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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
~

'

.

..

.

.

·.

..

.

.

·.'

.

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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JUST ONE OF THE FINE USED CARS
FROM ....

I. .

arow, -~2:

·LOttery ~

Local ·news briefs---.

.

Delay wipers, cruise, power door locks,
. AM/FM stereo casltlte, "Extra Clean",
"Just One owner 1'.

.

Retumjuveniles to Franklin County

· s,ooo To·22,ooo

CARRIERS NEEDED

.

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.·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

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THE HEAT IS ON! .

Correction

.

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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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,..,.~

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�The Daily Sentiriei-Page-3

Commentary
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DEVOTED TO THE INTE:RESTS OF TRE MEIGS-MASON A:REA

~~
ts:m~ ·""'-''---r•....-..=·~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
· Publlsl)er

PAT WHITEHEAD .
Asslstanl Publlsber/ ContFoUer

!.

-.,--= ~ ·'. ~"': • .

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111 Court Street
'Pomeroy, OblQ

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Ptge 2Daily~
. Ponteo&gt;y-Middfeport. Qh10
Wedn•dav. Jl.llv ~6. 1989

'

New ·S yri_. · pala~e _·kept under wraps

The Daily -Sentinel

• I:

•,

CHARLENE HOEFLICII
General Manqer

LETl'ERS OF OPINlON are welcome. They should be less thall380
words long. AU leiters are oubjecllo edlllaJ and mu• be signed wllll
name, addreoa and lelepbone a•mber. Noa118lgned letlers wiD be publlsbed. Letters obould be Ia good laole, addr..,olag·l8•-· not per10ulilles.

Million dollar citizenship

'

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- DAMASCUS; Syria - If ·Only highly sensitive•source!!. ·
tbe kids hi the old neighborhood
The site Is a high point
could see Hafez al-Assad now. He overlooking the city. The total
was born a member of a despised area ·o~ the sprawling palace and
ethnic group, but today he Is , grounds Is the equlvaiJ!nt of 6,000
president of Syria and putting the · football fields. OUr sou~ say
finishing .touches on a $1 billion Assad.hired a Japanese erchltect
palace overlooking Damascus. . and paid $3 mUilon for the plans
The only problem Is, Assad In 1976. The white stone buUdtng
can't brag about his new digs. His . has gone throUgh a series of
country Is econQmically contractors since the Japanese
strapped and It wouldn't' be . designer resigned, but the firm .
advisable for him to publicly doing the final work Is Oger
feast on cake when · the masses Llban, a French-Lebanese com· .
need bread. The palace has been pany associated with prominent
' in the works since 1976 and Is stU! Sy-rian businessman Mohammed
a national secret.
al-H~trirL
Syrian reporters are prevented
from saying much In the
One ro'om has been decorated
government-controlled press
with 125,000 Italian marble tUes,
and, untU now, .no foreign reporat a cost of $85 per tOe. That's
ter has l~arned any of the lavish $10.6 mUllan for a single room.
details. We got the specs from
Robin. !:.each Is unlikely to be

Invited In to tum a segment of
"Lifestyles of the Rich and
Famous," but an:? one who got a
peek inside would find crystal
chandeliers, gold fixtures and
priceless antiques. The house
removes any Illusion tnat Assad
Is a .humble ldnd of·a guy.
·
· He came to power from poverty, via several coups. · As a
child, he tactfully .changed his
name from Wahsh (meaning
"wild beast" or "monster") to
Assad, meaning "the lion."
The Alawlte sect to which he
belongs Is the most despised of
Syria's ethnic grO!JpS. Poverty
born ot'dtscrtmlnation forced the
Alawltes for decades to hire their
children out as servants to
wealthy Syrians. An Alawlte boy
like Assad could.never hOpe to be
more than a houseboy, except for

. Jack Anderson
the quirks of. third-world power
struggles. · .
His ascension to power In 1971
was a hard pjll for some Syr.lan ~ ·
to swallow, but by the mld-1970s
AsS&amp;d felt ·he dldn' t need to
· apologize for his roots anymore.
And he began the palace. Sources
close to the project estimate that
Assad has sunk about $1. billion
Into it.
.
Assad Is smart enough to
realize that he Is better o(f tn his
current humble home · on a
. heavUy guarded street where his
neighbors are foreign ambassadors. Anyone who. bombed the
· neighborhood would take the risk
. of kllllng the wrong people.

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By STEVE GERSTEL -

·-

WASHINGTON (UPI) - For the first time, Congress may sell
citizenship In the Un-ited States, ol)e of the greatest and most sought
after treasures. The cost - $1 million.
·
Impossible? Not all all. The Senate has already Included
cltlzenshlp,for-sale in the recently passed Immigration bill and
possibly only wldescale revulsion In the House can prevent this
proposal from becoming law. ·
.
, Specifically, the Senate bill .would grant visas for permane.n t
residence In the United States, which after five years leads to
citizenship, to anyone who Invests $1 million In an entreprlse
providing new jobs for 10 -people for two years. "
The blll would limit the number of citizen-millionaires to 4,800 a ·
year for the nexi tpree years, which, true enough, Is a tiny fraction of
the 630,000 a year openings provided in the blll. ·
But there are - right now:
.
-27,785 adult sons and daughters of U.S. citizens waiting to rejoin
their parents.
· -402,221 spouses and unmarried sons and daughters of permanent
rJ!sldents on the waiting list.
- -133.266 married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens cannot get
Into the country and won't under the Senate bill.
: -1.469,231 brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens who will not
get into the country for a long, long time.
- _
: Yet,lf any of them have $1 million, they could'getoffthewaitlngllst
and book passage for a lifetime In the United States.
· So could any of those teenagers from Nicaragua and El Salvador,
now held In detention as illegal aliens, waiting to be deported because
tttey cannot prove they jlre true polttlc!ll refugees and face great
danger If they go home.
.
,
; As so often hap!iens in the Senate, the antipathy to selling
citizenship · was muted by' the need for compromise to achieve
passage of any immigration bill.
Only Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., rose to bring the attention of the
Senate to this provision of the bill. He has a greatcapacltyforoutrage
and no fear to vent it.
_"We are putting the crassest commercial value on American
citizenship I have ever seen," he said. "It ls bizarre, It is outrageous.
It goes against this senator's love of country and feelings of
patriotism."
·
"
.
· "So what we have developed here is a toll road, Bumpers satd. ·
•7ile road to the United States today, If this bill becomes law, will be a
toll road."
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., as floor manager of the b\U, was
forced to defend the provision. It Is doubtful that he believed in. it.
• "Only three quarters .of 1 percent of the total amount is for this
investor program," Kennedy said. "And If It Is unfair and upjust... it
ought to be out. The real question Is can you make a plausible
argument - whether you cal) make a plausible argument for the
. ORANGE, Calif. (NEA) creation of those new jobs through Investors."
Few Institutions engender more
Bumpers ridiculed the concept that the provision will lead to the
widespread hostUity than credit
creation of 48,000 new jobs a year.
bureaus, which are widely sus"I will stand on my head on the dome of the Capitol on Dec. 31 every
pected of snooping Into people's
year and wiggle my ears if that happens," Bumbers said. "Everbody
personal affairs to compUe dossiknows that is nonsense."
ers on their finances -and other
Bumpers might be right. The Immigration and N'atutallzatlon
aspects of their lives.
Service has a regulation, dating to 1965, that allows entry Into the
But If the country's largest
United States for $45,000 but no one has ever come into the United
credit bureau, TRW Inc., typifies
States under it. The reason, Kennedy explained, Is that the "numbers
the Industry, the reputation· for
spilled over from one category to another. "
prying Into Individuals' private
· Unfortunately, the 4,800 slots ln the bill would be reserved for the
lives Is not justified.
members of the $1 million club. They could not be shifted to sons and
Best known as an aerospace
daughters, the brothers and sisters waiting to come to the United · and defense contractor and proStates and rejoin their families.
ducer of automotive components, Cleveland-based TRW entered the business of gathering,
analyzing and distributing credit
information In the late !!Hills.
Today, TRW's Credit Data
Division, with headquarters In
this community 22 miles southeast of Los Angeles, maintains
credit files on about 155 million
people - - almost all of the
country's 160 million "creditactive" Individuals.
TRW recently merged · with
another major firm In the IndusIcy, the Chilton Corp. of Dallas_.

and Terry McGuire won tile Most Valuable Player
Award. Pictured le'ft to ri1ht are Smith,.
Tournament Director Woody Call and. McGuire.

SPLR AWARDS - Eastern and champion
Rutillnd liplt Individual awards In the 1989
Middleport Pony League Toumaml!nt. Mike
Smith of Eutera won the award for the most hits,

-

MEIGS Marauder girls basketball Ro1er
Foster recently held a basketball camp for girls In
grades 4-10. Former coach Ron Logan helped'

Foster with the camp. The campers received
Instruction In all aspects of the game.

YOU

Its principal competitor Is Equlfax, Inc. of Atlanta, which earlier
merged with Credit Bureau, Inc.
and recently established a stra•
tegtc alliance with Associated
Credlt Services of Houston.
Only one major nationwide
credit reporting firrn, Trans
Union of Chicago, now remains
Independent of both TRW and
Equlfax~ (In addition, there are
about 1,200 community-based
credit bureaus throughout the
country. l
In nearby Anaheim, Calif.', a
bank of computers and a library
of 60,000 magnetic tapes filled ·
with data on credit users can
produce 1,000 credit reports
every minute, then transmit· tile
information in 10 seconds or leis
to any of the almost ~.000
credit-granting TRW customers~
The contents of those reports
are far more limited· than many
people believe. Included are both
positive and negative lnformalion regarding Individuals' accounts with American Express,
Visa, MasterCard, department
stores, gasoline companies and

others.
·
Also reported are summaries
of how the Individuals have
handled lines of credit, seeured
and unsecured loans (including
home mortgages) and accounts
with financial services companles. Finally, the reports Include
information on bankruptcy tulngs, tax liens and judgements
secured by .creditors as well as
data on government-financed
housjng (FHA and VA) and
student loans. ·
In each instance, the material
Is limited to Individuals' willingness and ability to assume and
handle credit extended by others.
Specifically not Included Is lnformation on:
-"- B!ilances .In checking, savings or other bank accounts.
- Salaries and other sources of
Income.
,
,
- Personal lifestyles, criminal
records, race and religion.
TRW and the other firms
probably would prefer to g;~ther
more Information, but several
federal laws regulate their beha'(lor. In addition, they appear

::· :]

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Mary Lofton Is a poor black agreed.
woman who lives. In the Midwest
TIJen she got behind. She was
and supports herself on a mix- afraid h!!t utUitles would be shut
ture of public assistance and tbe offln mid-winter, so she paid that
money she earns babysitting.
bill and not her .mortgage payThe only thing she owned was ments. By the time the people
part of a house her mother left Mary baby-sits for brought her
her when s'he died; her co-owners Into the TV station where I work,
were a mortgage company and hoping we could help her, Mary
the DeQprtment of Housing and had already Ignored several
Urban Development (HUD) _The letters from the mortgage commoney the mortgage company pany that urged her to contact
loaned Mary's mother had come them. Like a lot of us In hard
from HUD, earmark!!d espe- straits, she froze, believing that
cially. to help poor people like since she couldn't understand It,
Mary and IU!r mother acquire It coulda't be happening."But It
and Improve property In bllgbted was. The' finance oempany ·foreareas. As long as Mary pal~ her cloaed; Mazy's hOUII! was soldi
· monthly ownership share, sbe and she was evicted.
could stay In the hOUR and work
toward the day when she alone
We were sorry for her, but we
would own it.
. recoplzed tbe checlls and balanBut Mary ran into trouble with cea prelenl In ber Jltuatlon.
a delinquent utWtllll bill her There bave to lie rules, and you
mother had Incurred whUe they can't bend tbem for everyone
both were llviDJ 111 tbe houae. wbo Is fearful of tbe aystem ud
Upoa her mother' 1 ~atb, tbe doeln't cooperate. HUD, n
utOIUn compan;v. asked Mary to re~, 11u to operate t"way
sign a promissory aote saying II doel to keep tbe money safe tor
she would pay the but. She others wbo need loau u badly as

"

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Mary and her mother dld1 · ~f
Oversire-~
people don't cooperate, the whole
•
:\0
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system collapses. "We're
sorry'" we said, ubut there's
nothing we can do at this · wish that when some of tnes
point.. .. "
crooks go on tr)al, Ma,.Y Lotto"
Our words echoed through my
could testify about how she wa~ .
too scared to aaswer the letters
head and ricocheted off the sides
of my skull as I began to read of .from the mortgage comp~ny;
the HUD scandals this summer:
and how she lost her house so
accusations of Influence peddling · people like MarUyn'Harrell c®ld
embezzle -the money . •
by cohBultants and the.develop.
ers Wbo hired them, and down- . And I wish that if government •
offllllals recover any of ·the!
right theft by escrow agents
responsible for overseeing the ·.plllap trom these whlte-cqlla~ l
final sales of homes whose
,c riminals, : tbey would take1
owners defaulted on HUDanothar look at tl}e foreclosl!~ '
Insured mortgagei. · . .
on the property of people llkel
There's no way to describe bow
Mary Lofton and give them
anotbtr
chance.
I felt when I read this and
• Mary dldll't ateal, embezzle or,
remembered Mary Lofton's Jltuatlon when we turned her
make herself rich by depleting ,
away. Sick to my stomach . the .programa set up to help
doesn'tdo It, becau~e Iclon'thave
peoplf1 In need; all she did was
fall to tie able to pay ber billa. She
enoqh sensation left to . feel.
Outrage
do It when aetllaIa DO ~OOk; She Ia a poor
~lon returns. The worda.we Aiel
mcmey,J'nanqet, wbo perha~
to Mary about rules seem 10 laclls tbe education to deal.in the
Impotent and so se111elesa. I wlah
same leque wbere people llkl!
l could ta:ke them ·bact(: And I Marilyn llarrell play.

Sarah

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SET YOUR
PAYMENT SCHEDULE!

-Robert Walters

to have been sensitized to the .
Importance of Individual privacy
by critics who have offered both
le~ltimate warnings about unwarranted Intrusion and unjustifled complaints about ·credit
bureau practices. 1
TRW ·submitted magnetic
tapes containing the names of140
million people · and their Social
Security numbers from Its credit
flies. In each 'Instance, government employees were to tell the
company only whether . the
names and numbers matched.
Federal officials ·halted work
ori the TRW project under
pressure from Sen. David Pryor,
D-Ark., who said he was "appailed that offlctals haC! been so
cavalier about the privacy of
American citizens.
·
. But what PrYor characterized
as "the largest breach ol privacy
In the history of the program' •
was an expansion and extension
of a practice that dates back to
the late 1970s. Matching people's
names · and St;Jclal Securlt:l'
numbers Is hardly nefarious. - ~

.,

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CLEVELAND (UP!) - Cleve· .against Philadelphia ," coach medicine center.
land Browns running back Kevin Bud Carson said. "We're not
"He wasn't ·addicted to coMack pleaded Innocent Tuesday going to throw him Into that.
caine ," Gold said. "He did use
cocaine....
to cocaine trafficking charges, · "H~'s a veteran football
and his lawyer predicted he player," Carson said. "We've got
Mack rushed for 1,104 yards in
would not come to trial until after five preseason games , I think 1985 to break Jim Brown's team .
the football season ends.
rookie rushing record . He was
that'splentyoftimeforhim to be
Mack, a two-time Pro Bowl ready to _play when we go to
named to tpe Pro Bowl squad
selection, was arrested June 28 Pittsburgh."
folloWing- the 1985 .and 1987
while.sitting In a car In one of the
·Gold said Mack had been seasons and has rushed for 2,989
clty's most notorious narcotics working out everyday, noiing the
yards In four ,seasons, despite a
areas. He was indicted July 10 on rehabilitation center is just one series of injuries ln 1988.
.
four counts - possession of floor above the clinic's sports
cocaine, sale or resale of cocaine,
aggravated drug trafficking and
possesslpn of crlrrtlnal tools and could face up to 20 years in
prison if convicted.
Mack said nothing at the
arraignment In Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas Court.
His innocent plea was entered by
his attorney, Genild Gold, one of
the city's top criminal lawyers.
Bond for Mack, w-ho entered a
drug rehabilitation program at
the Cleveland Clinic Foundation
after his arrest, was continued at
$2,500 and the case was assigned
to Judge Richard McMonagle.
Gold · said It was a "pretty
good'' possibility Mack would not
go to trial until .after the NFL
season ends in January. "It
wouldn't be unusual for any case
being arraigned today not to go to
trial until after Jan. 1."
AND POSSIBLY SAVE THOUSANDS•
·He also said he understood the
WITHOUT REFINANCING!!
NFL would not take any action
against Mack until after the trial
ends.
Asked about Mack's progress
ln the rehabilitation program,
Gold said: "It's going very well.
He's' due to get out of It .the 28th
[Of July), We fully expect him to
FOR MORE INFO!IMATION ON THIS UNIQUE SERVICE
go to London."
The Browns play the PhlladelCALL DENNIS L. HOCKMAN
phta·Eagles In at exhibition game
at Wembley Stadium on Aug. 6,614-992-7066
leavlng Cleveland July 30.
657 HIGH STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
"I wouldn't Imagine it i London) Is going to be ·much for him
othe~ _than some ball handling
and some conditioning work,
because most of what we do over
. 'llro-.cl on number of rean and bolonce left on your mortgage
there is going to b~ live work

YOUR MORTGAGE
··YEARS EARLY

HUD's rules bend the wrong· way

"OK! OK! You are not responsible for what
you do. It's all SOCIETY'S FAU~ T."

Koenig, assistant coach; Scott Fitch, assistant
coach Wes Arbaugh, Jay Swain, Mike Smith, Rod
New~me, Jeff Dursi, Wes Holter, Buddy Kinney
and Dave Koenig. Absent were Randy Kaylor and
Tim Bissell.

Browns' Mack pleads innocent

Credit bureaus don't snoop around . .

Berry's Wo·rld

FINISH SECOND - Eastern took runner-up
honors In the 1989 Middleport Pony League
Tournament. First row, left to right - Mlk.e
Newland, Pat Newii!Jid, Head Coach Wes .
Arbaugh, Scott Golden, Paul VIneyard, Robert
Reed and Keith Hunt. Second row "'- Leonard

I

•

JUNIOR Award winners In the recent Lady
Marauder Basketball Camp were first row, left to
right- Stacey Price (P.I.G ...Cbllll)p); Amanada
Meadows (Free Throw Champ); Amanda Musser
and Jessica Wright (members of the champion-

ship team)_ Second row - . Misty Chaney
· (dribbling champion), Cynthia CotterUI (one-onone champ) and Jessica Karr, Tiffany Foster and
Jamie Lamm (members of the championship
.team) ..

Proprisition 48 rule h~ving
less effect on freshmen
By KEI111 DRUM
-UPl COllege Basketball Writer
All results aren't In, but
Proposition 48 appa_rentiY Is
having less effect on coUege
basketball's freshmen class each
season.
The controversial rule, which
requires minimum grades and
test scores for freshman eligibilIty, will sideline only half as
many .top freshmen this season
as a year ago.
Using the final top 50 from prep
evaluator Bob Gibbons ~ thEl
guide, only five of last season's
top high-school seniors failed to
qualify. A year ago, the figure
was 10, and two years ago It was
13. Three years ago, the first ,
class affected by Prop 48 had
eight top 50 players sidelined.
Expanding the comparisons to
Gibbons' top 100 also cuts the
drop6uts. At least 13 from last
season can:t play, while the
number was 21 for the previous
two classes.
The decreasing numbers seem
to Indicate Prop 48 Is get dng
prospects to pay attention to
academics.
The numbers may change,
however, Eric Manuel played Q

1989 FORD RANGERS
UP TO *750 CASH BACK

a Kentucky freshman In 1987-88,
but the NCAA since has Invalidated his test score and declared
him Ineligible at any .- NCAA
school. Cesar Portillo. P,layed a
few games at Florida J)jst season
before his score was questioned .
Portillo then left for a junior
college.
· The five top 50 prospects
affected this year include Douglas Edwards at Florida State
and Anthony Douglas at Memphis State. Three others will
attend junior colleges- Sherron
Mills, Mike Hughes and Orlando
Lightfoot

---

BENCH STRENGTH: ·Pac-10
coaches won't have to Iooli far for
advice next season. ·stx 'assistants on four teams In the leai)ie
have head coaching ex!lfir~nee ,
at Division I ichools.
:
,J
Bill Frieder, In bll fir~t.~ason.
at Arizona State, surrounded
himself with · forme~ heal! '
coaches. His full-time assistants
are Lynn Archibald and· GeoJ'ie
McQuarn, who were head
coaches at Utah ·and Cal State
Fullerton last season. Also on the
start Is Bob Schermerhorn, the
Sun pevlls' Interim coach

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�Sentinel

The

·Toronto blanks
RangerS;· Indians
.,·lose 5-1 to Yanks
By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI SpaN Wrller
It took a four-hit shutout to
· derail the Ryan Express.
Dave Stleb and two relievers
. combined on a four-hitter Tues·
. · day night to lead the To ron to
Blue Jays to a 4-0vlctory over the
Texas Rangers despite a 14·
strikeout performance by Nolan
Ryan.
•
Stleb, 10-6, made the Rangers
· appear helpless In his 5 2-3
Innings of work. He gave up two
·hits, walked three and struck out
two. David Wells hurled a hitless
'1 1-3 Innings before Duane Ward
·came on the eighth to post his
11th save.
Ryan, 11-6, blew plenty of
smoke In fanning at least 10
. . batters for the lOth time this year
and 191st tlr'ne In his career. The
aU-time strikeout king Is closing
In ..on strikeout No. · 5,000, with
4,955 In his 22-year career.
But the 42-year-old right·
bander was the first to admit that
winning Is his primary concern.
"Fourteen strikeouts doesn't
mean anything when you lose,"
Ryan said. "I'd rather h;IVe the
win . ..

•

. Ryan went six innings, giving
up three runs, six hits and three
walks. Kenny Rogers relieved
Ryan In the seventh· and struck
· out three. Paur Wilmet recorded
one strikeout In the ninth to give
the Rangers a combined 18
strikeouts, a Texas record for a
nine-Inning game.
"Nolan always pitches well
arid Dave Stleb pitched -.yell
tonight," Blue Jays Manager
Clto Gaston said. "Ward did an
outstanding job out of the bullpen
for us. There was some good
pitching on both sides."
"The last three games I've
pitched, I've had a good curveball," Ryan said. "It's been
consistent. Anytime 1 get ln
double figures In strlkeouis, It's ·
because I have a good fastball
and a good curveball. I'm throw' lng strjkes."

