Minnesota,
llllnois, and Pennsylvania spel)d
between $7.6 million and $12
million each biennium on private

nonprofit literacy programs. It Is
believed that a higher level of
vislb11lty and commitment from
our state Is critically needed.
It Is clear that providing
educational opportunities to
those who are functionally Illiterate In a chance .to help these
people to begin to stand up on
their own, be proud, be productive, and start making worth·
while contributions to communi·
ties across the state, If for no
other reason than to be role
models for their children.
If you have any questions
pertaining to House Bill 26,
Uliteracy, or any other Issue of
concern, do not hesil;ite to call
me at 614-466-8156, or write: ·
Senator Jan Michael Long, State·
house, Columbus, Ohio 43215 .

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Al- tors discarded recovered compo"most probably" caused by a lee con.t amlnatlon hypothesis, .. a
though the catastrophic crash of nents without ellamlning them.
buildup or lee on the plane's four·member minority of the·
Pan American World Airways The crash site was buUdozed
wings.
CASB (including a respected
flight 103 occurred more than shortly after the accident To reach that conclusion, how- aircraft engineer and a former
four months ago, hardly a week before potentially valuable evl·
ever, they had to summarily Air Canada pilot who II an expert
goes by without a government· dence could be retrieved.
dismiss the testimony of eight on DC-8&amp;) Is convinced the cause
FBI forensics ellperts were eyewitnesses -lour members of of the crash was ''an ln·filght tire
Inspired disclosure of some new
piece of Information about the denied access to the crash site.
the airport grtiund crew who · that may ·have resulted from
Instead, the bodies were shipped worked on tile plane Immediately detonations of undetermined
disaster.
Government investigators In to Dover Air Force Base In before It took eff from Gander origins."
·
Great Britain and this country Delaware lor post-mortem ell- ·and say there was no Ice on the
No aircraft .accldel\1 In U.S.
have provided an almost lnces· amlnatlons under classified con· aircraft and four people on the history has produced a greater
sant now of .Information about dltlons. None or the death certlfl·
ground wllo were certain the loss of military life - but the
the explosives aboatd the Boeing cates prepared there lists a cause plane was on fire before It Gander crash appear to have
747 that caused theplanetocrash of death. ·
crashed.
produced an official Washington
The Army paratroopers had
In Lockerble, Scotland, last Dec.
Rejecting the majority's "dl· coverup for reasons not fully
21, killing all 259 people aboard been stationed In the Middle verse and, at times, far·fetched understood. Both nations de·
East. The · plane carrying them assump!lons ... (ln support of) the serve an honest accounting of
and 11 others tin the ground.
home began Ita journey In Cairo,
Using sophisticated equipment
what occurred.
E8Ypt, then stopped In Cologne,
and techniques, Investigators
'
Welt Germany. But no comprefrom the two countries examined
b-lve. probe · was conducted
every remaining , piece of the
eltiler of tl!e security at those two
aircraft, Identified the type of
airports or of Islamic Jihad's
explosives, ascertained where
poat·accldent claim that It was
they were. hidden aboard the
By 1JnMed Pr.a lalernailonal
retipoulble.
plane and -even complied a lilt of
Today
Is
Wednesday,
May 3, the 123rd day of 1989 with 242 to follow.
In early 1987, In the middle of
auspected aaboteurs.
·
The
moon
Ia
wanlna,
movllli toward Its new phase.
the IDIII!Itlgatlon of the 11'01'11
But a very 411fei'ent !M!I'iel of
The
morniiiJ
star
II
Saturn.
aviatiOn dtsalter In Cf.Jtada's
events elllued foUowinJ the Dec.
The eveniiiJ stars are Mercury, Venus and ,Jupiter.
hlatory, the cllalnnan ot the
:ij, 1985, crasb In Gander, New·
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
CASB and another or . Its 10
toulldland, of a ¥c"'-11 Dou·
poUUcal philosopher Nlccolo MachlaveiU In 1469, British
Italian
mtmberl rellaned tor reUQIII
J)u DC.&amp; operated by Arrarl Air.
explorer
John Speke, wbo dllcOvered the source of the Nile, In 1827,
tbat bave neYer been tullY
Killed were all2!11people abolrd
French
perfumer
Francois Coty In 187~. Israeli Prime MlnlllterGolda
exp~.
- 2M pu-..n, all I'IIEJilbera
Melr
In
1898,
actre11
Mary AI tor In 1906, Broadway JOIIIp columnist
'l'llrOIIIIIOUt the la1t balf Of Ita
of the Anny'a lllltt AJrt.o• ..
.Earl
Wllloa
In
190'7,
autbor·publilber
Earl Blacllwel~ who publlahes
Dlvlllon, and ellbt membert ot · tllne-)'1111' probe, tile Cj\0 waa
·an
$11nuallllt
of
best~relled
and
worst-dr-d
celebrltlell, In 1913
polarized. A 1Um majority -five
the
(ale
76),
folk
slnaer
Pete
Seeaer
In
1919
I
age
701.
boxer Buaar Ray
of the nimatDIIIJ nine membel'l
lnltead of tbeuual metlculoDs
Rob!Dion
In
1921,
and
siDger
EnJiebert
Romperdlnck,
born Arnold
reconstruction or the remallllill
the flndlna 1D the Doney, In :1938 (liP 53).
portlolll of the plane, lnveltlp· · flllll 1eport tbat the crlf}l was

.,

.,Today in history

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Sen. Jan M. Long

Mystery 's urrounds '85 air crash Robert Walters

....

... ON MY MIND
,,

crew.

__

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- ••*"'•-"

"

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eo...,.

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· a 2.0 lead into Portland and time but scored only 12 points In points and Maurice Cheeks 18 for
By 1Jnlled Press Internatloaal
Seattle will be seeking a series the fourth quarter. Boston led the 76ers, who were swept In a
Golden State coach Don Nelson
sweep
In Houston.
has led his teams to a lot of
73-71 alter three quarters, but playoff series fortheflrsttlmeln
Down
66-61 with S: 46 left In the John Salley gave Detroit th~ lead Its history.
victories over the years, but none
third quarter, the Warriors went for good at 79·77 on a basket with
sweeter than Tuesday night's
Bucks 117, Hawks 113 (OT)
to
a gambling, pressing defense 7:50toplay.Reggte-Lewlsscored
triumph over the Utah Jazz.
At Milwaukee, Ricky Pierce
and over the next ttve minutes, 20 points to lead Boston, playing scored a career-high 35 points
At borne, theWarrlorsdldwhat
Utah committed seven turnovers without the Injured Larry Bird and Sidney Moncrief made two
many thought Impossible, sweepleading to Golden State baskets. and Kevin Gamble.
Ing the heavlly·favo~ed JIIZZ free throws with three seconds
Terry Teagle, who had 24
winners of the Mldwes t Division
Suns 130, Nunets 121
left In overtime to Uit the Bucks.
points off the bench, ignited the
- with a 120-106 triumph.
At Denver; Tom Chambers Game 41s slated lor Friday night
rally with a jumper. Mitch scored 19 of his 32 points In the In Milwaukee. Pierce gave the
Golden State's third-straight
Richmond, who finished the fourth quarter to lead Phoenix Bucks the lead for good at 112·109
victory In the best-of· five series
game with ·26 points, then hit a back from a 23-point second-half on a three-point play with 32
moves the Warriors into the
pair of free throws, Teagle deficit. Kevin Johnson also had seconds left. Dominique Wilkins
Western Conference semlttnals
another jumper and Rod Higgins 32 points for Phoenix, who swept' · scored 30 points for Atlanta, but
against the Phoen~ Suns, who
a slam oft a break to put Golden a playoff series for the !lrst time none In overtime. Milwaukee's
completed a sweep of the
State up 69-66.
Nuggets with a 130-121 triumph In
In their history. Phoenix trailed bench outscored the Hawks'
Richmond
added
a
jumper
and
100-80
before closing the third reserves 52·30 and the. Bucks
Denver. Game 1. of the best-of·
Manute
Bol
and
Higgins
a
free
quarter with an 8·1 spurt and sank 24 of 25 free throws; Jack
seven series will he Saturday In
throw each to put the Warriors opening the final quarter by Slkma's three-pointer ·with. 31
Phoen1x.
ahead for gqp~~, 73·66.
Nelson, who went against the
hitting 16 of Its first 18 shots, seconds left In regulation gave
Chris Mullin led the Warriors Including 131n a row. Chambers, Milwaukee a 102-99 lead, bUt
norm by using a starting lineup
with 35 points.
with no player over 6-9, was
who grabbed 17 rebounds, tossed Wilkins tied It with a three-point
"The Warriors don't have the In 15 points In the first five basket.
·
overjoyed with the victory.
. "I can't remember a better big type players Uke Portland' minutes of the quarter. The Suns
one," he said. "Once we swept and · Los Angeles," said John grabbed the lead for good at
The Daily Sentinel
Boston when I was with Milwau- Stockton. "They give us tight 119·118 on a Dan Majerle basket
matchups and took our big man with 4:12 to play. The Nuggets
kee, but I had a veteran squad.
tVBP8lt . . .)
• This Is so enjoyable because of out of the game. They made us got 26 points from Walter Davis
AJltvloloooiM-•t.IDe.
the way this team has come play th~ way we really don't like and 22 (.rom both Michael Adams
'
to play."
Published every atteroooo, Monday
· and Alex English.
together In the first year.''
thr'"'l!h Friday, Ill Court Sl .. J'o.
Knlcks 116, 76ers 115
The Jazz - led by Stockton's 34
In the Eastern Conference, the
meroy, Ohlo, by the Ohio VaUey Pub(OT)
lishing Compony/Multtmedia, IDe.,
Detroit Pistons and New York points and Karl Malone's 33 Pomeroy, Ohio f5'169, Ph. 992-2156. SoAt Philadelphia, Gerald Wll·
'Knlcks also lowere&lt;j the broom. closed within 94·88 on a Malone
cold clan p01ta1~ pald at Pomeroy,
klns
sank
a
20·foot
jumper
with
Detroit beat the Boston Celtlcs basket with 4:55 lett, but Bol
Ohio.
·
s1x
seconds
left
In
overtime
to
responded
with
a
three-pointer.
for
the
third
straight
time,
100·85,
EYES BALL - ·Golden State's Mitch Richmond (23) tries to go
Member: United Preu !Dternatl~.
give the Kn leks a ser les sweep
Plalelna 100, CeiUcs 85
while the Knlcks swept aside the
Inland O.Uy Press AIIOCiatton and the
up &amp;IJ&amp;Inst the oulstretched arm of ,Utah's Karl Malone In the ll_rst
At Boston, Vinnie Johnson and send them up against the
76ers' In three games with a
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
hill! of Tuesday night's NBA llrst·round playoff game In Oakland.
Adverttstng Representative, Branham
winner
of
the
eleveland·Chlcago
25
points
and
Detroit
dealt
seored
116-115
overtime
victory
at
The Warriors beal the Jazz 120·106 to eliminate them ,from the
Newopaper Sal .., 733 Thlril AYOitue,
the Celtlcs their first opening· series. Gerald Henderson sank a
Phlladelphli1.
New York, New York 10017.
playoffs. ( UPI)
Also In the East, the Mllwau· round playoff series loss sine~ three-point basket with 31 se·
kee Bucks beat Atlanta 117·1131n 1956 and only their third playoff conds left to put Philadelphia
l'!lSnoiASTER:
Send ·111
Chlo The Dally Sentinel,
Court
St.,
overtime -to take a 2-1 lead over series sweep In franchise history. ahead 115·114, but missed two
Pomeroy, Ohio-·
Joe Dumars added 24 points for free throws with 13 seconds to go.
the aawks.
11t1118aliP'nON RATES
In Wednesday night play, the Pistons, who wlll play the Philadelphia's Charles Barkley
liT Carrl• or Mol• ..,...
One Weelc .. .. .... .... .................... .. .$UO
MONTREAL IUPJ) ·- Mont·
TORONTO I UP!) - The To· Cleveland Is at Chicago with the winner of the Milwaukee-Atlanta missed a jumper with one second
One
Month ......... ..... ...................$6.10
to
play.
Mark
Jackson
scored
24
series.
Boston
led
55·51
at
half·
real Expos left fielder Tim ronto Blue Jays on Tuesday series tied 1-1, Los Angeles takes
OneYear ....................... .......... $72.80
points and Wilkins 22 for the
.Raines. who struggled through activated shortstop Tony Fer•
SINGLE COPY
Sports
briefs
Knleks.
Barkley finished with 29
the first three weeks of the nandez from the ~1·day disabled
PRICE
Dally ........ ..... ...................... 25 Cents
Bowllnr
season, was named National list and placed lnflelder Manny
Defending champion Lisa
League Player of the Week after Lee on the 15·day disabled list.
SublcrJbera not des trilla: to pay the carNOW OPEN FOR
. rler may remit In advaace direct to
Wagner
of
Palmetto,
Fla.,
ad,
·
hitting ..438 last week.
Fernandez was Injured April 9
· The DaUy SeDtlnel on a 3, 6or 12 month
SPRING SEASON
"I am feeling good on the l"hen Tellas pitcher Cecllio
TULSA, bkla. (tJPI) - Oral vanced from third place Into a
bull. Credit wUJ be atven carrier each
· Complete Una of Vegetable
field," Raines said. "I've been Guante struck him with a pitch · Roberts · University, citing a 107-ptn lead over Robin Romeo of
a. Bedding Planta. Azalea
getting my walks and RBis and I and fractured a bone In Fernan- "llfe-and·death struggle" with Van . Nuys, Calif., aft~r five
No sublcrlptlons by maD permitted in
a. Fruit Tr-. Gerenium1,
rounds
of
the
$35,000
Capitol
areu wbere home carrier aervlce is
am starting to run ..! can be just . dez' right cheek.
integrity. has withdrawn from
avallable.
Hanging Be1ket1, Shrubbery
as valuable at the plate as I can In
In addition. the Blue Jays · the NCAA and applled for admis- Classic In Washington.
and Trees.
BoxiDI
stealing bases."
Mollhltoerlollo•
purchased the contract of out· sion to the NAIA.
iaoldo Melp
OPEII
DAI.Y
9 All TO 5 PM
James
"Boneerusher"
Smith,
The Montreal Ellpos almost fielder Junior Felix from Syra·
"This is a financial decision,"
13 Weeki .................................. $18.2f
su••u 1 te 5
were stuck for a starter late this cuse of the International League university president Oral Ro· former WBA heavyweight cham·
26 Week1 ....................... ........... 13'1.R
52 Weeki .................................. $'/U&amp;
week.
and optioned pitcher Jose Nunez berts said Tuesday. •'We have pion, wlll continue his comeback
Hubbard's Gr•nbouse
Oalellllo llelp Couiy
Jeff
Sims
May
20
attempt
against
Bryn Smllh. who was ~che· to the Triple-A alfillate.
been In a IUe·and·death struggle
992-5776
13 Weeki ................ .................. 120.111
In
Fayettevllle,
N.C.
Smith,
37,
duled to pitch on Thursday, was
26 Weeki ............. .. ................... $MI.3D
Fel1x. 21, was hitting .276 with to maintain the university with
SYIACUSL OHIO
52 Weeki ....... .. ............ .. .... ....... $75.f0
forced to return to his California one home run and 10 'RBI In 21 Integrlty. · In llne with other · has a 19· H record.
home to be with his wile Patti. games ·at Syracuse. He led the neeessary . cutbacks In other
•
who suffered pregnancy compll· International League with 13 departments, In order to safecations and Is In the hospital. '
guard the academic quality and
stolen bases:
In addition. Dennis Martinez
spiritual commitment of ORU.
missed his tur'n on Sunday
the Board of Regents and I. the
PHILADELPHIA rUPI) because of a blood blister under The Philadelphia Phlllies filled president. feel we cannot justify
the flngernall on his middle lheir open roster spot Tuesday
the expenditures for athletics at
finger.
the Division I level," Roberts
night by calJlng up rlght·handed
Martinez however ha's . been pitcher Randy O'Neal.
said.
given the go·ahead to start on
"The survival of ORU Is an
O'Neal. 28, was 0·1 at Scranton·
Thursday and Smith will rejoin Wllkes· Barre of the Interna·
absolute, .. he said.
..
the team In Atlanta for a Friday tiona I League. He appeared In s1x
•'This Is one of the most
start. .
games. all in relief. and had one heart·wrenchlng decisions we
... Expos reliever Joe Hesketh save.
•
hav~ made since the ope~ing of
said he was "In the deepest hole I
In 16 Innings with the Red ORO 'in 19,65.'' Roberts said. •
have ever been In during . my Barons. O'Neal allowed 15- htls · "Athletics has served a great
career" after allowing nine and struck out 14 baiters. Last ,PUrpose at the university and we ·
earned runs In 1 1·3 Innings year. he was 2·3 with St. Louis
have all felt that its ideal of
Monday night In a 19·6 loss to and 3·5 with the Cardinals' farm
competition Is one of the strong·
Cincinnati. The performance bal· club at LoulsvUJe.
est underpinnings a sc..llool can
looned his ERA from 5.06 to 11.25.
· have."
•
"I won't knock the crowd for
Abandoned strip-mined land isn't pretty. Acid
booing me." Hesketh said. "They
have every right to. but It Is tough
mine run·off. Stream contamination. Soil erosion.
............ HANDICAP 18 HOLES OR
to handle. It was one of those
Poor vegetation.
things that I thought would never
.... ........ AVERAGE SCORE 18 HOLES
come to an end. but I'll come
That's changing. Mead Paper and the State of
back. I have to prove that I can
pitch my way out of a situation
Ohio are reclaiming abandoned strip mines with
SIGNED ... ...... ..... ... ......................................... ..... ..... ..
like that."
BYPRQ-, our trade name for the sludge byproduct
' '
COMPANY
CHICAGO !UP!l
Dave
from our paper making operations in Chillicothe.
Galiagher has just sill home runs
DATE ..... ....... .. ........................................... .. ............. . .
Every once in a while an idea comes along that makes good sense
In 486 major·league at ·bats. but
' found himself the cleanup hitter
CONTRIBUTION ENCLOSED$ .................... &gt;............ ..
for everyol)e. BYPRO• is one.
for the injury·depleted Chicago
! Make Checks Payable to Boy Scouts of America)
.White Sox.
BYPRQ- is fibrous and cohesive. It neutralizes acid run-off, holds
'
··r had to look at the lineup card
Fitl ou\ this entry form and send It with a check payable to The Boy
water and retards soil erosion. BYPRQ- contains minerals and nutrients .
a couple times my.s elf." said
Scouts of America, Ct o David Sharter, Star Bank, 25CourtStreet, Galll·
polls. Ohio 45631.
Gallagher. who batted cleanup
It gives iife to plants and restores the once barren land to natural growth.
Saturday against the New York
The continued use of BYPRQ- in abandoned strip-mine
Yankees and Monday night
against the Milwaukee Brewers.
reclamation is good for the State of Ohio and good for taxpayers. And it's
The second·year player Isn't
used to seeing his name In the
good for residents in seven southeastern counties, including Meigs
middle of thhe batting order. He
County, who want to get rid of hazardous and unsightly strip-mined land . .
has one home run this year and
never has hit more than nine In
Taxpayers save because the state does not have to spend millions of
any minor league· season.
,
ALL WOMEN'S-Nai!!ralizers - Aigner
dollars for topsoil- if enough is available- to cover the 350,000 acres of
"My first thought was to make
. sure I get to keep the scorecard,'·
strip-mined land needing redamation. It gets BYPRQ- trom us free of
Gallagher said of Saturday's
charge, exclusive of hauling costs .
surprise. "Down the road. I'll
pull it out and tellmyklds, 'Yeah,
Some people have questioned whether BYPRQ- is safe because it
I batted cleanup. And that was
the year we had tHarold) Baines.
contains.minute traceli o~ dioxin. Thtt Ohio EPA and state Department of
(Carlton) Fisk. iDanl Pasqua
Health both said "yes" in' approving Mead's existing sludge management
and !Greg) Walker.' I won't tell
l.A. GEAR • AUTIY • AIGNER
them that three of t·hose guys
plan. Mead has a new plan before the state to continue using BYPRO'
were orfthe disabled list."
Asked what must have been
under the ~arne strict guidelines.
going through the minds of
Mead Paper would be happy to answer any .
' opposing pitchers. Gallagher
l. A.. GEAI. ADIDAS. CONYDSE
laughed.
questions you have about BYPRO" and how it
"I don't even want to think
ALL MEN'S Dingo • l - ·&amp;.ado
is used to reclaim strip-mined land.
about 11.'' he said.

..._________

.

•.

'

AMessa eto

ThePeopeof

Meigs County

• ...... .

... . .

.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 •••••••••••••••••• •

• •

0 ........ .

May's Shower Of Saving•

1/4 OFF

DRESS SHOES .

$500 OFF

ALL WOMEN'S TENNIS SHOES

Sporl8 briefs
Hockey
The Harl1ord Whalers lgned
defenseman Brad Shaw and left
wing Mike Tomlak. Shaw. who
joined Harl1ord March 7 after a
sea$on with Verese In Italy,
signed a ].year contract plus an
option year. Tomlak signed a
2·year contract plus an option
year.

ALL MEN'S TENNIS SHOES

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MAn C. VAN VIAHIEN • OWND

I

J

.•

POMEIOY, OliO

,

,,

'

'

•

�•

Wednesday, May 3, 1989

,

~age-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

W~nday,

.

May 3, 1889

1Sth Aaalwer1ary Speeial_1l

McGwire's grand slam powers A's to ·B-5 win over lays
the bases.

By ERIK K. LIEF
Oakland manager Tony La
UPI Sports Writer
Russa expressed surprising sym·
The Oakland Athle11cs and the pathy for Bell.
Toronto Blu&lt;&gt; Jays literally
"If I'm George Belland I'm hit
sluggl'd it out Tuesday evening at In that situation ione·O\It to go
·Exhibition Stadium.
and a three-run lead). I'd be
Though the Blue Jays proved upset. too," La Russa said.
'more proficient at hitting their
·"I don't like guys coming out
opponent. the A's were better at on our pitchers, but I can ·
connecting with the baseball.
understand Bellgettlngupset.
Mark McGwlre delivered the
McGwlre's
lle&lt;;islve blow. a grand -slam sixlh home run came off Tom
home run with ,two outs In the Henke. who was protecting a 5·4
'llinth inning. powering Oakland lead. Th&lt;&gt; ilriv&lt;&gt; sent the Blue
~o a-s:5"1Ttcf0ry.
Jays reellng to their fourth
: In the bottom of the Inning. consecutive loss and seventh in
Joronto's George Bell retaliated eight games.
~lth some big hitting of his own.
"Every at·bat against him he's
bur the nature of h.ls offensive . struck me out," said McGwlre.
attack did not bring his ream any referring to his 0-6 previous
.closer to winning the game.
career record against Henke. ·"I
: Gene Nelson came on In th&lt;&gt; went up there knowing that he
111nth after Rick Honey.cutt. 1-0. always strikes me out. I was
&lt;"elired the first two batt&lt;&gt;rs. looking for anything I could hit."
Nelson hit Beilin the ribs with a
Although Henke served up
pitch and Bell charged the McGwlre's game-winning ho·
mound. fists flaUlng. inciting a mer. Duane Ward. 1·4, was
bench-clearing melee. Nelson tagged with the loss because he .
grabbed Bell around the legs and yleldl'd back-to-hack singles to
Bell hit Nelson twice in the face Luis Polonla and Dave Hendfr·
pefore order was restored. Bell son before being removed. Henke
and his manager. Jimy Williams. came on and walked Dave
were ejected.
Parker before McGwire cleared

IJ()neycutt worked two and
two-third Innings , allowing a run
and two hits. Eric Plunkreplacee
Nelson and recorded the final out
for his first save.

Rance Mulljnlks clubbed his
first career grand slam homer
and first home l'jln of the season
off Bob Welch to give Toronto a
4·0 first-Inning lead.
Oakland scored a run In lhe

._,\c

Canadiens eye same
effort, better result
MONTREAL tUP!) - Pat
·Burns. coach of the Montreal
Canadiens. is looking for the
same effort and a different result
jn Wednesday night's second
game of the Wales Conference
linai against the Philadelphia
:Flyers.
"I'm satisfied with our effort."
Burns said. "If we get the same
. on Wednesday. we shpuld win."
Montreal lost 3·1 Monday to the
injured Flyers. Some Canadlens
pointed to rustiness from their
week off. waiting for Phlladel·
phia and Pittsburgh to settle
. their seven-game Patrick Div·
· is ion finaL Montreal defeated
- · BoMon In five games.
: "The Flyers should be begin·
•ning to feel some !atigue and we
should take advantage of that."
Montreal center Ryan Walter
said.
: Philadelphia Coach Paul
• Holmgren said the Flyers' tough
•series wllh Pittsburgh left them
: preparl'd for Montreal.
• "Sometimes when .two teams
tneet and ·One has had a long
layoff and the other one has just
COme from another serieS the
• second team is more ready."
: Holmgren said. ·'My team plays
: on emotion and I hope it carries
· them to another win on
Wednesday."
,
: Both lineups continue to
&gt;h~nge because of numerous
injuries. For Philadelphia, goal·
•tender Ken Wregget continued
; his hot play in place of the injured
;r&lt;&gt;gular Ron Hextall. Rick
:Tocchet continues to play on one
-bad knee and Brian Propp was
"sent to· hospital after a Chris
Cheilos elbow left him bleeding

~Stanley

.

