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Paa•

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10-lhe Deily Sulinel

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- - -..... Area
deaths-';.;....._
.
Morrill D, Snider

from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 tci 9 p.m.
Services will be Jiet1! at the
funeral borne on Wedruiday at 1
p.m with the Rev. Jolin Evans
officiating. Burial wlllbe In Miles
Cemetery.

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Tuaeday; July 11, 1989

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Recycling Day
planned July 15
at~r· lot

Past Councilors ·
officer installation
planned July 13

Hospital

Application...

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EMS logs

11

Dally stock prteea
(AI of 10 a.m.)
Beyee aad Mark Smith
of Bl••&amp;. Ellll If Loewl

Meigs County Emergency
MeillcJII Services answered 11
· emergency calls on Monday and
transported 11 people to area.
hospitals.
Am Electric Power ............. 28%
At 12:01 a.m. Syracuse Squad
· ATitT .................... ...... .......35'li!
33 went to SR 124 and took Kevin
Ashland dll .•.........•.........•..38%
Dugan to Veterans Memorial
Bob Evans .......................... i5~
Hosplfal. At 2:04 a. in. Pomeroy
Chal'll)lng Shoppes ..............15%
EMS went to thesceneofanauto
City H,oldlng Co ... .... ........... 16~
accident on SR 681 and trans·
Feder" Mogul.. .......... ........ 24~
ported Edna Driggs and Matt
Goodyear Tit~ ...................543~
Hensley to Veterans Memorial.
Heck'S.. ............................... ~ .
Rutland Sqllild 44 responded to
~ey centurion .. ... ...... ....... .. 12~
Higley
Road at 4:47 a.m. and
Land$1.- End ..'..: .. ............. ..... 27%
transported Charles Bowles to
Limited Inc , ..... .. .................32'h
Veterans Memorial. At 10: 32
Multimedia lnc ............. .e .. ;97~
a. in. the Pomeroy Squad wen I to
Rax Restaurants ....... ... ..... ... 2~
Mill Street for Ira Van Cooney,
Robbins &amp; Myers ... :... , ....... . 17~
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Shoney's Inc .... .. .. ....... ...... .. ll'h
Center In Gallipolis.
·
Wendy's Inti... ... ....... ........ ... 61A,
At 3:28 p.m. M~ddleport
. Worthington lnd ............. .... 22~
Squad 11 went to the Stonewood

Morris D. Snider,
61, of
The M,elp County Utter Con·
Poilleroy, died Tuesday at his
trol Procram will bold a Recycle
home.
Day on Saturday, July15, from 9
He was born 'June 7, 1928 In
a.m. to noon at the Kroger
Huntington, W.Va. to the ·late
Parking Lot In Pomeroy.
CharleS E. Snider and Jane Bemke M.
This Is a donation project, ,with
Elizabeth Stowe Snider.
all
proceeds . goiDg to the, ·coHe was a machine operator al
Bernice M. Searles. 6lt. A;Jcron.
sponsor,
Carletpn School and
Midwest Steel In Pomeroy and a · died Monday eventngt.t Akron
Melp
Industries.
veteran of th,e Korean conflict . City nospltal.
Items for recycling Include
He belonged to the New Haven
She was a hoin.emakt);iand the
American Legion Post 140 and daughter or the . late Hod and aluminum', glass, newspapers,
cardboard, plasdc jugs, copper,
Stewart-Johnson Post 9926 of the Margaret Fife Searles'"'~
VFW, Mason W.Va.
,
She Is s~rvtved by 11:mlughter, brass, etc:
Survivors: .Include his wire, Rand! Popp, Akron; two brothers
Marjorie Snider, Pomeroy; one and slsters·ln·law, ChArles and
·son Randall D. Sn lder, Middle- ~IIzabeth Searles, Cheshire; and
.port; foster child, Marsha Mace, Carl and Eileen Se~~Middle­
Pomeroy; four sisters, Ruth port; a sister, Catherine Burton,
Koenig of Reedsville, Ohio; Be a· Middleport; three gtaDdchlld·
trice Ralrden of Hartford, W. Va, ren, Mark Popp, Cop~ Megan
Past Councilor's Oub of Ches·
Janet Reeves, Pomeroy and Berry. Stow; Tam111y Popp,
Brenda Templeton, Minersville, Akron; and a great arandson, ter Council 323, Daughters of
America will have a picnic
Ohio.
Ryan Popp, Copley. · "
. meeting at the home of Salde
Other survivors Include one
Other than her parei\!M:she was Trussell, Bashan, on July 13.at
brother, Ronnie Snider of Willi· preceded In death by 11 bi'Other,
amstown, w :va. one grandchild James, a sister, Ma'f~ Van · 6:30 p.m. Other. hostesses are
Faye Klrkarts , and Thelma
and· one step-grandchild along . Coo
. ·ney. an&lt;!. !lll. lnf4nt;•~r.
White.
Memebers should bring a
with several nieces and nephews.
Services will be Th.lll' at 1 covpred dish and a few giftS for
· He was preceded In death by p.m. at the Rawlings-Coats·
two brothers, James P . and Fisher Funeral Ho~, , Burial game&amp; along wltb a lawn chair. ·
Charles R. Snider, and two Infant wll! be In the Gra,y~l Hill New officers will be IDsialled.
daughters.
·Cemetery. Friends may call at
news
Friends may call at the. Ewing the funeral home on We&lt;jnesday
Funeral Home on Wednesday evening from 6-9 p.m. '""
Veterans Memorial
July ~0 . Admissions - Leo lit
_1eo_n_ttnu_ed~tr(l'll_llll_~~t&gt;_1....,l~,.,
~·.,...
' _ _ Curtis, Pomeroy; Mila Ramsey.
J un1
Racine; Jfnny WUUamson, Ru·
projects, $11.5 mllUon In housing owned by the&gt; vlllage: "''he vehl· tland; Lee Wood, Rutland; Edith
rehabilitation funds were allo- cles were sold to the lone bidder Spencer, Middleport.
July 10 Discharges - Etsllla
cated to 20 top ranking projects, on the cruiser and ' the high
however, Middleport's proposal bidders on each of the ~rucks. Cassell; Bertha Diehl; Charles
"did not rank high enough to be Sidney Little .purcbaied the ·Carter, Syracuse; Mary
funded,'' the letter stated.
cruiser for $502; Bill' Spaun, Pickens, Pomeroy; Margie
Hortman said he hopes to meet Pomeroy, purchased a '19'11 Chev- Burnelm.
with OOOD representat·lves later rolet truck for S236.56'ari8 a 1973
this year to determine how to Chevrolet truck for $105!56; and
Improve Middleport's appUca· Lawrence Yeauger. MUillleport,
tlon so It will be more competi- purchased a 1978 Ford1tuck for
tive In next year's funding $70. The 1973 truck to Spaun may
process.
not be officially sold untU the
Since purchases up to $10,000 village has found ·l md purchased
may now be authorized without a replacement vehicle.. '"
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going through the bidding proThe mayor's reporto€$6,321.97
cess, Council approved the pur· In fines and fees collected-l:lurlng
chass of a pickup truck for the June was accepted by•COuncll.
street deparlment at a cost .of
Ftqally, Hofhn'iiii' and
· $4,500, and also .the purchase of a members of Council coWI'inended
. four-wheel drive three-quarter Councilman Bob Gilmore, Roger
ton truck for the fire department · Williams, recreation director,
at a cost of $7,500; pending and the Middleport Fl~~.Pepart·
autthorlzatlon of\ the purchases ment, for efforts on t~e Middleby the village's Iiilard of public
port Fourth of July ,f elebratlon
affairs:
•
and fireworks dlspia':W, "Despite
In a related matter, Council rainy weathe&gt;r, Ml~~l'eport's
accepted several bids for ihree celebration was a success.
old trucks and one pollee cruiser

Searlea •

Stocks

.O hio Lottery

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calls_-

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'Bo Show' .
PICK-3

at All-Stars

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Apartments for Dana . Long· .
streth, who was tilkeil io Vete~
rans Memorial. Pomeroy Squad
1 was -called to 104 Peacock at
4:52 p.m. for Henry Werry. He
was treiUed, but not transported.
The Pomeroy Squad allo was
called at 5: 49 p.m. to SR 2C8 for
Francis Andrew whO wu taken
to St . Joespbs Hospital In Parkersburg. At 6: 11 p.m. Rutlaad'
Squad 44 went to Loop Road &amp;1\11 •
took Dennis Searles to How!r ~
Medical Center.
· . -:
· AI 8:03. p.m. Racine Squad :i8 :
went to SR ·338 tor Cora Webb. :
She was tQken to Veterans
Memorial.
.
The last call of the day came ai '
]0:06p.m. when Tuppers Plains ;..
Squad 86 wenttoSR 7forWIIUam
Grueser. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
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PICK-4
4829

Page -3

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llal.40. Na.441
Copyrighted 1989

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New phone system
goes on-line Saturday

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HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY ·
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frot DldrtllicS ...lnt .tllto wM lot ti••IIJ hit- lltwlng AW C..tw Ill

DR. JOHN H. RIDGEWAY'S 'OF.fiCE

Divorces granted

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,.~

THURSDAYI JULY 13

Two Meigs County marriages
have ~orne to an end In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Edl\h A; Watson and Terry C.
Watson have been , granted a
divorce while Terri L. Penhor·
wood and Frederick E. Penhor·
wood :· have bEen granted a
dissolution.
Deborah M. Well and William
F . Wells have ·petitioned for a
divorce. ·

''&gt;···-······.

9:00 UL 10 1JaOO 110011;

•wa AID UAW PIOY*I

Cal Tol f111 ,.__1-100-634-5265 for ic~ I ti ·: 1ai ilttwll.
THE .nsn Wl1 IE GlvtN IY A UCENSID IIUIN&amp; AID SPECIAlln.
ARJont wilD h• trouble h•ina cit undntlndlita coivwlltlotl II lnvlltd to.
h1.11ea frH h•laa 1111 to '" if this prob11111 Cllllll hllp•IIBrillatlis coupon
with you far JOUr FREE HEARIIG TEST of S75 VIIH. Adults only. P!•t.

CQME. IN WI1'H COUPON POl liST . '

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Laurence Olivier d~d
LONDON (UPI) -Three-time
Oscar winner Laurence OUvler,
regarded as the ereatest actor or
his time, died Tuesday, a family
spokeswoman said. He was 82.
Lord Olivier died In his sleep at
his house In Sussex, about 50
miles south of London, said Sue
Green, a spokeswoman for Inter·
national Creanve Management,
his agent In London.
Olivier's first role was a
Shakespearean one - Katherine
In "The Taming of the Shrew"ln
an all-boy school production at
age 15 - and he went on to.play
every great Shakespearean role:
But his enormous range took him
to Hollywood as well.
His first Academy Award was
a special Oscar In I946 for
"Henry V," awarded "for his
oujstandlng achievement as actor,: producer and director," and
the second was for his ·starring

rote In "Hamlet'.' .In '1948"'' ·
In 1979' he was · gtten an
honorary Oscar "for thef&amp;ll body
of his work, for th~"!unlque
achievements of hls' 'e\iilre ca·
r:eer and his IUetlme ~~trlbu·
tlon to the art of film.",, .,

of

Olivier was nomlnated for
Oscars for nutnerous 'ollier films
Including "Wuthertng• Heights"
In 1939, "Rebecca'' •~ lh 1940,
' 'Ric~Jard III" In 19!i6~ "The
Entertainer" In 1960, "Othello"
In 1965 and "SleuUI" ln·l972.
Olivier won fans on oot)J sides
of the Atlantic for !'fils early
screen role as Heatlrellff In the
movie "Wu therlng Helgflts" opposite Merle Oberon. ~.was sdll
winning them two gen~atlons
later with such roles l!l!'lhe Nazi
war criminal In the na ·~Mara·
thon Man" and as tht!"exiled
father In the televlsloil· produc·
tlon of Evelyn Waugh'si'"Brlde- ·
shead Revisited."
"'"
Olivier's later years were
plagued
by medical probJems By United Press International
prostate
cancer, an obstructed
SOulh Central Ohio
kidney,
tlirombosls,
pneumonia,
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
appendicitis
and
dermatopolylow In the lower 70s. Winds north
near 10 mph. Chance of rain 20 . myosltls, a muscle . ,was dng
disease.
· ' .
q'
percent.
But
even
at
81,
frail
and IU he
Wednesday: _ Showe&gt;rs and
was
acting
cameo
mov.!'
e rol~.
thunderstorms likely. with highs
.
In the&gt; mid 80s. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Ohio's Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance&gt; of showers and ·
thunde&gt;rstorms Thursdav . the&gt;n
fair Frlday.and Saturday. Highs
will he In the&gt; upper 70s or In the
80s. Early morning lows will be&gt; In
the60sf

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10!"1~

.We Unlock The
~ To
Values

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~ our low disc:our!t prices
aepi esent realllalue.
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. Bruce Reed, president of
.The benefit&amp; which Meigs their affiliates In Ohio have
Chamber, reported that although
County may expect from Meigs I!Chleved. this recognition.
-Industries' recent accreditation
CARF . will mean high level the July 4th Chamber-span·
by the national Commission on · service&gt; to Meigs Industries' sored Phil Dirt and tlie Dozers
Accreditation· of RehabilitatiOn clients with mental retardation · concert lost money, It could still
Facilities (CARF) , were outlined and developmental disabilities, be-considered a success. As Reed
by Keith Black at Tuesday's as well as· state and national · pointed oui, the concert was not
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com· recognition for the county. In scheduled just to make money, It
merce me&gt;etlng.
addition, more money will be was also supposed to provide
Black Is employed by the coming Into Meigs County In the recreation and entertainment.
Approximately 565 people
Meigs County Board of Mental form of state and federal grants
Retardation and Developmental for which only CARF accredited braved the July 4th evening rain
Disabilities as the adult services organizations are eligible. In the to attend the concert which was
director and general manager of next three years, Meigs Indus- held at the Pomeroy football
Melgs·-lndustrles .
tries' personnel expect a min- field. At least 1.000 people were
CARF Is a national organlza· imum of $600,000 additional mo· needed to break even. Chamber
tlon which measures rehabiUta· nies to· come Into the county had a $7,000 operating bUdget for
lion facilities against other reha· because of CARF. Increased the. concert, but fell short of
biUtation facilities . a~ound the funding will make It po,sslble for breaking even by about $2,500.
To make up the loss, Chamber
country. The Meigs MRDD ,Meigs Industries to expand Its
Board decided four years ago to currently $200,000 a year non- ' Is 's ponsoring a large&gt; giveaway
promotion •. with gifts being pro·.apply for CARF accreditation profit business.
and since then, Meigs Industries
"What's good ·for us at Nlelgs vided by area businesses. and a
has been preparing for the InduStries Is good for the county, mid-September golf tournament.
Reed thanked' several people
accreditation process.
and vice-versa." Black said.
· Meigs ' Industries' manage- . "But we're still a year or two who worked on the concert,
ment team was somewhat sur- away !rom seeing real benefits especially Jay Hill who headed
prised to receive a three- year coming back to the coun~y." he the event.
Finally. Chamber member
accreditation from CARF - the added.
longest accredl~at)on period · " Blll Nease, manager of Pome· Mary Powell urged anyone with
gr&amp;nted - Instead of .an antlcl· roy Bank One, repm;!-e&gt;d that thl' knowledge of area recreational
paled orie-year accredlttitlon. . · recent Ohio Unlverslly Commu· events which may already be
"This Is something for the ntverslty Band concert in Pome· scheduled for next year, to let her
whole county to take prkje In," . roy, Which was sponsored by know as soon as possible so the
events may be listed In area
Black said. There are states In Bank One, was well attended.
the country that have only.- one "We're looking forward to next tourism brochures for the next
year.
CARF facility, or none at all. year," Nease said.
Only 19 MRIDD Boards and/or

MM! MM! GOOD!- YoungPomeroyTesldents
April J,arge, at left, and her brother, Kenny, at
right, wlll attest to the fact that watennelon tastes
especially good on a hot afternoon Uke yesterday. ·
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UCIII DIPAn•rn STO.I

Grand
NEW

~.
· BWDIMJNG ALONG - Area realdenta trylag to beat tile heat
...... 'h•tlay afternoon at London Pool In Syrae~~ae. Comln&amp; up
Hl.., ~ at both London Pool and Middleport Pool, area r•ldenlll
o1.a1 . . . are Invited to partlclpll$e In evealn&amp; Swlm·A·Lonp to
beaell llle llllp County Cllapter cd tile Amerlcu Caneer Seclety.
fte lwlm-A·Lo'IP are. ~ehedllle4 fr- 8 to 9 p.m. a&amp; MltldleJ!Ort .
111111.7 lo U a&amp; SJraclllle, both on JIIIJ D. Swtmmen are Mked to
. 1'1....... a&amp; illtlr rwpeotlve pool; and .a10 ~ plcll UPIPO-r lheetl

IN GALLIPoLIS 600 SILVER 1R1DG1 PLAZA, STAT! II'. 7

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Friday, July :11

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at the pooL Swtmmen mq til• pllleio aponson to II&amp;)', for
example, 10 ceau for each lap lhe' p.Uclpant Ia able to awtm,
Prizes will be awarded to awllnmen colledln&amp; the m011t money for
the locai caacer society cllapter. Cerllftclltel of parllclpatlo11 will
alllo be prarented to ail swimmer&amp;. Tile Swtm·A-Lonp were
uiiOIIIICed by John BUIIIIell, preslde.ot "'.t....-~ · 'P Chapter of the
American Cueer 8ocletr . .

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Cousin Christopher Proffitt, center, doesn't like .
watermelon. So to keep cool, he just doused
himself now and then with a pitcher Cif water.

Wooten case decision

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9:00 A.M.
to 3 P.M. ·

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$) o·oo
ONE RACK OF DEVON •••••••
Stop I• Te~tfl

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Appeals court upholds

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Names Hke Gitano, Lee, Hanes. Sony, Selko; "· ·
Kodak and Stanley are your guaramee
.'"
of top quality. In fact. all the names
we sen haw to staDd up to your scrutiny.
That's why
check standards &amp;0 carefully.
..
Remember at Ames the key til yours!

It Pays To

In fiber optics calls are trans·
mltted on pulses · of laseractivated light. Voices and data
are clearer becuase the glass
strands carrying the light pulses
are Immune to e&gt;lectrlcal Inter·
terence and lightning.
The new switching center also
paves the w;;iy for equal access
service in Pomeroy, Letart
Falls, Racine and Rutland. This
service will start Sept. 30 and wlll
enable customers to -s elect a long
distance company of their
choice.
.
Selection of ,the long distance
company is made by marking a
ballot that has been mailed to
homes In the lour communities .
Deadline for returning the bal·
lots Is Sept. 30, ·he added.
Digital PQ ulpment transmits
voice and data signals through a
combination of on-and·off pulses,
Bates said. Analog switching
equipment.- such as Pm;neroy's
existing system transmits signals by a continuously varying
e)ectrlcal signal In the shape of a
wave.
"We're excited about this ·
project," Bates said . "This re·
presents a heavy 'Investment In
Pomeroy and we' re confident the
new system wlll provide excel·
lent service to customers."

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Open·
Thursday
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Super July Savl•a•l "

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It's no secret. At Arne&amp; 'voo can unlock
great savings on clothing, toys, hanlware,
JewelrY, eleCtmnlcs and more. Because we .
stock aome of the best brands bt the

DIGITS The .· temperature In
Pomeroy .Garecl . Into triple digits Tuesday
after-a at about 4 p.m. Temperatures were In
tbe Ita ._lbout the morning before Increasing

the first time Saturday morning,
Bates said .
In the new system customers In
the 992 exchange must dial all
seven digits when they place
local calls, Bates said. The new
switching Pquipmen,t will no
longer accept flve·dlglt shortcut
dialing.
As part of the new system,
party-line customers wlll now
hear only a single ring . when
receiving a 'phone call.
''This new co'mputer ·
controlled switching system provides about a fivefold Increase in
call·handllng capacity · over the
existing electromechanical system," Bates said.
Touch calllng and other op·
tiona! services also wlll be
available In Pomeroy for the first
tim e, he added. These services ,
Include · Call Forwarding. Call
Waiting, Three·way calling and
speed \'alllng.
"Customers can obtain infor·
matlpq ,a bout these services by
·ci!lllng GTE's ser¥ice number on
page 2 of the PhOne hook,'' Bates
.said.
.•
The new fiber optics cable link
that was Installed·passes through
the Albany GTE office&gt; and then
goes on Into Athens . It will carry
all long distance calls for the two
communities.

:~rJOK~r::. t~J~" r~~~!QY__f;_~mber

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through the 90s during the afternoon. Relief Is In
site as highs are expected to be In low 80s for the
next few days. (Thnes.Sentinel photo)

riuPJ.E

CARF benefits Meigs County, .

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lUll OFf.tE
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Anyone who Is scheduled to
report to criminal or traffic court
on July 12 should report on July
19 11t' 10 a.m. Instead.

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Court date changed

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Cantril
Trust·

Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will he meeting tonight at 8 p.m.

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NOTI'E

VFW to .meet

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Weather

The high technology era of
digital phone-call processing will
arrive In Pomeroy at 12 :01 a .m.
Saturday when GTE Telephone
Operations completes the Instal·
latlon of a $1 .5 million digital
switching system, said Gary, ·
Bates, GTE local service
manager .An additional $407,000 was
invested In projects designed to
support the new system, pushing
the total of the project to over $1 ,9
million. GTE Invested another
$602,000 to complete a fiber optics
cable network to link Pomeroy to
the long -distance network
through GTE 's Athens office.
Testing of the new swltvhing
equipment has been underway
for several weeks to ensure
proper operation, Bates said.
The new · system will ser ve
about 4,10p fUStomers in Pomeroy 's 992 exchange wlllch covers
an 84-square-mlle area in
Pomeroy.
'.' This switching system fea tures faster processing ·of calls,
clearer connections and new
services for customers," Bate&gt;s
said.
·
Phone users will notice the
'familiar dial tone will have a
higher-pitched electronic sound ,
whe&gt;n they use their phones lor·

::~·::·:=~~:·.~::·'"::-··:::::~:.··~:~:~~-~: ~:=:~.~: ~.~~·;::::·:~·-. _:::~~~:-:...:::::.

224 UST IWN:...PO.IOY · . - .

2 Sections. 16 pages · 25 Cants .
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 12, 1989

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COUPON

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Marriage license

A Meigs County couple has
appllPd for a marriage license In
Melgs ~'County Probate Court.
Eric L. Stover. Jr. 20, Racine,
and Julia F . Lutz, 18, Racine. are
planning to get married. ~

Tonight: J.'artly cloudy,
with a chance of showers and
thunderstonns. Lows will be
between 85 and 70. Winds
north around 10 mph. Chance
of rain 40 percent.

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In a two· to-one vote&gt;, the Athens
County ·Court of Appeals, Fourth
Appellate District, upheld the
trial court In the Spring 1987
Athen&amp; County Common Pleas
Court case of the State versus
Naomi Wooten. Presiding authority In the Athens County case
was former Meigs County Common Pleas Jud_ge Charles
Knight. The upholding of the trial
court by the cburt of appeals
means the murder conviction of
Wooten, lri connection with the
death of her husband, stands,
explained Robert Toy, Assistant
Athens County·Prosecutor.
·Wooten was round guilty of the
1983 shooting death of her bus·
band, Michael Wooten. She was
Indicted In Athens County July 3,
' 1984.
After Athens County Common
Pleas Judge Thomas Hodson
resigned from the bench In Sept.
1986, Judge Thomas Gerkin from
VInton County was appointed by
the Ohio Supreme Court to hear ·
the trial which,took place In Oct.
1986. 'file trial ended In a
·mistrial.

Although Alan Goldsberry wa s
appointed by Governor Richard
Celeste as Athens County Com. mon Pleas · Judge, replacing
Hodson, Goldsberry could not
preside over the se~ond Wooten
trial becau se he had practiced
law with Wooten 's counsel. The
Ohio Supreme Court appointed
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight to hear
Wooten's second trial In the
spring of 1987. A jury in the
second trial convicted Wooten of
the murder charge. The convlc·
tlon was appealed.
Appelate Court Judges John
Stephenson and Homer Abele
upheld the trial court In the "'
appeal action. Judge Lawrence
· Grey dissented. However, the
two-to-one vote means the conviction will stand.
.
Counsel for Wooten has filed a
motl9ri for reconsideration of the
appeal by the appelate court, In
an attempt to have the appelate
Judges chal)ge their minds on the
decision. According to ~lstant
PrQSecU tor Toy, whO helped
I Continued on page 8)

I

�L

•

Pllgs 2-The Deily Sentinel

burgh was an uneonstltuttonal
endorsement ·of Christianity At
the same time however the c~urt
upheld the placing of a Hanukah
Menorah next to a Christmas
tree at a government building
one block away because In such a
context this display was not
viewed an endorsement of any
religion.
·
The court also ruled that states
can't deny unemployment benetIts to an individual who refuses to
work on his Sabbath, even .If that
person does n()t belong to. an
organized religion. In regard to
free Sj)I1E'Ch, the court ruled that
Congress may ban. obscene
"Dial-A -Porn" services but It
cannot totally ban merely "Indecent" . commercial messages.
Also, in one of its more Infamous
cases, the court ruled that
burning the U.S. flag can be
construed as a form of pOlitical
ptotes1-1JLat is protected by the
FlrstAmenament. ·
On other matters, .the· court
ruled that a federal racketeering
·

Wednesday, July 12. 1989

_.Jordan's royal

A new pattern is-emerging
Lastweektnasto4declston.a.
sharply divided Supreme C~urtcho~ not to overturn a Missouri
law restricting a woman' s access
to an abortion. This case featured
a controversial Issue, a divided
· court, and a decision that represented judicial restraint on the
part ·of the court. This final
decision of the just completed
session was typically symbolic of
what the Court's 1988-1989 term
, was all about.
This was particularly true In
regard· to ·criminal cases. The
court loosened the requirements
for Us now famous " Miranda"
decision that requires pollee to
warn suspects of their rights. The
justices also held that drug
agents may stop 'and search
people who look like possible
drug dealers without warrants or
probable cause. They ruled that
prosecutors may seize the assets
of accused drug dealers even If
that · meant · that the suspects
were left.wlthout funds to retain a
lawyer. Tough nev; federal sentenclng guidelines that require .
mandatory prison terms for drug
offenses were u pheiC!"by the court
as well as the ability of the
federal government to require
drug testing of Its employees
working In sensitive or -public
safety related jobs. As for the
death penalty; the court ruled
that states related jobs. As for
the death penalty, the court ruled
that states may Impose It on
people who committed crimes
while they were 16 or 17 years o(
age and on murderers who'Ore
mentally retarded provided that
the jury takes this Into account In
Its findings.
On discrimination Issues; the
court also trimmed back some of
the high court's previous judicial
activism. The court made It more
difficult to prove that an employer's hiring and promotion policies are discriminatory. It acted
to put a damper on court-ordered
affirmative action programs by
ruling that workers lo\'hO are hurt
by these programs may file
lawsuits alleging reverse discrimination. The court likewise
ruled that state and local government affirmative action programs cannot use quotas to help
minority and women owned
businesses and that such plans
must only be used to correct
cases of past discrimination.
As for cases Involving freedom
of religion, the court ruled that a
nativity scene placed In front of
the county courthous In Pitts-

0tuo

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Clarence Miller

statute could be applied to
corporations as well as organized
crime syndicate,. Similarly, It
held that states may use their
racketeering laws to prosecute
the sale of obscene materials.
The court a.Iso ruled that the
Labor Department's rulE'S for
handling claims for black lung
disease were too restrictive.
Finally, the court held that
companies do not have to fire
workers who went back to work
durh)g a strike In order to rehire
striking workers with mor·e
senlorhy.
In summary, the Supreme
Court this term ruled on some of
the most divisive Issues that face
our society. In general, it sided
with the exercise of Judicial
restraint on most of these Issues.
Thus, It appears that a new
pattern of conservatism Is
emerging In the Court's rulings
under Chief Justice Rhenquist, a
pattern that Is likely to continue
Into.the next term.

AMMAN, Jordan - .King Hussein of Jordan knows how to
handle monarchy, but · matrimony Is another matter_ He Is on
his fourltl wife, an Americanborn debutante whose Cinderella
story is second only t9 that of
Grace Kelly. B11t our sources In
Jordan say that 37-year-old
Queen Noor has become something of a liability for the king
and he has set his sights on a fifth
wife.,
·
·
The object of Hussein's Interest Is a 21-year old ~,Voman whose
mother Is · an . American . and
father a Palestinian. If Hussein
wants to marry again, he can
.divorce Queen Noor or simply
add another wife under Moslem
law.
·
The reports we have gathered
Illustrate that Queen Noor, the
former Elizabeth (Lisa) Halaby, .
has simply not gone over well
with _Jordanians. Many In her
adopted country are not happy
with her lifestyle and n_ot sure of
her commitment to Jordan.

