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lhl.lrsct.v, JW~&amp; 15. 1988

Pomaoy-Midclaport. Ohio

Paga 18-Tha Deily Senmel

•

Local news briefs ... - - - Mason VOters ••• conunued from page 1

Ohio lottery

_:Co~n~tl~n::;:~:::,::lr.:om::.!p::a:=g::e.:1_ _....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...__ _ _ _,__ _ __

said that he didn' t have an opportunity to move the vehicle on
Tuesday and when he returned to get it on Wednesday he
discovered that aluminum palnl had been sprayed on tbe
vehicle and there were footprints on the hood.
Mike Perry, Rutherford Road, Albany , reported to the
sheriff's department Wednesday that his 11 month-old
Doberman dog was stolen about8: 15 p.m Tuesday. He said that ·
a vehicle was seen stopping on Township Road 1 and piCking up
the dog. The Incident is under Investigation by the department.
Entrance to a trailer on County Road 1 near Albany, was
reported to depu lies Wednesday. James Green reported that hIs
trailer was entered by tearing a hole In the screen on the back
iloor. The only thing reported missing was an old VCR tape.
Moderate damage was Incurred to a vehicle owned by Mark
A. O'Dell 29 Abbott Road, Pomeroy, when he struck a deer
which ran Into the path of his vehicle at 1:50 p.m. Wednesday
while he was traveling along Township Road 193.

Ten fined on speeding charges
Ten persons forfeited bonds on speeding charges In the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting bonds on the charge were Willard E. Miller,
Pomeroy, $41; Robert Petrte, Gallipolis, $40; Joseph J. Cox,
Gallipolis, $45; Mary E·. Lee, Pomeroy, $40; Teresa R. McDade,
Cheshire. $41; Margaret P. McCoy, Ew!ngton, $40; Rayanna S.
Stinson, Gallipolis, $41: Clyde M. Evans, Rio Grande, $41;
Eugene Mullet, Gallipolis, $41; and Pamela S. Wilson. Albany,

$44.
Fined In the court were Tom Gibbs. Cheshire. $15 and costs,
speeding; Ronald Cremeans, Langsville, $10 and costs, assured
clear distance; Melissa Manley, Middleport, $25 and costs,
accumulation of trash: Martha D. Lowe, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, running a red light; Robbie L. Clonch, Langsville, $50 and
costs, driving· under suspension; and Brian S. Eads, Gallipolis,
$200 and costs. vandalism, with a requirement for resUtutlon of
property.

EMS has 3 Wednesday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports that
three calls were answered on Wedensday by units In the county.
At 11:45 a.m .. Rutland was called to Meigs Mine No. 1 for
Randy Fletcher who was taken to Holzer Meq!cal Center.
Pomeroy was called at 3:05p.m. to the Amer!care-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Stella Bush who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 9:32p.m., Pomeroy went to Dutchtown
HDIIor Harlen Aleshire to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·

councilman Rar Varian defealed
write-in Carl Ome, 198 Ill 116. Jn.
cumbent Recorder Te.st, who did
not run for re-election, received six
write-in votes.
In a sepanue ballot ' question,
Mason voters turned down the ~
of changing the ~~ two-year
terms for officials to four-year
terms. The ballot initiljlive was
defeated 71 to 255.
Henderson

Ronald Wickline, running unopposed, won the mayor's post in
Henderson with 100 votes. Incumbent Mayor David Tarbett, who did
not run again, received five write-in
votes for mayor, 'Jack ·McCoy
received two votes and Glen Gibson received one write-in vote.
Incumbent Jean Arnold was reelected without opposition with I 00
votes.
Three incumbent cooncilmen

Chamber's...

held at the Meigs Football Field
at 9 p.m. on July 4. Gates will
open at 7 p.m. and tickets may be
purchased lor $7 at the gate or In
advance . from members of
Chamber. In addition, a preconcert partY Is to be held at the
Pomeroy Gun Club at 6 p.m.,
with members of the popular
Columbus-based group In attend·
ance. 'Pickets lor the party are
$25 per couple, which Includes a
light dinner and two seats at the
concert. Anyone wishing to at·
tend the party should purchase a
ticket right away since attend·

-Livestock report GJILLIPOLII STOCKY ARIJ8

Howard S. and Thelma Irene Bow·
'Howard Brewer, Sr.
ser Brewer. He was employed at
Howard W. "Bill" Brewer, Sr., 'southern Ohio Coal Company
.59, of Route I, Point Pleasant died Meigs Mine 112 where he was a
Wednesday, June 14, 1989 atHol- foreman In the maintenance
zer Medical Center In Gallipolis.
d(jpartment. He was also an
Born Jan. 14, 1930 in Point employee and foreman for 23 years
Pleasant, he was the son of the late at Bartlett Tree Company.
Surviving are his wife Margaret
E. Lieving Brewer whom he mar·
ried Sept. 4. 1948. Also surviving
are one son, Howard W. Brewer, Jr.
of Hartford; three daughters, carol
Hood of Racine, Diana Adams, of
Vinton and Martha Myers of Point
Pleasant; two sisters, Stella M. Hill
of Middletown, Ohio and Nelda
For anyone wishing to begin a
Jane Gilley of Point Pleasant; three ·
career In the field of drug and
brothers, Roben S. Brewer, Sr. of
alcohol counseling, the Reslden·
Leon, Oliver A. Brewer, Sr. of
t!al Treatment Program. which
Kingsi&amp;nd, Ga., and Charles E.
works with the Athens. Hocking,
Brewer of Logan, Ala.; and seven
Vinton and Meigs school sys·
grandchildren.
terns, has a golden opportunity
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
available.
Saturday at Crow-Hussell Funeral
Selected as one ol13 recipients
Home in Point Pleasant with the
statewide of grant money from
Rev. Lawrence Gray officiating.
the Oh Ia Department of Health.
Burial will follow in Kmland
RTP is now looking for a person
Memorial Gardens. Friends may
.to train as a specialist In drug and . call at the funeral home Friday after
alcohol education. prevention
4p.m.
and intervention. This person .
wlll work as a VlSTA volunteer
under RTP supervision durtng
Hospit~l
his or her lhree-yeqr training
period. After this time, says
Veterans Memorial
,
RTP's Ivan Faske. the trainee
Wednesday admissions- Har•
will be certlf!a ble as a prevention
Jan Aleshire, Pomeroy.
specialist, and "well on the way
Wednesday discha-rges - Roy
to certification as a drug and
Scarberry.
·
alcohol counselor."
Necessary qualifications for
the spot are "pretty limited,"
says Faske. An acceptableappll·
cant would be someone with a
desire to work in the field,
''somewhat assertive, who can
present well ... " As for education,
he says, "a high school diploma
would be enough."
Though the state mpmwwould
probably not be enough by itself
to Uve on, Faske says, the trainee
will "most likely" be hired to
work for RTP In some capacity
as well. In addition, he or she
would be eligible lor general
relief In the form of food stamps,
as well as Blue CrossBiue Shield
medical benefits.
Another plus of the program Is
that time put In as a VISTA
volunteer can be applied to
paying off any form of outstand·
tng student loan. aenellts re·
ce!ved through VISTA will not,
however, disqualify their recipIent lor any other government
benefits such as Social Security,
according to Faske.
Besides such training as at·
tending conventions and work·
shops, Faske says, the person
would do educational work In
'local schools and communities.
Faske stresses that the program could be, for the rtgbt
person, an excellect chance to
enter a r11pldly growing profes·
ston. He says that after goinl .
through the three-year program
"that person would be marketa·
hie for positions anywhere In '!he
atate ...and would most definitely
have a decent job waltln1 lor
tbelll·" He adds !bat "bellli a
VISTA volwiteer really looks

Training
available
for program

news

aood 011 a re~ume."

ADyoae waatlJI&amp; to know more
aboUt lbe proeram may contact
J'UIIII It Jl'l'P, 211 fol. CoU.p St.,
Atlllll. or call him at 1-8006~·
..,, Faille urpa any ln.,. lid
pa 1111 to act IOOD, a!Dc!e tbe
1
lllllltWtllledby July liD

p nsw

..... to ....... &amp;tale·~·

Tre.ula-Feeder Cattle 8tM41, Veal

Calve. Sleady, Bll&amp;cller COwa LM-S...

Blodu..

Medium Frame I • 2 Sleera:
lllo .......................... II.IJI.lJO.IMI
- l l l o ............................ u........
- l l l o ............................ '11.. .81.111
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-111111o ............................ 14.. .11.11
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- ... tllo .................,...........
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-~~~

a....

Me41um Frunel II t Hellen:
ZIHIMIIIIo ............................8L-.II
- " ' " · ........................... '11. .......

-•u
.... ...........................- ...
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-111111o. ................ ,.............. '14...
100-llllbl. .....................................
1100-up lbl. ............................ 118......111
Holltela steers ud BUill:
- l b l . ................................~~...
BuldurCGwa;

VIUllles II .... IS.It; Caaaer/Cutler
II.IWUI; LIPI weiPI low ...... oowo
10.-wa; JIOII&lt;I'elle up lo ILI8.
Buk:btrBuD:
VIUIIIet ll .... ti.OI; Caaner/Cutler
113.110-11.11.

Veil Colno:

Clilolce/prlme tl.tl-ltl.to: Medium

14..........

-.-,.a;
ca1v..

--0:
::::&amp;;... . . . . . . . . . . . .

8prlopr Cewo:
111.-a; Bal&gt;f
dowa. •

com.

Cow/Call
lii.IJe.

.............................aa....sut.

-~

4l.llf.ll.ll.

ATDINII UVJIBTOCII; IIALIII
luae It, 1181

Catlle Prl-: Feed• !1&amp;...: llf.llt
111o. 11.•nut: ....,.. lbo. atHI.tt;
Feed• BeU- 1.._ 'lt.. .ltLtt;
IIJ0.111 liB. ll. ... tll.tt; ...... Bda:
........ '11. . .101.11; .....,.. 1... 'lt...
11.00; 81.. Pior Butlo over lttl lllo.
IUUUI.
·
81 .. r;lller Cows: VtDI. . 41.11NS.II;
cua.. ' Cailen: 11.11-41.11; lltrtoa•
Cowa Br lbe Bead: ........,.,... COw ud
call pllro br lbo - : ............. Veil
Calv,.: ti... IM.tt; Babr Cllv• Br llle
Bead ,._......tt: llabr c.Jv• br lbe
Pound:,..........
Boa Prt-: llanowo ud Glllo • •
lba.: U.li·4UI; Balcb&lt;l'
11.11; llolcb&lt;l' - • : ILit; Fe- Pip
bJ bead: Ut-41.11.
l!lleep: Lambo: A.-.11; Old 111...,:
11.11-11.11; GoalaBylbellead: lt...ll.tl.

-o: . . .

received one vote as a write-in for
llllyDI'.

Incumbelll recorder Lois Shinn
was re-elected with 24 votes. Gwen
Greene received one write-in Y&lt;ite

Incumbent Russ Bailey lead .U
council candidates with 98 VQteS,
followed by incumbent Sharon
McCalliSier, who had 9S votes. Incumbent Billy Painter was re-elected with 93 votes. Two newcomers
won in Henderson. Mary Ellen
McCoy received 91 votes and Lisa
Grimes received 90 votes.
Write-ins for council were Lisa
Wamsler, three; Gary T. Roach,
one; Diana Glenn, one; Charles
Fields, two; Roy Eads, one; Ellen
Greenlee, one; and Maxine Gibson,
one.
The canvass will be Monday.

fat recordel.
The council members elected acCording to UDOfficial to1als -were
Crystal Cub, 30; JuaniiB Burdette,
27; Samuel ugg, 27; Sandra Morgan, 27 and DOnald Oldaker, 26
votes. Dennis Weaver received one
write-in vote for council
The lllwn narrowly passed a bal·
lot question regarding the length of
council, mayor and recorder Jerms.
The those terms of office will be
four yean instead of two yean, according to the unofficial results of a
19-7 vote. Those elected Tuesday
will serve the four-year terms. The
canvass will be Monday.

· Leon

Leon Mayor Donnie Gmene was
re-elected
without
oppOsition
receiving 26 votes in the-Tuesday
el!'(:tion. John · Bill Burdette

continued

June 11, 1181

--Area deaths---

join two newcomers in Heudcnan,
according to the unofficial results
which will be canvassed Monday.

f~om page 1

Hart(ord
Dan Rizer was ~lect.ed Hartford
• mayor with 76 votes. Incumbent
Mayor David Smith, whi&gt; did not
choose to run for re-election,
received 30 write-in votes for town
recorder. There was no recorder
candidale on the ballot.

ance Is ltmlted.
Volunteer ticket takersaresllll
needed for the concert, reported
Jay Hill, concert chairman. HUI
said anyone who works the gate
would miss very little, If any, of
the concert.
Any business with a flashing
sign Is. being asked to help
promote the concert durtng the
week preceding July Fourth.
And chamber has purchased
rain Insurance for. the concert,
Reed said. With Insurance,
·c hamber can at least recoup
expenses U the concert Is rained
out..
Finally, Gary Bates, of GTE
North. reported briefly on a
syslem changeover that Is to t.ake
place Saturday night at mid·
night, which will affect solne
aspects of telephone usage In the
area. For one thing, dial tones
will sound different alter the
cbangeover, Bates said. Also,
pay telephones will operate d!l·
ferently. Instead of paying after
a party answers;pay phone users
wUI have to deposit coins before
using the phone. Although the
changeover will lake place Satur·
day "lght, pay phone Instructions
wm not be changed until after the
changeover. For this reason,
Bates urges pay phone users to
take note of the new 11ay!ng
procedure.
,Bates ·also explained that to ·
select a long distance carrier,
such as AT&amp;T. Sprint, or MCI. a ;
customer should determine
where they make the majority of
lhej.r long dlatance calls, ln order
to determine which long distance
earner will provide them with
service at a better price. For
example, said Bates, If the
majortty or long distance calls
are going to a place within your
defined LATA (Local Access and
Transport Area), then although
the call Is long distance, II does
· not require a long distance
carrier. Areas within our own
LATA are listed In the front of the
telephone book.
Bates also urged customers
with Call Forwarding to keep In
mind that the customer with the
·Call Forward!ng ·feature Is pay·
tng lor long distance calls that
are forwarded to . another
.number.

Stocks '.
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:31 Lm.)
Bryce and Mark SmKb
of Blunt, Ellis A Loewt
Am Electric Power ............. 27¥.
AT&amp;T ......... ... ..................... 3511,
Ashland 011 ........................ 41 ~
Bob Evans ........................ ,.1511,
Charming Shoppes ., ........... ,16~
City Holding Co .... :.............. 15
Federal Mogul .............. ...... 271,\
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ...........551,\
Heck's ....... : ......................... ~
Key Centurion ..................... 13
Lands' End .................. ....... 27~
Limited Inc ........................32~
Multllned!a Inc ....... ............. 99
Rax Resta11rants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................1711,
Shoney's Inc ....................... 11%,
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6~
Worthington Ind .................... 22
(Worthlal(lon lnduatrlealourth
quarter May 31 net Ul a ahare
va.U8.)

Receiving wrile-ia voea for
mayor were Cotlolly Dudley, 19;
and De1n W, Smith, 10.
Council winnen included Incumbent Pred Kaylor, 90; llld newcomers Jolm Oldaka', 83; Jealca
Joncs, 74; David Ross. 69; and

Gene Oreena. 67.
'J')Iotna$ Andcnon received 66
votes for CX!!mclJ, but was not elec·
six delmdiJidii"dl.....
lles for
ted. There five council posiB in Hartford.
The canvass for ballots will be
;Monday.

Father's Day
Sunday,. June 18.

Pick 3
323
Pick 4.

8461

.

•

.

Weather
By United Preea International
·
Soutb Central Oblo
Tonight: Showers likely, with a
chance of thundersttms mi.lnly
early. Lows will be In the upper
50s. Winds northwest 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain Is 60 percent.

2 Sections. 16 Pages 25 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Restraining
order sought
by district ·
•
court actton

Meigs area
announcements.
Plan reunion
The 59th annual Spencer· Fell
reunion Will be ·held Sunday,
starting at 11 a.m., at the Ward
Spencer recreation area off Ba·
shan Road, near Racine. Rela·
lives and fried · are · Invited.
Those planning to at tend are '
asked to bring a covered dish,
with the recipe. A recipe ex·
change will be held. Dinner will
be at 12 noon.
Ice cream aoclal
There will be an Ice cream
social at the Bashan 11'!re House
on Friday starting at.5 p.m. Ten
flavors of Ice cream will be '
available, as well as sandwiches,
pies and beverages. Entertain·
ment will be by the · "Free
Country Band." The social Is
sponsored by the Fire Depart·
. ment Ladles Auxiliary.
Gran1e meeting
.
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will hold their regular
fun night and potluck supper at
6: 30 p.m. on Saturday. The
meeting w!ll be held at the
grange hall on County Road 1,
north of ·Salem Center. All
rriembers and friends are urged
to attend.

•

MIDNIGHT CLOGGERS DISNEY BOUND - The Midnight
Cloners POIII! for a p!ciUI't' just before hoardlnr; a chartered bus
which will take them to Dlsneyworld where they will perfonn ·on

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
House passed a landmark $285
billion bill to ball out alllng
savings and loans and. In a ra·re
defeat lor S&amp;L lobbyists. made
thrift owners Invest more of their
own money In their Institutions. ·
On a 320-97 vole Thursday, the
House approved the measure
sought by President Bush to
ensure that peopl&lt;? with funds In
failed thrifts lose no deposits and
that new reforms prevent a
recurrence of the ~:reed. fraud.
r.nwnuaaement and lax regula·
tor ~verslght that helped cause·
the criSis.
Aided by last-minute lobbying
by Bush aimed at fellow Republl·
ca.ns, the House overwhetm!ngly
killed an amendment that crltlc.s
said would gut the bill's key
reform - Increasing money
owners must Invest.
Passage came after legislators
voted overwhelmingly to send
the measure back Into commit·
tee unless speclallnteresl provl·
slons were deleted . The bill's
spo_nsors quickly deleted the
provisions. clearing the way for
passage. •
Reacting to the bill's passage.
While House · press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater said. "We are
pleased by this blpart1san step
· toward final passage of the
savings and loan bill. The House
responded to the president's call
for adequate capital requirements. We will work to improve
some features of the bill In
conference."
The thrift Industry, considered
among the most successful lobbyists. sulfered a rare d~leat. II
pressed hard to let owners put up
less ol their own money.
The final bill.will be crafted by
House-Senate negotiators. who
will Iron out differences between
the two versions. The Senate
passed lis bill Aprlll9.
Late Thursday, lawmakers
voted 214·200 to require federal

Saturday. The dancers seemed pretty excited ahoutleavlng Meigs
County's rainy weather lor the Florida sunshine. The busleftahout
1 p.m. Thursday from Racine.

regulators to disclose pub!lcly a Bush appearance In Bruns·
lending practices by S&amp;Ls in an wick . . Ga .. that the president
effort to stop red-lining - the mtghl veto the bill II the amount
dlscrimatory practice at some thrift owners had to put up was
thrtlts of approving fewer home reduced.
Bush later released a state·
loans In low-Income areas.
The House also narrowly voted men! saying he was "determined
208-206 to· require Federal Home that in the future. federally
Loan Banks to set aside up to $75 Insured Institutions should have
m1111on In each of the next lour to put their own money at risk
years lor low· and moderate· before that of the Insurance fund
Income housing. And It barred and the taxpayers. This Is an
S&amp;Ls from inves ling In high-risk essential element In protecting
against any future repetition of
"junk boJllls."
. Earlier. the House. voting this !)rob!em."
The House later voted. 280·146.
'326-94, killed an amendment by
Rep. Henry Hyde, R· Ill., to allow .to adopt an amendment proposed
RUSTY WOOMER
some owners to continue count· by the House Ways and Means
lng an intangible asset. known as Committee to place the cost of
supervisory good will, as part of the bailout "on budget" but to
the hard capllal they otherwise exempt the bill's cost from from
WO!lid be required to invest In provisions of the Gramm·
•
Rudman balanced budget law.
their thrifts.
Advocates
said
that
would
save
The bill as drafted required
most S&amp;L owners to bring the from $4.5 hlllion to $25 billion.
But by placing costs on budget.
amount of their own funds
·Invested In thelt Institutions up to .the House Ignored a second veto
3 percent of total assets by June threat from Bush, who wanted
1990 on the theory that the more the cost kept "off budget."
•
of their own money they had at Before the vote. Fitzwater told
stake. the less likely they would reporters an on budget approach
be to make highly speculallve might prompt a veto.
COLUMBIA. S.C. tUPI) -'The
Investments and loans thai
Supreine Court granted a stay of
helped rreat!' the S&amp;L crisis.
execution to Ronald "Rusty"
UndH the bill. those thrifts
Woomer. just hours before he
wllh supervisory good will on
was to dle Friday in the electric
their ...bQoks would have until
chair for kUling a woman In a
January 1995 to phase out count·
1979 rape. robbery and murder
lng It toward the3 percentcapllal
Michele Pratt was hired as a
spree along the South Carolina
speech therapist for Meigs
standard.
coast .
Supervisory good will Is an County and Eric Chambers was ·
Woomer 's execution was scheaccounting gimmick permitted contracted to conduct the Seat
duled lor 1 a.m. Friday. but the
In the early 1980s by federal Belt Safety Center program on
high court said Its slay will
regulators to encourage healthy two Saturdays per month during
remain In effect until a petition
S&amp;Ls to merge with la1l!ng ones. the 1989·90 fiscal year when the
filed by Woomer's attorneys can
Bush. · whose S&amp;L bailout bill Meigs County Board of Educa·
be considered. The court re·
contained tougher capital re· tlon met In regular session
leased no vote and made no other
qulrements In hopes of prevent · Tuesday evening.
comment In Its three-sentence
lng future thrift failures, told
The board also approved par· order.
lawmakers In a .letter released
"What they have done Is Issued
tic!pallon In the Council 'o f
Thursday he was "adamantly Government·Southeastern Ohio a stay until they decide whether
opposed" to any weakening of Voluntary Education Coopera· they will take th&lt;&gt; case," said
those standards.
tlve. the Southeastern Ohio· Mark Dillard. spokesman lor
Fitzwater told reporters
Special Education Regional Re- state Attorney General Travis
aboard Air Force One en route to source Center, and the Medlock. "If they decllde not to
Tri-County Career Development lake the case. then the stay Is
Center programs. and appointed automatically over. and there Is
John D. Riebel, Sr .. superintend· no longer a legal obstacle to
ent. as the authorized carrying out the sentence."
Dillard said a similar motion
representative.
lhr
a stay pending before U.S.
Action to modify approprla·
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department Is Investigating the
!Ions to adjust lor sick leave, District Judge Joe Anderson Jr.
theft of various Items taken from a car In Racine.
personal leave, and vacation was probably will not come Into play
According to the report taken on Thursday evening, Beverly
taken. and transfers made In the until· the Supreme Court has
Cummins, Racine, noticed that sometime between 5 aod 10p.m.
completed Its deliberations on
1988·89 budget.
her locked vehicle had been entered. The ash tray, tllle, and
The board approved a course of the case.
reglstrallon lor the vehicle are missing, a scanner was partially
"For the time being, the locus
study lor life time sports and for
disconnected, and Items from the glove box were scattered on
journalism. approved textbook Is on the U.S. Supreme Court," he
the floor. When she went out to get In the car she noticed the
adoptions as recommended by said. "One stay Is enough (to
right rear door was open .
the texlbook committee, and prevent the.executlon), but It's
amended the pupil competency conceivable If !Anderson) has
not made a decision and this stay
funds appropriations.
The board also approved a
Is lifted. then all the attorneys
•
maintenance agreement on the Involved would be turning their
photocopier and discussed the attention back to the U.S. District
A summer program will lake place on Saturday night at the
Court."
·
1989·1990 budget.
. Star Mill Park In Racine and will feature several different
The regular July meeting was
Department of Corrections
musical groups.
changed from July 11 to Satur· spokesman Francis Archibald
GrOUPII peJ,iormlng Include the "Harvest Time Bluegrass ·
day, July 1 at 8:30a.m. and at said it Is likely Woomer will be
Band "made up of Everett Grant, Russ Powers, David Rupe,
that ttme the 1989·1990 budget moved Friday from the site
Ron BerJa, and Adrln Stanley; and the "Free Country Band,"
where tbe execution was schewill be adopted.
which consists of Jim Milliron, Lyle Swain, Ernie Jones,
duled to take place.
Tammy Bibbee. Ba~bara Bennett, and Chuck Savoy.
"We will decide tomorrow
Conversion July 15
Goapel music w!ll be provided by Cathy McDaniel and Janice
whether to move him back to
Lavender who will begin the program at 7 p.m.
An upcomtnr conversion by death row at the Central Correc·
'rbe event Is free to the public and all that Is needed Is a
GTE North to new electronic tiona I Institution," Archibald
lawnchalr. Playground equipment Is available for thechll!lren.
equipment, will take place Satur- said. "He'll stay overnight at the
and refreshments will be sold. Alcoholic beverages are
day, July 11, at II mldnlpt, and capital punishment facility."
prohibited.
.
The Supreme Court decision
not ~Ia Saturday, u NPOI'Ied In
This event will be held every other Saturday night and Is
Thund&amp;J'• aecount of a Pome- was welcomed by Opponents of
aix&gt;IIIOI'ed by the Racine V!llaJe Park Board.
roy Chamberoi.Commeree meet- capital punishment.
Continued on paJe 12
Continued on page 12
Inc.

-Local news briefs-_,
Sheriffprobes Thursday thefts

1982 FORD ESCORT STOCK t 40222...................,
1981 DODGE OMNI STOCKIISI13..................... 1
. S6QO
1976 LINCOLN MARK IV STOCKIII3231 .......-.
1en FORD F·150 PICK·UP STOCKU9172........ •aoo
4X4 SIOCK 'N233 ""'

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
mid 50. Chance olraln20 percent.
Saturday, partly cloudy, high
mid 70s.

Plan program at Racine park

Woomer
recetves
stay of
executton

County board'
hires therapist

By NANCY YOACHAM
itlated, but ihey thought the
Sentinel News Staff
action was being Initiated by the
An action was filed May 26 in Ohio Historical Society . AI·
U.S. District Court. Southern though alleged violations of Sec·
District of Ohio, Eastern Dlv· tion 106ol the National Historical
Is ion, by the Village of Pomeroy, Preservation Act are listed in the
Mayor's Office, agalnslthe U.S. action. no historical societies are
Army Corps of Engineers. Hun· listed as pia lntllls.
Cincinnati Attorney Sally
tlngton, W.Va.
However, at least five Cremeens-Strong, of the firm of
members of Pomeroy Village Manley. Burke and Fischer.
Council were not aware that the acknowledges she is "represent·
village Is the plaintiff In the lng the village" In the matter .
action . The sixth council· She also says that "the thing to
member could not be reached \lY keep In mind is that althoug h
there is a local historic ordi ~
telephone lor comment.
nance.
it Is .not at Issue in this
The action Is requesting a
This
is a federal matter.;:
case.
temporary reslralnlng order and
Pomeroy
Mayor Richard
preliminary injunction to stop .
the Corps of Engineers from Seyler says II was Cremeens·
continuing to permit excavation Strong who contacted him by
and construction along the river telephone about the district court
bank property of Pomeroy rest· action. The mayor says that.
Cremeens·Sirong explained that
dent Dottle Turner.
Turner and a co-owner of the a plaintiff was needed In the
property. Jimmy S. Cain. 'con· action. Since the mayor had
tracted . repair work to stop signed the local arrest warrants
erosion of the bank. They also in the matter, he agreed to be the
built a boat dock at the site. plaintiff.
'Although at some point. the
During the construction process.
mayor
apprised council ·
both were served with several
members
about the courl action
warrants charging them with
violation of Pomeroy's historic and his conversation with
preservation and floodplain ordl· Cremeens·Strong. council·
nances. Cain and Turner main· members did not understand that
lain they were never In violation the Village would be the plaintiff.
Councilman Bill Young says
of local ordinances because they
were Issued permits from the .that during "some meeting,"
Corps to proceed with the work council did tell the mayor to take
whatever steps he 1the mayor)
on their property.
felt
were necessary In the
Turner and Cain are · not
·
Turner-Cain
matter. Upon re·
parties to Ihe dis trlct court
flection
however.
Young could
proceeding. •
be
sure
if
council
and the
not
Apparently. Pomeroy Council
members were aware that some mayor had been talking a bout
type of action was being In·
Continued on page 12

Meigs County residents
donate 75 units of blood
Seventy-live unlls of blood
were received during Wednes·
day's Meigs County visit of the
American Red Cross
Bloodmobile .
Held at the Senior Citizens
Center. 81 reported to give blood
wllh 34 lnd lvldua Is donating Iheir
blood In appreciation for blood
received by a relative or friend.
First time donors were: David
Sexton and Durward Cummings.
Multiple gallon donors were:
Betsy Herald. Gary Snouffer.
and Deborah Lowery. one gal·
ion; Dortha Riffle and Marie
Bush, two gallons; Barbara Lynn
Chapman, three gallons; Mary
Davidson. eight gallons; Donna
Davidson. nine gallons and Sarah
Fowler, 11 gallons.
Physicians lor the bloodmobile
were Dr. James Witherell and
Dr. Wilma Mansfield. Beulah
Ward, Lenora Leifheit, Winnie
Marcinko and Jean Wright were
the nurses who as sis ted and the
clerical workers were Peggy
Harris and Edward Cozart. a
re!Jresentattve of the Vietnam
Vets Mortorcycle Club.
The RSVP workers who as·
sl~ted Included VIrginia Bucha·
nan. Dorothy Long, Mary Nease,
Marlon Ebersbach, Norma Je· '
well, Florence Richards, Jack
and Joan Sorden, Edna Triplett.
William and Joyce Hoback,
Mace! Barton. PauUne Hysell•
Evelyn Gilmore, Gerald Wilder·
muth and Lu!a Hampton.
The canteen was aened by the
Racine Onlted Methodist
Church.
Donors by communlttea were:
· Pomeroy - David M. Klq,
Lenora McKnight, Janet K.
Peavley, Pamela J. Miller, Denile Mora, LolsJ. Wyant, Brenda
A. Cunningham, GreJOry W.
CunnlnJham, Durwood Cum·
lngs, Janet M. Ambroee, Walter
R. Couch, Howard P. Logan,
.....--

.........._

_

Leesa M. Murphey. Penny L.
Brinker, Harold W. Brinker,
Charles V. Jacks. Patricia J .
Barton. Adell L. White, Danny R.
While. Margaret Y. Harris , Fred
Thompson. Bonnie L. Friend.
Mary A. Jeffers. Gerald Rought.
Dan E . Follrod. Edward M.
Cozart, Geoffrey A. Wilson, Wll·
llam E. Snouffer. Gary E.
Snouffer, Donald R. Smith, Paul
F . Marr, Carolyn A. Charles,
Debra D. Buck. William W.
Radford, and Phyllis J .
Witherell.
Tuppers Plains .- Betsy A.
Herald.
Florida - David Frederick.
Minersville- Mary L. Voss .
Rutland - Marta H. Black·
wood, William Alan Blackwood,
Donnie R. Lauderm!lt. Donna M.
Davidson. and Mary E .
Davidson.
Lanpville - Karen E. Clark.
Alva B. Clark, Tara S: Clark.
Ellis E. Myers.
Racine - Patricia A. Ervin.
Betty V. Sayrt'. Dortha Riffle.
Charles W. Bush. A. Marl!' Bush,
Barbara F . Beegle, William H ..
Hoback. Barbara Lynn
Chapman.
Middleport- Sarah J . Fowler,
Linda Haley. Charles P. Gerard.
David G. Doldson, Sr., Jean A.
Durst, William H. Moody, Jr ..
Gloria J. Peavley.
Reeavllle - Mace! Barton.
Sherrie A. Roush, Johnnie L.
RouSh.
· Bldftll - Mary K. Sea{ls.
David Sexton, and Paul E.
HollllnJhead.
Lo1J1IIotliam -Henry E. Babr.
Keith 0 . Wood. Paula J. WOOd.
Vaneaaa Sidwell, Bruce Hawley,
Laura Hawley. and HQ,ill!f
Riebel.
B y - - Kathy CumJnas,
David i'. Lawson, Carroll R.
Norris, Darla N. Thomas. Teren
Tyson-Drummer, and Debbie
Lowery.

__ ,

. . . .R

....

'

�I

The

Ohio

Commentary

..

-·-·

The Daily Sentinel

BOBE&amp;T L. WINGE'M'
hbllaller

CHARLENE HOEFIJCH

General Manacer
PAT WHitEHEAD
Asall&amp;aat Publlaher/CoatroUer

A MEMBER af'l11e A_.,,... Pr-. JaiMMI Dalb' Pnu"r r l'ulllllllfn A_...._

cJetJen 8114 the Amerlcu New"

be
-be,....,.

LETTEB8 OF OPINION •ewelcome. 'fteJ - N IMI - · - ...,. AD le&amp;ten • • ouiiJIM!i to eclltllll ud
wlilo
ume,
aad lelep-• a...bor. No ••lp~ ~etten wlillle ,..,_
llabell. Letter• llloald be to piNIIMte,
DO&amp;
. lleo.

acldr-

acl*-"'•-.

,.......n-

Growing split between
U.S. and China

-

ROCHESTER. N.Y. !UPll Bernhard Langer. Payne Stewart and Jay Don Blake took the
fewest shots in Thursday's opentng round of the U.S. Open. Jack
Nicklaus. however. made tke
biggest noise.
Langer. Stewart and Blake tied
for the first-round Open lead at
the rain· soddened Oak Hill Country Club with 4-under-par 66s three of 21 sub-par rounds fired
Thursday.
Just one shot off that lead was
Nicklaus. whO at age 49 is trying
to once again extend what has
already been a record· shattering
domination of the world"s major
golf championships.
Nicklaus· holds or shares the
record for most Open appearances (33). victories (4 1. cuts made
(27). lowest 18-hoie score (63)
and lowest 72·hole score (272).
Now he is trying to become the
oldest player to win a major
championship.
.
Nicklaus shot his lowest U.S.
Open score in nine years. a
3·Under 67. thrilling a crowd that
hoped to inspire him to a record

•

.

Terrorist would even side
with
the
devil
Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

1

DAMASCUS, Syria - Who where a terrorist lays h1l head?
crawla Into bed with wbom ID the A world ot difference wileD be the Iraai8D revolution.
Amerlcaaa or Europealll tor
Middle Eut 18 ofl!'eat IDtere.t to doel tile dirty work tor his ho&amp;t of
every
Palestinian martyr.
We uked him about the
. 'tbe U.S. govt!I1IJIIellt. Tbe most the moment. Moammar Gadhaft meetlnp, aad be 41cln't deny
JlbrU told Ul he couldn't
dlsturbtnc bulllanates of the may be the "mad do&amp; of tbe them.l!l&amp;tead, he said h1l orcant- condenm Refllanjanl beeau1e
moment are Pale11t~ terror- Middle East," but lrllD Ia a zatlon "II ready to have alltancee Raflanjanl had beeD mllquoted. ·~
Ist Ahmed Jlbrn and the Irra- veritable kennel.
with llDY country that wuuld side Jlbrll 1Hpped over tire part about
tional mullabs of1rllJ1.
Tbe Central Intelllcence wltli our (Palestinian) atruule how R•tsanJanl's blantret execuWithout a place to call home, Agency has concluded, UIIDC and aupport It ... even with the · tion order wu publllbed verbaPalestiDI8D terrorists take up mostly clrCUJnltantial evtcleiiCe, devO. II It wnt help us reach our tim by the lrani8D governme~~t
with whomever wUJ tolerate that Iran hired Jlbrll to blow up encll."
news servll!e and that Ra'Majanl •
.
them. For more tbllD ~ years, PanAmntptl03181tDec. 21. We
'
hbnlelt tater retracted It
Speaking ot tbe devil- or, u
JlbrU bas Hved off the charity ot have gathered other evidence of the ayatollah 18 fond of caliiDC
Jlbrll hal been more thllD
Syria and answered to tbe wishes JlbrU's tnt toward lrllD.
eacer to take Iran' • dHth
America, the Great Satan of the SyrlllD covernment, with
If they cave frequent filer JlbrU saye the U.S. aovernment Rntencee ~erloully- WileD tbe
an occasional da!Jtance with mna tor traveling to Iran, Jlhrll has made eome stranae alltan- Ayatottah KborneiDI called for
Ubya.
would be a member ot the bonus cee, too. "You forwarded aupport the murder of Brttish _autbor
Recent top-secret U.s. JnteiJJ- club. He hal beld a aeries of and aaatatance to stalin blmaelt Salman Rushdle, JlbrU, .alone
cence reports and our own secret meetlagS with Iranian in order to achieve your victory amonc terrorilt leaderi, promassessment of Jlt1rll atter a officials in which he acted as a · against the Nazll llDd Japs- lied to follow up. Wilen Iran saya
!our-hour meeting with him bere, visiting expe.rt on mayhem. The ne~e," he said. "How do you "jump," JlbrU saye "on whom?"
have estsbltsbed that he bas now . first, llDd most signlttcant oc- accept such llD aiii8Dce tor YDII
We uked JlbrU if next year
sold his soul to TebrllD.
curred last July in Tehran when .aad not accept such llD all18Dce would ftnd hbn ID a new headJlbrU's relationship with Syrta the Ayatollah Khomeinl was lor others?"
quarter~ In Tehran. He deand Libya has been strained over planning retribution for tbe acAnotlier clue of JlbrU' s bad murred at nrst, thanltlnl Syria
Ills new ties with lrllD, and he cidental downing ot an Irani8D compaay was h1l reactloo When and Ubya tor their support. Then
may move his headquarters atrHner by a U.S. warship, which lrani8D epealter of the Partta- he added, "We have, with tbe •
from Damascus to Tehran some- kDied 290 people. Jlbrll went ment Hashemi RaflanjllDI suc- Iranians, a common poHttcal
time In the next year.
back to Iran In February to gested the execution of ftve t UDdeutandiDc.''
What difference does It make celebrate the lOth anniversary of

Hard truth

•

IS

Today in history

-

Ia 111M, J - Joyce IIIII bla future wife, Nora, tor the leCOIIII Ume
and flUID loft. He later
tiM dale U the IIDrJHay lieiH••forhll

e-.

-

Ia 1Jl7, 11M lint CoaiNu or Soviet• was ccnrvened ID Rulala.
Ia-. tile Iovitt Ualoaput tbe tint woman Into apace eo1m0naut

r:-!rqye·.

'

Va!IBCIDa
I'll ... ~ Ill AlrlcU blacklllll.lted tile 10111 annlverary of the
Sa~:,~aprlldaa With a one-diU' 1trlke; 11 blackl were Jdlled ID

rei

vto!Mce.

-·

,t

treaty.
.
On the contrary, it the United
States had tried to refuse a
serious Soviet offer to reduce the
number of intermediate nuclear
weapons it would have created

sand 1.-.p on the I~h· fairway during t)!e first round o!the U.S. Open
Thursday In Rochester, N.Y.· The Golden Bear was one stroke

behind the luders at 3-under-par. ( UPI)

Allison returns to Pocono
LONG ·POND, Pa. (UPil Bobby Allison returns to the site
of his near -fatal crash this
weekend when he attends the
NASCAR Miller High Life 500 at
Pocono International Raceway,
but isn't ready to drive the course
again.
Allison is the grand marshal
for Sunday 's race. which has
posted a purse of $514.122 for the
expected 42-car field .
. "Tve watched the crash on
videotape and it still hasn't come
to meat all.'" said Allison. 51. who
didn't complete a tap in last
year's race. His car blew a tire
coming out of the second turn on
the 2.5·mile trioval. spun against
the outside wall and bounced
back across the track toward the '
infield. where it was rammed by
another car.
Allison suffered a concussion,
broken bones in his left leg,
broken left ribs and .a bruised
heart. He was on the critical list
for a week and hospitalized for
four months.

Will"UJffl R US he f

far more turmoU in Germany,
and sundered the NATO aUillDce
far more effectively, than the
INF treaty did.

"It's a real pleasure to be back
here. especially after being hurt
so bad." said Allison. whO Is the
third-wtnntngest driver in NAS·
CAR Grand Nattohal history with
84 triumphs. ••J'm hoping that
thingS get better. but they
haven't yel.' ·
. Defending champion Geoff
Bodine heads the field of drivers
in Friday's ttrst qualifying round

Appreciates votes
Dear Citizens of Meigs County
I want to thank you very much
for your voti'S for my husband tn
the election for coroner.
As mostofyouknow. Dr. Conde
received the highest votes
Repulican-Democrat in this
county in the primary elpcfion.
The reason for this is because he
was honest and told the public the
truth about several issues.
Recently the RepubliCan Party
had to selecct a .coroner to
replace Dr. Pickens who had
been appointed after Dr. Conde
!eft the area to further educate
himself to become a surgeon.
After an accident, we returned
here. When Dr. Pickens resigned
as coroner. the county commis·
stoners selected Dr. Conde as
temporary coroner until the
Republican Committeemen
could re-appoint a new coroner.
Unfortunately. the Republican
Committeemen did NOT recog·
ntze th&lt;' voters' choice and.
therefore. appointed someone
else who did not even rLUt during

the election against Jim. Oddly
enough. the man the Republican
Committeemen selected for cor·
oner is a relative newcomer to
Mei!(s County and has never ran
for office in a general election.
Does that indicate that the
Republican Party had its voters
interest at heart?
In any event."•·thank you•• to
the peopl&lt;• for your many votes .
that is what counts the most. not
these few people.
I know M&lt;'igs County has
traditionally bE'en a Republican
County. Perhaps this is typical of
Republicans self-serving tn,t er·
ests instead of serving the public
who elects them. I wonder if
some Democralic leadership is
what this county needs to tum it
around!
Once again I wish to thank our
many friends. relatives and
anyone else who has been so
supportive of us now and in the
past.
Sincerely. Rhonda L. Conde

Tbe American Heart Assoeiation, .Gallia County Divis !on II
uretnc local residents to contact
your state representative and
request support for House Btll
486. By adopting thla proposed
law, Ohio wnt stren,thea It
charitable solicitation recula·
tlons and lncraue penaltlal to
orcantzattons that violate !be
Tbe American Heart ANOCiation does aot want to stifle
competition or to harm any
legitimate not-tor-profit acency
ralaiDC fullda for cardlovucutar
retearcll.' However, we are concerned that tbe public may
mlaullderltand the duterencel
bitw- tile ldfttl,ty, acttvltlll,
and mllakla of tile Alnlrlean
Blart Alloclatton and of orpJIJo
zat1on1 wblcb have lbnllarIIJI!Ddlnrnamaa.
·
For over one year, "IOUDdallke" orpalzatlons, such u tbe
AmartciD lleartDIIeue Prevention l!'oundatlon. National Heart
~evch, and The Heart Fund,
h•ve beea sollclttnc fllndiiD thJa
country.
·
·
None of the11e orpnlzatloDI-

II

for lhe top 20 positions in the
field. A second round of qualify.
tng to determine the rest of the
field will be held Saturday _
. Darrell Waltrip. who has not
won at Pocono since 1981. has a
narrow lead over Dale Earn·
hatdt in the NASCAR points
race. Davey Allison. Bobby's
son, heads a list of other veteran
drivers. including defending
NASCAR champion Bill Elliott;
Rusty Wallace, who is third in the
points race; and Ricky Rudd.
whO won the Banquet Foods 300
last Sunday at Sonoma, Calif.
.Richard Petty. the race's
oldest driver who will be 52 on
July ·u. will be among thOse
seeking to qualify. Petti- has
failed to qualify Jor three races
on the 1989 tour. which broke a
string of 1,000 straight wtnston
Cup starts.
"Lately. we haven't be~n running well," Petty said .. "But
we're working on it and I have no
bnmediate plans to quit."'
. Petty won tlie first NASCAR
race at Pocono in 1974. fie has
won once since then and leads all
racers with 22 Pocono starts.
If one driver captures bOth the
pole position ani) the race. ' he wiil
receove a $83,600 bonus. · a !eat
that ·has not been accomplished
in the last 10 Winston Cup, races.
Only three times in 22 Pocono
races has a driver won from the
pole. Elliott was the last (o do it,
turning the trick in June 198S.

•

•

I

100,000 Piston fans attend parade,
DETROIT IUP!) - More than
100.000 fans surged through
downtown streets Thursday. re·
ientlessly screaming ··Bad
Boys" in a thunderous tribute to
the Detroit Pistons. champions of
the National Basketball
Association.
Hordes of police restrained the
victory parade crowd until the
Pistol)s climbed above harms ,
way to speak..from a pedestrian ·
crosswalk .erected for this wee· ·
kend"s Detroit Grand Prix Indy

car race.

The Daily Sentinel
(Uirll-)
ADMd.., . . ........ o.

Publllbod ' rv&lt;rey ott..,.ooo, Monday
tbroqh Friday, lll ' court SL; Pomoroy. Ohio, by the Ohio .vaUoy Pul&gt;
lllblntl Company/Multtmedla, Inc.,
Pomoroy. Ohio A7tlll 1 Ph. tn-2156. SO·
•cond eluo postase paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

Support sought for HB 486
are aisoctated with the Amerl·
can Heart Association. But, we
are very concerned that many
Individuals who contribute to
these orlllDizaltons belleoie that
they are Jllvtnc to tbe American
Heart • Aaaoctatlpn or usoclate
our name with lrauduleat soJJcltatloDIIUCh u cash giveaways.
For over forty years, the
American Heart Aaloclatlon hal
been active in thll county ft&amp;llttnc our number ooe klllc heart
dtseue. And, the Iicht
been
succeeaful. Over the put decade,
the national mortality rate from
heart disease has, dropped over

Pr••

Menlbtr: Unhed
lolenlalloiUII.
lnl..dDallY PNooAIIGCfatton and the

i'lfwtPair•entattve. Branltom
['lotloltal
Advertllllltl

Ohio

AIIGCfatfoll.

Newi!IOP•
-. 733 Third AYOD1Ie,
!'lew York. 1'1.,. York 10017.

POSTMASTEit Send lddr• e~~.....

tO 1be DillY Slllttntl. D1 C..lt It,
. Pomeroy,

Olllo-.

I~NI.ATD

IIJC-wlll&amp;•-•

One Week ......., ........................... St.40
One Molltb ................................ N.lO

tW

One Year ......... .............. .......... f72.80
81NOLBCOPY

I'UCII

Subaerlbtn OGt d•lrllltlto pay thecorrtor IDa)' rlllllt In odvoe&lt;» dlr.;t to
')be DillY SIIIIIDII on all, lor IJ DIOJIIb

T1it public and lelltlmate
cllarltabl•• iMJte41Jt -payIll&amp; n. pelce for tlla CIIJ'I'ftt
wall cbulbdlltsollaltatloa law~
ID Oldo. You c• 1111p by
coataetlq Galtta Couaty'a atate
lept lilnt.lttve and IIIJiq the
IUpport of Houte Bill 8.

-

....... Cl'tdlt ...

be.,.... __ -

No 111~ bfruii ....... ID
ar- - • earrtor ....,~a to

-----

available.

_....,Ctul7
13 w..a ............................. ,.... m.K

Slacerety,
M I k e B r o w n , Publicity .

• w..a.................................. u•
._.
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...................................auo
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12 w•ci'"tTt!Wjji"Ci;;;;jJ···

ChaJrmail

Board member of tile
Gallla Co. Dtvllloll of tlie
American Heart AIIOCiatloa

..... . . : ..

-·

of baseball abroad and toencour· it and a wider spread of it and
KANsAS CITY. Mo. (UPil -Pete Rose. ··I told ownership
age a love ofit. an appreciation of ultimately a watching of it.''
Baseball Commissioner A. Bar· that therewerenopartlcularnew
tlett Gtamattl and National developments and the hearing
League President Bill While was set for June 26 and that's
announced Thursday a '"timeta· essentially it.'" Gtamattt said.
-Labor spokesmen. The Play·
ble for timetable" to expand the
NL from 12 to 14 teams by the ers Relations Committee Issued
early 1990s.
a release Itmiting the spokesmen
The commissioner said three on labor matters to Milwaukee
months after the owners and Brewers owner Bud Selig, PRC
players reach a new collective Executive Director Barry Rona
bargaining agreement, the NL and PRC Counsel Chuck O'Con·
will release an expansion nor. Gtamatti said the rule is
schedule.
designed to keep only people with
"'I made a commitment to try direct labor matters contact the
and have a timetable for a true spokesmen and ••J willtakea
tiimetable. that is to announce very serious view of anyone who
now when there would be a violates it ."
timetable for expansion of two
- Finances of the industry.
teams in the National League. '' ··There is a myth that baseball ts
Giamatti said.
awash in cash and it's false."
"Certainly by the early '90s Gtamatti said. "The (after tax l
(the new teams would be play- data for 1988 shows that four
ing). if you ass lime there ts a clubs lost money. one club broke
'l'lrd 'hctor YT1115214D
labor set ttement - and there will even' the others made a modest to
• 18 HP Briggt I S1rttton IIC twinLMrn Tt'llclor LT11/121&lt;12
cyU- - . n ongmo
be - soon alter the new year. more-than modest profit ."
• 11 HP Briggs &amp; Slr.rton Srnchro• 12-vott •l.ctrlc alart
Then Bill can announce his time
·'There is a lot of work to
Balanced"' lftOIM
• 4-gallon rear-moum.d futl tank
• 12-volt eftetrle...,
schedule. It will be the early bnprove the stable and sustatna·
• Twin staled btam htedlightl
• 4-quart fual tank
• AmfMitr
('90s) as opposed to the middle ble financial future of this game.
• Twin sealecf.blam headUghtl
·•
Eleclrlc Pro clutch
and late."
in my opinion."
• • ·speed lranaaxla whh In-line ahlft
• 5-speed t.oiY)'-duty trllnaaxle wllh
• as~ side-dlseharge.rwln-blada.
White, capping a two-day
- Arizona spring training
render-mounted lrHine thlfl:
aa:1e-moun1ed mower with ttvt cut•
• 42·. :J.bladt, uiHnoun~ mower
owners meeting at a news sites. Gtamattl said he feels the
height potltiona
wilh 11'11 cuHMighl poelffonl
conference wlt'h the commis· need for a "critical mass·· of
• 15 a: 8.00 pneumauc Muhf.nc fronl
• 15 x 8.00 pneumalk: Mulll·trac from
tires
stoner, said his expansion com· spring training teams in Arizona.
tire1
• 18 K 8.50 pneumaUo Muh~.c iear
• 22 x 9.00 pn~umlltc MuftJ.triiC rew
mtttee has met twice but has ""That's eight teams, I think. in
tires
·
tires
discussed no specific issues.
order to have the kind of
• T~rear UmJied warranty
• Two-year llmtwd wan.ntv
Glamatd said. ''One thing that round-robin play with A and B
has to happen tsthatbaseballhas squads that you must have if
SALE
to see how many potential major you're going to train profession·
SALE
LIST
league cities there are out there. als.'' he said.
LIST
- Ticket prices. "There is no
I have no idea.
5216995
$3299 95
"I keep reading that there are directive !rom me - nor will
going to be two 16-team leagues. there be- to freeze ticket prices.
Well. I don't know if there are six I urge as a matter of philosophy
major teague expansion cities for the clubs to keep the prices as
oui there. I'm sure there are low as possible.'' said the
150 Upper liver ld. (Across From Kmart)
probably two."
commissioner.
Among sites that have ex·
- Minority hiring. Gtamatti
Phone "46-7126
pressed interest· tn a franchise said he wants ··to be able to
are the Orlando and St. Peters- monitor equal opportuntiy burg areas in Fl()rida; Denver; · · whether or not people are being
Phoenix; Washington; D.C.; given a chance to stand for the
OPEN MON.-SAT. 8 A.M.·5 P.M.
Buffa!(), N.Y.; and Vancouver. job." The owners heard a report
outlining baseball's progress in
British Columbia.
Any decision by the committee minority hiring.
- International growth. Base·
would have to be approved by
three-fourths of the NL teams ball is attempting to expand its
and a majority of the American marketing and promotion
League clubs.
through Europe, Latin America
•'Expansion ts not only a and Asia. In addition to the game
process of selecting a city and so itself, Major Leaue Baseball. will
forth." Gtamatti said. •·•There·s be pushing its licensed products
an ownership II'OUP that has to go and television enterprises.
·'The baste thrust not financial.
through all the same criteria that
any other ownership group has to alihough there will be financial
go through. There will be every gains. it seems to me, in the long
effort to keep the NatiOnal run,"Giamattl said. '"Thefunda·
Association tnlorn'led because mental thrust is to take the game
expansion at the major league
level could well Imply expansion
NOW
at the minor league level.
"'This ts why it's complicated.
This is why it takes a long time to
do It right. This is why we're
telling you now there's a lot of
work to be done."
In other business handled by
Gtamatti at his first owners
meeting as commissioner:
RET. $359.95

a

··sweep. sweep. sweep L.A .."
fans. some waving llrooms.
yelled to music from the police
Blue Pigs band . The Pistons
swept the Los Angeles Lakers in
four games to cia tm the cham·
pionshtp ·the Lakers took (n seven
games over Detroit last year.
Thousands. more jamrjled the
Palace of Aubljrn Hills, the
Pistons· home court, for another
rally later Thursday. Some waited hours for the event.
••If the rest of the league thinks
we're 'bad.· wait until they get a
load of next year.'' General
Manager Jack McCloskey
shouted to the downtown crowd.
The '"Bad Boys·· label, sprouting from media description of the
rough and tumble play most
exemplified by forward Rick
MahOm and center · Bill La 1mbeer. was. eagerly adopted by
fans . who bought all sorts of
memorabilia emblazoned with
the term. Scores of T·shtrt
vendors. hawking various styles
!rom $10 to $15, worked the entire
downtown area Thursday.
"Are these guys bad or what?''
challenged the normally natty
coach Chuck Daly in a '"World
Champions" T-shtrt, prompting
a deafening roar. •"Thanks for
the support. You are the bestfans
Ill the whole world. We're so
happy to bring you the baskeball
champions of the world - the
"Detroit Pistons."

$249995

$169995

O'DELL'S LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER
WE TAICE TRADE IMS

THIU JUNE 30, 1919

$289.95

.C\.Al

RET. $1599.95
GRAVELY TRACTOR
' SALES It SERVICE

204 Candor lt.

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~THE

GRAVELY

8Y8TEM

Dally ................................... 2ti c:o.to

:u percent.

Dillard Pruitt. The crowd at 69
included former Open champion
Hubert Green. Steve Jones. a
two-time tour winner this year,
and Hal Sutton. whp was tied for
the lead with three holes to play
but lost three shots to par at the
16th and 17th holes.
!an Woosnam was in a large
group at 70 and defending cham·
pion Curtis Strange was at 71
along with Paul Aztnger , Dan
Pohl and Chip Beck.
Greg Norr~~an had to settle
for a 72 while Lee Trevino. who
played Thursday with Nicklaus
and won the first of his six
majors on this course in 1968,
shot a 74. Seve Ballesteros had
a disappointing 7S. Tom Watson
a 76 and Sandy Lyle a 78.
Nicklaus' 67 was the best Open
round he has played since the 63
he fired to start )he 1980 tourna·
ment. He went on to win that one
and tater that year he won the
PGA on the Oak Hill course by
seven shots.
Langer's round was made up of
a series of successes and disas·
ters. but it gave him an excellent

FATHER'S DAY SALE

'

Letters to the editor

taw.

By 1JnW Presa lateraa&amp;IDul
Today is Friday, June 16, the 167th day of 1989 with 198 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, movtng tQward Its first quarter.
!_he momiDC stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
• ne evening stars are VenuallDd Mars.
Thoae born on this date are under the lien of GemiDt. They include
ftbn comedian Stan Lallr&amp;IID 1880, publllher Katharllle Graham ID
1917 (... 72), audlon Erlcb SqaJ In 1137 (ap 52) and Joyce Carol
Oat4111l11NI.(ap51), ... acru.&amp;Joan Van Ark ID lNI (ap41).

~I.''VJY-."

BLASTS OUT OF SAND TRAP - Jack Nicklaus blasts oul of a

organization. · ,
Tbe United States took an
Important Initial: step when the
federal government prohibited
the qse of CFCs as propellants.In
aeroeol spray cans lJeilnniD&amp; In
1978. Now, .however, auto air
condlttoniDc - which accountl
lor 26.6 percent of all domestic
production - Is atop the lilt of
CFC uses.
In some cases, there are no
known substitutes lor CFCs. In
other Instances, the replacements are more expensive, less
effective, require the consumption at more power or cause
equipment to wear out sooner.
That may well lead to a new
generation of more costly and
bulky refrigerators, for exam·
pie. It almost certainly wnt
require us to roll down the car·
windows and perepire while
traveling on hot summer days·but no acceptable alternative Is
now available.

Europe has changed

Berry's Worl.d

oa t~~a date illllltory:

But the world has belatedly
discovered that CFCs have a
devastating liability: They
slowly rise into the stratospbere,
where they are broken down by
the .intense sunlight's ultraviolet
radiation. The chlorine and
bromine produced in that process then destroy the ozone layer,
a small but crucial component of
the planet's upper atmosphere.
Ozone shields the Earth from
harmful ultraviolet radiation. As
that protective layer becomes
thinner (a gapping hole already,
exists over Antarctica) skin
cancers will Increase and other
harm wm be done to people,
anbnals and plants.
The United States consumes 30
to . 34 percent of the 2 billion
·pounds of CFCs produced annually, while tbe nations of the
European Common Market account lor another 35 to 37 percent,
according to the World Resour·
ces Institute, a Washington, D.C.
environmental research

fifth Open championship and 21st
major title .
The first round of the 89th Open
was placed tn jeopardy because
of heavy rains on Tuesday and
Wednesday that left the Oak Hill
Country Club course
waterlogged.
One big storm Thursday likely
would have suspended play for
the day, but it never ca me. Only
an occasional light rain drizzled
down 9n the course, making it
vulnerable to the game's best
players. The 21 sub-par rounds
shot Thursday were the most
ever fired on the first day of an
Open.
Joining Nicklaus at 3-under 67
were PGA leading money·winner
Tom Kite. Joey Sindelar. Tom
Pernice and Scolt Simpson. who
won the Open two years a go and
led it at the midway point last
year.
At 2-under 68 were former
champions Raymond Floyd and
Larry Nelson, along with Masters champion Nick Faldo and
iittle·known· pros Kurt Beck and

•

start in his bid for his second
major title. Langer birdied eight
holes. one of them coming on a
60-foot putt at the par·3 llth hole.
Blake is winless in three years
on the PGA Tour. but had the best
finish of his career two weeks ago
when he tied for third at the
Atlanta Classic.
Nicklaus bogeyed the opening
hole, but came rtghi back to hole
an 18-toot birdie putt at the
second. When that went in. the
roar of the crowd could be heard
back at the clubhouse , a half·
mtteaway.
Ntcklauscametothepar-5 13th ·
at 2-under and hit a 9'iron for his
third shot. The ball landed on the
green and began to run toward
the cup.
The crowd, thinking the ball
was about to go in for what would
have been the only eagle fired in
the opening round. allOwed its .
cheers to reach an almost·
deafening crescendo.
The ball. however, lipped out
and finished 18 inches away for
an easy birdie.
·
•
•'

National. League will expand to 14 teams:.

Your sweat can save ozone layer Robert Walters

By HELEN mOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- The long march in improved relations between
thl( United Stat&lt;'s a.nd China has come to a halt.
.
';Vhile both sides want to keep diplomatic ties. the violent
No other state has taken such
BURLINGTON, Vt. (NEA) crpckdown on the student and civilian protes t~rs In Ttananmen
far-reaching
a~tion,
although
The good news for those conSQ\Iare has changed the equation ·a nd crashed a lot of hopes for a more
cerned about the future of the Hawaii recently enacted a law
open China.
planet on which we Jive is that that raises the standards lor air
The fact that the ··une was busy" when President Bush tried to
only about 50 percent ot the new conditioning repair tacllltles and
telephone China ·stop leader. Deng Xiaoptng. shows how far downhill
cars sold In Vermont are bans the over-the-counter sale of
re)ations have fallen.
equipped with air conditioning- the Freon cartridges that some
The Chinese leaders. who were cut off from the Western world from
far
the national average of do-it·yourselters use to recharge
J!lis to 1971, apparently are willing to risk isolation again to pursue 85 tobelow
auto air conditioners with that
90 percent.
th!!ir own agenda.
.
·
CFC
coolant.
The bad news Is that auto air
They put economic reform at the top of their priorities. Political
The
action in both states Is
conditioning - a threat to the
re~rm was to come later. That they could go in tandem was
note-worthy
because the time tor
environment because it uses
apparently unlhinkabl&lt;'.
·
mere
hand-wringing
about irreozone-destroying chlorofluoro~ut political reform would have meant the end of the regime that
versible
destruction
of
the enviras a coolant - is an
has controlled China for nearly four decades. The world they had carbons
unjusti!iable extravagance tn a onment has passed. Prompt
created was disappearing.
.
state where the mid-summer action must be taken to ·remedy
beng. who had suffered persecution in the hands of the Red Guard
high temperatures . average 70 problems that have been univerdi(Jing the Cultural Revolution. either gave the order to crush the
sally recognized - even II those
dell'ees.
re~llion. or was used as a fr.;mt. Administration officials ar&lt;' not
Now, however, the Vermont solutions wUI produce discomfort
qul;te sure and have hedged their bets.
legislature has approved and the or sacrl!tce.
Jt depend s on who is in the driver 's seat. The octogenarian Mao governor
When identified in the 1930s,
has signed Into law a
di~iples are not about to relinquish power to what they can only see
landmark measure that prohib- CFCs were hailed by scientists
a'" the coil apse of their totalitarian control of the mainland.
its any new car, beginning with because ot their extraordinary
J3ut their tough response to the demonstrators will have a
the 1993 model year, to be sold or qualities: Tbey are not toxic,
trelflendous impact on tourism and trade that the offtcfaldom has
registered In the state If it has an corrosive or combustta ble. They
been encouraging. The number ol new hotels in Beijing is proof of
air conditioning system that are inert, have a low boOing point
that.
and a high vapor pressure.
utntzes CFCs.
a:he Unit&lt;'d States has strategic reasons for not wanting a clean
br.eak with China. Listening pos ts lost in Iran were provided the
United Sta.tes by China to keep tabs on the Soviet Union.
!twas not a one-way street: China has received high technology and
milch modf'rn know. -ho~ from the U.S. government and American
blf.llness eager to deal with the mainland.
Back in 1987, when ' President peoples as to its desirability
A. particular irritant to the Chinese leaders Is the presence of one of .Reagan
negotiated the Interme- many ·years ago. By arguing,
Cl!ina•s leading dissidents. Fang Lizhi. an astrophysicist who has · diate Nuclear Forces treaty with instead, that they ·stmply had no
been given sanctuary with his wife in the American Embassy tn
Mikhail Gorbacbev, the Ntxon- choice, they forfeited the nuclear
Beijing.
Ktssinger crowd joined various option the moment some other
Meanwhile. Secretary of State James Baker is drawing up options
harder-right analysts in con- became available.
fo~ possible moves in case China gets tougher on foreigners and
That was why, at Reykjavik,
demning the &amp;ll'eement. By
dissidents. Much damagP in terms of world prestige has already been
reducing the likelihood of a President Reagan amiably
d$e. Whether the Beijing leaders are concerned over the setback is
nuclear confrontation, they agreed with Mikhail Gorbachev
not apparent.
argued, the treaty sbnply in- on the theoretical desirability of
~resident Ronald Reagan predicted that China would go capitalist
creased the danger of a conven- a world without nuclear weaafter journeying to that country on his Asian swing. Indeed, II seemed
tional war, in which Soviet pons. It is also why Mr. Reagan
th ~t free enterprise was taking root among the farmers and
predominance would be over- subsequently all'eed to verifiamerchants.
whelming. Moreover, the treaty ble mutual reductk&gt;ns in IRBMs,
:f'hey W&lt;'l'e small steps in the right direction . But thE' contagion of
would encourage neutralist ten- under the INF treaty.
thf' new openness in the communist world and the visit of Soviet
For decades successive Soviet
dencies
In West Germany, quite ·
tel?er Mikhail Gorbachev was a catalyst for the students. who have
possibly resulting in Bonn's bosses were unwHllng to do so,
been studyttlg in the United States and. the Western world. to make
because the Soviet Inventory of
withdrawal from NATO.
thl1tr dc•mands.
ICBMs and IRBMs was their only
as
In
recent
weeks,
therefore,
:i"he repres sions. the witch hunts. and the distortion of I he t·ruth in
West German Chancellor Hel- guarantee of superpower status.
goy&lt;·· rnment-run newspapers and broadcast outlets in Beijing shows
mut Kohl has succumbed to But Gorbachev laced tougher
the rulers are seeking aelean sweep and hope to wipe out ali vestiges
domestic
political pressures and choices than ever previously
of :thought and action that might lead to a re(ietition of the uprising.
called for negotiations looking confronted a Soviet leader. The
But they might find that suppression of ideas is difficult to achieve
toward further de- Soviet economy is a ·basket case.
When President Bush went to China there was amazingly only on~
nuclearization, these critics have Far !rom taking over the world,
e~rged portrait of Mao Tze-tung in Tiananmen Square and no Mao
not been slow to say, "We told it is painfully clear that by the
say.tngs emblazoned on the b1llboards. It was a great contrast to
so." It's time to remind end of the century communism
you
Pr~stdent Richard Ntxon·s breakthrough trip to China in 19i2. which
them,
In reply, of a few hard wUl be seem as just another light
·
·
was a historic event.
that failed. Gorbachev chose,
truths.
At that time, Mao quotations were everywhere. and the one that
therefore, to absndon Moscow's
Tbe
!irst
hard
truth
is
that
N(lcon picked up and recited the most was '"Seize the day: seize the
neither the peoples of Western · pretensions to global hegemony
ho\Jr.'"
Europe, nor any other human and obtain what henettts he could
frhe students tried to do that and failed. But a new day may be
population, will remain commit- · from a less threatening posture.
coining when the masses revolt again and China will open 'tts doors .
Unquestionably the bene!its
ted to a strategy of deterrence
through mutual assured destruc- are real. Always assumlnc that
tion by nuclear mlsslles lor one Gorbachev's declared Intentions
moment longer than absolutely are followed by corresponding
necessary, and any government actions, both the United States
that proposes otherwise is simply and the nations of Western
conniving at Its own downfall.
Europe wtll all'ee to · further
arms reductions a!ld other steps
Tbat may be unfortunate, but it to "reduce tensions."
is an unassailable fact, growing
In short, the old East-West
out of the lnte~natlonal lett's confrontation Is undergoing malong, successful, and Indeed jor modtttcuattons. the ultimate
largely unreslsted propaganda consequences or which are as yet
campaign concerning the unique unforeseeable. But it Is preposawfulness ot nuclear weapons. II terous to imagine that any of
the nations of the Free World them - Including the neutralllt
wanted to base their defense Ol) impulses in Germany - could
such weapons u a valid option, have been avoided II only Ronald
they should have educated their Reagan hadn't strned the INF

.•.·.
••

Three golfers share U. S. Open lead

Pege-2-The Deily •• ilillll
PorMioy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday. June 11. 1989

~

Sentinei-Page-3

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'Har queMion waa, D- my
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�Ohio

Reds drop l-0
By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
. Jack Clark recovered a segrpent of his productive past.
Despite a recent string of 20
plate appearances In a row
wllhout a hit , Clark shook ott the
slump and delivered a pinch-hit
single with one out in the 12th
Inning to lift · the San Diego
'Padres to a 1·0 victory over the
Cincinnati Reds.
Clark drove home Mark Par·
ent from second base. In his first
pinch-hitting appearance of the
season.
Recently , Clark has had to
stuggle just to hit the ball at all.
Prior to his game-winning single,
the punchless ·Padre had struck
out In 10 of his last 11 at-bats. He
struck out five times Sunday and
four times Monday before being
given Tuesday off: Still, he said
his confidence never wavered. ·
"It's just getting back the right
approach," said Clark. who Is
batting .221 wl'!h . seven hOmers
and 33 RBI. "It's a tough time
I've been going through and I still
don't know what lies ahead.
"But I don't care If I strike out
25 times In a row as long as we
can win these types of games."
Clark's hit came off a 3-2 pitch
from veteran right -handed re·

76ers lose ·
Jones in draft

; ' CAUGHT OFF' BASE- Reds shortstop Barry Larkin (11) and
•· ~cond baseman Lenny Harris (7) surround the Padres' Shawn
' Abner, who
caught between ,.econd and third after adv81i~ln!J
on a slnrte by teammate Tony Gwynn In the ninth Inning ol
Thursday night's game In San Diego. The Padres won 1-0 In 12
lnnln(S. (UPI)

was

•

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lA Coliseum woos its own Raiders
LOS ANGELES !UP]) - The
calling for a major reconstrucLos Angeles Coliseum Commls· tion of the 65-year-old stadium
J;lon is about to unwrap Its
that would take two to three
-:Package of enticements for the years to complete.
'Raiders to stay put -Including a
· The offer will include lowering.
major renovation of the stadium
the playing field and rell)oving
- It was reported Thursday.
the Olympic track. reducing
Team owner AI Davis, dlscon- stadium capacity to 7!\,000 or less
tended with the coliseum, anin an all-football configuration,
nounced .plans 22 months ago to Installing 200 luxury boxes and
mov(' the NFL club to suburban essentially retaining only the
Irwindale, but the city has been historic east-end periStyle.
unable to put together financing
The commission will pay for
lor a new stadium.
the modernization with money It
: Sources on both sides told the received from the NFL in a
Los Angeles Times that Davis . lawsuit against It for Impeding
}VIII meet Friday with Coliseum
the Raiders 1982 move from
CommiSsion President Richard Oakland and from bonds and
lUordan. who wiU propose a plan loans.
~

PHILADELPHIA . (UP!)
The Philadelphia 76ers Thursday
lost rookie forward Shelton Jones
to the Minnesota Tlmberwolves
In the NBA expansion draft .
Jones. who averaged five
points and 2.3 rebounds per game
after being signed by the 76ers in
early January. was the 16th
player taken in the expansion
draft held for Minnesota and the
Orlando'Magic, the two new NBA
franchises.
"It's a surprise." said Jones,
who was taken In the seC(/nd
round of the 1988 draft by San
Antonio and traded to Golden
State before he was released in
mid -December. "I thought I
migh! get taken by Orlando ..
·'The way everything happened to me was a surprise last
year so I'm just going to try to
take things as they come. I had
heard Orlando was interested in
me. I never heard Minnesota was
interested. But I want to make
the best of the situation and I'm
looking forward to getting out
there."
Jones started 34 of 42 games for
the 76ers, and scored a gamehigh of 20 points, but he played
sparingly in the last month of the
season as veteran Derek Smith
took his starting job.
Bill McKinney. Minnesota's
director of player personnel. said
the Tlmberwolves rated Jones
highly.
"He's a young small forward
who has a lot of great basketball
skills." McKinney said. " He runs
the floor. he can rebound and he's
very active. He plays with a lot of
intensity. One of the things we
are loo~lng for is players with
those characteristics.
"We know that as an expansion
team we will take our lumps ·but
we feel we will be on the right
track If we can get players who
will play hard every night. It's a
great opportunity for him to
come to a team with no established starters and make a good
role for him sell."
Jones was one of four players
left unprotected by the 76ers. The
others were believed to be guard
David Wingate and forwards Bo~
Thornton and Jim Rowinski but
the 76ers refused to disclose the
names of the players on their
unprotected list.
General Manager John Nash
said. however, the team expected to lose Jones.
"He had a decentrookleseason
and although he didn't get a lot of
playing time. when. he played
extended minutes he scored
points." Nash,said. "It's hard to
determine to what degree he can
become a top-notch NBA player
but it was a very good choice of
the players we left exposed."

deeisi~n

llever Kent Tekulve, but the loss
was charged to Tim Blrtsas, 2-1.
who gave up singles to Parent
and Garry Templeton.
"He hit a good pitch, a slider
down and away," Tekulve said..
"You want him to try and pull
that ball and he did. On 3-2 you
can't put the ball Ina much better
place than that.
Greg Harris, 2·2, who pitched
the !Ina! two Innings for San
Diego, gave up one hit While
striking out lour In his relief
appearance.
Bruce Hurst started for the
Padres and went 10 Innings. He
gave up eight hits , while striking
out 10 and walking one.
In the San Diego 12th. Luis
Salazar filed out to center and
Parent hit a line single to
right-center field. Templeton
bounced a single up the middle lo
move Parent to second. Tekulve
relieved Blrtsas. and Clark
greeted him by singling In the
winning run.
Cincinnati's best threat came
In the firth Inning.' Joel Youngblood grounded out and Rolando
Roomes singled to center. After
Bo. Dlaz filed out, Lenny Harris
slrigled Roomes to third. How -

to

ever, Hurat I!ICaped the jam by
getdnaTomB~atna. the Reds'
starting pitches', to fly to left.
Browtaa yielded three bits In
seven lnalnp. He walked one and
struck out four.
Elsewlleno In the National
League:
f'lntM I, Pblllla 3
At Pit !*burgh, Gary Redus and
Jose Lind both clubbed home
runs leading Plttsburah In a .
game delayed by rain three
times .for a 'total of two hours.
Doug Drabek. 4-5, went seven
Innings. allowing three runs and
six hllJ and Bill Landrum picked
up hla third save. Bob Sebra. 2-3,
allowed four runs and six hits In
three aDd two-third Innings.
. .ye.t,Giaafal
At s.. Francisco. John Smoltz
fired a seven-hitter and Lonnie
Smith hOmered as Atlanta
snapped a stx-gaml! losing
streak. Smoltz. 8-5. walked two
and struck out etghtln posting his
third complete game. Scott Gar·
relts. 5·2, gave up three hits.
walked two and struck out four In
seven Innings o.! work.
CardlnaiB t, Expae 3
(10 lnnlnp)
At St . Louis. pinch hlt"!r Tom

By Unlled .Press Internatloaal
Bo Jackson was told what to
look. for and on the third try was
able to hit It to get the Kansas
City Royals rolllpg to victory.
"They told me that he (Cleveland relief ace Doug · Jones)
throws a palm ball." said Jack·
son, who greeted Jones with his
third hit of the game. igniting a
three-run . rally that gave the
Royals to a 5-4 victory Thursday
n·ight over the Cleveland Indians.
"The . Urst two strikes were
palm balls tl)at he kept down,"
Jackson said. -"The pitch I hit
was also a palm ball. but I think
he got It up a little more than he
wanted."
Bill Buckner added three RBI
and George Brett had two hits
and two runs for Kansas City.
The Royals. who at one time
trailed 4-0, scored three times In
the eighth after John Farrell was
relieved by Jones.
Farrell went seven Innings
before Jones entered with one on
and no outs. Jones gave up three
hits to the first four hitters he
faced Including a game- tying
double to Buckner that scored
Brett and Jackson.
The Royals pushed across the
game-winner on Frank White's
ground-out to s'econd base that
scored Bill Pecota.
•
White's ground-out brought
Indians' manager Doc Edwards
out to argue a call that he thought
should have rule.d runner . Rey

Hockey.
The International Hockey
League Board of Governors
approved a shill In ownership of
the Peoria franchise from the
Peoria Civic Center Authority to
Bruce Saurs, a local bu~lness­
man. Saurs' Hat Tricks Inc. will
be the sole owner of the Peoria
Rlvermen. The board also approved the request of Toledo
owners to suspend membership
for the 1989·90 season.
Horse Racing
Favored King Glorious drew
the No. 1 post position for
Saturday's !\!\th running of the
Ohio Derby at ThiStledown. Several late entries ballooned the
field to eleven 3-year-olds for
Ohio's richest horse race, worth
$300,000, Including $180.000 to the
winner. King Glorious Is an 8-5
favorite on the early line. Mercedes Won. which figures to be
the second betting choice at 7-2.
drew the No. 2 post position,
setting the stage for a possible
wlre·to·wlre duel between two
hOrses who have won In excess of
$700,000 each.

'

Palacios out ot the base l.ine.
Palacios reached second on the
play to keep the Inning alive.
"I thought the runner should
have been ruled out of the
baseline. but I was told that
(Jerry) Browne had released the
ball before Palacios got to
Browne," said Edwards.
Even though there might have
been doubt In Edwards mind
about Palacios' base running ..
there was none In rookie
catcher's thlnklilg.
·'I had to go around the second
baseman lo avoid lnterferrlng
with his fielding the ball," he
said. "If I kept going strallbt •. I
would have hit him and then
lnterferred." Palacios entered
the game to pinch run for Matt
Winters. who singled Pecota to
third.
Brett Saberhagen. 6-4. we"t
seven Innings for the victory. Jeff
Montgomery got out of a jam In
the eighth after loadlftl! '. he bases
on ·a hit, a wild pltcfl .l!nd two
walks. Steve Farrearned hiS 15th
save with a scorless n)nth.
The Royals' 39-25markafter64
games ties the best In franchise
history reached In both 1976 and
1980. The Royal~ won the AL
West In both seasons and reached
the World Series In 1980.
Cleveland took a 2-0 lead In the
first. Oddlbe McDowell singled
and sco'red on Joe Carter's
double. Carter ·scored when Pete
O'B~Ien singled. ·
A throwing error by Roya Is
third baseman Kevin Seltzer on
Carter's hit allowed both Felix
Fermin and Browne to score. The
error by Seltzer was his first In 37
games. He had set the Royals'
team record for a third baseman
with his 36th straight ·errorless
game Wednesday against Oakland. The previous record was
set by JoeFoy lnl969, the Royals'
first season.
·
The Royals scored single runs
In the fourth and sixth to cut the
Cleveland lead to 4-2. Buckner
had an RBI groundout and Matt
Winters hit a sacrUice fly.
Buckner, who Is the majors'
actlV(' leader with 2.693 hits,
collected hls 1200th career RBI
when he knocked In Brett and
Jackson In the eighth.
Elsewhere . In the American
League:

..

1985 FORD ESCORT ................'S1695
Auto., PS. '
.

,,
j·;
t

(~;:~

Mariners t, Twins 5
At Minneapolis. Alvin Davis
collected three hits, Including a
seventh-Inning grand slam. and
drove In five runs to help Seattle
snap the Twins' four-game win·
ning streak. Dennis Powell. 2-2.
earned the victory with one
hitless Inning. Mike JackSon
pitched three hitless Innings for
his third save. Steve Shields. 0-1,
was the loser .
Brewers 6, Blue Jays f
At Milwaukee, Rob Deer hit
.two home runs p.nd reliever Tony
Fossas earned his first major- .
league victory for the 'B rewers,
who snappel! a 4·4 lie on Gary
Sheffield's sacrifice fly In the
seventh lnnnlng. Fossas, a 30·
year-old left-bander. allowed two
hits In two and one-third Innings
before Dan Plesac retired the
last two batters for his loth save.
Jimmy Key. 6-6.' gave up five
runs on eight hits In six and
two-third Innings and suffered
his fourth straight loss.
Orioles 3, Yankees 2
(10 Innings)
At Baltimore. Rene Gonzal~
singled to drive home Mickey
Tettleton from second with two
out In the bottQm of the' lOth
inning and lift the Orioles, who
turned a triple play In the first
Inning. Gonzales blooped a single
ott Lance McCullers. 2·2. In front
of center ,fielder Roberto Kelly.
whose throw was on line but too
late to nail Tettleton. l',fark
Thurmond, 2-1. was the WIIIJier.

Philathea Women meet
Two· new members, Kathy
Wilfong and Shelly DuBose. were
welcomed Into Phllathea when
the group met recently at the
Middleport Church of Christ .
Marilyn Wilcox presided at the
meeting with olflcers reports
being given by Dorothy Roach
and Marie Cole, and flower and
card report by Mildred Riley.
Round robin cards were signed
for Nettle Boyer and Martha
Haggerty.
The group voted to ag11in
sponsor the pocket lady for the
vacatlo.n Bible school carnival. A
kitchen shower was held for the
church kitchen. and Mrs. Wilcox
thanked those who worked at the
Elchlnger-Lawless wedding

_

FRIDAY
The Zion Church
of ChrL•t Is having a Vacation
Bible School each morning from
9-11:30 a.m. through Friday for
~ges two through high school.
~UTLAND-

POMEROY -The Ent~rprlsP
United Methodist Church will
hold It's annual vacatiQn Bible
SPhool through Friday from
9-11: ~0 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT- Thl' Middleport First Baptist Churc·h will be
having vacation Bible school
throu~h Friday from 9 a.m to
noon .

..

COUNtRY

12.00 COVER CHARGE
MUST IE 21 YEAIS OlD

"

MilWAY .
TAVERN
IT. 143 &amp; 7.
POMEROY, otHO

.RUTLAND - The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will be
holding vacation Bible school
through Friday !t·om 6-8 p .m.
ClasSl'S will be tor nut&lt;ery
through teenage. The public Is
Invited Jo participated.

~.

SYRACUSE - The Asbury
United Methodist Chu~~~:h will br
having vacation BlbiP schOol
through Friday from 9-11: 30a.m.
The public is invited to
participate.
BASHAN - There will be an
Ice cream social at the Bas han
. Fire Hous&lt;' on Friday at o p.m .
Ten flavors of lee cream will b;•
available as will sandwiches,
beverages, and pi&lt;•. Entertain-

.,

......

- ·-'.. ·- - - . -·

J..... •'·:. ·- -·- -·-

All Fathers Will
Receive A

.

•.

.... --·- '.... --

--- _______ .. ___ -

'

[

BRADFORD- The Bradford
Church of Christ will hav&lt;' Bible
school kick off night on Friday
beginning a\ 6 p.m. with a balloon
laucli. The ,·acation Bible school
will be for ages pn•school
through the eighth grad&lt;•.
SATURDAY
CHESTER- The Shade Rivet·
Masonic Lodge will have a
special ml'etlng on Saturday at 8
p.m . at Chest~r. The meeting is
called to establish an entered
appr!'ntlce degree. All mason•
are invited to attend.
SALISBURY - The Salisbury
Elementary P.T.O. will have a
playground worrk day on sa,ur·
day beginning at 9 a.m. Volunteers ar~ needed to assemble the
n&lt;'w playground equipment purchased by tht&gt; P.T.O.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER - The Mt.
Union Baptist Church will be
having a Father's Day Home
Coming dinner at noon on Sunday
with singing at 1 p.m. by the
,Joyful Aires Quartet. Chris tlan
Union Quartet. and the Gabriel
Quartet. The public is invited to
attend.

The sixth six weekS hOnOI' roll
for the SaliSbury Elementary
School ·has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
First Grade: Kim Condll, Marjorie Halar, Tiffany Harder, ·
Morgan Mathews, Kim Peavley,
,Amber Perkins, Anna Story,
Marissa Whaley, Michael White.
Second Grade: Lacy Bankl,
Jeremiah Bentley, Trlcla Davia,
Becky Jolmlflll, Carrie Lambert,
Daniel McDonald, Tamra
O'Del~ JennUer Ramey, Ryan
Ramsburg, Crystal Salser.
'lblrd Grade: BIW Bentley.
VIncent Broderick, JHae Ell!·
maa, Chad Folmer, Jason
Frecker, Myca Hayaet, Heldt
Legar, Michael Leifheit, Sbera
Pattai'IQII, Melissa RIIIIIINI'J,
Saiii'IM llfl1tll.
~

Fourth liraae: Jonathan
Dickens, Jared King, Raquel
Maddux, Tim Peavley, Chris
Roush, Adam White. Josh
Witherell.
Firth Grade: Nikki Bentley,
Jeremy Hubbard, Dorothy .Lel.f..
hell, Matt O'Bryant, Mindy
Patterson.
Sixth Grade: Jarrod Folmer,
Heidi Huffman, Annie Jetsle,
Joey
Shllo Moare,

from Wellston 371, children and
youth; Nancy Brown. Athens 21.
'community service; Lorrene
Snyder, Lancaster 11. veteran
affairs: Diane King, Crooksvi lle
~22. juniors; Arline Bennett.
Junction City 376, Americanism;
and Beth King, Crooksville 222.
placement.
The next birthday party will be
July 20 and will be hosted by the
Pomeroy Unit 3.9 who Is to provide
two large sheet cakes. The fall
conference will be liosted by the
Junction City unit in October.
Next year's summer conference
will be held In June.l990andwlll
be hosted by Pomeroy unit 39.
The national American Legion
Auxiliary convention will be in
Baltimore. Md., on Sept. 2-7.
Delegate to attend Is Mrs. Moose
and her alternate is Jean Carr of
Athens unit 21.
Mrs. Moose held a memorial
service for a II the deceased
members during the year and
noted that the national first vice
president should be voted on and
not appointed.
Mrs. Keister announced that o2
girls will be attending Buckeye
Girls State at Ashland College
the week of June 17-24.

Women attend
Harrisonville 0 ES meets, honors two graduations

60 years member Ruby Diehl
Frances Young. 'oo year
member. and Ruby Diehl. 60
year member, were recognized
when the Harrisonville Order of
the Eastern Star met recently at
the Masonic Hall.
The meeting was conducted by
Betty Bishop, worthy matron .
and Doug Bishop. worthy patron.
The conductress was asked to
present the (albers who were
welcomed and lnvlted to the East
to receive gifts In honor of
Father's Day . Bernice Hoffman

gave a reading in honor of all
fathers everywhere.
The sunshine collection was
taken and it was decided to
donate it to the OES Home.
It was reported that Gladys
Nicholson was to undergo
surgery at Holzer Hospital.
The meeting closed In regular
lorm and members were served
refreshments by the refreshment
committee. which Includes Pearl
Canaday and Margaret Bell
Weber.

Wolf Pen personal notes

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield, Crystal and Windt. Medina,
were visitors with Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell and families.
Mr. and Mrs. Bll' Reeves.
Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Reeves. Brandl and Robbie.
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Darnell, Jeff and Melissa. were
weekend visitors of Mrs. Dorothy
Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. LesUc Frank.
men! will be provided by the Free . Sarah and Mat thew. Texas Road.
Countrv Band. The event Is were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
sponsored by th&lt;• ladles Mrs. Eugene Haning and Ronald,
and also Gladys Tuckerman.
auxiliary.

----Salisbury honor roll _ _:__ _

'

·VAU.EY

recepti!)n. .
The, program was conducted
by·GregSmlth. summer Intern at
the church. He showed plctu~es,
had readings, and shared memories of his childhood, how he
became a Chris tlan. and spoke of
his desire to become a minister.
He was presl'nted a gift from the
group.
Snack night was observed with
blessing .given by Donna Hart·
son. Closing prayer was given by .
Martha Childs.
Hostesses for the July meeting
will be the Phllathea group from
the Loyal Women's Class of the
church. The program will be
given by Clndl Oliveri. extension
agent.

and Gallipolis unit 27.
Iva Powell. !rom unit 39,
received first place recognition
In community service, and Veda
Davis. also from unit 39, won for
best American Legion Auxllary
representative. Ellen Jayne
Rought accepted Mrs. Davis'
· award on her behalf. thanked the
27 units present for their work.
and urged the delegation to
attend the fall con.!erence.
Dis tlngulshed guests were rec·
ognized which Included Virginia
Ray, Ohio department first vice
president. Mrs. Ray spoke on the
volunteer work at the Athens
Mental Health Center and VA
Hospital at Chillicothe. She noted
that the United States has a lot of
volunteers.
Sixteen of the 27 units In
attendance were goal units. ·
including Middleport 263, Pomeroy 39, and Middleport 128.
National citations and blue goal
ribbons were given to each group
over goal from national and
state. Ohio ranks 11th in the
nation lor membership. goal.
National needs 1,620 members to
become goal.
Maxine Barnes. from tl)e Lancaster unit 11. was !'lected at the
new district president. and new
chairmen Include Hazel Grant,

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield
and Crystal. were visitors of Mr.
and ' Mrs. Steve Haggy, and Mr.
and Mrs . Robert RusselL
Mr. and Mrs. Terry :Johnson
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson.
June Murphy and granddaughter , Cassie. of Springfield. Fla.,
were recent visitors of Mrs. J .R.
Murphy and Iva Johnson .
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver.
Mrs . Howard Thoma.and Harley
Johnson were recent visitors of
Mrs . J .R. Murphy · and ' Iva
Johnson. Also visiting .w.ere Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff Bolle of Stockport.
Drl'ma Ward. Flatwoods
Road. was a visitor of Peggy Bole
recently.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver of
Richland. Ind., were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma .

Community calendar

...

'! •

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~x

SIS)'ERS GRADUATE TOGETHER- Anna and Usa Baxter,
from left, daughters of Irene and Homer Baxter, Mechanic street,
Pomeroy, have received their aa!IOOiiUe degrees Ia registered
nursing from Hocking Technical College. Graduation ceremonies
at the school were held Sunday, June 11. Both women are employed
at Vet.e rans Memorlnl Hospital.

s..,.,,

ADOIIH'S

);•,·r
I

•

APPEARING
SATURDAY,
JUNE 17, 1989

•

~

American Legion recently attended the eighth district
summer conference held in Junction City at the legion home of
unit 376.
The meeting was opened by
Mary Moose. district president,
with the advancement of colors
by Coreen Mohler, sargent-atarms, and color bearers were
Imelda Smeltzer and Nancy
Groff.
The Invocation was given by
Stella Butcher. chaplain of unit
376, and a silent tribute and
pledge of allegiance was given by
Betty Keister. eighth district
Americanism chairman.
Greetings and welcome were .
given by several members of the
eighth district Including Arlina
Bennett. president, and Evelyn
Wolfe. mayor of Junction City for
the 87 people in attendance.
Awards were presented with
units from Meigs and Gallla
County receiving several. The
Middleport unit 263. and the
Pomeroy unit 39 received awards
for Americanism. children and
youth. and veteran affairs.
Junior auxiliaries who re·
celved awards were Middle·
port's Feeney-Bennett Post 128,

'

1t1',fDI&amp;, .F:JSD.................~s).

'

Several auxiliary members of
Drew Webster Post 39 of the

(Jtl...... )
At New York. Gregg Jefferies
singled homt1 pinch runner Kevin
Elster with two out In the 12th
Inning In a game that fea.tured
two rain delays and lasted owr
five hours. Jeltrles hit made a
winner of Rick Aguilera, 3-1.
Reliever Pat Perry, 0-1, walked
two batters In the 12th to set the
stage for Jeffries' hit.
no•rers 2,, Astros.l .
(lllnnlap)
At Los Angeles, Mariano Duncan drove hOme the winning run
with a pinch-hit double In the 11th
Inning to Uft Los Angeles ·to their
fifth straight victory, and a
sweep of the three-game aeries.
Juan Agosto, 2-2, took the loss
and John Wetteland, 1-0, pitched
the 11th to gain his first major·
league victory.

AutO., 8 ;~~

. ,,

Auxiliary members attend· conference

Metat,ca•s ·

REBEL ·

Friday, June 16, 1989

Page-5

June 18th'·
Is
Father's Day!

1981 O.LDS OMEGA •••••••• ~•••••••51495
.
r·

By The Bend

Pag!IOZZ\. sinaled home Milt
· 'lbompson from second base with
one OUt In the 10th lnnlnl·
Pai!IC¢'s only two Jml of the
season have come on lOth·lallln&amp;
slql8, the flrlt wlnnbll a pmr
Junr 3 aaatnst the Cubl. Andy
McGafflaan, 1-3. took till! loas
and Todd Worrell. 1·1 eanaed the
viet ory by tntcbing one and
two-third tnnlnas.

Sunday

·

1982 CHEVEnE
...................... S1295
2 Dr.
· ~•
·

Auto., PS, air.

in 12

Royals come· from behi~d
to post 54 win ·over lnilians

1982 PON11AC GRAND PRIX ......S1895

Auto., air.

Padt~s

The Daily Sentinel

Sunday evening visitors of
Mrs. Kevin Knapp. Michelle and
Amy, were Tom Lavender and
family. and Mr. and Mrs. Mik(•
LavPnder and son, of Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell.
.Mr. and Mrs . Don Russell, and

Willing Workers meet
craft fair and bazaar will be held
In October.
Secret sisters who received
gifts were Doris Koenig, Glenna
Sanders, Edna Harmon, and
Jo~nna Weaver. Readings were ·
given by Hazel Barnhill. Mrs.
Spencer, Louise Chaffee. Mrs.
Harmon. Mrs. Koenig. Mrs.
Weaver, Edith Harper. and Mrs.
Brooks. Beulah Maxey and Mae
Vineyard were also present.
Fo'r the July 11 m~eting, the
group is planning to gb to Dale's
in Ga!Upolls for lunch and return
to the church for the regular
meeting.
A surprise birthday cake was
served by Mrs. Spencer In honor
of Mrs. Weaver's birthday. To
conclude the meeting. the prayer
circle was lead by the group.

Money making projects were
discussed and a workday was set
for June 21 at 9 a.m. wh&lt;'n
member&lt; of the Willing Workers
of St. Paul United Methodist
Church 'of Tuppers Plains met
recently at the church.
Evelyn Spencer presided at the
meeting which &lt;he opened by
reading the fifth chapter of
Ephesians regarding rules for
Christians to follow. Mildred
Brooks gave the opening prayer.
and each member answered roll
call by naming their favorite
Bible verse. Ten members were
present. seven sick calls were
made and a get well card was
signed for Pal Hall.
The group will assist with the
yard sale lor the church during
the flr.s t week of August, and the

Sunday Drivers!

Laura Mae Hartung Nice and
Eileen Bahr recently attended
the eighth grade graduation of
their granddaughter. Andrea
Hartung, daughter of Kenneth
and Jackie.Hartung, Louisville ..
Ky.
Mrs. Nice and Mrs . Bahr also
attended the high school gradua·
tloil of their grandson, Jed
Hartung, son of Edgar and
Sharon Hartung. when he graduated from Avon Lake High School
in Cleveland. He was an honor
student and membe r of the
National Honor Society.
Others attending were Tom
Nice, Kenneth. Heather. and
Andrea · Hartung. Louisville.
Ky.: Opal Eichinger. Chester;
and Charles. Sue. and Susie
Eichinger. Columbus.
.
After the ceremony a cookout
was held In honor pf the
graduate.

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KAYLEE KENNEDY

Kennedy birth
Cliff and Darla Kennedy , Ru ·
!land, are annoucing the birth of
their first chi ld , a daughter.
Kaylee Nicole. born May 29 at
Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed five
pounds, 13 ounces. and wa s 19
·
inches long.
Maternal grandparent s are
Ilill and Janet Williamson. Mat ernal great grandmother is Alice
Struble. Paterani grandparents
are Corky Kennedy a nd the la te
Clifford !Skip! K.,nedy.

GENE
WILDE.R

RICHARD
PRYOR

LOWRBoY

Get The Tan
You Want
With A

S.C.A. Wolff
Tanning Bed
TANNING SPECIAL

12 VISITS ONLY

S2495

D.J.'s
TANNING
SlUM ST.
IUTUND
FRONTIER FARMS RESTAURANT
1111 10 HOLIU HOSPRAL

FRIDAY SEAFOOD BUFFET
ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR

$795

5 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
BAKED FISH
CLAM STRIPS
STUFFED CRAB
FRIED SHRIMP
SHRIMP TO PEEL

FRIED FISH
CRAB MEAT
RICE PILAF
FRENCH FRIES
HUSH PUPPIES

SOUP &amp;SlllD IAI INCLUDED WITH BUFFET

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

SATURDAY STEAK NIGHT
5 P.M. TO 10 P.M.

ONE POUND Y·IONE $895

'1'11-ITA'I'Il GllniiOUND IIACING PAliK ANNOUNCI!I

SUNDAY RACING BEGINNING JUNE 11, 1919
Now Tri-Stote'o Greyhounds will drive for the finish line on Sunday
aft.moono in 14 odlan-lllled unpredictabl• raceo. Doora op•n ot noon;
1st race io at 1:30. Buffet-style bruiiCh 1ervad each Sunday.

1/t

LB. IIIIYE or NY SYIIP $J95

CHOICE OF POTATO &amp; All YOU CAN IAT SMAll IAR ·

NIW PllfOIIMANCI SCHIDUU1
SuMer-1.aG'.M. . .ttne(l4,_.1

CIIIMIM1 j y a ......,
W. Jl11.-hHP.M. . . ti.... A7•HP.M.

,._ I r-7•H'.M.

frt. a ... - hH ,_., . ."_a 7oH ,_.,

-

I

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WE MAD ElliNG OUI
AFFOIDAILEI
446·6635

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�,._6~ fXPERifNCE
w

Fridly, June 16. 1989

Friday. June 16. 1189

The Daily Sentinel

=

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THf JOY Of RELIGION

De• Aaa Ltmtlen: People say
Dear Dallas: Thanks for your
credil II tile lifeblood of the letter. And now a word from me
e&lt;:9nomy. But w~ten people don't to those who owe money:
pay their bills, they get lnlo
The worst lhlng you can do Is
trouble.
try to duck the collector. It you
I work for a collection agency. demonstrate a genuine desire to
Every day I make at least 200 pay, you will get plenty of help
calls In an attempt to talk to and your reputallon will remain
people abou I lllelr debts. You Intact. Integrity pays off. Trust
would not believe how nasty and me.
abusive they can be.
Dear Aaa Landers: A friend of
Here Is my message to all your mine recenlly married. Her
readers who owe money:
fatller, who Is above average
1. Please be civil when I call. I financially, gave her, his only
wa11t to help ydu before your child, a lavish wedding, costbtg
creditor .takes serious acllon.
more than $20,000. Everyone who
2. Please don't tell me that you went enjoyed 11. No one criticized
and your creditor have already the parents for having such a
aiJ'eed on a plan of convenient lavish affair.
payment Ullless It Is so. I wUI
Another couple I know celelearn the truth eventually and brated their .son's bar mitzvah
yOIU'credlbllltywUI bedamaaed. with a catered dinner at an
a. A. cbec:ll dated ahead Is not elegant hotel. The cost was
llle,al If It II sent 1o a collection $22,000. Nobody salt:! anything
aaency. l'm required by law to about the extravagant spending.
llold your check, and If It Is A Catholic friend recently gave
received more than 10 days her son a confirmation party tliat
' before It Is dated to go to tile cost $9,000. She had to bOrrow the
bank, I wnt send you a reminder money from her parenls aild her
In the mall.
credit union.
I'm tbe only person who may
Now comes the big question.
Seven years ago, my father,
be able to help you. So when I
teleplione or knock on your door,
who was not wealthy but comforpleue M courteous and coopera,
table, bought me my dream car,
tlve. I promise to do my best to . a 1980 (used) Lincoln, when I
work out a plan that wm satisfy graduated from college. The
your creditors and make your life price tag was $17,000. You would
euler. - S.B., Dallu
not believe the comments about

''Fellttrlllf /(Mite r F~tl C611~11"
221 W. Main St., P-r•r

992-5432

.SHER&amp;UIISE
PHARMJ£Y -~
--.

SUPPLY

Wt Fill Doctors'
Pr.scriptiOIIS

"2·2955

·~

.Pomeror

&amp; SNOUFFER
FilE &amp; SAFETY

sus &amp; snv1a

m-1o1s
' m 11ert1o
...... a...

N8963270-60
· 214

MioWI-', Ohie

e. Main

716 NOiTH SECOND AVE.

"2·5130 Pomeroy

FATHERS AD THE SAME, DESPm
THill DIFFERENCES

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-·669
271 lhrth
S.C....
lid..lpDrt,

Although he nught be tall or shon,
Or young or sray or bald,
He's stlll your dad, or any aon
· Of name by which he's called.
For all the dllnp that life demands
He'd always toll and strive,
By worldna with his brains or hands
And Reping you alive.
At times he had to punl1h you,
To teiCh you riJht from wrong;
As -~~ u everything he knew
To lldp you aet alona.
The Bible teUa you to obey
And love him while you can;
So just ICUK!uaber, COllie what may,
Yo11r father's quite a man.
- Gloria Nowak

Ohio

HAZEL . COMMUNITY CHURCH . Of!
Rt 124, 3 mlles from Portland-Long Bot·
tim. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday School,
9::1) a.m.; Sunday morn1n1 preachhll
10:30 a.m.; Sunday ~entngserviCM, 7:30

p.m.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel

Herrmann, pastor. Sunday School lO:OOa.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed.·

nesclay and Saturday Evealna: Service~ at

7::JI p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl

Hicks, 10 mlles above Racine on Rt. 38B.
Sunday SCbool 9 a.m., worshiP service 10
a.m. Sunday eventilg service. 6:00p.m.;
Prayer meeting aRd Bible Study 'nlursday. 6:30 p.m.

MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST-

Ott 124. behind Wilkesville. Charlfll Jone~,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:00a.m.; morning
worship, 10:30; Sunday and Thur.:lay
evening services, 7:00p.m.

MEI08

CHRIS11AN
a.rtls, posl&lt;r. Unda Swan,

9::1la.m.; preachlng:rr·
tlinl Soullov [ollowlngSuiiii\Y
meeting. 7'::b p.m. every Sun-

~:KE:D HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
Msgr. Michael Hellmer. Ph.
992-5898. Saturday evening Mass, 5: :l1 p.m.
; Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. CCD
classes, 9 a.m. SuOOay. Confessions: On~
halt hour before each Mass.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS, TOUC FAITH- New Uma Road , next to
. 1i'11rt Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards,
,._or. Sunday serviees, 10 a. m. and 7 p.
a; Wednesday worship, 7 p.m .

..,_ -..neroy.

'

• GaAHAM
UNITED METHODIST.
Prtradtlng 9:30a.m. first and seco nd Sun'Gyt of each month; third and fourth Sun111!11!&amp;Ch 1'1\onth worsh.ip services at 7 : ~p.
Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
~
and Bible Studv.
ENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mul, W'r"f Ht'ights Road, Pomeroy. Past or Bob
• _ . , ; Sabbath -School Superintendent .
. .......,. Spires. Sabbath School be~ns at 2
p... &lt;In SatVrday arternom wltll worship
Mntce fOllowing at 3:00 p.m. Everyone

lll'ltillm•.

I!IJTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- •sler Harriett Warner. Supt . Sunday
tduo19:30 a .m.; Morning Worship, 10:45

. . .....

~:

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.;.

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"'

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PGIIIEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lysoon
lbltey, minister; Saturday evening
~l!itlr" sf'rvlres, open to public, 7 p.
ta..; Sunday Church School, 9:30 a .m .;
Jlunlng Worship 10 :30 a.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po.......,. Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
)a&amp; Ne«ts. Sunday School Dirt"Ctor. Sun·
.., lrt~ot. 9:Xl a.m. ; Mornlnlil Worship.
~ evealngworshtp, 7:00p.m. (O.S.T.I
• 7:• ~E.S.T . ); Wednesday Prayer Ser·
filii. YoOO p.m . tD.S.T.l &amp; 7:30P.M. IE .S .
Mtsslon rrtpnds lag~ 2-61. Royal
satklrs (boys ages 6-18'1-. and Gi rls
iOn (ages 6-181 on Wednl'Sdays. 7 p.
... fD.S.T. I &amp;7:30p.m. fE.S.T.); Tuesday

• .--non. 6:30p.m.

• • 'f'Ml'H TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·
~Road, Rev. Emmett Raw son, pas·
# ... ·ro:. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School.
'
JOa.fh.; Sundayeve-nlngservlce. 7:30p.m.
f
; ln.le teaching, 7: :a&gt; p.m. Thursday.
IYIIA~E MISSION,
St .. Sylces,lO
Sunday

COOPERATIVE PARI!lll
UNITED Mll'l'IIODIST CIIUIICB
NOB'l'IIEAIIT CLUITBII
Bev.DooAr&lt;b•
Rev.FrutCrtlollfi
llev. Sel..o l o ALFRED - Chun:b School 9: :JI a.m.;
Worshtp, 11 a.m.; UMYF6:.'1Jp.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
ttrat Sunday. (ArchEI')
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
School10a.m.; BibleStudy, Thuraday, 7p.
m.; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com·
mualon. Urst Sunday (Archer).
JOPPA - Worship 9:~ a.m.; Church
School 10: :JI a.m. Bible Study WedneBday,
7; 30 p.m. (Johnsm).
LONG BOTTOM - Cbureb School 9: :JI
a.m.; Wotshlp 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7:.30 p.m.; UMYF
d_.y, 6:00 p.m.; Communion Ftnt SuDCSay
&lt;I Month (Croloot) .
REEDSVILLE - Cbureh Scbool 9: :JI a.
m.; Wol'lhip Service 11:00 a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a.m.; Worlhlp 10 a.m.;
Bible Stud)', Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Commu·
nlon Flr~t Sunday CArcher).

w-..

CI!NTKAL CLU8TER
Rev. Melv~ FraaWn
Rev. Clemea&amp;e 8. Zulp. .Jr.
Rev. Don Me.-. .
Rev. Wmter 'l'llatcber
Rev. Poul Marilo

Rev. Arttuor cro)lO...
Rev. Rob«&lt;-·

ASBURY ( Syracu,.) -Worship lla .m.
; Church School9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
Study, WedneBday, 7::Jip.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 1 :~ p.m.; Choir Reheersal,
Wednesday t;: 30 p.m. (Thatcher)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School10 a.m.: Bible Study, T\tel·
day , 7:00p.m.; UMW,FtrstMonday, 7: 30
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, ·6 p.m. Choir Rehearsal, Children's at 6:30p.m. Adult fol·
lowing; Wednesday. (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School,10a.m.
: Worship, 11 a .m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Suad.toy, 6 p.m.
(Franklin\ .
FOREST RUN, - Worah.l.p 9 a.ey~.;
Church School 10 A.M.: Chob' practice,
Thuroday, 6:30p.m.; UMW tbtrd Monday.
(Thatcher)
HEATH (Middleport) - Chureh School, .
9:30a.m.; Morning Wonhlp 10:~ a.m.;
Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wedneaday, Bible
study 6:00p.m . Chob' rehearsal 7:00p.m .
(Zoontaa)
MINERSVILLE - Chureh Schod 9:00
a.m.; Worship service IO:OOa.m.; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (Thatch«)
PEARL CHAPEL - Chureh School 9: 00
a.m.; Worship Service Hl: DO a .m. (Mar·
tin)
POMEROY- Chureh School. 9: !~a.m.
; Worsltlp 10:30 a .m.; Cbotr rth•raal
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, "'cond
Tueoday,7:30p.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
(Meadows)
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: lli
a.m.; WorlblplOa.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday, 7::JI p.m.; UMYF (Sealora), Sunday, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every other Sun·
day, 6 p.m. (FrankiiDl.
RUTLAND - Chureh SChool, 10 a .m.;
Wonlllp, 11 a.m .; UMW First Mooday,
7:30p.m. (Crabtree)
.
SALEM CENTER- Cburcb School 9: 15
a.m.; MorniD( Wol'lblp 10: 15 a .m.
(Steelo)
SNOWVILLE - Momma Wonhlp, 9:01

a.m.; Chureh ScboollO:OO • .m.

~MuUa}

LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m. ;
Church SchoollO a .m. (Grace) ~
RAqNE -4- Olureh Scllool. 10 a .m.; Wor·
shiplla.m.; UMWfourthMonday ai7::1Jp.
m.; Mftl's Prayft' BJ'Nidast, WedDed_.- 8
a.m. (Groce) .
'
SALEM CENTER- Cllureh Sc~od 9: lli
Lm.: WOI'IIliDlO:Ua.m. (_Steele).
SNOWVILLE - Woi'IIIIP 9:00 a.m.;
Cbordt lelloell8:01o.m. (lilortla) .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roger
S,rllla. mtaltter; Starlin&amp; Muoar and OlIver Swain, ·'suDCLay School Supts. Pracb•

lne ': 30 a.m. eacb Sunday; Sunday School

10:30 a.m.

1

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
QfRISTIAN UNION, Therm Durham,
pastor. Sunday service, 9::1J a.m.; eventnr service 7;00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
WedneBday, 7:00p.m.
.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskins, pastor. Bible
Clua, _9:30a.m.; MoMIIIRJWorshtp10:30a.
m.; EveaineWorsblp, 6::Jlp.m. Thurlday
BlllloStuoly,I::JI p.m.
ZION CHUitlCII OF CHRIST, PomeroyHorrto-mollol, (Rt.IC3) Ro.....,E . Purt.al, mtnltter; Stow Stan!~. BlbloSchool
Su... ; IIDolnoy H-.ey, Alit. Supt. SUNDAY: Blblt&gt; School 9:30 a.m.: Worahtp
10::19 A.M. and 7::JI P.M.: WodneBday Bl·
ble Stuol)l,7: 00 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Gr8"Je. The Rev. William Mtddl•warth,
pastor. Clturda service 9:Jla.m.; SuAday
Schoel 10:30 a .m.
BRADIIURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday SchoolS: .JJ
• .m.; Larry Hayna, S. S. Supt. Morning
wonhlp 10::1) a.m.
'
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev. John VanCI!', putor; Sandy
Justice, Chairman of tbe Board of Christian Ute. Sunday Scboo19: 30 a.m .; Morn·
ine worship 10:30 a.m.; evaneellstlc ser·
vtce 7:00p.m. W"15r.!if 10rvlce, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHR
CBI,JRCH, Dox·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Sorv- Suodlly
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedaaclay, 7 "p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Llooyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday SchOol 9: 30 a.
m.; marnlng worship 10:39 a.m. Sunday
rwnin11ervlce 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Stev•
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swteer, SuDday
School Supt.; Suuay School 9::JI a .m.; ·
Mornin1 worship 10:40 a .m .; Sunday
e'Yt'nlna worship 7:30p. m.: W!dllesday
eventac Biblo study 7::JI p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNn'Y CHURCH,
Burilqham. lUy Laud«mmlt, pastcr. · Robort Qrzort, uotstant putor. Su.O.V Schod
10a.m.: wm"INJ)7p.m.; W~ay.&amp;p.m.
youth meettq: WPd.. 7p.m.ebu~hS8'Vlces.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, \1
mll~otfJtt . 325. Rev . B!n J. Watts. pattCI'.
Robort Soarles. S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Sunday ev~nin&amp; tervtce 7:30p.m.; Wednesday •rvtce.7 :30 p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, l!tll Llotle,
pastor. Steve Uttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
Srhool10 a.m.; Mornlne worslp, 11 a.m.;
SuMay I'Vftinaw-orllalp 7::11 p.m. Prayer
. _ . a n d 11-.e otuoly. W..,l!lllay, 7: :JI
p.~n.; f"oulh meetiii&amp;We*leiUy at 7p.m.
REJOICING LIFE B4PTIST CHURCH
- 313 N. 2nd Avo., Ml4dl..,.n. Sunday
School10 a .m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m.:
Mld·tftek service, Wed., 1 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH:
Sunday Schod. t:30 a .m.: Dallas Janey,
supt.; Marnin1 wonhlp 10:30 a.m.; SU,n·
day t'Venlna ..... ~. 7:.10 p.m.; Wotllle~doy evenlq ...-vi..,, 7: 30 p.m.
·
SYRACUliE CHURCH OF THE NA ZARENE . Roo. Glenn McMUiall. put cr.
·Mary J•nice Laveetler, Su~ School•
Supt . Suoday ScbOol 1:3tlo.m.: Morn~l

w....... IO: ~h. OL; ~lotkaonl..,

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m.; Youtlt mooltu.f p.111.
EDEN UNnED IIRE'l'IIRI:N IN
CHRIST, ENen R. Blolte. ... t ... Bundoy
Schod 10 o.m.; Gory Jleeti,~!Mdor.
Mornllla ltl'tllll, 11 LOL;
IIJIItl
Rrvtoa: Chrlllttoa Eod-or 7: p.a,
Softl 10rvtee I p.m. ~ 1:311 p.m.
Mld-woolt prayer meellll. Wotloeaday, 7
p.m.
.

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va.
Rev. David McManis, paafor, Chun:h
School 9: 30a.m.; Sunday mornln&amp; ser·
Vice, 11 a.m.; S~nday evenln&amp; ~eTvlce,
7:30p.m. Wednesday pnyer meetiRI, 7: 30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Lotart,
W. Va .. Rt. 1, Jamea Lewllt .PIIICI'. Wor·
ship ~ervlces 9:30 •.m.; Sunday Scboolll
a.m.; Ewalnawonhtp7: :IOp.m. TuOidoy
ootlaJe pmyer meeting and Btblt Study
9::rl a.m.: WonhJp ~ervlce, W~
7
VIOilll LlmiEitAN CHURCH.
'
W.
Wolnut Old Hoory Ito.
Va. Tho"'""· C.O.Wt C. Welrl&lt;k. put cr.
Suoday SCbooii:JOa.m.; Sunday "cnbtp
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204 CondOr St.
P01111roy, ·OH.

992-2975

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Mldtl..,ott. Ohio 41780
(11~)882·1117- (181-00KS)
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

------------...1

L

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non· Pentecostal, Worship service- Sunday
10 a.m.; Sunday $chod 11 a.m. Evt!nlnc
worship service 7:00 p.m . Wedn8day
prayer meeting 7:00p.m.

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Locatod In Tex01
Community off Cl. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Halter, lay leader;
cation; Steve Eblin. assistant. Sunday
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9::.l a.m.; Mornlnt worsldp 10;3)
Srhool 9:30a.m.: momiaa wotahlp and
a.m.; Teens In ACtion. 6 p.m.; Evening
chlldl't'n's chureh 10:JJ a.m.: eveatna:
· Worship, 7:00p.m. Chob' practl~ 8 p."m.
preaching service first three Sundays,
Sunday. Wedn8day evening prayer and
?: 30 p.m.: Special service four1h Sunday
Bible study.
evening, 7: 30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST.
MHtinl, Btbt~ Study and Youth Fellow·
Roger Watson. minister: Norman Wlll.
thlp. 7: :JI p.m.
supt. Sunday School 9:.'Jl a.m. ; Worship
CHURCH OF GOD OF P.ROPHECY .
service lO:lJ a.m. Blbl.e study. WedD.esLocated on 0. J. White Road of Hllhway
day , 7:00p.m .
160. Pat Hens(lll, pastor. Sunday SchoollO
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS · a.m. Clu~e~forallages. Junior Church 11
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. I'Vrta.m.; Morning worship 11 a .m. Adult
land-Raclne Road. Mike Ouhl, paatr:r.
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young PeoJanlre Danner, chureh school director.
pl,'s. Children's Church and Adult Bible '
Church school9: 30 8.m.; Morning worship
Study, Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
services, 7:30p.m.
St .. Middleport. Alrtllated wlth Southern
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
BaptiSt Convention. DaVId Bryan, Sr., Ml·
Shuler. pastor, Worship SPrV!Ce, 9::l'l a.m.
nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m. ; Morning
Sunday Schoollfl:30 a.m. Bible Study and
worship 11 a.m.; Evening worship 1 p.m. ;
prayer servlct'Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday evening Bible study and
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONprayt'r ·meeting 7 p.m.
AL CHURCH. Ktngsbucv Road . Jllov.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St .
Clyde W. HPnderson. pastor . . Sunday
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stewart, pasSchool 9:.30 a.m.; Ralph CArl, Supt . Even·
tor. William Amberger, S. S. Supt.; Sun·
ing worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetlna,
day School 9: 30 a .m. ; Morning Worship
Wedn8day 7:00p.m.
10:30 a.m.; Evenlq worship 7:30 p.m .
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
Wedneld~ worship 7 :~ p.m.
CHURCH. 28&amp;01 State Route 7, MiddleST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
pan. Sunday School10a.m.; Sunday even· Comer Sycamore and Second SU., PGlnsr service 7: lJ p.m.: Tuesday servk:E'.
meroy. The Rev. William Mlddleswart,
7:30p.m.
pastor. Sunday Schod. ? :45 a .m. Chureh
service 11 a .m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
SACRED
HEART CHURCH, MsKT.
0 . H. Cart. pastor. Sund&amp;ySchool.at 9: 30a.
Anthony Giannamore. Ph. 992·5898. Saturm. ; Morning wo~shlp at 10:30a.m. ; Sunday E~lng Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
day E"ventna: service at 7:30p.m. Thur..ay
Mass, 8 a .m. !lnd 10 a.m. Confessions one
services at 7: ~p.m.
half hour beforo each Mass. CCD cl.. ses.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
lla.m. Sunday.
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
VICTORY BAPTIST, ~25 N. 2nd St.,
· Roger Willford, pastor. Sunday School
Middleport. James E. Keesee, pasta".
9;30 a.m. ; Morning Worshl10:45 a .m .;
Sunday morning worship 10 a .m.; Even Sunday evening worship 7:00p.m .; Weding service 1 p.m. ; Wednesday evening
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
worship 7 p.m. Visltatlon11tunday 6:30 p .
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
m.
CHURCH - CoolvUle RD . Jllov. Plttlllp RIMORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
denour•. pastor. Sunday Schod 9: 30a.m.;
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m .;
worship- serv:tce 10:30 a.m.: Bible study
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
lnd worship servl~. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. RDy
pra)'rr service Wednesday 7 p.m.
W. Corter, pastcr. Morntne Wortbtp 10:00
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLI!'JESS
a.m.; Bible Scbool6:00 p.m.; Billie Study
Wedntldlly 7:00p.m.
CHURCH ol Middleport, Inc., 75Pear!St.,
Rev. lv•n Myers, pastor; Roger Manley,
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Sr. , Sunday School Supt. Suoday School
Tillis. pastor. Sonny Huci&amp;Ul. supt. Sunday
9:30a.m.·: Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.:
School9:30 a.m.; Moralnt wontUp, 10:30
Evt'nlng Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
a.m.: Sunday evening service 7:00p.m.
evening Bible study, prayer and praise
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO prostrvice, 7:30p.m.
rram 9 a.m. E'Bch Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZALIVING WORD CHEsTER CHURCH
RENE. Samuel Basye, pater. Sunday
OF GOD - C".aary Hines, pastor. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Worship .ervlce10: 30a.
School9:;r) to 10:~ a.m.: Worship srvlce
m. ; Young people'5 service 6 p.m.
10:30 to ll ::Jl a .m .; Sunday evenln~ serEvangel.tstlc serviee6: :II p.m. Wednellday
vice. 1 p.m .: Midweek Prayer Servlre,
service 1 p .m.
Wed .. 7 p.m .
·
MASON CHURCH OF CHR 1ST, Mlll..MT . OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUNSt. , Mao..,, W. Va. Sunday BlbloStudy 10
TTY CHURCH , .Lawrence Bush, pastor.
a.m.; Worship 11 a .m . and 7 p.m. Wedna·
Max Folmer , Sr .. s.S. Supt. Sunday School
day Bible Sl:udy, VO('al music, 7 p.m .
9:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service. 7: :KJ •
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudm.: Wednesday ~entng Bible study and
ding Lant', Mum, W. Va. J . N. Tbadter,
praise service, 7: 30p.m.
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m.; WoUNITED FAITH CHURCH. Rt. 7 on Pomen's Mtntttry , Tbunday, 9: :t&gt; a .m.;
meroy
B~-~~s.-~ . R~be!t ~. S~lt h. Sr.
We&lt;lnesdoy Prayer and Blblo Study, 7: I~
p.m .
,

HEMLOCK GRovE CllllBI'IAN, OW·

vte.T:t'~

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES

.......

¥_.,sl&lt;·~..,··~·-

Ito-

POMEROY, 01110-992·6677
lill Clllidlll 111111 .... Allll , .
In a succeulul.

111al1'1¥. there Is

no such thing u one'•
way . There Is only
the way of both.
- Phyllis McGinley

Community happenings

Ann

that gift, not only behind my back
but to my face. I heard such
remarks as "spoiled rotten kid"
and "What wUI he have to look
forward to?"
My dad Is dead now, but I stU!
remember how trilled I was with
that glfl a11d how much pleasure I
got from that Lincoln ..
Why Is It OK to spend $20,000 on
a six-hour celebration but crazy
to spend $17,000 on a car?- SIUI
Annoyed After Seven Years
(Bloomfield, N.J.)
Dear Bloomfield: The Issue Is
not what people say, but how
much attention you pay to Idle
chatter.
Whose business Is It If your dad
wanted to give you a $17,000 car
as a graduation gift? And why
are you still thinking about II
after seven years?

Bible schools
The Pomeroy Church of Christ
will be having Vacation Bible
School lhe week of June 25-29,
from 6:30-8: 30 p.m. The theme Is
"Jesus, Joy Forever." All child ren of the area. kindergarten
through 12th grade, arl' Invited to
attend. There will be clowns.
refreshments. crafts. fellowship.
fun, and Bible lessons everyday.
Vacation Bible School will beat
lhe Silver Rim Baplist Church
from June 19-23 from 6-8 p.m . The
Silver Run Baptist Chu rch Is
located In Cheshire.
The Bradford Church of Christ
vacation Bible school has been
rescheduled for June 26-:30 from
9-11:30 a.m. Classes will be for
-pre-schOol through senior high.
The Hemlock Grove Christian
Church will be having vacation
Bible school June 19-23 from
6:30-8:45 p.m . for persons two
years old through adults.

When planning a weddinK• who
pays for what?, Who standi where?
.. The Ann Landen' Guide for
Brides" ha.s aU the answer.a. Send a
self-addretued. lonf(. bu.1iness-.1i::.e
envelope and a check or money
order for 13.65 to: Bride•, c/ u Ann
Landers. P.O . Box JJ562. Chico~o.
Ill. 60611-0562.

Gavin Plan( Recreation A.rea In
Cheshire. Registration will be
from 8-9 a.m. and the fee Is $2
which Includes a patch .

Trinity Church In Pomeroy will
be having Sunday School at 9: 1!\
a.m . during the summer.

Reunion
The Charles and Fanny Wolfe
Beaver Reunion will be July 8 at
the Racine Star Mill Park. All
relatives and friends are Invited
fo attend . Those attending are
asked to bring a covered dish for
Ihe dinner th a( will begin at noon.
Siiigtng and ,games are planned
lor part of the activities.

Ice cream social
There will be an ice cream
social today !Friday) starting at
&gt;p.m .. at theBashanFire Houst•.
Ten flavors of ice cream will be
available. along with sand;
wiches . ples and beverages.
Entertalrunent will be provided
by the Free Country Band. The
socia l is sponsored by th e Bash an
Fire Departm e nt l. a die ~
Auxiliary.

Library progran1
Jane Coaces will conduct a
ceramics class for children on
Wednesday . June 21. at the
Middleport Library . The class
will start at 2 p.m. and there is a
$ii charge for materials. All
children are Invited to atte nd.

Receives cilallon
Marine P.F .C. James C.
Hensler. son of Danie l and Patty
Hensler . of Racine. has received
a
citation In recognition of his
The Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church of Middleport will b&lt;• outstanding performa ncl' while
having Vacation Bible School th e stationed at the Marine Corps Air
week of June 19-23 from 9-11 a.m. Station in Yuma . Arizona .
Hensll'r. a 1987 graduale of
dally.
Southern High School. joined the
.Marine Corps in February 1988.
Dislrlct Cub Olympics
The MGM District Cub Olympirs will be held June 24 at the Change In Sunday School time

Reunion
:
The 59th annual Spencer-Fell
reunion will be held . Sunday.
starting at ll a.m .. at the Waid
Spencer recreation area. off
Bash an Road. Relaliv&lt;'s a n~
friends are Invited. Those planning to attend are asked ·to.bring
a covered dish. with th e recipe. A
recipe exchange will be held.
Dinner will be a t 12 noon.
Grange meeting
Sta r Grange and Star Jun ior
Grange will hold thc&gt;ir regular
fun night and potluck supper al
6:30p.m. Sat urday at the grang~
hall on Cou nt y Road I. north of
Salem Ce nter: All members and .
friends are urged to attend.

Quirks in the news.______

each. picture the stubborn 19·
story high"rise. and proclaim It
the "Leaning Tower of
Teenager stages bus robbery;
Providence."
gels oaty hand lotion
"It Is an event that did not
CHICAGO (UPil -A teenager
happen." authority director St~­
brandishing a handgun hijacked
phen O'Rourke explained Thursa Chicago Transll Authority bus
day. " Like a minted coin. when
bu 1 the only thing II nel ted him
there is a mistake everyone
was a bottle of hand lotion.
wants to be part of it. They put it
The busdrlver. Gladys Vera.
in a drawer and 10. lo. 20 years
40, fled the bus when lhe youth
from now they pull it out and they
walked to the back to try and
will know where they were on
roust Ihe · only passenger. who
May
21. 1989."
,
was sleeping, she said.
'i'-shlrts
commemorate
embar·
Precision
lmploslves
of New
Vera told pollee she was
York
used
some
700
pounds
of
rasslng
moment
driving south on Cicero Avenue
PROVIDENCE.
R.I.
!UP!)
·dynamite
to
try
and
topple
the
,
when lhe teenager bOarded the
You
might
think
the
Provldfmce
tower,
but
only
succeeded
in
bus at abOut 2:46a.m.
Housing Authority would want to tilting it forward abOut 20
Thursday, said Austin District
forget the day an expert tried degrees.
Sgt. William Campbell.
Since then. Bllray Demolition
Waving a snub-nosed revolver. twice Ia topple one of Its highrises , and failed on both of Johnston. R.I. - which subth~ youth ordered Vera to turn
contracted the implosion job 1o
easl and then south, Campbell occasions .
But
now
the
authorlly
has
Precision - has been tryl ng to
said.
come
out
with
T-shlrts
actually
bring the concrete. steelVera said she told Ihe youth she
commemorating
lhe
embarrassreinforced tower down with a
could not drive down the street
·
Ing even I. The shirts sell for $4 wrecking balL
By United Press International

past·o r. MeiVln Urake, S. :S. Supt. SYAday
Sch0ol9:ll a.m.; MQrntngWonhlp 10:30;
Evenlnr Worsbtp 7:00 p.m.; '!l'otllltMay
Prayer Servt..,, 7:00p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Rollrao4
Sl., Mason. Sunday Schod.lD a .m.; Morn·
1o1 worship II a .m .; Evonlna
1 P·
m. Prayor m...liiland atble Study Wod-

,.,..1..

neo~~-~UN BAJ'Tis.r. Rev. Nylo
Borden, pastor. Corn.aloo Bwodl, Hpt.
Sunday
SchOol worship
9::JI a.m.;
S.CI&gt;nd
ud
fourth Suntblys
terYice
at 2:•
p.

m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth 0111&lt;1

Main St .. Middleport. Rev. Gllllei't Crol1,
Jr. 1 pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baum1anlnft',
Sunday SchOol Supt. Sunday Scliool9:30o .
m.: Worship service,10:45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B. Hoskins. evan1elllt. Su.Uy
BibleSiudy9a.m.: Worlblp, lOa.m.: Sui·
day evtnlng service .6 p.m.; Wedn••Y
evening service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Roctne.
Rt. 124. William Hoback. pastor. Sontlay
School10 a.m.; Sunday evening aervk'e 1
p.m . Wt'dnesday evenln(l t«Vic-t 1 p.m. '
CAliPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cbeadle.
Supt. Sunday Scbool 9: XI a.m. Mornlnl
Worship !0:30a.m. Prayerservlce•.alternatP Sundays.
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - Ne-w Limo llol ..
netcl to Fort Mrtgs Park, Rutland. Robert
Richards. pastor. Services at 1 p.m. on ·
Wednesdays and Sundays.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
TER ot the Wesleyan Hollneu Church .
Rev . David Ferren, pastor. Henry Eblin.
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday School10 a .
m.; Morning Worship 11 a.in.; Evening
service 7:30p.m . Wednt'Sday everlln1 ser·
vice 7:30p.m .
·
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH .
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday st'r'VIees 9 : ~
a.m. and 7 p.m .: Midweek strVke, 7:l1 p.
m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not. ttnalwn. Sunday School Supt. Suodoy
School 10 a.m. with clu~ for a11 aaa.
Evenlne services at 6 p.m. Wednelday Ill·
blp study at 7: 30p.m. Youtllllei"VIcs Friday at 7:30p.m .
.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128NIIISt.,
MldcDeport. Brother Chuck McPhen.,,
putor. Sunday SChool 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening servlct"B at 7 p.m. and Wedneeday
services at 7 J), m.
ANTIQUITY BAP11ST.•Kennoth Smtth,
pastor. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.; church
service 7:30 p.m.: youth fellOwship 6: lOp.
m.; Btblestudy, Thurlllay, 7:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 33DCI
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pat·
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
momtna service at 10 a.m.; Sunday t&gt;Ven·
lng servlee 7:30p.m. Tuesday aad Thursday S«vvces at 7:30p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev. Glendon Strwd, putor.
Sunday School9: 30 a.m.: Worlhlp .ervtce,
10: 30 a .m.; Youth .ervtce Sunday 6:15 p.
m. Sunday ev~nlngservlce7: 00p. m. WNnesday Prayer Meettna and Bible Stutly
7:00p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCII, Suday arternooo. services at 2;.30. Thunday
e-veninl tervlces at 7:30.
'
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mot &lt;ll. W.
Va. Pastor, BIU Murphy. Sunday Sehoe1.10
a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30p.m. Prayer
mertlng and Bible stlllly WMnetday, 1:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAP11ST, Sa·
lem St . Rev. Paul Taylor, past«. Sunday
School10a.m. : Sunday ev~nlna7:00p.m .;
Wedntwday eventnc prayer meetlq 7:00
p.m.
SOUTH Bt:THEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Stiver Rldae. Duane Sydon·
strtcller, past cr. Sunday SchoO. 9 a.m.;
Wonhlp Service, lOa .m.; Sundayevenlq
lft"VIce, 7:00p. m. Wedneeday nipt Bible
study 7:00 p.m.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

How to handle creditors

(row's Famill Restawant

RIDENOUR

.

because II was too narrow and
that's when he told her to stop the
bus and walked to the back.
While the teenager was trying
to awaken the snoozer. identified
as Marco Gonzalez. Vera
grabbed her keys and bOlted
from the bus.
The youth fled the bus without
harming Gonzalez but first
grabbed Vera's knapsack. which
she said contained no money. just
j)apers and hand lotion.

Arrest warrant quashed ·for aaor
CANCER SOCIETY PRESENTATION- John
Mora, at left, principal of the Melp Junior High
School, aecepls thanks from the Melp County
Ch.,ter of the American Cancer Society for his
"oulatandlnc cooperation" In helplnr: the local
saclety Ia lllelr educational pror:rams. "He sets

4

•
•

!

the standards that the American Cancer Society
need&amp; to educate our young people about cancer,
Its causes and prevention," says John Hunnell,
,public Information chalnnan for lhe local
chapter, pictured wllh Mora.

reople in the news,_ _ _ __

,
,

~
~

"'

'

Sermonette
TOMORROW IS BUO.T ON YESTERDAY
Guidance comes from all directions when we are young. The
result Is up to us and becomes evldenl only years l.lter. We can
start In the right direction but what do we become? Look back on
your life.
School Is soon over for another year. Teachers give guidance
especially In the early grades. Will we )Iaten and follow that
eultlance to reach the aoaJ. So ottea we lanore lood advice
because the person Is older. We tend to think our peerallnow
more what Ufe Ia aii about What teacllers did you have who had
· l!'eat lnfiuence on you? Think about It anc' maybe go and tell ·
him or her what they really did for you.
God lays out a path for uund healves us a compass to lead the
way. Do we take hili Ieadlna? Do we think God and church are
very Important to ua and npeclally lo our children? Do you
teach your children about God, brlna them to wonhlp eaclt
Sunday or do yoli releple them lo a nursery for play lime.
Church Is only an hour lone. They 1~ that lon11 al a movie or
before T.V., and ID tchooL Do you thiDk you are pvln&amp; them
pod euldaBce 1D relation locln&amp;rdlaadSunday School? »ye•a
from - · wbat ..m they tblnlc about church aad God and
rel(lknl u a wllole!
Tomorrow Is built on yesterday and today. What we have
Iearaedln theputpolnlltbewaylotomorrow. \Vebecomewhat
we are tauaht apd arow upon the foundation we are liven .-hfll
youaa. which II alwaya ye~terday. Tomorrow, I wUI be what l
have been tau&amp;ht yesterday.
doocl teachera, pa1tora, parents, family and frlellclll can lay a
1011d foulldatloR for tomorrow If we accept It, God aad
_ . _ _ . . . . . pu)llt Do your belt today fllrt'-anow. ·
_....._WIIIIIIIIIIIIM_....., . .Uin •efMelpC• lr.

Makeba and Ladysmith Black
8y WO.LJ:.\M C. TROTT
Mambazo. which will be the first
United Pres~~ International
time South African musicians
DOWN AND OUT: Zlla Zsa
Gabor seems to have a problem have played lhe Soviet Union.
BLOWING IN THE WIND:
with authority. She was arrested
Despite
what Bryant Gumbel
Wednesday In Beverly Hills after
might
think.
wealherman Wll·
driving away from a policeman
who had stopped her for'drlvlng lard Scolt says the •'Today'· show
her Rolls-Royce wUh expired needs more clowning around . "I
wish they'd jusllet me do myblls
registrar lon tags and then slapping the cop when he corralled and ~Ire a weatherman," Scott
her several blocks away. GabOr said at lhe Three Rivers Arls
was booked on suspicion of Festival In Plltsburgh. "Hire
battery on a pollee officer. · someb()dy with nice hair and put
evading arrest and driving with him with lhe graphics and lei him
an expired license. expired regis- do a nice neal weather show. I
lold a guy this morning I'm a
tration and an open alcoholic
combination
Baptlsl preacher
container. GabOr described the
officer as a "6-foot-6 gorgeous and politician. ' ' And yes. Willard
Is still upset by the Internal
looking policeman" but didn't
like the way he treated her. memo Gumbel wrote slamming
his colleagues. especially Scolt
"(He) draggedmeouloflhecar.
so I slapped him." she said after and his antics. "Unfortunalely.
being released on her own you never can forget somelhlng
recogniZance. "I said. 'You're . like that." he said. "Who's to say
breaklnc my arm. ' He s~ld, ·r that maybe something like that
hope I break theni both .. .' They couldn't happen again and next
took me Into lhe station, broke time It will be effective? I am
two flngerli!IIIS. They finger- obsessed wilh it.''
KIDS IN THE BLACQUE
print~ 'me. They put me down
lhere like a dope fiend or a FAMR.Y: Taurean Blacque demuroerer." In January Gabor serves special men tlo n this Fa·
ther's Day. Blacque, 48, formerly
was kicked off a Delta flight
because abe was letdnll her two of "Hill Sl reel Blues" and new
slarrlng In the soap opera "Gend._. run loose on lhe plane.
liMON AMONGST 10\'IETS: erations." has two grown sons
P•l 11111111 Will llf taklag his
Solidi A.frtean BOUnd to Tbe Soviet
UniDIItllla month and he hopes io
absorb as much Russian culture
as po.tftlle. "The place ·I was
most curious to play was Russia," Simon told Tass. "I wan I to
10 to lhe counlryslde. I'd like to
meet as many people as I could. I
wan I lobe just alyplcal tourist. I
think Americana and Russians
have a huae curloualty about
GOSPIL . . .C
each other ... Now wllh the
poUUcal tnslou relaxing. I
kllow from Mle point of view of
ILUIGUSS
Americans that lhere's just a
creal feelln&amp; of relief and Intereat In Ruutana aad Ruuian
culture." Slmoa, who opened a
alne-colllltry tour In Brussels
COINIIY llfiD
Wedl111day ntaht, plana lo take
his aon, lbrper ,16, to Moscow for
the June 2'·25 shows In Gorky
Park wllll $oulh• A.trlcan per·
tormen R•P MaMIIutla, Miriam

"FREE SHOW"

SATURDAY, JUNE 17

7:00P.M.
"Cathy &amp; Jan"

,..,.

"Harvest ft•"
u•
nfrH"

STAIMILL PARK

•

.--.a.o

u,

and a grandchild but he's making
a new family with adopted kids.
He has taken in six hard-lo-adopt
children - Including twins who
were malnourished. the offspring of drug addicts - arid two
will be added July I. " Look at all
my babies. " Blacquesays in USA
Weekend. ''Look at the smiles.
That 's my satisfaction. That's
my joy. 1 always wan led to have
lois and lots of kids. I just love
them all."
LOWE TALK: There are some
new elements In the Rob Lowe
video case. Recently filed court
documents allege that Lowe was
using unspecified Illegal drugs
during his sex outing with Jan
Par!!OIIs, 16. during lhe Democratic National Convention last
summer, according lo Lena
Wilson. Jan 's mother. Wilson.
who has filed suit agalnsl Lowe.
also claims the actor admllted to
his Callfornla lawyers that he
made the pOrnographic videotape of Parsons having sex with
another woman.

BEVERLY HILLS. Calif.
(UP!) - A judge Thursday
quashed an arrest warrant for
acror David Keith after his
attorney appeared In court and
pleaded lnnocenl on his beh'!lf to
misdemeanor drunken driving
charges.
Municipal Court Judge Charles
Rubin had Issued the arrest
warrant lale Wednesday when
neither Kellh. 3~. who recently
portrayed Oliver North In the
television miniseries "Guts and
Glory.'' nor his attorney shoWed
up for a scheduled arraignment.
But on Thursday. allorney
Robert Shapiro appeared before
Rubin and entered Innocent pleas
to the charges on Keith 's behalf.

Shapiro had not realized that the
arraignment had been scheduled
for Wednesday. prosecutors
said.
Rubin quashed the arrest warrant and scheduled an Aug. 2
pre-erial hearing. Keith remains
free on bail.
The actor was arrested on
suspicion of felony drunken drivIng after his speeding car hit
another vehicle on the Sunsel
Strip In Wes( Hollywood on May
20, Deputy Dis trlct Attorney
Elden Fox said .
The actor's blood-alcohol level
was found to be more than .18
percent, almost double the
state's minimum for prosecution
of drunken driving .

Rappers serenade Cincinnati council
CINCINNATI CUP!)' - A rap
music group serenaded City
Council members In an attempt
to convince them not all rap
music lyrics popularize drug use
and street violence.
Civic and religious leaders
have complained abOut an upcoming local performance by a
national rap group. " NWA,"
contending the group's lyrics
. encourage drug use and violence
toward women and police.
The council does not have
approval power over the performance, but a local rap group
"Positive Peer Posse" performed at a Wednesday meeting
of the panel to promote the
controversial brand of music.
The group rapped out lyrics with
such messages as ''Stay In
School" and "Don' I do drugs .."
"I felt
music could be a

sounding board to reach kids
with a positive message." sa id
Lovell Love, a youth specialist
with the Community Action
Agency, who formed the rap
graup a year ago. " We want to
Instill in kids that everything
they do has to be positive."

.

IIUPY fA'MI'S BAY

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ADMISSION 11.50

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dltilllooMoo. . T.-torloo-. Hot hNII ,,_.,.- •4Y- a.lcl of(oto
Mocwool SoiW. ·or ..... a-.

PATRICK SWAYlE

." SUMMER TIME FUN"

-THISF.DAY,
WEEK'S
SPECIALS
. . 16, 1tit
11-. .

Prosecutors decided to file
only misdemeanor charges of
driving under the Influence of
alcohol because the driver of the
other vehicle allegedly made an
illegal U-turn and there were no
serious Injuries In the collision.
Fox said.
Keith 'has appeared in a
number of movi es, including "An
Officer and a Gentleman." "The
Lords of Discipline," " White of
the Eye" and "Heartbreak
HoteL ..
'

5I

..- - - · -..-~... •

'

FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 18
Bring Dad In for a FREE Sunclaa
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IIPPUII WT"

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Presaiption $hop
171 NOIIII
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ttl·""

�June 16. 1989

s Day
By JONATHAN FERZIGER
Ualled Preu lnlernatlonal
Many kids will spend Father's
Day fixing him breakfast and
some simply will mark the
occasion with a greeting card.
but George Sassower's three
daughters planned to make
picket signs. alert Amnesty In·
ternatlonal and badger members
of Congress to get their father
releasedfromaprisonhospital In
Minnesota.
Sassower, 65, a half-blind.
former lawyer from White
Plains, N.Y .. has been arrested.
shackled, and shuttled to federal
lockups In Pennsylvania , New
Jersey, Alabama. Florida and
Oklahoma - all in the past two
weeks.
His crime: contempt of court.
Sassower Is on a crusade
against what he sees as corrup·
lion among New York's top
judges and high officials.
"Filthy," as he puts it.
In countless times over eight
years. he has tried to get the
courts to respond to his char·ges.
which he has made In more than
300 motions In various state and
federal courts.
As a result of his unabated
appetite for litigation. Sassower
has been disbarred. fined. and
jailed eight times.
Most recently. U.S. District
Judge Nicholas Po!itan of New
Jersey sent him to a federal
prison hospital In Rochester,
Minn., to undergo . a month of
psychological observation. Since
May 18, he has been held without
ball on a misdemeanor, charged
wlth disobeying a court order· to
refrain from filing legal motions.
''This time I'm scared," said
Sassower. In a June 9 telephone
call to United Press Jnternationa! from the El Reno Federal
Correctional Facility In El Reno.
Okla. "If I die. there was foul
play ."
That may sound paranoid. but
several prominent people and
groups who have read about

Public Notice

Public: Notice

Oil • Refining Compony.
Iron pin Ht;
You oro hwoby notified
Thence, N 0 dog. 32' 30'
- o d by the boon! of thot 1 Comptelnt to Quiet E. Pilling en Iron pin oet It
. . . _.... of tho Mllgo l.ocll Title hll filed In the H11.21 ft.• going a toto! dlslalla at Dlltrlct of PoinaOJI. Common Pl._ Court of tllnce of t 000.00 ft. to o
Ohio. .c tho olll.. of the Mllgo County, Ohio, Cue point on the north tine of
T - . . . 320 Eoot Moln No. II·CV-108, d..,andlng S.CCion 24:
,._.,.. with ooid ..Ch
8trHt, Pomeroy, Ohio to ..,let tltlo ohho folowlng
• - in .... Eoot.
411711 uml 12:00 o'dock doocrlbld rut
·-of
Plelntlff' o nMio, oituotod In 14111.81511. tothe,._of ....
June 20. 1918. ond ot thot the Townohlp of RutiMd, gir'dling. - · 31.111111
t l - _ ... by ""' T.... County of Melgo, Md Stoto - - moroar ..... M!d-g
of uld boerd 11 pro- of Ohio, ond contained in oubloct to tho right· of-- of
vlclod by
for "" met• Volume 1.80 et Pogo 331 C:OO.ntv Rood No. 13 - II
rille
to roplocethe ond Volume 219 ot P - 7,
lghte It the high lchool of the Melgo County Deed
Citod -lngo oro boeod
ond
furtlw on the north tine of Section
fclcltWI field, oltu- .c Recorda,
bounded ond dllcribld •
24 11 ru""lng duo Eoot •
-Ohio. oc-dlng
Woot.
to
IP ·lllolltionl
prtlp8l'ed toll-•:
Situlto in tho ToV,,.hlp of
Ali Iron pine cloocrlbld 01
tar IIIII bowd.
lllllt.-lona to biddero Rutlond, County of Moigo being oot ore 'llo"x30" wMh
oncl ............ tar thlo and Stote of Ohio, end an lltiiChod ptoetlc ldontlfl·
•• on flo ot tho Office bounded ond d•crlbld • Clition cop.
The obovo cloocriprlon to
of tho
320 tot-o:
Beginning •t 1 point in tM tho -uM of an octuelourvoy
bot Mlln Stroot.
Ohio 411719. No ti&lt;OIKIUI North Uno of Section No. modo by M - P. lorry,
wt1 Ill conoldlrod u-.,._. 24, T-nahlp No. I, Rongo Ohio Roaiotwed Survey or
• 2 ualtted on thll bl•k No. 14, Ohio Compony' o No. 1803, on JorM~ory 20,
..,.,._. forme furnlohod PurchMe. which Aid point 1988.
lo 10 rocto Woot of tho
Tho d..,.,d of thl Comwllll the o'*"fii:ot""'o.
Nort-t com• of Aid plllnt 1o thet tho tMio to tho
hc:h bid ""'"" ............. Section
No. 24;
then .. obovo "-oribld root ootlltl
-led by o 1II% lid Bond
wtllllictol' to the ownw or Weot olong tho North line of Ill qulonod In the n.,.oofthe
by ..Ctltod chock on o thoetor. . ld Section No. 24 Plelntlff. Clorlco Blend, oko
lllh••t bonk In the oum of 14110 - to o point, which Clorlco E. Bland.
ten
(10%) of tho uld point Ia tho NorthwMt · You 1re required to lift- n l of the mulmum cornw of tho troct of which _ , the Compllint within
llld. lldri.,.. to be tlllld and lhlo 1o o port: t!Jonce South -ty·elght 1211 doyo eftor
lllong the Wilt tine of the the tat publlcotlon of thlo
add nlldto:
Mlllgt Loclll School Dlo· tdCt of which thi1 II I Plrt notice which wit be pub·
- . o-ofthoT-..,, 1000 - to • point In Aid llohld once ooch- for
320 bot Mlin ' - . P. 0. Wilt tine: thence South 80 lix !II IUCCIIOivo W - .
... 272.
Ohio dog., Eeot through the troct Tho IMt pubilcotlon wll Ill
of which thlo too port 1470 modo on June 23. 1918.
411710.
.
lido oro to be ptlinty foot to o point; thence South end thl "" onty·olght 1211
m.,.... on the out tide of the 11'1!1 dog .. Eoot through tho doyo lor ano- wll comllllled ...elope .. ~., troct of which thlo lo o port mence on that elate.
FOOTIALL FIELD UGHT- 313 to 1 point: thence
In c.• of your t.Hure to
ING liD. Tho - • t u t North 23V. dog., Eat 50 1naw. or othel wiN r•blddw
requ"-d to foot to 1 point: thonce North pond •
by the Ohio
tu,..h • ntlefKtorv Pertot' IIV. dog .. Wat 313 foot to Rulli of Clvl Prococluro.
-Bond tor 100% ofthl o point: thence North 1121 judgment Ill dofouM wMt Ill
coaiuect prla.. No bid mey feet to the piece of begin· randorod egllnot you for the
comoinlng 38.83 ,..lot domMded In the ComIll wlthdrewn och• nlng,
eluted alotlno
or r-pt Ac1'81. bl the ume more or ploint.
LARRY E. SPENCER
of bi• far It illlt oboty 1101 tooo. Being 1 port oftho flrot
delcribed tr1ct in 1 c.uin.
Clerk of Couno
Wononty Dood , dotod 28
Moigo County, Ohio
~ory dote muot be Mey
1941. from Jouph
ll8tod on the bid farm end
BY: MARLENE
oruea
••
UIVnMTied. to Roy
wt1 Ill tlll&lt;an Into conelder•
HARRISON
Deputy
don In tM -•clng of bi•. Tittle end Viole Tittle. ,..
The bolrd of oducltlon cordld In Volume161, Pogo t&amp;J 19. 21: (II 2.9. 11, 23
Stc
~n~~n• t o - ' tho-- 474 of the Deed Rocor• of
NipDnllllfl Wd for tM pro- Melgo County. Ohio.
Being the umo promlo•
Public Natlee
Ject,
tho right to
njeal .-,and ott. or por1o of convoyed to Dwlaht Bland
enf Clorice BJani by Rot IN THE COMMON Pl!AS
any ............
t1y ...., of tire ._d of Tille end Viole Tille by COURT OF MEIGS
lduootlon, Mllgo Loco! doted lloptombor11. 1884,
COUNTY, OHIO
lahiDI Dlltrlot. 320 &amp;et end r-rded In Volume MILLARD R. BURKE
110,
Pogo
331,
'
Melflll
lhln 1n11. P. 0. loa 272.
Plelntlff
County, ·Ohio Deed R•
Pon,.ov. Ohio, 411711.
YO
Jane Fry, T,..u.., oor•.
S.ld rool lltllttl being CHARLES CONNER, ET AL
Ill 21; (II 2. I, 11, 4tc
furthlf doocribld • foli-o:
CMo No. III·CV-1 13
Being It on Iron pin Ht on
Pubic Notice
the north line of Section 24 NOTICE IY PUBLICATION
To: Chwlol Comw, ed-which tho N!-of drooo
unknown If living, Md
Nid
Section....,.,
by-1IN Till COMMON PLEAS
If
...........
"""'-n
ouo "-" doocrlptlon, Eoot o
COUIIT OF MIIGI
dlotenco of 1320.00 ft.;
NTY,OHIO
- · · ................ to----of
-.AND,Ib
~
tlon .... IO ..... -It'D"W liln. .....,• . _ . , oncl • ,.._of 1fa..17ft. to
ulillnawn:.... L H; C..•,
• point, llld ' " " llllng
...._ aftlulown H living.
toran- by 1111 hrl pin 1M .,,
lf . . _..., hlo unwfllofl ..... B 7CJ .... 20'
11111rt, de13" E•""-ofi.I)Qft.;
~. . . . . . . . 10'00" vil-. ..........
E, peeotne an Iron pin Ml ot next of kin. admlnlabalvia.
w11ou lei334.13 ft., 'gotoog ........... •d ••lana.
- o f . . _ . , ft.toeiiOint . _ _ . . u'*-": and
inthe-efC.U.cyll- thoulknawn--Miro.
13;
~
• wll be

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Porn-.

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Public Notice
lowing r•t ootom which

lo
oltuMed In the T-nahlp of

Columlllo, County of Melgo, .
end Bteto of Ohio. and con·
tllinod In Volume 301 It
Pogo 111 end Volume 314
It f&gt;llgo 1113. of tho Melgo
County Deed R-•· ond
tunhor bounded end de·
ocrlbod 01 fvlowo end to the
oolo roof -ony of Mllwd
R. Burke. Plelntlff, end fr•
of Ill clolme of enothlr:
Blginnlng wHh tho N. W.
com• of • fifty ocro lot
owned by M. W. Towkobery
In Froctlon 23, Town · 9,
Rongo 111. County of Molgo;
then .. Eoot 101 ,rock ond 3
tlnko; thence oouth 13 roca;
thenoo •-117 w. 32 ro•
end 21 tlnko: t"""co North
31V. Eoot 7 rade and llnko
thMce olong the public rood
northi7W.14roilo; thence
- h 84V. W. 14 ro•:
tt.lco IIV. Woot SS I'Oiio to
141t Uno of • 110 ocro lot
farmorly ownod by M. W.
Towkobury: thence north
IIV...,.tothonorthofuld
friction,
conteinlng 41

..-.

REFERENCE DEED: Vo·

tum• 301.Pege 181, Vo·

tumo 314, P-1 83. Moigo
County Deed R_r •.
The de!nMd of the Complelnt lo 1hot tho title to the
obovo cloocribld roof -to
bequletod intiMin.,.oofthe
Pllintlff, Mltlord R. lurllo,
end/ or the r.tormetlon of
oold deed to • ' - Md to r•
float thlt tho - · dooorlbld root - • lo owned
by Plolntlff In fH olmplo end
frM of ott dolmo of ..OCher.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
MANSFIELD, Ohio tUPI) There was the feeling of deja vu
at the second night of the Miss
Ohio Scholarship Pageant as the
same two contestants who the
preliminary titles In last year's
second night did the same
Thursday night.
Kristin Huffman. 24 , won tal·
ent by singing "Glitter and Be
Gay" from the comic opera
"Candide" and Caroline Keller,
25, won the swimsuit IItle.
Huffman. -lasl year's first
runner-up, competed this year as
Miss Pickerington U.S.A.. a IItle
she won the week after last
year 's Miss Ohio Pageant.
KE&gt;ller, who has been Involved In
the Miss Ohio Pageant In some
way for the last . 20 years,
competed as Miss North Central
Ohio.
Huffman, who has won a talent
award In each of the three years
she has participated. made a few
changes In her · presentation
number this year. She sang thE'
same number last year .
''This year I used a lavaller
mike Instead of a hand mike,"
said Huffman. who will miss
Saturday's graduation cer!'monles at Northwestern University
where she will receive a master's
degreE' In vocal performance.
She feels her year of graduate
study in the Chicago area has
helped her In many ways.
"I've got another year of study
behind me." she said as one ,
reason she thinks shP . won a
talent award.
"It's like finishhi!Jtchool." she
said of her past year. "I lived In
Chicago and paid my own bills
and learned more about myself."
Huffman feels her. continued
participation In the pageant
system will helph!'r In her music
career. She has already been
acceptl'd In a summer musical
theate~ operetta in Michigan.
and after this pageant will begin
preparing for an audition for an
opera company.
Her plans could change. however. If she Is selected Miss Ohio
Saturday night. She'd then take a
year ·off to carry out the role of
Miss Ohio: participating In the
Miss Amerlc·a Pageant In Allan·
tic City, N.J .. In September, and
making numerous appearances
throughout the state.
Huffman's parents live In the
Fairfield community of Llthopo·

lis . while Keller's parents are
from the southern Ohio town of
Ripley.
"Between our two towns.
there's about 3,000 people, "
Keller said.
Keller. daughter of the former
producer of the Miss Ohio Pageant. Is a journalism graduate of
the University of Kentucky who
hopes someday to become a
network television execu tlve,
working In programming.
"I've worked In news and
sports and how I'd like a say In
what everyone gets to see," said
Keller, second runner-up to Miss
Ohio last year.

LARRY E. SPENCER,
Cln of Count of
Moip County, Ohio
(61 11. 28: (I) 2.9. 18, 23
Ito

· Public Notice
IUDGET HEAIIINO

NOTICE

, . laord of . . . . of
Caklmllll TGIIUI IdS: wll hald

wannaget

•

..

..

wanna feel dep

."

·-'
.

.· wanna feel alieriated?

.,
"

•

"

..
.. !

_,

wanna withdraw?

..
1

'

..'..

wanna damage your lungs?

I

wanna screw up your period?

)

'

-..

your sperm count?

TALENT WINNER - Miss Pickerington-America, KrisUn
Huffman, is the winner of the talent competition Thursday In the
Miss Ohio pageant. She won with an opera selection enUtled
"GIItwr and Be Gay." The 19911 Miss Ohio will be crowned
Saturday. (UPI)

1986 FORD CROWN VICTORIA......S7495

..; ,

wanna risk infertility?

many of them marched along the
racial justice and equality, while
famed Strip handing out reli· a third calls for adoption of state
glous tracls and attempting to anti-abortion laws.
convert rourjsts and residents of
One measure calls upon South·
a city built on gambling.
ern Baptists to pray for a
Among the resolution was one peaceful solutio~ to the current
on integrity submitted by Jerry crisis in China, while anotl\er Is
Salton of Two Rivers Baptist aimed at curbing t~e spread of
Church in Nashville. Tenn., a drug abuse and related violence.
member of the Southern Baptist
Still another resolution sup·
Convention Resolutions Commit · ports an incre,ased excise ta.x on
tee. who Pxpressed concern alcoholic beveragPS. a reduction
about recent sex and money In the legal blood-alcohol level, .
scandals Involving national polit · elimination of , "happy hours."
leal and r~ ligious figures.
and formation of a national
"The resolution is a response to coalition lo conduct a national
thi• good number of moral · campaign against . drunken
failings in many areas among driving.
,
leaders. both religious and politi·
The Rev . Jerry Falwell ad ·
cal." said Resolutions Commit· dressed an auxiliary group of the
tee Chairman Mark C'oppenger. convention Wednesday. and later
executive director-treasurer of praised President Bush for caf·
the Stare ~onventlon of Baptists ryingon the conservative leaderin Indianapolis.
ship of• Ronald Reagan.
Anolh~r resolution supports

PB. PS. air, good condition.

•

•

' .

•

•

•

wanna . . . ~e over 400 chemicals?

.,
.,

wanna kill a few brain rells?

•

,.w
.,
'

'

•

•

'

wanna feel apathetic?

.,.
.,.
'

wanna crash?

Our health
insurance may
. help you .
feel better.
Call:

r.••

..•,.

wanna know why your kid's been acting strange?

1986 FORD TIMPO .................... S499.5
Mjlrijuana can do it
.
aboking pot can make your nonnally active kid lethargic.
It can make him $tOp caring about things that he used to enjoy.
I ~1re sdlOOl. Friends. Family. It can also make him moody and G..for-getfi,.u;W.
Ifyou~ your kid is gettiug stoned, get involved
Beaiuse marijuana isn't a rite ci passage exrept to other drugs.
So open your eyes. Leani the signs. 'l8lk to your kid
Just bealuse you can\ see it, dr$t't mean iti; not there.

1984 FORD TEMPO ............. ~...... S219 S
ButD.,

PB, PS, air.

1985 FORD CROWN VICTORIA •••••• S5995

""' ._.. Of tho .... .....
"""20, , . . .
Qlorle lfunOfl,
Cllrll of Columllle

Auto ••

1985 CHEVY .C-20 .PICKUP ........ S8295
PB, PS.

JEFFREY J. WARNER
llepreMntatlve

3D2 W. 2nd at.,

Pom-, Oh. 41718
"'· 114-1112·1471
..... 114-112-2477
Ctolmo: 1-100-421·3135

•·
(

2 ddr., auto., PB, PS. air, 40,000 miles.

4 dr.,

~

.-

wanna fo~get

HEALTH

4 dr., auto., PB, PS. air .

Townohip

'

T

firm l4..lullol.1••
7:10f.ll.lllhfl . . . . . .

C81111to

. ~·- .

'

'·

ot--•• ,....

plolnt.

.

·L""-

'

•

Southern Baptists wind .up convention
LAS VEGAS, Nev. IUPI) The South~rn Baptist Convenlion
wound up Its controversial Las
Vegas meeting by supporting
resolutions calling for religious
and political integrity, opposition
to abortion and prayer for a
peaceful end to the crisis in
C'hina.
Approval for a litO resolutions
came on a hand vote Thursday .
the final day of the three-day
convention. The resolutions are
non·!2)ndlng on th,e convention
leadership and gPneral
membership.
The Southern Baptists. the
nation's largest Protestanl de·
nomination. had angered many
members by holding thl'lr meet·
lng In what manyconslderthesin
capital of the United States. and
many potential delegates boycot·
ted the convention.
About 20,000 attended, and

The Daily. s. ltiilei-P!ge-!(

wanna·get paranoid?

You •r• required to In·
wHhln
tMnty·light (2B) cleyollft•
tho toot publlaMior! of tiJio
notice which wll Ill pub·
llohod onao ooch week for
oil (I) oucc11- - ·
The loot publlaotlon wll be
modo on Juno 23. 1189,
Md the twonty·elght (28)
doyo for on- wll comrMnce on ttwt date.
In coeo of your feluro to

~~nawer or
DOnd 11 r - - by the Ohio
Rut• of Clvl Procodure,
judgmant ... dofoult wll ...
..,dorod egoinot y.., for the
rollof domMid In the Com-

Her father. Denny, had been
the executive producer of the
pageant for I4 years, turning
the job over to John Kunkel of
Zanesville In 1984.
"In my 20 years , I 've r~ally
looked up t6 Miss. Ohio and
admired their personalities,"
Keller said. "I said ·wouldn't It
be great If I could be here' and I'd
kick myself If r didn't try."
Keller, whO likes skiing, added
swl mmlng to her exercise rou ·
tine this past year. She said she
wrapped her cassette player In
towels and put on a Jdckboard
and used that in her swimming
workouts this past year.

Jlr:

Pometov-Middlepol1. Ohio

•

- r tile Comploint

..... .. ,.......~=~=·
..: ..............
....,.....
..

known-·· --storap

-

Last year's second-night wtnners repeat

In fees for two Manhattan law
firms. Feltman. Karesh, Major&amp;
Farbman, and Krelndler &amp;
Relkln.
. Puccini had been placed In
1=0urt-ordered receivership when
one of Its four partners, Milton
Kaufman, died and the executor
of his will, Citlbank. asked that
the company be Involuntarily
dissolved ,
ThelawflrmssaySass0 wer'sa
"kook" and a "legal terrorist."
bent on litigating them to death.
The courts have sided with the
law firms .
But Sassower says Puccini's
assets were never accounted for
properly. an action he says
covers up what he ealls the
"theft'' of more than $750,000.
''They plundered all of what was
left of Puccini." said Sassower.
"They ate up the cookie jar."
The courts. after rejecting
Sassower's claims, ordered him
not to file any ,more motions In
state or federal courts.
Sassower contends most of his
problems stem from his allega ·
lions of corruption against st.ate
Supreme Court Justice Francis
Murphy of Manhattan's Appel·
late Division. Murphy Is under
Investigation by the state Commission on Judicial Conduct for
alleged abuses of the court
disciplinary system. Murphy
calls the charges "scurrilous."
Sassower's personal court bat ·
tie has been Interrupted, but his
three daughters _;:Elena. Carey
and Beth- are determined to get
their father out of jail. They'V('
called state and federallawmakersand asked several lawyers to
take up the case.
Frustrated by their father's
continued incarceration, the Sas·
sower daughters were planning
to picket In front of the federal
court building on Foley Square in
Manhattan. protesting their fa·
ther's Incarceration as a "pollti·
·cal prisoner of conscience."
"I wish he were home with us
for Father's Day."

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

IHI.t prap

•

prison

Sassower are concerned about
his case.
Among them: Rep. Theodore
Weiss. D-N.Y,; state Assemblyman G. Ollver Koppell of the
Bronx, Harvard Law Professor
Alan Dershowitz. Amnesty Inter·
national, the American Civil
Liberties Union. the New York
State Defender's Association and
the Jewish War Veterans. .
"No matter what he's done,
this sounds like overkill," said
Weiss.
"This is a paradigm ACLU
case." said Dershowltz. "I'm
growing Increasingly concerned
about judges who lock up poll II·
cal dissidents In mental
hospitals."
Since June 4, Sassower has
been taken on an odyssey
through the prison system. He
was hauled out of Metropolitan
Correctional Center In Manhat·
tan and taken to Stewart Air
Force Base In Newburgh. N.Y.
Then. over the course of three
days he was taken to federal
prison facilities in Harrisburg,
Pa.; Birmingham. Ala.; Tallahassee. Fla. and El Reno, Okla .
Since last week. he's been at a
mental hospital run by the
federal Bureau of Prisons In
Rochester, Minn.
"On a misdemeanor? That'~
outrageous. " said Koppell, who
heads the state Assembly's Judi·
ciary Committee.. "I've seen
rapists treated better."
"It often takes several slops
for Inmates to get to their' final
dPStlnation , " said Gregory Bogdan. a federal prison spokesman
In Washington, D.C.
Sassower's legal troubles stem
from his assertion. made in at
least 300 motions since 1980, that
the assets of a men's clothing
business he used to represent,
Puccini Clothes Ltd. of Brooklyn,
were. "plundered" by the lawy ers appointed to protect the
company .
Sassower claims the lawyers
racked up more than $25 million

Fridly, June 18, 1989

."..
'

.

.:.

...
.,

•• ·J

•"'

.oi

""
..

••••

•oat

•
'

""

...,-,:
.
f J&amp;

•

..

...

"p fur a Drug-Free America

',I'

..

..:.

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•
tr

,•'

�•

Page 10-The

Friday, June 16, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BusiDess Services.

9

Wanted

11

fo.luy

'••

H_,., w.mect

31 HomeeforSIII
t;lme on St. Rt.
1•r•1•·

JONES TIRE
CENTER

Olllt FOI
1151.55

NOW

•New Tires

.Custom

oUGHT HAULING

Pipe Bendinc

14th&amp; . . St.

oOil CbiiiiiS

oGr-.se Jobs
oGtneral Chassis

laint IIIIRI»
.Computerized

.............. v••

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

Bll111cer

992-3897
. St, Rt. 124
Middleport, Oh.
(Nullo Hill Top Grocery)

FOR
SALE
3 Styles

PUIUC
IECYCUNG

•SHRUB 8o TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

WOODEN IUILDINGS

1101.-FII•' •·• PM
SAT•I-12 ....

SAlE NOW

o\/6/89/Un

lullt On

ON

Your

CHAIN IJNI FENCES

. FilE EmMAYES

IISIIIIIIW. &amp; C-OM.
ON

SAil NOW

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

Strawflow•s, Slatict,
Wildflow•s and Mort.
"Fill PLANT"

OPEN 7 DAYS

9AM·7PM
Paying today
May 31, 1989

ROUSH
CONSTRUcnON
IIIIINII: f;llG I.

'''"'

O.t Dopet Stroot t Ill.

lutland. Oh.

742-2421

..........~c...... 352
CAU 742·2772

AUTO - DIESEL

SAUS &amp; SERVICE
u. s. IT. so un

IIONY

SHIE'----------5'

to 301 lb.
IIONY CAST ... 3' to 20&lt; 111.
ST IINlESS ............. 20 1 lb.

SERVICE
SYUCUSf,. 0110

GliYSVILE, OliO

Most Foreivn •nd

614-662-3121

Domeetlc Vehic:l•
AIC Service
All M-Jor &amp; Minor

Authoriied John
Deere. New Hollend,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.

992-S 114

Repain

,.,.........
.
••

Loceted Off Bypaso
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;

s.~

143,-Pomeroy, Oh.

1-12-'89-tln

BISSELL.
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NIASE Certlfl.t Milch.-lc

CALL 992·11756
"DOC" VAUGHN

1-3·'116-ttc

Roger Hysell
Garage

CAN DO
MAINTENANCE
Co •

Rt. 124, Poinoroy Ohio

Plumbing • Plaster
Repair • Painting
El ectnca
· 1 o carpent ry
"We Fl• Alaeol Atyllol•l"
Harry lelfle

.

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

AIIo Tri.,IIIUIOII

20 Years Experience

PH. 992 ·5682

Day ar Night

CALLS

4-16-86-tfn

St. Rt. 124.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457.69
43020

161 North Second

.....

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

,

We Ctrrv Fishing Suppli•

Pay Your Phone

VISA- MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7
So1. 9-5

Cable BU11 Hera

5-11·1 mo. pd.

SErNICE

Part~----·

992·7479

lt. 33 North of

BINGO .

SWEEPER REPAIR

POMEROY-EAGlEs

CLUB

. AU

224 E. MAIN ST.
99.2 -9976

TilliS. E.l. 61U P.M. I
' SUII 1.1. hU P.M ·

·

Ill'- limit 1. coupon per cusI lomer per bini) sess1on.
I Wo Pov sso.oo Ptr Gamo
· Ootr I 10 Pooplo •u.oo
I u ~ '{rGamo nn 1
I L 0053
•
--

PHONE

1
1

'949-2969

I'
I
I

CARD OF THANKS

INSULATION

In Memoriam

Mastic -

Cortointood&lt;l!&gt;
Vinyl Siding

Soamleu Gutter
Replacement Witdaws
Blown lnsula~on
Storm Deors &amp;
Windows

In membry of
Helen L Milhoan
who passed away 2
years ago
June 17, 1989.

I. June Griffin. thank all
my friends and neighbors for
their concern and lovely
c.-ds durin1 my hospital
slly. Also c.-ds and prayers
from Un~ed
Methodist
Churclles of Lone Bottom,

AtedsvHie. Tupp«s Plains,

Thanks Very Much,
June Griffin·

5

Happy

Call

6-5·'19·1 ..,._

·ALLEN'S
HAULING
1600 GALLON

WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED
992-5275

In Memory of our .
sister,

HELEN MILHOAN,
who passed away

446-11il9 01 (614) 992-2104
Avenue. Box 1213
·
Ohio 45631
or it
Veterans Memorial Hospital
berry Hgts; Pomeroy, Ohio

WANTED

He has five point legs
ond o Five Points house,

lllemory keeps you ever

near us.

Thou&amp;h you died two
years ago.
Sadly missed and
loved by your
Brothers, S1sters.
Nieces &amp; Nephews.
11

WATER
SERVICE

of his spouse.
He's turning 78
onc1 he stil 1oa1cs wtat.
Who could he be?
His iritials are R.E.

the -

1,000 GALLONS

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Help W.nted

·REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate openin•s for part time relistered
nurses to work in the Special Care Unit, £mer·
pncr Room, Ho111 Health. and Medical/Sural·
cal Unit. $alary commtnsurate with experi·
lliCI. Eacellllt frlnae benefits.
COJtt~et:

a-.ndl DaUer. R.N .• Director of Nursin1

Veterui . .orlal Hospital
111 I. le•rill Drive
• · PDlllfOJ, OH. 457&amp;9
&amp;614) 912-2104, Exteaslon 213
•

EOI

'{

Call Anytime

992-2371
-

.

!Ill/It Ill

Cit Wlttl Whtt• 111!01 - - allln.
Found Tu_.., oil Ro.Ujll'lnp
Rd., IGrOII from Fatr~MI.
One •• II lm..... Cifi ·114-

112-2711.

.

Found: ringofk.,e.La,_Farm

·------Gallipona··-------·
&amp; Vicinity

Malnten~nce

p . .on

w.m_.

t~

llwe In fDr • · compl•. C.M

30•1711-1104.

.

Herold Dll.-!ch Nowspop•
Carr• n..a.d.. . ~.-y .,..
lnaluclol. Rt. 7 (C-.. City' 1&gt;
GollpoHs, Rt. 141 . 113. C. 211.
to M•CII'YII .. Mult h.,e rill ..
lble trlnaportlltktn • clebondl-

lllo. CCIII GorroMII« ot 30._1212830.

Leve clot._? Demonttrate the
MIW... ,.tv pi• alatt. In-'
Fun job with hrol !'lo
coHoctlng oo _dolhr-gl C.H
.,._2411-SH3 todlv fOo on
.

lroke7 Work own lw•.. It •
demonstr•tor for the new

Holo otyflot -ool ...... 'ICotilv
Kut onci Kwr 0&lt; coli 30.._1711- &gt;
42•7 ..- 17J-:IOII:
•
Lellar ..ory ·cheri111try

lly own1r fur•hH or unfur- . 1 z • • lend. long Hotlow

nlohod. 3 - - mervin&amp;
...12.000.00 ....... o.
phone 304-11711-•&lt;11.

.,

Nice 3 11&lt;.• llou•. w•hflropleco.

."

o.,

""'pod In our ..,_ 21 y-.
_,....,_ LPN
.1. Low

1171

Will a.e for .. _..., m~ or :
WOIJIIin in· In\' home. 114-117- :, .,_

34Ci2 ... tlmo.

.

HM'e rOom. bolrd •dtOUII • • . \
for elctertv. Re•onlble. 114- .•
112-7204
.,

..

15

•ee.ooo

""'

OO'IImnwtt Home&amp; from t1.00

( u-ropolol ......_
... P'opof- Nouet. Un.,rnia..-, Stove a.
t I• end rtpo' a. for e~~ rrent Mitt ref. 2 lA. Nll,l'mohood Ad.
c,.l 1·100-242-4944 Mt 3870 U31. Ref. ,_rocl. 441-4411
tllto open evening~.

lift• 7pm.

·

Y•dloio: ct., T""-•· 11.
• 17. I•C!O to 100. Hauooholcl
Items, other ,...,. to

nu..,.,..,

to mention.

Y•d Solo: Fridor • Sot ... S.
J-an E-eoApto. St. Rt. 38
Pill Foodl.. d.
lot. only. lloln - ollt. 4lornlly. 1-I;Nonhon 110. I 112
mi .. clothn. mllc.
Y•dloil' hi .. Jrmo 17th. e-t.
328 FoulthAw. Furniture: tO¥&amp;

&amp; mile.

--Simt-oollll&gt;ttchnlolon
lor o fullY -lppod Ph¥1icl.,'s
leborMory. No thtlt wark.
In p - - Mtdlcol
20(1
. -• ..,Pika Goillp- 1•30 to

srt••·A•

8oo.

femll¥ .oom. dedt. ftnet.

32 Mobile Homas
for Sale

.._,.in.

~lV-

.

Rent Fr•. Couple to ltv. inchUrch c.rnp pt~ ne•

Vlnton.lltht meintln•oework

rl!lulrod. Clll 11•1111-190&amp;
............. 4.

l•urd-v. June 17.

- 113-•••20 ak
torll'ltl.

CONTIACTOIS
11·18· '118-tfn

K and J CONSTRUCTION

A Great Coinbination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"
WE GO THE EmA IIlLI•••••
992-6810

Middleport
&amp; VicinitY

...... -- .. . --- ..... ----------- .. ,wom~n

.,d

chll*in clet'*'g.

C1n't mittl FriM. June 11 en II

"'ldor ond Sotunl... 1:00-?
lllird on d Centw Ita.. -on.
w .vo.
clotNng. bolll'
tl~m~.

mile.

D...,.._

}Mne, movie ~ ...

14 fa.t• Dr......on WV. P.t

.. C.

11th. sot. nth. •·1. T.... r1t111

-............__
With.

A llnlt of .. ...,.,.., 1na1u.:,~
18 ft X 4 fl. IWIIi .... il
s.turd-r, JUN 17 et 104

----·-p£-PTUiii'it _____ _
&amp; VIcinity

___
' 1-::"'1!.!!..-__,. .
--

.... . . 40-·-·
, __

WORD
PROCUSING
TYPIWRI'nR
·~blodl-.........................
XD)'JOO
' stcn. . . . . . . . . .
• :;;;91,~.._......., ...... .
Wotcll•.... . .

.,.,.
"'~'%· A... .,... ..... w. . 1101'·

.Un!llu•&amp;•llaelil
. c.r.t. . C.... • •
'1:\C.,t!!'l~~ al S.R•Ctr,_

••••• · · - · · - · •• -- uo •••• ; · •••••• ---

-&amp;

othlr •t•e. You turnilh b••
-

In Ohio

Of

7110 llontu.., • -

t-~0-143-

-•ooylllocoptlonlrt. 20 to

-olio.

• . ., _ -lng Aid Contor.
lOt lbcthlht, Huntinglon. WV.

loll¥ott• n - In "'' homo
for 2 mo. old ton. Man.-Fri.

7-4::10 JLm. - d ph. no . ..r. •

a.tt• ot I•DM~ctiDn to blbntt·

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

Ill• Alog•.otoo--. con
. , ... 2411-S781.
'

Cen

lit. 4 lox 147.

-tell neo ""'·
Olr74.

t.nnlsh

ref•~....

Call

ito..,slnlng In "" homo duolnt - ''
tho ctor. Coli 114-317-7121. ·
,
Wll do lowns. lonm.,.tne odd · ',,
jobs, IMI bl1dl·top .hrtNrfL

con St4-441-2734. •
441-2201.

.,._ ',,
',

Will do b•t:r, sitting in my horM. ·''
Any lhlft. 0,._ T,.,-ece Dr.- :;

c ......,.. eon e -1 •441-01104. ;;

Now ICceptint •trll beginntrl, ~
•*encecl. • d acklll DIII'IO ~ ft?
dents In nlf homa A•o . .ch ,,
chorclng ind trMIIpaal~g. If ·•CI

l...ootod. coli IJ ....2-MO:L ••

f iii.IIILI.i I

.,
'

21

B111ina11
Opportuni,Y

.

,'

~:------ .'.
fNOTICEI ,
,.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . . . . . , _ , . tlrot you
do bueln . . with p_,ple YDV _,
know, •d NOT to ~d mol'tl¥ "' "
thrOUgh tN meA untl you hA'e ••
fnv•~lglfld t hi 0"-ing.

••

',.,

hiring LPN pooltlon full oo
poot-- 1¥olololo. N- .....

118rtlnt. haufly welalt7.41.
l!xc. ben .Itt ........ ContiGI
tilt ~or of !'lurolnt Piolto.
ren Cere c.mw, Ill Jadl:1on
Ilk. Collt .. ..._7tt2. E.O,E.

-----

31 Home• for Sale

-~-,-:---,-,.--

Srom GoMipolll. ,.,. CoR .,._
~1200.

~

•4

-n .,___

it&gt; "'

lllown in ........." rhlt - · ~ ..
.....
ezuoa. C.Oh .,..._
t24.000 t.,d c o - with

OltiCII -

• ,4---1411.

C.ololt tnt•

·r

ootl only. COR

·

"" ,.;,, 3 llr.. I flropl•o.

t•oe•

po~

A-C: lfM.IOO.

'

,

A-One llool E01011 brolcOI, CCIII •
10.,1711-1104. or :10._171- '' •
1221.

MEIGS OI'FtCE

.
'
Moving must . . : Cozy Hou•

OO~OCIXIonC .....

. •High Efflclenoy

-

-central Air

1970 Rornll'ont. 12x10 wi1h
10.20 od•on room f&amp;IOO.
Colt 114--8200.
M... ..,...1984Nos ... l&lt;lx80
mobile hom• books for
117.000, Sot- L8 with -•II
olr. ownlne potlo a - l n t
Lo...
...Ient
od z for
.....
E
retired GIUDie or

-Goii·-

·-~-Aoldng
Col
.,._..._0111

1.·• ... :a II!;. ..._

of

' .··
\.'

I

t

·I'Uiiiii . .
• Aucdtn

"

eon.,,._...._
'

Hou• ...Junc:Uor'! Ten

MloMdA1.2. •zoo. ..,month.
30"'8911-3108.

2 mmmerelll commOdea with
flush v•fvea, n•er UHd. ll2715.
lor both 81._742-2187.

wlcloidc. I """· l.afft HM . tD
min. from Ooll- ,._
·
-...... Ltiir .... Collt4441-4441Htsul8i 12....,.,1

purch•e. Reg. price e298. AI

sot• ...,ced.

Dtnett• s•e-Tiblt and • chairt
•149, Aog. u•8. o - 4.00
wood dinette .chllira. padded or
unptdded, •terting ..- e18. 91.

2 llr.. opt.. • - plroh. c•r,•·
· - point. utlltlea !lOOt . .
pold.'tl75 mo. coil 304-17111110-l "' 304-171-6311. "'
30 .. 675-8704.

42 Mobile· Hoinla
for Rent

.,4,100.
or 4411--

1141/... Cllptelnil bed $'1 74.
An bedroom sutt11 r.tuced.
M~ttrQI &amp; 'h price tale •
lei•Full tilt ,t48.H, au...

•7e. King t98, Bunkloo •39.8t,

bebr nwttren *21. 91.

..-.i•.

room. low
no pett. 111:.
clop. Coil 114-.WI-1917. .

Compa.le line of olk dining
room furniture (pr ...beck ollie
chllrt), roM top dMk, Curio
cabinets-cur-ved glass front

U78.

Trllde-lns Tek ...

Don' I millie 1 move wtl:hoot us.
Cell U-H•u'l.304-175-7.21 .

Dozers, lo•dera, BeckhoH,

lobe•. Towmotor, log truck,
Dumptrudc. Canle. Huntinglon,.
W.Vo. 30.738-78911 SCopt
Sund.j .
G11 golf c..t, •c cond. Alii

fl26.00. Phono30•171-l 348
oltOI' I :00 PM.

InunitAl:. t12.1100 or lond
contreal to-could......,. CIR
11"'4411-I:IOStft•lt&gt;m.
t812FNOdom goodoou • ..n
• , .. 445-0101.
tmplay..- or P., -tim•
hlo··-·-tOI'Y lt-IYOu fromllllylngo
hof1Je1

COntkllr

1 rap11

d

t&lt;lx70. t i O O - ..... .
1oM. F- Dollvooy-Oltio ...... .,
1-100-12.0711.
1171 12xl0 Llbonv. Ooclc.
ewnlne 13100._ Good ta ndltlon ss•t92-3107.
t 2x811. 2 - - Goorloondltlon. Col .,._.1-0158.

dlo- __ ,

Or11t1'¥ rellhlced-ltctlonll
ho .... llaa
.......... 2 ............. .......... ., .. 423-I.S?t.

Aopos-1111 I - 14 ft; wlcfl-muot - d-•ocl. Ctl .,._~3-~1-

•::,r.

211ft.OIOicilthamtotE-·-·
Coli ., ... J7.. :1871.
.
t2xiOI!il. H. lo•od. 2ml. hm
,_,
1r1 Sit. - 114-441- · Cd
114-441-1011,
20.2. 01' . , . . 441-0802.

.,.._~e-eteo.

No depod. chldren welcDml.

.171/rno. C.l e_1.. 2M-tl71,

Molollo h - lor - · 2 bo•
rooma. lend H• Roed, 304S711-.M34.

44

l.olllci~IGDI_...,oOIIIoMI

ho-3 boct-21Nct .. jll'loocl
to .... et.. 421-e37t.
.
. tt77a_t_ 2-

room. oood aDniiiiO" Onr•ed
lot In Hon ........ •e.ooo. :10•
e?ll-3112.

n..

Fa,ms tor ....

Apartment ·.
for Rant

an EQual Houelng Qlportunltv.
ApplicaUolW·m • bepldltdupet

Apt . 2011 (olllcol MondovFridl¥. 1:00 • .m.-3:00 p.m.
only.

Large 2 t.•oom eptrtment-

Refrigerator •nd tresr• for till e.
Coli et•·lt2-1830.

45

Two ulld IOf• tnd chlir tllta.
Good cor)Cfilion, one tet by
Rowe. *110. IICh. 114-992·

Furnished Roome

17~.

Aooma for rent· week 011 month.
Sterting lit •120 1 mo. G1lia
Ho1 ...... 44.. 8110.

I pieoeltvino room auile. Chlftt
of dr1W1r1 end beb¥ changing

IOblo. Col llt4-992-Ht4.

Second Aw. Coil 11.44131&lt;11.
.
•

30''eleclriciiMHken.,, Ulld
vooylttlo. H....., Gold. .,7S..
motclllng ..rr~oo .,10. oo
• sao. ""both. :104-1711-nu

Bl•eping rocttN wlh ooo._.g,
AlloT rei!• apeca An hooft.upa.
CAll oftor 2p.m. 304-7735811. M11on Wtl.
·

153

T•• Townt.ou• Apertrnentt· 2

8r.. I 112

i&gt;IIIJIL

CA.. . .

. _.......... prtnlt on-

c.......,..,_,...,._, .....

2 MIM .,~y/tZ4.•&amp; • up.
............... Coli t-114-18117111.

-

...... fiODI pl.....-

lndullld.
IW!In. ol I :188 P• Coli

. . . . . - · • tNih

1 1•H'1--?teo.

'r'

34

BUIIBuHdinga
F .. nllllllltflll-- *110. ....
Ill• ~.;.-•IMt" 701 .....
.... Coli 114--

"

441e tt7P.M.

,

Home Perk.

neon elocU.

C.ll 114-317- .

.

. , .. 2411-8121.
HoppyJock

h lor

pyrethroiclll R • G feed llo
Supply, 319 W. Moin St.

Cal
~~~-·1211-327&amp;. or 30•

56

Buy or lell. RIY.tne Antlquet.
1124 E. Meln ltrllt. Pom ..oy.
Houra: M,T,W
m. to lp.m.,
SunciiV t to lp.m. 81•9922S211. .

Groom •nd Supptv Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breed• . . . All
"''"· lemt Pet Food DeJfsr.
Julio Wobb Pll , 11,._441-0231 .

ll'lti't , ......

i54 Mile:. Marchl!ndlse

Office or am~~ll busln..i IPICI
lor in Mlddopoct. AI
utllti• lnclldtd. AI# conditioned. f200. P• month. ........

Wheelct..lra-rww

ar u.-. 3

Dregonwynd
...,,1.,.
•nd

1..,en ldtt«~•· Chow stud • •
vice. Celll14-441-38441ft•7
AKC ; . . .tered aodl•·•,_l ..

lftd Pf-le

AlA COMPRESSORS
Compboll Harsfold USA

2 HI' ...lcolpu ..... 211 .... - k
For L.ou: A-ont. • ..,~y. ,_.27olot-. ... gevorioty
deCDf'lltiCI. 2nd floor, ..,,.. to cho- front, -lng ot ....
8ooonl •
on.VI'R1 F•niiUN
• • aam. IIOW A rafrl ..... or,
wet• pro Jided. DliltGII Md llt.141. c.nt....,, 1/•mle .on
•ef•on225..... Unllllln Pika Mon.·l•t. IIAMmonth. C.H It ._441-4241. IPM. lun. tl-1. 114-441111•441-4421, or 11•441- 31158.
232!.
SWIMMING I'OOI.Itttl8
-tllth011wlho
... -th31
·
Mi:rtliilltlt \I'
pool H - dodl.fonco.
WMMtv. C.. 24 In 1·100-

Pint._.,..._

....

~

UIED-· ·
sultlo. Ooolo&amp;
- -·... - .
t
............ o f - fu,... ....
:New- · - t • n - . . ••·
~
......... Colt lt4--ltla

- .......,. .. ..J-•

..... COII!IIY.-,. . . -

W.

"

at.T.V.,ttoll'oM
..... _
....., . . . II? lad.
ON.

Mlre~~ry

Cougar, 21.000 mi .•

•ft•

Str.wb•rln, pic'ic v our own.
Call (;l1ude Wlntera. Rio
G..,do. OH 11._241-1121.

For Soil' 1977 Chwy 91•"'·
goadconcl. clii614-248-6UI,
aft• I p.m.

Str.wbtnlll . Vou P'c:k or WI
oldc. 8 o.m.-B p.ni Mon.-Sot.
t-v lor' • Berry Petch. kerr Ad .
Coli 814-""1'8892 or 1142.11-5178.

1917

Strewbeni81 : Roulh't. 2 mi.,
South of New' Heven WV-nw~
Union C•mp Ground. Pidltng
Mon.,., Jun• 5th. cllll 30...

' .
2 yr. old ftion.,.HI•. mille.

c •n

814-2&amp;11-13311 en•ll:30 p.m.
Rsh T.,k. 2•13 Jodcson Avo.
Point Pl-ont 30,._171-2053.
10 golsotup.,4.99ondl0floi
comploto "'3 - ~ 6 .

I;;;:::::;;:::;:::;::===
67
M. ualcal
·
lnatruments

Now ecceptlng students for

SNAFU~ by Bruc:e Beattie

ol~

Ci•lflliGII; 1185

Port F . B. T·Top,;

1988

Yugo/t1 Sill: 1986 Oodgo
OmnVt1191i 19815 Ford E•
cart/.1895; 1888 Mut·
Unt/ t2181; 1111 Aenou~ltl2111; 1877 Chrys.
CO&lt;dobo/17811; S • D Motor-L
HWY. 110 N. CoM lt ... 445H811. "'114-.Wt-1188.
1872 Plymouth s • .,._ 310. 4

Pick your own lti'IIWberriM.
Huuen•s Stnwberry Field

b..-lll.eutom..lc. eluminumtfot

Mon.-Fri. BAM to 8PM.

U53.

rim. pricedtoni.Ctii814-441-

StrewberriM . Routh's Berry
Ferm. No.1, W.pick-.1.215 P•
quert. You picky our own. 81.00
per quirt. No. 2, Jtm ._rile*· 71 ,_ qUIIrt. 2 mil• back. of
NBWY Hwen • Union Cemp-

11111C.m•a. V-1. power st-ing. power brllka tilt. cruise. eir
cond .. AM/FM CMtette. Ilk•
over . pavmenu. Cd 814-4417517.

III'OUncl. 30... 882·22=!7.

1114 Ch•y C•vali•/*2.000.
Collll._311-9997. ·
1917 'Camilro. IUto. AM/FM
c•slll'te. P.S . P.l .., One owrw.
Bh•r,· Call 814-2511-1000. ve
hr II nJ.

Boot-1917 Loncllu 11'5"

JIMI FNIM EOUIPMENT
liT 38 WEST
.. GALLIPOUS. OHIO 4SI3t
NEW SHENNIU 25 HP O,IESEL
TRActOA WITt+
8TANOAAO CAT.
NUM. t .3/PT HITCH
!'II!W S' KINO KUT1£R RoTARY MOWER
NEW S 112 KING KUTj'ER
DIIC
NEW KINO KUT1£R t ROW
CULTIVATOR
NEW KING KUrrER POTATO
PLOW
NEW KING KUTTER 8'
GRADER BLADE
NEW FEATILIZER l!o GRASS
S PIIEAOI!fl
NI!W DIIT &amp;COOP
TOTAL VALUE f8.91S.OO.
NOW ALL FOR ONLY
.S.III.OO.
NEW IMPLEMENT. KING KUT·
TEll PAATSI!o SERVICE
Naw ·Ide• pu•tvPI mowing
miiC'hln• Ooodoondtion. t3&amp;0.
Colli 1._ 742-3033.
Cite

210 and AHil

1171 Mercury Grand M•quil
Brough.m. Sharp c•l Full
PCMIW equipment.

;;;:=;;:;:;::;;::;;:::=::
..
76 Autci Parts
8o AcceSIOries
BUDGET TRANSMISSION- ,; .
rebuilt 111 types . ...
w.,entv-30 d...-a. Pric:. t99&amp; • ..
Uud &amp;

tor.,• -.

ubult
~
converttn. aten•d dutch•, , :

up. Used &amp;

prnsure Pllll-. • CVC jointt·ll
types. Buying t ....lmitt~n• for

p..... Coil .1 ... 379-2220 "'
304-175-8788.

2 dDor. Ilk' niw, ful., IQU~

trailer. 3 in. by 2 in. s1Mie .. eme
wllh tutpenslon S. 'ligh·

~

•oollt27&amp;. coli 614-4411-4928.

79

,

•
. .....

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

'

1974 Winclulgo mini motor
home: 21 ft. Air. gtn.-.tor.
57.000 ml.lts298. 8 a. 0
Motors. Call 114-441-881&amp;. or
81 ......11-1111.

1972. 27 fl. Collro ""h wilctll
elft'lper. Very good condtJof\
Coil 814-tll-3310 "' 11•
985-33111.

· 1

-Sol-I-co-.-,.-in-ed-:Pr---._-2-::•*-,---"·

f ;

air cond, awning.

30•176-1758.

lletpt 8.

"

1180 Sh•t• Ultr1 C.mp•. lir. _;
hlllt, w.ter he.t•. ••elec
refrigeretor, aetf contlined.
tc:rtentd room, f2.91&amp;.oo. Clll
30.1711-4418.

•
•
•

mil•. Good condiUon. Runs
•coli .... ,,.._ CoH Doc. II._

982·17S6.

1972 MonteCerto 3150ano. tit,
1ir, new paint. old Alllf!V
VVh... need int•lor work.
white Letter Wheels.

Septic T~nk Pumptnst eBO, 0•1·
Iii Co. RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISI!S. J•cban, OH 1-800.
537-H21. ·
-,-,-.,-,-:----

.1.200.00. 30.8711-1718.
1910 El Comlno lclk ond gold

•~r~er&amp;or.

blk int•lor. 305 Mlto,

tit, cnrlt&amp;

1711-17H.

.2.110.00. 30•

1971 four door Chll'tl'rolet lm·

plio. good cond, 13150.00. CoM
304-773-5231 .

1912 Z-28. V-8 M.IIO. •c·oand,
30•171-~191

'11 Oldl. 2 door. tO'fll. loedfKL
low mil•. alrnolt show room

Tn~cka

for

Coil . , ... 4411-70711.

I:::::~~=;:~;;;::;=.
lit 4 W.O.

17 Ford Air-. otondlocl
Appr... •1.000 mH•. Alo,
AM-FM/Rodlo. Coli 81._4411-

""•1•: 1117 Cilllry fullllro
Attontlon lobo- -·con• IXIrMni!&gt;n I It• VI. ol
·- ,._
equlprnortt. color TV.
1_,. youo orop
llol vldla - • • • ,plot•. oiOCiotc
d-o.
c - tilt
...__ 114--..
27.Jim
. Alto .. l.. _ n _ rr;:ondow
..,
.
~•r
AC,._, ......... lntooncliS... llnl ..... tG-tl - · · lkm 111,100. Coli 81 .....
1 _ 11.., • Vl!lton .s.- C..l 1.;;_n:;l:..t:...,.;;;..:."'_l:..:pon.:...._ _ __._
lt._31S,I071.
.
1878
II po-gor
vent.t221J. eoll 114-371-

011-

~

........- .,. ,_-

71 Auto '1

JiCir Sell

CIOVIIINM81T . .. , -

c..-.~­

plu. I:J::t llulilo 111
_..,_
Ill. 1·101. .

~- roofing, c•Piftt•. • ·
tulldln_l!l. FM 11t1m11e. Cell

Do-

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

'

M.A. Roofing, Painting, driv•
~
Ftw •tim.t•. ,. ;.
lower ratee. ea• 114-982-3121 ... ,

wey ....lng

or at•992-2743onvtlmo.

•

F•tty TrH Trhnmir'g. •ump ..
•emovol. Col 30•1711-1331.
Aot.-y or ceble tool elling
Monw.tls eomphude..nedey.
Pump - ' • •d service. 304-

895-3102

.•'

Remodeling, new edd!tlona. c.por:tt, Dlf'l9• • dMb. Free
"tr-oo. Coll30.1811-3421i.

•

!

82

Plumbing

'•

lit Heating

•
•

••

CAIITEA'S PLUMBING
AN 0 HEATING
Cor. Founh end Pin •

GoHipolll. Ohio
Phone 81.a.44&amp;-3111 or

-.44n.
84

•

'

. •

eu. . ~
'.I

Elee trice I

• Refrigeration

..•

, •'

--------- ' .••
Rtlidlntill or oommarciJf wir-

~

85

I
•

lng. Hew ....,ice or _ ... , . , "~
ll.,.... 84-=trlci•'- Ridenour "
EIICI,_ 30.171-1718.
~
I

.'

Oll•d WM« ....,ice: ,.oil.
Cirtome. Wolle. llolhr . . Anytlmo.
.,._441-740•No

c.n
....

•m~~~r

'

•••

;

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

ttll ..... ultMionWogon.4

AII-I'II, lib - o • t - . 12.371.00. 30.. 1711-

.,.
""" c.n. 3 ._.,. v-e.
..., concl, d.OOO.OO. 30•

.

-nt

,.,. a... c...... -· ....

._

""-""· ea.tao.oo.

304.

7i UOtUiii\ICII•

I--------

.,......... .' =1t:'ci:i'tt'I"..C:.'t 1------1171 .... Cootttllllil. -

"

s 14-378-2411.

low ml Price bllow whole tela

Vans

•

Jim'• OddJoa.. Sundecksidn9

1112 DM•un Klnt C.b. 111 to

73

•

Sele

7738.

,

collect

Gooogoo c . - lid. Cell 11"-0294.

..,.,.:t•.. Mdwltllv• strip••

I

.,rnilhed.

c.n

214~

114-992-2427 .. . , .. 992-

Herd of Allliltered Ang.~a. A- 1
eondll:lon. Cows. calv-. heif•

9ft.

Free •im••·

r-W. Pll'fS. Md tuppli•. Pick
up and deUvery, D•vlt V10.1um
Cleaner, one half mile up

Motors. ttwy. 110 N . Call
814-448-18815. or ts14-44811 11.

815 Seed • Fertilizer

llf•tme IPJiran-

,.,..,~

SWEEPER ond -lngmochlno

4 vr. Old rilg'ed OJII't• H0111e.
Geldlng·h•• b11n •hownWillt•n PIHJUre, Call 114-

64 Her • Grain

~DOnditioMI

1991 Ch.,roi•C~aller. 4 door
artarn•ic. Good shlpa Clll

111M Ch010. ItO, ·Lwl. 48,000
mi.. nlcal 131911: 1984 Nllon ..
euto. sharpllt3.491. 1815
63
Livestock
Ford Von/13195; 1114 Chw.
V.,/11195; t812Ch... 314T.
Shsip/133111; 1878Ch... 314
ton/118111: ttto Clrew. e cyl
Reg'edOutrterHor11M1r•end ..Ia. P.S./t1791. 11 &amp; D

304-1711-11014.

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFING

1-11ot-237-0481. d.,. or nighl. _ •
Roter•ll••eman.t
Wat•proofing

72

ATTENT-ION Hor.. Owners,
Point Phrslt ._..,.lnlltodc.
Pelnt Pl1111. 2415 Jeckeon
A....enue. ~nt Pt. . ent. Phone

•

•

1971 MGI. 11.000 orlolnli

Used roto tiU• 3'h HP 8715.
Good condition. 304-17581129

1111 ... 742_3031
ond 3 ... lit. ,.._
-

•

Home
lm~vementa

tH. locel

t4A4 ft. Sti-. 30•1711-108&amp;

:181-H22.

81

305 va. 1178&amp; Coil 114-9928719.

ti.""'*V-411Mtpo.l1~
~131&amp;

rJ u~•'•ttiY
II

L

rtr'l ~ _ , . .

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

• ...... , ........,"':'"' , ........... ~---.fOOd ..... ,..,......

r.ti\'t."f."rf!':•

11-;wt.
~
..-;:;::;;;;;.;:":..';.;1;,;4-..;44.;;1:..':..'.;;.";;.·__ ,_•;;;;;;"'........
;;
_ _ _"""_

::o..'&amp;."f,':'J. ;:,;::..:. ..... mao

.,

•

in, utility

I fl. 4 ln .. .., 7ft.. SO

1879Ch1Nroi•C•IceCl•lic.

.. •"•

111

..

•

30 2 VB.

cond. Aslcing•J.IIOO. 300.1752513.

,.....

•'

289-5979.

.,796. Call 114-192-8719.

Chlllm••· 20 bu Soy•~ana.
Zx~ · In pipe c.ttle CI'OIIingl

:.'!!:·~-·A.-CIIl
11 ._ 21.. ,

ll· lit

•

••lid •
Gallipolis loot Club. Cell 11•

Sunclov CCIIIo. pl-el

· - · ..... - - .710. Col

'

,'
•
••

1914 Etoort. 4 speed. High
mlllge. _e:ctlltnt concltion. 2
dDor. white. 814-949-2801. no

Farm Equip""'nt

"" loll' TobOooo -

aun~c- w l h - l t 1241.

t978Linooln, 41,000ml.. 1987

PS. PB, AC. 1810. Coli 814441-8803.
II p.m. cell
814-.Wt-e311

tOO II. w .... ,..............
.....
,.m.

Llvlnt_ ......, .........

.

Hlna.,n ldlt-/.t20~.

Coli et•31a-889o.

pl-. "'~~~"· .., • ., .,d ~tv
bo•dlng. Coli 11._992-7143.
lndhr~ot~w 1• .,... bo-tlnMn,
1 gul.n.t. IN~
Must" .,,._..._0887.
"-ff Womsl., lnotructor; It,._
:3:41::01:411::.=====;.J·~4~48;10;;;;77;;;.L;lmtl;;;ool;;o;p;r;;I•;IL;;;_j

I WAIN
AUctiON • fUIIMTURI 12
Olhrtlt .• - .....
NI!W-· ... ,.... _ , _ •Rt.

....

ll'ld Him ..

I"'P"IfiiO each: CFA roall-

EVANS ENTI!IIPIIIIEI. Joclcson. OH. t•IOG-S37-IS28.

For LBIIB

, .. 1111 milt,.. • tou-lon
otootlntt '1'- Alclln• ..,.119,

C•tt-v tc.nnlll.

Sl~m . .

Boata and
Motors for Sale

• do., CCIIII1,._J79-2774.

1978 Monte C.rto• .utomltic.

8o Vegetables

a.1.r..

Roe•• Mtdlool, IIOG-11112104. 1
tMU. "AI •••· RON

Coli 514-441-98112.

Houaehold GoOds

Sale , .

whellecl .. ectric tooot••· Cal

,_••lc..... Con-·

Storo larHIInJI_ 30rcl0. Hondlraon. w.v •. •30().00,.-moMh.

111

Pets for

,.M.

lola Jutw lot. COM 114-882IIS•I. '700 o.m.-400 p.m.:
., .. HI-2217 ...... lfl.

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

:s-x Ft.. ca~.rn·~

workllll ContMna no ,Ynthltic

,o•.

rem-..

-Ired.•

Bulldng Metwilll
Blodt. bride.- - • pip•, w~
clows. .......... Clarcto Win•••· Rio Gmn d&amp; OH. C.M

orfent•le, quits, cupbo•rdl,

for Rent

Country Mobile Home P•k.
Route 33. North of Pom•ov·
loti.
pertt, ul•. C•ll
114-992-7471.
.

49

BuHding Suppliaa

'Mt lit' • •o dlff•ent .• bout the

Antiquas

HI-t pri- pllicl -

55

fill•• .....

8EIIIJTIRJL APAIITMENTS AT
BUDGET P.IIICEB AT JACKION EITATEI. 131 Jo....,
Pike from .,12 I IIIO. ,W ... to
ohop .,d movlol, It._ .WII2HaE . O.H.

Fn~it

&amp;041nt'l tractor with 2411nt'l
round boloo/115811; NH ""''
binelt991; new Ide• puR-type
reke/t791; NH •quer•
bll•/11111; 41• lnt'l Dlooll
tnetor with lnt'l h.., condition•.lnt't 44 aqu~re bill• with
pulf.typtrlkete41&amp;o. Cell 81._
281-81122.

2 llr.. •lorwMh•pondo living
room. •• 1condttlon. Cell 114379-2409. if no lniWif, clll

1184BuickLaSetr&amp;A·1 oond.•

61

Stonaw'ood A~Wtmentt. 1100
Powell St.. Mlddtp11. Oh. It
now ec'c eptlng appliCIItions.
Thar wil h .. e • vec.anor ,_.

2 lo.. lunriltrod. Oop.• Ref. 112

Nice 3 II&lt;., fUrnllhod.
'jitrd.lt210.No-4tl2 ...
outt41. Collllt._441-IDIIII. '

••do-·

Clolonot bought ._,
Oct. 1.1988. Com• With w•r·
renty, c•e. ""''ie ttend md
book in ctudld. • 200.00 or beet
01101'. 30•8711-21181.

• 1U Col 614-992-7787.

1-81.992-2381 dot•·

1989 ·cwn.o ·,.s, lolldiCl •·
cond.. cell 61 ... 44&amp;-1016. Of'

114-4411-2082, o• 81.4410102.

f.Jrrn Suppl11:o
&amp; LiVf!Siill:k

,.,..,18 requ lrM.

.,

80AT REPAIR. Mofa"y ,Moreruiter . Sp ecielilt f•ctory
tooinocl. Molcllo Sorvico. Precl-

Auto's For Sale

.3 0 .. 773-15975.

,.lv ..

7431.

W••·
r.......... ........

Kim bill console pi~no. _goad
CGnd, IICf'lftce e800.00. Phon I

GFKJous .,ing. 1 end 2 bed- ·
rOClm 1partmen11 •t Vllage
Manor lind
lde A•·
mentt in' Midcltport. From

04!pOIIt.

•
•

tlon p.tlobile M•lna

locllltl• ovollable COli II+
992-3711. EOH.

Middopoct. W-0 hookup. P..
own utltti•. 11815. month.

•

•

wtth Mercury 35 hp motor With
powertrimMdeutooil injectk»n.

71

Mualcal

882·2237.

2 bedroom Apts. lor ....._
C•peted. Nice t~~Jtlnt. LM ndrv

doW&amp; UnderpinninG ••lllec:t·

ric. E ~eell• endll:lo"

-·

-

Instruments

58

1 b&lt; .. ooom fuonlehocl opt. 1200
plus II~&lt;&gt; CoM 30•1711-3800.

lot for Rent : et Pri•t Mabile

dry•.

;

1

E&gt;o:. Concl con 514-3117-0242.

Laraetlltcllon of CII'PII 1 pem.
I" f2. low ••' taO. Mol Iofiin
Puo.. ure. At. 7NonhGolllpoll•
OH It ,._441-7444.

46 Space

2 ..... .....~~~. ..... • qulol,
ovorloolclna tho Otrlo Rhroo.
C•blt T.V . .v811.bla Faater's
Moltlo Homo Pw~ Col1 ·114..._1102.
'

57

ledi·H••Y duty bunk bedl

-211r.. Qc. locotlol\ larndrv

, -. .. IIHeot(. , til ...... .. "'
..................,.. 2 •• '

...... -·-·t.•tl

1nd King

Woo-.nner. Both good oondi-

•Sit. Reg .• 1200. Free m•ct..

Furn.. effioiencw ell utili• ~d.
Sh•• bllttv e100 mo. 811

.J! ..I. Hilu... t¥110 I t - -

,.,._..,._,1111'.. 21111ho. .:
I!H-1113.

fng WMI hu • • redin• with

of Port• on 654. Clll
ma"' c•Jitlno In !Nino room .mi.
, ... 388-9913.

- ___

.....
......
. . . . . . . . . . 000. Colt ,,..

c .. 11... 4411-4928.

1821.

11 ..... 1171, Dtblllt.

· •HMtPumpa

IIMN1'&amp;~1·
BOB'S HEAniG &amp; COOUIG

-Noothup

IWfll to •PII'IVt~.OOO. I!Y•
.,Into,
.,._..._.. Don:

Oaa

992-2621 or

.•

lmelt. n..- • aiHn. 1/2 •ere t~
lot:. Gar~• ,_..s rd. 11 mtn. ...,

28.180.. Mljoo ...,..._

33407 Smith llltltle Rd., la1111

For ..-.t.

19H lro.drnore Mobile home
1 .. 72. 3 1111. 2 trR 1&gt;11~
(g•clln tll&gt;l.- D-ntltaln-

otuded•aMW•.... ~.. •~ ..

DISCOUNT PIIICEI ON

SYIACISI

~·

~m•ll

Untrmllhld. fully c•potod. No
Moy 8pociii/No , . . , _ till lnslolt POll. OIP&lt;tllt oiQUirod.
A-It on .., Mobl!o C.H 11._882-30.0.
Homo puoeh•ool in Mow. F rwu:tr
C1tv Moble tta ...... C•ll 114- Meedowbrook Addn, 3 bldrOOiftl. full¥ c•pel.cL eir cond,
441-1340.
• • • fenoed yerd. l•ge oovared
1878 Eloono. t4a70. 2 llr.. t dick. 111 c co nd, no peu,
both. llogt ltooing · - lll'ti .. ly •375.00 per momh. diPoo•
t.unilhl4 oood oond., oetl 114- required, 30•·875-2822 ar
218-1521. .. ., .. 2... 1177 8711-~&lt;113.
8ft•7p.m.

Vlntco" T01o1ty -dllod, 21io . .. : .
hou• on ne • • A,..,...td

ty,_ift' i.1 ~·IWO-an.

BISSELL

~

some 'WMkendl.

.,._..._ . . . en ........

Vlrolnla

21 tn. ......,.. For office ~
.AIIPIW In person

••

Will belrt•lt In my ~rna " • • •
nlllll• ret•. Ref••a. ......

w..t to do ort~tM• clf'Y nutWing.

W.,tod• Elclor!v loclr ·• ICMMDne to
light houte~!!1!.,0,8 •111u•oo1. Colli,._..._

•

•

I 1... 4411-4421. .

Refrlg~rllor

"

~~======:::;::::::e~":"·~.,~..._::"':·~ condition.
Mtrrury Trolling
motor.
Shor•
lin•tr•il•
Dlut mor,.
All'"
DDOd
teiii1~892- 2'17D.

g•ogt. tJ71/mo. plrsdopollt.
ftodner II, rei. . r..uWed. 0111 week of June. To QUill~. you
. ,.. 2411-1313.
.
. muat be ez or otdlr, htndiCIIppMior dillllftd. AIIOICOII)tFor Rent: HoQ. for 2 or 3 ing appN•Iora tor trture waitlnglltt.llolsltf..H.A.Apprp..,PI&amp; n.. ltorel, ref. r•

AE-TIIAIN NOWI
SOUTH.EASTEAN BUSINESS \
COLLEGE. S28 Jodcoon Plko.
Cell 814-441-4Jt7. R•g. No. ,-....
85-11-101158.
.
.

hwlinga I

_.,.od.

·-tlful 2 .... fully

Schools
Instruction

delk. &amp;

l

CTI I

._Ired.

lnoontO llo- COM lt._N2- ,
1173 en• 7.00p.m. lot - • ,,
intorrNiion.
:t
RoOm for itldlrtv m.n or WCiflllft .,
• EHm Homa Cere fDr ellllrtr
on d hon oil""' pool. It •en- ·•

S;t /
~

·

Comrnock!r. 121 oornput• di•k

tion. C•ll 114-982·2021.

h...

........ co.n_,_...,,.,_ 41 HomeaforRant
34 N.lrc&gt;l!l-lold. WI/. Houso --------:-----~
4 llr.• dolvo In ltol-. 10 Ch-hlra311r.. 2blllw.l•-lot
Mr• ...,_,. t..d. Good far
...,..
•·
horell or a.atle. Fruit er.. • .Ww front. C.4. ~ 1 eiMI:rlc.
1c
ref.
Coli
Depoolt
g•clln. lonoo. Caunty 703-38,.1109, oo 11.,387· .... fl8.000.
geod lil-op 71117.
.
frontlgo.
w lh tree~ or • I'MChln.-y-0.
4 llr .. Pl.,., 8ubdlw~lon city
Kir111
sdloolo. U25/mo. plus dopHou•for••onlln.,.Rolld, oolt. Co)lll4-4411-0271 .,....
p.m.
·, .. ·
oil llrlck. 3 or 4 - - 1"1
botlw. 1"1-•wMhwn. CoM 3 br.; AC, t.nae, Z ftrepl•
lor IPPOint_, en. 400 PM.
- 1 t310 mo. CoM 30•1711304-1'711- ?332.
.
11104.

75

-

*"'•· monllor. • prlnl•

•

30... 178-et I 7.

~0 i!.~!: cotpur~~~~~..'!~~·
"" ..,...

• :

1'984 Vemliha Yenlu,. 1 200cc.

114-44.~18.
uau.

-

tul dr•a. Ike niW' or tredl for
Ch""" ·s -10 truck equ.l value.

Bunlc boclllf7S; · ·- or/UI;
al••
round teble/ •eo; Ateri
2aoo. eo topoo/IIOO. CoN

v-..at-n ....... sofa end chlir

4123.

~

DY"Mn•krottot•et. 3112H.P .
111• dol)o., 24 ln. tllpMh. lko
new/.110. C.ll 614.· 4•11308, aft• 15 p.m.

t llr .• opt .. 2H ftnt...o./1176

Nlcel¥ furnilt.dmobl•homa 1
mi. below town ow.-tooldng
rtvor. cA a;
Rot. con
. , ... 4411-1338.

11!'111.tls

,. . . . . . . . lteftll bukhg.
H• dllrson • • II 10~171-

c........., .. d h•dl- "'

We

Roed.lttll'l. W.Ve . Phone 30 ...
111-3821.

Rt. 3~Cycles.l• , 7mil•tDUth
of Hlndlr•on. disaounta now an
Tune Ups on ATV's •d Street
Bllcoa. Also, buy onytlrlng - ·
P&lt;&gt;loril 4w-•• !Nrlnt Mov
or June .nd gM t 200.00 wort~
of Pol•ll ecceuorl• frll.
Phone 304-1711-4130.

New W"CCI door, 7Jc9 ftblrIll••· I••• H.D . AUIOI'Miie
W•tier. Col 11._388-1771.

OlbiOn

mo. plu1 d-,ottt. &amp;ref. No p"t.·

~=-::--:-:::-:---::-::---.

Coli 11 .. 44f-t011• .,._..._
2012. "' 81.,441-0102.

-

Motorcycle•

tl200. Bob Hctofllch 11,._9921282.

King tiz• WM•bed. • · ODnd.,
min-'orool • ltgtood h-nci-

Fln•dna IIY•~eble.

Awnue. t221 month. _Depoall:

~~~

Situations
W.n1ad

'-'r
tu Rant ..

-'t ..ui-od. Coli .,,._..._81110.

VlllotHOipllol,l't.l'to-, WV .1
Tom CJoooh- .....,....., 30• ••
175-4340. EOE-AA.

12

Top QUIIity •t low COlli priC*.

2 beltoom ep111ment. S.mnd

.,., IIIII tlmo MT -(AICI'I 01'
..u Net.... Conllct ,. ......

dollv-g or IXIII ... Ingl Alto 18 Wanted to Do
booldrrg ... Ciollotty Coo- . ---~--.,.,---- •.•, ... 24.1313, tocloyl
.,

Clttlon. W .VI. NIYM f"'lldlftOI.

.o.:.....-;;w:.-.

Podloo boolckOOp•. _....,._
wriM to lox P -13 c.e ftolflt •·
PI...RR'IIIt•. 200M81nSt .. • ~
Paint P!nsont. _
w. Yo. 21110. ..~

mtmblr/DENTAL

leta au; hDul"' of IMft • ~pm
Mon tti'U Frt or eft• 1om •

INSULATION

Pl. 949·1101

~

HYGIINIITtoloin- pradlao
ful er IIOR-tlmo. Must bo
NOIMed to ,.._.,. In the t1at1
111 OM .. EIQI. llol•art 1ut not
'""'d. Wlllinetowootc ltor•lon d
ut " " ' ,_,..,. to IC!Il cia 20 1
ct o Golll•olll Dolly trilarM 12S
Third SA-.. , Gollipollo (!H
&lt;111.341.

- . . . Qipntlo yord IOit In

GINDAL

36
1
1
'""
"' ..ln~WIItld.
•·
- .•orm
...
...,... "'
otder •hou ...
wtn-.ws _..d ideon. F-A wen
tur.ee. t11,000. firm. Phone Clean a subdiY ilion- 7 mi.,
Iouth of Golltpollt. on At. 7c
(lt.llt7-8704en• 400.
UndOo!ll'oundutiMI•--•Ictld.
On IIPPrGX. ~ .a-• 'lot. 4 lele 1j11' ~!'Ide tor other IGI. Call
l&gt;odroorno. 1&gt;11 1\ lg. llvlnll room. . , ....... 3486.
It ldtchwr. Col .,._ 742-:1831
l..ndtor .... on.toftve.cr•ln
00 114-742-2233.
llutiMd T-nohlp: Coli 61.
Hau•for ... •2beltoom. 2381 182·3143 eftw e~Op.m.
FoUrth M d Crooll St... lyrao.rso. Ohio 11.,882-1101.

pool H uo• dldl. fence. • • · •
w•rrenty: tnstell•ion • lnenclng .,ollol&gt;le CCIII24 In: t -11103411-ot•l.

softw•r
uMCI
VII'Y
Furnitu,.VI'At
&amp; ApplllftCJII
0
1 d . ..N
• w
1 tIIIIa
1 8 20 yr"
0 •
At. 141 • Centen.-y, 1/4.mlle secrific./ . .00. C.ll 114-448on lincoln Pik• Mo~.~aat. 1-1. 1189.
Sun. 12-5. Opon en., houro --------~­
untl 9PM for IPPoifttment..So For Slit: 11 H.P. Bolen lawn &amp;
give us • .:Ill. 114-4146-3118.
arden trector/ t2400. Cell

r'DIIIN

w..t•: lfl•-lc. people or-

tMtllll.

985-4141

•ILOWN IN

...... latlmet•"

-&amp;

"'"'' • IIO ..ol lntu-oa Col
lor - · - 01 , _ _ 712-

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIDING

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

dew•! •P. 111 pr...,.t. Inter.... .-rtY lhDuld ... d •
,...,,... A rflf. to Echotng Mt•
311 Union lt.
A - OH 41701, or coil
. , .....,.1074-..... 11'5.

int.,IM.

·-----

SIDING
._ CO.

fill 1 po.llion of

Lots dl bo..,. cloll•lnt ond - ·
June 115111. lith .,. t7th.
• ::!10-4:00.

5·4-89-1 mo.

and Charlotte is

Help Wen1ad

Rutl111- 11.. ' ,.,. of MlcWIHIM. Witch ·1 foo I I - - ·

CHESTII, OliO

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

We Service All Me kat ·

flow.

Found: •belli...., moltllloolc

.

•Washers •Dryers
•Range •F raezars
•Refrigerators

992-5335-985-3561

11

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING • REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EYENIIGS .

MARCUM

GREG BAILEY

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE ·

A sadness Still comes
over us.
Tears of silence often

Loot• two~ocloiL _..,.,..
one t.mele. In vldrilty of T•u
lloool . . . Clllet4-ll.3117.

-------Pomeroy·-------:--

DEAD OR AUVE
"Must Be Repairdllt"

·

Fauncl• ApprGN. • - · cld. llloolc
lob. ot Mt•atl Pl. ., coli
., ... 44.. 0HI.

•am• •

''I'll bet Father's Day on the
soap operas is a real mass of
Hom• on Llnmln HHI. e
.,d bath. nl• Mal:lol\ 2 llory.
confusion."
· · ·
IIPPfOII,, 1•••otd... land. Cell
. ,.... 2-3270.
. ~;.~::::;::;:;~:;=:-rii==i=;:;;;;;;;~==
4
Mo111 c ... ntv. Choot• Twp.. t 1:
, ~- •. Ac:reege
44 Apartment

I':,

()I' 1 'J il

OWNEII-OPEIIATORS- Qolly
E....-lno.A_Io _
_.,
• spooltlllool oerl• 11 -lng
I n • • - IXIntrotooo for....m., . .
loool • 101111 hall
trllfic .,....... Non-forDid cllpltcft 1 o you an nle« tlwloadl
.,_, w.,.·to h.,L eolnt ·~••
you ..,.t to ga. W. PI¥ ••
P•mlt• • ton-mite tull. plus

5-17-tfn

June 17, 1987.

endoltd IYr"IMWCih, , . . .
ment. chlinlnk fen01. 2 c•
::.:.::.:::.• 1.. 182-241S foo

llllntl Fun )obi Fre~ ll300kit. No

two years ago,

last.

and . Found

etb••

ahon. don with lrolf-INcth.

mi!OI coblnots. holdbOorciiUO
.,d up to *II. .
-----------90 Days
c•h whh
tPI)I'OYid c:rattt. 3 Ml• ' out
.,..,,., Rd. Open 1 A.M. to-&amp;
P.M . Man, th"' Set . 814-4410322.

~ ·~

. I • • dining room, .._1ft •tt·

-.

lloyd's pooty plonl No lrw'"'-

~ Licensed· Clinical Audiologist

72

We••·

ey c&gt;w,... &lt;Ill Lincoln lt ..
Mlddopon. ·3 bodr- •ond
bathroom. l•go ...... ,.....

l.jJLIVill' I)'

.rlliiUiriiMnt'l. thoee quaMfiC8tlol'll. Mutt lnclu. I beehllort

. 992-685

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
-

i

c.nt•. •
loolr:lng ta

In Rutlond. Col et•aaz-ltn.

Listenin&amp; Devices
Dependable Hearina Aid S.les &amp; Sen1ictl
C!J
Evaluations For All Aaes

z

Hleclion of bedroom suit-.

11

soaW wor• who
mOlls both otolo • fect.ll

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS
Lorge Supply of llulult
Woovlng Supplleo
Sign up now for Buktl
Wnvlng Cleta•
OPEN MOST SATURDAYS
' 10:00 'TIL 5:00
PMl •110111 • OWNB

985-4300

l:

\

JUit wft t,a ..-n 1 ttnle •trt ~~
mon~r7 Or woukl you .., to
"•• • . . .? l!lthlr·-v Avon c.. help you bet e..._. you cll'l ,..,,
Mill Cell M.itr n
30.... !

-·

NOMIId

6 Lost

For Cwrent ·

•a.

p,. 1140 ...... ""' 1»-lrin.
Cooh Dold. Collt4-·2-HI7
0&lt; lt4-U2-2411.

UCENIEO SOCIAL WOIIKEA
fcllolnt Mt-• llooldontlol
ICF-Mll foclllty II

P'wnll• Ferr•
1122.

02732A

a...,

-11

1187 Sutuki GS 4&amp;0 L. till
apeed. In mktt condition. , eoo
•e~d mn•. beattiful m•allc
m•eon wilh lots of chrome.
l•ge wln.hlt!ld. two fuN face
twm.t•. one btU. 1 AFG.

1----------

t718. Dosk ""'up to 'J71.
Hut- MOD.,dup.bunkbodcr
aomploto w-mott- t211
.. d up to u n
boclcr
•110. Mitt,..... or box ....n91
t.lll 9r twin e71. firm 186, ll'ld
IN. o.._, 1%71 • up.
King .380. 4 ....1 ....
Qun cabin•• I. 8. • 10 gun.
..... mott•- 1311 llo •41.
Bid fr.., ..
Queen Sit'
•• a ldnt freme flO. Good

Sso..-• ':

AVON Ill •-ll . .~lot
30"'1711-1428.