Toronto scored an unearned
run In the first. Junior Felix
scored from third when George
Bell struck out and the ball
eluded catcher Chad Krueter.
Nelson Urlano's double Into
the •right-field corner scored
Uoyd .Moseby from second to
give the Blue Jays a 2-0 lead In
the second. Moseby had walked
and went to second on a walk to
Greg Myers.
,
Bell's double In the seventh
scored Kelly Gruber to make It
3·0. Gruber singled and stole
second before scoring. Toronto
added a run In the ninth on
singles by Bell, Fred McGriff and
Pat Borders. .
Elsewhere In the American
League, Detroit slapped Milwaukee 7-2, Chicago edged Seattle
7-6, Boston flattened Kansas City
10-0, New York dropped Cleve·
land 5·1, Minnesota belted Baltl·
more 9-3 and CaiHornla blanked
Oakland 4·0.
In the National League,lt was:
Montreal2, Philadelphia 0; Pitts·
burgh 4, New York 2; Sa,n Diego
6, Cincinnati 2; San Francisco 5,
Atlanta 4; Chicago 4, St. Louis 2
and Los Angeles 6, Houston 0.
Tigers 7, Brewers 2
At Mliwaukee, Fred Lynn
clubbed a three-run homer In the
first Inning and Doyle Ale111ander
collected his first victory since
May 29 to help Detroit end Its
six-game losing streak. Alex··
ander, 5·10, yielded two runs and
six hits over seven Innings. Don
August, 9-9, was the loser.
White Sox 7, Mariners 6
At Chicago, Dave Gallagher
collected three hits and Ozzle
Guillen scored the winning run on
a double-play grounder In the
eighth. Reliever Donn Pall, 3-l,
allowed one run In three Innings
· and Bobby Thigpen earned his
20th save. Scott Bankhead was
touched lor five runs and seven
hits In 3 1·3 innings, but Mike
Jackson, 3-5, took the loss. ·
, Red Sox 10, Royals 0
At Boston, Ran9y Kutcher's

•

This year, Jenkins and' l:fank
Cleland, league treasurer, are
hoping to recruit .more players
If your fifth or sixth grade son from the Racine area of Meigs
Is an avid football fan with County and from the Mason-New
· dreams of playing on the Meigs Haven areas in Mason County.
Marauders, Eastern Eagles, With enough of an increase In
Southern Tornadoes or Wahama league membership, formation
White Falcons teams, then per· of a fourth team for the league
haps playing_ in the Big Bend may be possible.
. Midget Football League will help
Jenkins and Cleland also hope
. him achieve his dream.
more girls will participate in the
~ : When do National Football
league this year as cheerleaders,
: League players start playing
Fifteen to 22 players per team
- football'
are needed and participants
Some may walt until junior must be In the fifth or sixth
.high or high school, but most grades and cannot be 13 years old
NFL players will tell you they prior to Sept. L A birth certifh
, developed a love of football In cate Is required at the time of .
their grade school years. And If sign-up and a $15 membership
they were fortunate enough to fee and $36 equipment users lee
live in an area which had grade are also required. Parents are
school teams or neighborhood responsible for shoes and socks
. teams -likethisarea'sBigBend for players and cheerleaders.
Midget Football League· - then
The las't sign-up fo~ students
they were in football heaven.
interested In participating In this
This is the third year for the year 's Big Bend Midget Football
Big Bend League which started and cheerleading is this SaturIn 1987. The league Is not day, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon, In
affiliated with any area sc·hool front of Andersons (formerly
district and takes players from Elberfelds) In Pomeroy.
throughout Meigs and Mason
Each' league team Is required
Counties, and elsewhere.
to have three t.o five coaches and
During the first year of the although all head coaching posileague, one dedicated player, tions are filled, assistant coacttes
and his parents, came alltheway are still needed, says Jenkins.
~
from Wellston for practices and
It Is the coaches whO select the
.. games, recalls Dave Jenkins, players for their teams by
league president :
private draft, explains Cleland.
The league's purpose Is to Final draft for this year Is Sept. 2,
teach basic football skills to fifth which will also be Tag Day for
and·sixth graders, and to help the the league.
youngsters develop good sportsTeams are redrafted each
-· manshlp skills and positive attl- year, Cleland notes, and Jenkins
:: tudes about themselves.
points out that only the highest
-· "Having fun Is the most quality equipment is used by
Important as peel in Big Bend league teams··.whlch follow all
, Midget Football. :' says Jenkins. ·junior high rules during contact
"It doesn't matter If one of our play .
.
'
teams looses by 100 points, as
Required contl!tlonln~ sessions
long as the kids have fun. " Safety and regular practices for the
.. Is also a major consideration of teams are at the Syracuse ball
·' league supporters.
field and the first game of the
•
In 1987, Big Bend Midget season - a preview - Is
• Football produced two teams. scheduled for Sept. 23.
.· Last year there were three teams
In the past, Big Bend teams
' - the Eagles. sponsored by the have played each other. as well
.: Pomeroy Fraternal Order of as teams from GaiUpolls, MurEagles; the Browns , sponsored ray City, the Ttlmble-;Glouster
by Brogan-Warner Insurance; area, Albany and Point Pleasant.
and the Dolphins, sponsored by
: Whaley's Auto Parts.
J

.,..
•
,
'
•·
:,
..

Sports briefs
Cycling
Greg LeMond, the two-time
winner of the Tour de France,
agreed to a world-wide market·
!ng and cycling management
contract with ProServ. The International sports marketing com·
pany repre!len ts many of the top
players Ill' the world In·a variety
of SJtOrts.
~· 1\
~-~--

,.

f '..

•

!\ ' '

..,._ ~~ __..... _ ·-·-..-··

SAX STEALS SECOND - Steve Sh of New York slides tato
second base with a stolen base durlrig1Jrst Inning action at
two-run triple ,keyed Boston's
six-run second tnning and Mike
Boddlcker won his llfth straight
slart. Boddicker, 9-7, scattered
nine hits and extended his
~careless string to 24 1-3 Innings.
Charlie Leibrandt, ~-10, surrendered six hits and six runs In 11-3
Innings.
·
Yaitkees 5, lndlaas I
AI. Cleveland, Andy Hawkins
pitched a five-hitter and Jesse
Barfield and Don Mattingly
clouted solo home runs, helping
New York snap a seven-game
losing streak. Hawklns,12·9, beat
Cleveland left -h:;mder Greg Swindell, 13-3, who pitched only 3 2·3
Innings and departed after the
Yankees had a 4-0 lead.
Twins 9. Orioles 3
AI Minneapolis, Kirby Puckett

belted .a · three,run homer and
added an RBI single as Mlnn!!sota handed Baltimore Its sixth
straight defeat. Allan Anderson,
10·9, alloWed three runs and
seven hits over 6 1·3 Innings.
Dave· Schmidt, 8·10, lasted just
four Innings, giving up five

Cl~veland.

The ball got away frilm Clevelaad

Fermi~J; (UPI)
earned runs·.
Angels 4, .Athletics o .
. .: At Oakland, Jack Howell and
• Chlll Davis each homered and ·
Chuck Finley recorded his first
career victory over Oakland,
helping California post Its seven~ straight victory. Finley,

shorts~op Felix

Scoreboard ..

'
12~,

struck out six and walked
four In notching his fifth cc;msecu·
live victory and Greg Minton
earned his sixth save. Dave
Stewart, 14-f\i .pitched his four~h
complete game and allowed 11
hits.

,,

Major!i

-·

By United Press.International ,.
Tlie · Worl!l Cup qualifying
game between the United States
and El Salv;idor - In limbo the
past month - will be played In
Honduras Sept.17, soccer au ihorltles said Tuesday .
The World Cup Organizing
Commjttee and administrators
for FIF A, world soccer's governIng body based In Switzer land,
rt&gt;commended the game be held
In the Honduran capital of
Tegucigalpa.
·
The ~ recommendation Is . certain to be approved Wednesday
at a meetlngofFIFA'sexecutlve
committee.
The decision ends a protracted
debate stemming from FIF A's
ruling to strip El Salvador of Its
Ju]y. 9 home game against the
United States after unruly Salvadoran fans cut sbort a June 25
quaiHi~r with Costa. Rica.
Keith Walker, S!'cretary of the
u.s. Soccer Federation, said
from his group's headquarters In·
Colorado Springs, Colo., El Savador approved this latest move
and · FIFA representatives Informed him of developments.
"It's exactly what we want,"
Walker sail).
··

The end of the Big, Bend
football season brings tournament action and a banquet. And
although all equipment must be
turned In by banquet time. team
jerseys are for players to keep,
says Cleland.
Like other volunteer orgl!niza·
!Ions around the Meigs-Mason
area; the Big Bend Football
League depends upon the dedication of caring adults to keep the
organization running smoothly
and in the best Interest of the ball
players and cheerleaders·.
League officers are elected and
t.hls year's officers, In addition to
Jenkins and Cleland, are Jeff
Werry, first vice president; Jim
Hill, second . vice president;
Roger Abbott, third vice pres!·
dent; Linda Friend, secretary;
Judy Williams and Janice Fetty,
cheerleader advisors; and Jack
Williams, Jay Hill, Perry !Perk)
Auht and C .0. Mcintyre "
commissioners.
So maybe . your son won't
become a high school footba.ll
star, and maybe he won't play
football In college. But then
again, maybe he will. NFL???
Who knows?•?

••

I

S! .-175

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•""*r• I:JO 1.m. •I p.m.· lund , Cl1 ad .

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ThuMIIO''" Ga~mf'!io

Coach punches corin~issioner;
_league gives coach quick exi'
PITTSBURGH (UPl. - The
Arena Football League has fired
Pittsburgh Gladiators Coach Joe
Haering for. punching league
commissioner Jim Foster during
a benches-clearing brawl In a
game, officials said Tuesday.
The fh'lng Monday was in the
form of an Indefinite suspension
but since only two games remain
In this year's abbreviated sea·
son, Haering effectively was
fired, league spokesman Jeremiah Enright said In Chicago,
where the league ls· based.
Gladiators Assistant Coach
Darrel Jackson was named as
Hiierlng' s replacement·. ,-·
Haering and Foster got'lnto an
on-field scuf{le Saturday night
following a · f!~st-quarter
· benches-clearing brawl between
the Gladiators and Chicago In a
game In Sacramento, Calif.
. ' The

Announce festival _.
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Wednesday, FIFA Is also to- States, 2-1·1, with five points.
decide If further-sanctions will be : Guatemala 1·2·0 and Trinidad·
Pla~ed against El Savador beTobago, 0·1·2, have two points. El
cause of ItS bottle-throwing fans. Salvador's only game was the
• At · Issue Is whether .the Costa rowdy 4-2 loss to Coslli Rica . .
Rica g&amp;me will be ruled a forfeit
The U.S.· El Salvador game
and If El Salvador may stage Its Initially appeared bound for Los
Aug. 13 home game against Angeles ·- at El Salvador's
' request because of many ex patTrinidad-Tobago.
The United States, which last rlates In the area. But Costa Rica
played In the World Cup in 1950,is and Guatemala objected to an
halfway through Its eight-game extra U.S. game In the home-andround-robin series for countries hoiTW! serieS. Short notice prefrom North and Central America vented the game from being held
and the Caribbean. The top two July 9 In Honduras.
teams advance to the 1990 World
The U.S. team, coacl:!ed by Bob
Cup In Italy.
,
Gansler, won the Marlboro Cup
Costa· Rica, 5-2·1, leads the of Chicago last.weekencl and w)ll
CONCACAF group with 11
next play In ·a tournament In
points, followed by the United
Aosta, Italy, Aug. ·3 and 5.
,

w·

Giants' Taylor ends holdout

N

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Chicago 4, St. Louis 2
have · been on a tear since sola 9, Baltimore 3; Detro!f 7,
At St. Louis . . Paul KilgU s
Langston's acquisition, posting a Milwaukee 2; Chicago 7, Seattle
36-18 record. In h!slast 30 Innings 6; Toronto 4, Texas 0 and scattered fou r hits over six
Innings and drove In a run and
pitched, the 29-year-old has Ca!Hornla 4, Oakland 0.
Shaw on Dunston homered for the
Pirates 4, Mets 2
struck out 40.
At New York, Bobby ~ nllla Cubs, winners of fou r straight.
"What can you say after
another excellent outing by singled horne the go-ahead run In · Kilgus, 6-9, snapped a personal
Langston, " Montreal Manager the eighth Inning to help snap the four-game losing streak. His last
Buck ,Rodgers said. " He got Mets' six-game winning streak. victory came June 6 against the
stronger as the game went on. If Doug Drabek, 8-7, went seven Mets. Mitch Williams pitched
he wasn't striking them out he ·innings and gave up six hits. Bill two Innings fo r his 25th save. Joe
was making them hit his Landrum pile hed the nInth fo r Magrane, ll-7, rld!ng a six-game
pitches. " ·
his 14th save. Bob Ojeda went winning · strea k, took the loss.
· Montreal took a 2·0 lead In the seven Innings for New York, · Jose Oquendo extended his hitsecond . off Don Carman, 2-11. before Ric~ Aguilera, 6-4 , came ting streak to 23 games . tops In
the majors.
Raines led off with his fifth home .on In th e eighth.
Dodgers 6, Astros 0
Padres 6, Reds 2
run and Ruble Brooks followed
At Cincinnati, Shawn Abner . At Houston, Tim Belcher
with a double down the r!ght-fleld
line. Brooks advanced to third on slammed a three-run homer ani! tossed a five- hitter and Jeff
a groundout and scored on third Ed Whitson won his · fou rth Hamilton and Mike Scloscla each
baseman Charlie Hayes' throw- straight, sending the Reds to contributed RBI singles In the
their ninth consecutive loss. sixth lm\ing. Belcher, 7-9, walked
Ing error.
"Pm not a home run hitter- Whlt~,on. 14·6. scattered 10 hits five and struck out nine en route
. "said Raines. " Although batting over seven Innings. Tom Brown- to his fourth shutout of the
fo!lrth In the lineup I should do Ing, •·10, lost his foUrth straight season. Rick Rhoden ~ 0·3, a
my share. "Carman fed me a decision, giving up five runs and last-minute star ter for Bob
Knepper, took the losJ;.
chl!ngeup and he hung It up to me seven hit~ over six Innings.
· Giants 5, Braves 4
pretty good."
At Atlanta, Mike LaCoss comEl.sewhere In the National
League, Pittsburgh topped New bined with Craig Lefferts on an
York 4-2, San ;Diego downed eight-hitter to send the Braves to
Cincinnati 6-2, San Francisco their sixth straight loss. LaCoss,
edged Ailanta 5-4, Chicago de- 5;6, gave up six hits over seven
feated St. Louis 4-2 and . Los Innings and Lefferts earned his
18th save of the year despite
Angeles blanked Houston 6-0.
In the American League, li allowing two runs In the ninth
was: Boston 10. Kansas City 0; lnnfng. Derek Lllllqulst, 5-6, took
New York 5, Clev.eland l ; Mlnne- the·loss.

By TO~ WITHERS
U~l Sports Writer
A -year ago Mark Langston
pitched In relative obscurity now he's the King of Mount
Royal.
The city of Montreal, bu lit by
the ·French on top of Mount
Royal, Is home to the )"atlonal
League East leading Expos, who
have built their pennant hopes on
the arm of the left-bander.
Langston, · acquired from the
Seattle Mariners May 28, tossed
a flve-hltte{Tuesday night and
Tim Raines provided a home run
to lead the Expos to their sixth
straight win, a 2-0 triumph over
the Philadelphia Phlllles.
Langston, 8-3, walked two for
his third shutout 'and fourth
complete game this season. The
Phlllles have lost six straight.
''Switching leagues hasn't hurt
me but they (hitters) are starting
to learn how I throw," said
Langston, who struck out 10. "I
(lnd It easter to pitch In a close
game. It Is better for my
concentration.''
Since coming over to the NL
DOUBLE PLAY - Braves' second blllll!tnan Jeff Treadway
from the American League on
makes a face ~ he throws to complete a double play after f~rclag
May 28; the left·hander has
out the Giants' Will Clark at second base In first lnalng action.
struck out 10 or more four times.
.
(UPI) He struck out' a season-high 13
·11
. Cincinnati Reds ln his last outing.
,-------------~~----------.
The Expos, who have a 3 ~
g·ame lead on the Chicago Cubs,

•
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Expos cop sixth wm·•n row; Reds lose·

Big Bend Midget Football League
to begin third season this autumn
By NANCY YOACHAM
OVP News Staff

The Daily Sentinai~Page-6

Ohio

•·

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OKLAHOMA CITY (UPil 7' A
list of boxers selected to challenge the U.S. Olympic Festival
·winners at the box-Off In Concord, CaiH., next month ·. to
delermlne American representa·
tives at the world championships
In Moscow next month. The
. chailengers must b~at. the Festi·
, val winners twice In order to win
a world championship berth.
Llgllt-!lywelght - John Her·
rera, Corpus Christl, Texas.
Flyweight - Lionel!' Odom.
Queens, N.Y.
Bantamwel!!ht - George Gonzales, Brighton, Colo.
Featherweight , Patrice
. Brooks, St. Louis.
· Lightweight - Prescott Gray,
.
.
Boynton Beach, Fla.
Llght•welterwelght - VIctor
·· McKinnis, Fort Carson, Colo.
Welterweight - Emmett Lin·
ton, Tacoma, W~sh.
Llght·mlddlewelght - Chris
Byrd, Flint, Mich.
.
Middleweight - Ronald
Simms, Kelly Air Force Bas,e,
Texas.
· Light-heavyweight - Richard
Brooks. Ripley, Tenn.
·Heavyweight - Javier AI;varez, San Antonio.
Super-heavywel&amp;ht - Ij:lvln
·- Richardson, Fort Carson, Colo..
. ., I

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brawl began when Chicago quarterback Ben Bennett hit a Pitts·
burgh player from behind.
The game offlclals were going
to throw Bennett out of the game
but Foster ran onto the field -and
i!'tervel)ed, Haering ~ald. ·
"I felt threatened and did what
Walls signs contract
any guy from · East Pittsburgh
would do,;_ I decked him with one
punch," said Haering.
ROCKLIN, CaiH. (UPI)
Tl\e .Giadla,tors went on 10 win Tight end Wesley Walls, the San
the game, 47·38.
Francisco 49ers second-round
Pittsburgh player representa- draft pick, has agreed to. a
tlve Jo J.o Heath said he called three-year contract and was
the league Monday night In an expected to sign and begin
practicing Wednesday, the team
effort to get Haering reinstated.
"I have a call into the league to announced.
talk to either Jim Foster or Ray
H)s signing would reduce to 11
Jauch, Arena Football's director the number of unsigned 49ers,
of {ootball operations," Heath Including top draft pick Keith
,
said Tuesday from his hotel room DeLong of Tennessee.
In Richfield, Ohio, where the
. '!;he team had been worried .
Gl!idlators are to play Detroit about Walls late showup because
· Friday night .
· ,,.
he played defense throughout
However, another league spo- much of his collegiate career at
kesman, Steve Stahr, said Foster Mississippi and the 49ers feel he
planned _no meeting about Haer- needs much work on ollense,
log, and he remained suspended esP~:Ctally on blocking.
lndeflrilte!Y.
.
"Obviously, miSsing sll' days
The d~lslon to fire Haering of practice set him back from
was Glide following ah lndepend- that standpoint," said another
ent lnvest!gll'tlon _b y Jauch, En- . •' rookie, head coach George Sel·
·right said. The Arena FootbalL . fert. "But he Is an Intense person,
League hill! the rlght to fire t!'afn ·;,and I am sure he has been paying
coaches becauS!! the league owns ' at~ntlon to, or thought about,
·and operates Individual fran·· some of the things he has done In
chlses, and Haering served as an minltamps. I would say he would
·• employee of the league.
make up for lost lme In a
"I was try}ng to cbntrol the relatively shortamountoftlme."
game, protect my players and
His contract was believed to
defend myself," Haering said. ·'I total around $850,000 for the three
d!dn' I do anything wrong."
seasons.

14 iJ

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draft picks. Guyton, an eighthround pick from Eastern Ken·
tucky, was on the Fairleigh
Dickinson University training
camp campus and could be
signed by Tuesday .
... Wide receiver Ricky Sanders accepted the Washington
Redsklns' last-ditch offer. to
prevent his holdout, agreeing to a
new multiyear deal that makes
his salary comparable with that
of teammate Gary Clark.
.
Sanders was entering the optlon.year on his contract this year
and was slated to earn $220,000.
Neither terms nor dura lion of
Sanders' new deal were released,
but It Is believed he wlll~arn near
the $575,000 that Clark, a twotime Pro Bowl choice, will make
In 1989. Art Monk, the team's
other starting wide receiver. will
earn $800,000 this season.
... The Green Bay Packers said
they have reached agreement
with punter Brian Shulman, who
was the team's eight-round !!raft
choice out of Auburn. The
Packers also cut wide receiver
J.R. Ambrose. a free agent
slgnl,'d In mid-season last year
after Walter Stanley was Injured.

·l ~I; 4

.. . The NeW England Pat riots
placed running back Reggie
Dupard and linebacker Ed Williams on the physically unable •to
perform list. Dupard, 25, the
team's top selection In the 1986
draft, is coming 'off Jan. 4
shoulder surgery.
Williams, 27, sat out all of last
season due to a knee Injury
suffered in the first preseason ·
game. He underwent reconstructive knee surgery Aug. 10.
·
The Patriots also anmmnced
the signing of defensive end Chris
Gannon, a .third-round 1989 draft
choice from the University of
Southwestern Louisiana.
... Wide receiver Bill Brooks
and running back Albert Bentley
expect to begin holdouts for
better contract terms when veterans report to the Indianapolis
Colts' camp.
NFL rushing leader Eric Dickerson· has dominated the Colts'
rushing game, leaving former
starter Bentley an unhappy re·
serve. Bentley was second In
NFL all-purpose yardage In 1987,
but carried only 45 times for 230
yards las I year.

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r. Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 24, 1989
.

SPRINr, VAILFV CINEMA

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:
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ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1919

·.:·· ~ .
·~ ..

By United Press lnternatloll!'!
Lawrence Taylor called a
quick end to his holdout Monday,
Jeavlng Phil Simms, No. l draft
pick Brian Williams and eight
unsigned veteran free agents
missing from the New York
Giants.
Taylor did not report when
camp open~ Monday In Madison, N.J .. and was expected to
join quarterback Simms In askIng the club to renegotiate his
contract. But Steve Rosner, the
linebacker's busllle'ss manager;
said former teammat~s · !;larry
Carson and George Martin
talked Taylor Into ending his ·
holdoui. .
·
"After weighing the pros and
cons, I expect him to come to
camp within 24 hours," Rosner
said.
·
· The absent players missed the
Giants' opening day running and
weight lifting drUis but the club
does not begin practice until
'
·
Tuesday.
. Giants Coach Bill Parcells
greeied 73 of the 86 players on the
roster Monday. Simms and Taylor were the only players under
con~raof missing.
They are subject to fines but
Parcells would not say If they
would be. The unsigned veterans
are 'linebackers Gary Reasons
and Pepper Johnson, center Bart
Oates, ~.a'fetles Terry Kinard and
· Kenny Hill, wide receiver Lionel
Manuel, tight end Zeke Mowatt
and kicker Raul Allegre. All but
Mowatt are starters.
Williams, a guard from Minnesota, and defensive back Myron
Guyton were the only unsigned

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Plge

-Local .news briefs... ____.........,
Continued from page 1
Including the Welsh, English, and German.
On the agenda thus far are such activltle~s a Yesteryear
program for people of all ages, a Founder's Day dinner, house
and church tours, dances, exposiuons of period costumes and
textiles, cooking demonstrations, musical groups, a speclal
"parade of nationalities" and many more activities.
The group Is also putting together a cookbook to sell and needs
·:old time" recipes for the book entitled "Treasured Reclpes
from the Past." Anyone with a recipe they would like to submit
should contact Julie E. Dillon at the Dally SentineL
Another book, dealing wtth the beginning of Pomel"oy and It's
early businesses and Industries, Is also being put together. If
anyone has any old piCtures or newspaper articles that they feel
would be suitable for the book, contact Scott Dtllon at 992·2006.
If anyone Is Interested In getting Involved In the planning of
the events or want to help In any way, the committee meets on ·
the fourth Monday o!'every month.

•·

After a week of water line breaks, the Leading Creek
Conservancy District reported Wednesday morning that all
repairs have been completed and water restored to all
customers.
The breaks resulted In several hundred customers being
without water, some up to· three days at a time, durl!Jg the past
week as district employees worked around the clock repairing
the lines.

Eas(ern board plans meetings

UMW rally to be held Saturday

EMS has four Tuesday calls
Units of the . Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded Tuesday to four calls for assistance.
Pomeroy at 9:40a.m. was called to the Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Audrey Sauters who was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL .
·
Syracuse went at 10:06 a.m. to Morning Star Road for Don
Hendricks Jr. who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport was called at 11:02 a.m. to Sycamore St. for
Kathryri Neutzllng to Holzer Medical Center.
· . Racine went at 11:01 p.m. to Trouble Creek Road for James
Hlnkl~y to Holzer Medical Center.

Marriage licences

Meigs announcements
For more information, cail 614992·6890, 992-6593 or 992· 7055.

Stocks

Hunter safety course
An Ohio Dlvlslon of Wildlife
Hunter Safety Course wlll be held
July 31 and Aug. 1,3 and 4, from 6
to 9 p.m., on the second floor of
the Pomeroy Municipal Build·
lng. Pre-registration Is required
since Class size wlll be limited to
30 students. To register, call John
Costanzo at 992-3883 before 6
p.m .. or 843-5405 after 6 p.m.

84, of Letart died

LOW PRICE

S9 9 '

LOP-controlled Diet last year.
3 percent sates tax, the
first of its kind in Japan, was a
key Issue In the election. The
LOP rammed the tax blll through
pa·ruament last December dur·
lng a session boycotted by most
opposlilon parties.
"The elect!o n results clearly
showed that the peqple were
opposed to the sales tax and we

· The

h'a ve agreed to Introduce a billtn· opposition party; · the newly
the .next extraordinary session of formed Rengo, which ls supthe Diet to abolish the tax·." a ported by Japan's largest labor
spokesman for the Sociallst federation, is expected to join the
Party sald.
others ln a legislative effort to
Joining the JSP wlll be the abolish the tax .
Komelto (Clean · Government
Together, the five opposltlon
ParM, the Democratic Socialist groups control 107 seats, com·
Parly and the Social Democratic · pared to 109 for the LOP, ln the
Union, he said.
upper house of the parliament.
The spOkesman said another

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Anniversary Celebration
Continues With . .

