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                  <text>Page-10-The Daily Sentinel
r---

Local news briefs ... ----.

Continued from page 1
Townsnhlp, 0.3 of a mile north of mllepost10, near Middleport,
according to the State Highway Patrol.
The patrol reported that Marvin L. Walton, 46, Glendale
W.Va .. lost control and his pickup truck went off the road Into~
ditch. The patrol cited Walton for failure to maintain control

\

.

EMS responds to five calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to five calls on Monday.
At 8:49a.m . the Middleport unit responded to a calion IVIIIISt.
In which Freda Bing was taken to Holzer Medical Center. .
The Racine unit went to Stiversvllle Road at 11:02 a.m. for
Violet Brewer who was transported to Veterans Memortal
Hospital.
William Arnott was taken from Meigs Mine 2 at 11: 11 a.m. to
Holzer by the Rutland unit.
At 3:06 p.m. the Racine unit was called to Letart Fails for
Mary Pickens who was transported to Veterans Memorial, and
at 5:29 p.m. the Middleport unit went to Front St. for Danny
Norman who was taken to Veterans Memorial.

_ _ _ _____;__ _
Counci·••... _(Continuedtranpage1)
recycling center, not just something thrown up."
The mayor assured Manley
that the street problem In that
area is a first priority and he said
that hopefully there wlii be some
money to do something in
August.
Mayor Hoffman appointed
Councilmen Gilmore and Dewey
Horton as his alternates to the six
county Solid Waste Advisory
Board since he has court on the
nights the board meets.
OuiUries Parade Plans
Gilmore outlined plans for the
July 4 ,celebration which 'will
begin at 6 p.m. with a parade
starting at Sears and moving to
Diles Park where trophies will be
awarded. The evening wlli in·

elude clogging by the Shady
River Shufflers, two hours of
m uslc by Bob Estep and the
Western Travelers Band, and
·
fireworks at 9: 30 p.m.
It was noted that the fireworks
this year will be "bigger and
better" costing llbout $4,400.
Donations of about $2,000 have
been received from civic groups,
it was reported, and the balance
will be shared equally by the
Middleport Fire Department and
Village Council.
At the meeting were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Buck, and Council members
Gerard, Gilmore, Satterfield,
Hor!Qn, · James Clatworthy, and
William Waiters.

collided .
A section of the Northline Mall
roof, north of downtown Houston,
collapsed Monday evening, ap·
parently due to the heavy rains,
authorites said. No one was
Injured but at least three customers and a securtty guard had to
run to escape falling debriS,
pollee said.
Galveston County residents
reported two tornadoes touching
down Monday afternoon and
evening. Very heavy rain com·
blned with high tides and what
the weather service called a "4·
to 5-foot storm surge" to produce
widespread flooding of many
waterways, inundating major
highways.
.
A solid band of rain and
thunderstorms extended from
DllnoiS across much of Missouri
and Kansas to the Texas panhandle early Tuesday, with often
heavy rainfall leading a cold
front as It mol(ed slowly south,
the NWS said.
Lightning Injured two campers
at Montauk State Park In Missouri's OZarks, striking a tree near
their camper as they grasped a
metal awning, a Dent County
sheriff's 'deputy said. They were
not seriously hurt.
High winds and rain knocked
over trees and power lines in the
Kansas City area and caused,
widespread street flooding, offi·
cials said.
,
Intense heat caused more
problems Monday in St. Louis,

Allison, the Atlantic season's
first tropical storm, lost some of
her bluster Tuesday after spawning two tornados and 10 Inches of
rain in southeast Texas, but a
band of powerful thunderstorms
pelted the Midwest with intense
rainfall.
The Harris County Emergency
Management Office reported
that a small girl was killed late
Monday when flood waters carried her Into 1111 open manhole.
Over 91nchesof rain had fallen
by 1 a.m. COT at Houston
Intercontinental Airport and Alii·
soon's winds were reaching
speeds of 50 mph, the National
Weather Service said. Allison,
after gathering strength over the
weekend, hit land Monday.
Flood waters began receding
In the wake of the first tropical
storm of the Atlantic season, but
residents of several communities
north and east of Houston were
unable to return to their homes
and several roads and highways
remained underwater, the NWS
said.
'
At one point, water reached the
top of a 14-foot overpass on
Interstate 45 near downtown
Houston.
Allison's flood waters also
blocked roads leading to the
Houston Ship Channel, prevent·
ing relief crews from reaching
exhausted workers cleaning up
the remainder of 252,000 gallons
of oil that splll~d Friday after a
Panamanian tanker and a barge

Flood 'victims to receive state 'a id

be requested, but much of it will
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) come
durtng the next fiscal
The state Controlling Board
period
,
which begins July 1.
Monday released $60,000 to the
The
money
will go for indivld·
state adjutant general's office
for victims of flooding May 23 in ual and family grant awards in
the Cleveland and central and Butler, Coshocton, Cuyahoga,
Franklin, Geauga, Greene,
southwest Ohio areas.
Representatives of colleges
The money will be matched by Lake, Licking, Lorain, Mercer,
and universities were the most $180,000 in federal funds, accord· Montgomery. Preble and
tenacious of the lobbyls ts patrol· ing to the adjutant general's Warren counties.
ling the Statehouse corridors . office.
The board approved a $600,000
durtng -the closed conference
Financial officer Erik Turner , low-interest state loan to Nemco
committee meetings.
told the board he expects $1 Inc. to acquire machinery and
The state universities sought mUllan ln damage assistance to equipment in expanding its plant
more flexibility in a 7 percent
In Hicksville, located along the
tuition cap that they said would
Indiana border in Defiance
hamper their ability to offer
County.
educational programs.
The company. which manufac·
The Ohio Department of Edu· Revival planned
lures orthopedic instruments
Revival services will be held
cation fought for control of line
and food processing equipment,
items within the prtmary and Thursday, Friday and Saturday employs 55 people and will add 65
secondary school appropriation, at the Faith Full Gospel Church,
more with the expanded opera·
which the governor's office has Long Bottom, with Rev. Dan lion, according to. the Ohio :
Tucker. Services will be at 7:30
been trying to take over.
Department of Development.
The conferees are putting $90 nightly with special singing each
The board approved a $459,062
million Into an "education lm· night.
Interest-free loan to Canton La·
provement fund" -requested by Yard sale Saturday
A yard sale, bake sale and car cal School District.
Celeste - and they have set up a
14-member oversight board. wash will be held Saturday,
However, that panel will be allle starting at 9 a.m., at Doily Reed's ·
to monitor the program and residence, Route 124, Reedsville.
make recommendations, not su· The sales and car wash are
Dally stock prices
sponsored by the Faith Gospel
pervlse use of the money .
(As of 10 a.ni.)
The governor's office wanted Ladies Circle. Proceeds will go to
Bryce and Mark Smith
the board to have control over the Faith Full Gospel Church,
of munt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
spending for programs such as Long Bottom.
Head Start, early childhood Trustees to meet
Am Electric Power .......... ... 28¥.
The Olive Township Trustees ' AT&amp;T .............. ... .... ............ 36~
development, teenage preg·
nancy, preschool and dropout , will hold a budget hearing on July
Ashland 011 .. .................. ..... 39
4, at 7 p.m., followed by a regular
intervention.
Bob Evans .......................... 15%
Senate Bili 140, the education meeting at 7:30 p.m. The meet·
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
improvement bill which dove· ings will be heald at the home of
City Holding Co ................... 18
tails with the budget lines, was township clerk, Barbara
Federal Mogui. ................... 27V.
amended Monday, bu !"the major Hannum.
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .............55¥.
hangup was over what to call the
Heck's .... ................ ... ... ... .... V.
fund recommended by Celeste.
Key Centurion ... ...... ........... 12%
The subcommittee voted to
Lands' End ............... ... ....... 28')(,
have pilot programs In open
Veterans Memorial
Limited Inc .......... ........ ...... 31',4
school enrollment where dis·
Monday admissions - Mary
Multimedia Inc .. ...... ........ .. .96~
tricts agree.
Page, Middleport; and Mary L.
Rax Resiaurants .................... 3
Pickens, Racine.
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. ..17~
Monday discharges - Frank
Shoney's Inc ....................... 11')(,
King, Ada Morris, and Stella
Wendy's Inti .... .... ......... .. ... .SV.
Roane County and Harriman Bush.
Worthington lnd ....... .......... 21%
officials expressed regret and
surprise at the turn of events.
"The worst has happened,"
said Jim Bilyan, head of the
Roane County Chamber of
Commerce.
"! was surprised It was that
dramatic and that sudden," said
Harriman Mayor Jerry Davis.
Kayser-Roth will provide coun·
seling on pensions and other
benefits to the employees and
otter them job openings at
Kayser-Roth plants In nearby
Dayton and Rockwood.
The Harrtman plant was established In 1912 and bought by
Kayser·Roth In 1982. The com·
pany spent millions of dollars
modernlzlng the factory and
doubling its size to about 300,000
square feet.
Kayser-Roth Hosiery makes
socks and women's hosiery at 14
plants in the Carolinas, Tennessee and Puerto Rico.

'·

Lena Mae Ralke, 90,461 Pike St.,
Kanauga, died Monday morning
at Overbrook Center In
Middleport.
.
Bom June 6, 1899, In Galllpolla,
she was the daughter of the late
William and Lydia R. (Betz)
Witham.
Precedlnl her In death was her
bulband, John Ralke, on May 30,
1976, whom abe married July 16,
1919 at Point Pleasant, W.Va.
i\lao precedlq her In death
wu oae daqllter, three 1iltera,

and four brothers.

•

heat warning for the fifth consecutive day.

Hospital news

!',.':1SNOW

-

Pick 3
688
Pick 4
6470

"by Kings

Mostly clear tonight.
near 60. Thunday, mostJJ
sunny. Highs near 80.

FRONTS: . . Wann "Cold
- ' Staltc . . Occluded
Map shows minimum •,~'f"''"· Atlllast !iO'IIo of an, lhaled -•roo..,..t
to receive poedpl1ation I
ed
UPI

•

WEATHER MAP - During early Wednesday momtnr, ahowera
and thunderstonns are forecast for parts of tile southern Plains,
the lower Mississippi Valley and parts of the Olllo Valley. Sbowen
are possible In parlll of the extreme Pacific northwest, with
showers and thunderstonns p08slble In parts of tbe central
Intermountain Region, the,north em Plains States, m08i of tbe GuH
Coast, most of the Ohio Valley 11nd the mid to north Atlantic Coast
States. UPI

-------Weather~----The chance of rain Is 30 percent.
By United Press International
Extended Foreca&amp;t
South Central Ohio
Thunday throurh Saturday
Tonight: Occasional thunder·
Fair Thursday and Friday,
storms, with a low between 65
with
a chance of showers and
and 70. Winds becoming northw·
thunderstorms
Saturday. Highs
est 10 to 15 mph. Winds becoming
will
be
mainly
between
80 anrl 85
northwest 5 to 15 mph. The
Thursday,
In
the
80s
Friday
and
chance of rain is 80 percent.
Wednesday: Variable cloudl· between 8!\ and 90 Saturday.
ness, with a slight chance of Early morning lows wlll ,range
showers during the morning. from the upper 50s to the lower
Highs will be in the middle 80s .. 60s Thursday and Friday and In
the 60s Saturday.

''SUMMER TIME FUN"

PBD.. DIRT AND DOZB88 DAY DESIGNATED - Pomeroy
Mayor Rlcllard Seyler ltu pnclalmed Monday, July 3, as PhD Dirt
aad Ole Boars Day In Pomerll)'. le)'ler Ia ufllng realdenlll and
merebaatl to well' IIO'a aad 18'1 style clothlar on that · day, In
aatleipiiUoa of the July • PhD Dirt and lhio Dozers concert In
Pomeroy, Tile concert wlllatart at 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy Football
ll1eld. o\dvaaee tickets are on sale for S7 each. Tickets may alae he
purelta&amp;edat tile rate, which wlllopeaat 7:30p.m., forte each. The
concert Ia belnl apouored by the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commeree. Wltlt the mayor Ia Leaay Ella8on, chamber member
aad owaer-mllll8(er of WMPO radio, who has been actively
Involved In the coDCert preparations.
,

May indicators
down 1.2 percent
~ASHINGTON CUJ'I) -The
"It's still too early to say If we
~
:san.,_ ; II Ol,;tt.!lli'·-1~1H1vlllg~~&lt;lltlttlandtng,"

PEPSI

DIET PEPSI

CAPRI.

FIR PIPSI

7-·

PURCHASE A 2 UTER
BOrnE OF YOUR CHOICE
PLUS A PACKAGE OF
KEEBLER PRETZR BRAIDS
OR KNOTS FOR

S149
"WHILE SUPPLIES LAST"

Prescription Shop
271 NORTH
SECOND AVE.

992-6669
IWIIIDLEPORT,
OHIO

The Public Is Invited To This FREE Concert
'••

Bring Your Folding Chairs For An Evening of Relaxation
·
and BeautHLil Sounds.

BANKEONE.

Eighteen Thousand People Jfho Care~
lANK ONE. ATHENS, NAIA PAIIT 01 THI CAlliNG TIAII
'
lhelra. 011/o M t - FDIC
,

2 Soctiona. 16 Pogn 25 Conti
A ·M uttimedillnc. NeWJPIIP•

June 28, i989

Residents skeptical. of
Ohio EPA proposal

~SHOWERS

A.Qt

Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

•

selected

Ohio.

Thursday, June 29- 7:00P.M.
.

Ohio Lottery

•

:BANK ONE PROUDLY PRESENTS

She Ill survived by two sons,
Johr) B. Ralke of Columbus and
Dana M. Ralke of GalllpoUI and
three grandchildren.
She was a member of the Fair
Haven Methodist Church, WSCS
and CIC of Fair Haven Methodlat
Church. ·
Services will be Wednelday, 2
p.m. at the Fair Haven Methodist Church with the Rev. Debbie
Foa1er offlclattna. Burial will be
In the Mound Hlll Cemetery.
Friends may call Tul!lday, 6 to
9 p.m. at the Waueh·Halley-Wood
Funeral Home. The body will lie
In state at the c:burcb one bour
prior to the service.

Ellison

Page3

Stocks

--Area deaths-Lena Raike

where the mercury reached 94
degrees and officials declared a

Announcements

Plant closes; 1,050 out of jobs
HARRIMAN, Tenn. (UP!) Kayser-Roth Hosiery says It Is
closing Its Harriman factory by
Sept. 8, throwing1 ,050employees
out of work, because of operating
losses and a major contract
cancellation.
Waiter : Pilcher, president of
the Greensboro, N.C ., company,
said in a letter announcing the
closing that the plant's problems
are too large to overcome.
"We have been experiencing
production problems and opera!·
ing losses for many months,"
Pilcher said, adding that the
company had hoped to work
througll the difficulties.
•'Then last week, the canceila·
tion of a major portion of the
plant's business dashed those
expect a(Ions and made it a
business necessity to close the
Harriman operation," Pilcher
said. "Last week's developments
made It Imperative that we
Immediately take this step."

27. 1989

Midwest thunderstornts replace Allison

Education hill, budget
conference report ready
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -A
state budget and an education
reform bill carrying the remains
of Gov. Richard Celeste's lnitla·
tlve to improve public schools
are to emerge at the Statehouse
Tuesday,
A six-member House-Senate
conference commit tee on the
$26.6 billion budget for 1990-91
scheduled a 10 a.m. public
meeting to unveil the results of
nearly three weeks of work
behind closed doors.
And a House Education sub·
committee is to put the finishing
touches on the Senate-passed
education reform bili and pass it
on to (he full committee, which
scheduled a 10 a.m. meeting.
Both bills are expected to
reacl) the House floor Wednesday
or Thursday. The Senate must
also ratify them.
The House was to meet at 11
a.m. and the Senate at 1:30 p.m.
Budget conferees met Sunday
and Monday evenings to finish.
their negotiations. There were
, three items to be completed,
according to the conferees, none
of which were expected to
present serious difficulties.
One Involved the collection of
back sales taxes on gold bullion
- a $7 million revenue Item for
the state. Another had to do with
a pilot jobs project for distressed
areas of the slate. The third
involved a compromise on llmlt·
lng public assistance for able·
bodied males between the ages of
19 and 25.

Tue~lllly.June

Pomaov-Middleport. Ohio

ecomnlcatftJiith.tunteddowna
·sharp 1.2 percent last month,
more than eraalng an Aprtl surge
and confirming the economy Is
slowing, the Commerce Depart·
ment said Wednesday.
It was the biggest monthly
decllneslnceal.8percentdropln
November 1987 In the Index of
Leadlng Indicators, which tracks
11 key signposts of economic
activity. Moat experts had expeeled a down tum . after a re-· v!Jed 9.6 percent jump in April
and aovermnent reports earlier
this month abowlng slow growth
In new jobs, sluggish retail sales
and a big drop In durable goods
orders 'In May.
Tbe report was not necessarily
ba.d news, economists
emphasized.
''For the country It is probably
good news. At thla stage of the
expe.nslon, the economy needs to
take a breather for a few
quarters,'' said David Wyss, an
economist with the Data Resour·
ces Inc. consulting finn In
Lexington, Mass.
,
"It Ia dlaturbiq how· wldes·
pread the decline was. There Is
no one Indicator that you can
point to and say It caused the
decline, but I don't think we are
beadlq for a recession," Wyss
said.
The Federal Reserve Board
has sought to engineer a "soft
landing" for the economy, push·
lng up short·tenn ln1erest rates
to slow lnfiatlon at the ume time
lt tries to avoid a rec:esalpn. The
lradual slowdown reflected by
the recent government reports
Indicates the Fed may be
succeeding.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Some of the citizens w·ho turned
out for Tuesday night's public
hearing to discuss a proposed
wastewater treatment system
for Rutland, expressed skepti·
clsm of the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency's Judgment In
drawing the boundaries for the
planning art:!a. Some residents
are wondering why EPA dld not
include all nearby housing devel·
opments In the Rutland area.
They feel If the additional developments had been added to the
affected circle of properties,
construction, operation and
maintenance costs could be
lowered.
Tuesday's meeting was held at
the Rutland Civic Center with
approximately 25 people In at·
tendance, Including village offi·
cials; Kent Baker, of Engineer·
Jng Associates, Wooster; and
Kimball Shields, Meigs County
Director of Development. Baker
outlined the proposed treatment
system before 11penlng the meet·
ing to questions from the au·
' dlence. This was the second
public hearing on the project.
The first was held June 6, also at
the civic center.
,. 'l'be ,e¥1atlna;.-.pla~ID8 area .lls,..
an area slightly larger than the

said Lawrence Chlmer!ne, chief
economist for the WEFA Group
of consultants In Baia Cynwyd,
Pa. ·'In a month or two the
economy could start rebounding
sharply."
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Fed reportedly has been Ohio House and Senate conferees
divided in recent weeks about Tuesday released a compromise
whether to ease interest rates $26.7 billion state budget for
because of the evidence of fiscal 1990-91 that 'Spends $340
economic slowdown; some busi·
million more than either of the
ness groups, Including the U.S.
two chambers originally
Chamber of Commerce, have
approved .. ,
urged easter credit to promote
The new spending document
accelerated growth.
will go to the floor of the House
So far this year, the govern·
and Senate Wednesday for cerment's leading Indicators have
tain approval. It must be enacted
declined at an annual rate of 0.3
by midnight Friday.
' "
percent compared with a 4.5
The additional .spending was
percent gain for all of 1988.
made possible by recent projec·
Thelndexhashadtwomonthly
!Ions by the state Office of Budget
gains this year, 0.8 percent in
and Management that revenues,
January and the 0.6 percent in
April, andd three declines, 0.4
percent in February, 0.6 percent
In March and now the 1.2 percent
in May. By .comparison, the
ALBANY - There was a
Index dropped on a monthly basis number of firsts for Southern
only three times In 1988. ,
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs No.2
Breaking down Wednesday's mine at the Third Annual Mine
report, the department said 9 of Rescue Contest sponsored by the
the 11 indicators dec linea In 1\fay. Holmes Safety Association's Sou·
They Included the money supply, theastern Ohio District Council.
sensitive material prices the
The event, held at the Perry
consumer expectations l~dex, County Fairgrounds In New
vendor performance and the Lexington, was the team's first
average workweek.
mine rescue contest of the
The two IndiCators that gained season. The Meigs No. 2 team
were stock prices and building was the first onto the field. And
permits.
when It was all over, the Meigs
Meanwhile, the government's No. 2 team took borne the first
Index of coincident Indicators,
place trophy.
designed to show how the econ·
The main purpose of a mine
omy · Is doing at the moment,
rescue contest is to give the
dropped 0.2 percent In May after , teams an opportunity to sharpen
a 0.4 percent gain In Aprtl.
their efficiency In mine rescue
procedures. Although ella! mine
dlsas ters have been reduced in
recent years, rescue team
members are on call 24 hours a
day to answer the needs of the
Industry.
Besides a written examination,
team
members, wearing IBfety
Janice H. Davlll, 32, Pomeroy, suffered a minor visible InJury
equipment
and breathlq appa·
In an accident at 1: 19 p.m. Tuesday In Melgl County, on TR 158,
ratWI
welghlq
up to 35 pounds,
near Alfred, 0.6 of a mile south of SR. 681. She was not
fl!Spond
to
a
mock
dlsas ter on
Immediately t reated.
fields
laid
out
to
represent
an
The Melp·Gallla Post, State Hlpway Patrol said Davis' 1983
underground mine.
Datsun Klnacab pickup truck and a 1985 Chevrolet Blazer
driven by Jon R. Dillard, M, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, collided on a
Tbe latter portion ~f the
curve. There was l110derate damage to both vehicles. '
competition Ia graded by the
Tlse patrol cited Dlllard for failure to yield one half of the
amount of time It taket the team
roadway.
to complete the problem, and by
the number of dlac:oUlltl, or
procedural erron, that judps
.
lind .
Membera of tltl&amp; year'a Melgl
Two were filled and a1x othen forfeited bondlln the court of
M~ Mayor Fred Bouman 'l'ualday arpt.
No. 2 team are IIIII Starlrey or
Troy Faeemtre. Galllpolll, $10 and COIZIB, weaving
, Jackson, Jerry Kpvacb of Glous·
coura, and Mlehael R. Glllril!y, Pomeroy, 1110 and costa,
l8r, Terl')' StateD of Wellaton,
flnlllelal rillr.IIIIPftllOD.
Mlllil il(:otto of Atbenl. Clar·
l'orfelllnl bolllla were Denzil L. Welah, Jr., Middleport, U!IO,
eDCe
lllaJm pf ~~t.
Randy 011 of SyraCIIIII, David
on D'WI aDd .., 011 l'lllllllna a atop lip; Bobby Lee Jellva,
Huntlqtcm. W. Va., N6, apeedl111; Roland E. WW, Rlltlaltd,IIIO
S1t1nn of l'obtt Plealant, W.Va.
011 ao motorcycle endOneme~~t; VIncent Staae, R11tlaDd, ..,, for
and Dave Petenon of Rutland,
alllowlq all Ullllcellled penon operate hilt vehicle; Sara
the te.-nt' a trainer.
,
Eric Grfllzka of S;outhern Ohio
Qmtlllued 011 pqe 16
Coal's Raecooll No.3 mine. came

village itself, Baker explained. It
includes ail the village, and then
extends north and south to
Include nearby clusters of
homes. EPA established this
area based on what they felt
should be treated at one central
plant, said Baker. The entire
planning area encompasses approximately 875 acres, he added.
As explained by Baker, proposed plans call for "an alternative system," called "an extended aeration package plant,"
which classifies the system for 75
percent EPA funding. A system
Is classlfl't'l by EPA as an
alternative, said Baker, when It
differs from conventional sewage disposal methods, but has
been proven to work at reduced
energy costs. EPA funding for
conventional systems only goes
as high as 55 percent, Baker said.
The anticipated cost tor the
collection system Is $1.3 million;
$309,000 for the treatment system; $82 in contingency; $409,000
for engineering, legal and adml·
nlstrative costs; for a "total
anticipated cost of $2.3 million, "
according to Baker. Of that total.
$1.3 million Is anticipated from
EPA, with Rutland left to pick up
the remaining $837,000.
An-•applkatl.on bas ~ already_
been submitted to EPA • for

construction funding for the
proposed Rutland project. This is
the final year for all such EPA
grants and It would appear that
about 20 proposed project~ may
be funded by the state agency
before the grant ,program is
eliminated in 1990. Rutland's ·
grant application could be listed
as high as eighth on the EPA Ust
for possible funding.
Should EPA approve the Ru·
tland project, and if Rutland
residents are in favor of the
project, a grtnder pump would be
Installed at each home or busl·
ness within the affected area,
Baker said. Inside the grinder
pump are cutters which shred
whatever comes Into the pump.
The shredded material is then.
forced out of the pump, into
sewage lines. and carried under
pressure to a treatment plant
which would be located on the
other side of Leading Creek from
the civic center, on an approxl·
mately 26-acre parcel of land
which ls already owned by the
village.
The existing population in the
affected area, based upon the
1980 census, ,)s 737, Baker said.
Building units in the area
number 272 residential, 26 com·
.merctal.nd.l3 ..1nslltutlonal The ~
median household Income ln the

area Is $14,460. ·
Before selecting a system to
meet Rutland's needs, an lndepth
study of the environment was
conducted. In analyzing soils, it
was determined that soils In the
affected area are not suitable for
on-site systems.
Tests also indicate there Is
contamination from waste water
In streams, storm sewers and
ground water in the area.
Other environmental conpi·
tlons were also investigated
including the geology, archeol·
ogy, physical charaterlstlcs and
land use in the area.
Following the environmental
studies, engineers reviewed exis tlng wastewater systems and
how they function. Rutland VII·
!age Council conducted a door to
door survey of exis tlng systems
and received an '. 85 percent
response to the survey, which
Baker described as an extremely
good response.
According to statts tics from
the survey, approxlmaely 40
percent of the systems in the
affected area of Rutland have
septic .. tanks and leach fields,
Baker said. Another 35 percent
have septic tanks only and the
remaining 26 percent is a split
b.etween...v~WI.olbv. avallabl"
Continued on page i&amp;
,

Final vote on Ohio budget slated today
earmarked for those purposes.
The conferee!/ placed a ceiling
on tuition increases at state
universities of ,6 percent or $120 a
year, whichever is greater.
,"It's a balanced budget," said
Rep. William Hlnig, D-New Phi·
!adelphia, chairman of the conference committee that worked
out ,the settlement privately
durtng the last three weeks.
"I'm pleased with the budget,' '
said Lee Walker, director of the
Office ,of Budget and Management. "They made a big step
forward in education. Now we
can begtn·education reform."

particularly personal Income
taxes, wlll be. more plentiful than
believed last November.
Of the new money, $127 million
will be spent on primary and
secondary education, $67 million
on higher education, and $30
m lilian to take care of Increasing
welfare caseloads.
Gov. Richard Celeste also wlll
receive a portion of the education
Initiative he sought '- a $90
million education Improvement
funds for public preschool, reme·
dial programs, Head Start and
dropout Intervention. A total of
$45 million of the new money IS

Walker also expressed Salis·
faction that the conference comml.ttee set aside $31 milllon tor
drug and alcohol recovery services programs, and restored $28 .
million In Senate cuts to Celeste's
eldercare programs.
Statehouse iobbyls ts exuber·
ant over the Influx of additional
money scrambled for spread
sheets showing the changes. In
an unusual display, they loudly
applauded the conference committee and staff.
Sen. Theodore G~~Y, R·
Columbus, the senior c®{erence
Continued on page 16

Meigs. Mine No. 2 claims rescue contest
In second in the benchman
competition while Tom (T.J.)
Ferrel took third place. Gryszka
is from A!hens and Ferrel is from
Rutland.
The benchman's contest is
designed to test sklllln detecting
problems or flaws with the
equipment used by mine rescue
team members.

With two breathing appara·
tuses used for the contest,
participants are asked to vlsu·
ally inspect one of them ,and to
Inspect the other by using a
testing system. Both negative
and positive pressure tests are
applied to detect leaks In the
second apparatus.
The meet, judged by members

WonuJn hurt in Tuesday wreck

Six bonds forfeited in court

were

f•

Po\B'DC...ANTS -

e(

11.-et- Olllo CJoal Comp&amp;Q'I Melp No. I Ollsse
resc•e te1111 11ft lllowss at work In aa area of a
mock :nlsse .. plll1 of the Tlslrd Annual Mlae
\lo

~

.

;

of the Mine Safety and Health
Administration and the Ohio ,.
Division of Mines, was. the first of
six contests that AEP Fuel
Supply teams will attend this
summer.

The team with the best record
at the end of the season will
represent AEP Fuel Supply at
the National Mine Rescue Con·
test at Lousivllle In September.

�.

..
.'

.

.

.

•

.
•

.

.

..

Conunentary

'

'

.•

The Daily Setit.iriel
IS!m~

q,l!'

.

""-'..._.....,..,""-...i..
.
.
. .
'

ROBERT L. WINGETr .