CALGARY. Alberta (UP!) ·:rhree members of the Chicago
:Biackhawks enjoyed a home·
coming of sorts Tuesday night
· when the team faced the Calgary
: Flames In Game· 1 of the
:campbell Conference finals.
• Defenseman Steve Konroyd
: spent five years with the Flames
: before being dealt to the New
York Islanders in March 1986.
. Konroyd subsequently was
• traded to the Blackhawks mid·
,: way through the 1988-89 .season .
·: Forward Bob Bassen grew up
· tn Calgary and played junior
: hockey 180 m lies away in Medi·
• cine Hat. Alberta:. Bassen also
,' was part of the Islanders·
· Blackhawks deal that sent Kon·
·. royd to Chicago.
· .• And rookie defensen\an Trent
:Yawney three seasons wllh the
: calgary-based Canadian Olym: pic Team before joining Chicago
; following the 1988 Olympics. ,

MriOO'WI!:LL SCORES - The Indians' Oddlbe McDowell races
home after roundln&amp;lhlrd on a fly ball to short right field Juagled
by Te&gt;:as second baseman Julio Franco In the Tuesday .n ..ht'a
game Ia ArUngton, Te&gt;:as. Franco· then threw wide and late to
catcher Jim Sundberg. Rain then Interrupted the game 30 minutes
later. The game resumed, and the Indians won ll-5. (UPI)

Postlewait savors her wins

---

'"

,• CALGARY. Alberta (UP!) ·:Calgary assistant coach Tom
:watt was an assistant last year
•with Philadelphia under current
~ Chicago Coach Mike Keenan. but
. their ties go back farlher than
, that.
. Watt and Keenan both coached
:: the University of Toronto Blues
·; to Canadian national collegiate
·• championships.
: Watt coached the Blues to nine
:canadian Jn~.unlveraity At·
.; hletlc Ulilon champlotillllps dur:
lila 1+~11' tenurt at lhe

Keenan followed Watt and
coached the Blues to a CIAU title
in 1983-84 before joining the
Flyers in 1984-85. Watt left the
Winnipeg Jets to return to the
school. then joinl'd the · Van:
couver Canucks the following
season.
In addition, Watt was an
assistant under Keenan during .
the 1987 Canada Cup.
MONTREAL iUPI) - Mont·
real Canadlens Coach Claude
Lemieux likely will return to the
ice Wednesday night for Game 2
of the Wales Conference finals
against the Philadelphia Flyers.
Lemieux was a last-minute
scratch . from Game 1, which
Philadelphia won 3-1, because of
a groin injury suffered In
practice.
"Claude · Lertileux will be all
right.'' Burn!f said. "He will
skate (in practlice) on Tuesday.lf
that was a sixfh or Seventh game
I would have used him, but we
didn't want him to Injure himself
further."

J(···

~-JIIIIP.......

t

-

0

WILMINGTON. Del. iUPilKathy Pos.tlewalt wins rarely
enough on the LPGA Tour that
she realizes how hard victories
are to obtain.
Last weekend. Postlewait won
only the fourlh tournament of her
15-year car!'er when she posted a
one-shot victory In the $425,000
Sara Lee Classic In Nashville,
Tenn.
The triumph was 'her first since
her single-stroke victory over
Patty Sheehan In the 1988 McDo·
nald's Championship at DuPont
Country Club. where she re·
turned Tuesday to discuss this
year's tournament.
Postlewait, who claimed
$63,750 In winnings her last time
out, said she did not expect to go
nearly a year between victories
on the tour.
''I did expect to win again
(after the McDonald's tournament) but I can't say I was
dlsappolljled lhat I didn't," she
said. "The tour is getilng so good
.and it's getting so' hard to win
· anymore.
"Betsy King has won three
tournaments this year and she

may win more because spe's a
good player. But I can't help
thinking that Joanne Carner used
to say that If she won three times
in a year that was an exceptional
year.
"The competitioQ is getting
better and better. It's difficult to
win outthere so I was pleased (to
win again)."
·
Postlewait figures to be chal·
leng~d by most of the top LPGA
players when she seeks to become the first victor to defend
her title at this year's tourna·
ment. set for June 22-25. The
event annually attracts a good
field, thanks partly to Its $550.000
purse and $82,500 first prize, but
also because of other reasons.
"It's tqe little things the
tournament does for the play·
ers," Postlewait. said.

FRANKIE
WIENERS

COME CE~EBRATE WITH US! •

for the· Wblte Sox. King. 2-3,
struck out three and walked
seven. Chris 'Bosio, 4·1, allowed ·
six runs and 12 hits In seven and
one·lhlrd Innings.
Mariners 7, Tl1er• 2
At Seattle, Jeffrey Leonard
craclr:ed his second grand slam of
the season as Seattle pounded •
Detroit. Mike Dunne,1·1. allowed ,
two runs and six hits over seven
Innings and MlkeJacklon earne&lt;t •
hts second save In relief. Charles ·~
Hudson. 0·2, pitched eight in·
ntngs and took the losa.

We Reserve The Riehl To

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PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., APR.~O THRU SAT., MAY 6, 19e9

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ACCIDENT REPORTS!
An indlanapolil . claimant

ltatld that ha waa giving a
ap.. ch at a convention, be·
fora a large audience. While
walclng around on
the
ltaga, hia zipper fell, CaUl·
ing him extreme emblrraaa·
ment, and lou of preltige,
on Whiclt grounds he Ia IU·
ing the manufllctur• of the
alacka. But look at the
laugh• he got.

HEINZ

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and'11ncon~cious In the second
period.
Wregget played less than eight
periods for the Flyers before
Friday. when he stopped Pitts·
burgh tn the seventh game of the
Patrick Division final. Wregget
was obtained from Toronto In
early Mar~h for two first-round
draft choices. a high "price for a
backup goalie .
Holmgren was reluctant to
name his goalie for game 2.
despite · Wregget's first game
heroics.
"I have to evaluate Hextall's
health before our rll?xt game."
Holmgren said. "I won't risk him
if he Is not 100 percent. My
deciclson to play either Ron or
Ken will be based on Hextall's
health."
·
Holmgren said the Propp Inc!·
dent served as an additional
spark to his club. Propp may be
back in the lineup Wednesday .
"There was a lot of concern
when Brian was hurt."
Holmgren said. "But I guess the
players gat more fired up. When
they found out that Brian was OK
they s.e t tied down and played a
good game. "
Tocchet. though injured. pro·
vidl'd the Insurance goal in the
third period, bareliY a minute
after Shane Corson had nar·
rowed the margin to 2-1.
"My knee is still sore but I
can't afford to miss any games,"
Tocchet said. "We are confident
because we have such a good
record playing in this building
over the years but Montreal can't
be taken for granted. We can't
afford to get lao overconfident .
against them."
·

fifth on an RBI single by Polonla
and evened the acore « with
three runs In lhe seventh on a
run-acortng triple by Tony Phil·
lips and RBI singles by Stan
Javier and-Parker.
Toronto took a H ~ad In lhe
eighth on a run-acorlng stnale by
Pat Borders.
Elsewhere In the American
Leag~~e: .
1 Indiana I, Ran&amp;en 3
AI , Arlington, Texas. Cory
Snyder drove In four runs. three
of them with a sixlh·lnntng
homer In a game delayed 1 hour
and 55 minutes by rain and high
winds. Greg Swindell, 3·0, al·
lowed seven hils, struck out six
and walked none over seven and
one-third Innings. Jamie Moyer
fell to 3-1.
)
Boyala 5, Yankees 3
At New York. Mark Gublcza
fired a six-hit complete game and
Luis de 106 Santos drove In the
tying and ~ahead runs, spark·
tng Kanslis City to Its fourth
stralliht victory . The · Yankees
had their four-gamE&gt; winning
streak stopped as Tommy John.
2·4. allowed five runs and 10 hits
In six and two-third Innings.
Orioles 4, Angels 3
At Baltimore~ pinch hitter Jim
Traber's sacrifice fly In the ninth
scored Brady Anderson With the
winning run for tbe Orioles.
snipping California'~ five-game
winning streak. Traber's RBI
made a winner of relief pitcher
Gregg Olson. 3·0 and a loser of
WIUie Fraser, 0-2.
Red So&gt;: 4, TWills 2
At Minneapolis, Ellis Burks
clubbed a three-run homer off ·
Jeff Reardon to cap a four-run
Boston eighth. John Dopson. 3·1.
pitched eight Innings, allowing
two fl!nS ·and seven hits. Lee
Smith finished for his third save.
German Gonzalez, 2·1. faced just
two batters. giving up two runs.
one hit and a walk.
I, Brewers 1
White
At Chicago. Eric King scat·
tered five hits over eight Innings
and Ron Klitie and Ivan Calderon
each smashed two-run homers

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomaloy-Middleport, 0hio

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:Page-&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

&gt;'

Wednasday.

POI1WOy-Midcleport. Ohio

Mav 3. 1989

.Wtalnliay, May 3, 1989

.;Mets' Ojeda beats Braves 7-1 for first victory of sea8on
.'

I

'• By Vnllecl Press International
' Bob Ojeda, who nearly lost the
Up of his lett middle finger In a
gardening accident last summer,
''sdll bas what It takes to win In the
· major leagues .
.:. The New York Mets' left,, bander allowed only five hits
· over eight Innings Tuesday night
to gain his first victory of th.
_ year, a 7·1 decision over the
nornestandlng Atlanta Braves.
Ojeda had his flngerdp reatt·
ached and the top joint fused In
microsurgery Sept. 21 after he
nearly severed the fingertip with
an electric hedgecllpper.
Ojeda said he and catcher
Barry Lyons talked before the

game. "and we said, 'let's get their eighth loss In a row ..
back to the basics and not try to
The Mets took a 7·0 lead In the
do too much or too many first Inning off Pete Smith, IH.
things.'"
With one ()Ut, Howa~;d Johnson
The strategy worked and walked, stole second and scored
OJeda added It was a huge relief when Darryl Strawberryclubbed
when the Metsgot an early lead his sixth home J!UJI of the year.
because "that allowed us to go
Braves Manager Russ Nixon
after people.
said the team bad a meetfng after
"Barry called a great game. the game to dlscu as the growing
He had me doing everything and losing streak. ·
he was moving and setdng !l , '"I told them I didn't think we
great target for me," said Ojeda, could loose this many,'' Nixon
who walked one and struck out said, "but we've goqo accept the
two In his fifth start ofthe season fact and deal with it. We've got to
amidst rumors he might be wipe the slate clean and start
replaced In the Mets rotation.
over tomorrow.''
Don Aase pllcbed the ninth as
Elaewhere In the National
New York handed the Braves League:

Expoe 6, Reclll 4
At ·Montreal, Otis Nixon
singled home Spike Owen with
the winning run In the eighth
Inning. Tim Burke Improved io
2-1 with two Innings of relief: The
Expos scored twice In the first
Inning off Jack ArmstrOng, who
had been called up from AAA
Nashville before the game. Kent
Tekul;ve. fell to 0.1.
Aa&amp;roll 12, PhWies 4
At Philadelphia, Bill Doran
and Glenn Davis drove In three
runs ap~e as HQuston scored In
each of the first five Innings. Jim
Deshaies, 3-2, worked eight lnningl while Floyd Youmans, 1-3,

AAUW
installs
officers

took the Joss. Davia belted lila Ed Whitson, 4·2, pitched his first
eighth homl!l' and teamrna te complete game of the year, ·
Kevin Baas stroked four hits. sparkl the Padres. Scott
was the 1011er.
Mike Schmidt slammed his sixth Terry,
luC. 4, Cube 0
home run for the Phllilel.
At San Francisco, Kevin Mit·
Dottaen 7, l'b'ala o
At Los Angeles Ore! Hersblser, · chell hit a two-run llomer and
4·2, scattered six hils for his first Rick Reuschel ~combined with
shutout of the season and Rick Rich Gossage on a shutout for the
Dempsey slUgged his first home Giants. Reuschel, 4-2, wentaeven
run of the season for the Dodgers. and oae-lhlrd Innings for the win. ·
LoSer Nelli Heaton, 0-:3, was lifted Gossage, 37, releaSed by th~Cubs
In the sixth after giving up five In spring training, worked out of
a bases-loaded jam In the eighth
runs and eight hlta,
and earned lila first save and the
Padres 7, CardiDu 1
At San Diego, Jack Cl¥k 303rd of his career, tops among
clubbed a three-run homer to active pitchers. Greg Maddux
spark a five-run third lnnin&amp; and fell to 1-4.

The o.ty Slllllnti-Pigl

. Poma"OY Middleport, Ohio

,

Installation of officers of the chair of Women's Work .
American Association of Univer- Women's Worth. Also Introduced
sity Women was observed April was Lois Whealey, the Ohio
25 at the Down Under Restaurant Division Nominating chair. Both
In GaiUpolis. The Middleport· women belong to the Athens,
Pomeroy Area Branch Invited .Ohio AAUW branch.
the GaiUpoUs Branch to Join the
New Middleport-Pomeroy of·
combined Installation.
fleers Installed were Sibley
Lee Lee, preslden~ of the host Slack, treasurer, and Sharon
branch, welcomed the members Hubbard, recording secretary.
and guests and Introduced the Joyce Ritchie, who had a preInstalling officer, Mary Lee vious school commitment and
rowel~ who Is on the AAUW Ohio
was unable to attend, would have
Division Board of Director~ and been Installed as membership

vice-presldl!nt. Other otflcers
are Lee Lee, president; VIrginia
Carson, program vice-president;
Jenny Manuel, corresponding
secretary; and Carmen Manuel,
educational foundation chair.
The evening's Invocation was
given by VIrginia Carson, of the
Middleport-Pomeroy branch.
Dinner was served and colorful
hats, make by Kate Jarrell of the
Middleport-Pomeroy branch,
were given as favors .
. Whealey gave brief comments

'1_

Carol CantrelL president of the
on the new Eleanor Rooaevelt
GaiUpolls branch.
Fund which focuses on ~arch.
Other Middleport-Pomeroy
Whealey also said the
members attendlq the lnstalla·
Middleport-Pomeroy Branch
tion dinner, In addition to tho.e
would be hearing soon about an
award the branch received at a · named above, were Lucille Hag·
gerry, Chrlsdne Napii!I',"Yvonne
recent Ohio Division Convention
Scally, VIcki Hill, CarOl Hick·
held In Worthington, Ohio.
man, Dolores' Wo1fe, J0111 Ma·
A framed cerdtlcate and
nuel, Jane Manuel, Sblrll!y
rosette were pres en ted to
Sayre, Aaron · Sayre, Helen
Middleport-Pomeroy branch
Smith, Ruth Stearns, Janice
member, Mary Lee Powell, by
Curry, Rachel Downie, Kathryn
Lee Lee.
Knight and Cindy Oliveri.
Closing remarks were made by

COPYRIGHT 1&amp; • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, APRIL 30,
THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 6, tlllltl, IN OMUPOUI AND POMEROY ITOREB.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

Reds drop 64 tilt to Expos
these guys are going to win.
Innings, allowing two runs, four .
MONTREAL (UPI) -Speed Is
"Our third base coach, Jackie hits and four wal~ whiles trilling
· Otis Nixon's prime baseball
Moore, made an excellenl deci- out seven before giving way to
-: ~ttrlbute, and Tuesday night he
sion to send Nixon horne from Burke.
helped spark a winning Montreal
first."
Cincinnati tied the score 3·3 In
rally by dashing horne on a play
Burke
Improved
to
2·1
Tim
the eighth. With two out, former
few others In the game could
with two Innings or relief despite Expo Herrn Winningham hit a
duplicate.
: Nixon singled home Spike yielding two runs, Including Ken bloop double to cepter and scored
Griffey's second horne run of the on a single by Tolld Benzinger.
Owen with the winning run In the
The Expos scored twice In the
eighth·Inning and then scored all year, a solo blast In the ninth
Inning.
'
first Inning off Jack Armstrong,
the way from first on a single by
For the second night In a row, who had been called up from
Tim Raines, lifting the Expos to a
6-4 triumph over the Cincinnati Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose, AAA Nashville before the game.
. suffering from bronchitis, was
With one away, Armstrong
Reds.
With the score tied 3-3, Kent too Ill to manage the team and walked Torn Foley and Andres
Tekulve, 0-1, yielded a double to was forced to return to his hotel Galarraga before Huble Brooks
right by Owen. Nixon followed roont Coach Tommy Helms drove In· Foley from second with
a single to right. One out later,
with his single to right, driving agalft guided the team.
Dave Martinez delivered another
home Owen. Raines then singled
Rose will not accompany the
single to right to drive horne
to right, with Nixon racing home Reds to New York for their next
Galarraga.
all the way from first to make It game on Wednesday, bu I will
The Reds closed within 2-1 In
5-3.
return to Cincinnati where he will
the second Inning when Benzin·
. "Ihavedonethatplaybefore," undergo· a battery of tests under
said the 30-year old Nixon, who the supervision of club physician ger slngled with one out, took
second on a passed ball by·
started the season with only 650 Dr. Warren G. Harding IlL
career at bats but 105 stolen
"Tekulve had two good Innings catcher Mike Fitzgerald and
scored on a single by Bo Dlaz off
bases. "I know I have the speed until they got to him In the
Johnson.
to get home from first with Tim eighth,'' Helms said. "I feel that
The E)!:pos lnffeased their lead
Raines behind me."
(Montreal starter R;mdy) Johnto 3-1 In the third when Brooks
Raines, who had taken second son was the key to the Montreal
on the throw home, then scored success. He gave us chances but singled and scored-on a double by
Fitzgerald off the wall In lefthimself on another single by Torn we couldn't take advantage of
Foley lor a 6·3 lead.
: center field. Cincinnati center
them.
fielder Eric Davis pulled his left
"Our team has been corning
''But on the other hand, we did
hams trlng on the play and left the
back for a lot of years," Montreal bounce back and tie this game.
game.
Manager Buck Rodgers said. But they finished us off with that
The Reds closed within 3-2 in
"These guys never give up. As rally In the eighth.''
the
long as there Is a breath of life
filth when Kal Daniels
Johnson worked the first seven
walked, stole second, took third
on a single by Chris Sabo and ·
scored on a sacrifice fly by Barry
Larkin . .

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Scoreboard ...

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grOUp denieS

SABO'S OVT - A acreamln&amp; Chris Sabo of the
Bedt- I&amp; restrained by lhlrd-bue coach Dave

46¢

Brlalci! after umpire Gary Darling ruled him out

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A group building a. new

day that tafks are underway to
. By PODIA SMITB
"He's a great looking horse,
Jure the Raiders from Los
Jolley he would ride Irish Actor
VPI Spot18 Writer
and he looks terrifiC here," said
Angeles.
Saturday should Western PlayLOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)
trainer LeRoy Jolley, a two-time
A Los A~geles television sta:
boy prove unable to start.
Western Playboy 'had a slow ·Derby winner.
tton, KCBs,tv, reportedMenday
Romero also worked Jolley's colt
workout Tuesday, · raising quesWestern Playboy trainer Harthat Raiders owner AI Davis and
three quarters of a rnllelnl: 143·5
tions about his fitness for Satur- vey Vanier lett the Churchill
Sacramentb realtor Angelo TsaTuesday.
day's K.e ntucky Derby.
kopoulos hilve met within the last
Downs track saying he boped lor
"It doesn't have anything to do
The winner of the Jim Beam a faster time from his colt.
month to 'discuss the possible
with Western Playboy. He's fine
and Blue Grass stakes developed
"He was a little nonchalant,
now,'' Romero said. "This Is
move. So!lrces told the station
that Davis was "very lrn· · an Infection 111 his lett rear knee but he had no distress,'' Vanier
backup In case something
about a week after the Blue said. "He'ss gotten to the point
pressed" by the city's latest
happens to him between now and
Grass and was sidelined a few where he's not Interested In
offer.
then."
days. Tuesday's five-eighths of a morning workouts. He wants
Jolley said a slow workout did
The Sacramento Bee reported
m Ue run In 1: 03 under Randy company (to run In a race.)
Tuesday •that negotiations benot necessarily mean Western
Romero was his first since April · "I'm satisfied with the way he
tween Davis and Tsakopoulos
Playboy would race poorly
22.
Saturday.
have reCently continued. Two
did it. He's fit. He doesn't need
In a good workout a horse any speed workouts. He was just
years ago, a developrn~nt group
moves at 12 seconds or faster per loafing a bit." ·
spearheaded by Tsakopoulos
. MOOSE MEMIERS
eighth of a rnlle. Derby outsiders
Romero said he was surprised
made Davis an Initial offer of
Wind Splitter and Triple Buck by the clocking because It felt
&amp; WOTM'
$100 million to move the Raiders
J.... , . ,.........,
covered the same distance ln1: 01 . like he and the colt were moving
to Sacr11rnento, the newspaper
Evllll... .,._ ......
· and 1: 01 3-5.
reported.
faster.
.
ont•tainlllg_.of
The probable Derby field was
· "I've worked him his last three
The deal reportedly pivots on
GEOIGI KAU At tho Orpl
how much the city of Sacramento pared to 16 3-year-old,l Tuesday works, and I feel that he Is right
X-rays
disclosed
that
Mawhen
Is willing to pay Davis to move.
IELKIOUS IUfRT DINNEI
. on target,'' Romero said. "The
. $6.00
Jesty's Imp, the colt owned by track here today was a little
Sources told the television sta·
lion that Davis asked for sole former . Pittsburgh Pirates and cuppy (dry and loose) and deep
fororitlo ~ to I OoH p.01.
lUring) and the winds were
ownership of the stadium and $35 Atlanta Braves Manager Chuck
million during negotiations two Tanner, had a bonechlplnhlslett blowing pretty hard. He was very
SUNDAY, ~y 7th
knee. The colt will undergo . comfort&amp; ble." ·
..... Y•• . .IOI... IIowl'
years ago. The station said Davis
arthroscopic surgery In Lexingbas reduced his asking price and
Still, Romero said he has told,,
' 675-1110
Sacramento has Improved Its ton and be sidelined six to eight
weeks.
offer.
TsakOAOUios arid Gregg LukenDerby favorite Easy Goer
bill-. managing general partner of continued to Impress.
•
the group that owns the t:IBA's
'
Sacramento Kings, are part
owners of 1,000 acres located
nor Ill 1of tbe Arco Arena, the
333 florth S.Contl Avenue
home of the basketball team.
Part of that area would become
Mklllleport, Ohio ., 760
The publiC Is Invited to attend
the Raiders' new home, the
an awards and recognition astelevision stat Jon reported .
sembly for members of the men's
and women's basketball teams at
About 10 football fans Tuesday
Rio Grande College/ Community
called ' the Sacramento Sports College on Sunday, May 7.
bt
Association, which owns the
The assembly begins at 7 p.m.
Kings; and Is building the new In Rhodes Student Center, At·
stadium next to the Arco Arena,
hletlc Director John Lawhorn
tlting.
seekl~g to buy Raiders season
announced.
tiCkets, said · Dave Dowell, proGuest speaker for the event
Cost of Registration and Ttstlng
ject director of the Arco Sports will be NI!WI Oliver, member of
.Complex and the association's the Rio' Grande College Board of
controller.
Trustees and men's basketball
Regi8tration ......................................... *16.00
coach at Rio Grande- during the
Tntlng ................................................. 10.00
"We had people calllngaaklng Bevo Francis era In the early
where they could alp up . for 19505.
Total Colt .................................. ~ ........ •2&amp;.00
seaspn tickets," Doftll said.
M&amp;lllbers of botll teams will be
"It's gtwn people something to In traduced and will be pre~~nted
talk about."
with awards. Oliver will also
Regt.tr•tlon ~ ....................................... *26.00
Dowell, however, said no talks pretent a speelal award to an
Te.tlfti ................................................. 10.00
wm uaclerway to brill&amp; the outstanding. member of each
Tcre.t COlt' .....
'36 00
Raldlrl to Northern Call1ornla.
team.
.
'':'l'bere have bean no talb at
11te Redmen ended the lJII8 89
. ltlhDOI Manulla .,. now available for t"on wtlo 1ra
any level," Dowellaald. "Anplo aeuon wttb a 20-13 record, wblle
~ In !Wiilt..ng thllf qhildl'en. Alto, m1nuala
told Greu that he had not apolcen · tlllt Redv.'amlln llad a 16-lUiallh.
.,.1¥11111111 tor tholl who .,.lnureald In obtaining
with anybody ID the Raldera' Bo.. tQmaiJIACieappear-111
lnfol1111tl011 MIUI our Clwiltllft lohool.
organization since 198'1."
the tllltrlet 22 playoltl .