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BUY ONE~GET ONE

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COPYRIGHT 1989 .' THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY. JULY 23. THROUGH SATURDAY •.JULY 29, t989,1N
GAI.UPOUS AND POMEROY STORES . '
WE RESERVE THE. RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS.
ADVERTISED tnM POLICY-Each of these advertised items is required to be
readily avaitab~ for aale ih each Kroger Store, except as specifically noted
in this ad. If we do run out of an advertised item, we will offer you your
choice Of a comparable item, when available, reflecting the same savings
or a raincheck whtc:h will entitle you to purchaae the advertised itein at
the advehiaed prtce within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be
~~tad per item purchaoad.
;

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With Low Prices. And More.

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ADDITIONAL ITEMS
S1.70 COVERS BOTH PIZZAS

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Domino's
Pizza
992-2124·

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IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

1989

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Armour Meat
Hot Dogs

Buzz
Beef PaUies

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Ice Cream

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.Assorted Pops

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Valleydale .
Sliced Bacon

Oven Fresh ·
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Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Audrey
Sau ters, Pomeroy; Harold
Hager, Racine.
Tuesday discharges - Ricky
Bolyard, Dor Coates.

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32-0Z. BTL.

Light 'N' Lively
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"July Sa~ings"
ANY
SILK FLOWER
ARRANGEMENT
IN STOCK
NOW

Jhe Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August . 11 th~
Advertising· Deadline Is
August ·5., 198~

MANY DIFFERENT STYLES
AND COLORS
TO CHOOSE FROM!

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Grapefruit Juice

Robitussin
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O~r 1 06th

Hospital news

ment, leaving a total of
$129.981.94.
The direct allofment to the
county bo.a rd was $33,592.76 for
July.

5ro. ·.

'

Rufus H. Hill,

Wednesday, July 26, 1989 at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in

our services at a competitive
price."
Toledo Edison and the Cleveland Electric lllumjnatlng . Co.,
both of which are under . the
umbrella of the Centerlor
Energy Corp., are required to
reduce thetr operating costs a~ '
part of&lt;&amp; rate Increase granted by
. thePUCO.
Kelly sald the move toward
. municipal power systems, which
purchase wholesale electricity,
could threaten the financial
stability of utilities that generate
eleclrlclty.
"Who's going to generate the
electricity If everybody goes to
munlclpallzatlon? If you run the
' companies out of busln~ss that
are producing electricity, whose
going be left to generaie electrlc·
. .·
tty," he said.
· Kelly sald President Bush's
proposed reductions lncoal·plant
emissions could lead to the loss of
generating plants, which may
reduo;e the supply of wholesale
electricity that municipal systems now ciependon.

Am Electric Power ............. 2974 '
AT&amp;'l,' ................................. 38~
Ashland Oil ..... . ~ ......... : ..... .. . 36 .
Bob Evans .......................... 147f
Charming Shoppes ............... 17
City Holding Co .................. 17~
Federal Mogul. .................... 23
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... .... ....5274
Heck's ................................. %
Key Centurion ... ................. 12')1
Lands' End ......................... 28%
Limited Inc ........................ 33%
Multlmedla Inc ................... 99~
Rax Re.s taurants .................. 2}'8
Robbins·'&amp; Myers ... ~ ............ 16%
Shoney's Inc ............... .':...... ll%
Wendy's Intl ........... ~........... 5Y,
Worthington Ind ................. 23',(,
(Goodyear Tire and Rubber
second quarter net f7 cents after
chg. vs. $2.35)

VoUeyball to start
All girls wishing to play volleyball at Eastern, grades 7-12, who
have not yet received the volleyball Information packet, should
make arrangements to obtain a
packet by calllng Coach Douthitt
at 667-6942 or Coach Jackson at
667-6530.
Plan reunion
The annual Neville family
reunion will be held Saturday at
Krodel Park, Point Pleasant. A
potluck dl nner will be served
about 12 noon. All family and
friends welcome.

Power show to
be held this weekend
The 16th annual Mld·Oh.lo
Valley Steam Engine and An·
'tlque Power' Show wlll be_held
thls weekend, Saturday and
Sunday lit the fairgrounds In
Barlow. Events will Include
, old-Ume threshing with steam
e1111nes. saw mllllng, shinl!le
making, models,.arts 11nd crafts,
a hugh flea market, and plenty or
food. Barlow Is located 13 mlles
west of Mar4etta on State Route

Rufus Hill

TOKYO (UP!) - Japanese
tlon for the upper house ot the house, bu't tt remains uncertain
opposition . parties, encouraged
Diet, or parliament, losing Its · whether they can·cooperate ·on a
by their success ln weekend
majority ln the chamber and leglslatl\le agenda or will be
parliamentary elections, have · forcing Prime Minister Sousuke divided by Ideological
agreed to combine forces to fight
Uno to announce· hls resignation differences.
an unpopular sales' tax supported
The Socialist Party, the lar.gest
to take respons!b!l!ty for hls
by .t he ruling Liberal Democratic
opposition group, announced lt
party's defeat.
Party, officials sald Wednesday.
Japan's five major opposition . was joining fo~es with three
The Liberal Democrats sui·
parties, several smaller parties other non-communist parties In a
fered the worst setback In their
and 15 Independents now jointly campaign. against a con trover·
34-year history In Sunday's elechold the · majority ln the upper stat sales tax approved by the .

Dally stock prices
(As of 10 a .m.)
Bryce aild M!U'k Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

School foundation funds distributed
Meigs County schools received
State School Foundation Subsidy
payments for July of $761,649.67,
according to · a report from the
office of State A11ditor Thomas E.
Ferguson.
According to the report the
total amount of basic and transportation allowances to each
school district and the County
BOard of Education with deductions were as follows:
Eastern Local School District,
total, $148,148.96 less $5,019,
school employees retirement and
$15,315, state teachers retirement leaving a net payment to
the dlstrlct of $127,814.96.
Meigs local School District,
$420,169.01, Jess $13,904, schoolemployees retirement, and
$43,166, state teachers retirement leaving a net paymeill of
$363,099.01.
Southern Local School District,
$159,738.94 total, less $7,706,
school employees retirement and
$22,541, state teachers retire·

,t ..:_
n.rea
'd eat' ·h 8 '
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Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Weekend .election ·victory galvanizes Japanese opposition

Group ... . . :. . _ _!C90!J!n!!Jtl!!!.nU!!!e~d,!fr!;!O!!!m!!..PI!!a!lig;!;,e.!l_ _ _ _ __
Ohio Restaurant Association,
Manos Pashallsh, said Toledo
Edison's monopoly was too ex·
pensive for members of his
group, which supports tile drive.
"The electrlclty that w~ get
from Toledo Edison lsn·~ any
better than the 'electricity that
anyone else gets/' Paschails
satd. "It ls exactly the same, only
It costs more."
"We believe that there's nothing wrong with our electric
rates that a dose of competition
couldn't cure," he said.
Toledo Edison spokesman
Rick Kelly said the utility would
not object to an Independent
panel to reylew the Issue, bUt he
sald~ the proposal offered by the
advocacy group ls biased against
the company. Kelly sald the
panel would not .' lnclude Industrial customers, which use about '
half of Toledo Edison's output.
"We are certainly aware that
many of our customers are upset
with our rates," Kelly sal d. "And
we are certainly aware that If
we're to continue · (In business)
we've got to find ways to provide

The Daily Sentinel Paga 7 •

•• •

outdoor work thls weekend.
The spread of blue mold In
tobacco should be limited~ hlgh
temperatures and some sunshine
Thursday and part of Friday. ·

A cold front will move across
the state on Friday, producing
scattered thunderstorms, High
pressure wlll folio)!' with cooler
and Jess humid conditions for

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
GET 2 GREAT PAN PIZZAS

. The United Mine Workers will have a rally for organized labor
on Sattirday from 4 p.m. to 10 p.rn . .at the Rutland Civic Center.
There will be guest speakers, music, fireworks, free food and
pop. Those at tending are asked to take their lawn chairs.
In announcing the rally, a spokesman from the Meigs Mines
urged attendance to show support.

Soltball tourney
Bradbury PTO is sponsoring a
Men's Class C&amp;D ASA Softball
Tourney on Aug. 12-13, at Hartinger Park in Middleport. The·
entry fee is $65 and two softballS.

amounts are expected to . be
spotty, averaging one-quarter ot
an Inch or less. Isolated locations
could receive one-Inch or more.
The drying potential will be
high Thursday for hay curlng.
Pan evaporation rates should
average near· one-quarter of an
Inch, with afternoon humidity
levels dropping to minimums of
50 percent to 60 percent on
Thursday. Light to moderate
dew_ should ·dry off by mid·
morning.
The less hot morning and
evening hours will l:le the best
jlme tor spraying activity. Wlnil
speeds should average .less than
10 miles per hour.

Pomeroy, Ohio. .
Born April 10, 1905 in Leon, he
was
the si&gt;n of the late Ward M. and
A Meigs County Grand Jury
Martha E. Wolfe Hill. He was a
convened at 9 a.m. this morning
sawmiU operator and a farmer. He
ln. the common pleas courtroom
was a member of Broad Run
of the courthouse.
United MethOdist Church and the
In a non-related common pleas
Farm Bureau.
court matter, shock probation for
He was preceded ill death by
Dean WhltUngton was denied by
step-mother,
Mary D.; brothers
Common Pleas Judge Fred Crow
Mont,
Dolph,
Brady and Denver
Ill.
and sister Flora.
Surviving are his wife Margaret
Herdman
Hill of Letart; two
Divorces sought
daughrers, Enna Rottgen of New , ·
Peggy McBane Will; Racine,
Haven and Mary Huffman of
.
Letart;
four brothers, Dennis Hill of
and Harold J. Will, Pomeroy.
'Leon, Henry Hill of Point Pleasant,
have flied ln Meigs County
AT ONE
Thomas Hill of Plain City, Ohio
Common Pleas Court for a
and Roben Hill of Glen Ferris,
dissolution nf their marriage.
Divorces have been granted to W.Va.; nine grandchildren and 24
great-grandchildren.
Karen Grlrllm from James R.
LIMITED
Funeral services will be Friday at
Grimm Sr., and Earl B. Chap·
DEUYDY AIEl
I :30 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
man from Catherine Chapman.
Home with the Revs. Boyd
Herdman and Mitzi Oldaker
officiating. Burial will follow in
Bethel Cemetery in Leon. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Marriage licenses have been Thursday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 .to 9
Issued In Meigs County Rrobate p.m.
Court to Glen T!llou Crisp, 37,
Langsville, and Jacqueline ·Rita
Cecchini, 23, Ontario, Canada;
and Marvin Paul Cremeans, 33,
Reedsville, and Julia Mae
Stoops, 22,' Reedsville.

Grand jury convenes

The Eastern Local Board of Education h_a s scheduled three
meetings tn the district to discuss the need for additional local
funding for schools and whether an Income .tax or addttonal
projlerty tax Is· preferred.
The meetings have been scheduled for Tuesday at Riverview
Elementary, Aug. 7 at Tuppers Plains, and Aug. 14 at Chester
Elementary, all at 7:30 p.m.
Dts trtct residents are welcome to attend any of the meetings,
Dr. Dan ApUng, superintendent, announced.

Racine harvest festival
Any local crafts . person or
business wishing to rent space
for the Sept. 23 Harvest Festival
tn Racine should reserve the
space as soon as possible, says
Jeanette Lawrence, a festival
organizer. The rental fee for
profit-making concerns wlll be
$10.
Non-profit organizations,
such as schools, churches and
scout' groups, may reserve space
free of charge.
To reserve space, or for other
informatlon about the upcoming
festival, call 949·2140 or 949-2800.
In addition to crafts, the annual
fes tlyal wtll feature country,
bluegrass and gospel music,
foods of all kinds, games and
more. Another highlight of the
.festival will be a car show.

Wednesday, July 26, 1S89

Heat will remain in Ohio through Thursday
By United Press International
High pressure aloft will bring
more heat and humidity to the
state of Ohio through at least
Th.u rsday, along with partly
cloudy skies and scattered thun·
derstorms, wlth the storms becoming more numerous during
the afternoon and early evening.
Heat and humidity will push
the Livestock Safety Index Into
the danger category Thursday
afternoon, with high temperatures reaching the lower 90s In
most areas. However, tempera·
tures In the BOs during the
· weekend will reduce stress
levels.
. Growing degree days at base 50
wlll accumulate at a rate of near
30 on Thursday, but co_oler
conditions during the weekend
will slow the growth of crops
across the state.
New hay cu ttlngs face some
rtsk of wetting from scattered
thunderstorms Thursday and
Friday. However, rainfall

Water line breaks are repaired

.

Wedneldev; July 26, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

6-The Deily Sentinel

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· .POmeroy-Mi&lt;ldleoort. Ohio ·

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.WedneldaY. J~ly ~6: 1989 ..

Wednesday, July 26, 1989

· PU(.tOf criPPled plarte Shuns
tlel"O
Jahel
·
·
.
·
C6mpanies announce ·
flecau~
.C~I)IrOI!ing
second qu~_er ~i~gs
· '
· . UPi l · " 2.. · Ge ral )!:lectric CF6-6 Mpl1tes airport,
It was .. li.Ms crlflc;al to
tile . .
SIOI,JX .CITY : lo'!"a f
,.... __ · · a · ne
,
·b
too. far away. . · Haynes !lmilly. Jelllner . ... .
'..
·
The U!llted AI rUne~ pilot who:. - ho~&amp;ed In 5 planes taJI. ~~:;': : . cho~ the Sioux City airport. . . ·
1'11e 'Nebraslql. f'lallei!lal G_uard
Multimedia ·Inc. !§ s.econ&lt;1·
guided .ll crippled DC-10 j_etliner the jetHner , threer~nde~ll nes : · Citing the Natloital transpor-. · will coritimie'flylrigfour RF-4 jets · . uarter- net was . listed at
to a specta~u1ar cra~h ~a.ndlng In . hyd r~ u llc s tl!e · _ng
ta~ion Safety Board investlgatlon over Buena .Vista County search: . . :10,787,000, o'r $.87/ share 'vs.
Sioux City last.week saldhhed~s · co~~e~~d Flight Engineer Dud- of the crash, Haynes declined to · trlg ·for metal engil!~ Part~ with . Sli,22l,OOO, or $.67/ share for the
not want to be ca11el1 a. ero. or le . Dvorak it)lmediately re- give more details or the fl ight, · lnfrare~ cameras ,- said NTSB · sa,nie J!erlod In 1988, according to
ju~t doing hls job.
.. C · t • f' ~red to ibe United Airlines · exce!)t to say he l)elieved the jeet inVestigator l'ed LoP!Itklewiczc.
the ctnvestme'nt !lrm of Blunt,
'There Is no hero.
ap ·
e
.
ed res book but could be tanded sa1ely: · ·
·
He ·said the planes Will - fly . Ellis &amp; Loewi .
Alfred &lt;;. Hayn
•'I thought we were going to go lower to the ground In ail effort to
The compa~y·s revenue for the
23e2s. thled pilot of ~";epr3:~?o!~~he'1ha8-a uniqire
United Fllgtlt
• to a news
In and land," he said. Insstead, a find the fan blade from the
er!Od was $121,020,000 vs.
..pr~~::.~~ apparent to us that we wing dipped Into the ground as crippled tall engine that has so
~114,285,000. Its slx-JYlonth net
conference Tue;!day at Marla~
0
Health Center. Just a group
had lost all of our h draulic fluid, the plane touched down and far eluded searchers.
was $15,427,000, or $1.24/ share
four people who did their JOb ~n~ and when 1 asked budley for the careened off the runway as the
In an unprecedented e~glne
vs.$9,329,000, or $.77/ share . Reput the best resourc~s to wor ·
procedure for that, he said, DC-10 cartwheeled apd broke failure, the fan blade d1sapvenue was· $22 7,317,000 ys.
Haynes, 57, of seattle, was 'Th
't
,
So
we
made
It
apart
in
flames
.
peared
when
the
tall
engine
.
$
.
1
0
214 266 000
hailed for flying the jetliner to u ~~e ,:; we~~-along·," Haynes · Haynes thanked flight con- exploded while . the plane wa,s
L~s.t 'yea.r's quarter net toi
Sioux Gateway AlrP;Ortl!lstWed· . sftd
·•· . ··.
tro!lerslnMinneapollsandSioux over Alta.
.
eluded an after-tax . gain of
nesdayafteranengmeexploslon .
" Somet!medur!ngtheprocess City .for their help, as well as
. Lopatklewicz said Iowa Air
approximately $l, 700,000 from
caused a complete hydraulic .... DenniS (!!'Itch) came up 10 the rescue crews and .hospital staff., Guard hel icopter's will continue
the sale of wz:rv-Tv (Channel
failure that left the aircraft. coc kpit a nd tended usahand," he "Thank you for your compassion searching cornfields Wednesday
17 ) In ·Nashv!He, Tenn., and
without steering control.
!d Fit h a u lied lnstructo
and for your caring· and loving based on promising spots that . Multimedia Entertainment Co.
The jet touched down on the ~~PPen~ 1 ~ be ~n th~ flight. r, .c oncern," he said.
· · twn up on the Infrared fUm.
of Tennessee.
runway, but carwheeled · and
Fitch got on his knees. to work
Haynes, exhibiting a large cut
Ground searches of a soybean
For the secol)d quarter, enter·
talnment revenues jumped 21
exploded into flames, k!ll!ng 111 tbe throt!les for the two remain- under his left eye and a bandage field adjacent· to the Sioux City
of the 2!16 passengers and crew ing engines. Varylngthethrustof on hls nose, was treated for ,airport wiU also continue after a
percent, anq c·ablev!slon rem~mbers a board.
the engfnes was the only way.:to lacerations on his head and foot. bolt was found there earlier this . venues :-vere up nine percent.
Dvorak, 5l, ·otTacoma, Wash., week,
:
.
Newspaper revenues Increased
This is a happy day for many steer the crippled plane Haynes
. of us,. but we must no !forget that · explained.
'
also ·was released from Marian
At the .~lrport, investigators
two percent, and broadcasting
111 peo~!e perished. In .. this
.. 1 put him to work at what 1 and·appeared at the news confer- will lay out the severed horizonrevenues Increased one percent.
acc-Ident, Haynes sa1d. This · thou ht would be.· the best place- ence, but First Officer William ,tal sta blltzerandeievato~ next to
·
'Ashland on ·.
crew and the entire mdustry Is for
to work and from then . R. Records, 48, of )Vo~1nvllle, the tall section. and _.. try . to
Ashland Oil's mit for Its third
· dedlcat~t! .to f!.ndlng the cause of dn, it was just ~orklng •together. wash., and Fitch, 46, of Ba~llett, determine the traJec;tory of the
quarter, which ended June 30,
this accident.
. as a team as·an effort along witll Ill., remained hospitalized in fair tall engine parts that are suswas $4:1,510,000, or $.78/share vs.
Haynes,
silting
In
a
wheelchair
I"
'
n·d
h
di
f
r
Sio
ux
condition.
peeled
of
severing
the
hydraulic
$5G'
11
d
-&lt;A
!th
d con , o er s a
ea ng o
.
.
..
.
L tkl wi
id ·
•931 •000 • or $l ·02/share· for the
an cover.,., w
scrapes an
City and trying . to · get the
Meanwhile, offlcl~ls .said only . ~lnes, opa e cz sa .
_ . same period In 1988. Excluding
bruises, said the flight crew was alr lane 011 the ground, .. the pilot . fragments of the fan that feed s .
Much of the investigation Is
the excise tax, revenue was
forced to Improvise emergency sal~:
.
. .
air to the jet engine have been turning to _laboratory analysis
$ _, ,816 ,000 vs. $2,025,146,000. .
2 093
procedures in an effort to land
Haynes . said fllghi controllers found, despite extensive ground
and Lopatk1ewicz said the NTSB
N lne months : net was
the plane safely;,
.
offered u.s. Route · 20 as an and aerial searches. Investlga- . probably will leave the alrpor(by
$125 ,6 13.,000, or $2.26/ share vs. Its
. Haynes sa.ld, · We were flymg alternate .landing strip, but that tor-s speculate that when the
this weekend. A final report will
net 1rom operations, which was
along at cr mse when we hearda . was rejected, as was the Des tall-mounted engine exploded,
not be x:eteased for nine to 12
$117 ,510 ,000, or .$2.10/share.
very loud report from engine. No.
the fan sev~red ·the hydraulic
m onths, he said.
In the nine-month period lh
1988, the · final ne-t was
· $157,703,000, or $2.81/ share, after
a credit of $40,193,000 from the
effect of an accciunt·
cumulailve
'
NEWARK, N.J. (UP!)
A spokesman for the airline.
a spokeswoman for the. Port proce&lt;lure~ for 'umdlng the dis-,
'Continenta l Airlines jet carrying
"The captain had fuilcc;mtrol of Authority ()f New York and New a bled craft, he said.
. l!'ollow!ng recommended
87 passengers and crew suffered · the aircraft at all times," Walker Jersey, which operates the
procedures, tbe pilot shut. down
hydraulic problems and made an said. 'The DC-9 is fully opera- airport.
.
.
emergency landing Tuesday :at tional without the hydrau Uc
"There was smoke from the the · plane's anti-skid system,
WASHINGTON fUPI) - The
NeWark· International Airport. sy.stem."
tires blowing but there was no 'whlch.prevents the-brakes frof!!
House
Judiciary Committee was
locking,
and
the
:.
;
lack
of
the
·blowing four tires on in: pact . . The pilot reported "hydraulic fire." she said.
·
prepared
to push a new Demosystem
may
have
caused
the
au thor! lies said. No !njurie.s were problems" but It was not ImmeThe airport was closed for 12
cratic
blll
to outlaw flag desecratires
to
flatten
;
he
sa
ide
diately clear if hydraulic failures
re!)Orted·. ..
.
minutes while five airport emer tion Wednesday. but Preside~!~
Passengers disembarked by
Continental Flight 354_, a DC·9 had crippled the jet's ·landing gency · vehicles, !ncud!ng fire
en route .to Newark from Chi- gear, said Duncan Pardue, a
trucks and foam trucks, stood staircases on to the runway and • Bush Insisted the plan was
cago, toucbed down about 8: 10 spokesman for the Federal Aviawaiting to meet the plane, she were · taken by bus to the inadequate and Republicans maneuvered -to force a vote on his
p.m. as fire ·engines and emer, tion . Administration's eastern said.
termi11al, Tierney said. ··
·
constitutional
amendment.
Walker said there ·was no
gency vehicles raced to m~et it, regional offl~e in New York.
· An indicator warning light In
The
Democrat-dominated
all tho rilles said.
The agency was Investigating . the cockpit flashed on about 20 comparison between the DC·9
' The plane, which was carrying the Incident, he said.
· inlnutes before the plane was due and the much larger · United panel Tuesday unexpectedly
82 passengers and five crew
. Four of the plime's six tires to land at Newark, alerting the Airlines DC-10 that lost hydraulic scheduled a vote on the measure
!J!embers, apparently lost one of flattened, apparently on impact, pilot of the problem, Walker said. systems a nd crashed July 19 In · for Wednesday in a move widely
two hydraulic systems and possl· and the craft slid down the
The pllot ordered passengers. Sioux City, Iowa, killing 111 of the seen as a way to s hort-circuli the
lily part of the second, but the runway, coming to halt midway . to brace .for a difficult landing 2'96 passengers and ~r~w. abo,ard . president 's suggested constitu" Th ey are apples an.d tional change.
pilot never los t control of the down the field with its tall section with their heads tucked to thei r
Committee approval of the bill
polllt!ng
left,
said
Lynn
Tierney
.
oranges.
" he said.
aircraft. said Ned W.alker, a
legs, then followed standard

1¥

!un.

Jetliner makes emeFgency landing in Newark ., ··

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Tille office ·
The Title Office In the Meigs
County Court House will temporarily· be closing at 3 p.m. until
further notice due to unexpected
circumstances, This situation
will be as temporary as possible
and anyone with any questions or
problems may call Larry
Spencer at 992-5290 during the ·
day, or 949-2346in the evenings.
Ml•lllonary service ·
The · Harrisonville Holiness
Chapel will be offering a missionary servtce on Sunday at 11 a.m.
with Rev . alld Mrs. Leroy Adams
Jr. going to Africa.
· .
Meigs Ba!.td Boosters
The Meigs Bahd- Boosters will
meet on Aug. 7 at 7 p.m. In the
high school band room.
Square dauce
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will sponsor
an open dance on Saturday at the
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy from 8-11 p.m. Caller (or the
evening will be Homer Magnet.
All western square dancers are
coordlally Invited.
Softblllllournameat
Bobb Logging will sponsor a
men's USSSA softball tournament on Saturday and Sunday at
the Middleport Park. Entry fee Is
$65 and hit your own ball. Call
Roger Manley at m ·-:i030 or Bill
Capehllrt at 992-5223.