CBULENJ: BOEFUCH

Plabllaller

Gelleral M•n. .er

PAT WBli'EBEAD ·
ANII&amp;ant Publltber/Coatroll~
.
A M£MIIE8 ol The A......ded rr-IIIJ:MdDIIIiJ ,.._~
ddiGa llllclllle AmerlcaD .New t Fill' l'llblllbert Ailed.....
I.ETIDI8 OJ' OPINION ore welcome. 'l1oq ollaoold be leu ta. . .
wordl Joq. All.....,. are
to lldliilll_. _.be ...... wD

••Jed

lie.,..

UIM4. Lelten ..... lle.ID ..... tllle, . . . -.11-,Mtperll •IL

I

u..

•

•

"Say it ain't so' Pete

•

'
.
main focus of dlacutlton. The
PalestiDlaJII In the territories
oeeuplecl by Iarael-allle!! tbelll7
war felt !pored and abandoned.
''We were on thebackburnm'ud
we knew It," the vUiqe leader
llld. "So we knew we bad to take
the movement Into our own
bands."
On Nov. 10. rampaiiDI rl&amp;bt·
wtna Jewish settlera, avenging a
stone-throwing Incident, fired on
an Arab hlp scbool ID Gaza. A
17-year:old Palestinian llrt'wu
abot In the back and ldlled.
On·Nov. 25, aPal•tllllan~P"QUp
staged a darlnl raid via bang
lllders Into Israeli Wrrttory, ·
emboldeniDI the PalastlnlaDa In
the terrttarlea ud sbclwlnl a
chink ID tbe armiir of Iarael. SIX
Israeli soldier were killed.
That rald was by the Popular
· Front tor the LlberatiDD of
Palestlne-Geural Command
headed by Ahmed Jlbrll. He told

us In a recent lntervliiW that he
belieVed the bang lllder attack
cretlted the Intifada. He had
pictures on bls wall oi the two
men wbo voluldeered for and
llled on tbe mltston. Jtbrills now
the chief suspect In the·bomblng
of Pan Am Flight l03on Dec. 21.
· Jlllrlt flatters himself to· think
be started the IDtlfada. The real
apark wu another rumor. On
Dec. 8, an Iaraell army truck
collided wltb several vans In
Gaza. Four Arabs died and 17
were Injured. The rumor spread
like wllclftre that tilt 11'11Ck
deliberately rammed tbe va111 In
reprltal tor J11e s~hllme. ot an
lii'Hll aallilman In Gaza twp
clays befllre. ·
,, · ', .
Protetta and rlotiDC brclke out ·
ID Gaza the next day and have
CCIIItiDIIId vlrtuaiiy nntWed
The belbmiDI wu aponta•-.
but the Intifada bu been an
orpnlred uprising 'Since then.

made."

McEnroe claims
first round match
•
tn Wim:bledon play

Whose 'People's ·. . Republic'?--:--_Sa11___,uh_Ove~rst_ree_t

utters to the 'editor

Blit the lllteneases end there
be!:ause of the very Ideal the
atudents were demonatratlng
for: Democracy, .a ayatem· of
eovernment that · upholds , and
protects freedom of expression
and belief, exltta bere In Amer·
lea. 1n China, the patience for
such expressiOn runs abort.
There, they send the tanks to
crusll you to ·d eath.
1n China, ·the diuenten who
were not a18ugbtered were
rounded up an6 jailed. China's
leaders proved which people the
"People'• Republic" serves those wbo toe the party IIDe.
How must the mauacre of
these brtgbt youne peopll! affect
the older Chln.e who foupt In
·the people'• revolution, believing
It would bring the equality and
progrea they wanted? It wu an
act that ml&amp;ht have been ex·
pectlld from troopa loyal to the
Kuornlntang regime that the

PeOple's Liberation Army overand carried out the . brutal
threw ~n 1949, but not from tbe
suppression.
PLA. Tbls time, 'their children
In the daya to follow, I hope the
and grandchildren were' being Images of BlOOdy Sunday remain
killed by . a aovernment that
burned Into our hearts: the snarl
theoretically stood for them. Not
of crushed bodies. and bicycles;
even I!ID&amp;e who most r~ently grown men sobbing as they
embraced communism during recount the massacre for repor·
ters; the rubbl!! of white atyro.
the revolution can jutlfy such a
slauebter or their children.
foam and pluter left' after tatlks
In the coming months an~ roUed over the studeltt·buUt
years, we wm learn the effeCt .. ' Godden of Democracy.
that Bloody Sullllay bu bad on
Even the experts can't predict
the political hearts of the Chi· what wW bapJIIII In China next;
nese. Decades have passed since Indeed, noneoftllem were able to
the American clvU rights move- predict the calallropbe that has
ment and peace dernonstrattona. ha)&gt;pened already. Even If the
We who participated or em- Chin- aovernmen.t manages to
braced the Ideals beblnd the emerce with Its eco110my and
actions -have already expe- worlclatandlng moetly IDtact, we
rlenced the many emotlona of tile will never again 1ee them In the
rest of the country - from same light. From Bloody Sunday
sympathy and undl!rttantllng for on, we wltl always be reminded
the students to bewltderment at that It's not technology or ecothe coune of eventa to Contempt nomic success that distinguishes
and hatred for thoee wbo ordered our system from theirs.
'

toWn-

PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (NJ:A)
- "Everybody Ia tlllt
wantl 1 ·Job bu ....," IIIYB Roy
Bur... the maapr of tilt A6P
IUperrnan,l bin wlla !Miatalnt a CODitaDt but liP'I')T fUtile
IUI'Cb tor'-JIIOIJI
toltoct the
atore'a abelvee and clledt out ltl

cutamen. ·

''Tbae's'jlllt 1111t a wllole lot of
people arourl." aadl aa exuperated Butlll, "e »I fnr tiiOie
just releued from priJGD, metal lnvalldl and people with
llldal probltaia -- u4 tllere's
really Dot . . .,. of them
r

available."
, Altlloqll ....
llrawn. lllaf·

cbaraetal I'

,.bat

aver·

the atate with the lowell Job._.
rate. Oilier New Eaglud commallldii-IDdlldlnglhlrllqton,
Vt.; Stamlord, Conn.; Nubua,
N.H. and Portland, Maine rep1u'ly compete with Porta-moutb for the bolD' of NC • 'lng
the Jowett rate of any metropolitan area In the country.
Tbe coaventtonal wltdom
balds tllat low unemployment It a
1011 toward which aoctety tbould
ttrtve- but full employment hal
Ita IIIPtlve upects, ma.t nota·
bly Ita tladlftcy to pnmatllraly
111ft tMugerw Into tbe work

toree.

ex

the etpt a1a1a1 m wlltcb
til ...,.. have the Matnt partlefllatlrln ralaiiD the 1111or Ioree,

fllurareNewEJII)IIIChatllwltb
I pla:t-t,...- Nfto
VMUIDilt, IUiade [a.

(New

In the

Not lone .,o, parents were the
rirst line of clef- aaalntt that
daapr to botb their younptera
ud the economy. But today, In
many famWet wboae IJudlet Is
atretclled to the brnklnl poiDt
even wttb both parentl warklng,
the addltiDD of another wageearner Is tolerated If not
encouraged.
WCII'Idq tecagera may not
directly pay family e:rpen·•· but
tlley are leea likely to beleecb
their parenta for expense money

Robert Walters
- and that can be Important at a
time when real bourly wages
have declined 3.5 percent In a
decade. .
Wltb parents abancloalng their
traditional role, a greater burden
Is placed upoa the Labor Department compliance officers assl&amp;Ded to enforce the federal
child labor laws. Durlllg the past
till yean, the number of vlolatlonl they have cited nationally ·
bu more than doubled.

Today in history

.,

8)' United Prftalnterllailoul
Today Is Wednesday, June 28, the 179th day of 1989 with 186 to
f9Uow.
The moon Is wanlne. moving toward Itt new phase.
The mornlnlttara are Mercury, Jupher and Sat urn.
'l'lle I!Vlllllllg atarl are Venus IUid Man. '
Tllole born oa 1ldl date are under tllf alp or Cancer. They lnclud&lt;'
EngliA Klq Henry Vln In 18l, nl!lllllb painter Peter Paul Rubens
In 15'/T, EIJI)Itll deJ'IYIIWI Jolm Wasley, founder of Methodlam. tn
1103, French pllllnlopber Jean·Jacq•.Jtouaeau In 1712, composer
Jtlcbanl Rod&amp;*' a IUid bank robber Jo,IID Dillinger, both In 1802, spy
IIO'olelllt Er.le Ambler In 1901, ftlmmaller IUid comadian Mel Brookt In
1111 (apil31, aacl .c:omediiD Ollila ftadller Itt 1946.
.

.

' o. eta .-talllltorr.

Ellison Is ex!lllcted to bring
scoring, defense and reboundlnl
to a team that bas not made the
playoffs since 191!6 and bas been
mired In the lottery three of the
last five years.
"I think they were looking for a
guy who Is capable of of doing all
phases of the , game well," he
"I'm happy that this partoflt Is
said. "I may not be great tn any over," said Ferry, who at the
one phase, bull don't think I have oulaet had been considered a No.
.
any weaknesses.''
1 selection. " I'm not 100 percent
The draft, limited to two sure that I'll be with the Clippers.
rounds tor the first time ever, You nl!\ter know with trades, I'll
was televised In prime time, with •sleep better tomorrow night."
an es drnated crowd of2,400at the
Oklahoma's Stacey King, at
Felt Forum In Madison Square 6-10 was the ftrst ofthree centers
Garden. The Kings kept the taken In the first round when the
·s uspense at a high pitch to the Chicago Bulls used the first of
last minute by ~fUsing to name three first-round selections to
.their pick beft&gt;re the draft.
take him sixth.

In lTJB, tile Colltlnenlll Army Wider eommand of Gen. Georee
W•llfllmft dl8ittwf tile Brltlill It MoiiiiiOIItb. N.J .
"'
I
S

CINCINNATI (UPI) - In a
deposition released to the public
Tuesday, Pete Rose vigorously
denle.d the conclusion of a baseball lnvesdgator that evidence
shows the baseball legend used
mlddll!men to gamble on baseball games. ·
"Nobody bets major ,league
baseball for me," Rose told
Investigator John Dowd during
an Interview two months ago.
The 3511-page deposition, taken
April 20-21 by Dow~~. wu among
eight volumes of material eathered by Dowd In hts gambling
Investigation of Rose. Dowd
presented his report to baseball
Commltatoner A. Bartlei Glamatti six weeks aeo abd the Ohio
Supreme Court ordered ·u. released to the public Tuesday.
"Pete Rose has .d!Cd under
oath ever betdng on major
league bueball or · uaoclatlng
with anyone who bet on major
league baseball," Dowd
reported.
"However. the Investigation
has developed evidence to the
contrary. Tbe tesdmony and the
documentary evidence gathered
In the course of the lnvesdgation
demonstrates that Pete Rose bet
on baseball, and In pardcular, on
games of the Cincinnati Reds
during the 1985, 1986 and 1987
seasons.
"With few exceptions, Rose did
not deal directly with bookmakers but rather placed bls bets
through others. During the 1985
and 1986 sesons, Rose placed bets
on baseball with Ron Peters, a
bookmaker In Franklin, Ohio.
Although Rose placed hts bets
with Peters primarily thrqh
Tommy Gtolo8a, on several occasions Rose placed bets on baseball games, Including Clnclnllatl
Reds games, directly with
Peters.''
Wh lie tqklng the deposition,
Dowd specifically uked Rose
about allegations made by Peters that he handled Rose's

WIMBLEDON, England
" I'm happy I won, butltwon't
(UP!) - John McE nroe rallied meananythlngtflgooutandlose
from two sets down for the first the next match, " he said. "The
time . In his career ·Tuesday · to Idea Is to win the tournament. As
avoid a first-round toss to Darren far as I'm concerned talk Is
Cahlll' on a day rain paid a cbeap and the next ro•Jnd ts
familiar vis it to the Wimbledon , another match. · Let's face It, I
Championships.
coutd'have easily been cut of the
The three- time Wimbledon tournament.''
McEnroe, guilty of 16 doubleconjured some of the magic from
his vintage years to down his faults, seemed destined to make
Australian opponent 4-6, 4.-6, 6-2, his earliest Wimbledon exit since
6·3, 8-6, earning a standing Erik van Dtllen dispatched .him
ovation from a packed center· In the opening round In 19'18.
court crowd of 14,500.
But the pendulum swuilg when
''I don't ever remember com- he broke for a 2·0 lead In the third
tng back from two sets down." set with a stinging forehand down
.McEnroe said after his 3-hour, the line. The left·hander then
22·mlnute match. " In the past I delivered a blistering array or
guess I wasn't putJn that position backhand passes which brought
very often, "
him decisive breaks In the sixth
·The victory by the 30-year·old game of the fourth set and the
New Yorker at the $5.3 million 13th of the · last set before
tournament overshadowed the finishing It off In style with two•
women' s opening day In which consecutive aces.
the top lour seeds - Steff! Graf,
The run-away victories by the
Martina Navrattlova, Gabriela top women underlined the gap
Sabatini and Chris Evert - won between the elite and the
in straight sets.
mediocre.
Zlna Garrison, the No. 5 seed
Graf, whoendedNavratllova's
from Houston, beat Japan's run of six consecutive Wlm·
Ktmiko Date 6-1, 6-2 In a . bledon titles last year, needed
only 50 minutes to drop Britain's
rain-Interrupted match .
Among the m en, No. 8 Tim Julie Salmon 6-1, 6-2 on center
Mayotte defeated Paolo Cane of court.
Playing her first match since
Italy 7-6 (7·2). 6-0, 6-1 and No. ll
Brad Gilbert fought from a she lost to Spain's Arantxa
two-set' defec t! to tie It 2·2 with Sanchez In the French Open
Australia ' s John Fitzgerald final , the world's No. 1 female
when play was halted fortheday. player was justifiably pleased
Cahill reached the se mifinals with her performance.
at last year's U.S. Open. McEn·
"I thought It was pretty good
roe lost to another Aussie, Wally for the first match on the grass
Masur, In the second round of last court and center court," the
year's Wimbledon.
· ,
20-year-otd West German said.
" I'm sick of losing to Austral· "I had a very good and strong
tans. " McEnroe said.
· second serve, just the first one
McEnroe, th e No. 5 seed, won was not constant enough. At
Wimbledon In 1981, 1983 and 1984. practice It's coming awfully
He was phllosophlcal a bout his well.''
great escape.
Navratilova. chasing a record
ninth Wimbledon triumph , was
relegated to No.1 court where the ------Sports
32-year·old
American outplayed
Sporl8 briefs
· Canada's Jlll Hetherington. 6-3,
BMkelball
6-2.
The World Basketball League
. Auto R,aclng
The · veteran left·hander Is
All-Star game, matching the
The overturned dlsqualtflca·
determined
'
·to
recapture
her
ahamp)on Las Vegu Silver
ttoris of drivers Thierry Boutsen
'Wimbledon
crown,
having
against stars fr!IIYI the
Streak&amp;
and Alex Ca ffl from the Aprll 23
missed
the
French,
Italian
and
rest
of
thl!
league, will be played
Grand Prllc of San Marino were
German
Opens
to
concentrate
on
July
12
at
Lu
Vegu, Nev.
upheld by the Italian Automobile
.
Foollall
grass-court
tactics.
Club. Tbedrtvers~te penalized
"I felt I needed to ta~e some
West VJrelnla University quarfor changing tires while waiting
time
off," she said. "l had a great
terback Major Harrla bu flied a
to re-start after an accident but
federal civil rllhls ault agalnat
the disqualification · was lifted run-up on the grass, so I am
happy with where I am now."
the city of Plttabureb, clalmlne
after an appeal.
Sabatini, the No. 3 seed from
he was beaten and arret ted two
Argendna, routed Dianne Balles·
year• ago followlne a atruggle
Bt~~~eball
Jury deliberations began Tues- trat of Australia 6-1, 6-0. No. 4 between pollee and a crowd of
more than 1!10 people leavlne a
day In the trial of a suit flied Evert, a three-time champion
party. ... A $300.000 atatue or
against New York· Yankees out- making her 18th consecutive
fielder · Dave Winfield by his Wimbledon appearance, dis·
Ptttsburab Steelen founder Art
Rooney Is to be lnatalled at Three
former ' uve-tn gtrlfrlenCI Sandra patched American compatriot
Peanut
Louie
Harper
6·1,
6-1
.
Rivers
Stadium. clurlllg the 1990
Renfro, who- claimed the two
season. Rooney died lalt year.
were Involved In a common,law
marriage. ...
Prestdellt Bush
plans to atte nd Wednesday
night's Orioles game In Baltl·
rpore against Toronto with his
grandson, George P. Bush. .. .
Betty Speziale of Fredonia, N.Y. ,
wlll become the first woman
umpire In the Little League
World Series when she works the
43rd Little Le ague World Series,
which begins Aug. 22 at WiiUams57 acl'ft ef ..... wltll 11 I ,...., fnt ~
port, Pa .... Paul Russo of Tampa
hoUit paa 111111,
llulik
hr
University hit a two-run homer In
the ninth Inning Monday night to
••n lilfor11-- -- _. te Itt ., •
give the U.S. national Team a 3·1
llpptlnt....t, CORtact ScMt •• I ftl·lltl
victory over the Japanese na·
1Kitwntlit..,eftlll . .
!tonal team In Bend, Ore.

PUIUC AUCnON

Satunlay,a ht, UhOO AM. ,
On Happy
w ld. In l•tt.d

=:tell·

•

Though listed as a center, tn
the fluid world of the NBA he may
play more forward than pivot.
'1 wlll play anywhere they
want me to play," King llld. "U
they want me to play guard, I will
play guard."
With the seventh pick, Indiana
took the first of 11 guards to be
~lected, tabbing 6·7 George
McCloud from F1orlda State.
By position, 13 forwards , 11
guards and three centers were
taken In the first round. The Big
Ten had five players taken, the
Paclflc-10 had four and the Big 8
had three In the first round.
Louisville, Arizona, Oklahoma,
nttnots and Iowa each had two
players taken In the opening
round.
The remainder of the draft was
as follows :
8, Dallas, Randy White, 6-8,
forward, Lo!ilslana Tech. 9,
Washington, Tom Hammonds,
6-9, forward, Georgia Tech. 10,
Minnesota, Pooh Richardson,
6-1, guard, UCLA. 11, Orlando,
Nick Anderson, 6-6, forward,
lltlnols. 12, New Jersey (from
Portland), Mookte Blaylock, 6-1,
guard, Oklahoma. 13, Boston,
Michael Smith, 6-10, forward,
Brigham Young. 14, GQlden
State, Tim Hardaway, 5·11,
guard, Texas EI·Paso.
15, Denver, Todd Licht!, 6-4,
guard, Stanford. 16, Seattle
(from Houston through Golden
State) , Dana Barros, 5-11, guard,
Boston College. l7, Seattle (from
Philadelphia) Shawn Kemp, 6-10 ·

Deposition shows Reds' Pete Rose
denies baseball gambling allegaJions

I

.·Bad news about good news on jobs

Ellison Is considered one of the
most premising frontcourt players among the clan of 1989. He ts
the only Loullvllle player to total
both 2,000 points (2,143) and 1,000
rebounds (1,149) In a career.
•'Wayman Tisdale will play
center u he did last year," said
Sacramento Coach Jerry Rey .
nolds, "Pervls can play both
Inside and outside, and he can
give Wayman some relief. . He
can play a lot of places."
The draft , considered deep In
forwards and guards, lived liP to
expectations In the first round.
The first five picks - In order,
Ellison; 6-10 Danny Ferry of
Duke to the LA Clippers; 6-8 Sean
Elliott of Arizona to San Antonio;
6-7 Glen Rice of Michigan to
Miami; and 6-9 J .R. Reid of
North Carolina - were all
forwards.
Ferry. whose father Bob Is !he
general manager of theWashtngton Bullets, hinted that the
maneuvering may not ~ completed with the 1989 draft.

'"

'

During the first weeks of
student demonstratton. In China,
some obRrvers were comparlne
the proteatl to Amertcu atudent
uprltlnga ot the •eo.; many
amoDg the atudenta even ulced
American reporten If their actions were like those of our ctvn
·rl&amp;blt or uti-war 11111Ve111enta.
• It wu a roinantlc comparilon,
and not without Its almllarltles:
There, u here, Idealistic youne
adults etlgaged In clvlt disobedience In the hope of fo~clng
dialogue with the powen. thatbe.
Even u the drama turned
tragic, there were slmllarltles:
There were acta of · extreme
rating with flowers, and Jerry bravery u the 1 ,...._t1 resittid·,
Dear Editor:
•.,....
The officers of the Rutland Black of the Civic Center for his
endleaa
work
before
and
after
the
·
.
other
cltlzena,
reluctant
at flrat,
Alumni Association would like to
b
.,.
d 11 ho hal
joined them In both plli1a.opby
thank all of the businesses whO · anqu~.., an a w
ped In
and action; ttudenta were Illd&lt;inated to the.· Annual Alumni any way·
jured and even lcltled for what
Thank You
, __ _,
dinner·and dance on May 27th.
DQttle
Turner,
they
bet........
ln. Y•, on tile
We would also like to thank the
Treuurer student tide, there. are many
Rutland Garden Clubs for decoparallala.
.

Berry s World

"I wasn't t-hat nervous," said
Ellison, nicknamed 'Never Nervous.' "I think all the guys were
waiting for the decision to be

' RETURNS VOLLEY - Argendna's Gabriela Sabatini returns
volley through her legs during Tuesday's action In a first round
Wimbledon match against Dianne. Balestrat. ( UPI)

Pete."

'

NEW YORK (UPI) - Pervls
Ellison, the MVP of the Final
Four his freshman year with
Loullvllle, Tuelday nleht led a
frontcourt brl&amp;ade In the NBA
draft.
The 6-fooi-Uorward wu taken
by tlie Sacramento Klnp with
their first overall No. 1 pick In
franchise history. Elllaon. who
captivated the nation with his
cool demeanor . In leadlne the
Cardinals ~o the NCAA cham·
plonshlp In 1986, callnly accepted
the role of belne the first player
taken In 1989.

M JP B

Well. what If It all turns.out to be so even If Pete says It ain't?
Here's what.
U tbe seemingly Interminable tnvesdgatlon discloses that be bet on
hiS ·own team, Peter Edward Rose will remain forever In the record
book·as one of bueball's greatest htt.t ers. .
But the Charlie Hustle beloved by the fans also wlll be remembered
as one or the game's most notOrious liars.
.
Lying and . denial are symptoms of the sickness of' addictive
gainiJIIJw.
..
·
.
It was baseball's strollg rules on gambling that resulted In the
permanent banning of Jackson and seven of his White Sox teammates
for consplrlllg to throw the 1919World Series to- the Cincinnati Reds.
The presldlne judge for the- grand jury that Indicted them was .
Kenesaw Mountain Landls.
.
The players, suspended by the team owner for thl! 1921 season, we~e.
found not guilty, but were banned from the game for life by Landis
· after be was named baseball's first commissioner.
· As jurists go, Norbert Nadel is no Kenesaw Landts, a federal judge
remembered for his toughness.
Na.del Is the county judge In Cincinnati who blocked for 14 days
Pete's hearing before A. Bartlett Gtamatd, the oaseball
commlsaloner.
Alld as baseball commissioners go, Glamatti .Is no LAndis, whO
made his office a bulwark from which to defend· baseball's best
Interests:
As for Glaniattl, the former president of Yale University lsan avid
rail of tbe game.
Nadel held Sunday In a ruling that stunned legal scholars .that
Glamat t1 "has pre· jUdged Rose" lind a hearing before the
commlasloner wouldn't be fair.
So now Pete and the commissioner are expected to appear before
Naciel July 6 In Cincinnati's Hamilton Counly· Court of Common
Pleu.
Nadel's 'ruling was a case of a hometown umpire calling local hero
Pete safe at home.
&gt;
But even Pete's staunchest fans are wearying. There ts evidence
his support Is dwindling.
·
If G!amat ti had not handled the case so clumsily, It probably ne\oer
would hav,e reached Nadel's court.
The commlsslone~ could have suspended Rose and then proceeded
with the Investigation.
Nadel'!!. ruling may help him win re-election to the bench but It ·
probabl)' won't do Rose much good In the long run.
Gt~td's speclallnvesdgator, John DQwd, believes he has ~!9th
the wltneases and evidence to prove that Rose routinely bet on his own
·
team.
DQn't look for John to say It ain't so.

,

Kings select I.Duisville's Penis Ellison

·.

.ignited intifad_a__Jac_k_A~nde_rso_n

~ JVUI

BJ LEON DANIEL
VPJ Sealor Editor
WASHINGTON 7 Wlll e\oer)'(lne please stop asking Cincinnati
Reds Manager Pete Rose to "say It ain't so?"
Legend bas It that a nameless street urctiln pleaded for
reusurance In those same words tO ''Shoeless Joe'' Jackson, banned
from bueball for life for bribery In the 1919 Chk:ligo "Black So;K" ·
scandal.
.
Lesend hi.s It wrong. The story Is apocryphal. In news coverage of the Rose gambling probe, sports scribes alid
·TV newscasters have emploYed that old cbeslnut to the potnt ·of
·
nausea. ·· ·
Even Charles Kuralt, ttie usually 'levelheadlld host of CBS' "Sunday
MomJne," succumbed, pleadlllg on national television, ''Say It ain't
10,

'-ge 2-The Deily San...lei
Porn.ov-M'dllport Ohio
V/adnndrt, June 28, 118!t

:ao,.....

'

.ume, ,..._.... &amp;tlloplle• Mmbor. N8 ....... J-.wlil

.

uprta..,

DEVOTED TO THE INTE8E8T8 OF THE MJn08-MAIION AlUlA

.

Ohio

_.II d t.rrltcldel:
BAMIC ~ R
41, u .~ u
Oile of tile 1Mit w1dl ap; ad .
uyllllqelle, .,_..tilt PaJ.. · lltorla datlM to mld-lll'l w11ea
tlnlaa
lalowD u tile Iaraellt alleeedl:Y tried to force
IDtitada, 110•'ln Ita lJtb month. 71 old Arab In Hebron to klas the
Aad rumors, u mliCil u aiay.' : blnclquarters of bit donkey.
thiDe .else, flle1 the Pal•tlnlan "Tida became a VflrY weJl.llllown
oatraae that keeiJt the Intifada . lnddeat," one IDtlfada. vma,e
goJne. ..
Je.-. told us. "Thettory took off
J"alestlne lJberatkm Orpnlia· like wlldftre. It dicln'i matter
t1on Chairman Yulr Arafat and . whither It wu tr11t or not: It wiu
other Palestln'-!1 lftdert llvlnl believable."
• ·
away from u..tr bomelan4 bad .
Palestinians had no 'troulile
been'lll'alt..,
for tlleki!J IIWalloWJnetbntory tbatlaraelta
to .blow Inside tbe .occupied . would bumlllate an Arab like
terrltorln; Hlttarlanl· wW mark
tllet. Tbe year, 1987, bad &amp;Ueady
Dec. 9, 1987, 14 the day It blew, aHn an Increase In more mun·
but fixing tile biiiiM will be u
dane IDcldents- confllcatlon of.
· tolllh as pllmb!J MrS. O'Leary' I Arab land. demolltion of their
cow with the rap tor tbeChlcqo llouaea,'deportatloriandarr~tQf
fire. The &lt;:ow kicked OYer a
Arab leaders.
lantern anc1 beciiiM a lepod, bllt
But the real countdown began
the fUel wu aiJ'Ndy tllere.
Nov. 8 ton, 1987,'wltb a meeting
Rumora about Jaraell atrocl·
of Arab leaden ID Jordlin. It was
ties and IDtlmldatlonofPal•tlnl·
the fltat such iummlt when the
ana provided the ..,.n Ia tlJe · Pa!•tiDian problem was not the

ISRAELI

111 Coari lMnet
· . PomeroJi Oblo

Qlih

..
..

..

-

.

rult.

baseball bets.
Dowd: "And you never called
him (Peters) to place a bet?"

Rose: "No."
Dowd: "And you never called
him .'jace a bet on a baseball
game? Correct?" ·
Rose: "CorreCt."
"I'm guilty of one thing In this
whole mess," added Rose, ''and
that's I was a (bad) selector of
friends.''
But, Rose denied tba t he could
be linked with people who bet on
baseball.
Dowd: "Pete, did anybody
associate you wltb betting on
baseball or talking about betdng
on bueball In 1984 to,1981"
Rose: "I don't know what you
mean, talk about betdng on
baseball. No one bet baseball
around me."
Dowd: "(Did) anybody ever
ask you for advice or direction as
to hOw they ought to place bets on
professional major league
baseball?"
Rose: uNo."
Dowd: "Anditakeltyoudldn't
offer II. You never volunteered It
to anybody?"
Rose! vba wouldn't know how
to dolt.''
However, Dowd maintained
the Rose deposition showed Rose
was very famltlar with bookmak·
tng taUxAys.
"Durlne his deposition, Rose
revealed a Jood deal of personal
knowledge of how bookmakers
operate," said Dowd. "For example stated that he settled up·
his (football) bets on Tuesday
after the weekend and Monday ·
nl&amp;bt football games were over.
"ROreexplalned that bookies
make their money by charetng a
10 percent fee, which he volun·
leered was called 'vigorish,' a
bookmaking term. Rose elaborated that If you bet $1,000 and
you lose, you pay $1,100. The
most be ever lost was $34,000 on ·
coneee basketball games."
Rose admits gambling on
sports other tban baseball.

briefs-----Olymplca
Boxers Joe Frazier and George
Foreman, figure skater Dorothy
Hamill and sprinter Lee Evans
are among 35 nominees for the
U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame class
of 1989. Induction Is July 20 In
Oklahoma City.

