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Plat

D-8-Sundlly Tlm81-Sentinel

July 16, 1989

POm.oy-MiddlapOn Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleaitnt, W. Va.

-'-----:---;.1

Humming birds, are unique visitors .
' HIIII\Jllln&amp; birds are the most various Dowers, their favorite because they have muscles In
beautiful and also the most being the common honeysuckle. both sides of their wings. This
Interesting of all our summer They also catch and destroy also enables them to dart up and
V!J.ltors. Many tl11\es !hey· are different Insects that destroy down, In and out, as. they prefer.
Feeding sugar 'water during
mistaken for some strange but. farm and garden plants.
Many
times
they
destroy
and
dfll months Is most lmpor·
.
the
terfly or some other creature.
consume
their
own
weight
In
tant,
because It supplies a
They are found during nesting
Insects
in
a
single
day.
They
are
nutritious.
food for their babies,
period from the Mlsslsslpl river"
espeCially
fond
of
the
tiny
mites
.
after
the
flowers
have matured
eut .a nd from Tennessee north
•
Into Canada. Other Hum~ers and Insects that carry plant and dried.
Folks Interested In birds
are seen In this area but they·do disease which causes the"sprea:d
· ·. shOuld make every effort to
not nest here, · they are In of many destructive diseases.
Ruby .Throats are one of the support this species of our most
migration only . They Unger here
earliest
of the migrating species beneficial friends, the Ruby
to feed on Insects and nectar.
to
return
to our area toralsethelr · Throated Humming Bird.
The Ruby Throated Hummer Is
young.
They
are also one of the
the onty ones that migrate to our
last
to
return
to Mexico· and
area In early spring and stay
America.
.
Central
here long enough to raise their
brood. Only the male has the
It Is surely a treat to those who M""""el' reco.n.ized
--e
.,...
)Jrlgllt red thrqat, ·that makes hang feeders In a garden, or near
by·
tree,
and
watch
them
teed
on
·
them easy to Identify. They also
GALLIPOLIS- Ames Depart·
make a rapid squawking · noise sugar water during their nesting
season.
This
practIce
Is
ever
so
ment
Store attributes a great
while In night, or while sipping
l.mportant
for
their
nesting
oc·
measure.
of its success to the
nectar from tubular shaped
Dowers, alld many other plants curs during the·drler part of the experience of Its ·Store
that benefit farmers, gardeners, summer. Its this period when Managers.
Store Manager Ford France'
and commercial Dower growers. most wild plants has. blossomed
and
their
flower
has
dried
to
the
has
12 years' experience In the
They .are the only birds that ·
place
where
there
ls.no
nectar.
retail
Industry. France began his
distribute pollen from .flower to ·
Birds
have
a
wing
·
career
with Ames In 1977 in
Humming
nower.
.
beat,
while
feeding,
at
seventy
PlymQuth,
In. He went on to
Humming birds are the smal·
five
(75)
beats
per
second.
They
.serve
as
manager
for Washing·
lest of au bird species, weighing
are
the
only
bird
that
has
a
power
ton
Courthouse
and
Clrclevute.
only three or four ounces. All
stroke
on
both
ttie
up
and
down
France
Is
llvlilg
with
his 'wife
species have a long slender beak
stroke.
This
feature
Is
possible
and
two
children
In
Middleport
suitable for sucking nectar from

.Ohio Lottery .

EXpOs defeat
·Jteds 6-3 in
12 innings
.

'

j

!

j

PICK-3

420
PICK-4
8655
Super I..Gito .

l

14-17-22-29-31-32
Kicker 379882

Page 3

•

•

at
.ea cOal miners retum to .work

Vol.40. No.49 '
' CopVrighted 1 989

AGENCY OPENING - Places To Go Travel
Agency will be openlllg aroUIId August I. The

fuD·servlce agency Is located at 417 Second Ave.

fields Monday on whether wild· Industry has been lessened by 35
,cattln&amp;,..mlners would break off~ percent, while West VIrginia lost
five· week strike that has sparked $2.5 million each week In tax
much violence and dipped heav- revenue.
Scattered pickets roamed the
Ily Into West VIrginia's tax base.
coalfields
of West Virginia Satur·
Weekend gatherings were held
day,
as
workers at a Logan
by UMW locals in efforts to
spread the word from Trumka County mine defused a confron·
that he wants the walkout to end. tation with pickets the day before
A few union miners wasted no by slaying overnight at the site.
Trumka announced an end to
time in reporting back to the
mines on Saturday, but most' the flve·day memorial · period
mines were not scheduled for which has Idled union toal
operations east of the Mississippi
producti()n until Monday . .
. 'file walkout flared June 12, the River since Monday.
"I should think by and large
day after Trumka led a massive
things
should go back to nor·
rally on the steps of' the West
malcy
by
Monday," said UMW
VIrginia Capitol in support of
union miners engaged. In a bitter spokesman Jr;~e Corcoran.
In West VIrginia 's District 17,
contract dlspu,te with th~ Pittston
the union's largest, UMW leaders
Coal Group.
Eventually, the strike spread met to discuss Trumka's call for
to at least 10 siates, idling more an end to the walkout.
In Logan County, workers at.
than' 40,000 coal miners.
the
Arch of West VIrginia mine
Production in the soft coal

. .. ,,1otl\
around the house, mov'ed lo the location lor more
space. The company Is planning to add a
hardware section and a small engbie repair shop.

ONLY

'

$237 74

PER MONTH
S488 DOWN

Welcomes You To Our

ffMEDICARE INFORMATION
PROGRAM AND DISCUSSION}}
'
To Be Held Thursday, july 27
Beginning at 6:30' P.M.

I

,,.

Automatic, air condition·
ing. tilt wheel, cruise con. trol, 14" aluminum wheels,
'AM-FM-cassette, etc. ·

SALE PRICE S11,200

60 mo.® 11.9%.

..•

,.. '" s1oel\

~

S17115

RETIREMENT PARTY HELD SUNDAY - More &amp;haa Boo
llll'tled oul Sunday for an open house honoring Dr. John Ridgway
who Is rej;Jrlng lhls week after 35 years ol practlclng,medlclne In
the Big Bend area. Tlie open house was held at lhe Senior Citizens
Center and wail hosted by his office staff. Pictured left to right with

Air conditioning. power steer
ing, ·AM·FM·CaSII&amp;tte. rear de·

PER MONTH
S488 DOWN

froster, etc.

SAU PRICE ·sa200
60 mo.® 11.9%

Searles sentenced

Come and Join Us to Learn About the Recent
Medicare Insurance Changes, a'nd Experience ·
First Hand the Overbrook Difference.

AS. LOW AS....

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Includes power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control,
air cond .• etc.
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'

·.BUICK-PONTIAC
1616 EASTERN AVENUE
GALLIPOLI

(614) 446-2282

FINAL STATEMENT- President Bush, rlg"ht,llstens'to West
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl before French President
Francois Mltterand ~ellvers final statement of the 15111 summit
meeting of the Group of seven lndulllrlallzedcountries at lhe Arche
de Ia Defenae In Paris Sunday. (UPI)

PALMDALE, Calif. (UPI) reaching a speed of 130 mph and
The B·2 stealth bomqer, the lifting Its nose wheels off the
costliest airplane ever buill, took ground in high-speed taxi tests .
Brig. Gen. Richard Scofield,
flight for the first time Monday
morning, soaring gracefully Into
director of the stealth program,
a cl~ar desert sky and an
said the two high· speed taxi tests
uncertain future.
·
~ low·speed tests · were con·
The graphlte·coloreci bomber dueled July 10- were a success.
wltl! a unJq~ ,ba),wtng ~ha~ Tl!f....ll!l:p.JI.!II! ll(ellt. thrOII&amp;II
lifted off into the sun at 6:36a.m. . 12~,000hours ofpre·filght testing.
from· the runway of an Air Force
The price of the plane has
plan't In the desert 60 miles north
produced shock waves In
of Los Angeles where li was
Washington.
asseml;lled In super· secrecy by
''I recognize
Northrop Corp. ·
shock," Defense Sec~retarv uic!V""
The B·2, with Northrop test Cheney said
propilot Bruce J. · Hinds and Air argued that
Force test pilot RichardS. Couch,__.,,J:'~~-m · 132
priced at
at the controls and Its
consume a
engines roaring, got off
of the deground on its second attempt.
than either the B-52
fuel system glitch scuttled
bombers.
first try at a maiden '"w"' \.'c&lt;fnl~~))~:~g:~~~ has already
Saturday .
billion, with one
About 200 reporters and photo·
air. five more at
graphers and a handful of Invited various
of production and
guests stood In the dirt along the five more approved and paid for.
runway to witness a new chapter
House Armed Services Com.
In aviatlon.hlstory.
mlttee member Bill Dickinson,
The B·2, built largely of plastic R·Ala .. said the program's decomposites both designed to tails were kept secret for so long
allow It to slide undetected that when Its cost was declassl·
through enemy radar, was schC: lied Congress was "aghast."
duled to fly in long, lazy circles
The Senate Armed Forces
for neatly 2 'n . hours before Committee on Friday approved
landing .at Edwards Air F~rce President Bush's $3Q5.5 billion
Base about 25 miles north of defense spending request for
Palmdale, where the first space 1990, but stipulated that no new
shuttle flight also ended.
money could be spent on the B·2
The B·2 is designed to fly 10,000 until It compleles its first test
miles with up to 25tons of nuclear flights.
or conventional weapons but on
The Air Force and Northrop
its first flight It was supposed to planned to have the B·2 take
carry only a payload or· com· flight the day after the Senate
memoratlve lapel pins to be vote and the bomber rolled out to
distributed to Northrop thee~doftherunwayandrevved '
employees.
Its engines for about 15 minutes
' The bomber wenl through its Saturday before taxiing slowly
final shakedown last Thursday, back to the hangar.

Business inventories
·up 0. 7 percent in May
'

WASHiNGTON (UPI) - The
vaiue of stockpiled goods In
business warehouses rose 0.1
percent In May led by a buildup In
Inventories at the nation's dehowever; to rapid total ellmlna· partment and general merchan·
lion of CFCs, . which are used In dislng stores, the Commerce
refrigeration, air . conditioning Department reported Monday. .
'\ and· aerosols and which destroy
Overall business Inventories
the ozone, layer that protects rose (o $776.9 billion when ad·
Earth from cancer-causing solar justl!(j for seasooal factors but
radiation. At present there Is not . lnfiation. the department
agreement only to reduce CFC said.
,
use by 50 percent by 1998..
The Increase fonows an 0.8
Also, despite general opposl· percent · jump lri· Inventories
tlon by environmentalists to during Aprn and is another
nuclear power plants, the leaders Indication that business activity
chose to declare nuclear power . has slG\ved under the pressure of
helps limit emission of gase• that the Federal Reserve's tightened
contribute to warming the global monetary policy and higher
climate, the "greenhouse" Interest rates.
·
effect.
On the whole, the value of
They recognized at the same
time the need for "the highest Inventories was 8.1 percent
safety s!Bndards for nuclear higher than in May 1988, but
.power plants" arut for "streng- rising prices accounted for part
thenlng lnternatlonar·· coopera· of that Increase.
StockpUes ol durable goods lion In sale operation of power .
plants and waste management."· so-called big ticket 'items de-

Environmental concerns major summit topic

SMITH

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614), 992~6472

the

bY Judge· Crow

. Mark A. Searles. 21, Pomeroy, was given a suspended .
sentence when he appeared this morning in Meigs Common
Pleas Coun before Judge Fred W. Crow 111.
Searles was originally Indicted March 28 by a Meigs County
Grand Jury. on charges of felonious assault and curylng a
.concealed weapon In connection with an Incident on March 20
involving a firearm. Upon recommendation of Assistant Meigs
Prosecuting Attorney Linda Warner, the carrying a concealed
weapon charge was dropped by the court, and the original
charge of felonious assault wa~ reduced to aggravated assault,
also upon recommendation of the assistant prosecutor.
Searles was given a suspended sentence of two to five years In
prison for the reduced charge, aild placed by Judge,Crow on a
•'strict" three-year Probation, reports Paul Gerard of the
jUdge's office. In addition, Judge Crow ordered Searles to pay
back the county for costs of his court appointed attorney,
Charles Kn lght.
.,.
Continued on page 10

Sll,S

AMERICA'S

Dr. Ridgway and his Wife, Jean to his left, are Louisa Johnston, .
long·tlme retired employee, Dlliite Hawle:t:, Janet Russell, Mona ·
Neal, and Judy Pape, hostesses. Cake and punch were served and
numerous gifts JNere presented lo
retiring physician.

r----LocaJ news briefs. .....,

1

Mrs. Sue Worden, a Medicare Provider Relations special~
ist and a representative of Ohio's Medicare Fiscal Intermediary, the Community M~tual Insurance Corporation, will
make a personal presentation in the beautiful Overbrook
Center Dining Room on "Medicare Insurance Coverage Information" designed to help each Medicare~covered person
fully understand how to receive the full extent of Medicare
Insurance payments for which they are eligible.
Mrs. Worden .has informed us that she will be available
to respond to individual case questi9ns regarding Medicare
Insurance Coverage after her presentation. Refreshments
will be served.

Approved and Certified
for MEDKARE,
MEDICAID,
Workers
Coriipensation, Private
Insurance, As Well As
StH Pay Residents.

ONLY

.'

left that site peacefully Saturday continue localized memorlaJ .pemornlng after retreating to the rlods In two sections: a four·day
mine property Friday night. .
memorial perlod In District 31
Workers confronted nearly 100 (northern West VIrginia) from
pickets as they left the mine, said July 17·20; and a three·day
State Police spokesman Ric period ln District 6 (Ohio and the
Robinson. Before police arrived, West Virginia panhandle) irom
ttle pickets and workers ex· . July 19·21.
changed words, a company se·
The UMW struck Pittston April
cu.rlty vehicle was overturned ' 5 after working 14 months with·
and "numerous" rocks were out a contract. Pittston, a subsi·
thrown. Violence bas been ram: diary of the Greenwich, Conn.·
pant during the strike.
based Pittston Co., left . the
.Phil Reale, chief aide to West BltuminousCoa!OperatorsAsso- .
VIrginia Gov. Gaston Caperton,, elation twoyearsagoandlsnota
said the state Is loslng$2 million a party to a national co~! miners
week In severance taxes Imposed contract.
Trumka has accepted an offer
on coal production, ~nd $500,000 a
week In personal income tax.
by U.S. Dlstrl.ct Judge c:;ten
Reale said the state Is taking Williams in southwestern Vlrgl·
an Indirect revenue hit due to the nla to mediate the ~trike. Tnere
reduction in equipment sales and was no response from Pittston to
traffic by barge and trucking the offer, the fourth in recent
,
weeks by various government
companies.
'Trumka said the UMW will cfflclals.

'

1989 PONTIAC
LEMANS
LE 2 DR.
.

"Special Care For People Who Are Special .to You"

21( Canto

A Multimedia Inc. Newopapor

Costliest airplane
on. maiden flight

G.RAND AM '
.\t.
'"
....

1 SectiOn, 10 pageo

. PomerQy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday, July 17, 1989

By NANOY' YOACHAM
friday.
Sendnel News Stalf
Linda Vore, of UMWA's DIS•
. Southern Ohio Coal Company trtct 6, reports that the upcoming
.mines are pr'oduclng coal again. memorial period Is In sympa,t hy
• Terry Trlmper, of AEP's pub- with Pittston.
·
. ·lie relations department, reBy contract, UMWA President
; ported this morning miners at Richard Trumka has the right to
:Meigs Mine 1 and Meigs Ml~ 2 call for memorial periods, not
· and Raccoon Mine No. 3 went exceeding 10 days on the current
:back to ·work at . midnight last contract. So far, Trumka ·has
;night.
,
· used five out of the alotted 10
Area miners had been Idle days. ~
since Jurie 19 when they began a
Also according to Vore, all
secondary boycott In sympathy UMWA mines In District 6, which
with striking Pittston Coai.Com· · comprises all of Ohio and four
pany workers from West Vlrgl· counties ln.the northern panhan·
nla, Kentucky and VIrginia.
die of West Virginia, and Includes
Trlmper says that United Mine 3,200 employed miners.
Workers of America representa·
Local SOCCO mines employ
tlves for the three mines have 1,100 miners.
"'
said their locals will be working
"today and tomorrow" and will
By United Press International
then be . off again during a
Unlied Mine Workers Pres!·
memorial period which has been . dent Richard Trumka awaited
called for Wednesday through reports from the embattled coal·

1989 PONnAC

BUSINESS RELOCATES - General Rental
has moved from 30 Sycamore St. to 431 Pike St. hi
Ka~~augL The business, which rents general
equipment to contractors aitd equipment for tasks

Mosdy clear tonight. Low In
·mid 50s. Tuesday, mostly
sunny. High In mld·80s.

't. ·

PARIS (UPI) - Envirenmen·
tal concerns took center stage at
this weekend's 15th ecol!omtc
summit with leadl!rs of the seven
major Industrial nations calling
for urgent and "deCisive action"
to protect the Earth's ecological
balance. An environmental declaration
by the leaders took up eight
pages of their 22·page final ·
communique Issued Sunday,
mo~ than any other topic, and ·
yet new lnlliatlves to reduce
pollution of the air and oceans
.
were noticeably missing.
Despite tjle unprecedented fo-.
cus on the environment at a
summit supposedly devoted to
economics, the United States.France, Great Britain, Italy,
Japan, West Germany and Can- ·
ada In effect merely reaffirmed
existing progr~ms.

• World environmental leaders.
applauded the e!rvatlon of their
concerns for the firs I time among
the annual, summit partners, but
In the words of Thomas Stoel of
the non·proflt Natural Resources
Defense Council In the United
States: "The communique Is
devr;~ld of the decisive steps the
leaders claim are needed.
"The leaders of the CQuntrles
that control most of the ,Earth's
wealth chave not promised to
spend an extra donar to reduce
the emissions of any pollutant or
take any other action .of substance, ~ ' Stoel complained. "The
Slllllllllt leaders have failed to '
de liver. "
William Reilly, bead of the
Ji:nvlronmental Protection
Allency In Wuhlnllon, was optimistic about what be' termed
the "terrifically encouraglna"

attention to ecological issues.
"All of this Is, I think, begin·
nlng to . move tpe envlropme11t
!rom the margins of policy right
Into the mainstream of discus·
sions about economic develop·
ment and the problems .of d'e bt
restructuring," Relllytoldrepor·
ters In Paris.
Still, he acknowledged, "Some
of the most Important countries
· whose cooperation and Involve·
11\e!lt will have to be engaged' to
solve climate Issues are some of
the countries that are not here.''
·
Iii their final communique, the
world's wealthiest itatlqns "wei'
comed" calls lor the complete
abandonmeDt, by the end of lhe
century at· the latest, of c;hlorptluorocarbons, or CFCs, and the
development of subStitutes.
There wa~ no commitment,

..

..

signed tolastthreeormoreyears
- rose 0.8 percent during the
month while non·durable gOods
climbed 1.5 percent.
The value of inventories at
general merchandise stores and
aepartment stores swelled 2.2
percent and 2.4 percent
respectively.
Automobile dealerships also.
bad higher backlogs, up 0.9
percent during the month despite
factory sales lncentl~s designed
to reduce stoc kpUer.
Food stores experienced a 1.3··
percent growth In Inventory In
May while apparel and acces·
sory stores were the only major
retail sector to see a decline, 0.2
percent.
At the same time, the depar·
ment reported that total manu·
factui'er, retailer and wholesaler
sales were unchanged during
May at $517.9 billion.
At current rate of . sales,
bualnesaes had a 1.5-month' a
supply of goods In their storerooms at the e!ld of May.

_,. ....

�'i'

J

Monday, July 17,

Commentary
lll Cotlrt Street

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERD!TS OF THE MEIGS-MASbN AREA
'
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\
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glb

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~~ ""'-''---rt,..,.._c:::i,...,.
ROBERT L. WINGfiJTI'
Publisher .

;

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHlTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER ol1be A.oclll&amp;ed Preis, IDI111d D..,. PreasAIIOdallon ud the American Newspaper Publishers Ali!IOCIII&amp;Ioo.
LETTERS OF OPlNION are weloome. They should be lt!8o tlutn 300
wol'do lone. All letters are oubJect to. edlllllf ud must be olped with
name, address and telephoneiiUmber. No u111iped letter• will be published. Letters sho,_.ld beln pod tule, addr . . ., lo._, not penonall-

tles.

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Fl~

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Expos take 12 innings to.
hand Reds 6-3 loss. Sunday

,

office ·works hard to fulfill demand

WASH~,GTON- About every

office processes the Congress
.member's request, preparing
· certificates bearing the name of
the constltutent, the member of
Congress who ordered the flag to
be flown and the date on which It
• was flown. No mention Is made of
how b.eeting was the was the
flag's moment aloft.

five seconds a pt~e or Am eric!In
history Is made, thanks to the
activities of an obscure office Ina
deep, dark corner of the U.S.
Capitol- the flag office, which Is
In charge of flags that have flown
above the Capitol.
In Chinese fire drill fashion,
flags are taken to· the roof of the
Capitol and flown for anywhere
"I dread doing flags because It
from flve seconds to a minute on means ·spending the whole day
two 10-foot flagpoles . A seven- dragging a huge handcart piled
person staff Is required to handle five feet high with flags all over
the requests for flags that flow in Capitol Ifill," one coqgresslon'al ,
from senators and House page told our reporter Tim
memb-ers qn behalf or Warner. "Once I finish my flag
constltt.Jtents.
·
run (delivery of flown flags to
After the flag's have been congressional offices) I blow off
hoisted and lowered, the flag work and go sleep somewhere."

CINCINNATI (UPI) - EvenIng shadows began fa!Hng on
Riverfront Stadium late Sunday
following a drearY. game that
sent the Cincinnati Reds nine
games back of National League
Wesi-leadlng San Fral)clsco.
NL East leader Montreal
scored three runs in the 12th
Inning to hand the Rec!s a 6-3
setback In a !our-hour, eightminute game that saw 26 strikeouts, 17 walks, six errors, two
wild pitches, a •passed bat), a
player eJected from the Montreal
bench and two headed to the
disabled list.
Cincinnati . starter .rose Rljo
suffered back spasms and Is
expected to go o1f the disabled
list, which would bring the Red's
DL list to seven. Expos shortstop
Spike Owen was also put on the
15-day DL. replaced by Jeff
Huson from Indianapolis of the
Class AAA American
Association.
As the Reds fall to one game
under ,500, manager Pete Rose
apparently hasn't lost his sense
of humor.
"We lead the league In MRis,"
Rose said, referring to the
Magnetic Resonant Imaging that
g(ves a clear picture or damaged
· tissue. "We're way ahead In
MRI's, and that's what we plan to
do for Rljo Monday."
Rljo, who said he was fit before
he started warming up Sunday,
left after iwo scoreless Innings
with a lower back-problem that
reportedly was causing severe.
·
pain and discomfort.
"We'll have to see how the MR I
turns out, but Jose definitely
could go in the disabled list
tomortow." Rose said.
Already on th.e DL are Barry
Larkin, right elbow; Rob Dibble;
right elbow; Ron Oester, right

Jack Anderson

Members of Congress clf:arly .
see the nag asaP .R. goodie they . - - - - - - - - - - - - '
can offer folks back home.
Requests became particularly
brisk after members of Congress patriotism. Most House offices •
began offering tbe service In charge from $6.58 for a 3-by-5 foot
their district newsletters. Attest· nylon flag and $7.29 !or a 3-by-5
ing ·to their popularity .Is the . foot cotton flag. Prices on the
expai1dlngstockplleo!red, white Senate side run higher.
The congr4!!islonal flag service
and blue boxes of Amerlcanflags
that sit floor to ceiling In the Flag sprouted In 1937 when Congress
requested flags that had been
Office.
flown over the Capitol; 12 ragged
Last year. computers were flags were given out that year.
brought into the Flag Office to But 1955 the demand was so
accelerate the preparation of the heavy that there was a threecertificates. CoiiStltutents ·are yeilr waiting list. This prompted
t.Jsually charged for the:flown on Congress to establish · a more
their behalf. Congress has even · elaborate system 16 meet the
assigned a price to this symbol of burgeoning demand;

....

