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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

500 attend. ••

Monday, May 8, 989

Continued from page l

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f
TAKING BLOOD- Nucy GrUIIth, a phlebotomist at Veterus
Memorli.l Hospital, takes blood from the linger of Martha
Hollman who was one ofthe over 310 who had tbetestcompleted at
Sunday's annual open house of Veterans Memorial Hospital. Ms.
Griffith was one of ten hospital employees taking blood during tbe
afternoon.

.---Local news briefs--....
Continued from page 1

EMS has 11 weekend calls

.
'

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
this past weekend; six on Saturday and 'five on Sunday:
Saturday at 2:06 a.m .. Pomeroy went to Chlldrens Home
Road for DarIa Pickett who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 4 a.m .. Syracuse was called to the scene of aulD
accident on State Route 124 for Charles Canter who was
transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 6:22 a .m.,
Middleport was called to Front St. In Cheshire for Robert Hupp
who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 5:07 p.m ..
Pomeroy squad 1 was called to an auto accident on State Route
248 and transported Brenda Fuller and Sharon Baker from the
accident scene to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy squad
4 was called at 5:27p.m. to the same accldenHor Laura Clark to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL At 10:34 p.m. , Pomeroy was
called for E;rnest Barrows who was taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
On Sunday at 3:31a.m., Pomeroy was called to East Main St.
for Robert White who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'At 6:28a.m., Pomeroy went to Laurel Cllf!RoadforClltr Jacobs
to Veterans Memorial HospitaL Pomeroy at J: 17 p.m. was
called to the Americare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Evelyn
Spencer to Veterans Memorial Ho,spltaL Racine at 5:31 p.m.
was called to Sharon Hollow Road for Charles Heck to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL Racine at 8:21p.m. went to State Route 124
for Paul Schuler to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Woman seeks money judgment
Linda Sue Hawley, Middleport. has filed suit In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court for a judgment of undisclosed amount
from Veterans Memorial HospitaL
The judgment action Is the result of an Incident Nov. 16, 19871n
which the plaintiff was treated In the emergency room of the
hosP.o~tal. A!'cordlng to the complaint, while being treated In the
emergency room. the plaintiff was Instructed to sit on the edge
of an examination table by a hospital employee or employees,
and while sitting on the edge of the table. she fainted and fell
from the table. striking her head and left arm on the floor.
As a result of the alleged fall. the plaintiff allegedly sustained
permanent pain. damage and suffering. As a further result of
' the alleged fall, the plaintiff Incurred medical and hospital ·
ex penses In the amount of $8.143.71 and expects to incur further
such expenses In the future.
The pia In tiff charges that the hospitaL through Its employees,
negllgenty failed to exercise the necessary degree of
emergency room skill and care. thereby resulting In her
Injuries.
The plainti!Ldemands judgment for compensatory damag~s
and a trial by jury.
In other court matters. Citizens National, a division of the
First Huntington National Bank. Point Pleasant. W.Va .. has
filed suit against Timothy C. Ha'ckett, Langsville, for a
judgment of $5.70l.77.

of the local heart association, and
hospital staff members reported
the test results to those ulldergolng the testing. Members of the
heart group also showed a video
tape on healthcare during the
afternoon In the hospital conference room.
Members of the hospital 's
volunteer organization - the
Women's Auxiliary- were In the
lobby, also to register ·VIsitors
and perform other public servl·
ces ana members were also
stationed in the hospital hallways
to assist In a smooUt traffic flow
for those undergoln&amp; the cholesterol testing as well as other
visitors.
Various hospital employees
were on hand to·· greet the public
during the three hour open house
and assist In various capacities
as well as to conduct tours. There
was a station set up to provide
free blood pressure checks for
visitors.
The hospital was decorated
with balloons carrying out the
theme of NatiOnal Hospital
Week. Veterans Memorial Hospl~
tal, Wellspring of the Commun· ·
lty, and with floral arrangements. There were favors
carrying out the week 's theme
and pamphlets relating to var·
lous healthcare distributed.
As a part of the week-long
observance, the hospital will hold
career day on Wednesday for
Meigs High ·School students, the

third such day held for local high
school students recently. On
Thursday, a cookout will be held
for all employees and volunteers
and the annual mock disaster
drill will be staged. On Friday,
the hospital will provide tours for
two classes of Headstart pupils
and service awards will be
presented to long-time em·
ployees and as well as special

1. of
the Cheshire community. died
this morning at Holzer Medical
Center.
He was a retired plant operator
lor Anderson Blackrock. Galllpo·
lis Ferry, W.Va.
Born March 4. 1921 In Point
Pleasant . he was the son of
Dewey and Clalrabelle (Green•
leyl Jones.
He Is survived by his wife,
'Genevle (Flint) Jones; two
daUghters, Wllmajean Garcia of
New · Jersey, and Jeannette
Grate of Long Bottom, Ohio; one
son. James I. Jones of Cheshire;
five grandchildren; and one
brother, Charles Jones of
California.
He attended the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene and was
a U.S. Army veteran of World
War 11. He was a member of tbe
DAV and the VFW.
. Services will be Wednesday, 3
p.m. at the Waugh-Halley·Wood
Funeral Home. Burial will be In
the Ohio Valley Memory
'Gardens.
Friends may call Tuesday, 2 to
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.. at the
funeral borne.

.Thelma V. Sines
. 11Mt1ma Vupua SiDes. 52, of
...... dllld 111111~ 7, 1989
Ill P'
IIC Vllley
8Gm Plb. 14. 193 in St. Pial.

'H:_ . .

League.
She was preceded in death by
one daughter, Terrie Osborne and
one brother, Sam Robinson.
. Surviving are her husband,
Richard R. Sines of Mason; three
daughters, Cathy Geocge of Zanes·
ville~ Ohio, Debbie Jenkins of
Pomeroy, Ohio and Sherrie
Thompson of Mason; and two stepsons, Richard R. Sines, Jr. and
Timothy Sines both of Mason. Also
survivins are one sister, Dorolhy
Shaffin o( St.Paul, Va.; four
brothers, Charles Robinson of Pen·
sacola, Fla., Bob and Freddie
Robinson of Richmond, Va. and Joe
Robinson of SL Paul, Va.; and
seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at I p.m. at the
FosJesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. Leo Lash officiatins. Burial
will foUow in tbe Mei&amp;s Memory
Ganlells. Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday from 6 10 9
p.m.

Dall• E. Roush
l)a1laa Eusene RoUsh, 43, of
Henderson died Saturday, May 6,
1989 It Holzer Medical Caner in
Galllpolil after a long illness.
He wu born Oct. 16, 1!14.5 In
Hondei&amp;Oit. He llbNidcd the Viclllry

ApllsiOile Church in Point Pleasant
IIIII worbd fCI' W.Va. MallCiblc
!roll of Point PlcMant.
He wu JAwedod Ia dealh by ooe
llrolbar1Doaald B. Roush.

of $. l'llil. VL IIIII the

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Fire runs
Pomeroy Fire Department
answered one In-town alarm and
live out-of-town alarms during
the month of April, requiring 401
man hours from department
volunteers, Of the six alarms,
two were structure fires, two
were vehicle fires or accidents.
one was a brush fire and one a
mutual aid call. Fire trucks were
qrlven a total of 329 miles In
April.

Reds blank .
Mets, 3.0
Page 3

3140

•

60 MILLION t;

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1 Section, 10 Pagas

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. May 9, 198"9

SEiiiVICi oi$8Ji!:iVIE8 75TH An open lloue In celebration of the slgnlng'of the
legislation that started the Cooperative Extension
Service was held at the Meigs County office on
Mulberry Helrhts Monday. Among the muy who
stopped by to joiD In the celebratloa were two
fonner long-time extension agents, Qeneva

Veterans Memor.lal
Saturday admissions - Darla
Pickett, Pomeroy; Charles Can·
ter. Syracuse.
.
Saturday discharges- Russeli
Cullums, Amber Short, Charles
Canter.
Sunday admlsslons - Walter
Barrett Sr.. VInton; Clifford
Jacobs, Pomeroy; Evelyn
Spencer. Pomeroy; Charles
Heck, Portland; Paul Schuler,
Portland.
Sunday discharges - Hilda
Monahan.

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Danny Ray Porter. 28.
Point Pleasant, W.Va .. and Ruth
Ann Faulk. 25. Middleport; Ken·
dall Matthew Lemley, 23, Pomeroy, and Amanda Diann Autherson, 27, Pomeroy:

·:':!"B)·iG\'l'lE

Sentinel Coi'I'Mpondent
A parade to kick off the l9S9
baseball season will be held In the
village of Syracuse saturday,
beginning at 11 a.m .. according
to the Syracuse VIllage Council.
Council also announced Marty
Maynard was hired as manager
of London Pool during Monday
night's regular session.
The paradewlllformonDusky
Street behind Larry's and travel'

..

'

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NeW,PIPM

SKIN
LOTIONS

up river on·viUs:ge sireets·to·the' •
Municipal Park. Following the
para.d e ballgames will get
underway·
Members of the Syracuse
Baseball Association have been
busy painting and doing repair In
preparation for the season.
Others hired to work at London
Pool were nine life guards. Hired
were Eber Pickens, Jr., Shelly
Connolly, Lesley Carr, Annett
Cardone, David Deem, Doug

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Funding for the 1988 year, and expense equally. one-third each.
.sentinel News Staff
Mayor Hoffman says It will be
·Pomeroy Village, however .. Is
A planned decrease In state about the same this year, was not currently participating In the
funding for Meigs County's only $104,489 from state funds , $49,482 cost of the operation, and as
'public transportation system from 'federal funds, $44,722 from
Councilman James Clatworthy
the Blue Streak Cab Co. - ·and I the sale of tokens to riders, and commented "that's not fair."
the Impact of that on local $10,970 In local monies. The local
It was decided that Mayor
fundlng ' agencles was discussed monies, he reported, were pro- Hoffman will direct a letter to
at length at Monday night's vlded !rom Middleport VIllage Pomeroy Village Council remeetlng of Middleport VIllage funds, a total of $7,500, and from questing funding participation.
In other action Council gave a
CounciL
the Meigs County Commission·
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported ers, $3,500.
third and !Ina! reading and
that he had attended a meeting ·
"We need to do something adopted an ordinance prpvldlng
onAprU 27wltl\OhloDepartment . before 1990 to get In additional for an increase of burial fees
of Transporallon officials In funo:ts," Mayor Hoffman said, from $150 to $250, and lot sale (a
which It was· anno1111ced that stressing the need to look for plot for four people) from $300 to
state funds for local transit financial support from other $400. It was passed with a five to
systems will bE&gt; decreased by five sources.
· one vote, with Councilman Paul
percent in 1990.
The only source for additional Gerard giving the "no" vote.
"That five percent," he said, funds, he said. Is through raising
Council also gave a first
"can be translated Into about a the pr'lce for riders or getting reading to an ordinance which
$21.000 decrease based on this support for the system from will keep Columbia Gas Co. rates
year's figures, meaning that the Pomeroy Village which Is . not for service at the current level
l~al share will have to be
now contributing.
through Dec. 31, 1990.
Increased by a bout that
During the discussion, Council·
Discussed again at last night's
amount"
man Dewey Hqrton pointed out
meeting was the proposed emMayor Hoffman reported that that the original verbal agree
ployment of a full-lime ecoabout 84,000 persons a year use ment when the transit system nomic development director for
the cabs and that the cab was started was that Middleport,
the village. Mayor Hoffman
company Is reimbursed for rider· . Pomeroy and the Meigs County noted that Fruth Pharmacy has
ship only.
,--C~o~m~m~ls~s~lo~n::er~s:_:w~o~u~ld~~;:.!t~he:__:·~c~o~n~tl~n~ue~d~o~n:g:~21~0--,

Lavender, Scott McPllall, and
Kevin Burgess.
Pool passes will be S25 a person ·
with no family passes to be
offered. Admission at the gate
will be $2 for adults, $1.50 for
students and $1 for pre-school
children. Party rates are $50 an
hour with a minimum of two
hours.
Mayor Eber Pickens reported
that repair at the pool has been
Continued on page 10 ·

·Dr. Guttenttan addresses
fifth M'DD dinner meeting

SUAVE
SKIN

l.l11ltiN
1001.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
"Persons with disabilities
want to be part of the American
dream we all know," said Dr.
June Gutterman, director of the
Ohio Bureau of Vocational Reba·
bllltation, speaking at Monday
night's fifth annual dlnril!r for the
Meigs County Board of Mental
RetardatiOn-Developmental Dis·
abilities. The dinner was held at
Carleton !\cboolln Syracuse.
Gutterman, who has a diverse
background In the MRDD field,
pointed out In her remarks that
people with mental retardation
or developmental disabilities
"don't want to havetobudget for
three weeks just to go to
McDonalds. They want to have
something In their pockets, other
than a few pennies. They want to
be able to come and go, take
risks, make mistakes and partake In everything that we
(people without mental retarda·
lion or developmental dlsablllt·
lies) partake In wllh the same
freedom of choices."
So where does that lead the
people who lnvt!llt the public
dollars, or the parents looking for
support? she asked. "It leads us
to ask a different set of questions.
We often look at youngsters with
retardatioa and otherdlsabllltles
and say, 'what will happen to
them"! Who will be there to take
care of them." '
Instead, said Gutterman, the
parents and the professionals
and the people Investing the
public dollars sboukl be uklng
the questions of the younasters
with retardatiOn and other dl•
abiUtlt!ll, 'what will you do when
you grow up? Where will you
work? How will you take care of
youself?' Gutterman described
these u an "Important set of
questions" wblch convey an
expectation In the abilities ot the
YOU!Iiltera of whom the ques·
tlou are being uked. "Without
expectatlona, tbose questions
III!Ver ever begin tQ get · -an•

SAVIHS EVERYDAY M
COCA-COU PRODUCtS

AT RITE AID

2 UTER BOTTLE

\

· •rt••••~!!L·
HfRR'S

POTATO CHIPS
6 QZ.IAG .

99.C

Nolan, 1938 to lHS,
c. E. Biake~~lee, 1940 to
1974. They were join~' her by John Rice,
extension ar;ent slnc'e · Blakeslee's retirement,
staltdlnr;, and Cindy Oliveri, extension agent,
home economics, since 1984 to • look over a
scrapbook of newspaper clippings of activities
tbrough the year.

Plan parade to kick off '89
hliSe~all season in Syracuse
CROW ·

IIEIItiEil
LADY SPEED
STD.OR
SPEED DRY
11111.1.-1111
1.5 oz.

Seeks licences ,

_......._ -- --7.-- -

'

Impact of reduced
transit funds topic of
Middleport Council

utJIHD
A1171&amp;111
, oz.

PTOtomeet
Syracuse PTO will meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday evening. Band and .
vocal selections by the 4th, 5th
and 6th graders will be
presented. ·
Dance alated
Round and square dancing will
be featured Friday evenillg,
from 8 to 11 p.m., at lhe Senior·
Citizens Center Jn Pomeroy.
Music will be by the True
Country Ramblers. The public Is
. welcome. Bring snacka for the
snack table.
AAudAI·MH
The Pomeroy grDIIJII of Alcobollcs Anonymous and AI· Anon
. wlllmeetThunday, 7p.m.,at the
Sacred Heart Churcb, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.
MeedqtoaJcM '
There will be a P.l'O mll!etlng
and art fair top'fht (Mqllday) , 7
p.m., at RlverYitll' Elemeatary.
The public llln\ltllld to attend.

..

't
Vot.40, No.3
CoPI'tltlhted 11188

Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T ............. ............. ....... 34%
Ashland on ........................ .42
Bob Evans .......................... 15Y.
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co ................. .. 16
Federal Mogul... ........... .... .. 52%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................51%
Heck's ................................. ')~.
Key Centurion .................. ..13¥.
Lands' ·End ......................... 30%
Limited Inc .... ·.. .................. 29%
Multimedia Inc .................... 97
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers.. .............. l6Y.
Shoney's Inc ........................ 9\i
Wendy's Inti... ..................... 5%
Worthington Ind ................. 2l'Ji,
(Bob Evans Farms Is ex
dividend today.)

Announcements

'

L..-.:---........:..:===::::.L.:========..L...---~==:......:.._J
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'

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

Likens and Eileen Likens of Hen·
derson and Vuginia BirchJield or
Poinl Pleasant two brothers, Curt
Roush of Logan, Ohio and Dencil
Roush ri !'oint Pleasant; one
grandson, TJ. Riffte of Point
Pleasant and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be I :30
p.m. at ViciCI')' Apastotic Chwch
wilh Pastor MKe Chapman ofliciat·
ins. Burial will follow in Concord
Cemewy in HendeiSOII. Friends
may call at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home Monday lio\n 7-9 p.m. or at
tbe churth one hQur prior to sez.
vices.

'

Low In mid 40s tonight. Chance
of rain 80 percent. Wednesday,
mostly cloudy. Chuce ol show.
ers. High In the mid 50s. Chance
of rain 40 percent.

Pick 4

•

Hospilal news

·• . .

Pick3
435

RITE AID PHARMACISTS
FlU OVER
..

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Ohio Lottery

Stocks

-----Area deaths----Dewey W. Jones
Dewey w. Jones. 68. m'

recognition given officers or the
Women's Auxiliary.
Hospital Administrator Scott
L11cas commented that lie Is
extremely pleased with the
strong public support shown at
Sunday's open house and particularly In ,view of the weather
which was not conducive to
people leaving the warmth and
comfort of their homes.

'

~,J11N 1 ill'~

SENIOR
CITIZENS

'liTE AID DISCdUNT PHARMACY.
306 UST UIN· STRED
NIDOY, OHIO
PIIAIMACY PHONE: 992-2586

.~

'
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wered," she said.
jobs and Integration In the
"The challenge as we build community, must be expanded,
toward the future Is to begin to said Gutterman. Training must
ask these dlf!eren t kinds of be provided so that people with
questions and take a hard look at special needs can work In the
the expectations we have. What comq~unlty, and then follow -up
are 'our' expectations, and more support must be provided to keep
Importantly, what are '\heir' these people working In the
'(the youngsters who are dis- community.
abled) expectations for their own
The biggest change we can all
lives."
make, said Gutterman, Is to gl~e
GuttE&gt;rman noted throughout the persons with mental retarda·
her remarks that the "key to tlon and developmental dlsablll·
building. a better future for the ties that we work with, the right
mentally retarded and develop- · to make choices and take risks.
men~ly disabled" citizens of
"And we can do this today
Ohio, as well as the entire United because the mechanisms to do
Slates, "Is change."
this are In place." ·
She pointed out that until about
Gutterman commended Ca·
20 or so years ago, the way to help rleton School-Meigs Industries
people with mental retardation for Its emphasis and commit·
or developmental dlsab!Utles tment "toward quality and con'
was to Institutionalize them In tlnued ~owth In the community;
large facilities, In pastoral pia· allowing more options and chol·
ces, where their basic needs ces for everyone In Meigs
could be met. "But that wasn't County."
good enough," she said, and
Robert Eason, president of the
flitally, parents began saying Meigs MRDD Board, extended
they didn't want their children thanks to other board members
Institutionalized. They wanted for their time and energies spent
their children at home with them, In helping to enhance the Jives of
partlcl;&gt;atlng In their commun· Meigs County's citizens with
lty, and finally, community· mental retardation and develop-.
based support for the mentally mental dlsab!Utltes. He also
retarded and developmentally stressed that It Is the continued
close relationship of many of the
disabled came Into being.
But community-based support, county's various .agencies that
help ·to provide the quality
services at Carleton School·
-Meigs Industries "wltbln the
budget we have to ·work with."
Eason shared a favorite quote.
"Quality II never an accident.
It's always the result of.intelll·
gent effort."
In brief clllllng remarkl, Ca·
rleton SchoOl Superintendent Lee
Wedemeyer commended theCa·
rleton Scbool·MeJ&amp;I Jnduatrles
penonnel for their wllllnpns to
help make the dreams of the
youngsters and adults they work
with come true. ' Wedemeyer
cited examples of staff
membera, on their own Ume,
without belni told or asked,
Continued on pare 10

•

UNITED EFFORT- Three U.S. Congreasmen
joined hands on the Silver Memorial Bridge over
lhe Ohio River yesterday as a symbol of joining
efforts to complete the four lanes oa US 35 In
GaiDa County, Ohio, and Mason County, 'West
'

VIrginia. (Left to
Bob McEwen, 8-0hlo, and Bob Wille, D·W.Va.,
expressed their concerns and plans to work as a
team In Washington to complete the four·lue
highway. (OVP photo by Margaret Caldwell)

.

U. S. Congressmen say ·cooperation
needed to make highway .link reality
"

By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStalf

ON THE SILVE{{ -MEMORIAL
BRIDGE Three U.S. con·
gressmen expressed cooperation
adrnist the roar of tmiler trucks and
amused glances of truck drivers
here Monday afternoon thai a four·
lane hi&amp;hway for Mason and Gallia
counties will become a reality.
Standing a! the state line of West
Vaginia-Ohio, U.S. Reps. Bob
WJSe, D-W.Va.; Bob McEweit, R·
Ohio; and Clarence Miller, R-Ohio,
held hands togetller while the
steady Ohio River churned below
to symbolize a worlting plan
tbey 've put together 10 get the mil·
lions of dollars needed 10 build the
highway. A comDiete four·Q
highway through lfie two counties
lw been a lons-aougbt dream for

more t1m1 30 yean.
Miller, the oldest of the U.S.
conan-nen IIIII fll1lcq milloriiJ
member of the ~ Haole
ApjAoprialions Comm-llid the
stroke of COO(lllrati011 reminded him
wben community leaders went 10
Washingtoa to sedt money for the
very bridge they were standing 011
in the 8ftcrm8lli of the Silver
Briii&amp;O di'8• in 1967 whldl
lrarllpCirlallo between
Point Pleant IIIII Kanauga.

levered

..That bridge went up

faaer: than

any other." Miller, then in his first
year in Congress, recalled Monday..
w~ said the four•lane will
elitrliilate a traffic bottleneck and
gene~ate jobs for tbe two counties.
Wise and others were instrumental
in tbe ·passage of a $200,000
feasibility .study for the West Vaginia section of tbe four-~ i!f
Congress last year. Miller saJd the
three-phase plan for lhe complete
four-lane through Gallia Cowlly is
done and now the money mUSt be
obtained from !he federal highway
1rust fund. Gasoline taxes fuel the
fund.
.
. 'Together with local, state and
federal· agreement we will move·
forward," said McEwen, a member
of the House public works commit·
tee. Wlso said the lhrco con·
greasmen's goal in WashingtOn is 10
ma1ce the four-Jane "• 10p primty.•

bolh states.
- Encouraging mutual efforts
by state governments and citizens
committees in both states to work
together for the completion of the
project.
''The feasibililystudy will look
· at tbe ecooomic benefits and the
site of !he road," Wise said, adding
tbe project can 'I even begin wilhout
tbe study which was BJllli'OVed by
Plcaident Reaprt before he left
office. Wrso ensineenxt the study's
passage in the House and then
received support for tbe projec1 in
the U.S. Senate from Sens. Robert
C. Byrd, 0-W.VL, and Jay Rock·
efeller, 0-W.Va.
During discussion Monday at the
Mason County Courthouse in Point

~t, Boclde S~in, Mason
CoUJuy AN Chlmber of Com·
anerc;e ....dent. llld ~ Bone,
The workin&amp; plan incfudea:
prel"-ol the Greene Caunty
- Seold'W wlutfev« fimciiDa is uCom-~1111!!!1!:!!!~, -IIJIIC)illed u the
nee
for tbo
aillliies ~ U...,f(l' the follow-up
and PgiRI !of IIIJ!Ies in Ohio wort.
NOidy 3QO r !'"'all from bod!
IIIII Weit~
- Sendhls a 1ellll' aiped by lidel olllll Oblo RMr llld lito
WtSe, Mcl!wen ll!d Miller request- jOVI .,,. ......... ttl """'
ing lllppCirt far die DIOleot tioll die
leadenlllp of tbe
BoUle Publle
Works and Transponatlon Commit· COURdeiiiiDlllll
tee IIIII the rele¥antltllx:ommiDccl. highway It a Dell'
- CocRIInldnl il1l lfrocll 10 ft!C*lq. The Jl&lt;tC*d
secure the nec:ellliy 1111e and elude . . . Mil lint liom
federal fuadina for tho project in
Conlin~ on page 10

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Commentary_
· The Daily Sent.inel
111 Cotu11Kreet
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOl'ED TO THE INTEREIITII OF TU: MEIGS-MABON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETI'

·.