..

· ll.u; Ctol

D"'''
161•
1111 g,...,...
II STOCK

FANS
ewBIDOW
..ox

.... Ill ' ...,1

PICIINS
UIDWAIE

\2. center, Trinity Valley Com·
munlty CoUege. 18, Chicago
(from Milwaukee through Seattle), B.J. Armstrollg, 6-2, guard,
Iowa. 19, Philadelphia (from
Seattle), Kenny Payne, 6-8, for·
ward, Louisville. ·
20, Chicago, Jeff Sanders, 6-9,
forward, Ceorgla Southern. 21,
Utah, Blue Edwards, 6·5, guard,
East CaroUna. 22, Portland,
(from Jllew York) , Byron Irvin.
~. guard, Missouri. 23, Atlanta,
Roy Marble, 6-6, guard, Iowa. 24,
Phoenix, Anthony Cook, 6-9,
forward, Arizona.
25, Cleveland, John Morton,
6-3, guard, Seton Hall. 26, LA
Lakers, Vlade Dlvac, 6-11, center, Yugoslavia. 27, Detroit,
Kenny Battle, 6·6, forward,
llltnois.
The Pistons completed the only
trade Tuesday night to af(ect the
draft, sending Battle and guard
Michael Wllllams to Phoenix for
the rights to Cook.
Dlvac was the only foreign
player taken, having played on
the 1988 Yugoslavian Olympic
team that won a silver medal.
Dlvak will be leading what NBA
Commissioner Da vid Stern
hopes to be a foreign Invasion
after the Warriors signed guard
Sarunas Marctullonis of the
Soviet Union.
Dlvac said he gained the
confidence to (ry the NBA when
he played the Boston Celtlcs In
the McDonald's Open In Spatnslx
months ago.
''That deflnttley lnfiuenced
me, " Dtvac said. "It showed me I
could play against an American
team.''

Under baseball rules, If the
commissioner finds that Rose
bas bet on baseball, he could be
sus)l!!nded for one year. Should
Rose be found to have bet on his'
own team's games, he could be
banned from baseball for life.
But right now. Gtamattlls legally
blocked from deciding Rose's
fate.
On Sunday, Hamilton County
Common Pleas Judge Norbert
Nadel Issued a 14-day restraining
order against Glamattl, and
scheduled a hearing July 6 for
arguments ·on ·a preliminary
Injunction.
On Monday, Glamatti appealed . to tbe 1st Ohio District
Court of Appeals. The appellate
court has told Rose's attorneys to
respond by Wednesday, but has
not set a hearing date on the
matter.
Should the appeal fall, Gtamatd would go to the Ohio
Supreme Court, and then to
federal court If the Supreme
Court refuses to overturn Nadel's
order.

~KVJS

The Daily Sentinel
(V8Plllfi-MI)
o\ Dlvllloa of Molllm. .a. loe.

Publllhed every afternoon, Monday

lbrOUIII Friday, Ul Court St., Pom.-oy, Ohio, by the Olllo Vall &lt;\If PublllhlD&amp; eompa:l{:'uJtlmedla, Ine..

Pome&lt;oy, Ohio
, Pb. 992-2156. s..
coud ctus pootap paid at Pomeroy,

Ob!o.

Member : United Preas lnternallonal,
Inland DaUy Preoo Alloclatlon and the

Night racing starts
at Stewart Friday
Skyline Speedway of Stewart,
Ohio wtll begin their new night of
racing on this coming Friday
night, June 30.
A full program of racing will be
. on tap with late models, sports·
man, street stocks and mini
stockS running.
Gates wlll open at 4' p.m. with
time trials at 7: 30 and racing at
8:30.
The track ts located off U.S. 50
between Athens and Coolville.
Coming up on Friday night,
July 7, ts the running of the Bob
Adams Sr. Memorial. This will
be a late model Invitational
paying $1,200 to run the 50 tap
event. A regular program will be
run for the three remaining
divisions.
For additional Information regarding upcoming events, etc.,
contact Darrel Wtule, promoter.
at 614-66H111.

ELLISON

Ohio Newspaper A.uoctauon. National

AdvertiiiD&amp; Repre~entatlve, Branham
Newspaper Salf.l, 133 'lblrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

POS'IlofASTER: Send addr- ch10. .

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'

· · Wrlfr nd•t'· June 28. 1888

28.'1989

bad.

.. ..

.

Since tile trade that brought
the rellliver to tbe Giants from
the Philadelphia Phlllles, Bedrosian has been a tower of power In
the San Francisco bullpen, note II·
lng saves In bls first five ·
appearances . ..
However, Ills successive string
of saves came to an end as Biggio
blasted a three-run homer off tile
right-hander to cap a four·run
eighth Inning tbat boosted tile
Houston Astros to a 7·5 victory.
Bedrosian, 2-4, walked plnc;:ll·
hitter Bill Doran Intentionally
before Biggio lifted a 1·0 pltcll
over the left·fleld renee for h~
fifth htimer.
the season. Tile
homer came aftet the As tros
closed to within 5-4 on a two·ou t
single by Rafael Ramirez that
scored Ken Caminiti.
"You compare those two
~ys," said San Francisco Manager RQger Craig. " And wbo has
the better chance to hIt a home
run. I'll put the bat In Bl'gglo's
hands again every time and I'll "
win mos1 of tllem. If Doran would
bave hit a home run, I would have
second -gues•ed myself even

of

•
'
'
•'

•
,•

STOPS ATLANTA - BedB rookie hurler Scott Scudder beld tbe
Braves to two blla and shut &amp;be visitors oulfor six complete lnnlnga
at Riverfront St&amp;dlmn to hurl Cincinnati past AIIBittja, 9-S. (UPI)

.'•

·'.

~

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'
'

''
'

B1 TOM Wtid(OCS
By UPI Sports Writer
With a healthy Alan Trammell,
tile Detroit Tigers lineup Is
recovering from Its early
maladies . .
ammE•ll's two'-run double hi
bottom of the ninth Inning
lfted tl)e Tigers to a 6-5 victory
over the New York Yankees.
Trammell adniltted the . hit
•
reminded him of the game last
season when hf! )Ill a grand slam
homer In the bottom of the ninth
. to beat the Yankees 7-6 after
• . Detroit went Into the last Inning
trailing 6·1.
''That game was one of the
biggest. thrills of my career,
•
along with winning the World
..:
series (In 19M), but It's nice to
~·....
'
come
through like this, espe'
. cially the way we've been strug·
gling," Trammell said.
.
"He was throwing me nothing
··~:
but
fastballs and finally he got
•, ..
one out over the middle of the
·•
plate."
-· Steve Sax's fifth hit oflhe game
. - a solo homer In the eighth off
reliever Mike Henneman - had
given the Yankees a 54 lead.
••
"Our pitchers wouldn't let
' ,. Saxle
be a hero," said New York
,.. .. Manager Dallas Green.
It was the second five -hit
. performance or Sax's nine-year
,

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major league career. He col·
lected five hils against the
Cincinnati Reds on June 3; 1988,
when hew as a memberoftheLos
Angeles Dodgers.
·
"The performance doesn 't
mean anything wben you lose,"
sax said. "Wilen' that happens,
If 's just another day ."
Tracy Jones opened the Tigers
ninth with a single to left off Le~
Guetterman, 1-1, the last cf tour
New York pitchers. It was •he
fourth hit of the game and the
seventh straight over two games
for Jones .
Lou Whitaker followed with a
single to right, sending Jones to
third. Trammell worked . t,h e
count to 3·2, then fouled off four
pitches before lacing the bal,l to
left ·center field, . scoring both
runners.
Winner Brad Havens, 1. 1 ,
worked a scoreless ninth.
Trammell returned to the
Tigers' lineup last Friday arter
spending 15 days on the disabled
list wltll a sore back and has
driven In the winning run In both
Detroit victories since his return .
· "We wouldn't beln the predlca·
ment we' re In now If Alan had
been healthy all year," said
Tiger manager Sparky Ander·
son. " We might ~e four or five
games under .500, but nothing

Stobart named head
---- Memphis State coach

.' . .
'.::. •
'. .•. . .

·...
~

·~

.

Even Biggio wasn't. surprised
.

a

lead. Starlin} pitcher Mike La·
Coal doubled and moved to third
on a sacrfflce by Butler. RobbY
Thompaon singled home LaCoas
aad stole second. Clark doubled
home Thompson to tie the score
and Riles doubled to drive lit
Clark. Riles moved to third on •
flyout . and scored when first
baseman Glenn Davia made an
error on a grou11d · ball by Pat
Sheridan.
Elsewhere In the National
·League, Pittsburgh edged Chi·
cago 54, Montreal clipped New
York In 14 Innings, Cincinnati
slammed Atlanta 9-3, Phlladel·
pbla dropped St. Louts 4-2 and
San Diego nipped Los Angeles 5-3
In 17 Innings.
Plraletll, Cubs ol
At ' Chicago, Glenn Wilson
knocked In two runs and Pitts·
burgh roughed up Rick Sutcliffe,
9-5, for rour fljl·lnnlng runs. Tbe
Pirates extet ded their winning
streak to four and dropped the
Cubs to a . season-high fifth
consecudve loss. Randy Kra·
me-r, 2·4, alloWed two runs and
five hits In six-plus innings and
Bill Landrum picked up his
seventh save.
Expos 3, Meta %
14 lnnlnga
At Montreal, Tim Wallach
singled home the winning run
with one out In the 14th Inning to
lift Montreal to their flflll
straight victory. Wallach's sin·

· NE... YORK !UP! l'- Foil.ml Is a ·
May 6- Loot .12,1110 Oil llle R• . won ·
·
· cbr&lt;llolqw~fbet• placl!dbyPeteRoiOfor
UOIIOonllootan, lootU.taOooMlnnet&lt;lll.,
' . tile porlod Aprl "lJ to Jtoly S, 198'1, u
l..t 12.8GO oa AI Ionia, Wilt 12.0110 on St.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Dlsclo. recorded by Patil Januen and Ron Peters
Lotilt. loot U.:IOO oa 8an Frondoco.
'
· • · and d,,.,..,,...,~ 1n 1 report relaued
May 7 _No ~~our., adiOOL
sures In the report or lnvesdeator
·· · Moll(ley by tile bueboll commloli_,.., · May a- wo,$2,000 on ~~~~ Redl. woo
John Oowd to Baaebail Cornm!S·
&lt;~(Ice :
.
12.0110 on !lou Iiiii. w11112.000 on Atllnta. · stoner· Bart Glamatd Involving
. . . . Willi su..e ·a.-~oore ·
wm· 12.000 oo Clllaoro.- 1011 12.1110 011
blln
'le tto
at t
AprilS:... Won $2,1100 pn the Redl, lcisl
Callfomll.looll2.11111mDotrolt,IOIIU.200 ·gam
I a. ga DS . , ns
12,000on BooiCIII. "'"' $2,tQOon Mlnneoota,
on Mltwaulcee.
CIDCinnatl Reds manage-r Pete
won 12.000 oo Call!om II.
• ·
· May 9 - Loot $3,400 on tile Redo, 1oa. · Roll!:
·
A,prl 9 -. U&gt;ot $2.600 ""· Plllla,elphla, . 12.8GO 011llouli11t, wcnii,:IOO on Atlanta,
When the ln~dgatlon began
wm $:1,000 on BaltlmOR!. loot $3,000 oo
1011 $3,1100 011 Boola!, loot $2.100 on
Kanau City, loot $3,600 on Callfomla.
Mllwoui&lt;H. wm n,oooonLo•AIIPI•. iOJt
on Feb. 23, baseball officials
· ApniiO - WonJ2,0GO oo the Redo. loot. $2,000 011Soo Dl- loaU:Z.IOOoo o.tr,u.
already had reports that R4se
S'l.IIOOon T"""'· woal2,000on MlnMSolo,
loot 12.W• tii~Whlte SOx. loot fi,OOOqn
bad bet on his own team
loot 13.200 on Philadelphia.
·tile Yon·
'
May 10- 'U&gt;at 13 400 on tile Redo, loot
"The direCtor or security for
Aprllll -Won $2,0110 on tile Redo, WM
$2,000 on St . JAws, .,.., $2,000 on Los
$3.200 on Mliwauke., loot $2,100 on
major league baseball bad re·
HouiiM,loot$2,1111lontheMeti,WIII$2.ta0
celved reports during the past
Anreles,lost$3.200on,Phlladflph... WM
$2,1100onMllwautee. w11112.000... Dot roll.
on San Dl- won $11.000 on Loa Alllel•.
.
'
won Sll.OOI on seottle. ,..., 12.000 on • ,.,. n.ooo 011 Boa\&lt;11. ,..., 12.000 on the
year that Pete Rose had bet on
Houllm.
Yonk.... w111 $2,000 on Deti'Git.
major league baseball games,
Aprlll2- lAst U.fiiDon the Reds , lo"
Ma)' 11 - Won $2.000 on llloRedo, Will
lneludlno games or the Qncln·
$4-,800 on Ihe Meu, wm $2,000 on
$2.000 on ·the Yan keel, we~~ 12.000 Qn
•.,.
Phlladelph... w111 !fl.DOOon lAo Alllel...
Tormto.lootU.OOOonllootlll,lootS2,000on
nati Reds, " Oowd wrote In the
loot $2,800 on 0-alld. w.M $2,000 on
At..nta. loot 13.600 on lloutm. loot SUOO
report.
Kan·uo Ctty,loot Sll.600onCallfomla, wm
111 Los Anreleo.loat S2.000on Detroit.
12.000 on Mln1101oto.
May 12 - Loll $:1.800 on tho Redo, will
Oowd's reasoning on why betApr.D 13 - Won 12.om on the Reds, lost
12.000 on. Atlanta ; won 12.000 on Los
$2,.00 011 San Diego, wnn $2.000 on Los
. Anaetea. won 12.000 on Detroit .
ting on baseball games by
Angeles, won $2,400 on Mll...ukee, lost
MaY 13-lf.ll\-16 - No betUnr action
particl~lltl Ia corrupt: ·
$2,600 on Minnesota. lost $3,400 on
recorded In the repcrt.
~'It erodes and destroys the
Philadelphia.
letl•li&amp;k Roa P-•
Apl11 14 -Won S'l.OOO on the Reds, loo!
· (Rocorol.. 1w P ... nl
Integrity or tbe galllt! of baseball.
$UXXt on St. Louis, lost 12,000 on Hou.lil.m.
May 17 to May 26 .!.. No betttna actiOn
Betdng also expose~ the game to
1,.1 12,000 on Detn:Ht, wm $2,000 on th e
recorded In the repCI't.
the lnfluen~ of forces who seek ·
Met~ IGII S2.800on Oak.. nd.
May 27- Bet $2,1100eadl on theR...
AprUI~-U&gt;s($2.000onlheReds,won
Tormto, Dotrolt, tile Yank•, Lo1AII·
to control the game to tbelr own
$2,000 on the Yankees, won $2,000 on
geles San Oleo HouatCil and Mtnne~ota.
ends. ·
Milwaukee, lost S3,400 ·on Toronto. won
Won itw betlan'd l01t three.
'
. "Betdng , on one's own team
12.1100 on Houslm.
May 28 - Did not b&lt;l .
.
llola Willi Boolde a..tc
May 29-30-31 - No bellini action gives rise to the ultlamte conflict
Apr1116- Won S2..000 ori ~attle, lost
recorded In die ~crt.
$2,000 on Philadelphia. wm $2,000 on
Jure 1 - Bet 12.000 eadl on the Redl, · or Inte-rest In which the Individual
player· bettor places his personal
Toronto. ·
·
Clewland, Toronto. the Yankea, Kanaas
Aprtll7- Won S2.000on theRedl.lost
City, U&gt;o Anlelaa and Philadelphia. Won

ile came ort Rick Aguilera; 3-3,
scoring Nelaon Sanlliventa fJ'Om
tblrd. Steve FrlW, 2·0, the flttn
Expos' pltcher,. went one ·lnnlng ·
and allowed one hit. ·
ae••.Bn~J

.

At Clnctanatl, Todd ~nzlnger ;
smacked a grand slam and
rookie Scott Scudder allowed two
hits over 6. ~·3 lnnlnp, Scudder,
2·1, struck out three aad walked ·
three, and was followed by follr
relievers. Atlanta atarte&amp; John ;
Smoltz, 9~. gave up two runs and
nine hits In six innings.
. PhlladeiJibla ol, st. Louis 2
At St. Louis, Dennis Cook drove
In a run and won for the second
lime In two starts as the PhWles
sent the Cardinals to their fourth
straight loss. Cook, 3-tl, went
eight Innings, allowing four hits
while striking out four and Roger
McDowell earDed hla slxt11 save.
Jose DeLeon, 8-7, worked 5 1·3
Innings and allowed four runs.
Padres 5, Dot11ere 3
171nalap
At Los Angeles, Chris James
singled home Tony Gwynn to
snap a tie and spark a two-run
17th Inning that carried San
Diego·. Pat Clements,l;O, worked
4 2-3 Innings while loser Tim
Be,lcher fell to 4-8. Los Angeles
starter John Tudor made his first
appearance or the season. Tile
left-bander, coming off shoulder, '.
elbow and knee surgery, gave up two runs and five hits In 4 1-3, ·
innings.
, ,,.,

S2.«10oa San Dieao. won S2.600on AUanta.
wm 12,000 on Mtlwaakee,

~~

"

··:MEMPHIS, TENN. - Chuck
:;::: Stobart, an associate head coach
;,..-. • and offensive coordinator at the
r University of Southern Callfor·
; c: nla, has been hired as the head ·
::-:.. football coach at Memphis State
....
Unlversl'".
.,.? -.~
"J
•' ~
Stobart, a native of Middleport
"' • and a graduate of Oblo University, coached the Gallipolis Blue
DevUs to a SEOAL football
championship In 1960.
Following his championship
year In Gallipolis Stobart moved
to CoshOCton high school, then
became an assistant at Miami of
Ohio,' and then to the University
of Michigan.
He was also a head coach at the
uniVersity of Toledo and · Utah
University before moving to
Southern ~I two years ago.
Stobllrt, M, succeeds · Charlie
Bailey, who re'slgned from Mem·
phiS State on May 3 because or an
NCAA Investigation that resulted
In probation from 1986 to 1988.
Another NCAA probe Ia under·
way at MemphiS State. that could
result In more penattles If majot
•
vtolatlllns are fiund.
Stobart waa quoted as saying.
"We're going to make It through
that thlngwlthoutaityproblemat
all" , he said at a news
conference.
·
Stobart waa a quamrback a.t
Ohio Unlvenlty where be received both btl bachelor's and
master'S dep'-, and Ills SI!C·
cen aa an ottenrtve coordinator

=' ·

......
·~·--·

...-.~,T¥1,

GAS &amp;IIIC. IAIGIS

coa.n ·.

was proven In ll!88 when the USC
Trojans were ranked ninth nationally, averaging 461 yards per
game.

Rise new Waverly
hardwood mentor
WAVERLY - Dan Blse, a
ro,rmer Rio Grande College bas·
ketball standol!t, has been
named boys varsity basketball
coach at Waverly high school.
Blse, currently head coach at
Teays Valley high school, was
hired to fill the position left open
when the coaching contract of
Carl Wolfe was not renewed In
April.
~
The job was accepted by Do"'g
Hlll of Thornville-Sheridan on
May 10, but on May 3l he notified
Superintendent David RoiJerts of
his decisiOn not to take the
position, and remain at Sheridan.
Blse had applied for the job In
1985 when Wolfe was chosen, but
be did not apply for It thla past
Aprll.
Blse graduated from Federal·
Hocking high school and Rio
Grande College. Prior to coachIng at Teays Vailey for tbe past
tbref yellS's, Btse was empll1ed
a• betd coaehlng reeord stallds.
at 100-IM.
·.

like this."
Detroit's 2845 record Is among
the worst In the majors.
Elsewhere tn the American
League; Baltimore pounded To·
ronto 16·6; California edged
Cleveland 2·1 In 10 Innings;
Minnesota thrashed Oakland 11·
5; Milwaukee nipped Boston 5·4;
Texas downed Chicago 5·1; Seattle blanked Kansas City 8·0.
Oriole&amp; 16, Blue .Jays 6
At Baltimore, Randy Mllllgan
drove In four runs with four hits ,
Including his fifth llome run, and
the Orioles I!Klk advantage of a
club· record 15 walks. The game
was the first In . major·league
history between teams led by
black 'managers, Frank, Robin·
son of theQrlolealandCitoGaslon
of the Blue Jays. Jay Tibbs, 5·0,
went the distance and Mike
Flanagan, 4·6, took the loss.
Angels 2, Indians I
At Cleveland, Jack Howell led
off the lOth Inning with a home
run orr Nell Allen, 0-1, to give the
Angels tllelr fourth straight vic·
tOry . Howell homered on Allen's
third pitch since being recalled
Monday from the minors. It was
Howell's ninth homer of the
season and his third In the last
rour games. Rich Monteleone,
2·0, pitched one Inning for the
victory .
Twins 11, Athletics 5
At MlnneapoUs, Kirby Puckett
collected three hits and three
RBI and the Twins scored eight
runs In the sixth on just four hits.
Gary Wayne, 3·0, worked 2 1·3
Innings for the victory and Juan
Berenguer pitched the last three
Innings for his second save.
Oakland reliever Gene Nelson
fell (o 2-3.
Brewers 5, Red So;&lt; 4
. At Milwaukee, Rookie Gary
Sheffield collected three hits,
Including a tie-breaking RBI
single to score Robin Yount In the
third Inning. Don August, 7-7, and
three relievers scattered 14 hils.
Dan Plesac got the lastoutforhls
American League-leading 19th
save. Roger aemens, 8-6, took
the loss.
R11111:ers 5, White Sox 1
At Chicago, Rookie Kevin
Brown allowed six hits over 81·3
Innings and Jeff Kunkel llad two
RBI. Brown, 7·4, struck out three
and walked one before leaving In
favor or Jeff Russell. who got the
final two outs for his 18th save.
Greg Hibbard, 0·2, pitched 4 2·3
Innings, giving up six hits and
three earned runs .
Marlnen 8, Royals 0
At Kan5as Clt'y, Mo. , Brian
Holman pitched a seven-hit shu·
tout and Jeffrey Leonard had
four RBI. Greg Brlley added
three ~I and Darnell Coles ,
homered In llandlng tile Royals
their third straight loss. Holman
lmprovecHo2·2. Luis Aquino, 3-2,
lasted just 4 2·3 Innings and took
the loss.

WIIIIINIPIII&amp;

If·- . . . . .. .
! .

.

---

·.

June t ·- .No bettin1 action reron1alln
fhe rePort.
June 5 - Bet.$2,000 each on Detroit.

MlnDHota, tjle Yaalleel, Seattle and
Ookland. W011 three t1et1 and loot two.
JunP 6 - Bet $2,800 ncb on the Reds,

Pttbiburgh n.d Montft'al. Lost all three

AprD Z2 - U&gt;at $2.600 on llle Redo, loot
$2,1100 011 At .. nta, lost U600on St. U&gt;uls.
W(ll

aooo

on BostCil. Milwaukee wu

ralned out.

Apr1123- No bets p.. ce&lt;lon bueboll or

the ijed6.

Dl,.o. W111 four bets and loot one.
Jtone 7 - Bel 12.000 eadl on llle Redo.
belL

JuM8- lift $2,000Nch on theRedl, tbe
CUbl, St. U&gt;ull, Toronto, Minnesota.

SeottloandtheWlllteSox. WonoiXbetoand
lost one.
Jun£&gt; 9 - ~~ $2,800 each on the Reda,

Phl..delpbla, Houlton. Callom... Torano. Minnesota. Qakland, Montreal

·

AprU 24 - Won l2,600on the RC!di.

ApJ"Jil 25 - Won 12,010 on AIJanta. 'won

12.000 on ."Dotrott. loot $3,000 on the
Yani!:•. won $2.000 on Mllwaukl!f'.

Atlanta and Seattle. Won aiX lletoand 10il

four.

'

,

June 10 - Bet 12.000 e.adl on·Atlan ...
Montrt&gt;al, St. Loula. Calllor'nla, Toruho.

Aprll26- No bets pllcl!d on bueball or

llou11111. Detroit, Baltbnon?. Kon10a City

$2,800 on Callfomla. won 12.000 on

Los Aftlelea. San Otego and Toronto. Won

~Ap'U 7'1- Won 12,000 on Seattle, lost ~-~~~-~-JuDOil- Bet $2,000eadl on tlloRec!o.

Oakland, lost l2,400on Atlanta,lmt $2.800
on the Met~ 1001 $3.400 on Philadelphia.
AprU•28- Lost$4,000on lbtRedl,lolt
dn Los Anples. wcmii.IJO on San

13.200

Diego. wm S2.000onTonlftto. wcmS:Z.OOOon

camomla, loot $2,400 on Dot roll, Will
$2,000 oo Oakland.

The Deily Sentirial

••

one bet and loot tbree.
Juno12- Bet 112,1100 eacb on llle R"'•·

June 26- Bet Cl,OOOeachon theKedJ,St .

Louis, the Cuba. San FranciBCo, Totu~to,

Texas. Kansa41 Cllyand lheYankee&amp;. Won
three bets and lost Uve .
June 27- Bet $2,000 each on the Reds,
Pittsburgh, the Mets. San Fnnclaco. San
DIECO, Kansu City and Tura1to. Won five
beu and lost 1wo,

'June 28- Bet 12.000each on the Reds, St.
Louis, Philadelphia. the C""'· San Fran·
cl~£o,

Mlnnes&lt;ta, and DetJOlt . Won four
bets and lost three.
June 29- Bd C!,tm 2adl on Mont ~eat.
the Meta. Atlanhw , LosAnJel•. Callfomla ,
Detroit. Minnesota. Tormto. Bost&lt;n and
Texas. Won flve betaud IOit five.
June 30- Blot 12.000 each on the Rects,
PlttsbuJI:h, San Dl-.o. OeYelaad , Texas
a~d MJnnesora. Won three bet1 and lost

ibree.

July 1 - Bet $2,000 each on the Reds ,
PJtlsbuflh, San DIE&amp;o. Clewland, Tt'xas
and Mlnnescta . Won three bets and lost
three.
t

July 2 - Bet $2,000 eai!h on the Reds,
. Callfom... Seattle. Oakland, PhDadelphlo

and Kansas City. Won four bets and lost
two.
·
July 3- Bet S2.000eodt on tbeRedl, the
Yankees, Mlnnescta, Oakland, California,
DPtrott, Montreal, Philadelphia. PlttsburghandAtllnta. Wt&gt;nseven bets and lost
three.

July 4 - Did not bet.
July ~ - Old rio! bot.

·

·

llnanctanhteresi above ihe Inter- ball games, Including Ci ncinnati
ests of the team. The product of Reds games, dh'ectly with
gambling - P.Brllcularly sports Peters."
action '- I~ debt, enormous debt
Checks written lo fictitious
ivhl~h leads to obligations, which
people:
leads to ~rruptlon."
Dowd's explanation or why his . " The evidence also showed
that Rose placed bets through
Investigation was so difficult:
· "Gambling Is conducted In another friend, Michael BE'rtollnl. Bertolini, In turn, placed
~ret by Its participants. Payments are often made In cash by bets on Rose's behalf with an
runners .b etween the bookmaker unidentified bookmaker In New
and the gambler because cash Is York aty.
" Rose's financial records redifficult to trace. The runners
veal
checks In the amounts
provide Insulation and, thus,
described
by BertoUnl, made out
den~blllty to the gambler and
by
Rose
to
flcti tlous payees. Rose
bookmaker.
denied
placing
bets with Berto'The secret gambling enter·
and
denied
owing anyone
lini
prise Is typlcaly exposed only
money
.
Rose
acknowledged
when a participant I~ apprehended and begins to cooperate sending 11 $8,000 checks to
with the authorities. The dlffl· Bertolini made out to fictitious
culty for the ln~dgator lies In payres but said that these checks
the gathering of corroborative
evidence. The gambling enterPrise Is designed to leavP. few
tracks; and upon exposure, to
provide alibis to tllP.
pardclpants."

May 2 - Loot 12.i00 on

Redo. loot

t111

53.000 on tile MetL wen $2,000 011 Torc1111o.
lOit $2,.800 Oil floUJtDII. WCII 12,000 OR the
Yaak..., wm $2.000 on Plttllaarah. loot
$2,8GO on Pittsburg~. IGII 12.800 on St.
Louis. won $2.000 on K•nu• City, wm

Rose's denial and why Oowd
disputes that dental:
"Pete Rose has denied under
bath ever betting on major
league baseball or associating
with anyone who bet on major
league baseball.
':However, the Investigation
has developed evidence to the
contrary·. Tile tes dmony and the
documentary evidence gathered
In the course of the lnvesdgatlon
demonstrates that Pete Rose bet
on baseball, and In particular, on
games of tbe Cincinnati Reds
during · the 1985, 1986 and 1987

seasons."
How Dowd believes Rose car·
rted out his bets:
''With few exceptions, Rose did
not deal directly witll bookmakers but rathe-r placed bls bets
through others. During the 198.~
and 1986 seasons, Rose placep
bets on baseball with Ron PeterS:
a bookmaker In Franklin, Ohio.
Althougll Rose placed his bets
wltli J&gt;eters primarily through
· Tommy Glolosa, on several occas lollS R4se placed bets on base·

were loans to Bertolini to be used
to . ~thletes . for
baseball card shows."
I

Rose's knowledge of bookmak·
lng operation.:
" During his deposition, Rose.
revealed a good deal of personal
knowledge of how bookmakers
operate. For exam ple, Rose
stated that he set tled up his
(football) bets on Tuesday a fter
the weekend and Monday night
football gam es were over .
' 'Rose explained that bookies
make their money by charging a
10 percent fee, which he volun·
tee red was c alled 'vigorish,' a
bookmaking term. Rose elabo·
rated that If you bel $1,000 and
you lose, you pay $1,100. The
most he ever lost was $34,000 on
college basketball games."