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

Awards assembly
-at RGC Sunday

.

'

Kellogg's
Corn Flakes
24-oz.

'
''

'

=
-

-

\

---=
---

U.S •. INSPECTED

Holly Farms
Mixed Fryar Parts
PGIIIId

-----

•

'

JUMBO, REGULAR OR BUN SIZE
MEAT OR

Kahn's Beef
Franks
1-lb.

•'

'

..

40, 60, 75 OR 100 WAIT

California

G.E.

Soft White

Strawberries

Light

O.rt

4-Pak

,,•.,".,,.,

.1989-90 SCHOOl REGISTRAnON

During the month of May, '!'• will hawing
a "SPECIAL DISCOUNT FEE" for Registration
and T

' CHILLED

For tht Month of May is

Kroger

Orange Juice
lhL

After June 1, tht' ratK wHI be:

. .

)

'

69

•

REJOICING
LIFE .
.
CHIISnAN SCHOOL

0 •••••••••••• : • •• 0 •••••••••••••• 0 0 • •• •

•

Downy Fabric
Softener·

t~!c:~E~:~~';:; Derby hopeful Western Playboy
-

OFF LABEL

Whole Boneless $
Sirloin Tip ............. lb.

I

•

'

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.Wednaaday. Mev 3. ·1989 ·

'

Wtdnn~av. ~

.Pomeloy-Middlapon. Ohio

.The U811y

.·

3. 1989_ ·

·· atG BEND

Vour lndepe11de11tly Owned
Low·Prlc:ed Supermarket
• .

•.

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•

•

'

ODLAND

•We Rnerve the Right to Umit QuantititM •Priew Good Thru Sat.. Mev 6. 1989

r

'

'·

•

1

99

Ent.-.

TOPPED
$3.49

CHARMIN
BATH TISSUE

..

....
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'

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F11.aall MEAT
DEPAIIIIIIRS. Must le 1'
Y•n 0111 to
No
PwcltueMuunry.

ASSORTED COLORS

••

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Int.- today at , _

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·~

'

CWI . .IIIS-

· Foodland Ttnderbest
lllat Depts•

... ...

Compare ''Apples To Apples'' On These · ~1
.
National Brand· Prod11ets And rite
"~ ·:
·. Amount Of Hone~ You Save· At ''Save •A ·· LOt'!! :~ · .,

·~.

HOUSE

~

2°/o
Milk

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4 ROLl
PKG.

.

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limit 1 With •1 0.00 or Mare

. SWEET
VIDALIA ONIONS

.
.
.
99¢
Madison Royal Black Pepper 4 oz. ................
Durkee Black Pepper 4 oz......~....................... ~2.39.. · Durkee Black Pepper 4 oz. ;............_;.:~:......'2.33
.,
Gold Leaf Brueberry Pie Riling 21' ~~- ....s1.29 Lucky Leaf Blueberry Pie Filling 21 oz.. S2.59 . Thank You Blueberry Pie Filling ~1 oz....S'f:97 ·
·Pillsbury Fudge Brownie Mix 21.s oz.............99¢ Pillsbury Fudge Brownie Mix 21.5 oz. . . . $1.79 Plll~ury Fudge BroWnie lllx 21.5 oz~--~1.75
~lue Bonnet Margarine ,.,:................................55¢ Blue Bonnet Margarine 11b.............................95¢ Blue Bonnet Margarine 11b.............: .. -·-····1~01
Swiss Miss Hot Cocoa Mix 12 oz.....................99¢ · Swiss Miss Hot Cocoa Mix 12 oz..........._.$1.89 Swiss Miss Hot Cocoa Mix 12 oz..............s1.87 ·
Libby's Sliced Pineapple 20 oz..........................65¢ Del Monte Pineapple 20 oz...............................s1.09 Dole Pineapple 20 oz...........................................s1.05
$ea Pak Onlo.n Rings 1&amp; oz.................:...............99¢ Sea Pak Onion Rings 1 lb.......................;.......~1.99 Moores Onion Rings 16 oz.......................:......s1.~7 ·
.• Premium Turkey Franks 12 oz..............65¢ .Swift Premium Turkey Franks 12 oz........s1.09 Swift Premium Turkey Franks 12 oz. .......s1.09
Swift
.
. $
E~ual Sweetner 50 ct....................·..................... 1.99 Equal Sweetner 50 ct..........................................$2 .49 Equal Sweetner so ct..........................................$2.49 ·
· Marzettl Salad Dressing 16oz. .....................s1.09 Marzettl Sal•d Dressing 16 oz. ........~ .. ~.:.......s1.99 M~rzettl Sllad Dressing 16 oz. ....................s2.17,
Arm &amp; Hammer Baking Soda 16 oz................39¢ . Arm &amp; Hammer Baking Soda t6 oz...............59¢ .Arm &amp; Hammer Baking Soda 16 oz... .-:.......51¢ · .
Ploch mans Squeeze Mustard .19 oz. ..............89¢ Ploch mans squeeze Mustard 19 oz.........s1 ~29 Ploch mans Squeeze Mustard··,a oz....~....s1.11
Kahn's ·corn Dogs 6ct.....................................~1.49 K~hn's C~rn Dogs 6·ct..................................;...$2.29 . .Kahn's Corn Dogs 6 ct......................................$1.99
$2 69 Drano Liquid 67.6 oz..............................................$3.89 . Drano Liquid 67.6 oz..............................................'3.17
.J)rano Liquid 67.6 oz..................·:....... .
.
..
$
.
Nestea Instant Tea 3.6 oz..,............................... 2.59 Nestea Instant Tea 3 oz.............................:...... ~2.99 Nestea Instant Tea 3 oz.................................-~4.19
Flddle'Faddle 5 oz.......................................................69¢ Fid~tle Faddle soz.........................................;.............99• Crunch
~.99¢
. ·N- Munch 5 oz. .......................................
.
. ' ..
. 49¢ .· . ..
. 65¢
Budding Meat$ 2.s oz. ...........,..........................:.......
Budd1ng "eats 2.s oz................................................ · Eckrich Meats 3 oz....................................................89¢
. .
$
Coronet Bath Tissue aroll pkg........~ .............$1.89 Coronet Bath Tissue 8 roll pkg........:............. 2.49 Coronet Bath·Tissue. 8 ~ pkg......................s2.45
Chef Boy-ardee Twin Cheese Pizzas ...~1.89 . Chef Boy-ardee Twin Cheese Pizzas ~..~2.49 Chef Boy·ardee Twin Cheese Pizzas ...~2.43
.
Page Paper Towels 1 ply ........................................39¢ Page Paper Towels 1 ply ..................~.....................59¢ Delta Paper Towels ·, ply .......................................;55¢
'

Pur chaM

GEORGIA GROWN

"

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'

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STRAWBERRY .
ES
.

1 YEAR CUFFSIDE GOLF

lroutht To You ly Your

•
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w• AS2,275.00

'

•USDA FOod St•mpl Gild'¥ Accepted ,.Not R•ponalbte For typogr..,hicel Erron

~81- t'age-1:1

3 LIS. OR
MORE

FOODLAND

FRESH LEAN

·BONELESS

GROUND BEEF

CHUCK ROAST

COTTAGE
CHEESE .

5 LIS.
or MOlE

TROPICANA

ORANGE .

JUICE .

!

HHUIIIIIUIIUIIH

.

'

· Total ...... 823.58

.

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OR MORE·

I

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Total
......
•

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•

ASSORTED RAGU

74

·Total ......

SPAGHEnl
SAUCE

$1 ~~~-

This Amounts To A 'rotal Savings of 35% On These National Brands!

SWinNING

CHAMP CHUNK

SHORTENING

DOG FOOD

"99&lt;··~L

••• J(

INSTANT

COFFEE .

$299
. . •

llllfiES 20 CT.

;~~SH BAGS $1 99

lllffiS 13 GAL. 30 CT.

TRASH lAGS

$ 199

~;:.'~rES

99&lt;

TAU IITCHfN

.

DON'T BE FOOLEp ~y .GlMMICKS SUCH AS "BUY ONE - GET ONE FREE" OR "SPECJALS"!
'·

......................... "' ..........
................ -

...

II
1'

•

·

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STORE HOURS: Monday: Saturday, 9 a.m~-9 p.m.; SUnday, 11 a.m.-a. p.m. -lm:e Jllarahout, OWner
I

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..................-

........... . _ . . . . . . Of

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SBI •SING

MEAl

sLt.

SCAlLOPED
POTAT()£S

69
oz. . (
5.5

•·ITE 22 OZ.

WINDOW
CLEANER

.

' (304) .675-1185
.

•
•

'

TOMATO
CATSUP

79L.4 4 Sl
7.,0Liox

35( AUGRAnN
99&lt; ·POTATOES
BROWN SUGAR
•·liTE IS OZ.

(PORK/BEANS

· •·liTE UGHT 2 Ll.

MACARONI/
CHEESE

MARCAL

FROSTED FLAKES/ · FACIAL TISSUES
RAISIN BRAN
. 100 count ao.., ·

69

StOOL

3/Sl

•-liTE

5.5

oz. 69&lt; HOSPITAliTY 20 oz.

:~~E:RAN $13 9 .
••IJTI LG. IOU

PAPER
TOWELS

49&lt;

$1 09

•.,liTE;_. OZ.

~=~.:iS129

ILACI
PEPPEl

S1'79
(.
5
99&lt;

~

20lL

HOSPITALITY ·

Na•·s•ST
CIANIERIY
AliCE .... oz.

. . all IU 01.

.

-$299

II-RITE

.1-1111-16 OL

99( ... SAUCE 39(
APPLE

�'

•
•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Wednesday. May 3. 1989

The Daily Sentinel

By ·T he Bend

Community·calendar
WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Boosters wlll meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., at the high
school. Refreshments will be
served.

Weclnasday, May 3. 1989
Paga 10

.

Rutland
Friendly Garden Club hoi~ meeting
.

.
Roll call was read with all
members bringing a flow~r seed
tor the junior garden club at the
recent meeting of the Ru !land
Friendly Garden Club when the
"' group met at the home of Joann
Fetty.
·
The seeds were given to Janet
Bolin whO Is starting a 4-H Junior
Garden Club.
Marjorie Davis read devotions
entitled "Evening Prayer", and
all members read the collect.
Reports were given and
approved.
Mrs. Fetty, chairman, read a
letter on the state fair flower
bedl. planting dates and flowers.
SCHOOL PRIDE DAY -Riverview Elementary Scltool took
parllnS!:hoatPrlde Day thlllpasiFrlday. Thedaywasseluldeby
It was decided the group would
Melp Coullt)' UttH Control olllce coordinator, Kenny Wi1gl1111.
go May 15 to plant beds.
Kimberly Wilford read a letter
Wllglna, who 'Visited the sehool and spoke to the children, 1ave a
from Star Garden Club Inviting
presentalloa which Involved a video on IIIIer control, aad passed
the group to their 50th annlver·
out trash bap aad pencilS lor eacb child. The Jr. Girl Seoul Troop
1015 of Riverview donated a new trash can to be used at the grade
school.

l

, Bissell birth being announced
Specialist Royce Alan and
Amy Jo Bissell are announcing
the birth of their first child, a .
daughter. Brittany Dawn, born
April 9 at Darnall Army Community Hospital.
. The Infant weighed nine
pounds. ten ounces. and was 22}1
·Inches long.
·
, Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jackson,
Tuppers Plains. Paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Doug
Bissell, Tuppers Plains.

Maternal great grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Russ Cumb'udge, Sistersville, W.Va., and
.Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Berkhlmer,
Sistersville, W.Va.
Paternal great grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs . Charles Bissell,
Long Bottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Curtis, Reedsville.
Bissell Is serving with the U.S.

BRITTANY D. BISSELL
Army and the family Is stationed
at Fort Hood In Kllleen, Texas.

McKelvey birth being announced
· Bruce and Teresa (Wllson)
McKelvey, Portland, are announcing the birth of a daughter,
Miranda Marie.
· Born March 13, the Infant
'weighed seven pounds. -four
·ounces, and was 20 Inches long.
· Maternal grandparents are
'Albert and Dorothy Parker,
Pomeroy. Maternal great grand. mother Is Josephine Kibble,
·Tuppers Plains.
· Paternal grandparents are Bill
' and Hazel McKelvey, Ravenswood. W.Va. - Paternal great
· grandmother is Anne Hllldore,
Syracuse.

review of the regional meeting
held AprD 8 at NelsOnvl)le. Th,-re
were six members In attendance.
Suzy Carpenter won a cross
stitched flower picture made by
Ruth Waller, state treasurer.
· A regional tour toW akeena will
be held May 9 with a potluck
lunch. Gardeners Day Out Is at
Seven Caves In Bainbridge on
Aug. 31. The fall regional meetIng Is In McCarther on Oct. 21
with Bonnie Allen as afternoon
·Margaret Edwards got seespeaker.
dllnp for children to take home
Nature SIJldY Camp In June 5-9
and plant, as part of the beautlfl·
at Camp Lazurus In Columbus.
cation project.
·
Mrs. Bolin In attending frOm the
·Mrs. Willford and Mrs. Fetty club.
.
will do therapy for Mother's Day .
The state beautification conon Mayl4. It was stated the Mrs.
Ies t was· discussed and It was
Willford did a poster tor the Post decided to enter. Margaret EdOffice (ln National Gardening wards and Mrs. Willford are In
Week AprD 9·15.
charge of keeping recorda and
Mrs. Willford also gave a
pu ttlng the book togethe~.
sary celebration In which ·Mrs.
Bolin presented the proaram on
"Creating Through the Ages."
Therapy was discussed by
Suzy Carpenter, Chairman. Mrs.
Willford Is In charge of the Arbor
Day planting with the juniOr
club. It was decided that two
white pine trees would by plan ted
at the civic center. The therapy
class at Rutland Elementary will
do the planting.

MffiANDA M. MCKELVEY

, Timothy Robert•Dexter, son of
Ted and Crystal IManley) Dexter. recently celebrated his first
birthday with a party at hlshome ·
In Middleport. .
'· Refreshments-and a CincinnatI
Bengal football player cake and
-cupcakes were served to grand·
. parents. Bob and Nancy Manley,
JaniCe Dexter, Rev. and Mrs.
Tim Nelson and Rev . and Mrs.
Odell Manley, Bruce and Pam
Humphrey. JoAnn, Sarah. and
Jennifer Dexter. Janet Gardner,
. Rev. and Mrs. Steve ·Manley,
· Steve. Rebeckah and Janlelle.
TIMOTHY R. DEXTER
Joanna Light. Tracy Manley.
Tina Kimes. and grandparents,
and Chris Qualls.
Also sending gifts and cards Leona Eblin and Frances
were Jerry and Teresa Lewis. Davidson.

Chester Council D of A conduefi meeting

Members of Chester Council
323, Daughters of America have
attended several spring rallies of
other D of A districts In Ohio.
Evelyn Ramey, the state councilor of Ohio from district 12,
East Lake, has as her 1989motto,
"You Make the Difference'', and
her slogan js, "'Positive Attitudes
Work In Unity."
Those attending the district 1
rally at the Carrousel In Cincinnati on March 18, were Esther
Smith, state council conductor:
Marcia Keller, and Erma Cleland on tl!e state judiciary
committee, Chester Councll323;
and Ji:sther Harden, district 13 ,
deputy, Guiding Star Counclll24.
Attending district 10 at Tate ·
High School In Bethel on Aprlll
were Bob Ritchie, Dorothy Rlt·

chle, past state coucllor of Ohio,
1986, Thelma White. Marcia
Keller • .Mary 'K. Holter, Esther
Smith, state council conductor
1989, -Erma Cleland, on the state
jucMclary committee, Elizabeth
Hayes. and Opal Hollon, all of the
Chester Council 323; Eshter
Harden, district 13 deputy, Bob
Harden, Margaret Cotterill, on
the state credential committee,
Bette Biggs, and Nathan Biggs,
Guiding Star Council 124,
Syracuse.
Attending district 14 at Fairlawn Inn In Akron _on AprU 10
were Erma Cleland, who serves
on the state judiciary committee.
Marcia Keller, Thelma White,
and Mary K. Holter, Chester
Council 323.
The same members who at·

Willing Workers hold meeting
Members discussed summer
activities they are planning to do
at the recent meeting of the Earl
Dean Willing Workers Sunday
School Class of the Chester
United Methodist Church when
they met at the church with
Leona Machlr as hostess.
..
The meeting opened with
prayer by Don Archer, and Betty
Dean read a poem about moth·
ers. Wilma Parker gave a

reading for devotions and roll
call was answered by giving a
helpful household hint.
Mrs. Parker announced the
families who are In need which
·
the group might help out.
Contests were won by Grace
and Harry· Holter, Mrs. Dean,
Mrs. Machlr, and Allee Griner.
The next meeting will also be at
the church and will feature ·a
covered dish dinner and auction.

AlldreWI.
: MarY Lull. presided at thE'
;-raee...... in wbldl Elaine Kelly
•: pw li )ll"lll)'tr, and cltvottona
; ·erruu.t. ''Diia 'nle Way Seem A

. ·s....._......,.,,

J' ,.

..

"""Pil'

"-""'!~~'•

' • ~•. · 'Carda tfel'f sent to Thelma
' ~-~ J.R. Latldernillt, Eileen
· Bowers, Sherrll! Might, Mar·
~

Chester Q&gt;uncil 124; Esther
Harden, district 13 depu)Y, . Bob
Harden, Margaret CotterDI, on
the state credential committee,
Bette Biggs, Guiding :?tar Council124; BettY Wolfe, cin tbe state
publicity commit lee, , Perry
Councll283, New Lexhigton; and
Faye Haselton, Belle Prarle
Council 269, Belpre, past state
councilor of Olllo 1980.

GOOD USED
WASHHS, DIYIIS,
REFIIGIIATOIS, TVs,
GAS &amp; EUC. UIIGES

Grange to meet

.COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rdAwe., Wlpelh

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Pomona Grarige will
meet at 6: 30 Thursday at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Atl!ens County Pomona Grange
will bt- guests and will also '
present the Ulerary program.

PH.446-16t9

IIIHOIII.KS: • , ...., ....

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Tiine Fo1
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Osg/1

...,., 1• sua

14 COllin

garet Amberger, Elizabeth and
Naomi Ohltnaer. aDd Charles
and Frances Eskew.
The mission repon was by Pat
Thoma on youth, lnclUCilfli the
Ohio Valley Chrladan Allembly,
and Shelall Rueb.
A date to clean the church
basement wlltbe 81!1 liter.
Also atlelldlq, In addition to
thole rneaUolltd, were Debbie
Alkire, Cllarltllne Alkire, Eva
Delteller, Jill Roess~r. Mildred
F!hilllps, and Janet Venoy.

tl

~ -

PVH honors· area emergency workers
Pleasant Valley Hospital honored Emergency Medical Ser·
vice members from Mason, .
Gallia and Meigs counties during
Its recent EMS Appreciation
Banquet. The dinner Is held
annually to recognize the Invaluable service provided the hospi'
ial and the community It serves
by paramedics, EMTs, flr~t­
alders and other volunteers,
ac~ordlng to Inez Howes, R.N.,
B.S.N., director of nursing servl·
ces at Pleasant Valley Hospital
and coordinator of the event.
Keynote speaker was Dr. F .M.
Cooley, director of the West
VIrginia Health Department's
Otflce of Emergency Medical
Servlc~s. Others speaking to the
approximately 100 people who
attended the dinner were MIchael G. Sellavds, executive
director of Pleasant Va)ley Hos, pita!; Jack Burdet!, a member of
, the PVH Board of Trustees and
Dr. Samuel P. McNeill chief of
the medical staff and director of
emergency services at the
Hospital.
Cooley expressed his appreciation to the EMS members for
: "helping to make West Virginia's
·.: ·emergency medical service one
, of the best In tjle country,"
; "We appreCiate the time spent
f away . frotn your families, and
~ What you have to go through to
• become and stay certified (In
: emergency medical care) ," he
said.
Cooley commented on the

strides made In emergency medical services since he joined the
state health department In 1975,
and told of advances that he sees
for the 21st Century. The goals
for the year 2,000, he said, remain
the same: providing better patient . care, and getting to the
patient quicker.

McNeill extended his apprecla. tlon to the squad members, and
said, "I probably. benefit more
than anyone else from your
services, because I have the
responsibility of taking over the
care of till! patient from you.
"The 'better you serve the
patient, the better you serve me,
and 1 am Impressed with the
work you do."
. The hospital presented plaques
to squad chiefs and gilts to those
members whO had recorded the
most runs during the past year.

While he said he foresees a
doubling of the critical "golden
hour" that EMS personnel, and
physicians and nurses working In
hospital emergency rooms and
trauma centers have In which to
stabilize victims of accidents and
Chiefs honored were Fred
sudden Illness to two hours, he
Wheeler, Gallla Countyk EMS;
added that the need for a trained · Mlkkl Young, Mason EMS; . Don
first responder force will conStivers, Middleport EMS; Garry
tinue to be of vital importance to
Matheny, Mt. Flower EMS;
the health care delivery system.
Joyce Circle, New Haven EMS;
Sellards added his thanks to
Richard Morrison, Point Plea•the EMS personnel, and said that
sant EMS; Rick Blatner, Pomewithout them, the health care
roy EMS; Lee Floyd, Racine
system In the trl-county area
EMS; Ray Wilford, Rutland
would not · be as strong and
EMS; Eber Pickens, Syracuse
successful as It Is today.
EMS; Mary Jane Talbott,
"You inake the community Tuppers Plains EMS and Karen
safer," he told those attending Nance, Valley EMS. ,
the dinner. "You Instill a sense of
Recognized for the most runs
security In all of us who are were Donna Massie, Gallla
citizens of this commulllty that
County; Chris Johoson, Mason;
wouldn't be there without you.
Don Geary, Middleport; Allee
"Your dedication and volunMaxine Legg, MI. Flower; ·Steve
teerlsm are rare these days," ~e . Mace,, New Haven; Angle
added, "You do ·a great, great Spencer, Point Pleasant; How·
professional job, and with your ard B. Mullen, Pomeroy; Unda
dedication, we cannot fall to Diddle, Racine; Marcia · Elliott,
provide the right kind of health Rutland; Eber
Syracare. climate for the trl-county cuse; Deborah Osborne, l~~~~'r_s
area.''
Plains and Karen Nance,

ONE DAY.
ONLYI Tuesday,
.

IUWI YIWY GUlli A

IOLDill DBIOOIS

MID. EGGS ONooRt!-.... 99C

9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M.

Jewelry·Sale

IIOIGIITON'S

"IIEW"-3 LL lAG

CHOC. MILl MP.U!l.... 89C

YELLOW ONIONS ..... I9'

•

.

IIAIGAIIIIEMlf......... 89C

65~
OFF
RETAIL
141 GOLD - miUNG SILVER
11" TWISTED

CHAIN

.... $116110W

oz. $2 •29
•••••••••
11 oz.
$1 69
...............
MIX ......~~:~..... S1.49
32

-

.

S6510

11" FRENC:H ROPE ... t360 NOW S12600
GOLD INGS •so te s7s v.a.
NOW SIJSO ....26"
STONE INGS SJS0-1408 , . .
. NOW SJJ'O te S140"

TENfiS ...-.m .... S1JJ NOW S61 25

•or

HONORED FOR MOsT BUNS -

&gt;: the Tri-County's EMS units wllo recorded the
:: mofll ruu lor the past years were honored at

uoz.2J$1
••••i••••
'
•39
.

~ Ple•antValleyHosphal'sreceniEMSApprecla·
; lion Banquet. Pictured above are, seated, from
~ . left, Maxine Leu of Mt. Flower, Aagte Spencer of
~ PolDt Pleasaal, Donna Massie of Gallla County,
[ Marcia Elliott of Rutland and Lln\la Diddle of

~ Meigs

,.,.
,.

1
'

~ Warren birth announced

The couple has another child,
;. Mr. and Mrs. James C.
Angela
Lynn, who Is eight years
•' Warren, of Route 2, Crown City
old.
:; (Friendly Ridge) announce the
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
, . birth ol their second child,
and
Mrs. James Warren of ESR,
!.- Samuel James Warren.
t The baby was born March 30, Gallipolis, and the maternal
~ at Holzer Medical Center In grandparents are the late Mr.
and·Mrs. Samuel R. Bosworth of
l' Gallipolis.
Gallipolis.
"~

't

.

1MCDIIII SJ 39
....................
..!~::.... •1.59

· A candlelight Installation program was the highlight of the
April meeting of the Phllathea
Women of the Middleport Church
ot Christ.
Precelilng the meeting was a
potluck diMer with blessing
given by Martha Childs.
Phyllis Gilkey, Regina Swift,
and Dorothy Baker were In
charge of the Installation service
In which the officers wei'e In·
stalled. Marilyn Wlleox, presl, dent; Mildred Riley, vice pres I·
dent; Dorothy Roach, secretary;
and Farle Cole, treasurer. Kathy

left,
PVH
director, Chrll loiiMoa
of Mason, Steve Mace of New Haven, Boward
MuDen of Pomeroy, Doa Geary of Middleport,
Eber Plcken801Syncu~~e and Jack Burdett oltlle
PVH Board of Trustees. Not pictured are Deborah
Osborne of Tuppers Plalna and Karen Nuce of
Valley.

