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                  <text>Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

•

Monday. MIIY 16, 1989 •

Ohio

Ohio lottery

Reds rally
to defeat
Pirates, 6-5

Pick3

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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

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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.

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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,"
.

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Local news briefs--

priver injured in Monday wreck

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

Commentary
INTE~ESTS

OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

..

""'-''--.,...,,...,.._=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETI'

CHARLENE ROEFUCH

Publisher

rege-2-The Dlilv Sentinel

Pomaoy Ml~d'•pDI't. Olllo
TundiiY. May 18. 1919

..

General Manqer ,

PAT WJOTEHEAD

.

Assistant PubUsher/ 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 Jess than 300
. words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letter s should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

Bringing back'
the Good Old Days
By ARNOLD SAWJSLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - When I was a boy, live people operated
elevators, delivered milk In bottles, pumped gasoline and showed you
·to an empty seat in a movie theater.
I had thought that automatic elevators, mUk In cartons at
supermarkets and self-service filling stations all were m•nlfesta·
lions of "progress" and were disliked only by old crocks bewallmg the
·
loss of Illusory "good old days."
· Now I find, courtesy of Trudy Pearce, ·a policy · analyst for an
. organization called Citizens for a Sound Economy, that -these
modern-day Improvements actually are the penalty for requiring
employers to pay a minimum wage.
.
·
Pearce says that the minimum wage Increase approved by the
Senate this year would "threaten to destroy as many as 700,000 jobs."
: One way that would occur, she wrote, would be for employers to
seek "less expensive ways to get the work done when they can no
longer afford entry leVel employees. "
"Some Install more machines while others set up 'self service."'
she wrote. ' 'For example, many years ago movie theaters had ushers
to show patrons to their seats. However, today even In most
high-priced movie theaters patrons must seat themselves. The
minimum wage Increases of the past have led to more 'self service.'
and therefore fewer jobs In many Industries, Including restaurants
and gas stations."
Pearce's estimate of the number of jobs that would be "destroyed"
by a minimum wage Increase Is n.o t new and Is based on what, to be
polite, would have to be called "debatable" statistics.
Opponents have_ claimed since the 1930s that the minimum wage
causes entry-level jobs to be eliminated. They usually cite as
evidence surveys that ask employers what they would do If they bad
to Increase wages for their lowest paid workers.
Supporters of the minimum wage say what is Important Is that the
actual number of jobs In the U.S. ·economy has continued to Increase
even when the mlnlrnum wage has gone up.
What Is new In Pearce's argument Is that the minimum wage
encourages automation- "more machines"- on the one hand, and
tequlres consumers to do more work for themselves - •'self service"
-on the other.
In the case ·or movie ushers , who began vanishing from theaters
shortly after World War II. Pearce apparently would have us believe
that It was a minimum wage of about 75 cents an hour and not the
postwar onslaught of television that brought hard times to the motion
picture Industry.
It might be noted, by the way, that while the movies did go through•&amp;
rough time when TV was making Its Initial Impact on the country,
there has been a noticeable turnabout In recent years with multiple
screen theaters.
One such complex I visited In Florida had a dozen different shows
· under way with young ticket takers at the doors and half a dozen or
more youthful attendants at candy and popcorn stands ·- many more
kids earning the current $3-plus minimum than ever would have been
'
ushering lor a third of that 35 years ago.
. Even so. I miss the movie ushers of my boyhood and the handy
flashlights they carried. Especially·when I stub my toe trying to lind
~n empty seat In a dark theater.

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Call It
an Incredible finish. Call It deja

vu.

Today in history
By United Press Internatk!nal
Today Is Tuesday. May 16, the 136th day of 1989 with 229 to follow.
The moon is moving toward full.
· The morning star Is Saturn.
: The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
Wllllam Seward, secretary of state whose purchase of Alaska from
Russia In 1867 for $7.2 mllllon was called "Seward's Folly," In 1801;
banker Levi Morton, vice president under Benjamin Harrison. In
1824. David Hughes, Inventor of the microphone. In 1831, actor Henry
Fonda In 1905. bandleader Woody Herman In 1913, entertainer
Llberace In 1919, New York Yankees manager Billy Martin In 1928
(age 61). and actress Debra Winger In 1955 (age 34) .
On this date In history:
,
In 1804. the French Senate declared Napoleon Bonaparte emperor.
In 1871, U.S. Marines landed In Korea In an unsuccessful attempt to
·
open the country to foreign trade.
. In 1929, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded
·the first Oscars.
. In 1969. the unmanned Soviet spacecraft Venus-5 landed on the
surface of Venus.
In 1988. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop described nicotine as
addictive as heroin or cocaine and called for Ucenslllg of tobacco
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•

:·Reds' Rijo named
:~NL Player of Week
_ NEW YORK (UPI) - Clucln·
nail Reds pitcher Jose Rljo who
·; posted two victories last week.
Monday was named the National
·League Player of the Week tor
; the week of May S.14.
· Rljo allowed one earned run,
, five hits walked liVe and struck
• out l2Jn 13 and one-third Innings.
· His ERA lor the week was 0.68ln
"victories over NeW York and St.
,Louis. Cincinnati has won all
~ eight games that Rljo has started
. this season.
The New York Mets Keith
· Hernandez, Montreal's 'Tom Fo•. ley, Tom Brunansky of St. Louis,
· and Lonnie Smlthpf Atlanta were
: also were nominated.
: MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Bo
&lt;Jackson Is now wowing fans In
:: pre-game batting practice from
.· both sides of the plate.
. :: After blasting some tape mea.· sure shots to leftfleld, before the
:: Royals faced the Twins. the
: Kansas City outfielder stepped to
: the plate left-handed and hit one
:·oft the facing of the Metrodome' s
•: rlghlfleld upper deck. Jackson
&gt; has never batted lefl·handed In
:'any game.
"We wouldn't mind seeing him
: ·learn to swltch·hll," said Royals
. : manager John Wathan . "But be
•:doesn't have an off-season and It
: takes too much time."
:, CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
: Cincinnati Reds placed out·
: :fielder Kal Daniels on the 21,day
• ;disabled lilt and replaced blm on
'• the roster with Skeeter Barnes,
: whose contract was purchased
• ;trom Nashville of the A,merlcan
, ·Association.
•; Daniels wlll undergo arthros·
•. ;coplc surgery Tuesday morning
; •to smooth a bone spur on his right
•;knee. He Is expected to be
; lsldellned from four to six weeks,
:·according to Reds team
,; physicians. ·
:; Daniels, hampered by the knee
: •problem off Utd on all aeuon,
·:was hitting Ju•t .230 In 'rleames,
: with one bome run aud six RBI.
. Barnes, 32, wu hltlllll .331 In
•:34 game~ at Nubvtlle, with 13
:.doubles five home! a and ~ RBI.
'
:: DETROIT .1 UPI) - What you
: . - . 11 wlult you're aotar to eet
•;wtth the Detroit Ttaen tbla
•

.

' ~leUGII •

~ • Detroit 11 &amp;uiJIIt to ralllt tbe
&lt;temptation to dtr Into Its oraul·
::utlon ud brlnl up pi'Oipecll
··Ibis aeuon before lltey are

to go with It," Tigers' Manager
Sparky Anderson said Monday
after Detroit did some minor
roster shuffling.
Detroit disabled pitchers Charles Hudson (hamstring) and
Jeff Robinson (sore arm), a ell·
vated reliever Mike Henneman,
sent Infielder Torey Lovullo to
Toledo of the International
League (AAA) and called up
ou lfleldi!r Gary Pet tis and
·pitcher Mike Trujillo from
Toledo.
Anderson was frank In ac·
knowledglng those moves are not
going to solve Detroit's
problems.
.
"We have to get two or three
guys to start doing things to·
gether In games," Anderson said
of his team, which has scored
three runs or less In 23 of its 34
games.
"We've got to win some
games," he added. "And it 's not
going to get (!asjer."
DETROIT (UPI)- The Tigers
received a scare when left fielder
Fred Lynn got hit on the right
knee by a ball during batting
practice. .
"I just turned around and saw
him go down," Detroit Manager
Sparky Anderson said.
A pitched tailed In more than
expected on Lynn. who balled out
and. tried to swing at the pitch to
foul It away.
"I hit It all rjght - right Into
my knee," Lynn said.
He carrie In, Iced It down, and
reported to Anderson he would
stU I be able to play .
'1 've got a better chance every
day of eettlq Into the lineup,"
said Detroit pitcher Jack MorriS,
who harbors a hidden desire to
take a regular turn as a batter In
, a game.
TOROI'j'l'O (UPI) - Jlmy
became the first man·
ager In Toronto's 13·year history
to be fired In the middle of a
season •
The Blue Jay a dllpoeed of their
tint two mauaera, Roy Hartsfield (l977·19) and Bobby Mattick
(1JII0.81) by allowing tbelr contracts to elapee. Bobby Cox
(118115), le\encl 1111 ~
lblP Wltll tbeclub at tbe filii ottbe
llllll.we.- wllell be took over u
aeaeraliii8IIIPI' or tbe Atlanta

WW~

Bravw.

Innings and nip the Pirates. 7-6,
on a sacrifice fly by Bo Dlaz, the
man who Ignited Monday night's
big win.
''There's no excuse for not
winning that game, " said Lan·
drum. recalled by Pittsburgh
last week. "I wanted to go high
and tight to Wlnnlneham, but I
didn't go high enough and not far
en9ugb Inside. It was rteht there,
bad execution on my part. "
Pittsburgh manager Jim Ley·
land, who closed the clubhouse
briefly after the game "to let us
cool off," pointed out that"wlth a
5-1 lead, any pitcher on our staff
ought to be able to stop them."
Norm Charlton, .2·0, who
pitched the ninth, was the winner
for the Reds, while the loss was
absorbed by Robinson, 2·4, who
replaced starter Neal Heaton In
the seventh Inning.
Bob BonUia led off the second
with his fourth homer to put
Plttsburgl! In front, 1·0.
The Pirates made II 3-0 In the
third when Junior Ortl2 singled
and scored on Barry Bonds' fifth
home run of the season.
Rey Quinones' solo homer. his
second, made It 4·0 In the fourth.
The Pirates added a run In the
!11th when Bonds walked, went to
third on jose Lind's single and
scored while Andy VanSlyke was
forcing Lind at second base.
The Reds scored In the sixth
when Dave &lt;,:olllns, plnchhlttlng
for Browning, beat out a single to
thitd and came around onSabo's
double.
Cincinnati added two more
runs In the eighth when pinch·
bitters Oester and Ken Griffey
singled and Sabo doubled, scar·
lng Oester and sending Griffey to
third. Griffey scored while Barry
Larkin was grounding out to set
the stage for the frantic ninth
Inning.
The two teams play again
Tuesday n~bt. with Cincinnati's
Rick Mahler (5·3) going against
the Bucs' Randy Kramer (0·1).
Elsewhere In the National
League:
Phlllles I, Giants 2
At Philadelphia, back·to·back
home runs by Will Clark and
Kevin Mltchell .ln the top of the
12th Inning Monday night had
given the San Francisco Giants
all the runs they thought they

Eastem girls

.

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II wbat you've ptalld you've pt

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14Vertlll!.q In pro' Ploaal jour~ alld fleldlq a natiDJIWtde

-

NATIONAL I.&amp;WliE

WLPd.GI

Gn ONE I

FREEl!

GRONE

........ c.~ .............

v.... Prns ..IH_..It_.
oUIDJCAN LEAGUE

--------------------,
BUY ONE,

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.

$319

.

Maj01'8

.

sales force of "detail people" ' forms where doctors '!ishlng to produce annual savlngs of $70
QUAKERTOWN, [&gt;a. (NEA)
who make personal calls upon forbkl substitution Indicate their million for Individual prescrip- Within a few months, Pennsyl·
wishes In 'a brief written tion drug customers 11nd another
vanla wllljoln 25 other states In doctors.
$30 million· for the state's Phar·
direction.
requlrlne ·that all pharmaceutl· · According to the trade assocla·
In Pennsylvania, Casey! estl· maceutlcal Assistance Cqntract
tlon, that figure goes up to 95
cal prescription forms contain a
single line for the physician' s·. percent lri states with one-lllte mates that the reform · will for the Elderly program.
signature Instead of the two lines
•
now mandated.
Although ihat seems to be,
more of a technical modltlca tlon
than a revolutionary change,
Pennsylvania Gov. Robert Casey
I
estimates that It will save the
state's consumers and government about $100 million a yel!r.
Indeed, In nelghliorlng New
I
York, where a similar Innovation
,$if:!.' ·" •
~ ~"' :.,
was Implemented In mld-1987,
I
Gov. Marlo .Cuomo cites a
I
I
statewide 'survey conducted by
Good WedMsday, Thursday, Friday &amp;.
students at the Albany College of
I
Satunlay
I
Pharmacy to support his conten·
IEGULAI
DOliN
llay 17, 11, 19 &amp; 20
I
tlon that annual savings of $164
million are being achieved.
Other states In which leeJsla·
~--------------------~~
tures have enacted laws mandat·
.,
.
.I
I
lng a change from a two-line to a
I
one·llne prescription form
I
stretch from California and
I
I
Oregon to Maine and Florida.
I
I
Similar statutes ~Pennsylvania
I
and adjacent West VIrginia wlll
I
UIOUNA PIIDE
go Into effect July 1.
I
I
Some background: In the late
I
I
1950s, leading pharmaceutical
I
I
companies - capitalizing upon aI
I
" counterfeit drugs" scare and
I
I
IIGaAI
64 oz.
equating cheaper drugs with
I
IIIIGaAI
lJ.
lower standards ...,... convinced
most state legislatures to dis·
courage If not prohibit the
substitution· of generic drugs for
r---------~----------~
brand-name medicine.
Prescription forms with · a
single signature line were then
standard. In the relatively few
states where generic substitution
was allowed, ·the prescribing
physlcl!lll had to authorize It In a
CHEATEAU
handwritten notation.
In the late· 1970!!, however,
most states belatedly recognized
I 1
I
1
the value of substitution: Ge·
nerlc drugs are substantially Jess
IIGRAI
22 oz.
G.AI
expensive than their brand-name
1
counterparts while their tested
• bloequlvalency gives them the
same therapeutic effect.
Accompanying that change of
Ir--------------------~
I
attitude was the Introduction of a
I
I
new form with two Jines, either of
I
I
•
which the doctor could sign.
I
'
Beneath one line wu a phrase
I
such as "Generic Equivalent
I
Permitted" or "Generic Substl·
I
U.S. NO. 1-10 Ll.
' .
tutlon Authorized." Under the
CHEATUU 10 LB. BAG
I
other line was a pbrase such as
I
"Btand Medically Necessary"
I
or "Dispense As Written."
I
But many physicians continue
I
to resllt substitution, In part
UGILAI
I
IIGILAI
because tbe approximately 60
I
,
firms tbat produce brand-name
I
drugs spend millions of dollara
.
annually to convince docton that
' only their medicines should be
preaclbed.
.
Those companies constantly
. . . . •. 11 C• .. •••-51• or tell Vll1l See Stwt for More Illlfenw$n
ette !be vut amounts of money
•
they devote to research and
develoP~Qent to Introduce new
drup, but they remain secretive
about the pn#llpte apendlng
Involved In panuMIIJig - If not
propqudl•lag - pllyatclana.
Sucb u:pudttllrft laciude
IPC)IIIOI'Iblp ot aemlnara 1114
~ for pll)taldaal at
polb rilortl, free dll\rlblttiOit of
evel')'lblna from boob to Y1dlo
tape~, lavltlh eWtalllmet at

their pllcblqln the ninth," said
Winningham, who had collected
four hl!s In St. Louis a day
earlier.
ptrates reliever Jeff Robinson
retlred ·the lint two Reds In the
ninth before Bo Dlaz doubled and
Ron Oester singled Dlaz home,
When Robinson walked plnehhlt·
ter Jeff Reed, former Cincinnati
hurler Bill Landrum took over on
the mound and Immediately
walked Chris Sabo on tour
pitches to load the bases.
That brought up Winningham,
who fell behind 0.2 before lining
Landrum's next pitch down the
right field .line to score pinch
runners Skeeter Barnes and
Danny Jackson and give the
Reds their fourth straight
victory.
To make the come-frombehind victory even more unbellevable, exactly one year·agoMay 15, 1988 - Cincinnati,
playing In Pittsburgh, overcame
a !HI deficit to go Into ex.t ra

Scoreboard ...

A simple change that. saves millions :~'l::;~

WHITE POTATOES

.
.

You had to see It to believe It
and many of the 41,597 fans
weren't even around when Herm
Wlnnlneham climaxed a comeback with a dramatic two-out,
two-strike, nlnth.Jnnlne. bases·
loaded single that produced a 6-5
victory for the Cincinnati Reds
over the Pittsburgh Pirates Monday night.
'• Amazing , " said Win·
nlngham. "I gue~s It was an 0.2
slider that didn't slide. It just
bung there. I'm just happy that
we won, that's all."
The Reds had trailed, 5-0, with
starter Tom Browning serving
up home runs to Bob BonUia,
Barry Bonds and Rey Quinones,
when they started on the comeback trail with a single runln the
slxth.
"We just ltepl nicking aud
piCking (with two In the eighth)
and then we got s.o me help from

WASHINGTON- Ivan Boeslcy vletlma of raeteteerbie to win
himself couldn't have done a triple damqes. It a1ao welgbl
say Boucher has uplrat.lons for
better job bad Congreu 'a sked down the burden of proof like a , actual damages.
him to rewrite the federal racket· pair of cement overshoes.
- The blgeeat players In the the Senate and that means he
eerlng lawa. But Boesky didn't
Boucher aays he II simply stock market - Institutional fiiUJt cozy up to ble campalen
write the bills now worklne their concerned that the racketeertng lnveston such as petlslon fundi contrlbutora. Boucher told our
way through Congress. That law Is belna abused and that or mutual funds repreaenttne uaoclate Stewart Harris that he
bonor goes to Rep. Frederick amall businesses are being millions of little people - would II just standing up for the little
Boucher, D·Va.
lillY·
hauled Into court In racketeer!Dg not be allowed to sue a securities
On the Senate side, Dennis
These days, Wall Street brok- · suits when tbe case. Is a. simple company IJecause . they are
0 -Arlz., bas IntroDeConclnl,
ers, Insurance tycoons and sav· contract dispute. The number of neltber a government entity nor
duced an Identical bill. He, and
lngs and loan sharks act like they racket~rlng suits Is on the rise, a "natural penon." Their mas·
others In the Senate, have tried to
can' t be trusted with the keys 1o and some of them have been slve resources would give them a
fiddle with the retroactive provl·
the executive washroom. They . petty. But Boucher's bill throws good chance of winning racket·
slon In the bill. If the bill penes,
need more supervision, not less. the baby out with the bathwater. eerlng suits, If anyone would let
old suits that have already been
them
sue.
.
But Boucher bas authored a bill
Here are some examples:
would have to meet the new
flied
- State Insurance commis·
that would gut one of the a t
- Boucher's bill nama two
terms,
ripping the rug out from
slonen
tell
us
that
!beY
wou.lelnot
tools for stoppLng white-collar types of plalntl!ta who can bring
under
people
who trusted In the
quality
as
govermnent
entitles
crime - the 1970 Racketeering racketeering charges the .
old
law
when
they flied their
Influenced and Corrupt Organ!· government and litdlvlduals. To under Boucher's blll. That means
suits.
zatlons Act.
win triple damages, the.govern· ' the people whO are supposed to
DeConclnl's proposed' date of ·
UntU 1980, the law was primar- rnent would ltave ·to prove the pollee the Insurance Industry
retroactivity
would have spared
ily used aealnst the kind of swindler guUty by tbe we~ht or- would have to rue· racketeering
Greyhound
so
It could collect
·mobsters who mall dead fish evidence. The Individual who suits as Individuals and ·satisfy
triple damageS Ul)der Its old suit
Instead of letters. Lately, It bas flied a private racketeering case the heavier burden of proof against
several Utah banks. .
that
th~
huclilter
was
not
Ollly
.
become an effective tool against would have lo prove the defend·
white collar criminals too.
ant was consctously malicious guUty, but maliCtOUI too - In Greyhound Is a major company :
In Arizona. Sen. Alan Simpson, •
Using the ever· popular excuse too. Bouclier says he Ia doing the order 1Q win triple damages.
R-Wyo., suggested a date that ·
A
ion
artist
In
tbe
Insurance
of making the law better, little guys a favor by giving them
would
have exempted Apache
business
could
take
advantaee
of
Boucher's bill would cripple the a right to sue t"' law In the ftrst
Corp.
which
bad sued several ·
another
bizarre
loophole
offered
racketeering law. It currently place. The old racketeering law
defendants
under
the racteteer- ·
by
Boucher.
The
Insurance
allows for triple damages to be makes no provlllou for lndlvld·
lng
law
10
years
ago.
Sen. Paul ·
assessed against swindlers who jlal lawsuits. .But the courts scammer could ·challenge •the
Simon,
D·lll.,
didn't
want
the bill ;
show a pattern of criminal already allow racket~rlng suits state Insurance commlasloner's
be
retroactive
at
all.
One
of his ·
to
activity. For Instance, It · a . by Individuals, and for triple right to bring the lawsuit by
constituents.'
Staley
Commodl·
:
claiming that If the Insurance
·
·
.
stockbroker bilks $1 million from damages.
Is
a
plaintiff
In
a
$200
million
'
lies,
- Under the bill, Individuals :company was such a scam, the
his clients, he can be sued tor $3
·
million. The theory Is that simply could not use. the racketeering commlsslom!r was at fault tor racketeering suit.
.
Retroactivity
Is
a
bad
Idea.
but
;
damaees
ever
letting
the
company
do
law
to
sue
for
triple
making a white collar criminal
selective
retroactivity
adds
In·
:
from
a
stock
swindle
If
there
was
business
In
the
first
place.
give back the boOty does not
All this beiS the question: · suit to Injury. and there are ·
dlacourage the crime In the ftrst any other securltl5 law on . the
books
that
would
cover
the
·
What's
a nice guy like Boucher illready enough people wbo stand ~
place.
existing
doing
pushing
a big-business bill to be Injured by this bill.
crime.
And
most
of
the
Boucher's bill would make It
securities
llke
laws
allow
for
only
this?
Opponents
of lbe blll
toJlgher for many lqltlmate

'

Pomefoy-Midclaport. Ohio

The Dailyj Sentinei- Page- 3

Winningham's ninth-inning hit gives Reds comebac)J win

Jack Anderaon and Dale Van Aua

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

l'lfh
~~

Tuud..,., May 18. 1989

Pending blll gilts racketeering laws

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE

'

•

.

