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                  <text>Pag1 . D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport- . Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.11 Help Wanted
La-tory Cto..lotry Supor·
vloc.-, lull lime. MT (ASCP) or
.-.Uinlent Contact peraonntl,
P I - Vllllly Hoop~al. Point
Pill-, WV, 304.a71-4340.

1

mont~?

Avon. 15. to
FFM giH. Clll 114-

011 otortld.
1112·7180.

-

mocllohly. Colll14-441-2183.

lomlonl to mow lawn. Mutt be

rolloblo. Cllll14o441-3613.

1 Card of Thanl!s
· MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery a. SS cash prize from the Obib Valley Publlsblnr;
farm, fqtured by the Meigs SoU and Water Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
Co-rva&amp;lon District, is located somewhere in number witb your card or letter. No telephone
Melp County •.Individuals wishing to p11rticipate calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
Ill the weekly Cllll_test may do ·so by guessing the be turned In to the newspaper office by4p.m. each ·
farm'sowner . .Jusimall,ordrop.olfyourguessto' Wednesday . In case of at~, tbe winner will be _
-Ill• 6 •'Hpo1Js Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave., ·chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
Gal-..us, Ohio, 45631, or the Daily Sentinel, 111 farm will be featured by the Gallla SoU and :Water
Court&amp;., Pomeroy. Ohio, 45769,and you may win
q,nservatlon District.

Uv~~krep0rt~·. --------------------~-------G!II.LII'OLIS STOCK\'ARDS •

Medhun Frame lli 2 Heifers:
1........... .. .. ........ ..... 8U0·1DU•
3IHHilO lbs . .. ...... .... .. .. ......... 81 ... 111.08
400-500 lbs. .... .... ................... 18.-.110
501HIOO Ills ..... .. .. ..... ... .......... .10.0.·81.00
800-100 lbs. .. .. .................. ..... 114.11··18.00
11111-1100 '""· .. .. .... .... .... .. ........ su•-12.25

48.01-IUt; L11lll ""'ihl law (fllde oowo

Bu~her

COm. M.IIO-down; Baby Calves 118.($-

-~50-300

TreD. .Peetler Cattle Steady, Ve al
Cahoet lle&amp;dy. Butcher Cows Steady
MMIIIm Frlime 1 A~ Steers:
!........... ..... .. ......... !Hi.IMHI8.00

_I. .... .,.. . ....

_,.._ .•....................... !M.IJO.in.oo
- - 11&gt;1......... ................. 85.01-10!1.00

SUI-104.00 .
- - ............ ..... ........ ... ...1....·81.00
7N-8N ................. .... .. : ....... SS.SI--13.00

•

45.01-down; Heii«&lt;'Sie ·il.fO..dowa.
Butcher BuD:

Ulllltles 18.~0·13.50 ; Canner/ Cutter
M.OD-111.00 ••
Veal Calvet:

Chotce( prlme t!. D0-101. 00; Medium
8=.1)6-15.00.
Sprlncer Cows: -.~own; Cow/Calf

Holst&amp;• Steers and Bulls:
:JOD-800 lbs. ............ .... .. .... .. ... 10.0f.88.00

Cows:

Utilities 48.50-58.-00; Canner/ Cutter

do-,n. "'

Yard Sale

1614) 992-3325

home wijhin walk ing dislance from stores. All ulili·
lies and a full acre. Ju st
$28,500.
VIEW OF THE RIVER- Re·
novated 3 bedroom home,
central heaf and aluminum
siding, 2 porches. Only
$17,500.
wijh new carpeting, balh,
kitchen , · roof, and heat
pump. Large lol. MuSI see to
appreciate. Only $40,000.

WENDELL JAME$
Who p•sted lway

118Van yean ago on

July 23. 1982
Somewhere there i1 no sun- ·

lot
Somewh•a
dewn:

lt' tl

always

Somewhere no clouds

Ob-'

acure the sky;
Somewhtre ..ch sh.SOw'.t
gonel
Som.whera there is no part·

lork, Mon. July 24 thnl Fri. July
28.

ond misc. Frl ond Sat. 10:00 till Dietary
8:00PM.

•c. 3091i
•d., Middleport. Follow
h.,.•,

3158.

'

Junk cara

with or without
motor•. Call Larry Lively 814-

388-9303.

Quill•

Pre 1940 quina. Any condition.
Cash Paid. Call 814-s192·S657 or

614-592·2461.

Public Notice

Small air cond In ~ cond,
phont 304-87J..1259 or 30.&amp;.458-

Edition given in the name of
the Owner in a specific
amourtt equat to 25% of the
Contract Sum or a Cashier's
check in an amount of 25%
of -he Contract l Jm pavable
to Rio Grande C' liege.·

JULY 14. 16. 23. 20

ing.

3 . No partiaTset swill be is-

oued.

AU bldo to be accompa-

nied by 1 bid secur;ty in the

of • 10% Bid Bond

~xecuted

on AlA Document

A310. 1970 Edition or a
Cnhlor'o Chock in an
amount

of

Ten

Percent

3 Announcements

f10%1 of the tCitlll oum bid

ev_abl• to Rio O~endo Coi-

lor client servlcn beQinning
August 1, 1989. The oRiel at
PPSEO wm be open on Wtdnesdaya
and
closed
on
Thursdays, Hours are to~ 8:30
to 5:00 Monday, Wednesday and
Friday : 9:30 to 6:00 on Tuesday.

Giveaway

::-::=;-::--:::::-;:::::i:-:-::-:::=:
2 pupplas, par1 beagle, to good
tlome. 1 mate, 1 female .. Call

614-742-2249 .
3 mother .(:att and 4 part
Slamue lcit1ena, 304-m-.5340.

3 puppln part Black Lab and
German Shepherd, 304-87~

6620.

7 month old. tmall male, mht
br1ad puppy · tlao t.mal•
be~gle, 304~895-3071. ·
'

Adorable puppile. 5 weeki old.

chow. 014·379-2566.

Kltt•.n• to givuway. Call 114-

992--am.
Part

German Shephard and
Husky puppiH. All thrH hava
blue eyn. Phone 304-882·3210
'Puppln; ·8 wke. old. Mothli"r
Cockar Spaniel, daughttr of
thoroughbrad Cocker S~nlll.

S14-379-2S09, or S14-37t-2tl31.

Lost &amp; Found

.:...,.....,...::..:..::..:....-:----Found white

-n.

the o-lng therool.

Upon IIWitrd of contract,

r•

-ce.
and Mltorlll
Pe¥ntlnt lond executed on
~r

AIA 'IIocumlnt 'A311 1970

Used furniture b'J thll pltet or
also atlllng.

entire hous•hol

614·742·2455.

3 Announcemanta

Loet:

Female

. o.nn.n

$hophord-14 wkl. old, In Vlnlon.
II found, p1N11 rotum. CIQ '114~

318.a415.

'

'

'

.

Michigan residents
flee toxic rail fire

304.a82·2145.

12

Situation

992-7614
Richard Valentine

Willi

UntN wt meet egaint
Sadty missed by
Eattr; and daughtert,

,,

446-9172
//(//
'

\

FREELAND, Mich. (UP!) Two derailed tanker cars filled
with toxic chemicals 'bu med out
of contrortor a third day Monday.
-forcing ·s ome 3,000 residents of a
25-square mUe area to stay away
from their homes.
"Smoke is still coming out of
.two of the cars, "'Said B!il Wright,
a member of the Saginaw County
Emergency Services· Damage
Asses~ent team.
"There's a cloud, a plume,"
Wright said In describ!nr; the
scene of the train derailment
early Monday. He said officials
are ."keeping the perimeter se·
cure. We have to keep people
away for another night."
At least 36 people were treated
Midland and Saginaw hospitals
for inhalation of toxic fumes and
skin irritation after 14 cars ol the
CSX train derailed Saturday in
Tlttabawasse Township, about
one mUe north ol Freeland, a
v!ll~ge of 1,400 residents. No
'serious Injuries were reported.
When the tra!ncareenedoflthe
tracks at 11:26 a.m., a tanker car
smashed into a tiome and it "is
just gone," consumed by flames,
Wright said. The residents were
nol at home at the time. Wright
said there also was fire damage
to 11nother home near the tracks.
Gary Black, a Dow Chemical
Co.
said one o~ the

(.

Ill ll!i,Jl Ill II I! '

WV 304..71-3005.

We need plenty of help to make the new
Hills Department Stores as friendly
and exciting as possible. That's where you come in.
And If you're inexperienced,
don't let that stop you. We're willing to train
good people the Hills way.
...

REPUBLICAN CLUB
CORN ROASt
MONDAY, JULY 24
6:00 P.M.
Bob Evans Shelter
Hnuse
Special Recognition

to tOWMhip
trustHS/ dtrks, city
and county officials
• EYER\'ONE WRCOMEI
ANNOUNCEMENT
Dr. and Mro. Paul B.
Friedman {Otgal
proudly announce tho
birth of 1 daughter.
Temar Michelle. on
July 7, In Cincinneti.
Ecotatic grondparento
ere Mr. and

Mr~.

Anatoly Kronik {Vite) of
Southfield. Michigan
and Or. and Mrs.
Jouph H. Friedm8n,
of Sou!hliold.
Gieet-grondmother
Mro. Mirra Voroby.V of

•o

Tomor' 1 brother,
Gebrioi, ...... the
flmiy' I Ucitiii1Hirtl, but
lo unable to expraeo hla
-n-co due to hla
tender y-o.
Tomor Michelle io
nemed In loving
momory of her
paternel
-...:;;;

IN MEI\JORY- In memory of the Mr1. A. R.
Knight, 1onr;-time sponsor of. the XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Slpna Phi Sorority, a10lld brass
p8ach&amp;l candlestlck ·was prellented by lhaiiP'OUP
to Graee Epilt:opal Church of wblcb she Willi a

President Bush to press. for
for capital gains tax cut today
.

record.cl muuge
revealt det•ll•. Call anytime 1·

818-503-3818.
lntorlor Doolgn

Spocloliot.

muturlnp and ntlmatlng carpel, vlny and cuttom drapn.
knowledge of khchen dealgn
1110 1 plut. Benefit package fnclud" paid vacation, lift and
medical lntUI'I~t. Submh
ruume to Bob Wintz or Mile•

_Apply Now.
Positions are available in the,following areas:
• clothing - ladies', men's, boys', girls',
infants', lingerie, dresses, accessories,
sportswear • hardware • housewares • toys •
seaso·nal goods • paint • automotive • domestics
• s.mall appliances • shoes • giftware • jewelry
• health &amp; beauty aids • ~ound &amp; video • books-•
snack bar

Doyton, PO BoK 33,_Pl. Pit, WV
25&amp;50 or call 304-a7&amp;.3587 for

The lam ily of Phylis
Wells would like to express a special thank
you to Dr. Vallee, Dr.
Lentz. tha nursing staff
and I. V. thorapiot of
4W. and 6E. of Holzer
Hoopital and also to ·
McCoy and Moora Fu·
naral Home
Your. special care
and
thoughtfulneoo
for our love one Wll '
great comfort and
. yary much appreci'
1 ated.
Harold Wallo
and faml

We need cashiers, receiving, ticketing,
security, layaway, service desk personnel,
and general office workers.

Opportunities for qualified people, college
degree or relevant retail experience required.
Excellent future. ·Relocation will be necessary.

our gretl!ude to frlenda,
nlighboro end retetlvei
lor !Iowan. food ond
prayen during the r•
cent looo of our loved
one. Norrlo Slmo.
Specie! thenlca to the
nu,. -- on 5 E11t, Dr.
Mark Welker, Willlo Fuo
n·erel Home, Rev. Cur·
tloShaeto for conoo~
lng wc.-do, the S"-1.Femlty end Emma Lee
W.ugh lor their beeut~ ·
ful ~lnging, . the pollbe.-.,., ond all who
helped in lny WIY. Moy
GodBI- You.
Wife. Velda Slmo
en F I

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Pierce Jr., received the letter
Depariment of Housing and
lrom the wealthy Colorado beer
baron, The Times said.
Urban Development agreed to
grant a $16 million rent subsidy
A former sellior housing off!.
clal told the paper that Pierce
package to Denver housing protold a HUD selection committee
jects after Joseph Coors wrote a
lo give the Denver proposal
letter to the the department's
"very careful consideration,"
director asking that the request
but the official declined. to say
be approved , The New York
whether the commiltee was
Times said Monday.
The request had been headed
aware or the letter from Coors.
The revelation adds to the
for rejection alter being left off a
J)41rceptlon thai during the Rea·
1987 list of approved applications, but · HUD reversed its gan administration, HUD was
decision one week after the more likely to approve projects
depariment's Secretary, Samuel ·

•

Competitive Wages • Company Benefits ·
FOR BOTH FULL &amp; PART TIME P~SONNEL
(Part time positions available after opening only)
Voluntary Affirmative Action Employer
'•

expr••

•

-Local news briefs-.,

..

'

Accepting applications only

Report second water line break

\

\

Another water line break in the Leading Creek Conservancy
Dislrict system occurred Monday morning leaving approxl·
mately 150 customers in the Harrisonville area without service.
.. A spo!tesJI.Ian tor the district indicated that the corrective work
should be completed sometime late today, however .
Last week more than 500 customers were without water, some
for three days, as several breaks occurred in the lines.
· Employ_e es worked around the clock to repair the lines.

I

''

'

House Speaker Thomas Foley
and top admlnls tratton officials
on lhe issue of capital gains .
The tax is based on lhe selling
of property at a higher price than
that for which it was bought.
Others involved in the meetIngs include Rep . Dan Rosten·
kowskl, D-Ill., chairman of the
House Ways and Means Commit·
tee; Treasury Secretay Nicolas
F . Brady, budget director Ri·
chard Darman and White House
chief of staff John Sununu.
The Washington Pos 1 and The
New York Times reported that
Bush has a margin of one vote In
the committee with the help of six
House Democrats who are dely·
ing the party leadership.
The defectors are rallying
behind a proposal. by Rep. Ed
Jenkins, D·Ga.. who• has proposed permitting individuals, not

Monday- Friday, 9am to 3pm
Ohio.Bureau of Employment Services
.
45 Olive Street
·
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Carr takes part in. seminar ·
Teresa C. Carr. Middleport, participated In an Ohio
.ContiDued on page 10

J

corporations, to exclude from
taxable Income 30 percent of
their profits from the sale of
qualified assets, including
stocks, bonds, real estate and
other capital' assets for one year.
Opponents say the capital
~ains cut w_puld'be a bonanza for
the affluent. Bush conlends it
would stimulate the economy
and productivity.
Bush and Foley have been
lobbying on the issue. The
speaker is exploring the posslbil·
ity of a compromise that would
reduce the capital gains tax by
laking inflation into account.
Foley has said be would be
willing to accept inflation adjust·
ments which would allow inves·
tors to avoid taxes on the portion
of lhe!r profits that is attributable to inflation.

HUD approved -subsidies after
Coors wrote Pierce,.Times says

'

Management Positions.

CARD OF THANKS

Word• e~~nnot

..

Other Jobs, Too.

1 Card of Thanks

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In an
unusual gesture, President Bush
took time out Monday to dine on
Capitol Hill with members of the
powerful House Way$ and Means
Committee lo press for ·his
promised capital gains -tax cut.
·The president was to attend a
noon luncheon meeting of the
comm!Uee. which writes tax
bills, and in the evening accompanied by his wife Barbara, they
were to attend the committee's
bicentennial dinner.
Both events come at a time
when Bush is reported to be
possibly on thevergeofvlctoryin
keeping a campaign promise for
a 15 percent cuI in capital gains
taxes.
Depuly press secretary Steve
Hart confirmed that a series of
meetings have been held over the
past few . days between Bush,

en equal opportunity employer.

Hiring-Reference Ald. Mult be ••
lea.t 11 yr•. ald. . $3.:15/hr. 12
hl'l. per wHk. Prelerenct given
Ia Gallla County Reaidency. Call
80111rd llbrory, 814-446-7323
for Interview.

oororll:v members Is tbe Rev.
Lee Miller, pastor. AlteDding were, front, A. R.
Knight, will! tamlly members, from lhe left,
Charlotte Dillard, Belly Knight, Susan and
VimtceJtUtDit!bt! and sorority officers maklnr; lhe

I_

We're a chain of202 discount
department stores in 14 mid-central states.

Jon C.A.A., Inc., P. 0. BoK 71,
Wollllon, OH, 45692. D11dllno:
July 28, 1989. J.V.C.A.A., Inc. to

appointment.

beoicle h•lllf w•h joy.

w••

bl-

At. 1 Box 328, Pt. Ptt.,

Hardman'• Home Center Is ac·
ciiiJ{Ing appllcallona .for an lnlerlor Design Speclalllt. In·
dlvldual Mlacttd mull hlv•
prevlout
•xperlance
In

N- York City Ia

Owner r•.vn the
right to reject 11ny and all 1
bi* 1nd to
irregularIty In tllelllclo and In the bid·
ding.
No bldclor may withdrew .
hlo IMcl within thirty 130)
llayolft.- the ICiull dite of
-oful
wll bl
qutred to oubmlt • Perfor-

Plenan~

Tht TrM Harverstera WIRII
timber to buy. hardwood or

2282.

2048.

Planned
Parenthood
of
Southeast Ohio, 236 East Mil!"
Str•al, announcas new hours

6

poinmtnt. Clre Haven of Point

Amazing

Used furniture and household
appllanc... Phone 114~742~

f'lyment of -'25.00 per sot. Fluffy, llnlo dogo. 304--'71-1633.
2. Deposit wH be refunded FrH Pupptts: 7 wka. old, put·

upofl return of the Project
Manual and Drawings; postpllid, in good conditton
w;thin 30 days of bi~ open -

but will troln quollllld poroon
lor pooitlon. Solory ond bonoflto
commtnauratl with experlenc1.
Apply in poroon or coli lor op-

and newar uaecl cart. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 E.. tem
Ave., Galllpolia. Call 114-441-

304-451-)611.

July 17. 1989 etthe follow·

ing beals ;
1 . One copy of the Project
Manual plus one set of the
Drawin~s upon paynient of
$25.00 depoait . Additional
cop• can be obtained upon

bed nu,.lng horN. Experience
CertlfiCitlon dnlrtd

1042.
Home Work. Span time. Paint
lovely _miniature toye, earn $20~
TOP CASH pold lor 1983 modo! . set. No experience neettury.

plno. Gory Bodoy, Loon, WV,

Announcements

451174.
Bids received after that 4
time will not be acceptod.
Bldi will be opened and read
aloud at that time and at that
place . Interested parties are
invited to attend bid open ·
ing.
Bidders may secure copies
of the proposed Contract
Documents from the office
of the Architect beginning

A- Llmllld 111111 only $5.00,
algn up tNt (billed on your or·
dlr). PIUI rocolvo $30.00 tH
productL Call Marilyn w.. ver,

AVON.

..

- ,,

~

..

1 Section. 10 pages
25 Cftnts
A Pilultimedia Inc. ·Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middlaport,
Ohio, Monday, July
24,. 1989
'
.

OPENING SOON IN
GALUPOUS·

r~~qulr!HI.

w...

CLASSIFIED
. ADS

lowing address : Finance Office, Rio Grande College ·
Allen Hill, Rio Grande, Ohio

'needed for 82

AuCtion.er. Rick p 11 ~J lk:en- Clinic Director~ Ouellflcatlortll:
ted In Ohio and
v1rglrila. Phv-lclanl "Attlt.. rW, family
_ _. -.-- nurH practitioner or an AN with
B00 kl
A cti
ng
u - . ~"~ BA In Nurolng ollallllo lor cor5785.
·
tltlcatlon by "lmerlcan NurMI
Aoooolotlon
u on FNP. Dutloo:
9 Wanted to Buy
-rollon ol rurol HooHh 'CIInlo
Progreml. 110.14 per hr. Hour•
Fumhure •.nd •pllanc• by lht a:ocr a.m. 4:30 p.m., Mon. thru
piece or entire houAhold. Fair Fri., ott weekends •nd hollday1.
prictt being paid. Calll1~41- Submtt ru~• 10 Jackson-Yin·

yoo?

1989 at 2:00P.M. atthefol·

m1n1ger

olgns. July 21 ot, 22nd, 23rd. =-..,-,-,--:--:-:---::-'-:--;Frldoy through Sundoy.
Exporloncod rolrlgorollon • oir
condhlonlng urvlce man. · No
8
Public Sale .
phono collo. 011111 Rolrlgorallon
Samco~.J52, Third Avo., Go~
. &amp; Auction
ltpolll, ""·
·
W. V.. Stott Chomplon HELP WANTED . Rural Hoonh

can help

Bids will be received for :
General Trades Contract.
Sealed bids will be receNed at the Owner's Office
until Mondav . August 7 ,

Vol.40, No.54 M
Copyrighted 19B9

Hills Department ,Store

First Time, 1401 Elm •nd
MaadowbroGk
· Drivt. Baby~~:lner n111edtd In our home
RefrigeratOr, dining room tulte, lor 111 3 ohlfto. Two boys 5 end
fireplace, double bed1 loti of In· 2. M.-.u,., responsible pereon.
tant girt clolhn and Daby hemt Clll114-448-i415 dor 2 p.m. .

WH()..().().()

Ohio 45631 .

.,..
"·

Ch1nch Clothing Slit, 3431
Jerry·• Run Roid, right hand

NIUI

Grande, Ohio, will accept
bids for the following pro. ject: Perking Lot Paving for
Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande, Ohio, according to
Drawin91 and Specifications prepared by Mark T.
Eplillg. Architect. 423 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis,

11

\

Pl. Pleasant
- &amp; VIcinity

Clothn~., baby

Notice is herabv given that

9·5 Mon. thru Fri.'
Evans Enterprises. Inc.

THE ·HILLS TEAM OF
SERVICE SPECIALISTS

motorcycle, 1 truck lopper.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Rio Grande College, Rio

CALL 446-3994

tial basement, insulated
wijh storm windows and
doors .•! acre. Just $21 ,500.
LISTINGS
Brute Teaford

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near 70. Llgbl winds. Cbance
ol rain 20 percent. Tuesday,
high near 90. Chance ol rain 30
percent.

•

I

Homewood Dr. In Porter.
lddt ctolhea I ml8o. Thu,._
Sat.

ISA
WANT AD

INVITATION TO BID

1528 Eastern Ave.
By Evans Motors.
4186 Sq. Ft. Whse.
Plus
28'x31' Office ·

w.v...

G.

ing,
Or torraw. tells ot pain.
And there our loved one

Page4

OUTSKIRJS Of TOWN Good 6 room home Wilh par-

· WE NEED

Pick-3 ·
508
Pick-4
5311
Super Lotto
17-23-36-37-40-44
Kicker 529947

Completely Fenced

ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME
- Nice 3 bedroom home

In loving Memory Of

Ohio Lottery

'

· 1.89 A.

NEW LISTING - 6 room

In Memoriam

9

Employment Services
Fri., Sol. 1815 Chothom Avo. --:-::--,--:--....,.':'""Pop·up compor, 1 conoo, T.V., 11 Help Wanted

THE BEST

form

2

their 1amll•

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Tribune- 446-2342
Sentinel.- 992-2156 Register - 67~ 1333

,-

of

Pomeroy, Ohio

Manha and Gerry, and

iunllau 'timet- Jentinel

.

Wa would like to exptaes our sincere
·IIPPrtlciation to all
who assisted in any
way
during tha
death
o~r husband and father,
Morris-Dale Snider.
Thanks to friends
and neighbors for
floral arrangements
and food and cards.
special thoughtsa nd
prayers. "May God
Bless each and everyone of you.
Dale Snider Family
Marjorie.

Rt. 160-Formerly
Motor Car Brokers
4800 s9. ft. Wllse.
plds 20 x20 ' Office

216 E. SeciNid St.

and food ware greatly
appreciated. It macla
the loss of our dear
loved one a little aasi.W
to bear.
Harold Welio

Bench inducted
into baseball's
Hall-of-Fame

WAREHOUSES
W/OFFICE
FOR LEASE

TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE

flowers, cards, visits

Sltttr nMdad In my _home lm-

1/fl/,l\1
1/11_11 I/( I I li'

Ill

Wo would like to thank
everyone who
preooed their concern
for Phyllio Wouo {wife
and motherj) during
her brief illna11 an~
daath. The proyero:

EOE..lA.

Need extra

Card of Thanks

i •.

that were supported by prom!·
nent Republicans, former aides
to the president and friends of
Pierce, Tlie Times said.
In accepting the request from
the Denver HQu~lng Authority,
HUD scrapped a Michigan lowincome housing proposal, but
both programs were deemed
"worthy," said Thomas T. De·
mery, a former housing official.
. In a one-page letter dated Aug.
12, 1987, Coors, vice cltalrman of
the Adolph Coors Com'~~&amp;ny and a
well-known supporter of censer·
vative causes, persuaded Pierce
to ''look into this matter and give
It your favorable approval,' • The
Times said.
.
Coors bad no financial interest
in the project, and said In his
letter that be wa,s motivated by
civic pride.
The Denver project was ap·
proved upder HUD's Section 8
Moderate RehabJUtatlon Program, which was temporarily
suspended earlier this year after
allegations surfaced at political
favoritism In the approval prO:
cess, The Times said.
Pierce dkl not return several
calls from the paper; and Coors
was out ol tbe COIIJ11ry and could
not be reached, the paper ald.

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products,
the other contained acrylic acid.
Fire turns chlorosilene into
hydrochloric acid, a d11ngerous
corrosive, while acrylic acid is a
colorless liquid that Irritates the
skin and is toxic if inhaled.
ofl!c!als sa\d.
A third derailed tank oar that
contained petroleum naptha
burned Itself out Sunday, officials said. AI Crown, CSX Del roil
division director. said seven
loaded and seven empty freight
cars left the tracks . Six _of the
cars were loaded with chemicals.
Some residents complained
Ihere was a delay in notifying the
public of what kind of chemicals
were stored In the tankers.
"They probably had a pretty
good Idea of what was in those
cars, and they waited 10 to 12

Eight die
on Ohio
highways
By United Press International
At least eight people, Including
two motorcyclists and a woman
whose automobile was struck by
a train, were killed In traffic
accidents across Ohio this
weekend.
Ohio Highway Patrol officials
said Ronald Oakes, 35, Dayton,
~as killed Sunday when he lost
control of his motorcycle on a
city street in· Trotwood and slid
Into a parked vehicle. And
motorcyclist Derek Bateman, 28,
of Huron was killed while making
anJmproper pass on state Route
6 in Erie County.
Ty Shelley, 20, Swanton, was
kUled Saturday when her car was
hit by a train at a railroad
crossing in Toledo.
Also killed this weekend:
Friday Night
None.
Salarday
Canton: Chad Baker, 19, Can·
ton, in a· one-car accident on a
Stark County road.
Delaware: Mark Ladefoged,
39, Marion, in a one-vehiCle
a~ldent on U.S. 23 in Delaware
County.
Athens: Ethel Gress, 75, Gal·
ion. In a two-vehicle accident-on
Ohio 16 in Licking County.
Sunday
Swanton: Robert Ross, 19,
Swanton, hi a one-vehicle acci·
dent on a Fulton ~~ty. road.
Akron: Joseph wtahl, 48, Ak·
ron, In a one-car accident on a
city street.

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hours before releasing it to the preliminary indications that a
public,' • said Ralph Byron, who faulty track switch may have
lives 3-'h m!Jes from tb~ accident caused the d'e ra!lment, but he
site. :•r res~.Jhat, and I wish added, "We are not ruling out
they had been more up-front. I sabotage."
.
would have left five hours earlier
He said it was better to let the
!!I had known."
chemical-laden cars burn them·
Representatives of the Na· selves out, rather than risk the
tiona! Transportation Safety . lives of firefighters .
·
Board and the Federal Railroad
The area under evacuation is a
Administration arrived at the 5-mlle square, extending Into
scene Sunday to begin their parts of three counties ~- Bay,
Investigation.
Saginaw and Midland, Wright
R. Lindsay Leckie, a spokes· said. "The population is 3,500 to
man for CSX, said there were · 4,000, and a bout 3,000 left."

Realtors support
payments to agents
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII The Ohio Association of Realtors
says it :Supports the Idea of
paying real estate agents who
provide mortgage-related servi·
ces to home buyers.
Association President' James
M. Keyes said confusion remains
within the real estate Industry as
to whether such compensation
violates the 15-year--oid Real
Estate Settlement Procedures
Act. ·which prohibits compensa·

--

TheMorigageBanke rsAssoci.
a lion is challenging a Depar~­
men I of Housing · and Urban
Development ruling s upporting
the additional compensation .
The bankers group· contends the
loan referral program represents a possible conflict of Inter·
est, In that realtors generally
working for the seller, assist
buyers In finding financing.
Th_e bankers group also believes the opportunity exists for

,~a~g~e~n~ts~;fo~r::~s~im~pl;e: ~~:~~t~o:m:a:k~e::~~d~e~a~ls;--~

lion to
Despite lbat uncertainty,
age
of their
Keyes said Ihe OAR supports Ibe
products to buyers.
Keyes said the NAR. believes
National Association of Realtors'
position that real estate agents it's in a realtor's best interests to
find the borrower the best
should be allowed to accept
money fcir providing such servi·
product because real estate
ces as tong as the fees are
brokers and agents rely on the
disclosed to all parties Involved
return of. business of satisfied
clients and customers to
and the services are above and
beyond the normal process of
succeed.
• "The situation becomes comselling a home.
Compensation by a homebuyer
plicated by the fact mortgage
to a real estate broker or agent
lenders are now vying for agents' ,
for simply giving the buyer the attention by offering fees for
name of a lender has always been simple referrals,' ' said Keyes.
illegal. However, Keyes said
' 'We're afraid some real estate
_agents have . greater access to agents, particularly · those in
mortgage information now be- smaller firms. may not be aware
cause of computerized loan ortgl·
of (the) prohibition against fees
nation systems.
for simple referrals."
Keyes said a real estate agent
Although some ·states have
today can provide a wide range_of pasSed laws regulating a real
services, such as comparing estate agent's Involvement in the
mortgage products, pre· · mortgage process, Keyes said no
qualifying a buyer and preparing such law exists in Ohio.
loan application forms .
_
The Ohio Association of Real·
Keyes said such services. in his tors, with about 36,000.members,
opinion, are well beyond the is the largest professional trade
scope of simply selling a house.
association in Ohio.

CAR
'

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~lA SH

_1. ao

UMW. A.
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I Pfift Cf:CUP
...
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BENEFR CAR WASH - Tbe wives and famUies ol Meigs
minen were defi!J a IMJy car wub • • • - oa Pleuer's J181'klns
lot Friday, willie their f!ulbllldl ... latMrll were In Vlralala In
support of strtlfaJ Pltlllton Coal Gl'GI!p mfllen. KevlD Gr••l•ao of
near Alban)' "worked" Wee&amp; lllala rib a ll&amp;p advertlalns t1Je car
wash. Tomorrow &amp;bey 'II be IICIIIHPI8Cle elle, be uld, but .&amp;lie fnd
ralsla1 will 141 ,on. Tile mOI!eJ' will be uaed to help llock a food
pantry for lhe mlllera ud abo to help some with utility bilk. . ·
•

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Commentary
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The Daily ·Sentinel
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111 CouJt street
Pomeroy, Olalo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~rib

Bm~
~v

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ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
P)abllsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assllltaat Publlsller/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General' Manqer

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welceme. 'l11ey llllould be l..atlulll310
wonlo Jon&amp;. AU leiter• are • •blecl lo ..UUnc and mulll .b e olped wKb
11111110, addr ..a and telephoae namber. No 'a nolped letters wW be pabllo-.
Letters ollould be Ia pod cute, addr ..llaC ..._,lOt penolllllllleo.
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~ms play waiting game
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Appreciates support
p ear Edit or:
I would like to thank anyone
and everyone who helped in
anyway to make our 4th of July a
big success. And a blg thanks to

our vets.

Thank you
· Carrie B. Morris
Rutland Fire Dept.
Aux. President

Berry's World

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Harvard University to conduct a chemlc!li producers. Last year,
study on hazardous chemical Pendergrass &amp;~!rapped an lndedata sheets used in auto repair "- pendent Information service,
and body shops, the September which OSHA had acquired to
1988. study also found .the lnfor· assist agency Inspectors.
The current , nap .over data
.million Inadequate and ln .viola·
Is only the latest
disclosures
tlon of federal standards.
chapter
in
a
sorry story of how
Yet John Pendergrass, OSHA
OSHA
has
abdicated
authority
director during the Reagan ad·
for
workplace
health
and
safety.
ministration, rejected the notion ·
While
OSHA
boas.ts
about
lmpos·
that It was his agency's job· to
monitor chemical company re- lng fat fines on !lrms !hat violate
ports for accuracy. Pendergrass worker-safety rules, It has cut
was no rogue; he refiected the deals with those same firms for
·hands·off approach followed by about half the original fine.
"A company official who will·
the deregulation proponents o,f
tully
violates .federal OSHA laws
the Reagan administration.
stands
a greater chance of
A government effort to develop
winning
a
state lottery than being
an Independent. chemical !nfor·
c~lmlnally
charged by !he fed·
mallon file was spiked by' Pen·
eraLgovernment
for workplace
dergrass, who told out associate
Scott Sleek that federal agencies safety violations,'' concluded one
ought to rely on data s~pplied by recent -Senate Investigation.

~~!~ecr:o~r:~... ~:r~~~~~~=

·~~·
~ 1811 b)l NEA. Inc

•

"Today, we'll work on Improving loud grunts

and shr/Bics when you maks shots. '' . ·

, TOURNAMENT CHAMPS - The Hubbard's
Greenhouse IJtde Leape team of Syracuse
handed Point Pleasant PSM a 6-4 loss Sunday to
secure the 1989 Kyger Creek Utile League
Tournament championship. Kneeling behind the
champloll!lhlp trophy are (L·R) Jeremy Fisher,
Jay McKelvey, Kevin Deemer, RobllY. Crow and

AlRlP

lOQJ~...

'P.oiJit t&gt;ieasant PSM In the
championship game Sunday ev·
enlllg to win the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament title.
Greenhouse starter Ryan Willi·
ams , who went the distance and
recorded a gaine-hlgh 12 strl·
keouts, got his mates of!toasolid
start with a three-run homer In
the top of the first Inning off PSM
starter Ryan Roush. After scor·
lng another run in the second
while holding Point scoreless In
the first two fratnes, ·Hubbard' s
took a 4·0 lead.
Then It was Ryim Rous.h's turn
to put the.clamps on Syracuse, as
he held them scoreless In the
third and fourth lnnliigs with
some of his 11 strikeoutS while
PSM scored two runs each In Us
halves of those Innings to tie the
game at 4·4. But Williams tripled
In the fifth and scored .on Ryan
Roush's wild pitch to score what
proved to be the winning run.
After Greenhouse scored an
Insurance·run in the sixth, Point
sustained back·to·back wills by
reserves Kapp and Brian McKin·
ney In Its half of the sixth before
Stephen. Diamond walked. Then
Mlkey Richmond hit a grounder

Jerrod. Clay. Standing players are. Ryan BID;
Mason Fisher, Jay Day, Tyson Buckley , Cass
Cleland, Ryan WIUiams, Paul Chapman 1111d
Adam Triplett. Behind them are coaches Kenny
Buckley, Bob Crow and Marvin McKelvey. ( OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

down the third base line-that was·
headed for foul territory In left
field, but Syracuse thlril sacker
Adam Triplett made !he scoop to
his right and fired · to secilnd
baseman Jay McKelvey to retire
Diamond and end ~ game.
· Syracuse's other twohltscame
~rom McKelVey (double) and
Triplett (single) . PSM's fourhlts
were collected by Richmond
(double), Ryan Roush (two sin·
gles) and Diamond (single).
Bidwell 8, Hannan Trace 5
The preceding consolation
game witnessed the junior . Pi·
rates take an early lead before
allowing the Wl,ldcats to creep
back and challenge In the late
Innings.
The Pirates scored three In the
bottom of the first Inning and one
In the second to take a 4.0 lead,
Then in !he top· of !he third,
Trace's Wesley Gibson scored on
a single by ~ret! Cremeens to cut
the Bucs' lead to 4·1. Wildcat
catcher John Carroll later scored
on a wild pitch by Pirate starter
Howard Caldwell to cut the lead
to 4·2.
Trace, 'who got In to the consola·
tlon game by dropping a 9·5
decision to PSM, cut the lead to
4-3 with a run In the fourth , but
the Pirates scored two ,In their
. half of the fou,rth to secure the

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victory. The Wildcats scored· a :
pair In the fifth, but Bobby Fink, •
who came in from shortstop to ;
r elieve Caldwell, held the Wild· •
cats long enough to pick liP the :
~

save.

Cremeens pitched the entire •
game for the Guyan nine and :
posted a .game-hl&amp;h ntne Ks.
;
Bidwell's elght·hlt attack •
carne courtesy of Jeremy Russell :
(double, single), Caldwell (two :
singles). Fink, Greg James, •
Brent Tackett and ChriS Toler :
(one single each), while Hannan •
Trace's other four hits were ;
collected by Carroll (two sin· ;
gles) , Gibson and HeathHutchln· ·
son (one single each) .
··
Award winners .
.
•
The Individual award ·winners ·
tn the tournament were:
.
No-h,ltier -Chad Cox, Ga!Upo· ·
lis Yankees (won Rawlings
glove)
•
Tourney's first homer Robby Crow, Syracuse (L5 Mag·
. num bat)
:
Mo•t bomers - Brett ere·
meens (Hannan Trace) and
Ryan Roush (PSM), three each
Most bits- Ryan Roush, PSM
(nine)
Most strikeouts Ryirri
Roush, PSM (41)
·· •
Best defen.e - Jeremy Rus·
sell, Bidwell .
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Astros sweep Phillies, ·cl08e ··
ili on _Giants; Reds lose 12-4:

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WINNING RUN -Syracuse's Ryan WID.Isms
(center) kicks up some dust as scores on a wild
pitch by Point Pleasant PSM pitcher Ryan Roush
(right) In the fifth Inning of Sunday's champion·
sblp game In the Ky~rer Creek IJtde, League

/

By STEPHEN RUTKOWSKI
UPI Sports Writer
Everything went against the
·Philadelphia Phlllles this weekend , even the umpiring.
The iast·place ~hlllles were In
need of a break after losing
Friday's game and 'a Saiurday
double·header to the Astros.
Instead, !he series ended In more
fr!lstratlon when a dubious call
by a rookie. umpire left the
Phillles on 'the short end of a '3·2
game Sunday at !he Astrodome.
Trailing 3·2 In the ninth,
Phllad.elphla had runl)ers at first
and· second with two out, Lenny
Dyks!ra hit a fly ball into short
left field, which left fielder Bill
Hatcher dived for ·and caught for
the final out - at least that's
Wlltt&gt; uinptre•C!!harlfe .ttel'ltlford
ruled. Replays showed the ball
skipped before Hatcher got his
glove on 11.
· Philadelphia Manager· Nick
Leyva and Dykstra critiCized

Tournament In Cheshire. pSM backstop Mlkey
Richmond (left) moves In for the attempied out
play after picking up the ball, which was never
more than a foot away from the plate. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

/~/

Nazi collaborator-·reopens old wounds
PARIS (NEA) - A year ago,
Nazi was criminal Klaus Barbie ·
sat ln his cell in Lyon- the same
j all where he condemned so
many to death- and threatened
to tear France apart with revela·
!Ions about high-level French·
Nazi collaborations. Barbie was
tried and convicted; he Is · now
serving life In prison.
His attempt to put France on
trail failed .
The same may not be true of
the next major Nazi war crtmlrial
to he brought to justice. Already
the arrest of Paul Touvler has
reopened decades-old questions
about the relationship of the
Catholic Church and the Third
Reich. If and when he ·Is tried,
what he has to say could very
well split F~ench society.
· Touvler, now 74, was one of
France's most notor[ous Nazi
collaborators. During World War
II, he headed the Intelligence
service of the Sovole, the proNazi French mllltla In Lyon set
up by the Vichy government. The
Vichy government was the
puppet state set up by the Nazis
In France, which did much of
their dlr.ty work during the
occupation years.

Most Vlchyk supporters say
they collaborated In order to
!lght communism. But. many .
were enthusiastic supporters of
the Nazi's anti-Semitism, ·and by
all accounts Touvler was among
the most enthusiastic. He Is
murdering Jews as well as
senping them to death camps,
looting their homes and destroy·
lng their businesses.
.
After the war Touvler disappeared. In 1946 he was triEid In
absentia and sentenced to death
for personally killing an elderly
Jewish couple In January 1944
and for executing seven Jewish
businessmen.
Last May , four decades after
he disappeared, Touvler was
arrested at St. Francis Priory ln
Nlce. The abbey Is owned by
supporters of excommunicated
conservative French Archbls hop
Marcel Lefebvre who broke with
Rome over the liberalization of
the church. The evidence Is now
· mounting that Touvler has been
hidden all these years by conser·
vatlve Catholics, Including very
high· level church officials.
According to government In·
vestlgators, It Is believed that
Catholic Church officials helped

Crime doesn't pay

•

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WASHINGTON - Canaries Industry' s record on revealing
once were sent Into coal mines to dangerous ingredients Is poor.
detect lethal gases. If the birds
Federal law orders chemical
died, the miners were kept out. makers to complete a form for
T.oday, the American worker everything they produce. The ·
may be acting as the canary. CMA · study, focusing on 10
unwltilngly the subject of unsafe · dangerous chemlcl,lls, found that
workplaces.
companies are providing vague
America Is dotted with toxlc and confusing Information on
ttmebombs. But the Occupa· how to store and handle the
tlonal Safety and Hel,llt h Admin· chemicals, found that companies
lstratlon .;_ the watchdog of !he . are providing vague and contusworkplace - Is napping. Ironl· Ing Information on how to store
cally, one of the most blistering and handle the chemicals, and
assessments comes from the Inadequate first-aid instructions
trade group of the Industry that Is In case Of exposure. The report
most culpable. ·
·
charges that problems with the
We have reviewed an Internal forms ''raised red fiags about the
consultant's report prepared last ability ... to adequately convey
year for the Chemical Manufac· Information and warnings, and
turers Association &lt;GMA) that about the effectiveness of·train·
echoes warnings sounded by lng programs."
many authorities: The chemical
When OSHA commissioned

After posting a 3·1 victory over
Bidwell In · the firs t semifinal
·gall)e Saturday evening, Syra·

governor sweepstakes

Letters to the· editor
'

Syracuse captures Kyger
Creek LL ·T ournament title

workers may be in dange.r.__ __._Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n_.

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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - At least four Republicans have announced their
Intentions to run for governor ln 1990, but the Democrats are playing a
more cautious game.
. · ·
. It Is well known tbat state Auditor Thomas Ferguson and Attorney
General Anthony · Celebrezze Jr. have their sights set on the
governor's office. They are raising money and volunteer support, and
doing other behind-the-scenes W()rk, bl!t their official announcements
are on hold.
Both Ferguson and Celebrezze are waiting for Ohio House Speaker
Vernal Riffe Jr., D·Wheelersburg, to declare his intentions for 1990.
'!he two state officeholders are stuck because they long ago gave
Riffe the impression. true or not. that they would not run for governor
iHte wanted the prize.
Neither Ferguson nor Celebrezze will allow Riffe to keep them out
of the Democratic primary, but they must show proper deference to
the venerable speaker.
. Riffe would surely work against whomever tried to pre-empt or
upstage him, and Riffe's help Is· Important. He was a key factor In
9ov. Richard Celeste's narrow primary win over then-Attorney
General William Brown in 1982, raising large S\lms of money.
Riffe Is pondering his -future, and · is expected to make an
announcement around Labor Day. The Inside betting Is that the
64-year old Riffe wlll forgo the race for governor In favor of. a 17th
term In the House and certain re-election as speaker.
'Ferguson and Celebrezze will' then be free to officially announce for
governor, and they probably will, although Democratic party leaders
would prefer to see Ferguson ~un for auditor again.
Ferguson has had a lock on the auditor's office since 197(\, and the
auditor Is a member of the Apportionment Board which will.realign
state legislative boundaries in 1991 according to the 1990 census data.
,Gqvernor and secretary of state are the other pivotal members of
that board, and Democrats want to malntaincontrolofit.lfFerguson
runs for governor, Secretary of State Sherrod Brown proba bly would
run for auditor, making both of those ~ey positions vulnerable foi'
Republicans.
.
. !ferguson and Celebrezze may not be alone In their quest of the
Democrallc 1\0mlnallon. Attorney Joel Hyatt, Sen . Howard
Metzenbaum's son-In-law, has high name recognition and the money
to give both of them a run.
Hyatt brings with him the clean slate of-an outsider, often attractive
to voters. That kind of candidacy could be especially valuable to
Democrats next year, when Republicans will try to tar them all with
the misadventures of the Celeste administration.
They've already started, braildl11g Ferguson, Celebrezze and
Brown as "The Three Amigos" who stood by and watched the
administration's scandals.
:u there Is a three-man prima ry, look for state Treasurer' Mary
Ellen Withrow to jump Into the fray . She won the treasurer's
nomination in 1982 as the only woman In a crowded field, and she also
would be a threat as the only pro-choice candidate on the abortion·
issue.
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Ohio

Page · 2-The Daily S.atilal
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
M~ July 24. 1989

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Back when I was a student at
Harvard Law School, Vice Dean
Livingston Hall amused us one
day with a particularly flne
distinction. "Remember," he
told us, " you don't have to make
an 'honest dollar.' All you have to
do Is make the dollar honestly. It
doesn't matter whether the dol·
lar is honest or not. :•
I'm not sure that Llvy Hall
would make the same statement
today, for the courts appear to
disagree with him. It has recently been held that a racketeer
(a Mafia mobster, for example)
cannot use the proceeds of his
crime to pay the lawyer who
defends him. Apparently, !he
dollar Itself must be hbnest after
all.
· Still, there Is a long iexal
tradition that "money Is fungi·
ble.'' That Is to say, If $100 are
deposited In an account $10 at a
time, there's no means by which
five of those dollars, upon being
withdrawn, can be Identified as
coming from a specific one (or
more) ofthelOdeposlts. This hal

·
Touvler escape advancing allied
armies In the summer of 1944.
Their motives, however, appear
to have been humanitarian.
As the allied armies advanced
on Lyon, Touvler held at least 70
priSoners, Including resistance
~lghters and Jews. Reportedly,
Cardin ~! Pierre Gerlier, 'then
archbishop . of Lyon, feared all
would be executed. Through one
of his priests, who had close lies
to the Vichy militia, Gerlier
proposed a deal : The church
would help Touvler escape In
exchange for the lives of the
prisoners.
. Under French law, Touvler's
1946 death sentence expired In
1967. He surfaced because he no
longer feared arrest. .· In ' 1971,
Influential conservative Cathol·
lcs led by the Rev. Charles
Duquaire, personal secretary to
the archbishop of Lyon, per·
suaded then· French President
George Pompldou to pardon
To~vler. B'ut .the political furor
that resulted forced Pompldou to
rescind the pardon and forced
Touvler to go back Into hiding.
Last year, as the result of a
lawsuit brought ,bY a private
Nazl·huntlng organization, a

Rehliford, a Triple-A umpire
replacing the vacationing Joe
West, and the National League.
· "We should .have a one·run
lead going Into the bottom of the ,
ninth," said Leyva, "and Lenny
got a 15-game hit streak bloWn."
. "How can an umpire be that
bad with a game on the line?"
Dykstra said. "And It's not ·just
today. It happens·all the time.''
John McSherry, the second
base .umpire, appeared to have a
better angle for the call, but
Rehllford on third base called the
out immediately.
"They (NL President Bill
White and supervisor of umpires
'Ed Vargo) made the decision to
bring him (Rehllforo) up here.
and they're not doing their job," .
• ·~oal4 ··w.~ ..----·•
beat. I just don t ·like It whe~
things are taken away from us.
Houston third baseman Ken
Caminiti chose tocredltHatcher.
"If he didn't catch the ball. he

made It look like he did •,·,.
Caminiti said.
The victory boosted Houston:s
record to 57-42, best in franchl,se.
history atter 99 games. The
Astros are in second place in the
NL.West, 1 12 games behind San
Francisco. During the four·game
series, relief ace Dave Smltti
collected two saves, Larry All·
dersen sa.ved Sunday's vlctoi:y
and Danny Darwlri won the'
second . game of Saturday's'
double-header In relief.
·
Houston stsrter Bob Forsch,
3·3, worked five Innings for
Sunday's victory. He yielded an
unearned run and three hits:
Andersen worked 12·31nntngs
hIs second save. Bruce Ruffin;
3·4. took the loss.

fbr

F'eM"hre

-~ ~aft~-'
7

Uague, Los An!lel~s spll ~
double-header with Pittsburgh,
winning the !lrst4·3 and dropping
the second 2·1 In l O lnnl~gs ,
Montreal routed Clnclnnatll2·4.

..

Robert J. Wagman

judge ordered Touvler's arrest
warrant transferred from ~ the
control of local clvlllan pollee In
Lyon tq the national pollee.
Within a matterofmonthshewas
In custody.
Today, Paul Touvler sits In a
Paris jail. Prosecutors say they
tried Barbie, and they will try
him. But they also say It could
take them two years to complete
their lnliestl~ations, and Touvl·
er's health Is not good.
· " During the war, many church
leaders - Including, some say,
Pope Plus- saw the Nazis as the
only hope of Christian Europe to
stave off the assault of communlsm. Some, therefore, openly·
supported Germany and the .
Third Reich, while many others ·
simply did little to oppose fhem
even after It became clear that
they were attempting to·exterml·
nate Jews.
Many deep wounds stUI exist In
France from the days of VIchy.
Those wounds will be opened
again by the trail of ·Paul
Touvier. Almost everytrall of
Paul Touvler. Almost everyone
believes that this Is one trial the
French govenrment would be
very glad to avoid.

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(USPSIU·. . )
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By Comtl' w Mol or - l o

FINISH TB~ -The Syracuse Minor League
baseball team finished In third place In the recent
Big Bend Tournament. Team members are front
row from left to right: Donnie Proffitt, Jamie
Buskirk, Jll!:rod Clay, · Joshua Davis, Erron
Aldridge, and Lee WIIUams. second row from left

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to right: Jerrod Mills, Ryan Nease, Jason Allen,
Daniel Bable, Russell Reiber, Guy Bing, and
Evan Struble. Third row from left to right are
coaches Dana Aldridge, Dave Buskirk, and Ray
Proffitt. Not Pictured are Adam Cumings and
Coach Rex Cumings.

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week.

Harris claims top golf hono~s-

or does it?

been a great consolation to many above the London Interbank
people (and not just Mafia rate.
Norman Bailey, a career in·
lawyers) who otherwise might
have uncomfortably clear links vestment banker who joined the
to ;~ll sorts of misbehavior.
National Security Council staffln
But there are signs that the 1981 as senior director of national
fungibility of money Is less total .s ecurity planning, told "Amerl· bombed Libya .
Questioned by " American In·
these days than It !ISed to be. can Interests": "The money
According to a special edition of went to East Berlin, to the leresis," a spokeman for East
the stimulating TV documentary Aussenhandelsbank. It was dis· Germany's Aussenhandelsbank
series "American Interests," bursed from there to various took refuge In the unsual runa·
broadcast recently on PBS, loans front companies imd various tax round. After all, ha ha, money Is
from American banks have been havens around the world. It was . fungible, Isn' t It? You can't
traced to such· ugly ultimate then concentrated again In Ll· pinpoint the funds.
But 'former National S&lt;!curlly
destinations as Middle Eastern bya, and was sent from Libya to
Agency
Director Lt. Gen. Wll·
terrorist gangs, who then used various ·accounts which were
llam
Odom
, though approp·
.the funds to finance their opera· controlled by terrorist .organlza·
rlately
close·mouthed.
·carefully
lions against Innocent American !Ions, and was then used by those
targets.
terrorist organizations In their did not deny that nowadays
money can Indeed be pinpointed:
'According to the program, that activities."
"There Is no way I can confirm
was the case with a S600 million
Most shocking of all, other
general-purpose loan extended In funds from this same loan went to that a particular transfer was
1985 by a consortium of more the terrorists who subsequently, traced by U.S. Intelligence sour·
than 80 Western banks, headed on Aprll 5, 1986, bombed a West ces; nor will I confttm that It's
by First Chicago, to the East Berlin discotheque popular with plausible for us. to track II - or
not to track it. I wlll say that such
German Aussenhandelbank (or American military personnel.
fiows
would not be abnormal for
Foreign Ttade Bank) . The terms One American soldier and a
the
Eaat
Bloc's way of supporting
were very favorable to the · Turkish woman were killed. Nine
borrower: repayment In eight days later, on the orders of Third World activities.''
How about It, First Chicago?
years at just a quarter of a paint President Reagan, u.s. planes

SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA

William Rusher

oJ

~-./"

AGE 13·14 Champion - Jay
By Dave Harris
Harris of Jaymar, Runner-up
Jay Harris of the-Jaymar Golf . Mark GflQrgl of Hlqden Valley
AGE 11-12 Champion - Jason
Club took hOme the top honors to
'
capture the Parker Long Memor·
tal Trophy as the golfer of the
year fo r 1989 in the Tri-County
Junior GQif League. Harris also
won the awardlnl986whenitwas
named in m'einory of Parker
Long who was tragically killed In
a automobile acc;ident. Parker
was a top junior golfer In the
trl-county area and was a former
winner of the award .
The ' Tri-County Junior Golf
League Is made up of Junior
golfers from ages 9-17 from the
Riverside Golf Club In Mason,
Hidden Valley Golf Course in Pt.
Pleasant, Cliffside Golf Club In
Ga!Upolls and the Jaymar Golf
Club In Pomeroy.
Harris posted the best 18 hole
score on the new Cliffside Golf
Course With Jamie Anderson also
of Jaymar coming In second.
Tho;! following junior golfers
TOP GOLFER - Jay Harwere presented awards . at the
ris of the Jaymar Golf Club In
round-up played at the Cliffside
Pomeroy won top ho110rs and
Go~f Course In Gallipolis on
was awarded the Parker Long
Friday.
·
Memorial Trophy 1111 the
AGE 15.17 Champion - Sam
10lfer of the year for 1889 If!
Hamllton of Cliffside, Runner:up '"\he Tri-County Junior GoU
Jamie Anderson of Jaymar
Leque.

Hart of Riverside, Runner-up
Adam Krawsczyn of Jaymar
AGE" 9-10 Chllffipion - J.R.
Hysell of Riverside, R\lnner·up
Zach Pullin of Hidden Valley.

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•• •

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''

\

,~ ,

..

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�' ; !'-a•

Monday, July 24, 1989

4 The Daily SentiuV ·

:, Bench, Y az head list
'

·.: Four inducted
:~ into baseball's
;·:·: Hall of Fame
••

·.•

•

~

If,,

!'
•I
'

'.

By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
COOPERSTOWN. N.Y . (UP!)
::
- Johnny Bench and Carl
Yastrzemski provided a record
crowd with an afternoon of
thanks and fond memories Sun-"
day during ceremonies at the
golden anniversary of the Base·
ball Hall of Fame.
••
Forgotten for at Iea&amp;t one day
·• were lawsuits and Ill w!U as the
Cincinnati Reds catcher and
: • Boston Red Sox left fielder led
: .· five other honorees into base·
ball's shrine. A crowd estimated
at 25,000 sat through the two-hour
·-. ceremony on a sun-splashed
·: afterJ;~oon in upstate New York.
Also honored In the 5Qth year of
,.· the Hall of Fame were jled
Schoendienst of the St. LOuis
Cardinals and umpire Alt;!ar lick,
selected by the Veteran's
. • Committee.
Bob Hunter and Ray l&lt;elly
: received the J.G. Taylor Spinks
•·. Award for writers and Harry
· · Caray received the Ford Frick
' Award for broadcasting. ·
But the afternoon of tributes
belonged to _Bench and Yast. rzemski. Both remembered their
• families for the sacrifices made
to allow them to play the game.
And both made special mention
of their fathers, who gave up
· their dreams of playing baseball
for their farn liy.
Bench and Yastzremski were
elected in their first year of
eligibility and were just the 18th
and 19th of the 204 players
inducted to en ter the Hall of
. Fame on the first ballot.
Bench, 42, played 17 years for
Cincinnati, including 13 in which
he caught 100 or more games.
•. Yasztremski played 21 years f~r
• Boston, appearinginmoreArnerican League games than any
other player (3,058 ).
Yastrzernski, 49, best summed
up the careers of both in his
closing statement.
"The race does not always go
to the swiftest nor the battle to
the s trongest,'" he said. " It
belongs to those who run the .race
and stay the course and fight the
good fight. "

my Idol, who they were saying
would be the next big superstar
from Oklahoma, '.' Bench said. "I ·
had no Idea the Hall of Fame was
waiting for me. I don't think any
youngster dreams of Jhat or
thinks that Is possible.
··or corse, you would think of
AU-Star Games or World Series,
but iheHaliofFameisaplacefor
fantasies. That Is a place, for the
Cy Youngs, the Babe Ruihs and
the Lou Gehrlgs."
Bench became the firs't
member of the "Big Red Ma·
chine" team of the 1970's to reach
the Hall of Fame. Former
as Hal.! of Fame president Ed Stack' and baseball commissioner .:;
1988 HAUrOF-FAME INDUCTEES· -' Red Schoen~lenst, AI
teammate Pete Rose; Involved in
B•rt
Gl•matli, behind, look on. (UPI)
,· ·
:
Bar
liCk,
Carl
Y
a$trzemsld
ll!ld
Jolumy
Beneh
(lrR)
gather
for
a
, a legal battle with Commissioner
·pholo
after
beln11
inducted
iato
tbe
Baseball
Hall
of
F•111e
Sunday
Bart Glamattl over Rose's gambling, avoided a face-to-face
meeting with the commissioner
when he passed up the ceremo·
nles. Rose, the Reds manager.
will also skip Monday's exhlbi·
save at the 17th, where his second third place after the third round,
TROON, Scotland (UP!) tion game between the Reds and
tively,eas)'. But early in the day,
Red Sox.
American Mark Calcavecchla shot ran off the back of the green. carded a double-bogey six at the outgoing champion Seve BallesThe emphasis of the afternoon won a four-hole playoff against He pitched in with a sand wedge 423-yard, par 4 ninth and finished
teros of Spain failed to notch even
was on warm rembrances rather Australians .Greg Norman and to save par.
S-under for the week on 280, along one btrdie as he carded a ·.
"If I win, that'll probably be with Argentina ' s E\luardo
than recriminations. Bench ad· Wayne Grady Sunday' to capture
final-round 78 for 299, ,his worst ·
monished the pro· Boston crowd the 118th British Open for his first the shot that won it," Norman Rome~o and fellow American . ever performance In a, British
at one point when he mentioned · major championship.
..
said. ,
Paul Azinger.
open.
.
Grady.. shot 1·u.n der 71 and
h!s former, manager and former
Calcavecchla, who birdied the
The sunny, calm .weather th&lt;1t
U.S. , Open . Champion Curtis
. Red Sox Manager John McNam· 18th hole of the final round to Calcavec~hia' s sixth blrclie at the · has prevailed all week · kept the Strange was 2-over on 74 . for a
· ara, "This Is not a day for booing, qualify for the playoff, sank two 18th gave him a 4·under68.
course playing fast and relafour-day total of 292.
Five-time champiOn Watson;
It is a day of celebration."
birdies and shot par on the other
· Yastrzemskl appeared In two two playoff holes. The two who started the day one shot
1!
World Series, · and excelled ln . Australians shared second place. behind Grady, picked up shots at
'
both. He batted .352 with three
The three golfers finished the first and sixth, but was back
I.
home runs and 9 RBI in World regulation play at 13-under 275, on 11-under at the turn and never
Series play.
British Open rules call for the made up the ground.
1:
Though he has no World Series first, second, 17th and 18th holes
Jodie Mudd of the United
,_ .
-rings from his 23 seasons with to be used in a playoff. It was the States was one shot behind
I' ·
Boston, Yastrzemski is the last first three-way playoff In British Watson with a 10-under total of
player to win the Triple Crown. Open history.
278.
In 1967 he hit 44 home runs,
'__
American Fred Couples and
Calcavecchla shot par on the
batted .326 and had 121 RBI to first and third playoff holes and Northern Ireland's David Fe·
....
lead the American League.
birdied the ·second and fourth. herty both posted final round 72
;.·::
For his career (1961-1983) Norman, who shot a course- for 9-under 279.
Yastrzern.ski collected 3,192 hits, record 8-under-64 on the final
Payne Stewart, who was In
'
'
'
426 home runs and batted .285. He round, shot bifdies on the first
Is the only American League two playoff holes but bogeyed the
player to collect over 3,000 hits third to fall Into a tie with
and 400 homers.
Calcavecchla. He landed In two
·He started in left field, rep lac· bunkers on the 18th and conceded
lng fellow Hall of Farner Ted after Calcavecchia's birdie. ·
W.l lllams, who was In
Grady, who led entering the
attendance,
final round, shot par on the first
Ya"strzernski will be rernein· two piayotf holes before bogeybered as one of the best to ever ing the third to fall two strokes
play Fenway Park's "Green back. He shot par on the final hole
BenCh's care~i' stretched lrom Monster'' In Iell Held. He won al!d llnlshed three strokes behind
1967.1983. He appeared in four seven Gold Gloves and seven Calcaveechla . .
World Series. with CinCinnati times led the league in assists.
Calcavecchia, 29, became the
"! was not blessed with God·
. winning in 1975 and 1976. In 1976
first American to win the British
Bench batted .533 with two horne given talent ," Yastrzemskl said. Open since Tom Watson in '1.983.
runs and was named Series "I had to work twice as hard and He overcame a stretch of poor
twice as long as many of my holes, star.tlngwith a bogey at the
MVP .
He holds the record for most peers. And as Grantland Rice seventh, to catch Grady and
horne runs by a catcher (327) ; said, 'When the Great Scorer Norman after 72 holes.
including 45 homers in 1970 and40 comes to make his final mark, It
"I wasn't thinking about win·
in 1972. He was the National is not whether you won or lost but ning. I was just trying to get as
League's Most Valuable ·Player how you played the game:
far under par as I could,"
"I can say that I gave 100 Calcavecchia said.
in both those seasons .
The Oklah-oma native also won percent of myself. Anything less .
His luck turned at the long 11th,
would not have been worthy of .where h~ made a 40-foot putt for
10 consecutive Gold Gloves.
"As &lt;! youngster I always me and anything more would not par. He birdied the 12th with a
· wanted to follow Mickey Mantle, have been possible of me."
chip from a hill overlooking the
green.'
-------Sports briefs------- .-.,was more embarrassed than
anything else. How lucky can you
Cycling ,
Tour winner -from Lakewood, get ," he said. "After that, all of a
Greg LeMond of th e United Calif., completed the 21 stages sudden my spirits changed."
States won the 76th Tour de that covered 2,000 ~iles in 87
Along with the silver claret
France. overcoming a 50-second hours, 38 mio.utes anliif.l5 secohds . jug, Calcavecchia earned
deficit on the final stage to edge The eight-second margin of vic· $129,600 for first palce. Grady
Frenchman Laurent Fignon by tory was the smallest in the and Norman collected $89,100
eight seconds. The second-time his tory of the world's top cycling each.
race.
The Australians said Caicavecchla snuck up on them.
Norman said he first saw the
American as a threat afte~ he
birdied the 18th.
"Before that. I never even
thought of hini," he said.
Wt'!'il
Grady said he had his eye on
Majors
San Franl'lst•cJ
... . ...511 ~n . 5~ Norman
during his round.
Hou~on ................... ....37 U .571
l 't,:
Ry l lntti'd Prt'S !; lnll'flllllonu.l
SIUI JM ei(0 .................... -17 3'! .-175 11 !,-1
' ,\.\fERICAN I..EACHJE
·
''This
guy
was shooting up the
lA~ 1\n~ • INi ................. ll:i 53 .-18$ 12 a;.
Ea.o;t
Cl•·lnrutl .................... u 33 .439 13
leader
board
like you wouldn't
" l P d . GB
,\llanla . ..................... -10 511 .-10M IM
1\ltllimort• .... .. .............!i;l U .l5~ believe It," Grady said of Nor·
Satunlay'!l Renlls
T 11ronfo .......... . ... ... .... -11! ~ .-1911 6
fllh · a~~:o ~. 81111 Franchw:o 2
man. "It really put a scare up
flt!\'t' l:md .
. ........ A7 t! .-UIO 6
Montrt•al 6, OndnmtiS
Rnst nn ........................~ 5 ~It .-tK.t 6
me. Like Greg, I wasn't even
HouMton
I.
PhiladclpNaD.
1~1
N1•W \ 'ork .... .............-tG 51 ..17-t 11 t
Hou.Con.l, Phllaodelpllia:l, 2nd
thinking about Mark at all."
.\lllwalllrl' .................. . u 112 .-t&amp;-1 IP .t
Lo11 An ad~ II, Pllli&gt;lburwh 1
IM r"l' ..... , ...............:1:1 6,2 .:J.n I!Hf
Norman mastered the 7,097New
Vorki.
t\tlllnl.ll
3
M'rsl
St . Loul!o 5, San Dil'~ 2
yard, par-72 Royal Troon course
f':alllnrnl:a ..
.. ...5!1 :m .liU.t SU rd'Y'!I G~tmMI
Oakland . .... . . .... .........59 ~9 .602 in the final round. His only bogey
~.o,. i\n~l e~~ 4, Put!Oiburxh :1. hi
TJ'X!\.'i '" "'"" ........ .......51 t;J .a57 jl ,i
Pilt~l"'h ~.LoN i\nlll:t"lrt~l. 10 Inn .. 2 nd
came at the 126-yard eighth, the
Knn,.uo; nt .~· ... .. ...... :-.~ U .3111 :,
:o;f•att1t•......... .... ...... ,,,, ;AII 1!1 ..195 I0 1 ·1
hole he dubbed a "sucker hole"
Monirt•ltll'!. flnclnruU -1
!\110111' !i OI:a ............ .... 16 ~~ .-t'l l l% 1·f
NN· fork 1. MID.nw 2
earlier
in the tournament.
f hh'III{0 ........... . ...........-10 ~j ..112 IIU'l
('hh: ll.ICO 9, San Franci!M.!o 5
Saturd11,v 's Kf&gt;S ult )ll
Norman
made. a t·remendous
Heai'tton 3, Phlllldrlph111 :1
fhi l'a ,li;O 10, Ro~tunfi

'

Calcavecchia captures British Open title .

CARRIERS NEEDED

~
I

,

CALL MIKE At THE SENTINEL
992-2156

1989_

..

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Oakland ;1, Balllmorf' 2
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!i!t•aA tlr 5, Toront o:!
Tt•111: a.~ ~. Nf'w Vork 4, 1ft Inn.
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Nf'w \ 'ork tPI\rkcr :I· II at fl4"vr land
(Fdl;'nlll 5-9), 7: 35p.m .
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~ Bo!iiO IOoliJ , K:30 p. m . '
Sellltle (Holmu .a.t1 at Chluao ( Reu~t~
7oi J, II : 38p.m.
Toronto (SI.ttk&gt;m)'l't' HI ~ Tt."XIlll
(i\IVIlrt'Z 0-fl. K: 35 p.m.
C~tllfornla (M1..Ca1dlllll Nl llt OaldiUid
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TueMIIQ'IJ Game.
KMao~ Chyat Bo~ton. nl~
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Suitk' at 011-.:o, ntpl
B11lllmorn at Mlrnr.~~ota, niP~
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hllrrh (\hlk 7,.J , l::Up.m.
San Funci!K'O (Reu~tt: lwl 12--1 ) at
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Tu...cla,y '• G~tme~~o
Phlllldt&gt;lphlaii!Monlreal, niP~
PUI!&gt;Obu I'JI:h 111 NI'W Vorl!, nllfll
San Frandlltu ~&amp;t Atlanta, nlrht
Slln Df('p at ('lnt.iniBtL nlllll
ChlcaKO at St. LoW-. wiKflt
Lo11 Anpll'tlat Hou!lloa , nllflt

Calendar .
Moad.,-'11 Sports CalfMar
J!.Meb.. l

Am•rlc• Letpt

New \'orklll Clnelud, l :SS p.m.
Dtt rol: • Mllwulll!e, 8: 3t p.m.
Se•tw a1 Cl•lcaro. tl:• p.m,.
Torrd;OIII Teru , I : J5 p.m.
California at Oakland, lf:llll.m ,
Na.tiD•ILellpP

,.m.

Phlladefplllut Monllreal. 7: M
Lo" Mttlt'fl at PH . . I'Jh, 7: II p.m.
San Francisco at Allan ... 7:1t p.m.
Chi ~ ago ac St. IA•s. 8: II p.m.
•
Olympb
Oklahoma Chy- u .s. Spart• Pe.lwal

TIP•••

' SfuUJ•t. Wnl GerrNny -

Merc~dtoaCup

WMhl ... on -

UIMI('

Mel!'l

Men'11 8ov11111 lank

Sports briefs
Soecer
The expansion St. Louis fran chise of the Major Indoor Soccer
League Sunday announced the
signing of two St. Louis natives,
goalkeeper David Brcic and
.midfieider Daryl Doran. Brclc
was signed as a free agent while
Doran was selected by St. Louis
eariler this month In a dispersal
draft of players from the now
· defunct Los Angeles Lazers club.
Tenalll
Cprl-Uwe Steeb of West Germanrupset Andre Agassi and
eliminated the United ·States
Sunday to lead his team into the
finals of the Davis Cup. The
defending champions will meet
Sweden In a·repeat of last year's
final, scheduled to beala Dec. 15.
In the other semltlnalln front of a
home crowd, subsitltue Jonas
Svensson ·was victorious In a
3-hour, 37·minute match over
Yugoslavia's Goran Prpic,
clinching the win for Sweden.

The Meigs Co.unty Fair Tab Is
Coming ·August 11th.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 5, 1989
.

'

·'

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

992-2155~
I

Lo·se Wel"ght

GET A GREAT DEAL•••
. AND A GREAT DEAL MORE! ·
SALE PRICES GOOD MONDAY, JULY 24
SUNDAY, JULY 30,-1989

~·~~~=
llildadories are naturally "flushed"
right out your bOdy because they
of

cannot be absorbed.
.
Within 2 days yoo should notice a
change intbecolor ofyour stool, caused
by the fat particles being eliminated.
"ApiOmatlcally"
Flit
Alxxmlinllto!lllCdtbeinYalton, Dr.
William· Slit!ll, ·beart specialist and
associate professor of medicine at
· UtLA rnedical .school, "the new fat- .
bonding process is a "lazy way" to lose
weight because the pills alone
STATE FAIR WINNERS - Tracy Michael,
d!lughter of Ruth and Jim Priddy of Rutland and
"automatically" reduce calories by
left, and Jamie Ord will be representing Meigs
Is in her ninth year of 4·H work In the Meigs
County 4-H members at the Ohio Stale Fair this
f'leasure Riders ·4:H Club. Jamie Is the son of ·1 ~~ fat.lt'i_s 100\lll sak
yelU'. They were the winners of the State Fair
Cindy and Pete Scott of. Flatwoods Road,
The fat-magnet pills are already
Qualifying Show held at the Meigs County
Pomeroy, and Is In his third year of 4-H club work
sweeping the country with glowing
Fairgrounds Thursday evening. Tracy is the
as a member of the Blue Ribbon Riders.
reports d weight loss from furmerly
OYerweigbt peOple in all walks of life
who are noiv lllirnrner, trimmer and
'
more amactive again. .
· Now Aftlab1e to lbe Public·
By United Press Intern•tlonal
.- Mr. and Mrs. David Johnson ,
If you are trying to lose 20, .50, 100
Although no one witnessed the pounds or more, you can order your
: Middleport, announce the birth .
act, Steve Brodie gained fame for supply of ~ "no-risk" highly suc' of a daughter, May 17, at
claiming
to have jumpecl"off the ceiStW fato.ma&amp;net pills dilectly from ihe
• Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Brooklyn
Bridge on a bet and doctors' CKclusive manufacturer only
The infant weighed eight
lived
on
July
23, 1886. Asked-if he (~ludes optional calorie-reduction
p&lt;iunds, three ounces and was 20
would repeat the 132.5 foot jump, pian fur~ better results). Send $20
inches long. She has been named
he replied : "I done it once."
Megan Nichol. Maternal grand·
fur a 90pilhupply ( +$3
or
$3Sibral80pill8Upllly(+$3
· ,
·· mother is Mamie Stephenson,
to: Fat·Migncll, 9016 Wdahire Bl .,
· Pomeroy, and paternal grand·
Dept.
W705, BeYerly Hills, CA 902ll.
.,,
, paren.ts are Mr. and Mrs. Carl
(U~~et~,
~ ptllflll·
By United Press International
. Johnson, Mason, W. Va.
.-*:. ,.•
tie
if
1101
JOOIJI,
•llll•fl•tl.) Visa,
. _. )' ;
Japanese Prime Minister SouMr. and Mrs. Johnson have
MaaterCanl
and
Amencan
Express
suke Uno, after resigning Mon·' three other children, Jeremy ,10,
OK.
(Send
card
nlll1)ber,
expite
day and accepting responsibility and signature.) For fastest ilervicedate,
· Scott, 7 and Kimberly 3.
MEGAN NICHOL JOHNSON
fur
for the staggering electoral de. credit card orders ONLY call~
; ,._
. -~--..;_~..;_...;;.;.;.~~;;;.,;;,;,;~;;.,;_
feat of the nation's scandal· 24 houn, toll free 1(800) 52'J.9?00,
.Plagued ruling party.
·
ext. MOS.
e&gt;f.M ,,..
"My heart Is as calm as stili
water."
bring a covered dish, drinks and
MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Local table service. Meat will be
School Board will meet in regu Jar provided by. the club .
session Monday, 7 p.m., at the
CHESTER
The Meigs
high school.
County Car Club · will meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Monday, 7 p.m., at the Chester
Orange Township Volunteer Fire Fire House. Anyone Interested In
· Department will be conducting a ,helping Bill and Sharon Neut·
fund drive starting Monday and zling organize the club should
·
continuing through Saturday. attend the. meeting.
Donations will help pay for a fire
TUESDAY
truck ..
CHESHIRE - Cheshire OES
EAST MEIGS - Football meets Tuesday, 8 p.m., Initla·
helmet fitting for ali varsity lion; officers bring favorite
· players at Eastern High School dessert.
will be held Monday, 6 p.m., at
KYGER - Cheshire Trustees
the school. Anyone Interested In
· being manager. should also meet Tuesday 5: 30 p.m .. town·
ship building in Kyger.
attend.
•
. CHESTER -The Ken Ams·
WEDNESDAY
•bary Chapter of tile Izaak Walton
HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG
POMEROY - Tile Wildwood
:League will hold its annual
Garden Club will meet Wednes: .
:ramlly picniC on Monday, at 7 day at noon at the home of Mary
Efficiency and
·p.m., at · the clubhouse . near
Nease, for a pptli!Ck luncheon.
High Quality
'Ch~ter. Famlles are asked to

.r -

iJohnson birth

.Quote of the day

a·

Community·calendar

IT'S THEONE
SYSTEM THAT DOES
.
·JT.J\LL.

DANNY J. IIOWARD
: Danny J . Howard, son of Mr.
, and Mrs. Danny Howard of
· Pomeroy, enlisted in tile' Air
· Force recently, according to
: MSGT Steven Elfrink, Air Force
:recruiter, Athens, Ohio.
· Upon successfully complet lng
· the Air Force's six-week basic
;mllitary ttaining at LacklandAir
•Force Base, near San Antonio,
:Texas, Airman Howard Is sche- .
'I ~

"~-----.._...·-·~~.

27

Now You Know.

---In the service-.'

DoctOIS 1nvent
'Lazy ncay to

ross

I'·

Middleport, Ohio

fered in children' s clothing In· only ; latch hook wall hanging; domestlc aris show Is the hobby
eluding girls dress, cotton and stuffed toy, animal or other; lace corner which will offer 19
cotton blends; girls fancy dress; net darning; and miscellaneous, classes. Ail pictures In this
boys miscellaneous;· t-shlrt;
no clothing, knitting, or crochet. category are to be ready to hang.
child's shorts; coat or jacket;
The knitting category wliloffer Classes Include picture, candlewand children's miscellaneous.
five classes which include 11ck; picture, cross stitch; pic·
The adult clothing· category
afghan; · sweater, slipover; ture, colored embroidery: pic·
offers 18 classes to exhibitors
sweater , button front; baby .ture, needlepoint: picture,
crewel; picture, counted cross
Including ladies dress, cotton or
sweater; and miscellaneous.
stitch;
' picture, latch hook; hand
cotton .blends; fancy formal
There wlil be a total of 18
made
purse;
ceramics, only one
dress; better dress, knits, etc.;
cliisses offered in. t.he crochet
liidles blouses;. skirts; t·shlrts; . category io include afghan class; rnacrame; . stenciling;
cape or coat; ladies ' shorts;
stitch; afghan, granny sq'uare; _. wood craft Items, small; liquid
ladies' slilc)&lt;s; ladies' suit, sl;;~cks
popcorn stitch; hair pin lace; embroidery; decorated wreath,
or skirt (lined); ladies' jacket;
ripple crochet afghan; shell grapevine; decorated wreath,
men's jacket; men's shirt; men' s stitch afghan; navaho stitch other natural material; decotrousers, 16 and up; ladles'
afghan; bedspread; vest; cape rated swag, natural material;
miscellaneous; apron, practical; or poncho; hankie, crochet trim; market basket, one; other
apron, fancy; and maternity doily; baby afghan, granny basket, one; and wall basket,
clothing, any type.
square; baby afghan, shell one.
Twenty-one classes will be stitch; baby afghan, other; ,.,_ P. S
available in the needlecraft cate- sweater set, three piece; cro- ...,.;, till weeping U.S•
gory which Includes pillowcase, cheted pothoiders, two; and
one only, cross stitched; pillow- miscellaneous crochet.
case, one only, embrpidered;
The. quilt category, and all .
pillowcase, one only, crocheted quilts must be completed, will
lif. '
tri!l); . cushion, applique; cu· offer Severt ·claSS!!S to the exhibl· .
. . .· .
shion, cross stitch; . cushion, tor which will inch•de appUque,
counted cross stitch; cushion, quilted; cotton patchwo.rk,
crocheted; cushion, quilted, quilted; painted. quilted; empieced; cushion, quilted, broidered, quilted; baby quilt,
printed; cushion, crewel; cu- quilted; comfort, tied or knotied;
shion, candlewick; cutwork pll· and quilted wall hanging.
I.LS. Gov't.AA:IIDV81Aieent
lowcase, one only; tablecloth
Two classes will be offered in
Clafmt for New Diet Pin
painted; ·tablecloth, embroi· the rugs category and Include
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)dered; tablecloth, crocheted; pot loorn woven rug;' and any other Anamazirqp~CWweightlosspilll'8lled
holders, two other than listed;
rug.
"lilt·mapet" has recendy been deveidressed doD, handmade, one
The final category of the oped llllil pe~ by two prominent
docton at a world liunous hospital iii
Los AliF!es that ~q~D~y "guaran- .
tees" SICI!dy filt loss, and calorie
. fe\lilctJiln by simply taking their tested
and pnwen new pill,
··
·
· TheU.S.ptnnlenthasjustappnwed the doc:lon claims fur a hanl·to-get
pa!Cnt"tbat conftrma "there has never
been llll)'lhiDg lie their fat-bonding pill
proc:esabdbii:." ltisa bltally new major
scientific breaklhrouab and is rewlutionizint! tbe weight industry.
·
lilll CU "Eat Normally" .
Jlesl d all, "you cau continue to
eat your favorite fOods and you don't
bave to change your normal eating
babits. You can start l9sing fat and
-~ caloriea from the very first day, ·
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desite without excn:ising". r
F1ullbes FaU)ut.cif Body : .
The new pill is appropriately called
the "fiit~magnet" pill becatR it breaks
intO thous,arids of particles, each acting
lie a tiny magnet, "attracting" llllil

roo

Hartinger Parkway Area

1t

I

Nearly a hundred classes nmg·
ing from chlldrl\fl's clothing to
cross stitch pictures have been
lnciud~d in the exhibit schedule
for the domestic arts depart·
ment at tile Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 15·19.
Esther Mays and Kay Freder·
lck are co-chairmen !or the
department which wlii be judged
on Monday, Aug. 14. The only
entry fee is the purchase of a
membership ticket.
Exhibitors can make only one
entry In each class and any
. article awarded a premium in
the last two years Is not eligible
· for entry. New work and new .
ideas will be ~;lven preference.
. Exhibits must remain In place
until 1 p.m. on Sunday of fair
. week.
Judging will be based on
appearance, ten percent, war!(.
manshlp., 50 percent, style, ien
percent, and materials, 30
percent..
.
·
four special awards wlii be
given with a premium of $3 for
each award. There will be a best
of show, selected !rom the blue
ribbon winners, in sewing, needlecraft, ,quilts, and rugs and
hOblly.
Premiums range !rom a high
of $3 for first to a low of $.75 for
third.
There are seven classes of- .

I:

Scoreboard ...

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Meigs Fair domestic arts exhibit ·scheduled

.,

.

Monday. July 24, 1989

duled to receive technical training in the Mechanical career
field.
Airman Howard, a 1987 gradu·
ate of Meigs High School, wlil be
earning credits toward an associate degree in applied sciences
thro\lgh the Community College
of the Alt Force while attending
basic and technical training
schools.

Make This One
of Our Best

Buys.

DOUBLE PRINTS
· -EVERYDAY!

C41

BRING YOUR FlLM TO USI 110, 1311,

FREE

COAST

BATH SOAP
4

1

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•C

''"~"t •

• ~

..

..,,

"

'

8-The o.lly Sentinel

,

In&amp; hl&amp;hJy efodlble croplaild,

wet lands, and other lands to
grass or trees," said Joseph C.
Branco, State Conservationist
POMEROY - The United
for
the USDA's SoU Conservation
gta!A!II Department of Agrlcul·
Service
( SCS) .
ture has announced tbe enrolle- •
"
The
total national acreage
ment of an additional 2,4. 2,382
co ntrac ted under CRP Is
acres net tonally Into the 10.year
Conservation Reserve Program 30,592,672 acres, and Ohio has a
to~&amp;! of 204,791 acres, " according
(CRP). Ohio enrolled 24.841
to John B. Clark, State Conservaacres .
The newly enrolled acreage tion Program Specialist, with
was approved from bids submit·
ASCS.
'
ted during the eighth sign-up held . · ASCS administers the CRP and
SCS Is responsible for land
Feb. 6-24. 1989.
ellglbilty
deteiminatlons, devel"The CRP Is a 10-year land
set-aside program where annual opme~t of the conservation plan
· payments are received for pla'nt· of operations, · .a nd technical

hllllc .\fflln Spedallal

MelpSCS

.~
,.

.:;
''

;~
~

••
·~:

~ ..

"'..'

~·

..

,'!.I.

••

•••
~.

'
.:r ·'

,.

There 1oet1 llie bride
WARWICK, R.I. (UP!! - A
.,
·
bride and croom required a
pollee escort to leave their
~ . wedding reception after a brawl
broke out amonggue$b when one
was told he had had too much to
drink.
.
.
Fifteen people · were arrested
• after the fight, which started at
,
the wedding reception on Satur• day when one guest was told he
was too drunk ·to ' be served
• alcohol, pollee said.
The fight began at a reception
• Inside the Elks lodge on West
'
Shore Road and . continued as
most of the guests spilled Into a
parking lot outside. The fight was
,
still raging when pollee arrived,
; witnesses said.
•
Pollee booked 15 people on a
, handful of. charges, including
• ~ assault and battery and.resisting
~ arrest. P
.
f
Witnesses told pollee an argui ment between two guests report- ·
; edly sparked the brawl after one
'' . of the two was denied a drink
when the other said he was
, already drunk.
(
The bride and groom were not

..

.

.

Ano.:.ng her better sellers are
BMW embllim-adol'l)ed earrings, ·
bolo ties, pins, belt buckles, hair
clips and hub cap purses, as well
as accessories adorned . with
Mercedes· Benz spare parts and·
ple~es of Jaguars and Volkswagens and Cadillacs and
Chryslers.
"I have just about every make
and model, and I do a lot of
custom work," Nelsoney says. ·'I '
did an Oldsniolille purse for a
little old lady who wanted one for
Mother's Day."
Hose clamps, she and her
customers ~ave Cllscovered, are
a better attention-getter than
expensive gems when It comes to
the oppo~jte sex.
.
f'
"You can wear diamonds or
pearls and they won't say ·anything. Butlfyou wear hose clamp
earrings, they'll walk up and say,
'Is that what I tlilnk it Is?' The
boys love It," Neslo~ says.
"Men have gQtten up from
restaurant tables and come over
and asked me, 'Is that a hose
clamp you're wearing?' 'Is that a
spark plug you're wearing?" '

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
.
United Pres• International •
G IMME A VOTE: Twenty years after leading the crowd in his
anti-war song "The Fish Cheer," Country Joe McDonald Is
thinking about running tor office 1!1 Berkeley, Calif. Friends of
McDonald have been urging him to run for the vacancy on
Berkeley;s nine-member rent board that was created by the
recent death of his mother, Florence McDonald. Count ry Joe
currently is on tour and unavailable for comment but his wife,
Kathy , told the Oakland Tribune that jle's Interested in entering
the Oct 3 special election but Is worried about his busy tour
schedu~. "There might be a real con!lict, because he's out of
town a lot," she said. The election Is Important because
Florence McDonald was one of tlve members who usually sided
with tenants and her death leaves the bOard split 4-4 between
those favoring landlords and IEinanis.
ROSS ON NUDITY: Diana Ross wants to make a movie about
slnger-dancer.JosepbiDe Baker and says she might be willing to
do nude !icenes If they 're filmed with some class. '" If there's an ·
artistic way to be nude and beautiful, ! would certainlyeonsic)el'
It because that's beJng part ot who Josephine Baker was," s~e
said in a sate!Ute interview from Lake Tahoe, Nev., where shes
performing. "But being nude for the·sake of being nude, that's
certainly not me. J.think my children would disown me totally."
. CARTER ON PEACE MISSION: Jimmy Carter Is gomg to
Ethiopia and Sudan this week to see what he can do· to bring
peace to the war-torn, famine-stricken nations. The former
president already has talked with rebel leaders in both
countries, including a meeting last month with a Sudaneserebel
leader at his Presidential Center In Atlanta. The purpose of the
trip, Carter says, is to "provide advice and counsel and
encouragement and services to bring warring camps to the
peace table." This is Carter's second ttlp to Africa this year and I
the State Department supported both. calling them useful and
constructive. Also on Carter's 10-day agenda is a plan (ounveila .
$76. million program to eradicate a parasite that contaminates
drinking water, and visits to Ghana, Nigeria and Zambia to
check on the progress of Global2000 programs he helped start to
improve health care, nutrition and agriculture. .
·
KENNEDYS GATHER TO HONOR ROS;E: Rose Kennedy
sp4mt her 99th birthday poslrtg for pictures with her namesake
great-granddaughter, 1-year-oJd.Rose Schlossberg, daughter of
CaroUne Kennedy, and, Ed Schlossbers, an~ w~tchlng the.men
' play touch· football, on the 'lawn. at Hyannisport, Mass. Rose,
confined to a wheelchair and wearing a floppy white hat, was
seranaded by a pianist ptaying ''Sweet Adeline'' and Irish songs
as the family sang along. "Through all the family's happy times
and sad times, the one person we could always turn to was my
grandmother," said grandson Rep. Joe Kennedy, D·Mass. The
KeQJiedY matriarch has been . plagued • by health p,roble~s.
lnclildlng a stroke In 1984, bu't a family ftiend says she s perked
up recently. "You might say in. the lastrlve to six months, Rose
has shown remarkable progress," the neighbor said. "She has
be&amp;me more aware of P'iople around her - mind you, she's not
doing any fllpflops but. It's' amazing to her doctors . .A'! of a
sudden one day she made a corneback."

Protesting .shrimpers end .Texas coast, b·lo~kade Ent'ironmentalist ends ·swfm
'

GALVESTON, Texas (UP!)lea, organized the blockaae on
~ · Hundreds of shrimpers disthe Gal"eston Ship Channel Satmantled a coastline bOat block- urday .to protest the law requlr' ade but warned . they would
ing fishermen to use TEDs.
return Tuesday if the federal
The . devices ·a re designed to
rgovernment does not ease a law
retain shrimp In nets while ,
requiring them to use turtle · allowing larger objects, such as
excluder devices in their nets.
environmentally endangered sea
Nearly 200 shrimp boats turtles, to escape. Fishermen
some flying the "Jolly Roger" · claim the devices cost them 10
skull-and-crossbones pirate flag
percent to 20 JJefcent of their
-began withdrawing Sunday as
catch.
Gulf Coast congressmen prepared to meet Monday with
, " We have accomplished what
Commerce Secretary Robert we se! out to do," Mialjevlch
Mosbacher.
said. " I think the public now
Also scheduled Monday in realizes ·bow this has been a
· Galveston was , a meeting be- frame-up of the shrlmplng Industween shrimpers and officials of try. What. we have done Is put
the Coast Guard and National Secretary Mosbacher back at the
Oceanographic and AtmospheriC bargaining ia ble . with our
Administration, which recom- congressmen."
mended use of the devices known
Mialjevich warned the blockas TEDs.
ade could resume Tuesday if
Tee John Mialjevich of Gretna, Mosbacher does not postpone the
La. , founder of the 2,000-member law until the National 'Academy
Concerned Shrimpers of Amer- of Sciences !fetermines the ef-

projeFt.
,
fects of TEDs.on the shrlmplng and the port reopened Sund'ay,
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI)
He said ·he was propelled by a
Industry and whether thedevlces · said Coast Guard Cmdr. Michael' - Marathon swimmer Skip
feeling · of responsibility to the
can cut the mortality rate of sea . Ashdown In Port Arthur, Texas. · · Storch ended his weeklong, 85·
environment.
turtles. ·
A blocki.de Involving 200 mile swim from Liberty Island to
"I had ~pie CO!!ntlng on me to ·
"We believe that Is a good shrimpers at Corpus Christl's Atlantic City, saying he dodged
make
a statement about the
compromise," be ·said. :·If not,
Port Aransas and Lydia Ann sblp plastic bags and jellyfish· stung
quality
of water along the Jersey
-Tuesday Is going to be the end of channels In southeast Texas also · him, but the water quality had
shore," he said. ''I had to believe
·
.
the · world for the shrlmplng ended Sunday morning, as did Improved.
that I had supporters all over the
Industry."
blockades in Port Mansfield and
There was a "big difference·:
world. "
·
Mialjevlch asked • the
Freeport.
In the water quality from past
The Jersey shore was plagued
shrimpers to move out of ship·
Scat'tered confrontations years, Storch said Sunday after
last summer by beach o:;losh\gs
ping channels SuJ¥iay, and the mari-ed Saturday's protests. A stepping ashore in Atlantic City
caused by water polluttoii . The
Co as( Guard . said most protester lh ~Carneron rammed abOut 4 p.m.', just as he ptanile!l.
shrJlnpers from Cameron, La., to an offshore vessel that . tried to
"I could taste the difference," · problem diminished · substan·
tlaily this year .
·
Port Isabel, · Texas, complied run the blockade, and in Galves- he exclaimed. "It's much better.
Storch
said
the
swim
became
with the request.
ton a 600-foot tanker collided with I'm ' happy about what I tasted
most
difficult
on
SatuFday,
one
The final · blockade dls&amp;Oived a shrimper. Damage was minor and smelled and felt. "
day
for
the
end,
because
of
the
aroundnlghtfal1Sunday,\vhen90 In bOth cases and .there were no
of
a
current,
having
to
dodge
lack
shrimpers cleared Ute Browns- injuries, the Coast Guard said .
debris an&lt;! sustain 20 jellyfish
Two men on .a pleasure craft
ville Ship Channel near. Port
bites, despite a repeilant suit .
· Isabel, said Coast Guard Petty were arrested in Port Aransas
" If I did not have people
Officer Tom Fussellman.
jlfter they threw a pipe. wrench
C&lt;?untlng on me I would never
Similar blockades· that shut • throqgh a window of a 41-foot
have kept going," Said Storch.
down the port .of Lake Charles, Coast Guard cutter and shots
· "This was a really tough swim;"
La .. and blocked the Mermentau
reportedly struck an oil company
River, just to the east, were lifted crew bOat in Cameron, La.

Actress remembered ·as · •amazing young lady'
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) Rebecca Schaeffer. a promising
young actress who police say was
gunned down by an o.b sessive
fan , was buried in her childhood
home following a service in
which she was described as a
"special young lady."
Mourners at Sunday's services
Included Benson a nd · Danna
Schaeffer of Portland. parents of
the the slain actress; Pam
Dawber, who co-starred with the
21-year-old actress in the TV
sitcom "My Sister Sam," and
· actor Mark Harmon.
Schaeffer, whO was sho t to
: death at her West Los Angeles
• apartment last Tuesday, was
described ' as a caring, warm
person by Rabbi Emanuel Rose.
·"She brought out the best in
herself and the best in otpers,"
Rose said at a service attended
:; bY about 350 mourners outside a
. chapel at Ahavai Sholom Cemetery. "She was inte!Ugent, cha·
rlsmatic and 'effervescent. She

Investigator named
for 1985 drug case
CLEVELAND (UPI) - · Ri·
. chard Deane, a 10-year veteran
· of the U.S. Attorney 's office lp
Atlanta, has been named by the
Justice ·Department to .inves tl·
gate a controversial 1985 drug
case In Cleveland.
The controversy surrounds
· claims by police informer Ar thu r
· Feckner, who says Cleveland
: ' narcotics detectives allowed him
to sell drugs on city streets to
_ raise money for what became the
1araest drug bustln Ohio history.
Detectives; however, claim
~ they did not allow Feckner to sell
• drugs, only to collect several
. hundred thousand dollars from
· · pall drug deals.
:
Earuer· ihls month, Cleveland
·,. Mayor Geol'le Volnovlch sus·
;: pencletl Pollee Chief Howard
Rudolph for bll colllluet aa head
of ·tbe narcotics unit durin&amp; the

. Fecluler c.ue.

was an amazing, special young
lady.
"She provoked admiration
rather than jealousy," the rabbi
said. "She was warm, caring,
gentle."
The day after a gunman shot
Schaeffer once with a large
caliber pistol as she opened the
security door of her apartment
building, Arizona authorities ar·
rested Robert John Bardo, 19, of
Tucson, Ariz . The suspect was
described as an "obsessive fan."
He was charged with firstdegree murder, and was being
held under a suicide watch in a
Tucson jail in lieu of $1 mlllion
ball pending an extradition hearing Aug. 18.
Schaeffer was born In Eugene,
110 miles south of Portland, and
raised in Portland. Her body was
flown from Los Angeles to
Portland on Friday.
Jimmy Hammll, a friend when
the two attended Lincoln High
School In Portland, described her
as " a good person, very sweet."
" I am lull of sorrow," he said
after leaving the gravesite. "She
was a girl who had everything
going for her In every way and
she was wronged terribly. She
was charming, outgoing and
vivacious. She had a smile and
good word for everybody."
About a dozen bouquets of
flowers were placed at
Schaeffer's grave beneath an
evergreen tree at the cemetery,
lqcated on a tree-covered hillside

southwest Of dO\\?liOWn ~Ortland .
Attached to one of the bouquets
were balloons, on which was
printed "Love," :'Shalom" and
"Rest well Rebecca."
A pu~llc memor ial is planned
Saturday in Los Angeles. The
family asked that remembrances be in the form of contrlbu·
dons to a scholarship fund being
established for young ·actresses
at the UCLA School of PerformIng Arts.
Schaeffer was kllled on the day
she was scheduled to meet with
director Francis Ford Coppola
about a role In a "Godfather"
sequel. She was seen In the
recently released "Scenes From
the Class Struggle In Beverly
Hills.
The killing has reklndl~ fears
in Hollywood, where celebrities
have long worried abOut being
stalked by potentially dangerous
fans who may have built an
obsession for even minor enter•
tainment figures.
A deranged, obsessive fan
pounced on actress Theresa
Saldana In 1982, stabbing her
several times before being pulled
off by a passerby. A Scottish
drifter, Arthur Jacksdn, was
recently dented parole from his
conviction in the attack after
au tho rilles said he had continued
to threaten Saidana through the
mail.
After Bardo was arrested, he
told authorities where to find
severalltema, Including a holster

and a copy of "Catcher in the
Rye," the ·book Mark David
Chapman was calmly reading
when he was arrested after
killing former Beatie John Lennon in New York.
Police have described Bardo' ~
obsession as similar to the one
John Hinckley had for actress
Jodie Foster, which led to his
shooting President Reagan In
1981 to gain her attention.
Police said Bardo had a collec- ·
tion of videotapes of "My Sister
Sam," In which Schaeffer played
a flighty sister. He had also
written her several letters, none
of which, police said , where
threatening or sexual.

.

Pediatrics
Infant, Children
&amp;

Adolescent Medicine
Now Seeing New Patients
Call

(304) 675-5220

JOHN
A.
WADE; flD. Inc:
. Nil- YAIIO IOSPIIAL
Ell, lOIII !11011.

.............
AUIIIIST

·

... '

67J·1J44

. . .._-.:.. ·--f--·------.. --··----'-.;..-....,_·(· -··-..
r

usiness Services
,•

·SEUICE

•
i.

out~• MeiQI. Oaltie Of' M•on count I• must be pr•
pold.
.,.._., • ~ 10 cltooune for •• ,.id in ..,,nee..

•
!

0 -16 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

•free Mil - ~ ..VII'IY and Foulld • • uf'CI•10 wc,.d1 will be

run 3 d.,111t no ch••··
•prJCI of ld for all c.._. ••••• is douWe price of ed coat.
'7 point lnotypo only ·
•senttnll • not '"PGnllblelof enor1 •"- tint d-r. IChedl.
• lor'""'' firet daw ad run• in PIIMfl . ~~ beforl' 2:00p.m .
d.., aft• pubfi~6on to mike correctiOn.

•

In Memorl.m

.