Suttle and Greta M. Suttle, Olive.
Compiled By:
Mae McPeck, 12.3273 A, to
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Miller and Janet K.
Marilyn
Recorder, Melp County
Groeneveld, Olive.
:- Harold R. Dunhan and Norma .
Sarah Caldwell, right of way,
. ~: J. Dunhan, 19.90 A., to Jeffrey A.
to Liberty Oil and Gas Corp.,
; Latta and Janet E. Latta, Scipio.
Orange.
James
W.
Doris
Deeter,
1
A,
to
•
Nick R. Blackburn, easement,

~ Family tradition

.

Philathea Group holds meeting

County· property transfers

•

NutS .....~:!..... S2.69

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Evangeline Chapter No. 172,
MIDDLEPORT - A parade
Order of Eastern Star, will have
a grand Inspection on Thursday, and other acttvliles will be held
at 7:30 p.m., at the Middleport Saturday to kick of! the season
POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge Masonic Temple. Inspecting of- for the Middleport Youth
164 will meet Wednesday, 7:30 fleers will be Worthy Grand
League. The parade will start at
p.m. , at the Middleport Temple. • Patron William C. Goetz. The 9:30a.m. at the parking lot of the
· Refreshments are to be served worthy ma·tron Invites ·all Family Dollar Store, and confollowing the meeting . .
members to attend . Members .tlnue to General Hartinger Park
are as ked to bring two ·salad Where activities will be held
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- dishes for refreshments.
throughout the day. Prizes will
port Literary Club will meet at 2
be awarded for decorated bicyp.m. on Wednesday at the hOme
GALLIPOLIS - Tl!e Airport cles and trucks .
of Mrs. Roy Holter. Mrs. Robert Boosters Club will meet Thurs·
Flssher will review "LI!e and day, 7 p.m .. at the Gallla-Meigs
PORTLAND - Dan Hayman
Death In Shanghai," by Nlen Airport.
and the Faith Trio will be singing
Cheng. The roll call will be a
at the Hazaet Community
positive result of Imprisonment.
Church. near Portland, on SaturFRIDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town- day at 7:30p.m.
COOLVILLE - Vanderhoof ship Trustees will meet Friday,
Baptist Church will be In revwal 7:30p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
POMEROY - Royal. Oak
Wednesday through Saturaay Statton.
Dance Club Is having a dance on
with Rev. Garry Kendall of
Saturday, from 8 to Hp.m.,at the
Torch Baptist Church as evange·
PAGEVILLE - A smorgas· · Royal Oak Resort. Music will be
list. Services start at 7 p.m. each bord dinner will be served by P.J. Shorte.
·
evening and special singing will Friday, from 4 to 7 p.m. ; at the
be featured.
Scipio Township Senior Citizens
SUNDAY
building, Pagevllle. Cost for
POMEROY - A slide presen·
MINERSVILLE - The MI- adults, $4. Cost for chlldr!'n 12 tatlon of the Holy Land will be
nersville United Methodist and under , $2 . Everyone presented by Mrs. Thelma Rupe,
Church Women are sponsoring a welcOme.
·
of Huntington, W.Va., on Sunday,
yard sale on Wednesday and
at 7 p.m., at the United Faith
Thursday at thehomeofDonand
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Church. The church Is located on
Marie Rea, on Route 124, In High School Class of 1964 will the Route 7 bypass at Pomeroy.
Minersville.
meet Friday. 7 p.m .. at Pleasers The public Is Invited.
Restaurant, to finalize reunion
THURSDAY
plans. All class members are Evening ollheater
SYRACUSE - Big Bend East urged to attend. If there Is not
POMEROY - The Senior
Girl Scout Service Unit wlll meet enough Interest, this year's reun- Class of Meigs County School Is
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Syra- Ion will be canceled.
Inviting the public to attend an
cuse United Methodist Church.
Evening of Theater at the Larry
ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs R. Morrison Gymnasium, on
SALISBURY -The Salisbury County Pomona Grange will Friday, May 12, at 8 p.m.
Township Trustees· will meet meet 7: 30 p.m. Friday, at Rock · Admission Is $2 for adults and $1
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Springs Grange Hall. A potluck for students. The students are
township hall.
·
dinner at 6: 30 p.m. will precede directed by Cella McCoy.
the dinner. Athens County, gu·
RACINE - Soutllern Local ests, wlll present the pr~gram .
Slide presentation
School Board wlll meet In special
POMEROY - A slide presen·
session 6 p.m. Thursday, at the
tatlon of the Holy Land will be
SATURDAY
school, to discuss Interviews for a
CHESTER - The Eastern presented by Mr. Thelma Rupe;
football coach.
Athletic Boosters are sponsoring · Huntington, W.Va., on Sunday at
a baked steak dinner on Saturday 7 p.m. at the United Faith
at the Chester Fire House. Church. The church Is located on
POMEROY - Alcoholics AnoServing
starts at 5 p.m. and the the Route 7 bypass near Pomenymous and Al-Anon wlll meet
Thursday, 7 p.m., on the secoild menu Includes· baked steak, roy. Everyone welcome.
mashed potatoes and gravy,
floor of the JTPA building, 117

· Two new memliers were welcomed at the recent meeting of
Ohio TOPS 570 when the group
met at the coonhunters lodge at
the fairgrounds.
Members walked an hour before the meeting

APPLES .....!.!.!!;... 2/69C

UIIOIINm QUAITm

green beans. slaw, roll, pi~ and
beverage. Cost per diMer Is
$3.00. Everyone welcome.

!hie, assistant secretary, was announced for May 13.
Mrs. Gilkey reported on
unable to attend. Mrs. Wilcox presided at the church camp activities and
meeting with officers · reports thanked the group for the towel
shower held for the camp.
being given by Mrs. Roach. Mrs.
Donna Hartson, Francis
Cole, and Mrs. Riley.
Those named to the prayer list . Roush, and Mrs. Gilkey were
were Helen Reynolds, Wilbur named to a committee to plan a
Theobald, Cathy Cooper, Marie wedding shower for Amy Erwin.
Francis. Carl Nelson, Evelyn A wedding gift wlll be purchased
Murray, Jordan Wllllams, Clar- for Beth Wolfe.
The Phllathea memorial ser·
Ice Erwin. and Dayton McElroy.
A kJtchen shower for the vice will be held May 28 preced·
lng Sunday school . with Mrs.
church kitchen was planned for
the June meeting. The all church Roush and Betty McKinley In
mother-daughter banquet was charge.
There wlll be no May meeting.

Ohio TOPS ·570 meeting held

HEAD UnUCE ••••••••• 6JC

.... PIOC.
CHEESE •••••••••1l.9A· sW

FISH SnCKS .........~~:.~z... S2.89
-~
EGG NOODLES .....~~:~.... S1.49

VIcki. Ian, and Nate Lehew.
Sending cards and gifts were
Laura Horsley, Kyle Woods,
Heather Woods, Steve Fife, Ryan
Evans. and materll!ll grand·
father, Michael Evans.

'

Ph•aumt; aad slaadln1, from left, Mlcbael 0.
Sellard1, execulhe dlrectqr of Pleuaat Valley
Hoapllal; Kevbo Du1aa, repreaentlq Cblef Lee
Floyd of Racine; Eber Pickens oiSyncnse; Bey
Jones, representin1 Mana1er Fred Wheeler of
Gallla County; Dave Barril, represent1n1 C,b lef
Rick Blatner of Pomeroy; Doa Silvera of
Middleport and Jack Buidett, a member of the
PVH Board of Trustees. Also recoptzed but not
represented lor the pbolOIIfapb were V!llley EMS,
Karen Nance, chief, aad Tuppers Plains J!;MS,
Mary Jane Talbott, chief.

BACON •••••••••••••••••••••~!~. S1.19
JUMBO BOLOGNA ....lit. S1.79
SMI1IIFIBI
• s•nDEDM.Ib. •u•
COOlED HAM ..... SUCEDM:l.. $1.95
HOII.ADI
,.
'
MEAT SALAD ••••••••••~.~!~•.... 794

IIS.PAUL~IIIJI'D

: Evangeline Missionary group
~ plans mother, daughter banquet
;~.gf'l'rady

tended the district 14 rally at
Akron attended the district 5
rally at the J&gt;ark Hotel in Canton
on Aprllll.
·
Attending the districtS rally at
the Berwick Manor ~;'arty Room
In Columbus on Aprn 15 was
Esther Smith, state council conductor 1989, Dorothy ·Ritchie,
past state councilor 19116, Bob,
Ritchie, Brenda Holter, Marcia
Keller, and Erma Cleland, on the
state judiciary committee, Elizabeth Hayes, Lora Damewood,
Thelma White, Mary K. Holter,

EMS UNITS HONORED - Chiefs of 12
Emergency Medical Service unhs In Mason,
Gallla and Melp counties received plaques
honorin1 their squads during the recent EMS
Appreciation Dinner hosted by Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Pictured are, seated, from left, Chris
Jolutaon, representing Chief Mlkkl Youn1 of
Mason; Jeyce Circle of New Haven; Maxine
Le11, representing Chief Garry Mat)leny of MI.
Flower; Marcia Elliott, representing Chief Ray
WUiord of Rutland and Richard MorriSon of Point

SWifT'S K-CH

Woods birthday

:: The mother-dauebter banquet
: tobeheldM.,llat6:30p.m. was
• dllculled at the recent meeting
: of tile Evangeline Missionary
; ; Group wbell members met at the

· "A Walk Down . a Country
Lane" was set as the theme tor
the September Flower Show.
Mr1. Carpenter attended the
Southwestern Daftadll Show at
the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanlcal
Gardens.
Mrs. Willford won a blue
ribbon In the mlnature clas1 at
the regional flower show where
Mrs. Bolin was co-chairman.
Judy Snowden presented a
procram for the club.
· Four members went to the
Ohio A:lsoclatlon of Garden Clubs
South Carolina tour.
The meeting adjourned with
.reports from Judith Hill, landscaping; Carrie Morris, flowering
crabapple; arranpnents by Mrs.
Bolin and Mrs. Edwards, and
perennlei' plant exchange.

IIIISP I SIIYE YAC PACII

Dexter birthday is celebrated

Corey Woods, son· of Chris and
· Alicia Woods. Pomeroy. recently
celebrated his fourth birthday at
' his home. ·
A dinosaur theme was carried
out with cake and lee cream
·being served to maternal ~rand­
mother. Mrs. Michael Evalis and
Matthew. maternal great grandmother. Ada VanMeter, paternal
grandmother. Mila Woods. sis·
ter. Alison Woods, Cindy and
Ashton Brjf, Lyle and Rhonda
Moon. and ara McDaniel. T .T ..
Dee. ThOrn s, Tyler, and Trista
Simmons, Anna and Heather
. Baxter, Ricky Nal~tetler, Lisa
-and Derek Hogan, Debbie. Kim.
: Reatha. afld Amanda Bush,
&gt; Janie and Abby Stewart. Meg
: · and Chelsea Amberger. and

Convention Is July 18·20 with
six members planning to attend.

West Second St., Pomeroy.

Timothy Robert Dexter. son of

~ Ted and Crystal (Manley) Dex-

~ ter: In keeping with the Manley
• family tradition, had his first
• hair cut at · Burkett's Barber
1: Shop In Middleport.
Edward Burkett has cut Tlmo- ·
thy's _great great grandfather's
hair. the late Carl Clinton Man~ ley; his great grandfather, ReY .
: Odell Manley; and his grand·
• father. Robert Manley, whn took
: Timothy for his first halrcutfour
~ days before his first birthday.

Ill\

to Monogahela Power Co., Olive.
Robert L. Hayth and Ruth · ·
Hayth, parcel, to Mitchell H.
MeadO!"S al)d Debra K. Mea·
dows, Middleport VIllage.
Sidney Parker by ~.O.A., Ro-.
berta Parker, Albert Qulvey and
Joanne A. Qulvey, parcels, to
Millard R. Burke, Columbia.
Cecil H. Smith, dec'd, affld, to
Eileen D. Smith, Pomeroy
Village.
Mayford Harris by mark, and
Wilma Harris, 8.5142 A, to Bruce
Hawley and Laura Hawley,
Lebanon.
Raymond E. Maxson and
Fran~ B. Maxson, 1.89, to Ray
Allen Maxson and Rebecca Ellen
Maxson, Chester.

Lennie Aleshire, leader, presided and welcomed a lt\14!St.
Peggy Vlning, .asslstant leader.
announced Amy Smith as a
contest winner, Linda Foster as
guessing game winner, Amy
Smith won the sack game, and

Nellie Grover won the true-false
game.
.
Juanlla Humphreys won the
TOPS fruit basket and Pat
Humphreys won the fruit basket
donated by Big Bend Foodland at
the open house.
'V Ola St. Clair, secretary, was
presented . a gift In honor of
secretary's week.
A thank you note was read by
Julia Hysell In the loss of her
brother.
.
VIrginia Dean. treasurer, reported that 16 members were
registered and funds were sent so
they could attend Area Recognition Day.
'
Mary MarUn, weight recorder,
reported best loser was Dreema
Cremeans, runner up was Linda
Foster, and teen loser was
Crystal Smith.
Mrs. Aleshire thanked all who
helped wilh the open house.
Donations were given by
members to purchase gifts.
The group meets every Tuesday night at the Coonhunter's
lodge at the fairgrounds ..

wrrection
Joe Kirby Jr. celebrated his
lOth birthday on Friday April 21
at his home on Yellowbush Road
In Racine. The party was given
by Joe and Peggy Kirby.

SPRING VAl if Y r,tNfMA
446

4~·

'4

Birthday observed
The birthday ·of Iva Powell,
Pomeroy, was observed Sunday
with a dinner party In Athens.
AttendlnltbedlnnerwereMarjorle Fetty, Ann Mash and Wayne
Mlll!oan, Pomeroy, and Robin
Campbell, Q~nnatl.

·-·-

--·----

•

�Page-12-The

Sentinel

Wedneaday, May 3, 1989

..---Local news briefs... - - After...

•

Continued from page 1
have to have rules for spending
slate money to that end.
Campbell said 68 percent of
Qhio's teenage mothers were
' '
unmarried in 1987, compared
' with only 14 perceni in 1%0. She
said the state spends $1'5 mUllan
Melgs County Emergency Medical Services reports the
in one year on welfare costs for
following calls on Tuesday; Racine at 7:21a.m. to Bucktown
teen mothers and their babies,
Road for Herbert Roush to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
who are likely to . remain on
Rutland at 8: 19 a.m. to Main St. tor Iva Stewart to Holzer
public assistance for 10 years.
Medical Center; Middleport at 12:51 p.m. to State Route 7 for
The focus of Campbell's bUlls
Richard Northup fo }folzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4:28
the provision requiring every
p.m. to State Route 681 for Faye StanlE'y to Veterans Memorial
school district !n Ohio to presHospital. later to Holzer Medical Center.
cribe a course in human growth
and development to begin train-'
ing young people to avoid Un·
wanted pregnancies.
Pupils in kindergarten through
A former West VIrginia teacher who lost his job over his
third grades would be offered
refusal to wear a tie said Tuesday he will appeal the latest
instruction in goal setting, persetback In his bid to overturn the firing.
sonal rights and responsib!Uties,
"There's no question about that," said Bill Webb of Gallipolis,
decision-making skills and interOhio. "It will go on through the circuit court."
personal communications.
Webb lost hls Level 4 grievance with the state Education
From the fourth through 12th
Employees Grievance Board when hearing examiner Jerry
grades,
family planning, risks of
Wright upheld the firing on Monday.
.
·early
sexual
activity, financial
He said the case now will move to Kanawha County Circuit
responsib!Uiies
of parenthood,
Court and likely end up in the West VIrginia Supreme Court.
and .
self-esteem
development
Webb, a 20-year teaching veteran, was fired last December ·
skills
would
be
added
parenting
for his refusal to wear a tie and dress pants to work at Point
to the curriculum.
,
Pleasant High School. The firing followed three suspensions
Parents and other interested
handed Webb over the dress code Issue.
members of the community
would have to be involved In
designing the courses, and pupils
could be excused upon written
The Gallla-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol received a
consent by their parents.
belated report yesterday of an accident ,which occurred at 6
CampbeII c ailed teenage pregp.m. Monday in Meigs County. on SR. 124 at the railroad
nancy
a "two-generation
crossing at Langsville·.
tragedy"
and said a seven-year
Troopers said Karen Gilkey, 39, Middleport, met an
study
In
various parts of the
approaching vehicle which· was left of center. Her 1987 Jeep
country
shows
that teenagers
Comanche, went off the road, ~trlking a railroad tie and
who complete such courses are
embankment. Damage was minor. There was no citation.
less
likely to start families.
Gilkey complained of an injury and transported h!!rself to
"They
are less . permissive
Veterans memorial Hospltai for treatmnent.
when the romance is taken out
and the risks are exposed," she
said.
But Rep. Steven WUUams.
A $750 scholarship in the memory of Rodney Paul Harrison is
R-Lancaster, said if human debeing offered to graduating seniors at Meigs Local High School
velopment courses are offered,
who are planning to continue their education through either
"you need to give kids some
vocational school or college.
direction."
The scholarship w111 be awarded to a student who has need,
Williams' amendment would
who has maintained acceptable grades, and most Importantly,
,have required teaching that
has taken an active role In the prevention of drugs and alcohol
abstinence from sexual interabuse among teenagers and young adults while attending
course Is the only 100 percent
Meigs .
effective method against unHarrison, a son of Phil Up and Pa.,.Jette Harrison and a brother
wanted pregnancies and sexuof Trevor Harrison, graduated from Meigs in 1986. While in
ally transmitted diseases, and
school. he participated In baseball, basketball and golf. He was
how to say no to unwanted sexual
AJI-TVC in golf in 1984, 1985and1986, andAII-TVC!n basebaliln
advances,
1986. He also represented Meigs High School at Ohio Buckeye
"I don't think we ought to be
Boys State.
·
doing this to begjn with," said
·'Rod w111 always be remem~Jered by his outgoing personality
Williams, adding that Campand his always present. warm and friendiy-.smile." said a
bell's bill Is preoccupied with
member of his family.
safe sex rather than abstinence.
Applicatons for this memorial scholarship may be picked up
Campbell said much of what
at the guidance office at Meigs Local High School.
Williams wanted was already in
the bill. "Snd that the language in
his amendment could impede
local control. The amendment
was tabled, 50-41.
Lama
Struck,
Hanover,
Ind.;
Bateman's bUI establishes visOma Starkey
itation rights for grandparents
Royal Brainard, Dayton; Eula
and other relatives in the event of
Oma Starkey, 84, of Route 4. Hensler. Middleport; and Ann
and
two
the death, divorce or separation
Urshel,
Hanover,
Ind.;
Pomeroy. Carpenter area, died
of the child's parents.
· ; Wednesday morning at her resi- nephews, Dr. Harold Urshel,
and
Dr.
William
The court would have to permit
Dallas,
Texas;
dence. Services will be anthe child to express his or her
nounced by the Bigony-Jordan Urshel, Santa Barbara, Calif.,
wishes with respect to visitation
along
with
several
cousins.
sis• Funeral Home in Albany.
rights.
ters and brothers-in-law.
In the case of· unwed parents,
Funeral services w111 be held at
Jasper Powell
1 p .. m. Friday at the · Ewing
tile bill permits visitation rights
for the paternal grandparents If
Funeral Home. Burial will be In
Jasper M. Powell, 91, of Oak the · Oak Grove Cemetery.
the mother has the child, and for
Grove Road , Racine. died Wed- Friends may call at the funeral
the maternal grandparents if the
. nesday at the Bland Nursing home Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 father has custody.
Home in Racine fo!lowing a long to 9 p.m.
Rep. James ·Petro, R-Rocky
illness.
River. Introduced legislation to
He was a retired employee of
shorten political campaigns and
the PomeroY, Cement Block Co.
limit the amount of money that
and TNT, a veterans of World
may
be donated to candidates
Dally stock prices
War I and a member of the
and
parties.
(As of 11:31 a.m.)
Methodist Church.
Petro's b!U limits financial
Bryce
and Mark Smllh
Born on March 19, 1898, at
contributions
to six months prior
SUversvllle, he was the son of the. of munt, Ellis A Loewl
to an election. It also restricts
late Christopher Marion Powell
gifts to $2,000 for statewide
Am Electric Power .............. 26'h
and Lorena Brown Powell. He
candidates and legislative cauwas also preceded in de;~th by his AT&amp;T ................... ..............34'h
cus campaigns, $4,000 to state
Ashland on ....................... .41%
wife. Faye Roberts Powell.
Bob Evans ..................... , .... l5~ _ party organizations, and $500 to
He is survived by four nieces.
legislative. and local candidates.
Charming Shoppes ........ , ..... 15'h
The penalty would a tine of
City Holding Co ............. ...... 15
three
times the amount received.
Federal Mogul. ...... .. ........ ...5l'lii
In
the
past, courts have viewed
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 51%
any
attempt
to limit donations as
Heck's ....... .. .. .. .................... ~
Tuesday admissions - Merle Key Centurion ................ ... .13'h
violative of free expression.
Davis, Rutland; Amber Short, Lands' End ......................... 31 ~
The House adjourned unt111 : 30
Chester.
p.m.
Wednesday. The Senate is
Limited Inc ............. .. .... ..... 29'!ii
Tuesday discharges -Ricky Multimedia Inc ................... 97'h
not holding voting sessions this
week.
Johnson, Bette HUI. Cll ton Rax Restaurants .................. 2~
Faulk , Keith Pickens, Sarah . Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16'4
McCarty.
Shoney's Inc ........................ 834
• Wendy's Intl .................. :..... 5')) Trustees to meet
.Worthington Ind ................. 21*
Correction
Bedford Township Trustees
(Key Cen&amp;urloa Bancahares
will meet in regular monthly
Joe Young, director of environ-' Inc. llrat.quarter net Ul/ &amp;.bare session Monday, 7 p.m., at the
vs. U'l. Net se:a mUUon vs aue
mental health for the Vinton
town hall.
mUIIon.)
County Health Department.says
: that the operating license for the
Vinton County Landfill went
from $1,300 a year to $12.500 a
- year. riot from $1,300 a year to
• $30.000. as reported in Sunday's
Times-Sentinel.

Classifie

Contlnued from page 1
a.m. to ' S p.m. on Tuesday: and from 8 a.m·. to 12 noon on
Saturday. For Information on the change of hours. or·any other
information, call the bureau at 992-2084.

Squac;f. has numerous calls

'l

Webb to appeal
.. latest setback

.I

.I

Patrol releases Monday report

I

Harrison Scholarship offered

I

--Area deaths-----

Stocks

Hospital news

Lodge

IO

• The Area's Number 1
Public Notice
ORDINANCE-"178
An Ordlnonae to fbi 1111•
rill.,dwl8•oft"'VIIIIoe
of PC~~MrC~y non-aaperviHry
omployeM.
SECTION 1.
POLICE ;
Potrotm111: tmuot h.,.
ochoolng)-Ful time Jllf hour:
1 Month thru I Monlho
or Without Ex.,....
;....... ....... ............. 6 .10
Aft• I Montho and/ or
1021 Houro thru 12
Montho ........... ........ II.110
Aft• 1 Yoor thru 6 Yoer1 ·
ond/or 1021
Houro .......... ......... :.. &amp;.73

Public Ill otlce

A divorce action has been
granted in getp County Cammon Pleaa Court to CarOl L.
·Theflllrarn Barr,. A. Tllll...
: flllnl tor dii!IOiutlonll ot lllllr
marJ1a111 are Kathryn J.lmllh,

c.. llnflla,

': Portland: Jolin a. Jettera. Polftt.
· roy. and Roblll Alulette h(fen,
:: Pt&gt;IIM!I'OY: Jerey Lr. TUils. ~
and

After 3 Monthi .....4.0B
CURK of Comet-v
Rooonlo ................ 110.00

.._ .....

be

..-.-lhrw(3Jdll'lfn
......,.. lllcllllk., on • T--

=· ---,Thu~

only to hourly-··
Arry employee him -

Jon. 1. 19S9 . wit not be

BON IONS • CHOC. FUDGE
PEANUT IDnER FUDGE
WIITE CHOC. ROSES • Asst. Colors
CANDY POTTED FLOWERS ·Aut. Colon .

GEARY
550 PAGE STIIIT
_,.IIPOIT, OliO

OPIN lo30'·'

.
NEW SUMMER HOURS
Mon.-Tun. B-6: thur.-Frl. I·B: ·wod. • Sot. 9-11
We Accept Food Stompo

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

Ohio

992-6910

B

oUGHT HAULING

Public S1le
&amp; Auction

Dar-lene

Tillis.