Hinig's resignation creates
mino~ disruption in House
By LEE LEONARD
.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - There have been no outright revolts In the Ohio
House .of Representatives in more than a decade, as Speaker Vernal
Riffe Jr .. .D-Wheelersburg. runs a tight ship. Democrats have been
firmly In control since 1973.
But every once in awhile a tremor occurs, disturbing the order of
things and opening the way for change.
Such a tremor occurred last ·week, when veteran Rep. William
Hlnlg. D-New Philadelphia, resigned to yield the 97th District seat to
--his son·, Richard.
Hlnlg has been iri the Ho)lse sil)ce 1965 and has chaired the Finance
Commltlee since 1983. He and Riffe grew up in the House together and
he has been a trust~d lieutenant of the speaker.
Rl!fe moved quickly last week to replace Hinig as chairman of
Finance with Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cteveland, whose flamboyant
style, Independence and spotty attendance have gotten him in trouble
in !jle past.
·. Sweeney maintains his own agenda. which Includes cozy ties with
certain Interest groups and fraterl)lzation with Republicans when.the
occasion calls for it . Once, he fancied himself as the future mayor of
Cleveland.
Now; Sweeney is viewed as a possible successor to Riffe when the
speaker steps down; perhaps In 1992.
.
'
His appointment as Finance chairman wjll test his maturity a11d
give members a chance to compare his abilities with Speaker Pro
· Tempore Barney Quilter, O·Toledo, Riffe' s natural successor.
On the day of his appointnient last· week, Sweeney raised ey~brows
by voting against Riffe 's two bills to regulate lobbyists and' liinit
political campaign contributions .
·
Riffe and Sween&lt;'Y shared red-in-the-face laughter in front of their
colleagues over the incident. But in the past. members have been
punished, and not rewarded, for showing up the -speaker that way.
"In taking the Finance chairm.anshlp, Sweeney vacated his majority
whip's position. Riffe e levated Rep . .Judy Sheerer. D-Shaker Heights,
whose quick rise In six years in the House may not yet be finished.
Nobody likes -thP outrageous costs of po(itical campaigning, but
nobody quite knows what to do about it, either.
Legis lators, candidates and political party officials are making
noises about putting a lid on the enor~ous expenditures, but it's
doubtful anything will be done. especially before next year's
statewide eiections.
·
· "¥" Courts a! ready have rul pd that limiting a candidate's expenditures
is a violation of his or her constitutional ·r ight to freedom of
expression.
So people arp talking about restricting the a mount that may be
donated to a candidate by one person or political committee. That's
the theory behind Riffe's bill that cleared the House last week and is
being studied in the Senate.
.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel, D·Youngstown, said he
thinks Ri!fe's bil will iavor incumbents. ·:People will jus t develop a
new circuitry to run that money around through nine committees
until it la nds where they want it to, " he said.
Republican gubernatorial candidate George Voinovich proposed a
vo luntary limit on expenditures by s tatewide candidates through an
agreement between Republican and Democratic party chairmen.
Voinovich suggested $5 million per candidate in the governor's race
-slightly less than what Gov. Richard Celeste spent in 1986.
With so much at stake in the 1990 elections, the party chairmen are
going to find a.ll kinds of reasons to avoid agreement on a limitation.
The bes t hope may be the constitutional amendment proposed by
Sen. Charles Butts, D-Cleveland , to limit spending by candidates for
statewide office and the General Assembly.
Butts is circulating petitions to get the issue on the November
ballot. If passed by the voters it would require the General Assembly
to enact the spending limit s.
It might not affect the 1990 elections. bu t it would be a start.

Berry's World

•

0

1989 by NEA . htc .

"SO - it's back to t11e of' ·running dogs of
imperialism· line. is it. Deng!? "

hamstring; Chris Sabo, left wall\ed one.
knee; Bo Dlaz, left knee, and
the game was delayed a total
pitcher Ron Robinson, right of 2:33 by rata and the longest
elbow but expected 'to be actl- stoppage was 1:19.
Atlanta took a 3.() lead In the
vated Monday In time to pitch
against Phlladlephla's Ken How- second off Bob Ojeda, 5-9. Evans
ell, 7-5.
led o!f with his first homer of tile
"Today was a sloppy game ·day. Jody Davis then singled and
all-around," Rose conceded,' went to third oa a double~ Ed
"butwemissedalotofopportunl- Whited. After Clary )Y&amp;lked to
ties and were 0-!or-10 with men In load the bases ·and Oddlbe
scorlng 'posltlon. We got a couple McDowell forced Davis at home.
of bad breaks-''
· Jeff Blauser followed wltli a
In one,• . Paul O'Neill had ·two-run single:
.
doubled that would have allowed
The Braves got a runEric Davis to score easlly from producing double play bY, Lonnie
first, but the ball .bounced over Smith In the rourtb to Increase
the wall In left center for a ihelr lead to 4-0. Evans' second
ground, rule double. Davis had to home run of the game and sixth
stop at third, and was left this season made It 5-0 In the fifth.
stra11dedwhen Todd Benzinger
Mets man.ager Davey Jobnson
grounded out.
said he was happy to see Evans, a
"It's not that I don't think our !ormerteammate, do well, "bull
guys aren't trying, because I'm wish he didn't have to do It
sure they're all hustling, but agal~Jff' us. He didn't have to
we're not doillg the fundamen - lmpres~ me." .
·
tals. like bunting and moving
New York scored In -the sixth•
·batters up, . and t!lat's hurt us when Howard JohJI.IOn led off
. quite often, and hurt us again with a double and scored one out
later oa a double by Kevin
today," Rose added.
A misguided throw from third McReynolds. 1be Mets drew to
baseman Lenny Harris that 5-2 In the elg~th when Johnson
would have cut down Montreal's blasted his 23rd home rua or the
Wallace•Johason at the plate but season. ·
.
instead permitted him to. s~;ore
The · Braves completed the
when catcher Jeff Reed couldn't · scoring with a run ln the eighth to
handle the toss In the fifth Inning, take a 6'2 lead. Reliever Rick
also proved costly.
Aguilera uncorked a wild pitch to
"I can't figure out that. throw," score Whited from third.
said Rose.
· Giants 3, PPiratetJ 1
OUT PLAY - Reds second sacker Jeff Inning of Sunday's game 'In Cincinnati. TheEJ!Opos
· "IIhlnk there was in.terference
At San Franci$Co, Scoti GarRichardson pull! the , tag on the. Exp08' Tim bell&amp; the Reds 6-3 In 12 Innings. (UPI)'
by Johnson on the play,. because relts allowed two hits over six
Wallach as Wallach sUdes Into second In the ltth . ·
he had to be Inside the foul line," · Innings and Jeff Brantley and .
Harris said. "But things are Steve Bedrosian provided three
going against us right now. so we Innings of perfect relief. Gar·.
relts, 7-3, allowed one run and
never got the call."
"We"re not getting the big hit struck out five In six Innings and
or making the big play right now, Bedrosian earned his 13th liVe.
so )Ve~ ve got to start playing solid Jeff Robinson, 5-8, yielded three
baseball to turn thlnp around," 'runs and five hits over five
. said Harris. "We can:t Wl!lt for l'llllngs.
Larkin, Sabo, Dibble and the ,
Padrell4, Cub8 3
others to get back: We've got .to
At . San Diego, Tim Flannery
kick ourselves·and ·s tart winning •. drove home the winning run with
before It's too late. •'
a pinCh hit sacrifice fly In a
Nelson Santovenla ll~ed a twO:run sixth inning. Dennis
slider back over the mound In the · Rasmussen. 4-6, scattered seven
12th
int'llng to score Tim Raines hits over six Innings. and Mark
. INDIANAPOLIS &lt;UPI)
with
what proved to be the Davis picked ~P his major
Fourth-seeded M!lrty ·Reist dewinning
run and hang a loss on le.ague-leadlng 24th save.
feated No: 6 Mike Raymond 6-4,
Kent
Tekulve,
0-3.
6-4, Sunday In the finals of the
"It
was
a
good
pitch, a slider
Indy Open tennis tournament
The Daily Sentinel
before .the two teamed up for the down, not even a strike, butl was
able to put the ballln play," said
doubles title .
(U8P81-)
·
The Hamilton. Ohio, tennis Santovenla.
A IMvll!ott of Malilmodla, b&lt;.
The Expos scored two .more
player earned $000 and a berth In
every altemO&lt;Bt, ·Monday
the qualifying tournament for runs· on Otis Nixon's two-out · Publlalted
tbroup Frtday, Ill Court St., Po·
double.
next month 's U.S. Hardcourts
me&lt;ay, Oblo, by tho Oltlo Valley PubElsewhere In the Nl!tioilal
• Tennis Champlonahl)is, "·also In
\labiq ~ '•"
a· -..
Pomeroy, Oh[o 15769, Ph. 9112-2156. Se·
League:
'
·
Indianapolis. ·
cond class postage paid at Pom«oy,
Braves 6, Mets !
In the double's final, Reist and
Oblo.
'
At Atlanta, Darrell Evans, a
Redmond, seeded third, beat
Membei: Vnite:l Press Internattoaat,
local rivals David Mc~allum and self-proclaimed "streak hitter,"
Inland DaOy Prell A:ModaUoa and the
continued a hot stretch Sunday
Ohio Newspa_pe&lt; Auoclatloll. Natloaal
Mark Woldmoe, 6'1, 5-7, 6-2.
Adverttslng Representative, Branham
with two home runs that powered
Second-seeded
Brenda
Hacker
first Inning of Sunday's game in Chlveland.
Newspaper Sateo, 733 Tltlrd Avenue,
. TUMBLES FOR R\JN - Tex1111 Ranger Sam
the Atlanta. Braves to a 6'2
of
Fort
Wayne
.won
the
women's
New
York.~ew York10017.
scored
from
third
on
~~!le
by
Julio
Franco.
Sosa Is upended by l*ns cll&amp;cher Joel Skinner
victory over the New York Mets.
Meg
.
title,
defeating
third-seeded
However, the Tribe won~· (~I)
as Sosa tumbles towartl the plate tq score In the
POSn.iASTER: Sl!nd adclr... ch•tpB
"Home run hitters, especially,
Boyle of Indianapolis 6-4. 6-3.•NO.
to 1he Dally Sentbtd, lll COUrt St.,
2 seeds Gretchen Donlnger and are streak hitters," said Evans,
i'Qmeroy, Ohio Cl'lft!.
Holyn Lord of Indianapolis ·, 42. "I usually have a good week
SU118CRJPTION RATEII
or two."
downed Amy and Meg Boyle 6-1,
By Curler ,.. Mot,.. llooole
Evan.s rejoined Atlanta, his . one Week ...................................suo
4·6, G-2. in the women's doubles
One Month ................................. SUO
!irst
major-league team, during
final :
one Year ................................. $72.~
CLEVELAND (UP I) - .The
.f.s . not missing It," said It open," Lefebvre said. "We
the offseason as insurance for the
SINGLE COPY
Cleveland Indians, last In the
~wards.
·
were due for a game like this and
Braves' young ln!ielders. But he
PRICE
American League In runs scored
If Edwards sees the walks as a they were •. too. That's why you
admitted that "It's hard to keep
Dolly ................................... Z5 Cents
In theflrsthalfoftheseason,may
new-found offense, Ranger man- . hate to play teams In 10-game
motivated when you ' are not In
Subscribers,not datrln&amp;to pay thecar11a.ve found their offenSe In walks.
ager Bobby Valentine sees them losing streaks." .
. the game every day ...
rtl!r "may remit In advance direct to
The Dally sentinel oil a 3, 6or 12 month
Sparky Anderson, wl)ose club
"Our new guys . like Dlon . a problem for his bullpen.
The
two
home
runs
pushed
TOI,.EDO, Ohio (UPI)
basis. Credit wUI bealvencarrll!'each
James are willing to·take a walk,.·
''Kevin (Brown) did a great has occupied the cellar in the
Scotch Baker, driven by Steve. Evans past Duke Snider and Into
and awalk isn't a detriment to an _ job, going as !arashedid, but our American League East most or
Brannan. paced the mile ln 1: 55_6 21st place on the all-time home
No sultocrtptlons by mall permktal Ill
offense." Cleveland manager · guys have got to pitch better," he the year, was relieved by thewln.
·
areu where home earner service 11
Sunday night at Toledo Raceway run list wlih 409.
available.
Doc Edwards explai~~ed atter his
said of his bullpen, • •
" I ··can remember when I'd
"The old man did a good job
Park to set a record for two-yearteam . pounded the Texas
Julio Franco drove In a run in come In and not even look at the
today,"
Atlanta
manager
Russ
old pacing geldl,ngs in 'a %-nine
Mall SaltoeriPIIono
the first Inning to ti~ teamm·a te clubhouse after a victory," AndRangers.11-5 Sunday.
,
lulde Melp !:outtty ,
Nixon said. "He really plck.ed us
track.
13 Weeki .................... ........ ...... $19.24
The Indians. Who .collected 14 Ruben Slerrs !or the American erson said. "I just come Into my
Scotch Baker won a dlvlsl'on of up."
2ii Weeks ............ :...........; ......... l37.96
hltspf!fourTexas pitchers to win
League lead wlth 65 RBis:
office like it was another one
Marty Clary, 3-0, allowed
52 Weeks ..................... ........ ..... S'74.36
the Ohio Sires Slakes, beating the
O.lllde Melp Coallly
their third straight from the
Texas, which wound up an chalked up. Now it's a thrill."
and
two-third
seven
hits
over
six
record of 1: 56.4 .that Kuzzln Kat
13 Weeks .................................. S~l.lll
Rangers. turned six walks Into 11-game road trip at 4-7, returns
Tracy Jones hit a three-run
of
a
game
that
was
Innings
set July 8, 1988, In an Ohio Sires
2ii Weeks .................................. $40.30
four runs.
home Monday to host Boston In homer In the first Inning and Lou
52 Weeks .................................. f75.40
Stakes at Scioto Downs in delayed three times by rain. The
right-hander struck out two and
the start a 13-game stand. Whitaker and Alan Trammell
The Rangers struck first for
Columbus.
four runs their first time up.
Cleveland hits the road for three blasted back-to-back homers In ·
Brannan guide~! Scotch Baker
Three runs came from Pete games at Minnesota and four at the fl'fth to pace the Tigers.
Into the lead at the quarter-mile
Consecutive singles by WhlIncavlglla's first of two homers Kansas City before returning
pole and finished four lengths
on the day.
home July 24 tohostthe Yankees.
faker, Trammell and Fred Lynn
ahead of Dee's Tuition. Stop Look
Cleveland. scoring 29 runs In
El$1!where In the American produced one run and Tracy
and Listen was third.
the , three weekend wins · after League:
Jones hit a three-run homer off
Other winners In Ohio Sires
Tlgen 8, Marillers 5
Sea itle starter Gene Harris, 1-2: Stakes In the races !or two-yearlosing ·in extra lnn,lngs to the
Rangers Thursday, gqt six or
At ·Detroit, · Charles Hudson to cap the rally.
,old pacing colts were Baker's
picked up his first Victory ln 12
"I was just hoping I could get a · Best. driven by Dan O'Dwyer. In
their own runs In tiui first.
Brad Kommlnsk, who led ,th,e mont~ lind the Tigers snapped
big hit," Jones said. "If (Harrjs)
1: 58.4; Falcons Hustler, driven
Indians with ·a three-run homer . their longest losing streak since gets off with onlY onerun,ltcould
by Charles Williams In 1:58 2-5;
and four RBis. was orie or six . 1982 with an 8-5 triumph over the
be another long day for us."
Good to Seymoure, driven .by .
Indians to drive In runs In that Seattle Mariners.
Yankees 18, Royals!
Chip Noble In 2: 0().4; and To Hot ·
first lnninws they sent 11 men to
"It's always in the back of your
(6% lnnlap)
To Stop, driven by Randy
the plate.
.
mind when Y,OU go that long
At New York, Greg C.a daret Tharps, In 2: 00.2.
Four sharp singles to left, two . without a win," Hudson said. ''I
allowed six hits over seven
The crowd or 2,958 .wagered
walks, a hlrbatsman, ~ field,er's ' . f~ltiwa~n'tcontrlbutlngtheway (See AL GAMES on Page 4)
$294,014.
.
choice and a Texas error. led to I could.'
.
·
.' those six runs.
·
'
· Hudson, '1-4, had lost seven
Incavligia's solo homer to deep straight decisions since beating
left center ln the third to pull the Texas Rangers on July 4,
Texas within 6-5. The two-homer 1988. He allowed six hits over six
game for Incavlglla was the fifth and one·thlrd Innings and beof his career and •flrst slrice July, ,c ame the first Detroit starter to .
HElniiG &amp; COOUIIG
26 1987 when he also hi! two at ' win In · 22 games since Frank
Cl~ela~d Stadium.
··
' Tanana defeated Oakland last
Efficiency and
Scott Balles needed help lifter . June 19.
.
three lnnlnp. Reliever Rich Y.~tt
,Edwin Nunez held the MarinIDgb QuaUty
took over ill the fourth and ers scoreless over the last two
pitched tWo and. two-third score- and one-third Innings for his first
Make Tbls One
tess innlnp, glv)lfg up three hits. save.
, .
of Our Best
He got the win, Improving his
"We've been struggling every
record to 5-'.
• ·' · .,da){. Ma)lbil this was the day •
Buys.
Kommlnsk's homer came off everybody came to the park with
the Rangers' third pitcher Gary their minds set that Seattle was
Mielke, and completed a five-run going to have to beat us at our
shcth inning, the second time the best," H;udsoit said.
AOLUI ·
Indians batted around. ·
• Seattle manager Jim Lefebvre
1 1
•'I'm going up there &amp;J,Ia see~.' ~new his :team was In for a long
the ball real well," sal&lt;l Ko}ll- djiY wheo, Ills team got only 'one
m(Jisk, who'had a five RBI game run In the fll'lltlnning and left the
PG""OY, OIL.
Friday. .
. .
bases loaded.
.
......
,
...
~!Ill~ - .
"Brad's always had the tools. • ''A couple runs In the first
.;.::;;[.~
Now he's getting ~Is pitch and Inning and wemlght have broken
ooooouooo_..,_,,j'.. _ "''""' . ··••• ••••·":~·••n"'''''.!'*.=:-••••••~·~-'"'''~. •••

Reist claims Indy
Open chaJ?lpiqnship

..
~ \.,';.\
.

.,

•''
..
•••
......
~_.,I

~

Whe_n conservatives fight each ot~~r
It is a law of nature that when
tradltlomilists, brought together
anything gets big ei\ough It starts by Russell Kirk and his 1953 book.
to sub-divide. We see this In
"The · Road to Serfdom," was
biology. when a single cell turns
their blblel; the Burkean tradi·
Into -two. then four. We see It in tionallsts, brought together by
social units- as when birds (or Russell Kirk and his 1953 book
"The Conservative Mind"; and
children) leave the nest, or
·t-he politically organized antipolitical factions square off.
We see It also in the realm of com!Jlunlsts (importantly inideas. The great religions are all eluding many excommunists),
divided into quarreling sects. symbolized by , Whfttak er
And when one subdivision (e.g.
Chambers and inspired by his
the Roman Catholic branch of the 1952 book, "Witness."
Christian faith) becomes large
·
It was. of course, Bill Buckley
enough, it too wUI shelter various
and hls National Review
conflictlngtendencles.
So It should come as no · (launched . in 1955) that were
surprise that the conservative most Instrumental In annealing
movement In the United States these disparate ingredients Into
the conservatlv~ philosophy we
today Is developing fissures.
Small as the movement was in know today. But there were
the early 1950s when tt began, It Important accretions to the
was far from monolithic. It movement in subsequent de- ··
started, In fact, as little more · cades: the neo-conservatives in
than a pragmatic alliance the1960s (exemplified) by Irving
against a common enemy (llber· Krlstol, Norman Podhoretz and
allsm). on the part or three quite Commentary); the New Rlgl)t In
distinct and not entirely compati- the early 1970s (led by Richard
ble Intellectual trends: the eco- Vlguerie, Paul Weyrich, and ..
nomic libertarians, typified by Howard Phillips); and the rellFriedrich Hayek (whose 1944 glous right of Jerry Falwell·and
book, "The Road to Serfdom," . Pat Robertson. which came on
was ·their bible) ; the Burkean the scene about 1980.

It is, of cot,Jrse, preposterous to
imagine that any m.ovement as
large . and vari6us as the one
described above could function
monollthically ._The wonder, in
fact , is that there has been as
little internal warfare as there
has been- a happy byproduct, I
s~spect, of the movement's luck
in having first Barry Goldwater
and then Ronald Reagan as Its
undisputed political champion.
But nothing human last•
forever, and a small but not
altogether insignificant fight has
recently broken out between
Chronicles, a monthly publica·
lion of the Rockford Institute
Perhaps most closely Identified
with the traditlonallsts, and the
Center on Religion &amp; Society, a
Rockford -sponsored project '
based In New Yor!t and broadly
neo-conservative In Its vlewss.
Thedlrectorofthelatterrecently
found himself locked out of his
office. under accusation or dis enchanting some of the center's
(and Rockford's) financial supporters, and he has retaliated by
charging that certain passages In ,,
recent Issues of Chronicles are
ooen to Interpretation as anti-

The next time ·I pick up a
women's magazine that talks
about some men's "fear of
commitment," I swear I 'II burn
it. (Unless, of course, there's a
constitutional amendment by
that time prohibiting it.)
I am so sick and tired of their
whining aboUt men who · are
''commitment-phobic.'' their
supposed "fear of permanence,"
and what we women should do to
conquer it. The last straw was the·
one I picked up In the doctor's
office this week. This headline ·
appeared In boldface next to the .
cover girl's decollete: "Exactly
How I Got th!' Man to Marry Me."
Excuse me. did someone let
Anita Laos loose again? Got him
to marry you? ls that anything
Uke I got a new stereo, a new
convertible, or some other pos·
session that has no choice In
being gotten? Or Is tt more llke
getting one's way? In either case.
does the "him" Involved have
any choice In the Issue, or Is It all
a matter of what we can get him
to do?
.•
·
this kind of stuff gives me the
creeps. It's as offensive as the
pitches we used to see In certain
men's magazines: "How to Get a
Girl Into Bed," or "How to Pick
Up Girls." You can stnt find them

In the advertising pages of the ..
worst ones. They are all about
tricks and techniques to use to
"get" someone to do what you .
want.
What place does this kind of
thinking have In our supposedly
enllghtened, egalitarian, post·
feminist society? On the one
hand, we talk about the need for
every person to find selffulfillment; therapists call It
"self-actualization." But on the
'other, If we are attracted to a
man whose idea of selffulflllmen! does not Include get- ·
ting married, we feel It's OK to
devise a way to "get" him to do it
anyway.
If. des plte our efforts. he still
doesn't want to get married, we ·
label him a "commitment·
phobic" and say he's "afraid of
permanence." . We dismiss the
possibility that he's merely
"Connie-phobic" or "afraid of
Pamela." No, It can't be that he's
just not interestl!d In a lifetime
C()Dtrac( with Connie or Pam;
there's got to be something
wrong with his head.
With all or the unhappy marrlaJes that have ended ln separa- ·
tlon or divorce In recent years,
you'd think we'd salute people of
both sexes' who refuse to rush Into

.

......
•"
-,""'
........
....
.. .•. .

.... '

·;

W l/[r.am Ru.~her - .

Semitic.
At such times: I tend to lean
back and echo old Chairman
Mao: "Let a hundred flowers
blossom - let a hundred schools · ' ·
of thought contend." But there Is
one aspect of this particular. ·:;
scrap that worries me, ahd that is . !
the Imputation of anti-Semitism.
"'
The right (like the left) has had
Its Innings with that ancient
disease. The modern conservative movement has rid Itself or Its
vestiges, · and lt Is exh:emely ,,
lmportani that It remain ·f ree of "'
them. It follows that It Is equallY
Important (1) tllat conservatives . •·
be on guard against Its recurrence, and (2) that they avoid
making the charge loosely amid
the tumult of some Intramural
brawl.
' '
I am not close enough to this
particular quarrel to draw conclusions as to who Is right and
wholswrong. Butthosewhocare ' · ,,
about the health and strength of'
the conservative .movement as a
whole wut be well advised to keep ' :
an eye on th)S problem, and not . 1'
let It get out of hand.
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Is ,commitment·ph_o bia' a myth?

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The Daily

Pom•oy- Middleport. Ohio

Page-2-The Daily SutiMII
Pomaoy-Mkldlaport, Ohio
Mondl'/. July 17, 1989 ,.
'

The Daily Sentinel

·~989

Overstreet ·'
""•h

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a "till death do us part" commit· noi his or her Inclination? Is this 1 ·
ment. Especl;tily when there's a still America. or should we ask
'
50-50 chance ·that they'U be 'for a marriage amendment right .'
letting a judge 'd ecide who gets after the one ,prohibiting flag .,,
the sofa in five years.
burning? I have a feeling some or
You'd think we'd encourage these .so-called "'fearful" nonpeople planning to get married to commUters just might know
spend a lot of tlme getting to themselves a lot better than their
know not only their potential critics know themselves.
marriage partners, but also
I ·tove women' s· magazines,
themselves. So many of us have especially when I'm waiting In
rushed into relationships which the supermarket line or when
seemed to be In keeping with they promise to help me lose fivesome expected culturalld"'al but pounds In two hours:- There's
which really weren't any~ here much 1ln most or' them that
near right for us. Why, then,' reflects our growing sense of real
would we urge anyone to marry equality . But, editors, the
in haste, when we've witnessed • 'cornmitment-ph_o blc man"
so much leisurely repentance? · doesn't fall Into that category.
Why should we encourage It's a Neanderthal myth, and It's
someone to marry at all, If that is ttme you got over it.