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

General Maaacer

Publsher

PAT WBITEHEAD

AIIWam Publlsher/CootroUer
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to ecllllllg and must be stpecl with
name, address and telepbone number. No unalped letters wUl be published. Letters should be In good taste, addreoslllg lasues, not per10nall·
ties.

Bush to reveal
East-West policy goals
By HELEN THOMAS
..
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. UPJ While HoUIIe Reporter
WASHINGTON - · President Bush has five commencement . ·
addresses lined up this month In which he Is expected to !lnallydetlne
his foreign policy.
.
The nation Is pretty well apprised of the president's direction In
domestic affairs. which Is basically to continue President Reagan's
economic Policies but to exhibit more compassion for social
programs.
In selecting education and environment as two themes he hopes to
stress In his presidency , Bush has shown that he believes the federal
government has a vital role to play and must dig deeper Into Uncle
Sam' s pockets to display his concern.
.
But In foreign policy, notably East-West relations, Bush has hung
back, awaiting the outcome of military and diplomatic agency
reviews that are just being completed.
When he stands on the same stage with French President Francois
Mltterrand at Boston University on May 21, when both men will
receive honorary degrees, he Is expected to outline the role of the
United States In a changing world.
Meanwhile, there Is some contusion as to the administration's view
of the dramatic pollth:al changes being undertaken In the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europe as to their Impact and. permanency.
Defense Secretary Richard Cheney predicted that Soviet leader ·
Mikhail Gorbachev would fall In his e!!orts to transform Soviet
society wtth his more liberal policies of perestroika ..
He told Cable News Network: "If I had a guess today, I would guess
he ultimately would fall. That Is to say, he will not be able to reform
the Soviet economy to turn It Into an efficient modern society."
Alter that Cheney speculated that Gorbachev "Is likely to be
replaced by somebody who will be far more hOstile than he's been In
terms of his attitude towards the West."
Asked about the Cheney statements, Bush said, "We want
perestroika to succeed."
A spUt In views In the administration Is not necessarily bad and may
lead to healthy debate In the Inner circle. But when top officials speak
with dllterent voices and the schism becomes apparent to the outside
world, It could lead to confusion.
Bush has created a vacuum In taklnghts flrstfewmonthslnofflceto
mull over future strategy. It could be a waiting game to see II
Gorbachev Is able to move ahead with his major goal of bringing his
country Into the 20th century even as It Is coming to an end.
The world Is moving ahead without signals from the leader of the
West. But to maintain that leadership Bush has to get on the playing
field. So far only Gorbachev has run with the·ball.
The growing Independence or Weot Germany In spllltlng with
NATO on the modernization of short-range nuclear battlefield
weapons may be a manifestation of the !allure of Bush to enunciate
his future goals. In East-West relations.
•
West Germany's Chancellor Helmut Kqhl, taking note of the
groundswellln Germany lor more rapprochement with the East and
looking tor poUtlcal survival, Is refusing to budge on his demand tor a
delay In the modernization of short-range missiles.
Two summits are coming up where the Western leaders will be able
to thresh out these and other problems. Bush wlllfty to Europe May 26
tor a weeklong tour that will Include a summit meeting In Brussels,
Belgium, to celebrate the 40th anniversary of NATO.
He also will be attending his first Economic Summit meeting with
leaders of the other Industrialized nations -a meeting that usually
turns out to deal with more political than economic problems.
Whether the differences that are beginning to crop up will be
papered over or solved remains to be seen.

Berry's World
CeM'tiR f01t

MINTEMOO
APPIC.'TlOM

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Pomeloy Midclrport, Ohio
Tu!Jdoy, Moy 9, 1989

TUNIS, Tunllla - The troublemaker&amp;. Suddenly, they
hundreds or Palestinians wllo look like martyrs.
have died In the bloody "lntlf·
Arafat gives no Indication that
ada" chose martyrdom, accord· their rock-throwing protest will
lng to Yaslr Ara!at. For them, It end until Israeli troops are
Is better lodlewlthstones In their withdrawn.
We Interviewed the chairman
hand In a land they call home
than to be massacred In a foreign of the Palestine Uberatlon Or·
refugee camp.
ganlzatlon recei~r tight.
In Ararat's mind, the Intifada, security. It wa ·
a.m. In
rapping
or uprising, In the Israeli· Tunis, and Araf
occupied West Bank and Gaza up his business day.
Strip, did not start 16 months ago,
Since December 1987, the
as It Is popularly reckoned. world has focused on the uprising
According to Arafat, It started In .In the occupied territories, but
1986 when Palestinians re - Arafat's memory goes back to
sponded to his call for demon- massacres of Pale~tbtlans In
strations to protest repeated Beirut refugee camps beginning
attacks on Palestinians In refu.le In 1982 when the PLO was trying
camps In Lebanon. The demon- to maintain a stronghold In
strations. were hardly worth a Lebanon. "Unbelievable," he
spot on the evening news. But said. "It Is a tragedY. So we are
now the Intifada makes continu- ted up being treated as rats, only
.
ous headllns and the Palestinians good lor sniping."
are no longer dismissed as · The PLO rallied Its supporters
c

in '86

Jack Anderson and Dale Van 14tta
to demonstrate against those
attack&amp;. The demonstrations,
which Ararat said cost 39 Palest!·
nlan lives In the first part oU987,
went generally unnoticed until
the wide acale rock throwing
bea:an on the West Bank In
December 1987. Israeli soldlen
r eaponded •with bullets and
beatings.
~
Ararat says the p~s has only
picked up on " this last wave" of
demonstrations because "It Is
the longest, the moat organized
and Involves the whole of the
occupied territories."
~ust as the .;late the Intifada ·
began Is disputed by Ararat, so Is ·
the list of the dead. Israel has
acknowledged a little more !hail
400 killed on the Palestinian side.
Ararat says he has the names of

671 dead.
The Israelis may not have
reported tOO.. deaths because .
the Paleatlnlans themselves kept
the names ~ret. U a Paleatlntan dies In a hospital, the death
Ia reported. II be or she limps
home and dies, Palestinian !ami·
Ilea hlgb the truth. They lear
reprisals from Israelis who have
beeil known to bulldoze t~
hornell of suspected protesters.
Ar11!at' s figures are a lao In·
!lated with the names of elderly
Palestinians who die, not of a
,bullet, blit of a heart attack
brought dn by a protest. For the
Palestinians·, those are martyrs
too.
··
'
.
·Ararat also keeps the names of :
32,000 who be says have been.·
· InJured durlnl the llltl!ada -an '
estimated 5,500 O(them suffering&gt;
disabling !nJurlef IIUCh as ION ot :
llmbl. Atop the pUe of papers .•
..Va!at was read1q before we ·
arrived wu an application .ent ·
. to the PLO to help fund a factory
In Bethlehem to make artificial
arms and legs.
The PLO leader was also
&amp;Orting through a stack of letters
from Palestinian sympathizers'
around the world; He talked
· about one letter, It Included a
check from aJi African contrac- ·
tor, "telling me to use II to buy a ·
bulldozer lor my people so !bey
can eruah stolll!ll, to use more
l-ocka to continue 0\11' 1truqle."
Ararat knows the Intifada has .
stirred ~lean sympathies ;
too, Including thole of some ·
American Jewa normally devoted to llrael. ''The American'
people need to understand why
our masses - our children and
our women - ' are contlllulDB
these 16 months In th!J last wave
of the Intifada. They are In need
of !r.eedom, to be free and not be
slaves In their own land," he
said. "We are not slaves. We are
huma~ beings."

America's global CU)ture _____;B;_e_n_~_at_ten_b_er=--g
movies. That's up 41 percent just
since ~985.
·
If you think movies are oft the
· charts, cons
levlslon. "Dal·
las" and "Hill St t" are on the
air everywhere. Thl
eserles,
compUed by the Security Pacific
Merchant Bank, shows the sales
of American programming t.o
foreign broadcasters:
1987 - $1.0 billion
1988- $1.3 billion (estimated)
1989- $p billion (projected)
1990·- $2.3 billion (projected)
.BY comparisOn, In 1988 AmerIca paid about $100 million lor the
rights to foreign movies and
television programming com- ·
blned. (The ratio Is about 25 to 1.)
There are.stmllar reports from
the music, book and VCR busl·
nesses. Foreigners listen to our
music, read our books, watch our
tapes. We don't much read,
· watch or listen to their stu!!.
Is It that Americans are
provincial, Insular, parochial
boors? More likely Is that we
have a taste lor just what the rest
. of the world now enjoys: Amerl·
can popular culture. American
. mass culture- lor all Its Ills and

Hanging up on

all Its glory - has become the ~verywhere . are moving Into.
only broad-based global culture middle-class brackets that allow Y
there Is.
· ·
· some time and money to enjoy
That I act has so.me
entertainment.
ramifications. .
'lJ!Ird: Forelgnersaretrylngto .
First: Perhaps we ought to buy some of our popular enter·
stop complaining about "foreign· talnment companies. Germans
ers buying up America." Are you own ·nou&amp;l.e day; Sony now owns
concerned that the oltlce build· CBS Records. Japanese interests
lng In which you work Is owned by are looking at HollywQod atudlos.
a Japanese bank? Don't be. The But the sale of an American •
building Is going to stay right entertainment company Is differwhere It Is; you'll never know the ent from other takeovers. FordiHerence. But how would you elgn companies don't seek to
like It II you turned on your replace American popular cui·
television and saw Japanese ture with their own. They are
sitcoms? Or went to the movies . buying In order to make money
and saw Japanese feature fltms? by selling more American cuiThat's real Invasion, and more ture to more places. As Jack
Important than who made the Valenti of the Motion Picture
widgets In your car. Other , Association of America says,
nations fear American cultural "tntertalnment Isn't fungible.
penetration. Sometimes they try · You can't clone an American
to repel It via "cultural prlitec· movie. It must be Infused with ·
tlonlsm." Some Europeans are American talent, or It won• t!eel
trying that now. But, sooner or American.
later, It becomes pervasive.
And finally this: We are the
Second: This trend Is likely to-~msot culturally potent nation the
grow. Cable and satellite televl·
orld has ever seen, 11n becom·
slon are expanding as Europe
g even more so. Is Is possible
moves toward economic tnte- that such a natton, or a cultur, Is
greatlon In 1992. More people ' In decline? lsn'llt more likely to
be In ascendancy?

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long-distan~e

·'trickery' ·
Robert Walters

ate $11 billion In annual revenues trickery."
Estimates of the number of
- are lured Into designating the
AOS companies as ihe sole AOS companies nationwide public lntere~t group Ill Washingproviders of long distance ser- ran1e from as few as 110 to more. ton, D.C., baa waged an aggresvice from their telephones by the than 200. Some of the largest s lve campaign to warn telephone
promise of generous comllslons. !Irma are headquartered In users about abuHI In the AOS:
To produce su!!lctent revenues Texas, Dllnoll, Florida, Oregon Industry. Rep. Jamea Cooper,'
·
0 -Tenn., has Introduced remeto psy those commissions and and Maryland.
The
AOS
companies
now are dlallell&amp;lallon In Congress.
earn substantial profits lor themBut the Federal Communica· .
selves, the AOS companies typl· seeking to extend their opera·
cally charge telephone users tiona by algnlng up as cuatomers tlons Commlulon, whlcb ought ·
three, tour and five times more the owners of re~taurants, bars • to be protectllll the public,
per call than the respected l&amp;d other netghborboild retail recently declined to regulate
establilbments wltb one or two AOS rates or bllllq practices. It ·
companies.
held, In effect, that exorbitant •
In December 1987, the Ala· · pay phones.
The
Telecommunlcatlona
Reratea are justifiable If they ·are
bama PSC ordered the nine AOS
search
and
Action
Center,
a
dlaciOied In the future .
providers then doing business In
the state to bait all operations.
Although the a1ency has since
allowed one firm to return under
cl01e surveillance, state of!lctals
By Vatted Pr- lllternatlou.l
remain rightfully leery of the
Industry.
Today Is Tuesday, May 9, the 129th day of 1989 with 236 to follow .
Connecticut, Kentucky, North
The moon Ia waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
Carolina and Mlssl.sslppl are
The morning star Ia Satura.
among the stateJ that also have
The evenlq atara are Mercury, Venu and Jupiter.
generally baruled AOS providers,
Thole bon oa thll dale are under the algn ot Taurus. They Include ··
wbtle South Carollaa, GeorJia,
abolltloallt Johll Browa 1111100, SeottllllliOftllat Sir J - Bart1e,
VirllJIIa and Florida aulhorol ''Peter Pan,"ln 1180, Howard Carter; theEIYPlologlat wbo
are 81110111 the ataa that have
dileowred the tamb of Tutankhamen, In 1813, lnduatrtallst Henry J . '
taken pwdUve actlona.
Kalaer 1111882, Spanllll phUOsopber JOlt Ortep y Gaallllln 1883, TV
I11 allarlbly worded order !hat
Jouraalllt Mille \VIlllce bllfJI (ap n), tellnll Champion Rlebard '
(l..oni distance calli ptac:.d bluntly 8I!CUII!CI tile AOScompan• ''Paacllo''
lilt Ill, actcnA.Ibert Film)' andGiellda '
tram aboat ot the l,ttiO pey . 11!1 of "fraud," the TeiiD'U?e J~ botll11119861111911
(aplll) IIIII Caldlee Berte~~ In 1NII (qe43), '
lllepllo.... at Ollt of the nattoa'a PSC last year said: ''The bull·
ud Ac ..,....wtller Billy Joel In 11149 (ap 40).
•
-~ aJrporta, BartaaMt In· . _ practleel of the AOS com·
teruttollal Ill Atlaata, are paalll are uaetbleal .at beat,
Oil IIIII date llllllltory:
,
' •• lid by 111 AOI ~..;lij. lltarll at wonL ... AOS earrlln
Clirtleapller
CoiUmbulllllsall
from
Spain on hl.s fourtb alld
·11sa.
TIM mtMJI1 1 of tbole
do DOC eompete for hulfa 111 . flail fOY8P to the New World.
.... - 1ft Ill lliii!PM ....... They proftt fram lporlllce aa4
I
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TALLADEGA, Ala. (NEAl Telephone users In Alabama and
a lew other states enjoy a special
benefit not available elsewhere
In the nation - they do not have
to risk being gouged by "alternative opera,tor service''
companies.
Almost 1 Y.. years ago, the
Alabama Pi~bllc Service Com·
mission threw the entire Industry
out of the state after receiving
hundreds of complaints about
AOS providers Imposing Inflated.
charges for the long distance
·calls they handled.
AOS companies diHer from
ATI:T, MCI, US Sprint and other
reputable telephOne toll coR:~paD­
Ies In one very Important respect: They -apeclallze In charglnl more rather than less.
They offer-their services not to
residential or busllless subscribers but to the operators of botels
and motels, bas and railroad
stations, truck · stDps, alrportl,
bollpltall, pras and coilele
donnltor)el wbole telepboi&amp;
are used by transients, vllttors
and other lacking accet1 to
lltmllttve service.

Today~

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Jackson, Vinton County cop
sixth.M_eigs Invitational meet
.,

Pege- :Z- The Daily Sa itiiMil

Arafat says·real intifada began

The most recent figures
showed the U.S. trade deficit
growing deeper again. The usual
suspects have asked that AmerIca Is a debtor · nation, that
everyone everywhere Is outcompeting us, that we're not
Innovative enough or productive
enough, that Japan Is a rising
sun, that America Is a setting
sun.
But lor another view of how the
world spins, consider some other
trade facts and ligures:
in France and movie theaters
basically · show French movies
and American movies.
In Japan the movie theaters
basically show Japanese movies
and American movies.
In Japan they show almost no
French movies. In France they
show almost · no Japanese
movies.
In American the movie theaters bas lcally shOw American
movies.
What's going on? American
movies - from uRambo" to
' 'Rain Man' ' -are very popular
around the world. In 1988, foreigners pald$1.1 billion dollar for
the . rights to show American