JEFFREY J, WARNER

ct-=":':.~=~•
. . . .,...•711

aoaw.
....
1141

an~

Various Sizes

DIAD 01 AUVE

Saturday May 6. 1919
10:00 a.m.

EVIIIIIGS

Located at the l1ah Baok Lake oa Rt.
87, Jut olrRt. :1, lll4WIJ'Between Ravenawaod WV • Polllt PI81Nnt WV, 12
vnee - t oi'RlpleJWV oa Rt. 87 olfRt.
33, 12 • " • eut or Poblt .....nt wv
on Rt. 87 olf Rt. :1, Watch For SJCn••.

UV"'G ON A
IUDGO?

Beat The Htlt This
Summtr With
Central Air!
1911-14170'
MO.LE HOME

3 BR, 2 blth, prt1111 tub.
llct hotat. LOCited n•

Harrllanvllt. $$500 C11h.

CAlL 992·5114

•W!III*t •Dry. .
•R1nge1 •FNBZ. .
·•Rwflle•raton

Til-COUNTY
RECYCUIG
OPII7 DAYS
9lii·7M
Paying today
Atwil II, 1919

·,.a
... wit...,
Not
leo)

(OPP0 ...:- ... 11.00 I&amp;
#2 COPPEI--...- ... 10 1 I&amp;
CIIAN AIU.IUM
Sllln
52' •
CWN .W.IIUM
WT - ..- ............. 40' "#I

- - H O O H O UH. .

CANS -··50' I&amp;

fiUC1101tEER·Rkk Ptarson
Mason. WV
OWitER-MCDdne S. Fowler

IIONY

SI&amp;T ----S•

t1

30• ._

IIONY UST- 3&lt; •• 20 1 ._
stawm - - -·--20• lt.

NO GWS AT PIISINr

773-5785

992-5114

TERMS: Cull or Clletk wltb I.D.

Louted OH BYPIII
At Jet. of Ate. 7
143, Po•nwcw..

ol Property
Lleenled IIIII Bonded In WV &amp; Ohio INI688

Not Rnponlible For Accidlnll or Lou

ch•.
pcrtoblo

614-915·4180

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWE'S GlOVE PAIK

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Women'• clothll, shoes.
oo..._Men'a et*ts XL Clm•

BISSELL
BUILDERS

r•. pllawL 521 M•anoU• Dr.

May&amp;. t-4.

""'c:h

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
PH. 949-2101
. or ln. 949·2860

Solo. 011 old R~ 110

•cr011 from the Polt ottf-.
11uro,. Frf.

4 f.,ttv •le. 1 rnl• out 180
Motor C.r Bn*en. Thrulday,
May 4 only. Boy' a 4- tO' a. Ololo
3-10. Jl'o.
.

"At le•son•l• Prices"

THE
BASin WEAVE

A.A.
1 -IIIJ0.3U-11081.

N9tt

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER
CAMP
GROUNDS

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS
Lar~ Supply of 8ulull

Weovlng' Supplioo

1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished.
Housekeepin&amp; Room
By Day, Week, Month

OPEN lOST SATURDAYS
PMI •111111 - OWIII

992-685

PATRICK H. ILOSSEI

AT THE

FABRIC
SHOP
110 WEST MAIN

...........

Pl-NG

POMEROY

I .. Nertlss.c.l
Mil' 11r1, Ollie 45760
)IILU

I SERVICE

•

'

We can "1181r aiNf rt·
core radloters hetiter carts. We can

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REP,AIR
Alee Tre...lt~let
PH. 992·5612
or 992·7.121

alseaddlleiland,..!

out rlllllatars. We also
ripOir Gas Tanks.

PAY HIU FOlD

992,2196
Middleport.

4-25-tln

MOUGAGE,
IDUCYIOI

SYm•

BOGGS

S.ve thouuads on

SAliS I SIIVICE
1. s. n.

tliltii!IIIOitpp.
No rtflnancln&amp;. A

so USY

GIYSYIIil, ao

lortpp Consultant
Service
Call 1-800-422·9010
·Ext 4051

614-662·1121

Au1hor"'d John
o-o. N- Holland,
Su1h Hog Form
EquptMnt Deol•.

,.,....it....

4-11-1 ...

u. &amp;hllllft

.......

lA••·
. 7ml•belowUmn.

Soo olgno.
12 wk. old puPII'f. Mello. Coli
114-3e7-'0111 ., 8t4-3877710.
Y•d IIIIo. 8Munlo¥, May 1.
Call 814-38.1410.

.

PH. 949·1101
or let. 9119-2860
NOMDAY

Fll_.. You houl. Coll114-912·
3102.
Old · - plono. Coli 814912-1144.

Hugh yard lnd Home lftt•ior

Solo. FridCII' M~ I. 1:00 til 1.
CIIM'Iollo Doot o. tll-ood.
W.Va.
Pupploo wry auto. mothor full

blaaded Pom....a.t, wonnect, 2
... 1 .. 304-1122211 .

CHESTER, OHIO

INSTALLATION AND SEIYIQ OF HilL
ENEIGY EfFICIENT HEAT PUMPS, All
CONDIYIO-G AIIID 95~ lfFIOIN1
F.NACL'
98S·U22
-!_J....J . •

'*'

TWo
Qorm., Bh11&gt;hord
pupploo, 8 - old, 304-875-

1130.

Gerege ..... 3 tenthl mUe on

88nd Hit Ro .. RJOII from
Nurelng ' Home, Friday •nd

Botu..,.

J&amp;L

VICTORY

LOST: Llr.. tin Md white rn.la
· - In 1 ( - • •• Col 814-

INSULATION

BAPTIST

Keeo...,

Putor Jom .. E.

Call 992-2772

I

3117· 7404.

LOST: loya brown, frame

lallel,

lc

lletWIIn 011111

drffi} a FoocllncL Friday,
Aprl 21th. II found. Colt e14-

441-.lt.

-Rt. 331-ar•drllll
or-......
Loot tn
• .,.. Frtctay.

Coli 814-112·7300. Aoword.

.... ,.-oltl.oold ...... dl

•ay .,d whlto ldtt.._ Loot In
T"'*-•"'.10· 114-141-2714

aft• 4p.m.

'-: - .._ ... "*''""

Htlrln&amp; Aid Salls &amp; Servi1c.l
EYIIuetions For All

Acts

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Cllnlcll

Audloloaist

:z:

912·2104
1213

z

-

· oret

Sll&amp; Frld8r.

Moy
·- .3. · - - 8uotn
- Col~g~.
128J.cklon,.e.
.. ~. 312.

Middleport
'&amp;Vicinity

6 Lotrt and Found

4/1/81/1

CHURCH

Rumm~ge/lllte

In
vlalnlty af J•aExx~ ~Po,.,.,
or lun Fun ltllllon In Recine.
Mon. May lot. Colt et4-247·

2411 or lt4-247·3011 .
-·d.

LQtT oun """· on ... d Hit
llood, 304-115-3111.

7

· Yard S1le

.......G.iillipons-----·---·
&amp; Vicinity

Veterans .Memorial Hospital
1
illuiiitiiY Hats. P.omeroy,

Stroot Wide Y•d lol•t 'M'Ight
........ Pom•oy. ......
Grove Cem•-v entrw.a M.y
lth .,.d lth. Some hDuotllng 8otu"'"' only. loglno
9:00a.m.
·

llg Yard IIIII Wod., 11uro. Fri.,
of
May 3. 4, I. 'h mlto Tupporo PI- on At. 7-10
Athen•·Melp County Line.
Tr..• on tlfl. Ckrt ... g. curteln&amp;. bedding. IDyl, loti alm61c:.

1\IJ2f21 Mte. Homelntlrior.

8 ,..... May 4th .,d ''"
8:00-4:00. 2 mil• out Flat·
woodo Rd. -hor. dryor, otoc't·
rlc r......

dr••· R1ln or .......

Moy 4ih •d lth. ISO I"'""'••Y
81.. Mldoloport. 01-. llrgo

mtm:w.elc.

May 4th ..d lith. 1:00-3:00.
Rlaalcrell Minor •bove Eallwn
tt -Mson retlct.noe. Rlln or

-··

4 t ... lly, May lith .,d lith.
40e30 Louoot Clft f!ood: jEbMn'oj, 9:00.4:00. F,ofdoy •d
8 :00-1:00. IMunloy.

IECYCUIG

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

•1u1ss
14. . . . . .,.

...,
•••• v••
Wo Buy Aluminum

SYIACUSf. 01110
Most Foreign •nd

C...o.GIItt.a ....

Ootn.~lc

c....,..,dMoro

Vehld•

A/C lervtce
All M..or • Minor

MON
, 9 -·
ur.•..fa..._12
NM;;"--

R.-lr~

Quality
Stone Company

CAll 992·6756

PH. 596-4756 or 992·6637
4·14·89·1 mo.

, U. S. SPliNT ·

ANY PERM

NOW THill JUNE 10

lAY'S
,.' BEAUtY SALON
•

,.,.',
'

HOUISs

N. 21111
- " · Oh.

9zOO A.M.
TO
I:OOP.M.

PomerOY.
I

lllw.nl L Wrltllll

IOOFIIIG

---··Outt....

.Down1pout1

31711 Noble Sunwnltt Rd.
Middl1port, Ohio
61.4·992·5724

Coole

lrMrlca'l only 100.,. ..... Optk lang

'
l i d - ........
COMING TO IllS 'AliA SOOIII

Part Time Job With Ntrtworlc 2000
In NlltWolk Merkellng
00
Coat '1 84 (lncludll tflllnlng • mll1ert.la)

BE AN INDEPENOENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTATIVE

for more info writ11
Scott AlllllrHR
P. 0. loa 337

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE E8TIMATE8

.-..r.

H~W8Y

Applr In p.,.on.
lnn-K. . •ga. Anyt~

-oov

Doyton ,_od Co. n - locolf
lndlwkllot lor
of moclcol,
oupptl-. moclcol -lodgo
holptiL but not - . . y , Port-.
llm• l•lble hours. MUit: be lbl1
to work lndlp•u:llrrttr".
ltnd ,._ume to ConGIIIPts of
C'lre. 2111 Lane. Dr.. De\'lon
Oh 4140,9 .

"•••t.

4 fwntv biCk yerd lila Thur1
ond Fri. Moy 4 .,d I. 2218
Jtff... onAw., Onty •letorthll
..• • towprf ....

PI-•

GOVERNMENT JOBS
111.040.-119.230 Y•· ·NIOrlng. Col Ill S0&amp;-117-1000
Ext. R-1801 b aur;n fed.rll
1111.

Moy 1 .,de. 9:00 dill. 21118
Mt. Vwnon Aw• ._ber
. .h - · · cllldt. .
odd .,d .,• .

ch*·
clat..._

=-----1111111

ao.
.... - Jo._l - lOring
thlo _ , . 10,213. 10 171,473.

Frfdoy ond SMurcloy. Moy &amp;Wid
e . Yard Ill&amp; o 1 - ol ..ooy.
tNng. MI'OII from Mllon Fire
Station.

lm-•o optnln•l Cotl ~·
fundobltl 1-315-73:J.110e2 ...
F2741 A tor ......... lotlnll

INOTICEI
THE OHIO .VALLEY PUIIliSHINO CO . - - d o 111M yau
do lluoln- wllh
you

P-'-

know, end NOT to·.-wd morMP,'

h••

tlorrow lry mol. au-d
lluoln•• .,.,atng. Spoclollloln
bill co-dillon. Cotl 1·100.
42.2-101(' - · ·4011 .

.

Own your own ep.,.nl

Dr

lhoe

aportlwear. llldln. men's,

chllctr.,_mot. .lty, • - olzoo.
p ..... dlnCIIWMr-...oblo. btl~ ... UnoerleorH. . .oriel ttore.
Add calor anlllyll•. BrMid
n~m•: Liz Cllllltorne.. Hl.tthtb.
Ch.,s. ~ • • ltMidtele:Forenza,
lual• Bov. LovL c.,.p - l vHIIIi, Orttnlcotlv Q_,, Lucio.
"""! , 20QO othlro. Or •13.19
one price d•lgn•, rRUiel d•
pridng diloount or fwnly lhoe
ltON. .....,. priall unbllll•lble
for top quelfty tho• normelly
Pt'IOid from tt9. 10 teo. Over
2&amp;.0 brands 2tOO etylas.
111.800. to 129,800: lnvtn-

'."'.Y.·doponlng.to.
trolnlng. · - olrloto,
Con"''"" 18

d-r•. Mr. Schn.W. 1407) 318
I IDe.
Own your' own appar• or lhoe
choo11 from : Jean ·

atore o~

:r;;•weer, l1dlea, m1n '1.
.n-mllllwnlty. l•ge .a.a.

JMII+te. d•CIW•r·..,.oblc. bri-

dll.lfngll'ie or IC0818Gri• •tore.
Add color en•tyela. Brand
nerne~ : U1 Clelborne, H..lt,...x,
Ch.,t, Lie. It Mlch-'e. For1011.
lualo Boy, l.ovL Comp lworty
Htllil, Ort~~Rtc.ltr' Grown, Luda.

..... 2.000 othoro. "' 113.19

one prioe d•9tlr. multi tt•
ptlolng d - n l "' - .......
~tore . Retlil pricel uniMIIIWHie
"" .., quotlty ..... no..notly
priold trom t19. to teo. over

210 brands 2800 etyle•.
1 t0.800to 129.800: l_,ooy,
trlining. fllt~ . . . . . gt'lnd
optnlno. .... Con opon t8 ......
Mt. lclin- 1407!3111-tiiQB-

------1191111

I;;=:::;;:=.:;;::;;::;==

• 3&amp;0. My pro.-alng. Phone
"'-- Pooplo coli you. No
•pii'III'ICI necealwy. Cell tr•
londoblol t-81.41ll-8897oxt.

Public Ssill
&amp; Auction

Real ~st

&lt;tie

K1822 7 door.

Bon ..cr.. Col 814-992-11890
or 114-99). 2777.

...

f•n.

truck driver
needed. Send appll~iont to
Tho Oolty ...,!not. Boo 729 C,
Pom•ov. Ohio 4&amp;7e&amp;.
E~ptrlenced

..utili, ftlqUII, ..c.

et4-245-81S2-

AUCTIONEER
Edwin 'Mnt• now booldng
spring ul•. 17 yen Ppl-

AVON - AI • -· Col M-llyn
w.... 304- 112-29411.

RevtnwiOOd, w.v•.

AVON otl•-11 Shlrloy Sc&gt;011~
304-e7&amp;-1429.

Phon~~ 304-273-3447

w.v.. ltMt Chwnplon Auc. Rid!Po...,., U-odln
Ohio ..d-Vtrglnlo. -~
Auc:ttono. 304-77)-8785

..lull: Wlr'll to

••n •llnle •tre

rnont¥7 Or would you • • to
hwe • .__.7 Ettt• w-r A\fDII
e~n

help you bet Ma-t you c•
belli Call -llyn w..... 30-.

Wanttld To Buy

9

882-21411.

T-OP_C_AS-,-H_p_otd_ro_r_t9-8~3-mo-dot
.nd ntw• uMd en. Smith
luidi-Pvntloc:, t 111 Eoot•n
Aw .. Ootllpollo. Cotllt4-44(1.
22112.

F.. tlmo L.P.N.. I HIO 1117:00
•hlft. .. bll'l..... ao~•lliwe
oolory. aantac:l l&lt;othy 'M'ay
D.O.N .. RN, ClriHa¥11'1 at Point
.._lnl.

c

PI_.,,
to -Ina
opplc:ont lor 1ho

Tho llouolng Authority of tho

Compl- ..... _
of rurnltun • entiqu-. Alto wood &amp;
CIDIII Met... SWitln' t Furnltu~
• Auotion. n.trd • Olvo,
8t4-44.3189.

City o1 l'lllm

o quotlflod
poeltlon of lecreuryR...,..ionllt .,d tho

Junk Cln with or wtlhc:iut
........ Call t.onv Uvoty 114-

3111-9301

..

~o utu\ -~ bolol&lt;-....,1
colonlot 3 .A. 2 lot&amp; obovo
. ,..... qu11ty buMt. tn d•lred

locotlon. Coll14-44(1.8118.

lyow-- Nloo4Br, I t12boll\
lorgo 1 - OOOft\ lormot clnlng
room. QOIIIJ&amp; out llulclng. nice
front poreh, OOrta"et• ....... ,.,..
lot. . . . • •hrubL Grier!
School. R~ 141. goodnoltll*rhood. tez. 500. Jmmtdl•• .oo-

..,...,.,, Col 114-441-1038.

HouMtor8oto: etoonw, I boll\
polllol - - lui porch.
Mttlng on 1.1ecr•. FNit n-.
btrov ""'- • .... llulclngo.

•a.ooo. 'MI oonsklw fMI•••

portlol poymont. con 114-&gt;145-

2181

"'''* .,...,oo"'

v-v ........,.
4
2 boll\ t.nlly """" with ...
.,._ tormot dlntna ..... t1u tn9

roan'\ :m fl. cullom Dill ldtch•
Clbln• 01111; wooMork. ftniah

ll•enitnt. 2 otir 08'1ga l•tl
t..dlcopod lot. 4 ..... ......

Ina. jtllna. - - . p occ:optlng oppliootioN. mllnttlnlng olllco booko. mnocotna

o.luae 3 B r. hDu• far .....
Owner flnmoe. Cd 304-171-

•uMenlO• lr'ld ... wll=fo•
...... _ . .... lry.....
•

1104

E-.ulhte Dlr.ator, 81:Cipt

~ltlan •omCert:Hied Hou•lne

Wll buy 01 .......... anything!
Antlqu... furntture:tpti ..OIII.
........ eut01. co
• honw
furNihlnfll. Mlflln •twnlle)lr,

Cortlllod Ocarpon., Spool lot.
Muet be lbl• to h .... oftloe
without ciooo •-Ilion Ill•
1ro1n1n• Tho - t i l ......

8t4-245-8tS2.

w...t.ttobuy:Junlcanwlthor

dille

tW _ . . . o r lwn

wMhout motors. CWI Aldl•d
Oootgo. 114-311.1091.
.

en.-Nek~--·M~
ing HUD r . . l.....rw •d ODm.

Uatd furnluN by tht

plfm• " - • m .. · r.urne
pa.tnwlced na lit• thM Mer

~

Homes for Sale.

H - Hoopltot off Rt 35-•brook lu-lllor\ Col
814-&gt;141-4119.

. , . , _ c1o n-lotw. do
recertllc.-:Dns. _.,.. to the

p•- bolng pold. Coli et 4- &gt;1453111.

31

PubNc Hou•e Mll'l .... ~
PMIIon II ,..ponaiWe fDr typo

,..._ IUfMI'ViHworkor-.. IWII

FurnituN .. d oppii.,CII lry lho
.,._ of .,Ito ....._lei. Folr

or

entn houllhold efto ttUtng.
.,,._742·2•88.

10. ttle to Ruootl • HouolngAuthorlly altho City ol
l'lllnl " - - p _ 0 .... 117,
"''"' Pl-ont. WV 28&amp;110. No
phone 01111 pleMe. EEO

...

~

w•

3 811, 2 bll: h. lull belem.nt end
o..p-. on 114ac:r• Owner
HI tlrnllhod or •""rnllhod.
' IDcotod: Rouoh Llno. ChooiOr&amp;
Ohio. Col 114-387-7711 "'
3e7-78··-

10 mlnut• from doWntown
Ootllpollo. 4 br., 2 boll\ woodar
LPt•--lul'--. a
...... ,_City lahool ciatrial. Coii14-44CI-31127.

oppllon-. Pho.O 814-742·
2041.

Nloo 3M ho- ful • - .
..... od - .... llult·ln - - nM c•p• -In llflng room.
Clo_!., potd for mlllln1 1111 ... 1 urwneohed ,_. llll'et• CIM •
1""0.00 - · Wrllo: PAaE - . • t 4-44(1.1780. D17K.1111. Linoolmua;.North
Aururo. It 80142.
4
2 ........ dining

,.......... p t -. Coli 814-

Cru~o Ship -

Pro 1940 Cflllllo. A.., condlllon.
Cooh pold. Cotl 114-192-1887
"'114-112-241'1 ,

Employor.

Uled furntturt lr'ld houMhold

".. r· --.. . eou., ...
237

8owtlol., on 1M lor 11rvloo

blolo towcrlcotl.tlclnHcopllol 1
01 2 dw•
w811l.
_
_ ...,
_
....In~•••
do..._

w.nt to buy ., Iron bed with

bid"""'

otylo. 304-17.2518.

-

3230
_,
....
·
--,.~tor
· 304-175- ' " · .. Moy 10. ,....

f llqdiiVIIIr·rrl

v.,..,

Rod • rlllo.hot-!cnoto.
- · bodo.........
of

16

S1' r 'J 1t.l' :~

,J•• 4 . 3221ron-

Schoo II
lnatructlon

R E·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEAITEAN IUIINE88
COLLEGE, 829 Joolcoon Plko.
Colt et4--4387. Rog. No.
11-11-IOIN.
EAIIN MONEY Rocdng boo..l
130,000/yo. ln00&lt;11o potontlol.
o.tolo. (11 li0&amp;-1117-1000 Ext.
Y·IOtN.
GO viii tWINT JOIII
- , IIIIo ...t 110,213
TO 171." J · - • • lnl!l Cot1 - - · 1-31.
7DIOU EXT mUA. FGr
.........Inti

17 Mllcellaneoua
8lo 31ft. Cou-homolluttt on
yaur lot. 117,N8. up. Cot1
114-81.7311.

fL;:;;;:::;;=;:::;::;::::;;;:::=
18 W•nted to Do

DamJ::oc Pial, now llllln1
IPPI ' ll&amp; _.,. In ....,. .

....,.,.. 1•1 ':M . ..,.

-t...,

AI type of CIDiiiQ•e._. do-.

homo •eo ,., too
--'"tmtl.lntar_n_d
-toK.I.I--.P.O.
Ia . 1117·YT, HllloW.. NJ
07101.

.... _.,.,. :=n--

---·
IJIII.- -11.111. AI 111111t. t

r=..:\1• •:
117.
···--·
!WI 111f q I lsi a

-

.
.
Aloe
- - . , .... o-...

---

=~~~

·~-~
a ... , -

Af!~

-

. -. . Plh Contoot

Olr. oflilunlntJ Coll14--

7111. 11011.

'

......
zld&amp; " - - - - Col
torootl-et1+-••1
., 114-:MJ-1173.

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

I'Wtll ..... w out· I wn.
•part•a I lu... fr• of
....... Col 114-.,_,_

notolo
- . AI-

•• rflfllClll
..
a&amp;llrMIL

.._~

-0-

room. fkoepllee. lovtllf lnt.tor.

hiring tl
poai:lona. loth ... _. •d unokltod. ""' lnlormotlon 011
115-7711-IS07M~ H 111.

742·

Mlwtaa¢1111_t . . . . .lonefllf'

POOLS
•IN·GIIOUND
POOLS

on!¥'.

Lllnd wound lltut'-'d • • · I
motttt flit. wtth

All POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

3 Mile East of •Artllur on. 5.1. 50

'

'.

w•

992-1888-

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

NIASE C«tifl-.i Muhanlc

"DQC'' VAUGHN

''.

•AIOVE·GIOUND

P•ple thlt .,.. .uri
lm
~II¥. OoodCo. ben•s.
FOf lnlorvlow coli 114-&gt;1457411. Th•• poe•to•
be
llltod qoldllf. Coli 'lhuro. • Fri.

ICf'• or more.

10°/o OFF

•CHEMICALS
eHEATEIS
•AUJOMAtK POOL

we::~.

3 t. .lly Y•d IIIIo. Sol, Moy 8,
8:00 Ill 4:00. R... .,. oNno.
1203 Meln 8t. Point

rfM.-.

S2111hlid """·

.,.. ..,.. Wl•elookr.::Dslllons
fDr acne han• •d h•d

Y•d lola t812 Moclloon A,..,
11uro .,d Fri. 9:00 tii4:00.

Colt _ . , woc~omov Auction-. U,oena_. &amp; lonct.d In
Bloto of Ohio: Llquldotlono,

Clr'lnlng jlr1 lr'ld nwGh more.
' - R..., Rd. ... loll.

A l•ee Cllltornla Co'!'Pa1Y h•
•pondod to tho Ootllp-Pt.
Pl. .n .... W.hel'elltltlmt

StCNII, ch...WI•. Cit c.rlw,
111.-rtl. ..... •-r· dlat'Mrllsher,
dot..._ bool&amp; dil.... muah
mllc.

ture. plct:uree. Loceted In Rto
o,.,clo .. 2n N. Cott1t10

Movln1 Bolo wo..,.ahlo clothing. booko. -'"a moc:hlno,

HELP WANTED

Y•d Silt. 2•1• Jeff. .on Aw.
11uro. Frf, Sot. Moy 4, 8. e.

tt1m1. gl•wer., M'ltlq..._ turnJ.
C:rll-' • Ann'-oooy !loll.