Today in 'histQry
· By \Jnlted Pr- International
. Today Is Monday, Ju!y 17, the !98th day or 1989 with 167 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its fuU phase.
Th~ morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus. Mars and Saturn.
Those ~rn on this date are urider the sign or Cancer. They Include
English clergyman and author Isaac Watts ln 1674, financier John
Jacob Astor In 1763, mystery writer Erie Stanley Gardner In 1889
actor James Cagney ln. 1899, TV per10nallty Art Linkletter In t9U
(age 77), ~median Phylll$, Diller In 1917 (age'72) .
·

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Indians beat :Rangers 11-5

Toledo Raceway
resUltS 80DOURCed '

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IT'S THEONE
.SYSTEM THAT .DOES
nMPST&amp;~1· IT ALL. ·

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�Monday, July 17. 1989

Ponwoy-Mkldleport. Ohio

King wins U.S. Women's Open .$unday

By.The Bend

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more meaningful than · the 316-yard par·4 to take.a two-shot par.4 seventh and sank a 30-foot
By RICHARD L SHOOK
$500,000," King said. "I certainly lead. A bogey ori the 170-yard putt on the par-S 12th for the
UPI Sports Wrltl!r . '
won't waste it, though. It will go par-3 fifth hole cost King a shot, eagles.
.
LAKE ORION, Mlcll. (UP!) ~
But she three-putted from 15
Betsy King's used her first two · to a lot of good causes and my but Sheehan fell two strokes back
retiretnent. As purses go up, It again with -a bogey on the par-4 feet on the 18th hole, missing a
shots Sunday to set the stage for
two-footer that would have given
change."
sixth hole.
her record-setting U.S. Women's
NancyLopezblrdledfourofthe
King put a 9-lron 25 feet from 'her a 65. This left her at1-over285
r Open victory.
last seven holes on the .Indian- - the pin on the 353-yard par-4 with the final-round 66.
·'I hit two good shots on the first
Ayako Okamoto or Japan
·hole, andthatkindofglvesyouan · wood Golf and · Country Club's oseventh and sank it fora birdie
l11$tant lift," King said. "It was Old Course to finish In second that opened the gap to three . equalled the ·Women's Open
place at 2-under 282.
strokes. Sheehan then tr)ple- record with a 65, despife !I bogey
the first round I'd even hit the
Penny
Hammel
fired
a
67
bogeyed
the par-4 eighth hole and o.n the 18th hole. But she was too
fairway off that tee."
far back to threaten the leaders,
King went on to birdie the - Sunday and Bradley liad a 68 to never recovered.
finishing
at 3-over 287.
tieforthlrdatl-under283,asonly
Sheehan's
second
shot
on
the
462-yard par-5 hole for a one-shot
Okamoto's
65 equalled the
four
golfers
were
able
to
break
311-yard
hole
went
out
of
Iiounds
lead and made three more over .
lowest
fourth
round
for an 011en,
par fcir the tournament. None of by Inches and she finished by
the next six holes . to post a
shot
by
Sally
Llitle
In
1978 when
them ever got cl~;&gt;ser to King than· three-putting, misSing an 18final-round 68, finishing with a
G-under
65
to
finish In a
she
scored
lncher as ' the clincher. She then _.
four-day total of 6-under 278 to four shots on tbe back side.
King's fifth win this season and bogeyed -the next two holes.
· · tie for second at the Country Club
win the tournament • by four
"At that ·point l thought It of Indianapolis. Judy Clark
shots. It was her second major 19th of her 13-year career was by
(since married to Gardner Dlcktitle, along with the 1987 Dinah the largest margin In a Women's wasn't going to be Patty's day ,"
ill$on)
was.7-under with a 65 on a
Open
since.
Janet
Anderson
won
King
said.
"
But
I
thought
the
• Shore.
The triumph made King, who by six shots In 1982. King finished _ challenge would probably come par-72 coUT~e. Baltusrol, in ' the ·
.
1985 011ep. ~ ,,
·
has five victories and nine other tied for ,12th In the Open last year from someone else."
Vicki
GOetze,
·
a
·
16-year-old
but
had
a
string
of
four
straight
Dottle'
Mochrle
fired
a
67
on
top-10 finisheS In 19 events this
·Sunday and Lori Garbacz had a from Hull," Ga., who was the only
year, the first woman golfer to top 10 finishes l!efore that.
70 to. tie for fifth at even-par 284. amateur to make the cut, closed
pass $500,000 In season ' s
earnings.
- ·
Patty ~heehan began the final VIcki Fergon had a 70 Sunday to out her second U.S. Open appearThe winner's check of $80,000 round tied for the lead at 3·under. tie for seventh with England's ance with a 75-300.
lifted King's earnings for the But she couldn't m_atch King's · Laura Davies, who fired a 6~ . . · . The final round was watched
vear to $503,794, topping · the . start and fell out of contention.
Davies, the 1987 U.S. Open by an estimated ·25,400, as the
previous LPGA best of $492,021, · · King and Sheehan 'both birdied champion, had two eagles on the tournament drew an unofflclill
won by Pat Bradley In 1986.
the par-3 third hole; but King final round. Davies holed a . Open record -ils,OOO lans.
' '
"Achieving the flvewlns Is a lot · sank a 15-footblrdle putt on the wedge shot from 135 yards on the
'

• WINS U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN - Betsy King dutehes her ,
champion's trophy after winning the u,s, Women's Operi Sunday.
WlnniJ!g by four strokes,, sbe took the IItle with a G-under par 278.
(UPI)
,

8rister will report to camp

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PI'ITSBURGH (UP!) - Pittsburgh Steeler quarterback
Bub by Brister said he will report
to training camp Wednesday, but
:admitted he considered holding
·out because . he Is upset with
: contract negotiations.
: "Not going to camp was an ,
alternative," Brister said. "I
guess I'm golngtocampwlth 'the
• attitude I'll, play out my option.
•Maybe they'll get it done and
: make I the contract)
retroactive. "
Brister is scheduled to make •
l187 ,000 in the option year of a
con't ract he signed after he was
drafted In the third round in 1986.
Brister would not reveal how
much the Steelersoffered in their
latest contract bid but said they
want him to sign a three-year
deaL
The Steelers have increased
their bid by $50,000f~om an initial
offer made in tM spring, Brister
said.
"I' m not asking for that
outrageous of a contract," said
Brister. who · became Pittsburgh's starter last season.
" They're being sort of stingy."
Brister's agent, Jim Steiner ,
said the Steelers' offer is less per
year tha n the $550,000 backup
quarteback Mike Pagel of Cleveland will receive in a two-yeilr
contract he signed this year.
. "Some guys who are backup
quarterbacks are making more
than what 1the Steelers) have
offered me," Brister said Friday . " It ' s disappointing sometimes when you see other guys
who are backups earning that,
when I'm doing the job and
working hard.

"I sttll have confidence at this
point that they'll get (a new deal)
done. If It's not by the second or
third game, I hope they see I'm
worth what I'm asking for. ·
The Steelers will conduct camp
at St . Vincent College In Latrobe,
Pa. ·

Kyger Creek U
Tournament scores
In Saturday's first-round action In the Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament:
Bidwell defeated Point Pleasant People' s Bank 6-4; Gallipolis Red Sox downed Middleport
Cardinals 7-4; !;iyracuse over
Mason County aar . Assn. 5-2;
Cheshire beat.Gallipolis A's 11-6;
Point Pleasant PSM topped Rio
Grande 6-1; and the Gallipolis
White Sox prevailed 10-3 over the
Racine Reds.
Sunday's g~es
First-round games: Gallipolis
Indians 4, Chester 1; Hannan
Trace 7, Point Pleasant ·Fruth's
6.
Second-round games: Rutland
11, Gallipolis Yankees 1; Bidwell
14, Gallipolis Red Sox 0.
Tonight's slate
Syracuse vs. Galilpolls Royals,
6 p.m. ; Cheshire vs. Green. 7: 30
p.m.
J Tuesday's games
Point Pleasant PSM vs. Addavllle, 6 p.m .; Galllpolls White Sox
vs. Neiv Haven, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday's sehedule
Gallipolis Indians vs. Mason, 6
p.m.; Hannan Trace vs. Middleport Dodgers, 7:30'p.m.

1A11 AnXl•l('tl ................ .n -111 ..fB'l 12
AtbantM ........................ 3K 53 .UM Ill

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Atlun&amp;u (Gia\'lnf' ~~~ al Monll'f' ..
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PhllatiPipWa tHeweii7-S)III nnclnlldl
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Plttllhu'l{h ( ltramw 3-1) at Su Dler;'O
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St . l.oulti ( Pow C'r 1-31 td Sl&amp;lll Frllncl,..,·o
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cHarnbwh ll-'.! l, "i : :\!1• p.m .
Ollie land ( \' oun~:l-111 Ill Dt'tMII (GI tt.on
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f~llfernla .t TerCMito., !, 5: 311 p.m .
Sp ... lko ~ Baltimore, 'US p.m .
OaJd•nd•t Del~t. 1:SSp.m.
OnoeiiUidal MlnnNolil, II: IS p.m.
Nt&gt;W l'orkal Clllcq•. 1: It p.m. •
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ftolllon at Tn.u. R: U p.m .

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PIUftllh .t 8 .. Dlep. II: II J.m.
St. toial"' at s .. Fruclill'O, 11:11 , .m.
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·South beats North 23.0

MASSILLON, Ohio CUPll Lance Harp of Franklin passed
for two touchdowns to Roger
' Harper of Columbus Independence in the South's 23-0 victory
Saturday night In the 44th annual
Dial Ohio High School NorthSouth All-Star football game.
Harp connected' with Harper
on a 12-yard scoring toss that
gave the winners a 16-0 lead In the
second quarter and on a touchdown pass of six ·yards in the final
period.
The South took a 2-0 lead on a

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second-quarter safety
Brett Lorlus of Akron St.
VIncent -St. Mary was tackl!!d in
the end zone by Stan A11derson of r
Fairfield.
A North fumblE' on the 10-yardllne led to the first South TD,
scored from one yard out by
Dante Lee of Dayton
Meadowdale.
The victory was the South's
17th In the series and second in a
row against 24 defeats and three .
ties.

FREE DELIVERY IN THE
FQLLOWING AREAS:
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, IIADIURY, MERSYILLE,
. . RUTlAND, SYRACUSE, ~SON, w:VA.
CORDERS MUIT IE PHONED IN BEFORE 3:00 P.M.)

FlU .• UVDY ON AU PIISCIIPnONS

• YOI . .'1_ I PIISCIIP1ION FILUD, WI
Wll DIUYh Altil IIIII • - SlOB Fal 011 A
SS.OI FIIIIMIM OIDII.
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PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
271 loul.

Middleport,
~o

Socand

.

Nice, FrJUtCe- Wolllf'll11 Nice ()pel!

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when

The Lord's Prayer and'Pledge to
the American Flai were repealed In unison. ' IDZf Nf!well
gave t he secretary's report, and
Eltzabeth Hayes gave the treasurer's report
Readings by Mrs . ..Hayes,
"Sleeping at the Footof h~.Bed"
were followed by games con·
ducted by Betty Roush and Mrs.
Newell. Door prizes were won by
Matthew Morris, a guest; Bonnie
Landers, a guest; Opal Hollon,
Ethel Orr, and Shirley· Beegle, a
guest.
·

Mrs. Kelter Installed the f~;&gt;llowing officers for the next six ·
mqnths, Mary ShojValter, presi· ·dent; Laura Mae 1f'llce, secretar'y; Mrs .. Cleland, treasurer;
Mrs. Hollon, flower committee;
and Mrs. Trussell, sentineL
·• Others prese11t were Pauline
Ridenour, Margaret Tuttle,
_ M~y K. Holter, Goldie Freder' lck, Margaret Amberger,. Cora
Beegle, and Fern Morris. _Guests
were Opal Eichinger, Edgar
Hartung II, Martha Lee, and
Sandra· White:

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OPEN ROUSE WINNERS- Recent winners In
Kenneth Swartz, second place wianer of a
Corky'• Claub grand opening giveaway were,
Clnelnnatl Reds jacket; and Joan WoUe, third
left to rl1bt, Deana Larkins, lint place winner of a . place winner of dinner for two at the Down Under
getaway weekend for two al the Marriott East Restaurani lri GaiUpolls.
Hotel Ia Columbus; Corky Werry, sto~ owner: ·

•

Personal note

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fi!i]j)o '

·-- __...,.,,

, MO PMSES .

PIJ STliiEiff DISUUT
CMOS Rll THIS rtATUitE.

7:00 I 9:30 DAILY
SAT /SLII I WED MTINE£5

PUWfR YAUIY IOSPRAL

Ell,. NOSE I THIO.T
·GENEUL .ALLEIGin
"WE HAfE HEARIIII AIDf'

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(3041 675-1244

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Mrs. Ethel Moore was honored
re'centJY on 75th birthday with a:
surprise potluck. dinner hosted by
Henry and Lois Reltmlre.
Mrs. MOore received many
eatils and gifts. Yvonne Jean .
Phillips a; and Janice Reltmlre
also ~elebrated birthdays.
. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
John Harden, Ravenswood ,
W.Va.; 'Mrs. Beverly Durst,
, Leon, W.Va.; Sally Cole, 'Par' kersburg, W.Va.; Betty and
Victoria Lynch, Dun!&gt;ar, W.Va.; .
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Milam,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Ned
Myers, Jason, Jamie, and Jared,
Al\ron: Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Hartong, Sugar Creek; Mrs. Lois
Ulm, Akron; Mrs. Louise Wandling, Kenneth and Jol)n, St.
. Albans, W.Va.;
'
Mrs. Clara Meadows, South
Charleston, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.

1989

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optional ~·s and 81's attire ,p~ay he woril. Music
wi!J be provided by Jlnf McLyn of WAIS
Nelsonville 770. Tho~ hal(lng favortte recordl or
dlslul J'nay bring lhem . ~ong. Relrellhineats will
be sold. and lhtre will be ilo alcohoDc beverages
permitted.
~\

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birthday ·is celebPated·' ,.
Pat Lucas, Charles.ton, W.Va.; Md.;
Mr. and .Mrs. Bert Hamrick,
Mr. and Mrs . Gay Herdman,
Mrs. Hazel Herdman, Leon, Dunbar, W.Va.; Hobart SlaughW.Va.; Mr. anCI Mrs. Ronald ter, St. Albans. W.Va.; Mr. and
Phillips, Mr. and Mts. Danny Mrs: Don Nj!al and three child~
Matzdorff, Shannon and'. Sara, ren, Mr. and Mrs. Les Clarke and
Mr. and MPs. Donald Phillips, two children, Gallipolis, Mr. and
Shawn and Shashawnee, Hun- Mrs. Eddie Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
tini;on, W.V.a. ; Mrs .. Karen Corbet t Scott, . Louie Jr. and
Thornton and Ashley, St. Albans, Evari, Mrs. Owena Clary, Doris ,
W.Va.
,
Scot~· and Jessica: Glenwood,
Mrs. Nora Smith, Eleanor, w.va:; Mrs. Jeanette Sheets,
W:Va.; MI' .. and Mrs. Tom Columbus; Mrs . G!adys'Barrett,
Swiney, Philo; Henry Adkins, Mr. !lnd Mrs. J31ll Reltmlre,
Hurricane, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs . . Tammy and · Michael, Mr. and
Paul Reltmlre, Claudette and , Mrs_' Charles Reltmlre, Todd,
Christopher·, Mrs. Goldie Relt- Steven, Jerry, April, and Gary,
mire, Minersville; , George .. all of Pomeroy; Mrs. Linda
Moore and .Crystal, Hartford , crar.ke, Aaron and Gabrielle, Mr.
W.Va. ; Charles Clarke; &lt;1'1na ,and Mrs. John Moore, Kevin
Hendrtck:and daUghter ,'Mr.·a.rid RQ,ush; and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Mrs. Morrison, Middleport, Mrs: Reltmlre, Eddie, James, and
Edith .Bowman, · Leoi~ardstown, Joshua, LetaFt, W.Va.
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Le~is Manley auxiliary meetirig held
Several award certificates received from the recent summer
convention at Junetion City were
noted when members of the
Lewis Manley Unit 263 or the
American Legion met at the
Thrledstone ;Baptist Church In
Gallipolis wit h-Annette Johnson
as hoStess.

NOTICE

GTE POMEROY
TELEPHONE .

·The unit received a blue ribbon
and certificate of achievement
for being a goal unit by Sept. 7,
1968; a commendation.'for birth- '
day roll call by reaching goal by
Nov. 10, 1988; a national cltallon
for membership ser.vlce; recognition for mernber~hlp equal to or

SUBSCRIBERS
On Saturday, July . lS, 1989
at 12:1 S a.m. GTE will
install a new cen-tral office
for P_omeroy subscribers• .
Customers with 992-xxxx
.telephone numbers to
complete .a local call, will
need to dial all 7 digits. You
can not dial ·5 digits to·
place .a .call •
'

'

Moor~'s . 75th

•- SPECIAL SlNIER MATINEES SATURDAY/SUMMY I WEONESMY .,.

'

JOH.N A. WADE, M.D. Inc:

Mr. and Mrs. John Bryan were
In Lorain with Robert Russell
and family, and Mr. and Mrs.
Abby Rector.
· They went espeelally for the
' graduation of their friends. While
·therll they also attended two open
house parties, and a bridal
shower fqr Charlotte Swartz.
. Mr. ~nd Mrs. Ronnie Russell
!lnd family, Cocoa, Fla. came to
the festivities also.

GOOD OLD-DAYS - Memben of the Parents
Dance Committee, Inc,, In Pomlli'G)', are planntnc
a ~·· and ~·· dance ·fo~ adults on Friday alg~t
from 9 p.m. to mldnlcllt. The croup holds It's
dances In the former Elberfeld'li Wareholl8e oll ·
Mechanic St. The cost will be S2 per penon and

..

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

a

J-c

•Fast Service &amp; Low Prescription Prien
•Quality Prescription Drugs
•Full Line of GonoriCI Available ·
etiost ln•urance Carries luoptod

Uti,IM

•
Te••
New,...t, R.I . - Vlrtl•• Mma of

McE !roy and · Eric Heck each
added a single.
.Kevin Taylor picked up the
win. He took over In the third for
Meigs starter Terry Fields. Phil
Kuhn was the loser, he had relief
·heip from Rich Coi'vlll.
Plckerinl(ton 19, Meigs 0.,
In ,S undays Joss to Pickering·
ton nothing went right for Meigs ..
Plc!rerlngton JumPI!ll out· to a
.four to nothing lead In the second, .
and broke.lt open with eight runs
on one hit, three Meigs errors,
three walks and two hit batters In
the third. The winners scored two
more ·In the fifth and seventh
Innings and three ln. the eighth.
Rlckerlngton had 14 hits, (seven
In the three run eighth 1, and took ·
advantage . of ·10 Meigs errors,
seven of which came In the first
three Innings.
· Hitters for 1,.\f~lgs were 'Wrlght
with a double and ·a single,
Flniaw a double and Youl)g,
Mattox, Fields, Lance and Heck
each a single . .Kyle Detwiler
slammed
home run and ' a
double, Bud Householder a 11ome
r\ln, J.R. Jarvis a triple, Brlap
DIPietro three singles, and Kevin
Nieman and Ron Klinger each a
•
double.
Seeing action on the mound for
Meigs was Young, Vanaman,
Stewart, Lance, Wright, Fields,
McQueen and Heclt.
Meigs, '·arter a slow start,
finished Its , season with a 9-14
record. Thlt'\ have a very young
team that (Jilned valuable experience this year and show a lot of
promise In the years to come.

v.nn
__ . ___ ..
......................
..................
·---- .

At The Prescription Shop
·Prescription Are Our Business!.

Goll
Anhr.M.er-.KhCiulk

The annual picnic was .the .
hlghllght of the recent meeting of
the Pa~.t Councilor's Club of !lie '
Chester Col!ncll323 Daughters of
Amerlca held at the home of
Sadie Trussell with Faye Kirkha.rt and Thelma White as
co-hostesses.
Blessing for the 6:30 . p.m.
picnic was given .by Erma .
&lt;;Jeland for the 26 people
attending.
-Marcia Keller presided at the
meeting on Mrs. Trussell's lawn.
She read five verses of· Psalm 27.

meeting ,~

,

IIIII.;_.,

..\tlaatk&gt; CHJ', N..J. -

Chluao .... ,..................fll u .ua l 'it
81 . . . . ....... ................... .n .~. f ·~
Fh._JI. .................. .:n 5I ..UI II
Plllla.elpW• ............... ..M M .311 11 ',7

a.d-a1 .....................11 •

Tnu

'

By DA,VE BARRIS
singled and came around to sco~ ninth to ' force the extra Innings
Sentinel Correspondent ·
·when Ed Crooks grounded Into a when VInce Vanaman lined a
ATHENS- The Meigs Amedfielders choice. Glouster took the single to left to score Ed Crooks,
can Legion Team was eliminated
lead In the bottom of the first · who had walked. Glouster loaded
from the 8th District Tournawhen John Downs singled,' he the bases In the tl'nth .with two
ment Sunday morning, falling to
score'd when with one out Mickey outs, but Kevin Taylor struck out
·
Bakl'r launched a long home run Scott McManus to end the Inning.
Plckerlnglon 19-0.
Ai that point the came was called
Meigs opened tournament play
over the right field fence.
Glouster made It 3-1 In the beca11se of darkness. Arter play
with a 5-4 loss to Glouster In 12
fourth, when Dave Cline led off was. resumed SaturdaY morning
Innings. The game was sta,rted on
the Inning with a double and he both teams put their lead off men
Friday evening but was suspended J;&gt;Y darkness after 10 scored one out later on a ground on In the 11th but.couldn't score.
That set the stage for Cline's two
Innings with the score tied at 4-4.
out. Meigs tied It up In the fifth,
,,
That contest was completed when Wes Young tripled with one · out heroics In the 12th.
Saturday morning .. Meigs came out, Jeff ·McElroy 'then lined a
Young led Meigs at the plate
back todefeatWellstonSaturday double to score Young and with a triple and a single,
18-5 before ·!Jowing out of tourna- McElroy later scored on a base McElroy and Vanaman added a .
ment play . with the loss to hit by Jason Wright. Baker.led orr double and a single, and Wright ·
Plcker.lngton on Sunday.
the sixth for Glouster with a added two singles . Taylor took
GloUAter 5, Meigs 4
walk, after a sacrifice and an the loss, In relief off Keith Mat tax
( 12 Innings)
error advanced him to third, he who plcthed 10 outatandlng inDave Cline two'out single to scored on a wild pitch to give nings, Cline pitched the last five
left scored John Downs with the . Glouster a 4-3 lead. ·
Innings to pick liP the·win.
Meigs loaded the bases In both
Melp 18, \\lellllton 5
winning run In Glouster's.5-4 win
Meigs had to come right back
the sixth and seventh innings but
over Meigs. ·
Meigs jumped out to the early failed to dent the plate In either and play Wellston In the losers
lead In the first when Wes Young Inning. Meigs tied It up In the bracket and jumped out to a 4-0
lead In the , first Inning and
coasted to the. victory.
rcontlnued from Page.3)
Meigs pounded ·out 19 hits and
Innings In his second career
Orioles 3, AJigels 2
took advantage of nine Wellston
start. Cadaret, 2-1, hurled hls
(ll Innings)
errors to add three runs in the
first complete game by pitching
At Baltimore, Mickey Tel- third, fourth , fifth and eighth
through a constant rain. The tieton doubled home Cal Rlpken , Innings and single qms In the
with the winning run In the 11th to second and ninth Innings for the
Yankees collected 14 hils and
scpred five runs In the fifth to give the Orioles their third victory.
·
takea10-0iead.TerryLeach,2-3, , straight win. Rlpken drew a
Keith Mattox ponded out five
. leadoff walk off Willie Fraser, hits to lead the way for Meigs
took the Joss.
A's 6, Blue Jays 2
· 2-5, and Tettieton followed with including two doubles, Chris
At Toronto, Terry Steinbach
his third hit of the game. Mike Stewart added three singles,
belted a grand slam In the Smith. 2-0, faced only two batters Young a double and a single,
seventh Inning to power the and got the win.
Crooks and Taylor with two
Athletics. Mike . Moore, 12-5,
Twins 4, Red Sox 3
singles each. , Wade McQueen,
allowed six hits over six Innings
At MIn neap o I is, Tim Matt Flnlaw, Jason Hager, Jeff
for. the victory. Mark McGwlre
Laudner's twd'"run single with
collected his 19th home run of the · one out In the 11th Inning rallied
year in ·the eighth to make the
the Twins. Consecutive singles
score 6·2. John Cerutti fell to 5-5,
by Gary Gaettl and Carmela
though he faced just one batter Castillo off Rob Murphy, 1-4, and
over the minimum through six a sacrifice set up Laudner's
Innings.
heroics In the 11th.

)uffor feltdi~PI UUe.

NATIONAL I....I:AOUE

SAil FI'Md&amp;co ...... .......$~ S1

O.rie&amp;l,

Page- 6

Pickerington eliminates Meigs Legion in tourney

Be•vldell n. Aarn Lepn, It, u•A

Ro.ton at Teua, eljCM .

W L Pet.
........ :............11 at1 .n1

......

'

Nf'W " ' " M Ct.lcqo, nll(hf;
Mllwulee at K..._. fltr. nl•ht

Eul

t..r.,..

..\mll"rlun

11: 31 p.m.
MIIMUiet {Undt&gt;t•ldc!dl Ml Kiln.,. ( ' Uy

Mont~•

-~

Calendar

Chlcu.,;o

Nf'W Vork .....................f1 .fl .5H

...•·-

w,

Uto~ehtrl( ~·~).

&lt;
••
~::

·

N"'' l 'ork:!

Monday, July 17, 1989

-- ..

will

•

.The Daily Sentinel

'

~I

'

Direaor named
'

exceeding the membership goal. natlona) security, and veterans
set by the department; an eagle affairs. S!le. stated that the
lapel ptn, notation for outstand- National Executive Committee
Ing contributions to the program Is "r"i&gt;rking on these resolutions.
of Americanism with Margaret
The' song· "America," prayer
Bowles as chairman; first place for peace by the' chaplain, Mrs.
In category iwo for chlldren ,and Johnson, ' an~ . remarks by the
youth with Florence Richards as . president closed the meeting.,
chairman, and recognition-for an
. Refreshments were served by
. outstanding program of Veteran Mrs ..Johnsim.
affairs and rehabilitation with
Tomlko Lewis as chairman.
,
· A certificate or appreciation
~-~
and veterans poppy cup was
presented to Mrs. Lewis for • , CINtiN'NATI cti PI) -Tickets
service contributiOns • to the for the Rolling Stones' ' 'Steel
American Legion Auxlltaty pro- W!ft!els" -(our appearance In
gram. which stressed dedication Cinclllhatl Sept 14 were sold out
within hoilrs Satllrday.
.
to God and country.
Tickets
went
on
sale
Saturday
Lula liamptcin, legislative
chairman, noted a list ,qf ap- morning, but by the middle ofthe
afternoon all were sold.
prov~ resolutlotis on economics,
.•

Tickets go fast ·
'

MAitiETTA, Ohio !UP~) -A
·New York man has been hired as
executive director of Attsbrldge,
the cultural development agency
· joining - Washington County, , . '
Ohio, and Wood County, W.Va.
Robert Hill will take over the
position · In mid-August, replac·
lng Robb Hankins, the director
" since tbe agency was founded In
1986. Hill cun-ently Is executive
director of the Broome County
:· Arts Council In Binghamton,

I

•

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r-------------------------'9
.
NOW AT DOMINO'S 'PIZZA

;. N.Y!.

.

.,

.