Jackson (left) celebrate~ his leadoff borne run
with BosiAin's Wade Bogp In the fll'lltlnillng olthe
IIIIth . unual All.Star ·G.a me Tuesday night In

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992-2635

THURSDAY. 9-7, FRIDAY 9-7, SATURDAY 9-3

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ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) - · he's a marvel at any age. One day memories. The win ·tonight was
He's been gone for a decade, but I wll'l be able to tell my kids I just the Icing."
Ryan said that It f(!lt different
the fans -In Southern Callfornl!! Cl!ught Nolan Ryan."
have notforg6tten·Nolan Ryan. . Ryan, who threw a three-hit pit&lt;:_hlng In Anaheim . Stadium
shutout last week in his first Tuesday night than It did when he
''NOlan," ''Nolan,'' •'Nolan,''
they chanted Tuesday night as be outing ever against the Angels, was pitching with the Angels.
talked to reporters on tbe field called his performance tonight The stadium was enclosed and
after . helping the American · "gratifying."
eillitrged after Ryan left.
"!t's special to win here," he
League defeat the National
"I never pitched here when the
said. "My wife (Ruth) and boys stadium was enclosed, so I didn't
League 5-3.
.. Ryan pitched two ,Innings, (Reid, ReeSe) really enjoyed the know that once It was enclosed, it
allowed only one hit and struck trip. We got to relive a lot of
(See RYAN on Pa1e 4)
O!lt three, lnclud'lng San Francisco sluggers Wjll Clark and
Kevin Mitchell. He was credited
0_
with ihe victory to become, at 42,
the oldest pitcher ever to win an
ANAHEIM, Call!. (UPI)
Robinson met for 30 minutes
All-Star Game: Early Wynn.was Frank Robinson will remain with Orioles president Lawrence
38
when he won the 1958 · manager of th e Ba ltl more o r 1- Lucchlno and general manager
extravaganza.
"l've· _always enjoyed pitching oles, Insisting · h.e was serious Roland Hemond, explaining to
here,» said Ryan, who pitched about his threat to quit because of · them why he believes umpires
deficient !!IDPirlng.
haven' t treated him fairly. The
for the Arigels from 1972 -1979 ·
His decision wasn't unex- three also discussed the com' 'The fans have always been
good to me. I've had pleniy of pected and in announcing it he plaintswlthBrownforanother30
admitted his threat to quit was minutes.
good games here, 50 this place - made
partly beMuse of a tough
Ro· binson "said he rece··'ved no
holds · a special .place In my
~
'
heart:••
, loss on Sunday.
·guarantees although Brown
Ryan, the ·second-oldest ·• "I was upset and frustrated," promised to look at videotapes
he ,said after emerging from a and talktoumpiresabouteachof
. pitcher to appear -In an AII'Star ' meeting with American League the plays.
G11me (Satchel .Paige : was 'the president Bobby Brown. "But I
"I told him we would look Into
'oldest at 47) • handcuffed the NL didn't say what 1 did because of all of them," said Brown. '"We're
.after starter Dave-Stewart gave that. I reallzeclwhat I was saying looking into · a couple of them
up two first-Inning runs.
and I meant It. If I'm not going to already. We look Into these _
"The key to my two Innings
was thai I had a gBod changeup, be allowed to play under the things routinely."
and then In the thtl,'\1 Inning, 1 got conditions of the otber clubs, I
Hemond said be considers the
would have stepped down "
matter "closed and the slate
·
·
clean."
my Cl!rveball over," Ryan said.
Ryan has five career nohitters, nine one-hitters i!nd Is
' .
baseball's all-time strikeout .
leader.
Before Tuesday, Ryan had
pitched in four of the six All-Star .
Games that he had been selec~ed
for, with an o-o record and 5.63
ERA In eight Innings to·show for
. lt.
.
1919 TOPPS, SCORE, FLEER, DONBUSS, UPPER DECK
' 'Thls was my best g11me," he
-AND TOPPS COINS ·
said. "My other games I was up
and down, qu t today I was· In
control.''
·
Oakland catcher Terry Steinbach caught Ryan for the · first
NO ORDER TAKEN AFTER JULY 13, 1919 •
tltne tonl1ht.
·
·
AR
Art Umitlll
"He. has a iood fastball, ''
Steinbach 181d, "but I washvery
lmpreased with the way ~e t rew
his curveball and change-up.
"He's . just a marvel IJt his
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-3411 .
· age/' SteinbaCh added . ."Heck,

R_ bin,son to stay with Orioles

992-2635

'.

night's Ali.Star Game In Anaheim, CaiU. AJ'an
claimed the vlclory for ·the American League
squad, which won 5-3., ( UPI)

Southern-California still loves. Ryan

THURS.

106 N. 2ND

'
WOOt DINITTES

5388

l -~4400

3 BIG DAYS

DELIVERS HEAT - At the age of 42, Texas

. ' '1

~~=-:

~
IF=: :; ~_ ; '

By JEFF HASEN
UP.-Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) - Bo
Jackson. left history to the
historians Tuesday night after
turning the 60th All-Star Game
Into a personal showcase,
"I don't think_about history,"
said Jackson, who .led off with a
tape-measure horne run as the
American League forged Its first
All-Star winning streak In 31
years, taking a 5-3 victory over
the National Lj!ague.
'
"I just want to have fun and
enjoy the times I'm out there.
When I leave the ballpark, Ileave
It all here." ·
Jackson's 448-foot blast to dead
· center off Rick Reuschel was the
fjrst o~ 12 At hits. The league's
home-run leader. ·named the
game's Most Valuable Player,
became fhe ninth player to hit the
~all out In his first at-bat. He
added a stolen base and single In
six Innings.
He joined Willie Mays as the
only players to homer·and steal a
base In the same All-Star Game.
' "It'll be really special when I ·
sit back and tell the story to my
grandchildren,'' Jackson said. ·'I
hate to be comp;~red to the
. players of the past. They did their
thing then ·and I'm doing my
thlng·now.
"'People-say I'm the next Willie
Mays .or the next Babe Ruth, but
It could go to your head. It can
re4llly serew you up and get you
out of the game before you can
blink an eye."
1 Wade Boggs followed Jackson's homer with one of his own.
Ruben Sierra had two singles for
tile AL.
•'The ball carries really well to
center field,'' Boggs said . "I was
thinking before the game, 'Hey,
4' I get a p !tc h Iii little out over the
plate, and I get It up In the air, It
'
might
have. a chance to get out of
*e park.'' ·
·
Nolan Ryan, the forme.r Callforn'ia Angel bypassed to start In
the Anaheim Stadluin twilight,
pitched two Innings of one-hit ball
and gained the victory. Doug
Jones got the final fou outs for the
save. John SmOitz was the loser
for the Nattonal League.
, Major league home- run leader
Kevin Mitchell and Howard
JohtJson had run-scoring singles
In the first· inning. Von Haye~·
two-out single off Dan Plesac In
the eighth made the score 5-3, but

Doug Jones got out of the Jain by
retiring Tim Wallach on a
sinking liner to left fielder-Mike
Greenwell.
II'he last time the AL strung
together consecutive All-Star
Game triumphs was when th~y
followed a 1957 6-5 victory with a
4-3 decision the next year.

Jackson, the. nlntl) player to
homer In his first All-Star at-bat,
snapped the dead-lock In the
second when he legged out a
potential double-play groupder
with two on and one out. Rubin·
Sierra had singled off Smo\tz and
taken third when Steinbach lined
a single to center.
The AL pushed the leac! to 5-2
" In 1958, " said AL mahager with two runs In the third off Rick
Tony La Russa, "I was In high Sutcliffe, named to the NL team
school, throwing the ball away, late Monday for the Injured Mike
striking out and thinking I'd Scott.
Kirby Puckett s'lngled, adnever get close to the major
leagues."
. vanced on a wild pitch, and
The crowd of 64,036 - fourth scored - when Harold Baines
largest In All-Star Game history singled to right. A · plllr of
- .expected to see a duel In the grounders advanced Baines to
shadows between Reuschel of the third, and he came home on
NL and Dave Stewart of t.he AL. Sierra's single off the glove of
But there were four runs, six hits first baseman Clark.
and two harriers In thE' first
The last time the All-Star
Game"
was played In Anaheim
· Inning.
''To be honest with you, thai Stadium was 1967 when 30 batters
first lnnln'g was just the opposite were retired In·the twll!iht. The
of what I was expecting," Ryan National League won 2-1 when
said. "And I thought, 'Hrnmm, 1 Tony Perez homered In the 15th
·
don't know ·If I want to go out Inning.
there.'
·
.
"I think the key was for me I
had a good ·changeup.' '
)llatlonal League manager
Tom Lasorda said his team was
SkUng
Squabbling
between Internabeaten by true stars.
."Bo Jackson was exciting, tional federations has forced
really," Lasorda said , "When he cancellation of the Tag-Heuer
hit It, I thought It sounded like he Speed Skiing Masters worldhit a golf ball. He's awesome a nil n:.,cord attempt later·this month. ·
exciting.
'
·
The July 24-30 test in the shadow
- "I didn't want to believe the of the Matterhorn likely would
back-to-back homers, but I saw have broken the old record of
134.245 mph.
lit. TheY're awesome hitters.''
Soccer
The AL tied a record by using
Manufacturers
Hanover has
eight-pitchers.
.
Ozzle Smith opened thE' game extended a letter of credit to the
with a single off Stewart, but World Cup '94 Organizing Comcatcher Terry Steinbach gunned mittee. The credit line will allow
him down when be tried to steal ' the committee to meet the Initial'
with Tony Gwynn up. Gwynn funding requirements for the
walked, took -second on a · tournament and meet projected
grounder by Will Clark and financial demands as the organ- ·
scored when Mitchell fisted a '!zing · committee grows. The
banking firm also obtained the
single to center. · ,
Mitchell took second when Eric fttst right to discuss commercial
·
Dav!s walked and Johnson Identification.
singled to center to make the
score 2-0.
Jackson quickly cut the marThe Daily Sentinel
gin to 2-1 when he crushed
Reuschel's sec9nd pitch. Boggs
(USPS 1411-. .)
A lllvllloa ol Malllmedla,IDc.
followed with a 398-foot blast
over the left-center field fence to
Published every afternoon, Monday
tie it 2-2.
throogh Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio VaUey PubThe back-to-hack hOmers were
Ushtng Company/ Multtmedl.a, Jnc..
the first · in the AU-Star Game
Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Sesince Steve Gai-ve.Y and Jimmy
cond class postare pati:l at Pomeroy,
Ohio. ·
Wynn did it for the NL in 1975.
(

-Sports briefs..;..

.

Mem~:

UT~A

slOUMa: srACE!
i"~--·
~ '
. -·- ----~""'

)

{

SC:CTtoNAL
~r .

CHERRY

Gerrt Tale
Prel!ideal Letart
Flame Fellowship
.J

Anaheim, Calli. Boggs foUowed with a homer of
hls·own, which pushed tbe American League to a
3-3 victory over the N atlonal League. (UPI)

701 2ND AVE., GALLIPOliS, JUtY 13th, 14th, -1Sth

Flame
ministers to area

l

Homers· by Ja~kson, Boggs
•
push ~ All-Stars to 5~3 .wm

Public grousing about the about .the q!II1E!n's Indulgence In
queen could not come at a worse cosmetic surgery. Our sources
time for the 'king. His normally say that the · governrnentstable country bas been broken eontroll~ press was once Inby austerity measures and torn structed not to use any photos of
by rioting. The prime minister, the queen for two weeks wl\lleshe
recovered from a nose job.
Hus~ln's boyhood friend, . was
Most disconcerting to the royal
forced to resign because Jordanhouse
Is that Jordanians are
Ians blame lilm for their
openly
gosslplng
·about the close
troubles.
friendship
the
queen
developed
Queen Noor Is perceived, by
with
actor
Sean
Connery
when he
the J ordanlans we spoke to, as
part of the problem - a die-hard was In Jordan filming "Indiana.
shopper who flau'nts expensive Jones and the Last Crusade."
jev;els and designer clothes. She Press reports In the United
is more nouveau royal tha11 States hinted recently that the
· queen's Interest In the filming
regal.
.
Hussein Is building a new and her visits to the set were
castle for Queen Noor, setting the more than ceremonlai, but her
rumor mill In motion with the spokespeople have denied that
speculation that be wants to put the queen Is anything more than
her away In a pampered corner a fan and a friend of Connery.
A spokesman at the Jordanian
so. he can set up housekeeping
with someone new. One Jordan- embassy In Washington, D.C.,
Ian official told .us the govern- said the rumors about the queen
ment put out an "offlc_lal rumor" and Connery are "ridiculous."
that the house was a gift from the He declined to comment on the
Sultan of Oman.
personal relationship of the royal
Jordanians have pornplained couple:
.

Tho BICIIOnt

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

60th AU-Star Game

hOUS·e_J_ac_kA_n_de_rso_n

SLUGGERS CELEBRATE - KJ!Osas City's Bo ·

~~ -

.

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

INGELS Furniture Annual Tent Sale

Letters
to the editor

Dear Editor:
Since Octob&lt;'r 198.'l. Flame
Fellowship has been mlnstering
in thC' Mason. Gallia and M0ii::s
area and although our namP i~
not familiar to the Ohio Valley.
perhaps peopl(' are no.t aware• of
what Flame F('llowship is .
Simply speaking. we ar(' a
non-profit organization of Christian men and womC'n from nearly
every denomination that meets
monthly at loca l chapters nationwide. Ourmem hers share fellow ship centC'rC'd a·round Jes us
Christ and participate in an
outreach 1home Bible study.
pray&lt;'r meetings. monthly nursIng hqme visitations. etc .! to
thosC' in the Ohio VaiiE'y having
spiritual. physical and !'motional
needs. No church ordinances an•
to be incorporated _or to be
obsC'rved in Flam&lt;' chapter meet ings. We are to st rengthen the
local church by coopPration in
this area and in not conflicting
with the meeting times of various
. church activitiPS. l;lowC'ver. being such a Christian organization. mahy hav&lt;' come to Flame
meetings who havp neve r attended church.
In .Mat·ch. our chapter hacj a
change in officers. With that
have come several new changes
and ideas. One• of ·thesC' is to
bettN acquaint the Ohio Valley
with Flame. As of March W('
have tried to send out flowers.
put up posters. and advertise
through Christian radio. C'tc.
about our monthly meetings to
l&lt;'t people know what we an&gt;
doing and mor(• Importantly
make those who have nevC'r
heard of Flame aware that their
Is such a ministry in the area . .
Our monthly mePiings arp held
at the Letart Comm)lnity Building usually on the third Thursday
of the monfh . It is Flame's delre
to serve and minister the people
of this valley and we do hope that
the next time anyone hears "Or
sees · th£' Letart Ftame Fellow ship on the radic$, newspaper,
posters or flyers that they will
!now that we love Jesus and
would
enjoy fellowshiping with
..
them.

Wedneaday, July 12, 1989

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••

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Middleport, Syracuse move
·to Bill Hubbard semifinals
SYRACUSE - Action continued In the· 1989 Bill Hubbard
Memorial Little League Tournament Tuesday night as Middle. port and Syracuse advanced to
·semifinal action before rain
Interrupted play.
In the CO~Dpletlon of the Mbn,
day game between Middleport
and Albany that was lntrupted by
a problem with the lights, Middleport came out on top by a .
score of 5-2. Middleport scored
all the runs they needed In the
second when they plated three
runs, they added two Insurance
runs In the fifth. Albany scored
single runs· In the third and
fourth.
Seymore led the winners at tbe
plate with a double and a single,
and Duncap added two singles,
while Mills had a double and
Newsome, Mattea and FrankO:
vlak each had singles . Wilson and
~ullins each had a single for
iAibany.
In the second game Syracuse·
scored six runs In the flrsrlnnlng
and held off Chester by a score of
11-8. Adam Triplett led they way
at the plate with a four for four
evening, all singles. Robby Crow
. 'slammed a triple and a: single,
. andJay McKelvey added two
·singles, while Ryan Williams hit
a two-run homer. Mason Fisher,

JUlY

Cass Cleland and Ryan Hill each
singled. Crow was the winning
pitcher, going the route and
striking out seven.
For Chester, Jared Riden our
went 3 for 4, with a home run,
double and asingle. David Fetty
added a single and a double, and
Charlie Bissell and David Johnson added two singles, whilE'
Ryan Buckley added a singlE'.
Tyson Rose was the starter and
loser for Chester, strlklngoutslx .The rains came and cancell~d
the evening's last game between
Middleport and Rutland. It will
be played tonight at 7: 30. The
consolation and championship .
games have been moved to
Thursday night, with the consolation game at 6:30 and th~
championship game at 7:45.

United Press International,

Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: 5end address changes
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GTE.-POMEROY
TELEPHONE.
SUBSCRIBERS

On Saturday,· July 15, 1989
at 1.2:15 a.m. GTE will
SAVINGS
install a new central office
lOX
for Pomeroy subscribers.
WINDOW
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· Customers with:992-xxxx ·
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SEE US TODAY/
need to dial all 7 digits. You
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HARDWARE·
place
-a
calt
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MASON WY.
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"-"• 4 The Daily Sentinel

1989 Kyger Creek
(I) FRIDA.\' 6 oOQ
GALLIP.OUS YANKS
RUTLAND

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(II) SUNDAY ,(,OO

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COOLVILLE,BANK..ONE
PEOPL['S BANK

. .

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•

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(19) THURSDAY 6o00

.

•

( 12) SUN DA \' 5o30

(4) SATURDAY ll :30
MIDDLFJ'ORT CARDIN!\L ..

•

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(5) SATURDAY 1:00

SYRACtJSE
( 1.31 MONDA\' 6 :00

CHESHIRE

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GAl-LIPOLIS ROyALS

.'

(23) SATURDAY 6 o00

PT. PLEAS. BAR ASSOC.

(20 ) THU RSDAY 7o30

(6) SATURDAY 2 : 30
GALLIPOLIS i\'•

.

.
(14) MONDAY 7o30 . ·

GREEN

,.

I
-.

R10 .GRANDE

'

0) MTtlRDAY 4:1Ml
PT. PtEASi\NT PSII1

(15) TUESDAY 6 o00

ADDAVII.LE

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(21) FRIDAY 6 o00

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(8) SATURDAY 5o30

RACINE
(16)TUESDAY 7o30

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NEW HAVEN
Gi\LLIPOLIS INDIANS
(9) SUNDAY I oOO

CHESTER

CHAMPIONS

(26) SUNDAY 6 o30

.

GAl-LIPOLIS WHITE SOX

'

(24) SATURDAY 7o30

•
(17) WEDNESDAY 6o00

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Mi\SON
FRUTH'S PT. PLF.ASANT

(22) FRIDAY 7 o30

HANNAN TRACE
MIDDLEPORT DODGERS

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LOSER GAME (23

(10) SUNDAY 2o30

I

(25) SUNDAY 5 oOO
(18) WEDNESDAY 7o30

LOSER GAME (24)

Phil Jackson named Bulls' head· coach
that finished 47 -35las t season and
By EDWARD J . FINKEL
CHICAGO (UP!) -Phil Jack- ' advanced to the Eastern Conference finals, where It lost to
son was named Monday as the
Detroit. He pointed to the connew coach of the Chicago Bulls
tinued development of young
alld said he would bring a more
players
as the key to going
low-key style to the sidellne than .
beyond
last year's
hls predecessor.
accomplishments.
J ac·kson, 43, who had been an
"We could be knocking on the
assis tant coach for the !Pam
door, " he said. "(But) we'll take .
since 1987, replaces the fiery
our time. I want to create an
Doug Collins, who was fired
atmosphere to bring young playThursday for what the team
ers along."
called " philosophical
Team owner J erry Relnsdorf
d ifferences."
said he, knows Collins' dismissal.
· " I'm a very different person
was unpopular with Bulls fans,
than Doug," ;Jackson said. "I
but the "heallh. and welfare of
think he did a great job with the
everyone in 'our organ~tlon" .
fa ns and the media. I'm not
·
·
trying to fill the siJoes of Doug comes first.
"We
dld
what
we
had
t'
o
'
d
o
last
Collins. "
_
But Jackson quickly added he week," Relnsdorf said. "Doug
"wlll be abijsi ve to referees : I took us a long way from where we
will pic k up_some technicals. I were . ... Now we have a guy we
think can take us the rest of the
will be animated."
way."
Collins had speculated in an
Reinsdorf denfed rumors Colin terview that his frenetic coachIng style may have led to his lins was !Ired for reasons unrelated to basketball, but refused to
dismissal and said the Bulls told
him he lacked the temperament elaborate.
Jerry Krause, vice president of
to lead a yo ung team.
basketball
operations, said the
Jackson praised Collins, sayBulls
players
strongly supported
ing hls former boss had much to
the
choice,
adding
that Jackson
do with his own arrival with the
contributed much to the
Bulls.
"To ignore the circums lances franchise.
''He has been a key member of
which made this possible would
be thoughtless, " he said. ''We've this franchise in many ways, a lot
of which haven't come to the
had many peak times together. "
Jackson takes over a squad public's knowledge," Krause

Stellino, McPhail capture
Hall of Fame media\ awards

Walsh to leave 49ers
SANTA CLARA . Calif. (UPI)
- Bill Walsh , who coached the
San Francisco 49ers tci three
Supe'r Bowl victories ln the 1980s.
wlll leave the team to join NBC
television as a football analyst,
team owner Eddie DeBartolo Jr . .
confirmed Monday night.
• A team spokesman quote(!
'DeBartolo Jr. as ·saying' Walsh,
who stepped down as head coach
but s tayed on as team president
last January after the 49ers beat
the Cincinnati Bengals In the
Super Bowl, was leaving " to
accept a top position with NBC
Sports television and radio (reportedly joining the team of Dick
Enberg and Merlin Olsen).
"I can confirm the reports
about Bill Walsh's depaturefrom
our orgaQlzation," DeBartolo Jr.
said frQm his Youngstown home.
"Bill . and I have had lengthy
discussions on the subject and he
leaves •the ·team with all our
bles;;ings a nd my best wishes .
Simply put, NBC made him an
excellent offe.r in an area of great
interest to him ."
Walsh became San Francisco
head coach In 1979·and was given
the job as te am president by
DeBartolo Jr. In 1982. Walsh, 57,
guided San Francisco to a
102-63-1 record during · hls 10
years with the 49ers, Including
Super Bo~ctories in 1982, 1985
and 1989.
.
..
After Walsh retired, hls head
coaching job, he handeil over the
position to defensive coordinator
George Seifert.
"He will take the position with
NBC's · No. 1 NFL announcer
team as their expert for football
analysis," DeBartolo Jr. said.
" It should · be a great challenge
for Bill. something he seems to be
. ln need of as the 1989 season
quickly approaches . . Bill has
been actively Involved In coach·
ing for more than 30 years."
Walsh was unavailable for
comment, but hls attorney, Stephen Kaye, said Walsh !eels "he

a

_Ryan••.

team. •

••
•

HAMBURGER
.

64C

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,,

d

A Phoeniz policeman seya
he •w whet appeered to be
a tarntntula crowllng on his
pants leg. So he drew his
jllltol and shot it. He also
shot a hole in his filot. A
mari from Oshkosh reported, I pulled off the 111ad,
to , look at my roedmap.
glarced at my mother-Inlaw; and went !War the
embltnkment.

The foml/y ol ptfl(eubta&amp;

.

Scoreboard ...

National league homer .drought continues

ream,

Bo Jackson and Wade- Boggs
made him try to hit one o! hls
own.
•
· "Oh yeah," he said . "That 's
why I punched out.''
Hayes delivered the final run of
the game with an eighth-Inning
single off Dan Plesac. Despite
the matchup of lefties, Hayes
selected the first pitch to him and
llned it to left-center. He says he
wasn 't trying to hit a homer,
though he could have tied the
score with one.

By l lnltt-d Pr.,.•lnlernatio,..l

AMERICAS LEAGUE

Battirilon•
Bolllil•
TonHito

i

-12 -l!i .-IK3

n ~s .~~~., 7
~0 ~5 .nt
K
al u .aes 1'1

Mllwiulkl't'
Cle\'•land
Detroit

'" '

w.. t
52 :13 .612
• 5% 311 .591 11.~:£
Kan""" ru~ ~~ :n .l70 3l.A!
51 -t
~7 3!1 .l~7
TexlUI
UH .~till 10 \':
Sealtlo
.m 12
tt
Mln.,...ota
.3~ 211~
3%
56
fhi&lt;""O
Tuesday's All-Star
Game Result
American League :;, NaIlona! League 3

foalllomla
Oaklould

Hou~on

1

al Toronto, 7:35

I

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Ill

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Ill I

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11

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9';
.480 II
.4H 15

No games scheduled

II II I

Ill I

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ALL__.II.IO

BARGA I~ fUGKT nJE"Df $2, 50,
· · (E~CEJIT FOR GHOS:rBUST£/lS l •)

I

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I

. . . . . . . . _ . . .I. . &amp;BD

SPRING VAllEY .......
CINEMA
,
446 4524
jJ

.n7

Ho~ston at Philadelphia, 2,
5:35p.m.
Monireal at Cincinnati, '7: .35
p.m.
New York at Atlanta, 7:40 ·
P.•m.
St. Louis at Los Angeles,
10:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh at San Francisco,
18:35 p.m.

p.m.
Texas · at l]leveland, 7: 35
p.m .
Seattl!! at Detroit, 7:35p.m.
Bol!tAin a1 Minnesota, 8: 05
I

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7

p.m.

Calllomla at Baltimore, 7:35
p.m.

II

36

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Thursday's games

Thursday's games

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.!i06

Chicago at San Diego, 1:05

Wednesday's games .
No g!Uileil scheduled ·

·Oakland

~~

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.Wednesday's games

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l9 3H

fint•innuU
S.D.
I .. A.
Atlant•

~·

The problem. said Payne, was
that even though Harris was one
of 20 unsigned free agents the
Packers trained hlm and treated
him like a signed player.
''They can see what your
conditioning Is like. Whether or
not you're bench-pressing as
much as you used to," he said,
"It's hard on hlm because he
enjoyed going over there and
working out with his teammates
or with guys he thought would be
his teammates ."
Harris Is a three-year veteran
who is one of tHe premier
linebackers in the league.

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1 "'D!mll.i~oo-~-IIJ:
o~

IIIII

t~urney

ATHENS .... Meigs will meet
Glouster in the first game of the
·1989 8th District American Leglon Baseball Tournament that
gets under way this Friday at
Athens. The Melgs:Glouster
game will be played at Rannow
Field at Athens High School
beginning at 6 p.m. In the other
Friday night game, Wellston will
ptay defending district champ
1
Lancaster at Dalton Field, which
1
is part of the Jaycees complex on ' 1
West State Street.
The double elimination tournament will continue on Sa.turday

NOW
IN POMEIOY /MIDDlEPORT
DOMINO'S
fPIZZA

DEUYEIS
.FlEE.

1'

1

)

'

..

•.

PEPSI'S
WITH A PAN Pill~
OIDEI
'""'

~:;a:, :::::~=~~~

I

2 16~1NCH ONJ_IT.;;EM==--i
PIZZAS

I

$14.95

I

.I
I
I

POMEIOT

I sr•t OilY

~:'; ,,.s. . . n.w.L

------" ..., • .. "'·

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MODEL HOME LOCATED ON
ART LEWIS STREET ·

·

stop at Pomeroy Sunday
POMEROY ,- Seven young' . across the country, taking parlin
bicyclists on a transcontinental the trip are Mary Kay Bacon of
bicycle ride stopped at the Philadelphia, Kirk Laughlin o!
Pomeroy Fire Departmenl Sun- Madison Wisconsin, Blll Gregory
day afternoon to enjoy some. of St. Louis, jlofo., Ben Forbes of
barbeque chicken dinner before Hlghla!ld Park, New Jersey.
Sonny Brustern of VIlla Park,
::ontlnulng their travels ..
Calif., Jordan Smith of Burbank,
The bikers left BaltlJDore, Md., Calif., and AndreW Powell of
about two and a half weeks ago on Pasadena, Maryland.
their way to Seattle, Wash. The
first two weeks of the ttip have
not been easy, as there have been
GOOD USED
at least 10 flat tires between
WA5.-s,DIYDS,
them. dne of the bicyclist had the
frame of hll bike break Ill half, 10
UflliiUIOIS, IVs,
time was speitr finding a place to '
~~ ,&amp; IIIC. UNGES
get It weldecl. And one of the
travelers took a nasty spUI and
lost two teeth and split hla Up 10
time had .to be apent at a hoapttal.
They averaae from !!0 to 7:1
mUes a day 111\,d hope to reach
617 ... ln., ........
Seattle sometime In the middle of
Pl. W·16tt
September. The blcyclllt are
trom' six different states from ·

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

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

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'seattle-bo~nd bicyclists

&lt;

S.JIUI PIZZA

$9 99

w

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advance to the state tournament
also held In Athens.

UIGI 1

'l:"" P&lt;o!*•"'· s..u, .............

I PLu~T-1~':;;~S::.i~inkl
Pomeroy, OH.
1
,.:.,
11 t Main St. limited Dtli••Y 1
•
Aroa
1
PMIIOI
n••·• ..... '""
992 2124
!!2'1..!'!!-':!.."'..l:.~•:;.

1..------------·
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RECEIVE 2 FREE I

STOPPING AT POMEROY - Tbi!8e aeven blcyellsta, on their
to Seallle, Wub. ~ stopped at the
, PomerOy PJre Department for 110111e barbeque clllcken before
: lleadlq wnt: They hope to reaeh Seattle metlme In September.

"

NATJQNAL LE.'\ Gt 'E
f':a.•t
II. L Pel. GB
Tt•am
Mont ... at
~9 3H . ,:;&amp;:J
('hlcai(O
17 39 .!H7 ll't
Sow York 15 :J9 .:136 ..
• St. l.oul•
H :19 .ll30 3'
.
36 17. .u~ II
Pill.
:~2 52 .3KI 15'~:
Phil .
West
S. F.
n 36 .!iK6

n u .soo ~ ·,
n ~2 .~9~ s

:N-York

last week. But Payne said he and
Harris decided he should quit
working out and It would be
better lor him to " Isolate him-·
self. Tlm won't work out there
again until h~ is signed."

way fram Baltimore, Md.

.

East
W L Pet. GB
u 37 -~65 -

T~am

' 'Every home run I've ever hit
was trying to keep a rally going,"
he sal d. "I was trying to keep that
thought process. l wasn't thinkIng home run at all. I would have
taken one if it came along."
At this point, the National
League would probably accept a
broken-bat double.

Glouster in

.

M.D.

p.m.
Kansas City at New Vorl&lt;,
8:10 p.rn.
Milwaukee at Chicago, 8:30
p.m.

Majors

. Meigs to confront

•'

Valley DriVe; Polilt Plellllnt, W.Va. 2aS5o

,

•

and Sunday with the wlnner to

Suite 12
PVH Medical Office Building

...

('lo, this was Jackson's award
to win all the way. In addition, he
also gaineil some new admirers·

.

(304) 675-6015

9~2·2556

up, HI

.
ACCIDENT REPORTS!