WIDiama waa fired before the
tint game of a aer1tt1 aplut
Cleveland. IJt., 1183 1M Jnc!lana
fired thell-mtiiiiiPI' Mta l"er·
raro In Toi'Oilto.

. 2... IQ.OP
WIIJ

encounters
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eaglettes of Coach Pam Douthitt
have recently won two league
game~ In between rain storms by
defeating North Gal Ua In the
tournament and claiming a 28-13
win over Southwestern. Eastern
lost to Southern 13·12.
Eastern Is now 10·3 overall,
having to play M1ller In a
long-delayed second round game
of the sectional tournament.
Against Southern Eastern hit·
ters were Amy Hager and Tina
Connolly with two singles each,
while Toby Hill and Tabby
Phllllps had two singles each.
For Southern Jlinte Beegle l.ed
with a double. while Tracey
Beegle, Tonya Ingles, Shelly
Winebrenner. and Carol Fisher
each singled.
Crystal Hill was the winning
pitcher and Trlsh Spencer suf·
fered the loss.
While rolling over Southwestern Eastern collected 11 hits, led
by Lee Gllllllan with two singles
and a double, Carrie Gllllllan a
double, Amy Hager a double and
single, Edna Driggs two singles,
and singles each by Toby Hlll,
Amy Murphy, and Tabby
Phillips.
Thornton bad the lone single
for Southwestern as Trlsh
Spencer and Toby Hlll combined
In the win. Spencer went 5 and
one third Innings walking two
and giving up just one hit and
slrlktne out nln. Lisa Hall suf·
fered the loss.

Alumni loumamenl
slated June 3-4
The first Meigs Alumni Men's
Softball Tournament will be held
June 3·4 .at Middleport field and
General Hartinger Park. The
tournament Is USSSA C&amp;D sanctioned with an entry of $65 and
two softballs. First, second, and
third place trophies will by given
with first and second place
earnlni Individual trophies.
Conlact Dennis Ault or Max
Whitlatch at 992·5760 or 742-2435
respectively.

needed.
But, In dramatic fa shion Bob
Dernler became a hero - again.
Dernler hit a two-out Insidethe-park home run with two
runners on In the 12th Inning,
rallying the PhiiUes to a 3·2
victory over the Giants.
In the lOth Inning, Dernler had
thrown out Will Clark from right ·
field attempting to score the
go-ahead run.
Craig Lefferts, 1·1, struck out
Von Hayes to open the 12th.
Pinch-hitter Dickie Tbon singled
and moved to second on a single
by Steve Lake. One out later,
i:&gt;ernler lined a shot Into the
left-field corner and the ball
caromed off the wall toward
center field past Mitchell. The
speedy Dernler rjlced all the way
home with his first homer of the
year.
"It was my first Inside homer
In the big leagues, " said Dernler.
who virtually ran over the
slow,ro·o ted Lake. "When I
rounded second and saw the ball
rolling I knew I was going to take
the chance. I'm especially proud
because I fouled up a bunt In the

toil\ ...

' 'They don't come any tougher
than that," Giants manager
Roger Craig said. "This Is the
toughest game I ever lost as a
manager. It's over, I can't bring
it back. It's In the loss column."
The Giants appeared to have
the game won when Clark and
Mitchell hit consecutive home
runs off Steve Bedrosian In the
top of the 12th.
'The Phlllles, however, battled
back against Lefferts. who was
unscored upon In his last seven
Innings and had held right·
banded hillers to a .162 batting
average.
. "Lefferts . bas been awfully
tough all year." Phlllles man·
ager Nick Leyva said. "II was an
exciting finish to an excl tlng

game.''

ROSE EJECTED - Reds manager Pete Rose Is ejected from
Carman went nine Innings and
the game by home plate umpire Tom Halllon .after Rose came out
allowed just four hits. He walked · · to protest an Inning-ending called third strike on Reds batter Paul
seven and struck out four. San
O'NelU In Monday night's game against the visiting •Pirates.
Francisco starter Scott Garrelts
O'NelU and Halllon argued Immediately after the call, and O'NeiU
also pitched nine Innings . He
threw the bat towards the Reds' dugout before Rose arrived. The .:
surrendered three hits. walked
Reds beat lhe Pirates 6-5. (UP I)

Defiance hands Rio Grande
3-21oss 'to end 19-18 season
I

MOUNT VERNON - "It was
kina of frustrating to lose a game
we could have won , but It could
have been worse," Rio Grande
baseball coach Dave Oglesby
reflected Monday after the Red·
men were knocked out of the
Dis trlct 22 Playoffs with a 3-2loss
to Defiance.
"We beat Ohio Dominican. the
top-seeded team In the district,
and that was very positive, so
looking back I see the positives
outweighing the negatives this
season," Oglesby added.
The defeat ended Rio Grande's
1989 season at 19-18. The Red·
men's earller ·18-16 regular sea·
son. fifth-place finish had al·
lowed them to enter theslx -team.

FIBST TtJRKEY- Michael
.Jacka, Hn at lerry ud Unda
Jacks, Lallgnllle, 101 bls flnt
wDd turkey recently. The bird
weiJhed 18 pound.l and bad a
beard of nine ud three
quarter Iache~~.

dov,ble·ellmlnatlon playoffs for
the first time since 1987.
Defiance (18-17) was to face
the winner of Monday's
Wilmington-Mount Vernon Naza .
rene game to get Into the
championship bracket, to be
played in Columbus. Wilmington
Is the defending distr ict cham·
pion. while MVNC won the
Mid-Ohio Confer ence title this
year.
Defiance got on the scoreboard
in the fourth Inning on three
unearned runs, reversing a n
early Rio Grande lead that
pitcher Dave Amburgey had
helped create by holding the
Yellow Jackets to lour hits.
Amburgey 's opi&gt;oslte ' number,
Bob Eaton. kept Rio Grande to
two hits.
Overall, Oglesby felt Amburgey. a freshman from Racine and
a standout for the Souther n
Tornadoes, had ap "outs tand·
lng" game against Defiance.
On billing, the Redmen were
aided by Herb Sharfenaker, a
sophomore from Columbus who
went two lor four, and Donnie
Becker, a sophomore from Mid·
dleport, who also connected 011
two of four appearances at bat .
II was Rio Grande's third
appearance In the rain-plagued
tournament. In the first game
last Thursday, Rio Grande fell to
MOC opponent Malone, 10-4, but
the following day stunned most
district observers by knocking
off the powerful Ohio Dominican
team, 8-5, pr~pelllng them Into
competition against sixth·
ranked Defiance. That game was
to have been played Saturday .
but was postpo!led due to the
weather.

Wild turkey hanrest
down in Meigs area

" Overall, I think It was a good
season," said Oglesby, who COni·
pleted his second campaign at
Rio Grande. "We made the
playoffs. which Is a very positive
thing lor us . With these kinds of
things happening, I look forward
to better things and a better
season In 1990."

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THIS
WEEK'S
SPECIAL

One hundred sixty-five tUrkeys
were harvested In Meigs County
during this year's wild turkey
season, according to a report
from Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood. That figUre Is
down just a llttle from th~ 1988
harvest of 176 turkeys. Turkey
season ran from April 24 to May
13.

P1tS/7SI14
Gt ..... I trl·l•h &amp;
AI St1n1 .d1.

DIM PIZZA &amp; SUI SHOP

STIACISI

one and struck out eig ht.
_eighth
" It 's done," said Clark. "We
Dodgen 3, Mets 1
battled lor 12 Innings and came
At tNew York, plnc h·hltter
out on the short end of II. I can't Mariano Duncan stroked a twosay enough about Carman a nd , run ~Ingle with one out In the
Garrelts, It's a shame neither one nlnthl to lift the Dodger s In the
got a win. Even though we lost, first meeting between the teams
games like this are run to play since last ye ar's league cham·
now and then. The adrenalln Is pionshlp ser ies. Dodger reliever
flowing."
Ray Searage Improved to 2·2.
Cubs 4, Braves 0
J ay Howell collected his fourth
At Chicago, Mike Bielecki save. Roger McDowell took the
allowed lour hits In seven Innings loss and fell to 1·2.
·
and Lloyd McClendon, just rePadres 6, Expos I
called fr om Iowa, slammed a
( lllnnlngs)
three- run homer to help Chicago
At Montreal, Marvell Wynne
snap a live-game losing streak. doubled home Blp Roberts with
McClendon arrived just a lew the go-ahead run In the 11th
hours before the game replacing Innlng to lilt San Diego. Wllh one
Injured Mitch Webs ter. McCien-. ou t, Roberts was walked by loser
don' s homer came off loser
Andy McGafflgan , 1·2. Wynne .
Derek Lllllquls t, 2-3. Bielecki, followed with a double down the :
3-1. struck out eight and walked r ight-Held llile to snap a 4·4 tie. ·
three before being relieved by
Mark Dav is, 3·0, earned the :
Calvin Schiraldi to start the victory In relief. ·
·

\

$3950
at.&amp;IW.r. .

991·7117

TIEIDAY M WBIIUMY IPEOIAL
IUJ UIGI 5
PillA
on
PIPPIIOfl nEE

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CAlL
fOI •

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YS 01 ANY OCCASIOII

Pom•oy ...... &amp; AtJto
' I

992·1M4
600 EAST lUll

________ ___ ____________ _ :,.._ ___,__________:..r.._ _ _ _ _ _ _

~__..:;_

_ _ _ __

..

�... .

.

--

~·-----· -·

...

1819

11.1989

Wilson's first homer of year
_powers Royals to 4-3 win .
· By ERDt IL LIEF
UPJ Sporta Wrller
The CaWndar took a full turn
and so did WiUie Wilson.
Wilson, whose last home run
came exactly one year ago on
May 15, 1988, stroked a two- run
homer In the seventh inning to
power the Kansas City Royals to
a 4-3 come-from-behind victory
over the Minnesota TWins MOo·
day night.
For Wilson,. a speedster not
known for his slugging prowess.
It was his first, and quite possibly
his last, homer of the season.
"It must be an anniversary or
something," joked Wilson, whose
home run to right with Fran[~
White on base after a walk,
arrived only 548 at-bats after his
last dlnger. That homer, which
came against the Texas
Rangers, was his only homer In
1988.
.
STEALS SECOND - Toronto's JuniOr Felix
steals second and ·beads for third as the Indians'
Jerry Browne Is unable to get his clove on the ball .

and stop It from entering center field Ia Monday
ntcht's game In Toronto. The mae Jays bea&amp; tile
Tribe 5-3. I REUTER)

Sullivan aims.for Indy start
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) Danny SuUivan, the reigning
Indy-car series champion, said
Monday he plans to race in the
Indianapolis 500 despite a broken
right arm suffered last Thursday
in a practice crash.
Doctors told SuUivan the normal recovery time for his injury
• is eight weekS, but the 1985 Indy
: 500 winner plans to begin driving
• again Wednesday In bows of
: being ready for the May 28 race.
Roger Penske. who owns SuUIvan's car. has hired Geoff
, Brabham to dtiv!' the Penske- Chevrolet In practice this week.
: Brabham will qualify and race
: the car if Sullivan Is unable to
· ret urn and serve as a relief
: driver on race day or If Sullivan
: returns but Weakens during the
· race.
- Should Brabham qualify and
Sullivan drive in the race. the car
: would start at thE' rear of the
: 33-car field.
• - "I've really got two weeks to
· get this arm strong enough to
race," Sullivan said. "Geoff
Brabham could qualify the car
. this weekend and 1 could drive in
' the race and start last.''
' Sullivan was released from
: Methodist Hospital on Sunday.
Approval · for Sullivan to drive
will be judged on a day-to-day
: · basis .
"We're confident Danny will
; be cleared to drive later this
: week and will be able to qualify
• and compete in the race.
- . but we

.

have to be prepared tor every
possibiilty," Penske said.
Brabham, who has not driven
in an Indy-car race since 1987,
began testing Monday with 30
laps In a 1988 Penske-Ciievy
backup car and reached 215.3ti2
mph.
"I'm not going out thinking I'm
going to quality or be In the
race." Brabham· said. "I'm just
happy to be back out there. I will
be ready to do whatever they ask.
That's my ·job."
SuUivan's car Is being finetuned by his PensRe Racing
te~mmates · - pole sitter Rick
Mears. who set a qualifying
record Sunday to take an un·
precedented fifth Indy pole, and
AI Unser Sr .. a four-time Indy
winner who starts beside Mears
on the front row for the-73rd Indy
race.
"We want to have both cars
ready for Danny," Penske said.
"We owe it to the team as well as
both drivers to do as much
testing and be as prepared as we
can."
'
A large cas twas removed from
Suil!van's at·m Monday and
replaced with a plastic
wrapping.
.
"I looked like Popeye with a
big forE&gt;arm," Sullivan said. "It
was really hard to set it down
someplace because It kept hurt·
ing. The big problem Is not lifting
- It's twisting the arm. Up and
down is fin!' but it hurts when you
try to twlstlt.''

Memorial Hospital · honoring
Jean Wright, R.N. who has
retired.
Hosting the p11rty were
members of the ·surgery depart·
ment. She was presented with
gifts.

The Meigs Local School Distrlcl was one of 206 school
districts In Ohio to qualify tor a
Right to Read Award.
A reptese!ltatlveolthediatrlct .
will be In Columbus to attend the
12th Annual Ohio Right to Read
Program Wednesday attheFawcelt Center for Tomorrow, Ohio
State University.
For the fourth consecutive
year, the Ohio Department of
Education Is awardllll Medal of
Honor plaques to districts with
total-school participation In the
1989 Ohio Right to Read Program
whlcb Ia emphallzed each year
-during March. The Oeparimlmt
awards Reading . Hall of Fame
certificates to each participating
· school.
"One third of Ohio's school
districts had total-district partielpatlon during the 1989 program," said State Superintenden! of Public Instruction
Franklin B. Wllter. "There were
946,921 school children from 2,113
schooll Involved In activities
related to tbll year's Ohio Right
to Read Program."
,

At Del roll, Lou Whitaker
stroked his eighth home run and
Chet Lemon 111t his flrst'to back
the five-hit pitching of Frank
Tanana. Tanana, 3-4, struck out
five and walked one to defeat Bill
Long, 2-4, In a matchup .oi two
last-place team$.
A' 1!, Brewen 2
At Oakland, Dave Stewart
beCame the major leagueli' first
seven-game winner beblnd a
destructive 17-blt attack, Oakland's bll!l,esl offensive output of
th~ ~&amp;Sj)n. St_ewart, 7·1, who has
a career recol'd of 9-0 In nine
starts against Milwaukee, allowed six hits over seven Innings.
Dave Parker had three hits and
Dave Henderson had three RBI.
Don August, 2·5, surrendered six
Oakll\nll runs.
• Ance.. •; Yanlleetl 3
(11 Innings)
At Anaheim, Calif., Wally
Joyner hit a sacrifice fly with the
bases loaded to lift California.
Lance McCullers. 1-1, relieved
Lee Guetterman to and took the
loss. Willie Fraser. 1-2, pitched
two Innings for the Angels to earn
the victory. Roberto Kelly had
for stolen bases for New York.

Jason Lawrence of Syracuse
won third place In the 1989
sta.tewlde dental health poster
contest announced Dr. Ronald L.
Fletcher, director of the Ohio
Department of Health. Lawrence
•will receive a ~ savings bond.
Lawre11ce Ia a student at
Syracuse Elementary School.
His poster was based on the
contest theme, "Play It Safe:
Protect Your Teeth! '•
The competition was held for

Settn One Con-

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992-1687

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Czechoslovakian athletes
cau1ht ull!lg di'JI&amp;S the first lime
will be barred from competition
tor three months, the otflcial
news agency CTK reported. A
secoild offense will br1D1 a
two-year ban and a tblrd offense
a life ban.

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all fourth 1rade students over the
state In observance of National
Children's Dental Health Month.
A total of 32,953 fourth grade
students from 605 s~hQols
competed.
The contest was sponsored by
the Ohio Department of Health,
Division of Dental Health and the
Ohio Dental Hygienists' Association. Prizes for the. top five
winners were donated by the
association.

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· DEPOSIT

RATE 8.75°/o-9.11°/o

It was announced that lnspec·
t!on wlli be May 22 at the
Middleport Masonic Temple with
meeting at 7:30p.m. and dinner
preceding. Practice for lnspec·
lion will be Sunday at 2 p.m.

Advance Serylce

SPECI l

Sports briefs

Greta Riffle bas been chosen as .
the delegate, and Lori Redman
has been selected alternate, to go
to Grand Session on June 22-25 at
Kent State University. ·

PERFECT GRAD

. . . . . . AU'IO

THE CENTRAL TRUST

Elected to office were, Greta
Riffle, re-elected honored queen;
Lori Redman, senior princess;
Lisa Miller, junior princess; and
Candy Moore, guide.

FOI1HE .

POMEROY .

""',_.,,...

· A proficiency test was given
with two members passing allow·
lng them to run for office.

THE 'PERFECT GIFT

214 EAST MAIN

.

Humphreys birthday

Plans were made for the Mrs. Spencer, Hazel Barnhill,
family celebration to be held on Betty · Chevalier, and JoAn ria
· May 23 at 6: ~ p.m. · when Weaver. The group voted to buy a
members of the WIIUng Workers bam 10 go along with the potluck
of St. Paul ' United Meihodlst for the meal.
Secret sisters remembered for
·Church In Tuppers Plains met
May were Mildred Caldwell,
. recently at the church.
Evelyn Spencer, president, Mrs. Weaver,andEdnaHarmon.
Program readings were given
opened the meeting by reading
by
Edith Harper, "A Mother's
Proverbs 31. with Mae VIneyard
Prayer",
Mrs. Harmon, •'The
giving the prliyer. Mildred
Raised", Mrs.
Way
I
Was
Brooks read the minutes of the
·
Weaver,
"Memorial
Day Flag",
previous meeting and reminded
and
Mrs.
Spencer,
"The
lmpor·
the group about the buffer they
lance
of
Laymen."
will purchaSe for the church.
The group reported 11 sick
Mrs. VIneyard brought the two calls.
Others attending were Glenna
quills that have been completed
Sanders, and Doris Koenig.
. to show the group.
The next meeting will be June
The planning committee for
the family celebration Includes 13.

trldon Pilley..:~
prOt_ectloa for sllllll to

1

Tp quality tor the Reading Hall
of Fame designation, schools
must participate In a minimum
of three reading activities. These
activities Include dally readiag
and writing and Involved parents
and community residents, as
well a school students and staff.
"Ohlola the only statethathas
continued strong support for
Right to Read Week since the
federal government funding for
It wu eliminated 12 years ago,"
Walter said.
Following a reception on Wednesday, Walter and StateAssist·
ant Superintendent pf Public
Instruction G. Robert Bowers
will present Medal of . Honor
plaq~~e~~ to representatives of the
designated district.
Dr. Joseph !{uklsh, profesS(Ir,
Ashland Colle1e. will speak at 2
·p.m. on the topic, "The Joy of
Storytelllng." .
. "Reading Is key to achievement In every curricular area·
and to .Ufetlme success,"Walter
concluded.
In 1988, 193 school districts
received the Medal of Honor
designation.

Officers for 1989-90 were In- veteran affairs, and Mrs. Hampstalled when the Lewis Manley ton, legislative, national securUnit 263 of the American Legion ity, public relations. and poppy.
Mrs. Bowles presided at the
met recently at the home of Lula
meeting In which a newsletter
Hampton.
Florence Richards, past pres!· ·from Mary Moose, eighth district
pr:esldent, of Junction City, was
dent or the eighth district,
Installed the following, Margaret read.
It was announced that the
Bowles, president; Loraine Goggins, first vice president; Edltll summer convention will be Ju!U!
8 at Junction City, and that the
Ross, second vice president;
Mrs. Richards, secretary; Mrs. department convention will be In
ADAM BRICE HUMPHREYS . Hampton, treasurer; Annette Toledo on July 14,15, and 16.
Poppy Days will be In Middle·
Johnson, chaplain; Dorothy Ca·
sey, historian; and Tomlko Le· · port on May 19-20. Members will
be on the streets asking for
. Adam Brice Humphreys, son wls, sargeant at arms.
contributions
for poppies. Mrs.
Committee chairmen Include,
of Jack and Jayne Humphreys,
Hampton
gave
a report on the
recently celebrated his first Mrs. Bowles. Americanism;
origin
of
the
poppy as the
birthday at his home on SR 143, Mrs. Johnson, community ser·
memorial
flower
for American
vice; Mrs. Richards. child welhosted by Melinda McLain.
A clown theme was carried out fare; Mrs. Casey., emergency; war dead. This event began In _the
and guests attending were San- VIrginia Stallworth, foreign rela- years following World War I.
Prayer for peace, singing of
dra, Deanna, Leanna, and Su- tions and education; Mrs. Lewis,
"My
Country Tis of Thee" and
zanna Henderson, Shawn Baker.
remarks
by the president closed
Heather McLain, Julia, A.J., and
the
meeting.
'
Corey Vaughan, Cheryl, Aimee,
Judy, Jay, Tara, and J.T.
Refreshments
were served by
and Jill Lemley, paternal grandHumphreys, Marty, Joyce .and
Mrs.
Hampton
and the next
parents, Norman and Mildred Austin Seelig, and ma,ternal
meeting
wlli
be
at
the home of
grandparents, Milo and Betty
Humphreys.
Mrs.
Johnson
in
Galllpolls.
SPnding
were Randy. Hutchison, Rutland.

Greta Riffle, honored queen,
reported on the Miss Ohio Job's
D~ughters Pageant held recently
In Columbus, when the group met
recently.
Appreciation was extended to
the sponsors and pa 1rons, with
the group being first out of eight
bethels In their district for
having the most sponsors.

Willing Workers meet

Sunday Silence·improving;
may still run in Preakness

. . . . . . . . . ,.

,.

Job's Daughters
hold meeting

Lewis Manley Unit
installs officers:

· Poster contest winner named

I

lfs

Mrs. E. S. Vlllaneuva, Or. Mel
Simon, James Six, Mike and
Sharon Wright, Ben and Sandy
Wright, Mabel Tracy. and Becky
Anderson.
Mrs. Wright has been working
In the nursing field In Meigs
County sinCe her graduation In
1948 from St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
In 1962 she began her employment at Meigs General Hospital
and then continued with the
facility when It became Veterans
Memorial Hospital In 1964.

Right to read awards
presented by schools

Tlpra S, White 8os t

Sullivan, 39, of Louisville, Ky. ,
has avoided drugs to ease the
pain because they make him :
groggy. He will be fit ted with a
brace late Tuesday and will drive
away from Indianapolis Motor
Speedway to buDd up hiS speed
without pressure. Sullivan, who
lifted small weights and wor)&lt;ed
out In a gymnalslum Monday,
said a decision on him qualifying
this weekend would not be made
until late Friday.
"The movement this way Is all
right but It's not the same as
when you're in the car." Sullivan
said as he gripped an Imaginary
wheel and turned It slowly back
and forth. "But there are other
things, like the feedback though
the wheel, and I just don't know
how It will feel until ( get out
there and get in the car.''
To repair the break. surgeon
Terry Trammell had to drill Into
Sullivan's right elbow, remove
part of the bone and marrow and
fit In seven screws plus a 3.5
WORK ON BACKUP CAR- Rick Mears (left), Geoff Brabham
mllllmetE&gt;r plate.
.
(rllfht)
and Teddy MIQ'er1 Peuke managing director; ga&amp;her as
·'My bones from working out
crew
members
work on Danny SuUivan's backup car, which
were so hard that Dr. Trammell
Brabham
will
use
to qualify for tile Indianapolis 1100. SuUtvan was
said the screws were like going
Injured
Ia
a
pl'lldlce
accident and Is not yet able to drive, but be
lhto wOod," Sullivan said. "He
could
be
ready
by
race
ilay, when he c'ould drive and ltartlastln
could strip the screw heads."
the
lleld.
(
UPJ)
Sullivan said he remembers
little about the crash. ·
"I don't think about it," Sullivan said. "I haven't watched the
replay. A.J. (Foyil said if you
weren't hurt after you .hit it, you
would be after you watch it 8 or 9
times ."
BALTIMORE (UPil - ·The McAnally, who arrived from
bruised hoof of Kentucky Derby California Monday. · Hawkster
winner Sunday Silence has made
also has a hoof ailment.
• 'dramatic'' Improvement,
"It all depends on what It (his
heightening the possibility the left front hoof) looks like (Tuescolt will run Saturday In the day)," McAnally ~ald. "We'll put
Preakness Stakes.
'
·
a little bit of pressure on it ancl
"We've closed a big gap In a see what. happens tlien."
Also, Houston, trained !Jy six·
Pierce was fouled while attempt· short lime," said Dr. Alex
Harth
ill,
the
attending
veterinartime
champion trainer Wayne
!ng a three-point shot with two
Ian.
"We've
been
doctoring
him
Lukas,
worked five furlongs at
seconds left. ·
less
than
24'
hours
and
come
a
Churchill
Downs in Louisville,
Pierce made the first free
-Dramatic
Improvelong
way.
Ky.,
Monday.
He was clocked In a
throw to cut it to 96-94 and
ment
would
be
a
good
slow
1:03
45
over
a muddy track.
purposely missed the second
description."
"I'm
very
pleased,
very
attempt but the ball bounced off
Sunday
Silence's
right-front
pleased,"
Lukas
said
In
spite
of
the rim and off a player, and went
hoof
bruise
was
discovered
Sunthe
time.
"He's
had
a
great
five
rolling into the backcourtas time
day. The colt walked shed row for or six days since the Derby.':
expired.
Easy Goer, second as the
"I wanted It to drop In front of an hour Monday. Trainer Charlie
Whittingham
planned
to
send
beaten
Derby favorite. is schethe basket," Pierce said of the
to
the
track
Tuesday
him
back
duled
to
work out five furlongs 111
final free throw at tempt. "Some·
for
a
gallop,
then
have
him
work
Belmont
Park Tuesday. Trainer
one deflected it.''
out Wednesday or Thursday.
Shug McGaughey said Monday
The colt has been equipped be may also enter Awe Inspiring,
with a bar shoe, which Harthlll third In the Derby, In the
said will "keep the foot from Preakness, but only as a hedge
·bruising." Whittingham says he against an off track. Easy Goer
Is not worried about miSsing two has shown a dlsllke for a sloppy
or muddy racing surface.
days of training.
"No, I'm all right," the 76·
year-old Californian said. "We'll
let him go a half (four furlongs)
or five-eighths (five furlongs)
when he works.
"We've ruled out all fractures
of a serious nature. It's just
someihlng that will be all right in
a few days anyway. If he Isn't 100
percent, we'll wall for the Bel·
mont (June 10) ."
In other developments, Hawksfer remains a probable Prea·
kness starter by trainer Ron

·

Attending were Ginger Pratt,
Lynda rraley, Vanessa Sidwell,
Lorna Seth, Carol Adams, Sara
Culums, Karen Pyles, Dr. and
Mrs, Malcolm Lentz, Dr. and

a

•
=·win over Bucks to sweep senes
BHI Laimbeer missed a threepoint attempt with 22 seconds left
and Detroit leading 95-93, but
Thomas grabbed the long rebound and was fouled with eight
seconds remaining.
Thomas sank one of two free
throws to give the Pistons a 96-93
lead.
"Usually the three-point shot Is
a longrebound,"Thomassaid. "i
ran and positioned myself and it
bounced at me.''
After a timeout. Milwaukee
in bounded at hal!courtand Ricky

A surprise retirement party

1n the tllll'd. Minnesota came
The center fielder's blast came
off Juan Berenauer, 1·1, who back to 11e the score at 2·2 on
surrendered the crucial runs on back·to-back solo homers to left
field by Brian Harper and Greg
just one hit. Berenguer, who
Gagne. It was Harper's fourth
entered the game In relief of
home run and Gagne's first ofthe
Twins' starter Roy Smith, struck
year.
out (our while walking two In
Kent Hrbek belted a solo
three Innings of work.
homer
· to give Minnesota a 3·2
Royals starter Floyd Bannls·
lead
In
the fourth. Hrbek's "'ast
ter: 4-0, served up three solo
to
rl1ht
was his seventh home run
homers on six hils, with one of
the
year. - Hrbek hurt his
strikeout In six innings for tile
shoulder
In the fifth Inning and
win. Tom Gordon worked two
lert the game.
hitless Innings of relief with one
The Royals' ex tended their
strikeout and Steve Farr pitched
winning streak to four games
the ninth for his tenth save In ten
with the victory and ended the
opportlinltiE:S.
Twins' five-game winning
All seven runs in the game
streak.
were. produced by home runs.
In other American League
Danny TartabuU put Kansas
·
games:
City ahead 2-0 in the first with his
Blue lays I, llldlana S
third home run of the year. His
At Toronto, George Bell hoblast to lett came after Willie
mered
and drove lri three runs
Wilson had led off with a single.
and Uoyd Moseby clubbed
two- run home~ to power Toro!lto
In Clto Gutou's ~at game as
Interim ma~~~ter of the Blue
Jays. Jimmy Key, 4·2, hurled a
six-hitter en route to hla tblrd
complete game. John Farrell,
3-2, was the loser.
·

~:Thomas
drives Pistons to 96-94
•..

•
By JOE DIGIOVANNI
: MILWAUKEE (UP!) - lslah
• Thomas. a scoring and a_sslst
•" lhreal throughout his career,
•: Monday night added clutch re·: bounding to his repertoire.
; .. · Thomas had a triple double
• wit h 17 points. 13 assists and 10
r!'bounds - including a big
• rebound with 22 seconds left- to
lift the Detroit Pistons to a 96-94
triu mph over the Milwaukee
Bucks and a sweep .of their
Eastern Conference semifinal
series.

Retirement party held at VMH
WIIS held Monday at Veterans

The

Ohio

MIDDLEPORT

992-8111

•

•

•

..
.

'.

'

W'~

'

PLES

New Haven

Point Pleasant

Mason.

882-2135

675-1121

773-5514

i

II ,

.

•

�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

TuBtday. May 16, 1989

Middleport. Ohio

Ohio

Community cal~ndar
nJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeting or Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM will be held at the
Middleport Masonic Temple,
Tuesday 7 p.m. Work will be
performed In the fellowcraft
degree. Refreshment will be
served.

.

r

'

---

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Chamber or Commerce will
meet Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at the
town hall.

·--POMEROY - Drew Webster

Post 139, American Legion, wlll
met Tuesday at 7 p.m at the hall.
Refreshments will be served.

the Middleport Presbyterian
Church will meet Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Myron Miller. Mrs.
Thomas Rue will have Bible
study. Mrs. Dwight Wallace will
have devotions.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m. Wednesday at the home or
Mrs. George Hackett Jr. There
will be a group review ot "Look
Homeward, Angel," by ThOmas
Wolfe.

_THURSDAY

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday, 1: 15 p.m., at the
RACINE - The Alpha Delta home .of Louise Bearhs. Tracie
Kappa Sorority will celebrate Its · Abbott will be In charge or
25th anniversary with a d!Mer contest; Helen Blackston will
meeting at the Racine Metholdlst have the program.
Church. All charter members
POMEROY - The Meigs Junare encouraged to attend. The
dinner will be served at 6:30p.m. Ior High Sports Banquet will be
held Thursday, 6: 30 p.m., at
RACINE - There will be a Meigs High School. Parents are
Southern Athletic Boosters meet· to bring two covered dishes.
lng Tuesday at 8 p.m at the high
James Diehl, pictured accepting a check lrom
CARNATION SALE - Home National Bank or
school. All high school, Junior
RODNEY - XI Gamma Mu
Tom Wolfe, b1111k president, as Joyce 1ly11ell
Racine Is underwriting the Meigs Branch,
high and band boosters are urged Chapter or Beta Sigma Phi
holding Stacy, who bas had corrective heart
American Heart Association, annual carnation
to attend.
Sorority will have a picnic and
surgery, and Denver Rice, look on. Diehl and Rice
sale currently underway In Meigs County. Orders
meeting on Thursday. at 6: 30
are co-chalrm1111 of the carnation sale.
are currently being taken for the carnations by
MIDDLEPORT ;_ Middleport p.m., at the borne or Gayle
·Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will have a Roush, Rodney, Ohio.
special meeting on Tuesday, at 7
p.m., for work In the fellowcrart
POMEROY - Studetlts, parThe annual carnatiOn sale of to purchase the carnations.
the sleepy .lethargic, and severly degree. R!'treshments will be ents and other corwJerned citizens
the Meigs Branch of the Amerl·
Joyce Hysell and her three
underweight Infant of three ye- served following the meeting.
from all around Meigs County
can Heart Association to raise year old daughter, Stacy ,who ars ago . •
are Invited to attend a special
funds for research Is underway.
·u nderwent heart surgery when
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of . substance abuS!' seminar on
About 25,000 babies are born
: James Diehl and Denver Rice she was 10 months old, were
each year witl) congenital heart'
are co-chairman of the sale present when ihe carnation sale defects and as a result of
which is underwritten by the plans were completed.
research, many of. the defects
As Diehl commented, "It's can be detected and corrected.
Home National Bank of Racine
with all proceeds from the sale to important that people here know
But more research Is needed
Fine Arts Night was observed
be funneled into research.
that we hav!' children with heart and much of the funding for that when the Portland ·Elementary ported that the school will be
receiving several Items within
disease and that surgery is being
Goal for the sale of $5 for five
research comes through th!' P.T.O. met recenti at th
carnations is $1,000. Orders are successfully performed, in part
school
Y
e the next lew weeks.
American Heart Association.
The annual fall carnival will be
being taken for the bouquets now due to research which Is funded
It is only through the findings • A ~rformance by the band
held
Oct. 7. ·
with deliwery to be made on June by local branches with projects of research that youngsters, like and viewing or the art work we..;
The
next meeting will be Aug. 2
1.
such as the carnation sal!'."
Stacy, who lives in Pomeroy with . highlights of the evening.
to
further
plan lor the ev!'nt.
Monday afternoon Tom Wolfe
· Stacy was born with a congeniher parents, Joyc!' and Steve
Following the entertainment
of the Racine bank made a
tal heart def!'ct and underwent Hysell, have a chance at leading the P.T.O. introduced the offic:
presentation of the check to the corrective surgery on Aug. 12,
a healthy, happy and productive ers for the 1989-90 SChool year,
· co-chairmen which will b!' used. 1986. Today she is a far cry from
life.
Rhonda Dailey, president; Lee
Codner, vice-president; Marylin
and Linda
Kenda Donohue. daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond DoActivities for the remainder of
Lucille Smith and Margaret 1 Nan Moore, Margaret Benson, Emily Sprague, Rosalie Story, the school year Include a trip to nohue, Pomeroy, has been
Viola Gettles, Anna E . Turner, Ann Webster, Wykle Whitley, Bl!'nnerhassett Island on Thurs- granted a departmental assistParsons were honored recently
and
Jean Ward.
Paula Whitt, Dorothy Woodard, day, sixth grade trtp to thf;! antship at Mount Vernon Nazaas charter members of Alpha
Center of Science and Industry rene College for the 1989·90
chapter
enjoyed
a
ham
The
and Mrs. Zurcher.
Omicron Chapter. Delta Kappa
I COS!) ;on Friday, "Field Day" school year.
planThe
executive
committee
lunchron
with
Mrs.
Benson
giv·
_Gamma , at the Sportsman in
The Junior English major will
on
May 22, school picnic and
ning
mreting
be
June
12
at
ing
the
invocijtlon.
Favors
were
Athens, when the chapter.
entertainment
by
"Sweet
Mounwork
In the math-computer
apple&amp; with white candles. Th!' the home of Mrs. Parker.
founded May 6. 1939 in Athens.
tain
Sound''
on
May
24
at
2
p.m.,
science
d!'partment. She was on
The n!'xt chaptl'r meeting will
officers table was centered with
cel e brated its golden
the
1988
dean's list.
awards
assembly
on
~ay
25.
and
an arrangem!'nt of spring flow- b!' S!'ptember 25 at the American
anniversary.
Donohue
Is a graduate of Meigs
Mrs.
Cooper,
chairman
of
the
ers. The chapter provided a Legion hall in Mlddl!'port.
Rebecca Zurcher, president,
High
School.
. ,,
"Campbell&amp;
Soup
Labels"
rewhite cake decorated with . red ·
Introduced the charter members
· who were presented corsag!'s by candy roses.
Sandra Nodrutr, membership
the chapter. They told of early
chairman,
led the responsive
experiences in the chapter which
reading
and
candle light ceremwas star ted with 16 m!'mb!'rs.
ony.
She
was
assisted by Mrs.
Mrs. Parsons was the first
Susan
Will, and Nelli!'
Zurcher,
secretary and later president.
Parker.
who
formed
a trtangle by
. Miss Smith was first treasurer
starting
the
lighting
of the white
· and later president. When the
table candles with their red
~ chapter paid lor th!' printing of
the first programs, 80 cents w!'re candies.
Sandra Evans, hostess com·
. l&lt;'ft in the tr!'asury. There was no
mittee chairman, presented a
money left to buy the Insignia for
POMEROY
GALUPOUS ·
Initiation. Miss Smith appealed style show, from the 30's to the
. to Anna Webb Blanton. national SO's. Cynthia Bateman and De·
founder , who·sent the insignia on borah Hammond wer!' models,
Joan. Mrs. Parsons emphasiz!'d and Miss Nodrutf furnished
• that Delta Kappa Gamma in an music from each decade.
Th!' chapter noted the recent
· honorary teacher ' s society
founded to promote the better- death of member Winifred Naas
and made a donation to the local
ment of education.
Other guests present were humane society In her name.
The group signed friendship
Barbara Sargent, widow of
' Meigs County teach!'r, Georg!' cards tor Maxine Philson, Olive
Sargent; Helen Hill. cousin of Pag!', Geneva Nolan, Avice
Frecker, Martha Grrenaway,
Miss Smith, a retired teacher
·from New York; ArceiU M.
Roberta Wilson, and Jane
Bourne.
·Nichols of the Philippines, who is
well~
Meigs County members pres\vorking · on her doctorate in
Early Childhood Education at e~t wNe Twlla Childs, Marjory
F!'tty, Fern Grimm, Jo Ann
Ohio University.
Mrs. Zurcher recognized all Hayes, Mrs. Moore, Mrs.
··past presidents. Those present Parker, Mrs. Parsons, Mary
were Mrs. Parsons, Miss Smith, Virginia Riebel, Miss Smith,

AHA carnation sale set by branch

Portklnd PTO meets

h
h
b
.
•
Soronty onors C. arter mem ers

~~~r::.·,:ee:ue::2';

Assistantship
granted .womarJ,

MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday, 7: 30 p,m., at
the home of Peggy Harris. All
members are urged to attend. '

.

. " .

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 2&amp;, 1989,

in

ust-ness

•

all the cov•·IJI we received for the SPIDER-MAN event
a~ all threugh the yeart. . • -

Beat The Heat This
Summer With
Central Air!
1981-14x70'
MOBilE HOME

POMEROY
92·2284

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

.r

1115-Ch..
1'3-ParUind

Qr~~nde

211-GuYIIn Dlst.

742-Auta.nd
117-CooWII•

371-Walnut

Reference•

--~~~.-

.......
..
-tr.

lw. ....h - opponuM'- lar ••..nlllt.

...... - · In"'- .... 104-122-

GOVERNMENT JOBS
t1I.OAO-UI.230
.-. Now
hiring,
Ctll 111 801-117-IOOQ

F..·bl•••d o..... Shoo&gt;n
1
......
B338."' pups. ea11 814-38f.

....

Kltt.,. to P41W8V· 2 mlle. 1

AVON · AI • -· CII' Mirifrrn

Ext. R·8801 fDr CUrrlftl

~~~

- .. 814-742-2894 -.. Woov•304-112-214&amp;.
10-·m_._...
-::
_ott.,-•-8..;.0_.m_._ _...;"' AVON lllw•lllhlrlet ll)•n.
F- puPtlfeo ••- homo. Pon 304-8711-1'29.
Oonnanlhophold. ... Colllo.2 - - - - - - - femllll•. lw•.U old. 114-143- Ju.. w_,t to ••n • llltl• •trl
1421.
mon~ 7 Or wauld you • • to
hive 1 ~-? Etthllr w., A won
can hllp fOU bll 1 M bllt you c.,

PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

Meyteg wringer w.lher: everyCall Molllyn w....-. 3041hlnaworbo_. '"""'"le belll
182-2848.
'if,:"~d ..J.f.::'1
.,':."'"""·

GENEIAL CONTIACTOIIS

rn booth. •11.00
2 klttent. I bolgo .,d wMe. 1 Be.utida
AdYMICO Doolgn. 304co11co. Cal 814-982-68&amp;5.
_87_11-_41_?. 11_ _ _ _ __

w-

98 5•4141

247-L.et•rt F•lla
148-JI•ain•

1'3-AII!t.;o Diu

11-18-'88-tfn

..Dog
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·181-3825.
K and J CONSTRUCTION 8 - ..... 304-882-2741.

Public Notice

...

.....

ltlprt, Ohit.
CoNslGiriiENn WILCOME
PATRICK H. llOSSER
AUtTIONHI

"FrH Eatlm-'•"

,.
••

PH. 949·2801

" or ln. 9119·2160

r.•

PH. 304-dl-72.5

NO SUNDAY tAUS
3·ll·tfn

, ·5-lt-1

~ ~--~.:;.::::..&amp;

•

II. 124 , , _ _

7.

Ohio

••

~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o T,...•1••1••

':
~
•

:;

PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

~

~
4_25 _11 n
:-rl L-----_.:..:.:....::::...~

WANTED
DEAD 01 AUVE

.

•Weaher1 •Dryii'S
•Range •Freezers

-

:.

· •Refrigerators
"Must It Repair.lt"

,·'

1

ML

iEI'IIISENT ATIVE
302 W. 2nd Strotl

SE~ICE

Wt can ~r and rt·
cart radiatars and
htat.r ,.,... we can
also DCid bo1 and ro4
out radiators. Wt also
rtpair Gas la'*•·

PAY HILL FOlD
992-2198

Middleport.

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SIIYICI
1. S. IT. 5I USI
GUVSVUI, OliO

614·6U·3121

' t92-S335-t15-3561

Ft,.E.. it•..
lal•llmlll

We Service All M1kee

5-4·19-1 mo.

·------....
MOlTGAGE
I

REDUCTION

"

SYSTEM:
Save thousands on
existii!J mortpae.
No ref1nancina. A
Mortpp Consultant

'

Service

~

Call 1-100·422·9010
Ext. 4051

=::::::=::::=
4·11'1mo. pd.

.

• . IMaa)IIU'phey
It All II. . . .
•
•

PUBLIC
RELATIONS
1011 HI....,,.....
Poon ..ov. fib in 4;71&gt;9
l'h•,n.• 1;, I II •t')2.,292!~
:1-:•.·n In

• FREE ENGRAVING

·~·

·----~-·-·

1-3-'ll·do

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
SYIACUSf, OHIO

Molt Forallft and
Domwtic Vehld•
A/C &amp;•vi~
All Mojpr &amp;

Mln01
AOfiOirt
NIASE Cort- "'""*"•

HAUIJNG

.jrt4):feo~

IIU.S&amp;ACI
992-1269
IVIN•Gs

4/8/lt/tln

Clr· port •le. Ml¥-17. 18, 19.
13 Pine II. G•llipalia.

WE GO THE EXTRA MILE •••••
992-6810
POMEROY ·

W.d 1'hu

Fri T

"
,.., " eeno~~~eboVt.
girl1, women• dothing. home

.........

Day

O.rflold Eodt. S-l.
---- ...PfPTiiiliiilnt......

Situations
Wanted

24 HR . DAY CARE. Superv•
· od
·
'. tructurtd plav·tlm•. l1rp•
houa• with bllckyard wlt:hln ctty
llmit1. CIM 114-44&amp;-0839 be.

:.:10:. ;P·"'.:, :.:·- Coli 814-....I-7AI3.
W.

c•• tar ..d•t¥ ., d

Income home. CIH t1.-.t92·
1873 .ttw 7:00p.m. tor more
WlfornwtiDn.

Y•dSolo, Moy 17.,d18. 9:00 iHwe
- -room
- -m-our- honw
--for

till 4:00, 2101 Linooln Aw.

.. dertr man er warn ... 20 ..-. .

or Night

8

ex perienc•. Cou nlry atma•-

phero. 814-949-3014 onytlmo.

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

15

MOBIL~

HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Perta
•Mobile Home

FREE ESTIMATES

f•nw. e1t1t•. lnliQun, .. c.

RE-TRAIN NOWI .
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE. &amp;29 Joc:fqon
Pika
Coli 814-....11-4387. llog. No.
811-11-10511.

992-7479'

SYIACUSE

1-13-'19-lin

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE

Howard L. Writtsll

Baskets '6. 00
Flats '6.00
Herbs &amp; Everlastings

NEW- REPAIR

Wanted To 8uy

TOP

CASHpoldfor 1983modol

.nd · ntwer uaed c••· Smith

Buidt· Pontlec. 1911 E•11•n
Aw .. G•lllpolil. C•l I 14- ......

.101 CINIIIIIGHAM-owmo.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

z-x:

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

4-10-'19-1 ••. pd.

1 7 Miscellaneous

2282.

Television Listening Devices
Dependlblt Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senticd
·C!J Hearing Enluations For All Aaes

Gutters
. Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

mo. pd.

9

992-2621 or 992-6944

ROOFING

'1.50 DOZ.

.G as
•Central Air

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

It. 33 North of
P-roy. Ohio

Paulins Hill. Co. Rd. 352
Off Depot S!teet
Rut11nd, Ohio
CALL 742·2n2

8t4-2AI-5152.

TEMPST&amp;:1

Rentals
•Lot Rentela

2·15-'88·1 mo. d.

5-11·1

Instruction

•High Efficiency

•Heat Pumps

Schools ·

Call M1rlln Wedemll'fer. Au:tio-

n-.
Uc1r1aed • Bonded in
Slate of Ohio: Liquidetion•.

INTEIIOI-EITEIIOI

Complti• houlllholcti of turntluN: • antiqu•. A"o wood &amp;
coel hMtara. Sw•ln'a Furnh:ure
• Auction.
&amp;

Third
814-.UI-3159 .

Olivo.

18 Wanted to Do

J.SB-9303.

being pol Calll14-441-

AntiQu•. furnflur .. eppli.,OII.
Mlet•. IUto., oompl•• home
furnillhings. M•lln Wedeme,•.

814-241-5152.
w...........y:Jun..•swhhO&lt;
,Goorgo.
whhout motors. CoN Rlch•d
814-38f.9015.
~~o~~:U· ho- eon 81 "'

or (614) 992-2104
417 Second AVIIIUe, 8oK 1213
Galli' poll's, Ohio """"'
,...,, 1
or at
Veterans ·Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

814-8811-7311.

Junh C1ra. with or without 1--~~---~­
molon. · Cell Lerry Lively 61_..
Well hlib¥•11 WI my home. "-•on 1111• ret•. Ret.. .,~
Furnllur• 111d IPJIII.nc. by~ ble. AI
alloWWIIIk~n•. Clll
piiCI of anth hauuholcl F.ir
prld.
3158.
lAwn mowing aert"ioe. C.ll
Will ... y or appr*• IFIYINngl

~614) 446·7Cil9

Btg 31A. Countryhomebuitt on
your lot. •17.995 &amp; up. Cell

114-381-1842 ..... 8......

E!C~*IIf'l'*' Mottw af 2. wiH do
bab¥alt1kllM my horN In PMriot
Clodmuo .....

Col 814-379-

28U

bolrjtltllng .. mr home.
-·
he. ,.,_.,_ ChoiJO
rotoo. Col 114-441-14154.

Will do

:I'!:O.";o'\'e';~'-~;" homt

~=================~ 1114-7'2·2485. bv

CAN DO
MAINTENANCE

&amp;

J&amp;l
INSULATION

co.

168 North Socontl
Milltll.,.,1, Ohio 45768

Plumbing • Plaster

SALES &amp; SERVKE
W.
Flthlng SuPtlfl•

Electrical • Ca;pentry
"We Fl• ~l•ut Alft"•t"

Phone

Here

IUIINISS PltONI
16141 992·6551
,I HIIIN(I PHONE
1614) 992,7,7!14

Harry Lefflt
20 Years Experience

llawn htlulation
Storm Doors &amp;

43020 St. Rt. .124
Pomtroy, Ohio 45769
1·614-992-3664

FREE ESTIMATES
Call 992-2772

Windows

6·11·1 mo. pd.

p

Til-COUNTY
RECYCUNG

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

10% OFF
ANY PERM

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM
Paying today

992-6282

NOW THIU JUNE 10

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

April 1I, 1919
IS.bli&lt;t

319 So. 2nd Ave.

to Ch•to Withoot
Nolicol

169 N. 21111
Middleport, Oh.

#1 COPPER .......... Il.OO Ito.
#2 COPPER ............. IG&lt; lto.
ClfAN ALUMINUM
~~s Aiiiiliiiiii"" 52 ' 1"
CAST ....................... (0&lt; Ito.
Al!MIIUIA
IEVDAGE CANS ..... 50' ~

Middleport, 1Miio

PUIUC
IICYCUNG

NOW OPIII fOI

CAMP

SIIHT ............ 5• to 30• ._
IONT CAST ... 3• to 20' lto.
ST AINIESS ...........-.20' Ito.

l•tii&amp; . . St.

.......... v••

Buy Aluminum

GROUNDS
1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished.
Houstke,ina Room
By Day, Week, Month

NO GWS AT PIESEIIT

at• ., a .....,
CO,It* .,d M-,

992-5114

LoCIIttcl Off IYPQt

At Jot. of
143, 'om

11. 1 a

. 011.
., -'ll·tln

..--·
------1
BINGO
I

POMIIOT..UGI.IS

1
I

112·1111

I

,,

~

..

~:tJI

•I 'lf&amp;-Ji,~ .
......:if
............. ,...

3-2o-·aa-ttn

HAND WOVEN
BASKETS

Supply of 8Nket
Woovlng Supplloo

large

Sign up now for l .. ket
WeevingCIIt . .

OPEN MOST SATURDAYS

10:00 111 5:00

WATEI
SERVICE
1,000 GALLONS

niHed. Ov• 71 oom-

' •· h
. . . - - dlolrlbUIOFI.
• o
wholelelera

t J•lpluyt:lf'lll

Bond S.A.S.E. P. 0.
25721-2121.

drOCIOl\'.

St~rmus

lo&amp; 2121-GT, Huntington, WV

!NOTICE I

1 1 Help Wanted

1·,.---------..
·IIAIIN MONEY Ao-g
THE
111105-117-1000
BASKET WEAVE

EXCELLENT PAYl Homo-

wort.•

loookol
010,000/ ............ tlof. Ootolt.
l!ott.

V-10119.

.;,a~rtt.

Couple to ··"' • da
Nll'loe wortc on Apt. C~l•.

Colt

304-871-510A

179-831&amp;

Somtiun• lo

or

304-

TH£ OHIO YALI.EY I'UBLIS fl.
INO CO. recommondl - you
do buatn• wllh people ¥OU

-.........·-""·

know, ll'ld NOT to ~cl moM¥
through the mel unll you

1000

h••
.

Wolff . .. - . , .. ,••

THI•. Comrnerat~~-:Home T.,.
ledl.
to 10 per.nt

ning

S••

'ric.l from t248. L..mpa.
Lotiofti..Acc••--· C.lladey.
Fr• colol . .

olog, 1-I00-221129210HOI7DI

a •• ,.. .. ~. d-r

-..-coi814-4Atl-300&amp;

W.t tolmprowyoure•...71e
your own bOI.a? Nled pert· dml
Income? I h•• 1n out..,dlnl
~pp~rtunlt¥

with N•lwork
2000. ..an •thorlr:ed indlp•ft.

31

.....a. . . . . . Cell 1·100-

..,_...•oiU.I.SprlntLong
177-2232Ext. 110.
L"NfiOOII-ovoll,..ololtlniO,

8•aut tfu l IPIOicltJ I. bri dt· \liny I
.,lonlll 3 1ft, 2 tote. above
.,•111•
loullt. d•iood
lo . .loO\ Ctl.14-446-81118.

Homes for Sale

q_ .......,. -.....

. . . . . . . . . .-

0011' -

17.11,.,tw.D--w•h
bonoflto. · - " ' · ....
..........
CD.O.N.
t'ln_._. Care c.m •. Cal 114448-711ZE.O.E .

In

ly-... -411, 1112tooih.
..
golomlfv - lt&gt;rmol dining
room, ,.,..., out llulclna nice
•ant porch. oon. .1 *lwt.l•lll

o.-141. aoodnolgh""'

lot. · - ..........
lchoot.lll.
hood. "2.100. lmtrt~cl•• oo-

.,..,111· Ctll14-448.10311.

POOLS, WELLS
. C,ISTERNS

c.u AftytiJH
992·237)

SAlE

...

3 Styles

hdJUI. . .

WOOIIll"'\\.llfGS
Wt 011 Ywa.t

lflllli"'P
•• .
.......
5.........

ON SAlE NOW AT

Uc.IOt$-frOoillt

992-6772

furniture 111d hou....,ld

iippll•c.. Phone 11.._. 742·
2041.

FOR

11U............
-:.Itt. I.C:. ,.._.

o... ' 10 .......

u.•

8uelnese
Opportunity

21

4-21·'11·1 mo•

224 E.CLII
MAIN ST.

l1u.

Colt 814-992-1511&amp;7
...Coth
814-et2-2Ae1.

SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
,SJJNDA Y 7:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAY 7:00P.M.
Paotor Jam.. E. Ke ..o,•

mo.

IONY

....ss

Pre 1940 qulltl. Any condition.
otld

PAMIM.IIOMI·-

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER

f lildiiLiiil

~111.

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHUJtCH

Mastic - c.,tainhtclfJ
Vinyl Siding
52 5 North Second
Stamltn Gutter
Middleport, Ohio
Raplocamant Windows EVERYONE WELCOME

Repair • Painting

••H•

If•·
114-2'111-5711.

entire houuhold ••o .,lllng.
Uaed t.lrntture
the piece or

Naw t..Giioon

h~ndi­

c•,.t In our home. 21 'fll.wt
Ml*"lenw. LPN on c.n. Low

&amp;. Vicinity

NO SUNDAY CALLS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Polnt Pl•••n.

l"ttrior. .,..._.,.. c.nn•. coffee I ~'.::.'":.:••.:.•.:..9'.:..·"'.::.·_·
tab4e, end lable.· tota mile. 158 Wlnled: Uw!W lomow &amp; trim.

or Res. 949·2860

Cotttflill'u

.UOHT

12

....................... ··-........ -

PH. 949-1801

c~.!..~::t

•SHRUB • TREE
TRIM 1nd RE·
MOVAL

&amp;. Vicinity

A Greal Combination"Quality and Reasonable Prices",

"At Reason•l• Prices"

-R....
ADIA--TO_R.....,.

Author• John
D-e. N- HoHtnd,
Buah Hoa Ftrm
Equpmant Deal•.

•

(I

4~00 "AM,

and

.......Gallipolis.......... :;;::;::::::;;:;::::::;::===

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

4S1n

Shon-r'a now tllldng •plic•
tktns on all po11tiont. 1:00 PM

Yard Sale

- - - - - - - - w.v•.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

.....

••
;: KEN'S APPUANCE
:·
SERVIa

•'

Probott Judge
lena K . NftaelrOIId, Clerk
(6) a. 9. 18. 3tc

JEFFERY J. WARNER
Po-01. Ohio

7

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

Robert E, Buck.

INSURANCE call:

614-985·4110

HOWE'S GROVE PARK

GREG BAILEY

46769.

ervtces

CALL 992-5114

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.

llack mile kitt.., litt..- trained.

••

3 BR, 2 b1th, prd• tub.
Nice home. Loc1ted n•
H1rrisonvilte. $6500 C11h.

PUBLIC
AUCnON

BISSELL
SIDING
.._. CO.

• . Garage

(614) 992-2054

2•1- Rio

992-Middleport

Takt tht pain eut of
paintl"'. bt twe do
It fot' yeu.
VEIT IEISONAILE
. HAVE IEFEIEIIICE

4,25-'19-1 mo.

...... .
___________.;_,
1 ________:::__________,_____________________________:--------1 ·- ·-·

-

UVING ON A
BUDGET?

FABRIC
SHOP
110 WEST MAIN

~ Roger Hysell

fAit I ~···2Ul

-1 mo.

______

To All . _ ,

113 (ourt St., Pom•oy

........•r

AA8-GoMipolll
387-C-o
311-Vinton

I

..

.../

3311101 103-IZI-1771. E.O.E.

t14-387·0209.

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

.~

304-

1 fem.. • kitt1n. Mtt• train ...
Coli

CHESTD, OliO

M•Dft" Co .. WV
ArM Code J04f

'"$UI'I.t.MCl

.r"

341 Secoml Ave., GaiHpolls

Meil' County
Aree Code 114

1-100-421-3535

-·,..

• FREE GIFT WRAP

Gillie Coumv

.... Code 114

S71-1A31 -.k••· Call

otd. Won"t

MARCUM

following telephone exchanges...

pu-

F,.. for thl h•Nng. Sp..t

3 Mile East of McArthur on S.R. 50

R.a• ere for can•cart• runa. brollen up d .. • witl be ch•glld
IOf'
u...-ate . ..

Cfllu•e
Now ·un'"
poolloN.IIW'I
loth -0111
ood
114-28..12111.
. . . . . for intoueddltft Call
7,..,_
wiL old
,.,. - bll
· ..... I 815-771-1107 EJO. H...l
,..._..,.,
P.M. 114-0WI-0147.
E...~... roctn•• lool*lneAtOII wortltrl fDr out of eiMe
&lt;Ill
W.M • .,....,h . . ktnmo,-..

Ou-. welltw. IIIProJII . 10 re-a

. 110.00
n&amp; .OO
121.00
. t60 .00

U1 .00
S61.QO

..,. 992-2156
"""'f!IAJ/1

llliii

..

3·10-'

AT THE

•

- ••• •

:

., •• :t.U-t551

&gt;

FREE ENGRAVING • GIFT WRAP • DELIVERY

Francis Florist ·
.The flillric Shop
.
.Jwlst.r 1M lohlt Drugs
1· Lnt, llut not least, the staff of The Doily ~tlnel, for

S7.50PaTOII

Contact llaiM Tqler

•'.

AND MORE

113.00 .
133.00

11/Y•UJ.I

.· r

'

u .oo
u.oo

l'lt. 614-992-SH9
•• 614-992-2477
Claimt:

·'

,·ON EVERY
GIFT IN STOCK

ONE

4-l _..,., ....

''
,.•'
,.

•

Quality
Stone Company

17.00

1&amp;.00
08 .00
•13.00

fot' HEALTH

DIUVDED &amp; SPIEAD
GlWA CO. liEA

OfiEN 1:30-6:00 P.M.

,. ,t

Watches • Gold
_Earrings • Chains
Bracelets • Clocks

14.00

the Meigs County Problrte
45769. Wllappoint~d
Court, Cue No. 28208, Ohio
EKecutrht of the estate of
Tholmo G. Garrott, 33171 Louiae Grewely Eden. de·
Hytell ~un Ao1d. Pom•ov. ...od.lot• of 33201 Hyoell

550 PAGE STIHT
ltiDOifPOIT, OHIO

&gt;•
~

·· Brion Collins-WMPO Radio
.
Norma Tor res of the Meigs Health Department
· · Senator Jon Michael Long
Jackson County Commissioner Dale Neal
Pomeroy Chief of Police Jerry Rought
Pete Wilson, Jackson Journal Herald
Gallipolis Doily Tribune
The Huntington Banks and the League Against Child
Abuse (main sponsors)
Clark's Jewelry.
The Video Touch
'
The Prescription Shop
Dan's of. Middleport
;.

DAY
3DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

Public Notice

Public Notice

GEARY
BODY SHOP

.-:

Good Luck Clilss
of '89

ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

Classified pages cover

•

., .. ..

,t

.

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

Run Road. Pomeroy, Ohio

(

.

1

ownertnd
mutt
304Cltlgive
n11c1awev.
good hOme

•

served. ·

•

for .., .....,., ....., il double prioe Df ad .et. ·

; TUXEDO RENTAL

No better time to ,buy
that perfect graduation
gift and save •.

wonll wflllte

ott ....

DAY IEFeAE PUBLICATION
COI'MONDAY
V DEADLINE
.--12:00P.M.
1:00 A.M.MONDAY
SATUfiiDAY
PAPEII
TUESDAY PAPEII
TUIIDAV
WEIJNIIOAY PAPER -- 2:00P.M.
2:00P.M. WEDNEIDAY
THUIIIO
...
Y
P
...
PEII
- 2:00P.M. THUfiiiOAV
FIIIDAV P&lt;!IPEII
- 2:00P.M. I'IIIDAY
SUNDAY PAPEfll

~

I\U.IUftl8. •

..

1'10

"A ctaMifted _..,ertilemMt placed in Thto.ii'W' Sentinllfl•·
cettt - cl_..tel dilpl.,, l'*n•• Card ~d ••• not toll)
wiN • • . , , _ ._,. tht Pt. Pl . . .nt R. . ..., .-wltM~i­
....., DeNy Tr~,_., ,......,., over ,1,000 ho......

~

ALL . . . H.M

1

0·16 WOIIOS 111-H WORDS 21-38WOIIDI

1

mu•

..'
•'

·····..... _
..,....._..,_.

446 4524

•an•.
Giwll...., ... ,ou. . . . u..... ,.

eta aft• pubUCIIIon to..,.,. cotrecUon.
be '*d In_.,.,.. . .
•Ads tha
Cad of Th.....
Happy Adt
In •mor&amp;.n
'Yircl S81•

GOIIpellllnJ
•
pOMEROY - The Bend Are~
Gosp.-1 Sing will be held' Saturday, from 4 p:m. until the music
stops, and Sunday from 1 to 6
p.m., at the the West VIrginia
State Farm Museum.

SPRING VALLC¥ CINEMA

couM*
mutt be pr•
.

·7-tiftoiYoo--.
·•••tl
Mt , . , ~ • • • ter .,,., efter fl"' d.,. ca.•
for.,.,."ftrlt
ct., eel rune in ....,I. C.ll belof'e Z;OO p.m.

~

We are very proud of our
area graduates and wish
them
This sale is
our way of showing it.

'Y.-'-~-------:..:..

·~~-of

•liMn

1.10 diloowM for . . pMd ift

.,,.. . . run J . . . •

Special meetin11
EAST MEIGS ~The Eastern
Local School Board of Education
will meet In special sessiOn at
7J45 p.m on May 24 in the high
school cafeteria. tor the purpose
of approving the graduates In the
class otl989.
·
·

SAVE

1

.r..,.

BRADBURY - Bradbury Elementary PTO will be having an
op.-nhouse on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Middleport fourth graders and
their parents are Invited to come.

Area Grads

TO

....

.'

Congratulations

The Community Assault Prevention ServictJ of
Gallio, Jackson, and Meigs Counties wish to Thank
the following people and businesses for their help in
making the SPIDER-MAN event a great success.
Kroger's - Dick Worner and his staff: Carolyn Ollinger, Betty Writesel, Dione Neace, Gary Gruser.
· A big Thanks for the cake, pizza, lunch and juice

I'OUCIU
"Afll outlille Metea. GMiia 01

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Danoe
Club Is sponsoring an open dandl!
on Friday. from 8 to 11 p.m., at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. Caller will be DaJe
Eddy, of Marietta. All westem
square dancers are Invited.
;
.

---

'"==================i'1

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

' EASTMEIGS-EasternLoc61
School District's Combined Elementary Choir will be having ·a
concert Thursday, 7 p.m .. at th~
· school Fifth and sixth grade
chOir members from Chester,
Riverview and Tuppers Plains
Elementarles will participate..
The public Is welcome.

will

.

Classifie

Thursday, at 7 p.m., at Me~
Hlgb School. The speaker wUI be
Bill ~ssex, of Greenfield, Ind .•

~--

Business Services

••s.o• .
Hll

•

SEARS II MIDDUI'Oitf
614·992·2171
, . .;!.-.-

.,
.----- .. - . ·-·- -------·---- -----

.

' ~

.',

'

·----'----'--.

J
I

I

�16,1989

Ohio
51 Household Goods

54 Miec. Merdlandlee

71

--·

For Sale: Loa.~at ...,.., -~ •
•oild. C•55 114·441· '1183

Motors for Sale

- ·-...,ice.

Dood concl-

•

· 1117 Lin• 11' 8"
- ...ryM lop m-wlth
...... ,rfm .. d ..toalln)tcdon.
- ...ry
-!!!. ......

T-·
lnetnl••·-··-

tlon / 14&amp;0. Coil 114·441·
1031.

-n •

·
- · - d oofL coli t14317•0441.
DON£
-ng
volt Sin 7.
Coli 114· 318·1193 ,.. 114441·7319.

The Daily Sentinii-Pag1 9

.Television
Viewing

IOAT IIIEPAIIIJ . - ...ry Mor·
cruller . IPHialltt Factory
Procl·
oJon Molole Morlna looocl
01
Otlllpollo 1 - C~b. Coil 114211-1178.

S•w mill •ng., gal 100
H.P ./ UOO. C•n 114· 4U·
1031.
Uwg~ Dorer wend'!.

~ov-Middlepoet Ohio

Bwlllnd

TUES.. MAY 18

111A1 NllY
PUULII

•

!VINING

.....

I

I:OD (I) lon8nu: 'l1le Loll
lpiUdll

..- - tot: 114-.2-2770.

• (2)' (I) • (I)

....

Ill • •

I~

(l)loadwalcAa.HNII'e
Iuper lowt 01 . , _ Trlvlll
.
(I)~ AF • ,., AW8y Q
(I) MMii Laamlng Hour

I TI-l INK MAVBE I CAN

iiJ ....Ill

e:OI(I):U... •

I

11:30. (2J 1111 ..IIC Nightly Hen

(I) lpa'l
.

w.,....,.JO ...,.. P up. Uood •

55 Building Supplies
Building M.r:ari•
8foc:k, brick. IIWtr ptp•. win-

-~ ilmolo, ••· Cloudo Winton. 111o G,..dL OH. Colt
114-245-5121.

Mutt .... n.wtr I"MMIIdiiMII•ge
..,., tv.- ho- 1" city lmM~

t... •.

leol400 iol. Z'h b•:. on moln
tJoior. A.il ..............
304-175-2730 .. 175-202l!.

P

-;;;c-u:===::-.=:::41
Homes for ·Rent
:::--:c-----.,.....,.~

... .,. 4 .. 5-oom. 3bothl.

Nice 2 t.. .. """""""' If! duola
hou•. Matn St. Ct.:l*at t2oo
mo. Wolw pold. Cobb I14-24S.
5818.

free~ 3to20Kra
~olld. 30.. -1171.

AMt•l ho.me tor • •: In tO'Nn
lo.,..Jcl\ C.ll 114-448-182:1
oll•lp.m.

R... oad far quklk tile. bride:

.,_.,..tnt

2 kltctt••· full
wllh
. .""' ... g . . . . cool..., w ....

Gunvlla

32 Mobile Homet:

Groom Mld Suppir Shop-Pot
Groo~ing .

All breed, ... All
atyleo. !om• 1'111 Food Olo!w.
Julio Webb Ph. 11 .. 448-0231.

/A.Y 11100 fOOT! '

&lt;'

iiJI ••..,.,..
!IICIIIIrl
iiJ Mtllml Vlca
18TopC.nl

II

l

*..

,.

,.

..

,.·

r:

,_ ---·Coil ......

E_.,. .....

&gt;

•

•

.~
,. .

Wft.L, No, %'Vf NfVE~
JEfN IN ''WtftJ~ WHo",

.

!lei ~r MEA. Inc.

room. •C41M.n condttlon. 8t6-

woil $chool Dlolrlco. C.H . ,..
441-8320.
Moy Spodoi/No Ploym.,.o tlil
Augult on ,., NW Mo_.e
ttDme purah•• in....,, Pr.noh
Cftv Mobil• Hom-. C.l 114-

4,...8340.

"Gi

IT'll
THE
VALLEY MANU·
HOME SHOW.
THE CHJLU·

3 br .. t375 • month. AC good
loc811ol\ coli 304-17S.I104.
Pom-. 2 bootoom. flnil hod
t.emn. N8'W'Iv pelnt.:lln•kl•
t280. month. 814-812-2111
dati: 11+ 742· 2172 •lftlnga
1nd wMk-Mdt.
PDtnt PI8Ment • • lurdllt•
Hellion. ,2 br., hau• ill
loooom.,., oliolnllnktenoarol..
Hom.,NCI Roo!•- C.l 30 ..
17&amp;-5140 or 30 .. 812-240&amp;

iiJI CIONIIII
Ill Hight Caurt
• CriMIIc llld ~

7:31(1)

12RH houH trell• for llle, 3
br .. Coil 81 .. 44• 7444.
1918 Shu itt 14dOwMh 14d0
odd on. 3 t.. .. 2 bot:.. Jiving

room. f~ml¥ ~ kitchen wllh

r.trlv-•or. Elec. r1nge with

overhll•d microwave•. he•t
pump. woodbur.,.., &amp; 10x20

buN . . g/,12.&amp;00 firm. Coil
114-448-0502.
1211110 Mohlle

ho~

furnllhed.

W•h•/ dry•. AC, IICC.IOf'-:,

c.u ., .. 448-103&amp;.

1978 EiconL 14a70. 2 t..., 1
b•h. Iorge Jiving room. ,.rtlol!v
furnllhed. good cond. C.H t142&amp;S.1!2S "' 11 .. 2BS.1977
aft• 7 p.m.
I 9 71 12x56 Uborty. 14000.
AectNood dedt.

•io

awNng,

114-742-27154 oft• 5:00p.m:
or 614-992· 31i07d01'1·
1 acre lot In FlltWoodl Rd.,
12J&lt;IO trolw...port. OUiboulldo
lniJII. 11!J&lt;28 g•og• .28.1100.
CAl 81 .. 117·1187.
14x85. 2 bedroom mobU•
home. 4 .... -. TUPI** .........
wat•. MII•HMI Rd .• A•cfne. 8111

chotp. 11 .. 94!1-21 17 "' 81 ..
149-2431.

1188 14l70, 2 b•*oom. ..
llectrlc VIctor!~ Tr811•. '"aN
upon lnopoallon mJv. 304-182I
3411.
1871 loyvl.., mlolle ho1.,70 with . 7x21 MJ1811do.
304-175-1141 .

F.. Jv furnlohocf 1•111• opl . AI
u!IMI• poid Mcopt 81-k:lty.
N-Jv ood800r81od. CIP•-·
Dop. Ailo 3 -oomlfOI•. C.i!
814-448-8118, or 81 .. 4481810.
Mobil homl for ' rMt. ..... .
Oop: roqulrod. C.l 114-.WS.
0527 aft• 2 P.M . or1nytimton
..do.
Tr•H• for rent: 1:bcl0 two
-.oom. prilm:e lat v•den
space on 211 G..lpoil, OH I
ml• from town/ e200 ,.. mo.
Coiii1 .. 21S.1391

12J&lt; 10 1 br., ""•1 12110 mo ..
plu. utlll:l• • depa.lt. ad.lltt
ontv. no pat•. C.ll 114-4414393. .
2 be«koom. furr*hed. -.w1htr
..,d " - · •lr. 1210 per moiOIIo
plu• utili leo . llr)d dOJiaoil. Coil
814-992·7479.
2 bedroom. country tRtlng. Five
Point• •ree. 1 p.-.on or 2 lldwlv
peopl• $180monthll. 814-94929119.

-.

(NR) (I :50)
. • (2J 1111 Mltlock

S·IC..

&amp;;"'~~North

' ,.

American Ught WelterWeight

r

Champklnlhip.lrom

•

Rockford, IL (T)
(I) • Cll Wha'l !Ill loll?

In

1200. pluo uti!llleo.
114-1143-12411.
Two tral•• fDr rent, MferenOM,

30 .. 17S.I071.

.. 2 ._.oom furnished .........
wll:h H

ooi'KI.

w.._.· drye~.

prlvat• lot. Millon. WV&amp; 304773-5111 .

44

Apertment

for Rent

IEMIT!RIL AI'MTMENTI ...T
IUOOEI' PRICES AT JACK·
BON ESTATES, 138 Jllokton
118 2 • mo. Wolk to
41 _.. old hou• 4 tid• -Pike .,_
..d nDVloo. 114-448. ho•,.;. 11 mi. Iouth on 111.. 21.8. E. 0. H.
7/ ldS. OOO. C.33 114-117•,
eu.o.
T•• Townhou• A; -tacwnta· 2
lr.. 1 112 INIIIII. CA.. ._

BUlin...
Bulldlnge

t 211M OM• or •niNUIIun

·-·111111114-317-0147.

31 toiii Acw fll

more.

Contact

ow,.-

Gront ovenlngo: 11 .. 181·4340
or II .. &lt;WS.1715.

'

Molol!o Hom• l'ork.
,.oute 31 North of Pam..,.,.
lml, Nnt•ll. ,_n,, •••. Call
. , ....2-7478.
.
'
C...ntr;

1\No trill• lata. NWW 1nd

wet•.

furnillhed.

304175-1071.

ref•en-..

--.-.. -

3 or 4 br .• home In town or
country. Oood rtfwtnoe~. ·CIII
ell• I p.m. 814'24S.-.

49

For 8•1• • Concrete and PIMtle
oojotlc IMJco. .... olroo. RON
EVANS ENTERPRiSES. J•o:k·
oon, OH. 1·110().137·9121.

lndlvlit.ntl guk• 1...... beginn ... terlaua gultMit. INI-

c•dll Mu~lc. 11 .. &lt;14.0117.
Joff
lnotnootor, 114441-1077. llnoMocl op.,lngo.

WOm•'r ill

p \; J: I I
ex I• •I,, I, ,

WHITE'S MET... L OETECTOIIJI

Aon ARiton. 12:10 Second Aloll ..

G•!ilpo!la,
4331.

r

~

f

~

~

Ohio. 114·441·
.

Cooldng Elec. 11,...,
44.7411
.

c.u 114- IS 1 Farm Equlp"""t

~;~~~~~~~~~
·,.v:m.,..,

""'•·Holl.,d
Hoy, oqu•eloollw
~.. illldono, to.
I
I'IIO'Nif't. Corn p~~n~-. whe•
*'lloo.--ic-wNhpump, IN Ford-or,.....,,.
spre•d•rs. otMr-ftfl re•cly
C•noe / t310 . Truck equipment ttaw.•, ,_.m Me·
toppor/110. Cho•t typ• clolnwv."•· 124•Moy-11Jd..
f r - / 1300. Coli 814-245- Jllokton, OH eo&lt; ..0 114-21.

Pl.,olor eoio. -od:
llb!•tiilr1Y to
mon
Coll1 · 0.281-4210.

8200

8~.

71 Auto '•

For Sere

GOVERNMI!NT IIIZID Yolo~
at• from t100. , _ , - ·
Cloofyo. . . .
plue. •;;~• Qullle. f11
IQI.II'I'
IJC. 1·10111.

- · c......

1ir111u1owu 4W.0 .. 4*.. A.C.
AM/FM. E - -·lolL
11110. Coill14'-4141 of.

t•lp.m.............

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

1178 01c11
V.VGaodC-Ion. • • P -·
Coiii14--M14.

Vene• 4 W.O.

1111F•d8ranoa. Cueta1Nae4.
w ...... Clll 114-112-1223 ...
. , ... 742-2101 .
1171 a.., ......-

•olne 4

...-

~.... . . - 110&gt;00 "' ofloi, oft• 1:00 PM . . 30..

llr•.

'17 1·10 4114. I oyl . A.tl
ln)lolloft. I . , _ . _
3
v••r u•dhnlted warrenty,
17,-.oo. 304-1711-7121.
1171 CJ .. loop . . 304-17.
1443 ""• 1:00 I'M.

74 Motorcyclii
Dtft.lolke .... ulol. liM 110 • •
lloll aond. Pnon: dloo - · •

- -·COif.,......

For LBIM

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

t104.

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

- · , ..:o. """' "'"-""·

""'*"""

. ._. . ,.

...
...... A....afiiP.f.OI'·
....107
1110.

··~-Colli
lft•7P.If.

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

_.

. .1\ ...... .,....••• - . .
Dip. 011'14 Col
.,.. _111• .

no- llaf. I

ICindal revaall relltionllhlp of U.S. with
larnl. D

Ill •0 MOYIE: 'Trouble In

Aul-lwe ........ repoir.

A~

--iol
-- .._,......or......,,..._...

or oomnwoltl wJr.
lnl--

,

e-.1011. 304'17S.I711.

85

POLL?

(1:43)

e

1:30 Cil
Cllllllva f.rth Thl
pariah goes Into an uproar
Whln Mac cto"' dowrLIIII

:r. gil=·~:;~,........~. .

• -

· Wll
1118.00
-~·
pluoe
utlltloo,
Mud.
J04'f71.H1Z or 1711--

'

J • J Wlllw .,..... IWhlinolnt
~~~'it~
11 ..

..... -"'·

BARNEY
'

HOW ABOUT
A 6AM! OF
CHECKERS,
SNUFI=Y?

MAW JEST

FER

WHACKED HER

. . I. -·.

.816 TOE. WITH

Jack to broldcaat Hva from
dUih row. (R) D

A 6AME?

TH' CHOPI'IN'

meCil~
Hopa II atunned -aha
...... of • lrtlnd'l unalhlcal

AX AN'-•

ll!ICIIcU. Q
CD Ne•a•alah

•'I

r~

Ill....

....

.

•(I) •

Inter•--

i£~'
DDt Jll•

etDLeviiC.I

'

111t~n

'

·, 1==5111
.
,.. c. .....

e!-111&amp;

11:aoe~eiiiCa.iii'irr,or

..

(1):!

.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pa!$1

Cia••

•'

..
" ·'

........

2 London

,.,,,.,'

trolley
3 Send

.. ".'

paymenl
23 Zest
24 Buss
25 One of

....

~

'

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

·~-·- ·· -,'

-

32 Leave oul,

as a

syllable
the
38 Fair
Americas 37 Walch over
26 Former 39 "The 27 Foe al
With
Lexington
the Golden
29 Pekoe
Ann"
31 Reline
41 Iranian
metal
native

.,

.'" .•

.,....

" ."

. ·'
'

.. ....

...·- ..

~·

'

...

.

..

.
...
~

"

.

"

&gt;

'

..

.. . ,,
' .
,...
.' ·

'

.•.,
."' 'l.~

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here'e lin to work II;

1111

AX:YDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
. for the three 'L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostraphea, the lqtb aild f011111tion of the words 1re all
hints. Elich day the code letters 1re different.

arYPTOQ001I!

z

KCMHG

UVBW

EN8SQ

EQ·

TQCTHQ

VMNU

.ICM

' .ICM

B NQ·

....,

'

'

~

EQ . 8

NBU .VQN

RUN. -ABE UNCOLN
-~

'

'·

E N'. B S Q . ,

DCNFUQN
· Yaata tu , •• ·CWO It aI 111 tll'fM . YOU HAVE
. GOT AN Ell!PHAN1' IY 1tE ·-·-AND . . .

..

,_

.., .

-Q.Y.

'

'

Opening lead: • 3

·. porter

•

I

..

.-~-

. TRYING TO RUN AWAY,

'

E81t

43 u.s. poet

KVQW

.,...,.. ,..

Norllo
1+

42 MldeiSt

IBM F Q

Oooe GilftiN IMI&amp; I Md 11151•
••oo.Ciota-IIO.OO.CII

3•

Well

Pass

cry

ICK8NG

..

Soa..

DOWN
1 Fencer's

•

c I •rty
apart&amp; 111111111111111 Mile as
will .. unique llld ""'-D-Di
~~lrom-

t,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

. 44 Fasling
time
45 Vogue

eo

(J) Uglllw .... Ollparla
Host Jay Jollio11D111
,

BERNICE

"

SOUTH
+AJI09862
.10
+2
+10654

40 OM source

=~:r;~:.:::?i£.
• .... c. ••

t'

+QH4
+3

Punish-

10:30 (I) Ma1kl a Look at MexiCo In
the 1NOIIIId 1111 cycle of

.....

.,7 43

ment"

10:011]) NIA 'U'a$ '

11:00e&lt;JJ Cll

EAST
+7
.AKJ 8
+A 106
+J9872

WEST

+Q50

.

"

38"-and

(I) h ¢ . . . On: 'l1le ........,

I

W.. ttraon•e W.Cer Heulln.

2.1111!1 ....ooo ....
ny,oiot................ ~·
CII30•U',._'II~I.
.

·--_,.

convtcllcl murdlnlr askl.

HOW MUCH

~'

f

I

jam - IAnlngrG atyle.
10:011 (2J 700 Club
• (2J .Gllll!dftlllll Calli' A

~SOSOL
. .

OMiiL
...

-

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

M. H. Riplilr
.

........ ...

Cbot••· -

·..M.···. ·---·n
,....._ .."--!_'!!.............
Cllll14-. . .a•at·

'

OJ

Tour Roy Cllrll lnlvll In In
Leningrad lnd vlllta
·
landmlrlll Including St. .
laue's Cathedral lnd St.
NichOlas Church. t1e allo
partlclpa!M In a bluegrass

Dllwd Wet• S....lct: Pools.
Dollwwy Any•
Ilona Coli 114-&lt;14• 7404-Nci

4*-

b . . . . . . . .. . . . .

~~Kklau..t

i1J MOYIE: 'lt..l.._ (A)

Generel HauHng

"""'In•

,_ nnt 2

"'

O.NipolloEiodrlc lorvloo. Eiocl·
rio matgr Ml• • •livicl.

~hone 304-f71.'2311 or .,..

•1

PIMCIH' CII.TUHdly

E::THNip uOt&lt;eS .

S..IJ-11

'

4 Memoir
14 VVide open 5 BaHie15 Friend
ravaged
(Fr.)
· IS Produce
11S AAA task 7 Dress,
18 Dry,
with up ·
like wine
I Resilient
19 Prickle·
9 Tahitian
21 Hanoi
seaport
holklay
12 Vicar
22 Southern 17 Openings
20 "A- Day's
constellation
Night"
. 23 Joslp Broz
24 Disdain
27 Meet
enlrant
28 Palch
29 Downing
Street
number
30 Single
31 Grasslike
planl
33 Mel of
baseball
34 Singer
Davis
35 Pennil

~;:J;cl:l.." Iran-contra

.' .,:!

• Refrigeretlon

lofvlco.
1, 000"' 2.000 . . . diiiVIrleo.

per ""'· C.l

21r., ' ..... , _
.............
n. . ...- ... IIOitlolr JOOiol
t 221 eono. C113CJ4.178-1104.
or304-1711-1311.

e

..

...... ttnnt. . . et.-t... " '
"
'lotio lio
Md 17 Pine lt . . , ....,..2111.
- '-" ",..
....-...
flolliod.
.....
'
lolo:l'fo. ..oi ·-11.300.00.

.

-:..

....""' . . . -

otrl• ... , ........·00111 I; w•lllliiiiPIII. '-••
.. louy. toiii14--0M4.

.-a.
Judv

e275/mo. Comm•del tot wllh
buHtlng. cor,_ 2nd &amp;

73

bedding
&amp;Short
distance
10 Action ·
. area ·
11 Species
of bear
13 Filipino
Island

'I:OD.

'THE'~TIC

NORTH
+K
.QU2
+K9873
+AKQ

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
; 1 Stall

carefree summer. Q
(2J g lft 'l1le - . Of
. 'l1le Hight Chief Oilltaple II
::;:.~ on his flrsl night
·tlJ Top 111k lollng
Cil Cll Aln111111 Dan 1nd
Roaaanne s-r to pay off
billl .with D1n' s cash

B2

Electdcal

~y

w-

I D;'N'T APPROVE

•'

CROSSWORD

Dilllllr (R) (1 :~)
11:30(1) •Cil 'l1le
v...
AJ Kevin wanta 11 to blgln a

DID 'oOJ HEAR AecuT

.

"•

IIJM-,tlieWrote

Ch...

84

&lt;

· South leads the jack of spades,
throwins a diamond from dummy: - ·
East must keep his red aces, so tbrow1 . .
a club. The club ace now dropi the . .,
jack, and declarer ruffs back to bis" · ··
band to win the 10 of clubll and make ~ · ·;
his contract

NORTH: Spades - . Hearts Q, Dia·
monds K 9, Clubs A
EAST: Spades - , Hearts A, Diamonds
A, Clubs J 9
SOUTH: Spades J 10, Hearts -, Dia·
monds -, Clubs 10 8
WEST: (immaterial)

• Halllvllll How .
I:OS W fi1C)YII: Hlall Pill Ina

Oo•tcor

cll.._ Will
buUd to ouM. Coli 114-44S.

Suppose you have all thelri~ks but
one. Perhaps you think it polite to con·
cede a trick to the opponents. Not so. It
is always ril!ht ·to ,play the band out.
First, a card you think is a loser may
actually be a winner. Second, an opponent may discard carelealy to give
you a trick. Finally, an advantageous
end position may have developed
without your realizing it.
·
North guelled better than I would
have when he passed three spades. •
West led his singleton club. Declarer
cashed dummy's spade king and led a
heart. East won the jack and gave
West a club ruff. Back came the queen
of diamonds, ducked by declarer. A
second diamond to East's 10 was
ruffed, and declarer played A'J of
spades, sheddins a diamond .and a
heart from dummy. West won the
spade queen and played another heart.
Declarer ruffed and now conceded
.!hat he would have to lose a club. That
was much too charitable. Here is the
layout:

0 PilmeNewa
·
Ill MOYIE: 'l1le ac...., (RJ
(1 :43)

"..
.,.,

lfooj,-·
n_.......... _.
......
...

72

47 Wanted to Rent

Ferms for Sele

as11111natton of JFK. Q
Ill •111 Tour Of Duty A
driven young cleric wonta to
prove hlmllllln battle. Q

,.,,

eo..

i

- · oiOCiric ICCOI. .. Coil
Roger• Medical, 1800·11121 4.

01h

sclenltltc evidence
surrounding the ·

_...... -.-.. . .

0144.

.-.ooma. , .are..
Oo-.

' ,_car lor his blr111day. Q
(!) (!) Novl Analyze the

Vol--· .....- . .

chen. Oood, cl_. oondiUon. No
p .... 304-812-2418.
3

u.................

R.I-.:

1

Nnkt.d or unfurnillt.cl. 1•911

2:00 PM oftw 1:00 coli 30..
17&amp;-1120.

34

r;

Wheeloheir•MW" or UNCI. 3

't lvlng room, t.•oom. .nd kit·

Angata aurpriaaa Tony with a

....,

... IW'I.-.

"

conetructlon oontractor Is
accuHcl of mul'lllring 1.

•II•

lor emptCJVMI •

1170 mobil• hom• 12x70

lchuilz. goodcond.l3,300.00.
30 .. 87S.3837. 8:00 AM 10

m....

._.,.oom

...,_.Bon

1:011 (I) MOYIE: 111111 F1 Trill

- ...c-

y.,,._

42 Mobile Homet:
for Rent

(JJ Red Min/TNT All
AIMrlcall PuNing ......

e111 1111 JoJa.OapPIIIftnli Y!il Q
Ilnaball
® Mljor Lllgul

S,uT .t 1&gt;11&gt; GIT

Ill

e (2J family I'IUCI

From Gr11n8bc!ro, NC Part 1

w••..-.

""' OMiie 01 - : 2 br.. hoif t..ld&lt;
ron o:h. Fon dod yorcl lan•*'t

.

· .CiJE~Tonlght
.Cil U8A Tadlly

QUITE A W~ITE·up IN
"WHAT!r TWAT ~"

1118DotieoArltoL.£.8utoA.C.
28.000 ori, / 111100. C.l 11+
DroaOnwvncl c.rtwv Konno!.
3n2721.
B1
H
'·'·
.1&amp;83Cutlaolupr..,•
.......
~-----.
orne
PWII1n •nd Slam•• end Him•
75.000
lmprovemen~
lwen kit1ena. Chow stud ..,.. Uh . _ 33hp.-tl .. 4t-or
Fwnilhld two bedroom a~Jl ,
vice. Coli 114-&lt;WS.3144011t•7 .,d buoh hog. uoild 300 :......_ .... Tilt, AM·FM c_Mt.._ --------~­
t280.00 plus el~rlc. ~1304P.M.
18.000.00 fltm, 304-171· en ile. 304-773-IUO ll«wMn
17S.3800. .
4, _,
1, ,(50 . .d 3:00.
2111 .
UIEIII!ENT
--,.,.-------W...TERPROOFING
............ tufv . .p ......
.
1818 Mor'"'ry Cou. . Ll. VI, Un aanclliaMI HteUrne .. .,....
2 -oomo. 2 b•hl. no 30,2.
1ml!ooie
31.000.
,.
chi! ot., Jc. .oclilortforcl WV•.
62 Wanted to Buy
1oron: Dey tie. LoOII , ......... lltrniiMcl.
1300.00 momh. on· utlhleo
114-112·1M1. . . . ., ... 1·11 .. 237· 0411. dOl' or night. ' "
.-fd.
requlr• end
98J.2t27.•
1110.00 dopooM. 304-89S.
Ao g e r • I • 1 • ~ e n t
:;
W.Ot ta buy: Uolll Mobil•
3400.
1171 Olcll IS G410d boclr M1d
homoo. Coli 114-441-0171.
lntwlor. NM• aheult •nd IWI.&amp;III .. diMingm8Chine
3 room furnilhed .Pt. grouM 90 J O.ya •.me • CMh wil:h
.1
Hoovv DUty -bcnoi .... hftiMisioa work tiOQ. 010. ,..,• • _... end supplf•. ftidl ~~~
11oGr. privete.ur•ce~nddiWe. epproWH credit. 3 MA• aut
114-812-1300.
ccurt~trutor. Geed •nc~tion.
utlllte1 lnclud•d. t271.00 BuloviHe Rd. Op., 9 A.M. to 8
up 811d doilvoov. Dwloo V~um . ~
month. phone 304-17e..l730.
Cleener,
one h•lf mile up ·I"
P. ~ . Mon. lh"' Sot. 114-44S. AKC reglo!- limo!• Chlhu• Coli 304-Nll- 2780.
1914 C:iovv Ch811on. 2 doC&gt;&lt;
hue. 8 mo. ot
. d. !~paVed. Whh• •
0322.
1111. Coil .,.. ;-;:
F"''"n. Cobb 114-21.11021.
WANTED:
looldl- ... h •tooo. 4 .... 028...
.
•
Aoortrroont for Nll1. .....,,... _
E
con*Jc"
.....
1oo
1800
Qlblc
yodo.
al
"'•
111
1 ""*oom. clopook .,d ,.._.,.
1
Y..l.,. Furntture
...,
to
•
...,...,
..
•2BO.
Cal
Chow
Chow
pOpploo,
5wic8.
olcl
. . _ ..... 304-17S.11110.
New 1nd used furnkur• end r ..lat_.ed AKC. red· chOwt. 2 mM•IoL Muot ~-e-. d!IJ 114-181'2143 wan or 114- IOJit lc t .. k Pumploo9IIO. Got· ,,,
co"'lnt 111d fr• of rodla. root&amp;
II• Co. IIJON 1!1/ANI ENTER · ,...
""""
- 5.' Colbl1 ..... 71172.'
3 femll•lt200. can loruoh. oto. Oldl_., Formo. Coif· .,J.I.'I7Jott• 1:00.
2
Apts. fDr rent. Houn..9·
PRIIEI. J•cklon. OH 1·800- \.;:
614-448-9312.
304-17S.:I441.
'
C.:ll.81od. Nl•
. oOIIInllo Laundry
537·
9521.
.
'77 Dodae MqniOD. t700.00.
f
I• IVIilllble. Catl . 114PtCIIENS USED FuRNITURE
Phone
3CJ4.
18&amp;3411.
"
For
Slier
17
mo.
old
mile
•
11
992-3711 , EOH.
'
Comptete household furnlthl'loiro- Potntw. AI wcirlogu•·
Livllltock
r ........ tnttrior •d ltJittrlof. ~.
inga, No eppll.,ca. ' / 2 ml• mo. old femllf• Pom•enl., c.. 63
c.n1r0
Z·28,
Y·l
Milo5,00
p.m
......
2lb•t322.
Groolauo lvlng. I •d 2 IHolf. Jertlcho. C.55 30.. 17S.I45Q,
MO. concl Coli 30 .. 87S. Coill14-ll92-2318.
room 8pertment• •• VHIIII• 114-3158·9773, ov•lngo.
Beogbopu,.. ........ oldon Moy
Minor 1nd Riv...tcle Al*t·
Flt1v Tr• Trim..,ll otump
m..ts In Mldclaport. 'rom u..d ..,pll•ces. Wuh.... dry. 23. 3 mole. 3 lomole. 'll.,k81 Eltdno LIOMUoln Soi8' lioa'ocl
· - · : . (:oil 30 ..17S.1331.
.... well morboocl.- bull. .._.oil! - · ...h ...........
U82. con 114-992-7787.
refrlgantor•. rnla-o- W.ve oven.. Ken' a Appliance. 131i. Oltrodo. 114-84:!1-1241.
~., 01 Hill• tool 4'111ng.
·-~-1' lllldrDOm • · for. rmt. t2M 217 E. 2nd St. fi9m•oy. 3 ,... Dtd Vor ....,e
buill
. '"""" 28 - Sob• 12
Ill:
Moat well OOIY'Iplttedltmtd.,.
ta
GoJIIpolbo
l:.
month. d•GIIIt ,....._.. 114- 114-992·6335 or' 114· 1SS.
JIUmp .... Mid MrY!ce. 30 ..
Vinton
lt
..
Ooll
.....
OH
M1r
good home. Goad with dtll ....
3511..
.
.,2-1119. .
21.19891:00:o.m. Aucilo-: 1171 cto.....: good concl 4 IIS.3102
Co55 114&gt;182· 7032.
·
OJII!Iol.· AC. 1100.00. 30.. 87S. .
r o . _ J o • -· For Into. •
'·
In ,_,m•oy. 2· be*oom. tur· MoHIIhen F..nltut'l end Carpet; ·
'.
1721. '
Fiooh TMk. 2413 Joo:koon Avo. cotolog. ~1114-288-1187.
nlohod, '•"" pOlio, 10101'· No. One c:.rp_., dlacount price, Point Pl••ent, 304-875-2013.
-~
d-. ~
ound. Security depatlt. Call Stelnmuter. Aneo V, Mon~o
F:S JI.·PONO BTCICII!NG!
10 go! !Ill Up'II'4.99Md 10gol
,. J IU Pi¥ mouth IIJollorico K••· !loti--. can 30.. 18.3421. '•
14-!312-1811•11• 1:00 p.m.
Scotch Guard Stllin
Cltfloh.
Hytorl4
~~
....
llo
..
•
ooncl · 11.1011.00. 1111
'•
Two -iono I :l2 • YJond 11. comp~·· · •4a25. .
140b. oo. 304-17•
CrliPI&gt;:O. Min,_. I Apenmtnt tor rn. 2 or 3
....
int
"
'
w.vo.
304-17S.
1117.
be*oom In Mlckllport. C.l ' 1418. Upp•' River Aald, Kl • .cAKC ROll-•, 4 month ol4 ~- C1111. 011 .' WID.. MAY
31 ot SOUTHERN STATES
114-992·2403 or 114-992· n1uge. Ohio 814-44e.7444. very welt menn•lld. hed •
l't. l'looa... toem2· 3
1112 · Pontl•c Tr..,l Am.
2710.
Iring thh •d fDr •ddltlonll 10 ohoto. nso.oo. 304-175· CO.OPin
P.M . Co33 3CJ4.17S.2780 to 41,000 .,._ 1lrOO{ - ·
Per' cent di1oount 120 vd• 4301 .
oon4 IIJ.... I~L •a.ooo.oo
orctw or 1 · - • • - •
minimum!.
firm 304'175-2110.
Coon Hound puppleo. l~ellclo
45 . Furnished Rooms
ond Rod 11o:k, 110.00 eoclo, lioct&lt; laollo~lnttlwill lloor·
30.. 87S.2BIII. • '
trudlo X Anauo CrooL Hioo.
1110
Roome for rent·WMk or month.
•eoo. cAl .,..... 271&amp;
'erta/•100. coli · 304-1715Antiques
8i""lna • t120 • mo. Oolll• 53
3044. .
.f!Oglolwod 5 . - oid Coole•
i !
Holol-11'1 .. 44.1110.
- - - - - - - ---' Spllr)lol, • .., ......... gontte
.,!M!olr4
D.,linilh
•d
1111 Oicll Cui!- SuJII'-. I'OJiolr -r.. C~~mloloiocl •,..
eod loving p... 1110.00. 304Furniahed room. 1100/ mo. All Buy or Sell. Alv•ln•.Antlquet, ' 171-7713 or 175-7710.
,,., .. eo_., 304-17S.II4&amp;7 .,
ullllloo poiol. Bh•• both. 919 1124 E. Moln Str. .. Pom•oy.
pah. /11100. Coil ..... 1:00 ell• 8:00PM.
Second ""'· Coil 114-44• Houow: M,T.W IOo.m. 10 Sp.m .. w..tell, lat ., Muon tGIIIU.hlp,
p.m.. 304-175-7244.
to buy. .....no~o~y pllcod Coil
39j;41;h.;;-;;;;;;;;';;i;:;;-;;i,;iid;,~ . l !kind.,
2528. 1 to lp.m. 114-992- 30.. 773-&amp;441. or 304- 7'73Plumbing
Sleeptng room~ with .
TNdcl for Sele
9111 .
AlloTr•• _.,.. All hook-'41•·
It H81tlng
CAn after Zp.m. 30._. 773- 54 Misc. Merchandise Reglot•od Clorm.,o ShOJiiwcl
'1111Fordf·210 4o:ool.. 37.000
5851 . MltOn WV.
mafe and ferul .. blldl: •dt-.
ml. /1.7 100. can 114-44•
10 mantis old t100.00 - . .
1031.
CNI.:.ro~~~=!NG .
304-17S.4112 or 171-11078.
SWIMMiNG POOlS t1188
Alfolfo hOI' In llo5&amp; _ . ......
46 Sp- for Rent
E8rly bird 1peciel On 89 PGOt•·
,
Cor. Pourth MOd Pin•
1117 IIIIo- P.U. TIVIIII. Auto ..
- - . . . ploone30.. 178-4221.
Hugo 19J&lt;31 pool, hup dock,
T,... ,..h OD. r.- mll. .o.
Otolo or 114Musical
fenae. fit• • WlrrMty.lnn.l .. 57
38M
bike ••- 814-112-3004 oftr hn• B14Office SPKe IW8Rebl• In • aoon tlon • ftn .. cln_g ev.. .a.t.. Clll
44•&lt;1477.
4:30p.i0o,
Instruments
•·
to be rarnodel.t dow•own 24 hra: 1·10CJ.34S.OMI.
pr-Jcnol buH..,g. Porldng
Holl•d 711. ~., loln~tlloohl
8101tnclormlooorbolh-.aonol.
304-273-421!.
.

•

you develop from srep No. 3 below.

BRIDGE

7:015 (I) "'"" Ortlftth

7:30

..••
*"

ohe chuckle quOted
b'l filling in the missing words

Tlr0111x - Grope - Drunk .,.- Uzard. - GRADUATE
Following a lecwatrom his dad, 1heard my son mumble,
"The trouble with learning from experience is that you never
GRADUATE!"

HewiHour
ill • • · - O f

1112 loftlo -..:..:. 2
IUio
A.C./11100. 1111 1'3¥-on. 4
1 •p. / 12100.
Coli S14-J71.2721.

G Comp leoe

SCRAM Lm ANSWUS

. (J) lpaltiCanter
.
(I) • Cll Current Altllr
(I) (I) MaCNIII/ ~

..,,

r*••

for Sele

~RERROR•

&lt;

.~ .

Pete for Sale
Ferd 132 11811• 12.210.00.
o...31y lou 1271.00. Two,_. ~lllwltora *200.00. AI «C
cond. 304-171-2113.

••

'•''

11-'•IIHH; ...,..., wHI fl- · · C.l 114-21.1UZ.
100 Fer4 T-or/ICII~ I ft.
linloobood .,._;/Uft&lt; . . . I
ft. buoh'-11211: 111. .......
ble bl"""'-1111&lt; - I ~1.
Ow- wll . . . . . . . . . 11421.1122.

11

""

..

F-Q
.1111 TIINI'I Company

40·20 John De,M• treator/ ..710: "'• olilootl
plowo/1111; Qo~l er!ndor
m-/l7tll. John O . . e -

, _ ..., .... ·Oolh .........

56

Q

..

~~?'!!fortherestolusto-

D 0 T EMS

· -'-·-.L
- -.L
. ......J
I ·-'-·- ' -

iiJc..-EifiNU
18111wCaunll)
1:31 mOne Day At A nrn~ ,
7:00 (I) Our IIOtiM
• (2J PM Mlgl-

Tlouclo oun 13-11. Ford
M4 Chevy. 111.00 •och. • , ... .
8U.21011.
.

Hoy ..:Oe lor ..., lOIII Ollt•I:OO
WwloolorL 114-317·'/141

-·----

4'\

IIJIIIMwliz Todly
Ill WKIIP In CIMWIItl

,...II - e

..- . . . . -clord .........
.,-..pi••••C:VCjolollwH
l y - ......, - - l o n o ...
porto. Coli 1..:371-2220 or
30 .. 17.17111.

'"
_,

.1111 WICN' In Clncl-1!

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s

&gt;

Ill • • Cll .....

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NA L PT

1--lr;',.....:l-l..:..;,l';...:.;.]-=-"'1':-1

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(I) • Cll AIIC Hlwa
(I) llody lllcllle

IUDGET TRANIMIISION ·
Uoocl • re.. ih ........ .

1~

•

The professor ~"'"""
lecture, "A word to the wise,
. . . .
. ." .but before he could con·
;::~~====~~ tlnue ellludent asked, "Is It all

.

. ·1111~Dip
111 l'~eta oH.~~e

RETURN '(OUR QUE5TION5 6EmR
FROM TJ.IE 6A5El.INE ..

I

~I

(0:30)

I I .1

F I S T .H 1 ~

rr IS lEST TO LET HIM

•.

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'

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~~

TundiiY. May 18, 1989

10-The o.ily Sa 1tinel

New cost...

Continued tram page 1

for sure II a walking or biking clerk determines the $3,500 Is
path, proposed as a Pomeroy- affordable, and upon receipt of
-Middleport joint venture, Is the company's financial statementfor 1988, the village will pay
felllllble.
It was decided that Pomeroy their share for this year. Council·
village worken will haul trash to man Bryan Shank however. did
the Galli&amp; County Landflll on a vote against giving the $3,500 to
two-week trial bllllls. Depen!llni Blue Streak because he does not
on the outcome of the trial basts, believe It appropriate for the
Council will deckle at the first village to subsidize a business.
Councilman Bill Young reJune meeting If It will be feulble
for the village to shedule a
ported be Is looking at playtwo-week spring trash pick-up ground equipment catalogs try·
for the entire village. Because of tng to decide on an Item to
the lengthy waiting periOds at the purchase with ihe $1,000 the
landfill at West Columbia, Coun· village was given by local motor·
ell has had to curtail irash cycliSts. It was stipulated that the
pick-up for residents. Even money be used for playgrounds.
though the cost to dump at Gallla Young said he may also use a
County Is a little higber than at portion of the money for mainteWest Columbia, Council feels the nance of current playground
expected savings In time may equipment.
offset the cost difference.
Council approved two requests
.Council discussed a request for liquor license' transfers. One
from Blue Streak Cab Company transfer was a C1 llcenae from
to again share In the operating · Henry and Robert Hensley, doing
costs. In past years, Pomeroy business and Ron's Carry Out,
and Middleport VIllages, and the 566, West Main, Pomeroy, to
county, have shared equally In David Reed, doing business as
such costs. This year, the com· Dave's Exxon, 402 E. Main,
pany Is asking for $3,500, Clerk· Pomeroy. The second transfer
Treasurer Jane Walton reported. was the former Meigs Inn 05
But next year, that figure Is llc!lnse which the State Depart·
expected to go to $7,000. Council· ment,. or Llquot Control will
members agreed that the cab transfer to AnDf Roush, doing
company provides a much business as the White House,
needed service to local residents. East Main, Pomeroy.
Finally, Clerk·Treasurer Wal·
But they also agreed that since
they are providing funds to the ton reported that payments for
company each year, they should cemetery care should be paid
be entitled to see a financial soon. Cost per grave Is $5. For
statement from the company. It perpetual care, the cost Is $100
was decided that after the village per grave.

Meigs County' Court news
In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, BancOhlo Na·
Ilona! Bank has been awarded a
judgment against Lorena Davidson In the amount of $12,662.70.
Ray D. Utile, Pomeroy, Is
seeking $3,553 from Raymond M.
Litchfield for damages to his 1984
Ford LTD.
City Loan Bank has been
. granted a judgment of $3,458.23
against Gaylloyd Bordon.
The Farmers Bank and Sav·
lngs Company is seeking foreclo-

•

Chinese students defy
appeal to halt protests
(UPI) - Soviet a sldestreet In southwest Beijing,
miles from the protesters.
Presld~nt Mlkl)all Gorbachev
met for 2 ~ hours Tuesday with
He and wife Ralsa shook hands
.Chinese leader Deng Xtaoplng,
briefly with several startled
ending 30 years of Sino-Soviet
onlookers and drove on for his
estrangeltlelit and dec:laring resmeeting wltJ! Lt. .
•
toration of normal relatiOns
Xinhua said the discussions
between the two communist
between Ll and Gorbachev fogiants.
cused on bilateral trade and
But while both leaders aneconomiC Issues. Tiley agreed It
nounced a new era In relations
would be ln. their nations' best
between their respective govern- Interests to expand cross-border
ments and parties, they failed to
trade and ease restrictions along
make progress on the Issue of
the border, XInhua said.
establishing a transitional goThe news agency said Ll
vernment In Cambodia once
accepted an Invitation by Gorba·
Moscow's chief Asian ally, Viet·
chev to pay an official visit to the
nam. withdraws Its remaining
Soviet UniOn but no date was
troops In September, the official •agreed .upon.
Xinhua news agency said.
\ .Gorbachev's meeting with Chi·
· Cambodia was considered a
na'.s paramount leader Deng at
key summit topic and there had
the Great Hall of. lbe People,
been hope a Gorbachev·Deng · · opposite Tlananmen Square,
meeting could break the
lasted 30 minutes longer than the
Impasse.
two hours that was scheduled.
Meanwhile. continuing student
Afterward, peng said the talks
protests for freedom brought yet
went "very well."
another embarrassment to
Both leaders ·declared that
China. The demonstrations by
after three decades of squabbles,
more than 100,000 people In
IdeolOgical and diplOmatic rifts
downtown Tlananmen Square
and anhed border clashes, rela·
again forced the government to
tlons finally llave been "normal·
alter the summit· schedule, this
!zed" between , their govern·
time moving Gorbachev's after·
ments and Communist parties.
noon meeting with Premier Ll
The last time the leaders of the
Peng to the Diaoyutal Guest
world's two communist powers
House,
secure wooded commet was In Beijing ln·1959 when
pound In western Beijing.
Nlktta Khrushchev lectured Mao
A later meeting with Commu·
Tse-twtg on the need to respect
ntst Party General Secretary
the military might of the United
Zhao Ziyang had already been
States. It was that summit that
scheduled for that site.
opened the schism In the once
Following his meeting with
close world communist alliance.
Deng, Gorbachev took one.of his
· Deng left no doubt Gorba·
trademark "walkabouts" along chev's vtslt meant an end to the
bitterness between the two neighbon as they sat down to begin
their talks In the Great Hall ofthe
People.
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon·
"Because the journalists have
day's winning Ohio Lottery
not lett us here we can publicly
numbers:
announce the normalization of
PJCK-3
relations between our two coun·
799.
tries," Deng said as both delega·
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
lions broke Into applause and
$1,289,042, with a payoff due of Gorbacbev beamed broadly. He
$333,859.50.
.
joined Dena In tbe declaration.
PJCK-4
"I can reamrm that our
7345.
bilateral relations have been
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
ralaed to a new high and entered
$227,683.50, with a payoff due of a new ataae. So It can be said th&amp;t
$118,100.
Sovlet·Chinl!le relattona have
been fully nonnallzed and 1ful1y
aaree that we should loot to the
future," Gorbacbev Ald.
David E. Carr, AI bally, has
H•pblnewe
tued In Meigs County Common
Pleu Court for a divorce from
Veter. . v wiwtal
~lillie June Carr, TM ~na.
Mottday admit"- - none,
A diVOrce hu ~ aNDiied to
Dllcllaraa. - ftuiMD Ollie,
SuiU R. Wba from Earl W. ~le Swaupr, and Helen

a

lnttery nurnben

To end rnaniage8

w-.lJL

le r' "c marrtqe dlaolatloal
- Pnll¥ ... Clark. Poawoy,
ud ..... s.
Middleport:
lf!......J:v I. lkClv.., Nlf&amp;.
,JIGrt, ud WIIJialll A. ~...
Noar.- udlllltcy.Joi'Gieer,

a...

......, ... , ....u.. .....

J .....

M.ritp Uca11e

ByUalled...._ ......IMitul
Thunderstorms battered
nortllem Texu Tuelclay wltb
hall the size of bueballs, btgb
winds and torrential ralna that
collapsed a achool roof and
· awamp~d
the town of
Gainesville.
' The National Guard was called
out before dawn In Gainesville,
near the Red River. where more
than 100 homes were ftooded
after 7 Inches of rain, officials
said.
"We are under water at this
time and It's still coming up,"
said Larry McKntght of the
Gainesville Fire Department.
The OoodiDg c!OIIed Interstate
3~. the state's main north-south
artery, from Gainesville to the
Denton County ltne. U.S. 82' also
was closed In Cooke County due
to flooding.
"Bn 35, we've had to pull a
couple of cars out of tlie water,"
said Kelll Harrison, a Cooke

Board... .

County sheriff's dlspa~ber. "All
the creeks In 8lld around the city
are out of t1te1r ballka."
The Ooodlng wu widespread
&lt;tbroueh northern Texas. In Ector, another tOWII near the
Oklahoma border, tbe roof of a
acbool caved In, said David
Spindle of the Fannin County
Slierttrs office.
There were no reports of
Injuries as a result of any of the
severe weather around the state.
The rain extended IntO south·
ern Oklahoma and Into southw·
estern Arkansas early Tuesday,
the Naltonal Weather Service
said. Showers also extended
from western Kansas Into east·
ern Wyoming.
In northern Texas, an· estt.
mated 4 to 61nches of rain fell on
Baylor, Archer, Wichita, Young
and Clay counties, the weather
service reported. ·
Six to eight families trapped .In

(Continued frllll page 1) ·

but the rlgnt amounts would be
arriving after an examination Is
made.
The board also approved:
-Payment of $3.7 mUllon lor
asbestos Inspections In ~.290
state-owned buildings.
. -$244 million as the state's

regular school subsidy payment
for May.
-A $2 mUllon contract with
Evaluation Research Corp., Oak·
ton, Va.. to assist the Ohio
Department of Human Services
with ~ting and Implementation
of a child support enforcement
tracking system.

--Area deaths-:__..;...._
.Laurine ComptOn

sure agalns t Bruce W. Hoffman,
Racine, and Patricia E . Hollman, Bradenton, Fla., et al.
A notiCe of appeal hllll been
filed In the case of James A.
Murphy, Glouster, against South·
ern Ohio Coal Company and the
Bureau of Workers
CompensatiOn.
The case of Diamond Savings
and Loan Company versus Robert J. Varian, et al has been
diSmissed.

BEIJING

Flooding wide8pread in northem Texas

. Methodist Church South. 4760
Winchester Pike, Columbus,
Ohio, 43232.

Laurine R. Compton Lawson,
of Columbus, died Monday at
Mt. Carmel East Hospital.
She was born July 4, 1903 In
West VIrginia,· a dauehter of
Pete Wheeler
Stephen G. and Jennie Mae
Salyers Complon. She was a
Pete Wheeler, 73, of Dark
member of Asbury United Meth·
Hollow Road, Pomeroy, died
odlst Cbun:h South, a SO.year
Monday at Veterans Memorial
member of Racine Chapter No.
Hospital after an extended
Illness.
t .
134, Order of Eastern Star, and a
member or N.A.R.F.E. She re·
Mr. Wheeler was born Dec. 15,
tired In 1957 from the Engineers
1915 In Pomeroy; a son of the late
Supply Section of D.C .S.C.
. John and Rosetta Burngardller
Survivors Include her husband
Wheeler. He was a retired boller
of 64 years; Leonard H. ·Lawson;
operator for the J. C. Penney Co.
a sister, Louise Compton.
and Grant Hospital in Columbus,
·Pres tier, Columbus: two broth·
a member of the Faith Fellowers, Haskell C. Compton, Akron,
ship Chureh, at Antiquity, and a
and Rudolph P. Compton, Ft.
member of the United CommerMyers, Fla. ; a niece, Judy L:
cial Travelers counciL No. 1,
Snider, Patllllkala; two nephews,
Columbus.
Or. Warren Rudy compton,
Surviyors Include his wife,
Matlacha, Fla., and Gary L.
Lavada Wheeler, or Pomeroy; a
Compton, Baltimore, Md.; and
foster son·ln·law, Harry David·
numerous great-nieces and
son, of Racine; and several
· nephews.
nieces and nephews.
Services will be Thursday, 10
In addition to hiS parents, he
a.m., at the Schoedlnger East
was preceded In death by three
Chapel, 5360 E. Livingston Ave.,
sisters and three btothers.
Cplumbus. The Rev. Mm:vln
Services will be held Thursday,
Peterson will officiate and burial
1 p.m., at Ewlna Funeral Home.
will be In Sunset Cemetery.
The Rev. Fred McDaniels will
Friends may call at the funeral , officiate and burial will be In
home from 4 to 7 on Wednesday.
Rock Sprlnga Cemetery. Calling
In lieu of flowers, the family
hours at the funeral home will be
from 2 to ·4 and 7 to 9 on
suggests that contributions be
made to the As~ry United
Wednesday.
8~.

Meigs ·announcements
Revival llaied
Racine First Church of the
Nazarene will be In revival
Wednesday through! Sunday
with George and Charlotte
Dixon. Services will start at 7
p.m. each evening. Everyone
welcome..
Geaealoclcal 10elety
The Meigs County Genealogl·
cal Society will meet Sunday, 2

p.m., at the museum on Butter·
nut Ave. Reports of the state
conven tton will be ~tven. Eve·
ryone welcome.
·
.
Daaclq Friday
'There wlll be round and square .
danciq at the Middleport Amerl·
can Legion Annex on Friday
from 8 to 12 p.m. The True
Country Ramblers will provide
the music. The public Is Invited.

. Middleport employee honored by SA
Myrile St. Clair, .an employee
of the SuperAmerlca store at
Middleport, has been recognized
for outstanding performance
concerning the company's Customer Service Awareness Program, according to announcement by R. J . Maxwell, senior
vice-president and general man·
ager of SuperAmerlca's South·
ern Division.
Candidates are observed and
evaluated wltb respect to
frle.n dly attitude, appearance,
protessionaltsm, efficiency use
of the Intercom and telephone
etiquette.
For her commitment to service
excellence, St. Clair received a
certificate of. appreciation, a
letter of commendation aDd a
special "Service Attitude"
award.

SuperAmerlca Is a chain of
more than 500 gasoline-compact
mass merchandising stores feat·
urlng the one-atop shopping con·
cept. Super America Is an opera!·
lng division of Ashland 011, Inc.

Denihan...
Continued tram page 1
and his wife, Huey, were vaca·
ttonln&amp; as the aues11 of the
Jobannesbura IJIIYOI' and coun·
ell throuah an official overseas
auest program, and that the city
paid for tbe trip.
Walah bad become acquainted
with officials durll!l meetings of
the InternatiOnal Association of
Chiefs of Pollee, accordlngg to
,
the patrol.
Walllll's trip ralaed concerns
voiced by black members of the
Ohio General Assembly.

CORRECTION
•
The Overbrook C1nter
Addr1u Was Incorrectly Printed
In the S.nday, .., 14th
Paper. It Sho•ld . , . lrid.

,

Overbrook Center

ftJ-M7J
Ill • • ....,
__,..., . .

Relit.

•'

shuts out

barn wu destroyed.

their homes by Ooodwaters In
Seymow: climbed blto Ute'bucket
of a front-end loader to escape,
said Mary Allee Smith, city
administrator.
'Tbe water was so deep, they
COUldn't get a truck In the.. but
they could aet out In a front-end
loacler,'' she said.
Sbennan poUce employees
slOalled through flooded offices
trytna to get their work done
Tuesday morning, said Clerk
..
·
B.J. Walton.
"We're In· water up· td our
anklll," she said.
. Darnall! from winds and hall
a1 big u baseballs was reported
tbrouabout the area.
''A lot of water and the ball did
a lot of damage to the houses,"
said David Spindle, a dispatcher
In Bonham with the Fannin
County Sheriffs Office. "We had
plenty of houses with wllldows
busted out."
The rains also washed out a ·
ratlrpad track 7 miles aouth 9f
Sherman, said Pam McCurdy of
the .Grayson County Sherltrs
Office.
.•
·
A funnel cloud was reported
just outside Texarkana In Bowie
County late Monday ntght,_and a

"No one saw a tornado," a

Page4

•
Vol.40, No.8
Copyrighted 1988

Stocks ·
Dally a&amp;ock prtcee .
(As of 10: Ill a.m.)
Bryce aud Mark Smith
ol Bluat, Ellll 6 Loe~

lutallA

'

, ,12 S.E.E:R.
"" TOP EFFICIENCY .
"" GREATER ENERGY
SAVINGS

""lOYEARCOMPRESSOR
The 7l2AC is Heil's tiiOII
powerful, most efficient central air
conditio::let It will keep your family
cornfurtsble and (#Ye.)'OU )'ell'S ri
~savings.

.

I.
WAINER

Racine Vtllage Council did not
meet on Monday evenlnt due to
lack of a quorum. A s~tal
meetjng will be held ThurSday, 7
p.m., at Star Mill Park.

HIA1111&amp; ' - COOLING
915-4.122
C•nil,01110

Bns· toi 1·11age now off..~ers,(:,E.I-?.1!~
more modern homes, l .,."'"''~ WAY!___
more attractive facilities ~. -0
and beneficial health care .........I ' - ·
services than ever before.
r
v'

(;-1"-0WINC:r

~

AneW fitness cenler with healed indoor swimming
pool is opening in lhc Summer 1989.

If you haven't thought al!out

~ristol Village for a while,

.,

( (

I

~enate . approves mnocent .
by re~n of insanity blll

it's time you stopped by tQ ~
how we've growrt since our
beginning in 1961. We now
~ , .
have so much more to offer in
·
,
providi!ll filr the 8JOWing needs and desires or retired folks like you.
We're a nOI·for-profit, ft&lt;!D-denominllional c6mmunily open t~ people
over the age ri fifty.

Life l..elses raaae from S20.1XXl to'$65,000. Several refund Oplions are
available, or you may choose a monthly payment plan .

Correction

I

Cekbtote Spring This Saturday!

Villr 111 Mq ltldllllri"' t/11 Pi~ CoiUity SprinJ
141111NI. Bw tiN.,.. tllld cnifts, s/10111 c.,., tllld ·

/tiel "' MI!Hrl)', -

,,.,. ,,,, ,,., ,..,
•• 11 ••.J-rilllt''r. ~·u "'"' "" Ope11 Houst
, _ f 10 fill , VIIIIDr llifot"""~~ C~•!l!!&gt;

m,.,..,_,

1,..,..'-'for

IDtkzj's «riw rtlin!lllllll . .1
Ill . . . Llac/Wavaly, alio 4j69()
(84)M7.U

.c. '1111 Pne: l-m.3111

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Robinette, Artis Salyer, Gayle employment of the substitutes,