Gn 2' GIEAT PAN PIZZAS

-

lT ONE LOW PIICE

....,..
HUVIIY AliA

''

One of the projects of Arts·
bridge Is lht promotion Of
"Amertca:s ~JUver Heritage
Trail/' the atllfactlOna atone the
lHillle 1trecllof tbe Oblo River
' between 'Marietta and
Parkersllllrg.

'

$9'9 "''

•'

The-Meigs County ·Fair Tab Is
. . Coming Augu.st 11 th.
Advertising Deadline _Is
August 5, 1989
\

'

••

''
, lDDmGNAL ITEMS

,,

. SJ,70 COYEIS 1011 PIZZAS
•·
.

·Domino's
.Pi1za
.
'' 992·2124

CALL BRIAN OR DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
•
'
YEAR'S EDITION
•

)

. WISt IIIIN

'

~

'

,~

~)

'l

,

.. POIIEIOY, OliO

• •

155

•

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�._I ne
...--People in the
Peg a

lJaiiY

.
Community calendar

Monday, July 17, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport,
OHio
.

::aBnan•

news~

17, 1989

~

lly WILLII\M C. TROTJ'
Ua~ Press International
PINK FLOYD MUFFLED IN VENICE: Authorities in
Venice, Italy, muffled Pink Floyd butt he band still drew 100,000
lans, tncludtnc Tom Crullle and Woody Allea, to Its Saturday
performance, officials said. The group performed 14 songs "Money" and "Another Brick In the Wall" among them- In a
90-mtnute shOw from a barge anchored In a lagoon In front of St.
' Mark's Square and St. Mark's Basutca. Italian authorities had
leared the sound waves would damage the landmarks and
limited Pink Floyd's volume to a rather modest 60 decibels.
' ~edla reports said the crowd Included Cruise, Allen, his
glrl~nd. Mia
and the son of the Suit¥ of Oman.
Afterward, the square and environs were strewn with so much
trash and debrla that city workers couldn't handle It and an
~y unn was bi'OIIIfhl ln.
.
r . MW.KR'N SI'BUS: There wasn't much mention of Mlchael
'11DIIell's upcoming fraud and Insider trading trial when he
spoke Friday In San Diego at a minority business conference
co-sponsored by the Commerce Department. Mtlken, who made
$550 million one year as head of Drexel Burnham's junk bond
division, was described In the conference' s program as being
, "Instrumental In the development and marketing of a wide
range of Innovative financial Instruments. which have provided
more than $120 billion In growth capital to companies tn
~virtually every Industry In America." In his address, Mtlken
criticized the government for not giving enough support to
.small businesses and minority entrepreneurs. Hispanic leaders
have praised Mtlken's philanthropies, administered by his
Mtlken· Famlly FoundatiOn, and his support for minority
,. wstnes~es, Including $600 million In loans to two Hispanic
'television networks.
.
SPOitTll NEWS: NBC's Dick Ebersol will have 'to referee the
'next time lleyanl Gumbel and Willard Scolt have a spat.
:Ebersol, president of NBC Sports, now Is a senior vic'e president
·llt lii!WS In charge of the "Today" show. Ebersol will be Involved
'Ill procluclna four to six sports documentaries that wtll air
beginning In sprtng' 1990. NBC News President Michael Gartner
said the dectslon to produce more sport's documentaries was
' \:lir:Uy due to the success of a news special on black athletes that
·atl'ed last spring.
·
. •·
GLIMPSES: The reunion of the Jefferson Airplane has given
singer Grace Slick the chance to reflect on aging. She's decided
slie doesn't like it. "That doesn't mean I'm miserable but let's
;get real," Slick, 49, told People magazine.'' 'First you don't look
gtllld. Then your memory goes and then they lug you around In a
wheelchair. That's no fun. I'd be perfectly happy, science
willing, to have a bunch of plastic !lllrts put In to keep going any
Way I can" ... A man recently rel!!ased from a mental hospital
broke Into the Swedish royal family's residenece and destroyed
1;.1.000 worth of antiques. KinK Carl XVI Gustaf and his family
were at their summer palace when the incident took place.

MONDAY
RUTLAND -The Leading
Creek Water Dis lrtct wUI not
meet Monday. Another meeting
will be rescheduled at a later
date.

.Quirks
.
i
n
the
news
.
'

a

'*

..

SYRACUSE -London . Pool
will be giving swimming lessons
beginning Monday with regtstra·
tton at 10 a.m. The fee Is $12 per
· person. Call the pool at 992-9909
or Marty Maynard ' at 949-2954
for Information. There will also'
be adult swimming and Inter·
es ted persOns may can the above
numbers for Information.

$1

THRIFTEE

59C

Ll.

BraunswJiger

Chunk

49C

RC .COLA

I .

• The Area's

Dr·Ayers
Pediatrics &amp;
Internal Medicine
Suite 12

Pleasant Valley Hospita.l
M!!(iical Office Building

'

ch•a•.
1

\..

..

New

Patients Welcome

(304) 675-6015

1(1 I

PLEASANt
VM.·LEY .
HOSPITAL

Valley D~ve.
Polnt Pleassnt. W.Va. 25550

BIDUGHTDIIIII'S

ICE MILK

FRUIT DRINK

1/i GALLDIIIII

$129

89C

DOL:

HIWIIRE

SMOKED

Slit;

GALLOII ,
•

'

99.C
HAMBURGER
HOT DOG BUNS.
12 PACI

3 $1 QO
FOI

RC

2 LITEI

99C

8
16 oz.

C&amp;K SUPERMARKET
MT" "''

PWS

DEP.

•a.oo

*13.00
$21.00

f13.0D .
,.3G.OO

21-35 WORDS
$7.00
*10 DO
$16 .DO
f2600
1 f60 00

18 00

!1

,... ,61 ~00

COPY DEADLINE'I nAV IE FORI: PUILICATIO~ ~·
~ONDAV PAPEA
-tt ·OO A.M. SATURDAY
TUESDAV PAPEA
- 2 :00 P M' MONDAV
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M TUESDAY
'!HUASDAV PAPER
- 2:00 P..M WEDNESDA
FIIIOAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M THURSDAY
&lt;!lUNDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M FRIDAY

Classified pages cpver the
•

following telephone exchanges ...
Meig~;.County

GIIMo County
ANoCodol14

Aiel Code 114

M.. on Co . WV
Area Code 304

441-0IIIipolhi

99~-Mickhport

171-Pt Pl . .lnt

388-Vi'nton
248-Aio Orende
21t-0u'lln Olst. ~
143-4NIMI Dilt
379-*elnut

916-Ch•tlr

571-Apple Grove
773-M•on
882-New HIVen

317-ChiOhlrl

..,

... ."}

•

,

, Pomoroy

468.!.Loon

B4,.r.Portlend
241~•t•rt

F1ll1

848-Raoine

•'l42-Autlend

· 117'-;CooiYilo

~

11-Houllhold Goodl

12-llporttng OOOdl

' ,
14-Mitc. Merch.ndiM
1&amp;-luldtng Supph•
68-Petsfor S.ae
157-Muticll lnetruments
18-Frutts • Veill•bl•
59- For S.ae or Trade.
53-Ant~

8-Hoppy Ado

1-I.Oit and Found
,
7-Y•d Slle'(Piid 1n •dv•nce)
· 8-:PUbllc ••• • Auction .
9-Wifltad to Buy

Ellllll toy !Ill~ nt
S•:r Vlf.t•:;

cept - clllllifled displav. luU.M• Card and 11111 notiCM,
will 1lao .pp.. In the Pt. Pl . . .nt Regilter 1nd tt-e'OaiU· ipoltl Deity TribUne, ,.IChlng owr 11.000 ~ftMI.
1--

FM:II SIIPIII11~5

&amp;

1 1-Help Wanted

1 ~-Situation WMted

13-fntur~nce

.

_

TV.

CB Raplir

.·

If- Hey &amp; Grairf
16-Seed &amp; Fert ililer

17-MilaelllneDUI
1 B-Wttnted To Do

Tr.;nsporlotton

21-lu•ln•• Oppariunhy
22-Mon-v 10 Lo1n

71-Autol for S.te
72-Trucka for S•le
73-VMI • 4 wo·,

23-P•olaslonol ..,;_

31 -Horn.i tor Slle
32-Mobile Hom• for Sate
33-Farms tor Sale
34-lulinMilluildlnga .
31-lots • Ac::rt~ge

ve:.tock

81 - Firm Equipment
82-W..,ted to Buy
13-LfYeltock

14- lus•n•• Training ,
.1 &amp;~Schools &amp; lnl1ruction
te~Aodio,

l1

74-Motorcycl•
71-loets • Motors for Sate
?I-A111a Paru &amp; AcC•eori•

77- AU1o
f

Rep..

J

78-C.mptng Equipment
79-Ctmpws a Motor Hom•

31-Aool Eo..to WMiod

937-Buffllo

--

Public N otlce

uHrl.

Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Mlddlooort • followo:
SEC. I. Thot WHEREAS.
the Village of Middleport hoo
heretofore adopted cenein
l~ra,t• · and chorgao for unitary sewage system e.vice.
WHEREAS, It io doomed
necesury and advt.able 'to
eetabtish certain rlt• and
chargee for unitary HWage
system and eawage dispo111
focilltieo oOtvice to be
rendered to ooid Village and
its inhabitants and other us·
era. which wll produce auf.
ficiMtt revenu• to pay the
operating and maintenance
expenses of it1 Nnitary nw·
age system and sewage dis·
pout facilhieo. ond to pro·
vide for payment of the prin·
cipal and
inter•t of
$346,000.00 of Firat Mortgage Sewage System and
Sewage
Diopoool focill·
ti• Improvement Revenue
Bonds of the Village loauod
for the pu rpoao of paying
part of the cost of construct·
ing said facilitt. and ex·
tending said syltem.

NOW, THEREFORE. BE
IT OROAINEO by the Council of the Village of Mldll•
' port, Meigs County, Ohio.
SEC. I, THAT. In connection with the conetruction of
eKtensiona and improve·
mente to the sewage ay.tem

the following oholl be tho
rot• chargod monthly by
the VHiago of Middleport,
Ohio for IOfVictl rendered
by Ita unltory • - - syotem to Ita lnhobltonts and
other yoors thereof:
Monthly rete, belod upon
water met• reedinga:
.,
0 to 2,00D gallono, por
month f8.98
2,0D1 to 6,DDD gollona.
per month. f9. 69
.' '
&amp;.DD1 to 8.000 g~lons,
per month. f11. 77 '
8,0D1 to 10.000 pllona.
·per month, *13. 78
, 10,001 to 15,000 pi·
Ions, par month. *22.17
' 16,001 to 20.000 a-t·
Ions, par month, t33.22
.• 20.001 to 211.000 got. Ions. per month, f38. 74
All over 211.000 golonaper month. na. 74 plus .28
per 1.000 gotlono.
Flat Rota - nen-m.,ored
prlvote wells por month
f11 .1Z. ,
SEC. II. In the wont ·thol

one.- ..n..•

..,. more

thin one domllllo, commorclll. or lnGIOirlll unit. the ml' nlmum bill of f8,JI por
_month, P• unit, or~ m•
Wed oorvlct ,......., whlcllII tho grMtor ohoii~PPtr.
-•now.,.,-,,.
lnatollod on • prlvot•w.lond
,torvlct · ll proviMd to,_.
·thlnonedoiMitlo.oommor.allf or lndui!NI unit, the flot
IWIUU 11.12 por month por
Iunit. tholl - " · A unit..,..
oonoilt of • ·l*"!
• ..illlnod co,_.
by lllo
,...,....... of. the Bo•d of

NOTICE OF BALE
By virtue of •n order of
Sola loouod out of the
Common Plo• Coun of
Meigs County, Ohio, In the
CMo of Tho R•cino Homo
Notlonot Bonk. ale• Tho
Homo Netlonol Bonk. Racine, OH. 41771. l'tointiff
agotnet Coot Poworlncorpo- ,
ration, ., ol., Oot..clonts.
upon o juclgm•t !heroin
rondered,' being COlo No.
88-CV-10 In lllid Court, I
wll offor for lllo,et tho front
door of the Coun Hou• In
Pomeroy, Molgo County,
Ohio, on the 11th day of
August. 1881. •t 10:00
o'docit A.M .. tho foUowing
len• ondt.,orn-1. to-wit:
PARCEL NO. 1: lltuoto In
Congr•alonot loction· 8,
Town 2. Rona- 13, of
Salisbury Townohip,
bounclod •
follows: (ol
. ,Beginning II o point on the
dividing llno - - Fraction 3 ond loctlon B. which
laid point II IZI feet 0011·
wordly from tho southWOII
corn• of Frection 3; thon ..
along dividing line - Froctlon 3 ond loctlon 8,
which laid point lo 821 foot
-ordly fromthesouthwMt - - of J'roction 3:
then.,. otong dlvlclng tlno
- - Froctlon 3 ond
Soctlon 8 Iouth elghty-flvo
dogr- fifty-four mlnvtoo
aaot IS. 81 dog. 114' E.lelght
hundred twlnty·flve 11261
feet to o point on uld llna;
lhlnct Iouth lhrOI dogrthirty throe mlnutoo WOI1 (8.
3 dog. 33' W.l hundred flft_,17111 foetto
a point; 11).,.. south oolghtyono!IOIJI'- forlv·thr• min·
ut•waot IS. 81 dog. 43'W.I
two hundreil thirty 12301
feet to • point; thonoo nonh
thirty-four dagr- twonty·
two mlnutoo - t (N. 34
dog. 22' W.l nlco hundred
•-ty·lix ond fotlrt_,
hundrodtho 1978.141 foet to
o point of beginning. having
oourfaco-of9.1-oo.
RoforMoo O•d: Volume
134, Pog• 121-181, Meigs
County Dood Rocor._ .
PARCEL NO. 2: Baginnlng 11 o point ot the
northoat cor- of tho troct
llllobovo d•crlt.d; thonce
oouth olghty-fivo dogr-

fifty-four minutoo - 1 IS.
85 dog. 154' E.l along the
nonMrly llno of loctlon'lll,
thr• hundred thirty 13301
fOil to • point on laid llno;
th•oo by llno through laid
loctlon I, aouth twonty-flvo
dogr- flvo mlnutoo (8. 21 dog. I' W.l throo
hundred olahty·-• ond
alxty-nlno hundrodthl
(387.181 feet to • point;
thence continuing through
Mid loctlon a. south eightynino d...... thirty miNIIOI
(S. 19 dog. 30' W.l one
hundred (1 001 fOil to •
point; t ...... eightyone dear. . ttftMn mlnut•
Will (8; 81 dog. 111' W.)
nlnoty (901 feel to 1 point on
tht ••torly I no.of trect 1111
• - doocrlt.d; thonce
llongthe umo, north throo
dagu . . thirty-lhree mlnu•
-1 (N. 3 dog. 30' E.l thr•
huildrod ninety 13901 f - to
o point, the pi- of beginning. Cont.lning o turfilce
oru of 2.14 ocrao.
R.tor.,.,. Dood: Volume
1~-\. Pog• 12&amp;-196, Meigs
County Ooocl Racor•
PARCEL NO. 3: Allo oil
!hoM - I n trocto of lond
oituoto In Froctlona 2 ond 3,
Town 2, R•ue 13 .. wore
"'""'IIYed by Greonough .,
ol .. Tru- ,to :rho P""co'*
c..t Comp!lftY, by dHd
doted Merch 28, 1910,
rocordod In tho Recordor' a
0111.. of Molgo County, In
Dood Book Vol. 102. Pogo
821, ond by dood of Wllllwn
Brown, 11 ux. to Tho Mortln
E - ,Compony. dated
Juno 12. 1820. ond ••
corded In 1ho Rooordor' a
Office of Meigs County
atoroo•ld, In DHd Booll Vol.
119, Page 70, ond by Aid
Tho Monln Eberaboch Compony •nd Tho Poococlt Coli
Compony convoyed to Now
Plnabursh CHI CornPMY.
by dood doted July 31,
1928, ond recorded In the
Rocordor's Office of MalaCounty, ln. Dood Book Volume 134, og• 1211-181. It
being tho lntontlon to con·
voy oil tho surf- • • •
owned by the Gr-or In
Froctlona Z Mid 3.
R.,_., .. Dood: Volumo
138. Poaoo19B-210, Meigo
County Doocl Rocor•.
Except the following rAI
ntote. sltuoto In tho County
of Molgo. 8toto of Ohio.
Township of Sotlobury: this
conveyonce to comprilo of
1.23 acres. from tho
s o u l - corner of o 7.14
aero . troct, formorlr known

horeln.
Tho coot Mid other mln•olo Including oil Md got,
undorlrlng the lond ·convoyed heroin. belngrworved
by the New Plnoburgh Cool
Compony In ctrtoln doted Soptomber 19th.
1130, to M. C. Hoblrt,
Tru-.lt lo undorotood thot
thoro oro oxcoptod .,d ••·
sorved throo dwelling
hou-. buldlngo or tho like,
on thlo lond, with the right
ond prlvl-offo...,. grontora. Ita eucc•aora •nd
........._ to remove ume et

We would like to thank
everyone who expressed
their cpncern for Phyllis
Wells (wife and mother)
durin1 her brief illness
and death.

~

OIIPINANCE
N0 .' 1212·89
An Ordinance to fix
adjusted ret• ond charpeo
for unitary sewer ay etem
and 1ewage dil"al
facilit• eeivice fo'r the
Village of Middlagort,
Meigs County. Olilo. its
inhabitants end other

Public Notice

•

Sf'! VILI!S

Jet. ~ Rti
'(

Public Notice

Card of Thanks

h'!faby declared to be a nu~
unce and is therefore pro.
hibited.
·
SEC. IX. That all or,di·
nanc81, or pertl thereof. in
conflict her-lth, l,ncluding
No. 910. odoptod
Juno 7, 11H17, be. the
same •o. h•llby riiPOIIed.
SEC. X. This Ordinance
shill toke effect end be in
force from and aft• the ear·
li•t dote provided by low.
Polled the 26th day of
June. 1989.
An.. t: Jon P. Buck. Clerk
Dewoy M. Horton,
Pr•idont of Council
JULY 10, 17

hunthd , _
the llno which

The prayers,

,...onr..

cards, flowers and food
were crully appreciated.
It mede the loss of our
dear loved one a little easier to bear.
Harold Wells and Family

now•""'"'"' thi

-bou~ofthe
now or forrnorly -~Joe~

by
Fron- Glooclinor arid fl!r·
That V~lage of
merly owned by Henry Prl·
the •11111!
ode to tho pi- of beginme•urament
nina.' Also onv port of uld
cloliv•od to any P""
Lot #371 which may loy
in 111ch a monn.,;. that
- - tho lbovO del·
crlbod w•t port Lot lt!J76 ·
rot• for - • IINico con
ond the CMitor of Mulberry
be dol•minod from 111ch w•·
,_ mot• rooding, in which
Street: which miiY now be
went the rot• for s.Wage
ulod for Street ond oiclo·
.arvicea •hatl be the rat• set
wolk purpo••· Tho •bovo
forth on o wot• ,..., roodd•c:rlbocl Lot lncludoo oil of
lng beloit. LIIUrwiaa. any liM
thetp.on of Lot #377whlch ·
UIOr upon notlficotion to tho
dooded to Millie C.
Board of Trust- of Pubhc
Scott by PhUip unz Mid tho
Affairs of tho VRiogo shell
- 1 p.ort of 11376 which
have the right to inotollot his
w• · doodad to Millie C.
oxponsa end approved meScott by C•tMrlno Kupper
loring dovica for the me•
ond Fronk Kupper by d 111remM1 of all water pump.
Public N otic&amp;
dllod 1886 ond 1877
raopoctlvoiV.
od from wells or ot!. •
sourcao granting unto tho ·
IN ·THE
Excoptlng end roo-ing
COMMON PLEAS COURT unto 1 former Gr..tor. her
llc!ord ,of Trult- of Public
Affoirs tho right to read the
OF
heirs ond ••luns. tho right
to ontor upon Mid prom....
moterandperiodlcollychaclt
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
tho accuracy of such mot•·
THE FARMERS BANK
for tho purpoM of pointing,
repoirlng ond 'doing O'lher
ing.
&amp; SAVINGS CO.:
The foregoing charges are
l'tointiff worlt on the promlaao now or
minimum chargaa. not max.
VS
formerly ow""" by uid
lmum chargao. and tho VII·
RICKY, J. MORRIS. oleo
Grontor lmrnecllotolo# to tho
logo rOoorveo the right ond lo RICKY MORRI8. at ol
- t of the prMIIiaOI horeb¥
obligated to increMe the
.
DofMidonts conveyoil.
soma 11 ony time ohould the
Allo grontlng unto tho
CASE NO: 89-CV-44
revenu• of the sanitary
SHERIFF'S SALE
gront-. their heirs and
sewage sy.....,. and setNage
QF REAL ESTATE
••lgns all of their rights.
diapoul locilhieo provo in- ,.~As.,tV.Sherllf of Meigs title ond lntoroot in ond to an
sufficient to'poy the oP..et· ~'
Ohio, I hereby offor • • - t granted . to tho
ing end mllin""•nce ex·
II 10:30 A.M. on
Orontor by Stolto E. Kloao,
penoao and tho debt oorvica
A,uguot 4. 1889, A. whlch-ornentlldMarlbocl
ch•a- of tho liondl tp poy
the fro!llotopa ofthe In Volumo 178, pogo 24&amp;.
tho cost' ot conltructirig said
County Courthou•.
Oood Recorda of Moigs
facllltlao or axtanoiolll to ~;~~O~hlo, the followCounty.
Ohio, and for a
ooidsyotem.
In
rool Olleto:
more complete d•a"lptlon
SEC. IV. Should tho bill
ocldr•• of uld root of lllid -ornont, mor.. ce
for any IOrYica rendered by Ollila II 148 Mulberry Ia hod to Volume 1 78, Pogo
the •enitary sewage •yllem
Holahts. Pomeroy, Ohio. 241, Rooardl of Meigs
ond •-•go dltpoul foclli·
Soiil r • l - l a mora fully County, Ohio.
liM not be poid within ton doocrlbod 01 follows: •
REFERENCE DEED: 'Vodoyo, o panotiy of 10% of
Bolng o poJI of Lots #371 lumo 309, Pogo 393, Meigs
such bllllngaholl be charged. ond #317in llid Vllago ond County Ooocl Records.
If tho bill ia not paid within
Sold root •toto WM opbeginning 11 a point on top
sb&lt;ty .S.V•· the Village rao· of tho. otono woll which proised II 116,000.00.
OIV. . the .
to cvl off tho morkl the touthoaot co....,
Silo of ootd reol Ollila to
aewer
to aaid pre- of the Lot n - or formorly be for not looo then twomiaOL
shell then bo ow nod by Froncoa thlr• (2/31 tho .tor••ld
payment Gloecknor and formerly opproisod v•luo.
oua.oD owned
by HM1ry Prlo• ond · Sold ute II subjo"' to
· bllllo not the - 1 cor- of Lot #371 opprovol by tho Common
doys. the on tho north •I• of Mulberry PI- Coun, Meigs County,
, is hereby outhorl!ed Street, ond running sou- Ohio.
dlrocted to cortlfy tho IhNat about jwwrty-flvo
· Jomoo M. Soulaby,
clellnqulnt bill, plus the p• foot (21'1 too point on top of
Sheriff of
noltloo to the County Audi· the otono will otong Mu~
Molga County, Ohio
tor for collllcllori oa ond ot boon' StrOll, tram - · 0 Approved: .
the ••m• lima thll other Mno droWn In o northuotorly I, Corson Crow.
tax•
clroctl!ln Jporollol with tho Anomoy for Plaintiff.
collocti4.
"
10ut-t ••of tho hauoo Tho Formers Bonk &amp;
SEC. V. Tho owner of pr~ which now 018ncll on the Savlngo Co., Pomeroy, Oh.
VItO -Oily which Ia ---ofootdlotlt378" (713. 10, 17. 3ta •
sorvocl or may be tOtvod by
would bo two lind •-holt --~-;-;:-::::-::--the ,urlltory - - oy1110m , _ 12WI.--t of lllkl
Public Notice
dlstiout focilltloo by pip•
houa.:
thin.,.
In
non-NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
cqnnoct... wMh Hid oy-..
The Bo•d of EduCIIIIon of
ond focilltloo to convoy llni- .torly dlrootlon two or;d on•
fMt 12WI lroin •nd t~e,_ Molgo . . _ 5c!K&gt;ol Dio.tary -~~~· IMrefrom shill holf
porolol
wlh the tout'-! 1.,.. diP• t o - · -..t
• woll • tho 1 • - of the
prMIIioOI, bo liool&gt;lo to tho vi· oiclo of laid hou'• Which blili for the ~ing:
logo for oil oonitllly -~~~• now - • an tho Wall 1. F'- lnourence
Mid Lot #3711 2. 8 - Accldlnt lnaurto llld sylllm ond focilhloo
from Mid o y - ond foclli·
--~JV cllr~'!'lk.
U.... In o
:Oil'*
ho~n
.3. Ouollno ond Oil Products
tloo from Mid prornll•.
... Tlr• a:rubel
SEC. VI. aow.,g, top f\11
• ,. .. foRows:
•11iout four I. Flro Eldlngulohor lnspoen •
tlonondll8potrs
41nch conneetlon - , .
I .' Boll• lnau,_..
'In ordlr 10 bo conaldorod,
8 Inch connoctlon oil -ed blcll ...,.1 bo r•
fiJDO.OO
'
linch connoct'lon - , , •
-tel In the Tr-uror's Of.
•1100.00
.
tlcia. 320 Eaot Main S1reet
al:c. VII. A now top ia
Pomeroy, Ohio, pnorbefore
heNIIy cllflned to bo the ilt12:00o'alodl noon onTu•diiJ. Julr tl. 1189.
lllllll•lon of - • oorvlct '
on • lin• w1toro none .,.,....
The loord of Educotlon
,...,.. the tight to ooc:ept
orty Oldlled and which r•'
qulr• the lnllollotlon of
or{tloctonv ond oil bl•.
n..- Un• from tM .......
Fry, r._uror
molrt to lloootlon not fllrrn-~~~
. lahool Dlltrjot
orty _ . . . b y - MrVIct
310 he~ Moln ltte;n
from the l l l d - motn.
IIi 0. Box 272
IIC. VIII. Any othlr
.......oy..;.ohlo 4S718
171 3; 10. 17, 1tc
...__,.of_,..~ ..

vis its,

Or..,.,..