175-83118-

nina 1.. end good dot.., g.

8

Av.nue ICf'OII from Rio O•dl

Coup&amp;. to lv•ln a dD m.!nt•
nance work on Apl. Compl~~e.
Cttl 304-875-8104 "' 30-.

Homelntlrior. Dill·

Aotn or - ·· Ola.,•to Y•d
..... Fn, .... -May 8 • e . &amp;:30
A.M . lo 1:00 P.M. Loto of
clothol. hou-ld ~.... ltolrv

·----·-pc;·.naroii_________ __

' -: loot point 81 . . .0 • •
with b.rtle ..... crou ...leclc
Rd. ••· Colt 114-&gt;145-81182.

Vinyl Sid!..
525 North !lee011d
Sea.... Guttw
Middleport, Ohio
llplacemlnt. Windows EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
llown lnnlatton ·.
SUNDAY 7•00 P.M.
st-De«s&amp;
WEDNESDAY 7:00P.M.
. Windows

Cllrogo Solo. .... lo. VUM.
comic bookl. clott.. M~mp
pump, furniture. • mile. M-v 4
• I . 1411hlrd A... .

•n.

3 - •· On 218. Coli 814-44111274.

Sao""-

Y•d ..... Frldw lndlaturcfll¥,

11uro, F~. I 10 8. Orchard HMI
Rd. ot 2t a. Pl.,to, lei do dot hoi.
or.,., • More. R•n/c.n 0111.

Wanted: 8omM)ftetomow"

Y•dlolo.Moy5.,dl.lov•ot
f.,.,, Mery Froendtt County
Rd 7,
Rd. tobl•.
l.npe, dr. . ., TYset.,diJ;Md,
old tnink. 10me ~. .Mre.

WOmen'aaiiH.M.,.:clol..,g.B
ft . . . .po. top. .,d lots mile.

flrlo

217M-2S2t .

store. chao•• from : jean-

Full 1M a111 II lpln:. 11h .,..., old.
good -ah dog. V-vgood wtth
p-o II not mlot-od. Col
814-112-7t43 ar 114-9923170.

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

c:J

Oor11Jo Bola Frf. Moy 8, 1:30

EXCELLENT PAY! Home ·
wort.a_
nlllded.
Ov•
715oomponloo.
_
_
o.dlo·
trlbl.ltors , • wholeeaters
dltOCOOtY. S..d I .A.S.E . P. 0 .
Ba• 2821-0T, Huntington, WV

lMgo Yard IIIIo. 4,5.1. ..r brlclc
houoo Bid.. JIWI..,.,
Qolllpollo Forry , King Hoot•.
b1eeboard heaters, bookt.
clott•. nlc n.:e 111d mile.
Choop Prfcoo.

oVINYL BIDING
oAWMINUII IIDING

MO.

'"FI'H E111lmlt81"

FREE ESTIMATES

Cr..._ Rd. from St. R1. 7.

Bl.llln11a
Opportunity

tt.ouah ttw mal untl you
lnvlltlpled tM ohlng.

Y•d Soto. Thuro ..,~ Fri. 2323
Jlffnon A.,.., clotl.. and
mloc:.

.........

Mastic - (lrtaintltlll!l

9:00 A.M . 1/2mlleon0.0rg~~

Have~-· puPI to glv•.way.

IRolln...,.ol t-8ta..gg.aet7
Ex!. Kll78- 7 doyo.

21

Pork Olltriat hiring lor Tiny Tot
Day C1mp rtour wMk ••iort.
tnd Tr4bble Road.
SOnloro In High School .,d
oofl.
Yard 8oto. Mov 4 .,d I, 2938 COIIIfiOitU~::.ct•rod:
boll olflclolo
.............
Meedowbrookbriv .. PolntPIH- 1-o. · ApplcMioN .,otlotolo:
Nnt, clatt.l, bay t hutkyt ~· Pll'k DfRrlds oflh» loC!If: .. •
Mdtho•.
tho Ootllo County Court Houoo.

8f. .llygiroooMio. Moy 8. 8.
1 1I 4 mi. out GeorQI'a Cr411k
Rd. off Rt. 7 9to l Boyund
0 to 14...., clatNng. Jr. 10 'I·

===

II. 124, .....,., Oltie

bl.....,.,

No

I femly ,-rd Md O*IQt sele.
Mly 4.&amp;.8; on Gunv•• Rldae.
Sic. 50 lbout 4 mH• oH Rt. )7

To gtve.way a bl. . bb m..e18
mo. old. Wormoct, vooy lriondly
to 1 good ho.._ Coll14-37921ol4.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Pom..-oy, Ohio 45769
Phone (614) 992-2922

Clothee, children• 4T-12.
7-12. ho- lmllior.
link.
t Be4
Love MM 1hM neldl uDhowtw,,._ Coli et4-245-IOM.
·
Moy 8 • • .

flhGne ordlra. P.aple clll you.
•perlenoe n.,...,.. Cd

St. N.w Hwen. W.Y•. C...tta.
miK, aome nM ,..,...,

TuP~JrN~ire.

Fridoy • Moy 8. ClotNng. bl...-de. a Mlac. Men:-; &amp;11 o.k Dr.

In~ pot~

1310/ DAY PROCEII8tNO

614-949-2526

DAY 01 IVIIIIIIG

Roger Hysell
Garage

.30.000/ .,..

81Ckyard lila Wed .,d Th.ns.
1:00..,111 8:00pm, I l l Fourth

dog., 11 moo..-t.Ooodw~h
lcido. Colt 814-44e-2380.

4-11-l

Leesa Murphey
&amp;: Auoelalet

108 Hi!Jh St ....

EAIIN MONEY Rocdng tooo•l
tlol. Oototll. Ill 805-. .7-1000
Ex!. '1'·1 0188.

A.M . Nice. cl.., misc. 117
Meanol1 Dr. Feltvilw, acrou
from FoodM1d.

INIULATION

llllpre, Ohio
CONSIGNMOITS WI.COME

Dolly Trilluno. ala 1 .. 111. 121
1hlld A-o. Oolllpollo. Ohio
48131 ,

ThullondF~doy. Moy4ondMoy

Pu,.b&lt;od l.oooie-typO femolo

•tLOWN IN

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

•

WUpollt, IJ'olo
614-U6.JOSI

ondl.

Clnt•rt·

Ctf'tlfild Uc«~11d

392 Pike Str11t

1V. oddl •

ReeiOMble pri .... Acrou frQm
S.Pirkle Supply. fh . 141

2-1 -'11-1 ino.

10:80 TIL 5:00

TUXEDO RENTAL

4-2~'1t-l•o.

· F~doy. Moy 81"

Cllr11Jo -

8om-tlpm. Lodl•. mono. chltdr.,s dolhlng. Cl.-. • In DOOd
repllr. l.Mnps. cui'UIIna. l.wn
~cc•lon ch•. OOod

IIAYIImiiiKI

ON SAlE NOW AT

4/1/11/tfft

twi(..

palntl... &amp;.t . . .
It fer rau.
YUJ IUSOIIAILI ·

Sign up now for lluket
Woovtng Cloo-

Ohio ..,.kory. S.d linn of
tnl•llt ,. ,_,.,. ol oCJalllllolll

• • 8:00 to 7.

PUBUC
AUCnON

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Antiqu• &amp; Colectibles: 7 ft. wicker swing. 4 pc.
wicker all, wicker buggy, Wlckar dol cradle, oak
china cabinat, Whla Mountain oak lei box, dental
cabinat, Falwail cabinet, 7ft. all glua !rant cabinet,
~r )ypg Clblnet, flour bin with glua cabinet,
dreaam, 4 rose back chairs, lei crnm chain,
comerslnk, c.tarCh•t, VIet. marbletopdraaaer, 2
VIet. marble lap tables, 2 cane hla &amp; her rac:kers,
qulks, bullet, oak plano, Mohair couch &amp; chair, ban·
que! table, primitive banch, mlallonoak lolding bed,
metal bad, maple table, oak chan painted whhe,
smoking stand, old stools, chlld'i desk &amp; chair,
needle point chairs, dining room auk, end tables,
coffee table, desks, oak mantlea, maple bad, thaater
seats, old 1runka, old wooden awing, buktta. old
dolls, oil plintlng, old scaletl, Graniteware, glasware, old blue, hull, deprenlon, antique butter dish,
platters, oil lampe, unu1alll2 moon d•lgn'crock,
old wool rugs, old Coca Cola tray, old chandliera,
stone jars, mirrors, pictures, sometools,lawnchalrs,
water heater, ster-. photo developer, phonograph,
maytag waahar, plus much more.

FREE ESTIMATES
Taite " - paiR Olft of

WOODEN IUILDINGS
•uilt On Yolw lot

SEARS tit MIDDIIPOIT
614-992-2171

982·2284

. . . 1141111-1477
:..: .1

3 Slylts

•FIREWOOD

PUBLIC fiOCTIOH

Lunch

Offwofor- •• duo by
Auguot 11, 1111.
(Ill 2, 3. 2tc

AUCTION Ill

FOODS
,_.,

514 Els1 Main

P. 0. lox 432, Pom•ov.

Ohlo41711.

• - a baolc•ound pr-od.

Ttw1t temlty ¥trd ule. 7 N lhlr d
Str•. Melon. Clot1111, loys.

11111101-111111011

n.., Spring VIII., PI••·

FOR
SALE

Sell xwc* OOpin, memory
writ . . a f• ""~Chin•. Offlceor

&amp;Vicinity
houM. M_,t ch..,.

NO SUNDAY CALlS

WaServlce

.

·~·-

PAINTING

Dar or

SRVICE
915·3t61

63 c Pkg.

.

&amp;Vicinity
... , ......... ······· .........

13
f llldlll.ldl

,.,d

319 So. 2nd Avt.

la'SDPUAIICE

(Equal. to 4 Stnall lo..sl

------·aallipoliii _________ - ------"Pt ·Preasiiiit-----4 ,....
ooto. Mov 4.&amp;.e.
Jlny• Run RoML JoyceHoll.,'a

992-6282

Off••-

"Milt II I p L*II"

JELLO GELAnN • Alit. nann

OHIO VALLEY.

REQUEST FOil it OS
lollclteci lor t . .
t-tnv
of 2100 ~~~-· of office opo.. lor lol Con_,_"
Servlce/Meigo
8otlond Wot•ConHtVII11on
Olotrict/ Agrloultlft Stobll~
rotlon Con-lon Sw·
vice, In or . _ Pom•ov.
Ohio.
For 0 bid pooll• COnllct
loR ConHtVotlon Servtce,-

The Daily

LINDA'S

WANTED

IODY SHOP

s,N'•' ,.,, W•k

··-. ·---...

-·-·--·-·----

Business Services

BLOCK CHOC. • Landmark
I~OCK WHITE CHOC.
· MOTHER'S DAY CANDY MOLDS
LORANN POT -POUR-II CRAFTING KIT

SALE

4-2&amp;-'BB-1 mo.

glvon '"' option of liking

***• Aut. Colors
MERCKEN WAFERS

R~g. 71• Pkg.

992-2371

Public Notice

SP

" Divorce 8J'&amp;nled

- roy,

3 Monlho ... .......... ... 3.71

Call Anytime

the medlcol lnou..,ce or
liking 1 doy off.
·
Thlo Ordlnonce ohlll be of.
f8ctMI Moy 12. 1881.
o-: Apra 11, 1118
Rtchlrd· loytor. Moyor
Vllllel of Pom•ov
Jone Wotton, Clerk
(4) 21: (&amp;I 3. 2tc

Could you
Rebuild your
House at
1bclay's Prices?

meet

• ;. ,Pordalld, n4 Lee

c::."lie:.l·v; ·;··iA~;;i;;is.!"

ln111ronce doy wKI only be
,...., by one (1 )omplo&gt;/Mot
• time In - h deputment.
For Flvo (8) v-1 of
oontlnuou1 HtVIco to '"'
Vlloge. 1 1 OC .,... hour
1 - " Y PlY wttt be g~w.,

Mother's Day
HOMQIADE CAiiiDIES

Harrisonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM
will meet in regular session
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. , for work in
' the master mason degree.

••

AIIIIUnt IUJIIf·
, _ ................ 4.94
laboNro: 1 Month tlwu •
3 Monilia ............. 3.79
After 3 Montha . .... 4.3t
WATER OFFICE: Cl•kl
"ookkiiJIIIF: 1 Month
thru I monlho ...... 3.78
After I Month1 ..... 4.08
SECIIETARY. to

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Public Notice'

WATEII .,d SEWER:

~nuw~..

WATU
SERVICE
•

Public N otlce

After II Yo.,o ........... , .. I.04
E.,. Petrolmon: Without
E -.................... 1 .10
wtthbJIIflenGI ...... I.IO
DI1)111Ch1r1: R~gUior
1 Month tlwu
I monthl ............. 3 .78
After I Montho ........... 4 .08
Extro Dlopetch.-: ........ 3 .71
M.,.. Per_,: 1 Month
thru t Mont... ..... 3.78
After I Montho ..... 4 .08
After 12 Monllla ... 4 .21
STREET:
A-nt
8upervloor............ 4 .90
laboNrt-1 Month
thru 3 Montho ...... 3. 78
Aft., 3 Montlt1 ..... 4.08

Bus ness Services

'

Ma~ketplace

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ow- -·torrod. Coli lt4182-8708olt• 8:00p.m.

3 - - ,.,clltvlllln Aiaotlc
H.._
8yroaroo. Nice lot. _.,
goocf notghborhood. v..., ,.._

........ prlood. 114- 112-7&gt;149.

- .... ........

Prl01 r-..oHI I y.- aid trJ..

lwot. 3 -

..,... 2 bllht. lorgo

'""

flmltt room. 4 wa dole to

,_

.... No rliiiCMMIIIIe offtr r•
tlood. Co" 114-IIZ-. .74 or
8 t4-7U.211eo.

I .room hou11 In Herr•~e•wll,
Ohio. On blldl top 'h A.
-M1111good
a
•
city
··
Co. tmmd•• poss.
t11.000. et4-717-2744.
Rodllprin• or-. c ...dm buill.

1 OWIW home on ..,.,_, 3
be*oom&amp;. 2'h &amp;..... I
fif•IIOel,
inpound pooL gM:ello. lots of
tJttrll- PriOid to ... For more
informltlon. Clll 81 ... 992-

••• a

""•oam .,-.,.,

3284.
3--boldllanow•hlorgo
lot. Mtd W~ Drfvo,- Hov.._
....... 304-77)-11181 .
J - - ,..... prloOd 10' ~

•tn 1111-. ,..ada ubrooll Additiot\ . . Ill• 1:00 .." ....
- - 304-171r74a
llouoo tor oot&amp; looond Str-..
- .. wv. 2 ilaoy, 3 ....

- O M IIIII\ .... _
u•t• and 01rpor1 .

r

41.100.00. CoN 304-773IOa ""• 1:00.

�. -:Page~ 14 The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

32 MoblleHfor Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

61 Household Good•

75

154 Mile. MerchendlH

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wedne&amp;day. May 3, 1989

3, 1989

BORNLOS=ER~--~~--~=-~

Boat. end
for Sale

Motor~

lMelll SllALL

""""•• n.,, Ooatar .......
u.. 10thet' type, wtll , ..

~

, ......, 11ft. ft . . . . . bo•. 30 H.l' . .........., Motor.

-

c-.,..,-........

noo.oo. oot~~.
- """n•I04-t7•
••oo.oo

,. f t . -

~L~W~~

~ IIEL.P 1

0.. v. 40 IW'

mot•. trll•. milo. e1100.
lrm. Clll 114-ti2-IIZI.

Dm. 104-~~

IUicling Malerilll
llodl. brlcl&lt;. - · pip&amp; -~ N!ll.... etc. Cl•de t . .. ~ fUo 0f'lftdl. OH. Cllt

•

Uaed

a

rebulh •II

tv~• ·

"'-P•••
• eve lolntwM
t y - ..... ,t_mll_ tor

_____ .....,....

Spaolol Dla...U,. Silo: Roof
.... _12h .. till., 22ft .. 24ft..
21ft.. ond28ft.. - lll.. lm-0.-loypalnt-..
gll .. - · a n d - ...... Petlo
dooro and 0 mloc. Coli liter
I , 114-4-4-11-1772.
·

rlw puppf11, C811 anytime 11.C..

317·0119.
~KCR ... Alr-pupolor ..a.
Call 114-211-1413 anv11-

-don

llnla / llui Front Amuon .
Til.._ II oll'lgo. Aloo a
Ccdllloo. CIIII14-2111-IMI8.

_,_I'll

Or00101 and"'"""
Grooming. All brHdl .• .All
Jtylee. lema PM Food 0.81•.
Julio Webb Ph. 114-4-4-11-0231.

49
For

For LeaH
Le•e: APirtmtnt. n.wtr-

decor•ed. 2nd floor. corner
Saoond • Pin&amp; Clalllpcll. Ono-

bectoom. It~ &amp; rtfrlgii'Mor.
· provlDlpoall
.d
r.t•.ncea
l'tlqUJr.t.
e221. .pw

month. Call 114-4-411-4249.
114-4-411-4421. or 114-4-41~325.

For rent 2 bedroom funtthed
mobile home, •188.00 month
olul Ulllll•. wll accept Hud.

3 ·~ ex42tNI•~4.cr•

2rooma
1op-.... or_l ·

~-1 1 • - · •• 2

,,'"' lldl on. -

. '71 Mobile homo 12&gt;148. total
. ...._... 2 - - pordl,
:•11--a. •a.10o.oo. 304
, ~ ..71-.. 78.

'"

.
·· !34

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

Busin8ee
BuHdings

Fwon. Apt. nlkt to UbrlrY
p - g li A.C. Rat. raq'ad.

a..••bl• for 1
114-4-41-0331.

.,.,.on. c.n

-------,...-

Garege • · 3 tnn'.d, room~ &amp;
bill h. Mlher, drytir, llir, ole.,
no Pit•· Ref. a Oep, -.· ec~. Clll
114-4-411-15 19.

Far s.le:
•ec~roniCI
ropalr oltop. ~~ oquiprnanl San..,. '!._1 • K. Col 814-4-487711on111P.M .

Elllclanl&gt;f apt. ldall far 1
p'. .on, mobile home below
town overlooldng
CA •
hall. Ref. Cal 814-441-0338.8

36 Lote &amp; Acreage

F,.nilhad afllolanl&gt;f. •••o• .,._
~~- pold.. - · b•h. 701 4th
~v•. GaQipolo. Coli ........
441hft• 7 P.M.

2 !10x100 lott. 22 ft. Ylltow-

F,.nilhad Apt.. 1 br.. t240.
otiMiao pold.. 820 4111 Aw.
Gallpolo. Col 814-4-411-4-411

1·"

"'':.:..
"

c-.•••

atona ...... 12&gt;112 Cabano.
1•10 -Nclng. &amp;undock.
- ·· - · Pwll.
llac HclldOvHRII
ReCI'eMio_.
1 mle up

rtv•.

eft•7P.M .

• • l'lunFid. an Raccoon Creek.

f

114-117·100.
2w~d

INttll¥ 2

b.tlclnglolt. A.pprad·

R.-el moWie home tot. Wet•
lndudotl t71/mo. Doll 814441-1177.
t/2 acr•. 1 mle oH 141 In
Cantanorr. Calll14-4-4f-1419
aft• I P.M.

I.Midfor_.e. Oneto.,._.•in
Rut... d T_nahlp_ Coli 8149t2-3143 aft• 1:00 p.m.
Ashtan be..drul ~· tots

c..,. •-

Sm .. tnn. 8pt. , all prlwle. Nice
for 1 p . .on. 0111 114-44833511
3 room downatllr ipt. , unf\lrn..
114-0 2nd ~ ... Doll 114-447572. w••aeftar 8 4•1980.

3 monw • bill\ unf\w,.hld.
Call814-4-4-ll-7115.
-

nice and

· Jr. 304-178-2331.

·

Uncoln Pike. Op~ 7 d.,., a

- · MM·IPM. Clllfar oppt.
~ft................ 3111 . .
4 dr. ch-...... 81. 5otylal "'
bunk bodl otlrtlng ot *171lndu..,g bodcllng. Full oin
m-·149.99. ou- ....
mattrea- 171, twin mlftr...,

b'f
lmplriel. VauW..n . . . . Met-

. . . . . . .. Mlttr. . . . ma

room autt••••· Coff•Padded
•d
end •bl•l71 •
tilt

Bentwood rocker-111.81.
Gnondfothai clollk •11.11. ltua
din.rt:• .... • chll,. .... ra....
dudel hutch). Wooden lltch.,
c:h-.n&amp;.991orgavariOIV, curio ubinat•·l271, SOFAS :

•319. v......, ....... u49.

TRAO£-INS TAKEN.

...,.,., a.rglln Hou11 . Furniture, gl.--a, gift
&amp;
mite. Jackson 81. An VInton.

. . . .. Cdi14-2411-HII

ueed...,..lkrtonr.tor~

304-1711-4.111

83

..

304-112· 3794 or 104-771S070.
'8001diC ..._LS, V·l. 4door.
AT. AC. 1'1. 1'8, AM_.M r - .
.......... 810.00, 104-17113731.