Tommy and Mllda Jane (Hud· · The Manuel famlly reunion'
nail) Gilkey will hold their 19th will be held·at Star MIU Park In
annual family reunion on Sunday · Racine on Sunday with a covered
at the Route 33 South roadside dish dinner to begin at 1 : 30 p.m.
park. A J)Otluck lunch will be All relatives and friends are
served at noon. Those attending · Invited. ·
·
are asked to bring table service
and folding chairs. Friends and - WIC pick up dates
relatives are welcome.
The Meigs County Health -Department wishes to announce the
GIIUian reunion
foUowlng WIC pick up dates for
There will be a reunion for the August. July 28, 9-11 a.m. and
family of Elbert and Della 1-3 p.m. Aug. 1 a nd 4, 9-11 a.m.
Gillilan, at theKygerCreekPark and 1-3 p.m. Make up dates are
on Sunday with a dinner to be Aug. 7, 14, and 21, from 9-11 a.m.
served at 12:30 p.m . Those and 1-3 p.m.
attending are to bring a covered
The shot dates for August are
dish and friends.and relatives are Aug . .8 and 22. from 9-11 a.m.
invited.
andl-3p.m.
Lodge 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
welcome.

Gilkey reunion
The descendants of the late

was expected and House Speaker
Thomas Foley. D-Wash., said the .
full House may act next week on
the measure, Which . was SJ&gt;On·
' sored by Rep. Jack Brooks.
· D-Texas, . the panel's chairman,
and Rep. Don Edwards, D-Callt.,
the head of a subcommittee that
studied the .Issue.
' 'There ' Is a growing opinion
that 11 statute is -preferable to a
constitutional amendment," Foley told reporters. "I would like
to see a statute and have ... a
quick review of It by the Supreme
Court before considering a constitutional amendment.

"

Personal notes
Staff Sargeant and Mrs. Greg
· France are announcing the birth
of son Carley Scott, born June ~6
at SCott Air Force Base In
IllinoiS. The Infant weighed nine
J&gt;OUnds and 14 ounces.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Walter France of
Rutland.
. Betty Butcher, of Long Hollow
Road, spent a lew days with her
· sister, Mary Rawlins anCI husJiand, of Dayton.
··
.- Dorothy Roberts, l?omeroy,
11pent a tevr 4!1YS wltJ! ber
jll•lllttter •1141· ~. M . and
Mrs. P'ri!d Fflllnger, aM also
Kellli Gray aiJd family ot Huber
·.,Heights.

Picnic
The Meigs SoU and Water
Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will hold a picnic
followed by a board meeting. on
Sat'urday at 6 p.rn. at the Rodney
Chevalier residence.

"'

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'

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Eddie Crooks has joined 4,!JOO
Presbyterian · youth from . the
United States, Canada, and over
30 countries around the globe at
the Presbyterian Youth
Triennium.
Crooks, active In the First
Presbyterian Church of Middleport. and a senior at Meigs High
SChool, Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Crooks.
The 1989 Presbyterian Youth
Trlimnium, co~sponsored by the
Cumberland Presbyterian
Churches , The .. Presbyterian
Chun:h · In Canada, · and the

•

Graduate named

'

.THURSDAY,

JULY 27, 1989
Every New Car or Truck
Which ilas Cash Rebate or·
Low Interest
Financing
Will
..
.

.If You Buy
Now You'll
SAVE!!

. CASH REBATES
UP TO Sl I Soooo ·.

)

2.9°/o

&gt;

I

'v

.

PLUS
APR*
t-------~~8QTH!:!!~~~~~~~~~~--~·W~IT~H~A~P~PR~O~V~E~D~C~R~E~D~IT~O~R~~~~U~P~T~0~!5' !YE~A~R~S~T~O~P~A~Y~.--~~-----~
..

Now -Have....

BARG

II

Every Used Car and Truc·k
Will Have A Special -Pr~ce
Reduction Red Tag For Your
Easy Selection!

THIS SPECIAL SALE is FOR A·LIMITED TIME
:AND 'MUST. BE OUT OF OUR
INVENTORY__,;

So Hurry In While The Selection
Is Best!!! ·

. ·. ·- Meigs Marauder
Football Couh Mike Staggs
COACH STAGGS NEEDS MONEY TO
UPDATE THE WEIGHT ROOM FACILITIES .

Powell's SuperVahJ Will Donate 3% of .·
Our Gross Sales From Thursday, July 27
to Assist In The Weight Room.

"1:........_.-JJ'GROUND
BEEF

)

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ICE
CREAM

$) ~~~AL.

\

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.....,..

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Ravenswood.' were Welcomed as
new members.
It ·was ·noted that parsley ,
peppermlnt,andspearmlntwere
Ideal chew sprigs for breath
refreshers. Members also en·
joyed making 'h erb vinegars. ·
Herb refreshments were
served by Lila Ridenour and
Debbie Gilmore.
The next meeting w!ll be held
on Aug. 1 at the home of Ann
Kelly In .Ravenswood .' The program will be on drying and
harvesting herbs .·
·

---Degrees received---

EriC Allen Thoren, Racine,
POMEROY - . Nine Meigs 4.0 scale) were Deborah Elaine
reCeived bls associate In applied
science degree from Ohio State Count!ans received graduate de- Hoilon, Cheshire, business adUniversity In commencement grees and 14 graduating seniors ministration; Brian Keith Law,
exercises on June 8 at the Ohio were among , the 2,:i00 Athens Coolville, bachelor of science;
Stadium. He was one of :i,399 campus students .receiving de- Lois Elizabeth lhle, Racine,
students receiving degrees . · grees at the June·graduatlon.
bachelor of science in education.
Completing .work on their doc·
Thoren is the son of Mr. and Mrs .
Seniors graduating with ho·Josepli Thoren and a graduate of tor of ph!losophy degrees were nors (an accumulative grade
Roberi Charles Holliday, Ru - point average of between 3,0 and
Southern High SChool.
tland, and Lynn Terry Lovdal, 3.499) were Michael Dean DavenPomeroy.
J)Orl, Middleport, physical educaReceiving master's ,degrefs. tion; Penny Elaine Price Mullen,
were David Eldon Gau I, Chester,
Middleport, home economics.
Thirty,nlne Meigs County stu- .In
education, Nicholas Anthony Kimberly Kay Krautter, Pomedents on the Athens campus at
Ohio University made the dean' s . Pomento, Coolville, physical ed.- roy, fine arts, and Marsha Ann
ucatlon; Chad .William Richards, Challen, Shade. ·electrical
. list for the· spring quarter, Coolville,
science; OJ&gt;3l M. Offutt
.
according to a list released by.the Grueser, Pomeroy, health ser- · engineering.
are
Sara
The
other
graduates
university today.
vice · administration; Kathryn
To be named to the list. a . Lynn Baker, Racine, hearing and Ellen Nay, Cheshire, journalism; Tammy - K. Smith Chapstudent must have earned a
speech
services;
Joy
Lea
Benman,
Long.Bottom, Paula Grace
grade point average of 3.3 or tley, Syracuse, physical educaMiddleport, and Betty
Horton,
better on a scale of 4.0 for the tion; and John Allen Van Reeth,
Ann
Loftis,
Middleport, and'Lea
quarter and have ·e arned 16 education.
Ann Gaul, Pomeroy, educ~tlon;
hours, 12 of which were taken for
Seniors
graduating
with
high
Julia A. Stout, Pomeroy, music,
a letter grade.
honors (an accumulative grade and Amy LouL!It!efleld , Racine,
Included on the list are De- point average of 3.5 or better on a
business administration.
borah Ela!n~ ijoland, Richard
Allen H11dson, Karen Elaine
Waugh, Jill Kristina Ethridge,
Brian Keith Law 1 Amy Jol!nne
Penick. Amy D. Louks, Shelly R.
'Thompson Dubose, David Scott
Fisehr, Sharon K. Wilson Hawley, Betty Ann Loftis, Penny
Elaine Price Mullen, Mark Ran·
dall Smith.
Jeffrey Jon Arnold, Melissa
Ann Calaway, Marty Lee Cline,
Sean Russell Dodson, Lea Ann
Gaul, Christopher Scott
Kennedy, Larissa Lee Long,
Judith· L. Mees, Kathleen Ware
Naily, Jenlfer Leigh Swartz,
SA'MDAY 7129, 5 TO 9; SUN. 5/30, 12 TO 6
David Je!lnlngs Beegle, Debbie
Lynn Holter, Tammy Dawn
Holter. Melll\5a Kay Ihle, Ryan
Craig Oliver, Shelarh Wilsol!
Porter, Rachel Laura Reiber,
Susan Elayne Roessler, Dixie
Kay Wolfe, .Sharon R. Lucas
Edmonds.
Teresa M. Pratt Fields, Sandy
K. Hoyt, Kevin VIctor King,
Randy 0 . Dudding, Kimberly ~',f .
Maynard, and Jack! Larue
112 WEST MAIN 992~2851
POMEROY
Malllzlkl.

2. Liter Btl.

$119

....SEU.$

.

"L......_J

POTATO
CHIPS

~:....JiJYELLOW

ONIONS

.... $2.19-:-12 0-a. .

3 Lb. Bag

~.JLJ

SEVEN SEAS

-c--..__.JJ SALAD
DRESSING

79~60Z.

DEL MONTE

W':........._.J/tBROUGHTON'S

conAGE
CHEESE

Sl o~oz.

'

STOP IN .AND SEE OUR·
BOOTH OF

FRESH

BAKERY
DONUTS

S1 4?ol.

SUMEI CLEARANCE
.
ITEMS·'

AT THE B.END AIEA CLEAUNCE
SALE AND DADE SHOW
.

We Reserve The li1ht To

.~iRiit Quan,ities

50°/o to ·75°/o
Corky's Classics

..

'.-.-..-...-

-

..

•

_STORE MOORS
·Monday thru Sunday

SAVE

992•6614

DAIRY LANE

.·a. C. COLA

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL

OP

FRANKIE
WIENERS :

Ill

99CLa.

Presbyterian Church (USA) is
·befng held this week on the
Purdue \]niversity Campus In
West Layfayette, Ind.
"From These Roots ... ," the
Triennium theme, will focus on
the Presbyterian Identity, Individuality as a part of the
community of faith, and the
human destination as a part of
God's present and fu lure church.
Daily experiences will Include
worship., meetings In small
groups, workshops, seminars,
recreation, and special evening
events.

.

Jim . Cobb

"'t'~.........._

.Deans list named

I

.

To New··

SALE PRICES GOOD
THURSDAY, JULY 27th ONLY!

Seeking recipes for cookbook
When Pomeroy celebrates It 's
1:i0th birthday the sesquecentennlal committee will have available for sale a cookbook made up
of' 'old time" recipes of mothers,
grandmothers, great grandmothers, etc. If anyone has a
recipe they would like to contribute to the cookbook, entitled
"Treasured Recipes from the
Past" send It or drop It by the
Dally Sentinel office In care of
Julie E. Dll!on. Any church
women's organizations are also
encouraged to collect recipes for
the boOk and turn them In to the
Sentinel office ..The deadline for
submitting recipes is Sept . 15.

If~rbalists.. ~a~e. . ~t~pg_
.

·Kevlri Klntt gave tHe herb'tlf'tlle
month re!)Ort on savory at the
recent meeting of the River
,.
Valley HerbalistS. held at the
home of P!lt J{ayma'!.
King. noted that winter savory
Is perineal and sqmmer savory Is
The 65th Annual Haye- annual. U Is Ideal when dried or·
s-Young-Holiday School reun- used as an aromatic plant and it
Ion will be held Aug. 13 at the Old can be used In cooking.
Holiday School Grounds , Gilkey
Connie Hill conducted the
Ridge Road.
business meetiqg in which picThere will be a dinner all p.in. tures were shown of the. herb
with families to take a covered tour, and baskets and cookbook
dish and their own table service. · repOrts were turned ln. Betty
Nuzu!D and Lenora Cale, of

.

Congratulations ..·

Youth triennium includes local

Reunion slated

.

Slngsperatlon
The VIctory Baptist Church
will be having a slngsperation on
Saturday at 7 p.m. The church Is
located at 525 N. Second In
Mlddle!)Ort. The Gabriel Quartet
and the Children of God Singers
will perform.

~--

F1sh fry
The Wilkesville Township Volunteer Firemen's Association
will hold Its annual fish fry ' on
Saturday. There will be a s !teet
dance from 9 p.m. to midnight
and the Midnlg)lt Cloggers will
perform before the dance. Those
attending are encouraged to
bring a lawn chair.

Mardi! reunion
Descendants of Dick and
Nancy Martin; family and
friends will hold their annual
. reunion on Saturday with a picnic ·
dinner served at 1 p.m. at the Manuel reunion
Chester Martin residence in back
of West Columbia, W.Va ..

Committee to vote on billJ

.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Announcements .

· · .
.
lng change ... ··
· . .
.
Reve!)(!e was $5',856,7:i7_.000 vs .
S5,6:iU99,000.
.
· . Federal Mogul . .
· Federal:Mogul Corp. •s·secondq'u arter net · was · $20,293,000, or
·$.83/share vs. $13,849,000, or
$.55/share.
The latest second-quarter net
Includes a gain of $8,300,000, or
$.36/share from disposition of
certain businesses after restruc- ·
turing costs.
Sales · for the periOd were
$294,804,000 vs. ·$:n;.o28,000, and
the six .months net was
$25,015,0QO ,- or $i/share
vs.$21,11!1,000, or $.84(share.
In that period, the net was
reduced · by a flrsl'quarter
charge of about $3,000,000, or
$.13/share,'for the after-tax costs _
related . to . a corporate .·
reorgaJIIZati0 n. ..
· ·
. In the same period las t year,
the net Includes a c.h arge Qf
$),772,000 related to the ex tin·
gulsltment of debt , .
Sales were $583;541!,000 vs.
· $613,352.000.
·
Dennis J . Gormley, president
and chief executive, said · that
without gains from
· ·disposltlons,
ff
the second-quarter net was o
about 12 percent from last year.
The CQmpany said second·
quarter results ·were .adversely
affected by foreign . exchange.
losses of $2,000,000. Last year, It
postedforelgnexchangelossesof
$800,000.
·
The company's six-month av- .
erage-shares equal$23,115,281 vs.
$25,006,364, adjusted for a two- · ,
f9r-one stock split paid In,June . ' ,

Just Ann·ounced F'rom Jim Cobb.. Chevrolet, Oldsmobile,
Cadillac •••• Incredible Savings ·News•••• First· Time ·Ever
-'Offered •••• ' 'CASH REBATES''
P-LUS ''Low h1terest .financing!"
STARTING .TOMORROW
Jint . Cobb 1-S OFFE"RING

Ohio

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH;
··""- -·--•.'

�.
Paga 1 0-The Daily Sentinel

•

•

Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednes·
day at noon at the home of Mary
Nease. for a potluck luncheon.

Quirks

Churches of Christ wlll meet at
the Rutland church on Thursday
at 7: 30p.m.

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Church of God will sponsor a
spaghetti dinner on Friday from
4-:s p.m . In t-he fellowship hall.
The cost is $3.50 per person and
will Include spaghetti, salad, and
garlic bread. Tickets are being
sold by the Ladles Mlnlstr"tes. ·

'

MIDDLEPORT -July birth·
day . parties for residents of
Overbrook Center
be held on
Thursday at 1: 30 p.m. Family
and friends are Invited to attend.
Ice cream cake will be served.

will

POMEROY -Star Grange
members wlll meet on Wednes·
day at 7 p.m. at the grange hall to
make final plans for the state fa"ir
booth. Members with Items to
POMEROY -Free ciQthlng
contribute or Interested in helpIng, are urged to attend or · day will be held at the Salvation
&lt;i9ntact Patty Dyer at 446-3575 Army in Pomeroy on Thursday
eveni ngs, or Opal . Dyer at
from 10 a.m. until nQOn ..All area
742-2805 evenings.
~sldents hi need of' clothing are
encouraged to pariiclpate in this
THURSDAY
offer.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
MIDDLEPORT -Star Junior
Grangers wtil meet at 9:30a.m.
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church iil
at Linda Montgomery's on
Pomeroy.
· Thursday to go to Noah's Ark
Animal Park.
RUTLAND -The women's
FRIDAY
Fellowship of Meigs County

POMEROY. The Senior
Citizens Dance Club will sponsor
a round and squar.e dance on
Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music
wlll be proylded by True Country
Ramblers. The cost Is $2 per
person .. ThOse attending are to
bring snacks for the snack table.
The pubHc Is Invited to attend.

- -- -

. POMEROY -TheYouthofthe
United Pentecostal Church will
be selling .and delivering subs
and macaroni salad on Friday
from 11 a.m. to 2p.m. fora cost of
$~.50 . Call 992-3824 to order.

Amateur shutterbugs may display- at fair
picture taking buffs will have
the chance to dis play their work
In the amateur photography
show, under the chairmanship of
Randy · Houdashelt, which will
take place at this year's Meigs
County Fair to be held Aug.
15-19.
All exhibits must be in place by
noon on Monday, Aug. 14, for the
1 p.m .. judging. Purchase of a
membership ticket is the qnly
requirement for exhibiting In the
show.
Photos are to be mounted at
least one and half inches on ali
sides of picture, and be ready to
hang.
Photos cannot have been exhl-

Wednesday. July 26. 1989

Pomeloy-Middlapon. Ohio

,
bited · previously at the Meigs judged tram all entries,
Four
categories,
color
snap.
County Fair.
It is not mandatory to title the shots, 4x6 or smaller; black and
pictures or have them framed white snapshots, 4x6 or smaller;
but all work must be the original color enlargements, 5x7 thrll
work of the exhibitor.
· 9x12; black and white enlargePersons who ·earn over half of ments, 5x7 thru 9x12 will oiler
their income from photography seven classes Including landsmay display but cannot compete _cape and seascape; apirnals;
portraits and personalities; pte;for ribbons and premiums.
.
toral,
storytelling with one pic· There will be two place preml·
ture;
abstracts,
patterns, special
urns awarded with three place
effects,
etc.;
nature
closeups;
ribbons in each class. Premiums
and
miscellaneous.
range from a high of$2 forfirstto
Another category, color snapa low of $.75 for second.
Two special awards will be shot size 4x6 or smaller. will
feature a class entltl!:'d Meigs
given including best of show and
County Fair Happenings, of
$3, and reserve best of show and
$3. Best of show awards will be pictures taken during the 1988
· Fair.
'

the news,________

•

10

Trip lo London Is 'cricket'

MENTOR, Ohio (UPI) - ·A
training can\p ball boy for the.
Cleveland :Srowns won a trip to
. London with a stunt the British
would hardly understand, though
·it seemed perfectly "cricket" to
him .
'
Kevin Gerrasch ate ·a breaklast of 107.9 live crickets to win a
contest sponsored by radio station WPHR, FM·107.$, to see who
could perform .the . most outlandish feat to qualify for the Loudon
trip.
Gerrasch won, crickets down,
and will travel to F;;nglaild to see
·the Browns play the Philadelphia
Eagles in an exhibition game
Aug. 6 at Wembley ·Stadium.
''I knew I had to do something
different, something really
wild," Gerrasch said. "Swallow·
lng goldfish Is old stuff.
"I figured, how about crickets?
Tl)ey're s.mall, and I'd eaten
some before at a party In college,
so. I decided to go for it."
The 22-year-okl Chicago native
said l)e had trouble swallowing
the first cricket, so he decided to
chew the rest.
"They weren't bad, sort of like
some cereals I've · had," Ger·
rasch said.
Asked how he managed to eat
the last nine-tenths portion,
Gerrasch replied, "I justbit off
his head. "
Town alxes bar's boorre-fioee
night
AVON. Mass. IUPII - In a

Peopkmthenews----~-------;!:8:!1.
°

•

SINGSPIRATION
FEATURING

THE GABRIEL·QUARTET
AND CHILDREN OF GOD
SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1989,

New minister named at church
Derek A. Stump has been
ca lled by the Bradford Church of
Christ. located at the corner of
Bradbury Road and Route 124, to
ser ve as the new minister of that
co ngregat ion.
Stump. originally from Grove
Cit y, came to Bradford after ·a
thr ee~year associa te ministry
wi th the Gallipolis Chris tian
Church.
He and his wife, Kariit a, are
1986 graduates of Kentucky
Christian Co llege. They have one
son. Andrew. who is 14 months
,aid .
• The co ngregation invites the
· ' ·public to attend se rvices on
'Sundays with Sunday sc hool
beginning at 9:30 a. m., morning

525 NORTH SECOND ST.

Douglas Scott McPh'au of Syracuse made the honor roll for the
spring quarter at Ohio State
University. To be listed on thihonor roll, a s tudent must make a
grade point average of at least3.5
and be enrolled for at least 12
credit hours.

**
..

*

ADOLPH'$ DAIRY VALLEY l

~·

,;
'• .•

t tut;
J

s

••;

•

992·2556
s- ,.,_.
(

SHARP CHEESE ..~~~!!-.. $2,98

IEU.OGG'S FROmD

GRAPEFRUIT ....HfA... 49c
CALIFORNIA
ORANGES ·-lAf!,, 2/69&lt;
'.

.

CAUFOINIA

CELEIY~~'!!=~"''

'·

•

·MINI WHEATS •••••••..'.'.~!•• S2.49
AIMOII

CHO,PED BEEF-•• ~ •••1•2.~!•. s·1.79
1011111111 , ...,

Office Hours
Monday through l"riday
8:30 a.m. · 5 p.m. '·
Suite 211. PVH Medical Office Building

NAPKINS ••••••••••••••••1.C.0.H••••• 89&lt;
·.KARO SYRUP ••••••••••1.'.~~
•• S1.19
'

- aAn MINI

MARSHMALLOWS ••••'.'.:~.-••••• 99&lt;

(304) 615·1460.

.

GLADI

SPIN FRESH ................... S1.o19

"At '1111 IJIII Of 1he POIMI'oy·Ma14111 Brldg1"

.jPOMIIOY, OHIO

HOFFMAN'S SUPEI

40 CT. Pflll

PEACH HALVES ••••••1.·.~~~ ••••• 89&lt;
S101ELY ,
.
16.5 01.
69&lt;
SUCCOTASH •••••••••••••••••••••

Oeneral and Oynecologlcal Surgery
.. Yearly f'emale exams
Women's Health

•

Sl.34
WRH FRIES .................... 51.89

VA. BR·AND HAM •••~•••••• S2.1·9
MEAT SALAD ••• ~•••••- ~•••••••••• 79&lt;
SUPIIIIOI BULl
WIENERS
•• ~ ••••••••••••!~~•···
S1.79
LUNCH MEAT 1-LB.
. . ,
BREAKFAST· HAM LOAF .. ~S2.39
SUPIIIOI BIG lED
GNA •••••••••••••!~~•.·...... 99&lt;

HOMEMADE

GOLDEN FRIES ••••••~~.~~•• S1.89
FIESII-UKE
CUT
CORN
..
:
••••••••••
~~.~~•• S1.49
NEW YORK
BREAD ••••••!~.~~.. S1.69

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Dr. Jack M. Levine '

•=

FISH TAIL

SWifT ECKIICH

GlADE A EGGSJ!I,,.93c

WBCHADE

,,

GRAPE
..

"

lj .

•.....•!~.~~. 2/89c

said.
·
In addition, they said the IRS
has been uncooperative with
congressional efforts to look Into
the case arid that an. IRS agent
recently destroyed key documents thesubcommltteewanted.
The congressional investlgators also cited a case In which the
agency 's former assistant com- _
missioner forcrirninallnvestlga-

tlon, Anthony Langone, used
government travel funds to
travel repeatedly to Atlanta to
see a girlfriend.
IRS Internal investigators re·
fused to take any action against
Langone, despite a number of
complaints about the abuse.
The congressional lnvestiga·
tors also said Langone used his
position and government prop-

erty to do public relations work
unsuccessful.
for a company he planned to set
In a third case clted by the
up with other IRS officials once
inves tlgators , the head of IRS's
he retired.
Central Region and two other top ,
Again the IRS refused to take officials allegedly used a governaction against Langone until a
mertt und ercover boat to take a
reporter Inqui red into the mat· joyride on one of the Great
ter. The Justice Department Lakes, and were so drunk on
currently i• looking Into the case
11quor bought wi th government
Efforts to locate Saranow and · fund s that they were forced to
Langone for ·.comment were spend the night on an island;

••

DIG BEN. 0

Voiar Independently Owned
.' low·Priced S~permarket
.

.