PAIGLE
ALl

WOMEN'S
SANDALS
'.

30°/o
OFF

THURSDAY, FIIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY

CHAPMAN .SHOES
POMEROY'S QUAUn SHOE STORE

Los Angeles, MlnnesCU, To~to, Oak·
land. theCubl, San Dtco. Ptttaburah and
Selltle. Won four beta U'ld IOit rtw
Ju ... u- Bet $2.000 ..... on tho Rltll,

Lo1 Anceles, tbe Ya-. Plt:oburp,

12.000 on Calllornla. loot $2,100 on S..tUe.
·

May 3- Won 12.000 on tbe Reds. 1011
SJ,200 on Houoton. will $2.000oo Cllloaro.
wua $2,000 on Tore~~ to. wm~ $2.000 011

. Calllonlla. PlttotJurah and Loi AIIIC!l..
were ~alned out.

Sports briefs

Parrtab durlnc fin&amp; lanlac ae&amp;loa In Cleveland:

lost $2.800 on Los Angeles. 'I'oi"'Oto wu
rained out.
May :i - Won 12.600 on the Redl, loll,
$3,4Qt1onDetmll . wM-S2.000onBoaton. lost
53,000 on Atlanta, won 12.800 on
Plttsbuflh.

Tuesday nlcht. McDowell attempted to KOre.
from third on an Infield P'auader. (UPI)

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Hockey
Calgary Coach Terry Crisp
signed a 3·year contract on a day
of front·offlce reorganization for
the Flames. AI MacNeil will
become vice president of hockey
operations; Doug Rlsebrough
wlll be assistant GM; Paul
Baxter will serve as assistant
coach; and Bob Francis will
coach Salt Lake of the IHL... ,
:rhe Pittsburgh Penguins re·
signed lefl wings Troy Loney and
Phil Bourque and defenseman
Gord Dineen to multi· year con·
tracts . ... The Philadelphia Flyers added former NHL players
Inge Hammerstrom and Glen
Sonmor to their scouting staff.

446 4524

'

.. '

Majon

..

•

.andBosian.WantwobetsandlOitfOur.
June 2G - Bet S2.1100eadl on tho Redl.
Toru~to. Mlanetota, Boston, Houston. the
. Meto. St. Louis lltd San 01 .... Won Jour
bela and 1011 lOW' .
June 21 - Bet $2.000 eacb on tile Reds,
Tora~to. Ml~~~~e~ota. St . Louis, the Cubs

and So• Francloco. Wilt allolx bets.
June 22- Did not b&lt;l.

June 23- Old nal bet•
June 24 ..... Bet 12,000 each on t.011
Anrflet, the Meta. Ho~o~ston. Baltimore
and Callfomla. Won all tlve beta.
JuDI! ~ - Bet 12.000 on the Mets and
wm .

-

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THE \1:\X~

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_..,~17fdftll$

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BANKIONE.
1r,..,Oi,_

.Ill

•
••
••

-

••

.

When vou invest in a CD at
BANI&lt; ONE, 'j{)u'vegottrepotential
to earn alot more than just one of the
highest interest rates 1n town. Because
adeposit of $2.500 Cl' nae in this
high-paying CD also automatically
entitles 'f'OU to receive Blue Max~
free t:hilt's all our best banking services, all in one oonvmieot package.
Get everything from no-serVice-charge
checking to a no-snnual-ree aedit card.
So in\'est ina BANK ONE
CD today. Because it's rte\U been so
easy h lQ\1 to increase lOOt earning potential. •
•

NA'I'ICJIIIAi.UtAOIJII

•

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o.u-1 ,..._,. IN) M Mt....aa

(011111-.1..),1: . . .. .
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•

Ellen O'Brien S.undera

a.;,.,,..

........ Cc.wlll U) II . . . .elf!

.,_c..-1-I).Qk..,la..•

~

I

11 1 public ter'(ioe ol tho Ohili Bureau of Employment Servlcn.
An EqUitl Oppol1unlty Employer

o1

.... ........, ..,.......
..........
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...... (.......

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t-NI.toa,...,

•
•

P.O. Box 272
C"-hlre, Ohio 45820
814-387·7341

IJrltl'll'

Ye ..

''"·&gt;· •.~
, , •. ;l

Beginning July 1, the Economic Dlllocalion and Wolter Adjuttm.nt Aulltance
Act will provide money to local agencies to help dislocate~ workers receive
job training or find a new job.

f

.,.._....&lt;"'"" ...,
Ntw

~·
••

If you answered yfll to any of these quesjions, you may be eligible for aslistance
under a new federal program for dislocated workers.

OtMIIII$

T•MI.OIIeapl

••,J:.-·
!"'• ;.

Rlcllard F, Celtslt
Gclvernot

.

!il-111..._.....

Br trn•d
AMP.aiCAN l&amp;ot.Gt.ra

'1 • ~

,.~.,

.

June It- Bet 12.0110eadl on tlteRetll.
tht!MetLIAIAII&amp;ales,8anDI ..o,T-to

Scoreboard ..

"

••• •

T~is lid

·

May f - Won $2,000 on the Rltll. wm
' $2.000 on Atlanta, loot $2,800 on St. U&gt;lllli,

tllree bets aci!OIIIOOU'.
June 18 - Bet $2,000 on the Redo and

WCil .

_,_

.

AIIOTIB -10 11111111111-111'
•

·•

·aS .·paymenis

Bet_.., ••

McDOWELL ATTEMPTs TO SCORE Oddlbe McDowell or Cleveland Is sent aprawUng
after bouncing off Calltomla catcher Laaee

Page-5r -..

.

Ton:11to, Oakland, C.lllorlla, aftdhtde.
Won .ewn ~~and 1011 01\1'.
Jun• 14- Bet $2,000 each on the- Rfd1.
112.000 .., Toronto. loot $2.800 on Seattle. Tau, s ..ttle. PlttalNrth. Loo An1elea,
lost U:.400 on Callfomla.
and Tor&lt;ltfo. Won lhnebelllftdlMt three.
A.,..q ~·- ,Wq~ 12,000on tho Jleil!, WCJI! . ~ a. a11011et • . -.. tllj!Celllcl-loat
12.000 011 S..llle, ....., S2.000 ~p Sl. toull,
:fune f5- Old nat,bol.
·
lost $2,200 on the' C~bl . Wat ~.OOOoD the
JuM 16~ or. the RldJ,
1
M~ts.
the Cubl, -San QllltJ, the J.fets, Atlanta,
May 1 - ·Woa 12,000 on die Reds. won Callfomta, the YaaMa and MllwauUe. '
$2,000 on the Mets. loal. 12.200 on Los Won flw bets and J•t tllreP.
Anc;eles, won 12.000 on Tormto.loat 12,800
June 17- Bet 12.'-ncb on the Reds.
on Baltlmcre, loot S21ta0 on tho Yank....
Phlladelphll. Son Frudoco, the Meta.
wm $2.000 on Ho'-'aton.
Balttmore, RD-. aad Callfomla. Won

AprU 29- Lost $4,000on the Reds, won
12.000 on .. - the Mefl. wCII $2.000 on
PhUadelphla, wm S'l,OOOon St. LouiJ, won

'.

ftUA$ '

real. Won IIYO 1101• and 1,.1 two.

$2,000 on tbe Met I. 1081 $2,000 on Atlanta,

1011 $2,000 on !let roil, wm $2.200 on

,, . ••• IlL

·-'
S
,...: ..J•••
......... . . .

Ju~ 2- Bet 12.0CIJeadlon lbeRedl, San
Diego, PUtsiRU'Ib. LOa Anafiea, the
Yankees, BoatCII, Ctwland and Tormto.
Won flw beta and loll three.
June 3 "!'· Bet 12.000 eadl on the Reds,
Atlanta Loa Aftplea, Oakland. lh p Yan·
kl!!es a~d Clewlaad; bet $1.000 on Molit·

Hou•CII. 1he Mets. the Cubl and San

Cltla.go. WC1112,000 on Mlnnescwa.

GaUIII·MeiP
Community Action Atiancy

16.... ONII'rlll

ooe bet and l01t stx.

12.000 Oil Los An&amp;ele&amp;, wcm 12.000 on tile
Yanteea, wM 12.000 on MlnnHota. lost

$2,000 oo Clllaaco.
April 21 - Loot t2,000on the Redo, won

.,
. . . . . St. u ........
Anli

IECIIYI 2 FREE

$2,000 on

$3.000 oa Tor•to.
'
April :10 -Won $2,000 on !be Redo, lost

If you think you qualify and you wantto explore newtkmtl'lllnlngor fob placemtHit
assistance, contact the office in your area for deta1ls: .

"1·1114

lost

Mlni"'Hola.
.
AprU 18- Won 12.000 on the Reds, lost
$2,400 on San Oleo. won Q,OOO on Sl: .
Loull,lost S3.200on Toronto. WCII Sl.OOOon
the YankMI. won $1.000 on DetrOit. won
12,000 on 8autmo~.
·
Aprtll9 - Loot.$2,000 on the Redo. loot
$2,f00 on Philadelphia, won. $2,000 on the
Yankees. lost $2,400on lheMets,IOit$3.600
on CIJicaiO. woo 12.-tlOOon Milwaukee. lOBI

Tigers edge Yankees, 6-5;
Indians drop 2-l tllt to ,Angels

''

••

more."

t o see Doran walked
Intentionally.
"He !Bedrosian) had an open
base," Biggio said. "I wouldn't
want to pitch to Billy either. I had ·
·a feeling that I hit It pretty good,
bul I just hope.d It wasn' t too high.
I was fortunate to gel II out of the
park."
Bedrosian said the Giants will
have to forget about Tuesday's ·
game . .
"I just didn't get the job done
tonight," Bedrosian said. "I have
no excuses. l'lljust 'have to keep
my head up and keep going."
Danny Darwin, 7-2, worked two
Innings and struck out five for
Houston, which deleated San
Francisco for the rlrst lime In
five meetings this season.
The Giants took a I·Olead In the
first. Brett Butler led off with a
single and scored on double by
Will Clark.
Houston tied the score In the .
bottom of the Inning. Gerald
Young walked. moved to second
on a balk, advanced to third on a {
sacrifice by Craig Reynolds , and
, scored on a sacrifice fly by Terry '
Puhl. ·
The Astros grabbed a 3-llead
In the second. Greg Gross walked
with one out and Biggio reached
on a two-base throwing error by
third baseman Ernest Riles with
Gross moving to third. Young
doubled to drive In both runners.
The Giants erupted for four
runs In the third, . taking a 5·3

POmeloy ""lddleport. Ohio

~ . ~Qse's betting leclp . · Disclosures ·listed. ~ Pet~ Rose' re~rt

AStros ·cool Gi&amp;nt$; .R~s . dump ·6r8ves.
B1 EltiK X. LIEF
UPI Spera Writer
· Rl!cently, Steve Bedrosian lias
been making the San Francisco
Giants look good, but Tuesday
ntgllt Craig Biggio make both
Bedrosian and the Giants look

\

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I I •• Ttmt ....

�'

. Pomaroy-Middl&amp;poi'i, Ohio

P_aga 6-lhe Daily Sentinel

Wdr1 11 liay. Jww 28, 1888

. .

John Matuszak died of accidental overdose of painkiller
.. LOS ANGELES (UPI) Former Oakland Raiders defen·
slve lineman John Matuszak's
death 10 days ago resulted
primarily from an accidental
overdose of a prescription pain·
killer called Darvocet, the
county Coroner's Office said
.Tuesday.
An enlarged heart and bron·
chopneumonia ,also contributed

to his death June 17, said Bob
Dambacher, a spokesman for the
coroner's office, which released
details from its autopsy and
laboratory tests conducted fol·
lowing Matuszak's death.
Tests also detected a small
amount of cocaine In his system
but that "was not considered to
have contributed to his death,"
Dambacber said.

Matuszak, who was 38, died as
he was being rushed to St. Joseph
Medical Center In Burbank from
Ills Hollywood home.
Matuszak's parents, Marv and
Audrey Matuszak, Issued an
angry statement !laying they
were aware of their sons chronic
pain and "resulting use of drugs"
but lashed out at "the scoundrels
In the medical profession who

recklessly dispe1111e prescription
drugs and the parasites of society
who distribute IUiclt drugs from
back alleys to fashionable
condominiums."
Matuszak was taklq Dar·
voce!, a prescription palukiUer,
which contains Darvon and Tylenol, tor an undisclosed allml!nt,
Dambacher said.
'
"The cause of death has been

COPYRIGHT 1989 ·THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ANO ·PRICES GOOO
SUNDAY, JUNE 25, THROUGH SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1989
&lt;

-.a...a... .MD I'OMaCW ITDIIIIU.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES: NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

determlaed as acute propoxy·
PMIM! Intoxication," a result of
the Oai'WII bl the pills prescribed
by MatUIZik' s physician, he
said.
His death was ruled an accl·
de11t. DambKber uld.
DamiiKber uld he did not
know wbat cau*ed Matuszak's
b&amp;lirt to be "very enlaraed" or
how Jona he had bad PJM!UlnOnla,

Qy·TheBend

AI LoCasale, a spokesman for

-·

the Raiders, said Matuszak bad
undergone surgery for . painful
back problems that forced him to
retire In 1983.
"Hia back problems ended his
career," LoCasale-sald. "He had
other physical aliments alona the
way, but In 1982, when hemla.ed
the entire season, It was becau.e
of back problems."

--

--will
.

bo ICctphld poo hom purch- .

ourt
KROGER

Meat or Beef
Wieners

REGULAR
110URS

..
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'
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I

j

·''

·.•

.:•;

'

•'
{

''
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¥

•
•
•

•
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
· GRAIN FED BEEF

..

,,

in sports

Red Sockeye.
Salmon
1

IN OIL OR WATER

Krog~u

Chunk ·
Light Tuna
'

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GENERAL MILLS

Honeynut
Cheerios
2hz.

Potential
jurors chosen

'

•

Kroger
Skim Milk

CAFFEINE FftEI DIET 'EPSI,
CAFFEINE PfiH ,..1,

1-----..

Diet Plllll
or Pepsi Cola
24 ..... 12-lz. c.

GllMlllO Lwe.·

-------------135¢

For

KROGER R~AL SOUR CREAM DIPS
8·0Z. 2 FOR t1 .00

. . 11.-48

,

Happenings

lS.Oz.

..

Ann ·
Landers

have just the right bite.

MATCHLIGHT CHARCOAL B·LB. BAG $3.49

\.

\\e use only-

So our dogs

Pound

..

Card shower

·Teaford birth

FRESH WHOLE PACIFIC

,

wonderful about that?
By KATIE CROW
Marcia Ia 99 years of aae and on
Last Wednesday I drove to
A reunion of the late Silas and
October 27 wlll'reach her lOOth
Zanesville accompanied by five
. Lera Bennett was held recently
birthday. There were not enough
youngsters, age
at the home of Ira and Hope Eblin
members at the meeting to make
11 to 16. Now
In Syracuse.
.
a quorum. But Marcia was there.
·that's
a
Those attending were Eileen
Marcia has proven that age Is
challenge.
Snyder, Mr. and Mrs, Terrade
no barrier. She keeps up with the
Now you know
Johnson Sr. , Middleport; Mt.
news, her friends and attends
haw many plt
and Mrs. Haven Johnson and
Church regularly. We . should
stops you have
Beth, VIenna, W.Va.; Mr. an&lt;j
take lessons. She Is a fine
to make. When
Mrs. Gregory Moore and CrysIntelligent lady:
you travel with the kids don't
tal, Chad and Jo Jo, Mr. and Mrs.
ever plan on maktna good time.
George Moore and Tony, Roger
Like to say thanks to the Jim
When we arrived In Nelsonville
Eblin, Karen Morgan, and Betty
they all decided It was · time, to Adams family and Kathy WineMartin, Colum,bus; Mr. ·and Mrs. ·
eat. EveryoBe waled a subma· brenner tor remembering me.
'Randolph Moore, Eric and Mls~
rlne sandwich, so we stopped at Thanks so much.L
of St. Parts; Mr. and Mrs.
Subway, wblcb was located on
Terr.a ce Johnson Jr., Pomeroy;
Speaktna of thanks; llke to
the main route.
HONOIUitY MEMBER- Maxlae Whitehead, banquet. Pictured wllll ber, fram lhe left, are
Charles Johnson and tvllchael of
We were &amp;tandtna waiting for · mention Gordon and Linda
fourtla from left, wbo baa retired this year as Amy Murphy, Robin Willie, David Rice. Laura
;Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
our 'sandwiChes when a hand· FIBber. Great people. They cer·
etemeatary mualc leaeber In llle Easlera Local Hawlhome, · and · Hell&amp;her Fin law, all May
Charles Bush, Robert and Dawn,
some man ·appeared behind the talnly are to be commended for
Scbool Dlalrlct, was lnclaeted as an honorary graduates of Easter• Hlp Scbool, and officers for
Centerburg; Mrs. Dan Knotts,
counter and reached out his hand their generosity. Last Saturday
member law lbe Tri-M Hoaor Society at lhe I he saclely.
·
Tina and Silas, Reedsville; and
and said hl. I was shaking his and Sunday they blvlted the
Eastern Local Scbool Dlalrlct'a spring band
Ian Bennett of North Canton. ·
hand and realized It was Roger entire Syracu.e ball team to
'
.
•
thelt home for a swimming party
Hines.
. Now I · know a lot of you and even had pizza on Saturday
night.
·
'
remember . Roger. He Is from
Certainly don't want to leave
Flora Betzlng, age 92, 25253
Meigs County the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Hines, Rocksprings out Marvin and Eleanor Kay
Maxine Wh:tehead was In· While at Ohio University, Mrs. dents to leave her music classes Powers Road, Chandtersvtlte:,
McKelvey who otter the use of
Road, Pomeroy.
dueled as an honorary member Whitehead minored In English with a better understanding and Ohio 43737, will be having a card
Roger has th~: Subway In thejr hot tub to all the kids In the : of the Modern Music Masters and performed with the Ulllver· a greater appreciation for music. shower Sunday.
Nelsonville and Is planning on neighborhood. When 'the kids get
(Tri-M) Honor · Sot:lety at the ,slly Chorus.
Mrs. Whitehead began teach·
opening another one In Logan. tired of swimming they go to the
annual Induction ceremony for
Roger was, for many years, head hottub. When they get tired ofthe
the Eastern High School Cl.apter lng. in 1949 In the Carthage-Troy
lab technician at Holzer Medical hot tub they are back In the pool.
of Trl·M which was held recently school which Is now Federal
Hocking. After leaving there, she
Everyone
should
have
It
so
good.
Center. He and his wife, the
at the spring band banquet.
started
teaching In what Is now
Then
thP.re
Is
Darla
and
Jam·
·
former Barbara Donovan, reside
The ceremony was conducted
the
Eastern
Local SchooiDlstrlct
mle
Thomas
who
also
lnvlte·the
In Newark.
by officers David Rice, Heather
In
Reedsville.
kids to swim at their pool.
Flnlaw, Laura Hawthorne, and
It was great to see hlm, he is so
At ·Eastern, Mrs. Whitehead ·
Included In this neighborhood
Robin WhUe, with Chris Spencer
personable. When you are drivhas
taught elementary music.
group are two other families.
fllllng In for Amy Murphy.
lna throuah Nelsonville stop and
Other new Inductees were She also formed an elementary
see him, he would be delighted to They don' I have pools bu I they
Lorre Osborne,, Nichola Pickens, choir consisting of fifth and sixth
see friends from Meigs County. · otter help, support and klndn,ess.
They ·are the Bob Deemer family
Amy Well, Sherrl Wolf. and Steve grader from each of the three.
and
the
Bob
Crow
famUy.
Wood,
all freshman; and junior, grade schools In the district.
You can accOmplish most
Every spring, these choirs per·
I
hope
someday
the
children
Crystal
Kaylor.
·
anything 1.1 you really want to.
form
a combined concert for
will
look
back
and
say,
"It
was
This was very evident last week
their
parents;
11
wonderful
when
I
was
a
kld;
when the Carleton Boa~d .of
Mrs. Whitehead had been ac·
Mrs. Whitehead also directs an
Trustees held their regular ye- was wonderful growing up whel"?
lively
teaching In the Easter·n annual elementary school oper·
I
did;
I
ani
so
grateful."
arly meetblg.
Local School District ·as an etta. Some of these have Included
One of Its members is Marcia
elementary
music Instructor for ''Tom Sawyer," •'Plnocchlo, ''
And so It goes.
· Karr.· Now you say ·what Is so
27 years. She gradual~ from ' "Cinderella.'' "Jack and the
Chester High School and at· Beans talk," " The Cabbage
tended Ohio University where Patch Kids," and other popular
she received ·her Bachelor's stories. Mrs. Whitehead's busDegree In Music Education. , band, Ernest, has been a great
help as "prop man" for these
.
operettas. The shows, always a
' ANNUNIIIIII ·
highlight of the school year, have
. "'1919, ... A.. . . .
TI-I!Jooii-been rewarding for both Mrs.
DeU' Alia Laaden: This letter ·
Cna. . s,.aaWhitehead and the students.
Is about sparlamanshlp. I hope
.·
Whitehead tries to make
you will publish lt. Parents whose
Kev 1n and Becky Teaford, of herMrs.
,
cla~ses
interesting
and
enjoy·
children compete might learn
Rodney, are annouclng the birth
able while remaining a learning
sometlilng. I did.
of their first child, a son, Kody
She wants the stu·
experience.
My 9-year·old son loves sports. · lover or spouse every detail Robert.
"Bill" Is a good soccer player about the put, but I realize !ball
Born June 22 at Holzer Medical
and does well on· the football should tell my husband about thla Center, the Infant weighed eight
field. Recently be became Inter· before ICIJN!OIM! else does. I've pounds and seven ounces, and
ested In wrestling. I attend his been sUent because I'm ashamed ·was 21 inches long.
first match yesterday and It was that I dldn' t tell him ~fore we ·. Maternal grandparents are
· a disaster. I nearly broke down married. Also, very few people Mr. and r.frs. Charles Michael,
' ·and cried as I sat there and know that t have had three Racine. Paternal grandparents
walcbed BtU's arms and legs get husbands.
are Mr. and Mrs. Morris Tea·
twisted every which way. It was
How do I break this ~und ford, Portland.
.
an easy victory for his young barrier? I'm cou'n tlng on you to
Maternal great grandparents
opponent.
·
tell me what io dO about this are Mrs: Russell Findley, Ra·
. After tile match was over - It
problem tbat Is haunting me. cine; Russell Findley, Pomeroy; .
was the Ionaest three minutes of Bopelal bl Bllth•da
' and Mrs. Marte Michael, Pome.
my llfe - "Adam," the victor, - DeU' Bet~ Your absolute roy. Paternal great grandmother IAC:::CIDENT REPORTS!
grabbed my son's band and said, deadlble Is the day you read this IS Mrs. Carrie Whaley, Shade.
A Phoeniz policemen Hya
"You did a good job, Bill. That In the paper. Hand your husband
he
HW ~t eppeaNCI to a
was a great malch." Adam's the column and say, '~I wrote this
a tarrentula crowllng on hla
father rubbed my son's head,
letter.''
pants leg, So he drew hia .
offered a few compliments an&lt;l .
Belleve me when I tell you that
piltol end shot it. He alao
encouraged him to keep do big his the truth wUI set you free, You Ice cream sale
The Racine Firemen Ladles
best.
wUI feel as If a 10· ton weight has
shot e hole in hla foot. A
Auxiliary
has homemade lee
when Bill went Into the ring for been.lifted from your shoulders.
man . from Oshkoah re·
his second malch, Adam',s father
Please write and tell me that cream for sale at $2 a quart and
TheTaste'llu~
ported. I pulled off the road,
, noticed that he didn't have a
you took my advice and bow $1 a pint. Flavors available are
to look at my roedmap.
vanilla, chocolate, lemon, straw·
coach. He took my son under his much better you feel.
at my mother-inglanced
berry, pineapple, banana, but·
wing and coached him through·
PlfUininB a wedding? Wlaot'•
law. and went over the
terscotch. peach. and cherry nut.
out the match. A good-looking
rislot? What'• wrong? "The Ann
Call
Alana
Butler
at
949-2227
or
lllilbankmant.
high acbool wrestler, wbo saw Lander• Guide fo,. Bride•,. will
Emma
Lyons
at
949·2431.
my son's lack of experience,
relieve your mu:iety. Send a •elf·
sbuuted suageatlou throuahout oddreued, loJII, butin.etJ•tize enve·
WIC pick-up
tbe malch.
lope and a checlc or money order for
The Meigs County Health DeGod love them - total
13.65 (thil include• · P"'tage ond
partment
announces the followstranaera. senstna !bat the boy
loondlinlf) to: Bride•, c/o Ann
Ina
dates
for
July WIC plck·up.
needed a hand In defeat, they
Lander~. P.O. Box 11562, Chicawo,
The
dates
are
June
29 and 30, July
extended tbetrs.
Ill. 6061 J.()562.
3
and
7,
from
9tolla.m.and1
to3
You can be sure In the future,
p.m.
Ann, when my ion Ia the winner,
Make-up dates are July 10, 17
,he will remember what it was
and
24,9 to 11 a.m. and lto 3 p.m.
like to be the loser and bow much
July
shot dates are July 1 and
11 helped to aet a kind word from
25,
frOII')
9 to 11 a.m. and 1 lo 3
bls ~1. - B.Z. bl Aldea,
p.m.
N.Y.
, DeU' S.Z.: Thank you tor
Jiving us an example of what
NEW YORK (UPI) - Fifteen
true sportamanshlp Ia all about.
more prospectlve jurors were
I bope thll column 111Je11 up on
chosen Tuesday for the tax
hundreds of bulletbl boarda In
evulon trill of bliHonslre Leona
locker rooma all over the world.
This lesion Ia one that cannot be Helmlley. the aelt-deserlbed
"queen" of the hotel business.
repeated too often, especially In a
On Monday, 26 potenUaljurors
IOC!ety that belleves wlnnbla Is
we...
Mleeted dlarina the proeverythlna.
·
ceedlnaa before u.s. District
Dear !1111 Laaden: I've been JudJeJoluiWalar, who hopes to
llvlng With a Ume bomb, .\1· bave a pool of 116 people from
llloulill'wliHn marrt.d for alx which to draw the trial jury.
Leona Helmlle:v, Frank Turco,
)11!81'1 to my third lnlabud, I have
45,
of Lutz, J'la., uti JOMph
IIIII bHD able to tell 111m that
IJcart.
51, of Oyater Bay eave,
· filgbpd No. 211 aot tile !atber of
my IJ'OWII daqllter. Tbla child LDac Jaland - both fonner
bora willa I wu barely 11. "'" • • uiOCiatel ol tile HeltnlMy aeeoDCI "'llll'ld aotDt ted bel' leyl - are cllliwld lila ~1111t
tax I¥U1Dil llldlcbilllll.
wbea abe wu 2 years old. My
Belmallf'l btaiiHnd, Barry,
llulbiN' aDd I baft 10 COIItact
wttb either of Ill)' former 80,wual10C~buthlscue
wu
beeause of his
tp~Marn, but we llve near my
camtl)' atld near my daqlater tllfiDI helltil. Till realtor, wbo
lllolbud.lt'allllraftlau IQIWIICia • blllloD oollectlon of
tllat . . . . . tllll
tbe tn&amp;th propel tiel tUt lllcludllllle.Emph State BtiOdf!W,
~ .........t.
. . . . . . . . . . .)'0111'. . . . e;aal lb I I tlllt 111ft 1111

A lesson

WHOLE RED, RIPE WATERM

Galon

Bennett
•
reun1on
conducted

select cuts ofbeef and pork•

Pound

f

WadnaadiiV. June 28, 1989
Page 7

.

Boneless
ibeye Steak

Se~tinel

••• • :..11

Honor Society induction ·held

JULY 4th.

1-lb.

..

What a challenge.

'·

__ _ ~. -will offw.,..... _, chalc:e et• _,.,._ '-· wn.n ovoiloblo. mlecting
the umoiiVfngo O f t . - which will _.,.....to purchut the tdYortiled hem tt tho
,

--

·,

Katie's Korner

·A IJ\ifhiE rt1J1 IIOU:'f-Each of~ ICtu .... ld ittma. reqund tO be I'Ndily IVIItebll for
.... in IICh Kroe- Storw, eiccepc • IOICific8ly noted in thi&amp; ed. If wt1 do run out of an

-iotld prico- 3D doyo. 0nlyont-

• •

The Daily

.

w•

_..bel'

I

,..a!