*'* Coli ., ...

Fem•l• lleck Llllrador. 7
mo- old. Hod • - ond
wonnoccl. C.. 11.... 2-1101.

ICODitr

Ads

We watched you suffer
day by day,
And could not help in
any way.
But just stood by and
saw you pass,
Into the Savior's armsat

WI&gt;Mo .... 1. .
182-1778.

Waod hlble w-1 dllir1 e211 to

Uotlnfltl

Uood trmllu .. .., .... "'
-1ro hou-td llso sotttne
., ... 742-241S.

I monttl old ....real-- L trolnod. puoo llrod. To fOOd
ho- Coli .,._•2-3311.

BASKET WEAVE

PlltmNG
•HATS
•T-SHIRTS
-.JACKETS

FREE ESTIMATES

You are the unforgetla·
ble kind
That slays mirrored in
I he heart and mind.
Husband,
Wayne E. Milhoan

indudincWMe's Chapel lid
others, and the Long Bottom
Communty Assoc. for their

3 , _ , ldtt- I wk. old •
"""' trlinod. Coli I, .....
3851.

6-9- 'It-till

J&amp;L
2

992·6872

'

SCIEEN

(U41

3/17/89 '"'

222 Ealf Main
POMEIOY, OH.

CHEMI

Middleport,

ftuppl•: •orn Mer.. 10th.
mothor hill • - iloll llloolc
lob. Good ... - . doa • ,.._
Ontv
tood ... _ _ lftoo....
Coiil1._..._ot1o. ·

THE

ORGANIZATIONS

992-2196

AND
MODELS
MAKES

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

1
v
•••
.
I 2 H.D. fREE wilhcou_pon and 1
1 purch~&amp;e of min. H.C. Ptdt- 1

r1pair Gas Ta. .s.

PAT HILL FORD

w..,.

112-:1841.

949·21

'••oa •-•

-t

E•i.

AVON - AI • - · CoM -llyn
3G ... II2·H41.
•t

toiluy- mollllohomlo.
Collll ..... ln71.

FREE ESTIMATES

FORG~~~~~~ES.

tU41 992-6550

Closed Sund•y

In Me.,_iem

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Pointing

aut racliatars. We alsa

.. IUSINESS PHONE

Writ....

Gutters

· •Mobile Homa
R•ntela
•Lot Ren1als

CUSTOM

We can r1pair and recare · radiatars and
heater corn. We can
alsa acid boil and rod

L

NEW ..:. REPAII

•Mobile Home~

MY-I-SHOP

HEAnNG

3 Announcements

....... frlllll' ldtt- .....
.,., to I good holM. rnell •
t..lle. CoH II._R.. I?a

ROOFING

RADIATOR
Now lecation:

Card of Thanks

Howard

MOBILE
' HOME PARK

,.o.,i.--------,;;;-..~;

PLUMBING

I'

.to ••••· Redlin.. •221 to
U75. lAimpo •a to 01%5.
Dlnottoo .,Oiond up to •491.

GOVERNI!ii!NT HOMEII From
ft.OO IU "-11111 F • - .
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tlol. N-lollna'INoA .... Cell
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giv-.
Coil 11._ . . . _ _

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, _ I Sanko On

2

Ph. 614-992-5479
log. 614-992-2477
(lai•:
1-100-421-3535 .

L.....;__ _ _;:_4-.::25:..:-t::;:fn~

RYAN SOVICE CEIIIIER

support.

302 w. 2nd St,.,..Of,
Ohl• 45769

1·614·992-3554

· YAIDMAN MOWliS
ECHO SAlliS I TRIIHIS
OREGON IAIS, CHAINS

1

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or 992
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EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

''

J. WARNER

IJUIFrRY

Certified Licensed Shop
6-2&amp;-'SB-ttn

111¥111

AUTO &amp;.TRUCK
REPAIR

"At Reasonable Prices"

SUNDAY

VAUGHN'S

BOGGS

IIVEIIGE CANS ..... 50' 111.

I

HIALTil
INIUIIANCI call:

5-24-19- !mo.

QEAN ALUMINUM
CAST·----------·-----·----- 40&lt; 111.
ALUMINUM

\

For

You Call It
We WIH Haul It

~

SHIElS ·--:--··----·-----52' .lb.

NO

IOUSH

L.W. STEWART
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
aFill Dirt

Q.U.. ~U-NUM

I

&amp;-7-'lt-lao.

......, ·7:00p.m.

IS.lljtct to Chango
Without Notict)

AT

SEARS 11 •DtErorr
614-992-2171

6-16-tfn

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE
IEAUTIFII IISIE1S ss.oo
FLAn Mi1 •.,. Up ss.oo

11. 11 '\II

74

SWIMMING POOLS Ulll
BOOitho-wlho..,getlx31

lof• and chlh priced from
Uti to tltl. Tolcl• •10 .,d
up to .,21. Hlclt-o-- UIIO

Kerr .-d.. 11 min., fromo.IIDo-

with or WithoUt
- · Clll Loioy Lhroly 11._
--·:102. '

KIT N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrl&amp;ht

64 Mile. Merchandin

LAYNE'S FURNrTURE

111. 1 112 n.. ~om Hob•
Hoopltli, MO.OOO. Colt 114441-8t37. "' 11 ...... 4118.

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SEARS .. -DIEPOIT .
6
71

fall

151 H-lhold GDDdl

· 2 br.,
l•ge It ina room •
·kftahtrt. 2 •ar•. lu~te~lon 110,

llou-lclo of .....
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•
Alao Fa.niture
wood •
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and
Variow Sian

Wt Buy Aluminum
Cane, Gl•o. a .....
Copptr ond More

The Daily Sentinel-

Friday, June 16, 1989

,,

....

'J
~J

�......

eonunued from page 1

EMS has five Thursday calls
Five calls for assistance were answered Thursday by units of
the Mel~s County Emergency Medical Service.
At 10:12 a .m. the. Pomeroy unit went to the State Street In
Pomeroy tor Bernessa Phillips who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 10; 14 a.m. the Rutland unit transported
Ginny Wllllamson to Veterans Memorial Hospital from an
automobile accident on Side Hill Road near Rutland; at 12:46
p.m . the Middleport unit went to Railroad Street for Dorothy
Roush who was taken to Veterans and at 6:22p.m. the Rutland
unit took Charles Foley from his ·Larkin Street resident to
Ve terans Memorial.
.
·
.
The Olive Township Fire Deparlment .wes called at 8: 44p.m.
to County Road 50 where there was a natural gas leak.

Restraining._..

Sheets in 'guarded' condition
Keith Sheets. 32. Rt. 4. Galllpolls, was reported In " guarded' '
but " stable" condition Friday morning at Holzer Medical
Center where he was admitted Thursday with a gunshot wound
Of the chest.
Gallipolis Pollee said Sheets, an employee of Foodland, was
the victim of an apparent self·lniiicted gunshot wound. He was
found In his car, on the parking lot at GalUpolls Foodland.
Officers said they found a note and a .22-callber revolver In
the vehicle. Contents of the note were not disclosed.
Sheets was dliicovered by Gerald Rupe. another employe of
Foodland, who heard the vehiCle's horn blowing when Sheets
slumped over the wheel. The shooting Is still under
Investigation.
Gallipolis Detective Mike Tucker said he has been unable to
question Sheets bE"Cause of his condition.

Woomer ...

continued from page1

"We are just absolutely ec·
ruary 1979.
static." said Tim Haas of the
Sellers was shot to death. but
South Carolina Coalition to Abol·
Wanda Summers survived to
Ish the Death Penalty, which
testify against Woomer. despite
canceled a planned vigil outside
having part of her face blown
the governor's mansion.
away by the same shotgun blast
Earlier this week. Gov. Carroll
that killed her friend .
Campbell refused to commute
Earlier. Woomer and Skaar
Woomer's sentence to life In
killed Cottageville, S.C.. coin
prison.
collector John Turner. Author!·
Among the arguments made to
ties said they came to South
the Supreme Court by Woomer's Carolina with the Intention of
lawyers Is one that overturned stealing valuable coins.
the death sentence of another
The other victims were Arnie
South Carolina death row Inmate Lee Richardson and his sister-In·
earlier this week.
law, Earldean Wright, both shot
The high eourt ruled Monday
to death during a robbery at the
. the prosecutor in the 1987 murder ' family's home in rural George. case of Demetrius Gathers of town County. Richardson's 5·
; Charles ton may have swayed the year-old daughter was wounded
• jury's sentencing. decision by by the assailants but managed to
heaping praise on Gathers' vic· rid e ~ miles on her bicycl~ In an
tim . Woomer ' s atiorn e ys effort to get help.
claimed the same tactic was used
Skaar, also of Huntington.
In his case.
committed ·suicide when he and
Before the stay was gran ted. Woomer were cornered by pollee
Woomer ordered a last meal of officers at a Myrtle Beach motel
"pizza with everything but an· in the hours after the shootings .
chovles" and asked to be burled
Without the stay, Woomer
next to his mother In Kentucky . would have become the 244th
Relatives came to visit.
person to die In the state' s
Woomer, 34, of Huntington. electric chair since 1912 and the
W.Va .. was sentenced to die for third since the death penalty was
, the slaying of Della !;ellers. o~e reinstated In 1976. Seven people ·
of two clerks he and Eugene have been executed In other
· Skaar kidnapped from a Pawleys states In 1989.
Island convenience store In Feb·

and a tornado swept through a
rural eastern Pennsylvania communlly , Injuring at leas t four
people.
Fierce winds In Florid a

continued rrom page 1

historic preservation or flood·
plain aspects, w)\en the mayor
was told to proceed as he deemed
necessary.
.
'
11 would appear that the
dis trlct court process began after
Dr. Frank Porter III, who.ls one
of five members of Pomeroy's
historic Preservation Commts·
sl.on. spoke with Cremeens·
Strong. Cremeens-Strong says
she was contacted first by Porter
and has slnee "had a lot of
conversation'with" Porter. Mary
Ann Peters, of the Ohio His tortcal Society. and with the historic
preservation office at the state
level.
· Dr. Porter was contacted Wed·
d b T o
Se
nes ay Y he ally ntln~lfor
Information. but refused to dis·
cuss the matter.
According to Cremeens·
Strong, the Corps of Engineers
violated Section 106 of the Na·
tkmal Historic Preservation Act
by Issuing the permits to Turner.
According to documents filed
In the court by Cremeens-Strong.
the excavation and construction
Is "within 100 yards of the

district buildings are more like
1.000 feet and across a main
street" from the Turner-Cain
site, •'with a · drug store and
automobile -deale r s hip In
between."
It was also pointed out In
documents forthe defendantthat
20 to 30 recreational docks are
built every year In Huntington
District under general · IJermlt ,
and an es timated 25 docks are In
the water every year around
Pomeroy.
The defendant maintains there
has been no Irreparable Injury to
Pomeroy's historic district. "No
historic buildings are about to be
razed or permanently altered.
We are advised that the city has
done that Itself within 'he historic.
'
district. but that Is clearly not
being done by anyone under
permit from the defendant."
An Initial conference on this
case was held last week In
Columbus. The next step In' the
court process will be some sort of
ruling from the district judge.
Rattan and Cremeens·Strong
report'.

Helen Pauline Thoma King, 63,
of 784 Kevin Dr.. Columbus, died
Thursday at the Kobecker Hos·
pice . . Olentangy Road.
Columbus.
Born on Feb. 19. 1926, at
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, she
. was the daughter of the late Ollie
and Georgia Thoma. Mrs. King
was a member of the Maize
Manor Methodist Church,
member of the Methodist
Women's Love Circle, and had
retired from the Lazarus Co., all
In ColumbUs. She belonnged to
the 20 year club at Lazarus.
Surviving is her husband , Leo
King. to whom she has been
married since March 6, 1946.
Other survivors Include a son and
daughter-In -law. Michael and
Marjorie. and a granddaughter,
Tina. all of Columbus; a brother·.
Guy and Ellen Thoma, Rutland;

downed trees, power lines and
damaged homes . •
A Potomac Electric Power
Company spokesman said two
days of storms ending la te
Thursday caused "unprecend·
ented damage'· to the company's
system In and around the nation's capital.
In the Central Manor, Pa .. area
Thursday evening, a • torando

9

8

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

GM-217

WAS S24,999

WAS S24,999

1989 CADILLAC SEVILLE

NOWt$21 ,4 99

.,.,.

:~s:14,400 NOW!$13,400

1989 CHMOLET ASTRO CL VAN

1989 OI.DSMOBU CUI1ASS

-

":).

-

NOW/

WAS 511,495

1989 CHEVROLET CAVAUER

.
NOWI$1 0,295

GM-204

WAS .9,495

starr .

~~

(

•

mt
14 Soctlont, 94 Pog•
A Muhimedle Inc Newapep•

Excess rain threatens crops
McKenzie said..
Hay crops also may not be
effected by the rain If farmers
can harvest their winter crop
soon, McKenzie said.
" If we can get our first harvest
In soon we can get a couple of
more harvests In this year, " he
said. "We could be In our second
growth period right now . At least

we won't be hurting as much as
we did In the drought .••
It 1s ha rd to predict how the
crops will turn out , Vollbornsalq.
"We don't know what the rest
of the season will be like " he
said. "It could turn out O.K.'' ·
"You're going to have to walt
until fall to see what will
happen, " McKenzie said.

M. • county
e~g.·~
II

~

d d (
recommen e J or
d "tSaster
•
re t•~e1

It Is Important to get tobacco

planted as soon as possible since
ltmustbeharvestedbeforethere
Is a !rostln the fall, Vollborn said.
"If It frosts while II Is In the
field It hurts the crop," he added.
Soybean crops usually do not
have to be planted until the
beginning of July, Vollborn said.
Approximately 50 percent of the
county's soybean crop has been
planted, he added.
When soybeans are planted
later In the spring the chances of
having a good soybean yield are
decreased, Vollborn said.
One advantage of the wet
spring Is that It has helped to
bring grazing pastures back to
life after last year's drought,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Sla le Emergency Board
recommended Friday that allbu(
five of Ohio's 88 counties be
declared dlsaster 'areas because
of excessive moisture and below·
normal temperatures this
spring.
The only counties not recom·
mended for disaster relief are
Stark, Scioto. Gallla , Columbl·
ana and Carroll, said Don Grul!e,
program specialist for the Ohio
Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation Service.
Qualified Ohioans would be
eligible to apply tor emergency
loans at 4.5 percent Interest
through the . Farmers ·· Home
Administration.
Twenty-eight of the 83 counties
recommended for relief Friday
had already been declared dlsas·
ter areas June 12 by President
Bush.
Farmers must carry Federal
Crop Insurance Corp. coverage

-~ke 11p, 'He dlif Jrto enter ill In

NOW/

•

GALLIPOLIS - The MasonGaiUa·Mt:lgs District ot the .Boy
Scouts of America's Tri-State
Area Council announced tha't It
raised funds exceeding the
$13;000 goal for 1989.
.
With Ron Mt;Dade, GaiUpolls
area manager for Columbus
Southern Power Company, servIng as district chairman, and ·
county cha,lrmen Scott Hinsch
(manager of the Gallipolis Star
Bank), Bill Nease (manager, ,
Bank One of Pomeroy) and Jon
Pal'rack (Nationwide Insurance
agent, Point Pleuant, W.Va.)·
leading the sustaining member·

to qualify for emergency loans
for crop damage, said David
Drake, farm program specialist
for the Ohio Farmers Home
Administration.
FCIC coverage Is not neces·
sary to get assistance for dam·
age to such things ·· as farm
buildings.
Farmers must have suffered at
least a 30 percen I loss of yield to
qualify for an emergency loan,
meaning they likely will have to
walt until harvest lime to get
their loans, Drake said.
They may apply. however. a~
soon as their counties are declared disaster areas. he said.
Gov. Richard Celeste must
forward the board's recommen·
dation to the U.S. secretary of
agriculture, who will declae
whether. a county Is to be
declared a disaster area.
Neither Drake nor Grube
would speculate on how long the
process might take.

Cooperative contract
continues 'for colleges

SPENDING TIME WITII DAD- This IHIJe girl &amp;peat Saturday
wtth her dad at the GaJUpolls dowatOWD aldewalk sales. Don't
forge&amp; to take a moment to recognize your !ather tor the tlmea and
memorlea shared. And remember all the little thlnp that add up to
tbe JO:r of bavtnr ~d being a fatller. (Timett-8ent1Del pboto by
Mar1aret Caldwell)
.

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Board of Regents voted Friday to
continue for another five years
the amended contract which
defines the terms of a coopera·
tlve relationship between Rio
Grande Community College and
Rio Grande Colleg~ .
"This cooperative agreement
Is unique within the State of
Ohio," said Robert L. (Bob)
Evans of Rio Grande, a member
of the Ohio Board of Regents. "II
was designed to meet the needs
of people In this area of the state.
It has worked well."
Under the terms of the contract, the college will continue to
provide certain Instructional ser·
vices for the community college.
The agreement also will permit
continued use o! the college

facilities (with the exception of
residence facilities) by both the
students of the college and
community college.
The board's action represents
an . extension of the current
cooperative agreement, which
has been In effect since 1984. That
agreement In turn was an
amended version of the original
agreement, which dates back to
1974.
One Individual serves as the
president of both the college and
the community college. However, each lnstltutlon Is governed
Independently by Us own board'
of trustees.
The colleges will unite to
become Universit y of Rio
Grand~ In the fall.

•.

ship enrollment team, the MGM lind Cub Scouts, and Camp
Klashuta (Chester) and Camp
was able to ~alse more money for
Arrowhead (Ona, W.Va.) .
area Scou tlng this year than in
the past three years.
In addition, the MGM received
Some of the Scouting events
a boost In Its fund -raising drive already In the yearbook are the
from Its aolf scramble at Cllf· Klondike Derby (for Boy
!side Golf Course In Gallipolis on · Scouts), tbe Pinewood Derby
Mayll.
(for Cub Scouts}, the Bowl·a·
Thon, Blue and Gold Banquets,
Among the Items the money aDd Courts of Honor. Events on
will be used for are lralnlnll the calendar Include the Cub
materials and aids for 'leaders, Olymplt:a on Saturday, June 24 at
professional staff In the districts, GaviD Recreational Park In
•council office stat! to provide Cheshire, Boy Scout Summer
help ·for each unit's "eeds, Camp In June and July, Webeloa
summer camps for Boy Scouts camp In July, Cub Day Camp on
July 17·21, and the Bike Rodeo
..
later In the summer.

'

. Meigs grand jury indiets
five .during June session

POMEROY - Five bills of lndlctmentl were banded down
this past week by the Melp Couaty Grand Jury. Indicted In
Melp County were Michael Todd Muillel', for .exual battery;
Harvey Faw, tor carrying a concl!aled weapon; Marvin P.
Cremeans, tor bavlng a weap011 while under a dlsabiUty; and
Oarrln W. Wise and Sherman A. Artrip, both for rect!lvllll
ltoleD property.
More laformatloa on the lndlctmentl will be released later by
, lbe Metaa Cpuaty PrOieCIItor's oftlce.

I

Cloudy. Hl1hli In mid 70s. •
Chance of rain 70 percent.

MGM district. scouts raise $13,000

NOWI

Gallla • Mason County
.
675-3388

Along the River ......... Bl·8
Buslness .......... ............D-1
Comics· ........... ....... .Insert
Classlfleds .... ............. D3- 7
Deaths ........................ A-3
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports .......... , ............ C1·6

By MICHAEL SHEARER .
Corn farmers who are planning
TtmetHieallllel staff
to store their corn In silos to feed
GALLIPOLIS_ Gallla County
cattle do not have to worry as
much since they do not need a
farmers are &amp;tnlilliDi to gel
their crops planted as more than
high quality corn, McKenzie
said.
three Inches of rain h'a s fallen
already this month.
As for tobacco, Vollborn said
After last summer's drought, · slightly more than half of the
tanners are now behind schedule
tobacco crops have been planted
In planting crops due to wet
In Gallla ·County. He added that
co~lllon.s ·which have existed
thiS week's rains have hurt local
throughout the spring.
tobacco farmers.
"We're In a ·tight spot right
' 'The heavy rainfall was crltl·
know," said Dave McKenzie,
cal In limiting what we can
executive director of tbe Gallla · produce," he said. "We need

B;atuo.wr,·(l~Eu

Cl

Inside

-------------------------------••
.

us."
She said the one thing she ·
GALLIPOLIS - He's the one remembers most about him was
who tells the tall tales, plays that he read the Bible 17 times
make believe and spends play- before he was 18 years old.
time in the evenings after a long
''That was something that
day's work.
always Impressed me," HineHe's dad, pa, father. daddy ~nd man said.
.
pappa. And today ts the day
Little four-year-old Emily
reserved for thinking a bout him, Meadows also gets entertained
remembering him, and offering by her father when they play
him love and support.
house.
Today·Is Father's Day.
"I cook for him ·tn my own
"Anyone can be a father , built ' kitchen," Emily said. "He eats
takes someone special to be a playdough and It comes out of his
dad," said Kevin Plantz, 24, ear. But he told me I couldn'ttry
Galllpolls. He Is the father o! one that."
,
and very soon to be a father of
To her, dads tickle and tease.
two.
' and "I love I)IJn . more than
· "It takes a lot of work to be a anyone else," Emily said.
real dad, " Plantz said. " He
For Bob Magnussen, 11, of
spends time playing and shows Gallipolis, dads still have time to
Interest In things that the kids are play after a long day's work.'
Interested ln."
·
"He comes home and rests for
Plantz said his father worked a a little, then he does things with
lot when he was young but now us In the evenings," .Bob said.
his father Is striving to spend "He plays baseball with me a lot.
tJme and be close tohls children. He pitches good, except when be
Marguerite (Moore) Hineman, gets (ar away."
76, of Gallipolis, remembers her
Bob said he enjoys playing with
father always entertaining her his dad and taking their usual
wlth'talltales.
trip together to Cedar Falls. ·
'
·
"
Take a moment to remember
"I remember him telling us
and
recognize your paternal
big, wild tales for us to enjoy,"
parent
for his hard work, !or your
Hineman said. "Of course, we
would get excited and believe · special times, and tor all the little
him. but that was just part of his things.

GM-219

18.888.00
'11,888.00
nO,III.OO
11,111.00
•7,881.00
•3.181.00
11,2H.OO
'I.IH.OO

t''

.

• ., ,. ., .....

Middleport-Pomerov-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant June 18, 1989

Thanking.·dad for
all the little things

NOW!$)4,7 50
CHEVROLET
. CAVAUER

'

•.

'1!' - ,.. ,... -

"We're running out of days to
plan·! "
Ed ..Vollborn, Gallla County
Extension Agent tor agriculture,
said only 70 percent of the
• county's corn crop Is planted.
.Most farmers prefer to have
thelrcrllp&amp;in the ground by about
May 20, he added.
.
until
Farmers
will
have
to
walt
CORN SUFFERING- Thill corn, growlnglaa field alongSR 141
fall .to see what effect .the wet
near Cea~ery, II jut begbmlag to brealllllrough the ground.
spring will have on their corn
Mally Galla County fanners stW have not been able to plant their
crops,
Vollborn said, adding that
crop11 due to the wet sprtnr condltlou while other farmers are
farmers
who are growing corn
beblad schedule. (Times.Senllnel photO by Michael Shearer)
for grain are at a greater risk.
"If there Is an early frost It
could be totally dlsastroua," he
said. "If they are llarvesllnl for
grain the maturity may not be
there."

WAS S,5,4SO

:tiCJepitalnews

_ .,__

,..

In Our Town: Max Tawney visits
Turkey; tomatoes are ripe..;Page

~1-

NOWt$2 3,699

;~·!17,495 NowtS16,49S

1304-A

... ,.

~~~~~d ~~':~~:~l~ns~~~:: ~~~tl~~sf~~~e~~~~t~~a~l~~!!

GM-193

1989 CHEVROLET BERETTA

.9

"'

Beat of the Bend: Things are
looking up for Bob Gilmore .••Page B-8

Vol24 No.19

1989 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88

1989 CHEVROLET S·ILAZER 4X4

WAS S16,995

"

ttntS -

· Times-Sentinel

GM-209

"

•

....

WAS S22,499

"

Rain mars play in U. S. Open...

Page~~

1989 'cADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

GM-171

GM-221

'N .,.. • •

50 cents

Keeping
the past
alive•••

Dance planned
A dance will be held Saturday
night at the -E ll Denison Post 467;
American Legion, hall from 8
p.m to midnight. Music will be by
the new band, "Kitchen Pickers"
of Parkersburg. Donations will
be of $2.50 for adults and $2
children under 12.
To continue classes
Trinity Church In Pomeroy will
be having Sunday School during
the summer months contrary to a
previous announcement that It
would be discontinued for the
summer. Classes will be held at
9:15a.m.

1

1~443381

.,.

AnnouQcements

Am Electric Power ............ .27%
AT&amp;T .. ...... ......... ................35')i,
Ashland 011 ... ..... .. .. ... ......... 40~
Bob Evans ....... ........... :.... .. .15%
Charming Shoppes .... .......... 16%
City Holding Co .. ....... .. .. ... .. 15 ~
Federal Mogul.. ........ .. , ... .. .. 26~
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. ........... 54\1;
Heck's .. .. .. .. ............... ....... , .. %
Key Centurion .... .... .......... .. 12%
Lands' End ................ ... .... .. 27')8
Limited Inc ............... ......... 31%
· Multimedia Inc ........ .... ... ..... 98
Rax Restaurants .. .. ......... ..... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .. .... .. .. 17~
Shoney's Inc ... ..... .. ............. ll ~
. Wendy's Int1 ........ .. ... .. .. .. .. .. 6'!4
Worthington Ind ........... ..... .. 22

1989 CADILLAC ELDORADO

WAS S10,H5

Meigs c.untr

.. . . . -

SPECIAL FACTORY ·PUR'CHASE
USED CARS

IMBLEDON
1

. ........

'

Injured at least four people and
destroyed seven homes along
s tate Route 999, eyewitnesses
and emergency management
officials sa ld,
Officials said the tornado
carved a 10-mllepaththrough the
rural area between Millersville
a nd Montville. Much of the
damage was centered In the tiny
community of Central Manor;
where at least 20 hOmes were
damaged, officials said.
"I don't wan t to see another .
one." eyewitness Ruth Frey said.
" II sounded like an explosion.
The first thing I did was to turn
around and check my house."

HBO and Wmbledon.
A p6rlllct matr:tr lor 15 yeatS.

Muscaro. 56. was recom·
mended In May by a screening
:committee to succeed Arm·
: strona. who became commls·
· sloner ,In 1911l.
·
· "Naturally. I'm very excited
about the challenge ahead."
MuiCaro said. "My goal Is to
malat.ala the high standards o!
tbe OHSAA. I ·reel strongly we
: IUive one of the best organlza·
, tloastll the country, bull hope we
•JUlll.lllr "acll a polnJ where we
: tlllnll there Is no room for
IJDPI'Oftment."
Ltlrry Morrison, president of
tbe Board of Control. pralaecl

-'¥

Sunda

Muscaro named OHSAA commissioner
COLUMBUS. Ohio WPI) Clair Muscaro was officially
approved Thursday by the Board
of Control of the Ohio High School
Athletic Association as its new
commissioner .
Musaro. an assistant commls·
sloner the past five years. will
: replace Dick Armstrong effec: live Jan. 1. 1990, becoming the
• OHSAA 's eighth commission In
Its 82 years of exls tence.

......

••••••••••••••••••••••IIII~•••••••••••••

Pomeroywhich
Main IsStreet
district.
listed historic
on the
National Register of Historic
Places, and within approxl·
mately 20 yards ·of a V lllage
His torte District , which Is eligl,
ble for inclusion on the National
Register." Such excavation and
construction Is cIted as " a·
serious threat to the historic
Integrity of these properties"
which "Introduces visual ele·
ments that are out of character
with the property."
In addition to requesting the
temporary restraining order an'd
preliminary ·Injunction.
Cremeens-Strong has requested·
on behalf of the plaintiff. the
payment of attorney fees and
related costs under the National
Historic Preservation Act. If the
court does not order costs paid
under the national act , her firm
will likely just absorb the Joss.
Cremeens-Strong says. "The VII·
lage has agreed to absorb out-of·
pocket expenses" such as court
filing fees. she adds.
• U.S. District Attorney James
Rattan, Columbus. representing
the Corps , apknowledges that the
federal law does exist, but that II
has not been violated by the corps
In· this matter. The permits
Issued by the corps were general
permits for a small job which
was a great distance from the
a slster-in-J"aw. Pat Thoma. nearest historical building In
Pomeroy; nieces and nephews,
Pomeroy's historic section, Rat·
Terri and Dwight Sturgeon and tan says.
son, Brandon, Kevin, Cheryl,
According to. a document filed
Suzan and Kelly Thoma , all of the by Rattan. "there Is no excavaPomeroy area.
tion being done under permit
Her mother-in-law, Neva King from the Corps of ,Engineers If
and brother-In-law, Virgil and that Is being done, It Is above the
Delores King and family qf ordinary high water line In an
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, also area over which the corps does
·
survive.
not have permit au thorlty." The
document further states that
Besides her parents. she was excavation and construction of
preceded In death by· a brother, the recreational boat dock are
Earl Thoma.
being done "under au thorlty of
Funera! services will be held pre-existing general permits.
Monday at 10 a. m at the one national and one by the
Ruthford·Corbln Funeral Home, Huntington District Corps of
517 High St ., Worthington, with Engineers. each containing spe·
the Rev. Lowell Nelson clflc provisions for consideration
officiating.
of possible affects on historic
Friends may call at the funeral property. There Is no allegation
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on that either of those provisions
Sunday. Burial will be In Union has been violated In this case."
Cemetery. Olen tangy River The provisions of the general
Road, Columbus .
permits are described as a
"flexible application of Section
106" which gives the Corps of
Muscaro's qualifications to be Engineers authority .to deter·
mine the "area of potential
the new commissioner.
"I think the three most lmpor· effects."
The defendant refutes the
tant things that resulted In Clair
getting the job was his wide. plaintiff's allegation regarding
range of experience In athletics. the close proxtml!y of the exca·
his strong publiC relations skUis · vatlon and construction to Pome·
and his work here In the office," roy's established historical dis·
trlct. "The established historical
Morrison said.

--Area deaths-__;._Helen King

~

-

Storm batters East Coast early today
By United Preas Jaternadonal
More than !Kl,OOO people were
stU! without electricity In the
Washington, D.C.. area early
Friday following thunderstorms

.

FridaV. June 16, 1989

Pomelov-Middlaport. Ohio

r---Local news briefs...- -

...... ,.

~···-"

.

,.,

••

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•

'

~

"

J

··· · ·~

' '"

.,

.

Stnce the start o! the year, new
Cub Scout packs have been
OJ'IIIDIIed In Bidwell and Eureka
Ill Gallla CoUJIIt, and In Apple
Grove, nat ROck, Hartford and
t.oa Ia Mum County. Ia addl·
tloa. 1111r Boy Scout troops llave
11M! Ol'laalzed In GalllpoUs and
Hartfold, aad In Syracull! ID
~tal Couaty. A pew taw en·
~t Explorer poat IIIIHI'·
Jaa COO!PIItloa In Melli~­
The additional unltl have l11U
6ll8 IIOp to till MGM.

ttftloe), ea Is t'•'
a .... • •• 't11iir
..... Galu,.lll), 1M h&amp; Ill {HRMit?411

••••rerl
•-tm..... ..._.,.*

..._..-,Pels&amp;l'fnnst, W.Va.) .......
Nan• (lluk One,
- , 11A dlltnat
(!'bites Ina d

.....

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·

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