'M -loc 'llro. blacl&lt;.
tope
~~~-- , _ ·phone
304-1711-1110.

1181

1y.• okfqUirtlrhorHaehlr'g.
4400. Cllll14-112-1974.
Pon••d.,a. 1m.... 1 femllle.
I will. old. •11. Cllll14- 7423110.

COWII- (81 Chlano. 1111 An.,-t.

.(llcllv_.U_IIul . o....

304-731-7111.
·
-· - - ... - . mile.

Antiques

Buy or Ill. Rht.W.e A.iUque..
1124 E. Mall'l lltrall, Po-oy.
Noun: M.T.W 1~1 . m. 10 lp.m .•

lunct., 1 lo lp.m. 114-9922521.

Poodle bl.. end whit&amp; 5
monthl old, •111.00. 304-n22518.

AKC r...... racl laloott Hound
pupploo, phcnol041711-2811

64 Misc. Merchandise

AKC regis• eel Shituz, meleend
ferN!.. ahot1. Wormed. YM

- ·· 104-1711-2191

&amp;rlv bird ooaclll on 88 poole.
" - 19.31 ooot. hugo deal&lt;.

AKC r....t•lld Minll:uN O.eh·
ahund, 1 mille • d 1 tMWI ..

flit•• werraottv. lnnall•
lion • llnoncll'lg -~~~~.. Call

304-171-2271 - · • 1:00 PM
""• clll 8711-1140
8:00
PM.

aft•

24 hn: 1·800-MII-0119

1947 Formal Cub wlh ball'(
-·UIOO. JD 1100.rlracl..-. noo. Or trade lor 18

67

Wheeleh*•ntW 011 ullld. 3
wheeled .. llatric taOot ... C.H

c-••rad .......__
r....,_

.,.or~.,, hllfar~
210
d
bull. 14 mcnthl old. 104-17111888aft• 8:00PM.

Mal MI.

T..-8011120MC3quatt•
t - pidl· up. Lookl Gaod. .....
good. A-le. Cllll14-4-4f7217.
1877 Ford F-tso 414. 4 opaad.
311-ad;Runo_d. ..cll-

._ condition. no fUll. good

lira For t1000. C.U 114-21111134 orl14-2111-8102aft•l
P.M .
19111'ord Rangor XL E_ll.,.
ooncltlon. 31.000 Call
114-317-0320.

Oood . , _ 11.10 ...... 3041711-4-430. CaN 1,00. 4:00.

3 opaad 1117 ~ ton Chevy
-pfar _.._ Standorcl Good
bo • • h• r.lntacl. uoo.
Clll 114-742-2 I I aft• 1:00

1r ollSiJitil;tl.tll

3 boclr-.lulbll- good
laelllan. 8 .... north l'olnt
- · 3114-1711-1071.
3 IR, 2 lialll.lulyc....- Cal
814-4-4-11-7201. . .

71 Auto'a For Sale

EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jodl·
•on. OH. 1·800-137· 8129.

Jeff W.mol"'

Naw 110

Fender Rho•.i plmo wltlt two
ecceaaory plugs. exc aand. P ·

73

;&amp;~S;::=::::;F;:::;i;:===

1117
A•ro Van.
AC-111t·CIUK ~MIFM · - ·
22.000 mN• ••o.soo CaN
814-2411-HIO
.,. 114-44111111.

•lectranlc

knllt•......... .,1.... !nat.
boob. Ink•.........ppll • •

_,.. Muoio. 114-4-4-11-0117.
ll'lotructor. 814
44f-8077. Llmllad -ll'lgo.

clllant for -lllng . . . . .
group, noo.oo. 304·1'11·
2233.

--••soo. c.nat4-4-4t1191

WHI1'FI METAL DETECI'ORS
Rcn~lloon.1210iaoondAvo ..
Golllpollo, Ohio. 114-441·
4331.

N

t

&amp; Vegetable•

NkttendO with contral p_.a,
llgllt gun. I cartridl•· ., so.

For • •· SWIIet potllto pteme.

Coli 114-949-2341 aft• 4:00
p.m.

it.,•

1171 Pord tor
. ,.........41.

....

c--•

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1187Chevyao.-n-. lui
oqu-. 11.000m1.-•11.100.
Clll '•t4-21t-11eo.

ueo.

ow-.

PRICE II!DUCEDU 111:1Ch-

tornoto pl..... • •. 110 .......
114-742·2220 or 114-742· .

ralat 20
..... AC,
DnaPI, Pl.
......
..,l!oon
ooOIIIIon.

2773.

AM·PM, Cl r - . an~IM, - "
- · ll•lli . , - . -•lnt•
rlor llt!ib and -all 1171
Aoollo IIHk wllh AC. 30.000

Houro: MOftU,·Thu,..., 10-11,
Friday • Sllunlar 111-7.

mia ana - • ·

304-1711-17111.

1181AMCI!ogle4--.

for'""*· 814-247·42112.

' II l'ord XI, P 2SO, ha"'l' duty
414. 480 lour I'W, PI,
tit. ""loa. llr. AM-fill caaatt.
-dull,...._ cab
blla and whlto 104.000
lriiL mllee . runa_good.
•1.1111().00. ..... 104-1711-1073
aft• 1:00PM.

=

PRICI! II!DUC!DII1111Ch.,_
1'01.1 20 loDnOIIeft•OM owner,

OIG oon4 ~C. Pl. PI, AM·PM,
c•--•-ao.llorm

. , - . - - lnt- .,.....
and morall 3041711-1719.

•300por
monl" UtiMial pilei. 104-1711710.

CAll

2 be*oom. _,,......... ,..mo-

had ...........

dllad. ---~1111.
r,-:-..
r;e;aft";';:';., CM

114-t12-f111 dllfO"'
114-742·21~
avanlnl.

1bo*acml!ll. lor,.:.,.un
month. dapCilll ...,...... 114112·1111.

_..,_...~
.W0. , ..........
-._ UIG

--

c........

I'Wit.

2 - - hou•lor 114-11:1-2171.

2--.. .
-·-

1180 y..,olta XI ISO .........
,., - 11.000 .... .
Good
••so. CMI
114-211-1414.

C..pllad. Nlcaoonll'l•l.aundoy
faciMiao ......... Call 114912-3711. EOH.
G - . • ..,.,. 1rd2 bad.,.,.. ..,.,'"""' •t Vllllge

®Ch8or•

IIJ Miami Vice

v.......

1180
110 lpaolll.
lleak. luell•t oonlltlon.
. .00. - · C111114-IB2-HI1
alt•I:OO 11-m.

• 182. Coli 114-112-7717.

210 ........
741·2808.

....

America (0:30)
(I) Ell1erlllnment Tonight

D Cll USA Todoy

®I 1111121 I!J) Jooplrdyl Q

Uf . · . .l
WAStlfP !VIY CA~.r

MfS$tfJ
(I

. . . . . . . . . _. . -p-

•

-=

Jim's Odd ·Job's. Sun.-.

lllllll Moior Leegue
BaHbiQ

«Jl CI'OIIflre

@ Night Court

hAfT Wfffc ANP.J T
STU·L.
ffAS'N 'T ~ArNEP I
-

Improvements

........... Cal 114-379-2411

a

Crook tnd ChaM
7:35 (l) Sanford II Son
8:00 (I) MOVIE: Jumping Jacks

.

S'·3

, •. bullclna dol• work Free

(NR) [1 :36)
(I) I!Jl Unoolvocl

D

Myaterlea Two French
aviators may have crosse~
the Atlantic before
Lindbergh. t;1
(!) Actv.nture: Thl
O.rne1m1n
(I)
C1J Orowtng Palna
Jaso.n 's mom and her !lance
call oft their marriage. t;1
&lt;D (!) Adonlic.Rulm
Examine lhe amazing

a

IABIMI!NT

formation of the AUantic
seas . (NRil;l

W~TBII'ROOI'ING

11m IIIIIJ Hlrd Time On
Plano! Eorlh Jesse becomes
a lop fashion model and

learns that fame has lis
price. Q :J
«Jl Prln\tNewo
1])1 Lourio D1nn: The Unlold
Story Exclusive interviews
documents and photographs
never before seen by the
pulbic which give new
insighls inlo lhe elemenlary
school shooling.
0 Murtlor, She Wrote
8 Nolllivlllo Now
1:05 (l) NIA lltoko1bell
8:30 (I) tit (I) Hoed 01 The .Clan
Should Charlie put his
students first, or obey lhe
teacher's union? t;1
9:00
I!J) Night Court The
holding cell lloods causing 1
an overflow ol wacky court
casas. Q
@ Ouinaoa Recordt World
01 Sport. (1 :Oil)
C1J Rober! Guillaume
Edward gets jealous of Ann's

W•wp;wftng.

loptloTank-g.HO.Gal·
No Ca. RON 1!1/ANS I!NTIJI.
I'RBD. Jadll..._ DH 1· 11011137·112&amp;
--,..,_
, , .··
_ ~lworkiJiaand • t -.
Col ,, .... :una
eON' S. Talwlolon Sarvlca.
"~~"•- ... RCA.
G!. lpooi~ln, 11'1 1-.th. Call
304,1'7.. 231 or 114-1411-

o-.

-

I, ~:.;.:.

Fetty TrM Trtm..... llump
removal. CaK 104-1711-1331.

()red ......

liON'S APPUiiliiCE IEIIVICI ,

114-

4i FwniiMd Moo1111

Pwu. . . . ,_,. t11S1mo. AI

... ..._ 11,
.,....,1.

=-=-. . . . . .,.

--.
.
.
..........
=

1= -

'ioau end

MCilorl for Sale

ttou• a•l anidng 01 . Hot

~)#. '64.~1&lt;

l'olnt. w• ...~ dry- and
....... 104-171-231&amp;

82

Plumbing

&amp; H81itlng

f . OfM O, ... A

CAAT!R'I I'W-NG
ANDHEAnNG
Cor. Fourth and Pine
OIIIDolo.Dhlo
PhcM 11444t-388e or 114441-1477.

to&lt;

........

I Mi

....... -

-.IIMJI. Mw.....-ie\f'
e .... Coll14--

...,,,.._uoo.

• 1110 t - Clolllo

new male college

c1assma1es. D
(!) The Mind l:xamlne how
adictiona to tobacco, drugs.
gambling and food arise. Q
(!) ~moriciA Pllyhouto See
an imaginary meeting
between Martin Luther King
Jr. and Malcolm X. t;1
®I IIIIIJ Jeko • The
Fatm1n A mysterious

stranger plays out the drama
ot a murdered woman's life.

8
0

MOVIE: Tile Deer Hunter,
Part 2 (R) (1 :30)
t:30
I!Jl Nick l Hillery Chef
Sheila Bradey falls for an
extremely handsome young
man. !;!
(I) D Cll Cotch Hayden
feels threalened by Christine

e (])

&amp; Refrigeration

flf:~

GllllpcloEI-Iclarvlco. !I. ..
ric motor • • • ·~
A - l l i e IIOIIIrlc ropalr. A~
. .,...Of'l. " ". . . . . . ........
. . !laclrlo.

VIHoCountry
10:00 (I) 700 Club
D (]) I!J) Quentum Lotp
Sam leaps inlo lhe life of an

Roo- or

elderly black man in a small

·

town. C

(!) Lodfoo Pro Bowlor'l Tour
(I)
(I) Chino Baach

a

R•fcllntill or oomnwof• wiJ.

ll'lg. or ropalro.
Uoonaacl ll•rlclan. IUdan,....
Bochlcol. 304-1711-17JII.

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEPEOSOL

-

~=··~ ..w-:;4-t'tn,::.;
_
. . . . . . . . . . Ph.1142411-1!211.
.

=•·

R II R - · _..._ ftaoll,
clsterftl,
ltllmedl.te·

•·

..

I

=-·

cr...

....p rou
~ ln1-

otc.

ou.er.

Mluuu.,._ U,lwlsaw••L-.=

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

10 4•1'11·1 14 for frao

....._ ,_~--'---------.---

.

TAUIIUI (Aplll 10o111y •I Try 10 eel
promptly upon eny hunchll you get toclay could put you 1 notch or two
tbo&gt;lo
In compatJ1Mi arrange-·Your 1na11nc1a can got you 10 the
IJOIIIIne ftrat. Teurua.lrul yourHII to a
blrlhdly gill. 8ond lor your AattoGraph prodlc1lono lor 1111 yurllliood by

87 OilhOiet-v

--

~.1-

Conllructive chii1(IM In your llfeolyle
erelkely to be'mldoln 1111 yeor ahotd.
They w11 be
In part 10 - • • peaplo- _.
10 -""""your

Wlltt-'o Wot• -llna.
Ran illilo -ooo .......
dli-

_,.. a.ooo "' ..
~ 104-11..

Qt with another man.

a

•7 Pine St. 114-4-4-11-2382.

o»-dll.
24 hour CaN 114-3711-1131

Leny King Livel

1])1 New•

STOP YORE
ARUMit.IN'
AN' 6ROWLIN'
PAW!!

~-~-~~--

1.

wa

I

Electrical

tMtt•

11 .. ••

~D

OOT THAI OFF '
MYCHEST.

BARNEY

---·Houllna-loo.

Yor...

rM SURE:?

..,

1.000• 2.000 ...........
, _ •4-178'1111 or 114-

,.,... ...,. . . . c -

_______

~ ·~R,~c:. ~"' ~AI« ~Rt&lt;­
~ ~ 'r-&gt;:'"; 15A~ 6&lt;\~

JIIJWII•Iarvloa.Swlmn'4ng

- · IOAT
II
M-r·
• • •LICIUICIATION
. l'rlaod ,. ...

"

!SA~ ~ g~ ~ BAF11&lt;

1.000•2. uallonodllhrooy.
CIIII04-1711--

&amp;Coll14-441:

...._......_ __.t;._ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ ... .....:...__._~-._ _ _~-----·'"""......._____.._~.;....-!..•---,...--~

B~ B.t\f(}&lt;. ~Rl' ~ ~~

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

oo ...: . liM 100

·~
Ror -

15A~ B.A~ ~~ J:l.l~~ ~f&lt;lc.

Dllord - · . . . leo: -

rr..'t..'Jt:

....,........._......
"f4.:a:'*·.,., .... · -

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

Can*

l iM 10

7i

e (])

2414.
_________

e1.100.00 ftrm . 304-112·

"'""'h

•· ••.

(!) Scholootlc Sporto

THf EcoLoGy 1$N'T ALL.

Home

Top Card

7:05 CD Andy Griffith
7:30 D (2) Family Feud

you cAN'T "T'fL.f. Mf

• (

1:30; 114-4-41-3101

11tl JllH 113. .
filum
oolor. •• oonol. 1100 mi..,

1bociiacm ... _tor_ll'l
Milici-. ••as. ""
..... lrtlllla ~ 114-ft2U41; .. ., •• .., 814-141·
2217.

\ . ~- -

8

FRANK AND ERNEST

1172 Conun.•ntll rnotor
• - •· 22ft. •2100 C.H oft•

-

Minor .nd ,...,.,... A,.nmenta In Mldlltport. From ·

-~

Sh•••

1111 lulukl RM-2SO ........_
Witt• cooled a front-dlec
br. . . Clll 814-4-4-11-13114.

A...,,_, 4 and bll ..
.,..,... po1c1. •eo.oo - .
3041711-3100 .. 1711-1108.

Uo!Rait: 2 br .. ,_IV ~
diiM ranch• .... llnCid yerd.
lldwall lohool Dlotrlct .
UOO/mo. C111 114-4-4-11-1320.

F-not;l

1811ll Tlitte'• Company
«Jl Monoyllne

1971-Dadge
Motor
homo 22 fl. long. I ft. 3.,, hiD"
310-cr. ~..... l.lnaoirllr•.
Good StiiPe. Loolta Good.
•s.ooo. eon et4-2411-He7.

84

Aport,_,o ll'lllandoroon. WYo.
cllll041711-1172alt• 5:00,

fDr

Ne-.Hour

I!J eiiJ I!J)WIIHI01

or - · tool ••uno.
•2000. Call Rolll'f
~-ocompl•ad•. .• •·
""mp all• and •-loa. 3041111-3102

4 cyL, 4 .,.a. 1'8, Pl. Lookl
81druNgood. 11011. ort••

I

H

ll
:
·
II.

CABTH
1

. 1 1•

l
.
,
~
·
l
1 1

I1
I II I
~_..;,T_;;O_Y:...,;.N:....:;K~T~--1~
HAROB
4 I -! .

.

.

.

.

When you ·see an ad lor 1 ·
vecation cabin that reoda 'Old
world charm: 11 really means.

.

'

.

~mploio

.lho chuckle quorad
6
)
by tilling In the milling words
L-..J...-.L.-.L...~_..__, you develop lrorn stop No. 3 below.

SCIU.M LETS ANSWERS
Vanity - Dusky - Chief - Render - FIVE KIDS
Overheard in grocery store: " Far better to have lovtld and
lost than to be buying food lor FIVE KIDS."

(2) PM Magazine
(!) SportaCenter
(I) . Ill Cll Curr1n1 AHtlr
(2) (!) MocNell/ Lehrer

lnArklull gultw l•eona. ~­

11ptlc twekl. AI 111ft, RON

p

8

1871·0ode• lhMie Motor
... _ 221llang.lft. 311'1. hlo"
310-... . . _ .. lnowllr•.
GDod Sh.e. looks Good.
•e.ooo. Coll14-248-9917.

- -11481.
- ct.,
CaN or.......
1·114-237nlghr.
"og•rsB•eement

•'".,...· Mrtous. .,lllrtet. Brui-

... Ita oNy,

H*oom Apll.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Camper~·
1----------"---

1172 Ford -gar KLT w lh

- · v-e ............ . eoo
Cill 104-1711-1111

pll~ phona30~1711-1318.

2

«Jl ShowBiz Todoy
® WKRP In Clnclnnoti
IIJ C.rtoon E•ll'l••
Q!l New Country
6:35 (l) One DIY At A Time
7:00 (I) Our Hoult

'""*

I..Maonclliollill IHttiiM .,._.
, . . Local , .....c. .., ..heel.

I I~ I t1 I I

(!) 3·2· 1 Con11ic1 t;1
11m IIIIIJ CBS Howo
Ill illl WKRP In ClnciMatl

Fer Ill• a loot
topper,
llldlng
wll'l-·
1041911-34110.

81

•

(I) DEll ABC Now• t;l
(!) Body Eleclrlc

Handfton. W,Ve. ·doing
front and allanmanta •18.11.
- and ulllil tlra 104-17113331 .

1171 Chevy CIO truck. 20 ft
fl•bool. n... a n - wry good
oond, ...100.00. 304-17111171.

P..,nlshed ana be*oom apt:.

, , . _ 3 room - · 1
IR .. nloo • cl-. Nice far
,......_ No-.Raf. &amp;Dop. Cal
114-4-4-11-2841

~Sport.~

.fJJ

~

2411-1114 ..- 114-2411-1923

p.m.

nilhld. .,...,. perking. Ulilftl•
plld. doppalt -Ired, 3041811-34SO.

Homes for Rent

--

::"'\'";;:g..""
••:::" ~.:"1:
lobar.
-~- ~-•at•

ml•.

Up.a...~uMoOn..,.

41

Owant B-. A-hrM. Un~
ftt. Turbo 3110. wlh

T nu:ks for Sale

72

For Safe • Concre~e •d Pl•to

•n..

L.OOJ&lt;.
OliR BEST!

\~~r\/IIYS

Hey &amp; Grein

64

Muslcel

Cunl• lpln• -..o. u.a. cond.
Coli 814-4-411-0711 oft• 3 PM.

Rogara Medical. 11011-11112104. '

At•em• Aldclng Hor... .w•d
wll'lnlng • - gentle.
4:00PM,
aoocl lor -304-1711-2091.
- · caN ""•

·Instrument.

horoagordantroctor. C.H 114-

441-9341.

Nlttln

t2.800.00. 11,000 mll ...o
104-1711-1149 aft•
4:00PM.

Menhal Stuct.lll ltp.nmem
.,.lllble Mey 18. one bloc*
from c1mpua. llr con«&lt;. fur-

Rr:nLils

oond. Tlk • G"tfflr Pl'fmlnta. C.ll

-eo

Livestock .

One ...-oom llrnllhed apt
cf~.

1111 Omrila/c ~1111/FM • -·
lllo,._. ,.,....,, 4 dDor, tood

'71 l'ord Cartior · --00. 71
luldl 481 anolna NOll good
t17e.OO. 104-171-2731.

-...oom

AolttCI' large buldll'lg . lott,
moM• homll l)ll'mitt ... pubfic

-

VI'RA FURNITURE
II APPUANCEB
Rt. 1411nCantanary.114ml. on

JW••

2
•-'rn.nta. tJitv
ceptted, IPPH.,c.a, Vllllta' •d
lr.. h pldlupo provided. Mllnt•
nMOI frMIIvlng doee to ~hop­
ping, Nnu lftd tchoots. For

mor411nformlt5on Clll 304-882·
3711. E.O.H.

rocliCicl Clyde

63

f.n01,

61 Household Goods

t-.. -..

accoptll'lgoppUCIIIono lor

wllh_fro_&amp; - .......
Jr. 304-1712331.

- ·· .... _

furnle~

SWIMMING POOLS t1111

Mr.rr.h&lt;lnillst:

VM1Qh8n laiH't da .,d c:h.lr*19D. v........... red ln.,...
*241. I !Mece wood •oup-

ecr• Mch. O.J, While

Ad. Col 114-2411-9911 aft•
1 :30 P.M.

Complete hau.-hold

3041711-!11112"" 8711-3900.
,..,.had opl. . 1 Br.. 243
Jacklan Pika 1228 • mo.
UtRMI• paid. Doll 114-11484411 aft• 7 P,M.

71 Auto~• For Sille-

coloro. UIO. Con 114-4-4-ll381hft•8P.M.

PICKENS USED RIRNITURE

VOU SAiD

I'DDR lOY 111A n

Mlule ferVJaon . . .re bll•.
•• •000. 1--MI h"' ....
"00. ,.rmlll .,..., C wl1h 2
raw ulttdtON. t1100. 2 row
h i g h - -..
cultlvatora. • rubll•
w-lll•n.... ••soosqu..

I TI\00614T

Cllt 14-371-2220 ·or
304-1711-17H.
.

1-~=======::;========~-aft-•..:.· -·_P_.M_.~----

Dngonwynd em.., _,.._
Goalo ,.,. •Ia. Coil 114-281,_.,_, Md Sl...... lnd HI,..
1114.
1171 Apollo lwei&lt;. w1t1! AC.
I~ klttena. Chaw stud ..,..
vice. Cllll14·4-411-314hft•7 4 mL aid Phil.., poll'lt. Colt. 3 · 30,000 mil•. one owner,
u.ooo.oo. 304-1711-1711.
P.l\ol.

lngo. 112 mll.....,ldlc. Call
30 4· 8 71·1410. 114· 318 9773. avanlngo.

(

c ,.. .,........

Pets for Sale

' Y"'kohlra TerR..letored AKC

·l

1\
82 Wanted to Buy

F-3

LET'S ALL TR'{ TO
PLAV OUR BEST...

part~

3

Cil Ill Cll 11m Ill G2J

w

WaiTanty-30 ct.,o. Prt- ..... .
up. Ulacl • rlbult torgue
00........... ltendlrd dutch • •

$-

(I)

I!J) Nowa
Boonlwalk a lltMblill' e
Super Bowl 01 Sporla Tri111o
(0:30)
(2) Dogn;a•l Junior High
Michelle's parents aren't
happy to find her date Ia a
dance is blac k. (N~l Q
(!) Reading Rolnbow t;1
ID llll Htppy D1y1
® Foci• 01 Life
11)1 Bho·RI
6:05 (l) Allee
8:30 8 aJ I!J) NBC Nightly Newt

IUDGET TIIANSMIISION·

114-2411-1121.

On•Kretnlll•lot tor rent At. 2
Nort.. after 1:00 PM caN
304-1711-2991.

EVENING

•

8:00 (I) llc&gt;Mnu: Tile Loll

Auto Perta
&amp; Acce110rles

75

·

I

WED., MAY 3

Epl-·

66 Building $upplles

I

•

ra"(E'D

10 LQC.'I(

Clll 11 ...... 0221.

l evege 110 loll hended . 241
~210 . .... -·Col . . . .:00

66

Television
Viewing

'1'E~ 'Nel.L I

- d 21 ll'ldl """' u..d on• ·~ lltoa lftd

The Daily Sentinei- Peg1 16

I

mailing $1 10 ~airo-Graph, c/o this "-determined by lhe compelence and In·
n - . P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland , cliJitrlou_aness of your co-wori&lt;I&lt;'S. This
OH 4-4101-3428. aa sure lo stele your Ia true but only to a small degree, lhere
zodllcllign.
Is much you CliJ do on your own.
QE'IM (..., 21-.luM 21) Thl• Ia a IAGITTAIIIUS ( -. 23.a.c. 21) SUb00011 dey to oliare tnvotY.ments wllh due lnc,nations Ieday 10 lake chances
friends, provldecllho)' ~re not of a com- on lhlngs you know 111111 about Howevrnerclal or financial natura. -.tmenl er. 1 calculeled risk may be In order II
could roouM H your pelt think they ore ll's In a lomlllar area and well lhough1
being uoetl . '
out
CANCER(~uno21-.ltliJ21)Youmaybe
CAPRICOIIH (Dec. 22-Jan. 18) Even
more cloaely scrutinized by your peers lhough Nrlv lndlca1ors might dl11811ree.
today thin utUII. Fortunately, you are lhlngs lp general lend lo worll out to
on 1 favorable rolland you're-not likely your ultlmale benellt to&lt;lay. Don't 181 a
10 ghlli lham lnythlng lor which you can r- Blrbng DIOWI In 1hl Hrly rounds
be put down .
Iampi you 10 toooln thl towel .
LEO (.luiJ 21-Aut. Zl) Bold anti lmagl- AQUARIUS ~~- »Fob. 11) Unloreni11VI pltna hiVI a btl1ar·1han-aver- seen or unscheduled happenings could
ego chence bl being achieved el this worll oul rather fortuitously lor you totime. H you have lalth In your 001101p- day. lnatead ol gelling upllghtlltiona. this Ia 1 good ell• 10 alert lesllng thing unuauel occurs, think of n 11 an
•
, ...... on , ... 1'0111 world.
opportunlly.
.
VIRGO (Aut. :11-lopt. 81 Continuo to
NCEI (Fob. »&gt;liitrccl 211) Tho ube alert lor tn opportunity to become
pects Indicate thtl you m1y : ; involvocltn a venture tnOUier hla..... tortuntle wl1h thlnge ol • 1111
.,._
termlndld. Plrtlclplltion turn oul
lure today thin you will be with lntangt.
10 be rOilier prolltlblllor you,
bill. Llmll your optiON lo Ia
u.IIA (..,.,II 0et. Ill Thl8 CIA bet ...koble.
',
p-1 ptoduothlli lily for you n
Alllllllllrciiii1-Aprll11) You re likely
you keep ....-llfllng In proper bllence. 10 be very enttrprltiln(l and orlglnll toWork, bu1 do 1101 -do; pll~. but do
day, eapeclllly In m11tors where t;;.r
no1 mike n your top priority.
oelf-ln1.- can bli odvtncod.
•
8COFFID (Ool. MIll • a) Todoy you ~r111 on llirlherlng your poriOflll
mey !eel YliUt rate Ill prao,.... will be
omblll~.

Before returning lo Vietnam ,
McMuQhy enjoys one wild

~~ewlwltch
®I e 0 Wleoguy Nawquay

wriggles oul of his arrest, but
his !rOUble• conlinue . t;l
«Jl Evening Nowe
® Mlljtlr LuguolltHblill
,
(l)
lotwNn Otmeo
10 20
10:30(1) NBA llt•k-1
• CIJ Ring of Truth Philip
Morrison explores how
sclanlllic tools shape our
Freedom: CMI
IUghta ii!KI 1111 l'nies
Joumoliltl including John
Chi-'IOr, Herb Kaplow,
nd K·• Fllml A
liZ
8
""
ng urama 8
1111 Clilll Rlghll Movement ·
wiltl film fool8gl tnd lholr

"-&lt;DO:ti..

reoor-...

e illl To 11 AnMuiiCid

• Nllw Col lbf
, ..., llllltlndlll 8tHII .
11 00 ...
•
C

..

·~r~
:OiteCIJ 1111 •

,

~~.....
~
11:30

•

Mlllnl ....
You Cln It • ...r

e

(2)

01 Tonlgh11how

NORTH

••••
•an

BRIDGE

Many
angles

H·H

.AKJ7

.......,

+,U IOU

EAST

.AQU

By James Jacoliy

+QU

There are two interesting aspects to
this deal. The_first Is the play In live
clubs alter West bas opened with a
weak two-spade bid. Totlay'a declarer

SOUTH
+A71Z

•1u

•qz

won the ace of spades. lheddiJII a

+KIH

heart from dummy, and tben played
A·K of clubs. He lben played four
rounds of diamonds, lhedding heart
losers. Tblt would bave been fine if

- ,.

Vulnerable: Neither

Dealer: West

East had ruffed in, but East simply
discarded on the fourth di1mond.
Then, when a beart waaled, East look
tbe ace and cubed the queen of clubs, ;
shortening declarer's trumps that i
were needed for ruffing dummy's losing hearts. Best of course Is .for declarer to simply cash the club ace and then
play on diamonds, since South can afford to allow the defense to !Dike a
trick wilb the queen of clubs, but can·
not afford to let a defender draw a
third round of b1s trumpa with that
·club queen.
The second interesting aspect is
that any chance for Soul!! to 101ke a
game in clubs would dilappear if
East-West bad a partoenbip agreement that I heartily recommend. If
East could blve bid three hearts as an

artificial lea_d-dlrecting bid, the de-

2+

......

l!ut

5+

Pus

Obi.

Pus
Pus

.....
••
Puo

Opening lead: • K

.,
lalle the flnt !line
heart tricks 11111111 a Cltlb -u.ct.
This •11'-1 llllly lppllet wileD the
oppoaetlt8 double your par'-'• ftllt
lenders would

1-

two-bid for tUeou1. If )'Otllllopt t1t11
metbod, it Is allo lellllble to
tbat
two no-trump over u OIIP c
tiboot double
that JOII will; to
play Ill your owa 1oDi IIIII. P111tter
bido 1J!ree clubll by aareetneut. IIIII
J011 puo with lone clubs or bid your
actual

!P.;':

lone suit.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 lover (Fr.I

ACROSS

3 See 8 Down

1 Soaay

oT

5lamb
9 Asian river
10 Be of use
12 Aching
13 Fullflavored
15 Newman
movie
16 Soviel
Socialisl
Republic

4 Before in
lime
(preiiKI

5 Brilish
P.M., ,
Macdonald
8 Prevent
7 "East of
Eden·
characler
19 Small
8 Cry .from
opening
(abbr.)
the stands 22 Yemen ,
17 Goll term 11 French
capilal
river
24 Singer
18 Summer
TV fare
14 UndergrOWih
Home
25 Land
20 Three (lt.) 18 Clly of .
21 - -poly
anclenl
measure
22 Lean-to
Edcim
26 Slinl
23 Singing
syllable
24 New Guinea lr--+--+-11--

..
••

27 Damaged
21 Religious
painting
30 French
river
34 Britl_
s h earl
36 ..,... Paulo,
Elfazil
37 Money roH

cily

•

25 Dull pain
27 Bill of fare
28Guevara
29 Cenlral
American
country
31 Actor LOWB