...,.ed

u-

fit • • .t obllptldto te1J I

,.,.ed

8llillary lftlpllred.

•

'I
'I
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�Ohio

Cream Cheese

WEDNESDAY

49C

MIDDLEPORT -The Brad·
ford Church of Christ vacation
Bible. school today through Frl·
day from 9-11:30 a.m. Classes
will be for pre-school through
senior high.

TNt Coupon, Yllld

thN hi.. July 1, 188htl'owoll'o

limit Quantities .

' - Yolu. .One coupon per
fMIIIy.

STORE HOURS .
·Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM .

...

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH;

.

E BONELESS

LB

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Rump Roast ..........

$:169

CHICKEN

·

Leg Quarters ...~..•~ 49&lt;
FRESH PORK BUn
.. $ ,
3
9
Steak/Roast ••.•L:.... 1
ECKRICH
$1\
'
49
Bologna

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'

•••••••••••••••

$

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MELON

$2!.9
FRESH

BAKERY
DONUTS

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$1!9

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Chuck Roast ....L:....
.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$ 49
Chuck Roast ....L:.... 1 ,
SUPERIOR'S ASSORTED
·
$ 29
Lunch Meats ....L:.••• 1

-

A

LB.

•••

G Cl r)[) W f

[Jr~

I "• () ,\ y

nmL "'" or~t Y

MEDIUM
EGGS
DOZEN

28&lt;

CAROLINA PRIZE

Bacon ...............L:.•••• 69&lt;

Umit 1 (aupen Por Family. ~
Wodao . .y, Juno 21
At
woll's Super Yolu. MUST H YE
PON.

Onii

STOKELY'S

CATSUP
32 Oz. Bottle
U.S. #1 IDAHO

Potatoes ••••••••••••••
.10 LB. BAG.

$249.

F~vomE

Cottage Cheese...~•• 99&lt;

'

. .

. . .

P.neapple ..•..•t~~i. 2 /

~HIPS AH~Y SELECIO~S OR

Oreo Cook1es !~~~~~.
~IHS

lOTSA !OP

2u•·2f$1

c:.t-r.IIIII~At

V·GIH~-

""1, , ...

UNUIIP'S

PORK ~n· BEANS

$ .

.

.

KEMP'S

99(
24
Assorted Pops ••••••
CT.

217

...,....

ASST. VMITifS

Cap'n Crunch

:..

~~4/89C

r,••wintl"f!ll
l' ~..tii•Mif &lt;~·il.:~
!JIII,IIJIIJI : ma

SJ49

····-···
....

15or
1602. .

~. . . . .I!Jibl.

I
,l~

C.0711

•
·r---- VALUABlE
COUPON
1 m41071

I

I

218

Alr.YUIIS

SUGAR

QuakerOh's
,2..
1101

-SJ29
~

4.25

Ll.$139

-----'"--"'--

--

One with I 10.00 or More Additional Purrhase.

ASST. LAYS

POTATO CHIPS
11.5

FOLGER'S

oz.

CRYSTAL
I OI JAI

BAG

CAMPBELL'S

Fried
Chicken·

'jOMEROY~The Meigs CooP'
eratlve J,&gt;arlah, 311 Condor St.,
will sponaor tree clothing days
today through Thursday .trom
9: 311 a.m. to 3 p.m. There will be a
selection or men's, women's, and
children's summer clothing
available. More Information
may be obtained by calling
992-7400.

$ 9

POMEROY - Terl· Hockman
will present a program for
chtldren on taking care of the
skin and glamour technlq ues on
Wednesday at the Pomeroy ·
Ubrary.

ASST. COLORS

GIW£ 'A'

Breast Quarters

-'-i~~·~~-~

rm::: 16uWIHtD.(

~ ----·-- ·-- --"

.Lilbll ..tl••
,,._. .... IW.w,.,.,.~IC'*U'f:l.,..,.ll!ooi..-..
_,_11_ ', ilf'IIIPIWJ .. IIilllltlllcWI . .I• ......... "'"'"""~•
III'IWI'I ~W IIP"'... '"'rr''"

I ~"'"""'""tun""'..t'"

POMEROY -The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet on Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the home
of Peggy Moore.

POMEROY -The Pomeroy , '·
group of Alcoholics Anonymous
and Al-Anon will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
CathoUo Church.

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a: hymn sing on Friday at the
Middleport Church ~ Christ In
Christian Union on Pearl St. at
7: 311 p.m. The •tne will feature
"Moutaln TDp Goilpe1 S1qera,"
"NI!IV Life Slnpra," "ftetlec·
tiona Trio," and "Narrow Way."
The public Ia Invited to attend.

.

--

RACINE -Dan Hayman and
the ,lith Trio will be IIJIIInl at
the Racine Park oa ltollte 338 In
Racine oa S.turda)' at 8 p.m.
atlllndtne are to btlnl

nc.

laWII cllatra.

--

Charmin
Bath Tissue

HOLLY FARMS

MIDDLEPORT- The Feeney- BenDett Post128 and auxiliary
will meet Wednesday nlgbt with
a dinner at 6: 30 and meetings at
· 7:30.

......... o.- Clllll will
... ~~

All Stores Will Be
Open Independence Day
!uesdoy. July 4th
Regular Hours
8:00 A.M. til 10:00 P.M•

ODL
.

MIDDLEPORT -The Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church
will be . having revival today
'through Saturday. at 7: 30 each
nllht. Clovis Vanover will be
featured. The public Is Invited.

fOIIERIIY -Belli and Beaus

.

Girls wiU attend
Cadet Week at OHP

REEDS\11LLE -There will be
11 has bee n announced thal
yard and bake sale, as well as car
Jane
Ann Wll!lams, Syracuse,
wash , on Saturday at 9 a.m .
and
Mary
Parker, Pomeroy, will
sponsored by the Faith Gospel
be
a1tend!ng
Cadet Week this
Ladles Circle at DoUy Reed's
·
week
at
lhe
Ohio
Slate Highway
residence In Reedsville. All proPal rol Academy In Columbus.
ceeds will go to the church.
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
Mars is the first planet beyond the were probably built by King NebuEarth, away from the sun.
chandnezzar II around 600 B.C.

POMEROY - There will be a
baseball card show on Saturday
at Meigs High School from 9 a .m.
to 3 p.m. sponsored by the band
boosters. Drawings with prize
give-aways will be held. Adm!S·
slon Is $1 for adults and $.50 for
children. Call 992-2673 lor
Information.

\'on I llldeatendelatly Owned
l.ow-I•Jiced SuaterlllarkJtt

SYRACUSE - Swimming lessons will begin on Tuesday al the
London Pool. Classes available
are beginners, 9-10 a.m .. ad- ·
vanced begillners, 10-11 a.m.,
and Intermediate, 11 a.m. to
noon. Call Marty Maynard a 1
992-9909 or 949-2954 for lnfor·
matlon .

--nmu

~

SATURDAY
MASON - There will be a
gospel sing on Saturday at the
Mason Park from 6:30-9:30
featuring live area groups. Refreshments will be sold and the
event Is sponsored by the Mason
Youth Advisory Council.

RACINE -There will be boys
basketball camp today through
Friday from 9 a.m. to noon for
IP'ades three through eight. The
price Is $33 and anyone In teres led
can bring the money to the first
day of camp. Call 949-2954 for
Information.

POMERO\' - Free clothing
day will be held at the Salvation
Army In Pomeroy on Thursday
from 10 a.m. until noon. All area
retldents In need of clothing are
welcome to come.

'h GALLON

P17~7l

~'\::.t.'lt

2 Uttr Bottle

Ice Cream ............ $11 9: .

·l

21!

RC COLA

DAIRY LANE

$1 89

-

I

ments will be sold.

Pa~-9

POMEROY -The Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on Route 143 will be
having vacation Bible school
today through Friday from 6-8
p.m.

POMEROY - A training ses- .
stan . for care givers, family
members, and trlends or victims
of Alzheimer's Disease, stroke,
Parkinson's Disease: and Hun~
tlngton's Disease will be held
Thursday from 2-4 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Building.

. GALLON

DIG BEND

POMEROY - Tbe Pomeroy ·
Church of ChriSt will be having
Vacation Bible School today
through Friday. from 6: 30-8:30
p.m. The theme Is "Jesus, Joy
Forever." All cbtldren of the
·area, klndergarll!n through 12th
·grade, are Invited to attend.
There will be clowns, refresh.ments, crafts, fellowship, fun,
and Bible lessons everyday.

LONG BOTI'OM -Revival
will be held at Faith Full Gospel
ChuJ:Ch In Long Bottom on
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
at 7: 30 p.m. each evening. Rev.
Dan Tucker Invites the public .

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $149

3 ~IAM~ND

MIDDLEPORT - The Heath
United Methodist Church In
Middleport will be having vaca·
'tlon Bible school today through
:Friday, tram· 9:30-11:45 a.m.
dally.

MASON -There will be a free
teen dance on Friday In Mason
sponsored by the Mason Youth
Advisory Council from 8-11 p.m.
featuring Rockola. Refresh-

THtJRSDAY

FLAVORITE

•

sponsor an open dance on Friday
at the Senior Citizens Center
from 8-11 p.m. Caller will be
,Jim Underwood. All Western
square dancers are Invited.

MIDDLEPORT -The Brad·
bury Church of Chris tin Mlddle·port will be having vacallon
Bible school today thrqugh Friday from 9-11: 30 a.m. dally.
Classes are for klndergarll!n
through sixth IP'ade. The theme
Is "Joy Trek-Journey with
Jesus Through Time and Space."
·The public Is Invited lo attend.

PRICESEFFECTIVE SUN., JUNE ~6 THRU SAT., JULY 1, 1989

U.S.D.A. CHOICE·

Community calendar =-=====;::;;:;;::================

• 01. Pkg.

Umlt 1 With

We Reserve The Richt To ·

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Vl'adnaaday. June 28, 1989

I-

: ~~:~:.

..

I

aumns

-

I_
I
I~
,.. ..................... M ..
I
"'"':~~:;~~~~

4 ROLL
PKG.

.......

(1,...1111HI

LUV'S
DIAPERS

PORIC
LOINS

$169

ASST. VARIETIES

IL

FRESH LEAN

Ground Chuek

REG. • ADC

DUNCAN HINES

Folger's Coffee

Cake Mix

$999

�1189

.

••

GoveriiiA'.

. . ·

Ohio Supreme Court Cblet
Justice Thomas Moyer was preslilt to admlnllter the oath. of
ottkle to ell elected a tate omctala
durlq tbe lneupratlon ceremOIIY oaTuelday evenlftl.
PardclpeniS from the Melp
Cowtty area. wltb the office IIley
- holdl'll In the moc:k eovernment are Jim Durst, acln ot Ed
and Rllth Durst, Middleport;
apoaaorecl by the America Le&amp;lon Poll 128 held tbe offices of
Aaaltaat Atbletlc Dlreclor, and
Ryan Bar~. son ol Guy and

Carroll Ann Harper, Middleport,
also aponsored by Poat 128, held
the office ot Civil Service Com·
millston Leader. Both will he
seniors at Melp Hl&amp;h School Ibis
fall.
Hank Cleland III, IOD ol Mr..
and Mrs. Hank Cleland, Racine,
sponsored by American Legion
Polt 602, held ,the otflce ot City
Collllcllman. He will be a Hlllor
at Southern High School this fall.
Matthew H. Scbul, son of
Herman and Nancy Schul,
Reedsville, sponsored by Amerl·
can Legion Post 39, held tile
ottlce ot National Guard Recru·
ter. He wlllbeasenloratEaatern
High School tblll fell. Nonnan R.
"Jay" Humphreys, SOD of Randy
and Judy Humphreys, Pomeroy,
also sponsored by Post 39, held

the office ot City Treasurer . .He
will be a seniOr at Melp High
School tbll fall.
Buckeye Boys State enrol·
lrnent Is over 1,400 blgh acbool
juniors from tbrouahout Ohio.
Boys State 11 the largest of the 50
programs conducted by the
American Leaton throughout tile
United States, alnd II belftl held
on tbe Campus of Bowling Green
State University.
The keynote speaker for the
year Is Randall Gardner. Repreaentatlve to tbe General Assem·
bly. Thecomrnencernentaddress
will be given by Congressman
Michael Oxley. Both Gardner
and Oxley attended Buckeye
Boys State and are members of
the Buckeye Boys State Hall of
Fame.

ALA notes NonDependence ,Day
...... CINNII p&amp; &amp;1111 -

t,. II

·.,
a ,_

• ........, 111111er nGI. '1'1111 lla;lll ed "r!• • •

........... ,., •• , &gt; . . . _ ........
JUar lllai n•llll· ' h e - e 7711•• wiTittaelllla
11-a...tqv' ,,,..
ltl , , ,

---People in the
By WILLLUI C. TR0'1't
Ualled P.,.. lllterae&amp;loul

OF STALLONE AND THE
SCIIWA&amp;ZEN-aliiUVE&amp;: Im·
allnl! · the TermiJietor meetlna
Rambo ..Allllllll8elnfllneaana'
says he and ~ ll&amp;alllae
mey IIOIIleday appear on the
screen toaether. "We've talked
about It sevtll'el times," Schwer: zenenar says In an Interview to
be aired on "Good Morning
America" Thursday, "to do a
• film toaelher possibly, acting
: toaether or him beln&amp; tbe pro• ducer and me acting In the film or
: vice versa. There are a lot of
: tblftiS, of course, to deal with.
There are egos to deal with.
, There's money - he gets .a
tremendous salary; so do I."
: Schwarzeneager also discussed
; the baby he and wife lllarta
• Sllrlver will bave at tbe end ot the
; year. '11 Ill a lot of responsibility
: but I'm ready for taking on tb011e
· kinds of challenaes and respon&amp;l·
biUUes," Arnold said. "I'm old
: eiiOUih !U). We bavemoney. We
. have time. We have love for
: cblldren and we have . a great
• relationship .... I mean I'm really
: excited about It - to see a little
: 'Schwarzen-Shrlver. '"
· CELEB&amp;\TING &amp;UNIER'S
~ REIGN: Monaco Is elready
: celebretlna the 40th anniversary
• ot Pn.ee Bellller's reign. Early
: celebrations were kicked off
: Tuesday with the opening of an
-exposition commemorating
: Rainier's accompUshments. The
: three-day celebration also In·
• eluded an outdoor
pul:lllc mass
.
.
•
:
:
-

.

~D

-

news----..~~

and a aala reception In front of·
Rallller's pink palace. Rainier, ,
who Ill credl~ wltb treetna
Monaco from 111 dependence on
pmblllls. ucendell to tbe,tlu:on Nov, 19, 19C9, lbllowlill the
deatb o1 hlllii'PIIdtather, Prtlee
.... 71

NEWMAN AND NEWftlAL:

It Joolll like .... Nn ee II
10111&amp; to have to ftellt tile dell war
apln. He loll an eppeel Monday
In hill attempt . to have a suit
aplnst hllll dlsmtaaed and a
lawyer tor' Westport, Conn., dell
owner llllu 0.111 says the case
should 10 to trlel qaln sometime
after Labor Day. Gold contends
he helped Newman develop hill
food line, which Includes pop ·
com, apqlleUI sauce and aatad
dresllna. uc1 11 owed an 8
percent ahare ot the comjl&amp;ny,
whlcll atwsltaprotlll to charity.
"There will deanttely be a
second trtal unlels there' 1 a
settlement, which I don't foresee," said Newman atlQrney
Wetiey Bo11011. The flrit tHai
ended In mllltrtal In June 1988
after some jurors received Information not Introduced In court.
1QUU!: COMES TO &amp;VNNY:
Bup ReiDer won't be wearlna
hll traditional pajamas wben he
gelS married Saturday at hill Loa
Angeles mansion and ll)e bride,
playrn11te ol the year IUJnberlq
Coarad, won't he weartoa bunny
ears and a tall. The groom, 63,
will he clad In a vea ted tuxedo
and Conrad, 26, will wear a
slightly off-white dress of taffeta·

of A. meeting held

'
'
•
:
:
•
:
:
·

The annual picnic of the take place.
District Deputies and District
Mrs. Srnltb talked about the
Past Councilors Club of District atate session, that Is to held at the
13, Daughters of America, was HoUday Inn In Mansfield on Aua.
held recently at Kacllelrnacker 14, 15, and 16. Members aotna are
Park In Lopn.
to make reservations.
Erma Cleland, Cbester Council
Others present were Kathleen
323 asked the blessing before tile · Trowbridge, Vernte Congrove.
1:30 p.m. basket dinner, and Evelyn McGeothtln, Vlratnla
Esther Smith, Cbes12r Council, Matheny, Edllll Edpr, Faye
. president protem, presided at tbe Belley, Mildred Lowery, Sylvia
• short business meeting. The Bownes, and Fay,e Tlowtnldge,
: Lord's Prayer and pledae to the all from the Loran Council;
: American ttag were repeated In Marpret Cottrll~ Etlesn Clark,
• unison. A get well card was JaniCe Lawson. Bette Bias. and
: slaned for Ada Morris who Is In Bet IY Spencer, all from tbe
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Guldtna Stat Council, Syracuse:
'rhe date for tbe club's Cbrlst· Thelma White, Opel HoUon,
mas dinner and meeting has been Ethel Orr, and Mary K. Holter,
: set tor Dec. 2 at tbe Western from the Cheater CotiiiCil. Chea·
: Slzzlln' Steak House In Athens at ter; and two auesta, Sandra
: 1:30 p.m. A $3 att1 exchange will White and MliUe Aspery.

PIISCIIniON
SHOP

..lldle....

On July 5, NonDependence
Day, the citizens of Southeast
Ohio will loll millions ot Amerl·
cane acrou tltl! nation In declartne tbelr fleedon from amoklng.
Jut one diY after our nation
celebrates Ita Independence. the
American Lung Association ."the atrlltmas Seal people - Is
scheduling special events
throughout tbe country to Inform
nicotine aclcllcted srnokera that
tbere Is help In the battle to be

style IIUc )With a chaPet·lenath
tree ot ~arettes.
train embroidered with tbe ClOU·
"Many of the amoliera who
ple'a lnltlalll. "KimberJely baa
contact our oltlce about quit tina
wantld to keep (tbe ncJdlq) as
are phylllcelly· and psycltologl·
tradlllonal as posllble." C.lllt
Cewle, who Ill orpn•• the celly addicted," said Jane Den·
bow, director ot the Southeast
atlelr, told the Loa Aapl•
Times. '1 tblak abe bel a pod Branch of the ALA of Ohio.
"Nicodne addiction Is a conUnu·
eye tor pod tbbtp and trbeJt she
lng process from the very first
see somethln&amp; that'• done jn tt.e
taste abe t'eCOpbes It IJIIIIIeo
dlately and WID respond to II."
Cowie II ao efficient tbat he bas
an extra pelr of ahoes a halt-aiR!
laraer on hand In caae Conrad's
feet 1""11 durtna the ceremony
A workshop prograln on basket that report. DevoUons, a short.
but. other tban a mendon of au
making was presented by Janet , essay, "Reap More Than You
eo.Jif. he won't aliy who'• O!l the Holsinger at the reC:eat meeting Sow" was given by Jackie Frost.
rues t lilt. Tbe aewlyweds won't ot the Shade Valley Council of The public beautification com·
be IOlna far after the cele\lra· · noral Arll held at tbe home ot mlttee reported tbat the flower
tlon. TileY will boneymooa at tbe
bed was planted at the CheSter
Shells Taylor.
mansion.
RoBer Mills Mini-Park.
MI. Hollltnger Ina tructed and
OLDIP8Il:l: The two 1tars of
It wu announced that the Olllo
aaalllted each member Ill making
an Oct.l a1tow In Macl*alquare
AssoclaUon of Garden Clubs
baaketl of ll'apevlne and boney·Gardea trill have a 'wnllmldqe
IUCkle vine and decorating them annual state convention will be
ot 1'19 years. 11811 ..,., 86, and
trltb bows ot ribbon ar raffia.
GeorpllllrM, 93, wllllteiAIItqe
Roll call was answered by
toaether for what Hope'I &amp;pokes·
members namlna a material tbat
man aayaiS tile ant UU..Burna
caa bi uaed to melle Nlkets.
alllo will be promot:lna a new
Jennifer Krawsczyn, vice pres·
book, "All My Beat Frtendii" ...
!dent, presided over tbe meetln&amp;
Iettice llallll d~tcuaslna her
and Betty Dean, treasurer, gave
career: '1 don't atna. I don't
dance. I don't aet," WMt abe
PAOi
doea mostly Ill appear around tile
PoUtlcal ectloa ......m.ttte.. or
coiiDtry u a auest bolt on PACa, li'" +arad 4,1$7 le llaJ ltl8,
various radio atatlons and this ~ to dlt WGrJd •ltnanac al
week It's WKJN' 1 turn In Batoa u.s. Polltlcl. PAOt tataaM&amp;
Rouae, La. "Nobodyk.wame ... ..,...... u ·~ • COiporiU..,
SWIR ICIIKII
I'm jull J•llc:a," aeld · ibe f a - and letter carrlln WIIIIIKII
u SbPac for 11.- dlltrlbllwoman who helped bnq down ton, a Back pac. a Clpr-Pae and a
evangel lit lim B•kt.-.

WA'IIINOOF -

~-

Oar Big Sa•••r ·
Claar•••• Co•tl••••
·oFF
SELECT GROUPS OF CONNIE, FOOTWORK$,
NATUIAUZEI;·NilE, IEEIIK &amp; DPS
GOOD SEUC110ft OF PUlSES

,,...,4.,,..,u
NOW

300fo

'

Gail HGveatter'
Unda 'n'ent

I

'

'

'

IWT IMUCE I'ICICIIS

Sti.IM

AlaiiCAN
CHEESE ......~•.U.W,. sus

CAI.tfMIIA

liD. IIGS .........P.H.....97'

COUIIriYCIOCI

MAIOAliNE·

....•
,,
..'
.,,
••~·•

OIAHGES ......L~SI.... 2/69c

CAll. .I lA

-•
·'

w

.

The aurfaca area encompooo• 62.4 acroo on tho J .

•
••

ute quadrangle mapt ap·
pro:~~imately

lAKING
POYATOES-...&amp;P~.

,r
,.,
f

encornp•~e~

~.

YAII

POII-N-lEANS ••••••!!.~!•• 2/Sl.-19
RITZ BITS CHEESE ••••••••ll.~!. S1.59
• 77111
VINNA SAUSAGE •••••••!Y:.o.z• S1.15
BIR CIIOC. - - OPIA CIIIAMS, FIENC:H VANILLA
ASST. COOIOIS •••••••••••• lM!.s1.99
.·
KETCHUP ••••••••••••••••••••••!!.~!-. s1.49
S111PS••••••••••••••••••!!.!!. Sl.99
'
240. .
59C
••••••••••••••••••••••
•.

-..-··
......

;-. ....••••••·••••••··••· S1.39
REG••••••-!!!.~!-. 5I S1.09

••

880 acree

an~

uta quadrangle maps approximately .7 mile~ nort.,_ of Pomeroy.
A copy of the oppllcotion
and a mop llluotratlng the
area to be mined are on fila
at the Meigs County Ra·
corder's Office for public

I...•

....

nor-

is loc:llecl on the Cheotor and
Pomeroy U.S.G.S. 7'11 min·

~

•••••••••••••99C

mile~

pillar method II located in
Section 3. and Fractional&amp;.
12 of Salisbury Township.
and Section 4 and Fraction 4
of ChNter Township, Molgo
County. The mining area

r'

1400. ·

.7

thellt of Pomeroy. The area
to be mined by the room and

~

IDAHO

•*
'

20°/o OFF ALL SALES
JEWIUY • SCAIYES • PLUS SIZES • SPECIAL ORDERS
DIESSES • JEANS • CASUALS
OPifiiiOfi.·SAT. 10·5, 111S.·'IInm.10·7

IEGISnl FOI GIFn TO IE GIVEN AWAY

Cork11's
Classics
~12 WEST MAIN
POMROY

fJ'B~ts~ulst

"Mid-Wssk" Ssls/

,( • •

W11kl

•

SIRLOIN' STEAl
SANDWICH

.
S
1.39
WITH FI.S ................ *1.94
'

• -

•

.

•

.. '

1

••

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY ;

Thi btl Of ........,.,.............;
i'OMEIOY, OHIO
992·d56

•

"At

:¥ff'......==1~·.;

d

••

Will, S. Hunt, and Jaymar
Cool proponiOI and 11 lo·
cated on the Che.ter and
Pomeroy U.S.G.S. 7'11 min-

•.,,

.•,•

Spe~ltl OIT6e

.·

Townahip, Meigl County .

•

CELEIY ..............!Q.~,.... J9c

:¥ff'......-.=6,( • •':;dJP.....dr(·• •

JUNE 29th • JULY

ond pillar mine. The area to
be effected by surface oper•
tione it: located in Section 8
and Fraction 3 of Salisbury

••
•.•

WlftSAP APPLES-· s1.19

hOtel to. get payment of the prize while In school. She was a
money as well as Interest that 16-year-old sophomore when she
has been accruing.
became preanency .
"I was sad, but happy at the
Attorneys James Sitter of Las
Vegas and N~lson Rose of Call· same time," Spry said of her
fornta said the casino should prepancy. "I told my friends
have paid the jackpot, arguing and they helped me a lot and a ave
that Nevada · Jaw prohibiting me the supporl I needed,"
persons under the age of 21 from
playing slot machines was
"Babies can be the most
vague.
wonderful thing In one world, If
They also argued that a hear- you are ready to give up rncllt of
Ing officer, who heard the case your time and take tile responat·
earlier this ' year and subse- biUty of lll)Other IUe coming
quenlly upheld a Nevada Gam- before your own."
Ing Control Board decision not to
Spry said her motber, Phyllis
pay the Jackpot, did not llave Spry, aave birth to a Nby wben
sufficient evidence on which to she was a high. school Junior and
base his decision.
another as a senior. The mother
Judge Donald Mosley held that says· It Is her hope that the
Nevada law permitted the resort yearbook's story of her dauah·
and gaming officials to deny the ter' s experience will cauae other
jackpot,. Mosley also ruled that students to consider tbe plttellll
the hearing officer had sufficient of youthful parenthoold.
evidence on which to base denial
"I hope these younp lll!rs,· who
of the jackpot.
hear
about this, thouah. will
Erickson's attorneys con·
think
before
they get Into trou·
tended Interest on the jackpot Is
collecting at a rate of $10,000 a ble," she said. "It has been hard
month and that historically Nev· for Rhonda. She has ~ sick a
ada casinos are not fined for lot and In and out of the hospital .
She just about died In Auaust."
allowing minors to gamble.
Students who worked on the
Erickson contendS such a pol·
icy encourages casinos to exploit yearbook wanted a theme lnvolv·
lng student responsblllty,ao they
·
children.
decided 'Jn a two-page spread
High school yearbook features that focused on tee1111ge parents,
said Jimmie Sue Mazon. tile
teeaagJ! mom
yearbook's sponsor.
LOGAN; W.Va. (UPI)
•'What could be more responsl•
Rhonda Spry appeared In her
ble?"
Mazon said. "It might be a
yearbook at Logan County High
controversial
theme and some
School this year. So did h~r
l·YE':&amp;{·old twin sons, James Ray may have negative thouglliS
about it, but ltlssucb a prevalent
and Jeremy Scott.
.
Spry, a mother at 17, edited and tblng now. I don't expect any
designed a special section for severe criticism.
"Be bles raising babies Is
The Guyana dealing with tile
controversial topic of minors something we art&gt; all having to
who have given birth to children deal with these days."

lamation. The application is
for an underground. room

}

•"
,.,.'

Mary·OUlard,C.M.A.
I

COOKED- HAM ••••;,.••••••~e. Sl.97

..•'
.~ .

...•'

· Offtc:e Staff:

'

·

PVBLIC NOTICE
Addington, Inc., P. 0 . Box
2189. Allhland. Kentucky.
41 106, hao oubmiued a cool
mining and reclamatton per·
mit application# 1 116 tot he
Ohio Doplr1mont of Naturol
Resources. Division of Rec-

~

4••

OFF

''(

S111111DED S2.19 L1.

•

Public Notice ·

•

1

Appointments and Walk·inl.Weloome

"'Super SaWn,•"

1

••••••

I1D1'8 VALLEY IliAD£ A

Judge strips underage gambler
ol SI mliHon jackpot
LAS VEGAS. Nev . (U P!) - A
judge took away Kirk Erickson's
"Million Dollar Baby," saying
Nevada gaming au thorltles were
correct In denying h 1m a $1
million slot machine jackpot
because he wa s tooyoungtoplay.
Erickson was 19 years old two
years ago when he lined up the
winning cornblnatlon on a $1 slot
;:. machine called "The Million
: DollaP Baby" at Caesars Palace
.. on the Las Vegas Strip, winning a
lt$a;061,812 jackpot. ·:
·
~ The Royal, Ark. , gambler, now
" 21, and his family have since
:1: ·been •fighting the state and tlle

.......
.,.

BOLOGNA .......~•••• S1.79
PACKAGED FRANKS •••••l~!~. S1.39
MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••••••••!·••••• 8Jc

....

Innocent plea In protest breast·
baring
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) The Constitution protects a worn·
- an's right to bare her chest just
as II does a man's, eight women
claimed In pleading Innocent to
exposure charges,
· Eight of 10 women arrested
Saturday for baring their b~easts
whtle plcknlcklng at Durand·
Eastman Beach on the shore of
·Lake Ontario pleaded innocent
Monday to the charges .
Two others were scheduled to
appear In court Wednesday.
The women said a 50-year-old
state law that prohibits women
from appearing topless in public
is discriminatory and violates
their 14th Amendment rights to
equal protection.
They claim it is inherently
unequal to allow men to go
.shirtless when women cannot.
The 10, ranging in age from 21
to 61, and about 25 other women
went to the beach to hold the
fourth annual " Topfree Picnic."
The picnics began In 1986 when
a judge dismissed exposure
charges against the '"Topfree
Seven," who took their shirts off
in a city park and allowed
themselves to be arrested.
The c barges were eventually
dismissed after a highly public·
lzeq . trial in which a lawyer for
the women Introduced a Barbie
. doll In court as evidence that
women are expected to adhere to
an Ideal of beauty that is
impossible to achieve.
The 1987 and 1988 picnics
occurred without incident.
Deplltles said they made the
arrests this year after other
bathers at the beach complained.
The 10 were led bare-chested to
patrol cars as other women who
had put their shirts on to avoid
arrest sang solidarity hymns.

"''•

. Acceptins New Patients
Monday, Tuesday, 11umclay and Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
'
Wednesday
9 a.m.· Noon

'

held July 18, 19, and 20 In
Mansfield near Klnawood
Center.
The next meeting date has
been changed to July 11 at 7 p.m.
ft will be held at the borne of Mrs.
Frost and election ot officers will
be held. A pool party and picnic
are planaed and each person Is
asked to bl'ln&amp; a salad.

....

Family Practice

PIOIKIION•••
F• AI YJIIII .. Sldn

•
.
ALA's Freedom From Smoking
materials and clinics, have led
mWions of people to stop srnok·
lng -or never start.
A alrnple written test to help
smokers determine the level of
their nicotine dependency as 'fell
as Information on ALA's stopsmoking programs are available
!brought the branch office In
Alben•.
·
Supported through a grant
from Lakeside Pbarrnaceuti·
cals, NonDependence Day Is also
a day when tbe nonsmoking
famUy and friends of smokers
declare their support and aid In
helping loved ones to quit.
For Information on upcoming
clinics or selt-help material,
contact the lung association
office at 614-592-1080.

Floral Arts Council has meeting

Dr.' Daniel
R. Trent

- . o f t , OliO

v
putt, and quitting Is an ongoing
and dltflcull process - not just a
one-shot deal."
Last year, tbeSurgeon General
reported that nicotine Ill tbedrug
In tobacco that causes addition.
The American Luna Assocla·
lion's ~ From Smoking
proarams . address the specific
behavioral problems of breaking
the bonds of niCotine addiction,
enabling the smoker to overcome
the many threatening obstacles
that are enCountered aJona the
road to freedom. from smoking.
The 1989 report of the Surgeon
General reaffirms earlier reports that smoking Is the single
most Important preventable
cauae ot premature death In our
society. The report contlrrnl that
anti-amoklng efforts, like .the

The Daily Sentinei-Paga 11

Pomeloy- Mkllllport, Ohio

Quirks in the news________

Boys State positions announced
After several daya of carn..lanln&amp;. tbe 53rd Ammcan
LIIIDD Buckeye lloyl State, beld
et Bowlllle Greft State Ulllver·
llty, moved to atate hoOd wltb the
lnauauratlon of tbe 1989

bell, .............

Wedneeday, June 28. 1989

300fo SAVINGS PEARLS 30~ SAV.GS
BIUHRONE FOR JUN.
RINGS PINS • PINDANTS • EABINGS
I

No gift brlnga out the lovellneaa of a woman like purle. We
have e tl na sill action of renmnable no non•IIM
prlces .... Comesee.
MEMBEC! ....OALO'S LARGEST 8UYNG GIIOW'

(jfQ)~PENDINI ~ 01WJ1tU10H

30 YEARS OF QUALITY SERVICE

&lt;S9'
~etlelas

vieWing. Wrtnen commentt
or reque&amp;tl for informal
conference may be sent to

the Divllion of Raclomotion.
Fountain Squ,re, Building
' B-3. Columbus. Ohio.
43224 wHhin thirty days of
the leot dlto of publication

212 EAST MAIN. PONIROY

of tM notice.
(6) 28; (7) 6. 12. 19. 4tc

'

5°/o
290 NOITH

SECOND
_..LIPOIT

OFF ON

MIDI GOODS

FIIDAY·SATIM~AY. . . .AY

CHEfl\,OLIT
.~t'N'J:JI OLDSMMiiLE
110 Vft GEO . ·
'

1616 lUI-·., , . . - GAWNUS, OIL
(61-) 446·1672

�:

Ohio

June 28. 1989

June 28, 1988

The Daily Sentinel-

Ohio
Public

.
'

'
'.

:..
•·

:·'.' .
.•'

•

COKE

."

'·

..
,.

/

.. ..'

LB•.,
.'

'· '

LB.

L9.
~
U

·-... ..
.. ..

.

..

•

'
\'

'

•

'

'•

,, I

'
.

........... t r w -

....., or tM -c.·eoumv

.,._,.,_...

c-•q.o.- .._...,.___....o....
. .
992·2621 or 992·6944
................... -··

Verious Sitts

PARTS AND I&amp;RVICE

WOODEN IUilDINGS

For Moot 2 and 4-cydo

915-4300

SEARS 11 IIIDDIIPOIT

~naln•

ltock Jlorto for

(llul lo Hill Top Groary)

'1.

•

"At l•olalll• Prices"

. PH. 949-2101
or bs. 949·2160
Day or Night

1st PJIIZE

COUNTRY STYLE
.

'

•

•

IDAHO

POTATOES

10 LB. BAG

•

$159

KAHN'S
.. WIENERS or
SAUSAGE FIXINS
FOR 4

'

FAMILy PACK

I

..n t •
CAll 7·2·2772

•

••.

('

''

'·

•

4-25-lfll

I A.M.·12 A.M.

r---"BiNoo-----, •
1IlL Uall I

II&lt;.IOOJ./1' loiroo

,. ..... wv 26111

z.J.tfo

•

••
.
•

.

·--

......... ,..,••• on.
--~-·.,_

...

•SHRUB • TREE
TRIM 1nd RE·
MOVAL
•UGHT •HAULING

IIOIIU

I

1

'

'

•

'•i

RooFING

·".me· ' ·

•Mcli!lle
p
.
.
.tf.
.
· ··Mobile Home

Rentell
•Lot Rental•

9.92·2269

IV•••s

LW. STEWART
TIICIING

lt. JJ .......
Pi11u•y, Olllo

1-U.'..Ifll

YOU eAU.IT
WE WiU. HAUL IT
•Gravel
•Umeatone

UNDA'S
PAHmNG

good

Secr...,/CI•k.lmmldiateop.
..mg , , eecrllbtf'VIcla'k for a

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

-.., m tlleconttruc:Uon office.
Mu.t h•• good typing "tkiHt,

ql.-y

•peri....

COfnllll*

1

pkJ 1.

lend ..... n.taP.O. Bt:IT,

FREE ESTIMATES

9~9·2168
. 5-31·'1f.1 110. pd.

,...............
. ..,,...
llllla.t..t••

NCI
I

Slnllk1&amp;1 Chllldar --·--..-· 53.00 111.
~'PI"! ChiiH ...,.. ___ ,,._ $2.15 lit.
Iaiiy Swiss ..............-.......... SJ.5 5 •
Marble ................,.,_........... S2.t5 •
Fw1nar's ChHtt"
...--..- ... S3.00 111.
, ... a.lostonll

W-lngCioooM

··-····

O,EN IOSf IATftDAYS ·
10:00 1 ll 5:00

6·15

c•

I a Gllttor

FREIIITIMA'A!I

Pt.

..

~.=.~anr=
oMIIIII.IUII.I*I. .
SINCE I,_

,...,. Ololo 4S76t

a...

I·IOD.4rt.JJJS

SPECIAL 111S W&amp;IJ .... 29, 10, July 1

kt Tea Mix/ltman

•tals,

w65C ....
c.te

....... • • fer 11\'IIICII

.

........ a.

NEW IUMMIR HOUIII
Moft.·T- 1-1: liMI..f'll. ..1: Wid. •
WIIAIIIJtfwllll&amp; I I

01110

S14 . . . . .
tt2-6t11

SM. ...

FOODS

'-::

SWEEPER IEPAII

OFCASH ·
ISI!IIER
THANA
CARME-Fll
OFSTIIF

umN'S

992-2156

AUIIAIES are
IODElS

FURJ11111
.tiiiORE
221 . . . . . .
rcmmY, 01.

..,.'"·'

992-6172

WAITED

oW11htn •Dry. .

. ., APftllll(l

TodGy"

991-1114

_, ·
a-CIIIII4-44f.-

......... - ..... Coli
- • .,._,Coli.,...

-.. ...... ___

l r r.lllt T.V. .......
QIII4-117•011&amp;

11......-.

s..-... stlll,
Giw Ua .4 Call

·-·-·. __
·-·
.... -·....,...
11·. .- -... .

"-tia. .
Etc•

VAIIGIII

AIWR.

eRIInfii•Fra•••
•Refrlger.._
. . . . . . . . l ... r..l"

W1 1luy All
Non Ferrous

11.- 0 I ol•ill - ... Slltl

"110("

C_,III.. U_.. lhap
5· 211-'II·Gn

tAII•7PII

IIOUDAYS

Mtnor

CAll 992·,756

DOD 01 AUVE

11a"

STIACUSE. 01110
MottFortlgft111d
DotMIUc VeNd•
A/ CII«vvco

ROI!"'!•

'IICYCUIG
oHN 7 DAYS

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SEIVI(E

N'!ASE CertMI.. Mec1'11nic

Middleport,

...,_I&lt;JfCM~M

•o

UIIOI

MVICI

u:::r
-

P • O OR • M - ·- - n

DIRft'TDR

"

NEEDED

Pfowlll't Coot'clnllor Mllded

per!· time lut loOIIIrta OI'Oinirltlon. Strong or.-nlretionel
elclle, wntmo •bAfty.
1n
eGICMion ,_....,.,, Duti• indildo l*lng ..........
Slllng .. d .,_lng

tnt••

cl-.

P-

.... _

................ dotltn-

lno .,..... ,._._ otc. Muot
t. w ling to wortl with • varltty
Ill
Dooooo profor•od.

lend ....,,.., n~m• of two
ret.ttM:. to Bo• 472. O.Hip~
11o. Ohio a&amp;3t . brJul¥ 7th.
F'od•ol, IIOCo,. Clol .... leo
wlola Now hWina , Yaur . . ..
t1J.MO to eu:uo. lmm•
..... _ . . ... Col 1-311-733F 2732-A

· - •t.
Juty 1. Riggi AI U.Or, V•-

lty, Lavotoov. Modldno eobiML

clothoo, _

....... -

.-.

.,,..d

· - - ·· Doryl-.

, . . . . . bo • . _ ....
- b r tt. CloD,_.,... ,,.
station •t Fiwe ~· on Fridllr•
.Nne 30th • 11 ...u..., Jtl!p
ht, lo.m. · .... llo. Th•owill be
bl1 of nice alotHng. Bel. .,.d
mile. item~.

Altll'ltion uaa plo red WDu ld
you •• • llig._ pold poalllonl
Not I job. tMit e c•. . With the
~unitY

h••

positioN
been • • ·
OOVEI'INioiENT JOSS
.....,...0,230 .... Now
l*lnlf
II) IOS.P7·800U
Elrt. R-HOS for currant .....

Coli

~.

71,

NormenE H,..,..,,..,.•on

blr. llnlrt'11. collector llentl.
ft'MICII more .

. ...._........

___

c....,. ......... 1-4, Jut, , ...

holdn. ...,..... oldiiiP. . loll
ofodllll•ll••

"'"'l't'PfHiiiiif"'-·
&amp; Vicinity.
Oltnt V•d lola 301 " " " II. " " " - w.v•."""'-·

fotdo¥, - -·

8

Public Sele
• Auction

w.v.. ·-· a.--

--YJo. . . . -·
Aut·

· -· RlaloPon"" l - •
Ohio - J0~77J.11711
-

8 W•ntecl To Buy

t•d•

ICI: oont.ct u• ••
1 ·11~21.4311 . C.l ...,,.••

Cour.tyRd.
-"-~Ciff.
Wetch for ligna. Saturdey
•a.m.-Op.m._ _ _ _
••pump.

ctot-. nice ...... . -• •
0111 bu... old · - d
eeb6ntf, . t of Ill . . . an . .

to climb tM

to •uec••~ tf

""-•'*au"' _...

An Major •

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

..

IIIIUIIAIICI 01111
1WAINIR
IWIIIIRA1M
mw.ws-

... '''"'"'·14f7
"""'·J47t .

...

Electrical • Ceo'J*ttrv

•• Clll

Mt-2772
;:zs,·..l ...

Par HU&amp;.'til

Plumbl~ • Plait.,·
Aept~lr • Pointing

.......

.a
............. .....-n...NO...-...

S

CAN DO
lUINTEfiANCE
(0.

c•• ·~
rdlll ·
_.

(ONSTIIKTION
.DWNa••L

Sat.
lolonwllh7

..........

WE GO THE EmA MILl.....
992·6110
POMIIOY

4-q:1mo.

ROUSH

tii-

·--

A Great (ombinatiolt"Quolity and Reasonable Prices"

992-6815

..... .

Ole.

PIch. =•art.

4H ...
N&gt;r 1, .......

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

812-2181

-....-~-·
YlftriSWIIt

614-915-4110

BA8K~S

Llrgo Supply of Bllklt
-lnglupplitio
llgn up .-lor

'111-o

GIIG IAIUY

Ill , ....

J&amp;L
INSUUDON

WilY lllf.'N

HANDWOVEN

10.1 •. - - -

1 1·111·'118-~ln

"'P&amp;IIIU
"* POD

742-2421

PRI!I! UT.ATEI

THE ·
BASin WEAVE

-m. . . . .

Olalnlle ywd ulo. - 7-f4. - ·

K and J CONSTRUCTION

Gutta'*

D
ownapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Rd. Juno 30. Jut, I . Twm
....... clocllll. mite.

~--- oo •tlen. Jwne JON&gt;, ,, •.•. -~~~ ......lo ..

GENOM (ONTIACTOIS

outndi 1•1.W.•

•Fill Dirt

.ii*Miili¥ H

URN

BILL SUCK
4/11./1111

992-7479

JILY 4

;".~.-.

..., _ _

NEW ~ IIPAII

._kot

•FIREWOOD

PAll

Hal. Ann Swia ..........."'"" 53.40 .._

'
•

llowarll L Wrif..el

i
I

915-4141

1·100-333-5252

AMISH CHEESE SPECIAL

.

*C:..:. en

IT.:
!~II. P1r - ·
.,_ '10 ~ 165.00

4U..,...Stnet
P.O;Ialll

'

•

r

1· -~ii.'l?:s P.a. · 11
..-ltl.~::.--1
I • · u. btl P&amp; ·
Ill I
1HOI P11Z1
I 2 M.D. nEEwl~ COIIJIOft ••
IIIIIIIIBI o1• H.e. ,_.

';1111 IWIJ ..
. . . Ioiii I ••••

•

'·'

A.ll.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

PHONE DAY 01 MIINGS

949·1969

'

'i

su.AY:

lr. 124, ••••..., Ohio

lot. 8·11

~:::::::3~/=17:/-::flft:!

lllf•l

CIIISTII, OliO

HOURS: Man.·Frl. 9· 7

1 · 224~~~N .T.

I

.......

992-237·1

c.rtllltoll

MARCUM

VISA • M.UTERCHAIIOE
Clo~odlunclly

·5 LB. PKG.

'

,.

Roger Hysell
Garage ·
Altt Tra...lttltt
PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

••
•••

LB.

hou~on.

.......Pomai:Ov.... ......

V•d 8oMI Floo f~&gt;;,.I'Wioplo

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING • REPAIRS

Call Anytl. .

J.z.wt. 1llo.

..•

$14.9'

,_

IWII1FUL IWGlS •uo
flAB . . ' • Up 15.01

Ptol ••C..MJJI
.... ........... 1 ..

•

CHUCK STEAK

home. Light

Opportunfty Employer.

,_, .... a.

POOU, WIUS
OSII.JS

" - Jlllllf"

.'

GROUND CHUCK

~

•

5 LB. PKG.

•
••
•••
•
••
•

,.....
.................
..... . ,... ,....
SliuwLwnStatict,

••
••
•••

••

3rd·· PRIZE

"

.

••

APRONS and
CO.OKOUT UTENSILS

CHOPPED

.'
'

W81t.d: middle ea• IICIV to
Mv.,ln and c•e for elcWJy
women In Athtnt. modern

•d benefttt. d._,t off,
more infcrmetion. Call 814.wa.7729Wrii1J1.

.....,.

IYAIIIIIVICI Clllrll

1,000 GAI.LOIIS

, .....$

••
••
••
•
"'
•
•"

· 2nd PRIZE

LB. PKG.

•

,,

~·

,'J' \

G.AS GRILL with STEAKS
. and FIXINS FOR 4

· 5..

~ SIRLOIN ·

..-

6 OZ. PICG.

'&lt;'

•'

YUIMANMOWRS
ECHO SAWS I 11111115
OIEOCIIIAIS, CIUINS

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

••'

,{

WATER
SERVICE

CUSTOM II&amp;T

4-16-M-Ifn

•. .

Clnld tu•dlu • WednMdl¥s.CeiTomJon•. l14-28fl..
1422.

E.,.., Community Y•d Solo•
Fri. Jutv 7th. y.., ... come you

....

i&amp;GLE IIDGE
SIUUIIIGINE

lABY D.IIOGAN. (K

NO SUNDAY CAW

~

Nice otull·old
Golllpollo
POIICirdo.
_·
, -·
lorWiodloc:k

PH. 992-3t22

I I'OMIIOY oiAGliS 1:

CHIPS

: LB.

c-...,..

111&lt;1. lit. V•d hie: Jut, 1·2·S.
4. "'Hours 1-1. MOfe illrN diiV.

Stratton.

6-1·

6-16-lfll

BUILDERS

POTATO

9·1

Hom .. ha. W.1 c\1-'•·
T..um011t, Brlggo I

H-'Q.IIIo

Mklcii.Port. Oh.

LAY'S

.

Movln1ISIIr. Furftilure, dothin.

Cook/Gooctt. H•lftlft-Not1hlp
Rd.
Juoo .... .., I.

.

Kfr. No oolltctlng or delivering

woflc your ftWn hrt. Call e 1~

IN A RUT
Tlr.t of t3.31 .. t..7 loring
flld:ory Of' h•dlabor labi7We're
loolng fa&lt; 8 pooplo who
...m mar• out oi ltfe tt.l jult
-lng .... e.. n why you ......

hold ........ rile. ......

XD7100

DictuNI, door wrMthi. &amp; .. c.

241313 for an lnt'"'lew.

(

............ o..

NowNrilljdiMO~on to•ll
ho
me tleoof . lttm1 IUCh ..

tuppr wtrd • . Me. I ml. aut

a._,. Rldgo hm Rio

WORD
PROCDSING
TYPIWRITER

IAI.DICI,......
III ft ,..., Ia l1r

61•·'111117,

1n

l«on..,porty ol.,. FIIEU300

41. .11r JO'd-'Juno»J;;jy
1 11-1. Todll.,.ocll~ clothMO

101

liPAll

hilt On Yow lot
ON SAil NOW AJ

jobwltht.w hnl Nalnvestmfftt.
no oofltding or cWivering. Cel

t14 · 241 - l313 ,· for

FrL.J """ 30. R~ 321 • Cherry
flidoo, Rio Q,.,clo. I AIM Sold

DAVE'S
SUU ENGINE

3 Styles
and

Love clot ..l1' Demon11rate
t.utitll dott.l lor an fiN s-rtv
pe.. l NomacWing'nvot.oed. Fun

lnt.-v~ '
·:-.:.;:p..;,._
_ __

•z ao... ,.. Ill•·

•

,

~189

1-1173-

&amp; Vicinity

•HATI
•T·SHIRTS
oJACKETI
FOR IUSINEISES.
GROUPS I
OROANIZAifiONS

9112·3887
St. At. 124

KAHN'S WIEN.ERS·

RIBS
$·729

...... ·aallipolis·.... ···..

1884 Plymouth 4 door ••
dan
.
2-1178 model truckl
truck
Vohld• wMI be IOid "•
lo" end oro ovoll- for In·
opoctlon ot tho v.._ glr·

SAlE

BISSELL

.

'. ..

.. .

••

12 PACK

...

c.

,,

V-10189.

The YHiov• of Middleport
wll olfw for lllo tho followlngYihldM:

CISTOII SC11111

ollewTJr•
oCuslo• Pipe Btndia&amp;
.Oil a....
oGrtiSe Jolls
oGtttarll Cllalsis
Maint••c.
oCompularilld Btl• car

••

JULY 30th!!!
.

.

·~.

130.000/ yo. lnoomo pot. . l~
Dot.... (II IOIHI7· 8000 Ext:

PUBLIC NOTICE

WESLEY HAWK 1o MARK
HAIIOLO HAWtt. You ...,...,.II dtlwtanthl
2M eM\' of AU.,M. , •••• ot
1:11 o·- p.m .. Judge
OIOIIGE W. HILL JR .. of
the Clnult Court of Wood
Count'(, W•t VlralniL It hlo

FOI

JONES TIRE
CENTER

.

LB.
'

E::NI=N-::M::O::NEY:::-:Ro:---:::--11-boOks-1

-lnt!llo-niMithe
nllllrel f ..... of ADAM

~ ...,Anna.

•• 203

......,:0 on ...ta· n·a + .1:30 to
1 . o.

1 0 - . , WV 211110. Equal

'

GREAT COOKOUT
GIVEAWAY,
.
.

FRANKIE$·

'· '

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

MY·T·SIOP

'

•

· VAUGHAN'S.
.

SUPERIOR

.'

--d.

,._.·dm•m..CIII.ttdanief~t~
"" • "llr - - phyold.,'o
!*Jrlltor,. No ihifl wmlt. Applv

Clll$18

'
'•

BUNS

,,

:

.,

&lt;1141341 .

IIJAIIK IWIOLD HAWK.
dayS..
of JE\:.~~·
hMcO.III to ADAM WEI·
.
·-.llyherne1 LEY HAWK.
TO: THe- Fotherof
R - lynn Moon ADAM WEILEY HAWK,
MARK HAROLD HAWK
Ill 28, 1tc
It IPP 111~11 lly AfR....,It

•

HAPPY.

$299

'''

Third Ave.. O.lllpoll1 0 H

rlgldo_ .... _ . . . .......

I,

.SIRLOIN.STEAK

.
•,.

•
''•
•I'

T-BONE STEAKS

' ~

,..,It

PIIIIIUII

5 LB. ttKG.

.

'

$389

of OH .. hp. llolp.,l llut -

"'''d.-gto_._,..,..,d
1111 your .....me 1;o lox cf1 20 1
c/o Oelllpollo Dolly T•llluno 825

SYIACUSE

49(

oz.

·.

ltntod. ,..,. m -/ D!NTAL
HYOIENIIT to Join ""' pooct lco
lui « port· tlmoo Muot bo
NOINed to prec:tlce in the 1t.te

lEG QUARTERS

16
THROWAWAYS

...

on the

Help Wented

W•t•: En•,.ttc. ~·· or·

BOB'S HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG

12 PACK

....

o ......

w•
P.M
. 31at

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
WOOD COUNTY. WElT
YIRCIINIA
UPON PETITION OF
ROBERT JOIII'II RIGGI
FOR THE ADOPrlON AND
CHANGE OF NAME OF
ADAM MILEY HAWK
No. II-A·21
U!OAL NOTICE
The o~~~-t of thlo- II to

CHICKEN .

11

oiMin ., Or., f r - tho
I'UIUC NOTICE
Nolloelo ........... t ... Cl&lt;cult Court of Wood
the u-....,. lllodlnC•e Coumy. Welt VIrginia. to
No. 21211 lllllllcatlon to lllow the ldoptlon of ADAM
the COIItlliOft -,._ Court. WI!ILEY HAWK lly RO.
....._ ·Divlolon of ...... IERT JOSEPH RIGGI. ond
..._
tho . of
c-,., Ohio. !toron-to to
ciiMp her - t o lora ADAM WI!ILEY HAWK to
EH11b11h Moon.
· ADAM Wl!llft RIGGI,
whlcll oultIn tho
lold IPIIIICIIIon
~d In uld Court. ot 1 :30 t-lllonofMY...,.nlll

Public Notice

•

II Loet and Found

13

�Peg a 14-The
1~

Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Sttulltlclna
Wanted

_... ___ ,.,__

411 Fumllhid Roome 111
lloonwtor
-•Gelle
"-tlno
• •120
• mo.
HotoU.14---.
..... -

...h .......

CAI lfl•
1111. ·

"'· 104-77.
.

AlooTrii•~AI--

Honaehold

Gooda

Television
Vie

--··
·
-lib·--·
_,,.,
..... ................tlli

I

· -· Collll4--tiM.
---·--114-

....

.. - . • . ooo

oltollclrlva -

ntl &amp;

eom-••·..._ aor,.. .._...

Wll ••• far ..dlrlv "'• or
wIn ""' ho- 114-..7·
M02lrlydai4

1100-•
Mtl Pine.

-

-·0¥· ... --. ..............
-=·-..
'-11.

Route 33. Nonh of
Loto. - · .... Col
~14-IIS.74n.

Schools

I natruction

lf oi~U• ''I ''"" '" " ''• o ••lo

Olllotor -

.... ~·· W•dl• ...\•••"' M

lulln--

u....,·~-

w...... ..,.

bll..nent. ,.., .,,,.. tnd

_,.."· 118'- fonoody.,cl
241ot Mt. V • - Avo.. Point
P l -. Moko ., on
lno-iol\ 1304 17J.In4.

17 Mlacallaneoua
R.lirM Writing Kit. Prof•

...... off. . . . . . . ldo. S..d

tB.H to,.__ Unllmkod. 32 Mobile Home•
1

e-n Clly. OH41123.

I
117 I . 2ndKill'
1~.

. . . Oftlliw;.

' '

'"trtll'·

114-1112·1331 or 114-..111111.

lot ,......
In _...........
AI~
....
Ilk ......

HI

oniii.UOOpor-Awl•
J o 1a COli 114-tiS.
1141. :00 o.m.•oi&lt;OO p.m.;
1142.217..-11-

42 Mobile Home1

........ h Y .... of rlv•. 114Trol•_lot_ln_•

*
2408. H n o - 114-441-

ta 3114.

,._

2 lw.. lrll• ........
.....
oond., Coli 11 4-171'

1.-1&amp; l•al lot. .., ...... 1n

11110.

114-1111-2301. - • onlY·

Trill•.
2 -00111.
•011 rt!QUirtd.
At.......
1, l0011t
Rood. 304-1711-1011

for Sale

- ·

.

-~~- f110 por

mo-

-

•or• ... ldngllb:IO,
.,..
'"" w.vo . e:100.oo por month
Coll14-4411-lll2.

au.llty - .......... H llnoo 1810. Now. Ulod. Ro·
dlimtiCL Wt Flnence Wh. We

:- '1-8 Wanted to Do

bebtt•• in""' home. Re•o-

___
_
aonar••

nlble ,.,... Aef•encM ~~~rill•
. lllo.AIII-.ollo--Col
__.:_
:' 114-2411-8781.

___

-ELSEA HOMECENTERI.

ClolllicotN• c~- .... u.a.
21

;
·

~

:

.
'

·

•-do,

·'
', 7413.

..

.,...
·, ------------------: - _.,................
1971 141181 · -·
' ldwlnCid. lnd edult DilnO l'tu-

; In "" ho- Allo .....
' chording Md lrlftiPOI~·- If
' Int-... coil I14-HZ.I403

2 IR,
mull be movN. Cd 114-37S-

2121.

:· ------~~~--~--Hou•~ndTrai•R•Iir.Uncttr-

' plnnlntLpolntlnlllnoldo.,dout

' plu..... ,_-...
i 114-IIZ.IIII.

i A"*"lon: w..... omol luof

:-Mil or DoGI:Of'l
to

121tll. 2ha*6om.Goodoondio

tlol\ Colll ....l-1111&amp; -.

1871

ptl,

tlo" 114-HS.3107.

Mnhlg •3100. Good ODndlo

-·• *·

:'"'

Bualnaaa

1977

a.- 12&gt;111. 2 bo ..

room. tiOOdGD,..ioA Onr. .ed
lot In tron-.. 11.000. (304

Opportunity

111-a12.

p-

!NOTICEI
THE OHIO VALLEY I'UIIL18HING CO. --~~~-YIN
do ...... _
with
you '

know. ~nd NOT to _.d mont¥
,,..,. tho mol uMI you h.,.
lrw.._.t tM off•lna.

Sout.,.nOiolo-grooooy,gu
&amp; C8rJYout. 30 Y'M'1 .....

33

Ferma for Sale

CoumoydriiJI! form- 3 lw..
2 INIIa ontW~ t24. 111 • up.
loioourmo'* Col 1·114-11 ..
7311 .
.

loootlol\ Cono- ........ 34
ldool funlr - l o t \ ·-coli
.,d tMibor .........._ oetlvo '
hunt~~O

llbiiiO Utotrtv. Dock.

1174 Como AI ol-lc 2
bo*OOIII. 2 til boll\ .... pumA
uotlorplnnlna .,..,.
Md •111••• lrlcildld Good
- l o l \ 114-112-1771.

i Ill d II 1: I d I

•n'd flthlng .-ru.

181.1100. 1 - t opoc;louo I
room houa wkh • • - Rot~·
· Col 114-111-10:14.
1n1 lnv-.trMnt Rentll prGf*tY.
Hou• ~nd 4 mollie..,...., Liv•
In oM. rwtt atMrt. 'WII r•urn
~nwrt in I .,.... ow-

......... E_.,. op.....
tunlly. 304-112-2411 onytlmo.
"'"~'

8 ......
ua~.

BuHdlngl

113
~J========~=========~
---------------H - prl- Jlll4 ..h tor

.. r......._ .,.,., oupllowdl.
-olooa, . . , h - C o l
ooll•: 304-1121-2271. or304121-1114.

...,

36 Loti 8t Acreage

VIII, tMnlno Hell. Top of The

31

88

_.. In

Hlirrilon Twp,

11,000. Dovlo Rool E-o. CoN

114-311-2111. Loa• Ohio
43138. Roy Brawn•gn. 114381-&amp;1815.

w•

12&gt;1110 moblt homo tor Olio.

plle lot wtth wor•hec:l · on
.llcbon Plk•Cioee to 31. C•ll

114-4411-11001.

.....
_, ......................
- .,.,ga oily-·

3 11r.. -ionoL 2 toll INIIa
CA.

Qhlo.

ndry. Syr8AII&amp;

114-112-1217.

__ . ·- --

lnYMtm.nt rent•l pr_.ny.
I

I

HIOioo.,d 4 mollllo- Lluo
1n oM. Nnt
Wll r-..m

at..._

"''" flnttnae. l•a•llent
opportunity . 104-112·1411

""'-

2 _ _ ..1 _ _ _.,.

lot.
. . .__
............
cl
_. .,._
porkMd
,- o l
114--12111.

Fur. . hod opt., 1 br. 1221.J.BR

oil·
•on " · OIIIIIDolll. -1114-4464411 . . . 1 p.m.
Utl~lu

polcl

243

oil.,.- -lquoo a
ooll •*• ... _.,....,.,
lluv.

Aohlon. . . . lu.ldlng lot~
mo.. • hom• .,..mltltd. pubtlc:
- • · prl- r... Cicl Clrt
-on. Jr. 304-8711-2331

c ... p• •d cMIIin d • tDr Ill e.

lo•ed br • - Of' like. public

wet• •d llecsrR: .,.. IIIII&amp;
304-1712021. •

M'-...l...ncll18 ...
_,., M .,....,.
Ia ....

LAVNE'I

IURNITU~

' .
lot• Md .~ . . ......_. from

""10

DIMtlll: '1H•dupto•411.
Wood tolllo W·l alialro eHitD

3 lw.. dupi« lor - . ltoto

.,,.,._ e11.11rm • • olid

114-4411-0045.

-King· UIIO.
•2711
up.
4 drowor
aliuta111.

•110. Mattr.... arbaa .....-..

Gun cobln . . I. 8.• 10 gul\

Regtru:tt. Inc. 2 BR.• .,n.ft.

,.., J*.leh c•p«. nM Dllnt.
...,. Plllillr poloi . , , ....

304-171-1104 or 304-17111311

two-

. . . - · - • • • • 41.

IH, a..- 131 • king fnmo 1110.' Good
loloetlon of - - ou•-.
motol cobln•o. holdbo- •30
.,dupto eea.
lid -

10 Dev• ~~me .. cMh wllh

opprovod ....... 3 MHu out
lulwllo Rd. 0 - I A.M. till
P.M. Mon. t1oru Sot. 114-4410322.

Col 114-441-1117, ofi•IPM.

Y-'11¥ Furnbre
,._ •nd us• furnllure 8'1 d
opplion- Colli 14-446-7172.
Haure 1-1.

1131hWd """·· 2 BR. untlrn.,
Dupla, ,..,. own utM:Ia. lea.
Otp. pUo Ril. Col 114-2411-

I.-go oaloetlon•al - • 1 Pllll·
lx12, •
•ltiOr MoloNn
1\irnlture. Rt: 7 ,NorthO.Hipok

CauntrylldeApt. Now-1 YltC.

2M: ,.WU•e. Nap.....c.Dtp.

'

OH 114-4411-7444.

tr•h

lflldlu .. prorwldlcl. M•t•

nan c. • • •Ina dose to lhoppln• ..,. .. •d schooiL For

3711. E.O .H.

ap•...w.

'*Y

d.-t and nice. elilb ant,, no

p•o. phono304-1711-131e.

...oh Ito• Midtllport. Ohio.
on• Mdtwobecholn tar..- had

.... • • .,.. lnd . . . . .

304-IIZ.211A

-com

Fur,.ltod 2
opt.. ,..
fr•oe lnd sewrlty d1P01II
roqu~od. Hov.,_ 1304
882·3217.
Fur'*hed one bed'oom ept.

.,71.00 por month olu• ·
ric. Jolf•oonA ... eoii304-8~52V211 - · · •~o.

·

PICKENS FURNFFURI
~~~-;u,

okl'. . ae.V . . . . . . . fllmllf'

.... Colli........
MC C._, 0.W IIUPII"II
114-742-21110:
,

t•r•

..

=-~=-·100.00.
butoller.. 11•. ftbor__.boOI.
40 HP. Jolwoo.., -or.
1800. Coll14--1121.

•It•

1 boct- 1111. ol utlklu
. . . eleclrfc l)lllcL all Hfor•
3 room end blth. ~1cllan St. 1:00 IM , 304-171-1371.
Compl•aly lurnlllord. Lorgo
yord. Coli 114-441-4101 or 2 boctoom Apto. iDr .....
3711-2740.
Corp•od. Nlc.oo•lnll Lounclry
........ -...... Col 11431 Bu&lt;khort Lon o. 2 br., · _1.;.
12_ ·_
31_1_1_._ED_H.
..____,,......12111/ mo. O.,ool -~Ill.
Groclou
.,
.....
422
Col 114-4412 bolwwo
I • .,. 1 .,d2 bod-

--...
.....
-0: . . . -.
___ ..... ..... . _·- ... .
_,....._
-

1·12e.m.
room 8P.-t"'lnll
et VIIIOI
Menor
.,d llluonlt
A-·
Hou• t)r ,.._ uftln,.hed. 2 ....,.. in Mld••art 'rom
bo*Oomo. "" - . , . . . tp. • 112. Coll14-lll-7787.
oo11
_.llod. l14-llz.-.
Lorgo 2 - - . . , . , _
Mldtl-. W-D hoolup. Poy

42 MoblleHomea
for Rant

...... ,................
...., Alrnllliod ..... opt, AI

· -....
.,....-~od.
_..,.
Ooporl.
-1-114-111-2211 ......

pl.--.. __

mleega • .,.,

-loo . . .

71Fort!Poir-e7IIOOO.coll
--304-17.2704

IIBICh...,C-1\ 117101111
Dlorll. 21' aulo•. m1 (lloodTvllll ••dlnam••

. . . . llloodrl .......... h 2
!!".!'
!i!oi!I!!Jioo• ,.....
plu. ln. 304-171·
- -·
uoo.oo.

I

col-.

_,_

- - -.......... leo

o,....

For llle:
llntll• bed.
owlngiOI. Coi814-2N-1112.

~~

..........

72

TNc:ka for Sale

· -· , . , ohoop.

....-.
I

lt14Citoo~- oontltiol\
I HOO II&lt;M. l-111 IIRor.

304-87.. 2111.

-1334. · - Coll14-.•

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

10111 JOin.dOa. 2lllolllo t,..

1181 ·Pood liD - " " w•h 1'1. ...... AC .. lt71 Ford
v.,. Coli 114-446-4101 or
171-1740.
1870t 112 ton pldt-up - •
I I - ~ llrllltiOO. Col
114-21.. 1114.

_ ,.,a.

Mroterleo Manhunl for the
killer of a famous race car

driver. CR) C
D (}) "Growing Paino
Ben's desperate lor a way to
spend time alone with spacial
girl. (R) C
(!) (f) Droc..,er: World Of
Science Look at manalees
and why their survival in
Florida is in jeopardy. Q
IDI!J Hartl Time on
Planet Eartto Jesse and
Control visit Disneyland to

(I)

am

"

EEKANDMEEK

iMWENT
WATEIIPROOANG
Unoo-1111 11•- vu•.,.
· - Locol .... _
..... liocl
...--.Col .. .....
1·114-D7· 0411. . , or nigllt.

Rogeraletement
WM•ptwfh;.

(R)

cam!'l•lining. (R) Q
(J) Hooperman
Hooperman coacllas a
convicted lelon in the ways
of romance . Q

m
eon....~n~~ America
Americans talk about effort
to preserve and rastore their
home waters. C

Trlm':Jl 1331.
,......,.., Col 304Fony Tr.O

---

(f)

I WA'SAFAAID60Y.EeoCT/

Rotor{ 0&lt; - · teal -~
Molrt'NIIIaale"t•ed•IIM•·
Pum@ Ill• -Md ..vice. 30+
lllli-aG2
.

Amerec.n p(aytoouu

Joyce Chopra's film follows a
young~
· rrs coming of age

V.OULOAe&lt;: ME THAT
S::W.E:Q6.Y.

StOll,_'
' V" .
am
•
Wl~uy onnoe
compromises h1mself, then
w~h

Steelgrave.

Kfng Uvel

Nicoll dreams aboul her
molher on her birthday. (R)

~ Profnlionallowtlng

1---------

......

... -

--lOu-

; ; ; . , 1 = - - - Col 114-

..... CIIIUI·=Io&amp;H'-10
c.tl1..
441-1111.

.-..

VanaS. 4W.D.

v... Loodoli

- . . - i o n . Prloo n-iololo. 114-IIS.7114.
1171._.-_., ........
..,.,.,....... now 11.10x33

CARTER'S PlUMING
AND HEIII'ING
eor.F-•II'Ino
. Clol- Oloio
......... , ......... ., 11444S-44n.

84

(I) D (J) lloblrl OuUiaume

BARNEY
IF THEY HAO

A SHIP'WS
SICONK
CONTUT·-

NOBODY COULD
BEAT SNUPfiY
SMITH II

Edward's plene are blown
when Ann's ••·husband
reaepears. (R) Q

HE'D
STEAL IT!!

AN' IF

HE OION'T
WIN IT--

1211 ldeoCaunrry
10:00 !II 700 Cklb

e

(JJ Mllml Vice A series of
student deetha leads
Cr&lt;JI)kett 10 a mystical
'·
professor. C
(I)
(J) Cfllna IIHch
Cherry 's parents ask K.C. to
lake her body horne lrom
Vietnam. (R) C

a

Electrlca I
S. Rllfrlgeratlon

.... -

1101 trnll. 114-741-2042.

(!)N-watcli

IIJ) Evanlng Now•

®Now•

liB Buldlng Suppllee.

.-..
I''"

Conoploto llno of o• .,,..,.
In gr. • • din. . . Ia::- blok
· - · -~·
~.... .... or e37· 1 mo· •110 -llo&amp;
· • • · -wln~·
.. -Iori&amp; 110, Cleolb
Curio oobln•...,,_
111o
0
lront-el71
,.._
-·
H. COli
II. l41mo.
Tr~oln'o ......_or 114-MI-1111.

~.:;::::::::-::::;;;::::l:::::::::::::====~
SNAFU,.
,., by Bruc:e Blattle

o:::o;:::;;:::;;:::;;::::;~;:----~:

i4 RIIY i d i'lllli

9) Uloq-t: DIM Dllomma
10:15 (5) MOVIE; Gunfight AI

CoiMote!'l C-CNRI (2:00) .

'14 CMry v ... bod. h-Mdllo,
-·
304171-1101.

-_...._hoi
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R. R-•-loa ....
cllt•u. Weill. llllllteciM•

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1.000otZ.oae'u' •dllh-v.
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t;OO D ()) 9l Night Court Dan

,.._.,
•daar:llliiAot~W._..
Dop. Allo3
_ _ _ __Col

. . . . ... I'L

® MOVIE; Wholly Mouol
lPG) (2 :00)
.
OMurtler,ShoWrote
1211 Naohvlllo Now From
Opryland!
8:30 (lJ Quln. .u Aocordo World
Of Sporll (1 :00)
Ill 11t (J) Held 01 Tho Clall
Renowned journalist and
former student visits !he IHP.

. Home

0 MOVIE• SurvivOr (2:00)
9:30 D ()) aJ) My Two Oedo

oh*.

lliillit
"'I'lL

®Benton

If)) Larry

LlvtlkL •

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

• ¥1 I I

Col 114-

ft

5

lete
quotod
filling in the miuing

oecl7~t~ol~an~~~~r:~;.~

newopeper, P.O. Bo• 81428, ~.
OH 44101-3428. Be_, ,o lleto your
zodlee llgn.
LIO (.luiJ 11-Aug. II) In oplle of being
plagued wHh ...-doubca today,
,, ioc*lllke you wll ~a ~~wee­
tltlt Ia periOI1IIy Important to you In a
moll 'lffecll. . ....,.,..,,
VWliiO (AMI- . . . . . II) AI long U
you . . .uveancllnvOIVed today. you'H
be ~- Ho ......... H thll 1*11 eubellintlllly 110w1 doMI. you - * I become 1 trt11e moody, , deptH II d or
lelhlrglc.

you'll
that wUI
billie
give you a
exira. You mlglo1 need It,
gance continues.
AQUAIIIIUI (.ian. »Fell. 11) Vt&gt;U'rel
apt to 111 a big hH ,oday wllh e..rvorool
.,...., your mate. Thill COUld ·~ you I
e1111y true Hyou etay out longer "'
Mid you wwld.
PISCII (l'ell. Ill March Ill)
mentlng your l)lu.ln
1on ooukl .... ely diMI yow
,... lodllr. Try to kaep your
- I n you•- at Ill tlmeo.
_..., (llanllllt•Aprll
vou·n h...
~(---DOlt D)FI,__
to
.
.
-....
In
order
to
gat
yaur act
,.. arlloo lila It malin,...,. IIIII to
... I hiiOIIII.......,._tooMy.Oddly taglthllr In thlt . . . . . . . . . . today• .

....
till_....,.,.._,._.
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,_IIICIII...._

111

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Mow IWIIIIy you .... lbarP. 111-111111 ..... ,., . . ~-*!lind

ICOIIIIO COIL II ..... a) II you're ,.. clulllr.
TAl. . .
......
11110
typl oiiii'CIIil ·- blratlllr
•• II 1 - with IIIGIMr .....,, IIIIM
- yau . _ ... 1111 .... 8ltCI ......... .._you lltlnll you.__
tMmAIWI ........ ltl lr· .

WOilc&gt;-- ill ••not
Cltll-

..... lllllllo...., •l.'!t!"'
fat 11• 011 )IIIII'

~~ii::rr~
4

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Yau lltoukl
lor

outeura
d"JC e-

'Ill
arallldal
:::.. you ....
1

10:30 ClJ Prl......,./ Jepen Harry
Anderson hose. this look 11
Japanese televiSIOn, with
clips from 101p operas.
children's programming,
dromas- even Jopan 's bell
comrnerclala. (1 :00)

...-

IIICIIMI

......... , . _...... I you ..
~- tl) YeN IIICifl4l wllll klrldl I
\
- * I Ill a Ill!' ..
tocllr II! 1!\8! .

You."
NORTH

BRIDGE

1.-ll-St

.AKQ5Z
.A 7
tAU

•Au

••

1--------------......,

CROSSWORD
by lHOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Hemingway. 1 Way
2 Oireclion
lo some
on ship
5 Doamatisl ,
.... llart
3 Threatening in
9 Bo1der 011
a
way
tO C1eighton •
4 Youngesl
U. site
ol the
12 Divulge
13 Describe
oceans
Yesterdlly'e Ans-r
(abbr.)
·
IS "Boon
P1ince -· " 5 Dolorous 18 Parly giver 27 Become
8G1eek
19 " 1he -furious
18 Glullun
Ieder
and
29 " -- Boots
HHarem
7
SimpleSi~pence
"
Are Made
chamber
lon
22 Actor,
lor
18 Tree
8 Playing
Sean Walking"
20 Region
cops
24
Thealrical
30
App1ehend
(abbr.)
and
award
34 Consider
21 Proboscis
Rebull
38
Deer
robbers
25
22 Liquid
11 Eve ·26 Chu1ch
37 Hawaiian
measure
14
Pungent
regulalion
lood
23 "1- You.
Babe"
(1965 song)
24 First ·dowri
yardage
25 Examine
27 Tmch 28 Dillydally
29 Stelli
G1af's game
31 Babylonian
deity
32 Hold il!
33 Knight
or Danson
35 Contemplale b-+--+-37 Corn meal
bread
38 Snare
39 English river
40 Compulsion
41 Delall

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES-IIere's how to work It:

.. .
...

-,

-.-·,

.,

.

•.

l /211

y

AXYPI.BAAXR
!aLONG FELLOW

(f) Rape; Boundlrlla Of

, . ., Exomlne tho wap thllt
women'sli\1411 are limited
beCiuae of their 1e1r ol rapa.
The piCture ,...,..,, actlvltiea
woman relraln lrom aa a
ralult. (0:30)

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used •
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, •
apostrophes, the length and formallo~ or the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dtflerent.

.1111 ....... ~

a1 How Cocdl &gt;
11:00 ()) MOVIE: The Lilt lillie 01
The Dlllan CllfiiiCNfll (3:110)

•GHowll
m rn •

Cll

a •a

.llll ArlaiiiO Hall

Dlla•,..•
a1 Tallll'ftllll Tile Dalllalda

CRYPIOQIJOIE
6-18

KfiUIU

c ••

OllJ

NACJ&gt;A

M U F. ·U I 0 Q
KR

NOJM

OTlRIKCRP

lneldl The Cloaet

ciJ Mllllll Vloe

a1 You Callie Altar

,,,.11:!:='=
~ oll)lll'nr All,_

.-..:.-:: •"==YCNGanllleDIU.,_ .......
................
0011111

AllOund- Gouge - Umbo - Fright - . BUGGING .
A close friend started an extarminallng buSiness. The s1gn
painted on his van read: "Call Me For What's BUGGING

am

squares oil

83

Comp_
ohe chuckle
IL....I.--.L-....1.--.L-.....1---1
by
WOf"ds
1 16 I I_ .I " Vyou develop
from soep No. 3 below.

North's jump to live no-trump was WEST
EAST
the 1fand-slam force, ultlnc partner • 8 7 4
.JIOU
to bid a 1fand slam If he bad t.o of the • a s 2
.54
top three beart bonon. Although South · t J 4 2
tKIOV5
opened with a weak two-bid, North de-· • to 111 5
.KJ7
cided that the play for lfaad slam
SOl1I'H
would be cood if partner bad K-Q of
bearls. For bls bid to be sensible, be
.KQJIOI8
also needed the spade jack. Still, actQ73
cording to instructiOIII, South bid ~ev•Qu
en hearts, and be now bad to give himVulnerable: North-llouth
self bls belt ct.uce to make it.
Dealer: South
In fact there was no reallltlc play
for seven, Iince setting up the spade
Welt
-tlo
suit by ruffin&amp; •ould IIIII leave dePuo
5NT
clarer short one trick. But declarer did
AUpuo
see a slim chance. U either of the defellden held both minor-suit kiogs as
Opening lead: • 2
well as four or more Jp&amp;des, the contract could be made. So declam ·•OJ!
the ace of hearts and cashed bOth ml·
..
nor-suit aces. Then he ran bls trum1 . away a klDtl? Then declarer would
tricks, throwing small minor-sui c.ub the queen of that suit,. aad Eut
cards from dummy and keeping the A· .auld be oqueeJed once apm.
•
K-Q-5-Z of spades Intact. Wheil the last' Al~gb a trump lead II conaidered
trump was cashed, East bad to come belt a1a1Dst a confidently bid lfand
dowll to five cards. To keep bOth mi- slam, in this lnllance a spade lpd
nor ltlnp be would bave to throw a would have aruttled the commualea·
spade and that suit would run for the tion needed for this unusaal propesrest of the tricks. But what If he threw siva squee11e.

(RI~
If)) PrimoNewo

82

Ito - -1"

MU P S V G

By .James Jaeeby

1211 Croolt And Chou
8:00 D ()) 9l Unoolved

••h

c_..,... _ _

1....-l.i.-.L.---J.L.-.L_---1. '

am

(R) (2:00) C

•17.31/ mo, 3 poloo oolo
IOWHM •781. or •31 .80/ mo.

bolo.

SfATS!

t ...ol
a-.
low
IY.-n. hlu:ll

lmprci\18ma'lta

" The trouble with those
'stick to your ribs' dinners,"
complains mY. sister. "is that
too much ol1t seems to stick

.SC:UM Lm ANSWUS

fumes when a counhouse
fire closes the door on

Woot 10 1ouy Wick IIIII I

~..,..,

4 Koa -

'77 DOllie MonMD, klw mi-.
304-1711'11111.

58

lol. . lon ...... - · Col
114-441-7372.

m...,....
114-1111- 1420.

'

'

I

.,IIJ cas Nawe

see how humans rejuvenate .

..... .,......... ..,.
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114.......77.
• ...

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'211 Of 113.11/ mo. eH M-

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140...dPrttL£.olr,aulll.tll. lnokltd. 1304171-1101.
.....
ltlt!o
...... (tloll ·7·01~2 ..... ' ..... 1011 · - · · -·
p,m. __________...__: ...... c.oll 304-17$1-.
• .,. I :.:.;;;;.

Rolli- tor""''' 100otlllo.
111 • . IJn.
N. A - 11.10142.

-

An wood OOUfiiiY IMnlllte •&amp; •3
ohlirl • -do With m•-..J
........ 1111 oi e:M.II- .,.

41 . HomeaforRant

--No. THOSE
WE(lE G~EAT

, M
.-.
Coli 114ca• -~~~~-~~·~~~
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lnl•.

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7 pc:. pcm:............
130 .. , . .1.
1111 or 132.711- 1110 - h . . . rwblla H.D. IU11k . . . .14tar 4x8 It utllly
1114-171eU41/mo. 4 .... ........ 81. 2111.
I dr, chat eM. H .
M1ttrN1 Mt •11. Bunlll• Trollor mountod oo-oion
•Jt .IB. cr i b m•theu•• ....cl ..... - - . . •
U!&gt;tAuto lolio. 0111 2114129.11.
S?a-1111 or87.11111.
Wood groups t3 1 I or
With 1110 .......... -

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a. Campers

,...,
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bo~.
,..ee
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_'olillno.
-••
w"
" ' , 81
304-171-1717.

wiM

coil. 114-4411-1118.

=

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Rn•olng IIV•IIIble.

.. I

iOI'IIGHT

I

79 Motor1 Homee -

1111-lhCh--

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Y-olo• C.P 10 -

~.':T!:~ ::.:.l:::."fo
Good oond. .0011 814-317·

All n- top qwllly .

Ill. 1411nCont.....,. l / 4ml. on

1110.00. - ..
_•.;.ao.--oo.--211_4-_17_1-_.~12.
. ____
ltl1 Ootoun iDr . p..._
1200.00. 304-411-~711
•
oyt

opERA

COULP you H~~ TtfE .nNCSING ?

~~~7';'~~itt ' liM c ........ . ..... Torgo
abrood .................
ulp. Col 114-H..
-.,.__oo.
•• oond.
11.000 ml•
II,..
304-171-a23.
1787or2fl8.h27.

VI 'II A

Llnooln Pk. Mon-a.t : 1 -1. lun:
12·1. Op., All• hro. u,... I
p .m. for •ppolnt....,.._ So alve

S. A'CC8110rie1

1810 Hon• Clvle ltotlon
,
....... N-~e liocll'. !l_ll&amp;hutlll'llft. -oltroll•.

Y--.:l:i'IOI.
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......
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·-In01,_ .............
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of-·
..

Going out of b&amp;oin- GluloioM lor- to •-L
Mony
-12·11.
Jewelry. dr•• ... blou._. . .
•--.. ·Top of '!Ito
- . . 11 I W."lnd at. Ponoor~. Ohio. 0 - Juno 2•2e
• ......, . ... __ g o _
.., ...... Tliu ...... J ....
21 fromllp.m. t1 11p.m.

a Appllsn011

............. Col . . . ._ . , . , -... --~- '
3p&amp; 114-44f.31ao.
ttwo 40 1oro.
4-a2-2011. ,
1171QoldT,__ _tziooor
- · Collll4-44t-21121. 78
Auto Parts

210CMr¥Mt~n•-...pt•al

._
,

Q

6:35 (5) Carol Bumatt
7;00 (l) MOVIE·: The Llet Ride Of
The Dalton Gang INRI (3:00)
G ()) PM Magazine
(lJ SporlaCenlef (0:30)
(I) ct (J) Current Allllr
(I) (f) MICNIII/ Llh01r
NowaHour
•IIJ 9l Wh"' 01
FOituMC
1D llll WKliP In Cincinnati
If)) Mo..ytlno
I
® Andy OrllfHh
11)1 Mloml VIce
1211 Top calli
7:05 rn Andy Qrlllllh
7:30 11 (l) Family Feud
(]) Mutual Of Omaha'• Spirit
Of Advontu,. Voices In The
Wild
()) IDI!ll Mojo• League
laHb811
Ill EntoiUinmont Tonight
(0:30)
lit Cll USA Today
•IIJ 9l Jeopardy! Q
If)) Cro1111,.

0710.

d·~-

~
.111
1. ·
. T 0 UHV
I•
1--..,I,.:....·.:;I~T-1:....;r...--1 ~

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!'d~:.!1ii :-.~

--------------Joop,ortowkh- ..
_304___1_75711-~32_4_1_
. -------

. . ,: . . 5~A..::.L..;.C....:;Si---11
!
1

1211 New Country

1171CIIIIIotiiC.Iaa 4DR . ltaw . . d...rn . . ..,. ••wll,

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•=

I

PILMDI

ID il])Lpve COI'iMCIIon
If)) ShowBiz Toclly

lliOo.-0 .1.0 . 114-841- 1&amp;81 29ft. lth 2740 or 114-tl2·8712.
...... lito' n..,.

Houl Trll•, fl71. Col I 14441-0045.

241n.o241n.. - - rick
3 ..... 4 - · .. d ........
114-"'I-H77.

Fl.mkurw

am

11 ft. Gl_.., a1 ioot. tllr
..ulppool/11-. 1111Toy•
Calico ....... ........,12100"'
1171 ~-- DoYIIo. wltllrogtN&gt;d.._lll'· Col
14.000~ ...._,_..,. 114-441'2VII cir 114-241vooy
oondllol\ .,700. 1172.
CoU 4-411fGI77.
18R ...,,._ ...,._ lrll•.

304-812-..

troll•. 57

IOAT IIEPAIII. -Mv -·
crulo.,. lpoolollot loetorv
trlln... Melillo....,,... Proof
- · M - o . liNd •
!J!~Poll 1oM Club. Col 114-

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- t887 N 8W.Cola14---

a... .... 11000
Coll14-44f.-&amp;
1 - Clory* Lolloron ms
• - lltl Dodge Ch•..
1"1 .._ ... , . _
t»GQ. 1I.C..v'•Tvpe10
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I 14--1t7a.
1181 ClMry C .... _ "4 opd.,
•d. - . . AMII'MI-.. IIIII
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1111 , - . Mento Corio.
111 . . _ _ rii!MOoo. co•
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(I) Body Elec1ric
(f) 3·2·1 Con18ct Q

CO-loft. Collf4-IIS.%7'70.
llnotrol•oluo-o.AIIn-

Cldl Clot!- 2 ..... condition. Colll14-

•= .........

1 ton oentrel llr cond. fiOO •

Houoohold .,,..blnJ 1/2 mi..
Jorrloho Rd. Pt. Plow.... WV,
eoll304-171i-1410.

Now .aCIIpllno -,pHCitiDN far

2 - - . , . , _ tlllv
c.rptted...,pW...-. . -• .,d

· -... ---~ ...... 7wll.

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pu- t11D.OD. " - . .....

t7H. Oo.ok f141 up 10 1371.
IMohu .. dup.lou'*oomploto
12tl
.,d up_ to. eaa.lhllr-

8t./ ,275mo. Wlthdlpaelt. clll

-=~r.:m.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
wu-.
dl'fl!l• ...,. _ _
rongoo. ShtP Appli.,~&gt;H.
Upp• Rlvor lid. booldo 8toM
Croll Motol. 114-446-73111.

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.. .,_,o~o~
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fur,.hldmo... ..,.,.. 1
mi. below town uu•loaldnl
...... CA • h.. Rol. Co
II 4-441-0331
Nooly

- Ill . I

Qp., IA .M. toiP.M. Montlonl
••· 114-4411-llte. 127 3tcl
Avo. Galllpollo. OH.

to 1811.
to
1121.Rol:llnero
" ' · · -1221
- ·1371. &amp;..nps •21 to 113:1.

31140.

..._w,,_

- Milo.
· ....
I
olil
ltlllledueto ........ ltlnl
h-Coll14-,.._
1 ._ . . , • • - · - • 10
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m...,... 1210. 1· t14-1111.

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ueed •PII.nDII Md T.V.

*""·watw
polcl Upper Rt. 7. 011114-4412br.• ltove•r..-lg.,

One bld'oom

Afton Ma~ttl.ll 01111 • • kJU
wll:hrlv••ont89&amp; ~icwM•.
Cttde Bowen. J r. 304-1712:134

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-8217.

Cll

~ Spor1tlook (0:30)

_....., T _ , - · · - ·

11tl - ... hPI.lC.AII.f'M.
I oyt., •-11871.
..e_c
Col 114--172V or 114- 1817 17 11. l..,lriol wkh 130

- -·---·". . . . -.,. ,---2

CountY Appll.,oo. Inc. Good

· - to till. T•bl• 110 Md

9111.

,.

---.....

::;~.::.-:- ..::-.1~=-

UIED--.•--oom
oullu. Oo.okl. _.,.. ""'-· •
... -.... of UIOd -'rnituro.
NEW- . - - boo.. 131.
- · 118 a up. C8tlol •
10ft too. I Clllll4-446-3118.

_,_- ........ Cll
rp.m......
14-4411-1131 - -.... 4
~- ....... hod ...... . ..

4 :30.

N••

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khc:t.. - d ...

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Fw,.hld 3 moo.. • boll\
lukllllo
tor Rof. • o.p. -~od.
Coil II 4- 441- I I II.

morelnfor,...k)nDII304-112-

CoN 114-446-1714.

....... ... In ........ _ . ,
remodllled.
lnf• work. •
r i E. of 111o Grw~.--lntt
MUll ool. Ill. 000 llmL Col
114-2111-1304
3
II'J INII\ _ _ippld

au......

O.J . White Rd ., 2 wooded
IuMtlng .... API"... 2 - •

...... Col 114-2411-HII oft•

New. ru ..lc oou ntfV home. 1
mle off Rt. 7. n. . CrownCifv.
Ownw
oontldlr ftnMdng
Colll14-2111-..4&amp;

... Llbrooy
porldng • A.C. !lot. rlil'od.
lor , .,..... . COli
114-4411-0331

Tlmbor h • - OUI toll', 1.-gou ...lnopt. 2311otAw.
ldod fuming •oo. good c..,p K~ohon/ot1010 ............
tltol. T1tll . , . _ 1o ..,..,..,, UIO/-oluo dop. Utlitiu •
m11o1¥ 12 ml• oout- of rol. No P•· Col 114-441101111&amp;:• on Llnaoln Plk• · 41H.
t21.
·AliQ. 11 • • on - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Unooln Pike Rd. ptiCII •t

Homes for Sale

""'· nMt

UIIO.

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

-llro-loJ.
· - ............
~....
AU ~.- ...
AI
llyloo. ,.. Pool-··
,4--0IJI.
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furrL

........._ ...... Sa'-

....,

SWAIN
Pike fram •112 • ma. Willi to AUCTION a PURNII'URI 12
.... ..d """''-· ., ...... Olivo II .. O.Ripolo.
NEW·I pc. wood group··-·
2111. E. O. H.
Living · - ..... ., • • •11•.
..... _with-a- 1241.
F• oll:l . , _ • tou-lon
.-InaRoailn• .-.~na­

.... n.. Fioor, -ooldna Clly
p•lt. Gollpol&amp; LJI ..
Grount floor 3 rodnr afftca roome. ldtahen/ dlnln=oom
or.
•-2nd Aw.. Mldtloport w•h ltOWJ •d r•
12.2V , . ......"
...
Wlf rtn10dll to netd. C.l 1221.
.
_.~....
eon
114-4461·114-112· 2311 dljll.
4241. 4411-2221. 441-4421.

n-. Hfte Dlpl•or hU remct-

11 1 W. 2nd St.. Pomoroy, Ohio 41711.

BUIITIRJL AP-A111111ENTS AT
BUDGET PRICB AT JACK·
SON EITATEI. 131 Jooacro

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(I) Oo.g01UI J...lor Hlgtt
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dance Is black. INRI I;!
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WEDDING

-•

�..---Local news briefs... - -.....
Continued !rom page 1
Bennett, Gallipolis. $40, speeding, and Georgia A. Hughes ,
Cheshire, $43, speeding.
'

Man fined on two charges
Raymond Litchfield, Syracuse, was fined on two charges
when he appeared In the court of Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night.
·
Litchfield was fined $63 and costs for operating a motor
vehicle l!nder suspension, and $2.'i _and costs on a charge of
failure to appear In court on another charge.
Also lined In-the court was Judy K. King, Middleport, $43 and
costs, stop sign violation, and Water Haggy, Pomeroy, $213 and
costs on an assault charge.
Forfeiting bonds In the court were Freddy Fields, Hartford,
W.Va., S63, expired registration; Michael Brown, Racine, $43,
· stop sign violation; Leonus N. Lee, Jr., Lincoln, N. C. , $43, stop
sign violation; Debra Roush, Mason, W. Va., $63, expired
plates, and Dwayne Smith, Sunbury, $43, !llegal turn.

r

..

2,900.
The conferees devoted $16.4
million for a 4 percent Increase In
public assistance benefits. They
kept a Senate provision requiring
able-\)()dled relief recipients
without families to work, go to
school or participate In training
programs In order to receive

benefits.
The committee set aside $8
mUllan for two pilot ptogramsone rural and one urban - In
allowing the able elderly to Uve
independently without entering
nursing homes.
The conferees also:
-Restored $10.4 million Iii
Senate cuts to the adminstra·
lion's business development
appropriation.
-Added $31.5 mUllan for community water and sewer construction grants, which the Senate had funded through boll()s.
-Added $8 million for cl!lld
support and $2 million for day
care for women receiving aid to
dependent children.
-Added $42 million to Ins true·
Ilona! subsidies to state universities, prompting the Board of
Regents to promise that the
student share of college costs will
remain at 41 percent. It had been
expected to go up.

Weather
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Most!y 'clear, with a
low near 60. Northeast winds less
than 10 mph.
Thurday: Mostly sunny, with
highs near 80. .
'
Extended Forecast
Friday lhroucb' Sunday
· Mostly fair, with highs ranging
from the upper 70s to the mid BOs
Friday and froin the mid 80s to
the lower 90s Saturday and
Sunday. Early morning lows will
be between 45 and 55 F'rlday and
mainly In the 60s Saturday and
Sunday.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tilesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK-3
688.
PICK-4
6470.

Second annual Street
Fair opens Saturday
By Dan Adkins
OVPStaff
The Second Annual Streei Fair,
featuring a parade, will begin at 6
a.m. Saturday, July 1, on Main
Street in Point Pleasant.
The parade, which will feature
local acts, bands, and floats, will
begin at Central Elementary and
make its way down Main Slreet.
Organizers for the parade and
street fair include co·chainnan 's
Nancy Ball and Annette Boyles,
both of Point Pleasant.
The parade is just one of the
many lhings scheduled for Satur·
day's s1reet fair, according to
Boyles.
The fair will begin around 6 a.m.
with a pancake breakfast in honor
of Steve Burris, a Point resident
who recently received a hean
transplant The breakfast will be at
tbe Legion Hall.
At 9:30 the crowning of the
American Association of Retired
Persons Queen will be on the
Mason County Courthouse lawn.
In addition to the Cornstalk's
Curse Burial Procession, which
will follow lhe parade, the Point
· Pleasant High School and Junior
High School bands will perform.

At 11:30 a.m., a New Orleans·
style jazz band-the Backyard
Dixie Jazz Band Stompers-will
perform. '
·
Schedul&amp;l for noon is a public
address by Sena10r Raben C. Byrd.
Bynl was originally scheduled for a
11 a.m. address, but Tuesday res·
chedulect his arrival time in Point
Pleasant.
The Midnight Cloggers are
scheduled to perform at 12:30. The
cloggers have just recently returned
from a performance at Walt Disney
World.
At 2 p.m. Johnnie Belinda, a
gospel singing group is scheduled
to perform, while at 4 p.m. Bob
Wise is scheduled to address the
public.
The winner of the Baby Photo
Contest will be announced at 4:30.
As of Tuesday, !here were only four
applicants for the contest.
The Main Slreet Fair Committee
is looking for additional units and
floats. Anyone interested in being
this event should contact
part
Bernie Riddle at 675-2310 or 675·

or

1606.
Also, !hose interested in provid·
ing entertainment should contact
Mary Fowler at 675-442A.

~

Change in library service

I

A change Is occurring In the
library service being offered by
the Meigs County PubliC Ll·
brary. The new library being
built In Pomeroy will allow the
Meigs County Public Library to
expand Its services. Including
providing . booilmoblle service
directly, rather than to contract
with the Ohio Valley Area Llbrar·
les. as has been done for the last

several years. The OVAL bookmobile service will stop at the
end of June, however, because of
budget cycles and regulations,
the Meigs County Public Library
. will be unable to begin their
service at that time. Users of the
bookmobile are encouraged to
use the Pomeroy and Middleport
libraries or the Books By Mall
program during this time.

Abel hopeful for school funding

'

Stale Representative Mary schools such as Eastern Local.
Abel CD·Athensl commented, The money will be divided
wbDe atteilillng the Eastern between primary and secondary
Local Athletic Boosters' bar- schools and higher education.
beque, tbat tbe Budaet Confer· Primacy and secondary schools
Committee may add add!· will receive two-thirds of the
dlma1 mtlieY for ediiCatloiL . tund1, while the remaining funds
Jto 51JIIDtatlve Abel said ilhe II will be used for higher education.
The House.Senate Conference
ltJIIIfld that 10111e addltl01181
Committee
is expected to bring
......., will be placed IIIIo tbe
iiliocil Nile aJd formula to tile budaet bill to a noor vote this
additional mODI)' for Weelc.

__.cit

.

~

L

o

Connors

Summer thunderstorms move to East Coast
By United Press International
The remnants of Tropical
Storm Allison deluged Louisiana
with torrential rain and hall
Wednesday as sweltering
summer weather brought !hun·
derstorms to the East Coast and
pushed the mercury to a record
100 degrees In Baltimore .
Street flooding was reported In
many parts of western Louisiana, -Including Lake Charles and
Baton Rouge, where the waning
remnants of the Atlantic season's
first tropical storm dumped
more than 3 ~ Inches of rain In
just two hours; the National
Weather Service said.
Allison left as many as four
dead In Texas before the storm

Rutland

Final vote... ' Continued !rom page 1
committee member, Injected a
note of caution, warning that
l!conomlc growth or the past few
years may not continue.
•'A leveling-off may come, " he
said. " It that happens, the new
programs In here are going to
have to vie with others that have
been long established."
"Most people will be satisfied
with the budget," said Sen.
Robert Ney , R-Barnesvllle,
another conferee.
"I don't feel completely good
about everything that's In this
budget," said Rep. Thomas John-·
son, R-Cambrldge, "but Ws a
compromise budget."
Hlnlg pointed out that the
budget was balanced Without
Increasing major taxes. A plan of
the governor to Increase the
cigarette and wine taxes was
dropped, as was a House-passed
tax on other tobacco products.
The only tax Increase left Is a $1
levy on barreled beer. Hlnlg said
that would amount to "about
one-third of a cent on a glass of
beer, so you better watch It If you
drink beer."
Of the new money, $18.9 m UUon
was set aside to provide for
residents of Broadview Develop·
mental Center In Cleveland,
which has been recommended
for closing by · the · Celesle
administration.
Another $23 million Is earmarked for upgrading state
employee pay classifications,
$33.8 million to fully finance real
estate tax rollbacks and $14.3
million to handle a prison popula·
tion explosion anttclpated at

Wedn81dey. June 28. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

was downgraded by forecasters
to a tropical depression early
Tuesday.
" Our deputies tell us that It's
still raining real heavy in Vernon
Parish, In the Leesville area"
near the Texas border,Loulslana
state pollee Sgt. Edward Spurgeon said Wednesday morning.
"We still have several roads
under water, but no one has been
forced !rom their home yet."
State roads 10 and 119 were
among the western Louts'tana
roacts closed by flood waters,
1
Spurgeon said.
More heavy rainfall was ' expected Wednesday In Louisiana
as well as In southeast Arkansas
and western Mississippi as the

Wednesday to Include all of
Louisiana outside the extreme
southeast section.
· '

tropical air mass moved slowly
northeast, the NWS said.
The National Weather Service
extendect a flash flood watch

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;-2N9

Oh.io Lottery

ousted at'

Pick 3
924

Wimbledon

Pick 4
8443
Super Lotto
16-22-27-33-37-39

Page 3

Kicker

Vol.40. NO.JI
Copyrighted 1881

2 Sections, 16 Pages 26 Cant's
A Multimedia Inc. NBWIPIPer

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, June 29, 1989

···----=-=:.:....-~--~-

methods of ·s ewage disposal. ·monthly cost to users of $34 to$37,
•'Four vercent of the people have but "that Is a high," he pointed
no system ' whatsoever," said out. Kim Shields noted that the
Baker, ''just pipes going ou tin to nqrm for sewage and water
storm sewer ditches or ·service In rural Ohio Is $25 per
morith. Although Shields a~d
streams."
Baker
would not promise the $25
According to Baker, most of
charge,
they believe that It Is a
the existing systems In Rutland
good
possibility,
once all funding
will not meet the Ohio Sanitary
sources ' lor the project are
Code.
, Although several different sys- tapped.
Although residents expressed
tems were Investigated as ·possibilities for Rutland, the extended some skepticism, said one resiaeration plant package was dent, "nobody's really against It
settled upon not only because of (the proposed system). we just
reduced cost factors to lmple· want to know what we're up
ment the system, but because It against."
Is a system which engineers
believe will be reliable and will
accomodate future growth In the

11!:JSNOW

Elevator construction
begins at courthouse

~SHOWERS

.RAIN

11 Warm "Cold . . Sialic "Occluded
Mapshawt mlrimum "mperatU"'.At ••t50% Ol~~t~y lhlded maiS lol&lt;*t
to receive p edjo4tallol11ndlcated
UPI

FRONTS:

By NANCY YOACHAM
held. The public hearing has been Regional Development· District
Sentinel News Staff
scheduled by the commissioners personnel on Friday, Roberts
Construction of the new eleva- for Monday, July 3, 10 a.m. , In said.
tor In the Meigs County Court· their office In the courtho-use.
After meeting last week with
house Is underway. Banks Con- Anyone with Input Into the representatives of Klals and
struction Company, of request tor the variance may Company, the county's lnsuMiddleport, started yesterday attend the hearing. As required . ranee consultant, the commls(Wednesday) working on the by the flood plain ordinance, a . stoners voted this week to mainground floor of the building. It Is variance board, which In Meigs tain present rates for employee
expected that work on the lowest County Is comprised of Auditor health Insurance for another
level will take at least two weeks William Wickline, Treasurer year. Present rates are $110.80
to complete.
George Collins and Engineer · for single coverage, and $280.50
Because of the elevator con- Philip Roberts, must recom- for family coverage.
struction, the Meigs County mend approval or disapproval
At the request of Michael
Commissioners announced In the variance request. based UPQn ' Swisher, Meigs County Human
yesterday's regular meeting that the outcome of the hearing. The Services Director, the commisthe Shopper's Lounge on the variance could be gran ted by the sioners approved an advance or'
ground noor of the courthouse commissioners at their July 5 $30,000 from the Child Support
w!U be closed temporartly. The regular meeting. '
En!orcellJent Program to the'
commissioners said they regretPhilip Roberts reported that Public Assistance account, pendted having to close the lounge, three projects from Meigs Ing state reimbursement to the
but for safety reasons, they have . County for the State Issue II agency in mid-July.
no choiCe. The lounge .will be Small Government Fund will be,
Also at the request of Swisher,
reopened to the public at the In Columbus on Friday. Roberts the -commissioners extended for.
earliest po~slble date, however, said that Bedford Township has another 60 days, Human Servi- ·
Commissioner Richard Jones submitted two projects - a ces' contracts with the Gallla-'
said he believed the facility $13,000 waterline project and a Meigs Community Action·
would be off limits to the public $17,000 paving project - and Agency to provide transportation
· for at least45 to 60 days.
Pomeroy V mage has submitted a for Medicaid patients and at-risk
Facemyer Lumber Co.. Mid· $3 million wastewater treatment pregnancy patients. The condleport, has requested from the proje('t. The three Meigs projects tracts are being extended until·
commissioners a variance to the are Included among many pro- Information comes from the:
county's flood plain law. The jects from 10-county District 18 state as to new spending ceilings:
company Intends to rebuild a which Includes Meigs County . for l:luman Services.
structure that burned about a Deadline for submitting prospecThe commissioners also met In
year ago at their Hobson site In tive Small Government Fund a one-hour executive session with
lower Middleport.
projects to the state Is July 1. Swisher. No action was takan on
As required by the flood plain Dis trlct 18's projects ar.e. to ,b e matters discussed In the private
law , a public hearing on the band delivered to G:olumbus by sessiob. ·
request lor the variance must be Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley

WEATHER MAP - During early Thundtll' rn'DrDIDJ,
rain/Showers are foreeaat lor parlll of the Pacmc Nortllwest wttb
showers andthunderstorms Ill paris ol the Nortbern Plalu u well
as paris of the Gulf Coaal. Sbowen and thundenlo• are poMible
In paris of the upper Mlulsllippl Valley, the lower Ml"'eslppl
Valley and lhe soutbern At lao lie Coast States. UPI
.

area.

·stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26'14
AT&amp;T ..... ................. ...........3614
Ashland 011 ..... ................. 39~
Bob Evans ..... .... .. ......... ... 15'1f %
Charming Shoppes ... ........ 16~ ',4
City Holding Co ................... 18
Federal Mogul... ................. 27'14
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................541-'s
Heck's ........ ... ........ .............. '1f
Key Ceo turton ............ ........ 12',4
Lands' End ............................ 28
Limited Inc .... ....... .. .... ....... 31%
• Multimedia Iilc ... ................... 97
Rax Restaurants .... .... ............ 3
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 17~
Shoney's Inc ....................... ll%
Wendy's Inti .............. .........6'4
Worthington Ind .................... 22

Retail $11,111. 1911 CADillAC

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. litall $7995. 1916

SAlE

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Retcil '6895. 1917 CHEVROLET SPIC'IIUM

Retail '11,895. 1917 CHEVROlET S:.SlAZER 4X4

, . _ . . . . . . . . , 111 ••• ......

Meigs deputies investigate 8 &amp; E
Wednesday at Five Point Express

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$6995

A NEW HOME FOB OLD GLORY - ROTC
cadete and memben of local veterans orcanlza·
tlou · prepare to raise the new 110-by·38-foot

Retail'6795. 1914 OIDSIIDIE CUilASS U'li I
Ct.o •• - • · Y·l •tloo. lilt wlootl, erwiN - -

Retail'5295. 1915 CHRYSlER LEIARON
Atolo. , _

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wheel. cnlle•llrtl. la/IMd•._
$4295
St ... 11322~
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Retail 11995

1985 CHEVROLET G-20
CONVERSION VAN

1916 CHEVROLET
CHEVmE

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V·I engine, AII/FM lltcto ......
Occt • ....,., •acatlast roaciJ.

Air cand, 4 spd. trillS. AMIFM
lltcto, 27,000 llllln. Great I"• mi-

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The Meigs Courtly Sh~lff's
Department Is . Investigating a
Wednesday morning breaking
and entering at the Five Points
Express. According to a report
from Sheriff James M. Soulsby,
the owner, Mike Roberts, reported tl\at the building had been
entered and 50 cartons of cl·
garettes taken. A 12-pack of beer
had also been taken from the
cooler, but left at thl! scene.
On Wednesday evening, the
sheriff's department took an
accident report In the VIllage of
Rutland. As reported,,l7 year-old
Carl A. Williams, New Lima
Road, was traveling north In his
mother's 1981 Caprice station
w&amp;gonar0und 7:20p.m., when an
Insect new In the window and got
1)1 his T-shlrt. As Williams was
attempting to get the Insect out,
he went off the road on the left
striking a video store sign, then
crossed Bryant Road before he

$5995

PONnAC GRAN PRIX

£m-.ly ct.. Y·l .,..,, •
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$3595

1913 lUlCK

Ollllint, 4 spd. tr.ns.. ....,
My fliit ......... tlrll, It -

:Z ;';n':· SALE $2395

LESAIIE ST. WAGON

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1 ... : · AMIFM st-.1111

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1913 CHEYIOLET

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1912 JEEP 'I• TON
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Stores closed
COLUMBUS - Director John
R. HalloftheOh!oDepartmentof
Uquor Control ~ announced
that all slate liquor stores,
agencies and departmental off!·
ces will be ciOIIed on Tlll!tlday,
July 4, In oblervance of Independence Day . .

To the strains of patriotic
music apd speeches touching on
the, hlstdr!cal slinlllcance of tbe
American nag, campus and
communlly representatives
were on hand Wednesday at the
University ol Rio Grande to
dedicate the 20-by-30-footsymbol
of the nation donated to the
university by buslnes.mtan Bob
Evans.
"I don't think there exists a
mare splendid sight than thla
majestic flal!," Capt. Thomas M.

'J

-

constitutional rlghls of our our legal options," he offered no
By United Preu International
Miners on strike against the members have been dramatl· specifics on possible appeals.
Despite the rolling roadblock
• Pittston Coal Group are review- cally reduced."
Sympathy strikers In 10 states, Injunction. Virginia stale pollee
Ing legal options In the wake of
judges crushing their attempts at Including Ohio, have been or· still report plenty of traffic on
non-violent protests, and a union · dered back to work by judges as roads around key Pittston fac!U·
oftlclat conceded Wednesday well, and while Corcoran said the lies. Wednesday's ticket totals
Continued on page 8
they may have run out of protest union Is currently "reviewing
techniques. ·
The United Mine Workers.have
suffered four legal setbacks In
their bitter strike against the
nation's largest exporter of metallurgical coal.
First, the number of pickets
The OU Communlverslly Summer Band will present a free
were limited by Injunction. Seconcert In Pomeroy tonight at 7 p.m.
·
condly, the use of road-blocking
Sponsored by Bank One, this will be the fourth consecutive
sit-Ins was barred by court order
year for a performance by the band here.
and enforced by the jailing of
·The concert will be beld on Court Street under the dlrectlou of
three union leaders and nearly $3
Ronald
P. SocclareiU. ThO&amp;e attenc!lng are encouraged to take
mUUon In fines.
lawn
chairs
or blanlt:ets for aeatlq.
The miners then turned to
Meigs
County
residents performing with the group are Todd
rolling roadblocks - convoya of
Clay, Lisa Miller, Jeanne Bowen, John VanReeth, David Deem,
sloW moving vehicles to cloa coal
David Bowen, June Buchanan, and Ankle Sloan.
roads - only to bave a judge bar
!hat technique • well wltb a
$240,000flne and threats of future
lines.
"What we bl.ve here In the
Pomeroy V!Daae Council will not meet Monday, July 3, due to
coalfields Ia a lot of attention to
the Fourth of July holiday.
'
the Jaw and very little focus or
attention on Juatlce," said union

start the day."
"We're real proud . of It,"
Evans said, adding that he tound
the Supreme Court decision
protecting burning of the !lag as
a form of free speech
"unbelievable. "
The flag was raised by
!llembers of the ROTC unit at Rio
Grande and representatives of
the Veterans ·of Foreign Wars
and Ohio Militia.
During the ceremony, ,Sgt.
Continued 011 page 8

Local news briefs--..

Band concert slated tonight

s

More than a doran members
told Rap. Duncan Hunlei', R'
Calli. ,late Weclnelday llle,y were

--

Carroll, assistant professor of
military science at Rio Grande,
said at the dedication ceret'11pny.
The flag, which flies atop an
88-foot pole, overlooks Stanley L.
Evans Athletic Field. It has been
flying since early May, when the
pole was Installed by the Rio
Grande grounds and malnte·
nance staff.
In brief remarks, Evans said
he has always been fascinated by
Old Glory and lloted that seeing a
flll.g like this "Is a great way to

prepaPed to joiD him ID tbe
overnight marathon to protest
the 5-4 decision last week.
They talked until 8: f2 a.m.
EDT, adjoumiJII un&amp;ll-J,la.Ja.lor
replar bulln••· Well')' ltelloII'IIPhers and other floor ltafterl
quickly 11~ to catch a quick nap
bdlri t1te Rouse took liP • a
foreti!JI aiel btU.
Many called for ainendlng tbe

,

.

"'

could slam on his brakes. He Is lnvestlgatlng the killing of a
struck trees In a yard next to dog In a pen at Dyesville.
Bryant Road. No Injuries were According to the report, Debbie
reported but there was heavy . Schumaker, Dyesvllle, called the
damal(e to the vehicle.
. sheriff's otf!ce Saturday that
Martin Pierce, Rutland, re- sometime during the night, unported Tuesday morning that his known subjects drove In behind
1985 four-wheeler had been her house and beat her four
stolen. He found It a short time year-old male dog In the head.
later hidden not far from his She found the dog dead In the dog
house.
house.
She reported that the dog had
Danny King, 39118 State Route
124, Pomeroy, reported to the just recently been returned from
sherlff'sofflcethathehadalarge quarantine after having bitten a
sum of cash stolen from his girl, but that she complied with
wallet. King's house was appar- the law and had the dog confined
ently entered. The wallet was on a chain Inside an enclosed pen.
Sheriff's deputies did not know
found In his driveway without the ·
money.
the breed of the dog that was
Donald Randolph, Route 2 kUled. Neither Keith Little, ofthe
Coolville, reported that he had Meigs County Health Depart·
two lawnmowers, a weed-eater ment, nor Meigs County Dog
and a gas grill stolen from his Warden Wayne Roseberry, were
property.
available this morning to provide
Also, the sheriff's department that Information. ,
.
'

Miners considering legal appeals

House members speak all night to
protest cour~ U. S. flxJg decision

l'llllq.

( ··; · +

American Oar ai the Unlvenlly ol Rio Grande on
Wednesday. The ltac, doaated bl' area bualnetJ&amp;man Bob Evano, was dedlea&amp;ed durtnr the
ceremony.

University of Rio Grande
dedicates giant 'Old .Glory'

WASHINQTON 1UPII- Con·
aresstonal critics of the Supreme
Court declllon allowlq bumtne
of tbe American flag as protected
free s!M!ech kept the Houlll! open
all ntaht and Into Th111'1day
momlq to apeak out •1•1u1 the

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80,

•

Continued from page 1

With a plant of this type,
sewage Is held and treated for 24
hours before being released.
With conventional systems, sew·
age Is normally held only two
hours. The extended holding
period should eliminate the pos·
slbllty of any unpleasant odors.
"Package plan," Baker said,
means that the system would be
prefabricated off site and then
brought In by truck for Installation. This reduces costs greatly
when compared to the costs of a
contractor building on-site.
ThP use of smailer diameter,
more flexible pipes with a system
of this type, also reduces costs,
said Baker.
According to EPA grant regulations, the village would be
responsible for operation and
maintenance of the entire system, Including grinder pumps on
each person's property. Therefore, an easement would . be
needed from each property
owner. Baker said It Is "anticipated that the easements would
be given to the village" since It
has been determined In the past,
that the value of the home with
the grinder pump more than
equals the value of the land with
the easement. U residents ask for
money for the easement, said
Baker, every dime that person
gets will drive up the rates for
everyone else.
The first step In the grant
process Is the completion and
approval of the "facilities plan,"
Baker said. The facilities plan
has been finished, the required
public hearings held, and now the
plan must be submitted by July
14 to EPA where II wlll .u ndergo
detailed review.
The second step In the process
Is designing and submitting to
EPA, detailed plans. This must
be done by the end of this year.
The last step Is construction. If
the proposed plan Is accepted.
construction could begin In Jan
1991 and be finished by De·
cember 1991.
It was mentioned at the meet·
ing that In 1992, EPA will have
au thorlty to mandatorUy lmple·
ment wastewater treatment
plans In unsewered areas.
Although many questions were
asked by residents at the meetIng, another of the main concerns
wa s the annual cost to users .
Baker Is still predicting a high

~90344

Clear tonight. Low In mid
50s Friday, sunny. Highs near

Council won't mee(.Monday

ConsUtuuon lo ttnke down !be
decision that tlai burning Is
ptaeutld b)' the J11'1t Amend·
ment guarantee of tree speech.

Jtap, Robert DoiiiH. R-Callf••
fold. tlie ltoue tbat llle JOver'Dmtmt· ..ws more Ploteotlo• to

sJUkelman JOf COrcoru.

Is tbere allY kllld ol proteat the

mlnlln can IIOW 111011111?
U.S. currency by maklq Its
"PrObably not wttbiD tbe pa·
dell tnllltlon lllepl.
,
· rllmeterl ol the order•·" Corco. ''Wt .tall'! rip up our own ran concedllcl. "Witltln the boContinued on paae 8
darif!tl ~ tbe
order~. the

JrP'•

I

No one hurt in wreck

-

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