*·*
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY l : JZd PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL ·
*·
. V1
........

-Sports briefs-

· ...,.,._ l'\•1\t

Family Practice

-

the game's top.honor.
''The thought' never entered
my mind prior to the game," he
said. "After r hit that first ball'
and came back to the dugout all
my teammates were saying,
'You 've got this wrapped up.'
"But when Wade (Boggs, the
nex1 batter) went deep, they said
to hlm, 'You've got II wrapped

Harris quits workouts to
protest stalled cQntrad talks

have lived up to every aspect Of
our obl'¥atlons to Peter Rose.
' 'We. are just being dragged
along In this thing. I don't
understand lt. Mrs. Schott (Reds
president Marge Scliott) doesn't
understand It and I don't thlitk
she likes being In the middle of
this thing."
By saying It Is neutral, how' '
ever, the club ·ts aligning Itself
with Glamaitl.
His. lawyers have .argued the
Reds have no place In the
iaws\ilt.
·

David R. ,Ayers,

$'''''' 01 16• Ws1kl

l.

By MIKE TULLY
since he has retired; the seventh- .
UPI National Baseball Writer
greatest home run hitter In
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) .major-league history coUld do
The National League showed Its little to help hls team.
· Mitchell and Johnson singled
power one day too soon.
Alter winning the hOme run- home runs in the first Inning but,
hitting contest in Monday's skUls with runners on first and se.cond
contest, the NL failed to collect and two out, Pedro Guerrero
an ex!ra base hlt In Tuesday flied out to lett Two batters later,
night's All-Star Game and woimd the AL had tied the score.
up losing !&gt;-3 to the American
''We jum)?,ed out on top." Clark
League.
·
said. "Give them credit . Back-toKevin Mitchell, Howard John- back dongs."
son and Von Hayes provldEld RBI · Mitchell batted four times ,
singles, but no NI.er even man- ' singling twice and fanning twice.
aged to reach the W!lrning track. The first strikeout came on a
A pair of double plays and eight Nolan Ryan curveball.
strikeouts further limited what
' 'The breaking balls he was
the senior circuit was able to throwing me I couldn't pick up, "
accomplish.
'
said Mitchell, who leads· the
·'They threw the ball well," majors with 31 homers and 81
said NL first baseman Wlll RBI. "! thought he was going to
Clark, who went 0-for-2 before hlt me."
giving way to Glenn Davis.
Mitchell says the home runs by
"Good_pitching, 1 guess," said
Clark. "They illd their joli. They
And· fielding? In the first, ' kept ·th.e ball in the park.''
Jackson raced to his left to snare
Nof s)JJCe 1984, when Gary
'Pedro Guerrero's fly In the gap
Carter arid Dale Murphy left the.
with two out and two runners yard, has the National League hit
aboard.
·
an All-Star homer. Perhaps not
The 26-year-old vacationing coincidentally, the Ai. has taken'· • MILWAUKEE (UP!) - The
.Los Angeles Raider running back
three of the !lve intervenl!lg agent tot Tim Harris. a Green
even produced a sUde Pete Rose games. The NL lias scored jusl Bay P.a~ker linebacker who Is a
would be proud of, dlvlng head· eight runs tn , the last four free agent, said Monday Harris
'·first Into third a, Iter tagging upon meetings and has now lost has stopjl@d working ,out volunconsecutive All·Star games for tarllyat theteam'sheadquarters
a fly ball in lhe fourth.
~ Jackson
also pushed an
the first time since 1957·58.
to protest. stalled contract talks .
Gonearethedays,w)lelltheNL
"TI!ere ts ·' no sense , In him '
_oppqslle-field single to ~!gilt al\4
struck out, finishing 2 for 4 with would hit fqur homKs as it dld In acting like .a Packer !!they're not
·two RBI and a run scored before 1981 when Carter 'hlt two, Dave golngtotreathlmllkeaPacker,''
leaving In the ·seventh. Appe1,1r·, Par.ker one and Mike :lchmldt said Ullce Payne.
Payne said Harns. a free agent
lng as ·a leadoff hl.tter tor .tlle flr~t one,
Scbmldt was. elected to .this , since' Feb. 1, had been working
time In his career; lie said lie
year's starting all-star
but out daily with other players 'until
never expected to emerge wltb

ven'to~ threatened anybody. We

Rose filed suit In Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court
June 18, charging Glamattl hal!
already decided he was guilty
and seeking to forestall a June 26
disciplinary hearing.
Last week, eight days after
Hamilton C.ounty Judge Norbert
Nadel granted Rose a temporary
restraining order preventing Gl·
amatti from holding hls hearing,
baseball flied a notice of removal
to take the case to federal court
The move was strongly protested by Rose's lawyers and
U.S. Dis trlct Judge John Holschuh ordered the two sides· to
submit briefs to support their
positions.. Rose' s lawyers · wlll
have. until next Monday to flle a
response to baseball's motion.
Meanwhile, the Reds, in a brief
.filed Monday, said the club has
no Interest In whether the suit is
decided In federal or state courts.
The Reds . were named a
defendant In the suit because .
Rose's contract Is with the Reds,
who relinquish their authority In
certain dlsclpUnary matters to
the commissioner.
But Reds of!lclals say they
have no place In the lawsuit.
"We are not a necessary
participant," Reds lawyer Robert Martin said. "There are no
allegations against us. We ha-

1ilil

politics," and paid homage to the information concerning the play- before Scu Uy confirmed It also
"tremendous networklllg effort ers-who came to the plate, as he was on the way out of the park .
Asked how difficult it was to
of NBC.' '
·dld with Tony Gwynn, Wlll Clark
follow
the game with the distracReagan's first comment once and Kevln~n the top of
tion
of
"all the worldly pres- ,
"wonderful. "
the game began ca me when the fli'st. . .
' ' '
sures,''
Reagan
admitted It was
He also expressed jokingly that
Ozile Smith was thrown out
Reagan
also
provided
worthy
difficult
for
him
to follow base- ...
"maybe I have an future In this
stealing· second base after open·
commentary
about
maj
orball
Closely
while
In office.
business ~ that I'm out of
lng the game with a leadoff
league
ballplayers
from
the
·
"It
was
tough
for
me to keep up
single~
"He's out," Reagan Domlniean Republic, stating the with all of my responsibllltles .
region "Is some proving ground during the base ball season when
announced.
· Reagan spent most of hls time . for Latin American major- · I was. preside nt," he said. ' 'But
now that I'm a freeman , lplan·on
reinforcing Scully's interprehi- leaguers."
Scully's sidekick took more , catching up ."
,
.
tlon
of
the
ac_
tlon
on
the
field
by
along the way ,
Initiative in ·the bottom of the, · Though tt:s been some 50 years . ·
stating
It
himself.
But
he
dld
well
"!Just told Bo he was my·new
Inning, noting how Bo Jackson Is since )'t~agan called a baseball
Idol,'' Kirby Puckett sal!f. "He's to supply viewers with tidbits of "able to enjoy a .nice little game, he still remembers his·
something to watch. I wish I
vacation of professional football, home-run call.
could play with him every day.
playing once baseball ends," just
"I used to calllt like .this: "It's
He's ·phenomenal to be able to
Baseball
seconds before ~ackson un- a drive to right-center field, It's ·
Minnesota Twins second baseplay two sports that welL"
his 448-foot blast.
going, .going, gone; give that man
man Wally Backman has been corked
It could be three one day,
Then when .the next batter, a bo1&lt; of Whea ties," he said.
Jackson said he has a new set of placed on the 15-day disabled llst Wade Boggs, al5odrllled a ball to
Reagan visited both clubgolf clubs and two pairs of spiked because of a sore lett shoulder. center field , Reagan· said, "Uh- houses prior to the gi' me and
· Backman was injured dlv[ng for
shoes he hasn't used yet.
oh, it looks like this one Is going spent quite a bit of time in the AL
"One day I may take up golf ," a ball April 28 in th~ Metrodome, out, too." calUng· the home run club!)ouse.
.
.
said Jackson. And let Curtis and already has served one term .
on the dlsa bled Us t.
. Strang~ be warned .
throw out the evening's "first
adjective" In descrll;llng baseball's summer classic, and Reagan res p o nd ~d with

.

By MIKE BARNES
" UPJ Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI)
The last time we saw Bo Jackson
play so well In prime time, he
rushed (or 221 yards against the
Seattle Seahawks on Monday
Night Football.
.
Baseball is Jackson's game
this .time of year, though, and
Tuesday night he flashed his
no-longer-rough.diamond form to
'&lt;;.arn the Most Valuable Player
Award In the 60th All-Star Game,
·won ,!&gt;-3 by the Amer-ICan League.
· You wan,t power? The K11nsas
City outfielder launched a 448·
r foot hqmer leading:of! the first
.Inning that ~ttledintothesecond .
· deck In center field -and matched
the longest hit this se:ason.
·'I swung It llke I swing ala golf
ball," Jackson sal d. "It was right
down on the plate. I was lucky .1
got a piece o! It "
.
A piece? With the tapemeasw'e blast off Rlck'Reuschel·,
Jackson became the first to·htt a
leadoff l!omer since Joe Morgan
In 1~77. and only lhe ninth ptaye~
to connect in his Inaugural
All-Star at-bat.
· How ~bout speed? Well, Ja&lt;:J.tson legged out a potential doubleplay grounder to plate another
AL run In the second Inning, then
stole second and continued to
third on .a throwing error by
catcher Benito Santiago.
· The theft made Jackson the
only player beside Wlllle Mays to
steal a base and hit a homer In the
same All-Star Game.

.

needs a challenge."
Walsh was considered a master at coaching quarterbacks and
creating a passing attack to suit
them. Quarterback Joe Montana
became Walsh's star pupil, a
third-round draft choice 'out of
Notre · Dame who carried out
Walsh's complicated passing offense on the .field and lead th"e
team to the three Super Bowl
victories.
As an assistant at Oakland
under then head coach AI Davis,
and at San Diego and Cincinnati.
Walsh was considered a key
figure In the development of
quarterbacks Kenny And.erson of
the Bengal~ and Dan Fouts of the
San Diego Chargers .
Walsh 's first · coachhig experience came as a graduate
assistant at San Jose State under
coach Bob Broznan, the man
Walsh credited for helping him
create many of his approaches
towards the passing game.
He began a long apprenticeship as an assistant coach in 1960
when he became defensive coordinator on the staff o! Coach
Marv Levy at the University of
California.
In 1963. he moved across San
Francisco Bay to Stanford and
jolhM Coach John Ralston's
staff. · In 1966. he joined the
·Raiders and 1967, became Paul
Brown's quarterback and receivers coach at Cincinnati.
Following eight seasons with
the Bengals, Walsh joined
Tommy Prothro for a year as
offensive coordinator ;.vith the
.Chargers. · He became Stanford's head ·
coach In 1977, where he guided
the Cardinal to a 17-7 record over
two years !hat Included bowl
appearances In both seasons.DeBartolo Jr. praised Walsh as
"one of the greatest coaches of
all time" and credited him with
"giving the 49ers that special
style of play, and their great
winning tradition."

filii

t

.

Reds profess neutrality
in Rose•Gwmatti
squabble
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI) The Cincinnati Reds have tiled a
brief In U.s. District Court
. professing neutrall\y In the battle between manager Pete Rose
• • and baseball commissioner A .
Bartlett Giamattl . .
The next mUestone in the bat tie
-comes Wednesday, when Giamatti's lawyers are to !lie briefs
explaining why the lawsuit Rose
filed against the commissioner
should be decided in federal
court. ·
Rose Is accused of betting on
baseb'1-ll, Including his own
team's games. He cou'ld be
suspended for one year If found to
have bet on baseball games, or be
banned for llf!Jlfhe bet on hls own •

Reagan, a former sportscaster
at radio stations woe and WHO
in Iowa , provided a national TV
audience with the color commen·
tary as Scully handled th,e
play-by-ptay .
· ;
Scully allowed Reagan a n
opportunity before the game to

.Jackson wins All-Star Game MVP

sooh.''

said. "(He) has done a great deal pU!ng a 125-107 record and
of the scouting. He has been the leading them to the league title in
organizer of the defense. Hls 1984. He played with the New
background Is outstanding'.'.'
· York KnlcRs from 1967-1978 and
Before joining the Bulls, Jack- was a member of the 19"73
son coached the Albany Patroons champ'lonshlp team. He finished
of the Continental Basketball hls career with the New Jersey
Association from 1982-1987, com- Nets !rom 1978-1980.
"

signed contracts with 11 of the 12
NFL teams - ohly the Cleveland
Browns refused to sign - to
televise all road games back to
the teams' cities. McPhall set up
regional networks for all the
participating teams, similar to
the policy In effect today.
The Individual contracts In
that first year net ted the .teams
between $35,000 and $185,000 a
year. In 1962, McPhail and NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
signed the. first league-wide
contract, worth $4.6 mllllon and
divided equally among the 14
teams. ·
McPhail, a native of Columbus. Ohio, comes from a famlly
rich In sports heritage. Hls
father, Larry, served as president of three major league
baseball teams and was credited
with Introducing night games to
0
rna jor league b~t&amp;!! balL His ~0..._==¢~••
0
(Continued from Page 3)
brother, Lee, once was president
affected the way hitter's see the Of the American League.
ball, " he said.
Before joining CBS In 1955, Bill
"Tonight , I anticipated the McPhail held several allmlntsfirst few 'tnnlngs not seeing much
tratlve positions' with the New
·' action, but It was just the York Yankees and Kansas Ctty
opposite. Evidently, batters are A's. He joined CNN in 1979.
'
not ,having any problem with the
Steillno, a native · of Grand
twlllght, " Ryan said.
.
Rapids, Mich ..•started his career ,
Each team scored two runs In In journalism with United Press
the first Inning, ' surprising obInternational In 1963, covering
servers who had predicted the Mlcbigan spoi-ls for two years .
•
twlllght-s tartlng time would fa- Alter serving two years In the
WITH FIIES......s1.19
vor pltchers,since batters would
U.S. Army, he returned to UP I' s
not be able to pick up the ball.
New York bureau .
'
" I was just lucky that by the ,
He covered the New York Jets
time I was put In, their (AL)
and Giants, as well as numerous
batters were worn out," Ryan
other sporting events, Including
quipped. "Sometimes as a
the World SerieS, NBA !lnals and
pitcher, you think. you have the
the !lrst All-Frazier flgh~.
"At 1lle IIIII Of 111e P•••ny·•••
advantage. But things did- not
Stelllno joined The Pittsburgh
turn out that way ln the first
. .
Post Gazette In 1974 as pro -j'MIOY, OliO ,
innlllg. Baseball is a tunny
football writer.
'
7
' '
('• • ; _
d
... ;
game."
CANTON, P hio ( UPi) - VIto
Stellino of i.he,Baltlmore Sun and
Bill McPhai.f" of Cable News
Network were na med Tuesday
recipients of the annual news
· media awards by the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Stellino, 21st winner of the Dick
McCann Memorial Award, and
McPhail, .wi nner of the Inaugural
Pro Football Radio-Television
Award, will be · honored on
F r lday,Aug. 4. the day beforethe
induct ion ceremony for the Hall
of Fame enshri nees.
McPhail, vice pres ident for
sports programming at CNN,
was
pioneer in league-wide
television programming for the
Nat ional Football League.
While director of sports progra mming at CBS In 1956, he

·'

UPJ Sports Writer
· Fqrmer P res ident Ronald Reagan returned to his professional
roots Tuesday night, broadcastIng the first inning of baseball's
All-Star game with NBC sportscaster Vin Scully.
·

Patterson .also said a decision
could be announced within the
next two weeks regarding former
Rockets Mlichell Wiggins and
Lewis Lloyd, who have been out
o! the league for 2~ seasons
because of drug Involvement.
The two are expected· to · be
readmitted Into the NBA.
The, 6-8, 235-pound Smith Is ·
considered a quality defensive
player and one of ·the league's
best rebounders. · He earned
$600,000 last year with tbe Warriors and recently rejected a
two-year contract offer from the
Denver Nuggets.
· Smith had surgery on both
hands In May. He underwent a ·
physical examl!latlon last Friday and Rockets team physician
Dr. Charles Baker was convinced Smith's hands were fine.
The Rockets also may have the .
Inside track . on acquiring
Threatt, 27, a shooting guard who~
played for Seattle last season and
burned the Rockets in the first round playoff series, averaging
nearly 20 points a game. He also
is an unrestricted free agent.
"We're working hard on the
Threatt situation, ·• Patterson
said. "There are a few other
clubs Involved with hlm, IncludIng Seat tie. But we're working on
lt. " .
Wiggins has returned to Houston and Is ·expected to enroll in
John · Lucas' aftercare program
this· w~ek. Lloyd ·has been In
Houstoll !or more than a month·
and : 111ready Is a member of
Lucas' program.
"I met with Wiggins (Monday)
and ~ was really Impressed,"
Patterson said. "He looked so
much better. I think something .
could be announced for him quite '

(3) SATURDAY 10 ,00
BIDWELL

Gi\LLIPOLIS RED SOX

The Daily Sentir:tai- Paga 5 ·

1

'

By TIM McMANUS

.

•.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ronald Reagan .reiums. to · airwaves.for AII-S.tar Game·
;

~·

(2) FRIDA\' 7o30

.

Wactnaaday, July 12, 1989

~ittle ~eague Tourn~ment

"\

NELSONVJJ..I.E·YORK

,

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Wedf:ludey, July 12, 1~89

Pomaov-Midclaport. Ohio

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Middleport, Ohio

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Our Madel Fumilhell by lnglk fumiture, ~·••part, Olio

POl 1$ YUIS.

FAMILY HOMES, -I NC.
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1-614-992-2478
0 ' •.

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�I

Pee•

8-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport,

~upplemental contracts. awarded

.
.
Athletic, band and cheer lead· · coaching position. Anyone Inter- by the board.
IIi&amp; supplemen~l contracts were ested should contact Charles . The board adopted a resolution
awarded and plans made lor a
Moore, 'htgh school principal, requesting that a financial analy·
tera 'of district meeilngs for . 985:3329, or Dr. Dan ApUng, sis be done by the State Depart·
Jllputon school fun~llngoptionsat super!ntelldent, 9854292.
ment of Education and the
Mollday night's meethig ol the.
Auditor. of State. This action Is
Eastern Local Board of Educa·
The"board directed Apllng to· necessary, It was noted, In order
tloil held at !he high school
set up a series of three meetings for the district to be able to
Given supplemental contracts throughout the district for · the receive an emergency loan for
were Pam DOuthitt, athletic . purpose of getting Input from
next school year It that should
director; Arch Rose, head foot· taxpayers on the question or become necessary,
llallcoach; Douthitt, head volley. whether to put an Income tax ora
A temporary advance from the
&amp;all coach: Ron Hill and Don property iax le'jY on the ballot In general fund to the State
!:lchlnger, assistant football November.
·· Teachers Retirement Fund In the
coaciii!S; Don Jackson, assistant
The request of the Eastern amount of $15,794.22 was
wUeyball coach: .Bill Hall, Local Education Association io approved.
·marching band director: Lori extend the current co 0.t ract to
·The board directed the s uperln·
Ritchie, high school cheerleader Aug. 31, 1991, pending ratlflca·
tendimt to post vacancy notices
advisor: and Tammy Capehart, lion by the ELEA, With the for an elementary music pos!Uon
!unlor high cbeer1eader advisor. stipulation that II be brought Into due t.o the retirement of Maxine
• It was noted that there Is still compliance with state law as Whitehead; an additional kinder·
vacani one assistant football regards salaries, was accepted garten position to be housed at
the Chester Elementary School
necessitated by Increased enrol:
lment; a Chapter· I reading
position located at Riverview
Elemetnary due to .the reslgna·
lion of Cathy Johnson; .a head
cook position at Chester Elemen·
tary due to Jnzy Newell's retire·
"• Sherman A. Artlp, 23, of ,Pleas Court ' to l8· months in ment; an assistant cook position
. Columbus, Indicted In Meigs prison on a charge of grand.theft. at the high school; due to Mary
County In June for receiving The grand theft sentence Is to be Bower's resignation.
The superintendent · reported
stolen property, was arraigned served concurrently With lime he
on the charge this morning Is already serving In prison on that the district had been granted
an additional developmentally
ttefore Meigs County Common another theft offense.
Hawley was sentenced Tues. handicapped unit for lhe elemenJ!leas Fred Crow III.
Artrip had been tal&lt;en Into . day for grand theft of a motor tary level by the State Depart·
custody recently by · the Rey· vehicle. He had been Indicted on ment of Educat!OI\.
·thursday, July 27 at 7:30p.m.
noldsburg Pollee Department In the charge when Meigs Common
Franklin . County. · He was .re· . Pleas Judge Fred Cr.ow III was was · the date set for the next
turned to Meigs County to face prosecuting attorney. Because meeting to be held In the
the receiving st9len property Crow was prosecutor at the time cafeteria. Attending Monday
Charge to which he entered a plea of the original Indictment, he· night's meeting were Jim Smith,
of not guilty.
co.uld not presld~ .a t yesterday's president; Kathy Manlcke, vice
·.: Judge Crow ordered a $2,500 sentencing. He was replaced on presldent,.and Susie Heines and
bOnd for Artrip, and set a trial the bench by Meigs Probate and . I.O. McCoy, members.
Juvenile JuQge Robert Buck.
ilate for Aug. 22, 9 a.m.
IJawley well be returned to the
. Artrip Is being represented by
Orient
Correctional Center as
jll.ttorney Charles Knight.
soon
as
~elgs Sheriff James .
·: Rfat-..tugene Hawley, 23, of
Soulsby
can arrange
Middleport, was sen tended Tues·
transportation.
day In Meigs County Common
.

Ohio

•

"'Wedn81day. Jutv 12. 1989 .

Offices up for

re-el~ction

Foilr seats on Racine and
Syracuse VIllage CounCils are up
ftir rf'oelcctlon. ·
One seat on the Racine Board
of Public Affairs Is up, and two
seats are up on the Sy~acuse
Board of Public Affairs.
There are no Board of Public .
Affairs Pfsltlons up In Rutland

VIllage, beCause Rutllind VIllage
does not have a Board of Public
Affairs.
·.
The Meigs ·county Board of
Elections closes at 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Filing
deadline at the county board of
elections office Is Aug, 24.

--~==~==~o:hio~~----~----~-~~~=-~==~~

Appeals.·•• .·
f Cont!n\11!(1 !rem page 1) ·

prosecute Wooten, the motion for
reconsideration was filed on
Friday by the defense. The state,
Toy said, Is prepa&lt;lng a motion to '
oppose any type of reconsldera· ·
lion .which wlll be filed this week.
'

'

We Reserve The Right To
~!mit Quantit.ies

.

Dr..Victor· Hochman

STORE HO'O'~ .
·Monday thru 1Sunday
·8 AM-10 PM .

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Now Seeing New Patients

.'

Goodwin was born on Aug. 7,1920
at Pomeroy, the son of the late
: The funeral of Morris D. Elmer Gillespie Goodwin and
Shlder. 6t: of Pomeroy,who died Norma Tracy Goodwin.
He was a veteran ofWorldWar
TUesday at his home, Will be
,
II,
a n\ember of the Sacred Heart
p!ilrsday, 1 p.m., at the Ewing
Catholic
Church, the Masons, the
Funeral Home with Rev. John
Pomeroy
Fire Department and
Evans offlcjatlng. Burial will be
Emergency
Squad.
!.n Miles Cemetery. Friends may
He Is , survived by three sons
call at the funeral home this
daughters·ln' law, . David
and
ei.oenlng (Wednesday), from 2to4
Phillip
and Dorothy Goodwin.
and 7 to 9 p.in.
Monrovia, Md.: Johnath;;m Vln· ·
cent and Linda Goodwin, West
David J. Goodwin ""&amp;.·
Palm Beach, F1a.; Rorui.ld Eu·
gene
and Sherry Goodwin, 'Mid·
: David Johnathan Goodwin, 68,
dleport;
and a daughter and
Lasley St., Pomeroy, died at his
son-In-law;
Mary Marlene and
~sldence Tuesday following a
Mark
Friedman,
Wortlilngton; a
brief Illness.
sister,
Mary
Bartels,
Stevens·
· ;A retired State of Ohio em·
ville,
Mich.;
and
a
brother
Tracy
ployee and owner of the Goodwin
Goodwin, Cincinnati, along With
Printing Co., Pomeroy, Mr.
seven grandchildren, and sev·
era! nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Phllomenla Mary GoOdwin· In
:Randy Stewart, Br~bury, was
1975, and a brother, Olan Eugene
filled on four charges when he
Goodwin.
appeared Tuesday night In the
Friends may call at the funeral
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
home from·2 to4 and 7 to9 p.m. on
Seyler.
Thursday. Funeral arrange·
: Stewart, currently confined to
ments will be announced 1!\ter.
· tile Meigs County jail, was fined
on charges of possession, of a
cantroled substance, $113 and
costs, fictitious license plates,
A marriage license has been
$63 and costs, DWI, $375 and
Issued In Meigs County Probate
~sts , and operating under sus·
Court to James Jeffrey Mays, 20,
pension, $63 and costs.
of Chester, and Aleshla Lynn
: Others fined In the colurt were
Holsinger, 21, of Reedsville,
nick Laudermllt, Pomeroy, $63
a!Jd costs, disorderly conduct;
Amy Shrlvers, Middleport, $63
and costs, open container In a
Nationwide Mutual Insurance
motor vehlcie; and Rochelle
Co.
, Canton, has filed suit In
Ward, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
Meigs County Common Pleas
~nfiask.
,
Court against Manuel Gheen,
• Forfeiting bon!ls In the court
doing business as Gheen's Paint·
Were Christopher Lance, Poml"lng, Racine. The plaintiff Is
roy ,.$43, assured clear dls~&amp;nce;
alleging breach of contract.
Teresa Davis, Middleport, $63
~peratlng without a motorcycle
endorSement; · Amanda Grimm,
Mason, W. Va., $63, traffic light
l(iolatlon' Michael .Lewis, Ru·
The Dally Sentinel received
tland, $88. open co.ntalner; Phyl· word this morning ihat a "rally
lis Pearson, Point Pleasant, $63, for organized labor'; which was
expired license plates ; Jose· scheduled for Thursday, 10 a.m.,
pliine Donohue. Middleport, $43, at the Rutland Civic Center, has
defective exhaust; Shirley Stacy, been canceled. The rally Is to be
I;.oulsvllle, Ohio, $43, Illegal left rescheduled later.
· tvm.
•

S2 49

EFFE(TIVE SUN., JULY 9TttRU SAT., JULY 15, 1989

'•

&amp; .

CIDER
VINEGAR

· 298 SECOND SL

',

..
Infant, Children

HEINZ ·
I

.,

Pediatrics

~p arraigned, ·
~awley ·sentenced

POWELL'S
SPECIAL
VALUES

$399
WITH COUPON

---~----------

.

'

'

-..u.,JI.
··--------··-------save s-,1111 ~':~·
1
: MaXWel~ House.
~-

I

I

I
I
I

~ iii_,IUILM. ....

• ..,. . .

••'
I
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..
P0111e1 oy-Midclepoi't, Ohio

r

.Dear John.••

Beat of the Bend
..

There are love letters In the
sand, letters that you slt right
down and write yoursel!, polson
pen letters, letters edied In
~lack, Perry
Como letters
and Dear John
letters.
· Now · I
tbOU(ht I'd
be writing Dear John letters- It
just proves how wrong I can get.
So:
Dr. John Ridgway, E . Main St .,
PomerQy.
..
Dear John,
.
It doesn'tseem .posslblethat 35
years have flown by since you
opened your practice in the Big
Bend area.
Guess It is true. Tlr;ne does fly
wben you're.havln' fun.
Nllne of us ever gave athought
to your retirement- we thought
you were the perfect example of
perpetual motion.
However, since you are hanglngltuphereonJulyl9,itisgood
news that yourstaffls holding an
open house In your honor this·
Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
I hear that not only will your
present staff of Mona Lee Neal,
Janet Russell, ntanne Hawley
and Judy 'Pape be on hand but
they will be joined by Louisa
Johnson, former staff member
who jumped ahead of you lnio
retirement.
I also understand that your
sister-In-law and brother-In-law,'
Teresa and Norman Woodward
are here from the State of
Delaware and will be joining you
and Jean along with a number of
• other relatives forSunday 'sopen
house.
·
I know that many of us will be
on hand to regretfully say goodbye and to wish you and Jean a
happy and fulfilling retirement.

'.

____ ..:.____

Football league
..
orgamz"ng

g.ven

offer some. advice on what I . tlme found a good plastic that
sh(&gt;uld do about the squatty llttle you can recommend to stop the
flowers In . our squatty .little disintegrating process. Do let
flower garden. God knows the me know.
plants have liad plenty of rain.
Meantlme, I keep trying to
They have been generously fed think .Buy American · - but
with one of tho~ magic plant dealing with the steering wheel
growers. rve talked to them, dallY seems to Interrupt th3t
admittedly a .bit under my train of thought.
breath. several times. So what's the problem?
; Okay --s-;;~ey-ar~t typical
Should I be rotating the crops, Dear John letters. Keep smiling
do the plants need more sun- ·anyway. ·
shine, am I using the wrong plant
food or don't they llke thethlngsl
say to them? Maybe the tope
~ourt
voice? Or could this, John, be a
combination of two or more of the
Six were fined and four others
above? I really feel a major
forfeited
hoods in the court of
frustratlo_n here. The neighbors
Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
blooms really makemelookbad.
Tuesday
night.
You might find It Interesting to
' Fined were ·Terry Michael,
note, however, to know that I
·have a 'limestone parking area Pomerlly, $50 and costs~lre
r y,
which abounds In
blooming works violation; Charlie
rflowers which . forge on them- Middleport, $50 ·and costs,
to
selves year after year without ' ating without due reg
one bit of encourag~:ment !rom safety; Kimberly Wilt, Po eroy,
$10 and costs, Improper backing
me. Yep-' I did say limestone.
Charlotte Marcinko, Long BotJ, don't want to face It, but I
suppose the bottom line could be tom, $1S, no costs, speeding:
tpat I -don't have one of those Melissa Downie, Middleport, $50
green thumbs that I keep hearing and cos(S, disorderly manner;
Angelle Starcher, Middleport,
about.lr you decide that this is
$50
and costs, disorderly
problem ;' just how do I go about
manner.
getting one?
Forfeiting bonds were Dale A.
Any suggestions will reach me
Fuller. Columbus, $50, running a
at Pomeroy RFD.
stop .sign; Paul D , Hogue, Jack-------John Whoever, President of son, $40, speeding; . Frederick
Carte, Point Pleasant, · $450,
· General Motors, Wherever yo11
DWI; and Danny L. Walker,
might be.
6,
Ru
!land, $50 , left of center;
Dear John,
I wante&lt;1 to talk to you about
the steering wheel In our 1986
Olds Calais.
Soon after we bought the car, a
hairline crack developed out of
nowhere in the steering wheel
SANDHILL ROAD, PT. PLEASANT, WV.
cover. We held a top level ·
meeting on the problem and ·
. decided .,... what the he~k - what
could this hurt?
Well, as time moved on that

of

Stocks

Dally atock prlcea
..
'
(Aa
of
10
a.m.
)
tS
•
Bryce and Mark Smtih
·
The Big Bend Midget·Footl&gt;all
ol Bluat, Elll&amp; &amp; Loewl
League
Is organ121ng for the 1989
Pomeroy resident Dottle Am Electrlc·Power ............. 28')4
season.
- ·
Turner, and Jimmy Cain. co· AT&amp;T ........ ;........................ 35'Va
owner with Turner of riverbank Ashland Oll ,;......... : .. ... ....... 381,1,
Slgnup dates have been set for
property along East Main St. In Bob Evans ............. ... .......... 15%
P6Meroy, have received a sum· Charming Shoppes .... .......... 15% the next three Saturdays. July 15,
mons noti(ylng them they are City Holding Co .................. 15~ July 22 and July 29, In front or
being named as parties In a court Federal Mogul. ................... 24~ Andersons In Pomeroy from 10
action In U.S. Southern District Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .... ......... 54'Va a.m. untll noon. Further Information may be obtained from the
Court, Columbus. Turner and Heck's ................. ., ...... :....... ~
Cain are being narried as. co- Key Centurion .................. .. 12% officers of the league present at
defendants in the district court Lands' End .... ... .... ........ ... .'.. 27~ the slgnups.
action which was flied by · the Limited Inc ...........................33
Vlllage of.Pomeroy, Offi~e of the Multlmi!dla Inc ... .. .. .......... , ....98 . The slg11ups are for both
Mayor, llgainst the U.S. Army · Rax Restaurants ....... ........... 2% players and cheerleaders. PlayCorps of Engineers. Huntington, Robbins &amp; Myers .. :............ .17'4 ers must be in tbe fifth or sixth
W.Va.
Shoney's Inc .. ..................... ll'Va grades next year and canno(be
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6'4 13 years old prior to Sept.l, 1989.
The case, requesting a temporWorthington Ind ................. 22~
ary restraining order In regard to
excavation and construction on
the river ba!lk property In
ques tlon, was filed May 26 In
district court. The temporary
restraining order had been reDON'T MISS THIS ONE
quested to stop the Corps of ·
Engineers from continuing. to
PROFESSIONAL
permit the excavation and conCOLOR
struction at the Turner-Cain site
PORTRAITS
on the basls .that it Is In violation
of the Nationai ·Hlstorlc PreserBY D.O. STUDIOS
.
vation Act.
·
r;,........-.-- PRESENT COUPON TO PHOTOGRAPHER
The · restraining order was
FOR A BEAUTIFUL 5 X 7 WOOD PLAQUE
dEinled June 20 by a federal judge
on the basis that the property
owners, Turner and Cain, were
necessary parties to the com-).
plaint and must be made parties
to the action. The cdurt ordered ,
the complaint be amended within
20 days to Include Turner and ·,
.
WITH YOUR PACKAGE
Cain, and set a hearing on a
SOMEIHiHGYOUWfLL .HAVE FOR A LlFETIME I
motion for prellmlnary InJunction for Aug. 15, 9 a.m.

Middleport

•
FREE
ALL

00

FRIDAYI JULY
D.J.-Sound and

I
I

ON DELIVERY

EAST MAIN

992-6614
POMEROY, OHIO

'!Your Dealer On
The River"
...
....
· ~·

SATURDAY
RACINE -There will be a

Eskew family
·,reunion held

''

R\'
E!!
.

Jim Cobb

--~

FRIDAY
POMEROY -T.be Mary
Shrine 37 White Shrine of Jerusa-.
I em will have Its regular meeting
on Friday at '7: 30 p.m. Potluck
refreshments '.will be serv~d.

BIG BEND FOODLAND

Quarter-Paul -

I

''

u

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2.·9°/0

APR FINANCING

ON SELECTED MODELS - WITH
'
APPROVED CREDIT.
' THIS IS THE ONLY THING LOWER
THAN OUR PRICES.

'

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EVERY U.SED C-AR AND TRUCK
HAVE BEEN REDUCEQ!
TOO DIFFICULT TO .LIST ALL TH~
GREAT BARGAINS~ SO COME IN
AND SEE THE SAVINGS FOR
YOURSELF!
G REDUCED"
R£TAtlllU19. 1989 CHEVROLET ASIIO CL VAN
AWII#CM10906. St- pDDingtr HDtilg, V-6eng. 9..,
pow. w....,_ pow. ~r loeb, air cand. auiO. trans. OVER
AM/IM - - CDS. .,_ canlnll, tilt wt.l.
s••E
Stock
Aft• Rebate.
,..

sa

R£TA1ll19,263.

.;,':th"

1989 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC

. . .1 IIU69. V·l ang. cruisa ••trol,lilt w...l. , 1,_
AMIFM ~·eo cantllt, fully pow• OVEI

St
RETAIL '17,736. 1989 OLDS. CUTLASS CIERA 4
Modti3AJ69. V-6 eni;ne. auto. tr-., iir ondi- '1910
Ianing. tilt whit~ puke wipln, . . . mete OYER
whit Is.
Stock # 113 7, After R...tt.
SAlE

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

RETAIL '21,119. 1989 OLDS. 98 REGENCY
M*l 3(X69. 3IGO V-6 eng. Uv pow.: r = , sa...,, win. •ra.u, lilt wllloL crul• can , pu1to ovn
SAlE

DR.

$ 121 453
$

,..
17 9

, lurury lnt..or.
#1199,lltli- Rebate.

RErllt •26.4".

$

$1 6

. .
SALE

1989 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

r:: S2 2

Mldii#CD69. V-1 lllgina,loadlll withal po- $1,.

;tt•;nt· ........ icw. ,,.. c

M

.._,_

IErAI '17,614. 1989 CHEVROLET S-10 ILAZER
. . .I #CTI OS 16. U Nt• V-6 llftglow, auto. !rant. , 1,_
,..... trim PIIHte· air clllllllttollng, AM/FM OVD
~~-. ll'lliH lllllrill, tilt whltl, puiM ..,.,,,
Stwcll 111 :a 16, Aft• 1•11
.
SAlE

99

4X4

515,536
,

••

!lim. It was decided to commend
· ;I'he Modern Woodmen of the vll!itge.
·
eating
and business .establishbeing given . Cards may · be America, camp 10900, celebrated
picked up at the high school Independence Day with a picnic
Marjorie Malone, Coolville, led ments which are returning to the
office.
at Malone-Henderson farm, group singing, and solos were use oj recyclea ble packaging and .
Dr. D(luglas Hunter, M.D. wlll Coolville .
'·
sung by Rena ·Moore, B.J . and · containers.
Possibilities for a 1989 matchperform the physicals.
Welcome was extended . by · Travis Rader, and Shannon
Ralph Henderson, and o(ienlng Breedlove, toolvllle; and Ing fund pr;oject were discussed .
by John Breedlove, ·Coolville
!U;;EDSVILLE _;Physicals for · · prayer was given by Jerry Amanda Breedlove. Belpre.
district
representative. Modern
athletes and cheerleaders at Rader, Coqj.vllle. During · th€
Members answered roll call by
Eastern Junior High and High opening. the Woodmen's Creed citing privileges and responsibll· Woodmen of America. In keeping
School will be given on Saturilay was led by Calvin Hawk, Alfred; lites for which every citizen with the group's emphasis on
at the high school.
Robert Henry, Amesvllle,ied the should be thanl&lt;ful. Personal . safety, bicycle safety reflectors
Grades 10, 11, and 12 are to Pledge of Alleghlnce to the Flag; freedoms, home and fa!'(liiY life, were ·distributed to all youth
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle- report at 8 a.m., and grades and Paul McPherson sang "God church affiliations, the right to present,
port Church of Christ w!ll have a seven, eight, and nine are to Bless America." A:n American .assemble and · to epjoy social
Pr~s were won by Jim and
bible school kick off on Saturday , report at 9:30 a.m. Urinalysis . Flag was presented by Frances gathering, were some items Debbie Moore , ·Maxine Rader ..
at 11 a.m. with a parade ana testing wlll be done.
Henderson to Howard Russell. listed. Many spoke of the growing David Toncray. Tony McPherballoon assentlon. Those particison. Jessie Doolittle, Nathan
Physical cards must be signed mayor of Coolville. The flag will · need to protect · our forests,
pating may decorated their bikes by parents prior to the physicals be flown at the west entrance to water, air, and soil from poilu· Bunner, Betty Rader, Terri
.o r ride on the church float . For being given. Cards may be
Smith, Ed and Gloria Rood, Bob
Information, call 992-2914.
McBrayer, . Sue Breedlove, and
picked up in the high school
Wilma Hel)derson, all of Cool·
office.
POMEROY - The Meigs
v!lle; Kay Sheridan, Jeff and
Drs. Wilma Mansflel
nd
Colmty Retired Teachers wjll Mark Brown wlll perform ' e
Sharon Gillogly, Tuppers P)alns;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball, weekend.
havfi a tea on Saturday at the physicals.
Dick McPherson and Michelle
Columbus, and Blll Sleple, N;C. · Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire
Pomeroy Episcopal parish house
Reed,
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Bill
were weekend guests of .Mrs . attended the annual Fourth of
from · 2-4 p.m. Mrs. Edith
·
Jackson,
Athens; Ida Livingston,
SALEM CENTER -The Sa· Frances Young.
July gathering at the home of Mr.
·
'
Brown, state president Qf the !em Township Volunteer Fire
Guysville;
and Jean Hawk .and
· Mrs . Virginia Gibson visited and Mrs. Charles Alkire, Racine.
ORTA wliJ be a guest. She Is also .Department wl11 have their ah·
Dorothy Robinson, Alfred.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dlll and sons,
with Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gibson
a member of the Gallla County · nual.lce cream:soclal on Satur· and
sons, Columbus, over . the have moved to the area and are
Retired Teachers Assoclatlol). day. Serving wlll be from 11 a.m.
living in the former ·home of
All retired teachers ·of the area to 7 p.m. The Midnight Cloggers
Charles Ellise.
are invited to a,ttend.
wlll perform at 5 p.m.
Members enjoyed· hiking and
Mrs. Margaret Douglas re,
swimming
when the Meigs
cently spent a few days with Dr.
RACINE -P.hysicais for athSALEM CENTER -The SaCounty
Jade
4-H Club met
A P?lluck picnic was the and Mrs. Don Gibson, Athens.
letes and cheerleadQrs at South- lem Township Trusfees w!ll hold
Lake
Elma.
recently
at
Ruby Diehl has returned home
ern Jr. High and High School wlll a budget meeting on Saturday at highlight .of the June meeting of from Holzer Medical Center and
Everyone brought along some. be given on July 15 at the high 9:30a.m. at the Salem Township the . Middleport Methodist is slowly Improving.
thing
for lunch .
·
held at the home of Betty ·
school. ·,
Firehouse. The · pubHc · Is Women,
The next meeting will be at the
Fultz .
Students are to come at the Welcome.
of Janet Bolin.
home
Mrs. Fultz welcomed the new
foUowlng times, · seventh and
•
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock minister and his wife, Rev. and
eighth graders · from 8-9: 30
Mrs.
Harvey
Rindfleisch.
and
a.m., ninth and tenth graders Springs United Methodist
Correction
presented them with a gift from .
from10~11:30a.m .,andllthand Church will have an lee cream
The
following
names
were
,
12th graders from1-2: 30 p.m. · social on Saturday at 5 p.m. Ice the church.
In ' the recent birth announce:
oinltted from the Harden family
. All students are to wear shorts.
cream, cake; and pie will be . Clara Crisswell presided over
ment
of Andrea Rae Pape, the .
reunion,
Garrett
and
Kathy
Kenthe business meeting in which
· Physical cards must be sighed served.
rank of John Pape in Air Force
dall
Jones,
Christopher,
,Benji
Juanita Bachtle gave the devoby parents prlo':_ to the physical
and Sarah. Warren, Mich.; and should have appeared as that of
tions. Nan Moore dosed the
Kenny and Connie Kendall, Staff Sergeant.
meeting with prayer.
Mr. and Mrs. Pape have two
The next meeting wlll be in . Brian and Cindy, also of Warren, other
sons, Kris and Randy
Mich.
September.
Tackett.

. Harrisonville happenings

4-H news report

UMW picnic held

.

.

~

Names omitted .

The· reunion of the late John
.and Roxie · Eskew was held
recently .at Fprt Meigs near
Rutland.
Prayer was given . by Roger
Karr, games were.conducted by
, Francia Eskew, and J&gt;.rtze!l W!!nt
to Ralph Fry; the olltil!it: ; and
Joyce Johnson, coming the farth·est from Chunute, Kan.
·
. · , Horse shoe pitching was err- ,
. joyed by many.' .
. Attending were Ralph Frye,
.'. Margaret Andrews, Laurie Wayland, Bill .and Norma Andrews;
DESCENDANTs - Pictured here, left to rllhl, are descendants
Raymond and Megan &lt;:\ndrews,
ol the late John and Roxie Eskew, Margaret Alldrews, Charles
Roger, Susan, Jf,!sslca, and· Eskew, Elleene Hatfield, Mildred Withee, Leona We beater, and
Valeri ' .Karr. Charle~ Eskew, . Maxine MQI"Clnko.
Francis ·Eskew, Barbara a_nd
Ashley Fields, David, Joetta, and With~. Elaine and Jerry Lave- Theresa, Mike and family. Ro·
Amy Eskew, Raymond and El· . rack, Larr)' Stafford Wade, Lo· bert Allen and Kelly Marcinko,
Jeen Hatflled, Dick and· Judy retta anii Joe Harris and family, Roxie and Danny Marcinko and
Simon, Joy&lt;;e Johnson, Darla .. Penny and Tim Morre, and family, Theresa Marcinko and
Humphrey and family, Charles Timmy, Eddie, Leona, Rick, Eric and Millie, and Jeff and Peg
;and Mildred Withee, Eugene, . Shawna. Tasha, Samantha We- Marcinko and family.
. Mary, .Matthew, and He_ather hester , Maxine Marcinko ,

Jessie Childers to Gregory
· Childers, 42.83 Acres, Letart.
Joh!l Fisher, Jr., Sarah Sue
Flsher . to Larry Whobrey, Jr.,
,Jean Whobrey, Parcels, Chester.
' Homer H. Hankins, JearrHanklns to Marvin L. Friend, Bonnie
Friend, 2.5 A., Chester.
RU))al Foreat Deem, dec'd., to
. Robert Deem, eta!., Roger Deem,
', ~ .• KeU_nethDeem, eta!., Jlmm~
Deem. elilr.';"Pe~l Deem, eta!., '
Cert. of Trans., Sutlon.
, · RichArd B. Payne, Sherry L.
Payne to Milton E. Roush, Sarah
E . Roush, Part of Tract, Syracuse.
Richard B. Payne, Sherry L ~ ·
. PaynetoMiltonE.ROush,Sarah
E . Roush, Part of Tract, Syra- ·
· cuse.
Charlea E. Hall; eta!., Irene E.
Walker to Leta Hall, Sheriff's
· Ded, Pomeroy.
Beatrice ReiJ\hart to Virginia '
·Pond Fqss, Howard L. Pond Jr..
.. 94% A., Salem.
Max E. Duckworth, dec: d. , to
Modena F. Duckworth, Cert. of
Trans., Syracuse.
John Henry T~rrell to Joseph L
Struble, Martl)ll W. StJ;'Uble, Po·meroy.
,
Charles E. Hall, etal., Irene E.
Walker to Loweli D. Chevaller,
Bonnie Sue Chevalier, Sheriff's
Deed, Olive:
Crenaon R. Pratt to Ginger A.
Pratt. Parcels, Bedford. ·
Edward Wayne Green', Joanne.
Green to Jaymar Coal Co., Pareels, Scipio.
,
ElcloJI Moi'J'II, dec'd., to PbyUis
Mon1l, Walter Morris, Janet Manuel. WIIUam Mon11, Roland Morrls, Cert., SaJ(ehuy.
Walter Morris, Nancy Morris,
Janet Manuel, William E. Morria, Sandra Kay Morris, Roland
Morris, Fern Morrll to Pliyntl
. Morrll, Parcel, SaUa\IUJ'x, •
Orvllll D. Romllle, dec'd., to
· Eveiya Romlft to Evelyn Ro- ·.
.

.\

Woodmen note holiday with ~picnic

-Meigs County property·transfers--

'

AS LOW AS

Stock 111226, Aft• tebatt.

•

--.:...
· TJIUBsDAY
'

. , POMEROY- . nie· Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AJ...;..Anon wlll
•· meet at 7 p.m. on Thursday at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

sges ·

THE '89 S
INVENTORY REDUCTION
IS
R
.
IT WILL BE THE BIGGEST SAVINGS EVENT IN
·J)M. COBB'S .HISTORY!
•

'

LOOK!- IT'S TIME FOR A FAMILY PORTRAin

,.

.

Com.munitJ!-cdlendar

MIDDLEPORT -Cindy
Oliveri, of the Meigs County
Extension Service, wliJ present a
children's workshop on banana
bread ll)aklng &lt;iliWednesday at 2
p.m. at the Middleport Library.
There ' Will be a $1 fee for
· rna terlals.

SPECIAL SCENIC BACKQROUND NO EXTRA CHARGE. ·
GROUP PICTURE $1.00 PER SUBJECT. PAY WHEN TAKEN.
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
BACK GROUND SCENIC AND BLACK

im Cobb

IT ALL STARTS
TOMORROW
THURSDAY,
JULY
13,
1989
..
EVERY NEW CAR AND
TRUCK WILLHAVE A
GIANT REDUCTION TAG ·
FOR YOU TO SHOP!!

I

2··5x7
8 JUMBO WALLETS
8 HALF SIZE WALLETS

15

•.

.

PORTLAND -The Freedom
Gospel Mission located on Bald
Knob Stlvers.vllle Road will be
having vacation bible school
, today· through Friday from 6-8
p.nf. each evening. The public is
Invited to attend.
·

'2-8x 10

APPEARING
i4
SATURDAY, JULY

~

CHESTER -Girl Scout day
camp has been canc;elled for the
week of July 10 through July 14.

I&lt;ODAI&lt; PAPER

EACH

.
Wednesday, July 12, 1989
.page 9

.

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WEDNESDAY
·senior girls tournament" or
REEDSVILLE -The South women's independent tourna·
Bethel. Church at Sliver Ridge merit on Satwl)ay and Sunday at
will be. having vacation bible Southern High School. The entry
school. tOI)ay through Friday fee is $35 and two softballs. Th~re
from 7-9 p.m. There will be will be two sponsor trophies
classes lor all ages and the publiC · given to the .first two teams and
Is Invited to participate . The 12 lndlvldu~l trophies to the first
church is located across from two teams. If interested call
Eastern High School, two mlles Howie Caldwell at 949-2954 or
out Silver Ridge Road.
Jim Caldwell at 949-2458.

~DEPOSIT

39(

By The
Bend
.

-~·

AND-FAMILIES

ONLy

TACOS

$150

~GES

Now

Eferv W•••••••v

YOUR FAVORITE
MARGUERITA

.
~-

REG. PRICE $14.95

Mexican fiesta Night

hairline craCk developed into

-- · -· ... ..:.

I

&lt;

FIRESIDE INN

Mr. John Rice, Meigs Agricul- more than a quarter of an inch
zagged gap In the plastic steering
!ural Agent, Pomeroy.
Dear John,
wheel cover. Now Is this an
Since you are .used to dealing indication that one day · the
with owners of lots of land with steering wheel will be only a bare
lots of problems, I somehow feel metal ring? If so, wllllt attract·· ·
that I'm not going to get your lightning when I drive In a storm
undivided attention.
and won't It be pretty cold to take
Agriculturally speaking, I sup- · hold of on those cold winter
pose I don't have this great mornings? Perhaps, some of
problem .
your other c,ustomers have had
However, I thought you might this problem and you have by this

•

MOTHERS! ...

FRIDAY, ·.
JULY 14, 1989
10 AM· 7 PM

The Daily S~ntinel

••

Wednesday, July 12, 1989

SUDllilons

•

.

'

.

mine. Affld .. Bedford.
Lllllan M•.Hayman, Wllllam R. ...
Hayman. to Gerald G ..:;;lmpson, ·
Shirley Simpsond..ot, Racine .
. Mary Jane Voll fka Mary
Friend to HoHy Nathan Friend,
Atfld., Letart.
·
Btll ·J . Donahue, Mona M. Donahue to John E. Anderson,
Linda I. Anderson, Plrcel, Letart.
. Virginia Mae Jones, dec' d ., to
Clayton D. Jones, Atfld., Chester. ·
'
Martha L. Fox, fka Martha L.
Wiseman, aka Evan D. Wiseman
to Shelly White, Part Lot, Middleport.
.
· 'James P. Nutter, Eva E. Nutter, Betty Alberta Nutter to
Charles S. Robinette, Frances S.
Robinette, Parcels, Scipio.
Village of Middleport, Ohio to
Middleport Housing Corporation,
Parcels, Middleport.
~arl W. Fields, Kreska Fields ·
to Bank One, Athens. N.A.. Pareels, Rutland.
Susan J. Gregory, Susan J.
Tuttle, Gary W. Gregory to Susan J. Gregory, Gary W, Gregory, Parcel, Olive/ Orange.
Chl!rles E. Hall, eta( Irene E.
Walker to Luke McDaniel, Sher·
Iff's Deed, Lebanon.
· Middleport Housing Corp. to
Norma Torress, O.o7 A., Mlddleport.
Bonnie. L. Theiss, dec'd., to
Thomas M. Theiss, Cert. of
Trans., Sutton.
Louise Gravely Eden, dec'd.,
to Thelma G. Garrett, John A.
Casto, Mary Ann Myers, Cert. of ·
Trans., Rutland.
· ..
Harry Calvin O'Dell to Ray
·Lambert, Juanita Lambert, Pareels, Rutland.
Charley D. Smith, Naomi G.
Smith to Kevin W. Knapp, Judy
K!lapp, Salisbury.
WOllam Carl Ratllff, Carolyn ·
M. Ratliff.to Jamea Earl Catlett,

'.
·~

.,

Leone A. Catlett, Lots, Olive.
Luke ·M. McDaniel, Kathy Me·
Daniel to' Geor.ge Hall, Minerals;
Leliai!on.
Ivor H. Young to VIllage of
Rutland, 26.62 A., Rutland.
Anthony G. Bradford, Rebecca
Bradford to Wilbert McClain,
Part Tracts, Lebimon.
Anthony G. Bradford, Rebecca
Bradford to Anthony G. Bradford, Rebecca Bradford, Gall
Bradford, Part Tracts, Lebanon.
.Shirley Wllson, Shirley Tur·ner, fka, Steven . P. Wilson to
Clair A. ·T urner, . Parcel, Rutland.
John Thomas, Cheryl Thomas
to Wllllam F .1\sbeck, Patricia A.
Asbeck, Lot, Middleport.
William F . Asbeck Jr., Pa- .
trlcla A. As beck to Jeffrey J .
Wanrer, Linda R. Warner, Parcel, Bedford.
Sam Hicks Jr. to Southern Ohio
Coil! Co., Parcels, Salem.
Norma J. Harrah, WilHam
Harrah, Rita A. talvert, Ronald
Calvert, Marlene Harrison, Dale
Harrison to Dale Harrison, Marlene Harrison, Lots, Pomeroy.
Rick Hatfield, Dottle Hatfield ,
to Dale E. Taylor, Lot, Pomeroy. ·
Joe Allen FQster, Betty Jo F~­
ter to Joe Allen Foster, Parcels,
Chester.
Joe Allen Foster, Betty Jo Foster to Joe Allen Foster, 1 A.,
Cheater.
' . ' ·
.
Clay T. Ihle,' Jane Ihle to Joim ,
Thomas, Cheryl L. Thomas, Sal·
Isbury.
Reva L. Musser, Frank V.
Muaser to Elberta Cliristlne Cleland, Floyd H. Cleland, 15/100 A.,
Rutland. ·
Sarah Roillns . to Bobby Lee
Young. Nancy E. Young, Parcels, Scipio.
Anna M. Ogdln, dec' d., to MaxIne Griffith, Atlld., ~em.
Mattie R. Al!isontoPaul W. Al·
llson, Cert. of Trans., Lebanon.

.

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.

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When The Weather
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�•

•

'

-P CI 1 0-The Deily Sentinel

· Wedneaday. July 12. 1989

Pomeroy Middlepdrt, Ohio

ALBANY, N.Y. tUPI) ;- New seconds In th.e ba!hroom com:
York has become the third s tate pared to 45 seconds for men.
In ·the nation to grant women Although the study concluded
that women need more ba·
equality In toilet stalls,
•
'throoms
than men, the lawmak·
Gov . Marlo Cuomo Tuesday
ers
agreed
. only to enact potty
signed Into law requiring that
buildings constructedlfter June Pllrlty.
1 1990 contain an equal number
The blll sponsor . Aseemblywotoilet fixtures for women as for . man Helen Marshall, D-Queens,
men.
said men would benefit as well as
The. law was flushed out qU he women from the new Jaw. since
Legislature after a Cornell Unl· they wouldn't have to walt as
ver~ty stu(ient _
study found that . long for their compa~tlonsto g_e t..
women spend an average of .79 · In·and olito!restrooms.
·

oi

• FOR ALL THOSE SUMMER .
ACTIVITIES YET TO COME .·

•

~Several

i'

l

",,

.

;

.

...
'

'

'

'r.
~

stores report
:! enterings to sheriff
: Meigs' County Sheriff James
··Souls by received a report Tues. :day morning from Betty Sloane,
'of Sloane's Carpet Shop, MinerS·
vllle, that the store building had
been entered but nothing taken.
The slterlff's department was
notified Monday morning of a
·breaklnfi and entering at Hill Top
Grocery .o n State Route 124, east
of Rutland. Taken In the B&amp;E
were cigarettes and Instant lot·
tery tickets.
Dale Barr. owner of Barr's
Station at Reedsville, reported to
the sheriff Monday morning that
sometime during the weekend,
the side window of the station
was forced open, allowing someone to ·reach In a pull the cash
r~glster to the window. Approxl·
mately $20 In change that was left
In the cash register was taken.
.At 1:25 a .m. Sunday morning,
Greg Sheets, ·Richmond, Va.,
reported that the windows of his'
vehicle bad been broken out. The
vehicle was parked In the park·
lng lot at a Route 7 night club .
near Pomeroy. Charges have
been tiled. The name of the
suspect will be released when the
suspect has been arrested,.
Also on Sunday, Raymond
Canter, Racine, reported that liis
lawn tractor had. .been stolen. He
advised authorities that he had
parked th_e' tractor Friday even·
Ing, but did not nodce It was ,
missing until he returned from
.
church on SUnday. at noon.
On Saturday afternoon, Bill
Cozart, Racine, reported that a
number of windows had been
broken out of his building (the old
Hayman Hardware building) In
Racine. The breaklrtg of windows
took place sometime during the
early hours of Saturday. Appar·
· ently, someone .was Injured durIng the Incident, as blood· was
found on some of the glass and
also at the water fountain at the
ijearby Old Ferry Landing Park.
Deputies are Interviewing some
witnesses in the matter, and.
charges of criminal mischief are .

.

WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S
SUMMER APPAREL

·-~·~-.

YOUNG . HONORED - At Monday night's meeting of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club, President Lee Miller presented
joe Young with a distinguished president's plaq!Mi for serving two
terms as club presldeat. Yclung was first president In 195\-52 and be
also has served as president dunnr the past year. The award
honored Young for his outstanding leadership an_d special support
of the Ideals of RQtary.

290 N0111 SECON.,

Councilors

~

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

BIG BEND

'

'!''

'''; '''. ''

"

D

.

.'

• DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET or R

'PEPSI-COLA

69

~

1-LB.

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Mt. DEW, DIET or IEGULAR

BOX£S
·

Havoline
Motor Oil

HD30,10W30 or
10W40

m~et

Stadlu
Cups

22 ounce

Weather
By United Press International
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows wlll be between 65
, and 70. Winds north around 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday: Partly cloudy. with
highs In the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
'.: Ohio's Exleilded Forecast
"
Friday lhrourh Sunday
. Fair through the period. Highs
: will range from the mlp 70s to the
· lower ~s . Early morning lows
:·will range from the mid 50s to the
·:1ower 60s.

:t·
'il~"

'

'

ASSORTED FLAVORS

VIVA

ICE MILK

.

' • ,.. 16 o. lotllll $169
PEPSI PRODUCTS
~
•; ••••••••••••••••••••
Ph11 Dlplt.
SUNBEAM

Hamburger
Buns

9!.

UQUID
22 ••• Ill.

SUPERIOR WHOLE

'
FRESH
LEAN

BONELESS

GRO'UND CHUCK .

Eo

The Past Councilors' Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America: will have a 'piCnic
meeting at the home of Sadie
Trussell, Bashan, tonight (Wed·
nesday) , at 6: 30 p.m., not Thurs·
day night.

,.....

~

~ "We sent Admiral Yost a .letter
;tJust .a f~ hours ago askJng that .
~ the Exxon Valdez not be brought
:; Into state waters until the State
::'! Lands Commission - which I
t chair and h!IS the jurisdiction of
•• the first' 3 miles of state wate\-s
:; off the coast- have an opportun~ lty to protect the California coast
:£:from any fur!her oil spill."
"''-' Coast . Guard Petty Officer
: ·Elizabeth Neely said officials •
):: were " going under ' the. assump. t$- tlon" that residual oil tnsjde !be
.;"' hull of the Exxon .. Valdez caused
,;, the sUcks.
~~ "Although we don't have. defl·
:ottte proof yet, It looks like (the
Valdez) Is .. . Ira lllng (oil) ,: •
ti Neely said. ·
'
~ She said ·ou ·samples ·collected
:;;by state Fish and Game Depatt·
~:ment officials to deter.rrtlne the
· •l"SSurce of the slicks were lncon:-~;cluslve, but were found to contain
~~·hydrocatbons , petroleum-based
• . b ta
' " su s nces.
.,_, None of the viscous material
from the slicks would • likely
~.eac!l ~ Southern California
:r~aches-; 'llkl'',a · stilflt'1"1slr and
.,.. pame offlda.l.
...
::;, "It's quite a ways off$hOre and
,..,It's moving slowly to the norE ·theast. As long as It stays out
,,.there Johg enough, It will break
!;up by Itself," said Reed Smith.
..,. Coast Guard and state officials'
:'.tsald the oil probably leaked from
:O:.the crippled tanker when It .
""'arrived In the San Diego area
E;sun~ay, perhaps when water was
""pumped from ballast tanks In
:: :preparation for,Its entrance Into
"' 'the bay.
. .
:;t; . The first or the sllc)(s was 18
"'·miles long when ~potted Monday ·
::l'but .much of It has since dlssl- ..•
e.pated a_111i, as of TUesday after-. , 1 ·
[;n.oon, was 8 mlles long. The · ·
·seeoi:ld slick trailed behind the· ·
:~valdez for 3 miles and was 25 . ·
~yards wide, Neely said.
.
~ The tanker created the largest
-::on spill In U.S. history when It ran
~~aground March 24 In Prince
f..Willll!m SQund off southern
,:,Alaska and spewed nearly 11
· "million gallons of crude oil. The .
: ;ship had been sCheduled to pull
' ' Into drydock Tuesday to begin a
!';ltine.r,nonth, $25-mllllon repair
=aob. .
.
,
&lt;~"- ·:Expressing frustrattol). over
C the curre,nt leakage, Exx9n offl·
!:~?lal .John 1'ompklns said: "We
&amp;..fook every precau tlon we knew
""how. We did everything we could
:':.to clean those tanks. That's why
~ were up there In Alaska for
. -:.alhtost three months .... •
~- If chemical analyses prove
· i!concluslvely the Valdez leaked
':.;:Jhe all, Exxon, which had said the
·!;:ship was thoroughly cleaned
• ·before It left Alaska June 23,
!.';would face civil .a,nd criminal
=wenaltles, officials said.
Instead, the tanker will remai!J

· VMH

.

'

Ohio

r.-

TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
. Richard Johnson, Letart, W.Va.;
Thomas Frye, Middleport; Cllf·
ford Plantz, Middleport; Thurston Stone, Middleport; Jane
Warner, Middleport.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Rosa Genhelmer, Martha Ander·
son, Patricia Johnson.

'.'

MIDDlEPOII,
OH.
. -

SAN DIEGQ (UPI) .,.. Two top
California officials a sked the
Coast Guard to deny the dam;
aged tanker Exxon Valdez entry
Into state waters until It Is
determined that no more oil will
leak from the ship .
·
In a telegram Tuesday night to
Adm. Paul Yost Jr. , c'o mmandant of the Coast Guard, Lt . Gov.
Leo McCarthy and State Controller Gray Davis asked that the
vessel, .which Is anchored 50 ·
miles off the San Diego coast, not
be moved Into state waters until
the California Lands Commls·
s)on has determined the safety of
.the move.
.
·"We are fearful that there still .
might be .some oil contained In ·
the Exxon Valdei," McCarthy
sal.d In an Interview with Cable
, News Netw.ork Tuesday night.
The Exxon Valdez , the supertanker responsible for the na-·
lion's worst oil splll, ls headed for
- San Diego tot repairs and was the
0 likely source of two o'll slicks off .,,
, the coast, Coast Guard officials
·said.
'
; An oil sheen· discovered Mon1 day and another stick deiected
' behlrid the Valdez Tuesday have
· delayed th'e disabled tanker's
entry Into San Diego Bay for. at
: least several days. Large steel
• plates bent out s.hape and jutting
· ' doWllward from the hull have
; also delayed th.l! ship's entry.
• "We're . going beyond that,"
· McCarthy said of his Jetter to
~' Yost. ~

Hospital news

.•
,•

expected to be filed. ·
The aepartmentls also Invest!·
gating El hit -skip accident that
occurred Saturday afternoon on
New Lima Road. A vehicle
traveling north at a high rate of
speed went off the roadway on
the right In the curve, knocking
down six mall boxes, two news· .
paper tubeSoand the stop sign at ,
the Intersection of Peterson
Road. The vehicle continued
north on New Lima. Deputies
have a name, but have not been
able to lqcate the vehicle. .

40°/o OFF

Pomeroy- Middleport,

California seeks _·to der,iy · e~try - to damaged tan~er

I

UnitS of the Meigs County . Middleport went at 6: 45 p.m. to
Emergency· Medical SerVices Hartinger P arkway for Anna
answered eight calls on Tuesday . Marie Starcher who was ·trans·
PO~roy at 4:03a.m. went to • ported to V~terans· Memorial
Lasley St. for Morris Snider who Hospital.
was dead on arrival.
Rutland at 7: 34p.m . was called
Middleport at9: 22 ,!l. m. went to to Carpen te~ Hill R6ad for
Ash St. for Cella Hlte who was Chr istopher Cline wha was·taken
.. taken to Veterans Memorial to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
,Hospital.
Middleport went at 9; 09 p.m. to
' Pomeroy was c allell back to South Second Ave. for Jane
, ·Lasley St. at 11: 24 a .rn. for David War ner who was taken to Vete·
•:OOOOW1n who was - dead . on ran. ~ Memorial HospitaL At ·11: 20
·arrival. ·
p.m.. Middleport went to the
Ru !land at 6: 35 a. n\. went to Overbrook Nursing Center !or
Salem St. for Anita Harless who Ve ~mont Markins to Veterans
:was taken to Htllzel' Medical Memorial HospitaL
·•Center .

·•

endangering public safet y bY
sending the Valdez to San Diego,
held a baysi de protest Tuesday.
" We hate to say 'I told you so'
at sea .' while Exxon engineers said Coast Guard Cmdr. J a ck waters .
bu
t this Is what e n vlronm~ntal·
enter . the 41-foot·deep San Diego ·
· pump water Into th e hull to float Scarborough.
"
Isis
have · been predicting all
·'Water pressure took some of Harbor channel until theobstruc·
apyremalnlng·oll abovesea level
"This, Is certainly an unlucky (the ) jagged edges. and bent tton was removed.
· along," said Ri ck Nadeau , a
and prevent.fu rther leakage Into vessel, there's no question a bout them back down away from the
Wor k on the heavy steel plates , spokesman for Greenpeace.
the ocean, au thorltles said.
It, " sa id Scarborough.
Cal ling the crippled tanker
framing or the vessel," said measuring 40-by -SHeet apd 1
· All . oil leakage must bbe
The damaged hull plates were Coast Guard spokesman Larry . Inch In thickness. would likely be " the Darth Vader of the seas ,' ~
stopped before divers can either originally dlsll&gt;dged when the Solberg.
conducted In the Py ramid Cove Nadeau said, " Exxon did a. bad
raise . or remove the massive Valdez ran aground off Alaska.
Because the addlttorufl slip- on San Cleme!lle Island pend ing job of cleaning up a fter the spill
steel hull plates th atbentdownw·. ·o fficials surmised Tuesday the page increased the ship's draft Navy permission, said officials.
and now t hey're saying they
ard durtng the tanker's 3,000· plates slipped further a s the ship from 20 feet to more than 50 feet&gt;
couldn'
t have -foreseen these new
A coalition or environmental
mile trio down the Pacific Coast, was towed through turbulent ; the Valdez would not be-able to groups, charging Exxon with problems. " ·

Parit} in New .York potties

EMS
answers 8 calls.
,,

-.

. ~ednesday, J!Jiy i2, 1989

TAVERN HAM

CATSUP

9

$

19
LARGE SWEET

USDA CHOI'CE
. BONE-IN BEEF

SALTINES

WESTERN

SliCED
BACON

'

@\feigs land
::transfers
•
Spencer, dec' d., to
Iren~

•"James L. Spencer, Margaret
::'A mberger, Pauline Kennedy,
~ary Thompson, Sutton.
r~ Margaret Amberger, Pauline
~nnedy, Mary Thompson, John
i~mpson to James L . Spencer,
::Parcel, Sutton.
··
""' James L. Spencer to Charles
i!~ire, 'Jean Allttre, Parcel, Sut-

'•

:.I..ottery

t,.ton.

. CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Tues·
.:day's winning Ohio Lottery
: numbers:
l&gt;JCK-3
.: 1102.
, PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
· $1,257,390, with a payoff due of
$2!55,347.
PICK-4

! ,

~

.!1

4829.

Jack R. Carroll, Mary E . Car;iioll to Mary J . Murray, L~t, Le-

11*11 ..... lholt ....
Ron..,. Dl 1211 8ldrll
PaiiJ4• lucb!bbitlr
llllptrllll

;:tart.

r

'.

Clarence McDonald, Emma
t;:Jdae McDoald to Brenda Malnl!ll ,
;;1 ~ A., Salem.
·
to' Arthur Hill, Debra Rae Hill to
~rthur Hill, De~ra Rae llill,
. acts, Sutton.
·
Qarenee L. Folden, Mary K.
!iof'Oidea to ~olin R .. Folden 66 A.

£:,

PlCK-4 tiCket sales totaled
'1222.~. with a payoff due of

e l/15'1nt.), kiem. . '

· :t173,Dl.

••

I'

,:•. . ·~

,we R•erve nie RJgltfTo-i.Jinli ciuanf~'- ePriall Good
•

'

iM.. JUlY 'II, 1981 •USDA

Food lhlmpe Glllllly Ao_o-pt• •Not Reaonalble For Typogrephlcal Erron

�'

•

W.dnBiday.J~'1~. 1989

Pomaov-MiddiBpon, Ohio

12. 1989 .

Middleport~

Pomeroy

·W estern firefighters seeni
·to 'be winning wildfire·battle ·

STORM DAMAGE - Robert Anthony sweeps
Th., mayor of. the city declared a state oi
up debris around his Hamden, Conn., home · . emer&amp;ency after the storm left niost of Hamden
Tuesday after winds of up to 90 miles an hour as an
·
without power. (UPI)
unconllrmed tornado swept through the city.

Stor1ns ·. pound _m idwest slates

By ROGER BENNETT
age and firefighters were still
United.Preas International
cutting flrelliles around those
Firefighters appeared to be homes that still stand.
getting the upper hand against
"It looks good right now, but
mos t of the wildfires burning In you never know, " said Colorado
the WE'st, but major fires In Forest .Service spokesman Cliff
California and Colorado were Shaw. "~t could change depend·
still blazing out of control.
ing on the wind.' '
A New Mexico man became the
Firefighters also neared con·
second firefighter killed In the talnment on a blaze that burned
.s~ores of forest. r;mge and grass · more th!ln 2,300 acres In Mesa
fires plaguing the West when be Verde National Park In southwwas struck by lightning In . estern Colorado:.
Arizona, officials said Tuesday.
Park officials d~lded Tuesday
· Fire crews stopped two wilder- to reopen the park headquarters,
ness blazes Tuesday in the scenic , a lodgE' and the Spruce Tree
mountains of northern California House, one of the ancient Indian
and another In Utah. Residents clitt dwellings that had been
werE' allowed back .into black- closed for two days. None of the
.ened Boulder Canyon about 25 park's Indian dwellings was
miles from Denver where flames damaged.
.
.
devoured 65 homes, but were told
But
a
2,000-acre
fire
In
Coloranpt to spend. the night. Officials
say they hope to have the do's Roosevelt National Forest
2,300-acre fire; which may have continued to rage out of control,
. been ~tarted by a . careless and members of · ihe stilte's
smoker, contained by Tuesday National Guard were activated
· Tuesday to help fight the blaze.
night.
. Firefighters c.b ntalned two big
'1'he worst two states probawildfires In the Sierra near the
~ly are Colorado and California," Interior Secretary Manuel northeastern corner of California
Lujan said Tuesday. '1'he oth- at dawn Tuesday, but struggled
ers, the weather seems to be against steep terrain and gusty
helping us a littlE' bit .... It all winds In a major fire at Big Sur
comes back to we have to depend and another In san Diego County.
The state · Forestry Departon Mother Nature again."
ment
declared containment of
The federal Interagency Fire
that were only 8 miles ·
two
fires
Center at Botse; Idaho said more
than 20 major fires were out of apart In the Plumas National
control in · the West, where ·Forest. The two fires consumed
fqrests, deserts and grassla.nds more than 9,000 acres.
. Arizona's summer rains
are tinder-dry in a continuing
drought. Nearly 1.5 million acres brought more welcome relief to
'fire~ighters Tuesday, slowlpg the
h~~e burned in the past weeks,
nearly 200,000 since the weekend. spread · of more than a dozen
But a spokeswoman said fire lightning-caused fires that have
"activity was moderating," par- already burned more than 63,000
tially because of drenching sea- acres and preventing the start of ·
sima! rains In the Southwest. The new ones.
The rain helped on a numbE'r of
stormy weather in other sections
of the West could cause a fires , lncludlng a 1,700-acre blaze.
resurgence of dry lightning, she along the North Rim of the Grand
said, which has caused nearly au · Canyon. Firefighters also were
helped by a largE&gt; helicopter that
the fires.
·
carried
water In a 1.000-gallon
The fire In Boulder Canyon
bucket
from
the Colorado River.
caused at least $5 million darn·
Ernie Cachlne, a membE'r of a
20-person crew from Zuni, N.M, ,
was killed Ia IE' Monday when be

Seasons 3rd
tropic depression
has formed

MIAMI (UP!) - The third
By United Press International
Robert T! udeau, 36, his wife,
ings in the 90s common stretch·
Powerful thunderstorm~ swept ' lng from the mid· and southern Susan, 32, and her son, Steven . tropical depression of the hurrithrough North Dakota, 'where Atlantic Coast states, across the Landon, 4, of Woodbridge, DL,
cane season headed northwest
over the opel) Atlantic with top
high winds and a tornado up- central and southern Plains, and were injured when lightning
·winds
of 35 mph Wednesday,
rooted trees, toppled power lines Into Interior. California.
struck their umbrellas, Deputy
··
forecasters
at thE' National Hurand shattered windows, the Na·
The mercury cllm bed above Pollee Chief Geoff Korous .said.
ricane Center said. ·
tiona! Weather Service said 100 Tuesday In parts of the desert . "They had two umbrellas.
At 6 a.in. EDT, the depression
Wednesday.
Southwest, western Kansas , · Both were being u5ell," Korous
was. centered near latitudE' 22.5
A tornado was reported late · eastern Colorado and southwest said. "Both h:ave holes In them
north, longitude 55 .0 west, or
Tuesday west of Drake, N.D. , Texas.
and burn marks as If they were
about 625 miles northeast of the
and property damage from 60·
Record highs were set or tied in both hit by lightning. The lightn·
northern Leeward Islands.
mph winds was reported In ·the following cities: Apalachlc· lng broke up the asphalt under
It was moving ·northwest, and
Burlington, Minot and Williston. oia, Fla., (95); Cape Hatteras: · thE&gt;Ir feet ."
itS
forward SpeE'd had SlOWed
Hall as large as golf balls pelted N.C., (93); Lakeland, Fla.,"T100) ;
The NWS issued a tornado
from close to 20 mph TuE&gt;sday to
Burlington. as well as Watford Orlando, Fla. (98) ; St. Peters- warning for Kankakee, Ill., after
City and Ca rson.
burg, Fla. (98); Tampa, Fla., a twister was spotted about 5 only 13 mph Wednesday mornSevere thunderstorms earlier (96); and Wilmington, N.C., (97.). · miles west of the city.
ing. Forecaster Bob Case said It
Tuesday forced. two major air·
could
continue to slow Its pace
Thunderstorms and heavy
The Federal Aviation Admin is·
during thE' day .
por ts In Illinois to suspend flights · tratlon suspended flights for 90 rains .Inundated parts 'of Kenbr iefly, And thousands of people minutes from Midway and tucky Tuesday night, and the
Maximum sustained winds
in the Northeast remained with, · O'Hare International airports In · weather service Issued a severe were 35'mph, with higher gusts In
out power in the wakE' of violent Chicago Tuesday afternoon when thunderstorm watch for parts of 'squalls. mainly east of the
storms and tornadoes.
thunderstorms stretched across that state, West VIrginia and center. No lmportarl t change of
Much of the rest of the nation, Illinois, leaving three people Ohio.
. strength was expected before
meanwhile, suffered through an. hospitalized after being injured
Northeast Utilities said 40,000 Thursday, Case said.
oppressive hE'at wave, with read· in a freak lightning strike.
Connectlcu t . custorhers reIt the depression develops
mained without power Tuesday winds of 39 mph or more it would
afternoon, mostly In the Water· become tropical storm Barry,
bury area, Including 25,000 In the the second named weather sys·
city a fter th~ area was battered tern of thE' Atlantlc-CaribbE'an
with severe storms Monday. hurricane season, which
CLEVELAND {UPI) - Consu- potatoes and cucumbers, but More than 80,000 Northeast cus- stretches from JunE' 1 until Nov.
mE&gt;rs will pay as much as 100 prh~E's for zucchini, radishes and tomers were without electricity 30.
percent._more for sweet corn and leafy vegE&gt;tables arE&gt;n't expected a t the height of the blackout.
TheN atlonal Hurricane Center
The utility was projecting a 99 said the tropical depression
oth E'r p~C&lt;~._uce this summer be- to Increase significantly.
causE' of E'X CE'Ssively wet spring
Ron Miller, president of Farm percent restoration rate at 6 p.m. formed Tuesday morning from a
weathe r conditions, a Cleveland Markets of Ohio, Ron Miller, Thursday, and 100 percent by strong tropical wave that bad
Plain DE&gt;alE'r survey rE&gt;vealed.
estimated that corn sold by tl)e midnight Thursday, said spokes- been moving across the Atlantic.
" It's principally a function of state's roadside markets will woman Jacqueline Harris.
The first named storm of the
The storm was blamed for two season was Allison, which moved
ail the wet we athE'r ," said Alan cost about $3 per dozen ears this
Brugler, dirE'clor of markets for year, compared wlth$1.75durlng deaths and collapsed the side of a
over thE' Texas coast June. 26.
the Ohio Fa rm Bureau Federa· 1987. Last year's prices ranged condommlnlum complex in Con- Another depression that formed ·
tlon. " Planting was at least two from $2.60 to $3.60 because of the necticut, leaving at least 200 last month never made it to
peoplE' homeless.
drought.
·
tropical storm status.
to three weeks behind normal."
Heavy rainfall across most of
Ohio and the £&gt;astern United
Food Industry officials said
States delayed planting and that while prices would probably
consumers will soon SE'e the remain high for several weeks,
effE&gt;ct s of thE' delay, w.tth short the prices - might fall as more •
supplies of sweet corn raising Ohio corn becomes· available.
prices as much as 100 percE&gt;nt.
They said !~ally grown corn Is
The above normal rainfall-In currently nearly non-existent.
stark contrast with last year's
Most Ohio corn, normally
drought conditions - also dam· available duling the first week of
aged strawberries, which will July, will not be readY until late
cost consumE&gt;rs as much as 40 this month. That means produce
percent more than last year.
buyers must pay higher plices to
The survey , found produce ship early corn from Flolida,
buyers will also pay more for Georgia or California.

.Gualitf -E~ucation

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

Clean air proposal said weakened
WASHINGTON {UPI) -Pr~s­
ident Bush'·s plan to clean up the
natiOn 's polluted· air has been
weakened In several ways since
he unveiled It one month ago, ThE'
Washlng.tbn Post reported
Wednesday.
The newspaper, quoting a draft
of the clean air legislation, said
since Bush made hls proposed
rE&gt;vlslons to theCieanAir Act, the
administration has relaxed
standards for controlling the
emissions of toxic chemicals and
pollutants that are the cause of
acid rain.
For lnatance, Bush'' olictnal
propcisal ealled for requiring

companies to control toxic air
pollutants with "thebes t technology currently av~llable."
But, the Post said, the draft of
the bill modifies the standard,
requiring polluters to redUCe
emissions to levels "typically
achieved by the best-performing
similar sources taking Into account energy , environmental and
economic Impact and other
costs." Such lan11Jaae appears to
allow for a loophole for subjective judgments by law enforcers,
the newspaper said.
Bush proml.sed lut month to
cut annual sulfur dioxide levels
by 10 m lilton tons

GRADES: KINDERGARTEN THIU 7
'

ENROLLMENTS NOW BEING
-ACCEPTED
FOR APPLICAnON, SCHOOL .IIAL,
OR APPOINTIIIIT CALL:

614-992-6249
US N. HCOfiD

n.

..

.......

.,,.. . . - QfvNway and F9und ldl undw 1 &amp; worda will bt
run 3 d.,t • no chqe.
•Pfiot of ed for- II CIPitell. .ert is dDubl• pri~ of td COlt.

• ~ell thM

mu•

bt peld l.n advance ••

Cerd of Th.,ko
In r..mOrlem

Hoppy Ado
V•d Sll•

143-Porta.tnd
247-Utart.Fellt

Pomerov

141-Aicine .
742-Ruclond

Public Notice

Ia to-

c.oted on the Ch•t• and
Pomer~ U.S.G.$. 7~ ,nin·
ute
mopo IP·

mH• nor-

Th•••
the room and

Ia locfted In
Frectlana36
T-nohlp.
. Frectlon4
Mel go

....

ond

Tile """- • • .ncom-

In MemDrillm
'

In Loving Memory Of
CELESTINO (Danny)
CORDERO
JULY 12, 1988
It 11 with c1eep lllldn1hat wa recognize the
first annivetuty of the
death of Cal.tino

'HELP

BAliNG POATOES .... f2.99

CAULIFLOWER •••••••••••.!~.~!.!~t.... 89&lt;

FIESIIIKE

BABY LIMA B,EANS•••• !~.~!•......... 99&lt;

ORE-mA-24 OL

.

HASH BROWN ·
DAWN FRESH ft'USHROOMS •••tql•• S1.2 9

.

TOMATO JUICE ...........~~.~.~·..........99 c
CANDY lARS

REESE CUPS •••••••••••••••• ~.!~~!•...~ 2/·59'

ROYAlE CREST

FIG BARS•••••••••••••••••••• !~~!-. •••.•••.s1;4 9
CHICKEN OF THE SEA TUNA .~ ••":·.ql-•• Sl J 9
2 ROIL PIIG.

PAPER TOWELS•••••••• Sl.39
IMtT'S • DEl"MoNTE

, ,

SNACK PUDDINGS ••••!!.~!~~.~~~~. s1.29

~

LOCI QUAR1' SIZE

.

FREEZER BAGS •••••••••• !~.~!........ S1 .•69

STOIILY

.

.

GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS......l~.~~·.~99&lt;
.,.......
.
·
. . ..,.,•
· · • ...
,......,. •
-~"-

r~

'

Steto Route . 124, Portland,
Ohio 46770: you are.heroby
notified ~he! you heve. bee~
named defercclanto in a legal
ectlon ercthted Homo Na·
tlona18antc. Plolntlff, vo. Ro·
bert D. Gll111on on'd Pan~
-·
Glblon, Oefonclanto. Thio
action hao ••igned
C•o Number 89-CV-128
and io ·pondlng In the· Court
·of Common P!oao of Meigo
County, _O hio 4~789.

pond • required by the Ohio
Rul• of CivH Procedure.
judgment bv default wll II'!
ronclared againot you lor tho
relief doomandod In the com·
plaint.
Dated: July 10, 1989

t••·

JOttES TIRE
CENYEI

•New Tires
oCustom Pipe Bending
.Oil Chances
oGruse Jobs
oGt~~enl Chessis
ll•inhn•nce
oC.OIII(Iuterized Bal•cer
992-3897
St. Rt. ~24

Middleport, Oh.

(Next to HiD Top GroatY)

Salary commensl,lrate with ,experience .
E.O.E.

DIESEL

SYRACUSI, OHIO

•LIGHT HAULING

Moat Foreign and
DomenicVehldal
AIC Sorlllco
All Maior • Minor
Repair•

1,000 GALLONS

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Call Anytime
992-2371 '
5/ll/19""

•Washers •Dryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators

"Must It

Repairable"

KEN'S APPUINCE
SERVICE
992-5335-915·3561
We Service All Makes

PLIIMIING &amp; IlEAIriNG I

" Now Locatiltll
161 NoriiiSerantl
· Midlo,nt, Olio 45760

RECYCLING

SAlE&amp; &amp; SERVICE

9lii-7PM

OPEN 7 DAYS
EXCEPT
HOUDIYS

For Shower• &amp; Partl11. ,.

CLUI'•x"............................s4.91 •·
CASHEW PIECES ...................,s 3. 99 •·

PAITY .. .IS .......................:s1.10.a.
OLD FASHIONED LOZENGES
Pop.u.!ntl

HOIIJIOUND, ONNAMON HEARTS
CAli SliPPUES1
lnlltatto. Cllar Vanilla
· D....o Coafectloner Sutllir
' ·Pestt or Powdor food C'lloring

DIVE'S ,.
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAIR
lnaa.letY. .yh ltr
l ............ o•.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 ond 4-cyde

enllln•

Stock 1'8no for
Homalh.,
Taoumoah, Briggo 6
It ...non,

Weed-•·

Pl.

. , . ·,. Cab Top~, ltc. '
AD'V ANCEO CAKE CLASSES TO
START SOON. - SIGN UP NOW.!
N"EW SUMMER HOURS .

Mon.·Tues.

8-5; Thurs.-Frl: 8-6
Wed . • S1t. 8-6
.~E ~CCf;PT roop !TAMPS! .
~

,We Buy .A! I.
Non Ferrous
·.·· · Metal·s,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel,
Etc.
Give Us A Call

Today"

992-51.14 .

Ju,. Ctrt with or without
moton. CaU L•rrv lhlefV 814-

4

388·9303.

Giveaway

Kilten • t o

Fwniture and appll-.~ by _the ·

give•w•Y-

·

..,,

Ollie

piece of entire hou•hold. Ftil
prices being J)lld. Cell 814-44&amp;-

Litter

3158.

trltined. ver.v cute . Call 614-

446-9319.
do~

C.t
go

.

Used furniture by the piftce or
entire hou•hold .. ,o aetling.

Peek-I ·POO, ·3 Yrs., good "'ith

kJ.do, good wotc11
814-2&amp;8-&amp;486.

CALL 992-6756

992-2269
EVENINGS .

"DOC" VAUGHN
Qertifi.t Lh:en•ed Shop

4/6/89/tfn

I

I
1
1

. BINGO ·
POMEROY.UGUS

LARRY D. DOGAN, CIC

CLUB

Cortifiod - -.. c........

lnwllf_,lrok•

2 E. MAIN ST.
2 4
992-9171

.

Wheat ·

'

sso.oo P• .Gamo

Wo l'ev
Or or II 0

1-100-333-5252

hotolo '65.00

Memt.r NYSE 6 Ot._
Principii ltOGil a Commoclfy
Ekctung~~
·

, Ptr G,mi

814-742-.2 455 . .

Cal

Qulltt

a

kitt.,a. wiy friendly to
home, aoNd bttck &amp; tig•

ocrloed &amp; white. Coli 614-2681793 anytime. .·

. MY-I-SHOP

.

Used furniture and houlllhold

5 fr• kktens Cheshira . . .. Call

appllancea. Phone 114-7422048 .
.

Re.a cute kittens to give ttWay.

The Tree Harvertters wt~nt.;!
timber to buy, harONOOf;t or pine.

e14-367· 7821 .

Coli 114-992· 7091 .

Gory BodV. Loon. WV. 13041
458-1681 .
.

5 ldttens, 3 femele;: 2 male. 8
woeko old. Coll614-985·4311 .

Wanted to buy, old h.-.d cut
fourwt.tion rock. Will pit;:kupcall
13041 882· 3267 or 13041 342·

4 smel 6weekoldc:utepuppi•.
mothe&lt; Cod&lt; A Poo, 304-6767883 .
.

8447.

'PRINTING ·

Mbcod blood omoll puPI&gt;IM. 3
1 male. goodhou•dOgs.
304-676-7883.

fMN~Ie

· Montgo~•d... towoohor. ·
neeM 1cm8 vjortt. ilOCJ 8761314.
pig~

11

(3041

5 :00.

6 Lost and Found

EARN MONEY' Reading book&amp;l

130,000/ T'· Income -potilntlel.
Found: Jutv . 6 . U.roe blot:lt · Detailo. II 806-687·8000 ht.
retrelvertype mala Chokec:hein Y· 10J89.
between Rio OriNide &amp; Vinton
• •· On the Rto OnNlde End on Love clotheS~ Oemon•tr.te
321. WeU mM"ered, pleMe be.,tiful clott. for a n1111111 PlrtY
como &amp; gM hlm Coll614-248- pill'! I No modeling_involved. Fun

5883.

jobwilhf- hill Nolnvntrnom,
no collecting or deiWertng. Cell
614 · 245-5363 , for an
interview.

.

LOST: Orange • white tomcM

named Mike we•lng fle1 collar.

loft arourw::t Graham School Rd.

Now hiring demonstr.ton to Mil
home deoor 'item• tuCh a,
Pictures. door wrMtha. &amp; etc.
Foro now porty pl..,, I'll E£ I 300
KIT. No collecting or delivering

Coli 114·448-8806.
LOST: 81ot:lt Lob &amp; Beoole!Boo·
•ert mix . Morg1111 Cent'er eree.
Rew~~rd. CaU 814-38S.904&amp; or
448-71'71.

~ork

LDit : In · Rodn~. Female Calico
Cat. HI•
long hair. If

•'"I-

Found. Coli 814-248-66'71 .

GOVERNMENT JDJisl Now ·
hiring In your area, bath'•kllledS.

LOST Murplt\'l I(Jtre Thurscler.

jo .. &amp; .p_plicltion, call 11&amp;, ,

unlkMied. For 1 cur.rent Itt of

383-2627 he. p 86 7.

Loet. Reward. black ., d while

Dental aatil:tant needed. E JCP. ...
prlf•rtd b.Jt not necelllfV."'
5.-.d
to: cle Bok .00:2....
Oalllpollo Dolly Tri ... no, 825
Third A""'. Galllpotit. 0H46831 .

Lolt small cool• cont..ning
kava and chedcbook. letwel!ll'
POint Pl. .lnt and Ma•on. (304
896-3484.

7

,.,ume

Now hifO. . AIIPiv ot Hoif
Hlghllgltco. H 614-448· 4&amp;97.

Yard Sale

.. ·'·

HAULING

,.

"~

1'600 GlU.ON

•

WATER SERVICE
UMESIONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED

. COIIIIERCIAL

•CU.-TC. IUJCHENI. lAT. .
•EXTINIIVE REMOOEUNG
•VINYL IIOING. ROOANO
eMEUl.IIUILDINGS
eNEWHOMU

. SINCE 1969
IISIY sr. STUCISI

992-5275

992-761

Roger ·Hysell
Garage

LINDA'S
PAINTING

5-17-lfn

•

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

INTIIIOI-EDIIIOI

AUTO-&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

Tab tht pain eut of
painting. let - de
It far JDU.

Alto Tr••••lulo•

YEIY IIUSOIIDlE

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

HAVE IEFIIEIKE

614-985·4180

4-25-tfn

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

LW. STEWART
TRUCKING

•zrroa TIACTOIS
elCHO NODUcn

VOIJ CALL IT
WE WILL HAUL IT

•HOWAlD IOTAVATOIS

•YAIDMAN MOWEIS

otNTOSTAn IAnE•s

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

•Gravel

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

742-2421

6/ 11/lfn

CHESIO, OliO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS ·
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

GIIIEUI. CONl'IACTOIS
1 1.1 ·- '11 ..1111

h••

Wonted: Potc- dme ooo~iono
evellabte for indlv~lll Inter..
Mtedln wandngwtthchiltt"en&amp;:
edolecenh on p•son~l ..fety
iuue•. For en applic.tion, write
CAPS. P. 0 . 8'o . 207 Jock lUI . ,

2ntl house-rlght
pecking house . House fullhoutehold &amp;:. mi•c. Gla~w.re, OH4S640.
poltt. clothes. etcll Etedrk:
renge, 11- 19 &amp;rown c•pet &amp; Di•trM:tTechniciWl fortheGaHia '
padding. Mon-Tu111. 9-6.
' Soil &amp;: W.rer Conaervatton Di•- .
:..__:.__ _ _ _-,:::...,-,: trict. Minimum requiremfll1t• ,
Lg . 4 flmly ~rdtale. 12·13-14 in dude • high school dlplomt, ·
on 154 nw Bidwell, P. 0 . Big additional experience find/or
variety of Items &amp; many b•- education con•idered, farm
gains. StMtt
clos• tate.
beckgr«K!nd pret'4!fred. I!Jility .,
·
wqrk With na-tiU equrpment,
15 famit¥" ~rd •ale : July•12. 13, good communication . . d ma14. 9 a.m. 1 '1'1 2 mllel ' ft'OrT'i ' ·thematical illdll• and the ablltty ·,
Cheshire on SA 664. clothing to work wilh peoP.Ie 11r1 CJ"tti~ .
infant to large tizlt, stroller, c• Al•o. requir~ to keep recor~&amp;: ..
aeet, battery operated. 4 documentat•on of ~onaervat10n
wheeler. furniture, .draPes. practices plann~ &amp; appNed. ··
dllhllt, John Boat. lots mile. Appllcetio"' will be accepted •
Items .
the Oistr.ict Office at 529
Jaclcaon P1k~ Room 308C Gelli--

••tv.

Wod. lhru Set .. 424 ~d Ave.
Re•. Kana~ga~ 9·5. Cheap
prices.
"

s... &amp; Sun. Houuhold item• &amp;
clothing. 442 Jerry Street.
Spring Valli'(.

17 Vinton Aw .. Mary Ktv
cosnwtiCI, etc. 9-5. Wed. 12th
8. Thurs. 131h.
---.,.-,--.,.-.,-Y•d Sale: In Mercantile, Thurs• Fri.y, first brlc*. houaeon
tOWirda High SchooL

pons. 4&amp;631 throogh Jutv 24,
1989. Conttct: Patty D....- District C onHrYatlonist. I 14-4468187. Sat r.y is negotionlble
baed on experience 6 ... cation. In addition to promoting
no-tilt practices the applc.nt
should h... e an inl•eat In
working with local land owrws
in promoting •ound c:onMrVation practices: le the wile Ull of
1 our soil &amp; water retourcet.
Part· time/ full· time cooks II
wailr81'" appfv in PII'IOn.
Village Pin11 Inn, Spring Vellfli

,.....

Patio • Hot do!Sale: 7-1&amp;-es,
Starting_ It 10: p a .m. at 0~
Evans Office. . Main Vlmon 2 nu,.... aida. Shop clerk, 2
OH . Spon•orlld bVVintonUnited hou" keepers. Inquire at Odell .
and Endl Shop. Midlleport.
Methodl•t Church.

Log Hou• becllide Shrine Club, Government Jobtl Now hiring in ·
8ullwHie Rd . Clothlna oddo &amp; your aru. both •killed .,d
en da. Wadn81d.,. July 12, A: unlkitled . For a current Mtt of
jot. Md appllcalion. cell 816Thurtdey Juty 1 3, 10 to 6.
383-2127 e~~:t . P886.

.......Piimerov···:.......
... .. . -- ~-...-·-··········-··········

6-15

·

Texa• Rd..

Middleport
&amp;.. Vicinity
'

•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

742-2455
Salim SL
lutland,Oh.

ee;ded for a loaf
rltHIIbte •
arto lirea. indudw Glllia Ma oon&amp; Melgo•Co. Coii814-448..:4~10:.:9:..:fo:.:r..:int..:orv.::..:..low::;_.- - - ' 51181 Rep

.. .....G.iillfji(ifi$"""" " .

.DWNII: GIEG I.

Show gifts. toys , fashions.
Christrr.a. homacteoor for No. 1
ChriUmas Party pl., . Free

8300. kit. Phono 814-9925311. Alao booking part ies .
A• per Article 9. Tran•fers and

Vecenci•. Section B, Posting,
of the Negotilted Agreemtnt
1815 Gen erat Han Inger Plrkway. between
the MLTA and the
Julv 12th thN 14th. Drop•. Boerd of Educltion.
·· the Mei9' ..
bedapread•, Home Interior. Local SChool District il po.ting
lamps. toYS. clothing. misc.
the following wc.ncl11 for hs ~
s•urday. July 11. O.argaWhlle ~- te•ching •taft: Sixth ,
Tucher at Stlem Cent• .
rJIIIdence on Old Rt. 33 . conec- Oracle
Elementary and LD Teach• at
tordollt- pl ..-. occupiedJ..,an; ~Meigs
Junior High.
tlbl•ch lira. ltlr.oa. mlc:rO'NI'I•
ttand. pio.,.... aereo ltMid: TELEMARKETING. 6 :30·8:30 ·
lugpge; etc.
evenings. Monday through
Thur.ctay. 85.00 per hour phJ•
bonus. C.li 814-992· 7•~. :.
10:00a .m.·1 :00 p.m. ontv .

.......Pt'Pleasiint ......

Wanted: Pan- time positions ~'
•vailable "for indivklJa" lntere.ted in working with childr..
and adol..cent• on pwsonal
llftiiV iuue.. For., .ppllcation.
Y•d •te 2323 Jefferaor) Ave. wrile CAPS, P.O . Box 207, 1
Wed. , Thurs.... d Fri.
Jack• on. Ohio •15040.

&amp; Vicinity

E•t• 811e of VloiM Farl-r.

· ~Dtpendtlble H11rin1 Aid Sales &amp; Serviitill
~Hurlaa Eval1ations For All Aaes

MAlES AND
IIODilS

c.

MAmN'S

I

22llalt ....
PO• •,, OH. I

Hl-6171

6-5·'19·1

z ·~.,. KOCH, M.S.

I

·

Clinicll Audiologist

~614~1119 or (614) 992-2104

417

Tolt'lng oppllootlonoot Doinln ~
ond Soturdoy, 2.108 Plla, 1:00--1:00 p.m. •II tm '~ ,
lhoN Stroot. juot off N. Main wMk. Appi¥ It Domino' 1.
Str•. ct01hlna •plllln011 and
llou_lt.,..8·4,
w..t ... rolloblo bobroltler for 3 '
old. Must hwe r.,•.nce. ·
Y•d Bole Qru- Lono Comp Coli 614-949-3021 .
Conltv, Frl.,dlot, July 14 .,d
11.9:001111 ?.
AVON · AI • -· Coli Morilfn
Ftl~

· Tllovlsl011

REPAIR

A¥111111, .. 1213

v••

w.... 30~112· 284&amp;.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AVON 111•••11 Shirlw Sp....
30~676- 1421.

,lllllipqlls, Olio 45631

'

Ylltr~~~s
~Mulbeny

.

Easy World he P-vl Auemble
prodUct. et home. Call for
information . &amp;04·849·0170
Ext. 313 !Open Sundoyl

auppfy co . ltluat

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

'• I

your own hrs. Call 814-

245-5383 for In interview.

985-4300

ALLEN'S

Help Wanted

Part-time medicai Ilib t achnici.,
for a luitv .. ulpped ohvlld.,'o
labor11ory. No •tift work. Applv
in penon- Medic•l PI••· 203

,....... 13041 675-2986 .

•HATS
•T-SHii'ITS
oJACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES •
GROUPS&amp;
ORGANIZATIONS

991-7479
lt. 33
of

992-39~t2

Emptuyment
Serv1ce:;

· ·

pi••• call 304-875-385, .or
pi••• return.

CUSTOM SCREEN

. Rentlls

.

Pre '940 quiltl. Any condttlon.
Cooh !&gt;Oid, Coli 614-992-&amp;857
or 814-592-2461 .

d•k pr81Criptlon"iiM181, will
the pa-son who pick8d them Up

•Lot Rantala

.

Jackson Pik• Gallipolis. 8 :30 to

915-4141

FUINIIUa
and MOii

FOODS

Complete houllholdt of turmt ure &amp; ant lquet. Alto wood &amp;
co•l hut••· Swtln's Futniture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; · Oliv e,
614· 448-3159.

BILL SLACK

NIASE CertHI .. Moci1MIC

5-4-89-1 mo.

64 Misc. Merchandise

Wlnh...-nr

WATER
·, SERVICE

.DEAD 01 AUVE
'

2282.

••lv

2 White guinea
895·3972.

•FIREWOOD

CHISTEI

WANTED

I

:~ .

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

. SERVICE

I

(614) 992-6472

" '..."

E~tlmet:M.,

6-16-lfn

A·w .. Gallipolit. Clll 81444&amp;,

\4'Fd !twt aiWIIYt tWyt w81:? Dry
up, ~I C. W. Dlviton.
Ptumbing • r ;enchlng. 114446-01159, lllte in evening or
r. morning.

&amp; Vicinity

. ..

S14 .1111\'. .

AUTO -

•~"Y
E. s Plfll*·

NC! SUNDAY

12

OliO. YAWY

VAUGHN'S

otherwilie rea-

PH. 949·2101
or 1... 949·U60

· The Overbrook Center is a new :·state
Of The Art" Skilled N11rsiJilg Facility .
which is now lookin~ for "JusfThe'R(ght
Person" to manage the ·position of ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSING.
since opening in October '6f 1988, 'overbrook Center has secured Medicare and
Medicaid certification, while achieving
tremendous census growth utilizing expe:
·rienced ·f rofessionals in a responsive delivery o service environment . To learn
more about this ream, please contact:
Mr. Mark Murphey
Overbrook Center
333 Page Street, P.O. Box 33
MidQleporr, Ohio 45760

(lllnt,

~r

Wanted To Buv

Cute krtten• need a home, pl ....

answ8f

CHEESE PIZZA .........~ •• !~:~.~.z•.... S2.29
HUNT'S "NO SALT"

VISA · MASTER CHARGE
HOUI!S: Mo.n.-Fri. 9· 7
· Sat. 9-6
Sunday

3

· TOP CASH paid fo• 1983 model
1111d newer used
Smith
B Lit:lt·fontlei:. 19 11 Eooc•n

it

.coil 304· n:J-6340

known 1ddr•• wu 615577

EVENJNGS

( .. f lOY -AI-DEE

otice

• ••free

~~

IDAH0-10 liS.

Parts &amp; Serilko On
Alllabs

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

an-

"Special Care For People Who ' Are
Specia} To You"

TOMATOES .............!P.-... 69&lt;

IY All SEIYICE CEIITD

Pric11"

ReaSOIIaltle

PH. 949·2101
or R1s. 949-2860

IN THE
plaint is for judgment on a
COMMON PLEAS COURT
note which io duo and poyaOF
,
ble. Vou are req'!ked to
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ower the complaint w~hin
HOME NATIONAL BANK.
28 deys efter.thel•t publl·
Pl1intiff C8tion of thie notice which
-vs.will be publi1hed once uch
ROBERT R . GIBSON and
week for oix ouccouive
PANSY GIBSON.
weeko. tho lilt publlcotlon
Defandanto wHI be medo on Auguot 18,
CASE NO. 89-CV-126
. 1989, and tho 28 deyo for
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
anower will commonc.o on
To Robert D. Glboon and that dote. ·
Ponoy Glboon, whooe 1111
In caoe .o f your failure to

COOKED HAM •••••••••• SLICED.'".Ib. Sl. 98

flESH 111Pl-6x6 SIZE

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

The object of thia com-

SHIEDDED.... .Ib. $2.19

CARROTS ....... J.tP.~....... 39&lt;

YAIDMAN MOWas
ECHO SAWS &amp; .._IS
OREGON IAIS, CHAINS

·'

11 Help Winted

CEUO PACI
'·
'

937- 8uffllo

•

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

BISSELL
BUILDERS ·

773-MII•on
882-Ntw H.ven
111-Letlrt ·

1

1

MEAT SALAD ..................~.!~. S1.6 9

1-12-'89-1 mo.

rr~~~~~~;~;lt.:i~~~=;:=~~ U&lt; 1005-31
N·tlll
CHAIN U~K FENCES
•ALUMI=~~N:IDING .
..I . " . .
•BLOWN IN
MOBIL.
INSULATION
HOME PARK
I
.
IISSEU ·
•Mo.bilit HomePana
SIDING CO.
'
·
•Mobile
Home
.... ._lullt

11 ·Help Wanted

Grandpa . .

HOMEMADE

~58-Leon

Business Services

love daily. I will n forget you. A lov·
ing husband. · dedi·
cated father and suppcirtMt gtandfether, he
is frequently 1hought
of and
griev11U81y
m"118dby ... Hell survived 1!Y hil
Mon-

WIENERS ••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••• l.~\•• S1·.89

Call 992-2772

'I .
Clerk of Courto ' I TilliS. I.L 6:45 P.M.
Meigs County Common
I SUN. 1.1. 1:45 P.M. ' . Filst $ecqdties
Pie• Court
DOOIPIIll
'
422 Market StrHt
171 12. 1 9. 28:
I 2 H.D. FREE with WUJIOftllld
181 2, 9. 16, 6tc
I pun:hee of min. H.C. Pact-·
P. 0. lox 111
1--....;..;........;;....;.;__-1,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-1 1 liP- Limit I coupon Jill cusParkersllurg,
WV 261 02
l tamer per binl)stSIIon.

(Denny) Cordero.
I ..,..._ the spirit
end memory of your

·,

Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

175-PI. ,.....,. ·

578- Apl!loGr...

918- Ch••r

.

· 7 -12-'89- 1 mo.

Get Results fast ~

.
P•112.4 ..,.. on the J.
Will. S . Hunt. ond J8yllter
prapertteo· Md

Oitt.

~14

"At

'

.2

241-Ria Orand•

Area Code

117-Coolvilla

Public -N.otice

Call

uz-MicfclliiPOrt

143-AratM• Diu.
378-WIInUl

COPY DEAOliNE DAY BIEFIIRE PUBliCATION
MONDA'¥ PAPER
-11 :00 A.M. SATUI!DAY
TUIIDAY PAPER
- Z:OO P.M. MONDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
- Z:OO P.M. WEDNESDAY
~URIDAV PAP'I!R
FRIDA'¥ PAI't1l
- Z:OO P.M. THURSDAY
lUNDA'¥ PAPER
- Z:OO P.M. FRIDA'!'

PUBLIC NOTICE
Adclnr,on. Inc., P. 0. Box
2189.
lhl.,d, Kerctullky.
411 01, heo oubmltted • coli
mining .,d real~motlon permh epplicetlon 1111115 to the
Ohio D o p - of Neturll
Reaourc., Dilllalon of Rec·
lemotlon. The oppMcetlon 1o
for an u-ground, room
.,d pi• mine. Tho uea to
bellffocted by •rfoceo,..
tiona lo loceted In l-Ion 8
and Froctlon· 3 of SellabUr(
T-nohlp. Melgo County.

4 ... -0alllpcilll
317-Ch•hlro
25~Gu,.n

•A ct...ified achMilern.-.t pltcld in The Deity Sentinel!•·
cept - clatHied • ....,. lutW.•• C•d and 11111 .noti-.1
'!fill elto ..,_. in tht Pt . Pl. . .m R. . .ter ~d the G•lli·
110._ Daily TrtbunL ,.achintower 11.000 hom•.

Public

Melgo Coumv

381 - VIncor~

I

M•on Co., WV ·
Ar. . Codi304-

Glllla County
Are1Code 114

Cortaintottl ®

Vinyl Siding
s.GIIIIo11 Guttor
Rljllacomonl Windows
Blown l111ulation
Storm Doon &amp;

$18 Per Day &amp;up
949-2526

following telephone exchanges ...

''7 ........... . _ ..... ......
.
•t...tlnll ie not r.panelbltfor •ror1tft1tr first dllf. IChHk
for enott fir• d., ed runt In p...,l, Call Hfora 2:00p.m.
dw ett• DUbllctUon to m*• correct~Qn .

tURKEY BREASTs·•••••• !.~•......: S2.9 7

.DS.£YE

Masti&lt; -

•Adl outlidil Melg~.. a-Ilia or M...on coufttl• muM: be pr•
'
POUCIES
•Re.-. • -10 diMouM for adl ~d In

You ,a. ·Wtlplwc•
able and wll live In
C.Ur hBirta for_, We
10118 and. .mile you,

Vegetable .prices·rise

.

NOW OPEN
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
WnH lOOMS AND
AI'AITMINTS FOI
i
.
RENT (By Day ar
~····················
••c•.
Classified pages cover the
WHk)

.Md :nvua!'·
"'I"' ~~~~r;•
' .

YIITHFIELD

INSULATION

CAMPGROUNDS

..

.'

9

r===::::;::::::::;:;:==;r-;:========~ 3 Ann!)uncements
.
OHIO RIVER
J&amp;L
Are you tired oftt.t •r•• in your

was struck by lightning In a small
Ponderosa pine fire In Arizona 's
Tonto National Forest.
The season's first fire death
became the subject of controversy Tuesday. A ~ conVIctfirefighter on California's Big
Sur fire was killed late Sunday
night by a falling rE'Qwood tree,
and a fellow crewmember said
. Tuesday the ll)en ba~ been
digging an unneccessary flrellne
so a visiting forestry official
would not see ·them sitting
· around doing nothing. The dead
firefighter was Identified as
Antonio Hernandez, 26, a father
of four from San Diego.
.
In Nebraska, two Forest Service slurry bombers · each .
dumped 2,000 gallons of fire
retardant on a 100,000-acre brush .·
and timber blaze. Without them,
said Disaster Response Team •
Coordinator Larry Nedrow,
"we'd bE' looking at weeks"
bE'fore the fire was under control.
"I've never seen anything like.
It," Deputy Fire Marshal Jerry
Larson said. "The Ponderosa
pine trees catch on fire and
explode, sending flames 100 to
150 feet In the air."
The fire was sparked by
lightning from a · thunderstorm.
Saturday afternoon at Fort Robinson State Park, which was an
Army cavalry post In 1877 when ··
Sioux Indian Chief Crazy Horse
\VaS killed by guarqs: AbOut half
the park's 22,0()() .acres . have
burned, dE's polling som~ 'of Nebraska's most scenic lands.
In Wyoming, firefighters
quickly controlled the first fires
of the season late Monday and
Tuesday In Yellowstone National
Park, scene of massive fire
devasiatiOn last year.
Under the temporary suspepsion of the· park's contrQverslal
nat ural burn policy. the fire~
were Immediately attac~ed by ·
hand crews and a . waterdropping helicopter.
.
. About 160 firefighters were
mopping up a 3,500-acre !Ire In
Wyoming's Brldger-Teion National Forest.

..

Announcements

Business Services

•twllll,
hil ~==
Enelda; ~hi
cHthn,John

KAHN'S PACKAGE

Sentinel-

Ohio

or II

...morl1l. H011~itll
Hats. Pomaroy,

f

-- · · --·......,-

�.v

14-The o.ily

LAFF-A-DAY

._ . . . t-......

44

for

C::
..... .uF-t:IOO.OOidt.
no
- ... . no dellv«ing•d nD

Twin RN•• Tow«·Housing tor
tho El-~. - clcoppod ., d
Oleablld. Loc•ed
~;town-­
town Point Pt. ..m. phone
304-176-1878. Equal Houoln g

lillolftMtolloop -for-~
IMr .... oloroowooll,llooLPN

room-IJ•h tPertmlnt.

c

Sltuetio.-.s
Wanted

45

1

U.ed

.,.,n.....

.

8

w-•··

dry·

Collf14-446-3712. · '
'

tten·-.

·

Aoonw for rent- WHit or month.
Starting It t1~ a mo. Oallia

l-IE'S 6tEN
PLAVIN6 FOR
A60VT A. .
VEAR ..

HDtoU14-446-9580.

W. c•• tor lldlrtt and handi_.,_ In our home. 2e ve-t
. , _.... LPN on t;: ..l. Low
loco,.. horn~. 'tal 114-II:Z.
1173 aft.- 7:00p.m. tor mor.
lnfl!r-..

-;=:::;:;:;::= = =

-:

115

Schooll
lnstruction

I"

31

Hames for Sale

IRoom•ndbeth.centrlhir. 12
.a-11 lind. Wlllktng diltlnc:e to
Pblnt Ple. . .t . 1304 875-

Ml t.lrt•ll: In my home. ~··o­
.. Mille ~· Ref•.,.,_
. .................. .... Ca.
: 114-246-1718.

•d•

7235.

32

. Hau• .. dTrai•RIP*· Un .....

pin.._ Plilltlng.lntide~ndout.

· plu""*'f. WIH pelnt ceiling~.

: 114-112·11818.

1981 Reel"""' Sedlonol21•61,
3 br .. 2 b•h. cent. N. must be
mawd. Call 814--"6-81&amp;• af·
t• e.

Will mow IMnt. fr• •imMe.

. 13041 112·3328.

72 ElooM mobilehame.12xll,
undlrplnnlng. porch. n. . King

woodburiW. t3200. Mull •II.
Clll814-38e.9181.
.

1 887 llhu It&gt; moli&gt;l• ho-. 3

MUST SELL Qw.,.; . . - g to
Florldo. 18M 14•70. 3 br .. 1

ING CO. reaommendl thll: you

1/ 2-b•h

on

rented lot. French

City B101&lt;eroga Call 814·4469340.

knOW". lnd NOT to tMdmoNt
· ttwough tN m .. untl you h .. e
· lnvelt._ed tha otr.lng.

2·3 br., ' nil• on 1 acre 1.-.ct
t280 mo. Outbulclngs. Cell
I 14-441-2411.
.
Trail• for Aant : Rt. 218 Call

114-216-1151.

For Mil or rent. 2 bedroom.
furnlshld. WMher-dryer, air,

t221' momh .,.., dopoolt. 114112·7471.

ohone !3041 45e. 1 B87. ,

For Sole or Rent, 19BI 2
'*"'oom 141:70 mobile honw.

.en

Country Mabile Hom• P.-k.
Route 33, North of Pom•ov.
Lots, rentllt, peril. 111• . Call

114-892-n79.

Mercl1anrlisc

..

.

SWAIN
,
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olve St. . Golllpolil.
NEW · I pc, wood group - •339.

Btnk w~h l!tlddlng. U49.
Full 1fn mll'trtM &amp; loundltion
ltlrtino- •ea. Raclln• ltllrtingtll.
.
USED- l&amp;dl. .
bedroom
DetQ. wringer w.1her, a
comphltellne of -u - furniture .
NEW• W•tern boot• t35.

Coli 614·245·5781.

.-cc-.on • .

446· 0475.

Workbo011 t18 • up. !Steel &amp;

For.. Sale: 10 spd. Huffv. Bika..

10ft tOI.) Call814·441-31 59.

County Appll ..ce, Inc. Good
und 8PPN-'CM and T.V. tats.

Fish TMk. 2413

Middtport. Would • o mjjut 1

mille .. off•- Clll Jeck W.
Cars.,. Ow'ner·Agent at 614992-2403., 814-992-2780.
8 Lln'a AMF Bowlirlg LAine tor
Mle. M.. on. W. V1 .1 Excel! ent

condttton. smaU down pavmn,
......owner financing 1N1i11ble.
P't'iced tor quick ••~ M•ke •
grell family op•Jtion. Must ...
by Aug. 1. C•ll Jacl!. W. Carsey.
Owner-Agent M 1-814-9922403., 1-814-992-2780.
'
Own your own ap.,.-el or shoe
store, choose from : jeenspartswear, ladies. men' s.
chihten· m•ernilv. large sizes.
. .,.C:Ie. d-'ctiW••· Mrobic. tw;.
d•t lin-ie or acc•sori• stora
Add color ari lly sis. lreli d

·witl h•• city

614-117· 3819.

Ashton

C~mp

Lulie Faye, Lud.a.

ID"e

lou

A~on.

fw• 2000 othlrl. Or t13.00

l•ge building Iota.
mobile hom• permitta:l, public
wat.,, priCII rea.u:ed. Ctr'de
Bowon. Jr. 304-171-2336.

one price d• ign•. mull tl.pridng diiiXIunt or f.-n;tv shoe
store. Ret~ _prleea unbeli.,ebla
for top qu.ttty sho• norm81tr
priced

one

C lvdo Bowen, ; r. 304-5762336.

8otmie •d Bill, St Mich-'•

BeY" H•.

bea~tiful

'

~lthrW•"ontaga publicwater.

nam• : LizCiaii:!Orne. Healtht•.

Forenz•. Bugle Bov. Lavi.

Tap

!NIIt• soon.

alrudv purch•ed. Gllrden.
r•aonable pricad. t27.600.

Y.r acre Camp Cont.;, Point
Ple•ant. tJII hookup. 304-6757611.

trom t19. to teo. Ov•

210 brands 2600 styl" .
t18. 900 to t29, 900: lnvattory,

ttlllnin~r • . atrt. .. grind

•a• or mor._ Cr1b Creek.
13041175-1603.

pp.ning. etc. Can optn 15 d.,._
Mr. McComb 14041859 0228.

18

2 GJMte lot Kirld .. d Gardens,

- d IO . . Ior\ 1304188:Z.27B 1,

Heal Eslale
31

Bfici.,cr 8Jtl:.. in A6o Gl'lftde.
Coli 114-381-9948.
·
1 br .. 2nd floor apt. nw city
park in dawn town Gell i-

ptlo/ t1 so. Coli e14-'146-0144.
., 814-446-7102.

rent.

C1rpeted. Nice lettint Laun*v
.fdl i81 IYIUtlbla Cell 114992-3711 . EO H.

Renl als

~ ..

lot with worklhed on
Jaeksan Pllc•Ciosa to 3&amp;. Call

41 .

114-~IOOS.

3 br.. -ionlI. 2 full
llropl-'buiiH• hutcll ....;i;C)OIO:' I
ov• • range. CA. city ..
C.U 114-~1-1714.
Sm .. t.. in oounty. New'tr
rarnodlled. Needl· llttle work. &amp;

F;lflll

61

t999 or 132.75/ mo. t&amp;O c ash
rebate. H.D. Bunk bedl8149 «
812 ..et mo. 4dr. chast 849 .9&amp;.
&amp; dr. chett $54.96.

22. You work too hlrd to paint
with anything lest. PAINT PLUS,
24115 J1ckaoo Ave. 304-67154084."

Mettrau ut 199. Bun:kies
t 39 . 95 . crib mattreases
t28.95

4x8 utility c•t. elect., equipt,
•:mo.oo. 13041 171·2111 .

9 MM Berrote $425.00, 1304)
876-8445, ...,. me111ge.

Rrewood -for .:.1e.' t30.00 pickup lo.t. call attar 8:00 1304t

418-1981 .

-·

House for Rent. Call 814·21e-

-3B

----·- - - - - - -

Hou• for rent or 11le on Lind
aontract. Pameroy, 2 bedroomt,
belement, c•pet. _ 814-742-

'

.

55. Building Supplills

j

•

g~WNIES.
0 1111 by NUl . Wl

Camper for Sale: 21 ft , h.;. air.
Call 114-256-1511.'

13041 17&amp;-2148.
1988 . CI:fllau

w~~

'

_S:upr~

Blldt

ow-.

178-2111.

3020 John Deere t i-ac tor / ,11915; 2010 John
Oe•e/ •34150;· John De..-e 3
pt:Mnt mower/ d91; v.,._a
round bll.-1 ,2181. Call 114·
286-8622.

lin-

For Slle 1984 Eagle 4 VVD, 1lr,

auto. Mun 1111. make off• [304
871-2137.
197&amp; Monte Carlo ac. cor:1d ..
palnt job. 63.000 . . ..
t1BOOOO. 1304)616-7118.

Uood Hoy
In tood
working oond, el10 nM John
Z28. · T·top0
Deere mower conditioner•. 19B3 Clm•o
Clldttl, · air cond.
Come ·see what we hllve. AM-FM
t4100. 00 flrm, 11141 317·
Agr100n lr'IC- John o.. e Sal• 7717.
In Mrvica Upp• River Rd.
GIIUpollo. coli 114-446·0475.
1978 Ford F260. Heovy li&gt;tv.
Pltrl1 fDr Wmall A or'B tractor, t1BOO .OO . 13041 882·
323---1304)116-3441 .
Hesston Roed. ,Baler, (304t 882·

3238. ., 200.00.

.

72

TNcks

63
Livestock
-~------~1I

•«»o.

1887 4.x4 Ford Raiog.-, Mll't·
uolrt&amp;800 . . Call 814· 2418284.

ATTENTION Hone Ownlfl. 1919 Chevy holt ton. 1 eyl. 3
~nt Plu1 • now ~rylng tec:k. apd . New tlr• shoakl • • Pttnt Plua. 2411 ~dlson Aw. h•u•t. Driven deity ptrh
.Pt. Pit. pl\ono 304-~76-4084.
truckle1200 firm. COli 114~2301. .. 114-246-1823.

64

Hay

8t

Grain

.'

1914 Chovrol• 314 1on PU.
PS/ PB. AC, cruloe. AM / fM .
l st..-eo. cemp• pack 111• E JIC.
Cond. CIIII14-. .6-M11. ·

'

Soptlc T.,k Pumplrilt t90, Gol·
llo Co. RON EIIA"'I ENTER·
PRIIES. Joobon. OH '1.81)0.
637·9828.

Rotary or .cabla toot *lllng:
complltedaamadllf.
Pump Ill• and eervice. 304-

, ...ry.1112balw. ...-odin
........,.,.. ... 2 . , .. c:.n
114-216-1141 , •.
ly _ _ , 382 Morrin Or., AI
brlc:lo_w.h3M , Ig.FJI .. 1
1/2 boll\ ..............Colll14-~-·lft·I'M.
In Olllo Cou~
2 br •• 1 "llh
v
Avolallfa-olllr.Coll1
-2000. or 11•~1211.

llo- -· ,

ntl.. from " ·

,.• • •. fHw 311r.,

•alt••"

:'.,~-:,r::e.';'A"'! .

-•
....

or -·17&amp;.3313. ·
~

·

42

Mobile Homn
for Rant

'Alfrllo Hoy, 140 A for llogo ar
chop. CIIIAndr llolor. - ...
F•lll. Rt. 31. 304-137·20 tl by
Ju~ 10.
·
··

Ono -oornt.r•hod opt. vory
cl.., .. d nice. No , .... 304876-140n
·

11 PorCon1
Perm. lit.

-- ·- --.--- . .......

---

71
Z ledroo,ril furnlahed .t. ·
t100. 00 dopoolt ...........,..
J04-17fi.Hoo.

1878 Chw...o. four -

club.liJ

Vinnie reMns to
.t h, Orglnl~lld Crime Bureau
on ,his own terms.,R) Q
11J .Leny King Uvl .
II) MOVIE: Hatdbodlea IRl

•a

Zenh:'h 1110 •rvldng most oth•
br. . dL Hou• cllll.
10ma

w.v.

op_plllne&amp; ,.,....,
304&gt;
576-23180hlo 114-. .6-2414.

ldt-

Bocorlc:ol. . - . . .
..0:
throorn. ropl_,_ "-Ins
co....... ctry,..ll. -omlo Jn. .llollor\ oil rernoclollns 304176-2440.

82

(2:00)
.
ao30 • w 1m Knlgh1 '' Day•

BARNEY
BOX OF BAKIN'

8t ,.ting

&gt;

cc;;:::::::2 .

SODEY !!

·,

'

C·ARTER 'S PLUMBING
AN 0 HEATING'
COr. Fourth an:d Pine
O.Hipolil. Ohio
Phone 114-. .6-3188 or 114-'
441-. .n.

84

"I don't want

any pepper or maple fiY'UP,
thank you."

J_ ..___ _

II

'

..

, Hank·hila the/ackpot whim
he asks a mill onalresa to
marry him. D .
e(JJA~OtdHe­
Henry sees Ann and Edward
share a warm embrace. 1;1

I BET ONE

Plumbing ·

~

'

Electrica I

8t

Celebttlltla Olfllage

Ronnie t.,1ilsap, Tammy
Wynene and Mickey Gilley .
offer a personal look a1 their
lives.
10:00 CIJ 700 Club
.
(II 1m -ml \!Ice
Crockett and :rubbe
181eguard wllneiB In· a
kingpin's murder lrl~J 1;1
(Z) (!) FollOw The
Y -·
An
ln-18
. llpeclat (1 :00) .
'
(II Clllna lkech Tile
Vietnam axpa~enca Ia
.reveakid thru Ialka with real
veta. (R) 1;1
18 0 lleme~:'!llf f
.(!)IE-Ing
e!D Wleeguy VInnie re1ums
· to the Organized C~me
' Bureau on his own 1erms. (R)

e

Refrigeration

"-riC•

-e

R•ldlntlll or commercial wir·
ing. New ...-vice or rtplir1.
Licenlld llectridan. ·Ridenour

Eloctrlcll. 304-176-1718,

-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

· ..... li4-

_,..., ... ,:ooo.

·-... --·....

11ea v -... -1m -Itt
apple red ehaft drive low Watteraon' • Wlter Haullno.
rnl•/t1300 Oolllpollo. ·Col Re•on ... e • • vollme • ·
- .... 2.000 to 4,000 .... ...
1.14-. .1-1008.
1111 liZ 1 000 LTD K.w-~ Coii30.176-2B11.
oupor ct- oxo. oond.. 13.000
ml , t1:J(I0080. Coii104-17612BI or 11.216-1011. ·
Upholstery .

....

87

, · ' , ..·.lltlr 11. ,..

·'-

"
Adv•IOittllllll In your choeen Held of
, In
...._.!f~ in IIIII yur 1 1101, blglnt~ with 1 minor - · you
may ~ICI!II - . 1 promo11ona In
I
·~.:lc.l;{iJ
.,..., II) People 111111
"

11
-!l'lfii-IIIOOitlaatwiHbefavor·
ably ~liP!

olr

Hoopenn~~n H~rry

Ill WliegUf

Auto'1 For !!ale

;;~. tiOO.OO. Coli 11041176-

(II

Ron'oTY S...loo. opoclll!llngln

2.000 ..... tlollll•l• !lh&lt;&gt;no
304-17 .. 2311 or 114-. .64018.

Hoy for .... 7 t - l&amp;le In
field, -.Udlne ~tlo door
ttOO oo -~· I
• 2aa
· , 1917 KXIO. E - • · -ndl. ·-~
•
·
.tlon. Col 114-ltl-8011.;

Fully furriohod g•og•-'· An
u111U• pold • - t lloctrlolty.
-1¥
!Odocorotod • clprllod.
Dop.Aioo3--troii•.Cal
114-~1111. or 114-446-

i

IIIUB02

Potrlc:lcl Wol• Houlln'g a...1oo. .

Ono boclrcom fur•hod -'· o1 .
, . . . . . . . . .. _ , .., llr. 304176-2722.

_71':'2_._
. - - - - - -12110 moMa home. 2 IR .
t-od3mll•lromt-.. uz1
monllt. W•• oold Coli f14-1018. 114-~2012.

'

'

MISS
" THE'qclNG
SHOW."

ol the mosl exciting
enlertainmem blockbusters
of the year feaiUrlng
superstars from th8 worlds
or fllm. music and comedy.
Taped live In London. (2:00)
1:30e(JI Juat The Ten Of ua
Marie's sisters think the guy
she likes len't gOod enough
fOr her. (R) Q
9:00 8 (II 1m Nlghl Court Art
enters Christine In the Miss
BuHalo Queen Pageant. (R)

takea on e moonlighting gig
playlnJI. sax Jn·a small jazz

-

Mf» ll'klk hou .., 2 Cll 111'81&amp; 2
br.. -~~ counny ldtcft.n w•h

'

I

WHAT .oo I KNOW
A130UT QU,Al.ITY
TELEOYI510N~...

· QL.IALIJYg;; TE;LEVI510N
CAN !:!&gt;E: lf"'PROVED~

, Moet~lll

3 bedroom In Mldcl_,, Clooo
114-112·31 28.
Bmal hou• for rent. Fwrtilt.d.
Prefer 2 oGJito. Can li4-112·
7711

'

'r'OW DO 'YOU rHINi&lt; 11-\E

Fatty Tr" Trimn*lo Rump
·--1. Call 304-176-1331.

~~:::.·--

Furnished 2 beGoom apt.. ,.~
frMce Md HQ.Irlty depoelt
roqulrod. HoY"" 13041
112·3217,

Myaterlea Explore the theory
that Pal Garren never sl&gt;ot
. Bill~ the Kid . (fll D
(J) ~leaalorial ~aeball
(i) All 81ar lleM...II
(Z) (!) Live From Uncoln
Cetlter GueSt artist vtolinisl
ltzhak Pe~man perlorms with
lhe orchestra. (2:00)
(II Oro!ldng Pllne Tile
·
kids throw a surprise
anniversary P8~!1rJason
and Maggie. (RJ
Qll
Jake&amp;
Fetmen Wealthy
··
busine"man murdered in his
'home; It's not as it appears.
(R)
.
1811]) FaiH Wltneat
Controversey and mystery
ainlinue to surround the
·case o,.army physician. ·
JeHray MacDonald, convicted
In thl bMal murders of his
wile and childr.en. (2:00)
@PIImeNewa
® MOVIE: Supennan Ill (PG)
(2:30)
'
II) Mulder, She Wrllte

Now
8:0&amp; (]) Prlnce'a TiUal Galli One

~~w~·~IN~
· T~uu~--~~~~~~~--~-.

J• JWolorS...Ioo lwi.mmlog

1011 of

to IChooll and ltOfft. C.l

.

18
. 83 8· 10 pldcup. long bed
brJghl rod/12800. CoH 814J711. 2721.
.

:-27-~'-:8_·-=-·-,---- - -

7:35 (I) AndY Grllfllh
1:00 (I) MOYIE: Peace II Our
Proleulon (2:00)

~NeahviU.

S'!VEEPER 1n d Mwlngmochlno
ropolr, pOrto 1nd ouptlll01. Plc:lo
upend diiNifY, Davtl Veouum
Claaner. one half mila ·up
Georg111 Creole Rei· Call 81,(,,

R • R Wol• a...1oo. Pools. ·
cllterns, w~11
. I madl••
1.000 or 2.000
notfollvory.
Call 10•17

813 3rd ovo. O.nlpollo. 2 br..
a.pMad. dupta, 1 112 b .. h
. . , _ otoroa~ t210/pluo dop
• utl•l•. Colll 14-z4 8-9IIS.

Lt.SS·AfaJT &lt;taR~ ...

Wlt•PfoOflno

cabinets. n.w 1towa Md
refrigerator. "' " porch, .full
b•ement. g•oga one flO«. No
PI*•- Not more then 3. t210.
Pluo "'"-1•. .-rky doooolt
Rat••'*
on '*luett. Phone
114-112·1212.

114-448-3107.
,_,

.I OOIJT G(])SIP... l!XlJT
MAKE SMALL W.K ..I'.IA OOT
lkJlt.RE.'STED I~ SFORl'S CR
R:llr!'l6 .. 1 COOLDJ..J'T CAR£

ll"•.,.

~

._h.

IZ.

- . . -.......... h•l-lng
trl_..,,,_24v-. .. 'lila blat
" • nll~n ur:-••lns 1:-M
• 0 4 • 1 71 · 4 14 for frat

--··

youlllfl fll

..

-- - --- - -· '-----·--~-----,----~-.1.__-'-"--·

. llholtanena \'Qw

"nn

,...,C

WI
1t1 eo
~;':
lion IIICt ...... C.'-" trtilt
IO a bfrlhdlr gift. Senti lot ~ Aafro. lat · .'

-

'!!'

J;.=.11111.-r you'll~le

mailing $1 lo. Astro-Graph, clo !his s hould be very adept today at picking
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.
up parlial ideas or suggesllons of olh·
OH 44 1P1;3428 . Be sure to s la1e your
era and 1a;loring them into something
zodiac sign;
construclive to suit your own needs.
LEO (July 23-4111- 22) The means will
us&amp; your gill.
become available In this lime frame lor
AO\IAAIUS (Jill. 20-Fab. 19) Focus
you lo undertake sOme artistic changes
your attention and efforts at thi s time on
you've been wan11ng 10 make In your
your inost meaningful objecllve. If you
surroundings. These touches will
are s ingi&lt;Hnlnded. you may come up ·
brighten things up a bit.
with a rather ingeniOus plan.
.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) The more
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mai'CII20) If you do a
you have lo do to keep yourself busy fo·
kindness lor anolher loday afld you feel
~ . the mora eHectlvely you are likely
It wasn 't adequalely acknowledged or
lo perlorm. Don't be afraid lo lackll! a
appreciated, don't lei 1hls dlsiUrb you,
hea,Y achedule.
bec&amp;UIIC1 lhls peraon will reclprocale at
IJIAA (lepl. n-Gc;t. 23) You're 111111
alaler dale.
undiw ex1r..-nely ' lavorable condillona Alllltl ·(llorall 21-Aprll tl) In your
c0(1C81'111f10 where your malarial ln1er· business or commercial lnvolvema~ts
eoll. Be on your toe.s . because posalbli· · today, don'l be too eager to jUmp at 11111
111es·(or galne could develop In several flrsl price oHered. You're likely to fare
arau.
'·
H you haggle I bll.
·
·
ICOAPIO(Oot.lM Nov.22)You11beal · TAUIIUI (April »Mar 20) When neyour best today In llltua11ona where you, gotlatlng a matler of Importance today,
are 11111 primary a.rthorHy or manl!ll"'. eachalipyoutakethallhowaawllllng· ·
·Your -llhy 1110 leed, nol to be num- n. . to compromise will be rrutl by two
.118red.,ono IIIII ranks.
·
, otllplln raturt). Succeaalul della will be
IAGm~ (Nov. 23-DeO. 21) The bulltupongM-and-1ake.
Mlil COUp(l ol .dlya your progreaa can . Qlllll (.., 21..- 20) The profit or
· lie - - - - Improved H you keep
:::~~~~~=I~
0
111
your
work
11
concerned will be there.
80
1
oul ep
Wha1 ,,.~. u a ~-"le could tum ln1o a ·,

Grephpredi!:tlonllotlha,...._by ·

!=

:na ~ Y"';~sell. T~.:J'
.

OliN !Dec.. 22-.1811.

111

c-:•:
"

You. ,gusher.

u""'

. 1;1

®Nn8

~N811Countrr

Chilli .
• (J) (I) • (II 1111

·=

01 St '•boma
0 .........
eY•CenleAIW
1t :Ill (J)
Tonlgllt lllow
A CUs

by THOMAS JOSEPH
44 "To Helen"
ACROSS•
poet
1 Inscribed
45 Tendency
slone
DOWN
marker
1 Vendor's
6 Cap
selup
9 Lloyd
2 Purport
Benlsen
3 Spare
is one
4 Medieval
to seed
coaling
·French'
Yesterday's Answer
poem
12 Prank
5 Bound; 20 Entrance 32 "South
13 Jl1ry list
surround 23 Canaanite. Paclllc"
15 And nol '
6 Recording deity
hero
16 Recline
ma$.m
24
Fold
33
Suppressed,
18 Moslem
as
potentate 7 Brazilian 25 Stephen
bird
King
'
evidence
19 "Puff the
Is
· 34 Disburse
Magic - " 8 Mosque
tower
one
36 On bended
21 Bob's
11
EmlSS!iry
26
Make
comedy
14 Kind
oneself 39 Tokyo's
par1ner
of
cake
heard
old name
221nqulre
17 Cuttlefish 27 Oppose 41 Malay
23 - nolr
gibbon
fluid
29 Owed
24 StK:kum
27 Provide
service
28 Actress,
-Velez
29 Edmond
O'Brien
film (1949)
30 Summer,
in Caen
31 Excepl lor
35 Gotcha! ·
38 Egyptian
weight
37 Tourisl's aid
31lln name
·
oniy
40 Upper-crust
42 Ill·
mannered
43 Reception

CF

JUH

.
W · JUMZD

HU .,.

QZ

HUFFZK

WFCKZ . DCXLHDB.

tH

FLUVDK

QZ

•

a

XGZWH

(0:30)

8UIA .-,

• Cnloll I CIIIM

CROSSWORD

' HLCF

.

8 TIIH l'1'tlm T1le lmltalde

P.L ,No N-.cl

Plta,..-

~ ""· NIIWSI'APBR Erm&lt;RPRWI ASSN.

7;ti .

Se~~&amp;llllll

IIJ=onlgltt
...........
. Fnow ,

get into tbe biddU)g vulnerable against
. non-vulnerable opponents, .have tak: ing tricks and a ~ot suit, not points
, that may be wasted in the play
·
· Jo.,.. Jll&lt;o/Jy~-. 'JIICOby.., - - u11
'JIICOIJy .. c.rt1 Gu&gt;ott' (irritt«r rrllb JtJ.tofber,
lbe "'~ OOrrold .ht:oby) .,.. ...., ovoltoble ot
- . a&gt;tb .,.. publiMied by

CJI\'II1'0QUOTE . .

IGmll n Ll•lll::e
1n1UI'e
Hila

. 1(1).,
Ill=:=·-••

I!

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

L _;':·..

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is J!Sed
. for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the le.-.gth and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dif~
re~ .

e ® lleiMf Miller

11:00~· Peper

to ·dummy's queen and East's king.
East cashed the heart ace and K-A of
clubs, and led a third club. South d~carded a spa&lt;!e as West r~ffed. The
spade re.turn was ru(led by El!•t,. and
West st1ll had two more dtamond
tricks coming. The contract was down
three•for 800 points -:- a nice result in
view of tbe fact that East-West could
not make more ·than a part-score.
\Vhal'$ the .m~ral? you·~ going ~

AXV,LBAAXR
Is LONGfELLOW

o-.

e

I.

DAILY CRYP'roQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

.

=
11.=11111

sovm

room

10:011 ~ MOVIE: The llluel
(R) (2:45) ·
10:30

Although the widespread use of .
point count has made bidding more ex· ! WEST
EAST
+s , .
act, players weaned on this evaluation 1 J 10 9 8 4 2
• ·A K-ll 6 3 2
method sometimes err in their com' I • J
·
875
petitive jud1ment. in today's deal an : t K Q 10 8
+AKU
unnamed expert sitting North looked , J 5 ·
at his band and saw 15 high-card
points. He 6Juld not resiSt coming in
+K73
·•1o 9 7 4
with a takeout double after~&gt;had
• 9142
responded with one spade. Eas now
+7!
made an "action" bid - he
ubled.
He knew he had a line hand for • ~""­
lnerable: North·South
fense, and he wanted to encour
r: East
partner to double the opponen for
penalties. Sure enough, although South
· Welt
Norlb
Eu1
tried to bluster a confident two diaI
Dbl.
Redbi.
monds, West was happy to double.
Dbi.
All
pas1
North had no place to run.
West got off to the best lead . DeclarOpening lead: • J
. e~ won the spade king and led a heart

+

&amp; ChaM

ec

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNO
Unconditional Hllllmo
tee. Loctl ;.,.ana. ..,,.hid.~
Fr• lltlmatM, Call ooHec(
1· 814-237·0481. d., or night .
A o g • r • 1 • • · • me n t

for S 'a le

1177Ch..,y, C10, 3ood .. 210.8
runs good.
CIH
• 14-84~2117.
OIL

Home·

~ Crook

· ··

a

lmpi'Ovaments

441-0284.

T-lopL loodecl 13041 e7&amp;.
1765"' 176-3241.

7 ft. hiV condl-

·81 .

·

IRI tsenaon

8 CI!o!llli Unaolved

-.

Lovetv 2 bedroom hou• In
Pom•oy. Ltvlng room, dininG
room, 111 ~peted. klteh1n wltFt

Go• · 1•110
,.... retrlger•
lot with
•had•
tfMii.
Clbln•e.
tor • .., . . Coli lor appoint·

a::J) M•A•S•H .

THE iXr,ESS ~tfE'CJ&lt;OVT
WiTtf· MI~JtOWAVf

mi. E. Of Rio Q,., . . McwlntMutt Mfl. t19, 000 firm. Call
I 14-286-1304.

3 or 4 lA hou•. l•oe tern •.,
room. H"l
City Scho*.

e ·(JI UP Today
aJI JeopardyI !;I

1111

Motors Homes
8t c;:ampars

•

1978 Mu11:ang II , h•chiMick,
,.,..., naw pert~; , . . . •little
Work. good worktng c•. t400.

Slllllfiii!S

&amp;189.

b••

40\i ' x6'x3.- angle. Iron. C B
l'tatk)n with antinna and 80'
oo.:ill cable. eell (30•1 17~
2290.

AN wood counb'y dinltte let, 3
chairs • bench with mltching
hutch t618 or &amp;24.81 mo. t76

79

·=
I'IIJI ICtoea!IN

TilE' FAS'T LANE "
•s G"O&amp;Nti TH~ouGH

/

Joop pOrtowMhw-ondtlroi.
304-876-3248.
'

+AQ8
•Qs
+AH
+QI086t

+

(0:30)

1985 Ford E•cori. 43.000
miles. excellent co nditlon.
t25oo: Coli ,,.,28&amp;.1311ef·

Morque. ·1986 """
tlonor/ tl28 . Call 114· 261· -c:ury
equlpt. 1
•s.soo. 11041

•le now going on at Paint
20 p• cem oH regul.price on lnterklr •d exterior
Plttaburgh Ptints. Sale.ndiJutv

Wo·od group• 1319 or
t17.31/ mo. 3 peieesofe chair.
loveteat t799, or 131 . 90/ rna.
With tao rebate. coffee a. end
t.bl• t7&amp;1et.

1983 Camaro BertinCtl, nice
... nd .. Call 814-441-2111.

1983 ll&gt;c:lo Sky-k Sun root.
8 •peed. 1.8 engln• o.. to
Income kala. ... for &amp;,1 800.
114'112-2331 . .
.

'
Farm Equipment

lnt•n~tlo.,..

All new top quality,

7 !PC- Potter B111et BA .. suite

1811 Choiy Clobf ... . CL. 4 dr ..
thlrp. automatic. · PS, PB,
AM/FM SI•M.. AC, etuile •
11•. Cill 11 4-38e.8240. or
. , .. , ... 8760.

Plymouth Valorle,
I hiVe • n.w-ld-. 2 row oorn 1176
tBOO.OO.
13041 176-1082.
pick•. e111c. cond . E· lru•h Hog.

usa cell. 814·448·3168,.

Financing available.

. Et?NJE TIIINfcS &lt;'LIFE

Normt

+

(J) Renegadta/TNT Montier
TRICk Challenge Serial
.·
· From Loulivllll, KY (T)
(i) Enlet181nmen1 Tonight

~7:00p. m,

&amp; Live,loci-,

Moblle 'Hame frame. with some
good web and floor. 65x1 2.
0200. 6'14·7•2· 3033.

At. 141 in Centenary, 1/ 4mi. on
lincoln Pk. Mon-Set : 1·6, Sun;
12· 5 , Open After hts. until 9
p.m. for appoimments. So gNe

Pomiac 400 big b!Octc wtth
Cart«· Clrborltor for llle Or
trod•"" omoltlltoc:loC~wy. Cal
114-3Si.M47. ·
'

11-.

.:.:..:...:.:.:..::....::.::..:.....=.:;::.:_ _ ,

24 hro o 1·800·345·0848,

VI'RA
Furniture &amp; Appliance~

IXC. cond.

IndividUal gular l••one. be- l 71 Chwlttl 4 Ofl auto. 1olld
glnnen, ...-a. ... lllrilt. Bnd·' -bodr. *210.00 or belt off•.
c•dio Mull" 114-~0187, I 304-876-211~.
Jolt Womolov lnotructor. 114- . :::-::-:::--:-::-:-~-:---­
«&amp;-8077. Lir~,ll~, openings.
'84 Grand Prix LE. eir, cruile,
tilt. PW. Pl. cloth lmerior, high
loldwlh p10..o. prioonogotlll&gt;lo mioo 114-387:0122oltor5o00
King trumpot tiO.oo. 13041 PM.
175-7734. to"'om•oogoo
-:-:-:::-=.,..-::-----1978 VW Ra-. , _ point
tiOO.OO. 14 ft Suroy 351'1'
Mercury and tr~~il• •10o.tjo.
Call 304-176-7418.

a

e .." glllt front IJ.In cabinet
•269 or •13.156 / mo. t26 r&amp;

Homes for R .e nt

.1.-....L-..L.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

By James Jacoby

~TopCetd

1il7 Ford T.. rus, ' 4 dr., cleen,
...,...,otic. PS. Pl. AM/FM . POOR BOYS TIRES. 304-1761111. • cru loo. AC. light 3331, front end 1llnement
-114-38e.8780.
· con 11"' 38&amp;.8240. ., t11.91, 4.000 vood ullod tlroo.
..... tlrel, n!IW' ......

J•ck•Dn Ave.

'

SLimmer special on 89 p~.
Huge 19131' pOOl. Huge .dack.
fence, filter wari'enty . Install•
&amp; finW'Icing 1v1ll~e. Call

rebel: e.

ptu1

!• .•

35 W. opt . 2 br., 1 bll~ prlvote
andoeed pMio. CloletogrCM*Y
store~ ••hopplngcem•. !Nat.,,
sewer, trash lrovlded .
0286/ mo. Coli 11 '146-8727.

2 badroom Ap11. for

Homes for Sale

121110 mable home for

Large upstlin apt. 2381stA\otll.
Kitchen/ rtove &amp; refria•Mor.
t280/ mo-pluo dop. Utl~l• •
ref. No pOll. Clll 114-4464928 . .

Complete !he chuckle quo•ed

~y fill ing in tile missing word s

BRIDGE

7:11&amp; (]) ~ndy Grllllth
7:30 G (II Family Feud

*•·

1 987101dod. TO'(oto Sui&gt;row~h
100.00J) mi. w..-anty . EJCC.
1hapa lee cw at Jumba, Ria
Gr., do/ t13. SOO. Colt 114246-9843.

, Instruments

SWIMMING POOLS t11B8 .

~/ U1ed

Houaehold fUrnishing. 1/ 2 mi .•
Jerricho Ad. Pt. Pleaunt, WV.
coli 304·e7&amp;-1450.

PMw paint, new

toed. 13041 176-2193.

.

One Br., UnlunHhed ipt . .-nge
II refrig. provided. W.t•. sewIQ&amp; 6 g•blge paid. Oepo1tt
Roq' d. CoM 814- . .6-.3U

•

The real raaaon people blame things orf previous gener•
t ions is that they know there's only one olher CHOICE.

II) Mlllml Ylca

Cofi·I14-37S·2802. .

c•

••I

Aeg.no,, Inc. 2 BR aptrtm.,t,
new plush c•pet. ntw paint,
uti~i• prnlllt, pol d. t175 mo.
304-175-5104 or 304-8766386

_

_...;..;;;;;..;.;;.;;,
.
. . .. Riches - Hobby - BlOck - VIctim -

OMoneylrn.
9 AndY Grllllth

llvo - · com-. 38 11&gt; -or
u - 1011 t111n 40 hro. 13041
1983 Oldl Cull- Sup.... o. . 882·2089.
loaded. ••c. cond. · low mi.
t4BOO. Coll14-448·2390of·
t• 5 p.m.
76 Auto Parts
8t Acces.Ories
ForSIIoo19100ml40,000ml.

AKC regiltered Ollehl hu"'d.
1hote. worJMd. heilth gulrln·

,_k.

Propet'ty for Nle. 1980 14x70
Sehutt Mobile Home. EJ£etlenl
oondltian. Central · air. \16nyl
underpinning. 10 acrn of
grouod, 1 c• g•aga etora8e
building free a•. \Niter well,

L.-L....L-

eiiZ
~-~~~
c In Clnclnnell
.18 ® WK11P

11U Gurmn Pontaon: baM,
trelt«. stove Md ,..,lgerator.

_.,,. !rirfu:•l - - - - - -

Sx with

LAYNE'S FU RNrrURE

PICKENS FURNITURE

1304) e7a. 7270.

1971 Chovelle 310. Southern" 1878 Coachman c.imp•r.
c•. E.:: . cond. Call i14-HS.:· sleeps 1. AemCMble ltCMt end
table. awning. portU.e toil&amp;
.....,,~
4123.
good aandltion. t1000. C.H
1915 Chwy Ole&gt;Vell, 2 dr., 114-982-7871.
57.000 mi l t1800. call 814AK C regilt•ad Blue
mB-2728.
18 ft. prowl• r.Monebt• Cap
Heller spar-ed. fem81a
• 14-992-7813.
.
i3041 171-5110.
1913 G..,d Prix. PS. PB, AC .
Mile Pom..-enl-:_n puppy. 3 t&amp;.whell. AM -FM radio, new 23 fl compor t2.SOO.OO. 304month old. not registered. trOO: Alldng *3000. I 14- 992· 77~1131
3361•ft• ep.m.
t100.00. 13041 8B2· 3110.

Home &amp; car computer disk
player with remote mmrol &amp;
Sof11 lnd chlira P,iced from battery ..ck. eskinglt100. Call
139&amp; to -1 996. T•bl• •so and 6 14-379·2183 Olllor 5 p.m.
•hop and moviM. 114-._.&amp;
up to t125. Hlde-l·bedl t390
21118. E. 0 . H.
to till. Rectiner1 t221 to , 1 12 ~ of 8'x1 1 ch81n links teMce.
1371. Lamps t28 to t12S.
TownhoUie A..,.mtnt1 • 2 Dlnettll •109and up to e49S. Coli 614·2&amp;6-8218.
Br.. 1 1/ 2 bot'- CA.. clo· Wood table W•6 chairs •285 to
Changing tlble/ 110; Bab¥
hwli•h•. dll~l. priltMe ent78S. Dook t14S upto .S375.
t7; misc. baby lt1m118A II
dooed plllo. pool oiiVII'O&lt;Jnd. Hut~" MOOendup, bunkbedl
aep•ate. Call 81•-24&amp;Wet • · ~. • tr81h
ded. complete w-mattr..... $295 or
51e9.
Stertii'1Q 11: • 289 per mo. c.n
.-.d up to t395. Baby beds
814-317· 7110.
•110. Mettre.., ortiox;.,rings Uncoln Welding machine 2150,
t.ll or tWin t78, firm tea. and 260 AM PAC. AC -DC variable
Furnished ct.. 1 br.
2 BR
t98. OuHn IMI t 27tii &amp; up.
-{u..d 50 hounl. 1 shop
1980 N11hul 14X70 Of*'da, *250. Util~l• pe;d 243 Jodt· King 1310. 4 drftllter cheat t69. Yofggl
oon PI&lt;. Glllipolil. colll14-446- aun cabinet• e. 8 , • 10 gun. ta~e 4'x9'6 " 11! steel. ideal for
3 ton C .A .• 2 P«Jn:h•.
welding shap. Cell 814-._.84418 aft• 7 p.m.
underpinning. Wll8htl- •d dryer.
Bob¥ mllltr-. U8 &amp; t45. 7888 . .
ltereo. fun51hed. Wit in bar. on
ltd frtm• $26, Queen Size
r.ntel lot t14.000.0(1. 13041 · Furnilhld. Clbl*' T.V. utliti .. , t3&amp;. &amp; king fr.-ne S&amp;O. Good Sliding glan door, wlndaws, &amp;
~ict
Idea
a
bachelor.
a.
..
t
i77~5421 .
selection of bedroom suttes, guttering. C1U 614-448-7498.
ful RtvarvR In Kan&amp;Jga. Fo•metal cabinl'tl. headboards $.3 0
t•s moble Home
C.H
and up to •e6. ·
Big Dakota Farm Home built ·on
814-. .6-1102.
vour lot. •z•.995 • Up. Call
35 Lots 8t Acreage
Days llml II CMh With 1-e14-886· 731 1.
Sh odv Lown opts. 728 Second 10
approved
cr.tlt. 3 Miles out
Ave . Furnished efflclenciM BulrNille Rd. Open 9 A.M . to 6
Flex steel cauch. 90 inches. Ike
lncludel wa· Woodltnd.132acr•l t3&amp;.000, 1'tlrting•ltlt171.
P.~n. lhru Sot. 614-446new, best offer, Call 114·448ter
&amp;
a•baa•
Call
814-44-•
0322.
AI. 7, below EIA'Ikt. c:lll 814- 4107. or 614-446-2802.
8172.
441-4416 after 7 .P·""·
Valley Furniture
lAnnox ZV2 ton central air
2 br, apt ., ctntrlll eir. dllhw11tw
O.J . Vr1ti1e Rd .. 2 t250 / ma. on Grlhm School New 1nd uMd furniture and conct«:ioner. goad co,_.ltlon,
building Iota. Approx. 2 •cr• Rd. Coli 614-446-3888 or 814opplloncos. Coll614· 446· 7572. complete with line set, 1nd " A"
Hours 8 -IS.
·
each. Call 614-246-9&amp;86 ~•ft• 446-. .91.
con, e3oo. Col 614-245·9218.,

4 o30,

~ ~soo.oo.

Home central 1ir, runt good:
boot oHer. Call 61•·317·0248.
cklal disk drive. color monitor,
with numerous gam-. IIIG.ICI•
donal. &amp; blank dit et. Ask·
;ng/ s1100. Calll14· 379-2183
tfter 6 p.m:

Cr•t Motel. 814--·739B,

1978 17' Storcnfl Trttutl. 120

.H .P.I .O. MercruiMr. EIIC. Cond.

Point PI-om. 304-17&amp;-2083.
10 goloot up e14.991nd 10111
compllll:e t43.2S.

Uke new Tan6;' 1000

Upper Alver Ad. beslda Stone

"1871 Gl••-• 18' 140H.P .. .
-hru ,wlndlhlol&lt;l t3,200.
Ill• I oOO. 30.• 176-3813

like new. etec: cream ..Perator,
1pring tooth h•oow Call 614·
379-2502.
.

n•

ar• NJrsing ~m· $40.000. or

Chwy Monro Carlo/ CliO. Can
114-246-1118.

AKC Bluett puppi•. Aaectv to
~I F. . A. B.,OIIum 114-117·
' 18. .
"

•us.

yw . Corn• Cole~ndThirdSt ..

18'l0 Dodge Ch•gor Rt. 383
Mogn,.. ( opct./ fiOO. 1971

Pure bred Walk• Coonhound
pupa. t30. C'aii14-89:Z.2BI2.

Uted IIIWn mower. rtding mow:
••· tiller. tTIC:tor••
Agracon Inc. John O...e &amp;atli
&amp; Service, Gltlllpolls, call 814-

dr-.

44

Q

8:~5 (]) ·Carolllumell
7:00 CIJ Falher Murphy
8 (II PM Mllgazlne
(J) 8pottaCenler (0:30)
. (i) e(JI CWrBnt Affair
(Z) (!) MecNIIII/ LllhNr
Newalfour
1111
a~~ Whtel 01

Auto's For Sale

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Yoh&gt;
cl• from t100 Fordo. Mar·
~ . Corvetta Chwy1. Bur·
plu 1 . Buyers · Qui de ( 11
IIC)6.817ol000 E... 8 ·10188.

AKC Aeailt•edCoclc• IP~nlll
pup1 . -.. uff· blond . Shots,
wormed. rwotiV . Coli 814-lle.
8181 . .

F_o r Sale: 4 n*rored . slillng
closet door1, Size 24" x , 80".

lNMg room luitM-t198-•&amp;99.

In'*'

hauM h• 4 IP~menta with
potlfttill income 17,800. P•

71

'

For Sll a: Dog Hous•llllil:". 1
11 2 mil• out Rt. 1•1. Clll

For Sala · Concrete and Pl•tlc
septic tanka. All sir... AO~
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Joel&lt;·
oon. OH. 1·800.537· 9528. ,.

T••

lnvellmiM Propa'tyl 2 atory

'

..-,ilelchlirs· new or uted. 3 114·441 - 0593 . Wayno
•
Rogers Medie~~l. 180().88&amp;- Shoernlk•.
2104,

Household ~oods

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
W11he,., !tJyltt'S. refrigerators.
ring••· Skaga• Appliances.

1981 New Moon 14x70. •II
Own your owtt epp1rt1 or .thoe .. ectl'ic. firll)face. new c.-pet . . BEAUllRJL APARTMENTS AT
store, choo.. from : Je~n ­ Colll14-379-2989.
BUDG.ET PRICES AT JACKS..ortaw81r, 1~1.. . men' 1.
SON ESTATES. 138 Joob0t1
121&lt;65.
2
bedroom.
Gocdcondldtlht..-,.•nity, 1•1111 aizn.
Pike from t192 1 ma. Walk to
tion.
Calll14-992·5858.
dtnOIWW•. .ol:lic. bri·

.

.

wt.eled alectrlc scooteri. Cal

Open 8A.M. to8P,M. Monthru
Set. 114-446-1699, 127 3rd.
Avo. Oolllp\)llo. 0 H.

Apartment
for Rent

.

8uy,
or trldl. lntiques • Groom Ret Supplr Shop-Pet
oollectabl•. See Dick or Sally 1t Grooming. · All - brHdi ... AII
Ed's G.llipolis Flu MarkM. otvlol. . ,...,. Pet Food ,Oollor.
Sat/ Sun, · or call 114-441- JuUe Webb Ph. f14-446-0231.
7812, dlily aft• 8 p.m. ·
Orogo"l"'Ynd Cou.. -noL
Bw or ~1. ANerlne Antique1. Pwalan and 81-'•• Md Him•
1 124 E. ·Maln ,Street. Po,n'eroy. l~an !dnen•. Chow stud • •
Hour.: M.T,W 10a.m. to lp.m .. vico. Coll14-~3844 111•7
Sundoy 1 to &amp;p.m. 114-99~· P.M . '
2521. .
Block·lob pupploo. 7 wk. old
Wormed/ • 25. Or eat f•mlty
54 Misc. Merchandise do(ll. Celll14-246-9188.

Call 814-446-

304-176-7188,

I

~~Country

21.-gemobilehomelots. Crown
VU1119e. Call 614· 256·
.
.
.
1283.

.•it•.

I

~...;...;..·~.:..:.~~6rTI:...:,.I...:..·,I"''.-1·Q

(!)IJetteraona

C~y

51

~

.......;.T:.....;U..;.0:.._;3Q....:A,_-II : · ;'1 like· my toaSt almost
5 1 1
~ black," the man adVised the
.I 1
. . . ·
waitress. Smiling the waitress

(!)lllhowtllz T-y

44&amp;· 4249. •4&amp;.2325. 44&amp;.
44~5.

Fl&gt;r R- : 3 br.• Moble Home 1
1/ 2botl\ whh..,trohlr/ t200
mO. Call 114-286-1811 '

• Bedroam, furniehld Mobile
Home. Chllci-.-. but na pMI.

114-216-128hft• 6 p.m.

do busln•• with peple you

In Ch•tWe. Aef.. .
Dop. lOll' d. Coli 304-176-8710.
orl14-446-4311.

2 br .. 1 boiiL 8porton lm•lll
Alurftnum tral•. EIIC. hwest·

Cltv• Moln St.. Lot 1 ean

llliOTICEI
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

2 br .• unturnllhad. 10xeo wtth

•Ptncto.

For •lo II¥-· cllll14-317·
72121ftor I p.m.

memaartnteluntt. window, AC.
Must be mo...d. / 12100. Crown

'

446-4107. .,114-441-2802,

TraM•. 2 bedroom. dllft, ..t.-enca ~r.t. At. 1. Locu.t
Rood. 304-876-1071

br .• 2·b•hl. CA. 3 c• v•_age.

Business
Opportunity .

2 br., unllrnilhocl al lloc. AC.
Rt. 588, priYI'te lat. Call 81..._

I~ I I .I' I . t

18 ® Lov. Connection

fHI:,
Second Call
tnd Pina
Amplocorrwr
p•ldng.-.
114-

R~ .

I N K E F ., ~
i

ei!Z cas .....

a11

Larp trel_- s.-:a Addlson--

Z BA moblehamelnEvercr..,.
Callie tv. hook·IOI· Coil 114441-3887or 246-5223.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Cil 8 (II ABC Newa
(Z) Body Electric
(!) .3-2-t Contllct 1;1

'

..-- - - ---:---,replied, " I've finally found . a
MA C 0 T I
;,an I can - '-." ··
·

e

cO...mero:~a~ ...... 140o•-·

BLI..,IIIo
4215.

·

~ Spor11LOolt (0:30)

2

I

6 :05 (]) Allee
6:30
(II ~NBC Nightly Newt

~6 Space for Rant

'----------,-----------1

RE.TRAIN NOW!
2 H~DOril hou•. 1h b•em.nt.
SOUTHEAITEIIN BUSINESS y, acre Allo 1bl0 Z bectoom
COLLEGE. 528 Jocbon Pika triM• on tot. loth in Pom•oy.
, Coli 814-~4317. II . . . No. t17. 000. • 14-892·31 22.
. 16-11·105118.
3 -oombrlc:lo 1\omo.,.h l•go
"lot. MidW., Drive. New Hav.-..
Good oond. 304- 77~1881 .
18 Wanted to Do

21

THAT'S A LON6 TIME TO
BE OUT ON Tf.IE COURSE ..

••aping rOOfll&amp; With cooking.
...ce. All hook-ups,
CAll otter 2p.m. 304- n~
1111 . Mas«m WV.

- " " lloooonalolo.
lloord.loundry'"'
o~c~or~r
~:..
114-912-

I VUOORE
I
I I I I 1

(Z) Degraaal Junior Hltih Tho
Bth graders IOQk forward to . ,
reigning as school ro~alty. l;l
(!) lleedlng Rainbow Q
. .
18 ® Happy Deya
18 Facta Of Life .
II) Certoon Expreaa

~lao Trllil•

"The · network offered me
.
I
equa I t'nne, t 1u t t.I wy .mstst.e(
&lt;)n usi.ng a laugh !rae~!'' ·

below to form four stmple words.

IJ) HOlM Run Derby

U1ed white blthtub and llvl·
tory . Ali &lt;;i In 11-itctrlc stow. ~~
e 14-992·217• or 114· 192·
3667. ' .

t~e .

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scro mb l~ word1

WED.. JULY 12 . •

1m Newa

217 E. 2nd · St. . Ji!Om•ov114· 982· &amp;331 "' 114-181·

Rooms

--,.--.....;_- ldltod ~,

6:00 CIJ Bonanza: Tl1tl Loat
Ep-1
• (II Cil • (II Qll • Q2l

3181 .

Furnished

Tlll1 DAI~Y C,/IQ
PUllLII \:)~

EVENING

1981, 115' lomblr runabout
- _ . , 10 liP. Tilt. Trim. ol .
Injection. •c. cond. low houra.

.,., '*'get. Mfriger .. on. mlcr9"
DYHI'.
A•llanot,

weve

\

L.J
12

11011111,

or 171-4180.

So• loot·1117 undlu 11' 8':
with Meroury 31 hp motor wl"
trlrnandautoollnjoctlon;
Mlr&lt;IUI"f Trollng motar, lhor•.
line trll• '*''more. AI in IOOd
con&amp;I~IOn. Coll114-ll2·2770.'

summorl t250. Call 114-44681112 or 114-441-B874.

r.rr•ttor. furnilhed. ucellent
concl ..d -.Jghl&gt;c)rhood Ref•
..,,. roqulrod. (1041 176-1882

....... Coli 104-I?S-21118. 4:00
to 1:00 'M on.,.

u s ed

eondltloner .

Mt. V•non Aw . .-ound tloot'. 3

toa••forlt.cltlltmlll&amp; 811'

Boalll and
· Motors for Sale

10.000 BT,U. olldlngwin- olr

Q&gt;ponunlty.

- . oloo lor llooiiog portlol.

Television
Viewing

715

For Sale: Downbi111MIHer. Gas
Furntc,, good cond. / •3&amp;0. C.H
114-'141-0411 .

n•

I

lot.,.'- coli

OOOM l!dwordl. 304-812·

KIT N~ CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrlabt

Household Goods

Daily Sentinei- Page- 16.

Ohio

Air cond .. 18,000 btu. • living
~- w ite. Call I 1 4-218-MII. .

Vee~ a,·

.C hid- .. ....... •~Mine•
db tUG Ltlor fetHouNof lJo¥d
.....loll For.,

61

Apartment
for Rent

Wedn-.v. July 12, 1989

Wednesday, July 12. 1989

Ohio

,

T~

HLGUIJ

AUGTZ .

ICHL

KUGUHLB
•\

.V W G 0 Z G
I
· Yee1ulr1'• c.nta..aate• TEU US YOUR PHOBIAS- AND WE WILL TELL YOU WHAT YOU ARE
: AFRAID OF. - ROBERT BENOG.EY
'
© 1989 Kong Feii,.H SyndiCate. Inc
,,'
•,

•
.,

�.
'

I

~ A~?tn

·

-·

. .

· 1
· ·ro .

·

· ·.

. ·.

·

erupts

Pomeroy::....Midd~
OhiO .
.

Wednesday, .July 12, 1989.

· ar~s.ls.

CHICAGO &lt;UP!)
··
Ioree. .
.
of · 100 artworks and . literary · sonal visions ol the
Eric . daily demonstrations ·from sev·
exhiblt~eaturin'g a :nllde baseball
The · city . imq~ediately . re- passages 9rgaqtzed by the New 'Ftschl4s an important American · era! veteran·s· groups and some
: player' .has ·touched olf' another sponded by posting a sign warn- York State Museum and the artist. We believe· tn ·freedcim ol stat~ lawmakers .
. controye~sy in. the nation's third 'tng that' the exiblt contains work · Smithsonian Institute Traveling . · ,expression," Harris said.
·
Last ye.a r, a painting of former
largest .city - the third tline in some may 1ind objectionable. Exhibition serVIces. It is sche- :·
Two other art dJsplays caused . C~icag~~ Mayo~ Harold W,l!Biling- ..
three years·u has been the scene " Please · use discretion . when duled to be on display through .a controversy ln .the city, sending . ton in women's lmgerie touclled
ot· an art dislll!!y that many find .ChoOsing to enter," rea4s the sign . Sept. 9 at the Cultural ainter.
thousands of demonstrators·into of( a stotin. Several members of
&gt; obj~tionable .
.. ·.
outside the exhibition, ·" Dia." Boys at Bat"~ a painting 'by' the streets. Both ' were at the · the City Councllstormed the Aft
An exlblt of artworks on moods are Forever: Artists and · American . artist Eric Fischl, • Chicago · School of the Art .Institute and removed · tile
baseball &lt;1l the Cll!Cllgo Public Writers on Baseball:" .
depicts a · boy ·In a baseball Institute.
!lllinting:
Library Cultural Center includes ·
uniform, a pjcnic table and a .
Earlier this year, an exhibit by .,. ~------,-----,--a · patntlrtg of a nude male
Chicago Cultural Affairs Com- fronta,l nude of a manilswtngmg a
an art student InVIted people to , When soineo~e aaya, "I'm In aearch .•
ballplayer. It opened Saturday, missioner Joan Harris described
baseball bat. ·
step on an .American f)agplaced ·of myaeH," don't you wander at thlllr
and by Monday protesters Were the show as a t&lt;~velirtg exibltlon
''The works reflect the per-. on the fioor. The display brought chOice of a rescue team?
·~

·.. art.·
Third
con V ersy
.

&lt;

'

f ·

Ohio Lottery

.

Meigs tourney
begins Friday

PICK-3: 433
PICK-4: 73,59
Lotto: 1, 6, 19,
22,35,-37
Kicker: 772288

Page3

••

•

..

~
~

COPYRIGHT 1989 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . JULY 9. tHROUGH
SA TUROAY , JULY 15, 1989, IN GAI.UI'O. . AND_.... &amp;TOOU.
•
RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT

.

ADVERTISED ITIM POLICY- Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale in

each Kroger Store , except as specifically noted in this ad . If we do run out of an advertised item, we

'

•

·•

wilt offer you your chOice of a comparable item;·when available. reflecting ttte same savinqa or a rainchee~

which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price with.n 30 days .
Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item purchased.
'

•
•

Join Our Continuing. • •

,
Vol.40, No.47 M

•

-

•

••
.

Kroger Meat
Wieners

-n nzv

12-oz.

'

,,

Holly Far_ms
Breast Quarters

Cali--· . .

Elegant Lady
Peaches ........... lb.

sEsSION liEU). -" Employees of the Mountaineer

New lflaven., W.Va., parllcpale Ia an early momin1 water

Boneless
~----~huck Steak

With the--ari'!Yal of-mal'mer ·our emplOyees and other citizens
weather, Pomeroy Postmaster··•· who mlgllt·be bitten." ·
Tom Reu~r · has. asked dog
owners . to ·help ptotect letter
Reuter said that all dogs are
carriers, utility workers and territorial by nature, and even
other citizens from the dangers the most gentle pet will bite if It
of dog bites.
feels Its domain Is threatened by
The Postmaster said that na- the presence ofa carrier or other
tionally more than 3,000 letter person.
carriers were bitten.by dogs last
"With a little care, ·a pet owner
:· year. ,
.
can not only protect ou~ carriers,
"In, recent ·years, the public · buthlsorherpetandpocketbook,
has respqnded to our plea to keep · too," he said. . .
their pets· restrained, and we
Postmaster Retuer stressed
have seen a decline in bites thai the Postal Service protects
nationally,'' Reuter said. "Ne- Its carriers from dog bite l)avertheless, much is stU! to be zards. Among remedies In sltua, don~o~;imlnate the· hazard to . tions when a pet owner falls to

•

Pound

Pourable
Dressing

The Ohio
alley Water said "during 1988 the CommlsSanltat n.' ommisslon (ORsian marked its40thyear of effort
/ SAN ) ecl!ntly submitted its to improve the health and vitality'
1988 Annual Report of activities
f streams in the Ohio River
Va)ley."
·
, to the governors of its me~be
.The Ashland Oil spill and
· slates and to President Geo
·.
drought :conditions experienced
Bush. ·
ORSANCO is an inters e
dur(ng . th . summer montlfs
m . lssion to redi·
commission formed In 1948 by caused the
state compact to contro1 and · rect resource
provide state
abate water pollution In the Ohio and federal a e les and local
· River Basil\. ·Member states
u t1 1It I e s
er qua Itt y
include Illinois, Indiana, Ken- Information.
tucky, New York, Ohio, Pennsyl"While responding to these .
transient events, the Comm!svanla, VIrginia and West Virgl·
nla. The federal gQverrunent Is stan did not abandon important
·ongoing 'p rograms," said Standalso represented. ·
Principal ·Commission prolrtg. ''We continued to make
grams 'Include the setting of progress. in the areas of toxic
uniform requ~emeiltsformunlc- .. subs lances ·control, water qualipal and industrial wastewater tty monitoring and control ol .
: discharges to the Ol)lo RIVer,
wastewater discharges.
operation of severa1 water qual" In Its 40 years of operation,
. tty monitoring·systems and spUI . the Commission has remained
detection and notification.
viable due in large measure to its
, In his message to the gover- . abilll¥ to adapt to meet changing
nors, Chairman Patrlck.L. Stand- c demands and concerns, while at .
lng from · VIrginia Beach, Va., · tlie sa~e time providing stable ·

20-oz.

to

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Country .Club
, lce·· craam

Banquet R·egular
Dinoers

%-Galon

.

1D-1 0.5-oz.

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KROGER SQUEEZE BOTTLE CHOCOLATE STI&lt;u•

r.ALtON

24-0Z.. • 89C

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S.PAK 12-pz. CANS ••• t1.118

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AA meets each Thurdsay

Retired teachers tea slated

.

and ettectlve water pollution
.control programs through its
eight member states."
Standing went ,on to say that
ORSANCO began as ' a resull "1\f
Ohio River Basin residents and
agencies working together.
"This same spirit exists today
and will allow the Commission to

meet the challenges \Ve Ia
the 21st Century," he cone ed.
rt Is
The 1987 Annual R
available free of c arge by
contactmg the Ohio R er Valley
Water Sanitation C mmission, 49
E. F.ourth St., SIJ.'e 815, Cincinnati, 45202, or 15y calling (513)

'

Recycling day planned Saturday
The Meigs County Litter Control Program will bOld a Recycle
Day on Saturday from 9 a .m. to·noon al the Ktoger parking lot In
Pomeroy. This is a donation project, with all proceeds going to
the co-sponsor, Carleton School and Meigs Industries. Items for
recycling Include aluminum (cans and other) , glass (should be
separated. clear, gree!l and brown), newspapers Hied In
(Continued on page 8)

m-n51.

({iounty commiSsion .
approves employment
.

.

The Meigs County Commts- tlon should be poured this week.
' stoners approved a request Wed·
· The commtsatoaers approved
nesday from Larry Spencer, renewal contracts for health
clerk of courts, to hire a parttime re-Insurance with Klals and Co. ;
employ~to work in the title
of Akron; the county's Insurance
. office d png the mont.h of consultant. The county Is liable
August.
e . partdrrle e!llployee for coVerage up to $25,000 and
Is being hired In anticipation of • then.a re·insurer picks up claims
· two, and poulblly three, regular in exces ovhe $25,000 amount .
. employees lrlmt both the title and
1~
s, announced that the
clerk of courta offices being oH So eas Ohio Association of
work for medical reasons.
ommisaloners and EnCommtalloner l'Uchard Jones g! rs will meet Wednesday,
reported t.hat Collltl'tietlon ot.the . A . 16, In Newark.
elevator In the ·eourthouse Is
And · finally, a request for
moving on ~ebedule. He said that Mel&amp;&amp; EMS personnel to travel
work Ia prQII'e5sinl! on the hole outalde the county to various
for the abaft, and that concrete seminars throughout the next
few months was approved.
for
- Initial siaaes
.. of the construe•
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Area news briefs------,

S ititt•··n Commission submits annual report

PACK'' 4-0Z. FREE

.···r' .

·~

WASHINGTON (UP!- Seven
escort a U.S. convoy to HonduU.S. mllltary policemen in Hanras ' Enrique Soto Cano Air Base
Thursday morning.
duras were injured, three serlously , When an unidentified·
Almost ali .of the approxlassailant threw a bomb at them
mately 160 American soldiers at
on a street In the port city of La
La Ceiba are from Task Force
Ceiba early Thursday, the Pen164 of the North Dakota National
Guard. However, Ihe MPs 11re
tagon said.
Two other military po!lcmen
members of the regular Army,
the Pentagon said.
.
escaped injury in the blast that
occurred~y after midnight .
The task force recently com. Thursda i the Caribbean .port
ph!ted a new road construction
iles northea.s t ot the
project in the Yoro valley as part
a bo.u t 12
capital of Tegucigalpa.
of "Exercise Fuert~s Catninos
The assailant escaped and no
1989. "
one Immediately claimed
The only regular military
facility In the area is the Solo
responsibility.
"Three U.S. military polleeCano Air Base, where 1,200
men were ser'iously injured and
American soldiers are stationed
four wer~ slightly injured In a
for six-month tours. ·
I -~~~~~~~je~x~~p:loslon at La Cieba, " .
It was the third attack against
.1·
said.
' American soldiers this year.
"Witnesses reported that an
On Feb. I , a cohvoy of seven:
vehicles carrying more than 30
explosive device \\'as thrown at
the soldiers as they walked down
American soldiers was attacked
by unldentlflkd .gunmen in north~
a street, " the Fen.tagon said.
The soldiers were assigned to
ern Yoro Province, but no one
Joint Task Force Br.avo, based at
was Injured.
So to Cano Air Base near CoOn F.eb. 19, art explosion ripped
through the back of a bus
mayagua, about 60 miles northwest of the capital.
carrying American soldiers,
All of the soldiers were taken to . wounding three of them and two
safely session at the Middleport Pool. The safety session took place
Honduran passersby in
the nearby Hospital VIncente
on Wednesday.
·
D'Antonl in La Ceiba, the DeComayagua. .
tense Department said. The
U.S. troops have been conducting maneuvers In Hondu~as since
exact nature of iheir injuries was
not immediately known.
· 1982.
The"1' MPs
were
in
La
Ceiba
to
· ...
...
- ,
away from , tne · nia1lbox" and
restrain a dog is interrupting
areas the letter carrier uses for
home delivery to the residence,
access to the property . If the pet
or, on some cases, to entire
cannot be kept behind a secure .
neighborhoods . .·The Postal Serfenc·e, the owner should restrain
vice will also seek to recover
il with a secure leash or tether or
worker's compensation damages
The Pomeroy groups of Alcohollcs Anonymous and AI-Anon
at
least keep the pet Inside the
and provides counseling tocarrimeet
every Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Sacred Heart Church In
house during the ·usual hours
ers who have been bitten and who
Pomeroy.
carriers are making their
wish to seek legal action against
rounds, " he said.
the dog owners.
Reuter added "We try to do our
Reuter said these policies
part py stressing awareness of·.
underscore the Postal Service's
commitment to protect its em- . dog bite dangers to our carriers,
Meigs County Retired Teachers will have a tea on Saturday,
ployees, .and added that pet · but we rely heavily on the
from 2 to ~ - p .m. , at the Pomeroy Episcopal Parish House,
owners can easily meet their support and cooperation of the
Members of the Gallia County Retired Teachers Association
responslbllltles to control ihelr community to help us end these
are invited· guests. Mrs . 'Edith Brown, state president of the
painful and costly Injuries."
pets.
.
Ohio Retired Teachers. Association wlli attend . All retired
"We suggest that pets be kept
teachers of the area are invited.

Postrrtaster··'asks·-· ~elp _
lo protect mail.. .carriers

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GRAIN FED BEEF, BONELESS CHUCK
ROAST OR

·FROZEN SELECTED VARIETIES

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injured todaY

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U.-s. soldiers

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Bomb thrown at senr1cemen

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~ Multimedia Inc. N•wll!paper
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26 Cents

2 Sections. 16 pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 13, 1989

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Tonight: Partly C,Wudy,
with lows between 55 and 60.
Npr.,.. winds 11 to 15 mph.
Friday: Partly cloudy, with
highs between 75 and 80.

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d.at

tllal tile mlalmam acceptable ~ellar price 11 Sill,. ., ud
aooa be
llalldllll llu been In a1e from time lo &amp;1me over
Melp Local woald retala rtrbt• to park on the P'otmdl beblad t~~e'
&amp;be many yean Iince Junior bllll c l - ce-d. Soon tbe bulldlnl
bulldllll at foolbai1Jame8 and other aehoollunctioB.Ia acldl...n,.
Ia to be advertlled for Rle by tile Melp Local 8cbool Board. The
L:i:y bu;rer muiH be made aware tbalthe buUdlniCOatai•Mbel...
IChOol board approved advertllla1the bulldln1 for sale with the ~lcb, lithe bulldln111 tom don, 01111&amp; be removed Pioperly, ·
stlpulatleu that any uid all bla II!&amp;&gt;'. be reJected by the board, ,
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