-

w•

E .-

P0MEft0'(, OH.
992-22159
NEW LISIING - ANTIQ-.

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

UITY - One story home
wtth 3 ,bedrooms. and coal
(urnace. Would make agreal
summer place, has 3. 1ots,
1ndud1ng rnm frontage.
$11,000.00.

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT ;_ Would make a
great rental or a home for a
young couple. Has 2 bed·
rooms. dming room. one
floor, all carpeted,.new roof,
and 2 lot&amp; $14,5110.00.

1

NEW LISTING - Vacant
acre lot 1n Harnsonvllle.
$3.500.00
NEW LISTING - SOUlltERN DISTRICT - A 4
bedroom ranch home wrth
full basement on approx. 111
acre lot. One car garage. Also
a2 bedroom rental house on
same lot TWO FOR THE
PRICE OF ONE!! $29,000 00.
POll EROY - 24' x60'
TratiiJ wdh 3 bedrooms,
24'x20' lamtly room added
on. carpet. 16'xll' porch
and satellrte dish. ASKING
$51,900.06.
.

°

"'

1 :,C:

uze.oo

..,, 1.o":i"

I

•
•

.....

l

11

915-4300

any or
by

COIIIIEICIAL
•CUllOM IUTCHE,. • IIATt.
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL IIOINO. ROOFING
41ETAI.IUI.DtNGa
.,.EW HOMEI

LINDA'S
PAINTING

-lou•

INTDIDI-EXTIIIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Take tha pain otrt of
palntlnt. Let -

w•

HAVE IEfiiENCE

614-915-4110

SWEEPER REPAIR
All MAKES AND
MODELS

Public Notice

the

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reosonalllt Prices"

PH. 949-2101
' .
Of les, 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Soolocl propollla wit be
rocoivod by the boord of
oducetion of the MoiJII Locol
School DIStrict. Pomeroy.
Ohio ot the office of the
T,...uror. 320 Ell! Moln
Pom•oy, Ohio
Street,
45718 untH 12:00 o'cloclt
noon. eatwn
l'lllndllrd
limo. July 2&amp;. 1888. Md et
thll tlmo oponjtd by tho
Tr-urer of sold boord oa
provided by • - for Cofotorlo Monogomant Sorv'for all schools within tho
Molgo Locol 8cltool Oiotrlct.
lnetNctiont to bl-1
1111d apoclflcotlons far this
aOtvico ore on file II tho Of·
flee of the Suporlntondont;
32D Eoot Moln Streot, Pomroy, Ohio 4117118.
Bids oro to be tooled ond
eddraoMd to: Molgo Loco!
School Dietrlct, Olflco of
tho TrBMuror, 320 Eeot
Moln 9treet, P. 0. Box 272,
P1&gt;moroy, Ohio 4&amp;7119.
81• era to be plolnly
m...od on the outside altho
sealed' •volopa 0!1 follows: CAFETERIA MANAGEMENT SERVICES .
No bid may be w~hdr-n
lifter ochodulod aloolng timo
or rocelpt of bldllar 1110011
sixty 1101 deys.
The Icard of Educotlon in-ds to occopt tho lowoot
rwponalble bid for the pro·
]oct. but reoorvao tho right to
rejlcl onv ond oil, or ports of
ony and ol. bl!lo.
By ardor of tho Board
of Educetlon. Meigs Local
School Dlatrlct, 320 Eoat
Motn Street, P. 0. Box 272,
Pomeroy, Ohio 41769.
171 3, 10, 17, 24. 4tc

&amp; lATON

IN M. .LIPORT, OHIO

Now Taking
· Registrations
992-5218 .
F• llera

lnf-tiOII

7-17-'1!1-1 mo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION

1-100-333-5252

Windows

.........

*-~

949-2526

Siding
Stamlon Guftor
hplammonl Windows

•SHAUB.,,. TREE
TRIM end lfEMOVAL
oUGHT HAUUNO

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-226.

n••os
- 4111..

/tfn

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992•2

f

i
'•
I

•
t

REPAIR
~leo TraacMitllo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

'

l
~

,~

4-25-tfn

'

. ~estroom work. . tor OallleC'o 4
Jr Ftir Juty 31·Aug 5 C~pl• ~
pr .... od. CorH 814-441-9441

'WATER
SERVICE

o• 814-441-4t20

814-2111-1088.

SYIACUSf, OHIO

ci .. : Will tn~in, mutl have ,..
rel•tblttrlnsport81:ion. Call 114-;

DomMiie VehldM
~ I C Servl.ce

2 Muses lldl. Shop d•k. 2 • .
kHP•'- Inquire • Oddl · '1 .
tnd Endl Shop. Mid.IPCM't
t

hou••

(All 992-6756

TELEMARKETING. 5·30·8,30" '

"DOC" VAUGHN

•Gravel

992-2198

742-2421

6-15

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE·
YAIDMAN MOWEIS
ECHO SAWS &amp; I'IIMMEIS
OIEGON IAIS, CHAINS

Middleport,

PWMIING &amp; HEll~NGI
Ntw """tlort:

161 North Stcoitd
Middloport, OWo 45760

IYAN SEIVICI CENTEI

WIAIAD57

........

31719 llodc•P'inlll Ad .. Pom• • ·

'D'I· Ohio E .0

3 Amounc8ments

1. 1989. The oHice of PPSEO

wll be open on Wedneed.,swad
dosed on Thurtdtv• Hourt are

to be 8:30 to 5,00 Mondly.

Wedn•di'Y and Ftfda,: 9:30 to

on Tuncl~ .

Giv1111way

2 female puppiet, 2· 3 months
old. Hsd all shots. Good with

kldo. Coii614-441·G458.

949-2969

ROOFING ,
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

•Washers •D ryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPUAN(E
SOY ICE
S8Piice All Mokes

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 ond 4-cyclo
ongln•
Stock Porta for
HomeUte. Weedeater:
Tecumseh. Brlggo &amp;

Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

6·21-'1!1-lfn

•New Tire
oCII$tom Pipe Bending
oOil Chanaes
oGruse Jobs
oGeneral Chassis
llaint•ance
oCompulerized BaiMcer
Middleport, Oh.
(Next to Hill Top Grocory)

EQUIPMENT

514-38a·9968.

oY AIIIIMlH MOWas
..NmST&amp;n lAnDEs

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

MOIIIS .
EQUIPMENT

742-2455
Salem St.
lutlo'!!!,.9Jt.

5/liUitfn

•VINYL SIDING
•AU.IMINUM IIDING
e8LOWNIN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
I

"Fret Eltlmllt18"

PH. 949-JIOI

...... M9·JI6o

OPEl 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
EICEn
HOUDAYS

We Buy All
Non Ferro'
Metals, ·
Plastics,
Stainless Steele
Etc.

refer., ... Csl814-941-3021 _ ;

Need Bowling LMI e M., 111•:. ~.
Mutt hive goodp . .onlllty, Mile ~ ~ ,
to me« people. wiling to worl&lt; . •
somenighta. mlkep . .onaltnd -.
telephone oontaa:a. Mun bf'
setf.. !lterur.., d en«gelle. Write •,,
Boll 406, Pomeroy, OhiO. ·
415789 glv ing full reeum•fulf ' 'time or pen time.
" ,,, ~
40

AVON • All • - · Carll Morily II' ··,
. ,•

Weor;e. 304-882· 2846

IP•L' "' &gt;
.

Old.- female. plft Pekinen

882· 2145

614-742·2618

Htir styliet needed •Piv 'Ktttft ' ...

houM dog to good home. Ctl

One ye~r old blu1. grl'f femlle
cat to good home Good with

kldo Cell 814-982·7020
Ktnena,

litter train«!, (304)

675-6122

3 ktr:tent. 1 wh~e. 2 clllu:o.

-==~;;;:;;;;== I
y rtf S Ia
8

o

I

Kut .,d Kurr or call 130"1' . ·
871&gt;4247"' 871&gt;3066
·. ,.

ReceptiOnilt· lnsu,...ceCI•kfoto 1 ~
lo~ doctor's office. send r•~ \o •
sume to Box 360, Point Plea-,·

..... wv 25660.
'
~------~-------- ·
Drumm• neededfor•tablishtd , :
Hard flodc·Motll b.,d Coli ' .
. ~:U7.1f: 7."$.. .. .
.'

'

Certified Respirltory Therap¥ '

Tec::hnlc:ils'l, contact Personnil' ~ '
ortlce. PleMant Vall f1f Hospitll... •. ~

8

304- G7S. 4340

··-····Gallipolis __........

School House.

9

old. 304-876-2859

)'tl•

Cruise Shipa, now hiring .U'
positions. Both skiled end un- . •
Skilled for lhtormetion Ctll '

Yerd Self!' Thurs: Fri. Set
Thurman OH. blll:ween At. 36. &amp;
278. Across from oldCentarYille

8

::---------·.
'
Blbv tltttng nHded tor 7
-:-:---=-:---"":':":'---::'· .

&amp; Vicinity

Public Sale
Ill Auction

18141779·5507Ext. H115

' '••

Prit.r MtlilfllfY SINite lndiv iclletf · '"'
needed Jom the Army Natio,.r' '
Ouerd pert-time. Monttt( P.tr· '
chack. 20 v•• retwM'IMt, ool-" ~
lege ••ilt•noe, 304-875-3950 '
or 1-800-842-3119.

-

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

6-16-lln

RECYCLING

•in• fori •~•

v• old In mv home. Mu1t havllf

Just went to ••n a litUe •trl · ' '
monev1 Or wauld vou Mke td · 'J
hMie • career? Etr:h• WfiV Awn · ;
Cll'l help you bel he beat vou c;en 1 • •
belli Cell Marilyn W.llfor. 304-

W.Ve Stlte Chll'npion All::·
tion•. Rick Pe••on. Lloenud in
Ohio ond-IVI&lt;oinla looking
Auctions 304-773-8781

•ZDOI TIACTOIS
elCHO PIOOIK1S
OIIDWAID IOTAYATOIS

Wlf'lted: reli.tlle bllrt

. - .;•

Free kittens togivtfiNIIY·3 male!!
2 famtle. 8 wks old. Cll~

992-3897

St. Rt. 124

814-992· 7180.

Gentle 3 month old kittens C1ll

"&gt;7

· JONES TIRE
CENTER

''·to ·,

304-1711-1429.

304-676-1703.

lacafld at v•y .._..,r
ht llldtl!.porf, Oh.

IIOs.IAY

DEAD OR AUVE

We

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

........

WANTED

'

AVON Ill • - I I Shiri«Jf

814-367·7120.

Howard L. Wrltesel

E

~~------~--~~
· : r.
Need.•tr• mon.,7 Avon.
9el otartod. Free gift. ~ •

Planned Parenthood of .Southealt Ohio, 238 htt M•n
Street, ennounc• new hourt for
client litrvk:• beglnningAugutt

4

VISA· MASTERCHAROE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7
Sot. 9-1
Closed Sunday

r• ·

Anno unGem en ts

&amp; SERVICE

Parts &amp; Sarwlu On

needed forAm••c:.•Pom•oy. • ~
lhis position requ ir• 2 v ...s
bookkeep~g t~~tperl.,ce wtth ...
Medie.e and Medic.id billing ·
pref•r«f Th•• is a ft.IH ch•oe 1..!
bookkiiiiiPing position which· II
re~pOMible for 111 Accou~ ..
Recelveble ectlvtr:iel. Send
~
sumnto ·WillitmJ 81•. Adm .• • t

II 1'111

8~0

1,

··'

ar:u

PAl HIU FOlD

through

Monday

Thund., •&amp;.00 P• hour plu• r·
bonus Corn .614-992· 74110. ~
10:00 • .m.· 1 ·oo p m ontv
" ;·1
·==-~=---=---:~Office Mantger-Bookktap•

5-26·'88-tfn

repcir Gas Tanks.

•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

even•ngs.

Certified licensed Shop

also acid boil and rod
aut radiators. Wt also

~ ··

446-4407

All Major' Minor
Replirt
NIASE Certificl Mtch ..ic

Wt can r.... anti rt·
core radi"tors and
heatll' carts. Wt can

-

Chol11trol Screening Techn~\,

Molt Foreign and

SER~ICE

.

We need e~tptri ..ced Con..Runnws. Mutt be able to mike I
elec:lrlcel conneclions. 6xp• ~
rlenc:ed ont,&lt; nlld IPP'v · Cd 1

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

!IIJ/191fn

LW. STEWART
TRUCKING
· VOU CALL IT
WE Will IIA Ul/1

1

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Call Anytime
992-2371

'8!1-1 mo.

BALUT, TAP
&amp; JIZZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG

lnt«VieW.

12•. P-oy Ohio

222 East Main
· POMEROY, OH.

949-2168

,.,.._...,.,WYU102
Mem•NYII·Ot:-

$18Perllly&amp;lp

pl.,l No modollnglnv_,od Fun ,

JPb'*"" t.w hrsf Na invelfment. •
ito ~lectlng or deiW•In~ C1ll •

Garag~

lt.

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WruS
. CISTEINS

FREE ESTIMATES

llewn hllulatl011
Storm Doon &amp;

- · ..... •c-llly

a•

t

1
I

Roger Hysell

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE
. 992-6872

Vinyl

P. 0. lox Ill ,

do

It for yo1.
YEIY IUSONULI

Maslk - C•taintood@l

WITIIIOOIIS
APAIIMIIIIIS fOI
Hilt (ly pay or

J

Love clothh7 Demonstreie J
be..tillt c:krJ:._ for en '#Ill ..,-tv ~

SINCE !969

ownoro.
Roforonct Dood: Volume
245, Pogo 38, Molgs County
OoociRocor•.
Soid Porcel No. 1 woo
opprolaod ot: 160D.OO.
Sold Porctl No. 2
opprollod ot: f141.00.
1 Sold Porcol No. 3 w•
opproiaod II: 16213.00.
Terms of Solo: Cosh.
Reilaototo conn01 be oold
for laos then two-thirds of
tho approlsod volue.
Jtmoo M. Soullby,
Shorlff of
Molga County, Ohio
171 3, 10, 17. 3tc

...._...._

NOW OPEN

;
•

5:00.

llllf ST. IYUCIII

~:=~::

LARRY D. IROGAN, CIC

Rnultsl

Part· tlmemechcllllbtechrHc:i'..
fOf I lilt, equipped ptT(tidtn'•
l1bor•orv. No shift work Apptf
in p ... ~ , Midi~ PI••· 203
Jilek• on Pike. Gellipofil 8 ·30 to

RESIDENTIAl

min ....

4-16-16-lln

NEW LISTINGS NEEDED Sellinl y01r prlllllrtY is 11
importlnt to u·as It is to
you. list with us for lllst

I'

Help Wanted

114·241·5383 , fo• on '

MIDDLEPORT - Excellent
Netghborhood. 2 bedroom
wrth a possible 3rd. Remodeled recently. N1ce lot and
close to everylhm g ASK FOR
DETAILS. $32,1100.00.

JIM TIIUIII .. :.. I4•zteo
Dottle Turner ..... 192-5&amp;92
Jo Mill .............. 915-..,
Offict................ tl2·225

I

Business Se
•HATS
•T-SHIRTS
oJACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES,
GROUPS &amp; •
ORGANIZATIONS

!

Services

It Ia 'the lntontion of the
prwloua Grentor horoln to
convoy oil
title ond
intorllls In
ell of the
root
lion

rendered

CUSTOII SCREEN
PIIIIIING

••
•

EmpluyniP.nl

"""-·

422 Marbt Strttt

'

Furniture ..,d epplienCII bv tlw
piece of entire houiBhold. F1k 1
prh::esbeingp11d. C•ll114-441- •
3168
.
:

uaod

MIDDLEPORT ,_ 2 stoi¥
block home, 3 bedrooms. 2
balhs, refngeutor, range,
disposal, carpet and hard·
wood floors. $29.000

!112-6111

The DailY Sentinei-Page-7 -

Rofor•ce Dood: Volume
133, pogo 544, Meigs
County Dood Rocords.
'
' Tllil ..._.. Ia given tubjact
to the . ..,...,... surface
rights, righto of weya 10
doocrlbod In Volumo 1311,
agoo 189-210 of the Meigs
County Doad Rocor•. Sold
rights of WilY I ore to be
In common with the ow-•
of the BAooot underlying the

'"d.

MY-T-sHOP

..

_

ita Pl-..re.

c.rttfittllnlureu Cou...,

Hlitry_ £. Cltlllld

_

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO. 1211-89
An Ordinance to fix rates
end chargea for water ser- .
vice in tho Village of Middle- ·
port. Ohio. '
'
Bo it ordained by the
Council of tho Village of
Middleport ill followa:
Soc. I. That the following
shell be the ret• cherpd
a the ..l.Mirel Ferm" end
monthly by tho Vlllogo of
0.21 of on ocro from tho Mlddloport, Ohio lor wator
aouthw•t corner of •n fllrnillhod by tho Village of
85.24 ·ocro troct lonnorly Middleport to itolnhobltonts
known u tho Groonou11h. ond other u-• thereof:
Ru...l ond 8qulroo troct,
METERED SERVICE
For the flrll 2,000 gollons
aid convey. . ce =~J n:-ore
portlculaly bou
end per month or laot: Min.
d•c:rlbed .. follows: Bogin- ' charge e&amp;-.94
ning ot o loculi troo two 121
Forthe next 3.0DO gallono
foot In tiMIIet• on tho nonh par month. .24 per 100 gal·
llrie of ~ion No. B. o~d lona
being the 1011~1 corFor the nex.t 1 D.ODO gal·
ofthe.-.m-lonedtroct lono per month, .2D per 100
contolnlng 7.154 - • and gollons
tho IIOUihoall cor- of
For the next 1&amp;.000 gal'
o-110 Bchwolun~n• 14.110 tons per month, .19 per 100
aero tnct In Froctlan 2; gollons
then.. with the nonh line of · AI over 30,000 gallons
Soctlon Number 8: ••t per month•. 18 par 1 DO pi·
331.6 feet to the 's outhW•t Ions.
cor- of Froctlan No. 3;
MINIMUM CHARGE FOR
thence continuing with the
MET!RED S!RVICE
north line of• Soctlon
Through on•holf Inch m•
Number 8. to ollalco on Aid lora, 111.94 por month
IOC!Ion Uno, 0011137.0r.t;
Through flve-olghthe inch
thonoo loavlng llld •octlc!n metora, •&amp;.94 per month
line ond ru..,lng oround tho
~ tlw•fourtho inch
hill; N. 43-40W.121.0feet met.._ t10.30 pw month
too oteko; thence N. 71-40
Through on•inch meters,
w. 407.11 feet to ellalco on U0.60
per month
tho-~ Hno of Hid 7.114
Through one ond one-half
acre trect: thence with tho inch meters. $34.3D per
waot line of uld 7.14 ocre month
~
troct; lOUth 218.D , _ to.
Through two inch meters,
tho ploco of beginning, conf61.80 per month
tllnlng 1.44 acr•. more or
Through throe inch motora, $91.50 por month
This .dood convoys pon of
t;hrough four Inch meters,
tho Mmo root oetote
the f118.7D por month
soma title 10 tNt conveyed
Through six Inch meters,
by tho Now Plttlburgh Cool 1222.40 per month
ComPMY to M. C. Hobort.
Soc. II. All bllil for the
Tru-. by dood dllod Sep- above
oarvica shall be
tombo&lt; 19th. 1830 and rondorod monthly on tho
racordod In Volume 131, firot day of eoch month or 10
Pogo 110-188 of the Molgo aoon thereafter u il re•o·
County, Dhio, R• nobly possible for tho sercordi, except • doocrlbod vice
during

POMEROY - 21 acres wtlh
24'x37' new barn. electric
available and TPC water.
ASKING $39,500.00

..,d •••""'"'lll ...

_

Pomeroy-MiddJeport, Ohio

Public Notice

1

891-Letlrt

.

I·n•aed to be edjustod, and

Office Hours
Monday through Friday
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.

$5.00

1-Cafd of
2-ln Mtmory
3- Annoucements
4-Giveaw.,

&lt;·

and sttid rat• and ch•g•

•,.

1 DAY
9 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS •
1 MONTH·

·~,:;;·~:~;;~far
1111 peW In 1Wence.
,
and FOund .ell und• 1Gwordswill.be

•f

testing policy

Edward

RATJ:S
0-15 WORDS 11·21 ,WOADI
.4.00
n .oo

TO PLACE AN ~D CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'I

f

.1 Marketplace

'A ctoolillod ....~ ......... piocodln,Tho Dolly &amp;ont\!)otl•·

SAUSAGE
LL

1e~

Sheriff announces

JUMBO
EGGS

SLICED
BACON

...

CHESTER ·- Mt. H~rmon
Church of Texas Community will
be having . bible school today
through Friday from 7-9 lf.m.
There wUI be classes. for all ages.

.

BREAD
3 FOR 00

POMEROY The . Ladles
TUESDAY
POMEROY -The Drew Webs· , Allxillary Fraternal Order Of
ter P.,ost of the American Legion" Eagles 2171 will meet ruesday.
A)! members are asked to bring a
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
cover~ dish for the potluck ..
Refreshments wtu be served.

eH oapitall . .•• 61 double price of 1d co1t. ' ~
type only UMd.
.
·~!"'!"~_is'""' rooponolblo 1o&lt; .,,.,., o!l•r. fi•ot dOl' IChp
errors flnt d-w ad runaln Pill*)· Clll b"o" 2..:00 p.JU,
dlti' aft• ltUbUOIIIDn to mike corr~euon.
"'
.,_.. thllt' must b'-"fl'd In edltence..
, , "- : ~~
1
Card .of Thankl
Happy Ad./
l-'
In M1moriam
Y•d Sal• :' ,,
~

COLUMBUS, Ohio' (UPI)
Franklin County Sheriff Earl
Smith has announced A tentative
policy 'that allOws for random,
surprise drug tests and locker
searches of deputies. ·
The policy was sent to the
Fraternal Order of Pollee with an
offer to help work out a perman·
ent policy.
' FOP President Larry Deck,
caiUng It a "right to privacy"
Issue, has said his union opposes
mandatory drug tes ling without
probable cause. '
Smith said he will begin testing
within two weeks. The FOP said
it wtll seek a court restraining
order.
The ten taHve policy comes 9n
the heels of public disclosures·
that more than 30 applicants who
admitted using drugs or having a
criminal ~cord have been hired

'

-~-

RACINE ThE: Southern
Athletic Boosters will meet Mondayat8:30p.m . AU members are
urged to attena.

MlDDLEP.ORT -The Mlddl~
port Church of Christ wUI be
havlng vacation bib!~ school
today through Friday from 9: 30
a.m. to noon for ages three
through the eighth grade.

Mexico, Canada, Germany and
all over the United States, said
zoo spokeswo'm an Kathleen
Harper. Some of the names
submitted for the little gray
marsupial Included, "Fuzzy,"
"Cuddles. " "Schnuckems," and
two of the runner-up names were
"Sydney," and "Murray," the
name of Australia's longest
'river.
Endangered black rhinos reach
Dallas
GRAPEVINE, Texas (UP!)Ten endangered black rhinos
arrived In the sweltering Dallas
area by passenger airplane over
the weekend as part of a breeding
program designed to save the
rare species.
The rhinos, dehydrated by
their 60·hour trip from Zimbabwe. were unloaded from the
jetliner at Daltas·FQrt Worth
International Airport and hauled
to a warehouse, where handlers
used tee and jets of ·water to cool
the animals down.
The animals were captured In
Zimbabwe as part of a conserva·
lion effort by several groups
concerned about survival of the
species, one of Africa's · most
endangered.
"The baste pu~pose Is · to
develop a captive propagation
program for black rhinos In
American zoos," said Victoria
Furber, public relations officer
for the Dallas Zoo.
· The species' numbers have
dwindled from 100,000 In 1960 to
fewer than 3,000 - a decline due
mostly to poac htng, she said. The
animals' horns are used for
dagger handles and ,for medicine
in the Orient.
· 'They are literally bemg
poached · to death in Africa tor
their horns," said Furber.
The rhinos arrived at the
Dallas airport aboard Lufthansa
Flight 494, a passenger flight
from Frankfurt, West Germany.

GAY 90's
lONG SIZE

The public Is Invited to attend.

POMEROY -The .Pomeroy
United Methodist Church wUI be
having a spaghetti dinner on
Monday from 5-7 p.m. Dena·
lions wU!'be taken.

