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hga D-B-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Ponla'oy-'Middlaport-Galipolis.

Ohio-Point Pleasant W.Va.

May14.1989

Ohio Lottery

Reds _sweep
Cards; hike
division lead

Pick3
94.5
Pick 4

0089
Super l..ollo

~12-15-16-31

Page 3

•

..
·.
.•
·.
PORTLA)'ID - Winners at Portland Elementary In the Melp County SoU and Water
Conservation District ' poster contest are, front

Name ...
Continued from D-1
This year, a fUm was shown and
booklets, ''Plants, Improving our
Environment." were dlstrlbu ted
In the schools, prior to the
contest.

row, Ito r, EmUy Dubl, Hillery Harris and Joshua
RoUIIh. Ia back IS Deborah Harrill, fourth grade
teacher.

Soviet inefficiency helps _U.S. exp:n1s
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Grain loss In the Soviet Union

creates a big market for western
feedgralns.

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the GaiDa SoD and Water
. Co~~~~ervatlon District,. Is located someWhere hi
GaiDa County. Individuals wishing to rtarllclpate
In the weekly contest may do so by pesslng the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your gueu to
the GaiUpoUs Dall)- Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallpolls, Obi~, 45831, or the Dall)- Sentinel, 111
Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio, f5789,and you may win

a S5 cub prize from the Ohio Vaile)' PublillhinJ .
Co. Leave )'our name, address aad telephone
number wllh )'our card or letter. No telephone
calli wiD be accePted. ,\11 conlelll entries IIIIOuld :•
be tamed In to the newapaper office b)' 4 p.m. each Wednellday. In cue of a tie, the wialll!r will be
choaea by lottery. Next week, a Metp County
farm will be featured b)' the Melp SoB and Water
CoDServatlon Dt11trfct.

•

~=.:d',aaa

JOINS SALES STAFF Steve Rime, Letart, has
joined the safes staff at Gibson
Ford Lincoln-Mercury,
Atheas. A 1981 graduate of
Southern ffigh School, he has
been In the automobile business for f!lur years foUowing
six years In the U. S. Army.

Raccoon...
Continued from D-1
fly, rod, we could always have a
lot of fun.
We are writing about the era
before the mid-thirties. Most of
the small mouth bass were In the
8 to 10 Inch class. Nothing large,
but they were really fun to catch.
In most places, pools and
rimes, there Is very little vegetation existing today because of
pollUtion. Because of this Insect
larvas and other small plant and
animal growth does not exist,
thus limiting the available food
so necessary for raped growth of
all animal species In the waters
Qf Raccoon.
· It 1s going to take a 1 cooperative effort among all
groups, such as wildlife organlza·
!Ions, state game and wlldl1fe
divisions, state reclamation de·
partments, and landowners put·
ling together to bring things back
to where our streams can be at
their highest potential.
Your Raccoon Creek Commit·
tee and the Gallla SWCD 1s
always ready and waiting for
suggestions thai might help In
anyway.
~t Is a waste of potential to let
our streams waste a way llke they
are doing today. Remember,
they are after all mother natures
way of providing food and at the
present there Is a missing Unk In
the food chain which the creek
could facl1ltate.

eet t · e etest-.
.

in ·t e

It's the grand opening of our new Chevrolet dealership.

.

•

2Soctiono, 1 2Pogn25Cento
A Multimodio Inc. NowiPop•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, May 15,1989

Sunday night·river incident puzzles officials
Authorities were stU! uncer·
taln today Qf the true nature of an
Incident Sunday night on the Ohio
River.
Around 8:30p.m.. fire departments, emergency medical personnel and law enforcement
officials were called to the
Syracuse and New Haven, W.Va.
river banks In a search for
''possible drowning victims."
New Haven Fire Chief Greg
Kaylor reported his department
was ca11ed at approximately 8:22

p.m. Sunday, reporting that a
motor boat was on fire In the
middle of the river between New
Haven and Syracuse. New .
Haven, responding Immediately,
also notified the Syracuse Fire
Department. ·
,
"At that point," Kaylor said,
"we dldn' t know 1f the boat had
been abandoned and set on fire,
or If It was a fishing boat or
pleasure boat that had caught
fire" wllh someone In 11.
It was still daylight when

.

firemen first began thetrsearch.
Both Syracuse and New Haven
authorities launched .boats from
their respective sides of the
river.
Due to the fast moving current,
Middleport, Pomeroy and Mason
Fire departments, and the Lifeflight helicopter from Grant
Hospital, were also alerted for
assistance In searching for possl·
ble victims.
Members of the Syracuse Fire

Department reached an 18 foot
wooden boat first, Kaylor said.
Firemen extinguished the ·nre
and then towed what was left of
the · craft to the West VIrginia
shore, Just above the golf course
In Mason.
There had been concern that
the boat would sink before 11
could be reached by firemen,
Kaylor said.
After the boat was brought to
shore, according to Kaylor, a
witness.called his department to

report having seen some pt!ople
on the Syracuse shore set the
boat on fire and then shove It out
In the river. It went a llttle ways
and then exploded, the witness
told fire department authorities.
At that point, Kaylor turned the
Investigation over to the Mason
County Sheriff's Department and
the West VIrginia Department of
Natural Resources. The Meigs
County Sheriff's Department Is
also Involved with the
lnves tlgatlon.

Kaylor said ·his department
was back In their station at 10:15
p.m ..
During the time they were on
the call for the boat. the New
Haven department received two
other emergency calls and had to
sp11t their crews twice to take the
calls, he added.
The Identities of the people who
set the boat on fire were appar·
ently still unknown this morning,
as was the purpose In setting the
!Ire.

.State drug abuse official
may have falsified time cards

He was promoted to researhed In said Investigation was going on,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
May 1982 and to mental health but did not elaborate. Inspector
state drug abuse off1clal await·
Elizabeth Joy Smith Is the
General David Sturtz is not
administrator In October 1986.
lng senienctng for a purse·
valedictorian and Carol Fisher .
Department spokeswoman allowed to comment on an
snatching Incident may have
the salutatorian of the 1989 Class
Stephanie Hightower-Leftwich Investigation In progress.
falsified time sheets.
of Southern High School, Prine!·
The Columbus Dispatch said
pal James Adams announced
Sunday
that the Inspector genertoday.
·
al's
office
has -studied pay
The top two seniors wUI speak
records from the Bureaus of
~t graduation to l&gt;e held Sunday
Drug Abuse and Alcoholism
at 8 p.m. In the Charles · W. ·
Abuse concerning !he work rouHayman Gymnasium at Southtine of Louis Haynes.
ern High School.
Haynes, 39, chief of the Bu·
The daughter of Darrell and
rea us o( Drug Abuse and AlcohoBy United Press International
at Brady, the National Weather
Gaye Smith, Racine, Elizabeth
ELIZABETH SMITH
CAROL FI8BER
Usm
Abuse,
pleaded
guilty
April
Texans
assessed
the
damage
Service
said. Thunderstorms In
.• has maintained a record or a
Television 3's, "Best of the also a former participant with
5
to
a
charge
of
theft
stemming
Monday
left
by
a
series
of
severe
the
central
part of the state also
perfect 4. average lor thepastsix
Class."
the July 4 variety shows In
generated
baseball-sized
hall at
purse-snatchllllf
lndlcent
storms
that
knifed
through
the
from
a
years, and a perfect attendance
Elizabeth was on the quiz bowl Racine.
Eden,
wind
gusts
to
59
mph
In ·
supermarket
on
the
.
state,
spawning
at
least
one
outside
a
team for three years, playing on
In her senior year, Elizabeth
record for the past four years.
western
Tom
Green
County
and
city's
East
Side
last
August.
He
Is
tornado
and
causing
scattered
· She Is the recipient of the OhiO
the varsity team for the past two, won the Daughters of the Amerl·
damage, while lightning in New dime· sized hall and wind gusts to
Board of Regents Scholarship for
was Inducted Into the Natlnal can Revolution's Good Citizens to ,be sentenced Wednesday.
. Meanwhile, the tnspect9r gen· Yor~ k1lled two people and hurt 67 mph at San Angelo.
thehtghestGPAandi,.CT .fCC!res . HRnorSo&amp;lety asa1!1nlor .wala Award, took pqrt.ln the senior,
Parllc'l.tlaf'ly · slfrly · thui'li!erand the Rio Grande College- ~.-"WinlieroftlieAthegsP'eac~Prlze • play'; and' was a1so a soiind eral's uffldh&amp; 'l'eported11 stully" • fotir oth'l#s. •• '.' .. · ' - ·
lng pay records believed to show
Spring rain \made appearances storms In west·central Texas
/Community CoUege Honor~
In her junior year, and partlcl, · technician tot the play.
·
Scholarship.
, .
pale!l In the Regional Scholars
Carol Fisher, daughter of thllt Haynes was not at work at 1n several other areas of the produced golf bal1-slzed hall east
She plans to enter Rio Gra!lde . Program af Ohio University last Drew and Belva Fisher of Letart least one third ofthe time In 1988, country. melmwhlle. Including of Petersburg and In southwest·
parts of Florida, Pennsylvania,
ern Floyd County, the weather
College School ol Nursing In
year and was also selected to Falls, has been selected as an the paper said.
bureau said. Northwest Okla·
Wyoming,
Nevada
and
Haynes
and
a
co-defendant,
August and pursue a registered
attend the 1988 Summer Scholars Ohio State University Freshman
homa
also was hit by high winds
nurse degree and then continue
Program at ou.
Scholar and will be taking part Areatha Ellen Baker, were Kentucky.
and
hall.
her education to obtain a bacheThe valedictorian received the there In the honor's program. She charged with robbery for grab- . . The llghtnlllg struck six people
Melinda Ivey, a dispatcher for
lor of science In nursing.
Meigs County Academic Excel· received the Kibble Scolarshlp bing a purse that ccntalned $37 huddlin¥ under a tree during a
the
Texas Department of Public
For the past four years Eliza·
lence Award In her eighth, tenth and also the Ohio State Dlstin· from a woman leaving the store. sudden thunderstorm In Ran·
Safety
In San Angelo, said at
beth has participated In the
and twelfth grade years, and the gulshed Freshman Scholarship. Court records show that Baker, dolph, N.Y.I the Cattaraugus
America!! High Scltool MatheSouthern Local School District ' She was also the recipient of the who has an extensive record for County sheri r s office said. Two least one tornado touched down
prostitution-related charges, men were kllled by the lightning Sunday In an open field In Tom
maUcsExamlnationandwasone
Adademlc Excellence Award In Holzer Science Award.
Green County about 23 miles
her Junior and senior years.
At Ohio State Carol plans to pleaded gullty to robbery and Is and four companions were hurt.
of onjy a few Juniors ever to win
northwest of San Angelo. No
serving
a
term
In
the
ReformaThe
mlshl!p
occurred
about
top honors on the exam. She has ' In her sophomore year she was maJor in production and opera·
damage
was reported.
tory
!or
Women
at
Marysville.
1:50
p.m.
Sunday
when
the
been a member of the Scholastic a homecoming attendant; In her lions management In the School
She
said
a DPS trooper saw a
"Truthfully,
I
was
with
somethunderstorm
halted
a
softbal1
Team twice and her freshman
Junior year a member of the of Business.
funnel
cloud
about 12 miles south
one
I
shouldn't
have
been
with,
game
being
played
at
the
Ran·
year received a state honorable Science Club, and Inner senior
She participated tnthescholasof
Robert
Lee
on State Highway
and
I
had
no
Idea
what
she
was
dolph
Central
School
In
Ranmentlon on the Algegra I test and year a member of the yearbook tic testing at Ohio University
208.
Ivey
said
heavy
rain and golf
planning to do," Haynes told the dolph, about 15 mlles east o(
her junior year a district ranking •staff: Elizabeth was a member of · each year that Southern sent a
ball-sized
hall
fell
north
and east
Jam.estown .
on the chemistry scholastic test. the Southern Band for two years team, and placed second In the paper.
of
San
Angelo.
Columbus pollee said the two
The six ccmpanlons had run
This year Elizabeth was a and was also a member of the district and received an honora·
Steve Hill, a firefighter with
semHlnalist on the Ohio Untver- flag ccrps In the marching band. ble mention at the state level in passed the purse back and forth under the tree to escape the
the
San Angelo Fire Department,
slty History Contest after recelv· She was also selected for the All biology her sophomore year. She while they were fleeing, but downpour, when the lightning
said a two-bay cinder block car
lng Meigs County's top score In County Band her sophomore took the American High School Haynes said nothing passed struck, authorities said.
wash was destroyed at about6: 15
Harry
Nelson
Jr.,
between
them.
Killed
were
the preliminaries. She was Just year.Fortwoyearsshetookpart Mathematics Examination all
p.m. "by either high. winds or a
The
paper
said
various
entries
30,
of
Salamanca,
N.Y.,
and
rece~tlyoneof300students1nthe
with the school choir and last four years and received the top
cloud." InJuring one
funnel
payment
for
many
of
Terry
Ristau,
29.
of
North
authorized
West VIrginia. Kentucky and summer participated tn the All score at her school her senior
In
her m1d·20s.
woman
Haynes'
absent
days
as
compenWarren.
Pa.
The
Injured,
three
.
Ohio area to be named to WSAZ Meigs County Fair Chorus. Shels year.
"It
look
like the drivers of the
tor
hours
reportedly
·
men
and
a
woman,
were
treated
satlon
She at tended the Meigs County
cars
were
trying
to get out of the
worked
out
of
the
office.
at
a
hospital
In
Jamestown
for
Academic Banquet both years of
hall.
One
woman
was Injured
Haynes began work for the minor InJuries and then released,
her ellglbutty and both the first.
when
a
steel
support
bea(ll feU on
and second annual Southern state Jan. 3, 1978. as a social the spokesman said.
the
driver's
side
of
the
car," he
program coordinator for the
The Texas thurderstorms that
Academic banquets. She resaid.
ceived the Athens Peace Prize Department of Mental Health. began Sunday caused a tornado
her sophomore year and reA Long Bottom woman was InJured In ·a one-car ac.c ldent
ceived
an honorable mention In
Sunday at 4:32p.m. on S.R. 124 near Lolllf Bottom, according to
the
same
competition her Junior
the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
year. Carol also participated In
Carole M. Dalley. 48. was laken to Veterans Memorial
the Regional Scholars Program
Hospital by her daughter. She was treated and released for
her Junior year and In Upward
multiple bruises and cuts.
Bound
of Southeast Ohio lor two
Daney, driving a 1983 AMC Eagle, was traveling east when
years. ·
she saw a deer In her path. She swerved to avoid the animal, but
A four year college prepara·
In the process went off the right side of the road and hit a tree.
Ron K. Glover, President of confer a Doctorate of PubUc
tory student at Southern, Carol
When the 290 members of the
The deer ran Into the woods.
was a member of the quiz bowl graduating class of 1989 receive ·Travelers Cheque Group, U.S.A., Service upon Miles T. Epling, Its
A Middleport youth was Injured In a one-car accident Sunday
Immediate past president.
'
American Express Ttavel Reteam, ·the science club, the pep their diplomas on May 21, they
at 1a.m.lnSutton Township on C.R. 29, 1.3mlleseastofC.R. 33.
Epling,
a
GalUpoUs
engineer
club, and participated In choir w111 be carrying on a 113-year lated Services Company, serving
John W. TlllJs Jr., 17, of 304 HamUton St.. was taken to
as the featured speaker. The and entrepreneur, Is a member
for three years and show choir tradition at RIO Grande CollegeVeterans fVIemorlal Hospital, where he was treated and
topic of his address will be of numerous organizations and a
for two years, taking part In two /Community College.
,r eleased for bruises, cu)s and scrapes on his hand. ·
fonner member of the GalllpoUs
"2009 ...
and
In
the
senior
variety
shows
Rio Grande's 113th commenceTUlts, driving a 1986 Pontiac Grand Am, was traveling east
City Commission. He has served
play.
'
ment ceremony wlll culminate a
wl)en he lost control in a right-hand curve. He went off the left
on
the Board of Trustees since
Glover 1s a 1961graduateofR1o
She was president of her class day of activities designed to
side of the road near a driveway and hit a tree standing to the
1975.
On the board, he has been a
·
Grande
who
has
worked
with
and a member of student councll honor students, alumni, trustees
,. right of the driveway.
member
of the Committee on
Amertcaa Express since 1970. He
her sophomore and Junior years, and friends.
,He was &lt;;(ted for faUure to contrQI
Trustee
Nominations,
a member
and student councll president her
"Rio Grande Collese regards has held pe~ttlons of reaponalbll·
and
past
chairman
of
the FI. '
senior year.
the graduation exercise as the tty for American Express Card
nance
and
Investment
Commtt- Carol played softball for four most important ceremonial occa- both In the United States and
'
.
years, kept the volleyball score- sion of the academic year," said over~eu. He has been Senior tee, member and past chairman
The Meigs County Sherlfrs Department Is Investigating a
book for three years, and served Or, Paul C. Hayes, coUege VIce President for Card Market· of the Execu live CommIt tee, and
reported breaking and entering, and auto accident that occured
on the prom ccmmlttee her president. "Our overriding 11081 lng and Executive VIce Pres!· VIce President of the board.
Followln11 the address aad
·Junior and senior years.
over the weekend.
durllllf the ptantitng !1f thll year's dent for Worldwide Marketing
pre~e~~tatiOn
of honorary deand
Straterlc
Planning
for
ConAccordilll to the report of Metga County Sheriff James M.
commencement program bas
Input
by
of Bachelor
p-ees,
conferment
Soulsby, deputies took a report at 1 a.m. on Sunday In which
sumer
Financial
Services.
Molt
been to focus at tendoll on our
and
Alaoclate
degrees
will be
James A. McDonald. 23, Rutland, was travelllll northbound on ·
ll'iduates and. their acccmpllah- recently, lie wu President and
school .coordinaiOr
collducted
by
Dr.
Ray
Boas.
SR 143 near Horner Hill when his car went off the right stele of
menta In coDCludilllf thill phase of Genera! Maaaaer of the \Japan
VIce
Prelldent
for
Academic
Dlvilllon ol Travel Relllted Servl·
the roadWay and Into a ditch. McDonald was cited for leaving
A proposal for expenditures of thelt edUCation."
the SC!ene and his 1974 Ford pickup was heavily darnaaed. No
A Baccalaureate and Found· ces. He Is a member of the Rio Affalra. In addition, BoiP will
T!Ue 6B monies tor special
InJuries were reported.
education In the Southern Local en' Day Program will open the Grande Colle11e Board of present the "Ouutaadlq ACademle Award 1989" to a l!'lldllate
In a Sunday morning breaking and enterllllf attempt, Penny
School Oil trlct ill being prepared Sunday ceremonies at 10: 30 Trustea.
lellcted
for biB or ber achieve1be Beard of Trlllteee wDl
Clark reported that someone had attempted to open a window
by Joyce Thoren, RN., local
a.m., during wblch the coUese
when she noticed the SC!reen wu totn and there were pry markl
dilltrlct coordinator.
'
pay1 trlbulll to the toUDCiera and LVDfea ID bllaorary dllfl!l! - the meat u a atudftt atiUoGrallde.
wtll eo-.elllllt With
on the kitchen door. Aceordllllf to Clark, the Incident must have
Resldenll may have Input Into put trust.ea, f~Jty and presi- Doctorate of Public Service the
ll'aduatellom\1111
file tradf;.
upon
Glowr
durtlla
the
comhappened between 2 and 7 a.ln.
the pi 0(10111 by contacllng Mrs. dents of tbe coUese.
tloMl
cln!le
011
tbe
lt'MIIIIId
tbe
m1111Ct!111111t
exerelsel.
Commeneement ceremonies
Thoren at the high ~tllool, 9 a.m
Continued on paae l5
•IDIIDI
of
the
alma
mater.
Ill
addition,
tile
board
will
are set to belln at 2 p.m., With
' - - -.....- -·..;.·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ''"' to 3 p.~~;~: today throuch Friday .

Spring rains continue
arou.n d nation today

..-Area news ·briefs-.

Tradition continues at Rio's
I 13th commencement Sunday

We're the new Chevrolet deal~rship in town. And we're going all out to give }()U the
kind of efficient. UP:-to-date service }()UVe come to expect from Chevrolet With an excellent
selection of new Chevrolet cars and trucks. A fine choice of quality used ears. Even a service
department that's state-of-the-art-ready to keep }()Ur car or truck running right.
Come in and meet us. We look forward to doing
with }()U.

DRIVE

THE

&lt;

'

OF AMERICA

CHEVROLET-'I....P""

'

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Chevrolet-

'Wia1llr wrlleat UIIU!Qr accounll

fol¥7&amp; J eaut bf ali V.I. wheat
&amp;Ntilliellon. The JOWl lltFtwDI
rtlmate ·•prtq .JIId .Wrum

IAWPOUS, OH. "

80Upt

c.r.mODt•

,~

wl . ..productltllllater . .,.ar.

(

-'

'

I

Sheriff probes weekend B &amp; E

'

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miiUaD • •

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Two injured in Meigs accidents

Estimate, ..
Contljlued from D-1
grain production by 26 percent
overaU to 203.9 mllUon tons. To
help rebuild reserves, the government required farmers to
Idle onjy 10 percent of wheat land
this year compared to 27.5
percent In 1988.
Though farmers st111 are plant·
!ng several major crops such as
com and sorghum, the depart·
ment proJected Thunday that
U.S. IJ'ain production thll yea~
wUI total 294.4 million tons,
tncludlJ!C 233.6, million tons of
feed l!'allll, 55.8 mUllan toM of
wheat an,d 5 mllllon tona of rice.
In the departiNIIt's first est!·
mallll til tile wotld Flln supply
lllld I r1 for 1•1890. •na·
iylll ~ a denwlll of 18
mQUoa .! Gill , . U.S. wheat Wllllt
till Dl•lic alldtorelp detJIAIIdfor
felll 11'81• wu· geapd at 223

evro et ineu

•

·

Southern
graduation
set May 21

..

Kicker 207129

e

,_

Low In mid to&amp; toailhl. Chance
rain 40 percent. Tuesday,
lsu1mny, hiJh lower. 70s.

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�Pomelf1'/-MidrJeport, Ohio
.

Commentary~
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court street
. Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF

THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~"b.
~fj' ~'--r'l,..,.._c:::l,_
ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE dOEFUCH
General Maaqer

Publisher

PAT WJUTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lessthan300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUl be pubUs bed. Letters should be In gond taste, addrfsslng Issues, not personall·
ties.
•

[Legislature proceeds
.o n education refor111
By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehouse Reperter
COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard Celeste tried hard last week to
: breathe new life Into his education Initiative by hitching a ride on an
: accountability and reform bill passed by the Ohio Senaie.
Senate Bllll40, assembl~ under the guidance of Senate President,
Stanley Aronoff, R·Cinclnnatl, had scarcely cleared the Senate
before Celeste's hlgb·powered communications machine had
churned out and breathlessly delivered to the press corps "an update
on the legislative progress of Governor Celeste's education
Initiative."
The governor took credit for, and perhaps rightly so, every part of
Senate Bill 140 that had lieen suggested by his Education 2000
.Commission last December.
That Included exempting excellent school districts from some state
regulations to give them more flexibility , monitoring deficient school
.'o~~tstrlcts, allowing high school juniors and seniors to take college
·coursl!s for high school credit, permitting parents to choose where
their children will attend school, and computerizing data on every
school system for easy comparisons.
But it Is a long stretch for the governor to say legislative approval of
thOse Items signifies that his education Initiative Is advancing. Far
from II.
.. The meat of Celeste's plan - a 1 percent corporate and Individual
Income tax earmarked for education .- Is mired In a House
subcommittee and Is going nowhere.
Aronoff and other legislative leaders have said repeatedly. that
. their troops are In no mood to Increase taxes, even for a highly prized
Item !Ike education. .
.
•'I think reform and accountability comes before taxes," Aronoff
said shortly after his bill passed.
Celeste believes they go together, and he said so after praising the
Aronoff bill.
"While there are significant new accountability measures In
Senate Blll140, It provides no financial help for schools who find that
their students are not achieving up to standards." said the governor.
·''Still to be addressed Is 'the goal of a !fordable college for all."
Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel, D·Youngstown, and Sel\.
Robert Burch, D·Dover, were even more bll!nl In thelr 'a ppralsals.
. •'Let no one believe that we have put together some kind of terrific
reform package," said Meshel. "What we've done Is put together a
·number of Ideas that move toward appearing to do \K)metblng. I
suspect we are doing something, but I'm not sure what.tt Is."
"This emperor of education reform Is wearing no c1othes," said
Burch, recalling the story of the emperor who tbo~ht he was
:beautifully clothed, but everyone else could see right ~rough.
.·
: "This bill will mean Utile 1! we don't address some otthe funding
·Issues," said Sen. Linda Furney. D-Toledo.
: Passage of the Aronoff bill Is an Invitation for I e House to
·substitute it for the Initiative the governor has presented. The result
w!ll be the appearance of reform, without extra taxes. /
This seems to be as far as the lawmakers want togo right now, and
:the odds are It's an offer they can't turn down.