·~

(Jackson) 10'6"
(Nelsonville) 1:06.6
B:v DAVE 11AB1U8
ROCK SPRINGS - The alxth
1600 Meter Run - 1. M.Staller
300 Meter Low H11rdlel - 1.
annual Melp Invitational Track (Warren) 4: 52.5, 2. Garrod (Alex- Michelle Crouse (VInton County!
Meet was held tbll past Saturday ander) t : 56. 3. Doran (Nelson· 49.3, 2. Jennifer Taylor (Melp)
afternoon despite cold weather, ville) 4:59.9
52.0, 3. Hahn (Jackson! 55.1
brisk winds and Intermittent
400 Meter Relay - 1. Jackson
1m Meter Run - 1. Shelly ·'
showers.
47.5, 2. VInton County 48.7, 3.
Mark&amp; (Warren) 2: 34.5, 2. Hart
Greg Harris of Jacll&amp;on and Meigs 48,9
(Federal Hocking) 2: 41.6 3.
Michelle Crou11e of VInton County
400Meter Dash -1. Jim Monk Flanl1an (Warren) 2:49.7
were the Individual Champions (Nelsonville) 54.1, 2. Mills
200 Meter Dash - l .Gina
and led t!Mrlr re~pectlve teams to (Warren) 55.7, 3. Gandee (VInton Prater (Vinton County) 28.2.
· Championships. Harris finished Countyl 56.8
2.Rose (Jackson) 29.0,
the meet with 32~· potnts winning
300 Meter Low Hurdles - 1.
3. Speakman (VInton County)
three lndtvldual events while Tom Campbell (Nelsonville)
29.1
Crouse also finished wtth 32Y., U.9, 2. Barnett (Jackson) 43.3.
3200 Meter Run - 1. Stacie
points wlnnlna three Individual 3.Campbell (VInlon Co.) 44.1
Glasa (Federal Hocking) 13:35.1,
events and taklnghometwomeet
1m Meter Run· Tom Reid 2. Landman (VInton County)
record&amp;.
/VInton· Col 2:10.5, 2. Doran 14:23.3, 3. Ridge (Jackaon) '
Crouse broke Amy Dixon re- (Nelsonville) 2: 13.8, 3. Hall 14: 36.1
cord In the long jumpwlthajump .-!Meigs) .2: 18.4
1600 Meter Relay - l .Warren '
ot 16'5" and tied DIXon's 100
200 Meter Run - Greg Harris Local 4; 30.6, .2. Feder al.Hocklng
meter low hurdles time of 15.8. (Jackson) 23.9, 2. Barnett (Jack· 4:40.3, 3. Jackson 4:57.7
JODI Tarter ef Melp laaDcll the bateD to·alater nataed MCOad Ill &amp;be event willa a time of : IU.
Dixon from Nelsonville set both son) 25.1, 3. Mills (Warren) 25.1
Jelllllfer Tqlor Ill the tol meter reliQ'. Melp
record&amp; In the 1985 meet held the
3200 Meter Run 1.
Sports briefs
long jump record of 16'4". The McCioughln (Warren) 11:00.6, 2.
record&amp; by Crouse were the only Cochran (Jackson) 11:13.7, 3.
Football
two records broken Saturday, Stuewer (Jackson! 11:26.2,
Gerald Riggs and Earnest
and the weather no doubt had a
1600 Meter Relay - 1. Nelson- Byner, the running backs aclot to do wtth that..
ville 3: 52.3, 2. Vinton Co; 3: 53, 3.
quired to revive.the Waahlngton
Finishing second In the boys Jackson 3:56.7
Redaklns' dormant rushing at·
'' events was Nelsonville with 96
Glrll Team Rellul&amp;a
tack, reported tor the club's
points and the Warren Local
1. Vinton County 124, 2. Warren silt-day mlnicamp Monday. .. .
CINCINNATI {UPil- Cincin- Warrors flnshed a distant third Loacl 95, 3. Meigs 92 4. Jackson The attorney lor former Nenati Reds Manager Pete Rose with 68 points. For the girls the 76, 5.Federal Hocking 75, 6. braska football star Johnny
says be doubts that a report on runner-up was Warren Local Eastern 17, 7.Nelsonville 6 .
Rodgers asked a panel of appelhis gambling Investigation will wtth 95 points, slipping past the
Glrll lndlvlual ReluUs
late judges to overturn Rodgers'
Discus - 1. Jennifer Siegel 1987 felony conviction resulting
be turned over to Comm IsS loner hos I Marauders with 92 points.
Boy1 Team Relulh
(Warren) 87'5", 2. Bunch from a clash with a cable
A. Bartlett Glamattl this week.
1. Jackson 132, 2. Nelsonville (Meigs) 86'6", 3. Pierson WedRose was asked tor his
television nian on Rodgers' utll·
"thoughts" about statements a 96, 3. Warren Local 68, 4.VInton era! Hocking I 80'4"
tty pole. Rodgers, nattily dressed
Co. 52, 5. Meigs 110, 6. Federal
lew days ago from the commisHigh Jump- 1. Lori Wllllar!ls
In a navy blue pln·strlped suit
sioner's office that Investigator , Hocking 40, 7. Alexander 32, 8. (Federal Hocking! 4'10" , 2. and r!laroon shirt. sat eating In
Eastern 23.
Stemple (Warren) 4'6" , 3. Pier- the back row of the court while
John Dowd would be making a
Bo:ys Individual Results
son (Federal Hocking) 4'4"
report to Glamattl this week.
his attorney told the three judges
Shot Put - 1.Jo&lt;ll Custer that the running back had not
"I have no thoughts about It
Discus "7 l.Heath o:Neal
(Jackson) 2. Monk (Nelsonville (Melgs)-30'2", 2. Hale !VInton been given a lair trial.
because I don't believe II," Rose
136'3"
3. Cummings (Nelson· County) 28' .6'4 " , 3. Close (Jack:
said.
Golf
ville)
134'11".
son) 27'7'A"
Asked to elaborate, Rose ju~t
Mark Calcavecchla leads the
High Jump - l.Mike Martin
Long Jump - 1. Michelle U.S. Ryder Cup standings with
said, "I don't think It's going to
happen. ';
(Eastern) 6'1", 2. Murphy lEast· Crouse (VInton County! 16'5"
640 points. The top 10 point
(new record!, 2. Jody Taylor leaders through the 1989 PGA
The commissioner's office an- ern) 5'6", 3. Caruthers (Meigs!
5*4"
(Meigs) 15 ' 3%", 3.Bunn Championship qualify for the
nounced seven weeks ago that an
Shot Put - 1. Chad Cummins (Warren) 15'1Y.,"
team, along with the PGA
Investigation was underway con3200 Meter Relay- l.Warren champion and a player desig(Nelsonville) 48'8Y..". 2. Monk
cerning "serious allegations"
(Nelsonville 46' Y.z", .3.0'Neal 10: 49.9, 2. Federal Hocking nated by the Ryder team captain.
Involving Rose. People who have
(Jackson! 43'10"
·11: 16.2, 3. VInton County 11: 19.8
talked to Investigators have said
The U.S. team competes against
Long Jump - l.Greg Harris
100 Meter Low Hurdles - 1. a European team Sept. 22-24 at
that they were quizzed about
(Jackson I 20'2'", 2. Mayle &lt;Fed· Michelle CrQuse !VInton County)
Sutton Cold field, England . .
Rose's gambling and business
era!
Hocking)
19'5",
3.
English
15.8
(new
record)
2.
Hahn
(Jack·
Rounding out the top 10 are Tom
affairs.
son1
17.2,
3.
Jennifer
.
Taylor
rMetgs&gt;
t9'0"
Kite, Chip Beck. Curtis Strange,
Should Rose be found to have
3200
Meter
Relay
1.
NelsonKen Green, Fred Couples. Payne
. gambled on baseball games, he
(Me!gsl 17.4
ville 9:09, 2. Jackson 9: 11.5, 3.
800 Meter Relay - 1. VInton Stewart, Steve Pate, Mark
could be suspended from base·
Warren 9:14.5
County 1: 55.3, 2. Federal Hock· O'Meara and Paul Azlnger.
ball for one year. Should he be
100 Meter Dash - . 1. Greg lng 1:56.2, 3. Jackson 1: 56.3,
. JENNIFER Tqlor of Melp Ill the 111'11101 mM8r low hurdles.
found to have gam bled on Reds
Harris (Jackaon) 11.2. 2. Mills
1600 Meter Run -1. Sarah Hall
games, he could be banned from
JenaUer !lnllhed Ill aec:ond with allmeollllellOndl. The laoalleun
The Daily Sentinel
&lt;Warren! 12.1. 3.Barnett (Jack· (Warren) 6: 23.0, 2. RatUf! (Vln·
baseball for ll!e.
flnlalled Ill lblrd out of oevet1 leune Ill the eveal.
sonl 12.1
·
ton County 1 6: 28.4. 3. Redovian
(VIPIIIf. . .)
·
r---::----;---:--;------,
.100 Meter Low Hurdles - 1. (Eastern) 6:45.4
Spoa18 briefs
1· Tom . Campbell (Nelsonville) 400 Meter Relay - 1.VInton
Publllbal ....,. llflon- MDodly
16.6, 2.Kldd (Jackson! 18.6. County 55.1, 2. Melp 55.4. 3.Fed·
lhrcuP ' Fridoy, Ul Court St., )'o.
3.Harlow
(Warren)
18.7
eral
Hocktng
55.8
AI hens County residents Ronald Clay (47:55)
mlrOf, Oblo, by tl!o Olllo Vall17 Put&gt;.
Baaeball .
.
400
Meter
Dash
1.
Shelly
Pole
Vault
-1.
James
Sauvage
lllblna
Com-/Multimedia, lac.,
claimed three of tht&gt; lour firstFemale
NBC and the U.S. Baseball
I'UmerOf,
Olllo f5'Ne, PI!. tft.mf. S..
Marks
&lt;Warren)
1:05.4,
2.
,Brun12'0",
2.
Mayle
(Fed·
(Meigs)
·
place finishes In the French City
U-18- Sharon Stinson (48:451 ,
Federation announced a multi·
&lt;01111 elMo pctlqe ..ld at I'Om•oy,
tln
(Jackson!
1:06.5.
3.Dean
Run. held Saturday In Galllpolls. Joanle Muriate (48: 54)
·
Olllo.
year agreemen I lor the network era! HocklnJtl 11'0", 3. Argo
In the lOK run. New Marshfield
311-U- Kim Muncy 145: 421
to carry telecasts of amateur
Mlmblr: tl!lllecl Preoo latenatloaal.
resident Ed Sams took first for
..m..IO.UyPitotAuoelaiiO!IIIIdtbe '
baseball leading to the 1992
the men with a time of 34:46. 5K ap II'OUP wlnaera
Olympics. NBC will broadcast
OllloNiw
-~~~~~
- - -1 1
Fllw_, _ _ ,
while Randy Spobn of Oak Hill
Male
one or two games a year
-New-.
'133 Tlllrcl A-ut.
took second with a lime of 36:36.
New yon,
Yon10017.
1&amp;-uder - Nat Gray (21: 50),
Involving the U.s. national team.
Sara Davis of The Plains was the Kevin Walker 129: 08)
SportsCbannel America, NBC's
first woman to finish the race.
11·14-'- Nathan Baloy (19:441 ,
cable partner. will carry as
to
'I1Ie DollY ~~e~~-.
m Collrl
St.,
I'OimiAITEII:
-coming rn with at time of 38:53. David Morgan (26: 031
I'UaiaatJif,
ado
.
.
.
Capital
University's
baseball
The
other
section
of
playoff
many as 10 other games.
Demaris Crawford or Millwood,
diamond will be the acene of the action will be at Ohio Dominican.
15·11 - John Bowen &lt;21: 061
~II'TION IIATIII
w .va,, came In behind Davis
tt-tf - Ron Powell (19: 19) ,
NAIA District 22 collegiale base· Oglesby said. Gate charges lor
.
.
, Contor
....... - · ~.lO
one weet
..................................
with a time of 40: 45.
Darren Hayes (19: 53)
ball playoff game between Rio both sites are $1.50 lor adults and
One Moath ........................... ......
Marcus Bess of Maysville. Ky..
11-18- Mike Malloy &lt;21: 161
one Year ................................. m.eo
Grande and Malone on Wednes· $1 for students.
won the 5K run by crossing the
ae-a4 - Bill Burdick (17: 59) ,
The Redmen are currently
day at 11 a .m .. Redmen Coach
IINOLII COPY
line with a time of 17:01, 31 Darrell Stewart (18: 33)
PillS
Dave Oglesby announced.
18-16 on the season and 17-15 In
Dally ... ,......... ...................... 25 Cnto
seconds ahead or Spohn, who
U
8
The Capital field will be district standings. The ream
awe- David Davis (17:41), 8C
placed second. Athens resident Ben Foster (18: 281
So!btCrlbonootdalrl!lltopoyllleurhandling one sect Iori of the action finished Mld·Ohlo Conference
Forty-two horseshoe pitchers In the double elimination tourna· play In fourth place at 6-4.
Suzie Morrell, finishing 24th
41-44 - Fred Baloy (21: 42) .
·
-Tile Dollf
-"'""' _rtatll
to
...Iaoaal,
lor dlnel
12 , _
from Ohio and West Vtratnla are men!. The playoffs Include the
overall. won tor the w.omen with Bob Polcyn (27: 40)
Rain forced the cancellation or
crtdlt will b e - - - a lime of 20: 110, while her sister
415-41 - Larry May (18:02), already registered lor this Satur- top six teams tn the d!Jtrlct, the Redmen' s last two MOC
day' third annual horseshoe which are. In order. Ohio Domini· games, set lor April 25 against
Nan came In second with a time Don Mega &lt;18: 45)
No e.-rtpt- by
Ia
...., ...... ....,. cam• aervtc» It
pllchlng tournament, the Toad can, Mount Vernon Nazarene, MVNC and April29 at Walsh. The
ol 22: 12.
lf.6.t- Jerry FisCher (19:56),
available.
Brickles Open, to be held at the Malone. Wilmington, Rio Grande Walsh game had been rescheIOK ap II'OUP win.ners
Jack Adkins t20: 16)
Dave Dllea Park In Middleport. and Defiance.
Male
.._,.-Hal Underwood 121: 28)
duled for May 6 In Canton, but
area
pitchers
are
welcome
to
All
IHt - P .J. Chadwell (37: 14,
said
that
should
tne
Oglesby
85-over Campbell Neel
rain again caused a cancellation:
13 , ...... ..............:................ 111.:11
participate In ·S aturday 'a event.
third overalll
(23:10)
•
Redmen defeat Malone. they will The only action the Redmen saw
•:16 Wetllt ....... ............ .......... ..... P'/..
A meetbtg wtll be held Thurs- play MVNC at 2 p.m. Wednesday . lor two weeks came May 2 when
51 Wetllt ...... ..... .... .... ...... ......... 1'Jf.31
30-34 - Dennis Brunswick
Female
-llelpc-Q
day
evening,
6:30
p.m.,
at
the
(37:32, lltth overall!, Scott Un·
. II Rio Grande loses. the team . they netted a doubleheader with
11-14- Chrlatle Bowen (24: 12),
uw.-.........
:........................... , .
park. ' to prepare lor Saturday's returns to Capital Thursday to Findlay, 6-4. 5-4.
derdonk ( 43: 50)
aw..................................... MUI
Sara Walker (25: 441
nw-.................................. tll.•
3W9- Richard Haft t38: 451 ,
complete the elimination.
a.f4 - Tina Kelley (22:59), activities.
Roger KINI!R. A8~11),
Kelly Bauer (23:07)
fH4 - Gar)' .ftGtlei 1~ -&lt;
37: 30,
11-D- Ginny Carvour (29: 111
fourth overall). Jack Sanders,
awe-.Ctncly Sexton 134: 10)
37:54)
..
4844- Ronda Morrell 125:051,
' 41-48 - ' Kerilleth· HaIley Donna Daniels 134:271
138:021, Charles·Fowler-f51: 21 l
4HI
lligeborg Adams
IIM4 - Don w~ (4•:42), (30:27),
Three members of the Rio age was .873.
A sophomore from Pomeroy,
Graade softball team won honorCouch
was also In 26 games and
able mention from the Mid-Ohio
had
a
batting
average of .286. At
Conference at the conclusion of
bat
64
ttmes,
she recorded 17
the 1989 season.
Ohio University head basket· Convocatloa Cellter, IJ h90 per
The three were Beth Coli, runs, 12' hits, four doubles. two
ball coach Larry Hunter an· session, with a group dlacount
second base; Jennl Couch, third triples and two RBls. Her field·
nounced that there wtll be three rate of •175 per sesalon II live or
base: and Laura Clellan, out- lng average was .910.
one-week sessions of the Ohio more boya tram the same school
Clellan, a senior from Lancas·
field. The Redwornen !lnlahed
University Basketball School attend the same sesaion.
the season with a 3-23 overall ter, posted a battlol average of
this summer, with theflrstcamp
For more lllformatlon, call the
record and 3-5 finish In the MOC. .213. She went to bat 61 tim•, had
running from JuMl8 to June 22. Oblo University baaketball of!lce
Their Dis trlct ~2 record was 3-15. nine runs, 12 hits, a double aJ¥1
The second camp will run from at 1-593-1186, or write tbe Ohio
Coli, a sophomore from Wapa- eight RBls. Her !leldlnlavera1e
June 25 to June 29, and the tblrd University ~skelball School,
koneta, led the Redwomen In was .&amp;Bll.
will be held fromJuly9toJulyl3. Convocation Center, Ohio Unl·
blttln1 with a battln1 averqe ot
The fee lor the camp, which Yel'llty, Athelia, Ohio 45701.
.H1. Playlqln all26gameawtth
will be held In the unlverlllty'a
SPRING VM l !\ GINfMA
68 at bat a, CoU scored 15 runs, 22
Subltantlal Pen1lty for E1rly WlthclriWal
hlta, sill doubl•, two triples and
441· 4',/4
bad 10
Her fleldtna: aver·
A-IL

Rose doubts
report will be
ready Friday.

&amp;_. _. . . . .

ifrench City Run results

i

Capital University ~II host
Redmen-Malone playoff tilt

-.10

Toad ·Brickle&amp; Open
bed led S turday

--

-lt.

Mid-Ohio Conference honors
three Rio softball players

mall...,.._

.--·
. . . ·=

THE CENTRAL TRUST

SPECIAL

OU basketbaU Camp dates announced

6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT

Sporte

Hoabn
Hockey Hall of Farner Pbll
Eapollto and b·--'1 Hall ot
- Farner Mldlty Mllltle rec:elvtd
Utetlme Achle¥e1Mat AJ!'ardl
by tilt Marcil ol Dlmft for
coatrlbutlolll to New York
aportl. l!lpollto said Maatle WM
hll cblldbaad Idol llld lallllnd
blm to Will' J..., No. '1. ...
Kent11Cky woa the Colllp J'vot.
lla'l Aa-tattoa Acadtlnlc
Aclllel:lllllllt Award by tncluat· .
•

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;

I

bt lela

lq 90 perceat ot Ita tncomtna: 1188
elala wttbln nve yean. 1be
award, created to 1981, II Pl"'tated eatwally by .-. 'J'GuciiIIOwu OUb ol Mempllll. TweiW
acbooll reeelved laollorable mntloa lor ll'••a•tlq 111...-t or

ol tllllllcomlll8- clua:
llol- Collqt, Colanllo, Dub,
-

Caroau.

Ilia • State, Mtlrtll
NotN DIDII, Nllll State. Rice,
T•ms n, Tllleae, Vllldertlllt

t3,000 MINIMUM DIPOIIT

---~~-Can"'
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INTIS•·

GAIUPOU8

448 0102

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8. 1888

Toronto ends Martners' win
streak with 10•1 ,.decision
I

BJ lulU KENNEDY DAY
UPISpora WrtMr
Tbe Blue Jays snapped the
Mariners · slx-1ame wlnnln1
streak With a 10-1 victory Mon·
day night at Toronto and may
have found a leadoff hitter In the
process.
JuniOr Felix, replacing the
slumping Uoyd MosebY at the
top of tbe bat Un1 order, scored
three runs and drove In three
more.
With Toronto riding a threegame loslng .s treak and losers of
11 of their las t13, manager J !my
Wlllla:na moved Felix Into the
leadoff position.
Felix, making his fourth start
since being called up from
Triple-A Syracuse on May 2, Is
hitting 7-for-14 with four runs
scored and five RBI. .
"He plays like a veteran."
batting coach, Clto Gaston said.
·'He hits good from both sides,
has some power and runs good .
"His speed makes a lot ot
things happeft. Maybe he makes
the pitcher think a little more
about what he's going to throw.
maybe he makes him throw i'l few
more fastballs .··
The 21-year-old Dominican
singled In a 1'11n to trigger a

'

SABO STEAlS SECOND - 'Die Reda' Chris
Sabo &amp;Udea safely Into secon4 base as !'letSIIecond
sacker Gregg .JeUriM was unable to lei Saba In

shutout In consecutive games
was during the 1987 season. They
lost both games 2-0, on May 3
against Montreal and May 5
against Cincinnati.
The last . pitcher the Mets
needed to encounter was flreballing strikeout artist Jo$e Rljo.
Rljo. 3-0, struck out nine and
yielded only two hits over seven
Innings. ·
.
The right-hander. who walked'
three, yielded only a first liming
double by Howard Johnson and a
fourth Inning single by Darryl
Strawberry. Rljo's nine strlkouts were the most bY a Reds
pitcher this season.
"He's got some ott he best heat
In the league," said RedS Manager Pete Rose. "He's got nasty
stuff. When he reaches back, he
can blow bat-ters away."
Norm Charlton pitched twothirds of an Inning and Jbhn
Franco worked the final one and
two-third Innings for his 11th
save.
New York starter and loser

Today's events

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Oaklllnd •t WUmoft', 1: Sl p.m.
Mln~rKDLII Ill IIMton, 7:JS p.m .

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S~&amp;n Dlt'Pill St. LaWro, 11:21 p.m.
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ROCK SPRINGS -ln ·a Class Inning when Smith reacbed on,an
A sectional tournament game error, Worthington walked and
postponed to Monday evening Smith scored on an error.
because of bad weather, the
In the top of the foW'th SHS
Crooksville ceramics took ad- rebounded to take the lead when
vantage of several Southern Mark Porter singled, Hank Cleerrors to claim a convincing 7-2 land walked, CHS made two
win In the first round of touna- errors to score one run and Chris
ment play at Melp High School. Stout bad an RBI single.
...Td'urnament director Gordon
With the score 2·1ln Southern's
Fllsher lsgolngtobehard pressed favor, CrookSville began to work
to get In the tournament slate on Southern's pitching. McGill
before Sunday's deadline, as all and Smith singled, Munford
first-round games have not yet · walked, Chad· Smith sln1led in
been played. Saturday's first- two runs, and CHS brok!l the
round games, a doubleheader, game open with two more walks
were bot!l washed out, moving and a single by Vallee.
the first round up to Monday and
This made the score 7'2.
Tuesday of this week. That has
Southern threatened through·
postponed a second-round con- out the game, put!lng runners on
test staged for tonight between base but without being able to
Miller and Trimble.
dent the plate.
Tonight's resc'heduled game
Southern made Its last stand
would have been between Fed- with two on In the seventh, but
eral Hocking and North Gallla.
again being unable to score.
Last week Fisher had reported
'southern Is now 9-9, and 9-3 In
that a total of 62 games at Meigs the SVAC. Southern has Kyger
, High had been rained out so far Creek yet toplaf. butthat has yet
this spring, presenting a tre, . to be rescheduled. ·
niendous backlog of TVC league U::e seorel . ·
games to be rescheduled.
Southern ............ ooo 200 0-2·7-2
In Southern's defeat sopho- Crooksville ........ 001 600 0-7-7-3
more hurler Roy Johnson suf- LP '.:__ Johnson
fered the loss despite another WP- Smith
good overall effort and a rel!ef
stint from Andy Baer. Together
they struck out six and. walked
'
('
Portsmouth East 8
seven.
Hunan Trace J
Chad Smith picked up the win
At
Ironton,
Portsmouth East
for CHS with seven K's and three
brokea1-1
tleaftertwolnnlngsof
walks.
Crooksville scored in the third play In Monday's Class A base-

Bob Ojeda, 1-4. allowed only
three hits over seven Innings, but
walked six and gave up three
earned runs.
The Reds scored twice In the
first without a hit and on only two
official at-bats. Kal Daniels
walked, stole second and took
third on ChriS Sabo's sacrifice
bunt, with Sabo safe at first when
Ojeda fielded the. bunt and threw
to third too late to get Daniels.
After Sabo stole second. Daniels scored on a groundout by
Barry Larkin. with Sabo taking
third. Benzinger produced a
sacrifice fly to score Sabo.
The Reds upped tbeir advantage to 3-0 with a run In the fifth.
Sabo walked, stole second, took
third -on Larkin's single and
scored on Benzinger's second
sa,crlflce fly .of the lllght.
·
Cincinnati stole a team seasonhigh five bases off catcher Gary
Carter.
Elsewhere In the National
League:
Expos f, Astros I
At Houston, Kevin Gross fired
a five-hitter and Tim Raines
blasted a two-run homer to help
Montreal end a four-game losing
streak. Gross, 4-2, did not walk·a
batter and struck out seven In
collecting his and the Expos first
complete game of the season.
Bob Knepper , 1-5, was the loser.

Hockey
Harold Ballard, the85-year-old
owner of the Toronto Maple
Leafs, was listed In fair condition
Monday after being admitted to
the coronary care unit at Toronto
General · Hospital. Ballard, a
diabetic. was admitted for observation only .... Pittsburgh Penguins assistant general manager
Eddie Johnston, Is leaving the
club to explore other alternalf"~:e
employment opportunities. ...
Edmonton defenseman Kevin
Lowe. New York Islanders center Bryan Trottier, and Montreal
left wing Ryan Walter are
finalists for the 1988-89 King
Clancy Memorial Trophy,
awarded for service to hockey.
Butetball
Phoen 1x forward Eddie Johnson, who led NBA non-starters
with a 21.5 scoring average.
received the league's Sixth Man
Award In a nationwide vote of
basketball media members.
Johnson received 33 of 85 votes,
with Utah's Thurl Bailey second
with 26 votes and Detroit's
Dennis Rodman third with 17....
Oliver · Taylor, a 6-foot guard
from Miami Dade-North JuniOr
College, has signed a letter of
Intent with Seton Hall.
BowIIIII

'

Amateur Patty Ann of Blon:
mlngton, lll., took a 36-pin lead
Monday over Robin Romeo of
Van Nuys, Calif., after tour
rou!lda of the $210,000 lleaeram's
Coolers U.s. OpeD 011 the LadiM
Pro Bowlers 'J'our ln."441-. Dl.

'

CO.,PQN
HEAliNG TISTS IN MEIGS COUNTY
flft Electronic. -lng ..,II wit! be given by Boilone Hur:ng Aid Cen:er at
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.COME IN WITH COUPON POR TIM
"I

I

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, May 9. 1989
Pas• 5

•

Meigs County banquet
hosts grange officials

SPEAKER - Samantha Mercer, 1988-88 Oh&amp;o Sta&amp;e Gra:i11e
Female Ambl••dor, apeaklq at llie reeen&amp;MelpCouatyGranp
Banque&amp;, LI!Q'I abe bu taken advaatap of wba llie Granp bas &amp;o
offer wl&amp;ll dlelr prop'IUU.

~-

ball ~tonal at Rock Hill Middle
Sci!Qol bY scoring twice In the
thlrd·lnnlnl and limiting Hannan
Trace to four hits to gain an 11-2
victory.
Senior lflty Tim Brumfield
went the dlstsnce for the Wildcats, slrlklnl outllx and walking
two, but be 1ave up 13 hits.
The Wildcats, tabbed u the
visiting team, scored flrlt In the
second wben junior catcher Todd
Saunders walked and senior left
fielder Scott Caldwell reached on
an error. Wlti: runners on first
and secoild, seniOr first bueman
Glen Cline hit a erounder to
shortstop, but the throw to
second &gt;was too late to retire
Caldwell. Cline was thrown out
on the play. but saunders
rounded third and scored on tbe
throw to first.
The Tartans responded In their
hair of the sei:olld when the
pitcher doubled cno names were
available for East's players) and
scored on a single bY the
sh9rtstop.
·
East broke the tie In the
second, wblch· started when the
designated hitter and the left
fielder singled. The aecoild baseman grouilded out to HT shortstop Brad Cremeens, bu 1 that
moved the runners abead 90 feet.
then the catcher fit Into a force
play that Cremeens used to retire
the DH and hold tbe runners, But
the pitcher singled home the left
fielder before the shortstop
singled home the catcher, break·
lng the 1-1 tie. The centerflelder
flied out to end the Inning.
Trace 'SCOfed one In lbe top of .
the· fourth, but Portsmouth
scored five runs In Its last two
lnnlnp to secure -the win.
Hannan Trace's hits came
from Cremeens (double) and J .J.
Bevan (both 1-3), Brumfield (1·2)
and. Caldwell (1-1).
The Wildcats are scheduled to
hollt North Gallla In a doubleheader Wednesday before playIng at Kyger Creek Thursday.
,
Score by lnnlnp
Hannan Trace,010 100 0-2
4
.
Port. Eas.t1 012 014 x-8 13 3
LP - Brumfield

• j

''We should all be proud of the
accomplishments .of the
grange,'' said Lecturer patty
Dyer In her welcoming remarks
at . the recent Meigs Couniy
Grange Banquet at the Salisbury
Elementary School.
The song, "This Land Is Your
Land" and the Invocation by
Wesllna Crabtree, c_haplaln,
opened the evening.
Special guests Introduced bY .
Dyer Included Pauline Atkins,
Pomona Master; Smantha
Mercer, 1988-89 State Grange
Female Ambassador: Heather
Nell)ey, 1987-88 State Grange
, Female Ambassador; Will and
Uz Smith, 1987-88 Ohio . State
Grange Young Coupli! of the
Year: Arthur.and Westlna Crabtree, Meigs County Grange Deputies: Bob and VIckie Powell,
GaiUa County Grange Deputies;
Opal Dyer. Melp County Grange
Youth Chairman; and all Meigs
County Subordinate Granre Masters, Patty Dyer, Bill Radford,
Eldon Barrows, Norman WIU,
Zlba Midkiff ,ai\d Earl Cross.
Samantha Mercer, In her remarks, stated she has lllken
advantage of what the grange
haa to offer with their programs.
"The only way for our me::nbershlp to grow Is to get Involved,"
she said:
Entertainment for the evening
was "A Boring Sermon" monologue by Heather Neilly, and
Sign-A-Song by Nellley and
Mercer.
Music was presented by Kendra Ward-Bence and Boll, with
Kendra playing the hammered

OOOT observes
bicycle safecy
ENTERTAINERS - E::tertaiDLIIent by Kendra Ward·Be!lCe
and Bob was a hJ&amp;bllght of the recenl Melp County Granp
Banquet, beld at Sali::bury Elementary ScllooL

Middleport Litet:ary Club
reviews
'Shanghai'
book
.
Mrs. Robert Fisher reviewed

the book. "Life and Death In
Shanghal" by Nlen Cheng, at the
recent meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club held at the home of
Mrs. Roy Holter.
According to the reviewer, the
story relates the plight of a lonely
deprived woman who spent six
and a half years In solitary
cooflnement. Her husband was
general manager of Shell 011
Company and when he died his
wlfe became employed by the oil
company. She had a young
daughter, Me! ping, who was an
actress at the Shanghai Film
Studio.
Mrs. Fisher noted that the
author descttbed Mrs. Cheng as a
target for the culture hating
Cultural Revolution. Her horne
was ransacked, many possesslons destroyed, and she was
arrested and put Into solitary

confinment. She was lnterrogated many times, then finally
released only to find her daugl:lter had been killed.
It was reported that Mrs. ,
Cheng's daughter had commit·
ted suicide by jumping from the
ninth floor of a building, although, Mrs. Fisher said, the
author questioned that and contended that she was killed
accidentally bY her abductors.
Mrs. Cheng received an apology
from the officials stating she had
been Imprisoned by mistake. She
came to America and Is now
living In Washington, D.C.
Mrs. George Hackett, vice
president, presided at the meetlng in the absence of Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter. president.
Roll call was taken and
members answered with ' posltlve result of Imprisonment. The
hostess served refreshments.

May Is "NatiOnal Bike Month"
and the Ohio Departmept of
Transportation CODOTl Is celebrating bicycle safety during this
month.
"There are an ··esllmatrcl 88
mUllan bicyclists In the United
States and five million reside In
Ohio alone." said Director Bernard B. Hurst. "Bicycling has
become one of the most efficient
and Inexpensive forms of vehlcular transportation available."
ODOT's Bicycle Transportatlon office, through the aid of
federal highway dollars. offers
the following literature on blcycle safety free of charge, "Bicy:
cle Safety: What Every Parent
Should Know." a brochure aimed
at parents of young bicyclists.
"Sprocketman Talks Road
Sense," a .comic book style
pamphlet. "Do You Make These
Eight Common Bicycling Mlstakes?" for the junior high level
and older, and "Bicycle Safety,"
presents rules ot.the road.
"FOYOBS: For Your Bicycle
Safety," a colOring book for
kindergarten through third
grade. "Ohio Bicycle Driver's
Guide," a 48pagetextforgrades
four through six. "A Guide . to
Bicycle Rodeos," a booklet for
planning bicycle rodeos, skill
tests, and safety and education
programs, and "A Consumer's
· Guide to Bicycle Helmets," a
brochure assisting prospective

•
ed
.
h
h
Out h growt emp astz
in Chester UMW program7;;tications

"You've Got to be CarefuUy people In Protestant churches.
A closing prayer was read bY
.Taught" was tile tltlf&gt; of the
Helen
Will. and the group sang
The Meigs Head Start Proprogram presented by Mrs.
"He's
Got
the
Whole
World
In
His
gram
Is now accepting appUcaBetty Roush and Mrs. Helen Will
Hands"
as
the
closing
hymn.
lions
for
fall enrollment. Childat the recent meeting of the
Mrs.
Marilyn
Spencer
presided
ren
between
the ages of 3 and 5,
Chester United Methodist
at
the
business
meeting
with
13
who
J11eet
income
guidelines, will
Women.
members
present.
Twenty
sick
be
accepted.
C.all
992-3088, or
The purpose of the program
In
calls
were
reported.
come
to
the
Meigs
Head Start
and
shut
was to help women see the
It was dllelded that the group Center In the multi-purpose
Important role In nurturing the would pay tbe flower bill for . building on Mulberry Heights,
young In relationships, emphasPomeroy, for applications. Head
Izing global Interdependence, an Altona Karr's funeral.
appreciation for other persons - The next meeting will feature a Start provides special services
for handicapped children.
and cultures. and to encounter membership tea.
the rise of militant nationalism
and domination promoted In this
THE
culture.
The group sang lhe hymm, "In
FROM
Christ There Is No East or West"
wlih Clarice·Allen as pianist.
IN CONCERT
A skit was read about "A VIsit
7:00P.M.
with a Russian Family" with
Jennifer Mora, Jessica Karr,
Ryan Buckley, and Denise Mora.
The scripture reading was
Tickets may be
from Galatians 3, verse 28;
purchased at
Ephesians 4, verses four through
:Six: Psalm 78, verses one
Faith Book Store,
through elgllt, and Deut. 6,
.Kesllell's M:ulcet.
'verses four through 15.
Mason Auto Olaa, Mlsoo;
Sheets were handed out on
MW Streot Books,
"WbO Taugllt You?" and "What
Middleport.
.Have You ·Been Taurht?"
'Members were asked about their
Group rata of
values, God, holll ty, people In
10 or more are avall•ble
•tiLe
In Alta, and

DAHLONEGA, GA.

I

(,

•

SINGING PERRYS

(:

-

~

bemg accepted

cu .. IH), • • ,_._
a..-. ..... ,:.o.,HioiPII.......

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'

Sports briefs

MIERK'AN LEAGUE

f'allfornla &amp;I D4'frnM, 7:11p.m.

('llh·...

miUllt.WI'I'

Majors

lAo~

.

•••ral

oloMaton;

comer an4 Rob Ducey walked.
Felix •lnlled LlrlaJio borne. and
Gruber alnaled to load the buea
aild cbue Dwu:e.
Steve Trout relieved and
wallled FernandC to force in a
run. McGriff then ripped a
two-run alqle to rlpt field.
TbeBJueJaysmaclelt7-0inthe
fifth lnnlq OD Ducey's run·
scol'lnl fielder's choice.
After Reynolds' slqle br0111ht
Seattle wlthln-7-1. Toronto added
three runs in the seventh on
Felix's two-run triple and Fernandez' RBI fielder's choice.
Elsewhere In the AL. Texas
stomped New York 13-2, C&amp;llfor·
nla cfUibed Detroit t-2, Oakland
overpowered Baltimore 6-1 and
MliUH!IOta edpd Boston 4-2.
Chicago at Milwaukee was postponed because of bad weather.
Ranpn 11, Yaal&lt;ees I
At New York, JetfStonerlpped
a bases-loaded triple and Pete
Incavlglla foUowed with a homer
to blghllght a seven-run fifth
lnnlnl that powered tbe Rangers.
Rookie Kevin Brown shut down
the Yankees for the second time
In a week to Improve to 3-1. Andy
Hawkins, 3-4, took the losa for the
Yankees. Texas had four hit
batsmen In the game to tie a club

·By The Bend.

Southern falls from tou•ney ·

Monday nl&amp;ht's June In Cincinnati. Sabo made
good 111e ollbe steal bY acorlnsla&amp;er In the Inning,
which belped the Reda post aU victory. (UPI)

Reds shut out N.Y. Mets 3-0
By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Sports WrUer
If the New York Mets' current
oflenslve attack were a hospitalridden patient, It would desperately be In need of a transfer to
Intensive care.
Heading into Monday night's
game in Cincinnati, the Mets
were searching for a way to
resuscitate their lifeless lineup.
However. after the Reds' 3-0
shutout of New York, the Mets
·discovered their condition was
worse than they originally
thought.
. "The last few days our bats
have been sick, " sa ld Met s
Manager Davey Johnson.
Johnson has good reason to be
concerned about the health of the
his team's offense. The Mets
. have been shut outtwlce Ina row
: - losing to Houston's Jim
•Desha les 5-0 Sunday - and have
not scored a run in 23consecullve
Innings, collecting only nine hits
during that punchless stretch.
The last time the Mets were

four-run fourth lnlllq, and
tripled Ina palrofruna toiiplll'ka
three-run seventh tnnln1.
Teammate- Fred Mc.'Grlft and
ToLlY FeJ'IIIIndez a110 drov-e 1n
three runs to help back the
pllchliil of Dave Slll!b.
Steib. 3-0, scattered alx hils
over elibt lnnlnp, walldq two
and striking out two. The rllbt·
bander lost his shutout bid In the
seventh on Harold Reynolds'
two-out RBI single.
·'He '!'88 sharp. He's aot p-eat
pitches," Seattle manager Jlln
Letr?bvre said. "He throws that
hard sUder at the hbda, he's
tough to hltln cqld we1ther.
Seattle starter Mike Dunne,
l-2. lasted only three and onethird Innings, allowlng 'slx runs
and six hits while walking six.
Toronto capitalized on Dunne's
wildness to take a 1·0 first Inning
lead. Dunne walked Felix and
Kelly GL'Uber to ope11 the ~nnlng
and Fetnandez followed wltb •n
RBI single. Tbe Blue Jays made
the score 2-0 In the111!C0nd Inning
on McGriff's RBI fielder's '
ch9lce.
Toronto pushed Its lead to 6-0
&gt;t~th four runs In the fourth
Inning. With one out, Nelson
Llrlano tripled Into the right-field

'

.

.

THURSDAY, MAY 11™
POINT
HIGH

upon IIQUOil
Call67~-6621 or
67~·10591or more
lntormatlon.

dulcimer and Bob the guitar.
OQor pr~s were donated by
Montgomery Trailer Sales, Joe's
Country Store, Stewart's Gun
and Gift Shop, MGM Farm City.
the Rutland Department Store
and the Rutland Furniture Store.
Favors were donated by the
Meigs County Grange Youth,
Star JuniOr Grange, Montgomery Trailer Sales, Farmers
Bank ancl Savings Company,
Bank One and Home National
Bank, Racine.
Salisbury Elementary School
provided the steak dinner.
The cl01lng song was "Sing
Your Way Home" and the
benediction was given by Wes·
tina Crabtree.

GRANGE DEPUTIES - Artbur and Westina Crabtree, Melp
Coua&amp;y Grange Depudes, lnfonn those In attendance at tbe recent
Grange banquet of upcoming events In Melp County Granges.

- 'Die reeeet Melp
Dyer, Melp County Pomona Grange Lecturer
GRANGE
County GI'!Ulp Banquet at the Sallsbnry
and National Youth Team Members; PauUne
Elementary School was enJoyed by • left to right,
Atkins, Meigs County Pomona Grange Muter;
Sarnutha Mercer, 19811-88 Oblo State Gruge
Westlna ud Arthur Crabtree, Meigs County
Female Ambaaaador; Heather NeiUey • 1987-88
Grange Depudes.
Oblo State Granp Female Ambiiu~Ba;;,;do,;,r.;,;.P•at..;tyll'----------------•-.

Annual alumni
banquet slated
'Die 60th annual HarrisonvilleScipio alumni banquet will be
held on May 27, 6:30p.m. at the
school in Harrlsonvllle.
A short business meeting Will
follow. and there will be round
and square dancing fr\)m 9 p.m.
until midnight with music provided by the "Rock Run
Ramblers."
Classes to be honored wlll be
1909, 1919. 1929. 1939. 1949. and
1959. The class of 1939 will be
celebrating Ill-golden graduation ·
anniversary and will receive
special recognition.
The alumni association project
for this year Is to provide 100
metal folding chairs and eight
new tables, for use In the school.
· Successful completion of this
project will enable the school to
have sufficient tables and chairs
tor educational and social events
without having to borrow these
Items from outside sources.
Individuals or families may
sponsor a Ia ble for 1100. or chairs
for $!5 each.
The cost for dinner and dance
reservations are $8 each, and
must be made no later than May
24. Reservations may be sent to
the Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni
Association. 35359 SR 143. Pomeroy. Ohio, 45769. or by calling
Ruth Lowe 111 742-3151. VIrginia
Gibson ~~ 742-3182, or Harold
Graham at 742-3033.

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PRESCRIPTION
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HOP
271 -NOIII SiCOMD

Dr. Victor Hochman
Pediatrics
•

Infant, Children
&amp;

Adolescent Medicine
Now Seeing New Patients
Call

(304) 675-5220
For An Appointment

Monday tbrodP Frld81
9 a.m. • 15 p.m.

Ple••m Valley Hoapital
Suite 118

P' E*SANT VAUI.Y HOSPIIAL
JJ:e'-:lf)-alpwaf ':analt

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Tuudav. May 9. 1989

First math
fair held

ONE OF THE BEST - Mlcbael Smith, Oftb pade atudeat II&amp;
Tappen Pial• El'.!mentary, received 1111 ovMI•.U.aratllla for bll
,pject, ''Metric Sportl" a&amp; the ICbooll Ont ever Math Fair oa
Tbanday.

1,

PonllfO'(-

1UPPERS PLAINS· Students
In th.e fourth, fifth, and sixth
grade at TUppen Plains Elemen·
tary participated In thatschooll
first ever Math Fair held on
Thursday.
JUdae&amp; for , the fair were
Eastern IDgb School ~nlors In
8111 Blaine's advanced · math
class and Included Heather Fin·
law, David Rlc:e. Bobbl Price.
Amy Hapr, Howle Lawrellce,
and Trlsha Spencer.
Receiving oullltandlngs In the
fourth grade were Laun Brown,
Laura Buckley, Sherry Burke,
Set!\ Car leton, Angela Chaney,
Laura Eastman, Billy Francis,
·Katy Man!cke, Jeff Rankin,
Chance Watson, and M!chelte
Westfall.
OutstandiiiJ ratings In the fifth
grade went to Brian Bowen, Alex
Brown. Jamie Erwin, Brian
Hoffman, Jeremy Johnston,
Tract Lance, Mike Lauebery.
Ginger Nutter, Noelle Pickens,
and Michael Smith.
Sixth grade oull!tandln,g rating
were awarded to Jason Carleton,
Jan.e t McDonald, Josb Wright,
Julie. Brown, and Ty Swartz.
All of lbe winuers were stu·
dents of Miss Cindy Pitzer.

I)EAD 01 AUVE
•Wuhert •Drv••
-Range •Freez••
•Refrigeratora

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882-2181
Mldd..port,

Largo 8upply of Boiokot

.,

SSO PAGE stlaT

, 10:00
____5:00_

OPEIIIOST SATURDAYS
1tL

992-61$5 .

446-2342
I

Public Natlctl
IN THE
aeMMON PLEAS COURT
PRQBATE DIVIBION
MI!IU COUNTY, OHIO .
IN THE MAnER OF
SETTLEMIIItr OP
ACCOUNTI
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Aooounte •d voucher~ oi

--

the following

• ... .._

n.....,. lducl·
..... lltidln

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Pr-.. Court. Melgo
County, Ohio, for
..doettiNiont:
EITATE NO. 21111 - A.
the

IUid Amy Hager at the Tuppers Plalnl Eleinen&amp;al')l Math Fair on Thund!Q'. The judles \\~lire

JUDGING - F1ftb grade studea&amp;, Ginger
Nutter, demo•&amp;ra&amp;ft her pro~ te judg1111,left te
rlgbl, Heather l!lnlaw, David Rice, Bobbl Price,

111 mm

DEPART.NI.~!Stall.'
·

-

'' .... ,u-... , ' "'''*"~•..,..· • ;&gt;&lt;

Donold L ........ . _...
llw!-.CifO...V.FM!IIIt,
Dl'

'

RoUnd and square danCIIIJ will
be featured Friday, froni 8 to 1~
p.m., at the Senkn: Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Music by
True Country Ramblers. Public
welcome. Brill&amp;' llnacb for snack
table.

.. ond.,....... - · o f

a.... .........,,._ ...

IN E-.

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PUBLIC
.RELATIONS

Call Anytime.

!It"'"
Pom...,, Ohio 45769
IIIII Hlp

992·2371

4·21·'81·1 mo.

..

BISSEll
SIDING
..... ._ CO.
•'frM Elt:lnlaei''

E'dllh A. CIOIII.
1k
W.W.A. of 1M e- of Moo
M............ Dl'
oJ

SAliS I SII¥ICI

Unt.o eaa.ptlono ·.,.
filod , _ oold - " ' ·
will ... for .....Ina befoq
uld Court 001 doe f21h d.,
of J - 1Ift, ot 'wlolclo
time Mid _
... wit ...
_ _. . . . .d co.........
ftono "-v to dto¥ untl flnon,
of.

OlmiU,,,....2-1121
Autl!oriled Jolon
0..., NIW Holl•ct
aulhlfotFEqupmentDNI•·

.........

...........

011., ~ written •a.pt~ono

lion of ·tile lnlll. not 1lh.. five A¥• prfar to doe
Nl for li-~ ...
llol!oeit E. Buall. Juolgto

Common Pleel Court.
Pro..... Dlvlolon
Metgo County, Ohio

till. 1tc

,.,....,de

1'loohN

ca. a.n.n. ,,,,

OhloQ711. . . eppaln11d
E - * of tho • - of
........ ielltot3:1201 tlyeolt
Run Rood. i'oniOI'Of, 0111!1

._..,G..... a-.,..
U'7e8.

RollortE. 8uall.

, ...... .iuolte

...... II. N••ood. Clorto
Ill 2••• 11. ""

2

In M•mor•m

.'

In 111111ory of
BtttyJ. . . .

!

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

10112YIIf1
.., 9, 1987.

I
•!

•••

a'~

llldlll

'' .

'·

[ rllp!11V'llt

3 Announcement&amp;

~)t'l \)IL 1 ~

lrl....,

l:'Ml""'- Coiiii4-378-

NIAll c.t~~• .........

m ..n,

CAll
"DOC" YMIIIII

.....

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

J. WAINER

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

EVDY 11IUISDAY

.W-WOP&amp;

...., ....u ..
'
.
• ...WN4,

IRDR • •

a.a..

liN

PA1aii.USSII
1

t_.II·ISJS

1-

A--

"""' Olltri&lt;ito

•olllll&amp;

offloo .....,... 11

lllo OoiNo Coui!IY Court HouM.

Couple to lv•ln lo do mllnt•
n•o- work on Apt. Cornpl•.

Coli 304-1711-1104 ... 304..,..1311.

u.s.1....

···•·

AI 11&amp;11'•...,

o .. t.,...•pm~:IDnav.-the

rollll c~rt~t.. •• n.-.d for
70,000 BTU noturll v• liM. ~·lotn-t ooll Lii"Y It D.,llll
A1oo 3 a• , __Coli E. Inc. CGru-1 OH.
114-742-3073.
' 1·--11411·1171.

e..., - k i E_.,. Poyr A•
- · ...- ..... Ito- Coli
for .............. 104--0170
bl. ~13.

411ndt . - IWIQI
814·892·1721. Working
oantlllon.

.. -,.,klltolild-loaood

........ ,_304-175-141:J

6 Loat and Found

l

·~--

'-I

=z.t- =. . ,

In N•wolk M•ll•lnO .

BPIHNI'-1 - -.. aTM

n

t

Ill

•by•ovollolllo.
llouro. ... or ,... -

ll•lblo·
llohlnd

a.m....
-al ...... '"'"'.
.....
Col 304-1175-2714
•

f llldllll,il

Ullnasa
Opportunity

, .•

EXCELLENT PAYI Homa.

worlllrt r.eedred. av. 71 com- •
ponl-.'"od _ _ ...

tribu tors. • Wholeaal•;•
olrootory. a..d S.A.B.E. P. 0 . .
Boa ZI2,._GT, H'""lngton. WV ·
21721-ZI21.
'

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

.

~

Oood f..,lly luiln- E- ~
lohool ptno altop, - ....own
tr.lchlle realp•. 10 yan ...

oon....... ,., ....... l."""'

_..... Equlpm..,. •colllllf.

n_

onty.l;oM 114-2411-1311 .

,'

1000 - I I ..
T•lri~ ··
1'11111-. COIIII'MI'dti-Home Tlrl·
rilng - · ...... 10 ,...... ..
Prtae~ from f241.

La:'J:

.

"
"-- . -.......
. . - -1-1100·221Colt
. ":
, ..

1212 J0-701

'

.,,.,......... _., ......0

Manaufaaturer seleatlnt
....... I n - • - High-~~~ DtOIII lrl our '

...-lnwotry. Call303-71fo :
1200- 2403.
. ~

COJUIII TO Ml AliA soo•

lcltt

7701

ttnugh tt. mil urd rau hlwe

Part Time JIIJ With N.awolk 1000

CCIIt'11J4feCin•d•
•Alii••
willlllru.a.
...............

p-In• '""''" polntlnt'

r•uc 5 n•• .aonatruatlon war

INOTICEI
,
THE OIIO' VALLEY PUILIIH- ,
INO CO.,_......,. lhll you
do lualn- with P:::rle you
know. •dNOTto 1M mOMf ..

-· llooola t.nlla
11·1·e-·ee-·tm•A c-..
-lor· Coiii14-~2-211U.

..0. .. 117

.

t-o.

31ontrholoodkltt-. 2 - 1
mil&amp; Utt• '"'"""· Col 114448-2113 ofl•llpm.

or
Yltwlls le1110rltl HOIPH&lt;
....., Nab. ,...,.,,

eon••

Roof

·,...,.,.
..., -;o-....-:==:--.....;·
:...· •
-olllalola
........
for..,..._
21
a .

To O t v -: "-oio ..... &amp;'7
nio. ald. Coli 114-441-2724

l614) 446-7&amp;19 • (614) 192-2104
417 SleOid rr. .... llciC 1213
Mpells, Olio 45&amp;31

.

""'"' tloldo ........ .,.
ri'"C..
E~e fr• of ct,•ga

.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. .
lk:ensed Cfinicll A11clol01ist

Al . . . . &amp; -

• ~:

Boa 1117·YT. Hllloldo. NJ
072111.

llilrina Aid

A/C-• .

.-on

COu.EOE, 121
Pllio.J\
Coli 114-441-43417. Reg. llo~·

- k """' •to .... 100
"'"'"'"omol.lnfloiOIOIIonalllcl
"-toK.I. Entorortooo. P.O.

GiviBWay

EVIIUitlons ·For All Aats

PUilK
AUCRON

l

EAIIN MONEV - 0 boollll
.30.000/- ....... ''"'· llotolla. fll 101-117·1!000
I!Jd, Y-1011111.

nr... of alvlna Mom thl Mm•
old ,,.,,, fry on ootglnlll.

liltenlna

DoFIIl'IV........

RE-TRAIN NOWI
-•· 1!
SOUTHEASTERN IUIINEI.:-1

lt

1

11 Halp Wanted

4·14-11·1 mo.

SYIQf.G&amp;IIO

•.. i

••
•••

l'ooo .......... l;ol 114-HJ.·

to"'"" ..,.y.

SDVICE
_,......._

:·:

1B Wanted to Do

Pl'o 1840 ...,- Alft con&lt;llloft.
Cooh- Colt 114-812-1117
or lt"-112·24&amp;1.

GENIDI. COIITUCTOIS

·

Instruction

Quito

,_k Ololtlot -~ for Tiny Tot
· Toglw-yol&gt;looklobmololl Doy Cor!lp ...... poaillonl.
mo. old. Wormed, -v
· ....... In High - o l .,d

- E DAY OR EVEIINGS
. 915~4141

•·

....,
••••sn•
c
ie••a rr
...........
......... r::alll
, ... ezo
lit . . . . . ., ....

..

pol

3 U. last of •Arthur H S.l. 50
PH. 596-4756 or 992-6637

VAUGHN'S
AUJO- DIESEl

llt!loiN

114-742·2411.

AIIIIII llll cIJ Ill!' II! s

4

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG &amp; REPAIRS

·

\

UH&lt;I .. mllure bv tho pi- oo
...... hou-ld ..........

euor.

Qual,ity
Stone Company

P~lndnt .
FREE ESTIMATES

.•.

85-11-IOSIB.

C.StD, 0 ..0

Outtara

APPO~I!NT

.

fui'Nihinga. M_.in WaJan...,er.
114-2411'1112.
'

hlndmllda alfl: from
Cauntoy Cnofio. e14-742· 24$4

All POPULAR SIZES AVAIAIU

NOTICIOF

OF
FIOUC.IAIIY
On April 21. 1111. 1n
tho Mllp County Proloolt
Cqurt. C:.o · No.- aazoa.

m .... wtoa. oompl«e home

MARCUM

NEW-IIPAII

....._....

Colll14-317·0401.

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

IOOFING

oa!Mrionco. LPN an ... 1. '--3
lnCDme henna C. I 114- tH: ~
1873 all• 7~Dp.m. fof mfr(;

"''-bolngpold. CoU14-4413158.

·

4-li·l

----~--~-

Iowa L Wrlte1el

'

WI c.e for aldlrlt' lftd htft~ :
CIPped in our hom&amp; 28 v-ft ,

::
-by
ilw =-"7==--..;".
~~~- of ""'"" .__,. . Folt 15
SChools
•• •

Ext 4051

101 c•NIIGIIAM - Owner

Oown1pouta

Public N otloe

I ,

· Strlic.e

SYRACUSE
992·2621 or 992·69••

R~~

Situations-;:;

furniiiiN ..d - "..

No rtfinancin(. A
MortP&amp;e Consultant

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOUNG

......If...

aal1·115-313--!
2127 Ollt. Fl41.
. . ~

axistin&amp; mortt~~~e.

•heat Pumps

1. 1.111. It WI

GOVERNMENT , JODI Now .•
IHrlng in your • • both alcltta -~
lftd \IIWkiHICI. For a lilt of jobl i

Save thou11nds on ·

•Central Air

-31 1

...~.

--------··

SYSTEM:

Ewlfn M.

to Mid -nloor to 11181t·
'ort P1018inlntlto the • - ·

•Lot Rentals

REDUmON

Gas

IICIN•.fa. 9 ~J!II­
Uio~ a-uliliiri

BOGGS

.

Junk Coil with oo wli'-t
"""""·
eo~r Lanv u.orv ·11"'
388-9303.

MOUGAGE

14tlr'&amp; . . St,

. . . . . . , t,W.VL
Wa Buy Aluminum
c.tle.Gtoe.. a-..
C-enci More

....... .,..,.........
Mnil•s

olio_..
.,.,._

114-448-31a8.

CaD 992·2772

IIOW OPIII POl
I'ISII.SS

..,.UO~ IPolv tollotl•ll K~
•d Kurt or ... 304-175-4U7~

ori~30U.

12

wood •
Swein'a Ft~nltuN
• · A,..loft. Thilcl &amp; Ollloo.

R•ntals

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

IECYCUIG '

bou....._
a...r•• ,.,...•.

2ZI2.

buy or oppreloo onytNngl
Antlquoo, ............. oppll.,_

•High Efficiency

•VINYL liDINO
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
ltiiiULATION

lalullr. D111111d.
EITATI! NO. 211140 - A.

.·

/trlel"~dl('
~i;.
_.,1_
I

Windows

FREE ESTIMATES

A_irom..,l oo~· hllpful.
enoa. lind
r-..rm to P.O . oa 328. llrW.Va. 21104 Atllc

prarlou• Ill• ex

..d.,........

lftliquel.

P••-Y·HI-'IJ11;.
Ohk

SUNDAY 7 ,oo P.M.
. WEDNESDAY 7100 P,.M •
Putor Jo111M E. K-ee

11.-s I

- n l t y ..,,

blntlts. ..tlr......t.

Wanted
··•.
...
.__,.,of
......
--------:··
ture •
Allo
...·,
coli "--n.

- · (614) 992-2922
,. '19tla

'

f'

Startn

tii'M. gr...

~,

, lt. 33 N11lll of

525 North Seeoad
Sstnnltss Gutter
Middleport, Ohio
Rtplaclllllllt WIIIHws EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY )C),OO A.M:
llown ....lation

Gutter Cl•nlng

LIMITED
TIME OFFER!

•f•

4: Aoeoel•leO

I

of doe ~ of

"'

\;

lltaaalew• Pun

Leeu Murphey

POOl:.S, WEUS
. CISTERNS

eo...,. ....

Md nM• uNCI en. Smith

•-·Pontloc. 1111 Eollom
Ave., Oolllpolla. Col 814-441-

can 1-800-422·9010

Mastic - Clrtaintood•
Vinyl Sill•

Wanted To Buy

TOPCAIHpoldfor 1883modll

eMoblhi H..m.
Parta
•Mobile Home ·

DAY 01 EVIIHG

lfiSIILATION

1,080 .G l" OilS

9

HOME PARK

915-4222

J&amp;L

WATER ·
SERVICE

•r»

992·7479

Ewlrn ...... tw.r. E-*

o Off.
.

....~.Oil.

AUCI'IONEEII
EdWin Wlnt• nDIIV booking
oaring alloo. 17 .,..,
rfenae. Phone 304-273-3447
R..,.,w.ood. W.Va.

MOll~

4-11-1 ...

'11 .

16tN.2a

olond.,..,...... Jla-of

•KITCHEN -BATHROOM •UVINO ROOM '
•BEDROOM •CHILDREN'S. PAINTS

"""'
,, "'~

UY'S
IEAm SALON

114-245-1152.

..-.:el

INSTALLAnON AND SDVICI OF HElL
RIGY IFFIOEIIT HEAT PU.S, All
CONDITION.G ANI 951%1 EFFICIEIIT
FURNACE.

NOW THill JUNE 10

~

-------

CHESTER, OHIO

ANY PERM

EITATE NO. 2111103 - A.

1OO'S OF PImiltS FOR EVElY lOOM. .

Y IS

100fo OFF

of

n_., Uoena_. • Bonded In
8tolo
Olilo' Uquldoilone.
,.,..._ MtltM. entiquel. Me.

EY.IIIGS

4·11-15-tloo

Public Sale
' &amp; Auc;tlon

Coli Marlin w..lomt¥•. AUOIIoo

992-2269

614-949-2526

4-4-89·1 mo.

8

BILL SLACK

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

of Wllom P.

HviOI "un lllled. Pamoror.

0

"May Gift Headquarters"

1

EITATE NO. 211144 - A.

WALlPAPER
SALE

I

olond.,......._of

~'t*' (»'ilo

949·!100

I

EITATI! NO. 218311 - 'A.

MASTI!RCARD- VISA.,- GOLDEN IUCJ(IiY.f nw'""

Round, square
dance slated

C"ftilhl.

De

. WAllET GIADIIATION (AIDS i GENWl ' GWtl4.~' Q~S ,

RACINE

"""*···

..... lfan.

TO lilY MOIHD MAKING PURCHASE
.
LADIES SPRING PURSES """""A!I,.!U.~U......NOW. $1 Q91

On Saturday, Burl Tennant.
has arranged for a group of
musicians to furnish entertain·
ment. Everett Wedge and his
band will play blue grass and
.country music plus some good
old "foot s tom pine" fiddle
music. On Sunday, a program of
gl)spel music will be presented
from 2-5 p.m.

Dol-

'*"

WMACifU.e-oflluoool
l!dlh A.
LPrldltf,Dn
EITATE NO. 21118 - Flnol
lllciDilb..__.,.
EUQIIoloo Clf
llw!-.ofMooya.-· .

MOTHER'S DAY SALE MAY 3-May 13 .
• REGISTER FOR MOTHER'S DAY GIFT
100fo OFF

grinding.

.-at,.

show

The Country Kitchen will be grounds will be open, Including
open both days of the show. In the Lewis. Summe"rs house, readdition to Its specialty of corn· presenting ·a wealthy '. fl!im
bread 'and beans, the Country owner's home, a country doctor's
Kitchen will serve cornmeal pte, offiCe. and · a Loom House,
hot dogs, Ice cream, and pop.
displaying_ old loom and spinning
The Country Store will also be wheels.
open and bas been well stocked
Everyone Is Invited to visit the
with craft Items. souvenirs, and West VIrginia State Farm Mu·
other merchandise. ·
seum and experience bow life
On Sunday at 9 a.m. the Rev . was "down on the farm" one
Louis Russell will conduct servl· · hundred years ago.
ces In the old log church. Lu Ann
There ls no admission charge.
Russell will play the antique
The West VIrginia State F11rm
pump organ and direct the Museum Is located four miles
slnrtng, and th~ubl!c Is Invited north of Point Pleasant. W.Va.
just off State Route 62, next to the
to at lend the service.
All buildings on the Museum Mason
. County Fair
. Grounds.'

The West VIrginia State Farm
museum will hold Its tenth
annual antique steam and gas
engine show on Saturday and
Sunday.
··
Robert Thompson, Pomeroy,
president of the West VIrginia
Antique Steam and Gas Engine
Association, sald that nearly one
hundred gasoline engines wlfl be
on display during the two day
show. Some antl~ue tractors will
also be •hown and operated.
Vartous pieces of old farm
equipment will .b e shown and
operated. periodically. An old
steam engine will operate an old
Buhrstone Grist mill and other
small farm equipment. A
number of antique tractors will
be In operaUon during the
weekend.
In addition to the antique
stea!D and gas engine show,
there will be lots of additional
activities at the Farm Museum
during the two day exhibition,
Including blacks!Dithlng, . spin·
nlng, weaving, and com meal

DOI'I FOIGO

.. ond.,..,...... ...,_,,. ...
LM11e L l'nlllllt. E-.crlo of
... &amp;-. of Moo -....-o. J
EITATI! NO. 21141 - Ftn,
.. ond.,..,...... ...._.. of

s&amp;udenta In Bill Blaine's advanced malb eJaas at ·
Eaatern Wgh School.
'

Museum hosts lOth annual

Alfred news

. ............
-lift ..... ..... ...,.......

.

•FIREWOOD

1 bedroom, vwy
beautiful, furnished.
Housek"pine Room
By Day, W"k, Month

w-lngCiu-

,

HARRISONVILLE - A free
blOOd pressure clinic will be held ·
Tuesday, from 10 a.m. to noon, at
the Harrisonville Town Hall. The
clinic Is sponsored _b y the Harri·
sonvllle Senior Citizens.

aupplloo

Sign up now for Botkel

GEARY
IODY. SHOP

PH. 949·2101
or Rat. 949-2160

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER
CAMP
GROUNDS

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

.

•LIGHT HAULING

---

BASin WEAVE

'

HARRISONVILLE - Harrl·
sonvllle Order of Eastern Star,
Chapter 255, will have a preInspection visit TUesday with
Deputy Grand Matron . Sandy
Quick. Officers are to wear
chapter dresses.

---

· 4-25-tln

W~ing

"At llasaa..le Prices"

Day. fight
NO SUNDAY UUS

THE

.AlE PltDII

POMEROY - · Th!! Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday, noon, at Main
Street Pizza. Gllf!tlt speaker will
be Jim Tompktna, vice-president
and general DWUlger, Soutberp
Ohio Coal Colbpany, addreulng
a planned merger of Mines No. 1
and 3. All members are-urged to
attend.

' IknowltseemedUkeyoumlght all night activities on behalf of
be hallucinating but that really the parents.
w~ snow that you experienced
Sullday morning
DeserVIng roses too are th~
-the climax of
employees and volunteers at
a -v ery cold May
Veterans Memorial Hospital who
SYRACU$E - Syracuse Pl'O
weekend.
planned and worked at various will meet 7 p.m. TUesday. Band
Before the
stations at the hospital Sunday and vocal selections by 4th, 5th
weather dec·lded
afternoon to successfully carry and 6th graders will be
to 't ake a turn for
out the annual open house.
presented.
the worst, the
Of course, there had to be
weatherman · predicted sunny planning In advance and Sunday
WEDNESDAY
and seventy for the weekend.
morning workers were on hand to
RACINE
- OAPSE, Southern
Sounded good to me- what with deeorate the hospital for the Local Chapter,
w!ll meet 7 p.m.
the proms being held for students occasion. Plans had been made
Wednesday
at
Southern High
or: Meigs and Southern High to serve refreshml!nts on the School.
Schools on Saturday night and attractive patio In the warmth of
the open bouse at Veterans spring as the last stop for the
RACINE - Southern High
Memorial Hospital on Sunday to hundreds of visitors at tending
School
Athletic Boosters will
make the opening of National the event. However, the weather
Hospital Week.
stopped ~hat plan- and refresh· meet Wednesday, 7 p.m., at the
Well - we all know about the ments were served In the dining school. Members are urged to
belt laid plans for mice and men. room of the extended care attend.
At any rate, the young people facilities.
MIDDLEPORT - The Ama·
w~re really pretty chilly In their
Of course, your attendance at teur
Garden Club of Middleport
beautiful clothes Saturday night the open house made all of the
will111eet
Wednesday, 8 p.m., at
- but they looked great for the work worthwhlle for the em·
the
home
of Mrs. Ed Burkett.
proms which are always a ployees and volunteers at the
Mrs.
Crace
Pratt will be the
h)&amp;hllght of the school year.
hospitaL They appreciate your
co-hostess.
Jeannie Taylor serves as advi- wonderful support.
sor for the prom at Meigs High
TIITJRSDAY
and John Dudding ls advisor for
Nancy Radford feels that she's .
POMEROY
- Preceptor Beta
the Southern ·High prom. The experienced a miracle.
Beta
Chapter
of
Beta Sl&amp;'llla Phi
schools changed from the dull
She's home from Mount Car·
Sorority
will
meet
Thursday,
and drab of every day to really mel Hospital In Columbus where
7:30p.m.,
at
theGraceEplseopal
·fantastic scenes for Saturday she underwent major surgery
Church Parish House..
·
night's proms. Jeannie and John and ls doing ftne.
are not only good leaders but they
Nancy feels the emotional well
RACINE- The Southern Band
a~ hard workers who get lncred·
being that you created through
Boosters
will hold their regular
lble results. I've told both Jean· your compassion and caring for
monthly
meeting
on Thursday, at
nte and John that I couldn't do her. Not only did Nancy receive
tliat If they gave me the school great support from residents of 7:30p.m. ,in the b'-h school banjl
room. Parents of all band stu·
building.
Meigs County but also from
dents
In the district are urged to
•There was something different residents of Mason and Gallla
.
attend.
for the Southern Prom this year. Counties. Nancy, of course, was
I( was an all-night lock ln.
In Elberfelds Department Store
POMEROY - Alcoholics AnoStlldents were given one hour to for many years and so knows a lot
nymous
and Al·Anon will meet
change Into Informal clothing of people. ·She was Impressed
Thursday,
7 p.m., at the Sacred
and be returned to the school by that so many of you remembered
Heart
Church,
Mulberry Ave.,
thiir parents. Once they arrived · her.
Pomeroy.
back at the building- that was It
Nancy thanks you - so do I. I
-;: no leaving. Seventy-six stu· know what you can do for morale.
Evening of &amp;hea&amp;er
dents were on hflnd for the night.
By the way, Nancy's husband,
POMEROY .The Senior
·However, no one minded that Rollin, Is also considerably lm·
Class
of
Meigs
County
School Is
l!ecauM a variety of activity had proved In his Illness. So, It
Inviting
the
public
to
attend
lill
been planned to keep the young appears that everything's com·
Evening
of
Theater
at
the
Larry
lng upr01es-soundsgo~ tome.
~pie entertained. In a well
R. Morrlaol) Gymnasium, on
· Improvised casino each student
May 12, at 8 p.m.
I not only wlsb you blue birds In Friday,
was gi~~en play money to try hls
Admlssloa
.II $2 for adults and $1
oj her luck at the games loaned to the sprtne - I even wish .you
tor
studenlll.
Tile students are
thf scbool by Plantl301. It was a some warm sprln&amp; weather. Do
directed
by
Cella
McCoy.
deltnlle advaata1e to be lucky keep smiling.
and wiD more play money
becauM at 5a.m. Auctioneer Dan
Smllb arrived and conducted an
a~- Whll the play money,
SUnday school attendan~ on1
sllillllita could bl4 on 110111e really
April 30 wu 25, and church
ntee Items w111o11· ,bad been at!IB'II~ Wal 13.
dliiated by lclnl IMIIIDMer -and
Guetlll cl1 Mr. and Mn. Clar·
ldllmeu I'MIIylllee. Thaw wei'!!. eeee JJ8ttdenon oa AprO 27·29
IUid ceaftlll laellldlltl a Weft Blt'tlla aDd Bill Wood, Who
millet with prizes were rttlll'llln&amp; trawl a Floflcla
the ....... - aad vtllt .. tlllllr Za..viUt home.
..... . . . cl1 the . . . of Act I
. . . ftiiiJy Ill ......
~
Cook* and IGft drlnb
itnllla-.a.N ... IIOII earOIIId.
were
enJo)'tJd durlna tile ICIClal
tile all
hour Wlllcll WI lid.
I
Rollt111011&gt; II a patlellt
at Ualftrllty Hoapltal Ia

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

PAt 1111 fOU

&amp; VICinity
-- -·----···-·---- --------·--····--

•sHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MDVAL

CUSI«*IUII
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

_ AI~t Trt~•l••'"

.;.....P:fPTaaunr·····

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

BISSELL
BUILDERS

REP~IR

1,..... ... ,.....
.

.....

AUTO &amp; TRUCK ,

. . add IIIII Gllll rod

THAI A

SMALL
\IMJ
ADS
r fWl( '

Gild

992-6282

SEARS 11 -.ui'OII'
614-992-2171 .

Roger Hysell
Garage
11. 124, , _ . , Olole

Wte~~~~,.....GIIIIn-

c•• ,,...,.,.
......

WOODEN~NGS
hilt 0.. y- Let

1•

•

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

J Styles

ON WE NOW AT

-.

llwoo Fomlly Ooroogo Wei 2
mlooupH ..... AunotSIMort'a
. -... M.y 11th ..d 12th.
8:00-1:00.

CARTER'S

SAlE

.
Varll. Siits

3 BR, 2 bllll, prd111 tub.
llct llolllt. LOcllld ...
lllrrlsOI,Hit. 16500 C.Sb.

11 Halp W.m.d

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

-

~t~~

1911-14x70'
MOillE HOME

CALL

~DAY

It's snowing in May

·······PO·merov...........

FOR

.t~"

.

Centrll Air!.

10• ..

Commur#ty
calendar

Beat of the Bend

UVING ON A
BUDGET?
Beat The Heat This ·
.Summer With

WANTED

OPa 7 DAYS
9AII·7M
_Paying today
April 11, 1919 .

;..

OUTSTANDING - Brian Hoffmu, fifth grade, received an
" outalandllla' l'lltlag for hla projeet, "Wha&amp; Are Your Chancea''ln
' ·the Malll Fair on Tlnanday a&amp; Tuppen Plains Elementary .It was
the flrllttlme lbe school bad a&amp;tempted a Ma&amp;h Fair.

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 7 ·

Ohio

Business ·Services
TII·COUtm
IECYCUNG

--

7

Yanf

sate

.

�-

i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pege-8-The DailY, Sentinel
31

Hom•

for

LAFF·A·DAY

Sale

""'m

hospcl ·

tll.lo2t.ooo. Col 114-44~
21• or 114-2...1378

SWAIN

AUCTION I

4 ............ d.nwlltnll•.
2 mil• VInton. Ohio. .

m....

·
·-·
.........
11\'ollnl.
pound
pool.
.......
lola .....
of

..... 111··~ ~
f
000.
3~Ill
•"'~a:-

*OOfft.
C.:. t1:H:a:3748.'

r

36 Lote &amp; Acreage

A

44

3 - - '"'"'" prlcod 10'~
oxtNniOO. Mo-brookAtlon; .-. -"• 1:00 •d
ken.
. 304-67~ 7438.

w....

Houoo tor ...._ llc»nd .,..,,
wv. 2 otorv. 3 .,..
one belh. balerMnt.

•r•a• •nd car part .
.... IOD.OO. · Coli 30 '- 77 3-

10:1111 oft• 1:00.
For ;oalo bv --·3-oom.
ll"ldo. lui~~~~-. 2 tlropl•
_ , 0 • h•ond-•. _,..
llr. 'l•go fencod lot, n• Or~
nonoo on d Jr. High. Kothnor
IMIO. IIPI&gt;C&gt;Intm.. Dnl!l, 30+
1.,.3772.ok• &amp;:00 PM.
30+17~6301 .

..Nico -norvho- 1.5wo.lri
lw·3--2boll-.2 . .
earage, 1outhern Ma1on

4418.ttw7P .M .

'"' dill'

Alhton. r.go
lot~
mobile ... _ pormlttod. public ~,..hod..:r···~ ·-h *i~:
- · · ~- ...,.._ Clydo ......_
C.H 114-~4411
Bowen. Jr, 30+17.. 2331.
7
.... P.M.
·
36 Real Elltate
~
;:.~ =~
Wanted
...,...
~1402.

-·""'*
:;:.T
CoM.,._

1 room tpart....._ 2 Nllw.

BOYERNMENI' HOMEII Fn&gt;m prkrato _,,.. ........... lu•
tl 00 fU .._..,. F ......_ tiO Flrot Aw. Oop. 6
R.Poo. TD Dei~!,- ""· · _.;,ld. Coli 114-~
ti•.N-8111111gThiiAoooll:ol 10 78.
lllolu-11 1-31~733-1014 Smol
AI
Ext 0273211 for curront llotinllll prkroto. nlco !Dr onop..on. 111
- · Stroot. COli 114-~

_,,,.hod • -·

33.18

N.W - l n g oppllootloftl for

._.DDm

41

Homes for Rent

, _ _ fu • ._ _ _

County. moderately priced.

.....ion. I mil• north l'blm
" ' - 30+87~1071.

..Es t»nd. 7 room henna I

L
2 br " -~
Solo/Rent:
.
dllocl
ronch. lor11
fen..,. _
vord.

304-17~2411 .

and .,.h 1tt iloor. 2

- - 2nd ftoor. 6 c:loaoto.
luK
........... g•ago. prlcod . ·~
IO'o. 309 llw ... h St.
WY~ 30+812·2303.

1111-. ......... P""'·

'·
Mobile Homes
for Sale

Bidwell Bahool District: .

2
IIPWbi.il&amp;. *'Nv
C•peted. sppMII'Ia., Mt• •d
trMJ! plc*uPIIJiiOVIded M ..nt.

_.,. ... llvlllg- to ......
plllg. bonlao end .,..... For
more...., nWI:Ian CIA 304-•2·
3718. E.O.H.
'
ano'"""...,.,,,.hod.,....,
niDi ond c:i- ltNiio ~
.....
.. no
P-,. phoM304-17&amp;-1318.

UOO/mo. Col 114--1320. Fur'nllhod ono loo*oOm opt.
Moo 2 br.. . .,..., 1n duollit Upotoln. Aduko Dnf¥. tzoo P"
houN. Main 81. Ch•hlrolt200 m-h. Utllkloo pottf, 304-17~
mo. Wot• pold. Coli 114-24~ 8710.
&amp;818.
AP"!m.,olnHM-ICI\ WYo.
Smlll 2 IR homo on 218. coll30+1711-1972- 6:00.
t17B/ mo. plul dipOIIt. Cll A.llment: 4 rooms arid bmh.
114-4411-1387 or 304-1711- utlk'- _.. tiO.OO .-~
1410ookforAich.
30, 4-17~3100 orl7~6101.
rent fur,.hed 3 room
cotteg&amp; 0,._ bedroom, niCII 6
d..,. Nice for aou .... No pilL
For

12a'JO. 31r.. 2 luH bothl. now

partment

Athton loo-.tllul ono ocro loto
w•hrtw•'"-o. ..,llllcwotor. .,.,.hod offl...,oy. ' 1150• utiCl!lt a-. Jr. 304-87~ hl• ,.. ld,, -•both. 701 41 h
2331.
.
Avo. , Ollllpola. Col 114-44.

10 .... 3-.oomhomeSind

2 · bedroom

a-...
.,_.

for

rent.

CerpMed. NloeeeltfnO ~ndry

• : ; . Houae type window ..
u
Inning. Prla. for quk:k

Rof. 6 d.oalt. Col 114-44~ foclll• ovollobl• Col &amp;142&amp;43.
992-3711. EDH.

114--1102.

2 - - · flnllhod .,__,_
applfanOII, nM"tv pelrlt«&lt; 1n-

Mle.

oetrs MobleHome ...,k.

&amp;piOIII/No Paym ...a til
A,_..tt on .., .-v Mobil•

Moy

· Hom• pun:h•• in Mey, Frtnc:h

ctty Mobile Hom•. Clll 814-

44~1340.

0""""""• lvlng 1 end 2 -

side. h•dwood floors. e210
month. 114-992-2111 . , . or

room apsrtment• •• Vlnegl
Minor 1nd RW. .kll APirt·
m.ms In MiddiiPort. From

114· 742- 28 72 ovonlng.

.,82. Colll14-892-7787.

wool&lt;-.
2bodroomhoul0for-. f1150.
,.momhlutl•l• notlncludocll
pluo dopolllt. Call 114-992·

1 bo*oom opt. lor - · t226
m•nth. d•Dih roqurocl. 114982-1119.
f4rnlahod. 3 room oport....,.

2375.

Firat ftoor, prlvete antr1noa. no

P••·

Houoolor-. 2-mhou•
eon 114-9*2213.
In oountrv. t 1150. P• mordh. I '2::-bo::--.,:-...,..----:K::-R~-::---:..
-:,.-:hod.-;
I 100. dopoalt. 704-4111-1131.
t 17&amp;. .,., month pluo dopoolt
Buah St. Mlcldloport. OH 3 "Coli 514-992-21711.
bectoom. furrilhed hon.. Aef.

CoR 30+812· 2&amp;11

45 Furnished Rooms

.Apple Grow • • 3 bedroom
houM on 2 . - • • 2 bM:hl. deck.
gwdan . , _ . rtllr.,..., ' Ho-

1978 14XI&amp; Bov-- 2 br ..

.,..st be moved. Cell 614-379-

2821.
Moble Hame for 11le: 1971
NMvvork•. allpa·2br .. 12&amp;62.

Like n - throu~ out beat of
quollty. Coli 114'44~017&amp;.

14o70 1887 Folrmonl. Allie&lt;.

Moble home. He• pump, Wll·
sher/dryer, Cell 114-241-

&amp;284.
For Solo: 1988 51a21 double
wldo. 3 br., utllty OODm. 2 luM

~tw . Tot .. •ectrlc wlh he•
pump. A .orv boaotllul homo. H

114-44~ 7882

lnt•oatocl coli

.tt•I:OOp.m.

1268.

6 drv•·

Ca11614-21~

1988 NamCD tNI• on tot lhlt

con bornocl. t41500. 114-99233111.
lx42tr..• on 4ecr• 2r()()fM

..,111 on Coll14-992-1352.

1971 12&amp;150 Ub.fv. f4000.
-ood dodo. polio owning
114-742-2764 oft• 1:00 p.m.
or 814-62· 31507 dll\'1.
•
2 bedroom.

moatoad lloolty, 21501 Jocklon
Avo.. o304-11~1140 or 30+
882·2401.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

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

F~ly lur .. hod g•age opt. AI
utl•l• pold ....,......rldlv.
-~~~

Dop. Aloo 3 bo*oom trll•. Col

114- ~ 11&amp;8, ..
18110.

New roof. 3

pordlll. -oddoclroom.tl-

Coli 114-31.883&amp;

...m.

Moblt home for

241 on Boohon lloocl. llc»nd
.... on left. beige .,d .. own.

1171 lloyvr.v mble homo.
Uo70 with 7x21 •pondo,
304-1711-1141.
Farms for Sale

' Iuper Bowl Of lpol1a Trlvlel

10 O.,a ume a c.h with
opprDVICI Cl'odl. 3 Ml• out
B..wllo Rd. Open 9 A.M. 1D 6
P.M. Man, thN Sot. 114-44~

0322.

Valli¥' Furnlturw

New .,d ueed *'rnlture 11'1 d
opplon- Col 114-44~ 7672.

304-175-1410, 11 4· 3181773,ovonlngo.
Re frf gent or· whit •· • 71.

llofrl...,or-whltc 2 dr.· t76.,

Refrfgerator·whlte: Hotpolnt
FF - •110. AefrlgentorAveeedo: FF-•175,
Rofrl-or-2 dr.; FF H.voat
Oolii - Like New e210.
R.trlgerator-sldllr( aide; whft•

t171, Rofrl-or-FF: whit•
ols.oo. GE W••·•tll. Kon·
more Wa~~~~ Kenmore
drvor-t76, Willi
dr\*·*911.

Whirlpool - - I dr)'er ..,.
like n.w· e300. 30 ln. .eeetrk:
,_..H..,_. Gald- t71, 3Q. tn.

, ........711. RMg•
double - - t1711. 30 ln. g•
rMto-whh•tl&amp;. Bk- A..
pllon- 878 llpp• RIYw Rd.
Coli 114-44~ 7318.
U.ocl •pllon-. -hln. drv·
......... .........on. mlerow.ve

ovlnl.

Ken' I AppU..-.

•

F umllhtd room. t100/ mo. A•

utiRIM pold th•o both. 918
-ndA.o.

''
'

Sleeping room~ with cooking.
A..oTrlif" ...ce. AI hoolf.~.

CAll oft• 2p.m. 304-773-

1811. M81Dn WV.

48 Space for Rent

Deep·

" - ••oo.oo. Rlfrla-ot«
NO.OO. AM work will 1illle belt
of!., 304-46~1811.

53

fii,DDQ. Coli

In ••·

,.._ oarner Second ., d Ptn&amp;
Amplo p....,g
Col

114-441-4241. 114-441·
232&amp;. or 114-44~4425.

Moun: M,T,W 10•.m. to lp.m.,

8undov 1 to lp.-m. 114-992-

2121.

64 Misc.

Merchandise

A.t. •

-lpmord t171.00. TMnllll

cenopv end toblo tiDO.OO. Co
oft• 4:30PM. 30+1.,.6734.

.. Appl• Gr.,.,. • • 2 bedroom Orie tcrl trllll• tot fot rent At. 2
mo ..• home on 7.8 Mr&amp; Nort"' celt .ttw 1:00 PM

,.,.,'*-

HomtMtted Reetty,

304-17~1&amp;40
24011-

44

... 304-882·

=====-

'"

.:3:114-~=17=11-:;28;::8:1;.
49

- For Laesa

For Lo•o: A....mont, nMI!I•
•oor•ed. 2nd floor. corner
lltDnd I Pine Oolllpok Dnobed-aom. stow

a ,.,. tva••·

prooldod. Dlpoot end
,.,.................. f2211. , .
mprdh. CIH 114-441-4241,
IUIJTII'UL APAIITMENTI AT 11+-44211, or 114-IUDGI!I' PIIICII AT JACK· 232&amp;.
ION ESTATES, 131 Jodtoon
Pile from •112 • mo. Wtlk to For ront 2
'"'*hod
ohDp Md .._.... 114-~ moblo homo, t 118 OD month
2&amp;1&amp;E.O.H .
plua utlltl-. wtl Hud,

-oorn

304-~8812

wheeled efeatrlo IICDOt.._ C.l

llogora Modlcol,
2104.

180()-18~

Far Sal• • Conaelt and PIMI:Ic
JllllllfCl tan b . AI sat•. RON

EVIINS ENTEIIPRIS£8, Jldc·

eon. OH. 1-800-837-8&amp;21.

Apartment
for Rent

or 17~-

•• . . . old houM 4 trll•
hool&gt;""" 11 mi. Iouth on Rt.

-no

- · '211n Concord 12 opood

r.._, 2 elecllric trlmrMN. 12t

Jam ......
2343lflor &amp;:00.

304-&amp;.,.

14o.,t-f270CLHIIooloult
" - · ·-For ...... ,.....
Cllll14--1270.

56 Building Supplies

t...
--

WHITE'S METAL DI!I'ECI'ORS
RonAIIItoon. 1210IIc»ndA.o ..
Golllpolll, Ohio. 114-441·
4331.

=·Cillo.

2 .......... -

of ""'lllg 6 plumlolllg ........

Aluminum t.den A J-inold

lnaldo6ou---•-L
341111. goldo-Hin. bluo
·
-2a
·IO,lo
1 1101do-rtub2al.
2&amp;6,
2&amp;12 • .,.,.._
CoRotr•lp.m.l14-~8772.

'MI•'•
so dih.m •ut ...
H•pyJit:k 3-X FI•Col•1171t

wo,..II!Contelns no 1yntMI:Ic
pyrot-1 R 6 G rood II.

For ...o: CGntploto 11-onlcl
..... - A I _ . , _ Bonooro a
a 11. Col 114-. . .

., ......,.. . . 8

a·

7711 . . . . . . . .

315 LoU i

Acnqe

•.•.

---·710·-

·-outfit. •-

1867 _
. . LE. L.ooolod41.000 mil-. Col 114-tl2·
1810 . . . . . . ar 814-•25088oft•lp.m.ond--

04 Cot - · """' ...... Coli
11+37.2718.

....... a-•

Mo-.

· Pets for Sale

•

Pot Food Doll•.

torCh•l•li:OO-toi:OOpm.

Cott-v -not.
...,.._, .nd li.n- Md Hlmat-vln kltttnl. atow stud ....
vlco. Coll114-~-~~~- 7
P.M.

1150 MF t-or. cllc. - g ..1171 Ford LTD, 0111 304-1711- n oom plont•- 71111.
Coll 114-~1341.
Ford 132 bollor f2.2IO.OD. '74LTDfour-t310-0D. 77
olr oond. 4 door,
Orwlly lood t271.00. Two- llon-lla
•• cutt•ors •200. 00. Al•c UIO.OO. 304-1711-8122.
c»nd. 304-17~2133.

l~o

fA((Tt4~EENON 11~
'

• • "'I'H-'Y~S'

JulleWobb ""· 114-44~0231 .
~nwynd

plowo 6

3413.

WHAT'S 80 DIFFEIIENT
A800T THE HAPPY JACK 3-X
FL£11 COUARn! IT WOIIIIIIII .
Contolnl NO ovnthotlc PYIOt-IBIDWI!LLCIIIH FEEDJ
0 NOIITH PRODUCE.

Puooloo. born PM-ch 10. Mot*
'h · lobndor end Yt ...._
ID•Itl. Fattw hm• Bh•

ph.d. Holro- wonnod. Only
fnq~ire.

f1&amp;.00oldl. CIM 1--0110.
AKC R I G - Cockor llponilll. 2 m..-. OltmPIIIftl

eon 114-112-300fl .,.

tore noon at llfi•I:OO p.m.

-lnsooolng.c•p.,·

. Tony catchn Samantha
giving a friend answers 10 an

exam. C
&lt;D fll Jlov1 Nova clartllea

...... plumbing ole&lt;tricll._ , oomplot• Coli 614-44~
7128.

lhe mysteries of lhe black
bear and of hibernation. !;I

a • 1121 A-• 111

BASEMENT

Featured are the heroic true
s10rles of rescuera who hun1"
lor a boy tripped under llle
Ice lor 46 minutes and 111e
aaarch lor a kidnapped 8
year old. C

WATERPIIOOFINO
Unaan..loftlll llt.ttme .,er~n·
t • LoU ,.,• .,.,_
" - _..,... c.tl collect
1·814-237-0418
night.

.,,,.Mel

d.,."'

Rogerslltement
Wol•prooflns

OIPilnwrMwe

1D1 MOVIE: Jawa II IPGI (1 :57)

8• NaalwHie Now

EEK AND MEEK
ALL 1HRa.JGI1 (IVILIZAilOO
MAU HAS~ lH£ -m:J1H

llptlcTenk Pumplng-090, OoiNo Co. RON EVANS ENTER PIIIS£8, Jocbon, OH 1-IOD537-tl28

Munier, lhe Wrote

+-1£ HAS .. .

2-ofhonor-1~••

~

comploto t43.21.
- · ~m._
3 pure br~
••
lh•hltd pupo, otoo.oo mtlo.
t711.0D .. 11+742-2811

63

Livestock

1112 ............ Umltocl. 4
door.--lv ... ooll-ro
1:00. l04-675-M31.

3 mo. old 'llv - . Colt. 3

=e"oft:::'P.M~

81

.......

~;:::;:::::;::::;;:;;;:;::::

72 Tnu:k• for Sale

br•dl. Houte Clllil, ... ~ lOme
..,.,..,oe nplh. W.V1 304-

'01'0"114-:--:l'ot'-:-:
.d~h:-IH-::-t:-tln-:-.,..-:--:.--:d

(1!-.umouotnllull. o-.
..30+731-7111.
__ --bo-.mllc.

-

with -

7881.

...... 304-17~

'

fllllrlldlheW On: The Family

'

;R~-

A LOLUPOP

ONLY VOTERS

SHERIFF

JEST FIR YOU, · TAIT "TTfANKY;'
MIZ. SMIF !!

.

GIT TH'
GOODIES!!

TATER

114-~11411.

GOYEIINMENT IIIZID Y.....
d• from t100. ,__ Mor·

•=•

111&amp;

Hon.

XR 80. &lt;hot

Con*lon. •-orO.I.O.Col

oo-- ~•Cholrvo.lur-

114-Z...11DI.

pluo.
Gultlo. 111
1101-187·
IIIL 1·10111.
1170 .,..... Dirt euot-.
III.OOO.,........,- ....._

Iii&amp; Hon&lt;lll Aolonoodo; 2
hlmou II. covor- 4411
m l • / - . Coli 114-D.._

-loc•m

1HOMonloCIIoltPI, '1. AC.
CC.AMIPM ..... •:t.oooColl

:r..-:~s ·:=,:,,c~
814-tiZ.

rlo MOto.- .e. &amp; leNice.
AUiomaU.tl llldric repllir. A'"
'ttm•ora. .....ora ~••·

a
&amp;7 Plno lt. 114-441-2312.

86

'

•'

... noo.

Colll4---.
1114 ~ -

·
•.
tlon.
Col . ,.·
. ....
. oft•
1.0004:30p.m. t11DQ.

*ovllo.-

..1111 Y..,oho
ofllr, 104-..,._1473.

.

- -· .,.

BERNICE

J a J Wot• lorvloo. Swimming

BEpEOSOL

""·

R a 1'1 Wol• ....... Poola.
alltMM,
tMmedf .....

w.....

1,000or 2.000golonod"""""·
CoR 304-17~1370. '

,,.,. Ko
+' too. noo.oo.
1m
110. t111D.OO.
.......4-.,.....,8.

715
1....... . _ . . ••• -

•

~~~'Eni
, • ...., aw..
., ~

··•..... .... ...

,_O,!Wir •

................ -a14-

eae...na

Motunfel'llla

. .. -

'::::J.=.-.

t7

P. . . ooe Md dttennlnatlon will be , .
qulred In the.,_ aheed In order lor you

to...._ a1 ollhe .-ell you .,. ca-

::.: --==-':"~t!;,.-·
•n

Upholatary

.. __ 23_.,.._

lllauus.,., •• 1111.-. .-vRt
1t1 . . . . m vi Ill lug. c.l

--

104-171-4fS4 for froo

.

TMIIIUI CA1111
I ., ~
Oil p cAing ...,_ miQf1l try to ln1tntldtte you toel8y In order to wtn tl1elr - 11 you IIIII' and juat 88 ftnnl)l.lhla s-Will bealc off, Know where lo look lor I'C):

you . Mall $2 to MatchmMer, c/o lhla yje!d . ~ will _,1ually have lo
,_,paper, P.O. EloKII1421, ~. _ , . , ._ _ 10 lor lhe .... of peace,
lit 11 be you . .
OH 44101:3-428.
oam1 IIIIer .,.......,. ., A II1UatiOn l+fl!"AIIIUI (..... II 11) A
that - l l y ap_.a to J&gt;e unprofit- wnture In which you .,. -11y ln...
able.,.,. be rot:tllltld If ,.,Ulllka a mora -could requlrelar more reoources
IIMglnaiMI approach. Get ou1 ofllle rut thM you h... at your dlfpalal. Start ·
todey and be a lilt more~.
looking arOWICI lor 1 wall--lilly.
CANCII!I (,_ 11-NJ II) H you run CAPIIICOIIII (Dee. ........ 111 A oltua·
lnlo oppoe!Uon ~. don'! e11empt to t1an thet you're likely to 8n\lclpa10 negmeet it head-on. V011'H be to WOik ·~ 1aclay could 1Um OU1 much mare
things out to ~·· muiull blnellt ~ly lhan you lhlnk ptllfible. Try
tt.-ough dlptomecy and tact .
laak-.g lor ounshlne I n - of
LIO (........... II) Un-ely. ahedows.
your lnl1l8l Nndl ~ miGht 11&gt;- AQIWIUI (..._ 81 Fell.111 A reeponcllne you to IIIWIIIjll to do llllnp llle 11- 111111~ cat-no you
hlld way. Look lor 1111111 ol ......... CCIUid be .........,_ to clagrea '"'
tanoa, nat pill "I
city. Hou..-, you....., d ..,..to cleel
Y1IMIO (Alii- • • •,. II) Don't Ill
your piiUurlllll l n 1 - uaurp lime PIKII (Peb. • M Ill\ a) H your
and~ -lhauld be ~eel to ........ In confHal wlltl the.....,.. of
your men . t DIll OOitOill&amp; I you plly the ml!allty of JOUt' pen ,._, M.....,
be ..,..,a adjuat JOUt' ..,....,. than Ia
lodllr,
....
to ... - ·
a.-.
lloOIL
II) Allll!ance ..,.,.,. to adjuat . . . .
today could be cauMd (MaNill1 , ,. . . . . you ,...
appt I l l . of fltua. you ... CIWid- 1111811111 ....,._._
to lion«'*""' .... ,...,-' .. aon-'

wllltlta_,...,._

and yau'l lind 11. Tho Alti'On
Gnlph MataltmMer lnf11n11y ,.. 1111
whlah ..... -~.,.. .... tor

·

"

- - ' · ............ 88lc tor ltladay.l1
Ia not llllely to lie gMin to you
voluntarily.

•0

I

r

·'

- - 2.000 1D 4.000 .....
~
etc.

(J)

1111 • •

llpOIU g~ each

304-17~17811-

2*12111.

Cil •

inttJMeW1 two Clllbrlty

•'

.......

(J)

"

5-1-11

tJ642

.A75

Three no-trump would have been
easier to play than four spades, since
East did not bold a live-card diamond
suit. But the spade ~ontract should
have succeeded.
Declarer won the ace of diamonds
· and drew four rounds of trump, dis·
carding a club from dummy. Then he
played a heart to dummy's jack. East
won the kiDtl and came back with a di·
amond. South threw a club on lbat. as
West won the kln1. West played anoth·
er diamond, and South threw another
club. Wben the defenders played still
another diamond, declarer ruffed, and
he is still wondering how to cash his
last heart.
After South gets the bad news that
trumps are not splitting, he should
look ahead. It is an lllusion that he
must k~p all the remaining diamonds
in the dummy. Let him instead throw a
diamond on the fourth spade. He
should then play ace and queen of
hearts. Eut can win the kln1 and play
diamonds as before, but see the differ·
ence on' the foorth diamond. Having
discarded two clubs on the second and
third diamonds, oo the fourth diamond
South caD ruff whill! at the same time ·
unbloeldng the remaining heart honor
from dummy. That lets him cash the
10-9 of hearts to lll!lke his contract.

.7•xa1s2
EAST

WEST

.9642

'14

t K 10 9 5
+U84

• QB 7 S

+QJ2
SOUTH

'

.AKQBS
,10863

tA
t!O 6 3

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

West .

Non~

Pass

2•

Pus

s•

Pass

Pass

Eut

Pass

Pus

Pass

Opening lead: • 10

Defender West did well to lead dia·' ,
moods rather than his singleton heart.
With four trumps, it is usually bette~
to attack a suit that will make declar,
er shorten his trumps rather than to
look for ruffs younelf. Against an
opening heart lead, declarer would
win the ace, dra• trumps and euily . .
make the contract.

CROSSWORD
ACROSS

.1 Boaal
5 Cleave

•

&lt;

'·

4 Golf club

5 Layat
8 Nudge

10 Alistair -

7 Ordinance

11

8 Crele

Exchange
12 Equipped
13 Columnist,
Carl 14 Part of •
the course
15 Alumnus,
for short
17 Derrlng,do
18 Verve
21 Aalarlak
24 Marriageable

28
29
32

33
35
315
39

Winslow
Parsonage
Speaker
Prasarve
Cargo
welghl
Secure
Greek
cheese
Prallle
Make

-'

mountain

9 Decade
10 Siamese

-

18 Entared
the
maralhon
17 Gullar
ridge
18 Yearn
19 Different
20 Chirp
21 Worn out

2622

23

Ye1tlrdly'1 Anawer
~

25 Make

.
37 Romanian
· a cake
city
27 Ribbon 38 Reddish ·
ornamenl
brown
30 Informer 39 Purse
(sl.)
34 Lethal
40 Housa wing
Bull (Sp.) 35 Harrison 41 China
" - for
or
or Baltic
All
Glenn
43 - du
Seasons" 38 Jamboree
Dlable

WMi&lt; u
wall 11 unique and humoroua
I!)Of1lna . - from around

IW wat'idc 1NR)
flllllfiOII

..........
•

eo Lew ComaDIIan

.

{

··~

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

..

'

'·
..

.-·
-.
(

"
,•
...:
"

clearing
Emulate
Bernstein

,,
·'

DOWN

1 Appla

1$8Ctlon

•.'

2 European
'

capital

.

3 Turkish
weight

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI'FJI- Here'1 bow to work It:

•vau

..•

AXYDLBAAXR
._LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.

P X

p J

D

liDWNX,

PX

su

w J v.

YFSEJ

C D 0
PJ
p

u

XSFKPB

DYV.-~DCWVN

S E 0

UFSC

NDZQ

PO

..
.. .

..,.

J

A PJ

..
•,

CRYPTOQUOTE

,......,.

'!

..

44 Watchful
45 Relieve
48 Foresl
47

HosiJII"f~

-'ftgo ond

1171 Hondo 710. Modll K.
-OaD.II!IIIIol!lllt-

•volvad-

(I) UghiiW llde Of lpofll

General Hilullf!g

I •a~ll~k~m~dL~-:=--:;:-:-::I·

flotl-m -

11:00 •
..

ft•ldenl:l• or aom~dal wir- ,:.
ing. New .vic. ar npairs.
u_..ed tlldrld•. Ridenour '

Elootrlool,

1918 llactlonl ai1d hOw
lnflllullonl have
Q
N••IJ•M CIMie

..... eou ... ,

~ Eltc.trlc Service. Elect:-

•

42 Coronet

&lt;D Melloo Folow Mexico"s

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

NOR111

looUsh

18:20 (I) letw- a 10:30(1) N8A lltkllllll

eo,...

w.tt•son's Wet•r H1uting.

•

TELL

......

.JlOS
'AQJ

By James Jacolly

31

CD fla awatuli

'·

'
71

r

10:00 (I) 710 Club
• (J) Ill Mldftlgl1t Cllar
Jaclt Iandi In the hoteeat
When hie friend ahoota an
Innocent man. Q

'

fte• ~ • • ,.., volume Ill·

IN.

.

CCIII'. Fourth end Pine

Honda -o"''CC• lor oal•

MIMI
.
IIJ LallY ICing U..l

11:3DiiiVIdeoCoufltry

•

Plumbing

..CHrtllllbull•d•- clwork 73 Vent &amp; 4 W.O.
Olllloolf. Ohio
ho- lor ..... coM 304-743- I----------:-:-::- -no 11+-3181 or 114IS41.
77 Dodge - f~711. 304-17. ' .--,44~7.."'
''
13111.
84
Electrical ·
74 Motorcyclea
&amp; RefJigeration
Jr diiSI!III 1.·11111
Auto's For Salt

MOYI!: 'Mu c1et
llaanll(llst' Cll Tua •

lPG) 11:56)

a. Heating
CAIITER'S PWMBING
liND HEATING

iIJ e1121

Ill MOVIE: 1fw Glut lan1lnl

v.......

''Thill II hc:lw fir I eM glllla S II I I
IPOf.l1d with lhe Wilma only hill WI)'

THINS-.

20 P• CMt ofl 111e on Zenith
lerlfc:e. Parts 01 llbor wilh thil

rat at~ ..-.. (1 1, An.,t.

304-675-?la&amp;

I WAS GOINS:10
A51&lt; YC\J THE OAME

HS'!e'+

&amp;1~2311Dhlo 114-44~2484.

82

.,............. 4100.

.....
iJia'i
::::::
~
=.m. , .......
• wJ-· 'lr"'~•
-·

DID WIN'n1ROP
.JUST CQ',\5' BY

1177 Ford ollort lood Y·S. outo.
1o1o of • . _ t2,100. llrm.

'*· --

·--·~····
. . . . . . . . -·=-·

.
Gil In Tile IIHt Of

of the Impact of 8 yara of
accelerated devetopement.

z.ttth lko ewwk:ingmoet 01t.

For Solo: 1 polocl - d bull.
wolaht 1,000 .... Coli 114-

1167 Ford T - Ol 8port
211.000 111.
111.
AII/PM
- -Col . .n*,.,..
.....•
wltN!to
..
,_ ... a 1 4 - - ,.77 - 1 c... Coli 1142. .12ta

...

1;1

Tho Night A of
dllmembered sk...,s are
found In Sparta. g
&lt;Jl Top 1111* lloldno
(I) • (J) 'War
A..-tca: Tile

Ron'o TV lorvlcl. opocltlloing In

Coii14-~A26 1111• lpm.

1 ,.M.

'

e

11:011e (J)

CoRI14-H2-23&amp;&amp;

od, tl July 1, 1t89. WVo
304-67~2318 Ohio 114-44~
24154.

1177GMCTrl-ala 11111. olum.
bod. Wlllll Wllh/wlthoutlood.

Coi=:I:1:4-:H::;::7·=0141=.===J.:or:7:42=·3:1:0:0:.=====~ •-Goodoontltlon. 1-:,.--=-:-::----:-::-:-:-~­
teoo.Coiii14-J411.113Dok•
111710110 Kllw- - -

YI'IIA IU IINrrUR!
aA,,UANCEI
lit. 1411nCorttonory. 1/4ml. on
Lltt- Plto. Op.. 7 ..... "'
IAM·ePM. Coli foroppt
Allor hourll14--31158.

'

1:01(1) N8A ...........
1:30 Cil
(J) The Wonder YHrs
• The kids" beloved woods are
scheduled to be deiii'Oyad.

•

•••

-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

&lt;D ,...,...,. YellOwstone
P"ark Q
fl)I'NII . . W An UMIInlliOn

uo. - - .......

gr-.
114-192·1111 oorly
momlngooriMo ovonlngo.

I ...
111111. ....... "'"'· •• .._
.....
ICittlion
.. _ ............ a.ll . . . . ., . . . . . . . . . . . ...
lt4-....1111.
rio ::.::.:·~=l'M•

I

IF HE. lXESIJ'T I&lt;M)IJ rr,
f-00 00 HE U£ AOCUT IT?

(}!' (C(.RS£

Rainbow ra.int•. AI work gu• ·
rlld:-.1. lnt•iot llld exterior.

3 Anoore Re.,..s. t20. uch. 2

l.op-lorrocl,

bluas mualclan Ia framed lor
the murder of a rock alar. !;I

¢l lift by NIEIII , Inc

llolnlu 1M INRI Q

Cawe-

color.

IDIIIIgllt Coull

Ill Croolt and ChaM
7:36 (I) 8eulonll 8on
1:00 =MOYIE: Tile llenlkar
10111 :27)
e Ill Matloclr An aging

Conclu1lan. Pert 3' ABC

24fl:11441.

goad homn ued

IIJ Crurllta

a

Coli 114-441·

Hou~ehold Goods

81

• • • Ill

(

S·9

Now Shlh-tlu puppl• to opoclol
ho,_,AKCrogllt-.-to
to in 3 wool&lt;o. AKC r - I d
8hlh-tiU .............ICe. COli
814-311-1114.

d'* ........

Todar

()) 1WI Cycling TOU! de
Tru·.1p Updlla
Cil • (J) Who'• the loll?

phone. hl10 .......... 111101
-~~~~~1. 304-6711-.30 IOk

----Celfl.•d
-11Me-671'ao&amp;.....,

I

S~erv1ces

1111 l'l&gt;rdloc Bon-Ill SSE.
211.000 miN, looclod Including

. . . .tl . . . . . . . . . .

-laf.

A (;OLf C.OO(tSI
NB&gt;&lt;l" 1b AN
ANC:IENT
G~EEJC TEMpLE.

(J) USA

lnablll

77 Dodge
t?OO.OD.
--304-1111-34111.
.

....
.'"'*"=
..,_.,..-a
.................

t•l!u_, _ _ ..
oiiiiO 0.1: !Millo
..... Col .,....... _
1111•

.,

tuohhofl, plow.cllc. Zrtlllli-n
plontor, t4711Q., H MF wlh
.._. ......, hoe. ....h hog.
tl. llod llodf Md
boom polo. oom pl.,.., 3 pt. -1878 Dick
· _ _ _ .. d
aw-wll
fln-. Col l14-ze.8822.
ofhr. Coli 114-tlt-1300.

Tlftt'l Comp.ny

ll&amp;,llll~rdyll;l

C.rp... ry work. P.-.tling. dry

Lito Modll4141nt'l dlooolwlh

,.,......
lltVIII.

/

loti-•. Coli 11,4-37!1-2416 '

Supply, 391 W. Moln St.,

4 dr............... otvlll cl
.... ........ It f1'J't.
- ..... - ·aul'ul .._
....

IWI

THEY'FE PUTTING

tw, bUMdng, dot• woriL frM

1 - 6 oH whlio), w'*

. . . . .. , . ,

t221o-CoiJ04-1711-IlD4.

114-44~0208.

.. 1118 Pallmlno Tl(L fold-·
· - · 111+17.3771-

-G

Spoclol dlloourc •lo. 150 """""
ot 4o8 p r - • t - oiQ

([JJ

.

r---------------~

BRIDGE

Cil Eld8rtlllttman1 Tonlghl

e

WfiAT''t..L TH~Y
CA&amp;.L. IT.~· THe

tN ATI-IENS

1971 22 Coachmen
Cnp•lt1100. now tlriO 6

....... Col

•,,

"Looks like you've gained weight," purred the lady In the
middle of a crowded 30Cial gathering. "Oh, just a lew
pounds," reaponded EVERYBODY in the room.

. Long lsllllid, NY

.1m' s Odd Job's, Sundedta,

For Ill• 1118
O...d
AM
lolllld
•.-o
Cll
11+....7711d•II'.M.

n..,.....,_._..,.....,..._

Buldlngt

·
-·
22ft. ezsoo. Coli """'
&amp;:311:
114-44~310&amp;

Home
Improvements

IIIBIDdc Co .. 123112Pino t ..
OH. Call 114-~

"' gln1Mn
. .l!~· Polll
.!...-.,130
'-6711-d:I0 ~
Y-•lolllor•w•~""'
10 .-oMup
491
,..... 1 4
~
· ., 10 -

•:IJ.•

Complete the chu&lt;kle quotod
by fill ing in the miuing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

- ...,

Bushel - Oddly - Verge - Hookey - EVI:RYBODY

e

1872 Contlnenut motor

ConCI'... blocb- all , - . ~rd
ardlllvery. MuanunllGIII o-

Fllh Tonk. 2413 ..-on A...

•- •
• · 200 volt
" " -· 4 Y'*' Dld.Colll 142l•bot-I:OD-4:00.

17 Q

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

1D1 CIIMra
OMiemiYico
IIITopCird
7:01 (I) Anclr Orlffllll
.
7:30 (J) l'amllr Flltld
(J) A......dH TNT Monster
TI"I!Ck Challenge. Part 2, from

Good Shill"· Loolcl Good.
fii,DDQ. Col 114-2411-91187.

114-24~6121 .

12211.

BUIIneu

18a3Ctal•-71.000
mla Tit, AM·FM _ . ,
orullo. I04-773--bo0 • ,:OO.,d 3:00.

Buldllla-;c
brido... llntolo.
.... c dl Wlr&gt;
lllo 0\wldo. OH. Coli

7/ t21.000. Coli IU.II7-

34

--oo-lon.

1113--N•W.Iopd,
ounrMf.--21mi-. t11DQ. Cll-.Ngh
814-44~
1204Jim~- ........

8 ht&gt; ,_.,, 3'AI hp 221n out

114-44~

SWIMMING POOLS f1181
Second ondPIIIo. Oolllt&gt;.... eon · Eorly
bird apiOiol on 81 _...
114-441-4428. ll4-441Hugo 19d1 pool. hull dock.
4249,
or
114-44~2325.
Tral• for rent: 12.1180 twO
t.ce. flt••warr.ntv.lniUIM ..
.,.,.....,, prlvoto lot ga-dln
tlon 6 llnonc:ing ovololllo. Coli
c:Ountrv
Mobile
Homo
'-lt.
opoco on 218 Olllocllo. OH I Route 33. Nor1h of Pl&gt;m.ov. 24 hro: 1-800-34~ 0941.
·mN• fTom town/•200 per mo.
Loll. -.... ,.,.. ...• . Coli
Call814-25~1393.
Whoolc;h-- or ...... ,
11+812-7479.

_•

A womal'\ beaan a writing
assignment. by vlsualizing an
unconventional scene. It
began : "The house is quiel,
the children are - a t - ."

....

AT

0 Ma.•,lll•

11+24~9187.

-310motor,
22ft.lonQ.
911. 3111. ""'"
..... l.ln.wtir•,

Complete fllm development

For Rtnt: Urge one-c. o•-ae.
Ol27aft• 2 P.M. or.,.,timeon ,.. of bu ilclnO on aar..r of

--·

•

1171·DOdge Sha1ul Motor

- ongllah bluo d'* mol•
Ci-la 9 mo. aid ,...._.,... blue

8uv or Soli. Akr-• AntlquOI.
1124 E. Moln 8treot, Pom.....,.

'

Ne•aHour

Oood Sh•e. Loob Good.

Two I mo. cldroglo•ocl.,glllh
,_. tk* famlll-. One I mo. old

Antiques

~

K1 p E CT

I I I I

Ill • • ill WI1HI Of
'--1;1

- 2 2 f t. lana Itt.$ln. high.
310-or. . . . I.Snowtir•·

Groom tnd 8uppt;' Shop-hi
Grooming. All breede . .. All

•eo.00.

I•t

I.S'RI. A I.H HI.

&amp;

C!l fll MacNoH/ ....,_

1178-Dodge Sh•t• "" Mot or

MoftlhM F...,ltu,. and C•rp-.
No. One c:.pilt. d•coum price.
8,t8lrlmnt•. AnaoV,Man.-.tQ.
lootc:h o..rd _ . Ret . .a.
TWo locatlonl 122 Vf1nd St.
Point Pl-tlrd. w.v •. 30+87~

Of1hw11har

Ii

,_ _.___.___.___.,_ _.___.1

e (J) AIC - . , 1;1

~~Affelr

I

56

p.. .....

rl

e!JlPMMagaatne

.I

217 E. 2nd St.. Pl&gt;m•D'f·
114-192·833&amp; or 114-98113&amp;81 .

1418. Upp• Rlvw Rood. Kl·
...... ChiD &amp;14-4q. 7444.
8otno thlo ·ld
lor - •
10
dl•-nt
120- vdo
'"lnlm.~m).
·

2y

I::JII (I) OM Der At A Time
7:00 (J) Our Houll
.

....... !l-i5.

PICKENS USED RJRNITUAE
Complete houtehold furnls~
Ill... 112 mil.....,_ Coli

ti I I

•

Ill c--. Eltpma
•-raoumwt

up,.

hoodbo-t30.,duptotlll.

be-

-do.

IIJ lhowlla Today
1D1 WKIIP In Cincinnati

'

ltrtdl•t4001ndup,bunkcomplete w-fftlltriJJM t215
Md up to f:llll. llbV t110.Mo-orboooprlllgo
ful o r - t41. firm t7t. end
tla a- t210 • up,

.

'

•eiOIeocaWKIIP In Clolclnna1i

J

Din.. .• e101enduptOMII.
- . . toblo w-1 dlolrs t21&amp;to
t78&amp;. O.k ttiiO
f371.

-IDn

.

(!) lody !laclrlc

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
lof• ond .., . . pricod from
t31&amp; to ..91. ,;
. obi• ~10 Md
up 1D t121. Hkfo.o·bo•o t38D
to t8111. Roclln . . fil26 to
t378 umpo t21 to t121.

-..mlultoo.- m..rcobln•~

L

~mplo

I~=~:::;::;:;:~--,
5

(I) lportaLoak
. Cil

relr'-•cn.

\

Matfi .......... Hour

llllhe-Ra
1:01 (I) Allee
1:30. IJl Ill NBC Nlglnlr Nowa

GOOD UI!O APPUMCES

::r •eo.

rho

NUROD

eiOI"--Darl
!It , _ Oi Life

.

Root""''Jo lotion ol
0 lour
xrarnblecl words

3 .:,-:.1:..,::..1~_,.,-l
. 1--r.-1

10:30)
(!) ~ Ago •. f"ar Away !;I

1764.

com-c:itla- 1400-·

lllclng doors. rwo 'lhlrdl acr•
Vlr'f' good con&lt;ltlon. 1 mh off

33

Cil ew 111 eo
IIINnl
(J) Ia ardw. . llltebll't

T\/NED FOR
MOitE NEWS AT •
Elf'JEN ...TJ.lANK
'IOU FOR JOINING
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Moble home t.,d oont1WCI. G••
furneee. stove. refrigerator,
Wll.,.

TUES.. MAY 9

Hneu. . . • • mora AI In aood
00-lon. Coll114-ti2-2T70.

-.. -In-

The Daily Sentinei- Paga 9

Television
Viewing
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lt-1 TIE'.m ta. ru:a.;~

CALL RiOA TlliRAA
FuetO;

-oom•
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"A man's home may be his
Castle 1 but I've ag·ed a lot in
Office."

"""" for
2
1
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18,000. 11 4-tl:l10
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May 9, 1989

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JUT N' CARLYLE~ ~y lany Wrtpf

61 H0111llhold Goods

IITTINTION: GOYEIINMENT
HOMIII
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\

Tua~tlay. May 9, 1989

c .p o a
SNB

RSAO~SO

y..., • .,., ClfFI•••• .., LIFE IS A GREAT BIG
CANVAS, AND YOU SHOULD ntROW ALL 1liE
PAINT ON IT YOU CAN. - DANNY KAYE

...,.·.

�Pege-10-The Daily Sentinel

··. U. S. Congressmen say...
to Point Pleasant, a north 10 ·
soulheast link from Point Pleasant
to Hurricane and a nonh·soulh
route from Point Pleasant 10 Mil-

ton.

·~
I
'

Cost on the West Virginia link is
estimated at upwards of half a billion dollars.
·Ohio, on lhe other hand, accord·
ing 10 Miller, has a three-pillse plan
in lhe w~ for the four-Janing of
Route 35 in Gallia County.Tbe $82
million project includes $25 miUion
for the road link from BidwellRodney Road 10 east of Route 160;
$43 million for completion from
Route 35 10 the Bidwell-Rodney
Road; and $14 million for the route
(rom one mile east of 1ackson to
Route 325. Right.of-way comple·
lion is done for the first phase and
partially .completed for the second
phase.
Funding would be a 75-25 match
with lhe state of Ohio picking up
the lesser percentage.
. Miller said the federal highway
trust fund provides $321.4 minion

to Ohio this year and $108.1 mil·
lion to West Virginia. The total
projected cost of ma1dng Route 35
a complete four-lane to the Indiana
state bne is $250 million, officials
were told Monday at the Point
Pleasant meeting.
. Jack Fowler lhe GaUia County
Community lrnJliO'jl:lll(:llt Cmp.,
said his group wiD work with both
West Virginia and Ohio officials to
make the project a reality. "We 'rc
going to offer our assistance and

or

'

offering help or assistance to
clients, In large and small ways.
"Without commlttment and
dedication," Wedemeyer said,
"our work here at Carleton
Schooi·Melgs Industries would
be In vain. And the staff deserves
the credit for the goud that comes
about, because they do the

work."
.Carleton School·Melgs Indus·
tries staff members and volun-

New bureau office hours set

'

Office hours at the Meigs County License Bureau have been
changed as follows: 9 a.m . to 4 p.m . on Monday, Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday; and from 8
a.m. to 12 noon on Saturday. For. Information, call992-2084.
.

I

I
.

l

EMS reports five Monday ~lls
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to
five calls on Monday.
·
At 7: 08 a.m. the Middleport unit responded to a call on Gold·
Ridge Road In which Mabel Brlckles was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Rutland unit, at 11:43 a.m. went to
Happy Hollow Road for Mary Crickman whQ was trasported to
Veterans Memorial.
At 12: 14 p.m. the Middleport squad was called to Stonewood
Apartments for Mary Gilkey who was treated but not
transported. The Pomeroy unlt was catted to Lincoln Heights at
7:02 p.m. for James Travis who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center, and at 10:53 p.m. th~ Pomeroy squad responded to a call
at Cltlf Apartments where Hubert Clower was transported to
Veterans Memorial.

Impact...

Continued from page 1

made a second $500 donation to
the project. He reported that
about $5,000 has been · donated
and pledged at this point, but that
about $15,000 must be secured
before the vlllage moves to hire
someone for the job.
Mayor Hoffman advised Counell that the Board of Public
Affairs is discussing sewage
rates and will probably be
recommending an Increase soon.
He said that the Improvements
made at the lagoon mandated by
the EPA will cost an additional
$16,000 year in payments, this
not lncludlng'tbe additional oper•
ational costs, testing and monl·
loring, of $1100 a month.
"Tbat translates into the need
for an additional ~5 percent· in
revenue just to keep afloat," the
mayor commented.
He talked about the possibility
of equalizing water and sewage
rates. since the differential in the
two rates gets bigger according
to w.ater use. Sewage is much
cheaper than water, he explained, and noted that consider·
atlon Is being given to some share '
adjustment between the two.
The visit of David Baker.
director of the Ohio Department
of Develop1'Jlent. and other off!ciats to Pomeroy at 5 p.m. on
Wednesday, was noted. It was
suggested by Mayor Hoffman
that he be asked at that time to
give a statement of support for
free telephone service In the
Bend area of Meigs and Mason
Counties.
The need for additional direc·
tiona! signs Into Mlddleportfrorn
State Route 7 by-pass was
discussed by Councilman

a

Clatworthy. ·.
Councilman Robert Gilmore
reported on the proposed annexatlon of land In the Hobson areas.
He and Councilman Jack Salterfield are In the Pf'dl:ells of
circulating petitions to the property owners and reported ,last
night that to date the signatures
of 15 of the 43 property owners
have been secured. An additional
seven are required before the
petitions can be presen~d to the
Meigs County Commissioners
which must give the final
approval.
Letters detalllng the plan and
listing the benefits of annexation
have been sent by Mayor Hoffman to the home owners in that
area. The benefits Include fire
and pollee protection, water and
sewer service, street lights,
reduced Insurance rates, a 15
year tax abatement on new
construction, a vote in. village
government and cable TV
service.
It was noted that several
. property owners do not live in
thts area .and efforts are being
made to contact them. As Councllman Gilmore pointed out once
annexation takes place property
values will increase because of
the additional services. It also
opens up the area for development, he said.
Mayor , Hoffman commended
Councilmen Satterfield a'tld Gilmore for thell' work on the
project.
Attending were Mayor Hof·
fman. Clerk-treasurer Jon Buck,
and Councilman Horton, Clatworthy, Gilmore, Gerard, WilHam Walters, and Satterfield.

--Area
deaths----F. H. Gilland

and Paul Gillian, a daughler,
Ellen Gillian, four brothers,
Oi:land,
Ottle. Clarence and
Ferdinand H. Gilland, 91,
Thurman
Gllllan; three sisters,
' Pomeroy Pike. Pomeroy, died
·
Clara,
Dorl.
and Oma, and a
Sunday at the home of a daughter .
close
frlenll,
Lllllan
Barbee.
tn Lancaster following a brief
Funeral services will be held
Illness.
Wednesday at 2.p.m at the Ewing
He was a former miniSter of
Funeral Home with the Rev. Don
Pilgrim Holiness Churches. Born
Meadows offlciatinjl. Burial will
on June 10, 1897, in Bedford
be In Meigs Memory Gardens.
Township, Meigs County, he was
Friends
may call at the funeral
the son of David and Mary Inez
horne from 6 to 9 p.m. today.
Jeffers Gilland.
He was a World War I veteran
of the U. S. Army serving In the
166th Infantry Division and belonged to the Disabled American
Veterans, Post 53.
' He Ia survived by five daugh·
ter.s and sons-In-law, Olive L.
Bourne and Pat Cavanaugh,
Lancaster; Marilyn and James
Ewing, Wellston; Mable and
Floyd Knisley, Greenfield; Ber·
aelce 81111 Leon PhUIIpl, Ocoee,

Fla.; and Mary Bell. Henderson,
Nev.; hVO 11011f and daughters-In·
law, Rolcoe and Jeanie Gilland, ·
Wub.; andChuleland
Dolul8 Glllllld, Elko, Nev.; a
1116r. IMta Warner, Pomeroy,
aDd ,_-a]llleceS and nephews.

r.-....

AJIO IUrYIVIIIJ are 27 Jll'and·
cblldttn

an4 32 treat ·

... . .

~-·
a:;.bfa,...bewu
~

In dllath ~

sou. Roy

Continued from page 1
cooperation and pomole anyway
we can," Fowler, a retired
Ravenswood Kaiser Cllecutive,
said.

Completion of the Ohio four.
lane is a job Sllei.Cblna than
100 miles. The Obio Dqilnment or
Transportation bas 19 projects on
the drawing bolrds Involving the
upgrading of 101 miJea
Route
35. None of the projects are to be
inititated lhis year.

or

Dr. Gutterrrwn... continued from page·1

.---Local news briefs --.

~

••

Pomaoy-MidciiPQrt. Ohio

teers were recognized at ills t
night's d!Mer, and many presented with awards. Dee Brown
was presented a plaque and a gift
for having worked for tile Meigs
County MRDD Board for 20
years.
Among others recoplzed for
their contributions to the success
of Meigs MRDD .programs were
Jim Lawrence, principal Of Syracuse Elementary School; Dr.
Douglas Hunter, Racine; ·and
Dick Vaughan, of Vaughan's
Cardinal Supermarket, Dick
Warner, of Krogers, and Larry
Powell, of Powell's SuperValu,
for donations over the years. ·
MRDD Board members were
also rerognized, Including President Robert Eason; VIce·
President Denver Rice; RecordIng secretary Vfckl Gloeckner;
and Thomas Weaver, John
· Lentes, Jon Karschnlk and John
Rice.
The evening's Invocation was
given by Chuck Snider, a school
employee, and the d!Mer was
prepared by members of the
Meigs Association for Retarded
Citizens. Entertainment for the
evening was provided by Sweet
Mountain Sound.

Tueeday, May 9, 1989

woe got the tallest checking in town.
We call it The Club. No
' other checking account can
stack up to its benefits.
The Club offers you
unlimited check writing
privileges, over $2~
worth of discounts on
travel and entertainment,
Emergency Cash
Advance (with your VISA
or MasterCa~d). accidental dealh insurance,
dining discounts,
financial ·newsletters,.
free credit card protection. a free registered
key ring and more
If your ~hacking account
does not measure up, join
The Club.

Pick3
920
Pick 4
1487

Page 4

.

Low ionlght In mld-40s. Chance
of rain 60 percent. Thurwday,
high In mid 50s. Chance of raln80
percent.

•

•
2 Section•. 16 Pages

10, 1989

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NBWIPIPet'

Chamber speaker .says

Coal indusiry's future
stable next 25 years

•'

(

~~liN HONORED - Cllulle WI!R)' and
Jed Will, each with $8 yeiii'S service io lhe
Pomer07 Fire Department, were honored at a

Plan parade...

.,

Continued from page 1
completed and painting of the
pool will be done as soon as
weather permits. . Plokens also
stated that a drain was placed
around the pool in order that the
pool may be drained in preparation for winter.
Sadie Tbuener.sent a new Flag
to council on behalf of the
Dautrhters of America. The flag
was given to council Monday
night. Mrs. Thuener noticed that
the village did not have a nag so
she took It upon herself to secure
the flag for the village. Council
·extended the!{ thanks to Mrs.
Thuener.
In other business council discussed needed ditching, patching
· of streets, repair to culverts,
grading of alleys and the drainage problem In front of the
school. Council also dl8cussed
mowing of grass at the park site.
Members are to make a list of
what they feel is needed to be
done and present the ltsts at the
next meeting of council.
Kenneth Buckley, councilman
reported that due to the efforts of ·
Monty Hart the Pepsi Cola Co.,
donated a score board to be
placed at Louks Ball Field.
Thanks was extended to Hart and
the Pepsi Company.
It was noted by Bclcktey that
the new ordinance In regard to
cutting of weeds or grass and the
cleaning up of litter could now be
enforced since it has been over 30
days since the ordinance was
passed.
Grass and weeds must be cut
. within five days after the owner,
lessee, agent or tenant has
received a written notice. In
regard to Utter persons have 15
days to rectify a situation after
notice is given.
Residents lire asked to comply
with the ordinance. Litter includes any garbage, waste, peel·
lngs of vegetables or fruits,
rubbish, ashes, cans, bottles,
wire, paper, cartons, boxes,
parts of automobiles, wagons,
furniture. glass, ol 1111 unaightly
or unsanitary nat~,~re or anything
else of an unsightly or unsanitary
nature.
Attending were Mayor
Pickens, Janice Lawsop, clerk·
treasurer, Pollee Chief Jim Con·
nolly, Ernie Sisson, Jack Wllll·
ams, Kathryn Crow, Jim Hill,
BUckley and Minter Fryar coun·
ell members.

meet1n1 of lhe firemen Tuesday nllbt. Above,

Danny Zirkle, fire chief, Jell, presentll watches lo
Werry and WID In reeopltlon of their service.

•

.New representative sworn In

•

~

COLUMBUS..:. Mary ·Abel was
: sworn In Tuesday morning as
• state representative for the 94th
. House District during a full
· session of the Ohio House of
Representatives.
.Stale Rep. Abel succeeds Jo: lynn Boster Butler who resigned
. from the legislature to assume
: the chair of the Public .Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
"I am honored to be selected
. for tills position and I am looking
· forward to working . with my
l cio"Uiiiues \n the House to b\!nefl,t
• GaiUa, Meigs and Athens Cdun-

~ Urge

•

·ttes. The office of state represen'
tallve carries a great responsibilIty to serve the people of
southeast Ohio and represent
their Interests In state government," Ms. Abel acknowledged
after the ceremony. "Many chal·
lenges face ·southeast Ohio and
meetiqg those challenges will not
be an easy task. However. by
working together with state and
local officials, I am confident
·th~t we can continue the progress
our region has made In recent

year:s."
State, Rep. Abel; an Athens

big turnout for
Baker's visit ·today

'

'

· Pomeroy Area Chamber of
. Commerce officials hope that
: chamber members and local
. residents will turn out this
afternoon for an appearance In
Pomeroy by David J. Baker,
,, director o1 the Ohio Department
· of Development. Director Baker
• will be In Pomeroy at. 5 p.m.
: today to present the Pomeroy
, Chamber with a $5,000 tourism
~ grant from the deparment of
development.
Baker, who Is making a week
" long tour of several Appaiachlan
" Ohio counties. Is expected to be
accompanied by State Senator
• Jan Michael Long; State Rep.
• Mary Abel; former state representative and current PUCO
- chair Jolynn Boster Butler; and
Dennis Mlngyar, assistant dlrec·

resident, was formerly the deputy director of labor relations at
the Ohio .Department of Transportation where she worked for
the past three years. She began
her state service In 1983, working
first as the department of agrl·
culture's legislative liason. and
then as Governor Richard Ce·
leste' s . scheduler. State Rep.
Abel is married to Richard Abel,
·an at-large Athens City
Councilmember:
"As• a reslde!tt of southeast
Ohio I am familiar with many of
the Issues that affect our com·
munitles on a daily basts education. eronomlc development, assistance for the econom·
icaily disadvantaged, senior cltl·
Continued on page 11

tor of the Governor's Office of
Appalachia. The presentation In
Pomeroy will be on the parking
lot, If weather· permits, or at
Pomeroy Vlllage Hall. ·
Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce President Bruce
Reed coriunended Mary Powell,
Pomflroy businesswoman. for
submitting the grant application
on behalf of the chamber.
The grant Is to be used to
develop a tourism brochure on
Pomeroy.
'
Llgbt refreshments will he
served ·following the presentation by Baker, Reed said. He
again stressed that he hopes
Pomeroy residents, other rest·
dents from throughout Meigs
County. and members of the .
Pomeroy Chamber will attend
Wednesday's presentation.

By NANCY YOACHAM
or physical connection, of Mine
possible the accessing of coal
Sentinel News Slaff
No. 1 and Raccoon Na. 3. The
reserves via longwall. A new
connection Is within one· half longwall. which wtll be the third
A "stable Industry for the next
25 years" Is how Jim Tompkins,
n\lle of completing at this time.
in the division, is pr~sently being
vice president and general man·
To make possible the merger, a
developed .
.ager of Southern Ohio Coat
natural sandstone barrier beAnother expensive pre-requiCompany,descrlbedthefutureof tween the two mines had . to be site to the merger was the
coal In Meigs County when he penetrated. Penetration of the upgrading of the coal washing
spoke Tuesday at the Pomeroy
sandstone barrier was com· plant at Mine No.1 to handle the
Area Chamber of Commerce pleted ear)ler this year "at a product from all three mines.
meeting. However, It ts the .conslderatl\e capltal expend!· Currently, coal from Mines No. 1
upcoming "physical merging" of ture," Tomkins said. Penetra- and No. 2 is washed at the Mine 1
Meigs Mine No. 1 and Raccoon
tlon of the barrier will make
Continued on page 11
Mine No. 3 that Is going to assure
the stabilization of the Industry,
Tompkins explained.
The short term and long term,
negative and positive effects of
the pending merger were depleted In detail by Tompkins.
The major negative effect will
· be the reduction of about 100
'United Mine Worker employees,
and a reduction of salaried
employees In addition to that.
About 25 percent of Southerq
Ohio Coat Company's employees
live in Meigs County, so the loss
·of jobs to Meigs Countlans will be
reJatlve to that percen~ge. Completion of the merger and the
reduction of work force will
ht1ppen "sometime In the third
qul\l'ter of the year," Tomkins
sal~. ~·
· But the reductlonJn work force
is "ohe of the short term
negatives," Tomkins added. The
tong term positive. he said, Is
that "if we didn't make fhe
lmprovemen ts and reduce the
costs, we wouldn't be there at
all."
It was two years ago that the
company began considering· 'every conceivable method" to
reduce the costs and maintain
PROS AND CONS - Jim Tomkins, vice presldent and general
the longterm viability of the
manager
of Southern Ohio Coal Company, explains what lhe
division, be explained. Between
merger, or physical connection, of Melp Mine No.1 and Raccoon
the division's three mines, It was
Mine No. 3 wlll mean to Meigs Counly during Tuesday's Pomeroy
finally determined that the only
Chamber meeting.
alternative was the combination,

ODOT oulines policies for
ad· signs, driveway permits
MARIETTA - Each year the eral and primary highways.
Ohio Department of Transporta- Signs may be erected only in
tion (ODOTI encounters numer- certain areas along those rQutes.
ous violations related to Its
An application form mu'st be
rlght·of-way . Most of the viola· completed and a minimum applilions are related to Individuals cation flat fee of $50 is required.
and firms not being aware of the Once the application is approved.
requirements of the Ohio Re- a $12.50 annual renewal fee must
vised Code.
The requirements. as stated in
the Ohio Revised Code. arc as
follows:
"No Individual, firm or corporation shall place or maintain
any post. sign . or obstruction
within the bounds of any road or
The 17tl;l Tri·County Simulated
highway on the state highway
system without first obtaining Disaster Exercise, held annually
the consent and approval of the on Thursday of National Hospital
Week. willplacestrongemphas!s
director."
The department has impie· &gt;·this year on the Involvement of
mented the lllgbway · permit volunteer fire and emergency
medical service personnel in the
system for those Individuals and
trl·county
area of Ohio and West
firms wishing to construct new
VIrginia,
along
with the staffs of
driveways from state routes to
the
three
hospitals
In Gallla,
adjoining land . Applications may
Meigs
and
Mason
Counties,
ac·
be secured from the State High·
cording
to
Thomas
R.
Childs
,
way Garage In each county . The
permits are also required for President of the Mid-Ohio Valley
Industrial Emergency Planning
other work within the right·Of·
Council (MOVlEPC), who Is also
way .
No :permits will be Issued to the Vice Pesldent for Professional Services at the Holzer
place any advertising signs
Medical Center. .
within the highway rlght-of·way,
In Ohio, the Holzer Medical
where they are prohibited.
Center
in Galllpolls andV~terans
Advertising signs are also
Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy
regulated outside of the state
are
Involved,
along with Pleahighway right-of-way on all fed'
sant Valley Hospital In Point
Pleasant, W:Va. Also participatIng from the health care field will
be the GatUpoUa Developmental
Cel)ter (GDC), Woodland Centers, Inc .. and Middleton Estates
be set by lllettate tor ''excellent" In Galllpolls, and Lakin Hospital
and "defk:lent" diltrlcts. Excel- In Lakin, W.Va.
tent districts will be allowed ·
This is the one time of the year
more ftexlblllty. in teaching;
that all join forces to participate
dedclent dlstrlcta wlll be monl·
In a tri-county dlaaate: drUI,
iored cl-ly by the state and tes ttng the emergency prepar~­
forced to Improve.
ness of each facility.
''Thll bill il destined to lm·
Representing industry, Is
Contllluecl on page 11
AKZO Chemicals, Inc., Galltpo.

be paid.
More complete information
concerning signs and permits
may be obtained by contacting
ODOT District 10. Box 658,
Muskingham Drive, Marietta.
Ohio; 45750. The District 10 phone ·
number Is 614-373·0212.

Disaster drill to be
held in area Thu~day

•

NOTICE
The Family Dollar inserted In Mon·

day'I Dally Sentinel should no' have
b11n in11rted on that dclte. The11
·salt pricts were to be effective . ,·
15·21. However, FGIIIIIy •••r
will now h-r the sale prlc•lil tilt
insert. We an sorry for any lncon·
venience which this IIIGJ hawe
caused.
Thl Dally Stntliel .
"

Ohio Lottery

Reds drop
3-l contest
to~ Mets

~

•
::.
·~

.;
-'

:

:

RECEIVES 11,. . DONATION J'OR IUDS Pomeroy MQor Rlebarllleyler, atadlnl center
and llold!IIC dannih lfoolartl, wu preeeated with
a 11,810 clleek fl'llm uea motorcycllltl to be uaed
for lmprovementa or playlll'-.d eqnlpment for
an exlltlnJ Pomeroy park, or for equipment If a
new park II co•incted In tbe vlllqe. The
dO..Uon io Pomerey Ia a pordoa of ftulda ratted
lhrGuP tile 1tll8 Toy Bua, whleh Ia an nenl

......Nd.., 1118 local lllOiarcyellltl io belleJit tile
Salva&amp;lo• Ann7's annual loy clriYe, • well u
oilier wortlnrblle cau- tllroiiPnt Melp·
County. The Tny Kiln usually lakee plaee In
November, If weather pennltll, wllh 101 to 110
motorcycllltl taiiiDc part. Over lhe yeiii'S nee
llle Toy Bun bepn, ·many 1 - r - donaeteu
have been made to area OJ'Ianlzatlou.

·iOhio Senate passes education bill,

...... I'.DJ.C.

PEOPLES
New Haven

882-2135

· , Point Pleasant
671Hl21

Mason
773-5514

·. COLUMBUS. Ohio 1UJIIlL' Despite complalnta that II will
:not fully solve Ohio schools' real
. problems, the state Senate Tues;day puled, 29-2, and forwarded
·to the Roue what wu billed as
:an ''education reform" package.
; Hatched by Senate President
.;Staaley Aronoff, R~CinciMatl,

.,

..__ ·-· .. -

and reworked by the Senate
Education Committee, the blil
provides ways for school Illstrlcts to achieve accountablUty,
productivity and measurements
o1 pupO performance without
coatlq excesalve sums of

money.
Among other thlnga, the bitl

'

··--

&gt;il

.

requires districts to offer kindergarten classes, gtvea parents a
choice In where they send their.
children to SChoo~ and seta up a
statewide computerized atallatl·
cal bue to allow diltrlcts to
publicly compare thlllr faciUtles
and peftom~&amp;~~ee with others.
It also will permllltalldarda to

----·--~-w----

2~-2

lis Ferry, West Virginia, with an
emergency drill, both for Inside
plant personnel as well as outside
the plant, on a simulated chemical release. This allows the
county emergency response
agencies an opportunity to practice their ellectiveness In dealing
with a simulated community
evacuation.
Mason County law enforcement, fire departments, emergency. squads and Beale School
PTO, In conjunction with AKZO
Chemicals. Inc .. will portray the
events surrounding a response to
·a simulated major tank failure at
the Industrial facility located in
Gallipolis Ferry. West Virginia.
The plant slrcn,local emergency
equipment, along with the help Of
voluntary participants will be
used for this practice exercise at
5: 30 p.m. on Thursday evening,
Ma~ 11, 1989.
S pposed victims wlll betaken
to t e three area hospitals In the
tri&lt;OUnty area. Addltkdlly, tile
Gallipolis Developmental Ceneer
will have their own ----~.
drUI, and Lakin Holphltr.l Ill
L,kin, West VIrginia, WUI ptn··
their own mock dlaaaler.
Additional "vlctlml"la a.uta
County . wUl inctlllle ltatiRta
from Kyger Creek HlP lleha
ContiDued Dll (1111'1 U .

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