'

'

ODLAND

they
.
Thecharged,
subeoinmlttee
is conduct· •·-------~~-L---"'1
log tliree d!lys of. hearings on the
IRS · abuses with a view to
proposing legislation to Improve
congressional oversight of the
ageney. IRS officials will appear
before the committee Thursday
to answer the staff investigators'
charges .
The Investigators cited eight ·
cases of abuse involving 25 senior
IRS officials nationwid~. which
subcommittee Chairman · Rep. .
Doug Barnard Jr., D-Ga .,
KAHN'S
termed "persuasive evidence of
senior level misconduct at the
service."
BIY ONE 1 LB. PKG.
The · most prominent case Involved the former head of the IRS
GET ONE
Los Angeles District Office,
Ronald Sara now. who pursued a
tax fraud. investigation against
clothing manufacturer Jordache
Enterprises-and a separate clothing diStributor 'based on tips
provided by rival clothing manu·
facturer Guess? Inc.
Saranow had close social ties
with thQ owners of Guess? Inc ..
who at the time were engaged In
a huge lawsuit against Jordache
and the distributor, He later
requested an unpaid leave from
the IRS to take a job with the
company.
· The congressional Investigators said the tips provided In the
· case were of . "dubious value."
·but Saranow pushed forward
FlESH LEAN
with an inves ligation in which ·
IRS agents conducted a raid of
· Jordache's operations, seizing 3
~ c141~\lo,and AI-. l!)'llnd '

FOODLAND

HOMOGENIZED

MILK

· MEAT BOLOGNA

117 GAL

CTN.

DIET

01 lEG.

SEVEN UP
•

12 PK.
12 OZ. CANS

99
.

..

I

•REG. eADC

SWANSON

fotger' s Coffee

fried Chicken

,

..

oz.$ 9

Witness: Leona
.wanted kickback
for mansion

f'Hit:ES H fi:CliVL i Hf\U ~)A I . JULY t'~i. I 'iri!l

111¥11 VAllEY

jury was convened to look Into
the case. No Indictments were
ever handed,up.
Saranow's actions in the case
were " a serious abuse of the IRS
criminal Investigative process
and the grand jury system," but
the IRS, atter an Inept Internal
Investigation, failed to take any
action against Saranow, the
subcommittee ln vp!;tlgators

Ground... Beef

ORE-IDA

'

•

dethol, high dllir. &lt;rib. moil Htty
. .... """' lnt•ior.

DEL

Specl1l 01 Tb1 Wesk/

.•
' .•
• •

lots of babr dothlo, bay~ _. girls,
cloil···' dot hoi, all ........h .

I i 0 N F 7 ·L' .' 1() ()

AllER. PROC.

· PASTOR, REV. JAMES ·E. KEESEE
ASSISTANT PASTOR, DWIGHT ASHLEY
"EVERYONE WELCOME"

On honor list

I

CHEESE .........U.Pir. $1,87

Victory Baptist Church

5 FAMILY ·uaD SALE
123 Park Dr., Pt. l'lta,..t
JULY 27 ·- 8 to 4

OEPl\RTIVlENT STORE
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con·
gressional investigators allege
several senior Internal Revenue
Service officials have abused
their power to further personal
interests, while the agency has
Ignored reports · of, their
misconduct.
Staff lnvestlgators told the
House Commerce, Consumer,
and . Monetary Affairs Subcomm]ttee, on Monday that "signlfl·
·cant numbers of integrity problems" exist at the top levels ofthe
ffiS, but that the agency Is so
concerned with its image that it .
either Ignores or poo·r ty investi·
gates abuses .
· "Wrongdoing by IRS senior
managers is too often Ignored
entirely .or, ineptly investigated, .
resulti,pg . In · clearance for the ·
wrongdoers." the Investigators
told the subcommittee In a
·written statement.
In addition,. whlstie-blowers
who report abuses are subject' to .
retaliation by IRS management,

FREE!

Union. "There's' no law that
allows pollee officers to deport
people."
Deputy Chief Edward Spurlock, commander of the 3rd
district. said he will Investigate
the parade, which began In his
'
district. ·

RUTLAND

DAFT 16 SUCE

7:00 P.M.

worship at 10: 30 a .m. , and
evening worship a t 7: 30 p.m.
There is also Wednesday night
Bible study at 7:30 p.m . More
informa tion ·may be obtained by
calling Derek Stump at
992-5844.

people going ln.there might w;mt
unique twiSt on ltquor licensing, a
to ,be served alcoholic
. popular bar was told to· scrap
.. plans for a booze-free night until beverages."
tbe tavern's owners met wltb
Homeowner finds . nude man
town officials.
sleeping
oa coucb
. .
•'I almost fell over backwards.
NORTH
BELLMORE,
N.Y.
I couldn't believe they'd · want
(UPI)
A
naked
lntrud~:r
!ound
you serving liquor seven days a
week," said ChriS Martln,_man- ·napping ori a couch by a startled
ager of Shooters on Route 28, homeowner was arrested by
which had planned to serve only police who said he allegedly
Juice and soft drinks on Monday broke' into the .woman's .house ·
search!~ · for food and became
·
night.
•
.
Instead, a hand-deltvered' let- drowsy. .
Todd Colombo, 22, apparently
ter from the pollee chief told
Martin to delay plans to tum off was feeling hungry. hot al)d
·the beer taps for · a 'night until weary as he walked down Norafter he met with town wood Avenue in 90-degree
weather Monday in th~ Long
selectmen.
fsland
town or North Bellmore.
A meeting with selectmen has
man
decided to eat, cool off
The
been· scheduled for Thursday
·and
rest
hi the home or Laura·
night, when Martin plans to
Hopkins. Nas5au ·'Courity pollee ' ··
present letters of endorsement
..
from groups opposed to drunken said.
He . allegedly forced . his way
driving.
"The Idea was to have a disc through.the !ron t screen door and
jockey, and · we'd be open· to headed for the refrlge~ator,
·
.
anyone who wanted to dance pollee said.
had
something
to
eat,
I
"He
without drinking or being around
guess
he
got
tired
and
took
off
his
people who are drinking," Martin said. "We· talked first to clotlfes," of.flcer James Higgins
people from the state and they said. ·· 'The woman comes In at
4:45p.m . • sees the naked man on
were tickled to death that we'd
the couch."
try to do it ."
The woman then called pollee,
However, poltce Lt. John ColHiggins
said, adding that the
lins said the pollee department
"ain't
Me\ Gibson . or·
suspect
wanted to ice the bo·oze-free
·
evening "until the Shooters Pub nothing. " . , .
Pollee
arrested
Colombo,
22
,
of
explains to the board of select- ·
Levittown, and charged hjm with
men just what they intend to do."
"The pollee chief wan ted to trespassing and. .criminal miknow .haw they're going to schief. Colombo, an upholsterer,
control it with younger people was taken to Nassau County
going In there, " he ,said. "Some Medical Center and then to jail.

of a pollee car. That's herding
cattle." .
Legal experts say the a,ction
appeared tQ be Illegal. The
district's loiter!ng law was declared unconstitutional in 1968 as
a violation of the Fourth Amend-'
ment, prohibition . against unreasonable seizures. Prostitutes
are normally cl)arged with &lt;jisor·
derly conduct or soliciting for
prostitution.
·'I hope the Police Department
doesn't take this as a joke," said
Arthur B. Spitz, legal director Qf
the local American Civil Llbrtles

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IRS -officials may have abused power,. investigators.say

Cops take streetwalkers on a parade

WASHlNGTON IUP II - VIrginia officials are angry that
District of Columbia police
herded 24 prostitutes· from Washington's red· ltght district,
-. · says Starr . offered Moman have · been reported," Bardot
marched them 1.4 miles across
BnylteWdiLPLresiAsMincte.
$100,000
earlier
this.
month
to
s.
a
ld
through
her
laYfyer:
U
'GLIMPSES: The marquee the Potomac River to Virginia
I a f cour I bu t Moman
ttl
'S
NO
RONALD.DEAGAN:
se
e
au
HE
••
t urned it d own.
'may say Rex Harrison but and turned them looSe.
n
but
"This Is the fourih commodity
It Worked for Ronald Reaga
officially he's ' now Sir Reginald.
FROM
THE
NEWS
MORE
the district exports to Virginia."
actor Jam es Garner says he
BEATLE BEAT: P au I McC"'rl-. The 81-year-old actor was knigh- said Rep. Stan ParriS, R-Va. "We
do asn't want a roaJ-life role as ·a
t 11 · Rl
t the
ted TuesdaY . at Buckingham
"ey 1s 0 owmg ngo on
get all the sludge, · all the
Poll.ti·ci·an. Caii' fornia Demo•
1a
1
news
Palace
by Queen Elizabeth I 1.
era tic leaders are trying to come
roa d· He 5 p nn ng a
Harrison was welcomed to the' garbage, most of the prisoners
conference In London Thursday
and now their prostitutes."
Up with a likable. well-known
t
t oannounce th e sops
candidate for governor next year
on the first . palace by · the band of · the
Pollee cars with flashing lights
il
leg of hi~ world tour and
Grenadier Guards with selec- led the unlikely parade of women
to run against Pete W son. now a
introduce his band, which again
lions from "My Fair Lady" ...
Republica n senator. and a state
includes wlfeUnda. The tour will
Comedian Eddie Murphy's un· in miniskirts and skimpy tops
senator, . Herschel Rosenthal.
come to the United States late
cle, Ray Murphy Sr •• 50, is. in a across the 14th Street Bridge to
suggested Garner. But when the
·
d h
Toronto jail for four months for the Virginia line early Tuesday.
idea was pitched 10 Garner.
this year or early 1990 an t e
''They said they were taking us
shows wlll be based on songs
sexually assaulting an 18-year- to VIrginia, that we could work
Rosenthal said his response was
from McCartney's new . album,
old woman in 1986 after a Murphy
"Flowers in the Dirt," and hits
concert. RaY. ·Murphy, who Is over there," said a woman who
along the lines of: "I'm making
$6 million a year. What do I need .
..
d
head of securityofEddleMurphy Identified herself as Toni. "They
from his Wings and Beatles ays.
that for •. " Garner's publicist
Inc.. had told the woman he · said we'd go to jail If we
DONKEY Co. NTRETEMPS
simply said the actor wouldn't
:
would Introduce her to his stopped."
Brigitte Bardo! says she did
The march shocked police
feel C.omfo rtable c. ast In the role
· deed have her neg
1 hbor 's don ·
famous nephew ... The Boston
m
ill
lifornia.
officials,
who said they do not
governor
Of
Ca
Of
'I . Herald says Glenn Clpse w
know
who
ordered It, as well as
NEWS FROM THE BEATLE k ey cas tra t e d bu t s he Can .
earn $1 million per Week lor three
e
is
So
d
h
d
Ia
·
.
Ex-Beatle
Ringo
Starr
Is
un
ers
n
w
y
everyon
Northern
Virginia politicians,
BEAT
kitten • weeks' work portraying millioti
I
Th
.vi·ng
his
career
with
a
U.S.
upse
·
e
oneme
sex
who
said
they
were not amused.
revl
spoken. nalre Sunny
von Bulow In "Revb
h
h
to
keep
w
o
as
ecome
an
au
.
d
,
s
gone
t.o
court
·'I've·
been
in
this business for
tour but he
ersal of Fortune," the planne
'
I
I
ht
d
t
im
aSouthernrecordcompanyfrom
an a r g s avoca e, was
movie about Claus von Bulow 33 years and I never heard of
releasing a 1987 album that he donkey-sitting Charley, who besuch a thing ln. my life," said
, 1
longs to her neighbor Jeanallegedly trying to kill his wife. Arlington Police Chief WUIIam
says is shoddy . St1Jrr s awyers
Pierre Manivet, and said CharJeremy Irons will play von
were in an Atlanta court Tuesday
Bulow and Michael Mailer, son of Stover. •'I don't know how In the
ley was starting to pester
world you get the authority to
to take On CRS R ecords and
·
th •2
ld m e
writer Nonnan Mailer, has a
MImosa.
parade a lot of prostltu\es In front
e ~ ·year-a
ar
small role.
Memphis producer Chips Moman. Starr's suit claims he wants she keeps In her garden in St .
to overdub his drumming an the Tropez . She consulted a veterl·
album and says it' s not up to his
nary surgeon and followed his
usual standards because Moman
advice to have the donkey
·brought liquor 10 the recording castrated, even though she was
.
'
unable to find the vacationing
sessions . The suit doesn't say
who drank the liquor but Starr is
Manivet to consult with him.
a recovering alcoholic. The suit
Manlvet was greatly disturbed
also claims that Moman dewhen he found out about Charley
and news oi t'he dispute was
manded Starr pay him $146,239
·.for the Memphis recording sesreported around the world. "I am
sions to prevent release of the
scandalized and upset by the
recordings Tuesday. The suit
frivolity with which the facts
L

Wednaeday, July 26. 1989 .

..

NEW YORK (UPI) - Leona
Helmsley once demanded three
TV sets for her mansion from
RCA Corp. as a kickback for a
600-set order, a former purchas-·
ing executive testified at the
sel!-decribed hotel queen's tax
evasion trial.
Helmsley , watching Milton
Meckler as he testified in federal
court in Manhattan Tuesday.
shoOk her head from side to side
"no' ' as the tale of the televisions
became public.
Helms ley, 69, is accused of
defrauding the government out
of millions of dollars in taxes and
billing $4 million worth of house
renovations at her 26-acre Greenwich, Conn., estate to the hotel
business she runs with her
·
husband. Harry.
Testimony in the trial was
scheduled toresumeWednesday.
Meckler said that when Heims·
ley heard the TV sets would be
delivered to her Cireenwich,
Conn.. mansion, she commented,
"How many more can I get?"
Meckler Is a former execu live
vice president of the ·Deco
· Purchasing and Distributing Co.
Inc .. of Maitland, Fla., a subsidiary of Helmsley Enterprises
that acts as a central'purchaslng
agent for the hotel group.
He te~tlfled that the giant hotel
chalp ruri by the Helmsleys used
Zenith TV sets from 1983 to 1985,
but decided to switch to RCA
Corp.• ordering 600 sets. .
He said tormer Helmsley exec,
ut!ve Frank Turco; who with
Joseph Licari Is on trial with
Leona Helms ley. made the pitch
for the klckb.acks .
Meckler·said RCA represents- ·•.
live Paul Robertson complained
that Turco called him. demandIng three TV sets be delivered io
·
the Helms ley man~lon .
Meckler said he called Turco,
arid asked hill\, "Are you kidding
me?''
Turco replied, "No, that Is
definitely what she wants." .
· "I called back Robertson and
said, 'Paul, you've got to deliver."' Meckler said,
He said Robertson told hlm,
"This Is a most unusual way for
·RCA to do business."
.
Meckler also tes tlfled he was
lnsll'ucted to tell the Simmons
mattres.s company Harry Helms·
ley had a bad back believed
caused by one of their king size
beds, wanted It replaced and a ·
cre41t alven-for all mattresses ·in
their mansion.

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~~~~.~e!~~S.!.n~t~~-~~~.~~.~~.. ------~~----~2P~~~.O~Y~·~M~~~~·~~~·~~------------------~----~~~~~~~~~~~ -

.PTL .pair found. guilty ·of tax. evasion

'

Classifi-ed

••

·' bOokkeeping. lf any laws had · ants took the stand for the first with the details. " · ·
been broken,.he s~!d, his broUler . time and iestifled It had been ·. Bakker and &amp;!!Other PTL Iieut.' .
was to:blame.
·
.
silent for ..persenal putposes thai emint, Richard . Dortch, face ·
. The following·.day; David Tag. we real~ed wedldn' thavetolook criminal charges . of .t heir . own
gart denied th'e prosecution's for evidence anymore," Brown · next mol)th stemming ·from the
assertlon.he may have had 'a'deal said Tuesday:
·· .
.. way !hey raised and· s~nt mo~ey
· with Bakker to take anything he
He said the governtnimi con- at PTL.
.
,
·wanted · from PTL because he eluded It was Day!dTaggart,and
Brown said his f.trst . thought
knew about the television evan- not Bakker, who';wtiially ran the when the jury announced Its
gelist's one-time tryst with Jes- ministry's executive olf!ces and verd~t was, "Thank God.'" ·
sica Hahn and was blackma!llng who helpec! himself to . PTL
"I'
never confident.' a.bout
him.
,
mol)ies .
wha ajurywllldoaboutacase,"
During cross-exa mination , , ,"I think the testimony In this he said. "But I've got to say, I
Taggart admitted many :or the tr'ial showed Jim Bakker· was never before had a case where I
· charges to PTL credit cards and somewhat removed from the felt like throwing up as .J waited
purchases made with cash ad· day-to~ay operations of PTL," for the verdict, There was always
fJ'1)ql P'l'L.
,· ,
. "Greed doesn't pay." prosecu- van&lt;;es were personal and . not Brown said. "I think he was lite the possibility the jury might
tor David Brown said. "No ministry related.
Idea man and often with Idea conclude, 'What's the harm
: matter .how riCh you are, you .
" It was only when the defend· people, they .a ren't concern~d
here?'"
: have an obligation to pay taxes."
An hour after the .verdict was
: Tile jury deliberated four
announced , the Taggarts
hours and 15 minutes before
emerged from the federal court·
reaching Its verdict. The· TagYOSEMITE· NATIONAL western face of the giant slab of house, flanked by their elderly
garts were released on $50,000
parents and two women friends.
granite July 19.
: unsecured bond apiece and · or· PARK, Calif. (UPI) - A "tired
Their
heads were bowed and they
But they were st!ll500 feetfrOI!l ·
; dered to return Aug. 25, .when and sore" · paraplegic ranger
said
nothing
to reporters, leaving .
determined to conquer Yosem· the top when they .started out
. each could be sentenced to a
that
chore
to
defense attorney
lte's famed 3,00o-foot El Caplt;:m Tuesday.
: maximum 25 years In prison.
Cotten.
_
Ben
"They are a full day behind
· Brown said It was the testlm· granite monolith expected to
"They
dpn't
have
anything
to
· schedule and are uu.v expected to
ony of the defendants themselves reach the top Wednesday.
say
folks,"
Cotten
said.
"If
you
Mark Wellman, 29, who has reach the top between noon and 2
that .clinched the case, which ·
been
confined · to a wlieelchair p.m. Wednesday," park spokes- wani to talk to anybody you'll
largely had . been a trail of.'
since being paralyzed from the woman Lisa Dappr!ch said after have to talk to rne ...
receipts showing excessive
Cotten blamed himself for the
waist down In a 50-foot fall In the talking with the two men. by
;spending by the defendants.
gull
ty verdicts.
John Muir Wilderness outside the radio.
"We were totally surprised by
"I
salil :going In they were
'"Their
muscles
are
tired
and
park In 1982, would be the first
· the defendants' testimony,"
Innocent
and coming out they
paraplegic to scale the face of El sore and they are really sick of
Urown said. "All these months
be
Innocent - and they
would
being on that rock but they are
Capitan.
we had been looking for docuare,"
said
Cotten. '"The verdict
He Is a naturalist lecturer at still' In good spirits and are
ments that would support their
in
there
was
due tO my inability to
the park and director of Yosem- determined to complete the
contention that the money was
jury o! their inno·
convince
the
Ite's access program for the c'!imb. ''
spent for ministry purposes." ·
cel)ce
.
.'-I've,
got
to· shoulder the
.Corbett, a worker at the
· handicapped.
blame
for
that."
Wellman and fellow climber Yosemite Medical Clinic, is
James Taggart, who had been
Mlke.Corbetthad
hoped to reach known as "Mr. El Cap" because . Cotten did not rule out the
: PI'L's Interior de&lt;(Orator, testl·
the top by Tuesday when 'they of his 41 seatings of the rock l,lOssib!fity of negotiating with the
fled last Wednesday that he was
goverriment for a lenient sentbegan their difficult .trek up the structure.
an artist who knew nothing about
ence In exchange for his clients'
11\.
testimony against Bakker and
' co-defendant Richard Dortch at ·
their trial on separate charges
next month.
·

. ,· CHARLO'ITE, N.C:c UPI) -A
: federal prosec,.tor · ·who . Wt!n
: gllilty verdicts against two men
· charged with tax fraud In· the
: PI'L scandal said TV evangelist
Jim Bakker apparently was not
aware they were embezzl!,ng .
money from the ministry. ·
· Bakker's former .aide, David'
: Taggart, and his brotJuir, J .a mes
: Taggart, were·found g~~llty Tues• day on five CO\Ints each of Income
· tax evasion and ccnsplracy to
avoid paying taxes on $1.1 million
the government claims they stole

RATES
0 · 11 W01'105 11-JI WORDS
1 DAY

3 DAYS

I DAYS

10 DAYS
1 MONTH
trw~,..,

CONVICI'ED - James Ta1gart, a Iohner Interior decorator
wltb Jim Bakker's PTL was convicted Tuesday of not paying
Income taxes on $1.1 mUJioa that he allegedly embezded from the
ministry. (UPI) ·
But he also left open the
possibility the· Taggarts would
appeal the verdict.
"First of all," said Cotten, "to
negotiate you have to have two
sides and no one has approached
me about that possibility. Second, until we have some perception of where they want to go

(with an appeal) we cannot
decide something like that.
"But 11 I tho11ght that was a
better way to proceed , I woulc),"
he said.
·
Bakker, who has a new television ministry in Orlando, Fla.,
declined comment following the
verdict.

gouging

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949-2526

Middleport,

LARRY D. BROGAN, CIC

•Fill Dirt
742-2421 ·

Cortlflod ........... ,.., ....
lnrMIIHif lrokw ·

Wheat
Rtst s.cunties
422 Markll SirHI

P. 0. lox 111

Roger .Hysell
Go rage

Parkersburg, WV 261 02

1-I00-333-S252
Mem._ NYIE a Otr.
Prindp• ltodl A Commodity

• ...,.,..

Rt. 124, Po1111roy Ohio

8-27-'11· 1 mo.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alco Tr••••lccl..
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

oVtNYL BIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN '
INSULATION

..

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
._..,

n:r'' ( '
~~
WB HAW A GOOD aa.tiC'fiOit OtO-.,u
llf 80: IJQ"f'':amn' COLO.._ IIA**
AIID V.UM•
a

''FrH Eetlm111ta'"

• H. 9·9·2101

'

Slop By and See Us! - FtnanciDii Avotlable
MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME

or Its. M9·2160
NO SIIIDAY

lllOW IIOUDU 1111, IAIIIIIGA, .O.O

Announcemen1s
3 Announcements
Planned

Parenthood

Listeninc Devices

Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Ser~•ict4

RECYCUNG

Evaluations For All Aces

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

OPEN 7 DAYS
9111-7PM

'

'

PPSEO will bo open on Woctneadaya and 'CIOMd on

)'huradaye. HouN are to be 8:30
to 5:00 Ptllonday, Wednnctay and
Frldty: 1:30 to 6:00 on Tuoodoy.

4

417 Second Avenue, 11011 1213 ..

Btluillul puppln. Fluffy 1nd
prttty. Whlt•blllctc •nd mhc ...
304~75-5633.
'

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy, Ohio

Non Ferrous

for c1lenl Hrvlc• betllnnlna'

Au;UI1 1, 1188. The ofllce ol

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

•
'614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

EICE"
HOUDIYS

St- ' 1nnouncn ""' houra

Giveaway

Colloo C.OI. F. .alo. Voljl ploylul.

IHa th1n yMr old. 11 ~
1135.
.

MARCUM

c•na, 0110

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG &amp; REPAIRS

6

Lost &amp; Found

PHOIE DAY 01 EVENINGS

OHIO VALUY BULK FOODS

915-4141

P01111roy,

GINIUL COh11ACrOIS

Olllo

11·11·'111·tfr
t.
1!
\
'I•
-v-------"---''-~.--- ..........---------·"---~------------------:-------..:.-.

l '

"

of

9outhtoot Cillo, 231 Eall Mtln

. Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless.StHI,
Etc.

c...sttrol)

Wt

out retdiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PIT HILL FORD

We Buy All
' II

3/17/89,tln

CAMPGROUNDS

We can r~r and recore radiators 41nd

.0

HAVE lEniENCE

. 1·13-'ll·lfn

SER~IeE

FREE ESTIMATES
Tillie the pain alit ef

painting. Let It fer you.
.VERY IUSONAilE.

992·3897
At. 124
Mid'~.'
Oh.

Rep~in
.
NIASE 'Certifi.t Mech111ic

IIUIIIOI-EITEIIOI

_NEW liSTIIIG·- MIDDlEPORT- 2 story brick home on 2
lots, wrth 4 to 5 bedrooms. 2~ baths, wood floors, NGFA
furnace. Garage, carport and· 15'x25' storage shed.
$49,900.00.

•New Tires
.Custom Pip·e Bendlnc
o()il Chances
.Crease Jobs
..•General Chassis
!lllaintenance
.Computerized Balancer

., ...2969

992-7t79
. lt. 33. No• II• of
Pollltroy, Ohio
·_.

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

JONES TIRE
CENTER

7-13-'89-l'mo. pd.

Grant A. Newland
7' 11-'89-tln

Reg. .
Sale
Baby Swiss C~eesa ....... s3.5s lb. :3.05 lb.
Marble ChHn -.........;... sus lb. 2.3 5 Ill.
Pepper Chien ............... sus 11. su 5. lb.
Smoked Cheddar ........... '3.00 lb. S2.50 lit.
Farmers .....:... -.............;.. 13.00 11. S2.50 Ill.

Porto &amp; S.wkt On

949-2168

'~

(6141 667-3271

JNC'•l THI! WUKI

.......

IY IN SBVICE CENTEI

Dam At Antiquity

·

CHAIN UNK FENCES

Sand·S~one-Dirt

•

YARDMAN MOWRS
ECHO SAWS &amp; 'IIIIIMEIS
oREGON IAIS, CHAlliS

21f2 Mi. lelow
lacina Locks &amp;

ETC.

lfl)/81 tfn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Z·l-1111

DUMP TRUCK

Napkins many 'oc'casl-............ 6S~ J*g. of 16
' · . Cake Decorating Supplies
Cake Tops - Cake Boxes - Flavorings •
Powder or Paste Food Colors .
Asst. Tips • Decorating Bags, etc.

CHESTEI

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

LIVE BAIT

Call Anytim• ·
992-2371

·
985·4300

lutland,Oh.

•LIGHT HAULING

POOLS, WEU.5 ·
OSTEINS

·

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9· 7
Sat. 9-6
Clo... ·Sundoy

•SHRUB &amp; . TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

.ALLEN'S

1,000 GALLONS

VISA· MASTER CHARGE

742-2455

992.27~r'l

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

Real Estate Geniral'

aut. colors-shells 30• .a.

..

•ZETOI TUCTOIS
ofCHO PIODU&lt;n
•HOWAIO lOT AVA TORS
•J AIDMAN MOWas
etNTEISTAn IAnEIIS

Certain!.,.®
.Vinyl Siding
Seamless Gutter
llopla&lt;lmont Windowi

.I

•

__... _._ __."'

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

INSULATION

:.·

FOI AN APPOINTMENT
- ASI

Gift Wrap· •ny oaalions ................... 90~-6 ft.
Bows ........................... asst. colars·stars 25&lt; ea.

ojACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES
GROUPS It
OR'GANIZATIONS

6·5·'19-tin

Mastic ·-

I

We offer '111,000·'28,000 •a11nual income
range. paid vaclltion. hOapltalization, uniform,
monthly bonua, axcotlen1 wcirldng conditlona.
• We axp~ career minded individuala, willi11g·
nesa to work. dependable tranaportation to
work, naat appearance, good ,w ork record.

E.

•HATS

992-6872

CLUI

NEW LISTING- BRICK STREET- 2 lots- BUY ON LAND
CONTR~CT $15,500.00.

_..____

·
•T·SHIRTS

POMEROY, OH.

J&amp;L . .

Call

MARTIN'S
•
•
fUINITURE
and MORE

PIINTING

.

222
East Matn
'
·

NO SUNDAY CALLS

7-2t·' l8·1 mo. d.

• · WANTED •

SOMOHING NEW .

-

949·2860
Day or Night

1-100-535-2199

EIPEIIIIICID .SEIYICE PEISON AND
10111 DIIYEI &amp; 2 TIADIEES
FOR IUIIIUFACTUIID HOME DEALEI
.
NEEDED IMMIDIATnY

Merchandise

....

or I~
...

(614)992·2104.:Extenslon 213

54 Miscellaneous

'.

PH. 949-2801

,

.CUSTDM SCIEIN

Tol Fne

Immediate full time end pert time openings
are available for regllltered nurses to work
In the Special Care Unit. Emergency Room,
end the Medical/Surgical Unl~. Salary
commensurate lll!itl:l experience. Excellent
fringe benefits. ·
CONTACT:
.
Rhonda Dalley, R. N ., Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. ~6769,

.

ft2-6910 •

lttasonablt Prices"

TIIUIS. U. 6:45 P.M.

PATRICK
BLOSSER,
AUCTIONEER
304-863-8895
304-428-7245

SU East Main

· ''At

All MAlES AND
MODUS

·

224 E. MAIN ST.
'992·9&amp;78

Wad . • Slit. 9-1
'•

Til-CO. TE-TE·
&amp; PEST CONTROL

R08ERT R. GIBSON and
PANSY Gt8SON.
Defondonto
CASE NO. 89-CV-126
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
' To Robilr1 D. Gitilqn .,d
P1onoy Olboon, wlioso l•t
known eddr•• wu 565n
Sttto Route 1 24; Porttond,
Ohio 411nO: you oro hereby
notlflod that' you havo boeit
nomad defondonts .In ologol
oc:tlon entitled Homo No·

NEW SUMMER HOURS
Mon.'-Tua. 8-11; Thura.·Frl. 8·11

n.
'~~~
- --------·--~----------~----------.J
__ 33J N. SECOND

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
HOME NATIONAL lANK,
Pllintlff

2 ESTATES

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS!

CUSTOM BUILT .
HO""'
..."'.s· &amp; 6.A"AG~s.·
11

WATER ·
.SERVICE

MY·HHOP
.

6/30/tfn

36th Street

01 APPOINT-NT CAU:

SWEEPER
REPAIR
.

Public Notice .

AT .BLOSSER$
AUCTION
HOUSE

•

'· 614-992-6249

PRAISED AT: IIB,OOO.OO.
The rul estate.. cannot be
oold for toioo thtn two-thirdo.
the oppraloed voluo.
TERMS OF SALE: Cosh
on dotivory of Jam• M. Souloby,
Sheriff of Moiga Countv
(71 26; (81 2, 9. 3tc

AU.CTION

(low

81SSEU
·BUILDERS 1•.

. .

In caa of your lliluro to
anawer cir otherwile , ....
pond 11 required b\1 the OhiO
Rul• .of CivM Procedure,
judgmont by defMih wll t.
rondored ll(llinlt you lor the
loUt! domenclod In thl com·
pi lint.
Doted: July 10, 1989
lArry E. Sponcor,
Clerk of Courta
Moigo County Common
Plo11 Court
(7) 12. 19, 28;
(81 2, 9, 18, ltc

Public NOtice

PUBLIC

packed.

··
B
usiness
·
Servic.
8.
1===:~::=~==;tr:======.:==;m~===;:===rr"F===:==·=·===;

wook tor oix oucc•oive
wHko. the 111t publication
wMit.medoonAuguot16.
1989, end the 28 days for
anawer will comm.,ce on

171-AHI• G,_,.

143- l'ortiM'Id

n•-o ..~ om

COMBINED FINANCIAL
beginning.
Being the oome reo I Mtoto
REPORT OF
' THE J!jiE!Gll COUNTY
convoyod to Ranzo T. Men·
ehini ori.d Jacqueline Mon·
BOARD OF EDUCATION
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
ehlnl by dolld rocordod in
ENDED JUNE 30, 1989
Volume 201 , pogo 1113 of
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS the Molgo County D - Ro·
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
cordi.
Mloc.'
.
Also the following do·
Rocoipto ............ 25,823.94 ocrlbed real HWo' oiluotod
in 'tho State of Ohio; County
GRANTS IN AIDof Molgo•. VlttOgl of' PomStoto
Sourceo ....... 39.6,064.23 oroy, Townol!lp Two (2)
Fodera!
.
North; Rongo .Thirtoon 1131
SourC.. ., .... , .... 9.847.00 West; and • port of Lot 490;
Toto!
· .. being mora porticulorly do·
Reteipt 0....... 431,536.17 ocrit.d oo foli-o:
0188URSEMENTS:
• Commencing at the Narthlnotruct~n .......... 5.944.98 -tcor-ofooidlot480u
Supponlng
detlnooted in Plot Booil 2:
· Servi... ....... 417, 146.74 l'lgtt7 oftheMeigoCounty
btrocurriculor
.
!'tat Recorda; uid pol"' tlto
Activill01 ..... ........ 802. 7&amp; being the South llnoofWett·
Total Ditb.uroe·
gall Str...; thence South 85
manto .......... 423,B93.47 dog. - t . otong the South
Exc. Rcpto. Over/(Un·
line of Wetzgalt St1'1181. o dio·
dorl Diob .......... 7,841.70 tance of 140.80 feet to on ·
Exc. Acpt1/Source~ Over/ iron pin n the trua place of
Underl Dlib. - Othor
beginning for the p•cel hor. ·Us•/Ntt .... ;.... 7,841. 70 ein intonclod to"" convoyed;
Boglnnng Fund Ctoh
thonce leaVing the oouth llno
Belonce .......... 54,013.65 of Wotzgll Street, oouth 1
dog. 30' ollt, ·• diotonce of
Ending Fund Cuh
Botonce .........,et .855.35 32.00 - · to on Iron pin;
Outotonding
thence oouth 88 dllfl. I 1'
Wanonto ...... (25.9110.021 - • · a dlotonce of 17.97
Cooh With Fiocel
feet to en Iron ·pin HI in o
Agent ............ 87,645.37 otono -II; thence north 1
Total Fund
deg. 30' - t . 1 distance of
Belonce .......... 8t,856.36 31.00- to an iron pin on
MEMORANDA DATA
the oouth line of Wotzgoll
· ADM .................. 4,388.00 Street; thence north B&amp; dog.
Numt.r of Non·Cort.
- · along the ooulh lino of
Employ- ....... , ....... 8.00 Watzgolt Street. • dlotonce
Numbo&lt; of Cart.
· .of 18.00 M1 to tho pi-of
Employ- ....... ... .. 10.00 · boginnlng. containing thlr. I certify the following re, teen thou10ndtho (.0131 of
· port to be correct and true, en aore, more or Ieee.
to the b•t of my 'know~ · The obove dacrlbed rtal
estate woo ourvoyed Auguot
edge:
John D. Ri-. Sr., 1, 1 979 end wu takon out
· Treasurer of the of a larger par=el. of reel •·
Boord of EdUCIIt~n tote more 'o~lly d•l"'it.d in
(6141 992-11592 Volum•, 276, Page 296•.
(71 26, He
·
Moigo 1 County Deed Ro·
,c:Ords.
Ref, renee Deed: Volume
Public Notice
306. ~ago 8&amp; and Volume
276, Pogo 8;79. Melgo
NOTICE OF SALE
County Deed Recorda.
By vlnuo of on Order of
REAL
ESTATE
AP·
Solo iooued out of the Common PI- Court of Moigo
·County, Ohio, in the - o of
Amorice'o Mortgogo Servic· 8
·Public Sale
lng. · Inc.. . 'fka First F'omi(y
&amp; Auction
Mart-e· CorP!IriJioll of
Florida. · Plaintiff. vo. Brian
Friond. at tl.. Defonclanto.
upon • JudQm~ therein
rendered, being ciso No.
89-CV• 100 in uid Court, I
will offer for ooto al the,fr.o nt
door ot the Courthou.IO In
Pomeroy, Melgo. Coointy.
Ohio, on the 26th clay of Au·
gull. 1989, at 10:00 a.m ..
the folla~ing lands end
tenamonta, located ·~ 3t2
Wotzgall Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 411789: A complatel•
got d•crlpt~ri ofthoreiol.eo·
tatolo 11 follows:
Situ8111d In the Vlllago of
Parkersburg, WV.
Pomer,Y. CountY of Moigo
tnd Stole of Ohio end
Located 1.2 of a
bounded and descrit.d a
mile
from Emerson
follows: Situated in the
Townohip
of Saliobury,
Ave.
County of Meiga end St4tte
of · Ohio. 111!1 dncribed ..
followa. to-wit:
Consisting of lots of
Situatlld in tho North part
clean furniture, houof 100 ocro Lot No. 303,
T-n 2. Ronge 13 of the
sehold goods, box
Ohio Company' a Puri:h•e,
and lying 011 the West oid,e of ' lots, glassware, an'
and ldjolnlng whet w11
tiques, plus a prap
formerly Anthony lloppotd' s
full of electrical and
lot. and more peniculorlv
deoerlt.d • fotlowo: B'!l)ln·
hand tools. Very Ia~
nlng on the .trHt a"J 1 the
sale. Lot of stuff still
SouthWool corner of what
wu formerly uid Rappold's
Lot; . then co North 1 dog.
WMt 1QO foot to whot w11
formerly Rtppold's Nonh·
wast corner; thence South
83 deg. Wett 60 feet to o .
n1rrow etreet; thence South
7 dog. Eost 100 feot tel o
·street; thence Npnh 83 dog.
Eaot 50 feat to tho place of

,

FOI APPLICAn,N, SCHOOL MANUAL,
L8

441-Galh,olit

•~•

13

Gibson.
Defondonto.
· Thlo 1
bort D. · Olbolon
and .Ponly

that date.,

(304) 675-6015

.

Mettt CovMy

317- Chalwt
311-"""011
245-R.o GrtnOt

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

Public Notice

&amp;

~ 1~!rax U~t.

uo.oo

. U1 .0ci

G.ll1a C011tl'h
,.,.. COCit 114

J71-WIIftll1

c~mpanies _deny

.3

17.00
I 10.00
115.00
125.00

143-·..

· , · · . .Ayers·,

COLA

16.00
18.00
tll.OO
121 ,00

liM• etl kw con•all . . i11n1. III'OIIIlfiUillllllf'l..,;n lttch. ..cl

·o r

RC

14.00
16.00
11.00
IU.QO
133.00

following relephone exch~nge! ... '

26-lll WOROi

t~n~B.nk.PI.tlff.~s.Ro·
r._~n
N~~ ...~~~~~:;
and Is pending In the Court

Clossi,/'ied page.&lt; ciu·er rhe

· BdSTf&gt;N tUPI) -The whole·
consumers," the. report said. ·:It• very Irresponsible statement."
sale price of gasolhie already
also. indicates that the greater
A series of hearings conducted
was . rising at the time of· the , degree of competition at the last month ccmprised the basis of
Exxon Valdez spUI In Alaska,
retail level helps · .to protect the report. Energy office staff
said oil industry officials dlspui· . ,consUIJ!ers from local price members heard testimony from
gouging."
.
,., ·
!ng a report that petroleum
oil company representatives,
companies took acjvanmge:ot the , And the report charged the new legislators, gasoline wholesalers
accident to hike prices.
envlronm·e n.tal ' standards, deand retailers.
The report, released Tuesday
signed to reduce ozone levels
by the. state's energy office, . during hot and humid summer
charged the spill of mll'l!ons of
months,. were responsible for a_t ·
.'
gallon,s of crude oil in the pristine
most 1 to 3 cents per gallon. ·
waters of Prince W111Iam Sound
"While our analyses showed
did not cause a supply disruption
that there· were some· legitimate
sufficient to justify a 36 cen.t-per·
reasons for gasoline prices to rise
Edward
gallon Increase in the wholesale
gnldually over several months, It
price gasoline between mid·
Is unconscionable that the. on
March and May.
companies would use a tragic
The wholesale Increase reaccident like the Exxon Valdez to
Pedilitrics
suited in an average 10 cent-per·
suddenly raise prl~es · alld prof!I
gallon hike at . the pumps in
at the consumer's expense," said
. Internal Medicine
En'e rgy · Secretary Sharon
Massachusetts.
The state Pe.t roleum Council Pollard.
insisted the price increases
"Consumers have a right to be
stemmed from tougher environoutraged at _the sudden Increase
Suite 12
mental regulations, declining
In the retail price of ga'soline,"
Pleasant Valley Hospital
seasonal demand and higher
said Pollard. "No one wants
Medical Office Building
costs working their way through
more government reg~~latlon of
the system as a result of a
the oil industry. But If the·major
productioncutbackbytheOrgan· oil companies continue behavior
!Zat!on of Petroleum Exporting like this, they invite this kind of
Office Hours
Countries last November.
scrutiny."
Monday through Friday
''The Valdez oil sp!ll on March
The report blame'il the surgeon
24 did not cause tlie increase,
"pul!liclty of the environmental
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.
though It did have a minor and and eccnomic severity of the
temporary Impact," said Frank accident ... (which) led topercepTivnan, a Petroleum Council t!ons In the oil mai'ket of potential
New Patients Welcome
shortages of crude oil and gasospokesman.
"Gasollne prices had begun to line, particularly on the West
rise before the spllldue to several Coast."
President
EMOTIONAL CEREMONY
Bryant and 11 oth.e rs who successfully completed
factors,
the most Importanl
· Investlgator.s also raised ques:
George Bush and Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole
the Joh Training Partnership sponsored program
being
the
$7
hike
In
the
cost
of
a
·
.
!Ions
~!bout decisions by Exxon
Tuesday. (UPI)
.
comfort PurdiUa Bryant after she broke Into
barrel
of
crudep.
l
lduetoOPEC's
and
British
Petroleum to Invoke
tears during a White House ceremony honoring
cutback of proouction."
a contract clause protecting
•
But the report found that 'the ·themSelves In the event of an
increase In crude ofl prices from' unforeseen disruption In delivery
II&gt;
the foreign supply reduction that could affect prices · and
•
barely registered In the whole- profits. ·
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. IUPI) ruling.
sale
market by the middle of
·"We have said repeatedly the
when medical groups say fetilses
temporary closing of the Port of
-Legislators will consider·tight·
Marc h . .
Like the Missouri law, Mar- become viable.
VALLEY
enlng state abortion laws during tinez' recommendations Include
· T!vnan also said price In· Valdez had al) Impact on supply
·Ken Connor, executive direc·
a special session in October, the tight restrictions on abortion tor of Florida Right to Life. said creases by major refiners were and therefore prices, but this was
HOSPITAL
first move by a state to restrict
after !be 20th week of pregnancy . the ·group plans to push for "significantly lower than their quite short-lived," said Exxon
abordon in keeping with a recent Tests would be required at that notification r)ghts forfathersand , competitors.'' In Massachusetts, spokesman Les Rogers. "We
Valley qrive.
decision by the U.S. Supreme point to determine if the fetus is w!il oppose abortions for rape major oil ref!ners control 49 would categorically deny any
Point Pleasant. W.Va. 25550
Court.
percent . of the. market, said lnf~rel),ce that we have colluded
viable. If it Is. abortion would be . and incest victims.
Tivnan.
The
remaining
lndewith
anyone
and
we
w,
o
uld
label
Gov. Bob Martinez, who anallowed only to save the woman's
"Our ultimate goal is an
pendents purchase gasoline from that as_a total falsehood and a
nounced Tuesday he will convene I i!e.
abortion-free society," he said.
a special session of the Leglsla·
However, the gujdeilnes proCormie Amide!, · a spokeswo- a combination of majors ·and r--------...;.------~---;....---~•
ture Oct. 10-13, said he would not posed by the governor include man for the Naitonal Organlza· wholesalers.
provide lawmakers with specific
tighter regulation of a bortlon lion for Women, interrupted the
The · report . concluded that
legislation during the session.
clinics and would require doctors news conference Tuesday to retail service station operator.·
Instead, Martinez said he will to Inform a woman about the angrily voice her opposition to prof!t margins , basically re'
offer broad guidelines based on
health and development of the the governor's proposals, ignor· malned constant between the end
the Missouri law that was upheld
fetus .
.lng requests bY a Martinez .aide of 1988 and June 1989. while
by the Supreme Court JI\IY 3. The
refiner margins almost doubled.
The governor also called for a to be sllen t.
governor said he is prepared to
strict ban on use of public
·'This indicates that local gaso"We're angry and we 'll be
work with lawmakers on era ftlng employees, funds or facilities for everywhere and we' ll let him line retailers, unlike the major
an acceptable bill.
abortions or a bortlon counseling. know about the way the majority refiners, were not Increasing
· "I think we have a responsible,
The only exemptions would be for of wc,men feel," Amide! satd.
their profits at the expense of
middle-of-the-road balancing of cases of rape or !nces t, or to save
the rights of women . and the
the woman's life.
,
'
unborn ... that I believe has an
Charlene Carres, lobbyist for
&lt;'Xcellent chance of passing,"
the American Civil Liberties
GAY 90's
8 PAK, 16 OZ. BTLS.
Mardnez said.
Unkm, said there Is no medical
Some elements of the proposal
evidence to suggest fetuses are
go beyond the Missouri law, but
viable at 20 weeks. Current state
Martinez said he believes they
law gives the woman full choice
.
.
'
are justified under the high court
through about the 24th week,
LOAVES
•

Florida governor.calls ·special

..

• The Area's Number l Marketplace

.
Paraplegic near8 top of Yosemite

Oil

. Pom.oy-Middlep()rt, .Ohio.

26, 1989

_

�14-The Deily Sentinel

Pega
6

Wednesday. July 26. 1989

POI"Ila'Oy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Lost&amp; Found

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
-111111, 112 ocrwiUS,OOO,
At. 7, E\H'IIIO, Call lt4-llolor7p.m.

FOUND: Blonde ma~&lt;o Cockor
Sponlel -rino ...,._ !loa colo
lor, 114 441 4UO.
LOST Hollllno llol!or
h....... In .... oH Fill Rock,
phone 30W7Wm.
LOST OA STOLEN· 7 year old
bill ond whMo lroolng
wolkor -c-houod", - Spom ond AMino lock ond
dano, lui Sol. nlahl. A-ord lor
lnloriMiioft obooi thlo dog. Col
304ol824541.
LOll. Cocko- block ond·
wlllte._ln Rock Sprlnoo· oroo.
114.f...-2711 .

...,h

Room a
Roome for rent-wNk or month.

Slartlng 11 12101mo,
Holtl414-44t•D560. ·

Golllo

1BR turri. houoo In the cfty,
117~.. 2IR tum. moblll
. - . S2CIOimo. lt4-441o410g,
378-2?40.
2
Blory
"!)OWly
remadated. 111 N. il.rk Drive.
CIIUCM 451 1111.
Houeo I 3 or moro oc:rwo, 10
- 1 - , w u h ........ nnl
-·on At. 7.1.14-211 ss71.
Hou" hor rwnl, I roomo ond

Loll: ICalico
Cat.Clolllpollo.
·- -H
Spruco
Flrll Ave.
found coll814-441-4510.

Space for Rent
eorn.....~o~ ...,., 1400 oq. ft.,
llocond ona Plno. Ample
parlllng.roor•. CIIII 11~24D,
448o/1325, or - 2 L
Country llobllo HOlM Pork,
Route 3:1, of Pomeroy.
Lote, ronteto, porta, ootoo. Call
814412·7471.
.

11-

('I

Gallipolis
VIcinity

&amp;

· · ···· · · ~· · ·h~··•'&gt;••"t:' •• ~

. ......, ...,..., .• -..~ 1· 14

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

_ __,..;;;_;~,;.;;;:..,.__,_

Gonogo Solo, clolhlng, lumHuro,
mlocllomo, Wed lhril Sot. July
21 tllru July 21. Horloy llnil
Lorono -Uitor, lllod Hill
·Rood, Lolort.

Po meroy,
Middleport

Ndlalllab technician
lor 1 fully oqul_.t phyelclen'o
labonolory, No ihlft work. ApplY
In porl&lt;iito-col PJuo, 203
Jackoon Plko, Clalllpollo. 8:30 to
1:00.
Phtobolomlol pari limo 30
. hro!Wit,
oontool
ponoonnol
Plouont Volloy Holpftol, Point
Pluoonl, WY, 304-871-4340.
=EOE/:=:AA.::__ _ _ _ __
Poolllono ovalloblo: Ful~ ·
limo AN SUpor . - . midniGht
lhlft. Slorllng hourly wogo lor
now iredull0/110.71 dllloionllol
wHh up. V-lon, HoUdoy, Sick
Ptll~inll

IIIVI,

&amp; VICinity

lnaur~~nce

bentlll

IYiilablo. Ful-llmo LPN Chorgo
Nunoo, llklniiJhl lhlft. Slolllng
• · tamiiiM. Auault 111, 2nd. hourly
w•ae.
For
naw
BroadW.,- StrMf, Racine. Rain, graduetel$7.45, dlfftrenllll whh

shine.

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent
Merchandise
.;..--------~ .,.=~,..:.::..:...:~~~~~
1977 Oakwood, 2BR AC,
locoled wllhln walking dl11once
Household
51
.
1o
UnlveteHy
of
RIO
Orondo.
Aotoroncoo
lt4-2411-i143.
Goods
31 Homes for Sale
2 br., AC, lumlthocl, booulllul --=..;:.,:,.:..;,.;;,.,.=,....LAYNE'S FURNITURE
rlvor v"';'.:,.Konouas, Foelor'e
Solao
ond cllolrw prlcod 1torn
Moblll
Puli.
114-4418 roome and blllh, cenlr~lalr, 12 1102. •.
~;e;,t;5~~id=~~~ ~:
acrn land, walking dhltanct to
RIC II..,. 1225 to $371.
Point PI-nt. 30!1'875-1235
2 br., gorwgo, 12.50/mo. dop. 15U.
Lampo 126 to 1125. DlriiiiM
Nq'od,
Nlco
o,..
lor
o
I roomo In Rutlond. Oood 111;. 114-111-1108, ' .,..........
' StOQ ond .up ID $488, Wood
1tr home, netd1 10me repair. 114-388-131g,
toblo wol choiN 1215 to 17115.
Call 114-W-3233.
·
Dooko 1145 up to 1371. Hut~hoo
bodr- oil oloctrlc mobile $400
lmonrwoo
up, bunk
bodoond
complllo
Apple Grove hotnOl 2 bod""!'!'t1 Shomo
wllh
1211
'up . t~
1200.
month
t&gt;luo
dopooH
1
baHrnent. nice cond, pncaa ond udiHIOI,
304-87d-4088.
·
Qi5.
boby
bodl
.110
11111rft.
rod-d, •-n byu opar boit o!lrlngo lull Of twin
polntnttnt only, 304-171-2466.
For ront or ~. 18M 2 bod· 0H
room 14JOO mocMie home, 304- 171, linn 881, oriel 111. Ouoon
Allrocllve
bulft country
Hte 1271 I ~p, King 1310. 4
home. 3 y11re old, 3 bedrooms, 871-711111.
chool "'· Ouri
2 botho, lUll blolmoftl, 2-3 cor Funy lumlohod aorwgo opt. All dnowor
1,!, &amp; 10 gun. Bobv moiiiMOH
gonogo, dock, oil oloctrlc hut utllllloo pold ucopl otoctrlcfty, $30 I Ml. Bod lromoo 125,
pump ond wood lumoc:o. 814- Newly rNJucratect &amp; carpeted. Ouoon Size 131. I king lromo
812-300.
Dop. Aloo 3 br. lrallor. Callet4- $50. Good ooloctlon olliidroom
eultH,
rnttll
cabinets,
BY OWN~A, 21105 Moplo Avo. 3 441-tSSI, 011.14-4411-7125, .
hoodbolrdo $30 and up to ..5.
bediOOIII Drtck wMh gorago, lull
A ·
10 dolftl oomo •• c..h whh opblolmonl, brMzowoy, control 44
partment
proved cradH. 3 mi. out lulovlllo
olr, llrwpl•&lt;!• comer lot, muoh
for R.ent
Rd. Open g A.M. lo I P.M. lion,
lftON. 304-621-1829 attar 1:00
thru Sot. Callet4-4411-0322. .
PM.
1 br., !With llovo a rwlrlga!Jior,
2 dlnene oolo, 125. and 115.;
no pollt/S171 mo. Wolor In· choll
B~ownoro 2 bedroom homo cludlcl.
.,... troour 130:·· oonoole"
1100/dapoiH.
C.ll
114n
loelllon, phono 304-675- 4411-3117.
TV coblnol $5.00. 304-175-8118.
.

1---------.. .
11
Help Wanted
..;_;_.;.,;.;;,;:::.~,;:;;,;,;,;..;;___

Motorcycle, . fumhl.l"t,

funo, I0¥0. clothing.

axp. VacatlonL alck l•v•, ln-

oo:-

-om

Co-•

. · ourwnce bonoln ovolloble. Con·
IICI PlnecrMI CIN Center. 555
· 4 tamllloo•. Augull tii, 2nd. Jockoon Pike. Call 114-4411. !lroodwor Sl-, Aoclno. Roln, 7112. Dlroctor ot Nurolng E.O.E.
:ahlna. Mo,orcycle, fu~ltur1,
.funo,IO¥O.clolhlng.
.A.D. only wonted. 1B hauro par 6639. ··
week. Wli.C. COUftllllng. llalge Fonnofo Homo Admlnlllrotlon
:I lomlly. July 21th, 21th. 388110 County Hoohh Copt. l14-H2· Iotlna available. Approv.d uctionol now on dlopla•. Fronch
Aockopringo Ad., P-roy. :H2=:;t._ _ _ _ _ __
'
1mon white
Clly Mobllo Homoo. 114-4411lhlng lor evwyono.
1340•
Situation
12
For Soli, 2 Olory houoo, 7
Wanted
bl he lu
.9 wanted to Buy
roomo, 1 112
I '
I
• COonploiO houoohoklo ol fur- BobyoiUino In my homa. Prlvolo baHml~twladwc:7:al fy~
• nhuro I onllqUOL Aloo wood I or Tllto XX: p,....,hoof ohlldron. noco, ro
M · :•",;
oii14-ID2-6770.
· cool hoolora. Swoln'o FumMuro Cal ~!'d:.:"::o~oo~~
p~~..P61:
. ' Auction, Tlllrd ' Oliva, coli A- end -rd lor lklorly. 192-t501.
lt4o446-315D.
Atoo hlndlcoppad ond Ioiii M
Ill 3 bed
h
FumH..-o ond oppllancoo by lho ooro. Roooonoblo.lt4-ID2·7204.
ull oo
room omo,
piece or enUre household. Fair WI coro· lor otciorty ond hon- Iorge gorogo. Aloo, 4 112 aero
bolng paid. Call 11·4-446- dlcoDMCI In our home. 26 yooro lot. Middleport. 114-t82·5434
onytlmo. ·
.
3158.
exptirlenco. LPN on 0111. Low
Now
Lllllng.Portlt"brook·3
br,
Junk core whh or wRhoul .1 inCO!ftO homo. CII11114-W-1873 brlck-2 b1the, LA, FA, Kit, htat
motort. can Larry Llvllr 814- after 7:~ p.m. tor more lntor·
I
nd
I.Cil
pump,
"11rou
poo Y
388-D~
):m~o~ll~on~·--------------- Schoolo-$70,1100.
BI4-245-H75.
autn•
15
Schools &amp;
Now rulllc 2 br., homo, noor
Pre 1140 qu!lta. Any condilion.
c - . CHy. 121,000. Call 814Caoh Pold. Coli 614-D92·5857 or 1 _ _..,;l;,;
.n,:;st::;ru;:;,ct.;:l;o;,;n,.......- 2!MI.e846.
114492'2411'
I"
RE·TRAIN NOWI
TOP CASH paid lor 1983 modol SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS Nlco 3 bedroom homa, 1 both,
and n.war uatd cars. Smith qQLLEGE, 521 Jack1011 Ptkl. gonogo ood Iorge lot, Clalllpollo
Bulck·Ponlloc, 1911 Eollem Call 114-441-4387. Rog. No. 116- Ferry. Prlcod mld 40'o. 304-17115725.
Ave., Golllpollo. Coli -114-446- 11·:.:1·:,:1.:;05::5:::B·:,__ _ _ _ __
2282.
,.
N•-- 3 br., Llvl- room, dlnln•
..;:;,, utlihy ··• room, nd
Uood fum""" and' houoohokl 18 Wanted to Do
cooling/Molino unk. Jockoon .
applltnc... Phorw 614-742·
Hou• and tr11l1tr Rpillr. Undtr- Plkl 1rea. H•r ClntmL
204a.
plnnlng, polnllng, lnolda ond RMoonoblo prioo. 814-4411-3831.
Uood lurnllurw by lho pi- Or out, plumbing. Will . paint
. Two bedroom, Burdlllla Addn,
entire household alao Hlllng. colllnQO. 114-192•5156.
114·742·2455.
N.ed A caka? Lara Th~son ono ownor1!')1C cond, Hlalo Ill·

un-. -..

Prt&lt;••

304-175-5801,
blrthdaya,

Employment Services

showere\ .

.cake .
far
annlvtraarlas,

reunlone,

etc.

R...ot.DII prtc...

QuaiHy mobile horne sldrtlng,

Help Wanted
11
ltoo HlimiiH, 3Q4.675-6D77.
$350. por day procosslng phono Will blby alt In my homa, IX·
orders! Peopll call you. No exw
perltnce n.c:3~~ Call (rtfun·

peritnced and can glvt refertn·
en full or part tlmt with
flexible hours, ntar Khool and

· dll&gt;lo) 1·315·7
2 oxlonolon
P·2741A.
hoophol, 304-e75-2784.
2 nurHO oldoo1 ohop clo!,k1 2 Will bobj1111 In my homo.

llamant, . FttA approud. prlotd

2 oportn\onto. t - - . , fur·
niehect, 2 bedrooms untur~

12x55, 2 bedroom. Oood cond"lon. Caiiii4-I92·1S5I.
12170, 2 bodroorno, lludy, olr
condition"!, hlah onlcloncy goe
lumoco.
It 4·912-tDS,
t-tt4·7D7-4232,1oave m-go.

...soo.

Fumilhld

Ndllloly.

National

Compon~

Local

N41lwork

Markltlng Grove artt anyllmt, 304--576-

614;992·7563 Monday J:2::4:.,:1B::·_ _.:..__ _:---:--

through rldl~ I:00-11 :OO a.m.

Will do houu cleaning. hive

AVON I All A.Voo f Shlrloy rotorenceo, 304-675-7277:
Spaoro, 304-6'75-1429.
AVON - All orou, Coli Marilyn
Woovor 304-182·2145.
Financial

dltloner, hot waltr heater.~. ..a..lll..~

Avon Limited time only $5.00,

olgn up lrH (billed

~

your or· 21

Business
Opportunity
304oiB2·2645.
.
INOTICEI
Sabyaltter needtd for 18 month
old. In your home or mine. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Rtferences req'd. Sind Infor- racomrMndl that you do
mation to Box Cia 003 cfo Gal· bualn... with people you know,
llpollo Dally Tribune, 825 Third and NOT to Hnd money
Ave. G.olllpoUI, OH 45631.
through the mell until you have
Dietary manag1r needed lor e'z lnvnflgaled lho ollaring.
b1d nursing hom1, Experience
High
requlrad. Certification desired DISTAl BUTORSHIP.
dar). Plue receive $30.00 frH
products. Call Marilyn Weaver,

but w,lll train qualified parson
. for position. Salary and benetlt•
commensurate with experience.
ApPlY In per.on or call for ap.
pomment. Care Haven of Point
Pltnanl, Rt. 1 Box 326, Pl. Pn.,

wv 304.f75-3005.

Expertencad retrlaaratlon I air
conditioning Mrvlcl man. No

phon• oollo, Golll1 Reltlgorollon
SOrvlco, 152, Third Avo., Gotllpollo, OH.
lnlerior Deolgn • Spoclollll.

Hardman'• Homt Center Ia accepting applications for an ln-

lorior Doolgn Spoclollll. In-

dividual Hlectld mual hive
prtvlou.
tlllperlence
In
~euurlnp and lltlmatlng car·
pet, vtny and cu.lorn drape._

Knoivlodgo of kRchon dHign

also a plu1. Benefit IHicklge lil·
· CIUdM paid YIICIUon, lift and
mtdiGal Insurance. Submit
reaume to Bob Wintz or Mike
Dayton, PO Box 33, Pt. Pit, WV

volume· route for ule In Pcint
lnco11111
Pltaaant. Average
$15,000 to 140,000 p1u1. Part
time to full time. Stll for $11,200
cuh. CIII1-800·•UI•8363.

OWn your own apparel or ah,.
ttore,
ci»&gt;M
from:
INWsportewear l1dl11, men'1,
chlldrenlm~temlty, l•rg• alze11,

P11h1,
d~nctwear/aaroblc.
bridtl, llngtril or ICCIIIOrlkH

ttore. Adcf color analyala. Brand
narnee: Uz Claiborne, Hnhhttx,

Bonnlo I

Bill

Sl Mlchollo,

Forenzat _Bugle Soy, lavl, Camp
Iaverty Hilla, Lnl.. F1ye, Lucl1,
oYif 2000 othere. Or $13.18 one

prico dnlgner, mulllllor pricing

diiCount or family eho. atora.
Retail prlcee unbeiltVIbll lor
top quellty .1hou normally
prlcod from llg. lo
ovor

Fwnl1htd

Job ohowlng Aug. 1, 10:00 om.
No 7 dllry bom. Londownor
....,... right to rwJocl ony ond

111 bide. Conttrucflon wll be

OUpofVioad by Soil Con-·
votlon Borvlco. for further lnfortnlllon eoi1304-&amp;71-4t70.
Hood helP lor oldortv llcly. Llln. Byrocuoo. Llghl h - -k.
lloilrY nogolloblo. Call colloct,
. 114.Qa.a740.

Apt.

1Br,

$210,

Real Estate

::i::;'l:."":.r, ~r,· ~~~~:;.. ~::

GoiHpollo. 814-448-4418 oltor 7
p.m.
Oonogo epl. tumllhed,· 21 112
Noll. !llllllpollo $221/mo. UHIIIIH
pd. Cal 614-441-4418 oftor 7
p.m.
Oroolauo living. t · ond 2 bodroom

apanmenll at

ond

VIllage

Rlvorslao

Apartment• In MlckUeport. From

$182. Caii614-912·7787.
Lorge upotalrw opt. 238 'First
Ave.
KHchenletovo
rstrlg,
1260/m&lt;&gt;t~luO dop. Utllhloo a.
rwl. No po10. CaiiiJ4-441-4i28.
Hlco 2 "!:, 4 112 mi., from Qol·
llpollo 1225 mo. No poll. Call
814:4411-8031.

•P'.

One bedroom fumllihtd
very clean and nlc!l. No pete.

304-8711-1400.

.

-

IInce, tllter 6 warranty. lnltetl~llon 1 llnonclng ovolllbll. Call

and

Pel'llan

Buy 01 attt. Riverine Antlquta.

Slam••

c:::.......:r.o.

and

Himalayan klttana. Chow atud

oorvlco. Coli 114-4411-3844 olter
7p.m.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jeckoc:n Avo.
Polnl Pltlllnl, 304-6711-2083, 10
gol ool up $14.19 ond 10 got
cornpllllo $43.21.
Groom ond Supply Shop-Pol
Graomlng. An broods. Allolyloo.
limo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
Webb. ean 114-441.0231.
Polk A Poe puppleo 1100.00
IICh. 304-875-2126. •
~--·--•-~~o. 1 "''"• 4 112
monlho, 175. 1 tomolo, g
montho, seo. 114-912·5672.
Purobrod BlomMo klnono, · I
wko. old. 814 441 4881.

ilo.":!%od:!"'rib~ =~~r:~:'r::J.t.~i

:.j ::"~4::-4:;:o46-::,1::354::::.·----~
57

Musical
Instruments

Individual

I r t na.

guhar

!!Oglnnore, gultariol.
llriinlcordlo
lluolc,
JoH
w......., lnolruclor, l14-44f.
tttn, lln\ll&lt;od opartlngo.
Plono lor oole. Aloe lllrlgorolor
ood old • • - ltun~ wlh
d - 1144411-22111.

c::'ic

~:or:
a br, - - 2 1111 botho,
llnpla-blo lolo, doublo bulidlnao, a br z .......,
___ _ For lntor,
I nongo, CA, city IChoolo. coll104-41l-2
CA. n\Jng i4lMi
CIIII114-44U714.

I

:fill ~~~!~'p!i•"·

(\ l

76.

.'~

~~

-·---

-

- . - ...

I,''''' (I )I

~

SUrp1u1.

FRANK AND ERNEST

THE

T/lt$

L.l

NJ (T)

\

(0:30)

liHil USA Todly

• l"lt!~a~~rdyl Q
.... ball

l1J CJNI!Ire
!HIIInaon
121 Crook 6 Chait .

7:35 (I)~ Logue .._.,.II
1:00 (I) The llut • The Only,
Plrt 2 Dl I (NR) (1 :00)
(J) a! U"ttalved
Mylllrlaa New reports on .
.tile aJieaed abduction of a
milliOnaTress. (R) ~ .
GJ Profeltlonal BOwling
' III 8 (I) GroWing Plllll
c
Ctirofand Ben are I)Ot ·
punished equally for breaKing
the same rula. (AI Q
CD C11 Dtacover: WOrld Of
Sclet1C8 Explore Hawaii's
natu!JI wonders and the
observatory atop Mauna

.,

,e

Ktoa~ !;I
Ill BID Jake • lite

F . - . Fatman retires, only
to lind himeelf in Hawaii
SOlving • murcler. (R) Q

OPJiicNNewa,
· 9 llogan'a H.,....

...

11.000

nUllo; 304-t'lfo

Wotar

Houtl'!fl,

=tooo"'::-....:':.':",..::;
UphOiatary

1m~~I11011Hr

7,000 ICiuollllf. 11100. ll4-4411M11.

~ ~~- -_,_-\ '-···'--· ---- ~----'

--·--------

eLe (J)catches
01 Night Court Ouan
Mac in a Clench .

·.· With his study buddy, Lenore.

~i(J)Hooperman

·

Hooperman leis a producer
of sleazy. films use hla
building. !R) Q
CD (l)lllltilnie Five men
trom the Yale Class of 1963
apeak candidly about career .
lallura, Infidelity, virility,

MORK MEEKLE AND
THE orHeR ~'( MY
Gi&lt;ANDF.ATHER SA.IDHE.'e

MXU811dentl~nd buslr~ess

· =onsiJt: ~

" GOINGlORE::TIRE.

0

~~-ltd

.

. .

MO"JIE:
Willi A
Maniaci WCIIMn (NA) (2:00)
1:30
Knight D1ye
Hank consklers lathering 1
child belore ~·s too late. D

e (), all

a

III 8 Cll Robert Gulllaurlle

When Edward teachee Ann
to drive, they ru" Into a kill.

;~try
10:00 (I) 700 Club

e

WHAT

HAVE YOU GOT
ANY BLUE JEANS
IN MY SIZE.

IN THUNDER
DID I SAY?

SILAS?

•·

'l·lf·lt

.Q

8KIOS
.KJ812

· Trick- wu tbe heart four, queen
IIDd king, topped ,by declarer's ace. It WEST
EAST
,. ,\J I
seemed lllibtral to naw play a club. [)e. • 1 7 5
.K852
clarer played low to dummy's jack; • to 7 a4 s
East tOot tbe ace and returned a +9 1 ~ z
876
'
.A1085
bel!rt. The nine lost 10 West's to,.and • 7
West cleared lbe heart suit. Now the ·
SOUTH
~ of clube dlleloeed lbe bad news.
'
•q·
u
So South went IAI&lt;
dwnmy with the ltizlg
.A'JI
ol diamonds to play.a low spade. East
8AQJ4
rose immediately wltb tbe ace, IIDd lbe
•Qu
defense toot two more burt trleu to
· Vulnerable: North-South '
set tbe contract.
·
Dealer: South ·
Tliis deal is ID aen:IIJe iD avoid·
ance. To protect bls J-9 of hearts, deNer ..
clarer must strive to keep Eut off
lead untn . tbe ..contract Is secure.
INT .
Therefore, declarer sbould lead to tbe
lead: • .•
10 of diamonds in dummy IIDd cimle
off wltb·a ·low club. Eut wiU duct, and
Soutb Wins tbe queen. Playlllg a seC·
ond club would now be a mistake. Instead, deelarer goes to dummy with ·
-··'
the diamond kine and plays a low ·back a spade, but declarer .-vwd not
spade. Once again, if East rises witb risk putting in dummy's 10. He ·would
win dummy's king and play a hlp club
the ace, declarer wiU have nine tricks. ft'Otll dummy, once again en~uring bls
So East plays lbe ·nine and declarer contract. ·
wins the spade queen .. Now be· can
Jomes .hlcoby'r- "JM!Obr COIIII1dp" ocd
switch back to club&amp; and guarantee 'JM!ObyaaConta.m..·r.mtt..,nlllllllt•U.• .
making his contract.
u.. Ill&lt; Ornld J-y) .,.. - ••lllllble ot
Alld wbat if West could have won . 1o rator~~. Bothre pob!=w by~'"'"""the aee of spades? He _would have led
C5&gt; -·""""""'"' ENTE1U't118&amp; .....

z•

·DPerung

by

deejau~ (R) Q
!HI MajOr
ue "BiiatbiH

•

NORTH
.KIOU

THOMAS JO~EP~ .

"

Giver
·a Nllltvllle Now
1:30 Cil B (I) Juat The Ten Of
Ul Cindy CCimes IO bellevB
her dad was responsible lor

11:00

. , ••c

'

CROSSWORD·

0 llttnNr, She Wrote Indian

.

tr,•

.

Cilll!ntartalnmtnt Tonlgl!t

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

w.••

.

7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:30 G (J) Family Feud'
GJ Conrolte Challef188 ·
Serltl From East Ruthe.rlord,

=z·

_7711,...,..,

. ..,.... ...

Ql l:GP Card

u-~ pi k
bod Ford/ Chovl
··mo:d~.,~: or~ 304-171.......,

vans &amp; 4 WD'a
R, A
llorvlco. Poola ....
1m Ford Bronoo 4 whMI ~rive tome, Wtlto. Jmmoda..l,060 or
Gill 304oi'IN120 ollor :f~&amp;'!ono doliWiry. Call :104-

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
Tb GET ANSWER

Jameo Jacelly

Part 2 Of 2 Slereo.

lira, new ~Ira.

73

In Clnclllllltl

0 Miami Vlca Prodigal Son,

1D74 Carville. T·lop, PW PB, 1971 TtUlwood, 1 I ft 111ep. I,
loto ol OpiCI, I&gt;OIItbl&lt;o foilol,
$7300. 814-112·5545 7:00 o.m.· $1,000.00 30W75-8513.
4:00 p.m. or 114·HD-2217
evenings.
tN3 llhOIIa 11 112 ft. compar.
ownlno• tully Mikon
.
lolnor.
U78 Orond Prix W. Somo ruot. ~PJ
...oo. Colfo14-44e-1214.
Noodo oomo work.' 1250. lt4112-t702;
25ft. C.Chmon Bunkhouoo.
"78
M
II
H
T V• PS Good cond. liMpo 1. Q,500.
1.
uollng • . · ~1 , • 114-317·7252.
PB, AC, llmiiO&lt;t edRion.lt&gt;M411- :.:.:::::::::.::.:=----4918.
Mldoo _ . , ~-. 21,130
mii-! 1 OMC motor, do- 'olr
!!~. ==~·=r·50~~.u
tomptlla; exc cond, prioo
366-!1808.
.
..- . 30W71-4437.

Chtvys.

lhe chuckle quoted

by filling in the missing words
you develop fr o m step No. 3 below.

BRIDGE

Of

0 Moneyllne
(8) Andy Griffith

=~=~=------

1171 ~ Dovilon B - 87
Olide, be. COIMWI-. Call
Cla~_114 •• . ,.. dly; 114-

.... -

.onsp

air, tilt whMI, good ·condition.

="'

' - ""-

NewaHour

POOR BOY nRES, 304-1711. 3331,'1ronl ond ollnmonii1U5I
4,ooo· good uood Urn, Hm

Buyoro Guido (I) BOM87ol000.
Ohio 114-4411
~ =Eo::L.:I-;;.:1.:;01~U::.·----­ 304-671-2318
24!14.
'
72 . Trucks for Sale
Rolory or cobll tool drilling:
_. .. compllllod .._
1973 Chevy 314 ton pickup wilh Pump ond OW¥ico,
1 - r ond hllch. 1500. 614-187• lltl-3802.
3220.
·ond ~ lnochlno
U74 Chevy holt ton, 8 cy~ ~=w SWEEPER
tim, runs excellenl, 30
2· rwpilr, . . . and luPDIII•, PICk
up ond dlliWiry, Olirlo Vlcuum
3538.
CINnor, otto holt milo up
ten F-150 Ford Aonoor XLT. GoorgM C.rook Rd. Calll14-4411Oood cond. Rune goOCI42711. 0214.
Call614-387.0312.
Sopeic Tonk Puill~lng.no..Goillo
1Q7ll Forti F-150 4x4 plcko41p, Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
oxc. cond/SS,OOO. Coli Oory It Jockoon, 0H 1-100-537-!1528.
114-446-3810 day; 114-446-7788, 82
ovontngL
Plumbing &amp;
1180 Chevy Luv 4 opood, good
Heatlnq
cond, 11,500. 304-171-6112 ohor
1:00.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND·HEATING
1883 Forti Ronoer XL, 11,500.
, Cor. Fourth lod Pirie
Coli 304-871-&amp;351.
GolllpoU. Ohio ·
Coli
~14-448-31Q
or 114-44111884 ChovroiOI plck...,p, 3 4477.
quorler loo. Automatic, toto of
oxlrao, llko now, hove lo - lo Plpo II In .. Plpo II out. c.w.
bollovl, CIIIII14-44U411 • . ·
Dovloon PlUmbing I Tro":'~~~
tlr~lne &amp; WMer llnH, 11
pic
1N6-Ford F-210, k....Pc. C{l. 01.51. Moml
, · - or.Evonl-.
engln•autonmlo, PSIPIIHD,
........
ouoponolon-englno neodo work. 84
Electrical &amp;
114-446-2141.
Refrigeration
1ft. flborgl- lruc:k .lo-. tho
Forti ond Dadgo. 1250. 114-317·
Aool-lol or commercial
7252.
wiring, ~ or ropalro.
Tokl'!ll Holod bldo on 1N4 Ford Llcoriieil ·oloctrlclon. RlciOnour
F-2110,.,.,.........,,, wMh rwbuh I Elootlfalll, IOU75-1.,...
cyll
onglno, monuof.HD
IUiprMian DDinJN!nY hll rl~ 85 General Hauling
lo Njocl ony/oll llldl. lklolo'IMi
_,..,Aug 15,1teQ. 4 p.m. 114- J I J Wiler......._ 8wlmmlng
oMWJt3.
' ~~~~- wollo. CIIH 814'

OWCom~:~te

I

"Ttul. more bricks you buy, the cheaper they are:;- the
Mleaman said. "Okay," announced lhe customer. keep
loading thellf on until THEY are FREE." ·
·.

8 (I) CurrenUtlalr.
(I) MacNeil( LAhrer

ra BID liJI W!Mel

-to

= = - - - - - - - - - 1 - o , - . wollo, olc. Coli
74 Motorcycl81
a4-1711-2111 ·

...

•· (J)

. CD

mloc., Monlloklo I porto, loko oil
tor 115.
::.~::.__ _ _ _ _ __
Joop porto wHh
ond
llrw, 304-8711-3248.

~onz:....r: ~,.".!.~''::'.:3
othe( brande. HOUM Clllla. tlso
oomo apf)ilonco ..,..,,., wv

I .I I I

Vesii;Y - Perch - Chief - Hearth - THEY are FREE

~c.m.r

210 Vol ocoonvillo onglno, ""h

GOVERNMENT SEIZED VohlciM
lrom $tOO Fordo. Moreodoo.

~

.

7:00 &lt;II 'llalller Murphy

:SS4::.:1;.·-----..,--""""

removal, elll304-17&amp;-.f331 .

I

• 1

SCJIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

, . ' e(J) (J) PM Magazlnl
(0:30)

u- no oil, asoo.oo. 30C:.S75-

pltcher'a mtrroreciiUIIOI.....

- - -·- ..

••31 W Ciirol Burnett

•.ANP

614~4~.

year we're doing
for our
vacatton. my na1ghbor an·
. nounced . "We.'re going to sit
in our new car and look at our

New

1972 modol 472 onglno wHh 400

79

A
•

a,..,_,.
'::,GJt
Country

7

71 Autos for Sale
11111 g Ponlloo Flrwblrd, or'nlnol
In rl
'"in
•• or, no putty, n;ew pa I,
brokH ond ohockl. ANdy to
ohow ond drlvo 15 500.' lirm
304·7'73-1911. • •
•
•
111111 ROd Olda Cullen S. Con·
vartlblo. Exo. orlglnolcor. 82,700
octurwl ml " 500 obo, 81 ...,.._
1156.

'

• PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
. ,
THESE SQUARES

II~.;~=

turbo· 1ran•mlsllon run• GOod,
1

e (I) ABC Haw1 Q

0 lhawllz Todly

,.

!

.

:: , some~hin~. differe~t

LLA

.L-....1.-.L..-"ol--L-L-...1
IS ·

IIIH-1 Contact Q

.J.

E

L l J VO A

·1

.CD.Body Elactrlc

Auto ·Parts
&amp;.
.
Acceasorles.

1181 Font Converoiorl von Et5o, w.n.......·e

Lefty's eyile are 1C! good, he I'IIICIIIhe
calc:her'a llgnall off lhe

(J)

P

I ...1..,.
I . ~·.1I ·-L......J
'L._....IL..,...

(I) ~Look (0:30) ·

Oldomobllo 280, V~ onginO wMh
~~~ ~1~."':.0:~ l::;. take _

Corvenn.

pluo lol wRh workohod on Jook·
oon Plk..Ciaoo lo 31. CaU 114- 2 ocro IDI, Aohlon,.~ooon 60,
4411-1001.
wotor, aao,.....oo. 3011Q1 N. Pork Drive, ownor con :;.:;:.:ol::181
::;._..,.._ _ _...,._
Hll undor no obllaollon to rool ., Ashton booutllul ..,,. toto
011011 IU""CY. Call 304-4511- wHh ri- lronlogo, f1Ublic walor,
1811.
'
Ciydl a-n, JL 304-171-23:11.
2BA Ia. LA, kitchen I~ GoiiiiiOIIo. largo building toto,
, Noll fo river. 111,500. 114-44e- mobllo homo pormhlod, publlo
.145hfter5.
.
wllor, ~,_ roducod, Clyda
.._Jr.
3 bodroam brlak houoe wMh
Aohton,
booulllul ono ..,. lole
lorgo 1o10 ~0~ way o.tvo. Hoven.
Concl. 304-773- wHh r1- fnlni'!QO, publlo Wiler.
8811.
Clyde-, Jr. 304-t?l-aSII.
I br., - - . 2 lull botho, Lewllolo 7 mlloe North of Hof.
fl,.a.ce, doo '·o,~, •Ita plbll.t141U 1141:
CIA, doublo lol, aMy~
...1114-44M714.
North Centnol . . - . 40 -

e

ON THIS BENC~ . AND HOPE 51-!E
COMES BV AND SEES "us... .

T 0 H u y1

I

III RMdlrtg Rainbow t1
(!]) Happy Dayo
Ill FICII Of Uta·
:•. 0 Cartoon Expreu
1:011 (I) Alk:t .
.
1:_:111,. (2) liJ) NBC Nightly Newa

am

. Vllloy FumHurw
New and u111d furnhure •nd ap. AKC molo Boxer puppy, 4
plloncu. Call 114-446-7572.
=~~."n".:: ~.!:. btk toe•,
HcurwD-6.
Drogonwynd CIIUory · Konnel.
Antiques
53

2 ocro 1o1 Aohlon, 60,
public wllor, aao,ooo.qo. 301041oll83.
.
.

Nil,

1015.

DNft • - notrl~orotor, kog ond . Hoy In lhe lilld tt.OO, 30W75kl $100 04-773-Q172.
1117Q.
111
•
r no 1 ' ·
=::.::..--------1
Draft bo•r rolrlgorolor. "Kog ond Mlxod hoy """ olraw lor ooto,
olrlnoldo.St00. 304-773-U72.
colla4-1711-208Qor575-2171 .

·

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
12x10 mobile Home tor

Big DokOIII Fe"" Homo bulK on
your lol, 124,1198 I Up. Clllllt4.188;::::··71~11:.:·-::--:-;-.,..,...-:::--

11

r

appointment.

- . ond bog. et 4-

QE-cop-ono-$95. Konmcro
ool·llkl ._, 1150 24 hro: l-800o345.0MI.
uch. D;yir-horYnl gold-$75.
Oryor·whlt•$75,
Whirlpool _,_mhh,t21n. wood plin~or·
wa1 har-alrnond-$110• .Kenmora '"otorlzt~ variable apHd, llkt
;:.~~ltt."v"" r ~fY!:~~ now. 114 e.q&amp;71.
whllo-!loovy duly-$150, Eloclrlc Siring t~mer, choln OIWO, IIIWn
Serv1ces
rongo-GE-575. 30 Inch otoctrlc ~:.1:':.:1' 3=..:'~ti'F~~
95
• FrH~Ir-20 cu. ft. lido,.
nngo.
•·u•-~.
$150.' Skoggl
Appllan...
• ...,
.,..,_, 304-175- 11162 Z.21, oulo, Vol, oxc cond,
7421
81
Home .
571 Upper Alvor Ad.
!104oi711-31H.
814-4411-7398
Wheolcholro-now or uood. 3 1983 Old~ 98, loaded, 87,000
.
Improvements
w - oloctric ocoolor. Call mlleo. A·1 ehopo, 11.4-4411-8234.
....... -.... t.aoo.a811-2t04.
BASEMENT
SWAIN
WATERPROOI'INO
AUCTION l FURNITURE 62 Wood ond cool twnoc:o tor ..... 1983 Plymouth eon, good cond.
1979 Honda 750 exc cond. 3Q4.. Uncondlllonol llllllimo guoflnOlivo Sl., Qolllpoilo. NEW • 8 po. 114-247-4713.
675-2714.
IH. local rwfwMCM fumllhld.
wood group • $331. Living room
oulln,$199-1191. Bunk bodo Zonfth t.v. 1150, polloblo . 1984 ChOVIIIO 4 Opoed, $1,500. Froo Htlmoteo. Colt colloct I·
614-237.()488, day or nlahl. R o
wllh bedding- 124Q. Full olzo w - . dryer 1150, tibl&lt;o I
geraBaaemant
ma1tru1 a foundation etarllng oholro 140, bod a ocquorium exc cond, 304--675·7618.
S99. Recliner ottrtlng $tf. complete a much ml.a. 614-- 1985 Chryelor How Yorkor, good Wol!rprooll.ng.
UESO.Bodo, drno-, 11«1100111 448·1118.
lhapa laodod, 304-671-2n2.
Eloctrlcol, rooting, khchon
· iU""· D•b, wringer Wll•h•, 1
11166 1/2 Hl101n plck·UP, 5 opd. bolltroom NPiocomenl, lrlmlnif,
comploto llno ol ulod-tumftwo. 55 · Building
AIIIFM oloreo1 oulo. Wire whOol concrete, dryall, cer~mJc lnlt•l·
NFW•\Vallom booiO • Ql.
COVOrl. ioo DIUI. Vlry good lollon, oil ramodailng 304-175'
Supplies ·
Workboolo $18 l up. (Sioof I
.
.
cond.J$4DM. Call St4-446-t02t. 2440.
ooh loo.) Caiii14-44W1H.
WHt VIrginia Trulil, roof tru ..
Sea,. 31 cu.ft. UPriGht Inez~. .... bull to order, Route 21, one 11167 EOGorl. 1N7 IAOC Z28 lor Eoportencod dryWall hengln~
ond llnlohlng 0110 rwpolr -..;
Qood cood. $300: 81 {.44i.1!MIII. milo North of Ripley. 304-3n· oolo. Call814·247-4793.
collon•r 1:00PM, 304-871-41457,
11323.
For lllle: 1N2 Mullong, now TA
r~~dlala. on alum. rtmai "VGC Call F..,Y Troo "Trimming, otump
woeherfd~r

Business
Tv,
Buildings
H_-_'n_u_Op_po_rt_u•_nv_
.
...,
_
_
.J.;;ea;•;;~;:';-:;;;:2·;";:';7.;;;:;;::;;;::
·
1
Office or omou buolno01 opaco
lor rani In Mlddlaport. All
SNAFU.., t... B
Beattl '
utilltloo Included. Air con&gt;e&lt; '!1 I'll«
e
dlllonod. 1200. por - h . Coli
814oDI2·S545, 7:00 Lm.-4:00
p.m. or et4-ID2·2217 ...nlngo.

loughUn (112)888 4226.

31 Homes for Sale

apt, · Yftt gold-1171. A..-o. Waaher-

==...304-l~m.PI•~:~ :::::r,

34

to $28,100: Inventory training,
fhrlui'M, airfare, gra~ opening,
ttc. can open 15 dlyl. ~r.

Oldtown F1rm1, Polnl P ..1tanl

Galllpolla. 0H

Dod.&amp;

seo.

.

11%:::

G..

250 brondo 2100 llyloo. $1 B,iOO

lnvhatlon for all c:ontr.c:tora ln-

llze

1124 E. lloln Stroot, P-roy.
lloroo, lunl~ood, buill In bo~n
.
rontol lot, $13,000. 304-n:&gt;- Regency, Inc. 2 br.: apt., new Houro: M.T.W.10:00 o.m.lo 8:00
!1421.
plush
carpet, new
palnl, p.m., Sunday 1:00 lo 8:00 p.m.
utlll1~4 r•rilolly paid. $175/mo. 114.. 92·2126.
1985 mobllo homo t4x70 1 2 bod- Call
76-6104.
roome, bath, vary gooa cond,
Buy, 1011 or lnodo~. onllquoe I
$14,400.00. 304-675-5541
Synocuoo:
2
bedroom collectobloo. Soo utck or Silly
oportmllil. DepooH, St25J ol Ed'a Golllpollo Aoo Mtrl&lt;ot,
1981 Schuhr, t4x72, 2 bllho, month pluo utllhloo. 114·912- 1111/Sun, or coil 114-44t-7112,
booutllully docorotod, Llrvo 1138,1141112-6722.
dolly ofter 1 p.m.
OVII tub. Exceptional. Phone
304~75-8347 or 675-3121.
Tara Towuhouet Apts; 2 br.! 1 54 Ml
112 botho, CA, dlohwoohor,
seaIIaniOUS
33 Farms for Sale
- · · pri¥01• onclolod polio,
Merchandise
pool, playground. Wolor, - • ·
Ferm, nNr Leon off Watlfloo I. trolh Tncludod. Slorllnn ot 1184 WI ·•-11 p
odol 14
30-30, 11~;~ 2 s:.1'110 ion~
Ad, achaol route, no ho~•. $261/mo. Call 114-367-7850."
1a~g1
barn, . 220
teN•,
hondmoda
'"" coblnet,
Rivers T~r-Houelng for Ch~
k- ·...,
•.,..
~-·
$65,000.00 coil Lorry or Colvin TWin
the
Eldo~y. Hondlcappod ond • 1n.,_. -111 448 4041.
304·755-5117 or 304.aaa.7567.
Dlolblod,
Located
noor 11160
Aopan, ..ood con-

211550 or coli 304-t711-3567 lor

t-tld In bidding on Anlmol
Wallo lagoon II C. C. LAwlo,

2 . bedroom

porch ond underpinning. """"'· Hlco neighborhood, I - m .
Nogollablo. Call after 4:pm 114- 1250. pluo oiiiCirlc, 304-8711-5321
&amp;911-e570.
oftor 1:00 PM.
·
1973 Klrl&lt;wood 2 bedroom occepllng oppllcotlono lor
mobile homa on 2 aer• ot land. 2 bedroom apt, fully carpeted,
Has outbuilding with electric, oppllo...., wllor ond truh
ch/ckenhouM, end blnk ctl'-r. plckupa pt0¥1ded, Molnllnonco
!roo nvlng ..... lo ohopplng,
614-!112·7121.
blnlw and .chools. For more ln..
1i78 1Cx70 Elcona, 2 br., partly tormollon call 304oi!B2·3711. Efum. aoodlcond. muat MIL Call qual opportunity houalng. Sec114-2!1-1528, or St4-251-tt77.
tion 8 accepted.
1980 N11hua 14x70 expsndo,
new 3 ton centre! air, 2 porchee.
underpinning, Wither I dryer,

__,no,

°

rallronco ood oocurlty dlpoolt
roqul·-• New Hoven 304 "2
32f7:-·
'
..,. •

llko now. Mull_, Caii814-M60175,
1971 Flamingo, 12185, S bod·
room. $4200. L.ocotod on nontol
lot noor Horrloonvlllo. It 4-742·
3
303 ·
1972 Now Moon. 10112. Now
Qlboon Relrigorllor, olr con·

br., gas heat, both recondition

!.'~-'

Mptk: lanka. All elze•. RON

e ambitious

WHUndl. Cai1114-l45-5766.
branch ol Will do blby ollllng In Apple

11182 F-210 Von. Olllco doob, I
or-., coll814-446-2351.
2 eoddioo, good oond. 0no
aood ohow ooddll. 114-288lla11olllr 1:30 p.m.
3 112 yr old llolo lolcto, Largo
clllldo owing 011, 304-41'1'15.;18114:
lot "" ...
.. 000
~pou~"'..,;r 11~.oo• 'TWin ·
Bod •10.~.2 drwoooro, 110.00
11 000 a1u air -lol'llr
121i.00 Pool Pump lllftor 125.00
Octo-gym moo. 114 311 6215.

kllchon
wllh
llovo
• GOOD USED APPLIANCES EVANS ENTERPRISES, JACK·
roltlgonolor, 1$180/Mo. pluo Wll•h-, dryoro, rolrigoroloro, SON, OH. 1~0G-137·11!121.
dlpooM. Lllllhln l raloronoo, no nngH. Sklaao Apt&gt;llonoeo,
polO. It 4-441-4921
Up par River Aa. Booldo Slone On grill, 20 Inch boye bll&lt;o,
wood swing $35., Cotrectar
3 room tumlohod ept, ground . Croll Molol. Cllll61._·7398.
lypowrHor m., picnic loblo seo.
' ' - prlvolo onlnonco ond G
h" bod
I
304o17WI71.
parl&lt;lnft, outakil11 of Hendl,rson,
lrt'e w "e
room .U II.
11 11111
1 tud·• •275 oo
Bought In 1985 lrom llllro. Olboon olr condnlonor tor
•
oo nc ~ • . por $400. Call Michollo, &amp;1•--•morilh. 304-675-8730.
5171oher4:00.
~- co•-m wlndow.JO,ooo BTU.
·
·
. UM ~· ~1 .......tJD24.
· ·
35 W. lpt. 2 br, 1 bllh, prlvole . Kl
I So
bod
ood
oncioHd polio. CioN to
ng oz
mmo
• g
J.O. Deller, concpy, I woy loiodo,
grocery 110,_ 1 oliopplno con- con~. roooonoblo, phono 304- 15,100. or wllh lowboy 88,500.
for, WO\or, llwerL lrooh 175-4111.
114-3'111-26H. .
provklod. $215/mo. coli 114PICKENS FURNITURE
MTD 11 hp rtdtna ·lown _ ,
44Hn7.
NOWIUood
wllh onowblodl, I yrw old, runs
Houoohokl lurnlohlng. t/2 mi. aoocf • - 00 3u••• ••22 of.
ont lor 11nl 30•~• 7•~ Jorrlcho
A
;r.':"m
Ad. Pl. Pi-nl, WV, rore;bo.,.,.,.' ' ~~
18·
coll304-875-1450.
·
PM.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
'RobbH cogM tor Olio. Colllt4BUDClET PRICES AT JACKSON Relrlgorolor·FF·Whllo·$110. 912·7174.
.
Plk
Aolrlgerolor-Honrall Oold·FF·
EIIT ••Es '36 • •·
~· 1 ' "
•••-on
$150. Aolrlgorator ·••o "" old•
SWIMMING POOLS $1188
10 0hop 1
ttorn,.!
'l?.!m
Avocgroo~-$175. SUmmor apoclol on H poolo.
· .~"1~ 256
116 1
8
:;m::o.:;•-~·-=-=-~~-c.:.::==·-...,- Rolrlgonlor..ldo bY oldo-Hir· Hugo 191131 pool. Hugo dock;

14x80 2 br., gao hoot, 12115, 2 llonor

peopll nMd.cl lm-

MerChandise

238 FINt Av1., 1 br., rtvarvi.w,

houstkHpera. Inquire at uads Ruson1b&amp;l raln. Rtftrwncn
available. All
tg•, also

and Ends Shop, Middleport.

54 Miscellaneous

1m Corracl eratt Ski T1quo.
Bluo ond whHo. 302 Ford With
Corroct Craft TRIIor. Call 11461 Farm Equipment
:1D2::::-3=on.:::..___,-_,..,.-=-,....,....,.
ti71 17 ft. lmporiot. Trl hutl,
TrO¥-bu!H . Rolotlller, I hp, llk!l- convortlblo lop, BSHP Evlnruclo
now eloctr~ olall. et4-256-t4t3. inotor and trwHar. ltd aqulpmont. 121100. cooh or loko ovor
63
Livestock
poymonto.l14-187o32ZO:
··TTENTIOH Hcroo Ownero, t985 Wlnnor aooo Boo~ .tlio
"Point Pluo lo now corrylng look. Yamoho IDodod, •••
· - •t84
_,..,.
Polnl PLuo, 2411 Jookoc:ll Ave., :'":::"':.;5:::00=·:.....,.,....-....,.,---:-~!'"
~hone 304-875- BOATEASII M...,..ry MoraruiHr,
4 • PloiOint,
:::-::::::.._
________ 1 oPIICiotilll p,..folon llobllo
IIIIUIIIul 1 yoor old r~glotlrod Morin!._we comolo you. 1ol14Thoroughbnld Golding St,OOO. 211t-1v111. Now ond UOod Porto.
Cal 304-87WZOD oftor 8:00pm
Booo bool·1887 Lonctou 11'1"
Roglllerod Pllnlo ond Ouonero, whh lloi&lt;lury 35 hp -or wMh
colT 304oll75-8881 or 175-87111.
- · trim ood outo oil ln)lotlon. Mercury T.rolllnt motor,
lllddla Horo-. Moro, 7 yr. $350. Shorallno trwllor pluo moro. All
Oeldlng, 8 yr. 1450. Yoor old In gOod oondlllon. eon It 4-ID2·
- · Tock. Joo WOII, 114-388- :277.:. :. ::•q;..- - - - - - - -

~
Big Dokoti ·Fonn Homo· buill on Young
Pu,..bred,
b"'ck,
yourtol, 124,915 ·' Up. eau 814- Aotrlorpel bulloto,tor ..,,. AIICI,
188·7311.
. .
• low lry no chloklne. 114·2511B
H tty
lng blc 11 20 1 1413.
·
lloya u rae
yc
n·
mlc;:w:v• onti. BroH =~-J~'l."e1~_.~;,.opaod64
-:.;__;H~a:.Yf.. .:&amp;:..:G::ra.:.;;ln::.__ _

:=n•::!'t-: ·s.~r·

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale .

dance. c

MA'1'6E WE SlolOULD JUST SIT

oftor
~;;;;;;~;;r:========:~ ·~~O::m.Coll
compllllo lop,et4-28Sot118
now uphololory.

.For Soli - Conoroll ond Plolllc

:~,:~:C.::~a~uM~.\'A~~ ~~~ ~i'l ~tl.:~hj,.:.lllpotlo.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

~

THIS MALL IS ENOR-MOUS ..
!-lOW WILL TlolAT 611\~ E;VER
F1Nl7 US 7
.
.

I I 12 ·I I

I :·
. I I I I .t

.Vouta Ties to her strict lather
so she can go to the school

11172 17 ft. llonlllll Tri-Hull
BOll. 121 HP, Evlnrucll Englno,

nlohod, 304-875-1385.
1 71
I ·
2 - m opto. lor roQL Car·
lloled. Nlco -lng, laundry County A~pllonco, Inc. Good
loc11Hiooovollablo. COIII14-912· . uood opplonceo' T.V. OOIL
·
Opon 8 A.M. lo 6 P.M. Mon thru
3711 FOH.
Sol, 114-4411-ISN, 627 3nl. Ave.

°

blkoo, oloo b4lY oi!Yihlng

SINNOU

'I

. (J) llorila Run O.rby
·CD Dearanl Junior High

wonh ol Pollrll IIOOIIUriN
...... Phono 304-t71-4t30.

15

I

: : ; • Cll 1111 eiD

lloy 01 Juno ond gill 1200.00

"How about a coffee break?"

....
11M -1ol. l.olnpo,
Avo.
Jut)' lomlly.
l1ol, Aug,
........_ clolhlng, otc.
ALL Yard lllleolluol 1o Poklln
A
DEADLINE:
tho day-bolore
lhe od 2:oo
to IO p.m.
tun.
Suncloy odltlon - 2:00 p.m.
Fridoy. Monclly odHion • 2:00
p.m.llllurday.
Y1rd a...: 421 He"&amp;aue c: c: ~ . .
· 27-21 July.
. .

.......

new. Polart. 4 wlurlars., ilurtna

Vory "leo opacloutl 2nd floor, 3
br., opt. u"lumlohod, olovo l
retire~. ~5-2722.
rwlrlg, hlllorio homo downtown
UIIIHioo. · Oli!J, rot. ·
Nloo
Furnlihed , 1
br., 127!/mo.
rwq'd. Coll61.4-441-4425:
·
HoUH/12~5 llo. Socur.nv Dip. •
rot. 81~,1759.

Yard Sale

1:00 (I) Bonlnu: lite Loat

now on tune upe ana ATVe end

49
For Lease
,.,.;.....,......;.....,--;;.;...,.,_.-

I

EVENING

mot:'!:

bath, _2 bldroome, MMII lot,

7

vore;-;

~'&lt;

1N7 Hondo.Fourtro 210, R par- ·
loci _.to low hrw. Ml!l, lltlrOo.
Call 114-441-7121 .
REDUCED! tN7 OS 460 L
mololllo
tt1110011
Buzukl,
wlndohlllcl, e -"'• 1100 mlloo,
mint condHion. 2 lull hoi·
boll,- AFG. 11200.
Bob
lllch, ot41112-6212.
At. u CYcto lllloo, 7 miiM
oouth of Aondor~on, dlocounlo

46

Television

lH~IJ I«JW ~I
~f~60TO!Ii

1NS Honda 450.]00 miiM, llko
now. i871. 304~To-173t .

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent

Motorcycle&amp;

74

Furnished

45

The Daily

(J) liJ) Miami Vlca
·Crocl&lt;att and Tubbs are
outwitted by a smooth
country lawyer. (AI C
(J) u.s. Olympic FH'ilv8t
Cil 81)) China llaach
VIetnam wartime mentality
typified through cartoon
characters. (R) