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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

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Stocks

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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~
Lands' End ........ .. ............... 28¥s
Limited Inc .................. :.....33~
Multimedia Inc .. .................98¥.!
Rax Restaurants .................. 2¥s
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .... ........ 16~
' Shoney 's Inc ....................... 11 ¥s
Wendy's Inti .. ...................... 5JYg
Worthington Ind ................. 22~

AHorneys at Law

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Auto, motorcycle, and all injury
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SENIOR
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collect: (614) 224·1160

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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

-~····.!!l-~!1

VICKERY, RIEHL_. ALTER

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580 S. High StrMt
Columbu1, Ohio 43215

306 EAST MAIN SYIEO
POMEROY I OHIO
PHARMACY
PHONE: 992·2516
••

• Co-CoUMtl cases a(ctpttd •
'

''

.'

..

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:)

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~

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•

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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..

II

Is

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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1 Section. 10 pages · 26 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. July 25, 1989

MYLAII'IJ./1

508.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,494,729.50, with a payoff due of
$527,299.
PICK-4
5311.
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.

I

•

•

60MILLION

· CLEVELAND CUP!) - Satur·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:

Partly cloudy. humid tonight. Low In 70s.'Wednesday,
pw·tlv cloudy, hot, and humid.
::~:,,~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.

RITE AID

ft Occluded Weather

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Indians
topple
Yankees

· 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.

-~-- .

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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 ·

___________....______,.,_

�Tuesday, July 25, 1989.

Commentary
The Da~ Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblo·
DEVOTED TO THE INTERES..,S OF TilE MEIGS·!IIASON AREA

~lb

'

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~~ '""-''-~,..,.._c::I,.-

'

ROBERT L. WINGETT·
Publisher
PAT WHITEIIEAD
Asslo!lant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
General Manager

LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he leBo than 300
words loag. AU letters are subject to edlllll&amp; ud must he·slped with
name, address and ltlephone number. No unolped letters wiD he published. Letters should he In good taste, addr-lnlls&amp;ueo,....; personal!·
lies.
· ;r
.

B-2 flies, but ·
where is it going?
By .ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior E41tor
WASHINGTON- Now that we know the B-2 really will fly, the next
question is whether it is something we really should buy.
You may have heard that the black, bal-shapedsteaith bomber that
finally left the ground last week in California is the world's most
expensive airplane. We a'iready have laid out $23.biilion for the single
plane that is IIY,ing and 12 others being built.
Based on the$70 billion estimated cost for a fleet of132 B-2s. the unit
price comes out at $530 million and change per copy, which is even
more money than Michael Miiken made in his best yearofseilirtg junk
bonds.
Enthusias ts of the B-2 hasten to add that the $530 million includes
the cost of research and supportfacilities and that the actual costfora
stripped down B-2 is " only" $274 million. They note that is only 20 per
cent more than our present B-1 bombers, which don't have the ability
to evade radar detection like the B-2 is designed to do.
What sometimes doesn't get mentioned in all the discussion about ·
the B-2 is that it is not the only major weapon the United States has to
defend Itself against a potential enemy. It is, in fact, only one-third of
the U.S. defense system .
.
In the process of modernizing the three elements of the country's
Triad defense, the military already is replacing Polaris submarines
with Tridents (and having some problems with the new long-range
missiles that gb with it) and has be~n ins!3lling MX land-based
missiles to replace the old Minuteman ICBM. Still bi&gt;ing debated Is
whether smaller Midgetman missiles should replace the MX.
So a decision to slop or slow B-2 production obviously would not
leave the country undefended. We still would have the latest in
undersea and underground missiles as well as existing older aircraft
to defend ourselves.
· Als o obviously, it would improve the Triad to have an airplane that
~ an fool radar en route to a target; but the question is whether the B-2
really is essential to the defense of the United States or the free world.
Its manufacturers, the Air Force and members of Congress from
districts where it is built, to no one's surprise, say it is. They add, In
TV commercials that began running in the week before Congress
act ed on funds for ther B·2, that it is the only weapon oft he Triad "that
can be called back" once launched.
· With all that in mind, Congress must balancethevalueoftllestealth
bomber against any number of other uses to which the money might
be put. Education. for example. Shelter for homeless people.
perhaps. Repairs to the bridges that are falling down on our highway
system . On and on the list could go, and a lot could )Je purchased,
improved or repaired with $70 billion. It might even be used to reduce
th e federal deficii .
In the immediate period after 1980. it was a safe guess that if the
military wanted a new weapon, the administration would push for it
a nd Congres s would grant the funds .
The White House and the Pentagon are seeking the money to go
ahead with the B-2. but the defense procurement scandals and the
rapidly changing picture of U.S.-Soviet relations may make for a
frosty climate on Capitol Hill for new military hardware requests.

:Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, July 25, the 206th day of 1989 witlll59 to follow .
The moon is in its last quarter .
The morning sta r is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include
Revolutionary War Gen. Henry Knox In 1750, artists Thomas Eakins
in 1844 and Maxfield Parrish in 1870, actors Waller Brennan In 1894
an&lt;:J Jack Gilford in 1907 t age 821, actress Barbara Harris in 1935 (age
541. and folk singer·songwriter Steve Goodman in 1948.

•

Berry's World

Tuesday. July 25. 1989

,.c.n,

-ca

@ t119 by NEA. Inc.

"What's the matter with me? I'm in my mid30s and I haven't made my first million yet."

evening.
.
By ERIK K. LIEF
probably still be out there."
UPI Sports Wrller
"One mistake and we lose,"
Rick Reu scllei, 13-4, surrenWhen Kevin Mitchell sees a · said Smaltz, whose record dered five hits over five innings,
mistake, he hits lt.
dropped to 11 ·7. " It 's frustrating, but was forced toleavethegame
Atlanta rlgllt·hander John but l'm not going to let it gel me in the fifth Inning when he
Smqltz delivered just one errant down. I just go out th ere and pitch aggravated a groin pulL Jeff
pitch Monday night and the San as hard as I can and whatever · Brantley allowed two hits over
Francisco Giants capitalized on happens, happens ."
· one and one-third ilmings and
Mitchell's 33td home run of the
Mitchell showed ample respect Craig Lefferts held !hi? Braves to ·
season to produce a 2-0 victory for Smaltz but simultaneously one hit for one and two-third
over the Braves .
admitted the Importance of being · innings . Steve Bedrosian gonwo
Alt~ough S!Roltz was deterpatient at 11\e plate.
,
outs to earn his 14th save.
mined to minimize his mistakes
"Smoltz is a tough pitcher,"
Ernest Riles led off the San
against the Giants, the one bad said Mitchell, "but all pitchers Francisco fourth with a single
offering to the major-league make mistakes. What you have and moved up on a balk by
leader In home runs and RBi to do is sit on his mIstakes. It he Smoltz . One out later, Mitchell
translated into a disheartening didn't make any mistakes, w.e'd drilled an 0-2 pitch over the

Truth may be surfacing a~ut air crash

M~t.J,

oF

·Air DC-8 were not contaminated
by ice," the dissenting report
concluded. "Fire broke out on
board while the aircraft was in
fllgh, possibly due to a detonation
in the cargo department."
Dissenting members of · the
Canadian Avla(lon Safety Board
told our associate Jim Lynch that
they were repeatedly barred
access . to findings and key
witnesses. The stonewall seems
to have been blessed by U.S.
officials, who doubtless feared
the public backlash If news
leaked that terrorists may have
brought down the plane. The
"Islamic Jihad," a Beirut-based
terrolst group, took credit for the
crash at the time, but the State
~partment and White House
· quickly dismissed the claim as a
hoax.

age, Irving Plnkel, a former
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration rocket analyst,
identified a small section on the
right side pf the plane that
"snowed strong evid.ence of
explosion damage."
Plnkel's unpublished source,
Canadians were apparently dl·
rector by U.S. officials to steer an
speculation away from terrorIsm, and toward mechanical
mishap. This same source noted
that the crash came.at a sensitive
juncture in the .then secret
Iran-contra dealings.
The soldiers killed In the
chartered DC-8 jef!lner were
heading home-for Clltistmas. and
were. bound for Fort Cambell,
Ky., from Egypt, where they tiad
served with the Multinational
Force and ObserVers to monitor
compliance with the 1979 Egypt·
Israel peace treaty.
Two days before the crash,
former Lt. Col. Oliver North
wrote a memo to Ills immediate
superiors noting how livid the
lranlaris were that the United
States had shipped them the

Eyewitnesses saw flames and
an explosion before the planeburst into pieces over Gander,
Newfoundland. That account
supports the terrorism theory.
And after examining the wreck-

Jack Anderson

wrong HAWK missiles. Two
weeks earlier, the Ira11ians had .
fired off an urgent messae to toe
White House charging that "you
are now cheath\g us, and you
must act quickly to remedy the
situation."
The FBI told · us they only
provided Initial tllurnbprlnting
and lab work to identify the dead,
a curious claim in Ugh! of the fact
that the FBI's own report on the
accident runs 247 pages - more
than 200 of which have been
csensured.
- Mounting public outrage and
disbelief has forcedtheCanadian
government to appoint one of its
foriner supreme court justices 'to
review the accident reports and
determine whether the probe
should be reopened.
Zona Phillips, co-founder of
"Families fOr the Truth About
Gander," maintains that her
stepson, Sgt. James Phillips Jr.,
and the other returning passengers were Indeed and victims
of terrorism.

'

i 8M ~iCK

E.I.~Cl(eNeP .

~ePFiS.H~
HUSTLES FOR HIT - Braves pllcher· John Smoltz charges
down the first base line as he outhustles the bunt and the throw of
Giants catcher Terry Kennedy (background) In the fifth Inning of
Monday night's gBI?'e In Atlanta. The Giants won 2-0. (UPI)

TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS - Rutland
came oul of the loser's bracket tO defeai ·Easlern
twice In a row and win the 1989 Middleport Pony
League championship. First row, left to right Keith Jones, Jake Kennedy, Scott Peterson, Billy
J!)nes, Jason
Dellavalle,'Sh!lwn Ingles, and
.
. Abby

Welch. Back row - Coach Dennis McKinney,
Jermey Rupe, Frank McGhee, Terry McGuire,
Eric Peterson, Kevin Musser, Tim Petterson,
Gary -Adams and Coach Wayne Adams, absent
were Randall Johnson ·and Coach Jack Peterson.

.

Trail Blazers regain Cooper
•
•
•

•

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) Center Wayne Cooper, traded by
Portland to Denver live years
ago in a six·player deal that
made Ki ki Vandeweghe a Trail
Blazer, Monday was reacquired
by the Blazers from the Nuggets.
Details of the contract were not
revealed by Portland team officials. But the Rocky Mountain
News In Denver reported Cooper
si&amp;ll,~ a, tllr~year ~al wltb
J:&gt;otlland !c;~r $1.1 million annu-

•

I

I

t

••

-..

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Capt . Gary Vance, comTen years earlier, two Los
mander
of the sheriff's station
Angeles Police. De.partmjljlt ~!fie·
here,
offers
this explanation for
ers were dispatched to tWome
.
the
fusillade
that
killed Aborn: ••t
of Eulia Love,-a 39-year-old black
think
each
deputy
fired until he
woman, to investigllte a complaint from the Southern Califor- perceived the tllteat had been
nia Gas Co. that she had failed to eliminated. I can't remember a
shooting where the deputies
pay her bill.
Love became upset and was counted how many limes they
about to attack the officers with fired. Either you're justified in
an 11-inch-long kitchen knife she shooting or you 're not."
A very different perspective Is
held, the police said. Both policeoffered
by Don Jackson, a black
men emptied their guns and eight
who
formerly
served on the
of the 12 shots they fired hit Love.
In
Hawthorne,
police
force
She died Instantly In her front
another
Los
Angeles
suburb, and
yard. In her purse, police found a
who
has
become
an
outspoken
money order made out to the gas
company to pay the delinquent critic of the way law enforcement
bill. .
personnel· treat blacks . and
The official investigation Into members of other minority
the mid-April shooting in Lancas- groups.
"Black youths do not graduate
ter is still being conducted but the
results are predictable. Already, into adulthood without the mark
the community's major has said of pollee Intimidation or pollee
the incident was "shocking," but violence sealed In their methe city council has refused to mory," says Jackson, who cites a
create a commission to invesll· half-dozen other cases In recent
gate alleged civil rights years of fatal police shootings of
civilians that he believes cannot
violationS.
be justified.

Artful media manipulation for anything. We heard Hungarian
a worthy purpose,-so sllcl~ that it communist leaders announce
Is not slick at all, Is ihe jackpot ·.that communism bad failed. We
skill for a modern political beard a network anchor, NBC's
,. leader. In Poland and Hungary, Tom Brokaw, talk about "40
George Bush lilt the jackpot. .
years of Communist oppresThere was probably more slon." In all, a vivid description
network television coverage of of an empire that had been very
those countries In tlltee days evil indeed.
Tile quote of the week ·came
than there has been In the last
three years. Nor was It mindless born Lech Walesa who said, "We
"photo opportunity" stuff. .The have a chance to be the America
of the East." Poles were sent to
network coverage had a theme.
The networks told us, with the slammer for less.
grace and virtuosity, the truth
By the time the press corps got
about communism today: that it io Paris, CBS's.Leslie Stahl was
has been a brutal failure, that &amp;aylng to Dan Rather that
democracy can be the wave of "President Bush comes here
the future even In· the Soviet when the whole world Is celebratrlm-lands, that America wlll In« American values."
likely be the big player If
Why this outburst of televised
democracy Is to prevail as the- geo-political reality? First,
Iron Curtain corrodes.
what's happening In Poland and
The good news Is that the Hungary Is remarkable. Second,
networks told the bad .news. We President Bush decided to make
saw the empty stores and long · the trip. Third, t1Je new television
lines In Poland. We saw the technology gives the president
Solidarity legislators tell us more agenda-setting ppwer than
about their experiences In jail. eVer before.
·
We saw full stories In Hungary
Thus, all the major networks
and heard about" now hardly ... traveled the anchor:" Brokaw,
anyone bad the money to buy

v

1

Robert
Walters

"History has taught AfricanAmerican men that to be in the
vicinity of the crime could lead to ·
·a deadly encounter," adds Jackson · in describing what can
typically happen when the black
is stopped by police as a possible
suspect:
"He is described as being
belligerent or aggressive in his
posture. He supposedly reaches
for a weapon or 'a flashy metal
object.' He is shot down In the
street. No weapon · is found.
Typically, the man Is unarmed.... Nevertheless, It Is
considered a good ·shooting by
police standards." ·
Film critics, social commentators and political artalysts are
expending a great deal of effort
these days probing t)le relationship between white pollee officers and blacks In Spike Lee's
controversial movie, "Do the
. Right Thing." . Instead, they
ought to come to Southern
California for a crltiallook at the
real thing ..

EM &amp;ern

By Unllf'dfrt'!olti lnh•r•tlolllll

••

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Rather, Peter Jennings (ABC) , So ·when Bush said "I'm
and Bernard Shaw (CNN) not . going," each network had little
only went to Hungary and Po- choice but to say, "Me too." And ·
land, but took whole broadcast once the networks went, with
teams with them. Accordingly, their anchors, they served up
the anchors typically introduced broad coverage - sometimes
the stories on the death of Sir five or six stories per night. Once
Laurence Olivier from Budapest. they did that, they did it well. And
Once the program comes from once the networks did It well, the
a faraway place, editorial logic public paid more attention to
dictates that t)lere will be plenty Eastern Europe than they ever
of coverage beyond just what
had before.
happened at the state dinner or
Cynics say that these sorts of ··
what the communique said, We . geo-palitical circuses are de~ ·
get the sort of full flavor that we
signed primarily to boost a
saw from Eastern Europe.
· ·
president In the polls.
Traveling the anchor Is not a
There's more to it. Bush has a ;
new television technique. It's
difficult chore. As the Soviets
been around since the days of
appear to recede as a military
gavel-to-gavel coverage of the
threat, American foreign policy
national political conventions.
must be seen to have both a cause
But it used to be enormously
and a constituency is the patrio- :
expensive and complex. Now,
tic and proud American public . .
with satelllte transmission, comBut the public reacts with politiputers and light-weight cameras
cal :iest (and resources) only as It
and editing equipment, It's easempathizes with the situation.
ier and cheaper. And com~tllion
That empathy is bolstered In a
within the ~levlslon Industry
media democr!ICY when the big
makes It Ukelr that It the story Is
networks put on an Intelligent
good, and If one network travels
circus. Bush took circus hotses to
the anchor, so will Ute others.
water. Anchors away!

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WASHINGTON (UP!)
Cou·rtside temperatures of 104
degrees and oppressive humidity
· blanketed the $415,000 Sovran
!;lank Classic .Monday, keeping
opening-round attendance low
and sending athletes beneath
iced towels for relief.
The top seed lo play Monday.
No. 9 Richard Mat uszewskj,
ranked 58th in the world, lost to
Gianiuca Pozzi of Italy 6-3, 6-4 at
the Washington Tennis Center.
In another, Richey Reneberg
needed. just more than an hourto
defeat No. 13 Milan Srejber of
Czechoslovakia 7-6 · (H), 6·0.
Srejber looked strong In the first
set but fell apart in the second,
losing every service and only
reaching deuce In the third and
_
fifth games.
Also, Neil ·Broad defeated Bret
Garnett, 6-4, 7-6 (7-3); Phillip
Johnson beill Dan Goldberg 6-4,
· 6-2; John Ross topped Scott
Warner ·6-4, 7-6 (7-4); Jeff Ta-

rango downed Michael Robert son 6-2, ·6·3, and Gary Muller
ousted Phililpe Pech 6-4, 6-3.
The tournament was stuijg last
week when John McEnroe withdrew because of a shoulder
Injury suffered at Wimbledon
and defending champion Jimmy
Connors because of "extreme
mental and physical
exhaustion." .
The top seeds -Tim Mayotte,
Brad Gilbert, Jay Berger, Yannick Noah of France and Dan
Goldie - do not play until
Tuesday's start of the second
·
round.
Matuszewski ran Pozzi from
alley to.alley. But as the first set
lengthened and the late-morning
heat grew more intense, Matuszewski's play became erratic, as
he sent several easy forehands
long or into the net.
"I lost the match more than
· he won it," Matuszewski said.
"He 'just kept It in play and I
m lssed the shots."

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Je~n

INTERNA.TION.U LEt\GUE

, ........... ,....... ,..... .11 II

Kovran

hampers tennis action

nament's Most Valuable Player.
Eastern's Mike Smith won the
award for most hits.

(A AI.

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. Rutland jumped out to a 3.0
lead In the first Inning when
Kevin Musser reached base On an
..,error. Mike Welch and tournament MVP Terry Me Guire each
singled, followed by a one out
double by -Gary Adams. Rutland
added insurance runs in the third
and sixth innings, scoring a pair

of runs in each Inning. Eastern
scored single runs in the first,
fourth and sixth innings .
Leading the way at the plate
for Rutland were ·Weich and
McGuire with two singles each.
Adams added a double and
Jermey Rupe and B.J. Jones
each had a single.
For Eastern, Jeff Durst liad
two singles wl;l.lle Mike Smith and
Wes Holter Elich chipped in with
a single.
McGuire was the winning
pitcher, limiting Eastern to four
hits. He fanned 13 and walked 3.
Jeff Durst was the losing pitcher .
He and Mike Smith co)Tlbined to
give up 8 hits . The struck outll,
walked 3 and hit one batter.
Eastern -had made it to the
cha·mpionshlp roUnd l.n Impressive fashion by defeating Pomeroy 18-4, Rutland 14-2 and Syracuse 11·4 before Rutland
defeated them for the title.
McGuire was named the tour-

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Sin.•i--wn................u

By DAVE HARRIS
MIDDLEPORT Rutland
came out of the losers bracket to
defeat Eastern in two straight
games and win the 1989 Middleport Pony Leag\le Tourn~erit
last week at Middleport. .
After Eastern defeated Rutland 14-2 earlier In the t6urmimeht~ Rutland won the right fora
rematch by defeating the Middleport Yankees 5-4 in Slrinings, the·
Middleport !). 's 11-5 and Syracuse, 15-3.
Rutland then forced the extra
game by defeating Eastern 4-3 in
eight Innings.
'

Cubs 3, Cardinals 2
At St. Louis, pitcher Mike
Bielecki drove in the go-ahead
run with a suicide squeeze and
Sllawon Dunston collected three .
hits and scored iwice, boosting
the Cubs fo their third stralgh.t
victory. Mike Bielecki, 10-5,
halted the Cardinals' four -game
win streak and Mitch Williams
added Ills 24th save. Scott Terry, .
7-9, took the .loss. Jose Oquendo
extended his hit ling streak to 22..
games, tops in the majors this
season.

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Rutland, cops Pony League tourney

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AMERICAN AS!IlCIATION

F.a."t

Ben Wattenberg

ally. The Nuggets reportedly
offered Cooper $1 million a year
for two years.
The 6-10 Cooper became an
unrestricted free agent after
playing out his contract with
Denver last season.
·
The Blazers traded Cooper,
forward Calvin Natt; guard Lafayette Lever and two draft
choices to Denver in 1984 for
V 1\lldeweiJbe., . ,
·
' ''

,........ .. ....... .. .. .. .. .... ..41 H

Majors

Some have reason to fear police
LANCASTER, Calif. (NEA) On a fatefulafternooilearilerthis
year, seven officers of the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's Department were summoned ·to a fast
food outlet )Jere to confront a
50-year-old black woman named
Betty Jean Aborn.
Seated at a table In the rear of
the restaurant, she was accused
of stealing several ice .c ream
bars from a convenience store
across the street. An apparently
disturbed transient. Aborn
wielded a 10-inch-long butcher
knife and shrieked at the sheriff's
deputies who sought to take her
Into custody that they would have
to kill her first.
A sergeant fired several stungun darts at Aborn, but they had
no apparent effect. Then, according to the law officers, an
agitated Aborn lunged across the
table with the knife above her
head. Three deputies opened fire.
No fewer than 28 shots were fired
to subdue a lone woman with a
knife, and 18 of them struck her.
She dli!d Instantly.

center-field fence.
With his 33rd homer In his 94th
game. Mitchell is ahead of Babe
R\lth's 60 horne· run pace of 1927. :
Ruth hit his33rd homer In his 95th :
game that year. Roger Marls, ·
who hit 61 homers in 1961. hit his ,
33rd home run In his 82nd game of :
the season.
Smaltz gave up three hits and :
struck ou I a career-high 10 In ·
going .the distance for the fifth :
time this season.
.
Atlanta loaded the bases In the '
fourth with none out, butlailed to :
score. TommyGreggandLonnie :
Smith hit singles and Dale ·
Murphy walked to load the bases. :
Darrell Evans flied to center,
Andres Thomas popped to second :
and Jeff Treadway flied to left. .
Elsewhere in the National ·
League:
'
.P irates 7, Dodgers 4
.
At Pittsburgh, Barry Bonds :
went 3 for 3 with his 14th home .
run to lead Pittsburgh. Winner ·
Bob Walk. 8-6, was ejected from
the game In the aftermath of an
. benches - ~learlng Incident
prompted when Gary Redus was
hit in the left eye by Los Angeles
pitcher Tim Crews and was
carried off the field on a
stretcher. Mike Morgan, 6-11,
took the loss.
Expos 4, Phillies 3
(12 Innings)
At Montreal, Tim Wallach hit a
bases-loaded single with one out
In the 12th inning, ·making a
winner of Andy McGaffigan, 3-4. .
Greg Harrls, 1-2, took the loss.
Huble Brooks and Rex Hudler
homered for Montreal and starter Bryn Smith lowered his
major league-leading ERA to
2.03.

When the altchors are aweigh

'I"

Mitchell's 33rd HR gives Giants 2-0 win

Page-2-The Daily Sentini:ll
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON -Ofthecountless classified and censored
pages in the history of interna.'
Ilona! terrorism, perhaps none is
potentially more explosive than
those documenting the De·
ce111ber ·· 1985 plane ·crash in
Canada that clamed 248 American soldiers.
The plausabillty of the oflicial
explanation ·- iced wings - is
slowly melting away as fresh
disclosures surface on how badly
botched the initial Investigation
was. The U.S. Air Line Pilots
Association recently blasted the
Canadians' November 1988crash
report as being based on "manufactured e"ldence."
Many of the Canadians involved in the investigation have
disowned tMir own report. Five
of the 10 members of the
Canadian Aviation Safety Board
rejected the conclusions that ice
on the wiQgs caused the jet to
stall on takeoff. One member quit
before the report was published,
the other four wrote a dissenting
version. "The wings of the.Arrow

·Thee Daily Sentinel Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I '

w.;-.c..'"'.

ColleP'
E•Wra Kentriy - Wemen'1 bMhl·

hall wam placed on I·J'!at NCAA
prlhlllo&amp;

Gltis_,ro Blatt - BMehll Coach
0. ll'lrl ... , mlpell named IMno
Hall and Paul MdhMa . . .lui
foolltalleMc:hel.
~.,.,..

- Named Gl'~~t Doria atWttlc

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992-2094

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-

HURDLING CHAMP ~California second baseman Johnny Ray
does a split as he hurdles over Oakland's Rickey Hent!erson In the
third inning of Monday night's game In Oakland. The Angels won
5-4, (UP I)

Giamatti says he will
not cut deal with Rose
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. iUPil
- Baseball Commissioner ·A.
Bartlett Giamatti said Monday
he will not negotiate a settlement
with Pete Rose concerning
charges the Cincinnati manager
bet on baseball games .
" I set out to investigate a very
serious set of allegations," he
said. " I a m not going to negotiat e
my position. I am not going to
n e g o I i a t e
t h e.
commissionership."
"I never said that I wouldn' t
lis ten to anybody, but that is n' t
the way the formal process is
·designed. I am going to sit a nd
wait to have a I court ) hearing,
and eve ntua lly I trust they will: "
- The co urts, the commissioner
added, work "exceedingly s low,
sir. bu t. eventually, exceedingly
fine."
; The case is before U.S. Distr ict
;Judge Joh n Holschuh in Colum. bus. dge in Columbus. Ohio. He
plans to ru le .Ju ly 31 whether ro
keep the case in federal co urt or
return it to Hamilton Coun ty
Cour t in Cincinnati before Judge
_No rber t NadeL
• The commissioner 's office ap. peaied to federa l co urt a ft er
; Nade l iss ued a te mporary restra ining order to halt a .J un e 25
hearing Giamalt i sc heduled with
Rose tha t cou ld have resulted in
banilif!g baseba ll's all-time hit
' leade r from the ga me.
: Giam atti and John ny Bench,
. who s ta r red wi th Rose on Cincinnati' s " Big Red Mach ine" tea ms
of t he 1970s. s poke on the
allega tio ns before the Reds a nd
. Boston Red Sox were to play in

the HaU of Fame game. The
exhibition was canceled because
airpla nne troubl es on the Reds' ·
fl ight from Montreal.
Rose said he would not attend
the game because he did not want
the "circus" atmosphere sur·
rounding the sca ndal to detract
from the attention he says Bench
and Car I Yas trzemskl deserve
fo r their Hall of Fame Induction.
"Baseball has to be the
winner, " said Bench, now a
broadcaster with the Reds. " It
cannot. be taken down by anything or anybody."
Bench said if Ros, bet against
the Reds while a player he should
not be inducted into the Hall of
Fame. However. Bench said, If
Rose bet on the team while
managing he should not be
barred from the honor.
"To bet agai nst them 1the
Reds) would go against everything." Bench sa id .
Base ba ll wr iters will eventua lly det ermine if Rose will be
enshrined. If Rose is banned.
Bench said, ·'it would be crushing, a bsolu tely crushing, if that
were the final result."
Bench said the controversy
surrounding Rose has hurt the
tea m. Th e Reds have lost eight
stra ight, their worst slump in
three yea r s.
"Th ey I the player s I are s ufferin g." Bench said. "I mean, this
has been over a month. You have
. to look forward to coming to the
ball par k. The clubhouse Is your
have n. It ' s unraveling to the
point where it's wa it until nex t
yea r already."

Pomeroy-Midclaport,

Tuesday, July 26. 1989

Ohio

Belle's grand
slam'
lifts
Cleveland
·
to
.
7-3 .t riumph over.JVew York Yankees
By TOM WITHERS
lng Carter to take second.
UPJ.IIports Writer
The play forced Green to order
Faced with the p&lt;isslbillty or the pass on O'Brien.
sevenstralghtdefeats,NewYork
"We can't make those kind of
Yankees manager Dallas Green · throws, " Green said or Kelly 's
decided to gamble Monday night. · ilhadvlsed throw. "It set the
If Qnly Green knew what Cleve- whole .Inning up; 1 gambled (on
land ·manager DOc Edwards was walking O'Brien) and I lost."
thinking. ,.
The win moved Cleveland to ·
With the score lied in the within ·5~ games or idle Baltisevenih Inning and two Cleve- more In the AL East, while the
land Indians on base, Green Yankees fell eight games back
decided to walk Pe te O'Brien and with their seventh straight toss.
load the ba5es for rookie Joey Cleveland starter John Farrell,
Belle, who promptly deposited 6-9, pitched seven innings for the.
,reliever Eric Plunk's third pitch win. Yankee reliever Lee Guet into the left-field stands for a terman, 2-4,' took the .loss.
grand slam that powered the
Belle was called up from
Indians to a 7-3 victory.
Canton-Akron or the Eastern
Before Belle belted his homer, League July 15 when Cory
Edwards had a premonitlori.
Snyd~r went on the disabled list.
"I looked at Mark (pitching Belle, playing in Snyder's right
coach Mark Wiley)' when he field spo\, Is lllttlng .282 with two
(Belle) went.totheplateandsaid home runs and 13 RBI In 10 ·
that I had a strange feeling about games.
this kid, that he's going to be the
"I've always produced when
type or kid to rise to the they walk the guy in front or me,"
occasion," the manager of the Belle said. "Even when I was
Indians said. ,
·
struggling, I would come through
Cleveland's rally started when in the Clutch If the)' walked the
Dion James. walked and Joe guy In front otme. I'd never seen
Carter follwed with a single. On Plunk . before, they said he's
the hit, James raced to third going to throw me some good
when center fielder Roberto hard stuff and that 's what
Kelly threw to third base, allow- happened."

The Yankees we re coming off a
heart-breaking loss Sunday when
they blew a four run ninth-Inning
lead.
" Somebody asked me If it
could get worse, " Green,said. "It
just did."
Carter, Who has been on a tear
since the All-Star break,
samcked his 20th hmoer in the
sixth. He has now hit 20 or more
homers In four straight seasons .
Elsewhere in the American
League:
Brewers 10, Tigers 0
At Milwaukee, Chris Boslo and
two relievers combined .. on a
four·hltter sending the Tigers to
their sixth straight defeat. Detroit has dropped nine straight on
the road and 16 of 18. Boslo, 11-6,
g~ve up three hits. over seven
Innings. Mark Knudson pitched ,
the eighth inning and ,, Tony
Fossas worked the ninth. Jack
Jack Morris, 2-8, making his first
start since May 22, allowed seven ·
runs and nine hjts.
While Sox 5, MariDers 4
At Chicago, Carlton Fisk's
two-out RBI in the ninth inning
scored Dave Gallagher as the
White Sox picked up their ninth
win in 10 games . Gallagher drew
a lead-off walk from Mike

as training camp opens

- WEST CHESTER. P a. !UP()
- All-Pro de fe nsive · lineman
Reggie White a nd wid e receiver
. Mike Quic k were a m ong 13
. players miss ing Su nd ay as the
Ph iladelph ia E agles officiall y
opened tr aining ca mp at Wes t
Ches te r Universi ty.
A total of 77 players reported tb
the manda tory meeting Sunday
n ig!J I. Two-a -day practices begin
Monday . White and Quick are the
bigges t names abse nt from
camp. al though s tarting strong
sa fet y And re Waters. de fensive
tack le Mike Pitts, offensive left
tackle Ma tt Darwin and a ll fou r
draft pic ks are also holding out.
"T ju s t hope the young guys get
in beca use it's important they get
: in a nd keep on lea rning," Eag les
head coac h Buddy Rya n said.
"The older guys, it does n't bother
them th at much."
Twelve pla yer s a re unsigned,
and Rya n gave no indica tion tha t
.there was muc h progress made
in co nt ract ta lks. White is signed,and is holdi ng out in hopes cif
receiving a con trac t ex tension.
· The Eagles have offered him a
repor ted $7.5 million over five ·
years, which wou ld make him th e
league' s highest paid defensive
: player.
Ryan sal dWhitewouidbe flned
· the maximum of what is be lieved
to be $1,000 a day . The Eagles
also announced that they have
waived de fensive lin eman John
Klinge l, who failed his physical.
Phila delphia will hold two-a-

Sports briefs
Baseball
The Boston Red Sox, with the
Cincinnati Reds unable to attend
beca use of ai rline trouble, played
a 4-4 Intra-sq ua d tie Monday In
what was tobethe annua!Hallot
Fame exhibition game in Cooper' stown, N.Y. Fans choosing to
leave Instead of watching the
scr immag e were offered
refunds.

•

T

day practices until July 30, when·
they leave for London and
American Bowl '89 , which will be
played Aug. 6 against the Clevela nd Browns at Wembley
Stadium .
Rya n has made the running
game and the pass rush the top
priorities of training camp. Ryan
conducted "voluntary" workouts
for the pas t two weeks at the
Vetera ns Stadium practice fields
in preparation fo r camp .

Goebel takes lead
in Columbia Open ·
AUSTIN. Texas iUPI) Bryan Goebel moved into the
lead Mond ay night after four
round s of the Professional
Bowlers Association $130.000 Columbia 300 Open.
Goebel, or Merria m, Kan ., who
is trying for hi s first PBA crown,
pos ted a tourna ment-bes t matchplay record or 6·2 and knocked
down 6,040 pins . The plnfall
includes 30 ·bonus pins for eac h
victory.
Third-round leader AmletoMo·
na celli of Venezuela sUpped to
second place 17 pins behind
Goebel afte r felling 6,013 pins.
Joe Salveminl or Colorado
Springs, Colo., occupies third
place with a pinfall of 5,986. Both
of Salvemlnl' s titles came In 1983.
Tony Westlake of Edmond,
Okla., fresh from his victory last
Wednesday In the El Paso Open,
soared from 11th to the No. 4 spot
.
with 5',971 pins.
Four-time champ Dave Fer·
raro of Kingston, N.Y., won five
straight matches to round out the
. top five with a 5,940 plnfall.
Th e fie ld of 24, from the
original 160,,face 16 more match
games Tuesday before cu ttlng to
the top five for Wednesday ·
night' s riationally -televlsed
championship round. The winnl!r
here earns $20,000.

,

I

Girls complete
cage camp at MHS

OSU's Snow, Craig
may retum soon

Jo Butcher (7th grade one on one runner-up).
Second row, left to right- Yvette Young (one on
one champ); Kerl Black (defensive award) and
Kim Hanning (free throw champ, and out
champ).

Charlton may see lots of action
White, Quick among missing for Browns in 1989 carripaign
~gles

Jackson, 3·-4 and went all the way
to third on reliever Keith Comstock's ,throwing error. He
scored when ·Fisk grounded a
single down the right-field line.
Shawn Hillegas, 6·9, held the
.Marine rs to one hit over the final
three Innings.
Blue Jays 6, Rangers 3
At Arlington, Texas, Todd
Stottlemyre allowed four hits
over seven Innings and Tony
Fernandez and Kelly Gruber
blasted back-to-back home runs
In the first Inning. Fred McGriff
and Ma'nny Le~added homers for
the Blue Jays. Stottlemyre, 2-4,
was replaced by Tom Henke who
notched his eighth save. Wilson
Alvarez, 0-1, making. his majorleage debut, faced five batters
.without recording an out
Angels 5, Athletics 4 ·
At Oakland; Chill Davis
cracked a tie-breaking home 'run
in the seventh Inning and .Jack
Howell · added an eighth-Inning
shot to lead the Angels to their
sixth stralglit victory : Oakland
reliever Gene Nelson, 2-5,
yielded both homers. Willie
Fraser, 3-5, got the' victory In
relief. Brian Harvey earned his
13th save.

By BOB KEIM
UPI Sports Writer
MENTOR. Ohio iUPil - Clifford Charlton spent most or 1988
watching from the. sidelines.
When lhe Cleveland defense
was on the field, odds were good
that Charlton would be on the
bench. A No. 1 pick out of Florida
last year, Charlton started just
one game at outside linebacker
and made only four tackles
during his rookie season.
His lack of playing time can be
attributed to two factors. First.
former Cleveland coach Marty
Schottenheimer thought most
rookies needed at least one year
of seasoning before they -were
ready for a Jot or action .
More importantly, with Clay
Matthews going to the Pro Bowl
and David Grayson having a
good year. the Browns were solid
at outside linebacker.
All of which meant Charlton,
dra!ted because ot -his ability to
rush the ,passer, was mainly a
special teams performer .

"Of course it was very discouraging," Charlton said Monday
of his lack or playing time. "But
that's the type of -coach Marty
was. He felt like younger guys
needed to wait their first year
and after they progressed a little
longer, maybe they could play."
As the year progressed, Charlton began to understand that he
was part of the team 's future.
"I think they felt like I would be
a player down the
- road " he said '
"not step in right then. The
Cleveland Browns were a good
football team and they really
dldn' t need mucl;l help, so mainly
I think they thought I was the
future of the Browns.'' ·
But the future has come more
quickly than expected. New
coach Bud Carson likes what he
has seen or Charlton so far in
training camp, and believes the
6·3, 245-pound St. Petersburg,
Fla., native will play an important role In the 1989 season.
"We're working him as hard as
we can," Carson said of Chari-

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP()
Ohio State University's No. I
tailback Carlos Snow and line. backer Orlondo Craig, who had
knee surgery Thursday, are
expected to be running again in
about four weeks.
Snow and Craig both had
arthroscopic surgery on Injured
knees Thursday and were released from the Ohio State
University Hospitals by ··
afternoon.
·
• Snow, a junior, hall a sliver of
cartilage removed from be\Jind
his right knee. Craig, a seillor
and part-time starter last year,
had a larger' tear or cartilage
removed from his left knee,
Both are expected to be ready
when training camp opens Aug.
25.

5 FAMI.Y YAID SAlE '
123 Pari&lt; fho., Pt. Plea-t
JULY26-Ito4

ton. "We're going to give him a
chance to play a lot. of football. I
look at him right now as a guy, if
he doesn't win a starting job, as a
guy who comes in and plays a lot
of football ."
"

lots of loaby clothot, boys, and girh,
&lt;hil • .,' • clothos, .all silos, •h
clothot,!,t_chair, &lt;rib, _, Iooby
......,.. "-• tntorior.

CARRIER WANTED
SPRING AVE. AREA

POMEROY, OHIO

"

CONTACT MIKE AT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
'

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent
'

Family Practice ·
Accepting New Patients
Mon~ay, Tuesday, '{h,p!'_Jday and Friday
.
9 a.m. - 5 J:r.m.
Wednesday
9a.m. -Noon

1983 CHEVROLET "5·1 0"
V~6

. a•••·

motor, AM/FM,, power st..rlng,
toppet. . . . .
.~This shows the one owner care." '
JUST·ONE OF THE FINE USED CARS
FROM ....
•

·smith-Nelson
.Motors,
Inc.
'.
992-2174

SOO EAST MAIN

.POMEROY, OHIO

I•

Appointments and Walk-Ins Welcome
Office Staff:
Mary Dillard,C.M.A.
Gail J{oveatter
Linda n-ent
138 Main St., New l{aven1 WV + (304) 882-3134
Pormerly Bend

Medtarl Center

Tuesday, July 25. 1989

-····. -

. .•

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Marauder girls' basketball
coach Roger Foster recently
completed the 1989 Lady Marauder Basketball Camp at
Meigs High School.
The Camp was for girls in
grades 4-10 and offered Instruction in shooting, ball handling,
and offensive and defensive
fundamentals.
Helping Coach Foster with the
camp was former head boys and
girls coach Ron Logan. On
Friday a competition was held
with awards going to the winners
and a pizza par ty was held for all
the campers.

SENIOR award winners In the recent Lady
Marauder Basketball Camp were first row, left to
right - Bridget Powell (outstanding 7th grader);
Melissa ~lsson (one on one runner-up); Billie Jo
Butcher (7th grade one on one champ) and Bobble

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend·

.

~

Page-5

Matlack, Osborn reunion held

Flower show categories named
Meigs Countlans will have the
chance to show what they growln .
the second of two flower shows to
be staged at the Meigs County
Fair this year, to be held Aug.
15-19.
This second show will be .
staged onThursday.Aug.17.1'he
filing deadline for hath flower
shows Is 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug.ll
with entries to be made at the
secretary's office on the Rock
Springs fairgrounds.
The flower shows are a cooperative project of the Meigs County
Fair Board and the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Assciciatlon. ·
Seven classes will be offered In
the second show for senior
artistic. The classes Include

"1,001 DalmaUons," exhibits
should tie modern, and feature
black and white; "Out of
Africa,.' ' featuring textures ; "On
Golden Pond," featuring yellow;
"Sound of Music," featuring
rhythm; . "Cinderella," designs
In a ladles slipper; "Love Story,"
exhibition table picture, special
class; and "Tootsle;" small
design, not over five inches In
any direction.
The two classes offered In
junior artistic for the second
show are "Red Heat," including
red; and "Rescuers," showing
motion·.
Eleven classes will be offered
In the second show for senior
horticulture with hybrid tea rose,

disbudded , tollage attached. The
classes are white or near white;
yellow, yellow blend or apricot
blend; pmk, pink blend; red , red
bl~nd ; run blown rose, any color,
stamens must show; grandlflora ,'· naturally grown, may be
single or spray; flortbunda,
naturally grown, not disbudded,
spray; miniature rose, dis·
budded, foliage attached; dahlia.
decorative, disbudded; dahlia ,
cactus. disbudded; and dahlia ,
any other.
Junior class exhll)itors may
enter in two classes for horticUlture In the second show; any
annual, disbudded, foliage att•
ached; and any wildflower, single or spray .

Wolfe Beaver reunion conducted
The 11th annual reunion of the Hupp, Tommy Powell, and
Charles and Fannie Wolfe Christy Baumgardner , all pre
Beaver family was held recently
teens; and Robert · Forester .
at the Racine Star Mlil Park with
Jarod Hupp, and Ricky .L11cas, all
93 in attendance.
.
pre~schoolers.
Table .grace was . given hy
Entertainment was provided
Russell Cline, who Is dolr.g well
by the Mountain 'Top Gospel
after heart by-pass surgery In - Singers, and Helen Wolie took
May . .
her albums of pictures of ·previous reunions for others to
Those recognized and given
plaques were Mattie Beaver Hill,
enjoy.
age 86, oldest woman; Russell
Those attending were John and
Cline, age 82, oldest man; Zach·
Wanora Beaver, Dolores Do·
ary Imboden, 13 months, young·
nohue. Allgle DOnohue and
est boy; Jenna Hupp, 13 months. · Brenda Neutzllng, all of Pome·
youngest girl; John and Wanora
roy; Russell and Leona Cline.
Beaver, 51 years, longest marand Joy Imboden and Zachary,
ried; Tim and Joy Imboden, sir/ali of Syracuse.
months, newest married; Paul
Don Manuel, Ernest and Flos·
and Brenda Holsinger, Thompshi Bush, Freeman and Mildred
son. Conn., traveled the farthest;
Williams, and Jan, Shirley Simpand Grace Holsinger, in honor of son, Betty Spaun, Mary , Fore·
being president since 1979.
ster, Robert, Roberta, Mary
Winning door prizes were Smith, Teddi and Loretta Smith,
Mary Forester, Kathy Thieman.
David Rice, Bobby Joe and
and Mlidred Wiiliams, all adults;
Tessie Wolfe, Melissa Teaford,
Loretta Smith, Mary Smith, and John Tillis, Jerry Powell, John
Lee Gillilan , all teens; Jamie Powell, Debbie Powell, and Ja·

·Che.rter Council
meets
'
A surprise birthday party was and Psalm 87 was read.
held at the recent meeting of the
Attending were Laura Mae
Chester Council for Dorothy Nice, Jean Frederick, Beulla
RJ.IIjl!!:. wh!lll . the group met at Maxie, Eva Robson, Marcia
·the hall with Virginia Lee. Keiter, Ada Bissell, Sadie Truscouncilor, In the chair.
sell, Doris Grueser, Ethel Orr,
Mrs. Ritchie was also honored Opal Hollon,, Mae McPeek, Erma
for holding five years with a state Cleland, Betty Young, Faye
office. Several members had Kirkhart, Alta Ballard, Esther
readings and other members Smith, Thelma White, Kathryn
placed real ·carnations of many Baum, Betty Roush, Octa Ward,
colors In a vase which Mrs . ·Iva Powell, and Heien Wolf.
Ritchie held. Her favorite song
Refreshments were served by
was sung by Helen Wolfe.
Mrs. Young and Mrs. Maxie.
The group also sang Happy
The Lord 's Prayer and pledge
Birthday
to Mrs. Maxie.
to the flag were given In unison,

Wyant reunion held recently
The seven children of the late Kenneth Wood, Caule, Cathy,
Leroy and Goldie Wyant -met and Donna, Plase A.F.B .. N.H.;
recently at Salt Fork Lake for a James ·and Robin Haning,
family reunion . .
Jimmy and Joey, Rutland; Mike
Attending we.re Kenny and Haning, . Chris Haning, Albany;
Lois Wyant, Jean and Norman· Stanly Beal, Jr., Mlddlebu ry
Wood. Mae Gilliam, Janice and Heights; Jeremy Edmonds,
Dallas DeBord, Pomeroy; Mary Lakewood; John and Darlene
Haning, Mlllifield; Juanita and · Gilliam, Troy, Ka,tie and Travis,
· Stanley Beal, Middlebury Reynoldsburg; Terri Gilliam
Heights; and Judy and Harold
Mike Peters, zanesvilie; Dav~
Gilliam, Zanesville.
Boudinot, Mllllfleld; DOug Baud!·
Ken and Clara Wyant. Arron
not, &lt;;!ouster; and Jeff Brownand Amanda, Parma; ' Tim .Wy- lng, !Sacramento, Calif.
ant, Ronnie Wood, Pomeroy;

Long Bottom news notes

The annual family reunion or
the descendants of William
Janey and Lydia E . Turben
Matlack and James and Mary
Chancey Osborn, of Long Bot·
tom, was held recently at the
Lancaster Fairgrounds shelter
house.
Following the blessing, given
by Don Campbell, a basket
dinner was served at 1 p.m .
Those attending were Wood·
row and Marilyn Robinson,
Woodstock. Va.; Charles and
Louise Brooks, M;~nsfield;
Madge Mulligan and Betty Ten!·
mers, Cincinnati; Jimmy and

a
~-

Welcome party given for Archer

. .. .~M~~~H~E~LE~~F~OLM~~E~R--

Folmer
in SBC
program

son and Tommy Powell, all of
Racine.
Grace Holsinger. Brad, John,
Southeastern Business College
and Jay, of Reedsyille; Russ and has been partlcipati~wlth the
F
··
Meigs County Muse
in the
recta Holsinger and Randy , federally funded Col e WorkSherrt · Smeeks, Roy and Mary -Study Program. With the as
Gillilan, Lee Gillilan, and Brandl sistance of the Job Placement
Reeves, aH of Chester.
rona Hupp, Rocky and Carol Office, Michele Folmer, a Meigs
Hupp, R.J., and Rachael, Sharon County resident and student as '
Hupp, Jenna , Jessica, Jarod, and SBC, has been placed in a clerical
· position at the Museum.
Jamie, all of Long Bottom; Carol
Tne purpose of the work study
Cline and Seva, Tony Forester, program Is to provide the student
Circleville; Richard and Paula with employment so that earnCline, Molly Cline Morris, Katie 'lngs received may be used to
and Anthony, Rick and Annette assist in meeting their ·academic
Cline Lucas, Ricky, Raymond, year expenses . The work oppora_n d Adam, all or New Lexington;
tunlty also gives the student
David and Giorlne Cline, Kathy valuable experience which may
Thieman and Joshua , and Donna help ln. future decisions . and
l,ang, of Waterford.
. . goa· 1s .
Mat tl e B. Hill, Clark C, Hill,
. Folmer, daughter of George
Vonda R. Wolfe, Jody and David.
and Sharon Folmer. Pomeroy,
all of Columbus; Charles H. and has put 'to practice her secretar.
Helen R. Wolfe. Linda Black, lal skills such as typing, filing,
Jason and Larra, all of Carroll;
and answering the phone. With
Wilbur and Mary Gillilan. Canthe ending or the work study
ton; Paul and Brenda Holsinger,
program, Michele has been hired
TQompson, Conn.; Earl an~
b the Museum as a part-time
Sarah Baumgardner, Christy,
ployee.
Tom, Jay , and Mike, of Sprin ·
The program is only one form
· . of assistance available to qualify field, Pa.
Next year'.s reunion will be
ing students who attend SBC.
held on Saturday, July 14 at the
Any questions pertaining to the
Star Mill Park In Racine with the
types of financial assistance can
s~me officers.·
be answered by calling Annet,.te
Oark. financial aid officer at
446-4367. The rail quarter wiii ·
begin on Sept . 26. ·

Rock Springs
Grange meets

Annual inspection of the Rock
Springs Grange was conducted
recently by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree, deputy master and
matron.
Barbara Fry reported that
county contests will be judged at
·the November Pamona meeting.
Bunny Kuhl reminded
members to collect items for the
fair booth. Three large ceiling
fans have been . installed in the ·
grange hall. Charles Kuhl and
Charles Aldridge were given a
vote of thanks tor the
installation.
Pat Holter presented the program on "The Extremes of
· Weather" · and several other
members presented various
Items s,uch as chick.e n on a nest
· by William Radford. jokes by
. Agnes Dixon and Jl\ai!CY Morris,
lightning strikes by Katherine
Riley, safety tips were noted by
Bunny Kuhl, a humorous skit was
presented . by four members, ·
Barbara Fry ga11e a reading, a
weather observers report by Roy
Holter, weather observation by .
Linda Broderick, and a report on
arthritis and the weather by
· Sarah Caldwell.
"How Great Thou Art" was
sung by Pat Holter and it was
reported that Betty · Conkle and
Louise Radford were 111.
Refreshments were served by
Charles and Maxine Aldridge.

By MELODY ROBERTS
Derek Winel1renner recently
Whitney Larkins. granddaugh- spent the afternoon with his
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsei grandfather 'Tom "Pappy"
'Larkins, recently suffered a Hayman.
·
broken arm.
The recent Ice cream social
Ernestine Hayman Is a great was a success due , to the
grandmother again due io the cooperation and work of Long
birth of Chelsie to Linda Fltzpa· Bottom residents and trustees.
trick Weber.
The Long Bottom Senior CitlAccording to Delores Hawk, a . zen'S meet the se_cond and (ourth
banana pepper per head of ')'uesday or every month In the
cabbage, creates a spicy varia- community building. On the
tion for sauerkrap t makers.
fourth Tuesday, free blood pressure clinics are held.
The Long Bottom Community
Francis Andrew is recuperating after a recent stay in the Association meets on the last
Jean and Norm'an Wood celehospital. Andrew, age 85, along W!!dnesday of the month at 7: 30 . brated their 39th wedding anni·
p.m. In tile community building. ~sary recently. They were
with family arid friends ·have
These
meetings are open to the surprised . with cake and Ice
baled over 1,000 bales or hay with
public.
more yet to do.
cream by their grandchildren,
Carrie, Cathy, and Donna Wood ,
Jeffrey and Michael Brlckles,
and niece, Robyn Hunt, at the
home ot Mr. and Mrs. Earle
Others attel!dlng and sending Wood:
Angela Houchins was )lonored
recently with a bridal shower at gifts were Emily Sprague, DoCarrie, Cathy ,', and Dof!na
the Heath United Methodist rothy Roller, Margaret Weber, Wood, Portsmouth, N.H. are
Helen Byer., Nancy Cale, Juanita here tor the summer with their
: church tn Middleport.
Bachtle, Harry and Darlene grandparents Jean and Norman
Hostesses were Mary Wise,
Margie Blake, Twila Childs, and Renafllesch. Clara Crisswell. Wood, and Ronnie Wood.
Pat Philson, ali members of the Kathryn Knight, Edward and
Jeffrey and Michael Brickles,
Letde Young, .Marly Ferguson Germantown,- Md.; have spent .
Eleanor Circle.
;
: The churoh dining room was and Chad, Andrea and Erin • the last. two weeks with their ,
Krawsczyn, Billie Jo Krawsczyn, grandparents, Jean and Norman
:decorated with pink bell relliicas,
Donna
and Mary Byer, Julie Wood. Carolyn Sue Brtckles,
pink table coverings with bride
Hubbard,
Jennifer Harrison,. their mother, has been confined
.cloU repllcu, and an umbrella on
Carol
and
Katie
Alexander, Brad to a hospital In Rockville, Md. for
the gift table.
Alexander, Betty Fultz, NeiHe three weeks. She ha,s just re· Games were played with prizes Zerkle, Olive Casto, Euvetta turned home after much lm·
going to Nan Moore, DOnna Bechtle, Emma K, Clatworthy •. provement. Jeffl'ey and Michael
Jenldnl, and Stephanie Alex- Grace Joh1110n, Susan Houchins, also viSited Mr. ,and Mrs. Mlck ·
ander. VIcki Houchins w011 the Shirley QuiCkel, Scotty Hayes, Howell, and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie
and Jeanne Anne Brandbury.
door prize.
Darst.

Personal notes

'

Lisa Pooler. Lindsey , · Rande, ·
Karen , Mary, and Patric k, Columbus; John and Susan Bailey;
Ryan and J .J . Bailey ,Columbus;
Nick and Lillian Basso, Co lum- ·
bus; Har dy Rausch, Marysville;
Jim and Jessie Osborne, Rad·
nar; Margaret Osborn, Delaware; Ju stine a nd Gera ldine
Leahy, Worthington; Virgil and
Betty Roush and Mike, Chester;
Floyd and Beth Mat·la ck, Par-·
kersburg , W.Va .; E thel , Lea h,
and Beth Arbaugh, Tuppers
Plains; DOn and VIrginia Ca mpbell, Guysville; and Lance and
Rosal ie Humphrey, Newark.

A welcome pa rty was helq St. Paul chu rch.
Attending were Car I and Hazel
recently tor the Rev. DOn Archer
Barnhill,
Jim a nd Dorothy SJout,
with a potluck dinner at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill on Ruthanne Millhone. Cathy and
his return to St. Pau 1 United· Stacie Reed, Edna Harmon,
Methodist Church In Tuppers Edith Harper, Doris.Koenlg, Mae
and Mary Vineyard, Blake and
Plains.
The church presented Rev . and Joanna Weaver, Emily and OliMrs. Archer with a handmade via Butler, Guy and Evelyn
quilt quilted by the Willing Spencer , Keith, Brenda, and
Mike Weber, Bill and JoannWorkers of the church.
Games and refreshments were . Francis, Susie, BJJiy, ·and Anenjoyed throughout ihe evening drew Francis, Alan and Pat Hall
by 'the 40 guests present who a nd Matthew, John and Anna
welcom·e d Rev . Archer back for Rice, Johnny and David Rice,
his seventh year of service to the Loretta Smith. and _the honored
guests.

Hunter safety class

POMEROY - An Ohio DivIsion of Wildlife Hunter Safety
Coyrse will be held July 31, Aug.
1, 3 and 4, from 6 to 9 p.m . each
evening, on the second floor or
the Pomeroy Municipal Building. Pre-registration Is neces-.
sary as class size will be limited
to 30 students. To register. call
John Costanzo, at 992·3883 before
6 p.m., or at 843-5405 after 6 p.m.

Softbatt tourney
MIDDLEPORT - Bradbu ry ,
PTO Is sponsoring a Cl&lt;iss t:&amp;D,
ASA, Mens Softball Tournament,
on Aug: 12-13 at Hartinger Park
in Middleport . Entry fee is $65 ·
a nd two softballs. For informa·
lion, call 614992-6890, or
992-6593, or 992-7055.

Benjamin J. Sol,

M~D.

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Suite 215
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building

Aleshire birthday

Now Accepting Patients

A surprise birthday party was
held recently for Avonell Ale- •
shire· by the Adult Basic Education students. start. and friends .
Attending were Harvey
Hoffner, Ernest Mile hell, Shirley
Mitchell, Shirley Finley, Je rry
Harper, Bonnie Krautter, Debra
Krautter, Linda Harrison, Anna
Taylor, Richard Freeman, Paul
Casto, Kathryn Hall, Charles
Kitchen, Clay . Fahner, and
Brenda Templeton. Sending a
girt was Linda Stanley.

Monday through Friday 8;30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

(304) 675-3400
0

flH rt~~~P~L~~LLEY HOSPITAL
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Safer than a safe; and a lot easier to carry, traveler's
checks put an end to worries over lost or stolen money.
Now through August 31, 1989, you can buy VISA
traveler's checks from Peoples Bank wlthout.paying an
Issue charge.
Get your "frft..free" traveler's checks before you get
out of town, and let us show you how we can save you
money on your other financial needs.

,.

Houchins given shower

r,.

PEOPLES BANK
New Haven
882-2135

m•IRP.D.LC.

Your Good

r.·

•

Point Pleasant

675-1121
Bank

M~n

773-6514 .

' tSJEqual~l.encl.r

!

�- ...... 6-The Daly Sentinel

~y-Middleport,

Tuesday. July 25, 1989

Ohio

---Area announcements--------------Tille ofllc:e
:-: The Tille .Dffi"e In the Meigs
~~ , County Court House will tempor. · arUy be closing at 3 p.m. until
,: further noll~ due to unexpe"ted
'; "lrcumstances. This situation
•· will be as temporary as·posslble
:. and anyone with any questions or
·; problems may call Larry
.. Spen"er at 992-5290 during the
~: day, or 949-23461n the evenings.

--- .

\\ '

.;.• Mhdoaary lervlce
The Harrisonville Holjness
';. ~hapel will be offering a mission• ary service on Sunday at 11 a .m.
': with Rev. and Mrs. Leroy Adams
: Jr. going to Africa.

-~-

friends will hold their annual
reunion on Saturday with a picnic
dinner served at 1 p.m. 'at the
Chester Martin residence in back
of West Columbia, W.Va.

Spaghetti dinner
The Rutland Church of God will
sponsor a spaghetti dinner on
Friday from 4-8 p.m. In the
fellowship hall. The cost is $3.50
per person and will Include
spaghetti. sala(j, and garlic
bread. Tickets are pelng sold by
the Ladies Ministries .

Gilkey reunion
.
The descendants of the Ia te
Toinmy and Mllda· Jane (Hudnall) Gilkey will hold their 19th
annual famUy,reunlon on Sunday
at the Route 33 South roadside
park. A potluck lunch wiU be
served at noon. Those attending
are asked to bring table service
and folding chairs. Friends and
relatives are wercome.
Gillilan reunion
There wiU be a reunion lor the
family of Elbert and Della
GIUilan, at the Kyger Creek Park
on Sunday with a dlqner· to be
served at 12:30 p.m . Those
at tending are to bring a covered
dish and friends and relatives are
invited.
'

meeting
The Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge 411 F and AM will hold a
friendship night on Saturday at
6:30p.m. There will be a potluck
dinner and all masons and
families and their guests are
we lcome.
Dance
The Senior Citizens Dance Club
will sponsor a dance on :Friday
from 8-11 p.m. Music wiU be
proVIded by, ·True Country
Ramblers. Those attending a~e
to bring snacks for the snack
table. The public is invited to
attend.
Fish fry
The Wilkesville Township Volunteer Firemen's Association
wiU hold Its annual fish fry on
Saturday. There will b&lt;: a street
dance from 9 p.m. to midnight
and the Midnight Cloggers wtu
perform before the dance. Those
attending are encouraged to
bring a lawri·'cl)air.
',

'

,.

,, j·

.-': ---Peopkmthe~ews------~------------~
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
COWBOY IN LONDON: McCloud rides again -this time In
England. Dennis Weaver is filming ' 'The Return of Sam
McCloud"- a reprise of his country crimeflghter who went to
the big city - in London. Now the McCloud character Is a
senator who goes t'o London to investigate the murder of his
niece and uncovers a conspiracy involving an International
chemical. company. Trafalgar Square and wrts of the mall near
Buckingham Palace were closed at the weekend to enable the
filmmakers to shoot a scene where Weaver and actress Kerrle
Keane escape a gunman after steaUng a horse irom a London
' poUceman. ''Filming In Trafalgar Square \\\as chaotic, " a
spokeswoman for the production said. ·'We used a large number
of extras, but huge crowds of tourist gathered as well and a
group of Italian women were going crazy over Dennis. In the
end, we had to move to another part of town."
MALCOLM FORBES TOOLING AROUND: EUzabeth Taylor
didn't accompany millionaire Malcolm Forbes to a weekend
biker rally In New Hampshire, but her motorcycle did. Forbes
flew his well-heele!,l •.blker gang, the Capitalist Tools, to
Manchester, N.H .. S'unday on his private Boeing 727 and then
rode his Harley to Epping for the firs\ New England Motorcycle
Festival. In addition to hjs riding companions, Forbes brought
the purple Harley he gave to Taylor last year and says he
intends to take the Tools on more expeditions to motorcycle
rallies around the country . . .
HESTONS AT WOICK: Charlton Heston and his son Fraser
first worked together more than 30 year ago and they're at it
again. Fraser, 34, who Is directing his father as Long John Silver
In a remake off "Treasure Island" for the Turner Broadcasting

''

'•
•

•
•

''

System, was only a few ' months old when he played the baby
Moses in the bullrushes while his dad starred in "The Ten
Commandments." The elder Heston sees no problem in working
with family. "People seem to think that there are pitfalls In a
blood relationship in a creative undertaking but I would say
quite the opposite," he says. "That is presuming that-you have a
positive relationship. If you are being directed by the w~~an
you are about to divorce, It would be difficult, I suppose.
A POLITICAL MARRIAGE: Michigan Gov. James· J.
·Blanchard dentes he's getting remarried to help his chances of .
winning re-elec(lon In 1990. "I love Janet Fox very much and
would like to spend t)le rest of my life with her," Blanchard said.
" II wasn't a political decision and I'm not going to let it become
a political Issue. I'd be a fool to poUticlze ... my marriage."
Blanchard, who was divorced in 1987, and Fo:): , who plans to quit
her job on the state Cabinet Council on Human Investment. are
planning a fall ceremony _
TALKING ABOUT RAP: Rap music has been condemned by
some as obscene, sexist and inflammatory but Chuck D. of the
recently disbanded ·group Public Enemy says rap is a form of
enlightenment for young bllicks. Chuck D., whose band is heard
doing "Fight the Power" in Spike Lee's movie "Do the Right
Thing," appeared at a weekend seminar In Indianapolis and
said rap Is shocking whites because white kids are now listening
to It, even though It started as a black art form. "This Is black
life from our point of view," he said. "For the first Ume, a kid
from New York can understand how a kid from Los Angeles
lives .... You've got to understand, Public Enemy and rap music
are dispatchers of Information. We're almost like headline news
... the invisible TV station tha-t black America never.)'lad."

:·- Quirks jn the n e w s - - - - - - - : Texans debate over 'Lone Slar'
, plale
.
.
· AUSTIN, Texas (UP!)
, Hundreds of outraged Texans
: are urging the state to r~consider
. a new license plate design, which
.: Iias drawn complaints from
: people who believe the slogan
· "Friendship State" is too wimpy.
The new plate, a powder
• blue-trimmed design adopted
: last week by the state highway
: commission, prompted hundreds
• of Texans to call the state
: Department of Highways and
: Public Transportation in protest.
• Department spokesman Roger
Polson said Monday that most
callers believe the tag's slogan
· should be "The Lone Star State,"
:or It should have no slogan at aU.
"Most calls have not been in
favor of using 'The Friendship

Pollee nab naked driver
. MOUNT VERNON, Iowa
(UP!) - Mount Vernon may not
be the naked city with ll million
stories, but local pollee say they

Klansmen must
-attend race .
:relations seminar
'

c .. -

•

;,..

'

now have at least one naked story
for the books.
Officers involv~d in a highspeed chase early Sunc;Jay weve
surprised when the dr.iver leaped
out of his vehicle and ran away
wearing no clothes.
The streaking suspect -Identified as Murry Mente, 22 eventually turned himself in.
Mente claimed the incident was
part of a practital joke.
But law officers added the
punch line, charging the suspect
with Indecent exposure, interference with pollee, speeding
and fail.ure to yield .
However, police officer Ray
Reynolds said, Mente was not
cited for failure to wear a
seatbeh.
If you can't arrest 'em, tax 'em
BOSTON (UPil - The state
Revenue Department, which last
year began taxing bookies, prostitutes and drug dealers, now is
considering a tax on the profits of
illegal. drug sales.
The program, expected to take

effect this fall, is an outgrowth of
a year-old state effort to collect
taxes on Income derived from
Illegal sources. · The. new program would levy a 5 percent tax
on narcotics profiis.
··our experience is wiJen we've
,found drug dealers who are
making substantial lnqome ls
that' they have very extensive
records," silid Stephen Kidder, ·
the state's re v enue
commissioner.
Revenue officials began collecting stale income lax on
criminal profits in 1988, issuing
$128,000 in bills. Last fiscal year, .
the revenue dei&gt;artment billed
bookies, prostitutes and drug
dealers for more than $2.1
million.
"We're not suggesting we'll be
doing a sweep of kids on the
corner. but it can be useful in
p~rticular instances to collect
taxes from individuals who are
profiting from this business,"
Kidder said. "It's a big-dollar
business."

th e Rutland church on Thursday
WEDNESDAV
POMEROY - The Wildwood at 7:30p.m.
Garden Club will meet Wednes-·
MIDDLEPORT -'-July birthday at noon at the home of Ma ry
day parties for residents of •
Nease. for a potluck luncheon .
Overbrook Center will be held on
Thursday at 1: 30 p.m. Family
THURSDAY
POMEROY -TI)e Pomeroy and friends are invited to attend.
Ice cream cake will be served.
group~~ A.A. and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m . at the
POMEROY -Free Clotlllng
Sacred Heart Catholic Church In
day
will be held ·a t the Salvation ·.
Pomeroy.
Army In Pomeroy on Thur~day
from 10 a.m. until noon. All area
RUTLAND -The · Women's rE'sklents' in need of clo(hll\ll' are
FeUowshlp of Meigs County encouraged to participate in this
ChurGhes of Christ will meet at offer.

Beat of the bend

Improving ooatit:lg...
drawing of . Bettie - which
included' a personality protne on
Willard (Bus) McMaster, former
•
Middleport residen.t. . Many of
you wiU remember Bus, I'm .
sure.
Bus is now in Hudson,. Ohio, .
and , Is married to the former
Kathryn Price of Pomeroy.
According to the profile, Bus
was 11 when he move&lt;! · to
Middleport. His dad operated a
hardware store and Bus graduated from Middleport High in
1937. Hew as Meigs County's first
Eagle Scout. For a while he
worked as secretary to the
superintendent o.f schools in
Ml,ddleport before going to Los
Angeles to . take a year's residence course In air conditioning.
He worked In ·that field In the
Cincinnati area until entering the
armed forces In World War II.
After the war·, heattendedOhlo
University receiving his degree
in Industrial Engineering. His .
first engineering job was with the.
Ohio Public UtUities Commission
The shrubbery in front of the· and that went on for 14 years. He
Middleport Elementary School. then went with ALL-TEL a.nd
for almost a quarter of a century stayed with that company for 22
had grown to an out of hand size . . years.
Now 70, Bus enjoys woodwork·So during .the past week or so
employees of the Meigs Local ! ng, photography, audio elecSchool' District hav.e been busy tronic recording (has his own
rell)ovlng the large shrubs.studio) for friends, and ballroom
There have been some favora - dancing. As always, Bus is a man
ble comments on the improve- of many talents. His address In
ment .to the building's appear- Hudson. by the way, ·is 32
ance
since . the work got Plymouth Drive.
underway·.
Involved in the
project have been Don Hanning,
WOW! Warmed up, didn't it?
principal; Eugene Hawkings. Take a · cokl shower and keep
Paul. Kauff. Joe Shavorinsky, of smiling.
the maintenance staff. and Custodians Tim Kauff and Sam
Morrison. ·

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

1-Card of Th~nkJ
2-ln Memory
3- Annoutements
4-Giveeway
5-Happy Adt
1 - loat end Found
7- V•d Sele(plid in advance)
8-P\.tbllc SaleS. Auction
9~WMted to Ivy

•A classified edvenliamMt pieced In The Daily Sentinel (ex-

rlllpluym~nl

-

..

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

441-0.Nipolit
367-Ch•htra
381- Vinton
246...:Rio Grande
2·51-Guyan Oitt.
843- Arabia Dlst.
379 - Welnut ·

992- Middlepon
Pomeroy
981-Ch,.ter

21 - Bualn•• Opponunhy
22-Mon.,' to loan
23-Prof•liontl Service~

Re~l Esl~le
31 -Hom• for Sale
32-MobileHom• for Sale
33- Farma for Sale
34-luain•• Buildlnga
35-loll It Acreage
38- Rul Ettlte Wanted

678-Pt. Ple,.ant
451-Leon
671-Apple Grove
843-Portilln~
· 773-Malon
247- Laun Falls 882 - New Haven
8tl!li-letart
949- AeCine
937.....;.Buftalo
742-AUtlend
6&amp;7-Cootvllle

IIJQilltd
41-HouMI for Rent
42-Mobile Hom• for Rent
43- F•rms for Rent
44- Apenment for Rent
45-Furnilhed Rooms
41-Sp.:e for Rent
47-Wiftted to Rent
48- EqYipment tor Rent
49-For Le•e

Get · Results Fast
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
"
FIDUCIARY
•
On July 6, 1989, in the
Meigs
County Probat•
Court, Cue No. 28287,
Myrville Brown. Box: 139,
Rutland. Ohlo 45775, wu
oppointed Executor of the

m

,......

-~. J r-.,..'l)~ ,

'

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY .
On July 6. 1989, in the
Meigs
County Probete
Court, C11e No. 28311,

. • ..

tltt ,.
I.

-:fl

;

Arrivi~ ria~Iy!·

.

· frank W. Porter, Jr., Route
U. Box 38A, llaclna, Ohio

45771. wu eppolnted e••.
cutor of the 11tatit of IAophe
' Wegner. doceiOed, tat• of
Racine, Ohio 45771.
.
Robert E. Buclt,
P.Obete Judge
Lena K. Nllaelrood. Clark
(7)11', 1a. 21 3tc

KNOWING, 1 Oz.··. ············· -'·······-·····.~ .... :.............·.... '35:oo·
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz. ; ... ~·, : ............ •14.50
~LIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION. 1.5 Oz ....... : ....... •21.00
MBRE ROSE, 1 Oz ................·.·..•....... .-. r ~····- ··········· '16.00
SHALIMAR, 1 Oz.·················~··············~-~ ............... •23.·0 0
g~?uA,!,O~S by Gloria Vanderbilt. 1.7 oz ........ ~ ......... *24.00
os R Oz ......................................................... *47 .s·o

Public Notice

Public.Notice

Public Notice
. tNTHE ·
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
THE ESTATE OF
CLARENCE GANS.
Doce10od .
Caoe N. 28319
NOTICE OF HEARING

2105.21 of the Ohio Reviled i:ado. had Clarence
Gena.
doce011!d, died

·

lnteatete;

An eppllcetlon h10 liMn
filed In thlo Court oflwlng
decedent' 1 purported Lut

Wll end THtam.,t for Probite. The ..._lng on the
epplicmlon wMI be held on
FrldiiY. Auguot 18, 1989, at
1:30 o'ctac:k. P.M. In thlo
Court. The Court Ia locml!d
In the Court HouM, et
Second and Court Streett,
MeiJJ• County,
Pomeroy,
Ohla. 411789.
Robert E. Buck.
Probote Judge
(71 211; (81 1, 8, 3tc

To the unknown, heirt at
1- and next ; of kin of
Clar.,ce jiena. dece10ed,
the unknown heir• al l.w
and ne.it ofkin of Fred Gena,
dece•od. ilnd thil unknown
helu at -and n•t of kin of
Anno Geno, deceaoed. And
to , Eather Fo-. whaae
piece of ,..,.;~ce Ia .-un,
known. S.rnard Froehlich,
.who•• place of residen.- 11
unknown. John Froehlich,

who1e place of r•ldence 11
unknown, Joyce Trader,

Public Notice

whoM piece af r10idence il · - - - - - - - - - - ' - unknown. Paul Fein, whaM
place ~ of neldence fa un-LEGAL NO'tiCE
known, Wltliam Fehr, whoM
Re: Propoted Annexation
place of rl01dence io unknown, Alice Wltzg,ll. to Mtclcleport Village
Thlo 1t1 to advll• that the
who• ptoce of r•idence 1o Meigs
Caunty Boerd of
unknown, Jolllflh a-,
Cammi11lon••
Mve lltlbJr. whoM piiiCe ofr111dence '
11 unknown end Mary Ann llo- the !late of Augurt 23.
Sawen, w!loae piece of 1989 end tl~ af 10:00
A.M. far • public
reelc»nce 11 unknown end to o'cloc:l&lt;
hearing on the propooed anthe helro who would .be
to the Vlloae af
••titled to Inherit under neutlon
Mtcldleport, Ohio,,.
. ·
Section• _21011.01 to

11 · Halp wanted

•

CA • 2 Oz ........................................................ •29 so·
LIZ CLAIBORNE,·1 Oz ............ ~ ................ : ....·.......... •22:60

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On July 20. 1881. In the
M•lto Caun~y Probete

• Court, COle t)ID. 21311,

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
.

1 1- Help WUted
1 2-Sitl.lltlon Wanted
13- lnsurence
14-lu•ln•• Treining
15-Schools • ln~tructlon
11-Radio, TV 6 CB Repair
17- Miscellaneous
1 B-Wented To Do

MuonCo.,WV
AruCode304

Meigs, County
Area Code 814

ceaood. late of Box 261,
• Rutland, Ohio 45775.
Robert E. Buclt,
1
Probeto Judge
Lena K. Nnselroad. Clork
11, 18, 253tc

. 271 NOITH SECOND

Sr:rvrces

pun:hae of min. H.C. Pack-·

U11H I C:OUIJOII per customer per binp IHSIOn.

lilt.

126 .00
180.00

W• Pay ISO.OO P• Game
Ower 110 l'lople 165.00

Mercll.llrtlise
51-Household GoOCh
12-1pon1n1 o-

.992-6669

!

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

J
(

HOW8Id ' G. Damron. 37800
Hotly Rood, Pomeray. Ohio,
457H.- appointed Exec• utor of the • - of Georgia
Rol8 .,_.,, do-eel.
tete of 37100 Hatty Raod,
·Pomeroy, Mlfga County,
, Ohio 45789. ,
"
Rabert E. luck,
,_Judge
Lena K. Neeoi!hood, Clark

m zs: 111 '· a. atc

• WANTED •

EXPI. .NCa 5 W1CI PIISOII AND

-..-a

T0111..VRI2
FOI MA-ACI- IIG. IIAUI
. .DID WFIOIA18.Y

We offer •1 8,000·•21,000 eniKIII lnoome

ren111, r*d veoltlon, hOeplteiizetlon. uniform,
monthly bonu1, aaell.lnt working contlltlon1.

We 1111*:! cerNr minded lndlvldu~ll, wHIIng•
n•• to -It, dejendeble tnn1p01Utl.an to
work, noet eppMr..-ioe, good work _o_rd. ·

POl All APPOINtMIIIT
CAll 614·915-4367 - Ail FOI DAIIII
I,

..,Gomo
1005-32

2-3-ttn

ALLEN'S
HAULING

53-Antiqun
54-MiiC'. MerchMdise
56- Building Suppli•
56-Petlfor Slle
67-Music:ellnstrument•
68-Fruitt 6 Veg«ebl•
59- For Sale or Trede

1600 GAUON
WAm SEIYICE
· UMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIRT HAUUD
992-52

F.Hm Suppl11:s
&amp;

liVI:,:\IIi,k
"

61-Ferm Equipment
62-WWed to Buy
63- livQtOek
_154-Hey &amp; Grein
6,5-Seed • Fertlb:er

•SHRUB &amp; Tf!.EE
TRIM and REMOVAL

Tr~nsporl ~Iron
71-Autol for Sale
72- Truck• tot Sate
73.- Vant It 4 WD'I
74- Motorcycl•
76-9oat• It Moton f1n Sale
78- Auto Parts • Acc•IOf'i•
77--:- Auta Repair
·
79-C•mping Equipment
79- CitT'!P•• &amp; Motor Home~

·:&gt;

,rofessi-1. lnstalmlic~nJ

FlU EmMARS
IESIDOOIJl ·&amp; COMMIIOAl

ON SAl£ NOW AT

SEARS IN •.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
EVENINGS

Servic1:s

4/l/81/lfn

81 --Homa Improvement•
82-Piumbing 6 He•ing
83-e.cwatina
84-Eiectrlcll &amp; Retrtg•etion
95-Generel Hauling
86-MobHe Home Repait'
17-=- Upholstery

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX
OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS

Pu bile: Notice

LIVE BAIT
ETC.

Said hearing wMI be hold In

21/2 MI. lelow
Racine Locks &amp;
Da• At Antiiquity

the Common Pleu Courtroom on the thlrdlloorofthe
Melgo County Coutthou11.

. All written and oral commint• will be heard at the
time 1o dnignated.

MOBIL.
HOME PARK ··
•Moblhi Homti-

Pena

Public N otlce

'-•Mobile Home
Rentals
· · •Lot Retttels

NOTICE OF
DRAWING OF JURORSOifico of
Comml11ionera of
Jurort
Meigo County. Ohio
July 21, 1989
To All ·Whom It M oy

992-7479
It. 33 North of

On Wodneldoy. the 2nd
doy ofAuguat 1889, It 9:00
a' clock A.M., et the office of
the Commilalonero of Juroro of Melgo County, Ohio.
Juroro wll be publicly drown
for the ·Sept-ber 1889
Term of the Common PI••
Court af lllid County.
Wallace Bradford ,
t. 0. McCoy
Commi81Jon•• of Jurors
(7) 25, 1tc
•

I

-~~

I

.'

GENERAl CONTIACTOIS
. .

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

...

"Free

11-18-'IIB·tilft:

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~•n•i~ol
c:J
Evaluations For AU Ages

i:j

....

Licens'lll Clinical Audiologist
~-7619

::1:

z

EttimotH" .

-

PH. 949·2101
or Res. M9·2160
NO SUNDAY

.

~

or (614) 992-2104

Avenue. Box 1213 .

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
.
or at ·
Veterans Memorial HOSIPilal
Mulberry lf&amp;ts, Pomeroy,

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

WI: IIAVIt A OOOD UL&amp;CTIOII
111 aa IJDI'PEIUEin' cotOJII . ..,,._. MD YMD.
Sto~ ·By ~nd See Us! -Financing Available
MASTERCARD and VISA WELmME

(614) 667-3271
Grant A.

IILOW IIOUDAY 1111, IAIIAUGA, OliO

BISSELL
BUILDERS

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"DOC" VAUGHN

J&amp;L
INSULATION

742-2421

Roger Hysell
Garage

Mastic - Cortainteod®
Vinyl Siding
Seamless Gutter
Replaconwnt Windows
Blawn lmulation
Storm Doors &amp;

Rt. 124, Pomeror Ohia

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tr••••l••l••
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Windows ...,,
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992-2772

7-12-'89-1 mo.

4-25-tln

JONES nRE.
CENTER

WATER
SERVICE

SWEEPER REPAIR
All MAlES AND

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and .MORE

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTEINS

222 East Main

Call Anytime

POMEROY, OH.

•New Tires

.Custom Pipe Bendina
oOit Chanps

oGrNII Jobs
oGenenl Chassis ·
Maintatance
.Computerized Balmcer
992-3897
St.

992·2371

992-6872
MOIIIS

6-16-tln

WANTED

CUSTOM SCIIEN
PlltmiG

•nro• rucrotS
o£CHO I'IOOUCn

DEAD 01 AUYE

•Washers •D ryers .
•Range •Ft'eezen
•Refrigeraton
"Must le RlpCiiraltlt"

•HATS
•T-SHIRTS
oJACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES,
GROUPS.
ORGANIZATIONS

-t!OWAID liOTAYArOIS
.

MOWER REPAIR

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

KEN'S
SDYiCE

985-4300

742-24SS
Saltm St.
Rutland,Oh.

We

CHESTER

LARRY D. IROGAN, CIC

NEW- REPAIR

422 Market Str11t

Downspouts

lealted at Y. .y ...........

In lllddftttert, Oh.

Gutters

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 end 4-cycte

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

P. 0. Box 118
Park~tsburg,

WV 261 02
1-100-333·5252

angina

V4U.7168

PH. 992·3922

Ea....

Announcemenls

BAWT, TAP
&amp;JAZZ

SEIWICE

DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON

We con rllllir and ,...

,., , ...tan oiNI
heatlf' c«n. Wt can
also ocitf boil and rod
aut nlllotan. We olso
repoir Go1 Tonkt.

II MIDDUPOIT, OliO

PAT HILL 1FOID
992-2198

fw

M kldl.eport,

Immediate full t11111and part time opening•
are available for reglltered RUI'IOI to work
In the Special Cere Unit, EmergHc:y Room.
and the Mldlcal/8urglcal Unit. 8al.ery
commen•urate with experience. Excei'*nt

fringe banefltl.

CONTACT:
Rhonda Daney, R. N., Director of Nursing
Veterans MefTIOril!l Hospital. ·
111 E. Memorial. Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 417811
(8141 882-2104, Elltenllon 213

. _ hlfernrtlon
7-17-'89-1 mo. d.

IAGU lUlGI
SIIAU ENGINI

CAMPGIOUNDS

YA-NIIOWas

NOW OPEN

1010 SAWS &amp; P I IS
OIIGOIIIAIS, CIWIIS

WITH 100115 AND
APAIIMENTS FOR

IYAIII SIIYICI Cltnlll
l'ttrh &amp; S..wice Oto

IEIII lly Day or
~

Now Taking
Registrations
992-5288

Wnkl

VISA •

~~~~~~HAAGE

HOURI: Mon.'Frl. 1-7
Bat. 1·11
Cl-lundly

$18 ,_;Day &amp; Up

····""

.9 49-2526

3/17111 ttn

\.
-

~··

•

Stock P•rts for ,
Homelite. Weedealer,
Tecumseh. Brigge &amp;
, Str•tton .

FREE ESTIMATES ·

"Ott/.

All Mek•

DlYE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPlll

ROOFING

Wheat
Rm Sscudties

Service

5-4·89-1

Howard L Writesel

Clrtifilll ......... c....
lmetm..t lrokw

•

(Next to Hill Top GrOCIIJI :

MY·T·SHOP

EQUIPMENT

Rt. 124

Middleport, Oh.

stutn ttn

6-S-'89-tfft

~WN

•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

Certrfi .. Lictt"lsed

4-16-16-tln

•'(&amp;'lii'UN MOWERS

•Gravel

CAll 992·6756

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

..Nrmun unms

YOU CAL/. IT
WE WILL HAUL

SYRACUSf, 01110

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949-2860

'

LW.
TRUCKING

Molt Foreign end
Dom•tic Vehid81
A/ C Service
All Mlior &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certifi_. Mac;:henic

Prlnolpll atock • COimmoclty

1I~::::;;;:;;;;;::~
~

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING io. REPAIRS
PIIONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

61&amp;.11•1117 .• 7

MMn,_ NYIE

.

.,

9.85-4141

6/ 311/tln

aab Gilmore,
60 RiveNiew OrNe
Mldcleport, Ohio 45710
Agent for, the Pwthionera
(7)18, 25; (8)1, B. 4tc

c•STEI, OIHO

DD.I!POll

MODELS

992-2269

Concern:

_,

2 H.D. Mr~r:::pon and . "At Reasonable Prices"

21-31 WORDS
t7.00
810.00 .
t16 .00

~&lt;

cept- cl• .. fled ditpl..,. lusln-'• Card end legal noticesl
wll altO appW In the Pt. Ple•ant Register and:the Galli·
polis Dt;ily Tri.,..ne. reaching 0'1411! 18,000 hom• ~
·

Gallle County
AreaCodel14

TltiiS. E.l. 6:4$ P.M.
SUN. E.1. 1:45 P.M. I

MARCUM

. I

POMEIOY..UGliS
CLUI

broken up day twill bec:hlfged

"Ads outside Melg~, Oallla or Maton counti• must be prePIId.
.
'
•Receive •.50 discount for ads peld in advance.
'Free ... - Giv•lw•v and Found ada und• 15words will be
run 3 d~t et no ch•a•.
•Price of ad for allciPilell«t~ta is double price of ad c:ost .
'7 point line type onfy uMd.
"Sentin_tl is not rnpon1ible for error I 1fter. first d.,. (Check
for error• fiut dll;' ad runt in paper) . c.&amp;l before 2 :00p.m.
dw eft• DUbtictllkln to m•h conect6on.
•Acta thlt mult be peid in adwence ...
Cerd of Th.nkl
Happy Adl
In Memoriam
Ytid Sal•

mate of Iva Stewart. de·

..

0·11 WORDS 11-21 WORDS
1 DAY
84 .00
85 .00
3DAYS
t6.00
88.00
8DAYS
ea.oo
$13:00
813.00
10 DAYS
t21 .00
1 MONTH · S:i3.00
$61.00

following telephone exchanges ...

OBSESSION, 3.4 oz. Spray ........................ ~· .............. 45 00

T1rt Bank T1taJ M:lla 'nlings }....

FREE ESTIMATES

RATES

Classified pages cover the

;'"

.

THE CENTRAL TRLST&lt;XMaNY

llmiiOR-ImRtOa

MASTERCARD-VISA-GOLDEN IUCIIEYE

?

·••••part 992-6661

LINDA'S
PAINTING

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9978

,DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE -11:00A.M. SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M . MONOAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2.-00 P.M. TUESDAY
WEONESOAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M. WEDNESOAY
'!HURSDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M. THURSDAY
FAIOAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
SUNOAY PAPER

•

I

6·21·'89-tfn

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

· RACINE, OHIO

.f'\

«

Pomeroy, Oh.

CHAIN UNI FENCES
, .. ,.,

BINGO .

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

.

is available lor a
limited time only·.
For more inlor· mation contact
your nearest
Central Truat office
Cllll G - 1 ' 446-~...

Located Off Bypeu At
Jet. of Rto. 7 &amp; 143.

614-915-4180

Public Notice

H you've been
holding back wait·
ing lor a great rate,
this is it. But you've
got to act fast.
This offer from
Central Trust

992-5114

HAVI llfiiENCE

'WATCH FOR US THERE"

New Colognes

Today"

YEIY IUSONAill

'EAST MEIGS · :...; A11'' gir ls
wishing to · play · volleyball at
Eastern High School, Grades
7-12, who have not yet received
the volleyball information
packet. should make arrangements to do so as soon possible.
You may do so by calling Coach
Douthitt at 667-6942 or Coach
Jackson ·at 667-6530.

,,

WHY YOU SHOULD ·
INVEST IN A
·CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH CD.
NOW I

Give Us A Call

Take the p11ln out of
painting. Let ... de
It f!"' rou • .

Volleyball signup

949·2100

We· Buy All
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless. Steel,
Etc.

AIE PUNCH!

WE WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, JULY .
29TH, TO ATTEND THE BEND AREA
CLEARANCE SALE AND TRADE SHOW AT
THE MEIGS HIGH CAFETERIA•.·
3RD STREO

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM • 7 PM
EXCE"
HOUDAYS

PP£1{

a

Received -a-;;&amp;;'p-boop-a-doop
from Scottie Hayes .- with a

RECYCLING

SMALL
WANT ADS

By BOB HOEFLICH
Improvements are pta,nned at
the Racine Village boat ramp.
Now Is . the
river will only
cooperate.
The vi-llage
has received
$1275 donation
fo~ work on the
river boat ramp.
However, this summer the Ohio
River just hasn't been cooperative . The rains have caused the
river to consistently be on the
rise and since a great deal ofthe
work must be done at the edge of
the ramp and even under water,
the . improvement hasn't been
able to ·get . off . the ground.
Last .Tuesday . the river was
down within a workable level and
Rose Excavating was ready to
dig in. But more rain came and
that little dream got nowhere.
Village Clerk Jane Beegle
says, not to worry - it shall be
done when the time is right.

--------

.Business Services

WASHINGTON tUPI) . - The
Ben'n ett · decllt)ed to say
Houston Mayor Kathy Whit ·
nation's mayors _asked the ad- whether the government would mire, president of the U.S.
ministration for S3 billion to fight
be willing to give more money to
Conference of Mayors, also said
illegal narcotics In the cities but
the cities.
"more military Involvement Is
said a meetlqg with drug policy
"Th'? mayors always ask for needed ... and Bennett agrees."
director William Bennett more money," Bennett said.
It was the first meeting bebrought no firm federal
"The federal governmen I will tween the mayors and Bennett,
commit-ment.
do its part," he said. "The states who wiU Issue a report on the
A delegation of mayors repres- and Iocai. governments must do drug war Sept. 5.
enting cities of all sizes held a
thelrs .as well.
The &lt;;:onferen~ of Mayors said
one-hour meeting Monday with . . "I'll go on· record that cr~cks ' In a statement that the nation's
Bennett, dlr~tor of the National are. worse than taxes. .. . Maybe anti-drug strategy must include
.Drug Control. PoUcy, to press tor down the road we wiU have to Improvement In the Interdiction
a •targe increase In anti-drug raise taxes (to step up funding)." of illegal narcotics, tougher
alloeatlotl going directly to urban
Flynn complained that "too penal.tles, ban of semiautomatic
'
areas . The mayors want the much" of the federal. .anti-drug
· assault' weapons and an Internamoney spent on local poUce funding "gets stuck In federal tional drug eradication army.
depart-ments, public hospitals and state burea~cracy and not
•and community organizations.
enough gets to the frontllnes In
high priority areas."
"This has been a wasted year
in the war on drugs," Boston
New York Mayor Ed Koch said
taxes will have to be increased
Mayor Raymond Flynn told
now to fight drugs.
reporters following the meeting.
"People are ready to accept an
''The federal government has not
Increase In taxes,'' Koch said.
backed up (Its anti-drug) rhePhiladelphia· Mayor W. Wilson
toric with dollars." . .
Goode
said the mayors were
During fiscal year 1989, $5
seeking
a fuU "partnership with
billion In federal. tax money will
the
federal
government.~'
have been spent on combatting
Marlon
Barry,
mayor of Wanarcotics and $6 billion wiU be
shington,
D.C
..
urged
the admlnspent next fiscal year. But the
lsttatl.on
to
"call
an
International
mayors said the bulk Is going to
summit to discuss the posslbiHty
federal and state agencies, Interof an International army" In
diction, the Coast Guard and
fighting . tnegal . narcotics
prosecutors - not to the cities
worldwide.
themselves.

-~-

Olan Booth of Pomeroy reports
that street car passenger services in Pomeroy were discontinued on June 26, 1929. Olan was
the only reader to come forward
with a date on when the service
was concluded .

Ohio ·

Mayors want bucks in drug fight

Publ.ic Notice

ATLANTA (l)Pl) - A group of
Ku Klux Klansmen will take a
cl.ass on race relations from a
.clvU rights leader as part of an
· agreement to be (iled in an
.Alabama federal court but one
.Klansman is balking at the
· set Uemen t. a pub I!shed report
·, ·said Tuesday.
The Atlanta Constitution said
fmperial Wizard ·James Ferrands of the Invisible Empire of
the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan
rejected the agreement in the
case, in which Klansmen assaulted civil rights marchers 10
years ago, as "cruel and unusual
punishment."
"It would be terrible if a black
·person committed a crime.
·;against a white person and he
;was made to come to a Klan
-meeting and listen to racial
Indoctrination from us," Fer'rands said. "By the same token,
you take someone who Is diametriCally opposed to their teaching
·and put them In a situation that Is
not friendly and where they feel
: Insecure and pound Into their
' heads that they have to get along
with black folks - that is cruel
and unusual punishment."
The newspaper, quoting Mor:rl&amp; s. Dees, executive director of
the Southern Poverty Law Cen·ter In Montgomery. Ala. , said the
agreement Is part of the set tiemen I of a cwtl case to be filed
Tuesday In U.S. District Court In
tfuntsviUe, Ala.
"A lot of times a criminal has
to face his victim and get a
cathartic · experience," Dees
said.
The defendants In the suit were
convlcled on criminal Charges o~
uuulllna cMI right• marchers
Iii O.catur,Aia., IaMay 19'19. ·
..,.

__

State'," he said. "I believe
they're generally sort of split
between Lone Star or nothing. A
lot of people don't want to change
it at all. Sonie people don't mind
the new desii?;n, but don't like the
motto."
The highway agency logged
nearly 800 calls about the plates
last Friday , .with less than 1
percent commenting favorably
about the new slogan. Polson said
the calls "tapered off a lot"
Monday.
"Some of Ohe callers) say they
are fifth generation Texans and
their forefathers fought under
.the Lone Star flag/' said Tommie
Pinkard. spokesman for the
highway agency. "There seems
to be a thought that we're
somehow doing away with the
phrase 'Lone Star'."

Community calendar

Lod~:e

Senior CJrizens Center in Pomeroy from 8-ll p.m. Caller for the
evening will be Homer Magnet.
All western square dancers a re
coordially Invited.'

Softball tournament
Bobb Logging will sponsor a
men's USSSA softball tourna' Melp Baad Boosters
ment on Saturday and Sunday at
;'
The Meigs Band Boosters will . the Middleport Park. Entryfee.ls
; meet on Aug. 7 at 7 p.m. in the $65 and hit your own ball. Call
Roger Manley at 992-5030 or Bill
: high school band room.
Capehart
at 992-5223.
•
: Square dance
Marlin reunion
: The Bel.les and Beaus Western
Descendants of · Dick and
• Square Dance Club will sponsor
Nancy
Martin, fab'lilY and
: an open dance on Sat-urday at the

.•

26.1989

3 Announcements ..
Plan,.d
Porwllhoed
Of
Southoaot Ohio, 231 llo,ln
strHI, •nnouncee new MWI!
tor ctlont ....,.._ ~na
Au£~U~t 1, 18... The
_ 1 el
PPSEO will be o..-n on
.
nudaye and
cloHd on
Thuredep. Hourt aNIO bt 1:30
to 5:00 MondoJ: Wod""ctoy lnd
Friday: 1:30 to t:OO on Tuotdai/,

4

Giveaway

,

.,_rt

3 P"PPIH
Block Lob and
Gorman Sh•pherd, 304-1711120.
'
8-ltut puppl... Plulfy on'il'

1':-l~btock

IIIII onllloo.

-·-?·

· · "' .homo In _..,...;.
1\14-47H711.

.F- PuDPioa: 7 - · Old, pert.

chow.lfWlWIM.

Full blooded Pit lutl to tlDOil
hom• In 1he country, 3044'J'I...
' . I~

3864.

Old 1-/!:Jd-1 - L 1 doL
qUII'I .... 111-441 137(
.,

........... AIIotnottoo\_
Heiler. IIIII ODIIIe. 7 Wb. ..._
WonRII[

1210.

.,. . . . . . .,

.....

�•

8-The Daily Sentinel

Paga

lAFF-A-OAY

Giveaway

4

Poma'oy

6

wooring

Hc8,.e,

on

IMdlcallon

lar

thyroid problom, loll at Third
Hartlnaor In Mlddl-.
Anoworo to llloty. .114-192·"50
ottorc-:40.
. -::,--:--"--::-FOUND: BiOndo ..1o Ccldlor
$panlol -ring WhHI lloa COI-

44

and

Iar. lt4

7

whita, In Roell: Sprlnp area.

614.gl2-2711.

Yard Sale

..

-- - - ----- --·- - -·- - ·

,,

~,..li.R.

,

ol'! ! • ""'• •ql oOh•o: ~ ..,.,. ...

•• ..... ., ,.,..,,~ .... ~,.

"It loqks like the mess I got
on your ~arpet when I came
in."

r=========:r==========-1

pl1wte

1

I CAN'T BELIEVE 1M GOING
OVER TO Tf.IE MALL TO MEET
A GIRL l DON'T REME;MBER ..

9

A.D• .only wantld. 18 hours per
week. W.I.C. coun~~ellng. Melge

wanted to Buy

Co•nty Hoallh Dopt. 114-1112·

houHholdl of fur- 6621.
nttur. &amp; ant lquM. Alto wood &amp;
Compl!~tl

COli heattrl. Swain'• Fumhur•
&amp; Auctlan, Third I Olive, cell

12

Situation
wanted

114-441-3151.

F'-!mlture and appllancn by the We care for . aldlrty and hanplec:i or endre hoL!Hhold. Fair .dlcappld In our home. 20 yaare
prtc•• being paid. C.ll 814-446- experience. LPN on call. Low

:usa.
Junk

cara

whh

or without

malaro.. C.ll Larry Uvoly 114-

Income home. Call814-992-6873
aft1r 7:00 p.m. for mort lnlor-

mation.

I ;.,;.,;,:,...._______
15

3111-1303.

Schools &amp;

I

Pro 1140 qu1~ ".:ny condHion.
Instruction
Cosh Pold. GlllltHI2-H57 or
RE•TRAIN f'IOWI
514-lll2·2481.
SOUTHEASTERf'l
BUSINESS
TOP' CASH pofd f9i' 1983 madol COLLEGE, 521 Jackoon Plko.
1

end . n•w•r used ca,., Smith

Call 614_.41-4317. Reg. No. 81-

Bulck.Pontlac, 1111 Eootom 1.:.;
Avo., Golllpalll. cau 61 4-4'* 18
2282.
lJaed fumh1.1r• and hou.. hald
appllancaa. Phona 114-742•

2048.

.

Uud furnllur.

"J also
the place or
telling.

entire houaehol

614·742·2455.

11..;·1,;05;;5:;:B;,
. - - - -·- - -

Wanted to Do

Nice brtck houu, 2 car garage,
2 bl., large country kitchen, 1

112 bofho, acr11nod In
brMzeway, on 2 acres. Cill 614258·114t.
.1Wo bodroom, Burdottl .Addn,
one owner, IXC cond, ntatt uttlement, FHA epprovadf priced
on Inspection, 11rlou8 nq'-llrea
only, 304-67~5or675·285~.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12x!5, 2 bedroom. Good con-

dillon. Coll614·112-5858.

14x60 2 br., ga• hall, 12xl5, 2
br., ga• halt, both recondition
Ilk• now: Muot -1 C.ll 814-446-

0175.

151171 Flamingo, 12x85, 3 bed-

room. $4200. Located on

lot

n~~~r

3033.

l'lntal
Harrleonvllle. 614-742-

11

Help wanted

$350. per day procnslng phone
orders! Pto'ple call you. No experi•nc• necnury. Call (rafun·
dablt) 1-315-733-6012 extension

P·2741A.

oil lor $115.00. 304-1175-5045.
POOR 'BOY TIRES, 304-1753331, front and allnmont $18.15l

refrlg.
$2611/moopluo dop. UIIIIIIH l
Kltchenlltowe

Uood pick up bodo,

te"/.o,

ref. No pall. C.ll614-446-4925.

Nictl 2 br., 4 112 mi., from Gal-

Coil

75-5104.

11,000.00
1$175

UESD-Bads, dr..llra, bedroom
auit1a. O..ka, wringer waaher, •
compllll Una of uaed fumtture.
.f'IFW·Wootom baotl • $35.

Antiques
ono bldroom tumlohod opt, 53
vory cloan and nico. No polL ,:.::......:......:.,:.:.:f
·

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

Buy or 1111. Rlnrina Antique•,
1124 E. Main Streit, Pom~roy.
Hou-· ... T
1 o oo a m to 8 oo
••· ..,., · • :
· •
:
p.m., Sunday 1:QO to 8:00 p.m.

w

614-8112·2526.

Buy, 1111 or trade enUques &amp;

cqllaclablas. S11 Dtck Or S.lly

at ' Ed'e, Galllpolla Fin Market,
Slit/Sun, or call 614-446-7612,
dally attar 6 p.m.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

itfiN~

THE

or tong, 304-1175.

1185 Chryaler New Yorker, good

Goldan Rttrlavar pup&amp; AKC
reglaleNCI 1150 HCh. Call 114-

266-4436.
Groom and Supply . Shop-Pol
Grooming. All brMdO. Allotyloo.
lame Pel ·Food Dealer. Julie

Wobb. Coil 6t 4-446-0231.
Pook A Poo pupploo, $100.00
uch. 304-1175-21125.

IHI...,..,.,

1Srn Apache told down, eiHpe

cond.l$4915. Colll14-44&amp;.1021. ·
11168 Ford Elcart W.gon. Aloo
RCA VCR. 814.ft2·11422.
11167 Eoeort. 11117tROC Z28 for
qlo. C.lll14-247-47113.

72 Trucks for Sale

Regllterld Tenilr puppy, 6 wk1.
olc0$75. Shots I wormed. Call

1973 Chevy 314 ton pickup whh
lopper encf hitch. Ssbo. 114-167·

57

Musical
Instruments

Individual

guhu

IIISOOI1

btglnntrt:, HriOUI gultarltt.
Mue~,
J•ff
Brunlcardl•

Wamale~

lnllructor, 814-44&amp;--

8077,11mltld openlng1.

Upright plono $75.00, 304-175.
3560.'
.

3220.
11177 f·t50 Ford Rongor XLT.
Good cond. Runo gaodl$2711.
C.ll614-367.0312.
.
1878 Chevy 112 ton truc:li, 350, 4
borrol, $550. C.ll614-446-3852.
1871 :114 ton GMC. Hoovy duty,
c1mper apaclal. Dual tanU. PS,
PB1 AC. $3500. Good ohopa.
11•-112·2751.
1879 Ford F-150 4x4 plcll-up,
ere. condl$5,000. Call Gary at

GCM.R~ ~ FIU)(IJG

IT

mlln, GMC motor, double air
exc cond, price

Trouble In Eden
• Neahvth Now
1:30(1) e(J) The,;,,_ Yura
The kids' beloved woocla are
scheduled to be destroyed .

~ 2.o, League aa-u
1:00 e CD 11m In Tl1l Of
The Night A viC1Im of a brual

Services

assaun trtggera bolh
marnorlaa and SUiplcionl. (R)

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

~ u.s. Olwmplc Fealval

(J) ~~--The
Connera react hilariously to
the Imminent danger of a
tornado.~R) ·
CD l!l S
Far
o . _ , atrtck Watson
travels to Africa to Interview
Moamrner Gadhaft.l;!
llll elll Mila :Teen USA
(I) •

Unconditional llr.tlme guar~•
111. Loal f'lferenc•• turiQh.ct.
FrH nflmatn. Call collact 1-

514·237.Q468, day or night. R o
Waterproofing.
Experienced drywoll hinging

garaBaeement

and flnlehlng 1110 repair worK,

..

1184 Chevrolet pick-up, 3
quarter ton; Automatic, loti of
eKtras, llll.• new, have to ... to

other brandt. Hou11 catrs, alto
some appllanc• repalre, WV

114-441-2141.

iiJ
-·
IJ) Hogan'•
Murder, 8111
Wrote

roducod, 304-1175-4437.

In Zenhh elaa

euepeMion...nglne IIHdl work.

[)Ffi(Ul.T 10

complete,

1:00~

blilavo, Colll14-446-1418;
11115 s-1~1 Etccouont Shorn,
1971 vw von. Good tOft!!. n.
truck t-r(groy). Bnt oft•~·
114-446-0111.
11166-Ford F-250, pick-up, I eyl.
ongl...utomotlc, PS/PBIHD,

~

.........,

o~

ff.AT 1t\£1R F£OR£ UP
lfJ Rft.IC ~- . .

.·,,

avenlngt.
,
11110 Chivy Lw 4 opaod, good

cond, 11,500. 304-175-8182 eher

a .

az cas
PlarhO•••

catloftor 5:00PM, 304-875-6457.
Fetty TrM Trimming, stump
remove~ .co11304-117S.f331.
..

114-441-3110 day; 114-441-me,

rarm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

generator ltorage. Mult ' " to -

81

mur~ring

u.s. Bantamweight
ChampiOnship from Portland,
ME (T)
(I) e (J) Who'etM -.?
As part of a work-study
prOject, Samantha works ior
Angela. (R} C
CD l!l Nove 'Nova travel a
along lha Gulf Stream In the
AUantic Ocean. !:;II
1111 •
san-.
Mlc:key ounna is
an lfrepreaal~ and
ln'averent Ct'\l&amp;adlng :
]oumallst. Q

"1

appreciate, 114-388-1812.
.
11113 ShHio 15 112 ft. comi&gt;or.

AC, owning, tully Hll.contilnor.
.3100. C.lf614-146-1214.
1H9 32 ft. Coprt, flllly Hll-&lt;:onFor Sale: 1112 Muet~tna. MW TA talnect, air, ...¥
t~~tqr1
radlala. on alum. rtms, 'VGC Call lter1o,
microwave,
trorw
614·245.5102.
kitchen, mutt 1111. $1150.
For 81,11: 1187 Camtro, V-6, Ch111paob, OH 614-894-5321.
Fual lll)actad. AM-FM casa. 25ft. Coochmon Bunkh.-.
Automatic overdrive. 114-256- Good cond. SIHPI II. t3,500.
6000.
514-367·7252.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcloo Mldaa inolor home, 21.130

wb. old. 114-446-411~.
6t4-446-13114.

So-

1, atovo, olnlc, loo box, ~£&lt;DC ..
convartor. C.lll14-3711-2....
1171
21' Clall A.
L- mllllfll1lood eond. 440
Chryolar
onglnHxtroo-

G1 Croolt • ChaM
7:36(1) Mejor'Lugue a . - •
I:OOCD The Blue. The Grey,
P11t 1 of I (NR) (1 :00)
e Cll 11m MatloCk MaUock
~lea to clear psychiatrist
l)ltlant.(R) Q
(J) Cbantplcinllllp ICe-

per with awning!- txc cond,

1985 Olda 'Firanu. Exc. Cond.

. ._II
IIJl CI088flre

accused of

cam-

$3,400. 304-876-761J7.

from $100 Forda. Marcedes.
Pomaranlanil, 1 mala, 4 112 Corvenu. Chlvye. Surplue.
montha, 175. 1 .. mala, I Buyoro Guidi 111 8fl5.ell7-6000,
monlhe, $50. 114-tt2-5072.
Ext. S-10189.

Purebred Slamne ' ldHena, 6

21 rt

(0:30)

e(J)USATOCitly

CANPY, AND MEPIVM
.StJFT

13.

tunr Mlf-oeont•lnld,

wen as unique and humorous
• sporting events from around
the world. (0:30)
.
(I) E - l n - Tonight

or LAflGE pof~O~N,

Fl•lwoodM'IIdem•••

ohopa loodod, 304-875·2722.

New tlr... $4800. Call 114-448Dragonwynd eanery Kanntt. 18118.
P1rWian end Slam... end 11111112 Nlaan pick-up, a opd.
Hlmoloyon klnono. Ch!IW otud AMIFM atereot ~uto. Wire wheal
oorvloo. C.ll 114-446-3844 aHor COVII'8. let DIUI, Very good

7p.m,
Floh Tonic, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
Point Plaeunt, 304-e75-2013, 10
gol HI up $14.11 and 10 gal
complolo 1163.25.

7

sports g - e~- as

l«fL~=:"" 1 Q

1971 Trotwood, 18 tt ale•P'I I ,
loti of
'toilet,

$99. Rocllnor otartlng $99.

&amp;

for!11 Chovl •

·= r:·bll

wood grou~ - $339. Living room
aulta-$.199-$599. Bunk bada
with baddlng· $249. Full aizt
matlrtts &amp; foundation alerting

.I

WffEN Stff 1bTALLfl&gt;

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olivo St., Gallipolis. NEW • • .pc.

Workboola $18 &amp; up. (Stul
housing. Sec.. 110ft too.) Coll814-446-3t 59.

~hort

e..-

Host Jay Johnstone ·
IntervieWs two calebrlty

" SCAAIEST fA~T WA~

·•

4,000 goad uud tim. Mm
tlrM,nawllrn.

Large upetlifll apl. 238 First

.
Regency, Inc. 2 b~., ept, ·new
plusl1 carpet, naw paint,
utlllt~•Q4_g.arhally paid. St?5lmo.

o o o o o

ml.a manifold and parts, tiki

$182. C.ll 814-112·7787.

304~75-1400.

7:05 (J) Andy Grlfllll1
7:30eCll Family Feud
(J) Ughter llkle Of Sporll

mite. Manifolds I parts, takl•ll

room . 1partmenta at VIllage
Manor
and
Riverslae
Apartmanta In Middleport. From

qual opportunhy

•

Part 1 Of 2 Stereo.
aJITopC.rd

l9i' .91.
Jaop porto with whlllo · ond
tlroo, 304-875-3246.
OfdontObllo :zea, V-1 onglna with

Garagi apt.· tumfshld,· _29 112
Ntll. Gllllpallo $225/ma, Ultlltlos
pd. can 11 4-446-44t8 oHor 7
p.m.
Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bod·

tlon 8 ICCipled.

aJINewc-trr

0--ytlne
Ill ~ Grlfllll1
IJ) Miami VIce Prodigal Son.

260 ¥-8, ocunvlllt engine, with

Galllpolla. 114-t46-4416 after -,
p.m.

formotlon coil 304-18:1-3716. E·

f9 PRINl
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Ron•• TV Service, spaclallzlna
HIV~Ing

=:~Uvel
Of VIolence This

IJ) Crlnlll

program axarnlnas how and
Why innocent cltlldran tum

;~

mosl
~:

Into violent end dangerous
adult&amp;. Hoatad by' Louie
Gossen, Jr.
1:30(1) e(J) Coech Hayden
feels threatened by Christina
gol'/&amp; out with another man.

1,

304-576-23116 Ohio 814-446- ,
2454.
.•
Rotory or coblo tool drilling.
Moat wella complatld ume
Pump ltl• and IIIIVICI,

:Z,·

815-3802.
SWEEPER ond oowlng mochlno •'
ropolr, .. ~o, and ouppllao, P~k
up and' dallvery, Davra Vacuum
CIHnar, one half mi.. tap

Goorgoo Crook Rd. C.lllt&gt;l-446.
Itt. Oberg last truck topper, tha . 0214.

Ford ontfDodgo. t250. lt&gt;l-367·
7252.

~·

HOW WAS

HE 'WAS PLUMB

FILBERT"

PARSON!!

"FIOOUN'

FANTASTICAL.

LAST
NIGHT,
SNUFFY?

I BET HE TOOK IN
A HUNNERT DOWRS

;'=FH11val'lt
Opening CereniOnl&amp;s:
Entertafnment's top .
pertormers, along willt over
1,000 singers, daocan a!'fl
athletes, are featured from
Owen Field and M8111011al ·
Stadium al the University of
Oklahoma In Norman, OK.

WHEN HE PASSED
,..__ TH' HAT!!

(R)

10:00CD700 Club
e Cll 11m MMtlclrdr'tlglllald1t Clllllr
Killian lali lor a singer,
unawart she has murder on
her mind. (Rl Q

ASTRO-GRAPH

Rllldlntial
wiring,

or

commtrcllt

naw Mrvlce or

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

rt~p•lrs.

LictnHd electrtclln. Ridenour

Eloclrieol, 304-175-17118.

Ju1J21, 111t
A lewardlng ~r could In the offing
whlre you shoUld be able to a~preoo
and put your Innovative Ideas to profit·
able u.... H o -• your aut;eeaall
won't be clue to your allorta - ·
LEO (JuiJ :IJ.Aug. 22) Something you'll
do today will provide you with a aolld
_ .. of a c h - t and pride, yet you
rn!ghl be a tad dleappolntld Whan the
prllla you expect from otttera doesn't
come eMily. ~&lt;.- wNr8 to look lor roand you'l ftnd 11. The Aatro-

,.

llriiPh MllcftrMicer lnllantty ,_II

(

~~~~tRMBlE FORI-

..

(I)
;

which signs are romanllcaUY petlect lor AQUARIUS (.len. 20-feb.
If you
yolt. Mall S2 to Matchmaker, c/o thlo keep your mind off youroell
you'll
newspaper.P.O. Box91428,Cievel'and, be able to IPOI ~;~~':f:::~=~:.ln~:· l
OH 44101-3428.
Whlc:lt you can be I•
l(IRGO (Aug. 23-lltpl. 22) AHhough od~ Inhibits your Ylllon lnolead· of
you'll be extremllly popular With others onhanclng It
·
today, you must IIIII take care thai you PIICIS (Peb. 20 Mr ch 20) You'll per.
don't lnadvertanlly oay something that tonn better today H you have lo match
could hurt aomeone'a leetlnga. Think your I I - agalnet a bull)' llchedule.
before opeaklng.
Tlllllo one of thoee tlmeslt'a to your adUBRA (lltpl. 23-0ct. 13) Shiite In con- ventage to pual1 yoltrMtl a bit.
ditlona tend to work out for your u"l· AIIIIB (lllrah 11·Aprll11) Conditions
mate benefit today, 10 don't be dltl- that affliCt your atatua and malarial well
turbed II changes not o'f your own
being are favorable today, provided you
making are.folalod upon you.
cfori't go out of your way t o - favors.
SCOIIPIO (Oot.M-1111¥. 22) Your qulc:k ' Tlke advantage of that which Is
wit and lklla as a mediator Wll come UltiOIIciled.
Info play today to avert art delcat1011 ', TAUIIUB (April 20-lleJ 20) Although
bel\&gt;oen two frlendl. You'll ha.,. tlttm your lntenljont might be otr.o -.you
chuckling over the matter In eplte of are IIIII 1111tto go.cl othlra Into competlng agalnll you today. You're llkllly to
lheinMivea.
IAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dfc. 11) Even ortit&gt;Y the action, bu1t1Mry ITIIIY not.
though your mind Isn't llkllly to b8 total- QIIIINI (Mer '11-.lunl 211) Your head ,
ly loculed on your aaalgnmenta today, fillY be a bit In ,lhe - · today and
you'llatlll do uurprlalngly ellacll.,. jOb. yooJr thought pra c 11111 might 1ac1t
With mora - o n . how-. you practicality. Tlllngall1oUidwortcout'o~.
could do..., better.
h01ilol1, .,_,.. othlra wHI be there
CAJIIIICOIIN (Deo. 22-.len. 11) A dll)' to
up.
on the town with - t . tun frlenda
221 'the eacret
could be on excallent tonic lOr you toII 10' ll11011lly
day. However, tlka care you don't get
Involved In frlvaloita, extravagant
actlvltlel.

e (J) lttihi6ilrt1it'-IGim111tllrtlt11*•1nlllg

Mellua'a grandmother urges
to loin the lllmlly bualnau.

WL

BRIDGE ·

MOVIE:
a.gullld (R)
(2:00)
1D-.30 CD P.O.V. Storle8 of killer
1ncl witn1111s complement
and contradict aach ottter.

lj~2m.,~
. . . . . Cei "'

11:80 CDPajler CliMe
eCD w e&lt;Jl 111

Bllawa
eiiD AIMIIIo ...,

•= ·

o=••

·IJ)

VIce Theretll

Stereo.
•YouCanBIAIW
11:30eCll GI'BeatOfc..on

=·'*'
lw.ar;:!-Q
(J)

(0:30}

,.e::r-• Cnralr. CliMe

.H

NORTII

'f.II-H

+75

Declarer knew be was off tbe ace of
hearts but boped be would avoid the
10118 of a trump trick. There would ~ ·
story U the openlns lead by West
· been a beart, but hi! led the queen
of apades. South cubed A·K of spades,
and East signaled eathusiaatlcally
with the heart 10 thal be beld the ace.
It seems ba.nb to now blame South for
playing A-Q of diamonds, Iince his obvious intent wu to throw oae heart
away on dummy's third diamond, and
then, he bopetl, get rid of !be other on a
higb club. Nevertbelea, it wu a lfli&amp;.
take to play diamonds rather than
clubs.
Look at it this way. For the contract
to make, West will ba.ve to follow to
two clubs. Tbat being the case, It costa
nothing to play A·K of clubs lint. Yes,
if both defenders follow to clubs, decl.a rer will then play A·Q of diamonds
with his original intent. But bere,.
wben East shows out on the second
club, declarer li suddenly preRDted
with a sure-fire alternative. He cui
play &amp;DOther higb club, dlscartllnl a
heart, IIICI then ruff a club {Welt must
follow). The low clubs remaining In
dummy are now w!Jmen, and declarer

ciosswoRomands.

'··

tKJ 10
+KQ8642
EAST
+2
.A lOll
t98714S2

WESI'

+QJ 10
.Q9732

ts

+s

+JI085

,., '

SOUTH
+AKOIIU "
.K4
tAQ
+A 7
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Norlll
2+
4+
s+

W..t

Paa
Paa
Paa

...

Eu&amp;

Put
PP-

Opening lead:

+Q

ACROSS
1 Word
• session
5 ·- Trek"
9 Frenzy
10 Michelangelo
work
11 Zest for
living
12 C:overed
passageway
14 Samuel's
teacher
15 Prior ·
to (prel.)
18 Falstalf's
title

.
·.

•·

All-

.... .' .)

. ,•
L...,~-:-~~------J
o¥eriake Wlih tbe liiiig,'iDd plaJ ODe of ··;
the good clubs, throwiD&amp; awey 1111 ·. :
heart kine. Certainly It wu quite rare
for the defenders' diamalltll to cliYide '
1·7, but declarer did not need to lake ::

~·rilt.

even

-

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.'

40 Zeus tumid
her into
stone
41 Statue
42 Before

. ..

..

(Lat.)

43 Boy Scout's
need ·
DOWN
1 Crawl
2 E. German
Cl•ty
3 Repealedly 13 Pyle
4 Hamilton
or Banks
bill
15 Shade
5 Warning ·
of
signal
green
6 Detective
21 Slnalra's
(sl.
"I Did
17 Sty
7 In slow
It
18 Sea eagle
motion
My- "
19 "Brandy - • 8 Beaming
22 Golf
20 Not at home10 Epeeisl's
instructor
22 Polish frau
move
23 Fry a bit
23 North
Yemen's
capital
25Ceremony
26 Mayberry's
sheriff
27Dupe
29 Actress
Hagen
30"- That
Jazz"
31 Health
resort
34¥oung
sheep
35 Palindromic
parent
36 Baseball
throw ·
37Becharm
· 39 Au nature!

r

''

.

;,..

24 R~f
attachment
27 Blaze
28 Ancient
30 Hacienda
brick
32 "Evita"
'3 3 Tenpercenter
38 Witticism
39 Fragment

'

"

- ·.

..

'·

. '·,
• &lt;

.,

..
;

..

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOII!S - Here's how to work It:

1m

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

converge; examlna ritual of
1111 naw debutante bal. (1 :30)
'

II

I

Lenirh -

IJ) P.(f.V. Olaparate llvea

8 l!'venlngThe
10:20 (J)

I I I .'~Rij

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
,_.~
UaltM - Video - Cull8t - OUT of HER
The airline attendant pa8Sad out gum to relieve pressure·
in our ears during the descent. After landing , it took ooa
paasenger twO hou111 to get the oum OUT of HER ears.

:.liD ~P In CtnclmaU

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
1972 modol472 onglno with 400

6648.

vldld. Malnllnance
rH v
cloll tD ahopplng,
bank1 en Rhoola. For more In ~

cas Newa Q
I11J lIMwlllz
iDe111
Llr4e
Toeltly

NewiHour
.
-~BWhHIOf

Fumlohod Apt., 1BR, .225,
utllhiH pd. 243 Joekoon Plk'!,

lck'-1

"

(J) AIC Newa Q

e

turbo traneml11lon runa good,
u- no oil, $500.00. 304-1175.

Now accapllng •r,pllcatlona for

1:05 (J) ,Allee

1:30.(1) 11m NIC Nightly Newl

1:31 (J) Carol llurne1t
7:00 CD Fethar Murphy
CD PM M~gazlne
(J) llporllaCanler (0:30)
(I) .(J) CunwntAflalr
CD l!l lla cHaM/ ....,.,.

utllllloo pd., 701 4th, Golllpallo.

2 bedroom apt. ully carpattd,
lpplia~c•
, water and traeh

c:a- EIQINU

Ill....._.

814-44&amp;.4418 aft1r 7 p.m.

Nice nelghborh~, 1 bedroom,
$250. plua oloctrlc, 304-175.5321
anor 6:00 PM.

IJ)

Connactlai1

$210,

tlpallo $225 mo. No poto. Coil
114-448-6038.

Ill I'IIC!8.0f LHe

(J) •

3267•

Ave.

r 1~

CDBodyl!1!&gt; 3-2·1 CGntact Q

CION

Apt. ·1Br,

II I

(j) 8port8l.Ook (0:30)

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

r.

Employment Services

MAI{BE SHE LL PAT ME ON
THE HEAD, AND I'LL TURN
INTO A Pll BULL ..

BUT MA'IBE SI-IE 5 REAL
CUTE, AND MA'1'BE WE'LL FALL
. IN LOVe At-~D SOMEDAI{ 60
OFF TO COLLEGE TOGETHER ..

to
groctry .toru • ahctpplng ce...far,
• .,.,, eewer..L. tr11h

f'-lmllhld

I

REVTSY

eiiD"-0.11

1

1

and

ALL Yard Solao
Mull h2:00
Pold
In
provldod.
Advance.
DEADLINE:
p.m.
44
·;:5..:-1.;;7'Z7:.:.:.,· $265/mo. &lt;;~II 814tho dey blloro thO od II to Nn.
.,.
Sundoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m. 11 Hei.P want.ed
31 Homes for Sale ' Apa~mont lor ront 304-876Frlday. Mondoy · odltlon • 2:00
::22::111::8.==-===---=
p.m. Saturdoy. .
Bobyalttor noodod In our homo Now Liotlng.Portorbrook-3 br, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
lor 111 3 ohlfto. lWo boyo 5 ond brlck.Z botho, LR, FR, K~, hoot BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
2. Moturo, m-slblo poroon. pump, In-ground poai.City ESTATE!,.. 535 Jocbon Pike
Pt. Pleasant
C.ll614-441-8415aftar 2 p.m.
Schaai•$70,J)OQ. 6t4·24S.II375. from $11u1mo. Walk to ohop &amp;
&amp; VIcinity
CRUISE SHIPS now hiring all Nice 3 Hdroom home 1 bath, movlu. 'C .III 14-441-258S.
ChUrch Clothing Sola, 3436 pooHiono. Bolh oklllod &amp; unokl~ gorogo ond lorga lot, Gallipolis Fumlohod 2 bldroom opl,
Jerry;• Run Road, · r.lght hand lid. For Information ull 115- Farry, prle~ mld 40'a. 304-175- reflrtnce and aecllrity daposlt
fori&lt;, Mon. July 24 lhN Frt. July 771~507, ed, H85e.
5725.
required, New Havan, 304-882·
28 • •

ba·

CD ~Ago • Far Any Q

W. opt. 2 br., 1 both, prlvoto
patiO.

-·

fh•

IJ) Reaillngllalnbow Q

all UlHftn Included $275~00 ,.,
month. 304-17U730.
35

~r

~=RunDefby

pork Ina. outoklrts of Hondoroon,

encloud

WOII

low to form four simple words.

lpiiOCIM

for rent. Car·

enll'lncl

....

e CD (J) e &lt;Jl Ill e tDl

37t1 FOH.
3 room 1\lmlohod apl, groood
floor

Rearrange letttrs of
0 four
scrambled words

8:00 CDIIonanu: The Loll

Nice Httlng. laundry
facllltltl IVIIIabll. C.ll814-1192•

peted.

TII&amp;T DIILT d. ~
PUULII P\!oii
_ _ _ _.;.,._~ Edlt•d

EVENING

~

a bedroom ....

M

TUES., JULY 25

• - Phono 304-1175-1130.

nl•hld, 304-171-1385.

and

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

M

new. Polarta 4 whHitrl, auring
May 011 June and gtt $200.00
worth of Pollrlt acceuorl. .

2 opartm..,.o1 I, bodroom fur·
nlatwd, 2 DHrooru unfur..

304-!IB2 31141.

7

eouth af Henderaon\ dltcount•

noW on tuftf '-~PI ana ATV'I and
~~- blkool, oloo ..,, onrthlng

Apartment
for Rant ·

448-3117.

walkw "Coonhound", betWHn
Sporn ond Roclno lock ·ond
dam, lut Sat. nklht. Rew•rd for
lnl9i'mallon allooil thle rlog. call
black

Rt. 36 Cycle . Soloo, 7 miiH

no petli/1171 mo. Waler ln-.
cludod. •100/ilopooH. C.ll 114-

ue ..ao.

Cockapoo,

Television
Viewing

74 · Motorcycles

1 br., with .tove a refriGerator,

.LOST OR S.TOLEN 7 yaar aid
tomole bile end white 1r111ng

LDSI.

KIT N' CARLYLEe by Lmy WJtabt

Merc:han&lt;i1se

Fully lumlohod 1111'"110 opt. All
utllltl• paid ucel!l tltctrlclty,
Nowly rodocorotod I eorpolod.
Dop. AIOO 3 br., trollor. C. II 614446-8558, Of 614-446-7125.

Bilek torrltr, omoll,
block eolllr wtlh

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

'

51

Lost&amp; Found

loot.

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
.
. .. . - -

Middleport. Ohio

42 Mobile Homes
for R~nt

"--oe; I wlto. old. lllolhor
CoCkor lpanlol, daughter at
thoraugh- Cocker Sponlol.
114-l?I-UOt, or 114-371-HU.

.,

',

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X fDr ~ two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
..,....
•
CII\'PTOQliOTE
7-25

'

.

..

•

PXEWBHEVBW
EXLF
EL

XF
S W WI

EHPWFE

XV

HF

L T TV I H·

QLV

DHRW

IBLRXFA

QLVB

JDXTD

E L

IWLIPW

DHRW FLFW.-ZVPWY

-.

••

J D L

BWFHBK

Y.......,•• C.V.to41_..: THREE 'lliiNGS ARE .
GOOD IN um.E MEASURE AND EVB. IN LARGE:

YEAST, SALT AND HESITATION.- TALMUD
i C) I - King F~ Syndiclte. Inc

.'

J.

•

1·

..,,.

.'

�•

Page 10-1lle Daily Sentioal

Polll«oy-Midcleport. Ohio

-Local n~s briefs... --......,

J

Continued from page 1
· Meigs County Regional Planning CommiSsion by Charles
Blakeslee, executive director of the commission:
The following are among the projects for possible funding,
according to a clearinghouse review report (April24 to July 21)
from Buckeye Hills-Hocking Vall('y Regional Development
Di~ trlct.
·
··
·· ·
·
. -Racine Meadows Ltd. , an apartment housing complex on
Yellow Bush Road, Racine; at a cost of $591,823.
· -Meigs Local · School · D!strlct-vocat!olial and other
. educatlonar facUlties and operations, $118,391:81.
- Meigs Local School District-development of a computer
lab, $30,000.
·
·
-Overbrook Manor LTD ., a 40•unltelderly housingco~plex,
adjacent tQ Overbropk Center. Middleport, $1,440,000.
.,..cRiiJland VIllage, ivas~e~water Improvement, $2.127,000.
. - Meigs County Council on Aging, transportation for elderly
.
·
and handicappted, $21,504.
-Villa:ge .of Middleport, public transportation, Blue Streak
.·
. .
Cab Company, $249,353.
An area-wide project which wopld benefit Meigs and nine
other counties has been submitted by Ohio Valley Area
Libraries, forl)ooks by mail, bookmobile, Interlibrary loan, and
related services, $1,738,840.
·

EMS has five Monday calls
·.. Meigs County Emergency Medical. services units answered
five calis Monday. .
·
·
·
At 10t:33 a.m .. Middleport went to VIllage Manor Apartments
for Shirley Appleby who ·was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. · · ··
Rutland went at 1!:30 a.m. to Meigs M'ine No.1 for Randy
Stewart who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
·
At.12: 12 p.m .. Pomeroy went io Long Hollow Road for Esta
Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 1: 51 p.m. to Hill
St. for Maxine Ferguson to Pleasant Valley Hospital. Pomeroy
went at3: 12 p.m. to the Americare-POmeroy·Nur'singCenterfor
Lena Heilman
but not transport~d.
. who
. was ireated
.

Meigs planners...

. .

. ..

Continued from page I

Ptesentation of a ·plaque to . possibility of the utility company
Theron Johnson for 20 years of helping toJinance the brochure,
service and leadership In the as the company has done In other.
·Meigs County Regional Planning counties. McDade said there was
Commission was a high point in a strong possibility the power
yesterday's . meeting. Earlier company could assist with the
this year, Johnson was replaced funding, possibly ln. a joint effort
as commission president by Fred . with Ohio Power Company.
Hoffman. Middleport, after McDatle and Ron Ash, manager
many years in the position. of Ohio Power's Pomeroy office,
Charles Blakeslee, executive di- agr('ed to look into the matter.
rector. of the commission made . , Murphey .also presented a
the presentation qf the plaque to synopsis of a recent Ohio UniverJohnson, which listed the major sity seminar on Small Business
projects during Johnson's years · In . App;llachla which she attended on behalf of the planning
of service.
The planning commission had commission.
V.J. Gaddes, of Buckeye Hillsearlier requested Leesa Murphey Associates. Pomeroy, to Hocking Valley Regional DE&gt;velpresent .a proposal for another opment District, reported on a
color brochure. for the county . soon-to-be published economic
This would be. the second color · development plan for the (!!sbrochure developed In an many trict, and .asked planning comyears by the planning commis- mission members to lnake any
sion. The .first brochure was c.hanges io the plan regarding
developed by 'Murphey and was Melg$ County rtght away.
Limited_ ·copies of BH-HV's
so well re~eived by the public
that the commission decided to Area-Wide Action Plan were also
go with a second brochure as tllstrlbu ted. The planning comsoon ·as possible, Murphey's . mlssloh then passed a resolution
proposaL .gave a, total cost es ti- suppbrting the.Area-Wide Action
mate or ·$6,680 for development, Plan and encouraging utilization
of tnt- plan for local development
including printing costs. c
. Although the plannillg commis- purposes. ·
sion approved the .expenditure,
Commissioner Richard Jones
ques tioned McDade, of Columbus Southern Power, as to the
Daily stotk prices
(As ofJO a.m. )
.
Bryce and Mark Smith
of !punt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
By United Press International
South Central Ohio
Am Electric Power .; ........... 29'%
Tonight : Partly cloudy and
AT&amp;T ............ .. .. .. .. .. .. ... ... ...38¥.
humid. with a low in the lower
Ashland 011 ..... ...... ............ .36%
70s. Light winds.
Bob Evans ............. .... .. ....... 14%
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
Charming
Shoppes .. ............ 17¥.,
hot, a nd humid, with widely
City
Holding
Co ......... ........ .15¥.
scatter ed thunderstorms mainly
Federal
Mogul.
.. .. .... .. ...... ;.. 22% ·
during the afternoon. Highs will
'GQOilyear
T&amp;R
.........
........... 53
be near 90. Chance of rain is 30
Heck's
..
..
..............................
V.
percent.
Key
Centurion
.........
..
.........
12'%
Extended Forecast
Lands' End ................ .. .... .. .28%
Thursday through Saturday
Limited Inc .. ..... ...... .. ..... ... .33%
Scattered showers and thunMultimedia Inc ...... ............. 98¥.,
derstorms Thursday , becoming
Rax Restaurants .... .. ... .... ..... 23;4
lair Friday and Saturday. Highs
Robbins
&amp; Myers ........ :.......16Y,
will be ·between 85 and 90
·
Shoney's
Inc .......... .. ... .... .. .. 11Y,
Thu ~sda y and between 80 and 85
Wendy's
Inti.
....... .........._.... .. 51'8
Friday and Saturday. Early
Worthington
Ind
............ .. ... 22%
morn ing .lows will be between 65
and 70 Thursday and in the 60s
Frida y and Saturday .
Ohio Agricultural Forecast
Hot and humid conditions will
continue acro~s the Ohio Valley
through Thursday, with afternoon h.e ating and gulf" moisture .
producing scattered mainly afternoon thunderstorms.
Lives tock will need good ventilation and plenty of drinking
' water during the next few day,. .
The Lives tock Safety Index will
rise into the danger category
Wednesday and Thursday afternoon , with highs expected to be_
• near 90. St ress levels are expected to diminish later this
· · week. with highs dropping into
the low or mid 80s Friday· and
during the weekend.
Ohio's haying a!\d harvesting
operations will continue to face
some risk of thunderstorms .
Afternoon humidity levels wlll
drop to minimums of 50 percent
to 60 percent Wednesday. Drying
.potential will still be high.
averaging around one-quarter Of

Stocks

Weather

.

.

By Unl~d Press Jnterna&amp;lonal
Pine, Pa.
Also in Pennsylvania, mo.re
Widely scatl!!red thunderstomls, -accompanied by heavy than l)alf an inch of rain was
dOwnpours hi some areas, m&lt;1ved . recorded in &lt;;oalda!e and heaVy
overnight . ·across (he middle rainfall flooded· basements and
Atlantic coast and from the roads ·near the towns of Frostcentral Appalachians to the coast bu·rg, Clarysv!lle, Zihlmand and
of the Carolinas.
·
Eckhart.
.
The NatiOnal Weather Ser!v!ce
Early morning showers and
said 1.55 . inches of rain was thunderstorms were widely scat. recorded overnight at Fayette- tered from northern Arkansas to
ville, N.c ; arid more than 21nches ilie lower Ohio Valiey. Fayetteof rain fell in an hour at W)Jite .
Continued frcirn page 1

are class-action lawsuits seeking four Air Guard.liellcopters would
inore thiln $100 million on behalf be "searcnlng for the - next
of the survivors and victims of · several days."
·
the crash, '
·
Lawson said Nebraska Air
The first suit was filed by Guard jets with Infrared camesurvivor Joseph Trombello, 41, of . ras would continue to sweep over
Vernon Hills, m.,whoflledsultin northwestern .Iowa. The heatChicago last .Frlday.
·
, recording cameras are able to
Investigators moved the tail detect the metal parts because
section of Flight 2321nto a hangar the sun makes them hotter than
Monday in an effort to recon- - the surrounding crops,
.struct the exact cau5e of the
United said MoD4ay night that
disaster that kllled 111 of the 296 alllll bodies had been positively
passengers a.nd creo,y . aboard identified.
·.
.· · ·
during a ·flight ·from Denver to
Hopkins; the United spokesChicago.
man, said the airline sent a
"The tall section js a slgnlft- speclalfUght io Chicago Monday,
cant factor to the puzzle" about ·carrying 12.bodtes, 29 relatives of
the cause of the crash, Sioux City victims, one survlvo·r and five
Fire t;:htef Bob Hamilton said United employees. On Sunday a
Monday. ''The tail section is , United flight carried 11 bodies, 33
critical becau·se an the hydraulic · · family members and one survilines converge there.
·vor to Chicago.
.
· ''The National Transportation
St. Luke~s Hospital In Sioux
Safety Board t)lought going over City said It was treating n!Jie
and. reconstructing the . tail in survivors, including one In crlti•
· different configurations -,viii give cal condition. Marian Health
them an accurate picture of.what Center said _2:I plane .crash
actually happened when engine patients remained- hospitalized,
No, 2 blew," Hamilton said.
including three tn critical
Searchers continued looking in condition:
a 4-square-mlle area near Alta,
Iowa Disaster Services Dlrecabout 70 mlles east of Sioux City, tor ·Ellen Gordon said 1,000 local
for pieces of the fan sect!oli·of the and state offiCials participated in
tall engine, Hamilton said. The rescue efforts. She said about 100
DC-10 was flying over the Alta state mental health workers
area when the engine exploded.
remain on duty counseling .vic. Iowa National Guard Com- • tim families, survivors and
mander Wari·en ·Lawson said rescuers.

Democrats....__..:.co:..;n:..::ttn'i-'u:..::e:..::d..:.fr:..::o..:.m;...:p;...a.::.ge_r_ _ __

Hospital news

DE&gt;mocratlc· members or the
committee began to work on
their own·version or Bush's plan .
Rostenkowski .said Monday he
bel!eves a committee vote on the
tax - which had been expected
this week - would probably nof
come in until next week. That
would give )iouse Democrats
tirne to discuss the matter in a
party caucus.
The · administration, although
pleased with its progress on the
tax cut, also tried Monday to
avoid appearing too confident.
"I would say only In terms
about vote, we are hopeful,"
Fitzwater•said. "We do think we
are very close:On the other hand,
the committee controls the process. We have a ways to go as-far
as negotiations are concerned. It
is definitely not a foregone
·conclpsion that we are going to
win It:"

Veter.ans Memorial
Monday admissl(lns - Esta
Roberts, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Ancil
Prunty.

ville, Ark.. received nearly
three-quarl!!rs of an inch of rain
and Harrison Ark.. repotl!!d
lnore than hal( an Inch of rain on
· Monday .
·
·
·
In the ·west, warm moist . air
produc.ed thunderstorms over
- New Mexico and northwest
. Texas. A' ·cold 'front moV)ng
. actess. -&lt;he . northern Rockies
generated showers and lhunderstorms from western Montana
lrlto northern Idaho.
Scattered showers · and :thunderstorms covered the Gulf
Coast and southeast quarter of
the nation Monday as record low .
· temperatures hit Brownsville,
·
Texas:
The. weather · service said
heavy thunderstorms in south
central Texas spawned several
small short-lived tornadOes near

Corpus ChriSti, but authorities.
said no injurie~ or . pro,Perty
damage were reported.
Recordd tow. · ternljl!ratures
were reported In ·. Brownsville
when the mercury reached 81
degrees, breaking a record low. of
85 degrees set In 1891 and agaJn In'
1949, the NWS said. .
Showers arid' thunderstorms
dumped heavY ral.ns l.n Florida, .
Mississippi, western Alabama •.
· Atkans•s. Missouri and parts of
Dt!nol&amp;, the weather service said.
Nearly 2 Inches of rain fell In
Pensacola arid Key West, Fla:, '
Monday, while ·Arkansas . and ,
Corpus Christl, Texas, received
up to 1 ii)Ch.
Dry weather . prevailed over
·the rest of the nation, with sunny
skleso.v erNewEnglandandwest .
of the Rockies.

CLEVELAND · IUPI) ~ An
unemployed construction worker
from Mich[gan , was Identified
' Tuesday . as holding one of four
winning . tickets In Saturday
night's $20 million Super Lotto .
drawing.
.
··
• ne nrst winning ticket ·was
· surrendered Monday morning by
eight employees · of the Kenyon
Inn in Gambier.
Nicholas J. Sunna, · 47, · of
Newport, Mich., surrenderee~ his .
ticket late Moriday at the Ohio
Lottery Commission's regional
office . In Toledo, and It was

validated Tuesday morning.
A lottery spokeswoman saidSurma· said . little to offlchils,
olhef tna n that he ts married,
with two sons and plans to use the
money to help his family, He ·
bought the ticket at the Can111
Carryouttn To.ledo.
Surma will receive $200,000 a
year for 20 years, after the
m11ndatory 20 percent federal
withholding.
.
·
The eight Kenyon Inn . employees purchased 15 tickets for
the ·drawing at Neff's dell In
Moulit Vernon.

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Spraying conditions will be
. degrad~ in the north by scat tered. thunderstorms. Rainchimces will be lesser over the rest of
the state Wednesday, with winds
across Ohio expected . to be
variable at less than 10 mph.
The 6-to 10-day outlook for
. Sunday throughThur5dayofnext
week calls for temperatures to
average below.normaracross the
state. · Rainfall, Is expectd to
average above normal, and that
would conunuetoprovide favor a·
ble mols ture fO!' crops.
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Partly . cl.ouily tonight.
Humid, low In ·70s. Chance of
rain .:io percent. Thursday,
partly cloudy , hot and hqmld.
IDgh In lower 90s- .Chance _of
rain 80 percent.

P I'ck-4
9()67 .·

·-Page 5 .

e
•

_Vot •.,O. No.IS6 M

•

•

a1:

2, Sections, 12 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.

· · (:Op\lritlhtM 1988

Meigs hoard buys
·insurance, ·.employs
junior.high coaches
~

'

.

..

.

.

·.

..

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·.'

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By CHARLENE ~()EFUCH
ther!IPY .
. .
. CO!llltion to ·which about 25
Dally Sentinel Staff . ·
Accepted at the meeting were Southeastem Ohio schools . be- '
. Football coaches for the Meigs the resignations of Melissa Blac~ 1ong is to provide better ~ ccess to
Junior High Sc)lool program as · a substitute secretary and legislators on areawide
were hired and several bids' for Renee Blirnes as . girls' junior · problems'.".
.
.
. services and . Insurance . were ·high basketball coach. Her resig- _· Robert Marshall was accepted
accepted at Tuest)ay nigh.t 's nation as a · teacher had been as a tuition student at Meigs High
meeting of the Meigs Local accepted earlier.
SchQol.· Marshall attended WaBoard of Education held In the
The cost of driver ·education hama Hlg~ . Schoollast year and
meeting room.
. . .
was set at· $50 per student, an · :has since moved Into the Eastern
Hired on supplemental con-· fncrease of $5·. Supt. James Local School District.
traets·for the coaching position~ . Carpenter repotted that between
The boar~ au lhortzed the creawere Brian ·zirkle and Bryan 60,and 70 students took the course tlon of a bus route to transptlrt
UP IN SMOKE -Deputies of tbe Meigs Cll~nty . ,at the CounQ' Garace located on tbe falrp'OUJids.
last year.
· ·
handicapped students., It was.
Swan.
·
·
Sherllfli J)ejlartment and Melp County Sheriff
The deparpnent ha8 announced that the !'aids are .
Approval was given for seven. noted by tile SUPerintendent'that
The bid of D&lt;!Vis-Qui.c kellnsu.J11111e11 M. Soulaby destroyed 3,35'7 , marijuana
n0t ·over and will contlntle throughout ·tbe
ranee was accepted for tne vocational agriculture students,. . currently there are lhree wheelplants Tuesday worth approximately '$3,035,500,
summer. ·
student accident Insurance, and of Me!gs High .School to take a . chair students to be transPorted(
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
the bid of War.ehotise -Trie of field trip to Maumee oriAug. 8-10. two aitend!ng junior high scbool
w.•
·
~a
·
Adisthtrenicst.f.orAtcire s. a~d tu·bebsidf~r_lhfoer
It was noted bY, Supt. Carpenter .· and the third the high school. . ·
"
that
.the. sWdents are junlo~ ~nd
:Again· the board .discussed
.
· . · .· ;
.
. . ·
.
.
. .·
gasoline · and .oil products was · seriiors and were selected on the : repaving the high school parking
.· ·
·
. · ·
·.
. .
·· · ·
·
· ·
.
·tabled pending further. informa- basis of student achlevemenv
tot. The plan is to have the worK
·
·
·
·
u and it was voted to rebid for
cqmpleted bj!fore school starts. ·
Insurance and fire ext!.nIt-washotedthatband .students
No action was taken ·on a
j · II
·.
.~
· · II
If .
.
gulshers on the basts of a of Tony Dingus, Instructor, are request by the superintendent to
·
technical problem.
attending band camp at Cedar have the name of Eugene Haw~ -COLUM"Eius,' Ohio (UP!) ..:. . Voinovich; who. lost a senate would strimgthen ·. It, quite
The board also accepted the Lakes In nip ley, w. Va: this week k!ns added td the list of tthose
Aides toRe
. .p ublican gu
. ''"'rnator- · race · til Democratic Incumbent frankly we're pleasantly ~urbid of the ARA Servies·. a · and .tlie boa·r d gave their appro- authorized to acql!lre federal
""
·
·
h
11
· t, ser·vic e. :val to that Instructional
·
surplus property.
·
Ia! candidate Robert Taft said Howard Metzeilbaum last No- prlsed to· see us.in ·I e post on · ca fe ter ta managemen
Tuesday. the first' voter survey · vember, held a 72 pe~cent to 19 we're In today."
effectiv~- for ihe }989-90 school program.
-The studentactivity and princt~
'shows a virtual dead -heat •with,· pe·PC.eill 'til the .Cleveland area, · · · Taft's father and•grandfa.t her
year.
Profes.sioria 1 iea ve. was . pal budgets and objectives for
·
·
'It was
· a1so· vo tedbY lh e bo ard granted t . Christine Wakefield the 1989-90 school year were
•(lle:velan.
d · ~ Ma~or Geor~te
but trailed · Iii the·· other four. were ·.senators and . his great·
0
•lfltbh ilell~'._._ • • .'"' ' , • tnc~ttpe\'eent to 35 percent·." g.;_",ndf\l~her was l'r~ldent Wll- · · ~o' (i!nter Into. a purchased servl- for Aug:!!5 after \I was noted that
revT~ew~o~~Jh~~~:r~'6:~bf~ 1S0. .
• .• Tb
_. e non-Independent survey,
in. C
. olumbus, labeled bv. DE&gt;ar_-_ . llam Howartl Taft.. .
. ·
. ces agreemerif with Ohio Univer.- the lilgh schOol teacher will be on
·
As soca 11ons t.or a travel-study group in Oxford,
executive session to discuss ·
'co.Jillpbted JU~e- 13-15 by, the · 'fourff "a ptyotal area." '
Wlrlhlin said the poll, results .. s tty . Th erapy
·Wirlhlln Group of IVJcLean, v a.,
The survey also shows Taft have a margin of error of plus or
physical therapy services for the England on that date. .
.
personnel matters and pending
shows Volnovich'wlth 44 percent ahead· in· the Dayton ·area, 46 minus f.our percent.
school for tlie 1989-90 school year · Membership in the Coalltiion litigation.
.
. .
to Taft's 4i percent throughouf percent to 26 percent, 49 percent
"For all intents and purpoSes,"
at a cost of not to exceed $1,520. of Rutal and Appalachian
Attending were Supt. CarpenOiilo; but sllows ·Taft lli;~ding in to .38 percent In the Toledo area he said, :'this .race- Is a Ioc.ked ; Supt. Carpenter noted that the . Schools for the 1989-90 school ter, Board President Richard
four of the. ttve • major media · and ·54 percent -to .41 percent ih race with a good deal of ·camrate is $40 ·a n bout and tliat the year at a cost of $250 . was . Vaughan, and members, Jeff
markets In Ohio.
·
CinclnnqU; ·Taft's hometown. ·
paigll!ilg yet to occur. QUite
service will be going to hand!- approved with Supt. · Carpenter ·Werry, Larry Rupe, Bob Barton,
. ''W~'re v('ry heartened and
· Richard Wlrthlln, chairman Of fr!lnkly, I had expected to bring
capped students who reqUire noting that the emphasis of the and Bob Snowden.
encouraged by the results of this the Wirth lin Group and President ~.ck · a result which would have
_survey,'' ~aid Jo)ln Delirdourf.f, Reagan.'s personal pollster, said shown _a 12 to 13 (perce.ntage
political. adviser to. ·the Taft he was surprised by the outcome point) Voinovlch lead." ·
c'ampaigo. '"I;qey . seem, to .con- &lt;)f thr·survey. . ·
Deardourff no.ted that the
firm in a ·scientific way what we
''We .had f)llly expected at this
Dayton area had the largest
M~lgs County Sheriffs depu- . breaking and entering attheL TD charged under a brick. The brick .
number of uncommitted voters,
have ~ensed .slnce · the beginning time to be considerably behind
arrested Scott MacDonald Car'ry Out a.t Chester. According shattered ·and damaged his 1985
·
ttes
of this campaign. Tllat there Is . Mt. Voinovich 111 . this- partlcu- 28 percent, Indicating to him that
·
and
John
Williamson, of Colum- to the ·report; the owner, Rlllph Bronco. A park bench was also
some strong sentiment for Bob larly race," said.Wlrthlln. "Not both candidates .likely would
bus,
each
,on
a charge of contri- Wells, was opening on Su-nday damaged.
Taft · and Dorothy Teater . only did he . (Voinovich) spend conce.n trate extra time in flD
bu'tlng to the unruliness of a morning when he-discovered the
A Racine juvenile has been
throughout the state."
over. $8 million a few short attempt win 7-'0ter support.
ea~ll~r
this
week
.
.
minor
cited!
to Meigs County juvenile '
building
had
been
entered
· Teater. a Fran!llln County months ago, but he also has been
. Dearourfl said the· poll 'N.\IS a
.
TWo
juveniles,
runaways
from
Court
for
.falling to yield at a stop .
through
the
back
door.
Beer,
commissioner whois 'runnlng.tor a high profile Republica11.1n the heaci-to-,head Taft vs. Volnov~cq
Franklin
Coun'
t
y,
were
brqught
slg.
n
.
According
to the . report, ·
cigarettes,
pop.
candy
and
molieutenant governpr on· the :raft state. for a considerable period of question and did not \nclude·two
to
Meigs
County
by
the
,pair.
The
.
ney
·
.
were
taken.
Don
Stephenson
stopped his
ticket, was present at a news time
others whB have said they will
juveniles
were
returned
.
to
Mike
·Appell,
oi
the
Rutland
vehicle
at
the
stop
sign
at Front ~ ­
conference announdpg the sur.
·"While the name Bob. Taft
run for the Republican nominaFranklin
County
.
by
Meigs
area,
has
reported
to
the
sheriff's
and
Pearl
Streets,
but
struck '
vey results: Taft, a Hamntonc carries. a certjln equity :with it · lion ~ Rep. Michael DE&gt;Wine of
co·
u
nty
Juvenile.
Officers
Cart
department that a window in a another vehicle , drivel! by Mar- ~
County commissiOner; was un- and while we knew -that adding
Cedarville an!) state sen. Paul
Hysell and Robert Jacks, and vehicle on hiS' property was .ion Davis, 25, also . of Racine,
able to attend.
· ·
Dorothy '!:eater to the pcket
Pfeifer of Bucyrus.
released · to Franklin County broken out. A house on the same which was turning off of Pearl
deputies. MacDonald and Willi- property on County Road 10 was onto Front Street. There was no
amson are lodged In th!! Meigs also entered and several ·uems damage . to Stephenson's 1969
County Jail serving 10-day sent- reportedly taken.
Buick and damage to the Ford '
~nces on the chan!es.
· David Deem •. Syracuse, has Fiesta drjven by Davis was listed ··
Sheriff James M. SOulsby reported that his . vehicle was as light. No injuries · we·re
•,
reports the departn'lent has damaged at the Syracuse Pool reportetl.
begun
an
Investigation
of
a
;when
a
firecracker
was
dis. TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - The eomm!ttee member, said the panel to evaluate alternatives to
g:roup . has . collected 20,744 · Toledo Ellison. ·
.
Campaign for Lower Electric
·names.
Only
19,000
are
needed
to
O'.Donnell said the group will
.Rates said tuesday It has enough
present the issue to Toledo's City subm!tthe petitions after at least
·signatures to file an Initiative
Council.
·
petition; which would estal)ltsh a
30,000 names are gathered. In the
The Campaign for · Lower meantime, she said the campanel to seek alternatives to the
Electric Rates, which launched paign will ask candidates for tl)e
Toledo Edison Co. ·
Its petition drive last November, fall City Colincli!!lectlon to take a
Jennlfer O'Donnell, Toledo,
wants City Council to appoint a. stand In support of the lssile.
director of Cl tizen Action and a
"Plainly., neither Toledo Ed!·
son's management·, the PUCO
(PUblic Utilities .Commission of
Ohio) , nor Ctly Council has taken
the tough steps needed to keep
D~ntal
Toledo's rates dpwn; •• O'Do'!"E'fl
said at a news conference. ·•
The free dental sealant program offered through theMel)::s
If Council rejects the petition,
County Health Qepartment with funding from a state grant will
she said, the next move will be to
be held on the next three Fridays, Dr. Margie l.,awson, health
place the ·Issue on the ballot for
.commissioner, announced Tuesday.
.
voters
to decide.
School aged children, excluding kindergarten; are eligible for .
.
Among
the alternatives the
the dental sealant. Parents are · asked to call the Health
group
wants
the plmel to stUdy Is.
Department at 992-662(1 to make an appointment. '
'
the
creation
of a 'cOmpeting
The clinics will be held July 28, AUg. 11 and ,\ug. 25.
municipal
system
similar to
sealants are _rE'COmmended for permanent teeth. Most ··
Cleveland's
or
Clyde's,
or the
cavities start on back teeth 6ecause they·have many smallgaps
granting of ·a competing francalled "pits" and "fissures' ~where germs and food can hid and
chise to an existing private .
cause tooth decay, Dr.'Lawsonexplalned. Teeth ne£'11 protection
utility.
'from cavities, she said, and a sealant Is a safe plasdc co,tlng
Clyde ' re~ntly broke , away
which keeps germs out of the back teeth by covering up their
from .'l'!lledo Edison and .estsb- .
tiny biding placeS. 1 '
Ushed Ita own system to buy
Sealants work and are easy to apply and there are no drills or
electricity wholesale from other
needles Involved, Dr. LawSQn noted.
'
suppliers. 1 O'~nnell said tl)e
Sandusky County .city provides
•
electricity at a cost 25 percent
·less
than Toledo Edison.
··
The sesquecentennlal committee that Is organizing the lSOth
"There's
an
old-fashlobned
birthday 'celebration of the _Incorporation of the village of
. American .solution to ·Price.
Pomeroy ls .mo:Ying fotward with p·Jans !or an activity packed '
IJOUIIilli and Inefficiency, and ·..
year In 1990.
bE8Pn1!: T1iJt HEAT. - Pomeroy VIDace
that's competition," she said.
The celebration will focus on the original settlers' of the area
workeill are .hopm1 ~ ft.la l•&amp;alllnl a new
The president ofthe Northwest · wateJ on Mulbe"1 Relpla betore the wealher
.•
Continued on page 6
Continued on page ~
cllan.- and 'the ral• fall &amp;l'ain. Preparatory

.
l• t l·po
·
·
l
l
.
_
if.t a
·
_
n
·
.
d
, h·ow· .
In
8
8
· . ;;.h :n v:rt·u·a·l de··ad· he·a··t ~~~:I
.J..fo
J' •. · :nov

1 10 0 00

Group says calnpaign for~ low~r
electric rates ·is right on target · .

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.

Retumjuveniles to Franklin County

· s,ooo To·22,ooo

CARRIERS NEEDED

.

.

.·Ohio

- Announce_identity of second winner

KEEP YOUR COOL WITH SAVINGS
.FROM RUTLAND FURNITURE!

A divorce was granied last
week In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to both partie$ in the
action of Nancy K. VanMeter
against Melvin R. VanMeter .
Based upon the choice of a minor
child, custody or tile child .was
given to the · t:lefendant in the
action.

·Redsl08e
nm·h·in

•

•

THE HEAT IS ON! .

Correction

.

.'

Scattered·thunderstonns spread across East

apply to profits on sales of such
things as property and stocks.
Before passage of the 1986 tax
reform changes, those · profits
were given favorable tax treatment. However, the sweeping tax
revisions eliminated the tax
break and made . those Items
taxable at regular income tax
rates.
·
Earlier this. year, there appeared to be no chance ·Bush
could win a cut In the rate, but .
Ways and Means Committee
Chairman Dan · Rostenkowski,
D-Ill., surprised his committee
by suggesting he may b~ wi!Ung
·to back a reduction if Bush would
agree to other tax increases,
which the preSident has a_damantly opposed.
Rostenkowki later backed
away from the idea, but other

.

Tuesday, July 26. 1989
.

NTSB ...

.

. _ HOT SUMMER DAYS ARE HERE!
BEAT IHE HEAT AT RUTLAND FURNITURE AND SAVE ON AIR
CONDITIONERS TO COOL ONE ROOM OR AN ENnRE HOME!

program dates an.nounced .

Celebration

RUTLAND
FURNITURE.
·. · . n.

D. 124, IHIEE •115 OFF D. 7
IUTUND, OHIO ·
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
1

·

FlEE DEUVEIY

,,

•

pums ~ove forward

. '

-

......

__

,..,.~

·-

~-·--~--

..

~· ·~~- --

..... -~

--.---

.

..

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