••

••

•

••

'Yw,d

0~

Galli a County
Area tod• 814
1

WEDNE&amp;DAY

Total Other Fjn. SourC88
(Uo•) .... .. ........ 2,423. BO ,
Exc . Acple./ Sour'* Over/
(Under) Diab. • ou...
u -/ Net ....... (3,191 .88)
Beginning Fund C11h
'
Blllonce ............ 9,004.12
Ending F'u(ld Cuh
.
·
••
Blllonce ............ 6.812.24
lion••·
PROPRIETARY
.
A aUmmarY of Mid Tilt
FUNDS
Budget may bo reviewed In RECEIPTS :
the OffiCe ol the Meigs Food S.Nice
Coointy Commileionert bit·
Sot• ............. 84,834 . 16
-thohouroof8:3QA ,M . Clus Materiels
and 4:30 P.M .. Monday .
• F6• .. .. ....... 16,434.6t
through Fridiy on or after Mioc . Roceiplo ........ 274.94
Auguat 1, 1989. ot 1he Total
Courthou10, Second StrNt.
, Receipts ....... 100.&amp;43.60
' Pomeroy.
Ohio.
.
DISBURSEMENTS:
Mary Hobotlttor, Clerk Employ- Saterl• •
Meigo County
Wag• . : .. .. .. .... 83.834.00
Commilsionera Employees Retirement
(7) 24, 1tc
· Benlflta .... ... .. 3t,41!8. 26 ,
----,::--c:-::--::-:--:---1 Pruch•ed
Public Notice
Servl... .............. 608. 1&amp;
Suppl;..
Molorlols ... ... 101 ,148.67
NOTICE OF .
01her Objoiets ......... 150.00 ,
APPOINTMENT OF
Total Disbur. .
FIDUCIARY
monto .......... 2t7,106. 07
On July 18. 1989, in the
Meig1 County Probate Exc. Acpto. Over/ (Under)
Diob ........... (1 t 6,661 ,47,1
Court, Cooe No. 2113t6,
\Wmo H. Cooto and John W. NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS.. , .Henderson, State Route
State Sources ...... 7,496.92
124. Portland. Ohio.
·
'
46770. wu appointed Co· Foderol
114.076.
65
Sourcos
.......
Eucutrlx and Co-Executor
of ·the ottate of Ralph Totol Olher Fin . Sourea
(Uo•) ... ...... . 121.672.47
,,c .HenderaOfl, deceaaed, lete
Exc. Rcpts./Sources Over
• of State Route 1 24, Por/ (Under) Oiob. end Other
tland. Moigo County, Ohio,
Uo• / Not ... ... ... 6.011.00
4&amp;770.
'
Beginning
Fund ·Cuh
Robert E. Buclc.
Batonce .... •.... .44,814.69
o;.
Probate Judge
Ending Fund Cash
lone K. N....., -. Clerk
Balanoo .......... 49.8211 .111
17124. 31; f&amp;J 7. ate

•
'

---------1

,

Public Notice
'

COMBINED FINANCIAL
A EPOAT OF THE
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF
SOUTHERN LOCAL· ·
- SCHOOl DISTRICT. •
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO.
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
ENDED JUNE 30, 1989
GOVERNMENTAl
FUNDS
REVENUE RECEIPTS(()plroting)
Taxoa ........... 1,165,793.56
Tuition ..... ........... 6.763. t 6

TOTALS

RECEIPTS :
r .......... .. .. 1.166.793.116
Tuition ................e.763. 16

Earninga on lnvHI·

For An Appointment

: ,

manto .. ......... :24.3711;96
Food ServiCft
S.los .. ......... ... 84.834. 16
Eldracu;riculer
Aetivkios ...... 104,087. 32
Clua Materials
• f'eeo ........... 16,434. 6t
Misc.
Receipro ......... 14,836.17
State
So.tiCft .... 2.097.228 .94
Fedotol
Ae. .p1s .. ..... 166,68D .OO
Total
Earninge on
Roceipta .. .. 3,678,922 . 78
· lnveotmonto .. . 24.375. 96
DISBURSEMENTS:
Extl'llcuniculer
instruction ... 2.100.683. 83
Activities ......... .88,026.68
Supporting
·Mile. .
Services .... 1.485. 688. 3d
Receopts ......... 14,6eo. 23
Extracurricular
GRANTS IN AID:
Actlvit;. ...... 12t.690. 41
Stole
Oebt Servicos .. .. 31 ,687. 62
Sourcas .. .. 2,097.228 .94 . Exployeea Salari• and
Federei
'
Wogos ......... ... 83.B34.•00
Sourceo ....... 185,680.00 Employ... Retirement
Total
.
Ben.rlto .... .. :.. 31,468. 26
Roceip1ol ... 3,662.318.60 Purchued
DISBURSEMENTS Servicoo ......... ..... 608. 111
Instruction ... 2.100.683.83 Supplleo •
·
Ml!eriolt
......
101.148
..67
SupportinG
•as 30 Other Objitcta ......... 160.00
ServiCft .... 1,485,u .
Extracurricular
Total Oitburse·
Actlvitloo .... .. , 100,014.37
menll ....... 3,9156,756 .'13
Debt 8ervlces .... 31 ,687. 52 e..,. Acpto. Over/(Under)
Total Diobuooe·
Diob ..... ....... .. 1277.832. 37)
manto ....... 3,717,974.02 Contributions a.
Eocc Acpls. Over/ tUnder)
Donations ...... 22,262.03
Diob ..... ,..... (1&amp;11.856.521 Slolo Sourc. ...... 7,498.92
OTHER FINANCING
Federal
SOURCES (USES 1Sour'* ....... 114,076.116
Refund of Prior Ye•s
Contrlbutionl •
' · Donationa ...... 19.829.63•
Exp.,d. .. ......... t,078. 71
Refund of Prior Veers
Refund of Prior Vaera
Expendlturoo .. .. 1,078 .71
Aeceipts ......... (t,078. 71)
Refund of Prior Years
Total Other ,Fin. Source~
Receip11..... .... (1 .078. 71 l
tUna) ...... .... 143,824.110
·:. Total Other Fin. Sources
Exc. Rcpts./SourCIJI Over/
(Under) Oi1b . • Other
U...l .......... ... 19.828.53
Uoeo/ Nat .. .'( 134,007.87)
Exc . Acpts./&amp;ourc• Over/
(Under) Diab. ond Other
Happy Ad~
Uoeo/ Not ... (135 ,826.99) 5
Beginning Fund Cuh
llllanco ...... .. 413,697.67
Ending Fund Calh
llllonce .. ...... 277,870 .58
· EXPENDIBlE TRUST
FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
Extracurricular
Activit leo." ..... 16,060 .86
Toto!
Rocelp1of ...... .. 16.060.811
DtSBUAIEMENTSExtroourrlcutor
ActivitI• ......... 21 .ne.04
Toto! Dioburoementl .......... .. 21.876 .04
Exc. Acpll. Dver / (Undw)
Dilb............... (11.1115.38)'
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES !U.eoi Contrlbutlona 6
Donetiono ..... ... 2,423.&amp;0

"

''••

•••

•

•

Monday thro~~~:h Friday
9 a ,m . · 5 p .m .

•

•

•

•'
•'

Plea18Rt Valley Hospital
Suite 118

••
''

••

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'

1M family ol proie•llonal•

'
Valey Drtw, Point Pttaunt, W.Va. 25550 '

'

.

.I

Middleport,

Male• Countr
Ar.. Code 8 4

'

f

PI . Pl••ift•
l.an
,
Appt• GrltW
Maaon

Bauinning Fund Cuh
eet... co ..... ...... 4&amp;7.51&amp;.29
Ending Fund Cosh
Belance ...... ,.. 333,60e.4 1
C•ah in Banks
,
(Netj .. .......... 333,508 .41
Total Fund
BoiMOce ... ..... 333.608.41
MEMORANDA DATA

NOTICE TO BtOD'EAS
Sooted propolllt wHI bo
received by the boerd of
education of the Meig~locel
Sc~Ool Diatrict, Pom•ov.
Ohio ot the office of tho
Tr-urw. 320 Eat Main
Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio
46769 until 12:00 o'cloclc
noon, eUtarn
ate~derd
time. July 26, 1989. and It
that time oponod by the
Treuurer of. aeid bo•d •
provided by low for Cafeteria Management Servicel
· tor all achoola within the
Meigs locel School District.
Instruction• to bidd••
end speclflcetiono for thil
aorvico ere on file at the Of.
floe of the Superint.,dtnt,
320 Eolt Moln Street. Pom·
roy, Ohio 46769.
Bidt ore to, be oeeled and
oddr.aed 10: Moigs loco! •
School District, Office of
the Treuurer, 320 Eoot
Main Street. P. 0 . Box 272.
Pomeroy. Ohio 467119.
Bids ore to bo ploinly
marked on the outside oft he
sealed envelope u
fol·
lowo: CAFETERIA MAN ·
AGEMENT SERVIC~S .
No bid may be withdrawn
.ttw 1ctieduled closing time
or receipt of bids for ot leoot
sixty (80) dayo.
The lowd of Education in·
tendo to ac-t the low•t
rooponalble bid for the proiect. but r•erves the ri~;~ht to
reiect any end Ill , or pertl of
any and all, bidl.
·. By order of tho Boord
of Educetion, Meigs Locei
School .PiotriOI, 320 Eoot
Mein Street. P. 0 . Bo• 272,
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.
(7) 3. 10, 17. 24, 4tc

·

8-30-89 : .. " .. 160.000.00
·I certify the following re·
port to be correct and true,
to the best of my knowledge.
. ·
Dennie E. Hill, Tr. . .
'of the Board of Education
614-949-2213
!7) 24, 1tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
Salisbury Townahip w•
offer for Sale It Public
Auction (11 One 1978 Ford
Durr-p Truck.
s.lo to be 'hold ot Bell•··
bury Townohlp ' Building.
Rockapringe. Ohio on the
t 2th doy of Augutt 1989 ot
tO:OO A.M .
.
Sarah Glbbo, Clerk
34046 Boll Run Ad .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phona 992-7098
24, 31; (8) 7, 3tc

m

'

1600 GALLON
WATII SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAUUD
992-5275

To Spy rll&lt; 8tst 8~ In
rii&lt;"Ciosolf/e41.

992-2259

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

SWEEPER REPAIR

NOW OPEN

MODElS

~Corbte Billo Here

(HAIN LINK FENCES
T

.I·

_.

. I

'I'"

j! :.
.

WANTED
DEAD OR AUVE
•Wa*hars •Dryers

·•Range •Freezers

•Refrigerators ·
. "Mud ... Repairm.le"

StrHt
P. 0. lox 111

422 Market

KEN'S APPUANCE
SRVICE

992-5335-915.3561

·:·.·

..i .

Proftssionallnttallation
FREE ESnMA TES

ON SAlE NOW AT

SEARS IN MIDDI£PORT
614-992-2178

lt. 124, , _ . , Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
All• Trt•llll..l••
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
4-25-tfn

JONES TIRE
CEHTER

•New Tires

oCustom ·Pipe Bending

oOil Chlnees

oUIOMAN MOWEIS

oGruse Jobs
oGeneni Chassis
Maint•ance

•INI'PSTAn IATTOIES

lAWN MOWER REPAIR

.Computerized Ba!•cer

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

992-3897
St. Rt. 124
Middleport. Oh.

742·24SS

Saltm Sl.

(N.,t to Hili Top Grocery)

Rutland,Oh.
61311/tfn

6-16-tln

-- -•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
' •BLOWN IN
INSULATION

ECHO SAWS &amp; TRIMMERS
OIEGON IAIIS, (HAINS

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

VISA · MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9· 7
Sat. 9· 6
Cloalld Sunday

Parts I Swwlco 0•

....._luilt
"Free Eotlmeteo"

AIMftoa

NO SUNDAY &lt;AW
3·11-lfn

--

... ETALIIUILDtNGS
•NEW 'HOMES
.'ii!VCE 1969

DIISO ST. SYUQISI

992-7611

3/ "17/ 89 tfn

5·2S.' 89-1111

...,. .,

BALUT, TAP

ROOFING

&amp;JAZZ

NEW~ REPAIR
Gutters

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

DANCE CLASSES
'MODEUNG
&amp; BATON
IN MIDDLEPOU, OHIO
Now Taking

Registrations
992-5288

915-4300
CHESTER

mWART

TRUCKING
rou CAU IT

.WE WIU HAUl IT

3 Announcements
Planned

· Parenthood

far client Hrvlcn baatnnlno
August 1, 111•. The ofllce Of
PPSEO will be opon on Wed·
nesday1
and
ciOHd
on
Thursd1ya. Houra Ire to be 8:30
to 5:00 Mond1y, WednMday 1nd

Friday : 9:30 Ia e:oo on TUHday.

Giveaway

RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
EXCEPT
HOUDAYS

We Buy All
Non Ferrous
Metals,

Plastics,
Stainless Steel,
Etc.

3 pupplaa pilrt Bleck lab and
Germ1n Sh•pherd, 304o67S..
6620.
7 month old. aman mate. mla:
breed puppy 1110 lem1Je

bnglo, 304-115-307ll.

Adol'llble puppiea. I WHb old,

Flutty, llnlo aogo. 304-e7WI33.

FIH Pupplot: 7 wb. old, port·
chow. 114-371·2511.
.
kiUinl to QIVNWiy. Call 11~
1192-177a.

Puppltli I wkt. old. Mother
Cocker Splf1itl, da911r of
thorouahbrod Cockor Sponlol.
614-371-2801, or 1144714631.

6

LOll &amp; Found

Faund: Gr1y female tabby. black;

collar, no 10. Fifth Ave. uea.
Ctll 114-446-1746 or 11~
4347.

Give Us A Call
Todoy"

•Gravel

992-5114

•Limestone

•Fill Dirt

LOCIIted Off Bypau At

Jet. of Rta. 7 • 1 43,
6-15

PornWC'/'1, Oh.

I•
.

.....

~------~,...,..
- '·1!\0 ~· • ---~ ~ ...

of

SOUIMool Ohio, 231 Eool lloln
Strnt, 1nnouncee new houri!

3 mother c1te 1nd 4 pen
Slamtst kltlant, 3&lt;*773--!340.

MY-T-SHOP
l'lltmNG

Announcements

4

7·13-'89·1 mo. pd.

742-2421

•EXT!HII'iE Rf.MOOEllfliiO
•YINVL SIDING • ROOANQ

949-2969

Howard L. Writesel

LW~

.OWNEI: GREG I. 1011511
•• ~;
. GEIEIAl
""
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
.
COIIIERCIAl
•CUITOM
KITCHIHI• IATHI

YMilMAN MOWEIS

RYAN SDVICE CENTEI

· --.,.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCnON

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

POOLS, WELLS
CISTEIIS

Roger Hy·sell
. ·-·Garage

MORRIS
•Z OOR TRA(TOIS
OfCHO I'IODUCTS
otiOWAID IOTAVATOIS

•HATS
•T-SHIATS
oJACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES,
GROUPS&amp;
ORGANIZATIONS,

5/l)/" tto

CONTACT:
.
Rhonda Delley, A. N., Director of Nunlng
Veterena Memorial Hoapltal
115 E. Memorial -Drive
Pomeroy, DH. 45788
'
1814)992-2104, Extenlion 213

6·21-'89-tln

EQUIPMENT

'

CUSTOM SCRDN

Call Anytime
992-2371

Immediate
1nd pert time openings
ere av•l•ble for realatB.reel nur••• to work
In the Speclel C1re Unit, Emeflllncy Room,
and the · Medlcll/8ur!lleal Unit. S.lary
commen1urete with experienc,. Eacellent

PH. 992-3922

We Service All Makes
5-4·89-1 mo.

WATER
SERVICE

1,000 GALLONS

GET ON BOARD!
Cleland Realty CREW Is Selling &amp;
Lbltlnrg on the river of Real El&amp;a&amp;e!

Stratton.

Wheat
First S«:umies
1-100-333-5252

6-7-'19-IMO.

1· 21·'18-lfn

.

enginee
Slock Porte for
·Homelite, Weedeater.
Tocumooh, Briggs ··

POMEIOY, OH. ·
992-6872

1614) 9'2-UID
IESIIINCE PHONE

4-16-86-lfn

"DO(" VAUGHN

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY - WANT TO SELL MIDDLEPORT- Bar and Restaurant lor safe. Building and
ali equipment. complete and in operation. ASK FOR DETAILS'

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 and 4-cycle

222 East Main

Parkertburg,_WV 26102

or Res. 949-2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY &lt;AUS

CerUfi ld Uc:ensld Shop

I

locahll at,..., l.....,
In llltltlllpert, Oh.

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

IUSIIIISS ,_1

IISIDINIIAL I COMMaOAl

CALL 992-6756

.

AU MAKES AND

16141

Mo.- Foreign '"d
Domestic Vthid•
A / C Service
All M1jor. Mlrtar
Repair •
NIASE Certified Maeh.,lc

REDUCED - PORTLAND ROAD- 2.15 acres and Ranch
Home with 1850 sq. H. ot living space. Heat pump, w1th
central air. 7 rooms, dis hwasher, range and refr igerator.
largllliving room, family room, and fireplace. $53,500.00 .

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Cortiliocl ...r - (.,.......
lnv11t_. lrok•

Your Phone

STU(USI', OHIO

'135.000 00.

HlOW HOliDAY IIIN, UIIAUGA, 01110

OHIO liVER
.CAMPGROUNDS

We Carry Fl1hing Suppll•

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
· SERVICE

· NEW LISTI"G- PdiiEROY PIKE -Forty-one acr es plus a
1980 liberty Mobile HOme. Beautiful view, 2 car garage,
. porch on 3 sjdes, 3 storage buildin gi, and barn. 2 good sized
.hedrooms. bay window, ,equipped kitchen. Re al P11vacy.

MASTERCARD a nd VISA WE LCOME

4 / 6/ 89/ tfn

···-

NEW LISTING- TWP. ROAD 348 ..:. Approx. 93 acres of
vacant land w~h 2 story barn, stocked pond, Old house srte
with well. Appro•. 25 acr es tillable wrth balance In timber,
abundance of walnut. Get a return on your investment from
sale of Timberll $60,000.00.

Slop By and,.See Us!- Financing Available

. SALES &amp; S.ERVICE

7-18-' 89-lfn

NEW LISTING- BRICK STREET- 2 1ols- BUY ON lANO
CONTRACT, $15,500.00.

WE liAR A
~1011 Olf
. 11'1 81:Z DU'TEREI'IT. COLORI. M.UFIM MD . . . ..

Middlapart, Ollie 45760 ·

NEW LISTING - CREW RD. - POMEROY '- New ran ch
home on 2+ acr es w~h 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, w~h carpet,
electric.B.B. heat. Upstairs unfinished. $51.500.00.

'

•FIREWOOD

Now .._lion:
168 North !acond

Grant A. Newland

.

r

•LIGHT HAULING

lARIY D. IIOGAN, Cl(

1614) 667-3271

'

•SHRUB 8o TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

PlUM.NG &amp;

NEW LISTING- LANGSVILLE- Ranch home with kitchen.
dinin groo(ll tamliy room, 3 bedrooms, 211 baths, w/carpet.
NGFA heat.' Pantry and ' satellite dish, and lar ge metal
buildln&amp; $79,900.00.

•

614-985-4180

6-S-'19-Ifn

. S"nd -Stone-Dirt

'

··· VEil REASONABLE
HAVE IIRRENCE

$18PerDoy&amp;Up
949-2526

DUMP TRUCK

G$49.900.00

:I: l614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 121l ·
.... Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

· Week)

NEWLAND ENTERPRISES

NEW liSTING- MIDDLEPORT- 2 story brick home on 2
lots with 4 to 5 bedrooms. 21h baths, wood floors. NGFA
'i.tur~ace. Garage, carport and 15'!25' stotage shed.

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

painting. Let • do
•
it for you •

WITH ROOMS AND
. APARTMENTS FOR
RENT IBy Doy or

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

POMEROY,O.

Television Listen in&amp; Devices
Dependable Hearin&amp; Aid Sales &amp; Sen1icEI
~ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

.

PH. 949-2801

608
E. Main

11 - 18· '88-tfn

References

FREE ESTIMATES
Tab the pain out of

5-17-tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

You Oon'r IWvt To loo.l FO&lt;

fri• beneflta.
I
I

ALLEN'S
HAULING

"At Reasonable Pricis"

I' '

915-4141

GENEUI. COMIACTOIS

INTEIIOI-IXTEIIOI

·cUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

'

PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

992-7479
, It. 33 Narih of

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS
LIVE BAIT

Dam At ~!'~!,'!ity

Public Notice

Balance

Rentals

•Lot Rental•

LINDA'S
PAINTING

2 1/t Mi. Below
Racine Locki &amp;

Public Notice

Valuotion ..... 65,166,480
·Propenv Tax levies :
inoide 10 Milt ......... 3.5000
Outside tO Milla,. .. 20.0000
ADM ..................... 989.00
Number of Non-Cart.
Emplov- .... ........ 39 .00
Number of Cert.
Employ- .: .......... 61.00
I
SUMMARY
,'.
INDEBTEDNESS BONDS
Balance Beginning of
·
Period ....... ... 180.000 .00
New Issues During ·
Fiecol Period : .......... ..o.oo
Redeemed During Fiscal
PeriOd :.. ......... 20,000.00

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING 8r REPAIRS

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Holm1

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX
ETC.

182- New Hiv.n
895- letart
937- Buftolo

A-nd

CHESTD, OliO

H).'... tin

Milan Co .. WV
Araa Cod• 304·
175418171··773-

MARCUM CONTRACTING

MOBIL.
HOME PARI(

Pomeroy, Ohio

uo.oo

. broken upd-v t.will b• ch•ged

446- Galllpotil
317- Ch•hirll
388- VNrton
~41 - Rio Orende
251-Gu';ln Diat.
643- Arabia Diat.
379- WIInut

Public Notice

PUBliC NOTICE
MEIGS COUNTY
1990 BUDGET
The Tax Budget for Meig~
County, Ohio, · for FIICII
Year 1990--plodJuly
14, 1989, by the Meigo
County Boord of Commia·

•

992·2198

following telephone exchanges ...

Tribune, raachi~g awr 11,0()0 ham•.

Public. Notice

PAl HILL FORD

$7.00
110.00
$16.00
$26.00

$6.00
$8.00
$13.00
$21 .00
$61 .00 .

pages cm,er

s...

COPY,DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY pAPER

.

$4.00
$6.00
58 .00
f13.00
$33.00'

26' 36 wO"RDS

fpr . .r.h d-' a1

• A cl111ified _.,ertiMment piiCidln The Daily Sentinel (P ·
cept - cl•tifild dit~. 8utin•• CMd ..,d legll noticn)
wi• 1110 ...,. . tn the ~ . Pl.-.nl R......, end the GaUi-

poli•

16·25 WORDS

RM••• for c;qn•cotiwl

• Ada th• mu• be pehlln edltance .,,
C.d of Th.nkl
Heppy Ad1

•
'\

We can r~air and n·
cora ratl~ators tnl
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
aut radiators. We also
npoir Gas Tanks.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

t

Dr: Victor Hochman

7

The

,..._..feople in the news__,

assistance In applying the lty criteria that allows many
plannl!!l practices, except for .cropped wetlands Into the pro· three planting practices. Tree gram resulted In the enrollment
planting assistance Is provided of 15~.961 acres natlonaily during
by the Ohio Department of this sign up. In Ohio, 1,216
Natural Resources, Division of wetland acres were enrolled.
. Fore.s try . .·
.
· Trees have been planted on 7,918
"I encourage producers who acres In Ohio.
farm erodible land or have wet · " USDA has also recently lm·
soils to Inquire about eligibility plemented sceur erosion eligibiltor CRP at tbelr local ASCS Ity criteria !bat allow certain
oftlces. CRP has authorization to fields that suffer from flOOd
accept bids only through 1990 · erosion to quality for CRP," said
under current legislation," said • Branco. Nationally 63,631 acres
Stevenson.
and 242 acres In OhiO were
The next CRP sign-up dates· enrolled In CRP, and qualified
11re July 17 thr~ugh August 4. · . due to flOOd erosion, during the
The recently expanded ellglbil· latest sign-up.

believed to be among those said Massachusetts Port Authorarrested, pollee said, adding the Ity spokesman Plill Orlandella.
couple needed an escort to leave . All six suspects . were scheduled to ~arf'lllgnedMondayfor
ihe scene.
--Interfering' .with a flight crew,
Fly the friendly skies
disorderly conduct and related
BOSTON (UP!) - Six people charges In East Boston District
were arrested after al) argument Court, piiUce said.
State TroOper JameS Deyer·
aboard a Continental Airlines
flight from Newark, N.J. escal- mond said pollee were unsure
a ted into a boxing match in the what provoked the argument. He
aisles minutes before the jet said the .passengers finally sat
landed In Boston.
down after the flight pulled out of
Its landing approach, but the
'
The pilot of the Continental fracas "continued again as .they
Flight 358 had to pull the DC-9 out taxied to the gate. ''
of its !l)ndlng pattern Saturday
•'It happens all the time here," .
and circle Logan International Deyermond sa\d. "Almost on a
Airport until the combatants weekly basis, we are breaking up
returned to their seats.
•
fights on planes."
The fisitight , between a New
---Jersey couple and a · Medford, Nice b011e clampe, honey
Mass., family, resumed as the
SAN ANTONIO (UPI)- If you
plane tllxied to the gate, otflclals . can' t afford an expensive SPQrts
said.
·
. car, L.S. Nesioney says you can ·
"These people wound up throw- at least wear part of one.
ing punches at eacp other while
For the past nine months,
the flight was comlnglntoLogan. Nesloney's business, Spare
Asked by flight attendants to sit Parts, has been transforming
down, apparently they didn't. authentic car parts Into wearaSt'lte police we0e waiting when ble, reasonably priced t.a shlon
the plane arrived at the gate, " statements.

'·

Monday, July 24. 1989

·i· Quirks in the.news-----~-:·

~ .

Pomeroy-Middlepol't. Ohio

Additional acres approved for program
a; Mlellelle wa.&amp;nll.

~

. .

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

. .-.....

-.

�Pila•
7

..

8 The Deily Sentinel ·

~·

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Yard Slle

44

Apartment

51

no potolfl 79 mo. Wolor ln-

a. VIcinity

Com~o loouooholdo ol '"'
nlture • anllquee. Aleo wood 1
coal hut.,.. Swaln'a Fumlt'"
l Auction, Third • 011.., call
614-448-315t.
Fumlturo ond opplloncoo by tho

ptec. or entire houuhokl. Fair
orlcoo bolng f'"kl· CaU II......_ .

~151.

Junk care whh or 1!flllhh0ut
motora. C.ll lariY Llv.ly 814388-8303.
Qulfto
Pre 1140 quina. Any condhJon.

' ..~ . •' " """ ..... .. ... ... .... ,.,.........,

TOP CASH pold tor ltD modoJ
ond noww uood co111. Smith
Bulck·Pontloc, . 11n Eoatom
p.vo., Golllpollo. Call 614-446-

..... ~

•gtll•ncoo. Phono 11'!-742·
2 a.
.
Uood lurnlluro by tho ploco or
onllre houooholcl otto ooUing.
61~742·2455.
·
Employment Services
Help Wanted ·

· /•I

Fum. opt. I br., $240, utlllitn '
t&gt;d. t20, Fourth Avo. GolllpoJio.
Call814-441-4411,oftor7p.m.
•.
Fumlohod 2 bodroan opt,
t==========l-------:--~-1,.,.rencf!l and tKI.IrHY depoth
7
•
15
Schools
Instruction
32 Mobile ttomes .
Fumlohod opl. pd. utliiiiH bath
••
&amp; 112 FuH bod, I liZ 20. Grapo ·
1 Sale
RE·TAAIN NOWI
or .
St. Call614-4411-0544.
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS 1 br, 8x50; mGbllohomo. SnOO. Gorogo opt; lumlohod, zt 112
COLLEGE, 5zt Jockoon Pike. Callll4-311.tl834.
·Noll. Golllpolls $225/mO. Ulllltloo
r:!1~~411-4:157. Rtg. No. ea. 12X50 mobllo homo. 1971. With pd. Call 614-441-4411 oftor 7
dock, owning, undtrofnnlng. p.on.
Gooo condition. Call i14·1112· GIOC!OUO living. I ond 2 bod·
17 Miscellaneous
3507.
room apartmenta It VIllage
Manor
ilnd
Rlvarslile
J2x55, 2 bedroom. Gc&gt;od con- Aparlmentt In Middleport. From
dillon. Calll14-1112..!1851. .
.182. Callll4-tt2·7787.
,
I:ZX64 ttolor S_t,soo.oo. 12X14 t,orvo upotalro op~ 236 Filii
galv ••I bultalng with oak Ave.
kitchen/stove . rtfrlg.
froolod llaor. 304.e7J.1503.
$280/m&lt;&gt;i&gt;IUI clop. UIIIIIIH &amp;
rot. No p111. Callll4-4411-4928. ·
14150 2 br., goo hoot, 12185, 2
br., gu hut, both rteondltlon Nlca 2 b.!:z 4 112 mi., from Gal·
like now. Must-! Call814-445- llpollo $oa6 mo. N.o ~lt. Call
0175.
.
114-44&amp;,8031.
. .

'

Financial

Interior
Duign
Specialist.
Hardman's .Horne Ctnttr ' ' accopllng ~pptlcallons tor on '""
torlor Dulgn Spoclollot. '""
dMdual Hl.cttd must have
In
prevloue
experianca
maasurinp and •.•Umatlng etrpet, vlny and custom drapea.
Knowttdgt of kitchen d11kln
also 1 ptu1. Blnefll: pacbge fncludn paid vacation, lite an~
medical lntur~nca. Submit
ruumt to Bob Wintz or Mike
Dayton, PO Box 33, Pt. Pll, WV
25450 or ctll 304-&amp;75-3567 for
appointment.
lnvlta11on for all contractors In-

----------==
21

. Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE! .
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
recomtnendt that · you do
buslnHs with people you know,
and NOT to ttnd moner
through 1he mall until you hive
lnvootlgat.od tho otfo~ng.
Real Eslate

terested In bidding on Animal

31 Homes for Sate .

Waslt lagoon at C. C. Lewie,

12160 mObile home for Ala,

Oldtown Farms, Point Pleasant.
Job shOwing Aug. 1, 10:00 am.

No 7 dairy bam. Ltndowner
raservea right to reject anr end
all blda. Construction will be
auperviHCI by Soil ConHr.
vatlon Service. For further lnlonnatlon caii304-87S.4170.

Llboralory Chemistry Super•
vlsar, full time. MT (ASCP} or

Contact personnel,

Pleasant ..Yalley Hospital, Point

Pleasant, WV, 304-675-4340.
EOE-AA.
Noed utra money? Avon. $5. to
~ started. Fr11 gltl. Call 614192-7180.
.

plut lot with workshed on Jack..

eon Pika.Cioea to 35. Call 614--

448.&amp;005.

191 N. Park Drive, owner can
Hll undar no obligation to rtll
nt•t• •s•ncy. Call 304-4581811.
.·
3 bedroom brick ho"fSt with
large tot, Mid Way Drive. Ntw
Haven. Good Cond. 304-n:J..
5881.
.
3 br., 2 baths, living room,

12

.

wanted
Wo care far ~ llld handicoiiDOd In - 21 pore
ti,Orl-. LPN 011 coil. Law
,,..,..,__
c.n 114-tiiZ...n
oftw 7:00 p.m. for ,,.._

•

~ rl dnaralecf

~ ~.~,;.~•:r.~!~; Doto. Atoo ,

snuatlon

motion.

I

IT WAS THAT 61RL

I DON'T KNOW .. MA'f'SE IT'S

A6AIN .. 51-1E WANTS

TAKE '(OUR D06 ALONG..

1:01 (J) Allee

....§

(2J Ill) H8C NlghtiJ ......

112
bofhJ,
ocrHnod
In
--•Yf'on 2 ocroo. COil 814256·1141.
TWo bedroom, lurdttte Addn,
ont owner, •xc cond, ntate lit·
• - · FHA opprovod, prlcod
on f111pectlon, I~OUI tnqulrH
ontr, 304,8711-zt11 or 675-2853.

(!) 8ocly llactrlc
(!) 3-2·1 eon- Q
~

=
•
J'iL
:T:::~n
Nellfllototw

Now accepting aPI)IIcatlons tor
2 bedroom tpl tully ea ,_ ....

ckliP• provided. Maintenance
1 flvlng clou to thopplng,
banka ancf echoolt. For more-Informotlon coli 304.&amp;82·3718. E·
qual opportunity h!luslng. Sac·
tlon 8 ICCipttd.
·o na Mdroom apt, 111 uUIItiH
axe-'
. tltctrlc r,td, call bator•
5:00• ••
pm, 304-87 1371.

Uttd appllanc•. Watha,.,
dry1,., ranga, refrlgarator.,
microwavt overae. Ktn't ApPilonco, 217 E. Second Sl.,
Pomeroy, 614·WZ·5335 or 114985-3561.
UHd' bunk bed1 with bunkln
and laddlr, good Cond, $150.00,
coli 304-4611-11104

1174 CalVIllo.

•

a~ PW, PB,

WHt VIrginia TrUll, roof 1,.. •!!t. lilt .._1,
HI buln lo order, Route 21, ont Sr.sOO. 114-192·

onlto North of Rlptoy. 304o3'72· 4:00 p.m. or 114-141-2217
9323.
:ov=•:::nl::,ng~•=·-....,-.,--,-::--,
Pets tor Sale
1978 Camoro, ollvor. l .eyt. Good
56
cond. AM.fM Cuootto. Cal814:;:.::=~=..:..;:;...:::;::;.;:....,.-- '317-7111.
·
AKC Mlnlllur11 Dachshund p.pin. Rtady to go A.uguat 1. 1978 Grand Prix LJ. Somo Nit.
Noodo oomt work. ~50. ·114Shot• and wormed. .till 114· m.e702.
.
..
1112· 5623
AKC Rcttwollore, · 3 fomole, 7 lt7t llonnovlllo, V... good
wkl old, 304-937·2018.
cond. loodod. •145CI. Call 814·
311ofl08.
AKC rwgltttrld' Ptklng... 5
monlhl Old ftmllt $150.00. Rot• lt79 Chovy Caprlco, 4 d lwollor 1 year otd· tomato •75.00. Sidan. J~f like naw. All tht •
qulpmont. 301 vs. •1198. 114·
304..!1711-28&amp;1. .
m.e1tt.

tr,ptt

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

"' fry

64

•

Hay

a. Grain ·

1m corvono. Ortatnol motor,
automodo•• 7900. 6f4·247-4161 .
- Ford L•D
,.,,
,, • Oood cond. PS,
AC1 crulao control. ..50. Call
61&lt;·251-6251.
1979 Plymouth Station Wagon.
AM·FM ·eatutte, 111n1 8, new
paint. Mull ue. C,llhon, W.Va.
\104·77:J.5354.
.
117t Tronto-Am, aoocl colld.
SZ,200 090. Calll1"-4411-4047.
18111 Plymouth Rollonl Stollon
Wogcn. A_C1 AMIFM rodlo, 1111,
c1uroo. 30...7H831.
1M2 Chovotto,4 dr., . . - ..,.
glno1 now broooo, l tlroo. Call
414~aa.a.t57 maka an offer.
1M3 Toyota 4 dr.. 12,000 mi.,

tunrool, I epcl. lmmaculalli
,1•3 Terctl, 4 dr., ntw motor a
tlrw. Call 114-446-7011.
.
IM4 Cho-o, 4 tpd. tronamlsolon. Rool good cond. AM-FM
tta... o cas..tta. $1400. Cl11114-211-8251
•
1114 Nteun 8tntrl uo cond
asklng 'S3 000 SOI\-175--2188
' '
'
1184 Plymouth Atllant Station
wagon. Automatic traneminlon.
PS PB, tlh whnt, crulu controi1.AC, AM·FM coaootlo, 4 cyl.
27 MPG, coli 814-44H143 oftor

~

71

., 111-

AUtos for ...,;.

·----- --

·--···

(,

Autq Parts

a.

1:,,=~ Tonlgllt

(0:30)

e (Jl UIA Todlly

. If!:~~ !;I

1t72 modol 472 onglno wHh 400 :
turbo tranamltalon runs

Good,

(llleiiDn.

· - 110 ol, 1500.00. 30of.f7511141.
1V71 Chew 250 cu In motor1
totlly rtbulft pin ICCHIOriH ,
In New H1ven $350.00. 304-882-

• Cnlott a Chua
7:31 (Jl _,., Laagua laubtlfl
8.-ocl Cll MOYlE: Till Lott IIIII

ltiot.- (NA) (2:00)
.
!Ill ALF ALF lumblaa 1

2!101.

e (J)

210 Vol, ocoonvll\o onglno, wfth··
mloc.
tor $91Monltoldo • polio, toko til ''

phone ma11age and Lynn
ends up with IWO da,.a. (R)

';'-:=-·-:--:::---:-c:----:

i

Joop :aerto wfth wi!Mil ond ,
tlrH,
-171-3241.
·
.
Oldtmobllt 2&amp;0, v.a engine wtth
mise manifold and pa~ take
oil to1 $91.~. 304.e75-5 • .
POOR lOY TIRES, 304-175-" '·
3331, front end aHnmont •1a.u :
4•000 good UIOII llrM, oom1-•
llroo, MWIIroo.
,
'•
Campers
~
79

a.

.

Motor Homes

:

Buperllauta Spinks vs All
from Laa Vegas, NY, 1978
(R)

Cll • &lt;ll MacGrvw
MacGvver mull ftnd a stolen
. vial of ~ty biCIII'Ia. IRl Q
(ll (!) Nallonal OIDgt apniC
BpiDlal Taka a lOOk at
Tanzania'S Sarengetl

Natiorlll Park and Its

emtlronment. Q

.,'.~

111

1971 Trobuocd, 11 ft IINpe 8, t
Jolt of apaa., por1ablf 1ollet, ' ·•
11,000.00304-171-1113.
_
r

iPII~IIewa

Hii'-nmK IN10~·

Gl Hogtln'l Htler-oaool

MIAN IEkkiiORY.

i1J M - , 1M Wtllte Steal

Me A Story
• •Nce'v;;*a NOw
I:IOeCil G1 HGpn Fltlllly
David lnjUrl an opponent tn a
hockey match &amp; Ia gulll
strlc:k... (Rl'Q
Ill
Hutland B.L. and
Kim go to New York while
Jottnny hal an op~~tatlon. (R)

eo

&amp;....,~:••••••••., ••

ti:OO e aJ lfl) MOVIE: 'lcandl!l
1n A 1nta1 r_,• NBC
llanday Nt;ttt AI Till·
Mo- (NRf 12;00) Q

·.

w eCil

MOVII!:
To r .. 1 dam'
AIC
Hight Movie (PG) (2:00)
(I) ()) AtMftCM Me-.

"·

- - - - - - - - - - •I
::. ~'::;.;~'W-4!l'.C:.:· Z21 for 1' - - - - - - Home ·
01
1MI MINUry Topaz 4 door.
Improvements
Auto. air, AM..fM canett1,
,.
buckll Moll, dtla~ wlporo, hid·
BASEMENT
den
and trunk rlllllf, raar
WATERPROOFING
datroat•. 304..e7s..ee33.
Unconditional lifetime guar1n·
Local reterencn furnished .
For Solo: 18112 Muotona, now TA tM.
FrM
Hllmatn. C.U COIItct 1·
radlall, on 111.1m. riml, "VGC Call 814-237.()488,
day or night. R o
114-245-11902.
aer•Baeement
·
For Sale: 1987 . Ctm..o, Y.e, Woto1pr00flng.
Fual lnltcltd, AM·FII ' Clll. Ftllty Tt'N Trlmmlng •lump
1
Automolfc ovordnvo. 114-2511- l'lln'IOVII, CIII304-67S..f:s31.
eooo.

a••

;t

Ron'o TV SOhlco, opoclollzlng
In ·Zonfth oloo ooiVIctna moot
othtr brande. HouN celll, 1110
.oomo oppllonco ropolro' ~ v
304..!1711-Z3tl Qhlo 81 4 1
2414.
Rotory or coblo tool drilling. ,
72 Trucks for Sate
Mott w.111 completed 11m1
lfT.I Chi¥Y 114 ton ofckup' wfth Pump Hln and Mr¥ic4t,
,, .
198-3802.
.
·
·
oncf
hhch.
hi!O.
514-117·
3220.
.
SWEEPER ond Awtng mochlno
1877 F·150 Ford Rongor XLT. Npilr, parta, and tuppllel, ptck
Clood cond. Runo goOd. Calf up and delivery, Datvft Vacuum ·
814-317o0312.
ont half milt ,up
::.:,:.;,:;:,..:::..:=:_
____ Cl11ner,
GOCI!ItO CrMk Ad. Ca118t4-444J.
1178 Chevy 112 ton tNCk, UG. 4 0214. .
'
baiTof, f550•. Call614-448-3152.
Sopllc Tonk Pumplna-$10 Golllo
1~9 314 ton GMC. Hoovr duty, Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
cam~r ~lal. Dual tanka. PB, ~ockoon, OH 1-800-1374621.
Pl1 AC. .3500. Good ohopo.
51&lt;..tz.271t.
82
Plumbing
1071 Ford f-150 4x4 plck..,p,
Heating
__... ,.. 000 ~ 1
oxc. - - - , . - t Gory 01
114-441-3110 dar; 814-446-n&amp;l, --:CA;::-::R:;TE::R::i:'S~Pi::L~U:::M:::B:o:IN:::G,.....__ '
. AND HEATINO
.:
~Wnlnp.
Cor. FO~o~rth and Pint
1184 ChtvfOttt plck-u,, 3
Golllpoii~L Ohio
ql.llr1tr ton. Automatic, lots of Call 614-448-31
.. or 81......_
tllroo, llko - · hon t o - to 4477.
btlltve, ~11114-44~11.
18111 11-10. ExcOitont Shopo, Plpo M In cr Pfpo It out. C.W.
1171
Van. Good oonc1 IIi. Davloon Plumbing I T10nchlng
'""'k 1 - r o " ' - · off'-· drains &amp; water Onn. 614-4410159. Momlngo or Evonlngs.
. ·

MEEKLE
! MEI&lt;ELY

SAID il-IA"F '101.1
HAVE A ~"'ELO \5I ':(
UNCCMPI..IO\Tt:D MEI-ITAL.lTY.

DID 'tt:U TEL. I.. CINDY "Tl-'AT

I'M €&gt;1MPLE-MINDE:D';

FollOw Franklin's mualcal
-from .... early ,.....
to lite ~nt. 1;1
Ill
llfowtt
Murphy don a story which •

·= . . .,. .,

SHE NS:VER Gi:'TO
ANYTI-IING- RI~T. ·
.•

fraH I wrongly lmprl~
man. (R)Q ·
·
Ill LIIII'J ICing LIWl
OPnM~Wt11•111

eo Detll'llnll wThe Sugalbaker tadlee ·get an

ti:IOifl

aaalgnmant at 1 nudist

:oc:. ':J.:1

GOVERNMENT SEIZED YohlciH
flom '100 Fordo. Mon:odoo.
CorvoHoo. Ch'"'l/O. Su=.
Buy~tr• Quid• (1» 101-187
,
Ex~ 9-1 0119.

=z:

Summar
lwnln; Nancl Grtntlh stars
In tills concert spacial at
AnderSOn Fair In Houaton. •

BARNEY
AFORE YE RUN OFF,
OON'T FERGIT TO

UH••THAT
REMINDS

AUNT lDWEEZY !!
l FOUND ME A

OUAmRI!

TX. SIMI II teatured alnglng
many of her hils, tnclucilnO .

StoP TH' H065

ME-·

Love At The Flve And Dime
end Once In A Very Blue

Moon.

&lt;ll u.s. Otyntptc Fe1tlval
(I)Nawa
(!)Mit Rllpotll

114-4~11;"' •~
':'::::'::...,;:C:::=-.-.,.---:,.......,.
IMI-Ford NIO, pick-up, a cvt.
ongl-utamttlc,
ouopot•ToHnglne 614-448-2141.

PSIPIIHb, 84
-k.

1 .7;3iiciVI~n;silo;;;4;WD;.;;;'~It;t;;u

IIMI ChiVY Convetolon VOn lull
tlzo,..,. 114-441-11111.1
tiiiFordConvw-woniiM,
loodod, 17.000 mlloo, IOW714tll2.
•
,,4 MotorcyciM

BERNICE
. BEDEOSOL

a.

J I ~ Wotor Sorvlco. Swtmmtng

r.;'~~otomo, wotlo. Call 81 c:

R l R Wiler BOIVICO. Poalo, cistome, Wollo, lmmodloto-1 000 or
dollvwy. clu 304-

:ro:.:&amp;'.Woaoroon•o
_,.blo

Wotor Hauttng ,
r::'l"''"""
dtO:

"i;~~U~p~h~IO;IIt~erya;;::-;;;;

-7111, ·--.,...
1171 - · Cl,
Muot
ltt10tiii 5 JIDI .... I1Wdt101
1. . Hortorlll-.-tlcloo
boll - · - · oond. lolo 01
Dlint • pon
otrlJioct. -lie
ldetl .....
mt., 15.000. Cal 114-44
;:;z:lo;,;:;IID- - - - ' - - - ' - -

.
-lilrl a

..

General Hauling

.ooo eopock~l

IMollWtll , - · ota. Call
87

-·- - .._.'

~rehoon Uphototory Cant• 303
H~~-.~=

I

Calll-1131.

.._.,.. ~om
viclntl M _.., -

1--~ ·

2
,.
tn
fllmtluno
~IOIIrootllrtnt. 'Coli IOW75-4164

_

.fulrl4,1. .
Cond~lonl

ohould IUbllanllllly ,,...

prove tor you rn the ,.., attead. where

your f i n - are COl-ned. In fac1,
lhla could be a bener lor you than
you've llad In along, long Ume.
LIO (.fulr II-AIII- II) Everylhlng
ohoutd rnov. liang Mlllfaatorlty 1oday
K you UM your Inn~ lnltaad of wilt·
lng on otberl. Ba a 1111-etaner. not a
couch potato. Milar c:hllnQM are attead
for Leo 1n the oCimlng ,.., • Sand for
your Altro4raph PI I CIOIIonl loday.
IIUII $Ito Altro-Gracdl, c/o l h l l - .

paper, P.O. Box 91428, Ctevetand, OH.
44101-3421. Be auretootateyourzodl..
acolgn.
VlltGO (Aug. 21 lopt. 121 You h... a
IJ)IICIII lbllly today lor being able to
unriMII a11111110n1 have lelllangted. II you utiiH your llllentl lor their
good, you'D Mil) your OWrt u well.
~ (lttpt. »Got. 211 Your llopea
and expectatlonl wHI havl bener
c h - of being reeJIHd today lhrough
collectlvt t11ort1lhln Iller wtn 11 you ••·
tempi to do tltlntll ~1)'.
BCORfiO (Oct. It Nev. 12) Your
chanc:etl for fulfilling your embltlonllodly on Pcattenl, provldld you . .
properly motivated. If you WMt tlq badly .,ough, rou'll figure out a
way to a-t h.
,
IAGITTAIIIU8 1-· :a - . tt)
8hould- you know on a~
IOCIIf bllll ollw lo do you • • • - todly tllke

tldvllntaOI. of h

lmrnedl81el)'.

Thll , . , _ might ballc If you vaclnate.
CAINCOIIN (OM. 1N811.1t) Something you'va been wanllng to h...
cttanged to your beneftt, but havl been
unable to do on fOU' OWrt, mlghl be
brougl\lallaut todlr through 11te ellorl•

orAQIWIIII
•thouQhlful••acllte.
(~ 31 . . .
I.

BIIIIXJE

greetell ··t oday lhauld be your
ability to -lite Idea ouug; tiOnl of
otMra In wayalhllt .,. pat IOIIIIIy flctal to you. Put your gift to work .
PI8Cia (Peb. 31
cdlll) You could
be hiOidlr lhln UIUIII today In INti.,.
that IN m.llngful to you ftnanclai\J,
!hough you'll 10 Mrn what

,.,!tin

on

·=

of 1111.

r~antzeh.C

eo.....,...,

'I gil

~~I cd1

18NawCao lily

11-Aplll 1t) Bet high
lUnd
for youfl8lf Ioder- you•
IOCtl1 lnvotJ.illlnt&amp; are COhCiiiied.
Don't ;et -tpltld wltll people wiiO do
not havl _ , l n g conllrucliWIIO lldd
to your lb.
TAUIIUI(Aprl• .., 31) Al80"lllel
will be w1t11ng 10 In . . , . , . , - to
your wtlltla today, pr0111dad 11'1 madl
a1111r to tMin you . ..not moilvaled by
tafl1lh I PI na.
W U(lllf 11 ,tu1 I II) Don't be . .
IUOtlnl to .... lltllltOdll. p diWW •Idea 10day, . , _ . wltllalll·
Ita attll ••• allan JDU mt;M ftnd way&amp;
to
Itt lite alllar.
C
(.lutle 1W1n1J 12) M.....

....... .

11:00 (J) Paper CliMe

ew w eCil •

IIJ=IIM
s..r.o.

•=

• 0 AIMtltO Hal
0
vtoa Duty &amp; l19ftOF
18Y011Cin .. . AIW

11:10•1£

::I-

•r-illltlliiiiW

. (I)# i

(0:30)

I=,. . . .__
..........
~Rtr·

;::r-Iot

~

lhllt
- ~~--""
1n ...........
wapiiiOilld
be gMnto
topyou
priority
today.
Don'l r111Q111 to , _ ranka IIIUIIIonl
wlliall ooutd ..... ~ICI I 1111.

eC~o~~~aa..

\I

'J.Uit

••uou
tiOIU
+AU

....

! 1

EAST
tit t7 s

Ia wben1 the Idea of tbe COFIIrlct laliiDI

IDc:n!tllbly lar-lelcbetl. "nat's
.QH
wbat baDI)elled to Nate Neanllbt,
Willy Nlllj'1 lint t:OIIIID, u 1te played
+Qtol
today'a deal. Alter tbe opealn&amp; lead,
. ·.
SOUI'II ,
·Nate wu already CGDtemplatlnl over·
• .QJ
trlcb wbell be played low from clam·
.A97151
my. But Eut wu uaeooper~Uve. He
tAJI
.
Wont tbe klnu! of .,."" l1ld awltdletl to
tbe 1liDe of il11f!IC'4tdl Deelarer played
Vulnerable: ~
low. Welt wt111 tbe ~ l1ld played I
Dealer:
Soutb
spade to tlumnDTI aee. Nate led a
1teart blck to bll-. Eut ipllttln&amp; bll
trump llooon. Declarer DOW did the
Puo , .
p. .
belt be could. He played lt·A ancl
All pal
ruffed a club, .played 1 ~t to dam·
my's kiD&amp; l1ld a diamond back to bll
Opening lead: +5
· ace (be wu ·~ Eaat bad aot led the
cllamODdlliDeattrlclttwolromK·I·I), L . . . . , ; - - - - - - - - - - J
ancl tbeD put Eut 011 lead wltb a tblrd
trump. Ualortunately lor Nate, East aotbiDc better to do lban! play aiDe of
aun bad
a low dlaJIIIIIICI, ancl be could dl•moncta. bat DOW Welt 11
.,
bll
taer'1 Wft•f tbe ttel after be wiDI tbe q1lllfiFI. U be '
.
· P1aY. I to
par
or
• b~ card, deelarer will rafiiD
,.
ting trlek.
Nate abould ltqehbout overtricks my wblle tbrowiD&amp; b11 jaclt, •
•
at t1te llart, lliDee 1te bu aa abaolutely IIICIIIda away. U Welt plap •
play to make b11 C!Clllltraet. Let It will be into dtlelarer'1 A.J.
.
bim""Upwitbtbeaceof=r=pla•
J
,
l)~-·,-,.lir..,.....aW'
•.
' .,_,.. emt_r-_ ...- .
A·lt of bearD. tbeD K·A . eluill l1ld ,.. loll 11nro11t ,-,., .,. - on"
ot •
rulhclub.Heeaa-playuecOtld • tr • .-.,., .,,, u 7 - - ..
spade, &amp;lvln&amp; up lbe lead. East 1w
~-.---· ·

.ltl

... - WI

•......a.:.:

sure

II

CROSSWORD
b, THOMAS JOSEPH
43

ACROSS

Lad
'·

DOWN

1 Criticize
4 Seadog
7 Stockings
BSeed
coaling
10 Mountain
ash
11 Frolic
13 Isle (Fr.)
14 Woeful
1&amp; Resident

01 &lt;sutf. &gt;
17 Betrayal
19 Greek
letter .
Card game
20

1 One using
an oar
2 Sharp
-tack
3 Boarding·
house
4 Dilatory
5 "Butter·
Illes
- Ftee"
15 Commotion 31
6 Jet set's 18 Whip
playground 21 Membrane
7 Black
22 Stripling 32

- of
Calcutta
·
9 Missive
21 Migrate •· 10 Actor Torn

23
24
25
27

Blissful
Conlribuled
Look oull 37
'High-·

~=·~~~.of car 12 Like some 29 FaH-guy
26 Slratagem

faucets

Swedish
man's
name
Newsroom

·.

employees
(abbr.)
·- a
lltlle

. leapot'

30 Plait

39 Time frame

27 Soviet
chess
champion ·
(1960-61
28Managed
29 Drinkable
33 Give
-whirl

I

..

34 Circle

· 35 Radiation
measure
36 Understand
38 Finds out
40FDR, JFK
and LB.!
(abbr. )
41 Novelisl
Murdoch
42 Sandra

l.r+-+-+-

7124

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

'.

.•

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnla. Each day the code letters are different.
C8YP'I'OQIJOTE8

HAZSS

HAGLQC

YGHHYS

GL•

VZS

KSVCIZS

YVZQS:

~

GL

..•'

SWGY

.. .

CVYH

..

QTTN

VLN

OSVCH,

VLN ASCGHVHG'TL.- HVYKIN
, Y-.. • .,•• Cat=tel A PRUDENT MAN IS
LIKE .A PIN: HIS
PI:IEVENTS HIM FROM.
' GOING TOO FAR.- MORRIS MANDEL
·
~ ltet King FHiur" Syndlcale . Inc
'

.. .
...'
~

7-14

'. ·

11) YO!ol.

NORTH

ne euleet time to fall victim to the
dread d1Ma81' of deeJam

Q

DootDr, lloCIIOr
Mlchall'a mothlr cornn10
the off1ce and cuteea to

Ill

··-- -

.A6

"'ay"""'J,...a--J~a~e
..=-b,

10:211(1) MOVIE:- Robertll
(2:30)
1Cl'.30(I) ~A 8acontl Look
ElWnlna the gulf ' * - '
campttlgn rhetOric IIICI the

1011-

I.

LIIII'J, Danyl &amp;

i"«i'~u
Ill lvenln;

ASTRO-GRAPH

Electrical
Refrigeration

-=·
.1-.;; . . .

r..::ooo.~: Gary.·~~

'~~
'&amp; Nawhllrt Joanna
becomlll naluctant dinner

RHI.nllal
or commercial
wiring, new IIII'V1ce or rtpalra.
Ucenttd electrician. Ridenour
l!!octlico~ :104.&amp;75-1'788.

85

Botnni Take

an offbeat and occastonaly
trrewnant look at hOw
Mtnltlpolls halt become one
of the hippest places to be In
the world ol pop,mualc.

~ ol

·-

section

10:00 &lt;il 7110 ctull

a.

vw

·=

(I) A. . . . . . . Wlkllimlll

~

Services

a

nalghbot~lvaa an all-nlghl
conctllt. Rl C
~~
YlEf Mr. Mom (PG)

... lliJs:f OOP.INTENT
~'\~THE!

1078

1981 Fo1d Etcoll Wogon, Aloo
RCA VCR. 614.tl92·5422. ;

eo

Kat. Aile Ka,.
and Allte'a daapondent

:,

SCUM LIT$ ANSWIRS

em~l

7:10. (J) ,......, Fauci
Cll lltiiOr ~ Be1abaH

Accessories

goode.::"
11,000.00 or t•clo an cr - r..r
good aonoll !Nile, - . . .
, . . ~-o ,.__ · - HP,....., otr,...., 4-ft;
look ond DOplo •
lxaotlot~ - .
1
1n - l i o n
11t='~. r•r.

=

18Tap~

7:011 (Jl ,...., Grltftll

FRANK AND ERNEST

=-.

--·
.......... -·
...,.,.ft.

"I spend
much time feeding my - k e•••
·I put him lnllhere to slow hll rntitabolltlm."

76

_,.
'II Cutto. au,..... nToe I ~~~17~1_,.,HI..;rtor,.;.;..~..;=;.,;;~;;;;;;D..;a....
, -,,.-,r
·~.00. 71 '""' 4 whoOI Clflclo, 11
Cal

Lt.

ea•

:104-&amp;~

I

FIMtwoodi\Wdornooo ~ ~
tully Nlt-c.ontalnecl, 21 " cam! ,.
por whh owning, OIC cond, .. •
$3,400. 304-175-7887.
;
A-•
fold
d
I
~.
1177 ,._..e
own, •..,. 11
I, ltove, 1lnk, a box, .AC, DC.
cot~vw&amp;or. c.III1W7NUI.
1978 Southwlnd 2lr C~N A.
Low mileage-good cond. 440
Chrya._
·~glne.. xtra•
generator 81orwg1. Must aN to
opprocloto.ll4-388of812.
1983 Slt01to 15 112 fl. compor.
• p.m.
AC, owntna. '"'Z.rn-contotnor.
18115 Oldt Flronza. Exc. Cond. U800. Calfo14
1214.
~:: .11roo. $4900. Catt 614-446- 1,., 32 n. Capri, tunr oon-ccn8
talned, air, large nhig. .tor,
front
18111 112 Nloun pick-up, 5 opd. ltereo, , microwave,
AMIFM star.ol a~o. Wire whtel kltchon, muot •n. - ·
covoro. leo oluo. V.ry aoocl Chooopooko, OH 814-HW321.
.
condJ$4115. Coii114-4411-1~ZI.

Tntna-lodbldoon1114Ford
F.UO plall-up, .wilt robult I
For Solo: Good Tlntolhy Holy · cytt;;d.r onglno, monuol::i:-HD
.I.Hipor bolo. Call 114-387· ouopolllloiHOIII-J hoo
0314, or 114-:157.otll2.
· tonojoct ony/all bldo. lido to
Mlxod hoy ond Olrow for ooto. :=:"~ 1 S.INI. 4 p.m.IIC..
ooll304-171-2011 of 5711-21171.
.;.;;;.::.:.::._ _ _ _ __
111row.
1014•

i,

-· ..

TELEPHONE.

Clnd..t
lit ,...., Ootfllllt
iiJ Miami vtoa L.ombard

i

condition.

S 7:00 a. m.·

8

UNSCRAMBlE lETTfRS .TO
GET ANSWEl

Ill) Wtteal 01

55

.

l

,..,
Domino - Bllfl:h - Elope - Fwbly - TELEPHONE
The I'Omputer can do more work fUier than a human
. bacauH It doeln'l have to take time out to an•- the

Cll 8patt1C1t'tlllr (0:. .30)
(I) • (Jl c:.-1 Atlali'
!D (!) Mactlllt/ Lllnr

SWAIN
AUCTION . 6 FURNITURE 82
Olivo st., Golllpollt. N~W. 6 pc.
wood gro1.1p • $331. Living room
ault. .119H588. B~o~nk bedl
with boddlng· ~4t. Full tlzo
monrott • foundotlon atoning
$99. Rocllnot otorttng S9f.
UESD·Bodo, drooo.,., bldroom
tultn. Dltka, wring-: wather,11
compllla lint of u-.:1 fvmhur..
NFW·Westam booll: • us:
Workboota S18 &amp; up. (Still 1
ooH too.) Call614-448-3159.
Solo ond 2 chohwL Clolotn Anno
Styto, 304.&amp;75-5zto. . . .

· I'

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUJ,IES

- ~ · ··

7:00~=~

for Rant

,.

• •

I

-

•

1:31(1) calot .._

a Gll'ltehtd.

for rent 304-675-

I

~ ·I 1 1 I'
I
I

Stotiatz Today

lit...,.._..

Apartment •

:r,:mont

I!

airline attendant passadThe
out gum
to reli- presaUI'8
in our ears during the daaclt"tt.
•
•
•
•
After landing, it ·took one
. . . . - - - - - - - - , passenger two hours to get
U C· T T E L
the gum - of - ears.
~-·,;I;,._..·;.175~~.:.....;1..,&amp;;;..,1-.
·Complete the chuckle quolld
by ti!Hng In the miuing words
L-.1.._.1.-.J.-.J.-.J._.J_ you davelop
from &amp;tep No. 3 below.

8

lIll 0eGCUNaWaQ
Cotooecllon

br. 1111tor.
11c..
44U551, or II4-445-71ZI.

44

.

.· w'&amp;'C:&amp;~~~o

RUHSE

I
. --r~,....;-r-;,--11.:!
D1 V0 E . •
2

Gl'aola u..
iiJ c . - 1!JpNIII

ATRICK .. MA't'SE 't'OO SHO~LD

I{OU TO MEET HE~
OVER AT TI-lE MALL

Baby
rabbll8
aiiiiOfted
colon/1noiM $5.00 lOCh. Loa
oorred blbloo o-.tocll$1•
uch;Calll4-441-4180.
Coc;:kar
Spanl...full blooded, I
1871 14170 Etcono, 2 br., ponty
d
Yalley Fumltu,. ·
wka. old. Blade with white
tum.
aoodlcond. mutt 1111. c111 One ~ be. room-t·fumlllh.ct . 1pt, . .
New 1nd uetd furniture 1nd ·~ marking, ·male ·&amp; ,.malt, 1100
814·256-1528, or 614·256·1977.
very cltan and nlca. · Na pet•.
304..!175-1400.
pllanca•. Call 814-446-7572. · uch. c.u 114-371-2188.
1981 Llborty, 14115, 2 br., wfth
Houro t.S.
=====~==:.,.,..-..,Drogonwynd Caniry Konno!.
underpinning, deck, &amp; can:~·py, Regancy, Inc. 2 br., apl., new
~-'1814 "46 •o54
pluth carpet. new paint, Willi
5 I
I
t
Plrelen · and Slam•• and
_..
.., ~ ·'
utllhiH,,garftal~plld. $175/mo. nice,amaon
n
ont,
•
ec.
Uf'l'
air cond., electronic air Hlmalay'" kinen•. C_how •lud
1985 ~~lt.wlda,. In exc. cond. ;C:,•I::.I304;:,:..:
· ,:.:15:.;..!1:.;1.:::.·==--- claantr,
humldlfltr
&amp;: nrvlce. Call 11...W&amp;-3844 alter
·
on o land controcl, to bo movod SH'DY LAWN AP''RTMENTS
clohumldlfloll$400. Call 814-245- 7p;m.
plico to ooll. Coli 614-441-1610, 7zt~ Second · Avt. ~ Fumlthod• ••••
~.
Fish Tar*, 2413 Jackson Ave.
01114-4411-4835.
offlclonclot stalling 11 St75.1n·
Point Ptuoont, 304.&amp;75-2063, 10
53
1985 moblto homol41lt 2 bod· eluding wotor l garbogt. ldool
Antiques
gol oot up $lUI ond 10 gol
roory1t, bath, very g~ cond, tor 1 per1on. Cllll14-44"8-2602.
=---..,-.,.,..;~..::...,,.....,__ complete $43.25.
S14 400 00 304-675-5541
Bur. Of 1tll. Rlvtrl111 AntlqUII.
• · ·
.
·
Tara Townhoutt Apt1, 2 br;1 1 1124 E. Main SlrHt, Pomeroy. Golden Retrltver" pupl, AKC
33 Fanns for .Sate
112 bolhl.l CA, dlohwoahlr, .,.. Hou111: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 6:00 ,.aillttred 1150 NCh. Call 114poul, p ntt Mcloud patio, p.m., Sunday 1:00 ta 1:00 p.m. 28"'-'436.
pool, playground. Wettr, IIYt~tr,
114-992·2!25.
·
Fai'ITI, n.., Leon oft WltlriOO &amp; trash fnctudtd. Stat11ng 11
Groom and Supply Shop-Pit
Rd, echoof route, no house, ~8V/mo. Coll814·367·7850.
Buy, Mil or lraciiJ... anllquet &amp;
large
bam,
220
aeret,
eollectabln. Sat UtCk or Silly ~=m~'l· ~!!d-o:-.:. •t3~r~
$65",000.00 call Lllrry or Calvin Twin Rlvar. Tower-Housing for at Ed't Galllpolll Flea Marklt; Wobl!. Callll&lt;l-441.0231.
304·7115-5187 or 304..!116-7587.
tht EldarfJ, Handlca:rptd and Sat/Sun, or call 614-446-761~,
Disabled.
Locate
near dallr lfl•r 8 p.m.
Pttk A Poo pupPIII $100.00
eaeh. 304-875·2625.
doWntown
Point
Pleasant,
34
Business
phont 304-8?5-6671. Equal 54 Miscellaneous
Pomeranlan1, 1 m11t, • 112
Housing Opponuntly.
Buildings
month•. $75. 1 ftmalt, t!
Merchandise
monthl, $SO. 814·912:·5672. ·
Oftlco or omatl buslnlu tpoco 45
Furnished
for ,.nl In MlddleJ)Of'l. All
16 wood.n window• with ttonn Rtglaterld Tarrier puppy, 8 wk1.
ulllhloo lncludod. A~ Con·
Rooms
wlndoWI aiiiHChmtntl $150.00 Cld1S75. Shoto • wcrmod. can
dltlonod. $200. por month. Coli _,_ _..;..;.:;.;;.;;,;.;;___ __
lor all call304-675-3044.
814-4411-1354.
614·992-554!1, 7:00 a.m.-4:00 Robme for rant-waek or month.
p.m. or814-t92·2217evanlng•.
Starting at $210/mo. Gallil I H4 Wlnchoslo,!, Pn...,odol, 9~ 1
Musical
30-30, llko no-250. Aloo ooloo 57
Hotal-814-448·9560.
Cherry handmade gun cabinet,
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Instruments
osklng/$500. Callll'l-448-4045.
46 Space for Ren(
2 1cri lot Al.hlori, Mason 80,
guhar 11110n1,
1982 F-250 Van. Offlco closko, &amp; lndiVId1.111
public watar, $20,000.00. 305- Commarclal apac1, 1400 sq. ft., credlftZII, ca\1614-446·2359.
lloglnnon otnous gultariot.
cornar Second and Plna. Ampla
946.&amp;983.
·Brunlcold11
Muolc, ·
JoH
parklnt:N••r. Call 614-44~249, 2o gillon electric water ht~aler. Wamtley Instructor, 814-4412 acre lot, Athton, Maaon ao. 4411-2325, or 448-4425.
I
Trallar liZI. $20. 614-992·5427.
1077, Hmhld openings.
public water, $20,000.00. 30S..
946.&amp;983.
qountry Mobile Homl! r Park, 4 burial apaetl for ula. Ohio Up~ghl plano $75.00, 304.e75Valley . Uemory
Gard1n1. 3580.
408 acr•• tor tale. Old ntua Routt 33, . North ol Pomeroy. Reasonably prlcad. Call 814property. MinerAl rightt. 614- Loti, rentals, parts, aa111. Call 258-8517.
.
614-912·7479.
.
742·2718.
4 tlrtt, 14.5x36x11S.5, like
Farm Supplies
Aohlon boautllut ono ocro toto 49
· For Lease
nowl$350; 2 llroo, 1200118.5, 8
with river frontage, public water, ::--:--....,.._,..;..:..;;..:..;,___ Plyl$40. COII614-4411-01143.
&amp; Ltvestock
Clyda Bewfan, Jr. 304-576-2331.
Very nice apaclou1 2nd floor 3
Big
Dakola
Ferm
Hom•
built
on
Ashton large b1.1lldlng Iota, br., lp1. unfumlthtd, ltove' &amp;
mobile homt ptrmltttd, public r.frlg, hlltoric homt downtown your lot, $24,185 &amp; Up. Call 614wattr, prka redLtCid, Clyde S27~mo. Utllltltll tXII'I, rat. 888"7311·
·
61 Farm Equipment
roq'd. Call814-448-4425.
Bowen, J r.
Big Dakota Farm Home built on
15 MF tro•..!!!!t plowo I dloc, .,...
ycu~ol, $24,915 &amp; Up. Call 614Ashton, beautifUl 0111 !ICI'I Iota
bush hog~OOi 4000 Ford trac..
8B6·7311.
wlttl rlvar frontage, pubnc water.
torl$2895;
Htllton
round
Merchandise
Clydal8ow.n, Jr. 304·578-2336.,
For Sale - Conerttt and Plastic balerl$1115. OWner will t1111nc1.
Stptlc ·ttnks. All slztt. RON Caii614·288-115Z:Z.
Folrllold Conlonory Rd. Building 51
HOUSehOld
· EVANS ENTERP~ISES, ~ACK·
loll. Call 814-445·1348.
D-17 AC tra~or whh mowing
GOOdS
SON, OH, 1.&amp;00·537-9528.
machine, rab &amp; AC bller S4850il.
North Central Florida. 40 acrn
Gr"n &amp; Brown draperiel &amp; 2 185 MF lroctor 14185, 850 N
prlmt pt.lhlrt. Fenced l crotl
FURNITURE
full olzo bodop10ads I hand round bllltr, $2985. OWner will
flnctd with bam a out~ Sofa•LAYNE'S
and
chtl,..
priced
from
madt
crahe
a
antique tlnonco. Coiii14·21H522. .,
building~, 3 br., 2 batt~ house.
$395
to
$995.
labial
Ss0
and
up
television,
614-446-3375.
' JD Dozer, blade, wlnch1 $1710.
CA, elklng $49,500. For lnfor,
1
to $125. Hldw-b.cta $380 10 Olter mixar complate with milk Caiii14•24W181, IYinlngl.
collll04-481·2161.
$595. Recllnere $225 ,to $375. •hake mlxtr, shraadar, ~lndtrl
Ohio River lot for tale or rent. Lampe $28 to $125. Dlnttt11 •llct.r. Dorme-r t,.ncn er. 4 NH Bolo Woaon/S2,500; 14ft.
•·
Kuhn hoy todaor,.1200; ~D 30
Nice camptht with blaullful $101 ond up to $495. Wood
beach. Located near Forked tablt w-1 chalr1 $285 to $79!1. qt. electric "- cream frttzll'. Bolo E)octor,.ISOO, colll14-2565011.
. .
Run State Park 1 Long Bonom, Dnk1 $145 up 'o $375. Hulchn 304-675-4563.
OH. Ontr 11nou1 lnqulrlte. $400 &amp; up, bUnk btd1 'complate Pool .table for nla. Slat• top,
with matt,.ll S295 and up to laathar pockats1 very goad con- Troy-bUlb Rotol:llltr, I hp, Ilk•
$7000. tl1111.114·867.e2Q5.
.--trlctlart.II4-ZII+41:1.
$395. boby bodo $110 Moll,... dillon.l14-tt24304.
Woodland, 132 ICI'HI135,000, Ml or box 1pring1 full or twin
lloohlnd 10 hp, grovoty tracAt. 7, below Eureka, C1ll 814· $75, finn •88, ond $98. Quoon Portoblo llghtod olgnt with lot· Wolk
tqr, whh attachment•, $1,000, 80
446-44181fttr 1 p.m.
ooll •275 &amp; !'l'· King •350. 4 11111 $299. Non~lghlod, $199. Hall Cab ovtr camper, ltove,
drawer chnt Pl. Gun Ctblnltt Fret delivery. Plaltlc lattere,
rofrlg., oiHpt 4..!1, $800. Coli
I, I, &amp; 10 gWI. Baby mlttrnsn $47.50 box. 1-800-.S;l).3453.1
Real Estate
36
814-3aa.lll58.
.
S31 a 545. Btc:l fnmn 125,
I
·
Outen Slu 135 a king frame Ra ntoft water tofttntr, 3 pare
Wanted •
$50. Good ootocllon ct bodroom old, havo all poporo, llko now, 63
Livestock
5 acrn, partially wooded road eultn,
matal
' cablnlta, 304-175--1145.
:-::--:-::-:~.:..:.:..:...;:;.;..-.-..,.-tron"!go· Callll4·3111-1739.
hoodboolito UO ond ~p to $85.
SWIMMING POOLS $1188
2 oman ponloo ond - k hor·
90 day• al!ml •• caeh with ap- s m
nne tor llla.I14-742.ZZ34.
·
,
1
1
8
1
1
proviCI cr:adlt. 3 mi. out Bulavlllo
u mer tptC
on
poo • ·
Rd 0
I AM
PM
Hugo 19131 pool. Hugo dock, ATTENTION Hcroo OWnerl,
· ~
• • to 5 • • Mon, fence, flltar &amp; •rranty. lnlta~ Paint Pll.ll 11 now carrying 1ack.
Renlals
thn1 Sat. Clll614-446-0322.
litlon • financing available. Call Paint PL1.11, 2415 Jaek10n ;&amp;ve.,
2 dlnatfe. 1 at 1 , $25. and $ 15.; 24 hrt: HI00·34~-G846.
Point Pleaanl, phone 304-87141 Houses for Rent
chllt
freezer S30,t' con•olt Sat wortd book encyclopedill. 4014.
TV cab not $6.00. 3Q4.I HZZI.
$100., WB dlcllonalrn $25. 50 BAutllul I ,.... old toglllored
I rm. ho.,_u, I bath, In country, Amaria rhlcrowavt Int. Brill books by Rav. Oflvar Gr..n 17!1. ThoroughbNCI Gelding $1,000.
I cfty ochOoto dlotrlct. Call 614- ~od.long totaL droa11r, l quHn Haoaock ton ·us. two bontwcod Caii31M;f175-520tllftor 1:00pm
446.0874.
alza mah l ttS. Call , 1_......_ rocktrl - 125. each, ·antique
In Polllond, ~~ 3 112 mil
1171.
llbrory lablo $100. dr....rlrillr· Roalolorod Palnto ond Ouonorw;
trom baaernent,
Rovons plenty
· .. 2 bodroom
full
of yanl I·=======~=:J~ro=r~S6=5.:304;:·6:7:5-:78:8:7·::::::::j ooll304..!17NR9 or 171J.117111.
ond gordon opoco, frH goo.
You~
Puf11obroct,
bloclc,
!?'82·oporr81!"~'lt~:..,Ca4." 304-372~14towlri0rpo3.in':''=~~8~t4:::

dining room, lamlly room, newly
ramoc1alad ·kitchen .with new
range, gl.-ad In front porch,
naw raof &amp; dack on the Ohio
Nttd money for blek to school River In Chnhire/534, Call 614·
clothn and Christmas? Work :157.0322.
your owi\ hOUI"', ehowing 3 br., ue11onal, ·2 full battlt,
t-louH of Lloyd honw Decor, flrtplact,
doubla-cvtrVrangt,
fashion•, loys, glttt, Chrlstma1 CIA, double lo~ ·city echools,
deeoratlonl. FrM $300 kit. Free coll614-446.e764 . .
training, peper tupplles. 814446-7002 Diana Sanders.
3 br., aectlonal, 2 full tSIIhs,
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE IN- flreplaee/doubla lott, Uoubla
OIVIDUALS NEEDED. Join lht oven &amp; range. CA. city tchools.
Army National Guard parl·tlma. Call814oo446"-6764:."
Monthly ptychtck, 20 year"' 4 rm. ttome built 1983 bath
retirement, .coll-a• ••siattnca. g1rag8, comer. lOt. Pt. ·~liasant:
304-675· 3950 or 1..aoo-642·3618. Total alectrle. $38,000. Call 304·
Pa~·llmo CASE MANAGER to 875-5349.
.
assist elltnta In oblalnlng 8 rooms and ~th, etr'rtrtlalr, 12
employmtnt, housing &amp; tupport acrn land, walking distance to
services tor tn out-patient Point Plaa~;arit ..3d~?5-7235
j:ltychologlc:tt agency. Stnd
ruumt tnd ref.,.nctl to: P. 0. Applt Grove homa, 2 bedrooms 1
bastrnent, nlct cond, prlcaa
Box 909 Golllpollo, OH 45631.
raduc:ect, ahOwn . byU ap.
Part.,tlme mtdlcallab technician polntmanl only, . 304~7~~458.
tor 1 tully tqulpptd physician'• .
laboratory. No Shift work. Apply AHradlvt cullom ~uln c9untry
In peraon-Mtdleal Plaza, 203 home. 3 y.. ra old, 3 be4room1,
J•ckson Pika, Ga.lllpol\1. 8:30 to 2 bathe, full bl1tmtnt, 2-3,. ear
gar~ge, deck, all alactrlc hilt
5:00.
pump and wood fumaca. 114·
992-3093.
·
.•
Plnk•rton Stturlty Strvle...
Prim• Wages, patd. Steurlty :,:.::.=:;=...,.,.-~-..-:-,..,--,....:
oHict,.. nHdtd. Must have 3 Farmer;• HOmi A'dmlnlstratiOn
yl'8. work exp. T~ephone, 10101 avallabft. Approvad uc.
tr~nsportatlon,
clean po:tlce tlonal naw on cllplay. French
record &amp; ahlh work req'd. Muat Cfty Mobllo Hcm11. 114-446.
bl ca~blt of living I working 9340.
out of town undtr adverH conditione. Tronsportollon lodging For Sale, 2 ltory housa, 7
~~·
&amp; meall paid by company. ln- room1, · 1 112 be;ttte, full •• •
~ttmlht, ntw wood~oa.l fur·
ttrvlt¥11 will be conducted at ntet,
r•modtl~. 4.75 IICrt, 3
42 Mobile Homes
Bot W,.ttm Motel In Gai11~, OH. BatwHn I a.m. &amp; 3 aere. ·wood lei. Must alii prlea
rtdueed. $20,500.00. Phone 614·
for Rent
p.m. Tun. July 25th. E/OIE. MIF. . 9112-11506.
.
2 br., gorogo, U .IO/mo. clop.
Potltlonl now available: Full...111 3 bedroom hOme, . ,.q'ed. "Nie• elu tor 1 couple.
limo RN Suporvloor, midnight Mu•
gorogo. Atoo .. 112 ocro 114-3...0801,
.11~Q004,
lhlft. Starling hourty wag• lor torgo
tot, Mlddfopoll. 1o14-m·5434 614-3aa.8319.
,... groduotolfl0.75 dltforontlol anytime.
,
with exp. V.c.tion, Holiday, Sick
2 br., mobile ho""', rant on
.....,
lnlurance
benefit._ Now U011ng.Quortorbrook·3 br, WNlo Rd. I onl. 11om .HoiHr
ovollobiO. Full·llmo LPN Charge brlck-2 lloot~o. LR, FR, Kft, hoot HosPital. ••15 mo. Calll14-245Nuroo, lldnlghl ohlft. Storllng pump, ond round pooi.City 563t, oftor 1 p.m.
hourtr wage.
For
new Schoolo470,000.114-245-t375.
2 br•• lraller tuhable.tor 1 aduh.
~olf7.45, dHf-nllol wfth
ru.Uc 2 · br. honw, ntar Call 14 441 oaoxp. Vocotion1. olck toovo, ln- N.w
turanc• btntfne available. Con- Crawn Cfty. UI,Ooa. Call 1 1 4 - • • · .
3 bodtOOm oil oloctrlc mobllo
tiel PIMCII'-.t care C.ntlf, 10 Zfll.el46.
JocU.n Plllo. COli 114-44 Nlco 3 bod100m h - 1 both, horne, UOO. mont~.._...
1·
7112. D l - of Nurolng E.O.E. · progo ond iol!lt lol, Oolllpollt ond utlllltoo, 304-1
I'Ony.
prlcod
mid
40'o,
304-175.
F•lty
tumloliod
gilrogo
opt. AI
Samoone to mow town. Muol lloo
15721.
.
·
uiiHIM paid txMIIt ellolrlclty,
IOIIoblo. Caiiii4-44W'I3.

1

Ill. • ~

(Jl

~~~:g,:-o

~--~

•w:llancu~ ftt• ' and~~~

&lt;£: •

be-

I tlltirr 1~---

!D"-OICIIOioiO

.. ,..

a.

•

(J),IIoma ..... .,...,

jii; • · t.U fllillg

1171 Flamingo, 12X65, 3 bid-room. $4200. Localad on rentll
IQt nor Harritonvlllt. 814-7423033.
ChampIon 14 115• 2 br·• I
1974
.
both, lolol oloctrtc, 18000. Call
114--&lt;~45-9211 or 114""4&amp;-4204.
1814 ChiJI'Ipkm 141651 Z beef..
room, 1 bath, total electric.
M,OOO. Call 114·241--82 19 or
ft4-4411-4204.

~~qulvalenl

radu

dll

the

low 1o form fou1 simple wordo.

1:00 (J) lontlnza: The Loet

"Ca11't ,VOU pttlllp &lt;Uiy f~ter? =~!~~ii;;4~-:.;:8;~cp l
,Jol.l lllly's vfaee
greE&gt;II !"

O four
Rearrange -letters of
tcromblod words

I!VlNINQ

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET· PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, S38 Jtckaan Pikt

,-

~::~~~~~"'14"'t2-5857 or

MON., JULY 24

'l AIII

- - - - - - - Ullo&lt;t ~y ClAY I ; POLlAN

. ,. . ,.... U.ti!IQ Inc:. ft Wottn. nt

2 oportmonto, 1 bodtOOm fur.
l"'lahed, Z bedroorRt: unfurnlohod, 304-67$-1315.
z·bedi-oom apt1. lor rent. c.,..
t&gt;Oiod. Nlco ooltlna. loundry
locllkloo ovoltoblo. Cill114-112·
3711 FOH.
3 room fumlahed apt, ground
u- private entrance lind
pork1ng, outaklllo of Henclorson,
111 utiiRoo lncludod 1276.00 por
"'"""'· 304-67HT.JO.
35 W. opl. 2 br., I both, prlvolo
aneiOHd patio. CioN to
grocery " 81o~ &amp; ahopplng cenfer,
water,
Mwer.1. _ lrallh
provldod. $2115/mo. con 814441.&amp;727.

Wanted to Buy

~~

•

cludod. • 1.00/d._tl. Call 114441-3117.

Chu""' Clolhlng Solo, 34:15
Jorryi~ Run Roid. rlghl hand
lork, Mon. July 24 lhN Fri. July
211.

'::~:;~y S@~4\llJ-~t.!fS• ••••

Television
Viewing

Motorcycles

I br.,. wkh OIOVO 6 rofriiiOI'IIIor,,

Pl.Piellant

2282.

74

Gooda

for Rent

9

Houlehold

The Daily Santinei-Paga-9

Ohio '

1989

Monday. July 24, 1989

••

.""', .!

.••

�Pie•

.

10-The Daily Sentinel

Southeast rains continue: tornado hits Florida

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO I AM EDT 7·2$-89

II!:) sNOw
FRONTS: "

-

FIAI"

Wa"" " ' Cold

Monday; July 24, 1989 :

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

By UnWed Preu lnlernatloaal
Scattered showers and thun·
derstorms that covered the sou·
theast pdrtion of the nation
overnight dumped more than an
Inch of rain over parts of Florida,
where residents were cleaning
up after a tornado damaged
boats and businesses.
The National Weather Service
said a. tornado touched down at
South Fort · Myers, Fla., late
Sunday afternoon, cutting a
mile-long ~th of destruction
about two blocks ~de. No
Injuries were reported.
Authorities said the storm
damaged the roofs of .10 busl·
nesses and 29 boats from a
marine sales business. One of the
boats slammed Into a nearby

~SHOWERS

otnce building. About 36 mobile
homes, sev~ condomlnhltns, a
car and a truck also · were
damaJ;!ed .
The weather service said the
storms that blanketed the sou·
thea,st early Monday' developed ·
In warm, . unstable air · that
originated In the Gulf of Mexico.
Forecasters said 1.5 Inches of
rain was reported at Tampa.
was ·

reported at Pensacola, Fla..• and
nearly an inch was recorded at
Cen trevllle. Ala.
Thunderstonns also developed
Sunday afternoon and evening
from the southern plateau across
the great basin to much of the
Rockies; Several large trees ·
were blown down by thunder·
storm winds at Helena, Mont. A
thunderstorm · at Elko, Nev. ,
produced· a wind gust of 58 mph.

WEATIU:R MAP - Durllll e~ly Tueeday, showers and
tliunderstorms are pcNJSible for parlll of }he upper Mll!llsalppl
Valley and tile sou&amp;bern Plalas. UPI

Continued trmn page 1·
University personal and professional developme~~ seminar,
"Understanding and Developing Positive Attitudes last week.
The seminar, directed by Andrew J. Chonko, Ohio
University's director of Continuing Education, Conferences and
Workshops, alqs partlclpan ts In developing strong, positive
attitudes about themselves and others.
Individuals worked through 74 Individual and group projects
focusing on such areas as attitude awareness, management of
emotions, leadership and time management. In addition they
learned about career planning and development, problem
solving methods and handling human relations problems.

EMS lias 13 weekend calls

Pick-3

842
Pick-4

,.

Vol .40. No.66 M
Copyrighted 1989

Cou~cil
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Dally Sentinel Staff
. A resolution in support of the
proposed $1,440,000 elderly
apartment complex by Overbrook Manor . Ltd. on Page St.
was passed by Middleport Village County at Monday night's
meeting held at village hall.
A copy of the.resolution will be .
sent to the Federal Home AdminiStration, which Mayor Fred
Hoffman reported Is one · of
several agencies currently re·
·
viewing the application.
According to Mayor Hoffman
the complex would consist of 40
units with all but one be.lf!i one

TYUM

fXTI1A-$1IBITII

BEI.t:AI'S
til'S

39

bedroom apartments.lt would be
letter from the PUCO regarding
constructed on 1.243 acres adja·
the recent Columbia Gas Co. rate
cent to ihe Overbrook Center on · ordinance passed by the village
Page St. He indicated that there
advising that the company·has 30
is a good . possibility that the daY,s In which to respond. The
project will be approved this iicdlnance provided for rates to
year.
remain the same for another
The resignation of Roberta
year.
Dalley due to health reasons as
Also read at the. meeting was a
the Middleport resident dis· letter from the Meigs County
patcher was ace,epted and a Health Department regarding
letter of appreciation will be sent possible danger of an electrical
to her for her years of service. ·
wire near the water at the
Mayor Ho.f fman reported that swimming pool. Mayor Hoffman
Laney and·· Ji!ecky Tyree have reported that a location change is
been named as replacements on being made by the electric
a 30 day probationary,basis.
company.
Presented at the meeting was a
He atso reported that the

Russell Cullums . 87, 'of Pomeroy , died Saturday at Veterans
Memorial Hospltlal following an
extended illness.
Borh on Feb. 14,1902, at Shade,
he was the son of Isaac Cullums
and Orpha Sheffield Cullums.
He Is survived by his wife. Etta
O'Brien Cullums, Pomeroy; a
daughter, Helen Cullums Swartz,
Coolville; two grandsons, Allen
S.wartz. Vienna. W. Va. and John
Swartz, Pomeroy, and a great·
-grandson, Eric Swartz, •
Vienna, W. Va., along with
several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents he was
AT ONE
preceded In death by three
brothers, Fred, Roger and Cha·
rles Cullums, a half brother, Ray
UMITED
Cullums, and two half sisters,
. DEUVEIY AIEl
Nelle Cullums Dunkel and Myr·
tie Cullums.
He was a member of the
Hemlock Grove Church, the
Hemlock Grove GranJZe. the

99
Cllll.DIIEII'S

ALLEIIIW
'

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
GET 2 GREAT PAN PIZZAS
LOW PRICE

•

Iii
Iii

-""""" --~

• •
•••

.

RITE AID

ONE BAILY
IIUUIPI.E
VITA.II
JJIUJI

ADDITIONAL ITEMS
51,70 COVERS BOTH PIZZAS

Stocks

$119

Dally stock prices
(As of 10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellls &amp;. Loewl
Am Electric Power .. : .......... 29'f.!
AT&amp;T ................. ... ......... .... 37~

Ashland Oil ........... .... .... ... .. 36¥s
Bob Evans ..... ..................... 14%
Charming Shoppes ...... ........ 16~
City Holding Co .. .... ............ 15\&lt;f
Federal Mogul. ................ .... 23
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .... ............ 53
Heck's .. ............................. .. '4
KeY Centurion ............ .. ...... 12~
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Hospita,l news
Veteran• Memorial .
Saturday admissions - Fran·
ces Clark, Minersville.
Saturday discharges - None.
Sunday admiSsions - Ricky
Bolyard, Middleport; Mae
Ketchka, Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges
Marie
Thomas.

Trucks collide, no oTJe hurt

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man said Monday night.
the tall of the plane near where
Investigators have determined. the failed engine was' situated.
the ln·fllght explosion of engine
"The accident IM!gah with
No. 2 last Wednesday severed at engine dlslritegratlon. after that
least two of the three hydraulic we have to determine how
lines· that control the DC·lO, hydraulic systems were des·
NTSB spokesman Ted Lopatkie· troyed," Lopatktewlcz said at a
wlcz said. The lines converge in news conference at Sioux Gateway Airport, where the jetliner
crash-landed. "We already know
that two of the systems were
breached during catastrophic
failure of the engine.
"It's not unheard of where
uncontalned engine failure (ex·
No one was Injured when two trucks coUided on a bridge at 8
ploslon) has caused further dam·
p.m. Monday In Meigs County, on TR. 134,0.2 of a mile east of
age to aircraft, lncludlnghydrau·
CR. 35, In Lebanon Township, according to the Melgs·GaiUa
lie systems," Lopatklewlcz said.
Post, State Highway Patrol.
"However, we have never seen
Troopers said a 1972 GMC truck driven by Richard E. Cooper,
this model engine suffer catas·
30; Guysvllle, Ohio, and a 1985 Ford Ranger driven by JosephR.
trophic engine failure to the
Proffitt. 41. Racine, collided headon on a narrow bridge.
·extent the entire fan system was .
Damage was minor to both vehicles.
lost."'
The patrol cited Cooper for failure to stop within the assured
The fan that feeds air to the jet
· clear distance ahead and no operator's license.
engine, a General Electric CF6-6
Another Meigs County accident occurred at 11:44 a.m .
housed In the DC-lO's tall section,
Monday In Olive Township on SR. 681. 0.1 of a mile east of
has not been found despite
milepost 25. No one was Injured.
extensive ground and aerial
The patrol said a 1970 Olds driven by William P . Spurlock,l7,
searches since the accident July ·
Coolville, went left of center and collided with a 1980 AMC
19.
driven by Steven M. Reed. 34, Reedsville. There was moderate
Meanwhile, United spokesman
damage to both vehicles. . .
Joe Hopkins said the pUot qf
The patrol cited Spurlock for.left of center.
Flight 232, Alfred Haynes, and
The patrol also Investigated an accident at 11: 20a.m. Monday
Second Officer Dudley Dvorak
In Orange Township of Meigs County, on SR. 681 at the junction
would be .released Tuesday from
of CR. 36, about 3.2 miles west of Tuppers Plains. No one was
Marian Health Center In Sioux.
Injured. ·
City and appear at · a ·news.
Troopers reported that Gregory B. Stanley, 32, M!lsslllon, was
conference later In the day.
backing Ills 1987 Ford tractor-trailer frof!l'SR. 681 onto CR. 36 to
The crash has led to at least
tum aroupd and backed Into a 1980 International truck driven ,
three Jawsults. The Des Moines
east on CR. 36 by Gary L. Carr, 20, Albany, Ohio. Damage was
Register said Tuesday two more
moderate to both vehicles.
suits had been flied against
The patrol cited Stanley tor an Improper turn.
United Airlines and airplane,
manufacturer McDonnell
Douglas.
The suits were flied Monday by
Brief explanations of several Meigs County projects which
Wllllam
T .. Mackin, 51, Mullica
have been submitted tor possible filndlng from various state
Hill,
N.J.,
and David Lands·
and federal sources were presepted 't Monday's·meetlng of the
berger, 40, Caldwell. N.J. Both
·
Continued on page 10
"
Continued on page 10

Local news briefs--

3 LITER BGnLE

POMEROY, OHIO

Report on Meigs County Nursing Home Needs,
1976; the Development Plah, County-Owned
Properly-Mulberry Heights, 1981; Comprehen·
slve ~Janning for Rural Development-Highways,
1982; Melgli County Industrial Sites, 1984-86: and
the recently published Meigs County brochure.
Charles Blakeslee, executive director of the
planning commission, presented .Johnson with a
plaque.

SIOUX CITY. Iowa (UP!) The engine explosion that
crippled Unlte.d Airlines Flight
232, causing It to crash· land with
a loss of lllllves, was the worst
ever encountered by federal
Investigators, a National Trans·
portatlon Safety Board spokes-

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JOHNSON RECOGNIZED - Theron Jobnson,
fonner president of the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission, at left, was recognized
Monday by the planning commission lor 20 years
of dedication to the development of Meigs County.
Projects which Johnson Wll&amp; Involved wHh during
the past 20 years Include &amp;be development of the
Comprehensive Plan for Meigs County,l9'79-1990;
the Report on Middleport Housing, 1976; the

NTSB .officials say DC-10
engine explosion worst ever

69

$999

WEST MAIN

' j

11111..

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receives between $16,000 and
$17,000 In revenue from that
source, Mayor Hoffman
reported.
Boat launching facUlties on
Front Street. were again dis·
cussed. Councilman James Clat·
worthy reported that one re&amp;l·
dent told him It was thebestplace
along the river toputln a bOat but
complained about the lack of
parking. It was noted that the
village again this year applied to
the Division of Wildlife for funds
to Improve the 1aunch and do
something about the parking
situation. A similar application
filed last year was turned down .
Parking on Fourth Street was

developme~t

BEIIADRYL

~

traffic light at the Intersection of
Walnut and North Sec.olld is
scheduled to be Installed this
"''
wee k .
Council approved an ordinance
for revision and replacement of
local ordinances to comply with
the Ohio Revised Code, an annual
procedure req ulred by Ia w.
The Increase In gas tax and Its
effect was discussed by Mayor
Hoffman who noted that the
designated one cent tax return to
issue 2 funds will amount to
$57,000,000. He filrther noted that
next year after the additional tal(
phased In the village should
receive an Increase of between
$5,000 and $6,000. The village now

discussed by Councilman Bob
Gilmore who said he had com·
plaints from residents about
Inadequate parking places. The
possibility of decreasing the
yellow curbing at the ¢nd of the
fire department building was
discussed b.u t the consensus of
council members was that the
area Is needed for parking by the
firemen when they go out on
calls.
Attending . the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman and Council
members Jack Satterfield, Wll·
llam Walters, James Clatworthy. Dewey Horton, and Bob
Gilmore.

Meigs planners learn
utility firm will retain

--Area deaths--Russell Cullums

A Multimedia Inc. NewiP•Per

supports elderly complex proposal

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PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
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$527,299.
PICK-4
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PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$277,331.50, with a payoff due of
$178,000.
Super Lotto
17, 23, 36, 37, 40 and 44.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$11,509,932.
Kicker
529947.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$1,410,130.

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Partly cloudy. humid tonight. Low In 70s.'Wednesday,
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::~:,,~n~e~ar 90. Chance of raln30

4

' .

Maida N. Long, · Pomeroy,
attended a workshop at Ohio
University last week on "Teach·
lng of the Holocaust" directed by
David Heaton, OU Ombudsman
and Associate Professor of Eng·
!ish. He provided participants
wl~h teaching methods and mate·
Veterans Memorial Hospital rials needed tor a classroom
Commission, and a 50 yea( preSI!ntatlon of the Holocaust.
member ofthe Modern Woodmen
Indlvlduats attended lectures
of America.
discussing the history and litera· .
Funeral servcles will be held ture of the catastrophic occur·
Tuesday at 1 p.m at the Ewing renee, along with medical and
Funeral Home. The Rev . David film lmpilcatlons.
In addition they took part In a
Prentice will ortlclate and burial
Will be In Burlingham Cemetery.: discussion with actual survivors
Friends may call at ·t he funeral of the Holocaust In order to gain a
home Monday evening from 6 to better understanding .of the
9 p.m.
event.

'

4941

Lottery numbers

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded to 13 calls for assls lance over the weelcend. Seven
calls were on Saturday and six were on Sunday.
Saturday at 1:21 a.m .. Syracuse was called to Minersville for
Eileen Clark who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland was called at 12:59 p.m. to ·Fplden Road tor Penny
Plesset who was taken to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
At 1:11 p.m. Saturday. Middleport was called to Bosworth St.
for Alafalr Harrls'to Holzer Medical Ce11ter.
.
Pomeroy went at 3: 50 p.m. to Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments for
Hubert Clower to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
. Middleport at 5:14 p.m. transtJOrted Sonya Barnett from
North Second Ave. to Holzer Medical Center, and at 7:24p.m.
treated bill did not transport Mildred Jacobs.
Syracuse at 8:06p.m. transported Mickey Tucker to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
·
Middleport made three calls on Sunday. At 10: 48a.m .. the unit
went to Page St. for Bud Darst to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
and at 11:36 a .m. to Pearl St. tor Rlclcy Bolyard to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 3:25 p.m., Middleport went to South
Third Ave. for Carol Toops WhO was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Pometoy was called at 4:28p.m. to Rouje33 torMarthaJane
Elmer who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 10:59 p.m .•
Pomeroy transported Ladonna Large from the station to Holzer
Medical Center.
Racine was called at 8: 22 p.m. to Manuel Road lor Robert
S)lane to Veterans Memorlall:lospltal.

Ohio Lottery

FlU OVER

By United Press International
South Central Oblo
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
low around 70 . . Light winds .
Chance of rain Is 20 perc(!nt.
Tuesday, partly cloudy with a
chance of thunderstorms. High
near 90. Chance of rain Is 30
percent.
·
'Extended Forecast
WednesdaY thrOUJb Friday
Partly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
Wednesday, scattered showers
and thunderstorms Thursday
and becoming fair Friday. Lows
65 to 70 Wednesday and Thurs·
day, and In the 60s Friday. Highs
85 to 90 Wednesday and Thurs·
day, and In the 80s friday.

.--Local news briefs...

Showers and thunderstorms •' ·
also were scattered over Ken· ·
tucky, .the Tennessee Valley , the :
Mississippi V;liley, the Texas: .;
Panhandle and portions of south· ·
ern·Texas . .
Scattered thunderstorms Sunday dotted the southern United
States as high winds lri Fldrida
caused treacherous riptides that
claimed the· lives of three
swimmers.

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· Projects revieWed for planners

___

.......,

Hy HANCY YOACHAM
Dally Sentinel Staff
Thirteen hundred acres of
property at Great Bend wiH
remain a ·holding .of Columbus
Southern Power Company as a
possible future power plant site.
Tl\at was 1he message Monday
from Robert L. Jones, public
affairs Information manager,
and Peter Slpawnyk, executive
assistant, both with Columbus
Southern Power, to members of
the Meigs County Regional Planning Commission.
Planning Com!1llsslon President Fred Hoffman had re·
quested an update from the
power company to answer ques·
!Ions surfacing locally regarding
future development · of what
many area residents regard as
one of Meigs County's prime
development sites.
Monday's meeting was held a I
the Farmers Bank and Savings
Company building.
"I don't come with good news
or bad news,'' said Robert Jones .
The site ' ~remains a viable plant
site," he said, but there are no
plans as yet to develop a plant at
the site.
In the past few years, Colum·
bus Southern Power was acquired by the American Electric
Power system. However, at the
time the 1,300 acre Great Bend
site was purchased In the mid·
1970's, Columbus Southern
Power, then Columbus and
Southern Electlic Company, was

B-52 blast
leaves one
person dead
SAN ANTOji!IO CUPI) - A
B-52 bomber caught fire and
exploded during refilellng at
Kelly Air Force Base, killing one
civilian worker and Injuring 11
others, Air Force officials said
Tuesday .
Witnesses said the explosion at
10:35 p.m. Monday se.n t a giant
fireball In to the night sky. ratlled
nearby base housing and showered debriS as far as a mile 1
away.
Air · Force spokesman Gary ,
DuPriest said one civilian
worker was killed and 11 others
were Injured. DuPriest said
seven of the Injured were taken to
Wilford Hall Medical Center at
nearby Lackland Air . Force
Base, and one was transferred to
Brook Army Medical Center In
San Antonio. Their conditions or
Identities were not Immediately
available.
Four other civilian workers
who were slightly hurt were
treated at the Kelly Air Force
.Base lntlrmary and ·released,
DuPriest said. ·
'The Injured were a 12-man
·crew employed by the Air Force
Logistics Command," DuPriest
said.

-~-- .

--- ·

•

stte

a separate company .from AEP.
At the time of the purchase,
Columbus Southern .Power
owned only a ·limited number of
future plant sites and Great Bend
was high on the list of preferred
locations. Since joining the AEP
system, however,theGreatBend
site has become one·of several
sites held throughout the AEP
system. Now. any need for . a
power plant must be assessed as
a collective need within the AEP
system.
Based on current information,
the earliest AEP might need
another generating plant wo.uld
be the mid-1990's.' Jones said.
That would probably mean that
construction on such a plant
.would sl;lrt in the early 1990's. he
explained.
The Great Bend acreage Is not
Included In AEP's rate base,
Jones added, so customers won't
pay on the acreage until It
becomes a useful property. He .
pointed out however that the land
Is still highly productive farming
land.
"Our intention Is to hold the
unit to he developed Into a future
plant stte," he repeated.

Many variables must be taken
Into account when a company
chooses a site for a plant. Jones
said when the final version of the
proposed Clean Air Act is passed
by Congress, it W.m certainly
play a part In future decisions by
power companies. The amount. of
avalllible property and access!·
bUlly of the property via water,
rail and highway also play a part
In site selection.
Although Jones reiterated sev·
era! times that Great Bend is
valuable to the company for
possible construction of a plant,
he could not say exactly where
Great Bend rates on the com·
pany's liSt of possible plant sites.
"We have a limited number of
plant sites In Ohio sowewlllhave
to start using what we have," he
said.
. Following the explanation of
plans for the site, Jones and
Splawnyk responded to questions
· from commission members. Ron
McDade, area manager of Co·
lumbus Southern Powfr. Gallipolis, was also· at the meeting and
joined In the question and answer
session.
Continued pn page 10

Democrats oppose cut
in capital gains tax
WASHINGTON (UP I ) - Pres·
!dent Bush honored members of
the House Ways and Means
Committee, even as Speaker
Thomas Foley of Washington
urged Democrats on the panel to
deny the White House a political
· victory by opposing a cut In the
capital gains tax.
With the panel expected to vote
In the next two weeks on a plan to
reduce the tax. Bush and his
aides have stepped up lobbying
efforts and spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater said the White House Is
"hopeful" the president will
prevail in what he described as a
"very close" fight.
Although Democrats dominate
the committee 23·13 and the
Democratic leadership has
strongly denounced any cut In the
tax, at least.six Democrats oil the
panel are believed to be support·
lng the reduction. The switch
would give Bush a one-vote win.
That would be significant not ·
only because Bush has made the
tax cut a key domestic priority,
but also because Democrats
complained bitterly during the
1988 presidential campaign that
Bush' a proposal was not fair and
would be a giveaway to the
wealthy.
The pre~lden t, however ,
argues that Cll ttlng the tax will .
stimulate business transactions
and raise ·tax revenlie for the
government.
As the White House lobbied for ·
support and Democratic leaders
tried to get their forces to close
ranks, Bush went out of his way

--·~- ---- -·-

__{)

Monday to spend time with
members of the powerful Ways
and Means Committee on which
he served when he represented
Texas in Congress.
Traveling to Capitol Hill, he
attended a private lunch with
co!1lmlttee members wno were
celebrating the 200th annlver·
sary of the panel . He and his wife,
Barbara, later planned to attend
the committee's bicentennial
dinner.
White House aides and lawmakers Insisted the pres id ential
aappearances were light ·
hearted and no business was
discussed. Still, there was no
mistaking Bush's message.
"As you might have guessed,
the Ways and Means Committee
Is rather lmportan t'to our work
over here, " noted Fitzwater .
The pl'l!sklentlal attention also
was not lost on House Democratic leaders, including Foley,
who contended that while the tax
cut may raise tax revenue In the
first two years, it would eventually lose money and make It more
difficult to balance the federal
budget.
Asked his advice to Democrats
on the · comm lttee who · are
supporting a cut In the tax, Foley
said simply: "Don't do II."
"We're just trying to appeal to
the glllid Judgment of the
members of the committee "
Foley added, noting the vote 'ts
''close, too close for anyone to be
confident on either side." •
U approved, the tax cut WOuld
Continued on pqe 10 ·

___________....______,.,_

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