Berry's World

'

Mondat'. May 1&amp;. 1989

Govermnent ignored warning
Jack Anderson and Dale.VanAtta
legendary sayvy to resolve the
thrUt crllll !ben, the cost would
have been a !~'action of what It
wtll be today.
When Baker's Treasury De·
partment belatedly kicked Into
gear, It simply put Ita finger In
the dike and lobbied for the
recapitalization of tbe depositor
Insurance tund. Baker let a much
lower man on the totem pole,
Edwin Gray, propose tough re'forms In the Industry and take
the heat tor thole p~.
Gray was Wall's predecessor as
chairman of the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board.
Wall quickly !oat the respect of
sallie of his staff, some General
Accounting Office Investigators
and key members of Congress.
Accentuate the pasltlve .was
Wall's Imbecilic theme In office.
It Is a perfect epitaph tor the
thrift lndustl'y.

Ot-le L.AST MeDAL

8allday. There wu no declalon; catcher Terry
NO DECISION - Montreal Expe Tom Foley
Kellaedy threw to second oa a delayed third slrlke
dives towards lhe walling hands of San Francisco
Giani Robby Thompson In 1 fourth Inning play , call to Andres Galarraga. UPI

Tway captures(1989 Memorial
golf tourney with 277 effort

Can Gorbachev
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney would do well to study Hilaire
Belloc's famous little poem "Dis·
covery" before he pl)lnges much
deeper Into the thickets of the
Pentagon. It begins as follows:
Life U a lon~ dilcotJery. Un'r ir? I
You only teet your wi1dom bit by
bit. I If you have luck you find in
eorfy youth I How dangerou• it U rO
tell the Truth.

In 10 years In the House of
Representatives, Dick Cheney
earned enormous respect, both
from other members In both
parties and fron~ the media, by
being a man who· spoke openly
and honestly, but· always
thoughtfully and without pas·
slon. It was the most natural
thing In the world for him to take
that style wltb him when be went
to the Pentagon a few weeks ago.
When asked, therefore, by a TV
reporterr whether In his opinion
Mikhail Gorbachev will succeed

SUCCeed ?_____W:......i_ll_ia_m_R_us_he_r

or fall In his efforts to reform the
Viewed strictly as a prophet,
Soviet economy, Cheney re- Cheney Is almost certainly right,
sponded by telling the truth as he and Bush undoubtedly knows it.
perceived It: "I would guess that Gorbachev:s reforms won't work
hi! would ultimately fall; that Is because the Soviet system Is
to say, that he will not be able to beyond repair. Communism Is
reform the Soviet economy."
based upon a fatally fiawed '
And then, mindful of his notion of the nature of man, and
responsibility as secretary or of the consequent proper struc·
defense, he added an Indirect ture and function of human
warning against America letting society. It cannot be reformed; It
down Its guard: "And then when can only be replaced.
that happens, he's likely to be
But Gorbachev and his allies
replaced by somebody who will can hardly be expected to accept
be far more hostile than he's been thlss prognosis, any more than
In terms of his attitude towards Nlcholss II could have been
the West."
expected to admit that the House
The next day, without refer· of Romanov was )lound to fall. It
ring directly to Cheney, Pres!· Is their tate, as II was his, to try to
dent Bush Inserted the following cure the Incurable, and In the
soothing words Into a speech to process, If possible, to make Its
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce:
demise bearable. Eventually a
"You know, I madeltcleartoMr. . saner and healtbler society will
Gorbacbev ... when we met, that replace the Soviet state In toto.
we wanted to see perestroika ' What Is the role of outsiders·
succeed."
while this Is going on? It would

a)most surely be counterpro-·
dueled for Western governments
to predict that Gorbachev' s reforms will necessarily fall. That
might brlngonexactlytheklndof
reacilon In Moscow that Cheney
. warned against.
Instead, Western leaders
should encourage Gorbachev's
reforms, wish them (and him)
well, and call for the kind of free
society In Russia that would, by
Implication, not merely reform
communism but replace lt. As
the regime sinks Into Its terminal
agonies, we should stand ready to
do whatever we can to ease the
suffering of tbe Ruaslan people
and bring to birth a new and
happier future for their natiOn.
Meanwhile, Dick Cheney needs
no correction, let alone a reprl·
mand. He might, though, benefit
from an occasional reminder
that the way to handle a dying
bear Ia: very carefully.

Logic won't resolve crisis ___Sa_ra_h_Ov_er_st_re_et
qp.:

~·
.5~6

(l') 1989 by NEA. tne

" ... snd the Alssksn branch of our papertowel division will show a SUBSTANTIAL
profit this quarter."

Today

m history

ByUIIIIellrr-r.ler..U..aJ
Today 11 Monday, May 15, the !35th day of 1989 wlt}l230 to follow.
Tbe mc101111 movtna toward tun.
Tbe 11101'11111&amp; star 11 Sat11111.
Tbe evenlalatara are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
TbOII borll on thll date are tlllder the sip of Taurtll. ~Include
autbol'L. Frank Balllll ('1'btWizllrd btOz") In :18116. Frencliclu!mllt
· Pierre c;urle In Jlllll. au lllor Katherine Ann Porter In 1110, Chlcqo
• M8yor Ric~ l. Dallf
acton J~ Gotllllln liCii &lt;aae IN)
. ... J .... \CI$1fl' Ia Jlfll, COUDtry llnpr ely Arllc&gt;ld !:'!.~18 (aat
53
n&gt;. actiWP Aula Maria Alberlhf!tttln 1936
llnaer•
Trial Lopa In ltSf (qel21 11nd Lalnle Kazan In 1M2 (qe •7).

111•

&lt;• ), -

...... _

--~
(

.. )&lt; ..

'Thts won't be the hardest ethical dilemma. Neither side's
column I will ever write, but I logic - all or nothing, either
don't expect another one will abortion without restriction or
none at all- has seemed sound to
ever be as hard to prepare for.
This one took years, and I'm me at all. The abortion debate Is
still not completely ready. But a tough one for a logical person.
time hilS marc bed past me, and I By using the same deductive
have no more ot lt. Tbe attorney reuoning you usually rely on,
general of my state, Mluourl, you don'tcomeupwlth eltber the
recently argued a case before Ute classic pro-choice or anti·
U.S. Supreme Court Utat will abortion position.
Take, tor example, the classic
affect American abortion laws If
pro-abortion reasoning that after
the panel concurs.
To what extent Is unclear, but conception there II no more than
some believe that If the court the potential for ll1e .untll a fetus
upholds MlaiOUrl'a ..w declal'lnl Ia able to su.taln life without Ita
mother. The iollcal mind then
"lite betllna al· conception."
birth-control devlcel tltat work aoes searching for a point of
Just .ttl!!' conception, lnatead of viability and comet up with 101111!
betore, may be In Jeopardy. I am contradictory Information:
terrltled by the thougbt that While ~elence develop~ waya to
thele reliable methocla mleht keep younaer and yoanaer fetiiiM alive, aome cliDJcl abort
become lllelal.
Yet Attonuly General WOllam · felulel of tbe 18111e age.
Welllter hal 1J'11114 that wery
Or talle the wrencb!Da atorlft
slate lho1IJd be I110wed to require of womea wllo bave placed tllelr
doc:ton to ltll1re lelia to deter· I!VII at lite mercy of butcben.
mine w11et1 a tetua II viable. On n . t WOIDIII In! dnperate
tltat one point, I can't lOIIcally beeaUIIoftlltlaekofiUppDrlour
faalt btm.
mciMy pnMIIel .wldle. at tile
Wllyt Becauae &lt;Mir tbe ye~ lUIIe tlllll, NitUbiDI that they
WI! bave all wrestlecl wltb tbll
bear thele clllldreR - wltether

1

they are up to the challenge or
not. While these stories can
break your heart, they can't
complete an equation for the
logical mind that coulders both
mother and viable child.
But lake the anll·abortion
contention that no baby has to be
unwanted, that for each baby
there Is an Infertile couple
longin'g to become parenta. Tile
mother may not be able to give up
the cblld, even thougb she's
horrendously Ill· prepared to nur·
ture it. ~e may bend to the
conaklerable societal pressure~
and keep It, with she, with child
and the re.t of111 all tbe worse for
it. Or IIIII! may bend to other
socletal prenuree to give It up,
and •JIIIId Ute rest of her JUe
reerettlnl the deciiiOD whlle the
child wonders wily bll CIWll
mother wouldn't keep him. No
happily logical concluaiDD here,
ettber.
The roadblocb I've bit wh!ll!
trytn1 to tiD4 a lotllcal&amp;DilJW to
the abortloll q-tlon are proba·
bly as much re~po~~~lble for my
pro-cbolce position u -'anytblq
I've beard from ettller camp.

Given my own confusion, I can't
make that decision for anyone
else.
At the same time I feel
betrayed by the most vocal
pro-choice advocates - the ones
who get any press, that Is. For the
most part they have refused to
deal with the Issue of how fetal
development should affect If and
when abortions are performed,
as If setting any conditions under
which abortiOns may bot be
performed puts the whole pro- ·
C!!Ss In Jeopardy. And bere again,
the old logical mind can't help
but wonder: U tetuiii!S that could
be .viable with assistance are
aborted, II the next logical step
recognizing a mother's right to .
lnfaDtlclde?
I'm not aure I bave enough
Information to make a logical
declllon, because some ot the
debate baa never been Invited ·
Into tbe forum.
.'lllllltJ ~~ of tile worl4'a acUv.vnJee_ll't .. lnd • I•

1f111C111J 100 mllllm fadlraltu retanll .... fllld-- ,....
•

.,

'

.

The Daly Sentinel-Page 3
.

Jackson·~naps losing spell;
Reds sweep Cardinals, 5-2,

Page 2-Tiw Dilly 81 illtwl
POil'aoy-Mid I til~ Ohio

WASHINGTON - American "blghly confidential" was sent
taxpayers will be asked to dig by Isaac to Baker, who had
deep In their pockets for as much recently been named Treasury
as $200 billion to ball out secretary.
his sister agency, the FSLIC,
hundreds of savings and loans
It read: "When we got together wblch Insures savings and loan
that were run Into the ground by a few months a'go In your office, I . deposits. But he didn't want to
crap-shoot management. You told you that one of JIIY prinCipal lcxik like a meddler. So he
can send your thank· you notes to concerns about the financial prepared his study secretly and
Federal Home Loan Bank Board · system was the condition of the sent it to Baker with a note that It
Chairman Danny Wall, former thrift lndustl'y 11nd the ability of was done "without benefit of
Treasury Secretary James the (depositor Insurance fund) to direct access to the FSLIC which
Baker and the spineless cope with the problems. About does not know that we have done
members ot Congress who were that time, I requested our staff to this work." Isaac parenthetl·
In the pocket of special interests. p~epare an analysll of the thrift cally added that he "did not want
, The salt to rub Into the Industry. ... (T)he study conto stir up any more political
taxpayers' wound Is the fact that cludes that the problems of the concerns than· necessary at this
a bailout would bave cost only thrift lndustcy are of such propor· tlm.e."
about $10 billion - relative lions that they will ·soon overWhat was Baker's response to
pocket change - If government whelm the ability of the Federal Isaac's financial S.O.S.?
officials had acted when the Savings and Loan Insurance
According to our sources, the
experts wer·e still smelling Corp. to deal with them unless unspoken policy was that If a
smoke.
something major Is done to shore crisis was brewing, make sure It
Here's one glaring example. In up the FSLIC."
didn't erupt on Ronald Reagan's·
early 1985, William Isaac, who
Isaac was In a ticklish position watch. In other words, save It for
was then chairman of the Fed· to be sounding the alarm. He ran the next president. That turned
era! Deposit Insurance Corp., the FDIC, which Insures out to be Baker's good fi'lend
Implored Baker to make solving commerlcal bank deposits. He George Bush, who may be
the thrift crisis a top priority. On was smart enough to know that wondering now what friends are
June 5, 1985, a letter stamped something was grossly wrong at for. Had Baker used some ot his

•

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
DUBLIN, Ohio - Bob Tway
pu.t an end Sunday to nearly three
years of questions about the
status of his struggling goJ!
game.
Tway, the toast of the golf
world In 1986 when he won three
PGA Tour events as well as the
PGA Championship and ,was
named the player of the year,
broke a long dry spell by winning
the $1 million Memorial
Tournament.
"'
'"I'm very, very delighted,"
said Tway after he birdied four of
the final six holes, Including the
final two, to au tduel Fuzzy
Zoeller for the $161t,OOO top prize.
"It's been three years since! won

a golf tournament. I've been
hounded by questions of 'What's
wrong with · your game?' . and ·
'Why haven't you won?' and 1
couldn't answer any of. them.
"I just kept plugging along and
I just wasn't playing as well as I
did ,In 1986. Believe me, It was
very frustrating. I figured If I
just kept practicing and working
hard, eventually I would start
playing good again."
After the Tournament Players
Championship In March, Tway
decided be had to make some
changes In his swing. He got help
from both former Tour pro Tom
Weiskopf and and teaching pro
David Ledbetter In Florida.
He took the changes to the
Masters and failed to make the

'

.: Rio's Gheen named all-MOC
Rio Grallde catcher Scot
Gheen was the only Redman
named to this year's all Mid-Ohio
Conference baseball team.
Gheen, a senior co-captain and
three- year letterman from Mid·
dleport, batted .326, hit three
homers and drove In 14 runs Ill his
final diamond campaign. He
joined senlorcatcherTJm Blase·
zyk, pllchers Keith Elryant and
Etraln Montero, Infielders .Chris
Brown, Bryan Helwig and
Amner Reyes, and outfielder
Joel Perez, all from MOC and
Nationill Christian College AI·
hletlc Association (NCCAA)
champion Mount Vernon
Nazarene.
Other all·conference selections
lnclued Infielders Lonny Allen
(Tiffin), Joe Ford (Ohio Domini·

Pelluer asks
for trade
DALLAS &lt;UPI)- Dallas Cow·
boys quarterback Steve Pelluer,
saying be was convinced he was
no longer In the team's plans,
said Sunday he had asked Coach
Jimmy Johnson for a trade.
"They have closed the door,"
Pelluer said. "I don't see any
· way they can do anything except
· !Fade me."
Pelluer said the Cowboys had
otfered him either a one· year
· contract at his 1988 salary or
$300,0110 or a ftve:year deal at a
salary, "thllt'll too low even for a
backup quarterback."
Altholllh Pelluer said Sunday
bil agent had not made a formal
rebuttal to the Cowboys' offer,
there bave been reports Pelluer
· wanted as much as $800,000 to
· quarterback the team next

can) and Shane Hardy (Cedar·
ville), outfielders Lance Baker
(Ohio Dominican), Todd Carmer
and Dave Jones, both from
Malone; designated hitter Joe
Montanaro (Tiffin) and pitchers
Aqdelle Cummings (Ohio Domin·
lean) and Mike King (Malone).
Baker was named MOC Player
of the Year, while Mount Vernon
skipper Mel Severns, who guided
the Cougars to Its first-ever
nailonal championship with a
win last Saturday over Spring
Arbor (Mich.) College, was
named MOC Coach of the Year.

cut, which he called "the low
point" of his three years of
frustration.
"I'm kind of surprised that I
played t)lls well this quick," said
Tway. "It's just great to get back
In the winner's &lt;;lrcle. Obviously
It's great to win any tournament.
but this Is kind of special. I think
people regard this as the higher
echelon of golf tournaments."
Tway and Zoeller, the lourna·
ment leader the first three
rounds, came to the 17th tee tied
for the lead at 9 under par. Tway
broke the tie when he hit his
7-lron approach shOt three Inches
from the pin.
After hitting a tree with his
drive on the par-4 final hole,
Tway managed to get his ball on
the green. He then removed any
chance Zoeller had to lie by
rolling In a 25-foot birdie putt.

"I was just basically trying to
lag It down there." said Tway,
"and It went ln."
Tway's 3-under par 69 Sunday
on the Mulrfleld VIllage Golf
Club ·c ourse gave him a 72-hole
score of 11-under 277. Zoeller shot
a final round 72 and finished at
279.
Zoeller, who picked up $96,000
for finishing second, took his loss
In stride.
''We went back and forth at
each other and you can't ask for
any more,'· said Zoeller.

By BIU.. WOLLE
felt no pressure during his losing
UPI Sperta Wrller
streak.
With the practically-Invincible
"It's going to get better. I'm
John Franco backing him up, all
going to get better," he said.
Danny JackSon needed to snap a
''I've thrown the ball well the last
three times. Things went my way
personal winning streak was to
get to the late Innings with a lead.
today, and hopefully that will
continue." ·
At St. Louis Sunday afternoon,
Cincinnati gave Danny Jackson
the lead, and the left-bander
Rookie Ken Hill, 2·2, allowed
knew what to do with It, pacing three runs over 7 1·3 Innings In
the Reds to a 5-2 win over the taking the loss. He gave up 11 hits
Cardinals.
and two walks while striking out
Jackson, 2·6, snapped a per· seven.
sonal six-game losing streak and
The victory gave Cincinnati a
earned his first victory since three-game sweep, the first for
Opening Day after pitching the Reds at Busch Stadium since
seven-plus Innings and allowing · June 1976.
one run.
Cincinnati took a 1·0 lead In the
John Franco went the flnal12·3 third on an RBI single by Paul
Innings to earn his 13th save In as O'Ne!U.
many tries, allowing one run on
O'Neill, 5-for·12 In the series,
two hits.
singled In Herm Winningham In
"I think Franco Is the best In · the fifth to give the Reds a 2·0
the National League," Cincinnati .advantage. O'Neill collected his
Manager Pete Rose said. "He third RBI of the game In the
was 39-for-42 (In save opportuni- ninth.
ties) last year, and he's 13-for-13
The Reds added a run In the
this year. It doesn't get rnuch eighth on a single by Ken Griffey
better than that."
and scored twice In the ninth off
The Reds, who scored a total ot reliever Joe Magrane.
only nine runs In Jackson's six
Elsewhere In the NL, Los
losses, gave the starter some Angeles swamped. Philadelphia
support In the last of a three- 9-0, Montreal clipped San Fran·
game series with the Cardinals. .' cisco 4-3, Atlanta downed ·Pitts·
Jackson, who lost twice to New . burgh 5·2, Houston topped Chi·
York after giving up five runs In cago 5·1 and NewYorkedgedSan
13 lpnings, did Ill tie differently 1
1 Diego 2-1.
against the Cardinals, Rose said. 1
Dodgen I, Pbllllell 0
"He's pitched three good ' At Philadelphia, Eddie Murray
games In a row," Rose said of drove In five runs with a pair of
Jackson. "The next llmeyouloo!t homers and Ore! Hershlser fired
up, Danny will be 6-6. Last year, ! a two-hitter as Los Angeles ended
he was the best left-bander In the • a three-game losing streak. Her·
National League. This Is about : shlser, 5·3, walked four · and
the time of year he got on a run struck out seven In his second
last season."
shutout of the year. Alex Madrid.
Jackson retired the first 10 1·1, lasted only 3 2·31nnlngs. Jeff
batters he faced and did not allow HamUton broke a 26-lnnlng
a hit until the fifth. Pedro Dodger scoring draught with a
Guerrero started the Inning with solo homer In the second Inning.
a double and scored on Milt ,
Expo~ •· Glanlll S
Thompson's two-out triple.
At Montreal, Dennis Martinez
Ja~kson walked two and struck
pitched a five-hitter over eight
out one.
Innings to lift the Expos. Mar. Jackson, who finished second tinez, :i-1, walked struck out five
In the Cy Young voting a year ago and walked one. Tim Burke
behind Ore! Hershlser after hurled the ninth for his eighth
compUing a 23-8 record, said he save. The Expos chased Giants

starter Mike Krukow, 2·1, when
they scored four runs In the fhlrd.
Braves 5, Pll'Met I ·
At Pittsburgh, John Smaltz •
scattered four hits over seven
Innings to post his third straight
victory and lead Atlanta. Smaltz,
6-2, struck out five and walked
six. Joe Boever pitched the ninth
for his fifth save. Doug Drabek,
1·5, lost hl.s flfthstralaht start. He
allowed three runs and five hits.
Aalrol S, C•llll
.
At Chicago, Mike Scott pitched
a four-hitter tor his lOOth career
win and Kevin Bass hOmered to
lead Houston and hand the Cubs
their fifth straight loss. Scott, 5-2.
struck out six and walked none

The Daily Sentinel
(UIIPIIIC. . .)
.\ Dlvtoloo of 11..-meGio be.

Publlllled every altemom, Mondoy
tbrouato Friday, 111 COurt St., Pomeroy, Oblo, by tile Ol!to Valley PublllbiDC COmpaay /Multtmeclla, IDe.,
Pomeroy. Oblo ma~. Pb. 9t2-21!16. Se&lt;OIId CIUI (1011011 paid at Pomeroy,
O!olo.
Member: Unlt&lt;d Pma lrltmoattonal,
IDJand DaUy Prell A11octat1on and tbe
OhiO Newapa~ AuoclatlatL Natloaal
AdvertiiiDI
reeeatatlve, Branham
New IIPIII*
-. 733 Tldrd A..,....

New York. New Yort&lt;10017.

POSThiASTER: 5ead a d - chanlfl!ll
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lltJIIIM:IIIP'ION a.tTIIII

a,. CUrl• or Mel• .....
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balta. Cl'ecllt will be atven cor-each

week.
No subacrlptloM by mall permitted ID
areu where hpme carrier aervtce lJ
available.
Malll\tdtOC~Io­

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""'ld• Metp llaooiiiJ
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:INTRODUCING
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DON'T GUBSS .. .INVESTIGATE
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for details. '

COMFORT .AllURED DEALERS:
Foltftlllla MMI!Ile*l • CoDing
Miidepcrt

992-5321

•

~eason.

'"I believe great tblll&amp;l lie
ahead for me," Pelluer said at a
baatlly called COIIference,
llllvcnr. . . . . . Wft elllotlon.
'1t'a t4o bad fllat won't be with
the Dallas Cowboys.

.'

ao.110 ·

13 wee~oo ..................................
26Weeb .................................. ~
52 Weeb ................................. ,J75.40

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Pege-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

. Monday, May

15. 1989

• •
Midclapot1, Ohio

Mon~.~16,1989

Twins rout Blue Jays, 13-1;,
Indians still lied for top spot

r---

EMS lurs 5 weekend calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to five calls over the Weekend.
No calls were reported on Satwday, but on Sunday, at 8:28
a.m. the Pomeroy squad responded to a call on Wright Street In ·
which Delbert. Eugene Murray was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 8:28p.m. the Syracuse stat)onasslsted the New Haven Fire
Department In a search and boat rescue, with the Pomeroy
station joining at 8:39p.m., and the Middleport station assisting

Scoreboard ...

..

.......

Mud Hens post 10-6 victory

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hrinp all of 1919 :we en .cel-. ·
ibrat11111 our 40th year at br11111· .
ing IIIH• htanng to our '
frilnds-dltnts. It is gratifying
t• knaw that we have dlvll· •
~ 1 rlplltation .for lttt91ty

DiMI 1hpsndability. We w.-e
hire ytlf.-day, expect to Ill
hlrt t-..aw; 11111 our oWitJa •
tltn to you is to Ill awallablt
(ev.-y dly) as you nit1l U.. with 1
the ... up-to·•ft ttchnalo·
IY thist Is to 1st found. Ht.lng
Jll'olllem7 l'r ilng aW ..-olllem!,
t'- nll ..h 111111 - WE .
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Wilt Mlln St. Lillllt.. Dlllnry

992·2124

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May 1- LA Lahra Ill, 8el&amp;tlt 1ft
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Mq It - lA Laken II, 8elltlf- 8f
MQ u - LA Laken n, kllitk t1
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Efficiency and
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Make This
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•
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___... .......-·····-

The.Syracuse station, at 10:06 p.m., responded to a call on S
124 to check out smoke from a structure, but nothing w-1-s
showing.
·

--Area deaths-.Lester Jackson
Lester C. Jackson, 75, Coolville, died Saturday at Arbors
Nursing Home In Marietta after
an extended Illness.
Born In Sutton, W. Va., he was
the son of the Late Stonewall and
Nora Barnett. He was a World
War II veteran, U.S.Army,anda
retired coal mbier, belongs to the
Coolville Lodge F. and A.M., and
was a member of the Baptist
Faith.
He Is survived by two sons,
Robert Lee Jackson, Norwalk,
and )31lly Joe Jackson, Wooster;
eight grandchildren, and three
great-grandchildren, two hr.olh·
ers, Earl Jackson, East Rochester, and Richard Jackson, Barrackville, W.Va.; Lucille Andre,
Atlanta, Ga., and Lavonne Ed·
wards, Enterprise, W.Va.; and a
dear friend, Charles Rlunsey.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by tour broth·
ers and a slater.
Funeral servic.e s will be held
Tuesday at 2: 30 p.m. at White
Funeral Home In Coolville, with
Billy C. Murphy officiating.
Burial wlll be In Coolville Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home today, 2 tp 7 p.m.

.

WEDNIIDAY IN THI "PM"
AT HOIJIII CLINIC
GAUJIIOUt, OHIO

DILES HEARING CEMJER
..