SenUnel News Staff
Salyer, Jeff Skinner, Mary B. delaying that until a recessed
meeting tu be held Monday at 6
Coaches lor the 1989·90 school
Slavin, ·Jeanne Slawter, Unda
p.m. By unanimous vote the
year were hired along with
Smith, Gregory Spees, Deanna
board
agreed to limit substitutes
substitute teachers and some
Spriggs, Paul Stumbo, Frances
to
a
single
list. Superintendent
uncertified employees during
Thomas, Sandra Walker, David
James
Carpenter
will contact
Tuesday night's meeting of the
Weber, Elizabeth Webster,
each
of
the
individuals
now lis tea
Board .o r Education of the Meigs
Helen Williams, Kay Wilson,
on
more
than
one
sustltute
list so
Local School District.
Mae Young, Bryan Zirkle.
tl!at
the
choice
ca·
n
be
made
by
Non-certified personnel em·
Michael B. Staggs, teacher,
each
Individual.
assistant football coach, and
ployed were Sandra Butcher and
In action following an execuMyrville Brown, both cooks, with
junior high wrestUng coach at
tive
session the suspension of a
Madison Comprehensive High- · Butcher to be assigned to Meigs
student
was upheld. On the
School, Mansfield, lor the past Junior High School and Brown to
proposal
of Board President
fo11r years, was hired as· head
be assigned to Harrisonville
Richard
Vaughan,
the board
football coach for · the
Elementary. Also hired for a
diScussed
limiting
the
number of
·
year effective with the district's
Marauders.
paid meetings (each member
Other coaches hlrel;l were Jim
next pay period was Carroll
receives $80 a meeting) with the
Oliphant, head boys' track ,. Johnson, custodian. The board
matter
to be considered later.
coach, and John Arnott, head
also agreed to hire sustltutes for
Robert
M. Ha&lt;Ssenger, regional
softball coach.
students doing after-school masa'es
director
for School Nutrl·
Staggs Is a 1978 graduate of
keup of work.
lion
Services
,
which
specializes
Gallla Academy High School,
The resignation of Ruetta Crow
In
food
service
to
public
and
Gallipolis, Ea~tern Kentucky
as secretary was accepted and
prjvate
school
systems,
dis·
,
University, and Marshall Unl·
substitutes non·renewed, mostly
cussed
at
length
a
proposal
for
verslty~ · Huntington, w. Va.
because of other employment or
food
management
In
the
Meigs
Le(loa Auxiliary. In front, I to r, Jesllica
where he received his bachelor of
moving from the area, were ·
POMEROY ROYALTY - Pomeroy will be
Hamilton, Utile Miss Poppy, aud Allhley
science degree In education in
David Barnes and Gene Good- Local School District.
paylnr tribute "to thoae who have made the
As explained by Supt. Carpen·
Hamilton, Poppy Prlac1!811; Ia back, t.a Powell,
1983. He has been at Madison
win, both custodians; John
ulllmate sacrifice In the name of freedom" by
ter,
the purpose of going with a
Comprelienslve for the past four
Evans, Angela Seller, Edward
center, poppy chalnnu; 8lld Mary MartlD,
, weariDg the Memorial Poppy durlnr Poppy Days
food service management com- .
years. Prior to that he was a
Sellers, Bruce Stewart and Dean
Senior Poppy Queea. Not pictured - Amuda
. May 21-2'7. Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler,left,
pany would be saving money
Fetty, Jlllllor Miss Poppy. Gel'l Miller Ill pre~~!dent
teaclier and assistant football Sexton, bus drivers.
officially proclaimed Poppy Days for the abo•e
through
purchasing and Increasof the Drew Webster Auxlltary.
The resignation of Fred Pen·
coach at Bourbon County High
dUel. Wllh tlle mayor Is tblll year's poppy royalty
sales
In the cafeteria . He
Ing
School in Parts, Ky.
horwood as a substitute teacher
from Pomeroy's DrewWebeter Postst, Amerlcau
emphasized
that It would In no
His high school honors In
was accepted by the board.
current
workers, that
way
affect
, fooiball Included 1977, First
The board by a vote of four to
the
only
reduction
In
staff would
·Team All-SEOAL, Second Team
one approved a dock day for May
come
through
attrition,
that
AI\ District; 1978, . First Team
18 for Jenell Barker and a
there
would
be
no
reduction
In
All-SEOAL. First Team All·
one·half dock d!lY for Julia
staff,
that
the
management
firm
District, and First Team All·
Vaughan, both for the purpose of
would "live within the terrns of
Ohio. In addition to being hired as
business with the court.
the negotiated contract."
football coach, Staggs was em·
The board entered Into a
Hassenger discussed the ImColumbus Heating and Venti· ployed as a teacher. His certtflca·
purchased services contract with
exemplary service.
By HANCY YOACHAM
portance
of being on good terms
Grover Klein for transportation
In other matters, the board · latlng was accepted to replace lion is In social studies.
Selll;lael New• stalf
with
the
workers
so that the best
the heating system at Syracuse
Employed as substitute
totheOhloScboolfortheDeaffor
Southern Local School Board hired the following people as
a student, accepted David Fetty job could be done In serving
announced the employment substitute teachers for the 1989.' Elementary, at a cost of about teachers were Cindy Allen, Ber·
nadette Anderson, James Bach,
as a tuition studentfor the 1989·90 meals to the students.
David Gaul as the Tornadoes' 90 school year; Nancy Circle, $28,000.
He discussed techniques used
Great Bend Electric was ac- John W. Barcus, Kim Batey,
school year, and approved a list
new football coach Tuesday S.teve Deaver, Linda Fisher,
to
encourage students to eat
cepted to Install a fire alarm Pam Bentz, Nina Bias, Valerie of seniors for graduation.
Barbara Lawrence, Jane Ma·
night.
the
cafeteria, not only ala
Don Richmond was granted
Gaul, a resident of Chester, l)uel, Jenny Manuel; Mlchale system at Letart Falls Elemen- Black, Karla Brwn, Judith
but
meals which qualify
the
tary for a cost of $6,500.
· Ilrownlng, Mary Canady, Donna
May 9 as a dock day lor testing In
was hired by the board on May 4. Edwards, David Kucsma, Wll·
USDA
subsidy
.
He
talked
about
The two projects are being Clark, Sandra Cobb, Larry ~on,
preparation to entering the ser·
The boar~ met br lefty last night llam Robinette, Nancy Basye,
financed
from
the
school
dis·
Judith
Crooks,
Victoria
Diddle,
vice.
The board approved a sixth tailoring programs for elemenRose Ann Jenkins, Brian Zirkle,
to make the announcement.
trlct's $42,000 In lottery profits James Diehl, Michael Edwards,
grade field trip to Cincinnati for tary, junior high and senior high
A 1983 graduate of Eastern Chris Judge, VIctoria Diddle,
Harrisonville, and the purchase schools, and ways of, increlllling
High School, Gaul played football Cindy Allen, Darla Kennedy, for this year. The balance of Rick Edwards, Marshal
of concrete poles for lights on the productivity through . special
lottery profits, about $7,000, will Eglesdon.
for the Golden Eagles. He re- Eileen Buck, Shirley McDonald,
Karen Facemyer, Molly
football field . The board voted to promotions.
ceived his teaching certificate Margaret Amburger, Leda Mae be used for maintenance proIn response to ques lions from
authorize the treasurer to secure
!rom Ohio University where he Krautter, aeten Maag, VInas jects, and for additional lighting Feesler, Linda Fisher, Elaine
Board
Member Larry Rupe, the
bids on lights for the football
also played football and was a Lee, Lee Lee, Nina Bias and around the Southern football Freeman, Judy Gannaway, Lu·
management
representative
field.
ctlle Haggerty, Valerie Hanstlne,
field.
graduate llllsistant coach lor a Lucille Haggerty.
said
that
the
emphasis
In on
The following other Items of Carol Hare, Carolyn Heines,
It Willi noted that three of the
The resignation of Fred Pen·
year. He will be assigned a
establishing
programs
which
are
seven new buses orders are In
teaching position at Southern. horwood as a substitute teacher business were also conducted by Charlene Hemphill, Bill Hoi·
self-suffiCient
or
pay
for
themthe board.
comb, Paula Horton, Rose Ann
now and ready for Inspection,
.
High.
was accepted.
Jenkins,
-A
request
from
the
RacineChris
Judge,
Darla
and
the board voted to mall selves without having to be
Hired as substitute bus drivers
Assistant coaching positions In
checks to employees over the supplemented from the district's
were Bill Downie, James Southern Alumni Association to . Kennedy, Farle Kennedy , David
the district still need to be filled,
surrimer unless the treasurer Is general funds.
O'Brien, Don Smith, C.T. Chap· use the school during alumni Kucsma, Barbara Lawrence,
depending upon the financial
The average cost per student In
Vinas Lee, Henry Lewis, Beverly ' advised of another method of
man, Tammy Chapman and weekend was approved.
situation of the district.
Southeastern
Ohio schools where
-Admissions to football and Lucas, Helen Maag, Linda Mandelivery. The matting process
During Monday nlght'sregular Clarinda Theiss.
the
management
firm operates Is
Hired as substitute custodians basketball games were In- ctnl, Jane Manuel, Jenny Ma· . was approved by !I three to two 95 cents In elementary and $1.05
monthly meet111g of the board,
the resignation of teacher John • were Allee Williams, Melinda creased from $2.50 to $3 for l)uel, Brent Marshall, George . vote with Larry Rupe and Rl· In hlgb school. However, It was
chard Vaughan voting "no."
Dudding was accepted. Dudding Smith, Patty Brown, Carol Hood, adults, and $1 to $1.50 for McLean, Shirley McDonald,
students,
at
the
high
school
level.
Debbie
McGuire,
Ina
Meadows,
A lengthly discussion was held emphasized that the manage- .
Mary
Smith,
Janice
Lyons,
Shfr·
is retiring from the teaching
on substitute aides, bus drivers, ment company If hired by the
profession after 30 years. He has ley Shultz, Krl.s ta Smith and At the jtlnlor high level, admis- Michael Miller, Marie Mulford,
cooks, cus1Ddlans, and secretar· board, would not set the prices
sions were Increased from $i.50 Steven Ohlinger, Kathleen
been teaching social studies at Donna Rae Wolfe.
tes, when It was noted that but that priCes woul~ continue to
Hired as substitute cooks were to $2 for adult~ and $.75 to $1 for · Parker, Marearet Parsons.
Southern High for the last' 17 of
Katheleen Peyton, Max
several names were on two or be set by the board.
tl)ose 30 years. In addition to his Janet Manuel; Allee WIWams, students.
As for the length of a contract,
-A Carleton School emer- Pierce, Mary Powell, Lori Rlt·
more of tbe lists.
teaching responsibilities, Dud- Melinda Smith, Carol Hood,
Continued on page 5
The board took no action on the
ding also served as prom advl· Patty Brown, Barbara Chapman gency evacuation plan which chle, Jozie Roberts, William
calls for Carleton .students to be
sor, student council sponsor and and Donna Rae Wolfe.
Milford Frederick was hired taken to Syracuse Elementary In
coached different sports at
Southern Hlab. Tbe board com· by the board as high school case of an emergency, was
approved.
mended Dudding for 30 years of custodian.
-Payment to Roberta Mal.d ·
ens as director of the senior play,
replacing Donald Salmons wbo
was IU, was also approved.
-Brogan-Warner Insurance
Co. was accepted as provider of
student accident Insurance.
"Irresistible Impulse" test.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) The next regular meeting of
"We're cloaln1 a loophole In
The Ohio Senate, continuing a ·
the
board will be June 26at 7p.m.
legislative crusade against the law," said Watts.
Watts' bill also requires that
crime, voted Tuesday to narrow
any
resident In a mental lnstitu·
the courtroOm defense of lnl)otlon
because of an Innocent by
cent by reason of tnsan tty. .
rellllon
of. Insanity plea be mont·
However, senators refused to
The request for $3,500 for Blue
go alolll with a provision that tored after release to ensure he Streak Cab Company, discussed
would have Imposed a heavier or she Is taking prescribed at Monday ntaht's meeting of
burden on the accuaed to prove medicatiOn.
Pomeroy VIllage Council, was
Watts wanied a defendant to 'made by Middleport VIllage, not
he or. slli! Is Insane.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. have to prpve lnsan lty by "clear the cab company. Middleport Ia
Eugene Watts, R-Columbus, and and convincing" evidence, but an
the admlnts tratlve agent for the
forwarded to tlte House on a 29·2 amendment by Sen. Richard
Blue St..ak' s federal and atate
vote, establllhes In law the Pfeiffer, D-Columbus, reduced
fundlnlr.
Accordllll to Pomeroy VIJlaaledetente of tnnocent by reason of the burden 'of proot to "a
lnsantty,Dow pamlltted only by a preponderance of the evidence.' • Cierk Jane Walton, Mlddlepm't
bas reqtll!lted that Pomeroy pay
20-year old Ohkl Supreme Court . The Senate alllo passed, 31-0,
and sent to the House a "taxpay. $3,500 for 1988 and $3,500 for 1989
cue.
•
Under Wat 11' bill' a defendant ers' bill of rights" to ensure that
to llelp meet operatiOnal cos11. In
Uie _....
··~~
waa • Wat'W I tUlle
MBMoa•
lkmu• ~~~~Millie
addiUon, Middleport will be
will be required to prove that his Ohio · tlixpayera receive fair
,......._
011...,
Ia
Alloil
...
nslllf;QitJI 1 ·a
earJr,...... ollie •e•lllll' cltbeall propm Ill Kelp
or her meDial Uinell or retarda· tteatment tr1111 the Ohio Depart- reqtll!ltlna $7,000 from Pomeroy
I
.......
auUtlll•
1111.,
. . . . . . I .. r,
CoaiJ were abarecl 4Drllll Tttn«•r'• OoW
)ion prevented htmtrom knowing ment of Taxation.
In 1990 for Blue streak, Walton
Meva
Jllllr,
Ma
w__.,
T
1
.. , '
._.
IUblloa 0., .Uanu. Tbe dbmer, wldcll-lleld to
''This bill should make It very said, because grant fuada to the
right from wrona .• Currently, a
0r1mm,
.
.
.
.
.
.
...,.,
&amp;eUet
11
s
company are expected to be cut. . pi'Oir rll &amp;lie ltate Elderc- pnar-, wuu tire
defendant may alao assert that c)!!ar thai the tax~er bas
Maarer.Orbm
.
.
M•
•werepretalt411111f
-IIIII' rl*na onterbif'llmeroy. ApJI"D'mnSelr
. the Ulnlla or ..tardalion pre, rlghta,"nld Sen. Richard Finan,
Altho\llh POmeroy CouncUfor belill tile..,.• ...,.......
111 all deC. A rn"!tll''l· of "PUt 011 Yo• Oltl
memberl agreed that Blue
vented him or her trom control· R·Cinctnnatl, the bill'• author.
Con~ued on page 5 '
Pulda•e• • • 14 with a 'Oolll Blbboa' ~· J.t," Ill
llila:. hls .acttona- the SQo:!:.alled
Coutlllued 011 'Pill! 5

.Gaul named new Southern
--·· 'grid. . c(.ac~:; ·Dudding retires .

WARRANTY

Racine Council
has no quorum

'

Staggs named new
Meigs football · coach

.

Bed 718.AC Ceatnl
Air CoMltloaer

Am Electric Power ...... .... .... 27
ATi:T ........ ; ....... :.... .......... .. 3~%
Ashland 011 .............. .......... .41
Bob Evaris ............. ........... .. l5%
Charming Shoppes ....... .. .....16% .
City Holdlni Co ....... .. .........15~
Federal Mop! ......... .. ...... .... 54
Goodyear T&amp;:R ...................54\4
Heck's ....... , .... ... ...... .. ..... .... . %
Key Centurion ..... .............. .12\4
Lands' End . ................. ....... 30~
Umlted IJ)C ...... :&lt;.................32\4
Multimedia Inc . .......... .. ... .... 95
R~ Restauraitts ...... ........ ... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ .. ......16~
Shoney's Inc .......... .' .. .... ....... 9%
Wendy's Inti ............ ............ 5%
Worthington lnd .... ..... ..... ... 21 \4

We now offer home health care
services and assisted living
apartmenlS .. A new skilled
nwsi111 home opened
Mlldll989.

25 Conto

A Muhimedla Inc. Newtpaper

•·

50s.

'

2 Soctlono. 14 Paget

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, May 17. 1989

,.

South Ceatral Oblo .
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a
low between 45 and 50. Lith!
mostly ·north winds.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny,
with highs between 75 and 80 .
xteaded Forecut
Tllllraday tllroqb SahD'day
Fair during the period, with
highs In the 70s to near 80 and
with early mornlnllows ranging
from the upper 40s to the middle

'·

Pick3
436
Pick 4
7744

Cincinnati

BoWie County dlapatcher said,
"but something must have happened because It Is not there any
more.' '
A funnel cloud alao was reo
ported near Par.ts aboUt 6 a.m.
but pollee there
could not
confirm a twts ter on the ground
IUid tbere were no reports of
damaae or Injuries.
That area also sustained dam·
a.g e from straight -"winds and
Ooodlni In low·lylng areas, the
weather service said.
David Martin of the National
Weather Service In Fort Worth
said the storms developed over
West Texas Monday night and '
gained momentum as they
reached north-central Texas.
A severe thunderstonn watch
wu In effect early Tu~ay for
parts ot northwest Lou181ana and
southwest Arkansas, forecasters
said.
A low pressure system an.
chored off the Mid· Atlantic coast
Willi generating rain from North
C~ro)lna to the lower Great
Lakes region. Cities reporting
more than a half-Inch of rain
early Tuesday Included Washing·
ton, Q.C., Williamsport, Pa. ,
Elmira, N.Y. and Goodland,
Kan.

Weather

Ohio Lottery

Pittsburgh

•

•••m -

••rr

....,.

cn ,

'i

-

--.-

. lv, _ _ __.:...._-"----.J.--------~--~

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