,.anow

Mlslaken ldenllly
PiTTSBURGH (UPI)
A
sub11rllan Pittsburgh man is
relieved that court officials handl!lig a paternity suit corrected\'
spelling error that caused him to
be wrongly named as the father
of lO-year-otd child.
Computer salesman John
K*tser said someone mixed him
up with a John Kayser.
,
"They primarily were going
after the wrong person: me,"
Kaiser said.
Government officials say the
mother In the suit, Deborah
Sparte, 30, of Pittsburgh,
appited for welfare benefits last
yei'~· Officials at the Allegheny
County Court of Common Pleas'
Family Dfvls ion said she was
required to file a paternity·
chtld support claim against the
fa(her of her 10-year-old child.
Sparte supplied a Social Secur·
tty number, a last known address
and. other Identifying Items to
county officials, who found out a
man named John Kayser who
bad moved to Houston, Kaiser
sal(!.
But somehow, the caseworker
followed the trail to John Kaiser,
whO had never met or even seen
Sparte, county officials said.
Kaiser could not immediately
prove he was not the father of the
10-year-old, he said. Court off!·
clals asked him to come in for a
hearing so they could see If he
could afford $300 a month In child
support, he said.
Kaiser refused. and went to the
Family Division and waited five
hours to meet with a caseworker .
'
He showed the different
spelling
of the last names. the different
Social Security numbers, the
different birthdays, and other
inconsistencies.
"He was 5-foot-9, I'm 6-foot -~."
Kaiser said.
The case was -eventually
str;~lghtened out. But the father
of two said it cost $2,000 of his
time. He's a salesman on full
commission.
"What can you do? It's over
and done with."
No 'Fuzzy' or 'Cuddles' for new
koala
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Whai's tn a name? Try "Tjurlnga" for something exotic.
Tjurtnga Is the official name of
a 7-month·old baby koala that
San Francisco Zoo keepers chose
Saturday from some 15,000 en·
trants In a contest where the
wiJ!ner gets a slx·day trip to
Brisbane, Australia.
The name , coincidentally,
means an aboriginal good luck
stone that signifies creation, and
It was submitted by Ola Kupka,
director of development tor San
Recreation Center
the Handicapped Inc.
Kupka, coincidentally a
former associate director of
development tor theloo until last
December, specified In her en try
that If she won the prize,' several
dlaabled people from the center
would also take the Australian
trip.
Kupka said she came up with
!be winning en try In the Narne
!be Koala competition by perus·
tng l~e dictiOnary.

.•, - - - - __ ;:t_. _

· --~------------·

Wanted To Buy

Sol• cov. for 24ft. round p~.

Cell 814-3711-2808. or 814379·2504

lnt•lor Design Specillist .. ••.J
Hlfdmlnl Home Cent• is IC·
cepting JPpllcetions for an lnt• ,
rior Da1ign Specillilt lndlvitllll " '
select,ed fnl!lt h.,e prw~ : ,
tlll*'llnce m me•uring md ~
81tlmtrtlng c•pet:. VlnY'l and
custom drap• Knowledge 'of •
kHchon cMIIgn llloo plus b.,...._ • •
pldl;agelndudll pllid v~tt•ton: • ~
hfe ln1urlrlce .,dmedlcll Sub-: ·'=-...
mtt resumetoBob'MntlorMitl, ...,
Den on At P .O. IDK 33, POint '~
Ple••tt. WV 25580 or Cal 1 J '

304 · 675·3187 fot ···
IIPPOintment

. .....,

~,' .··
'i~~~~~~~===·
2 Situations

Ualld "rntture by the piece or
entire hou•hold 1110 . .lling.

5 1o1-742·2411

QuRto
pq 1940 quilts. Arrr condition

C11h pold. Cell 514-112·1117
•

or 114·182-2411.

Ulod lurnltuoe M d hou....,ld
opplloncn. Phono 114· 742·

20...

U1MI moPICI•· DDtln'l h•e to
be In running oancll:lon. Cll

114-992·7410.

'

: .~ ::
----------~
... • ~ 1'!
Wanted ,

. .

W. c•e f&lt;w elderly on d h.,dil · ' ;;
c•JJCt In our hom&amp; 21 VI1Jil" , ~...
MJ*'ftne&amp; UtN on call Lov.
'""'"'" homo. C.l 114-992&gt;
1873 IIIIer 7:00p.m. flrr '"""' •'
lnformatkJn.
. , .::
Room. bo •d. I&amp;~ ndry for eh:tlrlvt l: '
ontv . "e •onable. 814.- 912· ,
7204

.. ..... ..

Give Ua A Call
Today"

992-5114

w....... old h..d ............. ,.•

llloolt. Win pi,. up colt C3041
112·3217 or 13041342-1447.

RE·TIIAIN NOW!
• ·,.•
SOU'!IIEASTIAN BUIINEU ~
COLI.I!OE, 121 JocittUI l'lt!o. ' ·
Coli 814-oW'8-4317. lllog. No
...11·10-.
.

IMII
oorol..In
,
_ llr
304-17
3211
or •nd.
304. .8-1042.

--·-- ·-- ·-

·

�.. 11 8 The Daily Sentinei

.

Porna-oy- Middlaport. Ohio
54

LAFF-A-DAY

Monday. July 17. 1989
74

KIT N' CARLYLEe by Lany Wrlpt'

Misc . Merchandise

-

N••• dlral• Rtp Ill. Underpointlnil. lnoldo.,dout

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

114oW2-IIII. -

.

ngo.

l

- - - m"':'.vtftvl
: J:•lau•
1 Md
tot-In,
end

For 811 0' 4 Q!jrrorod oNclln~
closet doorw" Size 24" x 80' .
Coli 114-245-5781.
.
1000 S)C wh:h

...--.

iiii,IIICidl

~

Woodl1nd, 1:,2acr•l t3ti,OOO.

thraufh tha mel untl you .. .,.
lnv•lelted tM ohint-

O.J . VW.Itt Rd .. Z wooded
building lots. A,.,..OIC . 2
eoch C.U 814-245-BIIhlt•
4 :30.

.cr.

41
31

Homes

for Sale

Br.• 1 1/ 2 btltt.. CA. . dis·
hw11her, dilposal, priv.. e .,...
doood patio, -~ plorwound.
Water. III'Wtr. a triSh included.
St•rting It 1289 p• mo. Call

3 !"·• IIOc:t!onel. 2 full b•ho
llf11tl_. laiHt·ln hutch. doublo
. . . . . r•a-. CA. city IChoolt.
Coli 114o~6-1714.

IIJ 3rd .... O.Nipollo. 2 'br ..
cwpotod. clupl•. 1 1/ 2 b,.h

...
..·814-24\S.HU.
12110/ l)k.ldilp
a o!tl-1•.
Coli
2 br .. 1 b .. h In G. . o County.
Awlloblolmmodlotol¥. Colli t4-2000. or 114-~S. 8298.

Mo- hllla. 3 mi., from Pt.

pte•lftt. N.w 3 br .. .nc:hwil:h

1 - 100m a .,_rll olr. Lorge
lot: For .pt. c.n 814-~S.
9UO. or 304-1711-8198. or
175-3313.

2 bie*oom houae. % b~em111t;
'h IICI'e. Allo f2x80 2 bectoom
tr-'1• on lot. Both in Pom•oy.
117,000. 111"-992· 3122
.

I room1 tnd b•h In Syracuse.
Coli 814-992-3180.
3 bed-oom ranch. Nice larel Jot.

l•ge out· buildinfJ

992-7449 . .

c.n

114-

centrlfair. 12
..,d. w"king distance to
' l'blnt
~~- 1757235.
IRoomand~t\

Pie•.,'·

For Ill&amp; 2 storv hou ... 7 rooms.
'· 1Vol bllt,., full b•.,•n. n~
wood-coli. llrnec&amp; remodeled.
4.715aa-e. 3 aaeawoodect Must
sift price i' edlced e20. 600.00
Ph 814-992·8580.
•

32

Homes for Rent

P'"'· C.II814-38S.8388.

lovett 2 bei$-oam hou• in
Pomerc;ry. liv.,g ~. dning
rOOm, all C*"Ptt.td. kitchen with
lots of cabinets. new MD~te end
refrlgerlltor, sun porch, fuli
b11ement, g•age. oneftocw. No
Plf;s. Not more thin 3. UIO.
Plu1 'utHiti-. ,..,,~~y dtDolit.
Rl'f•tnc. on requen. Phone
114o992-5292.

Moclarn 3 bodroorno1'11b•h lg.
kitchen. living room 24x24
f~mifV I'OOI't\ dtc;k. 2 c.- gll"lge.
v.-y nice. · 10 ml• from Point
Pl-ont. Rt. 2 N . U50.00.
11141.441-9278.

42

.
furnished g•.ge IP1 · AI

f!Jitv
utilil:i• peld •cept elactrlcitv,

rn~c::.~~~re!:~~~t~F~~~

Citv Broker.,e. Call 814-4419:MO
1981 New Moon

. 14~~:70.

Coli 8t4-379-2989.

1959 Morl• 10x50/ 81500.
Coii814-2SS.1381.
1979 Baron Prince. 141160. 2
br ., total electric . E~~:c .
condl t10. 500 firm. Coli 114441-8280.
12x55, 2 bedroom. Good condi-

tion. Coli I 14-992-5168'
. · 1~&amp;0mobilehoma. 1971 . With
deck. awning. underpinning.
Good condh:lon. Cell 814-992·
3507.
1978 Mobile home. 12w46total
IIIC'Irlc. 2 bedroom, good oond.,

13041 8751878

1980 Nashue 14~~:70 expendo.
new 3 ton C .A.. 2 porch•.
uncWpinning. washllranddryer,
lf..o. funilhld. bu ilf in b•. on
rtntel lot. *14, 000.00. t3041
773· 11421.

33

L..rqeupetaln apt. 238 1stAw.
Kitchen/ stove a refris-ator.
1260/ mO:plus dep. Utititi• &amp;
ref. No pe!o. COli 614-441-

person

m~~t .

ocw 1*'101 · No

weter &amp; sew-er peid.lncitv.
Coli 614-«6-3871 ofter 5j)O
Ptlls.

46

p. m.

FlKnished 3 be~oom on Kingsbuy Rd . Coli 814- 992· 5039,

4

B8droom. furnilhed Mobile
Home. Chil cten ·tut no pets.
phonei3041 458- 1187.

large t;ail.- SpiCe,. AddiSOI'lo
Bul.,llle Ad . C.ll 614-4464285.

1986 2

Country Mabile Home Park
Route 33. North of Pomerov.
lots, rentals, parts. sales. Call
614- 992-7479.
.

Apartment
for Rent

49

Efficiencv apt. in Rto Grand&amp;
Call 814-388-9948.

Farms for Sale

M..on Co. 70 aaes. •ceiiMt
beef f•m. flc to roHing, no

house. modern buHcln~. City
1nd well wit•. could be d&amp;Y&amp;Ioped for \oetid.,tisl or comm•·
cially . *200.000.00 firm
dO. OQO. 00 clo!N n. owner oou kt
finMce b,.lrtct. Write to· Poim
PltMIIIf Regilt•. 8a• C -12,
200M1ln Sheet. Point PIIMint.

WV28S50.

51

Garage ept. furnished. 29 1/ 2

Nell. Golllpolls. 1225. utihl•
pd Call 614-448-4416 after 7
p.m.

1 br .. furn'ed .. utilh: i• Plid. t&amp;O
deposit. 1210/ mo. 8 mo. lf!lllle.

Call 814-446-3687.
rent.

Carpeted. Nrce urnin9- Laundry
faciliti81 awailable. Call 614-

Gractous lwing. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor end Riverside · Aplft·
menta in Middleport. From
f182. Call 814-992-7787.
2 bed'oom. in Recine. g•. off
street p•king. Cell 614-992·
2151 d.,s or 114-949-2420
'

Unfurnished one

Antiques

Business
Buildings

Buv. aell or trlde.: afttiques &amp;
collectabl•. S~e Didc oi' S .. ly at
Ed's a.llipoUs Fie• Market,
Sst! Sun. or call 814· 448-

7812. dolly oltor 8 p.m.
Buv or Setl. Riverine AntiQues,
1124 E. M•in Street, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W 10a.m. to ISp.m.,
Sundov 1 to 6p.m. 614-9922828.
Victorian

love· seat. Walnut
scalloped plttern on back. ntd
velvet. Great condition. 614992·20e7 or 514-992-1975.

54

Misc. Merchandise

56

Pats for Sale

Groom and ,Supply shop-Pet
Grooming. ·· All bree·ds .. . All
stytes. lama Pet Food Deller.
Julio Webb Ph. 614-446-0231 .
Dragonwynd Catt-v Kennel.
Perslan and Si.m ... •d Him•
1._,., kitten•. Chow stud Sirvice. Coli 814· ~8- 3844olter7
P.M.
CFA registered Him.,l¥'n. kit,.,., Sired "ttv top qualitv, New
York Bred Cettery. •rver• I color
point• to choose from. Hads hots
&amp; -mod/ $200 each. Coli
AkC registered Cocker Spaniel
pups, luff mill• &amp; femal•,
shots •••ned 6 wormed .

prlce/ 8160 each. Celi814·38S.
1890 .

Red Chow, female. 2 yrs1 ohl. 1
female puppy, six wQ. Weliied.
WDrmed/ e150. each. Call 614379-2588.
1

Household Goods

4 hor-. 3Ton--Wolkero&amp;
1 . St.,cfor a nod Flly, .,.tl 814o
241-9195

oe.d

Hotstein heifer calves. AI str
Rev and Williamson
1, ·
Sou

.

theldo, 304-875-1825.

64

Hay •

Grain .

Big round hav biiiM. t20 eech.
Csn deliver. Call 814-992·
8894.
H•v for .. le. 715 centa. Bile in
field, 1lidlng patio door.
ttOO.OO (!1041&amp;71-2288.
-

Hovlnthefioldl1 .00. 304-175'
5679.
·

Tr~ns~llrl~t111n

AKC Bessett puppi•. Rea~ to
go I F. A. Ben edum 614-887·

71

57

Musical .
Instruments

. 15•~~4 swimming pool, all
alu m~mu m, treated lumber deck

Fermall C-tractor. plotv aJ!tivateS, di1c &amp; , mower/ 5700.
He&amp;Yv workers Utble with 4
cheirs / 175.. Call 614-3889943.
2 1/ 2 ton central air with 20
KW, electric furnace. 1500 firm .
Coli 814-448·8280.
For Sale: 1989 Emmerson remote control VCR, amment
cond. One in contest. $175. Call
614-448-3375.

Upright piano for sale. 1100
Coli 814-949-2882.
Flute. Excellent conditioft. Uted
9 month1. *1150. Call614·8435232.
lhdividual guitar lessons begimwr~, serious gutrarist. ' 8ruic•dis. Music. 614-4"8-0187,
Jeff Wamsley instructor. 114448·8077. Limh:.t openingS.

Upri_ght piano $76.00 f30"l
675-3680.

F""der Strat with DIManio
PlckupsandKahurTremalo. Call

HD 6 Do:rer for sale. Good
condition S4600 Call 614992-8088.
Couch, loveseat. S75. 2 end
tables. 820. Table and 4 chain.
136. Tab'e, 15 chairs. $40.
Wooden t~ble. 4 chairs. 1&amp;0.
Coffee table. en~ table,. he&amp;Yv
solid olk. 050. 814-949·2171 .
Peint •le now going on at Paint
~s. 20 p• ~ent off regular
prtee on 1nter10r and exterior
Pittsburgh P1ints. SaleendsJuly
22. You work too hard to paint
with anything less. PAINT PLUS.
2415 Jackson Awe. 304-875-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82 4084.
Oliwe St ., Gallipolis.
NEW . 6 pc. wood group · *339. 4x8 utitity c•t. elect.. equipt,
living room sult..· t199 -e599. l260.00. 1304) 676-2181 .
Bunk beds with bedding- e249. 9
Full sile mettr•s &amp; foundltlon
MM Barret• *426.00. {304)
starting. $99. Raclln.- starting- 175·1445. leave message.
99 ·
USEDBeds. drMs..... bedroom fl rewood for sale. 830.00 picksuites. Desks. wringer washer, 8 up _lotd. call afl• &amp;:00 {3041
complete line of used furniture. 458-1981 .
.
NEW· Western boot•- t315 .
Workboots t18 &amp; up. (Steet a Se•oned h•d woo~ •315. 00
soft toe.l Cell 614-448-3159.
plcl&lt;·up lood 4xl lovol. 19'71
house trailer 66 mak8 offer.
County App• .,ce, Inc. Good 1979 lebll'on SW. 80 DOdge
used appllences lr'ld T.V. sets. 010 Truck 1400.00 ea. Phone
Open 8 A.M. to 8 P. M. Mon thru 1 -:::-7:::-5-:7.:.8·_2_00.:.8:..or.::_:2:.;1,:5:2·~­
Si0. 814-441-1899. 127 3rd. I.
Awe . Gallipolis. OH .

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61 F arrn Equipment

trash pickups provided. M1int•
n~nc:e frill living clost to shopping. b1r1k1 .,d schooh:. For
mOre lnfarm.tlon can 304-812·
3718. Equal Opportunity Hou•
ing. Sed ion 8 accept.:!.

GOVEF\NMENT SEIZED VoM·
cl• · from t100 For•. Mer·
ced•. Corvette~. Chevyl. Surplus . Buy au Guide ( 11
805-887·1000 Ext. S-10189.
19971oodod. Toyoto Suprow-h
100.000 mi. w ... onty . EIIC.
shape See c• a1 ·Jumbo. Ak&gt;
Grende/ $13.500. COli 814245-9143.
1971 Chovolle 360. So~t,..;.n
c:•. Exc . co~ . Cell 81~1894823.
.

1979 Mercury Zeptrvr. 111.000.
good co nd/ 1800. Cell 814379-2111 .
1980 Dodge OntnL n., lir-.
nt/IN paint, 4 apd., 40,000 mi.

exc. cond./ 11,000. Cal 814379-2102. . .
,,

1988 Pont. Fir-d. 37,000
mi .. T·tops. nice: · 198&amp; Pont.
Su nbird, 2 dr.. auto •
nlco/t348S: 19al Ply. K Cor.
49. 000 mi./.:JII98: 1988 Ford
Tempo. 6 spd. air. 42.000
mi./ 13595; 1885 Ford Eocort / 111911: teas Ford Muotong/12100: 1983 ford Eooort / 11911: a • 0 - o r..
Hi·wov 160. Coli 114-4416815. or 114-441-1189.

*·

1989 Oldl CutiMs. ac. cond
12,000mll•. 1979FordLTD u:
51.000 octuol mH•. coli 614441-8858.
For Sale: 197&amp; Ford T~rlno. 2
dr .. 351 win- olr. PS. Pl.
AM / FM ano TriM, 71.000
ml. / 11400. Coli 814·445·

1988MeraoryCougor, V-1, Exc.
!X)nd.. cruile, tilt. air, al power.
15,000. Coli 814o~S.80114.

AcreaQe

1 bedroom opt.
(3041 175-1172.

Hondwtan.
.

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

Unfur•hod 2 -oorn lpt ..
--~... -lo.. ..,._

=·-·

m'"lo" (3041

A lhton bean• I one ..,.. lois

~~-·-• public-•.
Jr. 304-117•

'"'':?.,publo
loto.

Aolli...
.........,....
. . . . .,,.

~

- · Jr. 304-571-2338.
- - Cli'dil

~~5111.

1978 Chovotte c•. good lor
porto. 1100 .00. 304- 17537118.

19711'7 St•crolt Trllful. 120
H.,.I.D ..M~~&lt;crulo•. he. Cond.
t4500. 00. 13041 171-1270.

'10 Pomloc Phoenix, 4
1100.00. 304-875-5123.

76

1983 Ply-.th Roliilnt 4 dOor
111c cond t1 , 700.00. 304-571&lt;
29•1

72

for Sale

1977ChO¥y, C10, 3opd., 250-1
cv I. runo good. UOO. C.H
814-1143-2187.
191M Ch.,rol .. 3/ " ton PU,
PS/ Pe. AC, c.uioe, AM I FM ·

/ at•eo. cemper pedlege. E.c.
Cond. Colll14-.8418.

19a3 S-10 picllup. long bod.
lw_ight rod./ 12800, COli I 14379-2721.
\,
1972 314 ton OMC tiuck.
Comper apoclll 380. AT . PS. Pl.
*3.000. COl 814-24S.H23..,
11+241&gt;9114.

1918 Chov. S -10 picll· up, nice;
1986 Chov. S-10. 4x4. plcll· up.
sharp;. 1984 Chev . S-10
al.erl $4595; 1883 Foid 4x4.
picfo-up/ 13595: 1914 Nlosan
pick-up, Mlto. nic.: 191M t'auzu
picll· up/ 11995; 1910 Olev.
plcll-up. I cyl., ouot/ 11795:
1971 Ford plcfo- up/ MilS: 1985
Ford Von/839911;.. 1984 co...
Van / 12000. COli 614-448·
18,5, or 614-~8188. ..

•

1979 Ford F-150. 4•4 pick· up;
•c. co nd.I 115, QOO. C.U Oery It
114-~1-3110. day; 814-~S.
7788...'"'""'·
1977 GMC Tri-A "xle. 8800 - ·
1•. 151 4 tr..amia•ion. 12 front

exle-34 ·r .,t. niW Wf1V elr axle,
15ft. Ilium. beet 111 whh/ wi-thout 'bed Call aft• 8 :00p.m.

814-2&amp;1-1325

Mrenlng~.

1971 VW Von : OoodCond. loot
offer. Coiii14-~S.091S oltw

I p.m.

11329.

'*''

1 - - furniohod ll't. olr
"'""'
ol-11&gt; •111.00
JoiiWionmonth
AW. 304871-21120 - r o 5,00 PM.

1979 CJ7 or...,ll point, new
top 30" V-1. 43.000 mil• on
engtno. 13041171-1514.

1...
·

tt2·7711

-

w-.

1179 kxeo. Oood oonclltlon.
Coll14-"2·3242.
lit. aac.,..••••· 7mH• _,h
of--.
....._ ... _ ..
Tune llpo on "TV'1 end ltrllt
•••· Aioo. louy _,..,, ......
........ 4 · - ·.. 41rlnt Moo
cr Juno onl . . UIOO.OOworth
of 'ol•il Ne. .orl• frM .
Phone 304o.,..._130.

--·-----.,.-- ·1111 Hondil Cloot-

ex

110.

lonl"""" .,....., "'" .......

11• v-41 ..._.....,o-,

. . -•
• - · · - lott.
t~....................
...

"Anyone -

tile lid lor my

prMSUre cooker?"

1111 M - Cillo - · oond..
,_ """" lab. n.aoo m1-.
etiOII.00. (3041 871-7111.

•w
w...

Tree &amp; 1tump, rerncw1l, shade
trea avergree"l. shrubs. mulch.
mushroom compost.
Don't l11t1 dl:cap•: Cell t14.... 9648.

•"*'g.

Stampede-Finals
&lt;lJ • (I) MOVII!i 'Cracked

Up' AIC Mollciat Night
Movfl (2:011) Q
w (!) ""**ean Mallin A
setecUon of eaxophonl111
Che~le Parker's recordings
are featured. Q

,.

·'

!Ill • a2l .Murphr Brown Q

.....

·o
.- I, .o.m.
. -......
ltw
• I P."- Col
...
104-171-1U3. .,...... 304-

lb-JUJ.

0 Larry King Uvel .
0 Prime Tlml Wr'811SIIIIIIIIIrtg1G
8:30 !Ill • a2l Dllllf11ng WO!Mn
,.Anltlony acts .as surrogahl
. brotller to a young con artllt.

I ~UES5 HE coUL.DN'TG-ET
A DRIVeR'S l..lca-15E.

''
11

o~'

~&amp;.aea..ntrr

,.

Fetty Tree Trimmin3 stump
removel. Call 304-675-1331.

10:00 (]) 700 Club
(l)

:~

Pump .... and service. 304811-3802
.

•,

Wallington. Jean Du ShOn
and others perform In Utla
rousing trlbuhl to CNcago'a

,.

Influential 47Ut. strttt music
communl1y of the '40s. (NR)

br.,dl. House cMis, lllso some

'"'*•·

11Jpll.,ce
W.Va 304
1171-23110hlo 814-4411-2454. •·

STUFF
.COlTON IN

a. Heating

Refrigeration

LOST
AT CARDS
HE

OUR EARS,
FELLERS

iIll llllEvening
Born F a Newl

AG'IN

10:111 (J) MOVIE: BeJvaa- 1:
Goldin Olblt (NA) (2:00) .
10:30 (l) Moyen: A s-111 Look
Moyers rsc:atlt hlghllgh1a or
some of'hla moat acclaimed

!Ill •

Dcictfll', Ooclor
Deirdre aakt Mike to make 1
hOUse call tor her; the
. patlln1'1 her did.
ill Major Llalllte ll'aaeball
• Naw Country

'
'•

c

ASTRO~RAPH '

General Hauling

.

,
'"
lro-Qr_
aph,, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 9.1428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.

..:n

W••

Potrlcfoo
HoullngServlco.
HOI•. welt. rilt•ns. 1.000 or
2. 000 ..... deiN•i•. phone
304-57&amp;.2311 or 814-44•
4081.
Wettereon' 1 Weter Heullng.

llo•onobl• ..... - - dlo.- .... 2.000 to 4.1100 .....
lty, cloter,., poola, wollo. ' oto.
Co11304-57S.zt1e.

UpholltflrY

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
•
•

=g

lniiiMews.

••

J &amp; J Woter Sorvlco. Swimming
pooh. &lt;Nt~ ~.Ph . 61424,59215.

87

out of money' may mean
Stephanie out of his life. (R)

••

R • R w..or llorv leo. ,oolo:
ch:1ern1, wells . lmmecliltt·
1.000 or 2.000gollonodolilrwy.
Coli 304ol71-1370.
,

.

!Ill • !l2l Nswhlrt'Miclteel
LET'S

Resident ill or comma-cisl wirIng New service or repai's.
Licensed eledrici~n. Ridenour
EIOdrlcol, 304-871-1718,

' .
85

(1 :00)

VARNEY

Plumbing

Elee trice I

IDl .....

(J) Prealoua Mamorlae·
Sllolllng 47Ut IIIMt Valerie

Ron' a TV 5ervice. speciiUring.,

84

'

m

"

Septic Tank Pumping- 190. Oallio Co. RON EVANS ENTER PRISES. Jacll1on. OH 1-100537-9521.

:When

~ ltocllo 1989 Calgary

Rogerslesement

Motorcycles

1917 Hondl Four TrD 210 X.
Exlro tlrof end
' 114-

llood lowo Copportonor .. lfl"'
otor ,..h leo moker. •eo. oo.
304-175-7301.

•w

IIA,S EMENT •
.
WATERPROOFING
l)lcondhlonol lll•lmo ~·., ­
tee. local ret•.-.ce~ t.rnilhed:
fioo oatlrn••· Coli cotloa
1·814-237·0488. dar or night.

&amp;

maahln&amp;

ll11d whito boOhtub ond loYotory. AIIO on 11-le · -· COR
114-192-2174 .. 814·812·
3817.

0 MUIIMr, 1M WIOhl A
Falhlol\allle Way To Die
. .• Nsllwllll Now
a:30
1111 Hoaan'F~muy
Mark enters phase of ,
adolescent rebellion. (R)' I;J
9:00
1111 MOVII!:
wa
Yaung' NIC Mondly
Night At Thll Movtea (2:00)

CARTER'S PLUMIINO
AND HEATING
Cot". FounhMdPine
,.
Gellipolit. Ohio
,. '
Phone &amp;1.-.441-3811 or e14--~77.
•

4W.D.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
- ACROSS
40 Ending
1 Singer
for old
"In black"
or young
5 Football's
41 Eat into
,Super DOWN
9.Warfare
1 Edllor's
need (sl.)
mark
10 Acid
~Soap plant
In soap
3 "Chicken
12 Zoo sound
feed"
13 ·-on
4 Jordanian
My Mind"
rnountaln
15 L-shaped
5 He played
· Item
.,
Captain
11 Barker and
Ouaeg
Perkins
8 Cheers
17 • - and
lor the
Sympathy'
matador
111 'Father
7 Skin
of the
problem
H-Bomb"
. 8 No place
20 Dross
for Custar
21 Head line
11 Split
22 Alpine
14 AnKious
snoW field
23 Purpose
25 Temperate
28 Lug
27World(1914-1918) b-f--+28 Grand. parental
29 Vinegar
32 Shea
athlete
33 PUnster
34 Gardening
tool
35 Drinking
toast
37 ·-in
the U.S.A."
(1984 song)
38 Tantallze
31Commedla
dell'-

(2:00)

Home

Be
to ltate your zodlec elgn.
LEO (.luiJ 21-A... 22) AmbHious objeet._ can be ac111evac1 today. provtd·
, ~ Y11U '-the fortitude to do so. Give
••v t r - matters top priority lind put all
on the back bu"*S. ·
YIIIGO (AIIg:· ZS.Iept. :12) Busll!esl

'
.

.

.

ovlll'com!ng 11. You know your Umlta-

tiona, but you also are kMnly aware of

your latents and abilities.

AGUAIIIU.I (.latt. zo.Feb. 11) Your
peers will perceive you to be they can rely on today. They'll know
once you give your word to do 10fn8thing. you'l fOllow 11 through to ·e ConS1ruc11Ye conclusion.

·

arid ~ Should blend ~ather well
PIIICEI (Feb. Ill lla olt Ill) 1111n0 wilh
for you loday, .0 II there 1e something loyal Old frlendellld edherlng to taml~
Important you want ' to diiCIIII with a
ler routines wtn bring you con-able
majOr ·client, do It In convivial
satlalac110n today. You're not apt 10
IUIToundlngs.
'
find the same gratlfiCBIIpn In lnvolv&amp;,, , UIIIA (...... 21o0ct. 21) Savwlll 'lart"*lla with ,_ ICqUIIntancM.
oua metters can be concluded to your
AIIIU (lllnll 21·Apltl tl) You're betaatlllfiCIIOn today. IYeil 1~~0\~gh you
till' equipped to handle tough su~gn.·
, may be l!Oubtful of your abiii!Y io•1J9,10.
men1a 1oday 111an you may reaiiD or apr ' .." F~t~,:llili't In hie den aiv;l;~'~ '~.'"' ~hi. Wha1'a more, you're likely to
, you -.1101~.
" ·•IGCalld ocnlf*lly ..-alhld.
'
s-at~~~~ arr~!!!!! IC=CGMIO(OIL . .B)YourgrMt- .TAUIIUI. (April Ill X 1 Ill) Special
w!H not be
for ma-... pu •. . - eat
today II yaurlblllly 10 I!8IP evkno.tadp Ill' . . . . tleli you'w acquired
will greatly enrtcll your lila In 11M1 ~.
'ln JH'OI* Plfl!leOIIYe. E¥en II througll perNtllll axparll111111 can be .
llhead. Three In particUlar .t10Uicl be you'l . _ 10 "-1 wntuar- lllues. 1uaed to your advMtaga1cJdav. You'llln·
ltllldoU11.
llley'H not __ llo'Mim you.
ltlnctlvlly " - auctly ' - and when
CANCIII (_,. 21-.lulr 22) Happy r• IAGITTAiliUI (Notr. 21 DM '21) Thll
1o apply H.
.
.
1ft the olflng ~-·at~; cOitld·:ut"• good day to aq ~. 'GEIMI (llltr21.,..111Someone tor
rMttn.._youllldiOurmile . .'lll t+'i!W you'D be ..,.till about What .wllam you've doni10111M11ioog Utoughl·
..,..,.,.,. H8nnOny of purJIOII II the you 1M cl II I and H - you buy Ire apt ' ·ful In the pest ntlgh1 ba In a po8111on IO
_ . . 10 •"=
In IOinl llldallvora. to remain your tavort111 tor along ttme_ ~ today. Thll a111c11on with
'Mal« chanpa . . ah8ICI ~e-rn CAl IIICOIII (Dec. ...,._ •l The : whiCh 111111 wll be done could touch you
the coming ,.r. Send lor your Aatro- more dllllcull lhe c11a1tenge today, the : deeply.
Grlllth pr1 N Ilona today. Ma11S1 toAa- , moregrattllcstiOn you are apt 1otakeln ; ,

"'"*.,..

\\

.2

.109876

11:00 Ill Paper CIIIM
• Cll &lt;lJ • CIY IIIII
dllNawa ,

.. "

U82
+KI54

..

-

CROSSWORD

lj~ itovtE: Every Time

Improvements

•

.... .,

•RJ

11J PPii.~mme.tlllanwsa

19112 Ford truck 302 onalno.
good cond. taoo.oo. 304-5712615.
Vane •

adheres to a
traciltlonal lifestyle. Q
!Ill
F - Par11 Of 5
Cameroon

El Cemlno with 1510 engine
•aeo.OO. '77 Ford truck w~h
302 onalno tiOO.OO. Coli 304171-51}3.

·~

lpaclal A primitive' tribe In

ill v. Par11 (1 :42)

81

.,

.,
NORTH

dlamonds.lt.- ;

~~Gaagraplllc

Serv1ce~

..

1· 1'1

a'.:

MscGyver come• to the aid ·
of a Nn-~ teenage

82

1182 H_.ay O..l.on Sport•
t•. Ort-"'al owner. 3100ml•.
Coli .-14· 141·3042, II no
..awer.
Ofl 1n.wering

II'PiilnCIO. Cllll14-~&amp;- 7572.
Hours 8-15 .

(J) Amarlcl'l Wilt I mIll
&lt;lJ • (I) MllcO;vat'

·

.

li-!121 .

(J) Major .....,.llaaabaH'a

.... . .
~·

'•

· ·-·

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

,

·.·, .-;-

··· -

...

" "

.. . .

t. -••

16 Pierre's
"molher"
19 Coal
feature
20 Barracks
sound
23 Actor
Terence
24 Hidden
25 Bluto,
a_g.

27 Nightclub J
· employ· ea
30 Main
artery
31 Start
afresh
33 Sapient
36 Parched
37 Purse

SpectaCulars

,,
•• J

' -·
'

.......'

.

'

..

.. .
·..
·.

...'
•,

.

' •'

.

', ... ,

... ..

,,.

..

.

"'

.
(
DAlLY
CRYFI'OQVOI ES- Here's bow to work It:

Grtatl II lila 'World Belies

.. -

7117

~-

.llll AIIIIIIO Hsl .

'

DMDMJIM

...

AXYDLBAAXR

0 Miami VIce Stree1Wise

Is LONGFELLOW

Starao.
• YauCan . . Aihar
11:30.(1) !Ill Tonight lllw
®
(0:30)

=·nlel
~·=Joumal

.

'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the len8th and formation of the words are ali
hlnta. Each day the eode letlel'l are diffe)'ent.
•

• 'L'Tcllfiii;J
odly

•

. iEiZ--a
12:oo (J) MOVII!: lhgle

...

·: ~.....

+

Wa lay Qccdbya (PGI3)

SWEEPER ~d sewlngmechine
repllr. p . .a. 1nd I!U_., Pk:k
up Md diHw*Y. D.vis V.a.~um
Clean•. one half mile up
Ooorg&lt;11 Crllk Rd. Coli 114.
441-0214.

1983 S-10 4x4. utendod cob.
AC, cruise. tilt, AM / FM
ceasette. 18.000 mi./ e&amp;400.
Co118-14-245-11417.

Hswk (2:00)

.Ill ill) ALF After bugging
Willie lor a pet of his own,

20ft . ,,.,.. Trei•Prowter. AC. ~'1 •
. . _ • . t2800. Coll114-815- :·
4418 0&lt; S14-ll&amp;-4llil3. '
,,

7133.

1914 Ch""' wn. high mlllogo.
good GOnd. Re• · hMt Md air
13041 17~1809 .
..

, VIII_. Furnllure
New and used furnfturw and

.

8:00 Ill MOVIE: Eagle a Tha

(I IMi bJ NEA. Inc.

._

I

...

UIA Today ,,

&amp;BiniOn

f HAVES 7-17
•'
,.

tlr• / 14995. Colt 814· 448- '
IIIII. or 814· ~6-f119.

19 79 Ford F2110. Hollliy duty,
•teoo. oo. 130 41 a82-3239.

oppr-d crodlt. 3 MH01 out
Bui.. Mio Rd. Opon 9 A.M. to 5
P.M, Mon. thru lot . 114-4410322.

· ',

IIJ c-atlra

..

.5

· lafiAf.~eopardyii;J

TO A $plfP

197" Wineb•r.· Dodae Ch•~ · •'

19 83 Dodgo Colt 4 dr., 4 •pel ..
wtth high &amp;low. Powersteer•ng.
PB. 79,000 mi ., zood
John Deere 460 H ..Vro Push lhll'o/t1100. COli 11 441Spreadl!ll'. like nfMI , 13.500.00. 7314.
304-812-3578.
'
1988 Chryolor Lo8oron 4 clr ..
Hes•ton Road, Beier. (3041882- hlllfvinyltop, wlourlnteirior. lir.
AM / FM stereo. auto. Wire
3239. • 1200. 00.
.
whatl coven. Ice blu•. Very
Two-14 John Deer B1la 330 good cond./ 14995. COli 8 14John De• tf'lctor, hay rake. 441-1021 .
1800 lb. aoltm horoe. bolid&lt;o
1978 ChiNrolat Monte C.rlo, 8
Lstart Grade hoot.
1
cyl. new
runs good need
Troy Built Til or. a hp horae: b... wy. Coli l14o245-9484.
modd like now •126.00 13041
19811 / 2 Nlo- pick' up. 81jid.
875-8812.
AM / FM llereo c•ntt:t. 1port
wheals, aharp, ••c .
cond./ 14800. Coli 114-~1163
Livestock
9278.

1t79 Piy-thStotlonWogo"
AM·FM c • - • olom e. now
point. Muot oN. Cl.. on. W. Vo.
Coli 304o 773-5314. ·

(0:30)
.(I)

Jult1p.

sis. 157.000 m •· .OO( H, n.w

Wll•prcofing.

74

:t'M I\1Afl~'fl&gt;

'' .,,
,-

ing. He said th!'l he would win every
event if he always made the right WEST
EAST
opening lead. Here, afler ~ ace of +J4 2
+AKQ3
• K Q 10 3
clubs lead, the defenders tried their • 8 6 4
.K7
best. ·West played a spade .to East's • J 10
+Q·u
queen, and East returned a low trump. 1 +A J 10 9 ·7
But declarer South was quite capable
.
SOUTH
of puttillg lil the queen of diamonds.
._
Aller that. he played the heart ace and
•AJ975
'"
ruffed a heart, cashed dummy's king
.AQ854S
of clubs and ruffed a club, ruffed &amp;II"
+3 ,
.r
other heart and ruffed a spade back to
,, ...." .' " '
Vulnerable: Both
his band. When the ace of diamonds
Dealer: East
brought down the defenders' trumps,
••
be bad only one losing heart and bad . S..lli
Norlli
'•"
scored up four diamonds doubled.
·
..
"
Pus
What is so bad about laying down
PHI
the ace of clubs to take a look at dum•
my? The biddirig certainly suggests
·~
that declarer is long in the red suits .
Opening lead: A
Further, lbe fact lllat North bas ·
pasaed four diamonds is proof politive
.
· :::'::
that North ~ ireiler length in dia· · clarer will wiD and lead a cl . ow-:
monds than •n hearts. The defense , West must take lbe club ace and play
must be alert .to. the da~ger. that de- spade to parlntlr, since lbe defenae ' •·
clarer may do qu1te.well if he 18 able to must cash one spade trick before pia _. ;
ruff enough hearts In dummy. So there ing the second ro\md of
18 really no need to .rush to c;ash the ace ler that South must lorre two heart ' · ·
of clubs. Let West lay the Jack of dia- tricks~ a trick in eac21 black suit f ' 1
moods oo the table at trick one. De- down one.
or ;.

ALF gets an ant farm . (R) g

19791 ton. GMCStepVon. now

tir•. good c:ond. C•ll 61.,.367·

73

Masj81tna (0:30)

•• •.1

.

0 Miami VIce Smugglers'

&lt;lJ Enhlrlalnment Tonight

Motors Homes
• Campers

1178 Ford ' F-280. 414. hills- .
boro. flatbed a P a H
lalmpor/ 11800. Coll8t4-2459557.

13041171-11111.

1 .,_.oom: P~nt Pl. .ent • •·
t2tl0.00 pluo lloc. 130&lt;11 175

79

z.n• h ... o seN icing most oth•

90 Dltys umt •• CMh whh

\\

POOR BOYS TIRES. 304-175
3331 , front end elinement
t1B.95. 4,000gooduoodtlrM.
semi t•w. new tirea.

1950 Model Fordpldo-up. Oood
oonditjon. !;oM 114-992-7314

600 Seris Back Hoe. Ecehnt
condtfion. Smell M'ld mtdf.Jm
trattors. 12600. Call614-992·
6092 aft If 6:00p.m.

Bvr

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

... ....

Complete the . chuckle quoted
by filling in tho missing words
you develgp ·from step No. 3 below.

Today's deal reminds me of a com·

7:30 .Ill Family Feud
.'
· . ® Mlljfll' ~ l•aball

TI"IE FA&gt;T L.ANf,

,.

Ie

ment made by a friend no longer liv·

7:05 (J) Andy Grflllth

L.IVE .LIFE IN

flying?"' the elderly man asked
the youthf\ll·looking pilot. Jok•
ingly, the pilot replied, "You
mean ,..-- today?" ,
·

.Tw~P In Clnclnnl1l

7:35 (J) Major Laaaue llaaebiiU
Ttucks

1979 Plymouth Arrow. auto
trans. eaoo. Clll 814-21561704. or 614-251-1119.

814-992-

TO

_

BRIDGE

lives.

LIICf

I. . .16

. ,_

. .·'..

" How long have you baen

My husband's grandmother turned 103 and the local paper
interVIewed her at great length. Finally grandma snapped.
" Wh.ate\rer you do, don't m8nrlio_n_M_Y_A_G_E_I_",---...;_----. ,

• C.labr111aa Oflataga
Ronnie Milsap, Tammy
Wynette and MICkey Gilley ·
offer a personal lOOk at Uteir

Auto Parts
• Acce118Dri!JS

Aot8rV or cabl• tool ctlling.
Most weh compl•edaarnede'f.

For Sale: 1911FordConvtrlton

800 series backhoe (•ceMent . Van, micf.til:e. 6 cylinder,
condiHorf will . fit sm.tl lr 18,000 ml Coli 114o44!&gt; 7307
medium 1iz e tracton. call aft•&amp; after 5 p.m.

p.m. •2500. Cell
8092.

,,,

~·

. .

Joyful ~ Knack - Humid - Negate ""- MY AGE

Blues

cv~

1981 Datsun, long boll 70,000
milea. bed liner. e900. 1988
Herl.- Dni•on .. Cuttom Soft "
TIM. Blue .,d sllv•. Lou of
eeCMaorle~. 8000· • •· 81 ~
742·2103111 • lp.m.

One -oorn fur nil hod 11'1. verv
deen lftd nice. No ptts. 304675-1400.

36 LOU •

176-2606.

.,

Auto's For Sale

Furnilhed 2 bec*'oom lipt. , rw·
frence 1nd sic:Urlry d_,osh
.required. New ' Haven. (304)

1 bedroom apt, all utl0tl111
l!tXCIIPt electric paid. cell before
5:00p.m .. !30 .. &amp;71-1371.

I

2001

dr•.

Now accepting epplic«ions for
2 bedroom ep.-tmenu. fultv
Clrpeted. IPPii.,CII. wat«lfld

3810.

..

"

'SCRAM-lm ANSWEIS

IIJ. ~
ill Andy Grltlllh

VInton Auto SIIYega For Slle:
'84 Ponti«: Floro SE. block wMh Foreign 6 domlltlc alto,.-, ..
llu mn whHis •d sun roof, first Coiii14-38S.I082.
• 3.500.00 ...... ~. 304-175-

8987 after 5 p.m.

65 MF tractor. plows 1&amp; disc,
n""' bush hogt835on 4000
Ford tractor/ 12895; Heaston
round bal•/ 81196. Owner will
finance. CoU 814-288-8522.

11 ft. L..rson M d trtl•. 10 HP ·
Mercury . 1.1 050. B14- 892·

_

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN. SOU-'RES

6

Newllltow
.
.~ • ~1111 Wheel Of

14 ft. 1957 Stwcrott D..p v
Botrorn 1oM .w Jth t"rll•. 4YI HP
motor. 10 R». 1rollngmotar1nd
depth lindw. •eao. Cou 114742-3021.

1971 01•1'1 ........,. 98, 455

AKC· Registered Golden Re -

triMier puppies. 8 weeks old.
Hod Ill shots. Coli 304-8122854.

1978 Chry ster le Baron.
1950.00. 1887 Nio- tnrck
with toppor/11500. phone
13041 871-1772.
.... In englno.t2SO.OO. 304-

1988 Metaory CoogorLS : 198~
Dodge Ch•ger Shoibj Turbo.
calllfter7p.m. 614-211-17'25.

7371,

8

(J) 8poltiC..ntar (0:30) .
(I) • (I) Cunattl Aflllr
IIJ (J) MacNaii/.IAIVer

6 Holotoln Holler.. lr•~ In 2
nlontho. Coli 814-381-9148. . ilnytlrno . on _ ...... (3041
676-1941 .
For Sill' Ouort• horll &amp; Colt. I c:"19::-78=.::.:.LT~D-:F-.,-d.~.zt::-:I.-:00-:-.-:
130~41
Coll814-256-1210.
876- 1414

k111ftsmen. 1'0 inch radial arm
saw, ike new cond./ $260. Cell
814-448-4045.

Call 614-446 ·

o cas '"*'

L.ove c-tlon

• Ill PM M~ga•IN

'-,.-10:.:...-.h-.,-lo-r;_.-1.-000-~.~.0-.-4
opeod. noA,C. c.n litO&lt; I p.m.

·.

,

1--..,~...:..,l...,:.:_.,l;.;e,....::,_I..:....TI-1
L-~·--'--..J.L-J..._J..__.J

1:3J (J) carol llumell
7:00 Ill F.._ MurpltJ

1178 Choootto. lour - d . olr
Mnd. tiOO,OO. Coiii304117S.
1725.
.

.r

be-

I p NN0 1

I

Nawa g
W llodr llntrlo
(I) ABC

• Naweo. ltrt

1985 Chwy O.ovoll. 2 dr.,
57.000 ml / 11800. coil 114379-2726.

&amp; fence . Includes pump &amp; other

!!!Ill ill) NBC Nightly Naw1
iJi SporteLooll (0:30)
&lt;lJ •

15

.

8:01 (I) Allee

"

Boata and
Motors for Sale

~ ·I

I

.

•'

CRUTK

I

0 Clrtoon Expreu

1:30

CLAY I . I'OLLAN __:::,._..:,__ __

the

~ ~l~
I I 1~ I . t
--;N.;...:O:,.,;.:R:.,W;,;.....;S:,...-l·l ...r!

11J lllftlllz Toclly ·

3858.
SWIMMING POOLS 11t88
Summer special on 89 pools. AK C Registered. 6 mo~h old
Huge 19x31" pool. Huge deek lassen Hound . Has shots .
fence, filter 6 wanantv . lnstall,;. $100 coli 814· 889·3711
tion &amp; financing available. Call
24.hr" 1·800,-341&gt;.0948.
Fish Tank. 2413 Jadtson .Ave
Point Plell&amp;nt. 30.,.676-2063 :
1 Reclining-Jeri-chair / with· 10gal set up e14.99 end 10 gal
tlbletop. 1 wheelchair 1 potty complote 143 26.
·
chair. 1 bath stool. 1 cOmmode
st~l. 1 bath-rim. 1 w•lker. a 2 AKC regiuared Dachs hund,
cems / 11500. Call 614· 388· shots, wormfld, health gu&amp;rln·
9704.
teed. 13041675-2193.

&amp;st Main St ... Pom•O't'· Panill
utlttiea ,_;d 614-992-2094.

Office or lftWII busin. . tPK•
for ,...t in Micklepcwt. All
utllti• Included. Ak" conditioned. t200J• montlt COli
114-992· 88 7 :00 A.M.-4,00
P. M . or 814 - 992 · 2217
wenlnga. ·

C(;)Oi&lt;IE5,..

~r

I .. .

I ;I I I'

3

...........

Pure bred Walker CoonhoUnd
pups. 130. Coli 614-992-2512.

be~oom lpt .

Vec.,q
Twin Rlv•a Tower-Hou11ng for
the Eldorl¥. Honclcoppod ond
DISibled. loc•ec:t n ... dow.,.
town Polm Ple•lftt. phone
304-171-1179. Equol Houolng
Qlportunity.,

IN M"{ FOOD..

11111 •

882·3287.

34

PREFER PLAIN.

.llll

~ 1~- 388- 8890.

*

992-3711 . EOH.

IN'enings.

For lease

Mercl1aml1se

Furn. apt , 1 br., e240. U1lltl•
pd 920. Founh Ave. Gsllipalii.
Call 814·446-441 8. aft,. 7p.m.

for

53

.

(J) 3-2-1 Cantaol g

304-875-5027

For Sale or Le•e: Tlftfern in
Mldcleport, 0 H. Ap.-tment up.
st•ir•. will consld• land contract Coli 304-882· 3382.

FL.Wnished ~t . 2 rooms&amp; private
bath, 2ndAw/ e150mo. Utili·
tiM paid. Deposit req'd. Call
6 14-UI-2390.
•,

Apts.

Space for Rent

Commercialspace.1400•quare
fa«. corner Second 1111"1 d Pine
Amp'e parking-,... Cell 8.14446· 4249. 448-2326. 448·
4426. .

Rood. 304-87!&gt;1078

2 bedroom

lllod opplien . .. Woohero, dry·
"'· f8ng•, refrlger•ors. microwave oven•. Ken' s Appll.,ce.
217 E. 2nd St.. Pomerov.
814·992·15335 or 11 .. 98153581 .

~eceuorles .

Trail•. 2 bectoom. clean. reference. reciuired.. Rt. 1. LOOJit

44

Furnished Rooms

Sleepintt rooms wilh cooking.
AlsoTrMifl' IPIICe. An hook· ttJi.
CAll oftor 2p.m. 304-7735651 . M11onWV.
, .

r e250 / mo. 1250 / depostt. 2

bote.' ·
Complete line of ook flrrnlol&gt;
lng1. oek dlnene I pr. . be~
choirll949'orl37.991mo. 150
rob••· Curio coblnet-curvod
g lo Sl lr ont • t 2 7 9 or
t15.14/ mo. Tradein' stllcen.

r

: r.!:&amp;'..:::a .

I .DON1T LIKE FOOD

NEITHER .. !

country

0

Rooms for rent- week or month.
Stlrting It t120 a mo. G• 'u:J
Hotei-114-448-HBO.

all

alctric. fireplace. new carpet.

undwponnln~

Onelr., unfurnished ept. •nge
a refrig. provided. WMer. sewag·e. &amp; nwblge p.;d. Deposit
Roq'd . C.H 814-UI-4346.

45

2 ·3 br .. trailer on 1 aae lllld
1280 mo. Outbuildinga. Call
814-UI-2488.

c• u•-ae.:

MUST SELL Owner moving to

304-175-&amp;104 or 304-1755388

a.

New lv redecorated CIPr Ill eel.
Dep. Atso 3 bectoomtralt•. Call
81.-.4411-8688. or 8t4-US.
7125.

304-875-7988.

72!2 oltor 5 p.m.

A8geney. Inc, 2 8R apartment,
.-..ww · plush c•pet. n..- ~lint.
utlltl• J*1llftv peici t17S mo.

35 W. lpt. 2 br , I both. prlvoto
en dosed pltio. Close to grocery
store~ a shopping center. water,
sewer . trash provided .
1215/ mo. Call 014-448:8727.

bedroom 1 4~~: 70 mobile home.

1987 Shutt!' moclJI• home. 3
br .. 2-Nths. CA. 3
For Slle t, owner. cM1614-367-

t••

.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

For Sale or Rent.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Fur,.hed, cable T.V . utMiliel
paid. Ideal tor b•chelor. BeiUtiful Riverview in Kan.,g~ . Fosmobil.e Home Perk. C.ll
614-441-1102.

4921.

2 br .. mobile home llrnillwd.

3 bed'oombrick Hom.wtthl•ge
kJt. Mid w., Drive. NttW H1v ...
Good cond. 304-773-lla1 .
ICf'W

&amp;14-367-7110.

Hou• for .ent et Rodrur; OH no

1 2*10 moble home for 1lle.
'*'~ lot w~h workehed on
~'!~":,~i.loo• to 35. Coli

aEAUTIRJL APARTMENTS AT
aUDOET PRIC!;S AT JACK SON ESTATES. 53t Jocllson
Pike from 1192a mo. Welk to
ahop and movif!ll. 814-4462118. E. o . H.

Tara Towritou• Aputmants. 2

RenLils

75

'.•

WHICH D'O '(OlJ WANT, A COOKIE
WITH NUTS IN IT OR A ·
COOKIE WITI-I RAISINS?

14ho4

i -,;S-'-pr-y;_,r-M...:,U,.,.;G::....,,.--.~1 ,

•o

111

C. filii~ j ) , .( _ /) 'f:1 ~Q. e WDII
P\!=J l'CIU ~~ ~ pq•p .,••

low fo fOrm four -'mple Worda~

•

(J) Home Run Derbr
(l)PowarOfCIIoloaQ
(J) Reading Raltlltow g

dinene set, 3
chalro a bench wkh moOching
hutctt 1118 or t24.88mo. e71
rtbate.
·
AM wood

Oppot1unity
. INOTICEI .
VAlLEY PUaLIS KING CO . reoomm~ndl thll you
dil laloln- with P-'• you
kniM', ll'ld NOT to •cl moiW(

~

-~

1917 KXIO . Ekcoll ... oonclltlon. llall 114-992,5018.

t:J

Wood groups e31 9 or
t17:31/ mo. 3 peice sofe chair.
1 - '799, or t31 .10/ mo.
With tiD rob•o. colfoe &amp; end
tabl• e7&amp; ....

for Rent

1!11- OHIO

Epleadtl

dov:
114-~S. 7788....."'"'·
19HYZ21SOYamlha. runs.Xc.
Col o11or4p.m. 814-~8-1835.

t';;;;::;::;;:::;====r;;:::;;;;;~::;:::::-j•
.~n gl•s front vun cabin•
"'2'"'1--;;B:-us
.....,...
in_e_a_ _ _ 35 lots &amp; Acreage
44 Apartment
o:ze9., s13.55t mo. 825 r•
Rt. 7, below Eurollo. cllll14441-«11 oil• 'l p.m. .

•w..... •Cil
. as

·'
' '

PUULII

'
0 four
Reqrrange letters of
tC:ramblod words

0 .1 tM TV u.t1ng Inc. F1 'llllonh, TX

Gory ot e14-~S.3110,.

*••· Knewltdge ot
deolgn •oopluobenoltt

"Do you ever just get overcome hy fits of silliness?"

. MON•• JULY 17

.

I:OO(J) lioMiza: Thlll.al1

1171 Hlrl8'( Divilan Sup•
Glide. E.:. oond/ -13,oo0. Cal

wtth numerous g~~nea, M.lc•
tionel. &amp; blank discs. Atlc.'
ing/ 1950, Call 114· 379-2183
lftM' 6 p.m .

CWpol.

k~clhen

•

TIA11AILY

EVENING

191e' V210 tfOod cond./ t525.
Col 814-245-1187.

\ I

•llllll'llnce In

..... _ lndUdeo pold .........
lifo IMUfOftce.,dMedlcol. Sub, . ,_,_tolab-.lorM••
Dotton At P.O. 8011 33, Point
,._.... WV 25110 or Col
304·171 · 3117 lor

~~ 11.\

11111 Hondil XR 200. good
cond./ .,15. Coli • 114· 4411185. or 114-~1-1111 .

cllel dilk drive, colof maMCH".

7 pc, pOtter Beuet BR .. sutte
1899 or 132.75/ mo. 150 c11h
r-o. H.D. Bunk bodol149 or
·f12.48/ rno. 4dr. cheot.49.95.
I dr. ch•t t54.H .

1M

The Daily $entinei- Paga

--·~

Television
Viewing

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Monday. July 17. 1989

Pom.oy-Middlaport. Ohio
NATIONAL WEATHER SEAVICE 'FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 7·17-89

D

SNOW

FRONTS: "

-RAIN

,Warm "Cold

~SHOW. . . .
"Static . .C)x+'llld

r.,ap shows minimum t9rnperatures . At least 50~', of any shaded . . . 11
1o f ~e i•o· e ptedp;tat'On i ndit:at~

------Weather--~--By Unlled Press lnler~looal .
•
Sou til Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. !,.ow 55
to 60. Winds light and variable.
Tuesday, mostly sunny with the
high In the mld·80s.

· Extended ForecaSt
Wednesday throullt Friday
A chance of showers or thun·
derstorms each day. Highs wlll
he 80 to 85. and lows mostly In the
60s.

·
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1, · '·
r-- L oca l news
rteJs... -o

1

Continued from page 1

.Rain l~gers in East; heat bakes Texans
By United Press lnleroatlooal .
Ralnshowers lingered ear~
Monday from New · England to
the Gulf Coast, causing scattered
damage and flooding, while
Texans-braced for another day of
sizzling heat, the National
Weather Service said.
The blustery thunderstorms
battered pockets of tile Deep
South, topplfng trees and damag·
lng cars. To the north, heavy
rains flooded streams and roails
along the East Coast.
An upper air disturbance mix·
lng with warm, humid air produced Intense thunderstorms '
from the eastern half of the Gulf
. Coast to much of the Atlantic
Coast, the NWS said. Forecasters did not report Injuries but ,
said there·was some damage.
A tornado near Rockmart, Ga.,
Sunday afternoon uprooted trees
that blocked roads. Winds also
downed trees and caused numer•
ous power outages near Colum·
bus, the NWS said.
.
In Alabama, storm winds ,
toppled numerous trees at
Gadsden, Attala and ' Hoakes
Blu!f, with some of the Umber
· falllng on au tomoblle~ and dam·
aging homes, the NWS said.

near Garden City, Kan.
Temperatures soared above
tl)e 1CJO.degree mark across
!)outh, Central and West Texas
Sunday, and the NWS warned of
unrelenting beat and humidity
over North Texas the 'next few
days.
Lar~do had a blistering 108

degrees Sunday, the highest both had highs of 101.
·The weather service Issued an
readlhg In the stale. San Angelo' s
excessive
heat advisory over
high of 106 and the 104 ln Del Rio
North
Central
Texas through the
tied records.
But the heat was not confined early part of the week, warning
to Sou.th Texa~ . Midland-Odessa people to avoid st:I:enuous out·
had a high of 105. Abilene, Austin· door activity and- stay In air
and Waco had highs of 103. conditioned areas as much as
Mineral Wells and Stephenville possible,

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news

Growl}rS _begin· picking chores
Mon~; yields.down this summer

l'lfiiiT FILII

No one claims Ohio Super Lotto

are garnevlng $7 to $7.50 per Clarence Hill. "And when we
By NANCY YOACHAM
10-pound basket on the markets, were lucky enough tocultlvate,lt
Dally SenUnel staff
Last summer, area tomato
Hill ,says. "At least that's what would just start. raining again the
yields ' were down because of .. we've . been told," he adds. · next day."
drought. This S\ll'(lmer, crops
Locally, a 10-pound basket Is
Weeds stand tall in parts of
were damaged by an overabun·
selling for around $6.50.
some fields, something you just
dance of rain.
,
PACKING HOUSE - Kelly Porler and Shelly
right size .an!l color tomatoes from the conveyor
It remains to be s'eeri whether wouldn't see In a normal year. '·
belt to pack Into baskets·for shipping.
Tomato fields and packing good mar~et prices will offset the
Winebrenner, along . with other packlllg house
One or two farmers tried to
workers on the Don Richard Hill Farm, select the
reduction In crops. Together th.ls
h,ouses In the Letart Falls a~ea
the water off their fields,
pump
were full of activity Monday year, Clarence and Heath Hill set
but
most
farmers just let the
the first full day of picking for out 65,000 plants on the Don
water
stand.
"We had no place to
Richard Hill farm. Of that 65,000,'
most area growers. No~rnally ,
pump
the
water
to," says Heath:
tomatoes would be ripening and at least one-third of the plants
Hill.
ready for picking at least by the were lost to water. Other farmers.·
Because of the rains, many
Fourth of July. But the heavy In the area also experienced
.
tomatoes
developed. Into what
rains experienced earlier In the similar loss Of plants due to
farmers describe as cat faces ·
growing season delayed · the wa!er,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "We've never had a problem tomatoes with a wrinkled ap- .
growth of plants and production
Fruit on the tomato vine Is
of fruit . Prior to Monday, most ·With low spots In our fields," says pearance and brown patches or;
sparser than usual so far this
area farms were just picking a Heath Hlll, ' 'until this year." seams stemming out from th~
year. Although there's little you
There were 'places In the fields bottom. Cat faces usually don't: ,
few tomatoes to sell locally .
' can do to help except wish for
, One farmer reportedly said where water accumUlated and have a lot of meat Inside and are·
·
·
better weather, there's still time
that last Tuesday, July 11, 100 just stayed, making It virtually not marketable.
On
the
Clifford
Hlllfarm
one
for most plants to stage a
10-pound baskets were picked on Impossible for. farmers to care
comeback.
his farm. On the same· date last properly for young plants. A of the largest farms In the Letart'
"It began as a tough growing
year, 1,100 10-pound basket~ place In one of our fields Is "just Falls area - workers were'
season for tomatoes In mary
now beginning to dry out ," Heath · InstrUcted to go through a whole.
were pick¢.
gardens," says Jim Utzinger,
The first of the tomato trucks Hill says. "For awhile, It looked field which had deJJeloped .Into
cat faces, and remove antJ.
horticulture professor at Oljlo · bound for northern and eastern · like a pond."
'
FarnJers could not' properly discard the Imperfect fruit&amp; .
St11te UniVersity. "Most were
markets also started leaVIng the
Rain ' Is also causing some
·planted · In ·May when the-·days
Letart Falls area on Monday. cultivate tomato fields because
tomatoes
to form black, rotten
were cloudy and the soil was still · Right now, reports Letart Falls of standing water an'd th'e result
The
tomatoes with the ·
spots.
farmer Clarence Hill, "the of standing water -mud. "That
cold.
Continued on page 5
"This caused them to grow
markets are good." Tomatoes was the real" problem," says
I
slowly or not at all. Those not put
In the ground early but held for
planting ln drlet soU also grew
slowly," Utzinger added. "They ,
set fruit while still In . their
containers but didn 't grow the
ROANOKE , Va. tUPI)- Most where union officials reported 'flexible' beyond Its previous
roots and leaves to support the
of the nation's 11n1on miners are miners back on the picket lines. terms. ·
fruit."
Virginia Gov . Gerald Ballles
back on the job after a m9nthlong
"Asking they now demonstrate
Soli temperatures In central
had
pleaded
with
both
sides
last
walkout'
In
sympatl)Y
with
min·
the
flexibility they claim before
Ohlo In mid-May were about 50
week
to
resume
negotiations
with
ers
striking
Pitts
ton
Coal
Group
the
world
but have never demondegrees, Utzinger ' says. That's
a
federal
mediator.
Trumka,
who
but
the
head
of
Its
parent
strated
at
the bargaining table Is
normal for mid-April.
last
week
ordered
·a
five-day
company
says
he
will
not
go
to
only
reasonable,"
Douglas ·conTomatoes are native to the
memorial
holiday
period
east
of
the
bargaining
table
until
the
'tlnued.
"To
do
otherwise
Is to
tropics and sub-tropics. To grow
the
Mississippi
River
to
cool
United
Mine
Workers
cease
"all
Invite
a
repetition
of
the
sad .
well, they need prolonged peri·
tensions
In
the
coalfields,
agreed.
unlawful
activity."
charade
and
devastation
the
coal
ods of high temperatures, sun
But In a letter the governor's field community has endured
A less formal meeting than one
and moist soU.
office
made public Monday, over the past three months."
with a federal mediator was
"Continued moderation In
Pittston
Co. President Paul Dou·
arranged. Officials from the
Douglas said he believes the
weather - more heat and sun
glas
said
Virginia's largest coal UMW's goal Is. to "try to
UMW
and
Pittston
prepared
to
and less rain - could provide us
producer wQuld have to see some transform this relatively local
meet with a federal judge at a
· with a fair to good harvest,
movement
In the UMW's stand labor dispute lnto a broad-based
coalfield
motel
Tuesday
In
Duf·
Utzinger says. "Tomatoes bloom
on
the
Issues
and an end to any regional or even national polltl·
field
,
Va.,
to
give
the
jurist
a
.
over a long period. Eventually,
lawless
actions.
for
the
Issues
separat·
better
feel
cal issue."
.
weather that favors pollination
lng
the
two
sides.
"Surely
having
shootings,
fire
About
1,700
Pittston
miners In
,_..,
and fruit setting will stay with
Pittston
Coal
Group
President
bombings,
and
wanton
destruc·
Virginia
and,
West
VIrginia
have
us,
TOO Mt,JCH WATER- Mary Hill, of the Don Richard Hill Fll'fii,
lion
Michael
Odom
agreed
to
meet
of
property
cease
Is
funda·
worked without a contract since
holds tomatoes which show the black, rotten spots which are
The season's cool, cloudy
with
U.S.
District
Judge
Glen·
mental
to
everyone's
best
Inter·
January 1988. On April 5, the
Indicative of too much water during the early growing season;
weather didn't help tomatoes In
Williams
and
the
UMW
said
one
est,"
Douglas
said
.
UMW went on strike, and began a
other ways, Utzinger says. "Less
Inside, the tomatoes are fun of waler.
Its
representatives
would
he
on
of
series
of sit-down demonstra·
",
S
ince
we
have
observed
no
sun kept some of them from
hand.
Broadcast
reports
late
substantive
movement
by
the
tlons
In
Southwest VIrginia deflowering. Rain helped the plants
Monday
In
Roanoke
said
the
UMW
during
the
past
20
months,
signed
to
halt the flow of coal
t,a ke up a lot of nitrogen, which
union
official
would
be
UMW
I
will
ask
the
federal
mediators
to
from
Pittston's
mining
led to grawth of stems and leaves
ascertain
whether
the
union
President
Richard
Trumka.
truly.
operations.
but not flowers."
The main exception to the end has significant new positions on
More than 2,000 miners have
Lack of sun on tomato plants
of
the
wildcat
strikes
seemed
to
Issues
and
been
arrested for misdemeanor
the
outstanding
caused some flowers to grow
be
In
southern
West
VIrginia,
vlollltlons.
,
whether,
In
fact,
the
UMW
Is
abnormally, Utzinger says. This .
keep them from being pollinated.
Consistent rain has an even
quicker and deadlier effect on
tomato plants, Utzinger says.
Stanqlng wat~r In the garden for
'
only a few hours can kill the
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle reports that a one-story
plants.
frame house on Peach Fork Road was completely destroyed
Tomato plants started from
Monday afternoon by fire.
A Bend Area clearance sale
seed normally produce a harvest
The
hQuse
was
owned
by
Robert
Ball,
of
Ball
Hun
Road,
but
. In 70·85 days depending upon and trade show will be held the .
was
occupied
by
the
Jim
Hayes
family.
Hayes
was
able
to
get
variety. Tomato transplants nor- weekend of July 29:30 In the
out
a
televisiOn
and
stereo
but
nothing
else,
Zirkle
reports
..
mally bear fruit In 4045 days Meigs High School cafeteria.
The Hayes famUy was home at the time the !Ire started, says .
The two-day event, a first for
after being planted In the garden.
Zirkle,
but everyone e~aped the house. A nelghtior called the
Utzinger offers these tips on here, Is being staged through the
fire
department
at 2: 26 p.m. but by the time firemen arrived,
helping your tomato plants grow cooperative efforts of the Middle;
the
house
was
already
engulfed In flames.
port Chamber of Commerce and
well:
·
Pomeroy Fire Department was assisted by Syracuse ·and
-Get asoU (l!st. The healthiest the Pomeroy Merchants Assoca·
Scipio
Township Departments.
,
·
tomato plants grow In soU with tlon, with Mike Gerlach of
Origin
of
the
fire
Is
unknown.
The
structure
was
Insured,
the right levels of nutrients. Have Middleport serving as general
Zirkle reports. An estimate of total losses has not been
your soil tested If It hasn't been chairman.
determined.
"Emphasis of the . area·wlde
tes led In more than three years.
sale
Is to showcase merchandise
Results will Indicate If the soil
available
here an\1 to let res!·
needs nutrients or If It has too
dents
know
that our prices are
many. To get your soil tested,
right,"
Gerlach
said.
· contact your county office of the
Two people suffered minor Injuries In a one·car accident on
Ohio Cooperative
Extension
SR 681 at Alfred on Monday at 6:45 a .m.
He described the end-of-season
.j
Ser vi ce. ·•
,
, clearance sale and trade show as
· The Melgs·Ga!Ua Post, State J;llghway P 'atrol said Francis
-Have the plants grow up- a "type of shop-at-home promoParker,18, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,was travelllngeastontheroadwhen
right. Unsuppor~d plants lose tion while at the same time
he swerved to miss a deer and went oil the right side ofthe road
bare
soiL
more
fruit
to
ro
or
giving
the
merchants
a
chllnce
to
causing
him to drive off the right' side of the roadway Into ~
IMPROPER GROWI'II - Rain water wbleh 8tood fer leqtlty
St11ke
them,
cage
em
or
grow
·
"move"
their
summer
stock.
creek.
perlodJ ... time Ill some leel&amp;lo• of &amp;omato flelda o• the Doa
them on a fence or trelUs.
Gerlacl\ aald that the entire .
PBI'ker suffered minor Injuries, but was not treated. A
RleJalrll Hill Farm at~ l'alll, lltuted·the growth af pllllllll.
Stakes
should
be
put
Into
the
Bend
·Area
Is
Involved
with
passenger,
Dorothy Parker, 48, Rt. 3 ~omeroy, also was hurt
Tldl ,ear'a exeeulve raJ• outed maay liomat- to rot, lllle the
ground
abOut
4
Inches
from
the
from
Mason
and
New
businesses
amaller fruit held here by Hell&amp;b Hill. The larger tomaa- held by
Continued on pa(le 5
Continued on page 5
Continued on page 5
· Bill are.JIIIt beglmllng to .rlllfln.
\
.. :. 1.-.. ~
•

Agriculture experts say there's still
time for plantS to stage_a·comeback

Representat~ves

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Monday through l"rlday
8:30 a.m. ~ 5 p.m:
Suite 211. f'VH Medical Offlce Building

ATTENTION·

SENIOR
CITIZENS

SAVE 111% Dl AU YOUR
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DJJ PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
IVl The fomily of proleuionol•
.. W.VL 2IIHO

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r--Local news briefsCause of Mondayfire unknown

Two injured in Meigs mishap

.PHARMACY
RiTE ;RITE AID306DISCOUNT
lAST MAIM STIID
POMEROY, .OHIO
AID
PHARMACY PHONE:·992-2586

(304) 675-1460

to meet judge

•

Trade show,
sale scheduled
July 29,30

·nr. Jack M. Levine

.,

lacreaslnl cloudiness . to"
night. Chtiace of rain 41
percent. Wednesday, high
near 80. Chance of rain 80
percent.

0305

·Meigs .tomato crops

Squads have 7 weekend calls .

,,

Pick-4

.Recent rains damage

d~ntr~~h=~~tfc;~~f=c~::e~~

Yllllr DIM, Pain! PII

· 702

July 18. 1989

Grof!-p lAJOnts to start car club

UTICA, Oblo (UPI) - The
North Fork Local School District
has named an YpsUantl, Mich.,
educator to be superintendent of
the Licking Cbunty Dis trlct. '
Named to bead the district Is
Gilbert Dunn. the superintendent
of WillOw Run Community
Schools In Ypsilanti. He has 20
years experience as a superln·
tendent In Michigan.
Dunn begins Aug. l at the
district that has 1,850 students.
He will be paid $49,500 a year.

Pick-3

Indians, 5-2

e

building. Strong wind gusts up to,
50 mph downed power lines and
uprooted several trees, the NWS
said.
A tornado near Merry Hill,
Attempts are underway to start a car .c lub In Meigs County.
N.C., knocked down trees and
The first organizational meeting wll) be tonight !Monday). 7
power lines.
o'clock, at the Chester Fire Station. Anyone lntere$ted In a car
Heavy storm ·rains flooded
club Is Invited to· attend.
·
·
·
underpasses In the Attala·
Gadsden area, with some homes
threatened by high water' the
NWS said. It said the drenching
In the already soggy area con·
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services .
trlbuted to a mudsllde that
answered seven calls over the weekend. Two calls were on
damaged a home.
Saturday and the other five on Sunday.
Portions of the mid-Atlantic
Saturday at 1:15 a.m., Pomeroy went to Crew Road for Linda
Coast received between 3 and 5
Foreman who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
Inches of rain Sunday. Many
5:13p.m. to Chester Road for Christopher Lee to Holzer Medical
creeks
and streams were at or
Center.
above
their
bank5 In the region.
Sunday at 10:37 a.m., Racine went to Fifth .and Main Sis. for
Rain
was
scattered
early Mon·
Arlene Stobart who was taken io Holzer Medical Center.
day
from
eastern
New
Yprk state
Syracuse was called at 12:43 p.m. to Rustle Hills for Allee
across
Georgia,
from
northeast
Loomis who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Florida and the Florida Panhan·
Tuppers Plains at 1:57 p.m. went to North Tlilrd Ave. for
die across Louisiana and nor:
Marvin Murphy who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital In
theast Texas. Umbrellas also
Parkersburg, W.Va.
were In order from western
Racine at 1:57 p.m. transported Gary Johnson from · the
Texas across southwesternSouth
station to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:07 p.m ., Racine
Dakota, from ·southeast Ne- ·
went to Portland for ElsiE&gt; Roush who was taken to Veterans
·
braska
across southwest Iowa
Memorial Hospital. .
and northwest Missouri, as well'
as some areas In New Mexico,
Arlzona, Montana and Oregon.
Thunderstorm winds gusted to
68
mph Amarillo, Texas, and to 53
(:LEVELAND (UP I) -No one total prize payout was $726,275.
mph
at Billings, Mont. Lightning
One player selected all six
claimed the $9 million jackpot In
caused
a few fires at Billings.
·Saturday night's Ohio Super numbers In the correct order In
up
to
an·Inch In diameter fell
Hall
Lotto drawing and ,the prize for the accompanying Kicker game
Wednesday's game w!U rise to for a grand prize of $100,000. The
winning Kicker combination was
$12 million.
The winning numbers were 14, 379882.
·In addition to the top prize
17, 22, 29, 31 and 32.
winner, six players matched the Dally stock prlees
first five numbers for $5,000; 76 (As of 10 a.m.)
The Ohio Lottery Commission ·matched the flrsi four: which Bryce and Mark Smith
said 170 tickets were sold with
pays $1,000: 713 had the first of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
five of the six correct numbers,
three, •for $100; and , 7·,280
for $1,000 prizes. and 7,417
matched two of six, which pays Am Electric Power ............. 28%
AT&amp;'J: ......... ....... .................36¥.
players selected four correct $10.
numbers to win $75 each. ·
Ticket sales In the Kicker Ashland Oil ...................... ..38',1,
Ticket sales for the weekend game totaled $816,410 and the ·Bob Evans .... .............. ... ... ... 15
Charming Shoppes ..............16¥.
game totaled $5,349,55! and the total prize payout was $350,100.
Cliy Holding Co .......... .. ......15¥.
Federal Mogul. ............... .. ... 23
Goodyea,r T&amp;R ......... ........ ..53%
Heck's .... .... .. .... ... .... ......., .... Y.
It would actually be the third
PROVIDENCE, R.I. CUP!) Key Centurion .................: .. 12'%
Someone In Rhode Island cl\ose . biggest ·single winner In U.S. Lands' End ....... ,..... :..... ... ... 27'%
all six numbers to win tl\e $39.4 history If one person claimed the Limited Inc ... .. .. ........ ......... 32%
, million Lotto America jackpot, prize, but the $39.4 mllllorlls the Multimedia Inc .................... 98
the seventh. biggest lottery seventh largest overall figure In Rax Restaurants .. ........ ........ 2%
North American lottery history.
winner In U.S. history.
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ..... ....... 17%
The largest overall prize was Shoney's Inc .............. .. ....... 11%
"Rhode Island has never had a
(grand prize) winner but we have $61.98 million In California, split Wendy's Inti.. ................. ... .. 5%
a winner now and a big one," by three groups In October 1988. Worthington Ind .......... ....... 22%
Peter'o•connell, Rhode Island's The largest single winner was
Sheelah Ryan, who won $55.1
lottery director, said Sunday.
• It was not yet ·known If a single . million In Florida In September
person or a group owned the 1988.
Hospi~
O'Connell said the previous
winning ticket. Officials said the
winner or winners probably high jackpot lor the Lotto Amer· Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions- None.
would be Identified Monday when lea game was $16 million. That
Saturday discharges - Karen
the prize Is expected to be drawing was In March.
Lotto
America
began
In
Sep·
Pooler,
Max Folmer, Thomas
collected . The ticket must be
tember
1987
as
a
way
for
Frye.
validated, O'Connell said.
Sunday admissions - None.
The winning ticket was pur• less-populated states to compete
with
larger
neighboring·
ones
Sunday discharges - Floyd
chased at 7: 23 p.m. Saturday,
less than four hours before the siphoning revenues from lottery · Reltmlre.
Saturday night drawing. O'Con· ' ticket sales.
nell refused to say where the
ticket was purchased, citing
security reasons.
According to lottery officials,
the player or players used the
"quick pick" system. In which a
computer randomly selects the
six-number combination.
The winning combination was
Qeneral and Qynecologlcal Surgery
10·19·27 ·35-4042.
Yearly ~emale exams
" It Is the biggest jackpot In
New Englan&lt;~ and probably the
Women's Health
third· or fourth-biggest ever In
the country," O'Connell said.

. New superintendent
from Michigan ,

Ohio Lottery

Twins stop

..

-

~

I

_...,._

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