32 A Gershwin
33 Die mark
35 Schoolroom
item
37 Owl-like
38Cheer
39 English
composer
40 Cargo
41 Bambi

DOWN
1 Short race

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'ES-Here's bow to work it:

1113

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is~
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. SIJ111le letlen,
apostrophes, the lqth and fonnatlm of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.

.

CIIWfoQuon!

5-3

•FGTZXMQDL'B

KTPKDBF

QB

I

MD

PFKVXZF

UQLG
'

CQMV

'-UXYZDYU

XL

FUKMA

DKFL

B.

WDPNFa
1ltE IKIEJ OF

c:a,;t•••••••

'

,

XL

DLF

I

i
•

'

Y•wt , ••
STAYING YOUNG IS TO IJVa IIOfRiti.Y; W · . ·
SLOWLY ANDoiUSTNOT~AIOUTYOUR AGE.
- LUCft.l.E BAU.

.

orr;:-.

~

•'

�···~·~

Paga 16-The Daily Settital

•

Pon•ov-Midclaport. Ohio

.

'

Bennett ·says drug dealers 'must suffer-consequences'
• •WASHINGTON (UPI) - Declaring "the drug crisis a crisis of
authority," federal anti-drug
chief William Bennett said Wed·

Middleport
-court news
Larry Rider, Middleport, was
fined on two charges In the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
lma.n Tuesday night.
·
Rider was fined $100 and cos Is
and given 10 days probation on
both charges. one being assault
·and the other resisting arrest.
Also fined In the court was
Harland C. Utile, Bidwell. $10
fine only on a charge of Improper
backing; and Pearl Edinger,
Cheshire. $25 and costs, dlsor·
derly conduct. Brenda Sue
Adams. New Haven, W. Va.
forfeited a $40 bond on a speeding
charge.

nesday llllclt users and dealers of
narcotics "must be confronted,
and they must sutter
consequences."
Bennett said more judges,
prosecutors, federal agents and
jails are needed, as .well as
possible new ways to Impose
punl.shmPnt - suclt...as revoking
driver's licenses, seiZing cars or
holdings parents responsible for
young offenders.
:•we have to do more. We have
to do better," Bennett said In
remarks prepared for delivery at
a "Just Say 'Know' to Drug~;"
conference at the Washington
Hebrew Congregation.
Bennett Is to unveil a national
antl-drllg battle plan by Sept. 5.
In his speech, he outlined "some

of the major principles" that
would govern his strategy, Including the key of community
lnvolvemPnt.
''Simply put, I believe the drug
crisis Is a crisis of authority," he
said. "A crl.sls of ... legal and
poUttcal au thorlty .. . of social
authority ... of moral authority.
'Two words sum up my entire
approach; consequences • and
cOnfrontation, Those who use,
sell and traffic In drugs must be
confronted ancl they must suffer
consequences."
Bennett, the first director of
the new office of Najlonal Drug
Policy Control. Is to draft a
comprehensive plan that ad·
dresses .drug Interdiction, educa·
tlon, treatment a!ld law

enforcement.
state and local drug plana nation· couequencei:."
Too otten, Bennett said, drug wide for posalble Inclusion In his · He said, "one of the key Issues
In the drug war IS prevention ...
users and deal era are arre~ led . national atratel)', lauded;
several times before they ever go
how do we keep young people
-A proaram In Toledo, Ohio,
to jail.
from· staruag to u• drugs!
that fines pllreat.l of , juvenile
"Tbolle guilty of drug offenses offenden.
·'One approach Is ... lnterven·
must believe that punlahmentl•
-A. pnJI!'am In Phoenix, Ariz.,
Inevitable. As long u they don't, that permlt.l pollee to fine and tlon - not government !nterven·
the deterrent effect wUl be jail users, u well u 1etre their tlon, but Intervention family by
neutralized."
cars If they are ueed It to buy family, nelghbori!OQd by neigh·
borhood, church by ' church, '
Bennett said anti-drug pro- narcotics.
grams In schools must teach
-Proposals that drug offend· · school by school."
children the dangers of narcot· ers driver's licences be revoked.
lcs, but must also teach them the "In much ofthecountry, driver's
''There Ls a areal deal .of talk
consequences of break In&amp; the licenses are an elemental free.
about rebabllltatlon." Often, he
law.
dom that youna people are
said, "what Is really needed Is
"Penalltles must be Imposed terrified of loslq," he said.
habilitation - aid, aslliltance
.. . ranalng from detention, to
Bennett said, "I'm talking
and Instruction for younpters
suspension to outright about tlie reconstitution of legal
who have been left without the
expulsion."
and social authority throuih the
most elementary lessons of mor·
Bennett, who has reviewed Imposition of appropriate
als and manners." ·

. SALE DATES; May 1 thru IIIDY 6, 1919 • Quantity righh riHrvlll. Not r~~pa•lbla for

'Yfll9.-

.

Lottery
Pick3

060

Mets 6-4

Pick 4
9699
Super. Lotto
ll-15-18-20-22-36
Kicker 560617

Page 6

•

Copy

or pictorial ..,.an;

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 4, 1989

htld 1889

Low near ~~tonight. Chance
raln 100 percent. Friday, high
lower 70s. Chance ol rain
percent.
·
·

•

.at
Vot.39. No.262

2 Sections, 16 Pages

26 Ceots

A Multimedia fnc. Newspaper

Waterlines lie under proPosed ,road location
By NANCV Y.OACHAM
abandon the Idea of moving the
Sentinel News Staff
road because it would be too
Although Salisbury Township expensive to move the liries also.
·Trustees have proposed relocat·
The commissioners agreed with
-lng Willow Creek Road , the . Warner that moving the lines
relocation will probably not take would be a great expense.
place, now that the trustees have
Charles Knight, attorney for
' been Informed that Leading Leading Creek Conservancy Dis. Creek Conservancy Dis trlct watrlct, stopped In during the
. · ter lines lie under the proposed meetingtoseel!relocallonofthe
: new road location. The proposed road had been discussed. Knight
: relocation of the road was
reported that the water lines lie
·discussed In Wednesday's meet- on easements from the pt·operty
Ing of the Meigs County owners.
' Commissioners.
On behalf of Jim Crisp, man·
, County Highway Superintend- ager of Lea~lng Creek Conser·
: ent Ted Warner reported to the
vancy District, Knight prepared
·commissioners Of the existence a news release for 'L'he Dally
. of th£&gt; water lines, and that It was Sentinel regarding the proposed
' his feeling the trustees would
road relocation which would

Three were fined and seven
others forfeited bonds In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were James Simpson,
Jr., Syracuse, $63 and costs on a
charge of squealing tires; Sher·
rle Butcher, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs, disorderly manner; and
Ron &lt;;:apehart, Pomeroy. $63 and
costs, squealing tires. . . ·
· Forfeiting bonds In the court
were Brady Huffman, Racine.
·$375. · DWI; Frank Hettinger,
Columbus. $43, Illegal left turn;
Steven Messinger. Huntington.
$!i3, expired registration; Patrl·
cia Morgan. Langsville. $45.
speeding; Ricky Kearns, Clifton.
w. Va., $43. Illegal left tum;
David Stanley. Athens, $53 illegal
left turn on a red light; Jeffrey
Wickersham, $63, operating a
vehicle without reasonable control. and $63 squealing tires.

necessitate the additional reloca·
lion of the water lines owned and
maintained. by the conservancy
district.
According to the news relpase.
the water lines required to be
moved are permanent lines crlti·
cal to home service to all homes
on Willow Creek Road.
"All lines are laid on ease·
ments owned by Leading CrPek
Conservancy · District and
granted by the landowers." Crisp
said tn lhewrltten release.
"Salisbury Township cannot
relocate a road over these lines,
as the Increased weight ·and
stresswouldcausedamagetothe
lines, t)lereby causing problems
in the water service to our

. ~. 29(

Continued from page 1
an action filed by James Clifford,
doing business as J&amp;F ContractIng. Pomeroy, for monetary
judgment from Greg B. Roush.
doing business as Roush Construction. are Elmwood Terrace.
Ltd.. an Ohio limited partner·
ship; Elmwood Terrace Inc., an
Ohio · partnership In care of
Harold D. Brown. Pomeroy;
Harold D. Brown. general
partner and Individually, Pomeroy; Lynn Brown. Pomeroy; the
United States of . America.
Farmers Home Administration.
Columbus; and the .treasurer llf
Meigs County.
The following cases have been
dismissed by the court; Clarinda
Sue Theiss versus Thomas Ml·
chael Theiss; PamPla Sue
Shields versus Ronald Randall
Shields; KellPe Renae Hill -lersus Steven Craig Hill; Diana
Lynn Starcher versus Ronald
Earl Starcher; Randall S. Russell versus Sherry Lynn Russell;
Todd Grover versu~ !){'!bert
Fridley.
Judge Fred Crow JII · has
stepped down as presiding au·
thorlty in thecaseofthe Farmers .
Bank· and Savings Company
versus Ricky J. Morris. et al. due
to a conflict of Interest resulting
from the judge's sormer family
law practice.

Regular or Diet

Angel Soft
Bath Tissue

Up
'

..... 58(

I
I

IN NEW LOCATION - The Melp Health
Services, operated by Dr. Wilma Man!!lleld and
Dr. James Witherell, have moved their oflices
from the Meigs Medical Bulldlnr, adjacent to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, to a home on nearby
Mulberry Heights. The house was purchased from
Mr. and Mrs. Roher! Fetty and has undergone
extensive remodeling and redecoration to provide
attractive efficient quarters for the two physl·
clans. A patient parking lot has been created at
lh&lt;' rear of thO' new location at 570 Mulberry

i

I
I
c....... ON ':;zr ,_. ...... Coooll• c:.diMI,
1Mb
LW:~~!,;_•_.- __ ""':' ____ ,!D_•_•.J
pkg.

Ulllk- wlti'ICOIIPQIII. 11(1.00 .,....... 'b cllldlftt ................

\,I

CHICKEN .

PARTS

Niles Michael Young. Jr .. New
Ha\'en. W. Va. wa s arrested
Wednesday evening and charged

Quarters

Kraft ~Parkay

lb.

pkg.

Weather
By \Jailed Press International

'

Crisco
011

rilld 501.

with theft and falsification f.ol·
lowing an alleged shoplifting
incident at Big Wheel. according

School districts seek grants

(

Pure Vegetable

-

..

offered by th e cour t.
''This is using an atomic bomb
to eradicate a few mice." said
Rep . Randall Gardner, R·
Bowling Green.
Mottl said four states require
employers to pay full wage to
employees absent for jury duty .
His bill las t sess ion did that .
Unanimous approval was
given to Boehner's bill making
the possession, sale and advertisement of drug paraphernalia
illegal. Currently. It Is Illegal
oniy to sell such equipment to
minors .
"We a re sending the wrong
message to our young people,"
said Boehner. noting th e proliferatlon of adult "head shops'' while
"we ask them to just say no."
Tile gleaning bi'll also was sent
to lhe Senate on a unanimous
Continued on page 16

Helpts. The Continuity of Care Medical EqUip·
ment bu!llaess beaded by Greg Kaylor has
relocated also In the basement at the new quarters
for the Meigs Health Services. Pictured discuss·
ing the llllal touches to be carried out at the new
quarters are Dr. Mansfield, Dr. Witherell, Mark
Epling, architect lor the project, and Larry
Haynes, remodeling contractor. Dr. Mansfield
and Dr. Witherell, who are presently practicing In
thp new quarters, plan a public open house for
June.

Local news briefs-·- -

Margarine

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear. with a low near
40. Winds southwest 10 to 15 mph.
Thursday: Becoming cloudy.
with a chance of rain lat£&gt; In the
day. Highs will be In the mid 60s.
chance of rain 40 percent.
Extended Forecut
.. Friday tbrOUih Sunday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Friday and Satur·
day, but fair on Sunday. Highs
Will range tram the mid 60s to the.
mid TO&amp;, with early morning lows
raaJIIII tram. the mid 40s to the

ship could alford the expense of
moving the lines.
In discussing the condition of
the county road system with
Warner and County Engineer
Philip Roberts, Warner reported
that "a lot of new slips" have
occured during the recent heavy
rains. There are " banks just
turning loss tvery place,"
Warner said . 'Hill mentioned two
new sflps in Olive Township and
two new slips In Bedford Town·
ship that were particularly bad.
Also mentioned was a slip In the
Hobson area .
·
A recurring slippage problem
on County Road 1 In Columbia
Township has finally necessl· ·
Continued on P'lie 16

New H~ven man charged on
two counts follOwing' l-ncident

Winter wheat crop
condition worsens

I

water service to the best of our
abilities when contracted to do so
by Salisbury Towns hip...
·
Crisp concluded the release by
saying, " We will provide Salis·
bury Township an estimate of
these cos ts and cooperate In
every way possible to speed this
relocation process. Le ading
Creek Conservancy Dis trict will
not im pede th is work in a ny way,
provided th e relocation project is
suita bly fund ed by Salisbury
Towns hi p and our casementsand
the inter es ts of our consumers
a re protected.'"
Althoug h the. trus tees were not
present for Wednesday 's meeting, those ·people who were
present were doubtful the town-

By LEE LEONARD
"Many people a bhor jury duty
UP! Statehouse Reporter
because it is an economic hard·
COLUMBUS Despite com· ship on them." said Moltl.
plaints it would hurt small- and
His bill requires any e mployer
medium-sized businesses. the of more than 75 persons to pay
Ohio House of _Representatives half the difference between jury
narrowly passed legislation Wed· pay and the employee's regular
nesday requiring large Ohio compensation if the trl.al lasts
companies to help pay em· longer than two weeks:
ployees on jury duty.
The proposal would be tried
' Th£&gt; bill, a watered-down ver· until Dec. 31, 1993.
slon of one that Rep. Rohald
"If jury pay Is Inadequate , why
Mottl, D-Parrila, pushed through· are we mandating that · .the
the House last session. cleared by · . private sector come up with the
54·39- four vQtes more th'an the difference?" as ked Rep. John
50 votes needed for passage Boehner . R-Wes t Chester . "This
and went to the Senate.
will have a n e ffect on those
At the same time. th e Hou se
bus inesses leas t able to a lford it .
passed bills outlawing drug paraBoehner al so complained ttle
phernalla. encouraging gleaning
bill is discriminatory in that
fields for surplus farm crops. and . homemakers. retirees and the
permitting surveyors and eng!· unemployed would not receive
neers on private and public the extra pay and would have to
property to do their jobs .
settle for the $5 to $15 per day

Assorted Varieties

Seven

customers," said Crisp.
"We have met with Salisbury
Township and examined their
proposed relocation. In order to
protect water service to our
customers, our water lines will
necessarfly have to be moved.
The cost of the relocation, as It Is
caused . by Salisbury Township,
wlllbetheobllgatlonofSalisbury
Township. Whlle We reqret . the
necessity of these moves. we do
understand the flooding prob·
terns of the Willow Creek r es i·
dents. 'We encou rage Salis bury
Township to proceed with thi s
road relocation as It will be nertt
their constltuimts.
"We assure you that we will
relocate our lines and continue

House passes bill to
up jury duty pay

Cardinal ·
White Bread .

. .Judgement ... .

I.Wnaeilsued

•

Cincinnati
Reds stop

Pomeroy
court news

WASHINGTON IUPII
Heavy rains delivered muchneed£'d moisture to the western
Corn Belt and northern Plains
last wPek but the condition of the
winter wheal crop worsened. the
government said Tuesday.
In Its wPekly crop progress and
weather report. the governmPnt
said 45 percent of th£' winter
whPat crop was In poor or very
poor condition. One week ago, 35
percel)t was listed In those two
categories and at this point last
year. only 10 percent was listed
as· poor or very poor.

. ...

-

I •

•

j •

Head
Lettuce

.$
ea.

Special days planned for park

Assorted Varletles•Dinnet

&lt;;rtsp

59(
.

Kraft Macaroni
&amp;. Cheese
5th·7V• OJ:.

pkg.

.....

lilllltfMW(tftC...... I.

The Eastern Local: Meigs Local. and Southern Local School
Districts ar&lt;' presently participating In an SEO·SERRC
consolidated application for early childhood grant funds.
The. grant funds are made available under the provisions of
Public Law 99-457. 1986 amendments to the Education of the
Handicapped Act, as an Incentive to 'expand and Improve
services for preschool hand !capped children.
Proposed activities as a result of the grant funding are to
assist in coordination of early lntgrvention services and in the
Pxpanslon of t•arly Intervention service.
.
Anyone Interested in further Information about th e prOJeCt or
in offering suggestions for consideration In the project should
contact Mary Price.· Eastern LocaL 985-3329; R. Charles
Holliday. Meigs Local. 742·3113, or J~yce Thoren. Southern
Local. 949-2611.

39&lt;

=::-....
~.

- -~--~ .• J ~-

, Middleport RecreatIon Director Roger Williams announ()('d
todav that the Park ' n' Putt Mini Golf Course will be having two
spec.lal days per week during the current season.
Monday nights will be Senior Citizen Night with a special
admlssloD. price for all those Individuals 55 years of age and
older .. These Individuals will be admitted for one-half price or 50
cents per game.
·
Friday night will bE' FamUy Night with the head of household
paytniphe full admission price of $1.00 but all other members of
the family will pay only one-half price or 50 cents.
Wealher permitting. the Park 'n' Putt Is open daily from 4
p.rr.. until10 p.m" · .
WIIUams stated that other :c&lt;pectal days and activities will be
scheduled throughout the s.ummer.
·

r

GARY H. JONES
DOUG L. DRAPER
to the Meigs County Sheriff's
N.R. HUMPHREYS
Department .
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reported that Young was stopped
outside the store by Big Wheel's
loss prevention officer.
The sub.lect allegedly gave the
· office a false name, address and
age. and then later related the
same false Information to Carl
Hysell, Meigs County Juvenile
diana Michigan Power Co.'s
Draper, a native ol Koanoke, Va.,
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Officer. Upon Investigation the .
Donald
C.
Cook
Nuclear
Plant
in
holds
a bachelor of arts degree in
correct name · was determined · N.R. "Randy" Humphreys Jr. was 1972-1973. Indiana Michigan and management from the West Virand the falsification . charged .,. promoted to plant manager of Central Operating are affiliates in ginia College of Graduate Studies.
Cenr:ral . Operating Co's Philip
filed. The youth was also charged
SpOrn
plant on May 1. He succeeds the American Electric Power Sys· He currently ts attendmg the
with theft of two cassette tapes.
American Electric Power System
Eugene H. Gloss, whq retired. Suc- tern
He posted a $250 botid on each
lives
at
Rocksprings,
Management Program at Ohio Slate
Hiunphreys
ceeding Humphreys as assistant
charge and Is scheduled t'!ir a
with
his
wife,
Judy,
and
three
University
College of AdministraOhio,
plam manager is Gary H. Jones.
hearing in Meigs County Court on
children,
Jay,
Tara,
and
J.T.
tive
Science.
Succeeding Jones as operations su·
Wednesday .
Draper began his utility career in
pcrintendem is Doug L. Draper, Humphreys is a member of the
The sheri!! also reported that
Church of Christ.
1969 as a utility helper in Apwho
was
production
superintendent
his department Is Investigating a
Jones, a native of Charleston, palachian Power Co.'s General
- operations.
failure to pay at the Dry Dock
W.Va.,
holds a bachelor of science Office Operations DepJUtment
Humphreys, a native of Craig
Carry OUt at Burlingham.
degree
in mechanical· engineering Roanoke. He was promoted to en.:
County, Va., holds a bachelor of
According to t.he report around
from
the
West Virginia Instirute of l'ineer B in General Office Hydro
science degree in industrial tech·
9:20p.m. a black male drove Into
Technology.
He attended the m 1971 and moved to Philip Sporn
nology from Ohio University. He
the carry out from US 33, ordered
American
Electric
Power System Plant in 1977 as an engtneering
also has auended the American
cigarettes and a 12 pack of beer.
Managerl!ent
Program
at Ohio State technologist. He 'advanced through
Elect:ric Powec System ManageWhen the owner gave him the
University
College
of
Administra- the. positions of maintenance enment Program at the Unl~rsity of
products. the subject handed him
gineer, tl!aintenance supervisor, and
Michigan Gladt!!l!t School of live Science.
a penny and drove off north on
Jones joined Philip Sporn Plant perl'ormant:c supervisina engineer
Business
Adminstratlon.
Route 33 In a red Nlssan with
Humphreys joilled the Perfor· in 1978 as production superinten- before boina tJIOIIloted to producWest VIrginia tags. Charges o(
He
was lion superintendent-operations in
Depanment at the Philip dent-maintenance.
mance
theft are pending.
promoted
to
maintenance
superin·
1984.
Sporn Plant in I97l. He rose
Sherry J. lncleStad, Langsville.
tendent
in
I984
and
operations
su·
Draper Jlyes at Now Haven with.
through !he positions of perforreported that sometime bet-ret"n
perintendent
in
1988.
,
his
wife, Kathy, and duec children .
mance engineer, perfonnance su·
5 p.m on April 28 and 8 p.m on
Haven
With
DaDa.
David 8Qd SlOVen. Draper I!
Jones
lives
at
New
pcrvising engineer, plant perfor·
May 2nd. an unknown · person
his
wife,
Lois,
and
two
sons,
Adam
SCCIIIIIII}'·treuurer
of the Nev.
mance
superintendent, · and
took her 1976 Chevrolet pickup
and Andrew. Jones is chllrman of Ha~~e~~ KOtary Club IIIII a member
~~lt!ICkllt before the administrative COIIIICil at New of ' 'lbllnd Masonic LodJO No
truck. The vehicle l)as now been
boin&amp;
10 ISIIIIII!JC plant
returned but the muffler had
tll8ll8pr in 1984. Hum_IJhloys also Haven United Methodist Chun:h 190 llld thc New Haven United
been knocked off, Indestad reserved ~ a start·up engilleel for. In- and usistaru Scoutmaster of Troop McdlodlltChurch.
ported to the &amp;iii!I'IH.
·No. 259.

Humphreys· succeeds Gloss
as Philip ·Sporn plant manager

-

i

.-

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