•

"

William Russell ·

l
r

J,

William Fred Russell, 93, for·
merly of Middleport, died Sunday at the Ohio Masonic Home In
Springfield where he has resided
for several years.
He was born on Oct.lO, 1895, In
Clifton, W.Va., the son of the late
William . and Harriet French
Russell, He ·worked for 47 years
for the New York Central J:tallroad and was a member of the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
. He was past master of the
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M. where he was a 75 year
·member. He was also a 70 year
member of the Ancient and
Accepted Scottish Rites, Valley
of Columbus, where he also had
served as an ambassador from
Meigs County. Mr. Russell also
belonged to the Aladdin Temple
Shrine, Columbus, and was a
past president of the Twln ',City
Shrine Club.
,
He Is survived by his wife,
Lorna of Springfield, a granddaugher, Kristen Freedman of
Utah, two great-grandchildren,
Bryon and Evean Freedman of
Utah. He was preceded In death
by a son, Austin Russell, and a
daughter, VIva. Rupp, his first
wife, Allee Russell, two brothers,
Robert and Owen, and a sister,
Mary.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at
Rawlings-Coats-Fisher Funeral
Home with the Rev. James A.
Seddon officiating. Burial will be
In Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.m.
Masonic rites will be held at7: 30
Tuesday evening.
·

Forbes Stewart. She was a
member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
She Is survived by a brother
and sister-In-law, VIctor and
Margaret Stewart, Merritt Island, Fla.; a niece, Linda Pleasant and her husband, John,
Huntington, W. Va.; a nephew,
Jerry Stewart and his wife,
Mary, Johnson City, W. Va.; two
grand nephews, Greg and Chris
Hedrich, and two. grand nieces,
Tract Hedrich, and Amy
Stewart.
·
She was preceded In death by
her parents, her ~usband, Antone
Lucke In . 1982, and a sister,
Maxine Sayre.
Funeral services will be held at
1 p.m. on Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Don
Meadows will officiate and burial
will be In Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.

Ma!J8ioe Nelson
Maggie Leona Nelson, .78, 161
Pear I St., Middleport, died Sunday morning at Veterans MemorIal Hospital. .
Born Dec. 7, 1909 In Telinesee,
to the late Phlllmore Clouse and
Emma Cooper Clouse, she was a
waitress and cook for several
different restaurants.
She Is survived by one son, Car I
Phillips, Cumberland, Md.; one
step daughter, Betty Burgoon,
Logan; five grandchildren, 13
great grandchildren, three
great-great-grandchildren, one
brother, Millard Clouse, Garland, Texas; three sisters, Mary
Phillips, Adena; Bessie Harvey,
Mexico, Mo.; and Julia Engle,
Middleport.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, James A. Nelson,
and two brothers, Leo Clouse,
ana Wllllam Clouse.
Services will be at the Hunter
Funeral Home In Rutland on
Wednesday at 1: 30 p.m. with the
Rev. Uoyd Grimm officiating.
Burial will be In the Robinson
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Tuesday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

Delbert Murray

Delbert Eugene (Murph) Mur·
ray, 55, of Wright St., Pomeroy,
died unexpectedly Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was a shift engineer at
Phillip Sporn Power Plant. Born
on Aug. 28, 1933, at Bel~on. W.
Va. he Is the son of Ada Ba II
Murray of Smithburg, W. Va ..
and the late Rev. Forest. Lee
Murray.
He Is ·survived by his wife,
Barbara Captelna Murray,
Pomeroy; a daughter and son·IJ!·
Ia w, Jon! and Des Jeffers,
Harrisonville; a son and
daughter-in-law, Randy and
Amy Murray, Raleigh, N. C.; a
sister and brother-In-law, Mar- ·
Faye Stanley
tha and Bob Moore, Smithburg,
V{. Va.; two grandchildren, Katie
Faye Stall'iey, 59, Rt. 2, Albany
and Nathan Jeffers, HarriSon·
!Snowville), died Saturday at the
ville, his father·ln·law, Frank
Ohio State University Hospltal .in
Captelns, Charleston, W. Va., a
Columbus.
.
brother-In-law, and three sistersBorn In Snowville, she .was the
in· law.
daughter of the late Glenn and
He was preceded .In death by
Elsie Gilkey Stanley. She was a
his father, an Infant son, his
. housewife, and member of the
mother·ID·Iaw, Jessie Captelna .
Snowville United Methodist
Mr. Murray was a member of
.
Church.
the United Methodist Church and
She Is survived .by her hustbe Fraternal Order ot tbe
band, Lyman Stanley; one slater,
Eagles, Aerie No. 21n. He was a
Edith Sargeant, Athena; and · veteran of Korean War.
·several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Services will be at the BlgonyWednesday at 2 p.m at the Ewing
Jordan Funeral Home In Albany
Funeral Home. The Rev. AI
on Wednelday at 1 p,m. Burial . Hartson will officiate and burial
will be in the Burlln&amp;ham Cemewill be In the Riverview Cemetery. Friends nlay call at the
tery. Friends may call at the
iuneral home after 6 p.m. on,
funeral home from 2to 4 and 7 to 9
Tuesday and anytime before the
p.m. Tuesday.
servic.e on Wednesday.

.Banquet cancelled·
The Meigs High Spring'Sports
Banquet scheduled tor tonight
has been cancelled aM tenta·
lively rescheduled for Wednesday at 6: 30 at the high school.
CollDCII to meet
Racine VIllage Council will
meet In recessed seslon at 7 p.m.
tonight at the Star Mill Park.
Special meetlag
Middleport Lodge 363, F . and
A. M. will meet at 7 p.m Tuesday
at the Middleport Masonic Temple. Work will be in .the Celtowcraft degree. Refreshments will

be served .
Chamber meeting
· The Middle port Chamber of
Commerce wlll meet Tuesday at
6:30 p.m. at town hall.
Homemakers club
The Third Wednesday Home-·
makers Club will meet Wednes·
day at the Syracu~ Town Hall at
9 a .m. to leave on the annual
outing of the club.

'I

Evelyn Lucke of Hubbard St.,
Syracuse, lonl·tlme Mel1s
County Clerk of Courts, 'Ciled
unexpectedly Saturday at the
C8bei-Huntlllaton Hoapltal In
Huntington, W. Va .
Mrs. Lucke wu In Huntington
to attend the wedclinl of a
nephew.
Qorn on Feb. 28, 1910, at
·Mlneraville, abe was the dau1h·
ter of hull Stewil't and Etbel

Sales totaled $4,980.740, while
sales for the accompanying
Kicker game were $783,687.
The Kicker game produced the
number 207129, and only one of
the tickets had that number, for
$$100,000.
Lottery officials said five
tickets had the llrst five numbers
for $5,000; 66 had four o! the first
six for $1,000; 723 had the first
three Cor $100, and 7,186 had tM
first two for $10 each.
•

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
jackpot for the Ohio Super Lotto
rose to an estimated $10 million
for Wednesday's drawing a fter
no tickets had the six number s
drawn Saturday.
Numbers drawn were 3, 6, 12,
15. 16, and 31.
Ohio Lottery of!lclals said 210
tickets had five of the numbers,
each worth $1,000, while another
9,389 tickets had four or the six for
each.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 1e: 30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blant, Elllll 6 Loewl
Am Electric Power ..... ....... ... .27
AT&amp;T ............ .... .. .......... ... ..34Y4
Ashland Oil .... .......... ........ ..... 41
Bob Evans .. .. ......... .......... ~ ..l5¥.,
Charming Shoppes .. ............16%
City Holding Co .... .. .. ..... ..... . 15
Federal Mogul... .. ....... ..... . 54Y4
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ... ...... ... .. .53~
Heck's ............. ................... . Y4
Key Centurion ..... ...............1~¥..
Lands' End .. ... ..... ....... .... ....31%
Limited Inc ..t ............... . ... . . .31 ¥..
Multimedia Inc .. ......... ...........95
Rax Restaurants .... ...... .. .....3r&lt;
Robbins &amp; Myers .. ......... ..... 16¥.,
Shoney's Inc ............. .. ......... 9%
Wendy's lntl .. ....... .. . ~o ...... . ... 5~
Worthington Ind .. .......... .. ... 21 Y4

BROCK
SUM
DROPS

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions-Wanda
Jacks, Pomeroy.
Saturday dlscbarges-Cllfford
Jacobs, and Donna Smith.
Sunday admissions-Russell
Cline, Mason.
Sunday discharges-Walter
Barrett, and Teresa Moore.
·
Bober Medical Center
Discharges May 11 - Alva
Betts, Lester Burt, Phyll~ Cald·
well, Delmer Foster, Dtanna
lhle, Garnet Johnson, Mrs. Sa·
inuel Juniper and son, Davina
Kldd, Jamie McCormick, OJUe
Moore, Emlly Robinson, Robert
Sheets, Timothy Simpson,
Brenda Smith, Kenneth Tabor,
Nellie Trapp, Melissa Wright,
Jacinda Yonker and Beth
Zachariah.
Dl&amp;cbarlles May 13 - Unda
Baker, India Boykln. Edna Claypool, Nancy Collins, James
Depue, Michael Dillon. Julia
Haynes, Jacob Holman, Ann
Johnson, Rlckena Kemper, Harvey McFarland, ROger Morgan,
Lisa Snodgrass, Olen Wilfong
and Allee Wolfe.
Births May 13- Mr. and Mrs.
Calvin Geiger, son, Bidwell. Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Killingbeck, son,
Middleport.
DI!ICh&amp;rllell May 14 - Vicky
Brown, Betty Corbin, Karen
Dillard, Artie Kimes, Madgle
Ousley, Melan le Richards, J~
shua Riffe, Mary White and
Mildred Zirkle.

.

'

I'IIESIIN
SUNSCREEN

umtJII
L-__ _. #31 OR m-4
OZ.

Weathet

PERT

PLUS
SHAMI'DD
1! oz.

By United Preas International
Soalll Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
chance of showers or thunderstorms. Low from 45 to 00 . Light
mostly northwest winds. Chance
ot rain 40 percent. Tuesday.
partly sunny with the high In the
lower 70s.

SCDI'E
MOUTHWASH .
24 oz.

lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satw·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:

SAVINGS EVERYDAY ON
COCA-COLA PRODUCTS
AT RITE AID

PIC&amp;-3

945.
PICK -3 ticket sales totaled
$1,524,480.00, with a payoff due of
$516,859.

2 LITER BOTTLE

PIC&amp;-4

0089.
PICK-4 ticket ssles totaled
$278,310.00, with a payoff due of
$83,000.
Super Lotto
6, 12, 15, 16, and 31.

NOW OPEN POl
SPI..G SUSON

HERR'S

.Comp'-te Uno ofVeg.tablo
• hddlng Planta. Azal ...
• Fruit T.._ Q-nlum•.
Hanging B•kot., Shrubbory
endT.....
OPIIINILY 9MTO 5 . .

POTATO CHIP.S
6 OZ. lA&amp;

JUIINY 1 t1 S

Hullbllnl's GnusJ.W..
tH·J776

•

Evelyn Lucke

'

'(6141 594·3571 .
TOU.fliE If OliO 1....117·7716
. ·.316 WBT UNON SIIUI'
A111NS,
4S7tt,

•I

R

~~OO~m.

Lakers rally from 29 points
-down, nip Seattle; ·Qulls win

Super Lotto jackpot goes unclaimed

Local news briefs... ----, Meigs happenings

Continued from page 1
Deputies were also notified that the road signs at the
Intersection of Letart Twp 95 and CR 28 were damaged
sometime early Saturday morning.

By ERIK IL LIEF
with a career hlgb-ty{Dg 11 Gruber's throwing error. New· ·
UPISporls WI'Mer
man took second on Gladden's
strikeouts In elabt lnnlnp.
In April, people asked the
Mlnn!lsota completed the single and scored on Doug
quesUon 'What's wrong with sweep pt Toronto as Tim Laudner Baker's linill!. John Moses sin· ·
Frank Viola?'
and Gary Gaettl each had tlu'ee gle borne two runs and Randy ·
After the left·hander posted his RBI.
BUlb added an RBI double.
second straight victory In the
Elsewhere In the American ,
Laudner's tw~run triPle put
Minnesota Twins' 13·1 rout of the Minnesota ahead 2·0 In the Le&amp;I\H!, Cleveland drubbed De· '
Toronto Blue Jays, the answer second. Arter Kent Hrbek lingled troll 8-3, Chicago defeated Balli· ;
seems clear: The • ,Minnesota and Gene Larkin reached bueon more 8·5, Kansas City edged
Twins.
·
a fielder's choice, Laudner hit a Texaa 3-2 In 10 Innings, Mllwau- :
The 24-game winner and 1988 shot oft the lett·fleld fence. Mike kee nipped Oakland 2·1, Callfor- .
American League Cy Yoq Flanagsn, 2-3, lasted only 2 1-3 l!la blanked New York 5.0 ·and :
a ward winner opened the seuqn innlnp and surrendered four Seattle dropped Boston 4-3.
with five consecu live los.ses In his earned runs.
1n.u- s, Tlcen s
first six starts.
At Cleveland, Pete.O'Brlen hit ~
VIola's poor performance
The Twins raised their lead to a two-run homer and a runraised questions as well as 5-0 In .t he third. AI Newman
scoring double to pace the
eyebrows around the league, and reached base when second baseIndians' 12-blt attack. Tom Can. fueled speculation that his stag· man Nelson Urlano muffed his
dlottl, 4-2, scattered eight hits
gering three-year, $8.1 million popup. Back·to-back RBI dOU·
over 8 2-3 innlnlll for the victory.
contract Z!lPped the big left- bles by Dan Gladden and Kirby
Paul Qlbaon, 1-3, took the loss for
bander's motivation to win.
the Tigers, who have the worst
Puckett followed, with Puckett
BUCKS PLAYER INJURED - Milwaukee
playoff game Sunday. 1\rystowiak suffered
A closer look reveals that much stealing third and coming home
record In the majors.
severe ligament damage and will undergq
Bucks' Larry Kryslkowlak covers biB face biding
Of VIola's early-season misery on Gaetti' s sacrifice tly.
Wblle Sox 8, Ortolea I .
surgery today. DetroH defeated Milwaukee 110-80
the pain then applauds biB team after being
stems from Minnesota's poor run
At Baltimore, Ron Kittle, Ivan
Toronto pulled within 5-lln the
and took a 3-8 lead Ia the series. UPI
wheeled paat their bench moments Into the first
production. In four of VIola's five fourth when Kelly Gruber
Calderon and Fred Manrique
quarter of the Detroit Pistons-Milwaukee Bucks
losSes the Twins provided their singled and scored. on Tony
blasted twO: run homers to poWer
ace two runs or less.
Chicago. Kittle, whO extended his
Fernandez' double.
Before Sunday's generous 13·
hitting streak to12games,drtlled
Minnesota added a run In the
run attack against Toronto, Viola fifth on GaetU's second sacrifice
the game-winning homer In the
won comfortably 6-2 against fly. The Twins scored three runs
seventh. Steve Rosenberg, 1·1,
Boston.
earned the win In relief and
In the seventh. Puckett doubled
"You have these days when and came home on GaetU's
Bobby Thigpen earned his sixth
you !eel great and you really single. Kent Hrbek walked and
save. Mark Williamson, 0-2. took
have to go alter them," Viola Larkin double home GaetU .• the loss,
said: "Every aspect of my game Hrbek scored on Laudner's sacrl· ·Royall a, Raagers ~
just
went
well
today."
.
(10 laalnp)
flee fiy to make the score 9·1'.
By IAN LOVE
Lakers made only 4 of 20 shots In I"They are the top of the line."
In
Minnesota's
fifth
consecu·
At
Kansas
City, Kurt ~tlllwell
Minnesota added tour more
UPI Sports WrHer
the first quarter and trailed 32-12 1 James Worthy scored 12 of his
tlve
win,
Viola
gave
up
just
one
singled home Willie Wilson With
runs in the eighth after Newman
:The Los Angeles Lakers with·
33 points In the fourth period for
entering the second period.
1
run
on
three
hits
and
one
walk
none out 'ln. the lOth ln~lng to !Iff
reached
base
on
third
baseman
stixxl the best the Seattle SuperLos
Angeles.
He
sank
a
3-point
"I don't think I've ever seen a
Kanau City.
'shot
SoniCs could offer Sunday and
and
a
20-footjumper
around
team as committed to destroying
1
moved one step closer In defense
a team as Seattle was In the first a Nate McMillan layln to give the
of their NBA championship.
,quarter," said Laker Coach Pat Lakers . a 90-85 lead with 2: 27
-The Lakers overcame a 29·
Riley. "Eventually the emotion remaining,
pciint, second-period defiCit and
backed oft and we were able to • Xavier McDaniel hit a 3defeated the SuperSonics 97-951n
pointer and free throw to cuI the
get back Into it."
seattle to sweep their best-ofSeattle bull! the lead to 43-14 lead to 90-89 with 49 seconds to go.
seven Western Conference
before the Lakers' began to rally. Arter a time out, A.C. Green took
semltlnal.
Los Angeles cut the margin to 11 a pass from Magic Johnson and
· Los Angeles, In search of a
at halftime and gradually re- jlit an open 12-foot jum
. per with 31
third consecutive NBA cham$econds left to give !he Lakers a
gained control of the.game.
piOnship, w!ll face the winner of
"The champion, the pride, 92-89 lead.
t~ Golden State-Phoenix series.
1 The Lakers, who are 7-0 In the
came out," said Magic Johnson,
The Suns lead the semifinal 3-1
who had i 7 points, 9 assists and 9 playoffs, sank their free throws
and can advance with a victory In
rebounds. ''When we came In the down the stretch to hold off the
Game 5 Tuesday In Phoenix.
lockerroom at halftime, we said, !ionlcs. They beat the Sonlcs for
: The Lakers, attempting to
'OK, let's wrap It up."'
tjle 12th straight time In ·the
llecome the first team to win
The Lakers grabbed their first playoffs dating back to 1980.
tltree straight NBA titles since lead at 82·81 when Orlando
· The Sonlcs were led by 30
the Boston Celtlcs won eight Woolridge sank 2 free throws points from McKey, 28fromEills
cliamp!onsh!ps In a row from with 6:14 to go. The Lakers never ard 26 from McDaniel. The rest
1959·66, looked like they might be los 1 the lead thereafter.
o the Sonlcs scored only 11
"playing a Game 5 against Seattle.
"When you are playing ·on points.
• The Sonlcs burst to a 9·0 lead adrenalin and emotion, If the · · ·In other semifinal games,
"iehlnd Dale Ellis and Derrick other team makes a run on you, Chicago clipped New York 106-93
McKey, who combined to score you've got problems," said Seat- and Detroit dumped Milwaukee
the team's first 13 points. The tle Coach Bernie Bickerstaff. 110-90.
Bulls 106, Knlcks 93
At Chicago, Michael Jordan
limped Into Chicago Stadium and
scored 47 points to power the
Bylls to 3-llead In their Eastern
Conference series. Jordan aggra·
New Yortt,I•Dlqol, llhlllop
vated a pulled groin muscle
walta for lhe ball from rl(bt field In lhe leVenlb
. Majors
WHITE TRIPLES - Callforula Aapls DeYOD
................ Aaaeleil
during
Chicago's victory Satur·
I"IU... IIIIii.A&amp;IM&amp;al
lnntnc. ABeles won 11-0. UPI
White
slides
safely
Into
third
on
a
triple
as
New
11 UnMed Prna blter1111tt_.
Clod.-! S, st.,YIII 2
day
and
received
treatment
AMERICAN LEAGUE
York
Yankees
third
buemaa
Tom
Brookens
.... ., .. ae. ••
East
overnight and In the lockerroom
Mo•re .. 1. s .. P'raDcleco :1
W L Pet. GB
New Yorll&amp;. 811 Dlep I ·
until game time.
1717.100LoaM pi• I. Plllladelplalaf
Clntl111d
17 n .see .\tl.... I, Plltlbu rail t
.
Bill Cartwrightadded 21 points
New York
17 IM .1111
\&lt;a
Clllda•lll, Si. Lo• 2
for
Chicago. Jordan finished with
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Baltimore
Ill II .441 !
Routt.ool, Olllcapl
MUwaullee
15 II .441 !
11
rebounds
and
6
assists.
Johnny
446 4514
.. ' .
Toro..o
I!U .U3 8
-~~~~~··
Atllnta (Lillq
..sl Gam•
l-1) at Chlcqo
Indianapolis ellged Buffalo 3-2.
By United Pr~ International
Newman
scored
23
points
Cor
the
II ~3 .~t-1 t
(Bielecki 1·1), 2:18p.m.
International League
Dan DIMascio cracked a three" 'sl ·
Ln AD ltl• ( Mol'l an S.l) at New York
Knlcks, who have lost eight
ALl. . ..,..._.,
......
'
Oakluld
t4 n .1117 (Fer ... dell .. l), 7:35p.m.
run
homer
alld
Jim
Walewander
California
23 II .138 I
straight
at
Chicago
Stadium
S.. Fnacllee (Garrell• I· I) at Phlla·
At Pawtucket, R.I., G411'Y
Kall . . City
23 l3 .t:IB I
drove In three runs With a triple
llelphla (Carmo~~l-1), 1: U p.m.
dating
to
March
6,
1987.
20
u
.511
31
..
.
Tremblay
homered for the first
·• SeaUko
TPltltbllllll (HeMoa H) at ChtdnMII
!t!UlJ•s
Game . 5 shifts to New York and single Sunday, sparking the
(Bra••••
1-J), 1:&amp;1 p.m.
time
this
season
and the Red Sox
16111 .4711
Mlnnetota
Toledo Mud Hens to a 10-6
S.. Dtep (TerreiiS.t} at Mo•reat {8 ,
Tuesday
night
with
Chicago
In
ct. leap
It ZO .U.&amp; II
three
runs
on three hits In
scored
Smtih J.l ), '1': A p.m.
lnternatlonai League victory
Sat...cle 'a Re&amp;~ilfl
position to eliminate the Kn!cks
'helllay'a Games
the
first
game.
Andy
Araujo, 1-6, ·
MlanNala ID , Toro.. o A
over the Tidewater Tides.
AtUta al Clllcap
In
the
best-of-seven
series.
Clr.veland 3, DP.trolt I
recorded the victory while Pete
~~ MplfJI u New York. allflt
Noi'ITI Carrasco also singled In
OaklaiMI4, Mllwau.Jet :1
Pistons 110, Bucks 80
PkW:IullhatCiocla.al, al ....
Harnisch,
1-2, tookthelossforthe
C.llor•all, NN&gt; Yorit I
Saa Fr~ndaea a1. Plllladelllhla, nllhf
two runs for hOst Toledo In a
At Milwaukee, Islah Thomas
llu-Cky.f,Taul
Red
Wings.
Chh:IIP I . Balllmol'lll t
scored 26 points and the Detroit four-run second Inning. Kevin
Sao DleoJO at Montre.a. nlthl
In the second game, Angel
Se.-lrlt. . . . . . .
St. Loul• aa Houtl-. niJIII
Ritz, 2-4, survived the slugfest to
Pistons remained unbeaten In
s..•ar•a Betulla
Gouzalez
hit his third homer of
CJfVtiMd IIi, Dec.rMI a
the;: playoffs In posting a 3-0 lead pick up the victory. The two
ye411'
to
help Eric Hetzel, 3-2,
the
Pro
playoffs
ChiCIID 8. llaJUmoft 5
teams combined for 28 hits, with
In their second-round series.
Mln""ota 13, Toroolo I
gain
the
.vJctory
for Pawtucket.
NB.4. Pl&amp;yoll1
Tidewater collecting 16.
Kan• CltrS. Texaa t,IO Jnnlnp
can
capture
the
best-of·
.Detroit
Dave
Johnson,
Confere~tet
StmiD•ht
1-3, took the
MII'QIIkee t, O•kiUd I
Blaine Beatty, 2·3,'suffered the
ht·d8nen
seven Eastern Conference semi!·
California 1, Ntw York I
defeat
for
Rochester.
EuternCoM'erenoe
defeat. Toledo led 10-3 after six
Seadlt ol, Bot~ton :1
Ina! Monday night In Milwaukee.
Otlcqo n . New York
Monh.r '• Games
(Chlcaple,.
~rW
J.l)
The Pistons swept Boston In Innings. .
ClevllaM (Farrell !-t} aiTerol'lioCKey
MJQ' I - ChlcAIO 1., New York Ill
Mark Bailey collected three
S.2J, l :Jip,m.
three games In the opening
COT J
Clll c..o (Lolli: t-J)at Detrtlt (TIIWia
hits
- Including two doubles May
II
New
Yerlll
U,
OIICAIOI'l
round .
!-4}, '2:11p.m.
MIG' IS- QlllciiOlll, New York 8&amp;
l l u • City (.... •&amp;er s.G) at Mlnne·
had three RBI for the Mud
and
Mark Aguirre added 15 points,
May 14 - Olleap Ill, New York 8:1
1,.. (8mldll-l),ll :ts p.m.
;Hens.
.
MIIY
IIQllcqoat
New
York,
8
p.m.
Mllwlllllee CAup• t-4) M OUiud
Joh1J Salley 14 and Bill Lalmbeer
~t· Mar It - New York a1 Chlcaao. 8
f8tewarl .. l) , 11: n p.m .
Elsewhere
In
the
IL,
Paw12 for the Pistons, who had six
p.m.
New Vortl (LaPolm I-l l aa California
K·MQ II - Clllc1110 al New- York, 1
CBIJ'tr\lttt ..I), lt:U p.m.
players In double figures. Ricky tucket swept Rochester 3-0 and
p.m .
'1\ieodiQ''I OamM
Pierce led Milwaukee with 22 4-1. In lnter·leagueAAAAlllance •.
MHwa..eeva. Detl'lll
CleYel•• AI Tor.-.. •lpt
play, It was: Syracuse 2, Denver
C. . nMie ... ..-.....)
Oh: ~a~o .a DetrtM, •IJM
while Fred Roberts added 18.
May II - DftnM U. )81waa• AI
Jlu•caty•Mtn.nG&amp;a, nllh!
lin
lllnnings and Oklahoma City
Sucks forward Larry KrystkoMIIY I I - Delrtk Ill. MI.... lee tt
ltaltlmore at Ten.~, •I PI
M-.J It - Delroll Ill, Mlhrall llee M
New ron at oa~~~u•. alpt.
wiak suff.e red serious ligament 7, Scranton-Wilkes· Barre 4.
M.,.ll- DelrtllatMII.,..Iee,lp.m.
Mllwaa llee at IuKie, 11lp&amp;
In the American Association,
K
·Ma,r
1'
1
'
MU._
...
at
Det..U.
I
damage
to his left knee 25
Bolloa al Calion• a. niKhl
p.m.
Omaha
routed Louisville 7-1,
secbnds Into the game while
JC·MII)' It - Del role I&amp;IIIIWHkee. TIA
' - - - NATIONA.L LEAGt!E
Nashville
blanked Iowa 5-0 and
x•Ma,r %1- MllwaaiiN 1i DetreM, TBA
driving to the basket. He will
Eat
Wetter•
Co..._c.e
" ' L P~t. GB
undergo surgery Monday.
Beat&amp;le ~• LA. l.allen

The Daily Sentinel- Page-&amp;

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'RITi AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
RITE
106 WT IIAIII
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J~ID

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NBUCY , .... ftt-1116
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16. 1989

Ohio

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National N1Jrsing Home Week
May 14th thru
20th, ·1' 989

.The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

- . ----·

Monday, May 16, 198~
Page 7

Bridal shower held recently
Delanl L. Baker was honored
Cake, punch, and chips were
recently with a bridal. shower served and games were played
given by Jane Reeves and Sally with prizes awarded to Marilyn
Caldwell, at the V.F.W. Building Robinson, Connie Connolly, and
· In Tuppers Plalris.
Cindy Cossin. The door prize was
Guests attending were Sandy won by Wanda Findling:
Cummins, Cindy Cossin, Shelly
A heart cake was presented to
Beck, Peggy Cummins, Connie Miss Baker at the end of the
and Tins Connolly, Kaleen and shower.
Joshua Hayman, Cathy VanA lingerie shower was also
Ness, Luther Boothe, Dixie given In her honor In Logan, by
Sovel, Wanda Findling, Karen Joy and Julle Johnson.
Baker, Becky Hastings, Marilyn
Games were played with prizes
and Lee Ann Robinson , Gay Ann awarded, and cake, punch, and
Burke, Joyce and Lisa Burke. chips were serVed to Shelly Beck
Darlene Baum, and Carol and Nathan, Mae Skiver, WaveBarnett.
line Kerns, Joy Johnson, Sandy
Sending gifts were Susie Swain Cummins, Karen Baker, Lisa
and Tim, Rhonda Cogar, Shirley Rardlan, Katherine Cummins,
and Julie Hawk, Rubal Caldwell,
and Peggy Cummings.
VIolet Mlllhone, Lori and Larry
Miss Baker will become the
Ritchie, Bill and Dorothy Robin·
bride of Brlam W. Cummins In a
son, Charlotte VanMeter, Mar- double ring ceremony on May 20,
lene and ,Michelle Donovan. · at 1:45 p.m . at the St. Paul United
Robyn Barnett, Lori Burke, and
Methodist Church In Tuppers
Katherine Cummins.
Plains.

•

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f.

A SALUTE.TO

···A SALUTE TO
.

.

•

Bradbury Church has banquet
honoring mothers, daughters

.,

. N~rsing .ared Rehabilitatio~.
.. ,

992~6606

.

.

•

36.759 ROCK .SPRINGS ROAD

Center
'

333 PAGE STREET

POMEROY, OHIO
'

992-6472
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

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, •

I~

l .

.

I.

"TmS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSES."

Pleasers

Ferrellgas ;'
992·5097

POMEROY, OHIO

•DDi60RT, OHIO

Swisher~Lohse

POMIROY, OHIO

POMEROYI OHIO

992·6128 . ..

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

. CHEmR, OHIO

985·3301

Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser
IMSURANCE AGEICY

· POMEROY, OHIO

~GRAVELY

Tractor

.

.

.DDLEPORT, OHIO

-·

Smith-Nelson
Motors,
Inc.
··.

992·2174

PO..OY,OIIO

UCINE, 0110

'BANK ONE. A H'IENS. NA A PART 01 THE CARING TEAM .

Adolph's ·Dairy VaUey
992·2556

POMEROY,OIIO

992·6687

446-2691
GAWPOUS,
OliO

POMIIOY, OliO
+~

· -· ..
f}

~..

-1

INSURANCE SERVICES .
.

POMEROY, OHIO

--

Isabelle Wolfe told the &amp;tory of
Anna J&amp;I'YIII of Gratton, W.Va.,
the founder of MotlMr'a Day aa a
national holiday, wllell members
of the~ UaltedMetbodllt
Church met recently for the
annual mother dau&amp;hter

•••uPOn,

· Dorotlly Downie had prayer
· before dlaner.
Alice W11111111)' aave a trttiute
to mothers, and Helea Fllher
pve a trlllute todaq11tera. Faye
•. Wildermuth rec:tte~ a poem her

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.PO.aoY,.O
' .

992·2039

Mike Swiger
'
:ft2·•••s

SfAft fA. . IISUUNCE

'

OliO'

~~~:u~=
and
· are llllllrally ''flushed"

ript out of your body bOrause they

CIIIIIOt be absmbed.

Within 2 days you sltould notice a
ctwDFiatllecOiorofyourstool, caused
by the fat plrlicles bei eliminated.

~:::::r~=.Dr.

WiUiarn Sliell, hean specialist and
associate professor of medicine at
UCLA mcmcal school, "the new fat.
bollcllni IJlOCCII is a"lazy wwt" to loee
wetaht because the pills alone
''lutomatically" reduce calories by
~~fat.ltisiOOIIIi

1n

IChool wUII a D - .

.., John
llelltiiiJ, Cella MeC.y 111111 Earl Youq,lotk over
the Dowen before ther were diiVIlnllied to the

toacllen.

:Mother-daughter banquet held by Pomeroy UMC

992-5432

Middleport, Ohio .

992·64!4 ,:

was discussed, and It was decided that the group will support
the Race Track Ministry.
Both circles reported they had
received letters from the scholarship person, and love gifts were
turned ln.
Mrs: Gheen passed out order
blanks to those who want to order
the Baptist Women's Magazine.
Installation of officers was
held,.and members of the Esther
.circle served refreshments. Ctr·
cle count was nine In the Ruth
circle, and six In the Esther
circle.

the "fat·IJl88net" pill because it breaks
intothou181ids of particles, each actina
lilce a tiny 1Jl8811el, ''aaractlna" and

are already
witht:::i'

TEACIIEB8 HONORED - Ill ol~Aem~Me of
/ ~lll&amp;k~ Teaeben Dar, tbe Melp Hlp llellool
S.lor Rll~weln cooperation with the Pomeroy
Kro1« Store, pr-to4 each toacllw In the lllp

Crow's Family Res

Pomeroy Flower Shop

Ewing Funeral ttome
••

SYRACUSE, OHIO

'

OHIO

It was announced that the
theme for the year will be
"Reflect God's Image" at the
. recent meeting of the Bertha M.
Sayre Mlsslcinary Group held In
the fellowship 'room at the
Baptist Church of Racine.
Barbara Gheen, president,
opened the meeting with a
reading, and a prayer by Florence Adams follj),wed. Emma
Adams gave a report on the
Sunshine Fut1d and said she had
taken a gift to Carol Rhodes who
18 In the hospital.
The care and share ministry

·
·
Prescription
Shoo
992·6669
· .DDLEI'in, OHIO

992~11
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Missionary gro~p meets .

Home
National
Bank
949·2210
992-6333

Valley ·Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

Ingels Furniture

rif·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

•rogan Warner

Eighteen Tliouuhd People Who Care.

992-2054 .
POMIIOY,

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO

will

-

992·3394/992·3345
'

POMEROY I OHIO

992-2644

BANKEONE

Baum Lumber Co.

992-2975

MIDDLEOIT, OHIO

Quality Print Shop

K&amp;C Jewelers

992·2975

992·2196 .

.

'

992-3785

992-2284

Francis Florist-

Middleport Trophies ·

Pharmacy

992-2955

POMEROY I OliO

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to_
Lose Weight

.Gospel Sing planned for Saturday

Fabric Shop

Pat Hill Ford

. Fruth Pharmacy .
992·6491

992·2057

Syraruse UMW
holds meeting

Five Points Diet
Class meets

Star Grange meets

&gt;

Thomas A. Smith, Sr., Columbia Township Road 1, Albany,
graduated In March from HockIng Technical College with an
Associate of Applied Science
Degree In Pollee Science
Technology.
Smith, a nativ e of Dayton. and ·
a retired Chief with 22 years
service In the U.S. Navy, Is
currently serving as a deputy
sheriff with the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department.
Smith served with the Pomeroy Pollee Department .for 18
months before assun'llng his
deputy sheriff position. He re·
sides In Columbia Township with
his wife, Helen Sue, and their son.

Ann Sauvage read "The Good·
ness of Motherhood" to open the
May meeting of the Syracuse
United Methodist Women.
Elsie Barnhart was presen ted
Others attending, with those
The secretary's report was
the oldest mother mother award, already mentioned, were na read and approved, and 23 shuqn ·
June Baum the youngest mother Darneh, Linda Darnell and !VIe· calls were reported. Mrs. Sauv- .
. SCIENCE WINNERS - The winners of · mention. In the middle row are, fifth graders,
award, and Mabel Michael won Iissa, Beth Mayer, Charldene age gave the treasurer's report
Sallllbury Elementary School's annual science
Dorothy Lellhelt, first; Matt O'Bryant, second;
the award for .mother with the Hanning, Loretta Roller and and a free will ofterlng was
. fair for, Jl'lldes four, five and six received cash
and Bobby Maah, third. In back are sixth enders,
most children present at the Lora. Krist! Riffle, Me ian le Ar- taken. Members . are to bring
prizes and cerdfteatea. The fair was held on
Heidi Huffman, flrat;. !\lolly To!lan, ae~nd; and .
Church of Christ mo· nold, Debbie Flnlaw, Jessica ' their Blessing Boxes to the June
Bradbury
. March 14 and all pardclpanlll were given coupons
Johlt Jeffera, thin!. Absent when the picture was
!her-daughter
banquet held on Johnson, Kathryn Johnson, meeting. It was also decided to
for a tree plaa from Main Street Pizza, Pomeroy.
taken was Jourtb grader Adam Jenkln8, who
May5.
Prke WIDaen pletuftid Include, flnt row, Ito r,
Carol Brewer and Stacey, Libby contribute to the Senior Citizens
placed third. Judge&amp; for the aclence fair were Bill
The opening prayer and read- King, Leona Hysell, Angela and Center twice a year.
fourlb gr_.ten, 10111 Witherell, flrat place; Adam
Buckley, John Costanza and Gary Walker.
Ing "What Is a Mother? \' was Veronica Baum, and Marlene
Wbll!', secolid; and Steve Hyaell, honorable
Mary Lisle read a letter from '
given by Naomi King, followed Harrtson.
Sine Cera, home for juvenlles of
by a special singing of "Precious
the area located In Athens
Memories'' by Paula Haynes and
County.
.
Mrs. Michael.
Helen Teaford presented the
Bessie King read "A Mother's
program "Stress In Our Dally
~ONDAY
school. All high school, junior
RIO GRANDE - The eighth Paraphrase of I Corinthians 13",
Ute", and M11ry Cundiff had the.
· POMEROY The Meigs high and band boostersareutged
annual open house at the office of and Linda Bates read "A Mother
closing, with Marcia Karr giving
County Board of Elections will to attend.
Rio Grande College professor, Whose Life Was Not Wasted."
the closing prayer.
meet Monday at 4: 30 p.m. to
·A puppet show, conducted by .
Dr. Ivan Tribe, will be held 2: 30
Irene Parker served refreshKay
Pickens
lost
the
most
conduct the official count of
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
to 5:30p.m. on Wednesday. Dr. Kathy Johnson and Lynn Ru- weight In the Monday night Five ments to those mentioned al)ove
ballots cast In the special election I,odie 363, F&amp;AM, wlll have a
Trlbe's office Is In Room 247 of nyon, was followed with a read· Points class, with Jessyca Hat- and Mar le Houdashelt, Buelah
and Republican primaries. The special meeting on Tuesday. at 7 the college's new bulldlng.
lng entitled "Thank You God" by field losing the most weight In the Ward, Harriet Sinclair. presicount will be the Ol)IY business p.m., for work In the fellowcraft
--Mrs. Baum. The closing prayer
dent, and visitor, Grace Dimock.
teen class.
conducted at the !llfletlng.
degree. Refreshments will be Square dance set
and farewell was given by Mrs.
served following the meeting,
POMEROY- The Belles and __ Runyon. ·
Losing the most pounds In last
TUESDAY
Beaus Western Square Dance
Mrs. Haynes won the door week's Mason class was Wanda
POMEROY - Drew Webster
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of Club Is sponsoring an open dance prize, and Pat Arnold won the Shank, and Dorothy Russell was Diet PUll s-p~ng u.s.
Post 139, AmeriCan Leilon, wlll the Middleport Presbyterian
on Friday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at prize for guessing the most baby the runner up.
met Tuesday at 7 p.m at the hall. Church will meet Tuesday at the
Lois Ann Reltrnlre and Jean
the Senior Citizens Center In pictures.
Refreshments will be served.
home of Mrs. Myron Miller. Mrs.
Pomeroy. Caller will be Dale
The dinner was served by Gary Vaughan tied for the most weight
Thomas Rue will have Bible Eddy, of Marietta. All western Bates. Bill King, Derek Johnson, lost In this week's Mason class,
RACINE - The Alpha Delta study. Mrs. Dwight Wallace will square dancers are Invited .
Larry Haynes, Jim Huffman, and runner up was Marjorie
~ Kap!ll\ .s orority will celebrate Its
have devotions.
Wigal.
and
Tom Runyo~ .
25th. anniver88ry with a dinner .
Ticket&amp;
on
&amp;ale
meeting at !fie Racine Metholdlst
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Tickets for the
Church. All charter members
MIDDLEPORT- The Mlddlt!Racine-Southern Alumni banare encouraged to attend. The port Literary Club will meet at 2
quet to be held May T1 at 6 p.m.
dinner will be served at 6:30p.m. p.m. Wednesday at the home of are now on sale at the Home
u.s. Gcw'f.~IIWflnt
I
Mrs. George Hackett Jr. There National Bank and VU!age Cut
Claims
tor New Diet PIH
George and Martha McGos·
The first degree was perRACINE - There wlll be a will be a group review of "Look
key , W.Va. statemasterandflrst formed In full form with field
Rate Store In Racine. Informa·
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Speciai)Southern Athletic Boosters meet- Homeward. Angel," by Thomas
lady, Clnthla Querrey, W.Va. work.
lion
may
be
obtained
by
ca!Ung
An
amazing new weight loss pill called
Ing Tuesday at 8 p.m at the high Wolfe.
state ceres, and Gay Querrey,
Mldkltf, legislative chairman, ;•fat-magnet" lias recently been devel949-2493.
W.Va. state women's activities gave an Informative report.
oped and perfcc1M by two prominent
chairman, were honored guests
A donation was made to doctors II a world filinous hospital in
at th~ recent meeting of the Star Friendly Hills Camp.
Los Angeles that reportedly "guaranGrange 778.
Members reported sick were rees" you steady fat loss and calorie
Plans were made to work on Catherine Colwell, Bridget mluc:tion by simply taking their tested
and proven new pill.
the
community service project Vaughan, junior member.
PPINT PLEASANT, W.Va.Featured singers ' on Saturday Reflections Trio, Traveling ·Sj!rThe U.S. gOYenunent has just approvon
May
20,
following
a
potluck
There
were
15
members,
four
The Bend Area Gospel Slng•will will Include Conrad Cook and the vants, Narrow Way, New Life
ed
the dociOnl claims ror a hard-to-get
dinner at 12:30 p.m. at the home visitors, and nine juniors present
be held Saturday, May 20, from 4 Calvary Echoes, Renners, Re- Singers, and Charity
pete11t
thai confirms ''the111 has never
of Bernice and Ray Midkiff.
for the meeting.
p.m. until the music stops, and flections Trio, New Life Singers, perform.
been
8ll)1bing
lilce their fat-bon1f ill
Patty Dyer, master of Star
The literary program con·
Sunday, May 21, from 1 p.m. to 6 Narrow Way, the Shaffer FamAdml881on to the sing Is free
....,_
"ItJSa..
. ·-"
~~~~~
pnx:es5URU!II.
......ynewmaJor
Grange, and national youth team dueled by Ruby Lambert, leep.m., at the West VIrginia State lly, Traveling Servants, and and everyone should bring a lawn
scientific lxealahrougll and is reYOluFarm Museum. The farm mu- Chosen.
chair. A tent will be provided In member, reported on ber attend· turer, consisted of the theme tionizing the weiRht foss industry.
seum Is located off Route 62, four
On Sunday, Conrad Cook and case of rain. A country kitchen ance at the recent Mid-Atlantic "Tribute to Mothers." Readings
\bU Can "Eat Normally"
Youth · Conference held In wereglvenbyPattyDyer, "What
miles north of Point Pleasant.
the Calvary Echoes, Prodigal, will be open for refreshments.
Best
of all, "you can continue to
Maryland.
Is a Mother?"; Maxine Dyer,
Camping Is available. 1
eat
)'OW' filwrile &amp;lods and you don't
"No Others Love Uke Mother's
The sewing, needlework, and Love"; Mrs. Lambert, "I Have have to change your normal eating
.stuffed toy contests judging were Noticed Tbat" and "Mother's habits. You can start losing fat and
announced for the June 3 Day·" ; Freda Smith, "Mother's reduce calories from the very lint day,
until you IIChieYe the ideal weight you
·
meeting.
Hands"; and riddles by all.
desilll without excrtisina".
l'llllbefl Fill Out iii Body
The new pill is appropriately called

Community calendar

Pomeroy -

Smith graduates
at Hocking Tech

banquet.

•

f

.

.

daqhter pve as a child In
Sunday school on Mother'&amp; Day.
Marilla Hoover read 1everal
humorous nytnp that children
have Aald to thalr m~thers.

Choir members, Jean Werry,
LIJIQ W8111el', . Mrs. Wamaley,
Jllll!t Mttadowa, Mrs; J:lowlde,
and Mn. .Hoover, accomj)lllled
by Paula Wtllrer, IIDI ''Thank
You Lon! for Mothers Dear'' and
''My Motber'a Bible."
Jackie !!!.lderbrud praented

homemade plutlc canvas 11ases
cl. Dowen to Ada Warner, oldest
mother; Cherie Williamson,
Y011J11811tmother; JanetWWiam·
son, mother with most children
present; and Polly Hy.elL hav1111 the )'OIIIIIelt arandclllld.
Mra. Hlldebrandpr.entedamall
bud
to all the offlcen and

v._..

committee cbalrpmen.
Berllke Carpenter, pmldent,
presented llllall potted plants to
ladles over 10 years of qe.

.

'

•'·'

•

a1cr:uc.
of uZ
trimmer lnd

�----------,---,-,...-~'-------------~-----------,-·~~--------------- -----~

: Page 8-The Daily Sentinel
••

~ Movie language disgusts
-~ parents across the nation
Dear Ana LaDders: I cheered
. when I read the Jetter !rom the
• . woman In Fort Madison, Iowa.
:-she bad just seen "Rain Man"
and declared the acting brUIIant.
-The language, however, spoiled
the picture !or her. Had the dirty
words been omitted It would help
· the box oHice. My husband and I
·. go to very lew movies these days
.. because or the dirty talk. .I'll bet
millions o! Americans !eel the
same way. - ·Kansu City, Mo.
. Dear K.C.: Not only Amerl•
cans, but Canadians too. Here' sa
letter from Vancouver.
Dear Anit Landers: My wife
:" a11d I have walked out oho m'any
~ movies because of the dirty
·· language that we now rent
' videocassettes and stay home.Fed.Up Ia B.C.
- From Panama City, . F1a.:
.: : Amen to your comments about
· gutter talk In the movies. While
_ you w'ere11t1t, Iwishyouhadsald
-. something about the bedroom
: scenes on the soap operas In
· ~ mid-afternoon. They're disgust·
lng - cou pies nude In bed, rolling
.. around, leaving absolutely no: · tiling to the Imagination. Rock
: .bottom, I call it.
.. · From Palo Alto, Callt: I'm a

~Mystery

Ann

Monday, May 15. 1989

M~.~y16,1989

F'ome10)1-Midclapoe1. Ohio

•

Train,' 'Spleqdor,' viewed

CANNES, France (UPI)' The sketches are woven to- Marcello Mastroianni as the
American director Jim Jar·
gether through Elvis posters owner and manager o! a ~mall
appearlag In nearly every room cinema house he has Inherited.
musch' s "Mystery Train "
weaved the phantom o! Elvis Into and musical performances by from hla father.
§ketches o! life In Mempbla,
singers' Screamln' Jay Hawklal
One of a dylniJ breed of
64-year-old male who hal been
Tenn., and Ettore Scola's and Tom W"ts 8lld by Joe manaaera to still love th~ moaround. Notblpg shocks me, but
•'Splendor" tOOk a nostalgic lOOk Strummer of the Brttiah rock vies. he ·sbarel hil passlpn with
110me tblnp offend me. I'm language. How much more ex· at the death o! small Italian group Tile Clash.
·
hla projectlonll t, played by one of
talking about the F-word In the pllclt can It get? Would "Gone cinemas at the Cannes film
"Although the characters Italy's most popular actors,
presence of my 15-year-ord. With the Wind" have been a bette festival. .
never really meet, In 'Mystery Mualmo Troisi.
.
.
grandaon. I'm afraid to take the movie U Clark Gable had taken
' 'Mystery Train," the third Train,' the episodic form Ia
"Spleiidor" Ia olll! o! three new
boy to the movies again.·
off hls clothes and jumped In bed . part of a Jarmuach trUogy, finally just a dlsgulse and the llallan !llms. foculllng on the
From D.Uu: I work In a with Scarlett O'Hara? Why must focuses on a shabby hotel In three stories are just separate death or the 1111all cinema house
six-screen movie theater. My decent people be embarrassed In downtown Memphis, where des- ' cars pulled by the same train," In the provinces. Another o! the
question: Where are the parents front of their children ·by obscene tinles cr011 paths without becom- Jarmusch said Sunday. He des· three; "The New Paradiso CIor these kids who flock to PG words on bumper stickers, gutter . Ing Intertwined.
crlbed his latest film as "a nema" Is also In competition at
·
movies? U they knew what their talk In ·the movies aM filth on
.
Japanese actors Youkl Kudoh modern minimalist version o! the C11nnes this year.
.
15- and 1~year-olda do during · TV?
and Masatoshl Nagase, who play Canterbury Tales," Chaucer's
''For me, the Spleii!IOr l,s a
these movies they would be
· Don't go to dirty movies and tourla ts visiting the shrine of un!Iillshed literary work.
: symbol," Scola said at a news
shocked. These films are provoc- don't buy dirty magazines. When . rock 'n' roll, argueaboutwhether
Jarmusch, whose "Str8J1ger conference Sunday. "It'repres· '
ative beyond belief,
you see raunchy stuff on TV, Elvis Presley deserves ' to be Thall Paradise" won the Camera ents a place where the d~ains
FromSiouCity,lowa: Bravo!
don't buy the merchandise of·
d'Or prize !or cinematography In and aspirations o! the ma11es
honored as the kl~~g of rock 'n'
Hooray! The woman from Fort
!ered In the commerlcals. Be roll.
198!1, entered the second film of could be fueled.
'
Madison was right on, We are
sure to write to the sponsors and
Italian actress Nicoletta Bra- the trilogy, "Down By Law," two
"Life should ' be a continual
sick of all the filth. Where wm It
tell them Why you wnt DO longer sel)! plays a woman trying tp years later.
performance," the Italian dlrec·
end?
.
buy their producta. Money talks,
Scola, another festival veter8!1 tor continued. "The 50-year hisbook a filcht back to Rome after
From Loa Anp._: The writer
and when sales begin to .f all off, It colleetlng her dead husband's and chairman of last year's Jllry , tory ·or the Splendor and the
who complained aboUt dirty screams. .
remains. A group of alcoholics takes a moving look ·a t the swan people who love Its movies
language In movies asked, "Is
An alcohol problem~ H01D con
compll;!te th'e cast o! .characters, song o! the small cinema house In represents the moving canvas of
that the way people In Call!ornla help your~elf or •omeoRe you loveP who are revealed through three provincial Italy In "Splendor."
a lifetime without fixed rules,
talk?" Please tell her that nearly "Alcoholum: Howe lo, Recopi:&lt;elr.
The movie stars Italian actor looked at with nostalgia, but also
separate 24'hour slices o! life.
27 tnllllon of us have social , l!ow to Delll witlr. It, 'How to
with deep affection."
conversations and never use the · ConqiUir It" will give Y"" the
F -word. We are aghast at the fln1wer1. Send a lel/-addre~ted,
change In moral standards and lonf! bulineu·•LI:e envelope ond o
feel just as Outraged as everyone check or moRey order for $3.65 (thu
else.
.
illclud .. pOOIGfe and handling) to:
--8!1 percent admitted damag- lng company documeJIIs, using ·
PARK RlDGE, Dl. (UPI) -A
From Oxnard, CaHt: I'm sick ·Alcohol, c/o Ann l.oRdeto, P.O. Box
Ing
property. while "horsing dlsco~mts for friends and leaving
.
"startling''
62
percent
o!
the
to death o! crude and vulgar 11562. Chi""'fo, 111. 60611.0562
·e mployees of two national fast· around,,., purposely waatl.n g work early. Assistant managers
food . organizations admitted company materlals'·or perform· . were assocatltid with leaving ·
stealing cash or property from lng ',YOrk slowly, consuming ·work early. CreW members were
their employers, . an IndustrY drugS' or alcohol on the job and associated With eating food withcoming .to work hu_ng oyer from
study said.
out .paying tor It, un~xcused
·One of the main attractions of the national anthem before ihe
Fifty-two percent said the drugs or alcohol:
absences a11d faking Illness," the
the festival · was Melllhardt Minnesota Twins' ·game with the average employee stole between
-78 percent said they ~tole report said. . ·
.
.·
Raabe, 73, who played ,the Kansas City Royals. The Em my- $10 and $400 per week, and 7 'company time by coming to work · . Full-time employees' inore
munchkln coroner In t!le movie and Oscar-winning actress Is Ill percent said they tOok $10 to
late, leaving early or calling In Ill often took supplies for personal
and had the pleasure· of. pro- the Twins Cities starring In the a week, but London House Inc., when they really we~ well.
use, left work early and argued
nouncing the Wicked Witch o! the play ''Grudma Mo1e11 - An which published the study Sun-78 percent said they argued with others. Pa~t-tlme wqrkers
East was "really 'most sincerely American Primitive" ... Merv day, said the amount actually with customers, co-workers and were associated with helplng
Griffin brolilfht In deslcner stolen "probably falls between supervisors.
dead."
others take property, I!Dexcused
Iii case anyone forgets Baum's Waldo Fernandes ,for a multi·
The "typical" .thief within the 11bsences and feigning Illness.
these extremes."
.
book, which was printed In 1900, mOIIon makeover for casinoThe study did not compare the two companies worked evening
"Employees who !elt their
Chittenango 'has business named hotel and club on Paradise Isla!!d
theft rate to other Industries.
or night shifts, the report said.
employer had treated them unAunt Em's Kitchen, the Emerald In the Bahamas. Fernandez, who
"Managerial-level employees fairly were more likely to make
"A startUng 62 percent of the
City Bowling Center and the has ex tenslve experience as a
respondents admitted to some were associated with 1. taking theft admissions," Slora said.
movie set designer, has worked
Tlnman Construction Co.
type of cash or property theft, supplies for personal use. !alslfyZAPPA ZAPS ROCK FOR over the homes of Griffin, Goldie such ·as taking supplies or mer·
BUSINESS: Frank Zappa finds Hawn, Nell Slmoa and Elizabeth · chand!Se or eating food without
the business world much more Taylor .. . Nick Nolie recently
paying !or It," said Or. Karen
.
.
.
Interesting and Innovative than . filmed "Everybody Wins" with Slora, a · research psychologist
spUI. State officials ended a
rock 'n' roll. He told People Debra Wtnrer and his next for the Park Ridge-based organ!·
ANCHORAGE, Alaska · magazine he has five joint project will be "Q &amp; A" with
zatloil, which develops and lm- Alaska tourism officials plan to thr!!e-day conference Sunday by
entertainment ventrues going on Winger's estranged husband, Tl:
J:llements psychological testing use $4 million .from Exxon to vowing to get out the message
launch a national advertising that tourists can still find the
In the Soviet Union and he wants · m~ Hutton ... Millie, Presiand evaluation systems for busito get deeper Into International dent Bush's Springer spaniel who
campaign aimed at convincing unspoiled Alaska they want to
ness and IndustrY.
·
gave birth earlier this year, will
trading.
'
"And 53 .p ercent admitted to vacationers that only a small see. despite the 10.9-mllllon gal"II OCC!Irred tome that Spain receive a speelal gift to' mark
some type of theft support, such portion ot the state has been lon spill.
doesn't have any .trees," Zappa motherhood. · Country singer
as watching others steal or 'not fouled by the nation's worst ·ottsays. "Possibly you could ship Crystal Gale sent her a crystal
reporting theft," the study said
the Soviets meat and produce dog ~Jowl from her Nashville, ·
The· study randomly' selected
and get paid In lum,bf!r. Then sell Tenn., store, Crystal's Fine Gifts · one emplOyee from each of 872
toUet paper back tothe Soviet and Jewelry.
Individual fast-food .units belongUniOn because th~ don't have
Ing to . two unnamed !ast-!ood
that either."
organizations . · kesults were
1
Zappa Is led up With the music
baSed on 341 con!ldentialsurveys
ill'
business because It has turned so
filled out and mailed to London
cautious and commercial. "ImHouse.
agination Is virtually forbidden
Here are other findings of the
In American music today," he
study: ·
says, "but It's welcomed In
business. So I go where the aetlon

TO PLAC£ AN AD C~l 992-2J 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY A.M. to 5 P.:M.
A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

a

a

11· 28 WORDS • ' 2&amp;. 38 WO~DS
S4 00 '.
$5.00
$7 .00
$5 00
$8.00
S10 .QO
u .oo
$13 .00
$15 .00
$13.00
$21 .00
$25 .00
$33.00
$51 .00
. $60 .00

0 · 15 WORDS

1 DAY
3DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

Aatn ara for conteeutive runs, brojtflln upd~ty s wlll he eharged
tnr e.:h diN u Slllparate ads .

. SSO PAGE STREET '
IIIDDLEPOIT, OliO
OPEN 8:30-6:00 P.M.

4-25- '1!1-1 nio.

......................
....................
WANT ADS

GLIMPsES: Actress Clorls
Leachman will test her singing
vol.c e Monday night at Mlnneapo.fls's Metrodome when she sings

Eagle-eyed birders

Other Plana Also Available Are:

'

••

This year's title was taken by
-the slx'member team sponsored
by the Bausch and Lomb optical
·company, said Paul Kerllnger .o!
7tbe CApe May Bird Observatory.
Qreg Hanlsek, Jim Zamos, .
· John DeMarrals, Jim ,Dowden
- 8lld Daa Georp spotted 201
. dtflerelll klncls o! birds, ~ly
. -edliJIIJ wt the Allduboa Society
• "clllplllr trom Bergen County,
=WIIICIIIPGtted 199sJ1ecles, KerUn·

.JWI&amp;Id.

.• "PeGfle doa't!lnow how alee It
111 ""' Jeflf!Y tor blrdll!l,"
•"l'h~ thil!k It Is

Beat The Heat This
Summer With
Central Air!
19al-14x70'

,.

HOME

To my friends and
neiJhbors, thank
' you for the
prayers, cards
and flow~trs on
my stay at the
hospital ..~

state annually plays host to an
estimated 350 species.
Mid-May Is the peak. of spring
mtgratlon, which makes It a
perfect time to hold a birding
contest.
While the Bausch and Lomb
group took the enure state ·as
their playing field, some groups
limited their areas o! operations
- yet still saw a reamarksbly
diverse group of birds, Kerllnger
said.
The Bird Watchers Digest
team limited Itself to Cape May
County but still saw 178 species,
while a group traveling by
bicycle covered only 86 mUes o!
the state's roadways and still
'
saw 173 species, he said.In all, the teams spotted 257
species In the Garden State,
Kerllnger said. ·
The teams also raised $200,000
for conservation purposes by
taking pledges !or each species
noted, he said.

l21 MIDICAIE SUPPLEMENTS- Claim flUng Is a
real haule. Find out about our "AUTO"nc
CLAIMS
.. FIUIIG."
(31 LIFE IIISUIANCE for Seniors.

NEW WOLFF
SCA
TANNING .
BED

SPECIAL.
STARTING MAY 15

18 VISITS $32

(24

SHEAR ILLUSIONS ·

STYLING STUDIO &amp; TANNING CEIITII
293 SO. SECOND

'•
•.

;;

..'•

'

•.'

,.

:·,.
,.
,•
•

· :coMPUMENTS OF

VAUGHAN· CARDINAL
WANRD:
Adults netding"
help with
reading. Apply
· at· Pomeroy or
Michlleport
Ubr•y.
992·5113or
992-5713 ,

'

.•

. , ...... 111........11'1
,.•• "1114 ~........... ..

,.......

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

.,~

•••'~~ '"'"""·
•

Taken

•

'

NEW LISTING -HUNTING

. Parts
•Po/lobUe Hoiiie

Rental•
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

LINDA'S ·.
PAINTING
INTEIIOI·EXTEIIOI
FR,EE ESTIMATES
Talc• the pain out of
palntlag. l,et 118 do
It for you.

YEIY IElSOIUILE
HAVE IEfEaNCE

614-985··180

mo. .

Roger Hysell ·
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

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

"Frse Eltlmllt•"

PH. 949-2101
ar IlL 9119-2160
NO SIIIIDA\' CAliS
3-1 ·1ft

PUBLIC
AUCnON

NEW LISTING ..., CHESTER ·
- Appro,. I acre lot with
12'&gt;60', 3 bedroom moblle
home. 20'x48' garage with
works~of. Call tor Appoint- .
ment S 1.500.00

'AUcnON&amp;I
PH.
,. Y•UC •

S~ICE

We can r~r and rt·
radiat•s and
heater c••· We can
tho acitl boil anti rocl
out radiators. Wt also
rlpair Gas Tanks.

c••

PAT HILL FOlD
992-2196
Middleport,

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE
Baskets S6.00
Flats S6.00 ·
Herbs &amp;Everlastings
Sl.5Q DOZ.
Paulin~

Hill, Co. Rd. 352
, . Off. Depot Street '

Rutl1nd, Ohio
CALL 742-2772

PLI-NG &amp;

PORTLAND ROAD - 2.15
acres and ranch home wrth
1850 sq. ft. of living space.
Heat puinp w~h central air,
7 rooms, dishwasher, range
and refrigerator. large living
room ·with fireplace.
$59,500.00.

Plumbing • Plaster
Repair • Painting
Electrical • Carpentry

Mlckl..,.,t, Olio 45760

"W• Fl1 Al•tll Alflltl•t"

Wo

CARPENTEI- Nice double"

43020 Sl. Rt. 124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

co.

w

IIIIIEISVI LLE I D. -'- RA·
CIIIE - 2 story house wnh
2 bedrooms, bath, carpet,

""'lemliaoh

161 North Stcontl

SALU &amp;. SERVICE
~

Harry Lefflt
20 Yurs E~q~erlence

wide sitting on 1.86 acres in
I country seltinJ I\\ car
1·614-992-315154
1-11 -1 mo.
garage. deck, equipped kit·
,chen, fenced yard .
$32,500.00.
11..--""""'~-...
IIDOLEPOIT - 2 un~
l(llrtment bu~ding in MiddlepO!l Good rental income.
01 AUVE
.Good neighborhood. OWNER
•Waahers •Dryers
WANTS TO snL NOW!
•R ange •F reezers
$24,900.00.
•Rafrlgerators

"Must k Repair.lo"

KEtn APPUAIICI
SHY Ia

.IIIII Tfl..ll ..... 941-Z&amp;IU
Dottle , _ ..... 912-!1112
Jo Hill .............. 985-4411

!lEW usn• IEEDID-

Wt 11M IIQira for ltlp

~ ..... ~~·twtth

'

'

MIIDUOIT, OHIO
·
.

UlloriMitlllllll.

flohlng luppll•

Your Phone
BIIIIH-

IUSIIIfsS PIIONE
16141 •tt-6550
.I IS.IICI ' - 1

PHOTO'S 8Y HONEY PORT.AITS

4-16-16-lfn

MORTGAGE .
ltEDUCTION ·
SYSTEM:
Save thousands on
existina m9J1pae.
No refinancina. A

llortpae Consultant

Service

Call1·100-422-9010
Ext. 4051
.

4-11·11110.

BOGGS

SAliS I -VICI
• ...... lltlrr
IIISVIII. . .
614 ...t.ll21

AldtlorlpMI John
D - N- Holltnd,~
luehHooForm

o.l•.

AI.L UNEMPLO'IED
DON'T WORRY
BE HAPPY

Olvlllon

OOntUfMI"

ol ... • .,d
eledrioll IWoducti

AAPIO AOYANCIMENT
TIIAININO PROGRAM
UP 10 I 1200 MO.
Mult be n • llld reHIMe •d
lible 10 tllrt wOrk invnecll•el¥·
114- .....8141
c.ll Mon. .. Tu-.

GOVERNMENT J088
111.040.-111.230 y ..., N-

hlrOni&gt; eon 111 sor.-187-sooo
Ext. R-9508 lor CUO'ont -~~

ROOFING

NEW -REPAII
Gutters

INSULATION

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

4-10-'19-1 mo. pd.

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
Paying today

FREE ESTIMATES

Puoor Jam,;o E. Keeoee

Call 992-2772

992-6772

3·20·'JI.Ifn

LIMESTONE FOR .SALE
ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

Quality
Stone Company

tsubfKt 'to Ch111go Without
Noli&lt;~ I
#1 COPPfR .......... suo ~~
#2 COPPfR ............. 10• I~

CUAN ALUMINUM

·SHEETS ............. .., .... 52'

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

Mastic - Certllintttd4!&gt;
~rn,t SWing
525 North S!!eond
Slallllns Gutttr ·
Middleport, Ohio
Rlplactmtnt Windows EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
llown lll!lulotion
SUNDAY 7:00 P.M.
Storm Doors &amp;
WEDNESDAy7:00 P.M.
Windows

April 18, 19a9

.

I~

3 Mile East of •Arthur on 5.1. 50

PH. 596-4756 or 992-6637

4-14-89-1 mo . .

CUAN ALUMINU.M

CAST ....................... 40'
AWMI"UM

lfYIRAGf CANS ..... SO•
IRONT
SHEET_:.......;. 5' to 30•

I~
I~

MARCUM

CHESTD, OHIO

11t.

IRONT CAST ... 3' to 20' Ia
ST AIMLESS _ ............. 20 1 lb.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BAJHS
•ROOFING ' ·
•REMODELING. REPAIRS

NO GLASS AT PRESENT

992-5114

Loclrtad Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts. 7 1!1 ·
143,
Oh.

CARTER'S

PlUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

319

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
5YIACUSf, OliO

Mollt For•gn •nd

Domettic Vthidll
A/ C Sarviee
All Mtljor &amp; Minor

A.,ah
NIASE Certtfla:l

M•ch~nlc

CALL 992-67 56 .

985-4141

. ."DOC'' VAIIG!IN

.

STONE

DIUVEIED &amp;

•IliAD

GlWl CO.liU

11· •

K and J ~ CONSTRUCTION
GIEG IAIUY
•NEIIV HOMES •SIDING
'
•GARAGES
•REMODEUNG
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

A Greot ComtiinatiCIII"Quality and Reasonable .Prices"
WE GO THE Em• MILE'"..

S7.50PBTott
6loMU·9557

3-10-'89-1 mo.

Announce 111 cnt s
3 Announcements

~EN DIGS
4/1/U/""

WITEl
SEIYICE
1,100 GAlLONS
POOLS, WELLS
. CISTERNS

CaU AJtytl•

ttt..urtmo.

W.••

AVON iit••lltilor Sp-.
30o4-878-1429.

Jutt Wild: to . .n • little •trl
man.,.? ·Or wauld yau •• ·to
hwetc.. .?Eitt..weyAvon
C.W.
Plumlling •
T..,ohlng. .Call 114-44&amp;-0119 _, hlllfyoubolhl_you..,
INt!ll Call Morllyn w..,or, 30~
8ft• I p.m.
112·21...
nteeiiMY

m..... Don·• ~

Dav-.

Nice 1ei1Ction dk 'ROWIN for

- I l l Doy. Cllfl'o Ploco.

..._..lit .• Mld,1part.

4

Giveilway '

GOVE~NMENT

JO.!

N-

hlrOng '" , ......... bolh ...,. .
Md ~~n...ed. For t lilt of )Dbl
.. dopp!lclolon. c.. 1·118-3132827•~

FMS.

.....,.., boalh. 151.00
- .... Oool... 304Pwt Oermen Shap•d pu pp;. ......
1711-..73.
• - • • biiiCII. approx, 4-5
moa. to QfVNI'A'IIV. C8ll 814plato .,d -hindi.
,..._8181 .
llaed¥' wark wallllle IDr • .,...
ritnOid plott lftd deddwt•.
Mlxod br•d
approx. 8 Ohio.
Monongohll• Al-ehonr
wllo. oltl Milo. ~ chll-.
Could bo ogoodwoldl dog. Call
~~~w~. 1·~
81o4-378-2233.

p-

w.,,.,

r.t:r.r.""

w.tw. drywr. . . . . tc.nmDre,

Ouinp ..... · · peraonnel
_,_
aperttort,
Exp.

7 wk. old pori boogie puPitl•
Motlw - -.. CoM ttl!• 5
P.M. 114-441-0147.

•P. NIIUhd. PleMe Hnd , .
.,.,.. to Perlonnel Dtp. P. 0 .
loo 11318 ClnnalnnatO OH
. .211. E.O.E .

-

lor locll Job il9hl ,.....

12

Situations

Kill.,. to Qldwl'/. 2 milo. 1
Wanted
fomllo. 11o4-742·2894 - · • - - - - - - - 1 p.m. ar .tl• IP:m.
24 HR, DAY CARE. lu-ilod
ttructured pl-r·tlma. Larpe
hau•wlth b l;atdwltWn aty
,._, Col 11~44&amp;-0831 botwetn I 1.rn. • 10 p.m.

8 Lost and Found

W~ntlll: Ywnt to mow • trim.
Colll1o4-&gt;Ma-7•u

Loat: Cuahion from couce,•

Nol-r-dRd.· ....,llo~d .
Calfi14-&gt;Ma-IIIO.

15
8

Public Sole

U.S. SPliNT

Schools
I nstructlon
RE-TRAIN NOW!

Part Time Job With Nlltwolk 2000
II! Network M•rkllting

Cost '184°0 (Includes training • materillt)

COU!GE. 121 -

,..,

Call 11o4-441-U87. R... Na.

neer. Ucen1ect • Bondld In •• 11· 10111111.
Slol• ol Ohio: UQuidltlono.
f...,., Mtltll, entlqull.
114-248-5112.
17 Mlscellaneoua

"'' * .....

W.¥8. lUte Chaonplon Auc·
tk&gt;,..,
on. u..... In

Ohio .. d -VIralnlo. _ , Big 3 IR . Counnyhomo ...llt on
Aucllo ... 304-77)-8715
your lot. 117,811 • up. Col
114-UI-,7 311.

BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTATIVE

18 Wanted '10 Do

For mort info writr.

TOPCA1Hpaldlor1183modll - - - - . . , - - - .nd ".,.. u... on. . lmll:h
1-·Poollac. 1 I 11 Ea .._
In ""
Ave.. Qolllpollo. Call 114-44&amp;nlble
Ret.tn••
•
blaAINta,·
__
__
Col
2212.
&amp;14-248-1718.
Compl. . hou-ldl of
...... ..,llr- Aloo
...,lao. Coli
laWn
11o4-31•114 oil• I p.m.
• ·" - Third •
Wll .,._It, flit, • • • dote to

Scott AndsrMn

--.s.•.. . ·.
.,........,,

Wll ...,.,••

ho..... ,.....

-In'/

........................
CIII814-&gt;Ma-4717.

·

Leeu Murphey
&amp; Aoeoelalee

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

furnllu .. Md . . . . . . . lf't 1M
, . _ of " " " hou-ltl Fw

pr- -·poltl Cai1814-&gt;Ma311&amp;.

' IOIHIP!oPo•eoey, Ohl• 4$769

FOR
SALE

3 st,ltl
anti
Varleul Sills
,

Ow,_

WOODEN MDINGS
hilt
Let
ON SAlE NOW AT

SEARS•-,.
61

Certified nurelnt 1111 .Mot w ..
..... - · lor lldarlr In lhllr
_ _ ... Cdlf4-UJ.I021 .. ,
I 1o4- 742-2172.

ho-.---.-...IMtlll' In hoMO .
:Mio4-&amp;71-31

Phone(614)99~2922

BILL SLACK
992-2269

AVON- A I · -· Col MlrH¥n
30o4-U2-2141.

_ _ l..............c:h• •

Call Marlin--· Auello-

A-rica's ..., . 10ft f . .r Optic Long
Dill-• lilelworll
COMING TO THIS IlEA SOON!

1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished..
Housekeepina Room
By Oay, Week, llonth

•FIREWOOD

Hot.

SOUTHEAIITEIIN IUIIN!SS

NOW OPEN
OHiO RIVER ·
CAMP
GROUNDS

•LIGHT HAULING

GOVE"NM!NT JOBS
111.040-119.230 .,.• . hlrlnj&gt; Col 111 508-517-1000
Ext. R·l108 lor """'"" -~~

. • Auction

P. 0. lox 337

•SHRUB • TREE
TRIM and RE· MOVAL

.

C..t•t . . . . Toylor

Fomllolltlta tD good ho- CoH
&amp;1o4-812·7001 .

~S-'III•tfn

9Ef!EIAL CONTIACTOIS

R•terencei

u...

olll 11o4-258-1211.

PMQNE DAY 01 EVEIINGS

CerUfilld Licensed

4-ZI-'11·1

•

Day" Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

•l)lftdlng "•lei¥' end nlildl
htlp to Ill v41riou1 poeltlone.

'"41

Equpm 11 1

'

or les. 949·2160

99~1-6'9••

992-6110

.5·11 -1 mo. pel. ·

CAN DO
MAINTENANCE

101 CUIIIIIIIGIIAJI-Ow-

. 992-2621 or

···-...

ACREAGE- APPLE GROVE
- DORCAS ROAD -letart !
EVERY THURSDAY
Township. Approx. 107
acres of wooded land w~h 2
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
bedrooms, I bath, lurnished
HOWE'S GROVE PARK
cabin. TP/C water. Ideal set
lelprt, Ohio
up for hunters! HI mile to
CONSIGNMOOS
WRCOME
the river for the fisherman!!
$45,000.00.
PATRICK H. BlOSSER

Office.............~. 912·2259

1.

PLACE: VAUGHAN CARDINAL

•

•Mobile· Home

·

Altt Tr••••l.,lo•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

- - - - -· Col 1· 1100877·2232hl. 110.

'·

~r.1

DATE:( TUESDAY,· MAY. 16

.

'

...

•

t.

Completely remodeled inside and out and il ~ cute.
Approx. one acre ol neatly
manicured · lawn, a 2 bedroom one story home, with
part basement, storage
building, and more .
$28,000.00.

panlllin1 snd in Southern
School Distrid. Recently
remodeled 1nd in good
condition. $29.500.00.

PHOTOGIAPIIEIS
HOUIS 11 AA TIL T PJA.

HOME_ P~R~.

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

DIAD

No age 1111111
U..lt 1 ,., ..... . '
1 s,.c~a~ ~ rllllllt" ·
Slllgle or Gro.,.

It I frltt. It I frlt .. ".lf
'

rl
E·
8110'

NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- OLD ROUT£ 33

.

'

.···~n

992 •2550

.••,

:·

!

WESTMAIN

INS~TION

.,.· ,~

'·

A

. 1

•BLOWN IN

::

1·800i.343-2980

MOBILE

•ALUMINUM SIDING

'.

·\

FABRIC SHOP

SYRACUSE

Howard L J¥rlt-l

•VINYL SIDING

'-'•

.. "SENIOR
CARE"
.

AT THE

.......... of U.S. lprlntLong

;a, 949·2101

•A classified advertitement placed in Theoi\tv Sentinel (e~t ·
eep t - eiMtlfi"ed displlf;', Businets Card and legal notkesJ
will alto appelf in thtt Pt . Pleasant ReQitter and the Galli·
1
polis Daily Tribun&amp;, ruehing ov1u 18,000 hames.

4-25-tfn

••
'·

FOI COMPLETE INFOIMATION
CALL TOLL FREE

TUXEDO RENTAL

BOB'S HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG

no cherg e
all c~phal h1n en it double priee o f ad .cost.
tvpe onty LiSBd •
·
nOt responsibl e for errors after fint dfiV . !Check
'fOf eUOfS fir•l d~ ad runa in paper) . Call b" fore 2:00 p. m . ·
d..- after 6ubliution t o m eh couecti Gn.
"Ad s that must b ~t paid In tu:tvance ar e
Card ol Thanks
Happy Ads
In MemoriAm
Yard Seles

' 2·15-'la.t

The family of
Robert S. Marcinko

'
'·
'

((lllf•••L lnt.,audlate I Sklled Care Pro.t•tlo.)

aardtn tub.
n..
Cash.
99~!-51 14

1 Card of Thanks

.,

(11 Long .Term "Convalesmnt Care'' policies. .

Arrlvi•g Soo•

_spot 201 species
WILDWOOD CREST, N.J.
(UPI) - A team of eagle-eyed
·birders ranging from the peaks
- of the Ramapo Mountains to
Cape May Point spotted 201 avian
.. species to clinch top honors In the
: sixth annual World Series of
· Birding. ·
- - A total of 30 teams from as far
' away as Canada and Mississippi
competed In the event, which
· ~ takes advantage of New Jersey's
location along key north-south
. . flyways used by the feathered
·. creatures during spring
' mtgratlons.
The three- to six-member
· · "learns vie for the title - and the
: :·stone-Urner Cup - by trying to
· • spot the greatest number of bird
_ species during a 24·hour period.
. - which this year ended at mid• . night Saturday.
.
·
. • The compelltlon operates on an
• :honor system. Ninety-five per·
• cent of all birds recorded by a
team must be s lghted or heard by
every member.

BUDG£T?

ON

fs."

-, Give away and FoU nd ads under 15 WQt dl wi t! b e

lt. 33 North of
Pomeroy.1_
?l'it,tlil

LIVIN(i ON A

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

-

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES I GARAGES

:~"'""' ! t . SO di s (: o r.mt fo r ad• p11fd in adY, ncft.

GEARY
BOD) SHOP

Tourism in Alaska gets boost from fine .

WANT ADS

BISSELL
BUILDERS .

=•unity with Networ ..

"At ...,_.., Prim"

Business Services

sioo

~I

lnCIIOft'W I h•l 1ft ~-~

Efficiency
Gaa
.Central Air
•Heat Pumps

.Fast-food employees admit to thefts

Last,
"HOME HEALTH CAIE INSURANCE.''
The Policy .That Senior People Have
··
· ' . Been Asking For. .
.. ··

Business Services ;~.~.;;~;;:

18

------People :in the news-By WILLIA~ C. TROTf
United Press lnteraatlonal
BtJTTERFLY ON PRJSSY:
Butterfly McQaeen had the mem·orable role o! Prissy In "Gone
·: with the Wind" but she wasn't
thrilled to get the job 50 years
.. .ago. "I was so sad on the train out
• to Hollywood as I read the script
~ because Prissy was a stupid
part," she told The Sun of
-Baltimore.
- "But you ~ow old and you
make your .peace. Now I'm
:grateful for Ji'rlssy though at the
- time I hated her. She was so
; Ignorant. but because ofhed've
· had a wonderful life."
MUSICAL FEUD: The feuding
· will take on a musical theme this
· : week on the "Family Feud"
' . game 'show when teams headed
. , by Luther V~r0111 and Dlome
Warwick face o!f.
Vandross' s team Is composed
- bf Bobby McFer~; Little Rl·
chard and Manhattan Trander' s
Tim Hauser and Alan Paul while
-Warwick will be backed up by
· · Vanessa Williams, Gladys
. · Knlcht and the resto!Manhattan
-Transfer, Cheryl Bentyne and
Jan ill Siegal.
The women's team Is donating
Its Winnings to Warwick's AIDS: fighting foundation while the
· · men's will go to the United Negro
: College Fund.
. THE REAL LAND OF OZ: The
town o! Chittenango, N.Y., ho·
nored native son L. Frank Baum,
the au thor .of "The Wonderfu I
yvtzard of Oz," Saturday .at the
11th annual Ozfest.

Pomeroy-Midd~epot~
· =rt~,~O~h~io~-:'"l'".;...._.i;....;_~;::::;---~:-_:The~
. ~~~~~~~;::~

Wll llo
Ill 111111.

THI

nil'
11.

IASin WIAVI
HANDWOVEN
BASKIOI'S
Large lupply of Iuiie!
W.ovlng lupplleo

llgn up now for . . . .
w.w1n11

-

c•••

.......,.

OPEl lOST SATUIDATS
li:GO 11L5:GO

,

OUio.t

""' , 140 ..... ,.., -ion.
C..h- Col 11o4-UJ.M17
., &amp;14-HJ-~1.

21

Busln...

Opportunity

-··--7. . .
EXCILLINT P'AVI H•tR•·

....

,-~-~
trlfttare. • whOiualert

- -· ... d I.A.&amp;.E. '· 0.

...........
m»aat. "•• ..... wv

�r
I

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

LAFF -A-L&gt;AY
31

Hamea

for

-----,.--- -··

Sale

...

53

Rent

47 Wented to

-------------3 or 4 .... homo h -

lo.,titoL _ , blrl&lt;*· ..... l
_.,.. IIR . Zlotl. . ....... . ...., - - l•d•lrld
lo'*IO" C111 114-44ll-1118.

oourwry., Good ,.,• ., •

or

• C11

oft• 1 p.m. 114-24ll--

l y -. Nlco411r, 1112ball.

l•go famltot -

49

formol clnlng

room. ..... out bul61g. nla.

For

SWI-INO POOLI.1111

2nd floor, corn1r

bt*OCII'It, ltawe a rifrlw=alor.
WltW
pnNfd
I~
DlpOIIIt _,d
__
_.....1221.p.monttr. ca11 814-44.4248.
114-448-4425. or 11&lt;1-4482321.

•oom.

Vwy .nnatlwe ....... b
2 IIIII\ ,.,.., ,_, wtlh ftr•

for .... clln~ Iorge lvlng
room. 30 fl. cuotomookldlchon
collinott. 011t w-orl!. flnllh
-

c• oarega ,.,..

.._.......,k Bubel¥ !lion.

C.H

304-178-1512 .. 17ll-3100.

114-4411-41!18.

'

aor•.

4
hou• endsmaltrail•.
2 mil• ltom Viflton. Ohio.

C)._ ..... ,.-..

lolling ....... Coil 114-31li-

~~!_~·~-=~ o;o,~~

~-"""""''"""-- J ,.,

For Solo · Con ..... ond l'l_,lc
-lo tonkl. ,.. allot. liON
EVANS ENTEIII'IIISES. ·Jock·
oon. OH. 1-100-537-8121.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
RonAWIIon.1210-edA ....
Oalllpollo, Ohio. 114-448-

lnvoia"e/11 . 377.11 , will
toile/ M. 210 firm, Clllll 114-4114 oftor I p.m.

-lor.

•:r..t."'·

mo.

y.,,.,
,_.,_ftll.

~=;;:~:;:;;;;::~~~=========-j

w.nt•=
...

"-/•300.

.,..,lot

....,~-

m•

- • •· prJ... ...,_ CIJde
- J r . 304-1711-23311.

lnfurmotlon. coli 114-192·
32114.

bllllnle~ .. tMO.oo. con

21ll-

65 8 ulldlng Supplies
euJlllogMot_.olt

DID•.

BIG&lt;*. brick. _ . ,
window• llntolo. It~ Cl~do lin, Rio a-ell. OH. Ctll
114-248-1121.
Concwete blockl- el • ...._. .,...d
or dlllvery. Muon 1111 cL Gtlllpo111 llo&lt;* Co .. 123 112 Plrot at ..
Oollloolll. OH. can 814-2781

pllcf. 9311 Sooond Aw. Oolllpollo.114-&gt;«e-4411olt•7p.m.

Upp.- Rlv• Rd . botldo ltono
Croll Mcnol. 114-448-7318.

156

Home on Un aaln Hill. I roonw
.,d bllth. ,... lectlon. ,2 l'lory.
IPPfOX· 1 we of delft 1M d. Cll

36

Real Eatalle
Wanted

F,.n. Elllcloncy/.171. ull-1•
polcl 701 14th. Otlllpollo. 114446-44111ft« 7 p.m.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

2744.

2

.711.

a...oom.

c.pet.

3711. E.O.H .

v•

Nice 2 ..... tP.trn.wt In dupl•

hou•. Moin St. Ch•hlrt.1•20o
mo. Wot« polcl Coil 114-245-

Hou• for •I&amp; Second Strlllt.
Mooon. WV. 2 ttorv. 3 ~
rooma. one b•h. bailment

garage and carport.
u8.eoo.oo. Coli 304-77~
eo21 ..... 5:00.

Rtf. a c1ep0111, can 114-4482543.

Augult

on

My

...,

Loc•ld ICMr Rd. 2 mt from
. - · Hoopltol, I• go 3 blr., big
clop,
mo con

''"d/•3150 •3150
114-4411-7151 otter 1 p.m.

For •I• or I'Wit: 2 br.• hllf bride.
ron ch. Fon Old r-d. la~ndry

~~

MobHa room. actflent aoncltkln. llld-

School Dlllrld. Colt 114Homo purd!Med In Moy. F""'ch Cltv Mobile Homoo. call 114- &gt;«e-1320.
._..9340.
3 .... •371 o montll. AC good
loootlo"
coil 304-175-5104.
IT'S HEll El IT'S BICll THE
SHII&gt;WNIE VALLEY M...-.u. Point Plaa111t .,.. turdMta
FAI:TURED HOME SHOW.
2 br., hou• tJ I
. MAY 1:Z. 21 IN THE CHILU· adciUon. choln
Ink-a rot..
COTHE MALL IPACIOUIBIN- Horn•tld llollllly,
Coil 304OLEI. LUJIURIOU8 MOOU· 1711-1140 or 304-112-2405.
LAlli ON DIS PlAY FOR YOU
DAILY NOON '11LL8. COMETO
THE CIIIWCOTHE MALL AND 42 Mobile Homes
IE! AMI!IIICA'S AFFORDAIL! ALTIII NATillE. 111!011 Tl!ll ·
for Rent
FOR I'IIIZEI. THE SHAWNEE
VALLEY MANUFACTURED
HOME IHOW '81. IT'S HillEl F~lr tur. .hld g•ogo opt. AI '
IT'IIICliiT'SFORYOUIOON'T utlltl• pold - - oioctrlolty,
MIIIITI
- l r ...,._.,... a - - 0..,. Alto 3 bedroom-•. CIH
Mobl. -~-lend con,_. -~-, 114--1151.
or 114-44llfurMce. atov•. r.trlger~~tor. 18~::!:."' .. dry•. Clll14-2111- 1::::--:-'-:---:----::-:~
Moblt homo for - · Rof. •
Oop. roqu~ld . Coli 114-441112111 hou•trol• for oolt. 3 0127tii•ZP.M . or-tlmton
· br .. c.JI 114-4411-7444.
wtok-.

b•..,..,_

1------:-----

1 1718lorltz 1 4ot80 with'14otl0
edd Ofl 3 br.. 2 btthl. llvlntl
,_,. _.., rao"' k•chon wa~
,..,._..or. 11-. I'WIII'I w•h
oveiMell mlarow.v,, helt
_..,,_, II 10•20
....... lf/f12.100 firm. c.n
1 14-44f.OSOZ.
121 . , - · ~ ""'*hod.
W.,../dryw. AC. IC•tarttl.
Col 114--80311.
1m 121110 Ull_!!: · -

-

-

bedroom auh&amp; mtllel cabin tis.
.ordl *30 ond up to ..II.

I:T::-,..-.:-.-:for----:-,-:-,21::-:80:-,--- - ........ lot . .....
opoct on 211 Goillo .... OH I
ml• from town/ .aGO per mo.

,.._..,011

2 bedroom Apto. fur - ,
Vlllav Furntture
C.p-. Nlco oottln11- l.aondry ~ end used furntlure lr'ld
lodlhllo ovollobla Clll 814- ..,........ Clll114-4411-7572.

892·3711. EO H.

p~d

8714

-·rod

-lhlh-,.u puppl•tolpoolol
homo&amp; AKC roglll•od. rood\1 to
go In 3
AKC roglot•ed
Shlh-tru male ltud servf• C1ll
1'14-311-8814.

w-.

AKC roglot- llmole Clllhu•
huo, 8 mo. old. -ed. - · •
- ·· COl 114-2111-8021.

Houro 9-1.

PlcliENS USED FURNITURE
Complete houlllhold furnllhlnga. No .,plltn ... 1/ 2 mil•

· Coli 304-1711-14150.
114-31.9773.
_ ....

For Sole: 17 rno. old mol•• 11
mo. old t.nlalt P0m•MIII'I Cll
olt•I:OO p.m.. 114-2111-1322.

MUSTSELL:Konmoro-horll
1
opt. to.
- · U25
month,
dep0111t
Nqulred.
114- dryor/.1711. 19 cu. ft. uprla111

3 Angoro Robblt' UO. oiiCh. 2
Lop-Eorred, •10. - . Podl-

-oorn

192·5118.

freerer- Hot point . Hlc •
now/USO. Coli 114·21S·
eol4

Furnilhed. 3 room IPII'tmtnt.
Flrtt floOJ, prtvata entl'lftoa. no

P•~

caiii14-S49-2251

U.ed IPPIIan .... WMMra, dry.,.., ....... l'lfrlv-8torl. miGro2 bodr-. K-chon llrnlohtd. wave ovana. Ken' • APIIIIm-.
• 171. .,.. mornh olu• dopoolt. ~17 E. 2nd St. Jloom•oy.

Coli 114-HZ-287&amp;.

114-HZ-5335 or 114·91113511 .

In Pomwoy. 2 bNroom. fur·
nllhld. J•go plllo. . _ plfll·
ground. s.iwrlty depoolt. Coli

Malllh• Furniture •d Ctrptlt,
No. Ono 00')101. , . . , . . , prloo.
114-HZ-1181 ott• 1:00 p.m. Stoln-or,Anoov...
Scotch
-~~oi-&amp;
APifiiT*It .for rmt. 2 or 3 lloro - - 122 lllond lit.
bodr_,. 1n Mid•-. cal Point P I - W.Yo. 304-178lt4-912-2403 .. 114-812- 1488. Upp.- Rlv• Rood. llo·
2780.
n..... Ohio 114--7444.
- ·cent
... ed
tor (20 yd1
10
P•
diiOOUnl

grNd. 114-192·1185 urly
morning~ ar lltt •tnlnga.

Flllh Tonk. 2413 Jocklon Avo,
Point PI-t. 304-178-2013
10goloot up .14.·HMd10gol
C0ft'41loto•43.25.
3 pure bred whitt O..mon
lhophord pupo. .,00.00 mol,
175.00 fomol&amp; 114-742-2011
or 742·3100.

mifllnum).

45

Roomo tor-·- or month.
lt.,lrij. ot • 120 • mo. Otlllo
Hotlf. 14--1110.
Fwnllhld rooro. UOO/mo. AI
.-nd
. .1. pold.
119
A... lh••
Coli boll\
114-44113145.
Sltllllna ,_,. with coolin~
AIIOTrill•- AI hool&gt;,..,
CAl ott• 2D.m. 304- 77~
1111. M•on Wv.

Ont -llblt. 2 ond tobl•
•eo.OO.Onohutch•eo.oo.C.I
304-1711-2213.

:;r.,:'l=-JWi.::": 1';1At¥:.,r.d •••
.. . , . . . . _7...,..

.. Rtglot•ed 5 old Co&lt;*•
8pa\IIL - e d gentle
end kwlng pet •1eo.oo. 304875-7713orl78-77eo.

,..._Col

Wonted. lot In-n t-nahlp.
to buy, NOionoilly
304-77:.N48. or 304-77.
11S1.
.

I

...........

=.~:tr.l.

.. :1 t .............. - ·

~.._..... I • • .,.,,

II

411 S p - for Rent

~Mioof\WYt.304-

t,u'~. ,~_..,L..,l.:.r~

"""'L

63

Livestock

E•lno L..... oln Solo: lloa'od
U-.oln -owlthoolir-.lirod
OOW&amp; open hli'fwt. I .VIDe ...
bullo ....... 21 lot&amp; lolo ot:
Golllpola Lhiloto&lt;* Co.. 12
VInton II.. Qolllpolo. OH Me\'
21. 1119 1:00p.m. A_ _ ,
ro..,.J.. I - r t For lnfll. •
c - · ... 114-2111-1117.
Fli-OMIITOCKINOt
C-h. H.W llu. . . So-.
Crop'lt. llln- I( Triploid
a- ~ Dol.: MO.. MAY
31 II IOUTHIRN ITATB
CO.OI' In fit. 1'1- ltom 2·3
P.M. Coli 304-171'2710 to
ordlr or 1·JI00.~14311

Blocll 11111--llnt-Sonto - -

c-

trudll
11 ·
Moo.
. .00. CM
lf4-11.27SI.

.. Hor.t. I - - Agho. :1
- - o l d . f t - - old. 1
four l'llollt 304-11:12111

, 174 ,.,........ lllltelltte. 4
- · 311 Mo.. , .. Pl. olr.
••collont condition. •1100.
114-992·7132 oltor 5p.m.
1811 -~~~ry Cougor LS. VI.
302, 1- mlloogo 35,000.
loldOII. E..... ..,_..lon. Ooy
114-.:1-1141,--114ti2-2S27.
'77 D - · 1700.00.
1'hono JIJ4-IIli-M11.

72

.r11 !1:"'

Auto's For Seli

OOVIIIMIIINT IIIZIO Val• " - 1100. -·
-· Clllwo. lur·
plua. · I~• Ouldl. Ill
108-117lliL 1·10 111.

&amp; 8oMblll'l

H-0
""'
·
...... .....,.
.. 1112

-

..... ...-00

1 8 1 7 - P.U. Truck. Auto..
Tr-. wtlh 00. IDw mll-oa
llco ROW. 114-H2·3004 oltr
4:30p.m.

73

Yml&amp;.

1--------1t78Fordl.....,.. c-.ed.
118 MO. Colllt4-H:I-1223 or
lt4-741-2101 .

74

M!JlOrcycln

81o-d Drywol flnloh end
ropolr _ , . '"'mblnld •po.
rl•oo 50 ~n. 304-175-1457
ott• 1:00PM.
82

Plumbing
&amp;. H•ting

I

I
•

---·

--

~

~-·-

Koran Evans
oearches lor lhe men behind

(!)A~

I•

.

. 8odf (NR) (2:15

.

...._

1:00. ()) Ql MOVIE: 'Roo VI
Wille' NBC Mondly NIDhl

AI The Movlel D
(J)111t111111101The
Mal . . . Truolto Mud Racing
Spectacular
(I)
(I) '1.1.. 11rytclf' ABC
MJIIIry Mowle Stryker tries

to protect • sclloolboy
prNCher from an lVII
evange!Cst.Q

(l) Pfillppll1411

(!) United .,.,.•• Tho

I

c1n-; veRMONT...

PhllppiJ141r In Out Image
See how economic and_
pollllcll problema have
afiiiCied the PhlllpplnH. Q

aMurphy's
• a 1r1ffic
MurptoJ ........
acc:ldent wllll
1 lovlble couple tuma Into a

lawouH. g ·
01 Llny Klnt U..l
8 Pttmo Time WNdlng

I

t-.30 Ill

'
CARTER'S PLUMitNQ
AND HEATING
Car. Fourthendfllne

-·Ohio

(J) MtMII Magutne

Phono 114-4411-3111 or 114&gt;«e-4477.

84

Electrlca I
• Refrigeration

-rio

Clolllpolo Eleclrlo..,Joo. Eltot·
ria motor • • • HrYtoe.
A.,_lto
ropolr. A~

Dlrt-llllo1Uiuld.IIM210•oot·
lont oond. '""" • • - · II
1304. - c.• 114--

815

11• Hondo XII·IOO - " •nd. Coil 114-0M"I lft•l f1.m.

ti&gt;Nwwawak:h

(!) Mulco Look at Mexico In
lhe UMIOs and the cycle ol

IAIHY DON'T DOC
COME ·ON
I~ TH'
HOUSE?

BE
HERE IN
A MINVlE,
MAW
HE'Ll

RIGHT NOW

lhe
D
1111 •coun~=~·
n R61d8ra
find Dick 'a ftral mystery_novel

HIS BRAKES

IDI !v.nlng Neon

a

HE'S PUlTIN' ON

men IICIIhan ltcllon. Q

JR)NeWI

10:30[1) MDJera: A 81cand Look
Mortimer Mill D
Ill • 0 Kale II Alllo Allie's
old boyh- returns to Now
Yortc lor lhe opanlng of Ilia

';'!i,'Lw Newfrwed 011111

aiNewCcM •• ,
10:50 Cll MOVIE: Winter KHI (NR)

General Hauling

(1 :40)

1171 ...... U 110 I Good

Dll•d Wot• S.VIco: - ·
Clot-. Woill. Oollvory Any·
lim&amp; COil 814-448-7404-No
~ . . . colll.

-·/1110. Orllw 7100 mL
Clll JM.I78-14U. .... for

J • J WM• S.VIOI. Ltnanlng

Honry.

--!OY··-....
...........

.....

17110. 114-247-2724
·1000
.

0

IIIIR-•-Joo.'ooll.
aleterns. wllle. tmmecRet•
1.ooo .. tooolrs'""dollv.-v.
Colr304-17•1

W~terton'e W1t1r Hiullng.
llo•onolll• ............ ....
_ .... 2.000 .. 4,000 9.. ...

lty, -...~--~
Col
304-178-2111.

H

l . . . ll. .luluiiiiiiOIGIOif
•
..... - - Coli .,..

178-1114.

M. H. Repair

, .. llloadld Collo JIUP for oolt.
170.00. 304-171-12:0.'

ootlrMI•

· -------------~--------------------~-

11:00. ()) (I) • (I) 1111 •
all Hen

______..___

.....

~_..,......

-

!1111

BERNICE ·
BEpEOSOL

Send lor your Allro-Graph predlc:lk!ns
lod.,. Mill $1 lo Al1ro-Gr8Ph. c/o lhls
na ..lplpll&lt;. P.O. I)ox 11428, a...tand,
OH 44101-3428. Beoura 10 1111e your
zodiac ligfl.
Gl ... C... 11......... 20) Wlohlul
thinking muetn't be ll&lt;lored to rep!-ny lodl)l ar - you may vlluallze
oornethlng IIIII II yet lo . . . _ U
though• It lo al.....ty 1 laregone
conclullon.
CAIICIII (.luM 21......, U) You COUld
dlwpt domeellc tranqUillity tOCM)r
you begin to moko cllangellhlt Jlllect
the .,..,. family Without flral tallolng
tf*n out.
LIO(-a Atlll ai)Becaralullllhll
tlmelhll you don't get llllliCIIICIIbout
or
1ro trying to PI OIRCM tnlng lhl world
Or Mill.
What you ..... 10 ofler mull - ·
YIICIO lAIIIII PL a)
much to your •••• tMt t.. . - - todly. eo try 1D lllip 11111 1n
mind" you go out "--na. To 111.....

n

1.- '**"'' -

--

n

C

'VI (Dio. ....,._ 11) Whllnl
y o u r - II - n e d lodl)l, don't
g1o1e anyone With- you 'I ha.. dialtnp . . - . to .,.,_ rou are er11111c
ar •-.....,•· M could hurl your ·

Imago.

r•

AGUAIIIU8 (,_ 20
11) Have
blhlnd rou and~ over
any
- ' ! ,au do lodlf, a r - a
..toue mllllke mlgldlllp thrtJUQh lhlt
- · · ...... lllllr ....
Cll (M. • M Ill . , DOn't Ill
-ltalltllehllok today- leobl~
Qlllld 1o you .1t111 ..._. you're too
ombln
' to br1IIICih the •blect·
11111
m1g111 try to your

-:-3

It_.,,_ r•

a

eta.,

-your ONtllt ...... lloml.

!...a(...... a
llfll'l : : . , • - ....

CJIIIIItl 1

8COIIPIO (Oct. Ill Nov. 22) Your
Md IMighll COUld be mlllucllng tod.,, oo guard llgelnllreeetlng lmpulotoely. Take omp1e ljme to think 1mpor1lnt -lhrougll.
IAQITTAIIIUI (IIDv. a Dec 21) Be
carefUl In d11llnge With lrlencN today
money leln\-. TMN'1 a poaiblllly
I mllu-Mdlng may ortoe over
~ r - llrange.

~.

-·

-

::'£:
•

l'amllr allolta . . . . . . . , . , . . . . . . , TOCM)r you
II I l l ' - lftlfbaiiUidwiiiiMtllillllll"d til

• II lfOU'N '" •r.•l'ICIIII dill .., 1111101111111101'" cd 108 u pt1111 II p In .
wlllt1111 W ) Ill d, ,at! RIIOI gil too lllf'llriD • llloDII-1. Don't bllilli 10o
111 111 eel u -.ap - - .
t.vtty on IIIII PlfiOII.

tllllu.,••

[ll=·it'Et;·::-1111
:.......
.MCMit-. =--...

11:311. (J) S NIIC Hen lpaclal
lllpOI1

• Crook IIIII 0 . .

11:00!
.17)

r.11

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~~~;a.from

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1. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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I I I I I I I. I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Vacant - Flltt - Joint - Dealer - NAIVE
Fu"ny quote: "Oh what a tangled. web do parents weave
when they think that their children are NAIVE."
When you lear that a suit will be r-------------~~
NORTH
$-1&gt;-st
ruffed, best declarer technique is to
+AI084
lead up to the key high card at the cru..
.AK4
cial moment, rather than just dropt AJ 7
ping it on the table and hoping lor the
+Q9S
best. In a recent North American
Championship,
Mexican
expert WEST
EAST
George Rosenkranz found an opportu- +J652
+KQ&amp;3
.QJ97
nity to demonstrate this technique. It's .10 6 5
t!O ~
tQ965
..
reasonable to reach six clubs as in the
• 872
diagram, although George and his +to s
partner used their own special methSOUTH
ods In a more complex bidding
+7
sequence.
.832
Declarer Rosenkranz won dummy's
tK8U
king of hearts, played a club back to
+AKH3
his jack and then a diamond to the jack
Vulnerable: Neither
in dummy. He returned to his hand
Dealer; South
with a second high club and then
played a diamond to the ace. Next
Soutb
Weal
Nortll EDt
came the remaining diamond in dum·
t+
Paaa 1+
Puo
2+
Pus 2+
Pus
my played toward his hand. Note
3t
Pa..
3•
Pus
Easfs dilemma. H he ruffed, declarer
4t
Pass 8+
Pus
wou1d simply play low. Later a low
Pass
heart from dummy would be discard- Pass
ed oil the diamond king, allowins deQpenins load: • 5
clarer 10 ruff his losing heart with the·
queen of clubs. In the actual play. East
discarded on the third diamond. De·
clarer took the king and ruffed his last king before leading to the jack in dum
diamond with the trump queen. Al· my, the contract fails. East will bl
though a heart was eventually lost, able to 01e his trump to ruff a winnln
diamond honor, and the quest for I
South had 12 trieks and his contract.
U declarer first plays the diamond tricks will fall short.

ACROSS
48 Run -down
1 Vocalist
Vaughan . DOWN
61 Hall (Fr.)
Munch·
2 Pseudonym
· ausen
3 Stallone
11 Texas
role
shrine
4 Friend
12 Omit a
(Fr .)
syllable
5 - Charlie
Ynterdty'a A111Wer
13 End point
(braggart)
14 Jewish
6 Harass
22 Eccentric 34 Spotted
lestival
7 Keg
23 Plaything
cat
15 Research
contents
24 Dramatist 35 Ward olf
room
8 Purge
Connelly
36 Borgnine
16 "- Shall 9 Work by
26 Glullon
lilm
Have
Pindar
27 Cooler
39 Balaam's
Music"
10 Ending
28 Period
steed
18 Inner
lor win.
29 Gunless
40 Dog
(prefix)
or sin
hoslility
command
19 Popular 17 By whal
31 Shoulder 41 Glimpse
disco, e.g.
means
wrap
42 Actress
24 Do lawn 20 Destroy
33 Many
Arden
21 Alley item
work
limes
44 - mode
25 Beach
resort
26 Attacked
29"- Man·
(Sammy
Davis hit)
30Whiff
31 Gains·
borough's
Blue 32 Relax In
' the shade
34 Machine
part
37 Craze
38 Marsh
elder
39 Benefit
43 Vaclllate
45 Siller
46 Walchlul
47 Dulch
painter

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOI'£41-Here'a how to worl!lt:

5115

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

Gliilllltttltl
(!)llgnOII
•101'-~

ill =mODillfl
8
VIOl
al Yau Cln Ia I Ito!

Complele lhe ch uck lo quolod
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

.!Jl Molar llllllll 8oHtall'l

248-1211.

1111 Y..,olooiJC.IOOH.-

•a Dellgnlng WOIMII

10:00 ()) 700 Club

In .,,,..,. u.rrlatMlf. Clll
304-UI-4 14 for lreo

____

PIIIAeNewa

1:311 (J) Aulo f!aclng: A IIICf For

~-~

•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

a• lllitglln(j
aro.. •
Iaiiey -Cifelli Q

1:01 Cll MOYIE: Mutlnr On nte

I HATE THE:SE'
L.ON-e.t.JDEif!:r
GAME SHOWS.

_

111 •

Ool
(PG13f(1:44)
Munter, lht W1'111o ·
• Nelltvtle Now

IRA B.S\IIINK,

_

CROSSWORD

dJ
&amp;:-·
.._,
....
Q
8

YOU WIN A !.l-IS
rtO&lt;ET 10 'r'l.J&amp;\

.

1111 movie myth. Q

-

•-olol

that tlgn."

...... - " . . .

RedlocovetY

SuzanN! flnda 1111
accountant who ablconded
wllli her life savings . Q
• VldeaCounlry

.....,...,.u_..,._
•

OIThe World

2414.

lltol-111 0&lt;
wJr.
I n a - - · . . . . . ,•.
u-111 oiochldon. llldon..,,
B•rlool. 304-17li-17U

011• l o t &amp; - ondl

-t·~ .. --·-

hlm.Q .

(l) CoAIN~'•

57 Jllnolt 114-&gt;«e-231:t

~---· CIII :

-·--·

woman from Mac&lt;lyver's
pall returns. Intending to kll(

._r

Ill •ll't Upl1olo,..•L-Ing

•

(I) • (I) MacOy.., A

20 P• cent off ..11 on Zenllh
a.va.. Pllrtt or
wll:h t . .
od, til July 1. 1119. wvo
304-1711-1311 Ohio 114-44ll-

4 W.O. ·

' """" of . ...._.

"l'lltlvl ynu S100 to put down
'••

8porto Trtvla

(0;30)

tt&amp; Locol ............ _
Frtt ........,... Clll colloct
1-114-237-04111. dol or night.

...... ~~- ...Ill

I

lIuper
rJ i.ldwalk01
Bowl

I"'"'.--- . - ..... -- ....... -- - ·""·1,..

11Miullllu4W.D .. 4dr.. A.C.
AM/PM. I.,.... oo. . tlon.
Coli 114--·1·1 of.

.11.000
.......

:

hoala The Tonight Show In a
a~l starring Ed McMahon.

•

Unconclllonli lt.llme gulr.,·

11770MCfrl.alt.11fl.......
bod. Wll ... wllh/wtlhoulbt&lt;l
c• 114-2111-IUI til• Spm,

104-171-IIK'

.II

=:m.-:r ,.,..,,..,,

I

BMEMENT
WATIIII'IIOOFINO

TNCL for Lie

01111104-. . .1411.
... . 700 ...... 11.200.00.

81W.II!IlJIJIItll: lt4-

.;....,.....;._..:..__ _ _ 1

---

• .'

(0:57)

• ()) Ill ALF ALF guetlt

llon'oTV tlorlloo. optdollolngln
lonMholto ..,Iaing,_, othor
biW'Ida. Hou" clllt. •o tome
- · .......
w.vo 304li1ll-23110111o
114-&gt;«e-2414

..-JI!!m&amp;_ol.....n

II

0111011- .... obit In o ....
to bo •-doled -own

two

i8

(!).

a

tiM -do NJeN- I.
3000 Ml•. ~--oo..,lon
1170- o.n... ..... - k 11100. Coli 114-11:1-2111 ...
• or t . ...,.. flrtt ••· ••4:30p.m.
1100.00..,. 114--U11or
441-3111.
.... rod.
lTC ·
- -:200l:C
illo30 ln.

;:" .,_...._.,.._ -...,.._,7... . . :
-·-1-11!2~

i

••

•eo.

WANTBI:
.
1100 Cllblo , ..... of dOll' fill
m• ..ol. MwtY,o ~clfll
oonttnt •d fret of rllb, fOOta.
......., otC. 01111CoiJ
304-178-3441.

11a c..- Z·21. v-1 - ·
1111.
- · - · 011104-17.

la."l:gL:a,"'l~.~~-~10-·-----• 1100. 2 _ _ _ ...,...,.,.... -=:=.-=·e;:~i
-·

• Crook and Chill
7:35 Clllanfolll • Son
1:00 ()) MOVIE; 8epe II 8ea (0)

Duty - - olr
J . Oooll CllncltiDn.

1170 c - 1paug~o-.
Ylrr0ood~.•orp-.
Coli 114-441-2114.

SNAFU® by BnKe Beattie

lllld ,. ..Jt. Coli ., .. _
I ...,._ Mollie 0144.
........ OR lOri~ lid. et_.; -;j~;;c;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;.;

CM'M•

....,.,
•m;u

::;:;:;:;:;::;::;=:...1:========:..1'•

II"

. . 1. .1611

. . . .,

ENPS

•

· coli 114-379-

-ellInt-.

71

pot&amp; Cil 114--

2 - - ·~,- ond dryer, olr, UIO ... - h
Coli

IDI CrGIIIIN
1R1 Night Coun

r•*· ,_... .,

IJ.l/1'1

odd·-

Diohwoohtr •eo.oo. Ooop" - 1100.00. lltltlg-or
•40.00. Allworllwllltoloobolt
ollor. 304-41.1111.

Furnished Rooms

IC'
fiHr/
LAN~

r-t. Oood condl-

11.M AMC Eoglt. 4 dr.. Stdon.
,. ,1-c. olr. AM/FM. ·
lo
ngn.
. -83,oooml.
- - · .-y
-c
can
114-248-llt7.

. .....

II:JorUI~:Idyl Q

. .nlllora. "" ......... ltltl...

I

~=3. no

fl...,.,..

a-

Clllfl1~21t-1•s

•·7::"':::":'-:-"--:--:-=-,:lx- 1 ~ n1 t•pluo~Ill'!'; a ..:,,;"',:r;i

··--------··

90 Days Ame 11 CMh wtth
•IWOV8d credit. 3 MM• out
Bul..,lllo Rd. Op., ·8 A.M. to I

room IP..tmente at VMIIv•
Minor and Atv. .kM Apwt·
menta in Middleport. From
.,82. Coli 114-H:Z. 7787.

. .. Home • d 5 • • m Point

Spocloi/No ,.,m..,o

ltomo •eo. Qood oolootlon of

Orooiouo lvlng. 1 end 2 bod-

Hovon. WVo 304-112·2303.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

17~3000.

UOO.OO month. oil utl-111
l*d.
required 1nd
$1150.00 dopoaR. 304-8911- P.M . Mon. 1hru S.t. 114-.UI3400.
0322.

fuH b•tment. c•ptl«&lt; p.tto.
dllached g•-aa priOid UPPif
30'1. 308 Sev ... h St. -

.

~~·•

For IWI1 furnlthed 3 room
cottaga one tt.droom. niCI a
dlln. Nice tar coupla No . . .

beG'OOfM 2nd floor. 5 do..,.,

304-178-3099.

llod ~rom• •20.

5118.

hom~,.

....-.. an the.,,.,, 180.'s.

lab¥'

Fut'nllhed two bedroom ept,
ueo.oo ,.,. oioetrlc. coli 304..,., ....... luly . ., - .
2 beltoonw,. 2 b8te.. no .mtl
chll._., toc.tld ...rtford. WV1.

Rlnttl home for ..re: In town
5 locotlor\
Coli 114-4411-1522
•d b•h 1st floor. 2 8ft•&amp;
p.m.

..EJm aond. 7 room
roornl

Homes for Rent

noo up to •3711.

Klng•310. 4dr_cholt.IIOun cabin... •• a. • 10 ... n.

hHL

41

0,.~

Dragonwynd c.tt., Klnn.a.
Ptrtltn end ll~m~~~e .,d Him•
litftn klttll'll. Chow etucl ....

tee.

mort lntonnatlon clll 304-812·

..,,.,.moiling. •14,ooo.Co1
114-992-5272 - · · 5.
3 bedroombri&lt;* homtw-hlorgo
Jot. Mid w., Drtvo.- Hovon.
Qood cond. 304-77~5181.

-

WOod tlbl• w-e Dh*• t2111o

Pets for Sale

Groom ond Supp!r lloop-Pet
Grooming. All br. .de ... All
llyllo. l.,o Pot Food Ooti•.
Julio Webb I'll. 114-4411-0231.

SofM 1nd Chairs priced from
f39S to t898. T•bl• f50 1nd

2 br.. up to •1211. Hldo-o·bedl •380
·Third to ··~· AecHnn •221 to
"'"'· coli 114-4411-3741 or . t371. Ulmpo •21 to •1211.
114-216-1103.
om.- 't108 lnd up to t481.

3 or 4 bedroom. 'h A. Good

100 f&lt;lrd Tr...orfi27Gr. 8 fl.
flnllhld -1170&amp; 5
ft. buoh holll' •21r. 1
bit blldt.ll11r. -tt211.
Ow- wll flnonoa coli 8142111-H22.

·

lintertalnment Tonight

a (!) USA Today

•

INtt,...• ••
• t41.
no •

pooolblo - - llnonclna 304458-tl711.

Olrct.n. oily wM«. Hl"ilonvtllt. Ohio, Moiga Co. •11. 000
lmmedl•• polS. 114-797-

1tl4 f'ard
t!oo.
2110.-

..... COl 114-2111-112:1.

(I)

.,100.

AKC
Cocll... lponlol
pupatnSO toch- Full-llloodld
un-roglot- c- 'I"&amp;'~ 1100
Eoch. Col 114-318.

51011.

more lntorrnetion.

-bol•/•211•
dlolll' · .......
- Golh...
fl.

""'•lm&amp;.J--·-

7:311. ()) Famly Foud .
(J) MaJor LAifllt 8ollblll
Maaulne

lp.m.

Coli 304-112-2710.

W•Mrt. dryers, r.trlgtratOf'L
renget . Skaggs A.ppll•ce•.

0000 USEO APPUANCES

GOVERNMENT HOMES! From
• 1.00 IU Rooolr! Forodoturoo.
Ropoa Tu Ooilnq.- " ' -•
tl•. Now Solllng'IIIIIAoooiCol Now - l o g oppllcotlono for
(llolundololtl 1·3111-733-eol4 2 -.oom IP8'tmtn1t. fully
Eol 027 32A fur .....nllltlngol c•peted. IPP•Iftc., wn••d
trllh plckupa prcMdad. Mtlnt•
ftlftCI ..•Itvlng do• ta thopRenldl o
ping. blnka .,d ....,• . For

40-20 John Deere tree·
tplowo/•111:
../117110; • •Qohl
- trlnlltr
-·

81Mam1VIce
8TopCIId
7:01 Cll Andy Ottfftth

~

1177111t.8kyltrk .... p•.Solf
contained, good oondltlon.
114-147-2724 1111 - - ..... of210M- wltholr. tit. .......
AM!FM 11- Coli wonlntfo
114-441-2070.

01 Monlyllne
1R1 CIIMrw

•

1173 23 ft. Holldt¥ ll. . bl • .
Solf contlllnld. ueoo. COil
114-HZ· 7479.

Pur•bred whita Oerm1n Sh•
puppla Col 114-31•

kit. tlulcll dollvory. -44 wu

Fll'ft. Apt. 1 br., •221 &amp;~~Itt._

ev•• old ttl-lwei.
4 .cr.• Ckllll
to,_,
3 _..,_
2 IIIII\
l•go ,.,..., mom. 114- 992·
1874 or 114-742·2180 for

Hoy .... fur oolo: ..e oil• &amp;:00
Wtlkdolro. 114-:11?-7143.

'~"UI~Of

•101 TlvM'• Complny

187111odlllwlloColonor. 30'
long. lth w - 1011 oonlllnld.
Col I 14- 317· 7,t1 1.

vloa C.ll114--3144111•1
P.M .

s - - · -. Biadoort.groin

lito 514-441-1tl99, 127 3rd.

Nowollour

I•

_

.

(I) • (I) CurNf11 Altolr
(l) (!) MoclloH/ Leh,.,

~

I

Ie

z

6 ~~ic!~~:EER LETTERS I

• Now Counlry

llf11P8'I

Following a leciUre from his
dad, I heard my son mumble.
"The !rouble with learning
r--:--:--:--::-~---, from experience Is that you
I 0 RAL
never - ! "

8

1:31 Cll One Oty At A nmo
7:00()) Our ltouM
• ()) PM Magazine
(J) 8potteCeriler

j

~ -,~

-TK'5f-U;,.;.R;.;..,N"-D'T--11. .-:
~~ 1 . 1
1. . . .

'---"-"--"-"-....1.--'

JR) WKIIP In ClnciMotl
8~!­

con ,,._z•e-

HutchM f400•dup,bunk._.
co.,.._ w-mlll:tlu&amp;• f281
end up_' to •391. ltbv blcll
•110. Mlttr.... orboXIPriniJI
ful or twtn
firm •78. end
fl8. Qu~~r~ . . . f 210 &amp; up.

3 111 atHI arch buildings.

Avo. Qolll~lll, OH.

Aport"*'~
pel&amp; 322

e14-

AMIFM 11-. Coli .7114318-17eo.

......

11'

1--,.:1::....;;.1..::.,;17r-.:..;.I...::.TI;::'8-I

OI~TOCM)r

304-178-1711.
310 Choirroloi tnalna dump
bod • hoJot.
5017.
Trudl '"" vloon. 73·11. Ford
ond a.-,. •11.00 ..... 114148-2100.
-;~;;;;;;;;;.~~=:
..
79 Motors Homes

I I 1I

I I I 1· . ·

.r
.

sr~-= Q
(!) 3-2·1 Contact Q
Gill •acaa-·
•101 WKRP In Cincinnati

t y - luyln,--ftl for
Ctl 14-379-2220 ..

1110Trono. AM,301V·I.blocll
tap/21,000 ml•. 1•11• Ro~ereB111mtn1
1114 , . , . C,. Trootor. 42 ·h•d
cep. •lplne atereo, fully Wot•Pf-11
Inch belly m - . hydr.,Hc. loldedfColl&gt;«e-23eo.
Oood condltm n300. 0110.
SWEI!PER •d•-._vm.ahlne
Coil114-742-21•2.
d euppl•. Plair.
1187 f'ard E - . d..,ogld 11ut
Low ml•/ f781. up end d....,ery, 0..11 Vocuum
Wanted. Pattu,. t.r rtnt In r--1111•
1111 Ootoun 200 SIC 2 dr., I Cle.,«, Otte half mlle up
........ o..... · - 114-11!12- opd./.1200.
Coli 114-2111- . . c - 1111. Coli 114- ·
1114
&gt;«e-0214
.
1122.
.
Ford 132 lltlll• •2.2150.00.
Soptlo Tonk Pumolng.
OolRll 7 Turbo, - l t y bod U71.00. 1Wo row 11•
"""" oontlllon. • ..., with lo Co. RON EIIANI ENTEII rw c:uhlvotora •200.00. All • • lootlw
14.000 h~woy PIIIIEI. Jo...on. OH 1· JIOO.
concl 304-17ll-2133.
ml Motltodouolv m-od. ol 137·11121.
. . . _ llllf\' 1,000 mi. N..,
on•ooft CMr •rt.OOO: uldng
UI,IOO. ri~..: merriM.
muot. ooll I
•11¥1 CON
114-4411-173.
.
'r .uy T,. Trlmrrina """"'
62 Wanted to Buy
For lolo: 1170 MQ Midget... 1 · - · 1:11304-178-1331.
... 311,000 ....,.1 mi .. ..
Wont to buy: Uald Mobile porfeat aontlllon/t3,100 ftr.,.
... Coil 114-248-1114.
ho-. Coil 114-44ll-0171.

••a.
OpenSA..M . toiP .M. Monttwu

..,.,.,.hod
c•pM:• no

7.

, . . ..... Oontury lh•p.
lutomatlc, AC. arulte tltt,

1.

(I)
(l) llody llecWic

t,,.•.

I

2

P 0 GE R

1

lJie

§())

BUDGET TIIANIMIUION·
Uood • rebuilt on
_ , . , , 30 u.o.l'rliot •na
up. U.od a
pr-ploii-·CVCIOIMI-ol

8t C

II

I:OIIJ) Allee
1:311
Ql NIC Nlghlly Newl

Auto Pllrts

Holldolr llombl• 21 II., Mit
"""'""'""'
- · e. •zeoo. 11
1/211. 1-oft•nn..,bo•.
· Coli 114--7018.
Tobtcao Miter with culthretor/t221. lpr.,/UO.OO. 2

ThrM411a'e1rects,llto90ecre
C•fn Aldge and Gunvlle RoM.

114-992·3270.

.,oo. - · -·
-· Cor-•

booll....... 304-17112343 Ill.. 8:00.

"'•H.
"""'D-

.... roqulrtd. can 114-4481079.

14.000 mla "I - · cl~

... . ., _ ....
- ..... Coll14-&gt;«e-0177.
OOVEIINM!NT IEIZEO Vthl.... ttorn
Cloevyo. Surplua . 1~1 Guide C1l
-M7... 1 -10111.

John

100 ln. gold ..1m ooiO. 721n.
IOVHNt/.280. 2 metchlng
lwown ...un.veeo - . Full
IIU mIt trill aet With
1r. .o1 t35. U In aood oondltlon. Coli 304-1711-.144.

8 .....111

the

ROXHAT

(J) Pley 8oll Wllh Reggie
Jackoon
(l) , _ , 01 Cllolce

1111'-

....

IJe.
low to form four simple word1.

1

.i:~~.il"="Q

TI-IERE15 NOTHING MORE
LONELV TI-IAN SITTING .ON
A SENCfl ALL IN 'i'OUR5ELF
W11li0Ul A 0006!-INUT..

l GUESS MAI{5E I AM ..

--.......
-0 ·-

1173 CediH•- Do\M'

8 hp - · "3'h hp 221n ....
.,._,
211nc..- 12opotd
r - . 2 .aeatrla trim.._.. 12ft

U.400 now •e.IIQ: -12
woo t14. 700 now •t.IMIO:
IOx112 woo t22.700 now
.,4,1150. Clll814-841-3001.

Hou• for Ml&amp; 2 bedloornt.
corner lot. svrec:u... Oldo, aloae
to •18,000. 114-992·

•·

••ft - ·

M Deyo- •1170o. I I _ . , .
" ' - · UOOO. Porooloornd&amp;
Coli 114-2111-1270.

- d toft. colt 114317·0441DONE
Brown

6

I roam epa1nwrt. 2 IMithl.
prtilte entrw101. Pertl..., fur·
nlohtd. 9150 Flrll Aw. 0..,. II

For Sale

1178 - ' " " ' 4 dr.
loMed.
botllont
oondlllon.
.
, _ Col
114--lllt3.

Llrll Do.., wench, good oondlllon/•410. call 114· 4U·
1031.

E-•

Athton, l•ae buldlng lot-.
mobl• ho- .,....mtl... public

-"'•·

law mill eng .. 111 100
H.P./.400. Cell 114·441·
8031.

w••·- ·

rtv•.

-1077.

71 Auto'•

•

•@Hen
()) w • Cll 111 • a

• Acce110rie1

· ~~~
Plano tor 111..lo _ , .""pon·m;;n~W:.""-·
Locolly.
co1112111-4210.
67
Mllllcal
lnlti'Urnents
Ctnoe/.310 . Truck
1Dppert•so. Chell ty" lroalu- .,.., I - boColi 114-24118200.
(llrinoro. - · ..IN~
.... 114--0117.
For Sole: l.ocluot poot.
II J o l t - - · 114oolld. Coli 814·4•11- 7983
~

Rearrange letters of
0 four
JCrombltd wordo

1:00()) _.,r 1M l.old
!pl1adt1

INich nat. original

76

MON., MAY 15

S@lt~lA-~t-~s·

WOII
TIIAT NILY
'UZILII
- - - - - - 1411M ~y CLAY I . POUAN - - - - - -

EVENING

-g

CDVW •

4411-7U3.

61 Household Goods

•

ground pool. g•Ho, kQ of
•tl"'a. PriaM~ to ... For more

•

.... - . - - " ' I n aood
- - Colll14-ll:t-Z7'70.
1117_.h
~--!11U1
- - V-11worth
bo•
lootary ........ hu ...
-•lllrd4.ooo-.eo."""'"" - - _,or,
IIJM.fuot
-~
W~h
m•l...,., 31 ...... m•c..bo•

The Daily Sentinai- Page-:-11

Television
Viewing

-'""' T-.-•. -·

Cooldroe Eloo. - · Coli ,,._

ocr-. ..,lor country -In~
()Wftl,"
VI'RA FUIIIIIITUIIE
A-._
•
•
prioa n-llblo. 1,.....;,;.;,;~.;..,-----r---------1
APPUANCD
Coli Oovo 814-891-71971'"
IIU411nContonory.114rnl.on
••iniL
Linaotn Pika a.... 1 uta •
32 Mobile Homes
44 Ap~~rtment
- . BAM.ePM. Coli~.,.
For_.., _
_zotorvlr.,.•
for Sale
· for Rent
Aft•hourol14-44ll-311,. '
oolonW. 3 br.. *'YI eking.
"-lr -owted
u4 dr. choot. •44.85. 5 llyltl of
2nd Avo.. t11ctlont nolghbo~
• bunk ltl"lng 11 •1711hood. Showln\byoppolnt,_, 12&gt;170, 3 .... 2 llllllllht. now · BEM.ITIFIJLAPARTMENTS AT Including - · Ful tllo
Coll814-- 217.
H..,tt tvpo wln-t. IUDGET PRICES AT JACK- m--MG.IIi Du- olu
u rplnnk\g. Pri011 for quick SON EITAT!S. IH Jlc*1on mllttr-..7L tWft m.nr-.
3 br..
2 bill-. 112
Mle. Foat.,.tMoblfeHomtPwlf. Plk• fro&amp;n f112 •
Wllk to , ,. . ••· Mattrleu•
b,
lot.
21&gt;o40. H.,.. 114-4411-1102.
ohop ond ..-llo. 114-&gt;«e- lmp_.ol.
-bedcreolo
lftlll
2511E.O . H.
.
C-ond
~ hou• or moble home 11 down
end •bl•m •• Ht. '-dded
. p.,.men11t38,000. can 114Tar•TowMou•Apen:menta- 2 Bentwood rocker·fll . ll,
2111-1784.
33
Farm• for Sele
Br.. 1 112 bolhl. cA.. .... Orondlothorcloill•es.se. Blue
- · · · . ., _ . prlvoto... cln. .o ... lcfl-1488 (ln10 min. from -ntown Ooll~
dootd pMio. pool. plfll-nd. • • hutch).-- Kkchon
polio. 4 blr .. 2 both. wood,. LP
II tr•lncludtcl ....... •11.0 l•go v.Joty. ,...
1ro1 •
g•-.lulbol_,_llf- 41
ocr• 11
oldmi.
hou•
4 on
rio coblntto-1271, IOFAI:
hooli-,..1
SOuth
Ill. 11-;"/,11 •211 p.- - - cal v
room. City School Dill. caH 71 ez&amp;.OOO. COlt 11 ._. 817• 114·71eo.
..,.,., ~~- ooloondchoir·
•est. v.. .,....... rodln••·
114-&gt;«e-:1127.
S220.
2 lr., opt.. nM pluoh c•pet. U4S, I pi«&lt; wood group4 br.. 1 112bolht. 112-olot.
n • - . uti. Ito port lolly polcl •3119. V•ghon lt•••·tz4S. ·
good - l o " •so.ooo. 3 br., l4
UIIiness
U2hmo. call304-1711-1104. TRADE-INS TAKEN.
8
doorbl-ldt.1112-alhultz
or304-175-1381.
1UZ. 2 ftropl- In-ground
8uHdlng1
H-·· llrgolio Hou•. F.. nJ-·CA. •es.eoo. A.Onollool
F,.nllhtd olfldonov. eo7 So· turo. gll~twora gilt ".,• •
,.oloor. Clll 304-17&amp;
ooncl Aw.. Otllloolo. •1eo. mloc. J-on St. In VInton.
5104. 304-175-5311. « 304- Olllct buldlnfl ovolloblo n- · lh•ebolh. COII814-4411-4418 Houro: MonU,·ThUrodfll 10-5.
175-1321
oourttoou• In llanlpolio. Le•o ott• 7P.M.
Frldt¥ &amp; Sotuidoy 10.7.
or buy. COil 114-4441=0144.
Cotmg• type horne at Tyoaan
Furn. Apt. ntKt to Ubrery Delbert Swll._ IJHd Appllent.ka port)f llr'*hod. eloct.
P-D to .A.C. llof. roq'ld. 3n '11*dlt. Kon.,JIL caH
hooll, 2 .... L.ll .. ftr-wlh 36 Lots&amp;. Acreage
lulllllo fur 1 - · cal 114-4411-7473. Dlohw•h••·
....... g h. ..-. 1 1/ 2
114-4411-03311.
leo.o o : - - . f121: o.,..,..
boll II. klldoon. 2 - - t .
'125; Eloctrlo Rongo. neo.
outbulllnga. 1 tCn betutllul
Olr~ge tpt. 3 tlrn'ed~ rooma &amp;
pln•6 h-clll. tolnlngwld Zwoadldbullloglota. ~~
boll\-~. dryer, olr, d SWAIN
lllo•oagr. . hu ....a•lll=~ m•olv 2 - • - 0 - 1.
o no pliO. Rtf.• Oop. roq'od.COI AUCTION
FURNITURE 12
Prioor-.....,.a Cllfl14Rd. Coil 114-241-8511 oft• 114-44ll-1118.
Olvoii .. OoHipOia.
1810.
5:30P.M.
NEW-Ipo.woodgroup - •339.
Elltci.,ov opt, ldeol for 1 Uvlng room ;..•••198-IHS.
For &amp;ale 1J¥o own.: 3 br•• 2 1/2 IMidfor . . . Onetotv•••in p. .on. moblt home bllow Bunll: b. . w'ith bedding- •241.
botho. full bot. .ont. g• F.A. flkltl.,d Townohlp. Coli 114- - n o v - g
CA. Full tllo m~- llloundollon
lur,..t. Eltc. t.1r cond•. 2 •• 892·3143 ott• 1:00 p.m.
ho•. Rot. Coll14-&gt;«e-0331.1
•t9. Rodin• ltl"inalttechtd ger•a• with euto
open••'-oe lot in Spring VII· 10 ecr• for·ela I mil• outRt. FurnAIIwd -"'dtnqo. f110. utf. USED- lldr, . . . . . . bedroom
ley Sub Dlv., 104 Oak 143 off Rt. 7. Fr• 911· lti• peld., lh•e b•h. 701 4th ault•. O.I)CII, wrfngw..,..lhlr, 1
Dr./.12.1100. Coli 114-448- U1,000. Coli 814-992-1231.
A¥t. Odlp- con 814-4411- complete line of uold tum.ure.
118113.
441Boftor 7 P.M.
NEW- WO!I'. . t31.
Athton bu.lttlll one 10'1 Iota
WOrkboots ~18 • up. (ltlll &amp;
:.t.,,..prtngoorll&amp; c ...ornbulll. wMhrlvtrfronttgt. publlcwottr.. 2 .... ..,_,,_ ot Rio O•de. 110ft 1-l Cllll14-&gt;«e-3151.
1 OW'nlr home on IPII'f'Q,.;. 3 Ctvcte Bowen. Jr. 304-117&amp;- from porch &amp; prtwlte drWe &amp;
ocr•. 1 bodr..,., ~ botht, 5 2331.
l'lfd. call114-2111-1402.
County Applonoa Inc. Oood
fir..,e.,_, Intercom .......... i~
u... IPPMirlt* tnd T.V.

hou•.
•ar•
-J.••o.
R.--

BORN LOSER

4,3311.

"Kids, Mother and I haw'
decided to gel a place of our

SI7Ior3l8-ll34.
Mull loll : Splk ontry 4 .... 2

8oets and
MotOrs 1M Sale

·-11171Andlll 11' 1"
with-'""" 311 . . with
-trlnoon4.,.o•lnjootlof\

Hugt 11•31 pool. hut.::t
t.naa. fit• • ...,.._,
...
tlon II lfrooncln9 -olllt. Colt
24 hn: I·JI00.-1'111 _ _ _ or 3
whelltd eleabic -uan. Cail
llogoro ~dlcol, 11100-1112104.

For rent 2 bedroain funllhed
mobl• how.. e181.DO mDnth
.... utHltt. will Hud..

lon .....ld lot. 4 . . . """'
Holo• -..... ott lit. 311-

Pometoy-MidrJaport. Ohio

Mol ..... Mey 15, 1989

.,. - ·
IOAT IIIPAIII
. - ...Ftatory
•uleer.
a,eolelfst
T - a llolllltlorvloo. Pr--.M-t.lltldot
Gall; all loet Club. Cell 11 ..
21ll-1170.

Eorly bird oooolol on II poolo.

For lA•e: Apert:"""'- ntw.,·
de.,...._
........ ,.,.. Oolllp- On•

. .,..•..141.
. ·
Or-lot. ...
_ • .....,....
hood. •12.800. '""". . . . ocCU-0111- Coli 114--80311.

75

KIT N' CARLYLEe lly Lury Wrlpt

AnliqU81

..... loll. lllv ..... Antlq-.
1124 E. Mtln ...... Po-oy.
Houre: M.T,W 10e.m. • 8p.m..
llorndto! 1 to lp.m. lt4-lltl2·
2521.
54 Mlac. MerchandiH

Laasa

froM parch. ooncnte cHn. 1•11

bM4If"'M. 2

Monday, May 15, 1989

Pomaoy-Midclaport, Ohio

One letter stands (or another, In this sample A is used
ror the three. L's, X ror the two O's; etc. Single letters,
apostrop~. the length and ronnatlon of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters ere different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

·•

5-15

JBP

N M S Z

MXRS

K,BW

SVSEMXZW

OJ · WMS

v·s K L

MS

WB

XZQ
UP.· Z

OSLW

xos

WB

GL

XN XJ

vsw

xz

M G Z Q ..

WUJGZK
GW

MGD

G L

up z.

VGZHBVZ
Yarlr&amp;taw'• ~ 1'1n AU. OF US IE*"" '10
'WRtiE INTME
MOST· Of~'OO
ON TO GREATER THINGS. - BOPtrt' KNHIH'r

'•

Olt-

•

-

.•

•., .1

••

'.

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

•

Monday. MIIY 16, 1989 •

Ohio

Ohio lottery

Reds rally
to defeat
Pirates, 6-5

Pick3

799
Pick4
734fj

20 FL Oz. Rust Curb
Spray Enamel

lOW P ICES EVERYDAY
..

·Page 3

Low toni«~ In mid ~, Wed·
t'etl~!l:f, moetly 11111111y. Hlrb Ia

·

.

•
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
·'¥'o1.40, No.8

26 Cenu .

A Multimedia Inc. N-opopor

New cost estimate proposal upsets Baronick

2*4

fiOR

Boys' 8-18

Tank T ......

2

4-7...... .2

$~Men's
·
Pocket T,Shlrts

fiOR

By NANCY YOACRAM
Senllnel Jllqwt staff
Pomeroy VIllage Council
· member Betty Baronlck cannot
understand why tbe vlllare is
hesitating to replace a tWQ:Inch
water line on Mulberry Heights
with a six-inch line.
j:laronlck pointed out in Monday night's meeting of Council
that last fall, Council voted to
replace the line and she thought
that lines and fittings were
supposed to have been ordered.
DiscUssion of the problem
. ensued,· with Councilman Larry
: Wellrung suggesting that new
cost estimates be obtained on the
proposed project. Baronlck how·

Slightly Irregular.

3~

Men's

Swlmwear

2'"'

Boys' 8·16

Swlmwear

4-7............... t.89

ghs ~osition
a•se
·
Lounge

Ladies' T-Back Bra

$199

1 Section, 1 0 Pogos

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, May 16, 1989

' Copyrighted 1888

endangerment and that by reopenlng the road, residents would
be ensured of adequate access
for emergency vehicles.
The road was closed seven
years ago after a llmdsllde. r:.egal
matters Involving damages paid
to an affected proJ:l!!rty owner
resulted from the slide. Because
the property owner has refused
to sign a waiver to eliminate the
village's liability should another
slide occur, the village has been
afraid to reopen the road.
Councllmemhers and Mayor
Richard Seyler agreed that It
would be in the best Interests of
the residents to reopen the road,
but until .the liability problem can
.

STYL£5 YAIY

Denihan fires
state patrol chief

The cbange In status of Rio grams, student population and founded as a private. four·year
community service," Hayes college in 1876. In 1974, residents
Grande College to that of a
· university was formally an,
added. "University designation of G11ollla, Jackson, Meigs and
serves to more accurately reflect Vinton counties approved the
: noun~;ed by Paul C. Hayes,
Rio Grande's role as a diverse creation of Rio Grande Commun·
. Ph.D., president of Rio Grande,
: during a Monday evening pri!!IS center of higher education."
tty College. Since that time, the
Rio Grande is a comprehensive public board of trustees bas
· conference In Rhodes Student
: Center.
,
four-year Institution offering pro- contracted with the private col. Rio Grande College will be- grams lind degrees ·In six col, lege for all educational aer.nces.
. come the University df Rio leges: business, 11beral arts,
"The change to university '
math and science, education, status will have 110 lmpjlct on the
: Grande In the fall of this year.
nursing, and technologies.
Part of Nuural Growth
relationship between the private
University status for Rio and public boards of trustees,
' Unlve~Sity status, Hayes ex,
: plalned, comes as a natural part Grande was authorized in Janu· and the delivery of educational
: of the continued growth and ary by the private Institution's services both boards have found
development of Rio Grande, hoard of trustees . .
to be so successful," Hayes said.
In Un..ue Position
founded as a private four-year
Hayes said . that historically,
"Witb · the · Initiation. of tbe Rlo Grande bu been·kllown as a
~ee~p~ar•~a~ . ,_
•
- ., flU~ Tetent yearrr, ' he· said, University of· Rio Grande In !be teacbers' college; · Hayes said.
''the Ins titutlon ba• broadened Its fall of 1989," Hayes sale!, "we will "In recent years, however, the
academic pl'llil'ama and Ita edu-- be In tbe unique ~Ilion In Institution lias broadened Its ·
cational fippot tualty to InClude a southeastern Ohio of blling a new · academic programs and Its edu·
university, with a century-old catlonal opportunity to Include a
greater range of dlsclpUDes.
"As a center of higher learn, heritage of service to higher greater range of disciplines.
Ina, Rip Grande has exJ:l!!rlenced education."
•'With those programs In place.
Rio Grande College was we are In essence a university ...
ateacly growtll In ter1111 of
a collection of colleges offering
diverse programming," he said.
".tnd, with oqr continuing
relationship witb tbe community
college," he added, ''the Unlver,
slty of Rio Grande will he
poSitioned to expand services In
various community endeavors,
Including education, business,
beallh care. goverrunent and
art.''
Record Enrolbneal
In documenting the growth
pattern exJ:l!!rlenced by Rio
Grande, Hayes cited !be record
Increase In enrollment at the
Institution during the current
academic year. Fall quarter
1~ enrollment grew hy
nearly 1~ percent - with a
student population now totaling
nearly 1,900, That number Is
exJ:l!!cted to exceed 2,000 In the
fall.
Hayes further cited the Institution's dramatic growth In' facilities over the past decade. Since
1976, building and renovation ·
projects at Rio Grande have
totaled more than $15 million,
Including the recent completion
APPROXIMATELY • lndlvlclnala repr.:aeallal area aews
and
opening of a new $4 mUllan
· media were on bud for Mond~J nl,.a'a pretrl coaference Ia the
classroom building.
Jame~ A. Rllod• Student Ceater. 8hcnnl with Dr. Paul
H~J•
1n addition to these ne,w build·
folowlnl tbe Ndlon Ia LllrrJ' Ew1D1, Rio Grande's dlreetor of
the university Is currently
lngs,
coDep relatloa.
renovating Anniversary Hall,
and tbe Jeanette Alhlez Davis
Library Will double Its current
,
size.
In addition to these two projects. an historic campus buUd·
In&amp; will be remodeled to become
The driver was Injured sUrbtly In a one car accident at 25
tbe Esther Allen Greer Art
p.m. Monday 011 CR. 25, 0.2 of IInDe west of ,us 33, according to
Huaeum.
the Metes GaiDa float, State Highway Patrol.
"Again, becoming a university
Troopers . said tbe accelerator stuck on a car driven by
was a natw-al next step as the
Michael W. May,er, 16, Pomeroy, and tbe vehicle went off the
lni UtuUon grew," Hayes said.
road, atriklng a tree. Tbere was beavy damage to the car.
''I'be change represents tbe
Mayer suffered a minor vlalble Injury, bowever, be was not
culmlniUon of past auccesses,
Immediately treated. Mayer was cited for not wearing a seat
and looks forward to our •
belt.
.
plaiUIIIed flllvre M:blevemen ta."
Another M:cldellt occurred at 7: :KI a.m. Moaday In Melp
The feulbiUty of a nwnber of
County oa SJl 7, 0.2 ol a mOe IIOI'th ol milepcllt 6. The Jljltrollald
pn:i)ecta. ranging from the crea- ·
• a vebfl:le driven by Robert E. Myera, 23, GaiUpolls, struck lllld
Uon of football and , marching
' · killed ll'deer. Damage was moderate.
band pi'Oifams to ro!ng on·alr
with a campus public li!'OIIdcaat·
IIIJ radio station, are being
.' ... ltudled.
. _ ~nt! •• Growtll
"Ill lilt ,., am; Rio GraDde
t1alta ot 1111 Melp Ollllty E~~~e~i II~ Medical Service
will IIIItH Itt l2Hl year ol.ervtce
l'ftpraled to dine 01111 DD Mou r.y. . ·
to !Qber lducatloa In IOU!heut·
At J0: at a.m. the Pl!merGy lqiiAd -,.aded In a dali II 9&amp;
ern 'Ohio." Hayel cooclllded.
Hlllll St. Where Paul Bulb .tu talcelt lO VeteriDI Memorial
Holplfal.
''We wlll pursue Ibe next decade
The 8aleml'mi Department, at 4: 18 p.m. was c*'ilad to Dexter
of grow!Jl as the Unlverrdty of Rio
Grande - an Institution with
for a atruc:tureflre at tbeJimMalnelrttldiJice, &amp;Jidat 7:17p.m.
biiiiDry and tradtUon; and, an
!be u.,lt returned to tbe scene,
tutttutlon of. IMiw .ldeu IUid
dynamic lfCIWlll,"
.

2FoR'1
Family Dollar
2 Liter Sodas

Asst. I!a¥ora.

·Men's
Actlvt KnH
Shirts

Men's
Rustler
Jeans

~· ' &amp;18 •

ShOrt Sleeve

.58ft

R11g. '11

Knit Shirts .
Boys' &amp;16

• • Rustler
Jeans
R~gullrty

Velour lith
Towela

Aaat. prtnta and
IIOIIda. Slightly
Irregular.

.

'8

Pack 014
Waahclotha ·

100% cotton.
Asst. aollda.

Ladlea' Fashion
Sundl'l11t1
AllgUIIIIy 110

PIUI Size
Suncll'lllll
-~·rty 1 11

·~
2
fiOR

2
FOR

.&amp;

Boys' Shorts
&amp;18
TIICk
4-7...... ..2 For '3

Men's Track

Shorts

R~gulllrty '3 Ea.

•

Pk. Of 2 C, D AAA
Or Single II Volt

Battertn

""014 AA..r1 -

101nch
Playbill a

--·'
4 Foot
Pl11tlc
Pool

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-8•2

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12" ~e25 Ft.
Aluminum Foil

Local news briefs--

priver injured in Monday wreck

.*1&amp;8.

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Rallrllritlel

~:r.:..or
32ct.~.

•

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CA.DY IllS or
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Map..County EMS has 3 oolt.
-.

ASSOmD

'

be resolved, it's unlikely the tion to grant a two-week grace
reoJ:l!!ning will take place. .
. P!!riod to violators of the ordi·
The petition from the Wyllis nance before tickets are Issued.
Hill residents was accompanied
Councilman Reed brought up
hy a second J:l!!titlon with 65 the matter of rewriting the
signatures of other res ldents who ordinance which had been p.r o·
also support the reopening of the · posed before. but not accepted, to
road.
eliminate parking along the
Councilman Franklin Rizer riverbank. Reed suggested the
requested enforcement of a vll· ordinance be rewritten to Include
!age ordinance which prohibits all property along the riverbank
parking on the sidewalks. Rizer from one end of the village to the
said that sidewalk parking Is other. with the stipulation that
being abused In the village and Council has the right to grant any
that the rights of pedes trlans are necessary variances.
being overlooked. Mayor Seyler
After discussion of Reed's
said he would see to It that the suggestion, It was decided to walt
already existing ordinance is on the ordinance until it's known
enforced. Council passed a mo·
Continued on page 10

:Rio Grande College will ·
~become university this fall

Pink, Beige or
Whitll!

EACH

ever, did not see a need for new Mulberry He!ghts was repaired,
estimates, since estimates had Reed understood that problem ,
been presented last fall. It was Jines In other areas of the town
also suggested that perhaps were to have been considered for
Mulberry Helgbts residents r~placement.
would consider' JliiYing the differCouncil finally determined
eru:e between , the cost of a that Village Administrator John
two·lnch line and a alx,lnch line. Anderson should be authorized to
Councilman Bruce !Reed begin checking Into the best
agreed with Ba~:onlck that the . priCes for the needed p!J:l!! and
matter had been voted on before related equipment to replace the
and he did not see the point in Mulberry Heights line.
dickering about whether or ·Dot
Fifteen residents and proJ:l!!rty
proJ:l!!rly owners were going to owners of Pomeroy's Wyllis Hill
pjly, He said It had been bls bave submitted a petition to
understanding that the \1llage Council requesting tbat their
would Install tbe new nne be- roadway and access he opened .
cause :1)1ulberry Helgbts Is ··and repaired. The residents feel
plagued with water leaks. Once that the closure ofthelr road Is an

CHOCOLATE

I

---·-'!2,---..:. ·-----·-·- ·-- - .....,._ ......

··-----~~ ------~-

.... ~--- ..... -~....- .

DR. PAUL C. HAYES

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) which affected his credibility and
Col. Jack Walsh. suJ:l!!rlntendent his ability to continue In his
or the Ohio Highway Patrol for position as chief officer of tbe
almost 10 years, was fired Ohio Highway Patrol," Den !han
Monday for taking a two-week told a news conference.
expenses·paid trip to South
Denlhan said he told Walsh
Africa without permission from that the patrol su!ierlntendent Is
superiors.
an unclassified position, mean·
Walsh, 53, wasfiredby.Willlam ing he serves at the pleasure of
Denlhan, director of the Oblo the director an~ cannot apJ:l!!al a
Department of Highway Safety, dismissal. He said Walsb
who said the colonel's vacation to handled the firing In a "very
the white supremacist state prqfessional'' manner.
showed "Impaired judgment"
Walsh, was appointed during
which reflected badly on the the admlnls tratlon of Republican
patrol.
Gov. James Rhodes. He has
The firing took place after more than 31 years of service
· Walsh met earlier In the day with wifh the patrol and will receive a
Gov. Richard Celeste a,nd his J:l!!nsion of $38,184, the departchief of staff, Cllrolyn Lukens· meht said.
meyer. Celeste left the decision
Wendy Schweiger, sPokeswoto Denlhan, whose department man for the Highway Safety
has jurisdiction over !be patrol.
Department, said It was Walsh's
Walsh claimed he did nothing · second hip to South Africa, and
wrong.
that the impression might have
" I really don'·! believe I did been created that the Celeste
anything wrong, " Walsh said. administration supports apar·
·"The administration has tried to theld, the racial discriminatory
make il look like there was some policy of the country.
degree of impropriety. In my
Denlhan said the admlnlstra·
judgment, there was no connec- tlon opposes that policy.
tion to my job to this visit.
Walsh said Celeste and Dent·
"It was a . very enlightening han thought that his vislt might
education that didn't hurt anyh· make It look like he was a racist.
ody," he added, '•'We met some
"I am not a .racist," Walsh
very wonderful people, black and said, adding that he had made no
white."
decision on his future.
Denlhan said he offered Walsh
He also said Denlhan cited
a demotion to major, which was figures that showed minorities
declined. He said Lt. Col. Rl· had been shortchanged In the
chard Grumney, assistant super, patrol. However. the next patrol
lntendent, Is In charge of the class has 35 to 40 percent
patrol until a successor can be minority membership, Walsh
found.
· said.
A spokeswoman for the depart·
Schweiger said Denlhan was
ment said Denlhan hOJ:l!!S to upset he was not told about the
name a successor within a week, second trip. She said Walsh
and Is at tempting to find one damaged his own credibility with
within 'the patrol's ranks.
lrooJ:l!!rS, who must abide hy a
''Based upon his action In going rule that forbids them from
to South Africa without my accepting anything of value that
knowledge on an all-exJ:l!!nses·
might Influence their decisions.
paid trip, I have found this action
Earlier, the patrol said Walsh
exhibits Impaired judgment
Continued on page 10

· Board
OKs more loans for
schools
'

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The state Controlling Board
Monday pumped another $2.7
mUIIorl Into five school districts
unable to continue operations
without state assistance.
The money for the five school
loans had to come 'from the
state's savings account, since the
school loan fund has no more
money In lt. The largest loan $1.75 mUllan- went to Howland
Local School District In Trumbull Count)'.
The board also approved a $1
million low·interest loan to attract a new steel processing
center to Medina County, and
shifted welfare money around to
cover anticipated shortfalls In
Aid tQ Families with Dependent
Children and Medicaid accounts.
Meigs County Gets $38,000
Otber school loans went to
North Ridgeville City School
District, Lorain County,
$500,000; Wellston, Jackson
County, $347,000; Eastern Local
School District, Meigs County,
$38,000; and Northmor Local
School District, Morrow County,
$100,000. .
Liverpool Coil Processing Co.
Is 'building a steel processing
center In Liverpool Townsblp,
Medina County, to make cold
rolled steel for au tomoblles,
appUances and other lterris.
The project, a joint venture by
Shiloh Corp. of Mansfield and
MTD Products of Medina, Is
exJ:l!!cled to create 105 new jobs.
A spokeswoman for the Ohio
Department of Development
said the project Is near Valley
City, where Liverpool bas a
lioHolled steel fac!Uty.
Tbe board gran ted the Ohio
Depjlrtmen't Of Human ServiCI!S
permission to transfer $16.9
million In unsJ:l!!nl funds from
other accounts to Medicaid and
aid for families wltb dependent
children, to make up for
shortfalls .
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura,
complained that Allen, Preble,
Clermont and Fulton counues,
amana others, were not receivIng reimbursements. from the
state for welfare payments.
James Bun'losky . execu Uve
assistant for the director, said
some counties had been short·
chanpd Ia advanced payments,
(Coatfnual OD p&amp;ae 10)

VISITS IICIIOOL - 8&amp;l&amp;e Snuw 11a au..e. J.oaa lelll
11udenllr M Salllbury El•l•ta.rJ ailftl tile la111d otda of be... a

~ena&amp;or. Studellta were'-'" to lllte&amp; tllelru.&amp;e --.m pe~
aad perbapa a f - buddllll polltlolaM- born.
~- -

"

~-

-

.

. -· -· --

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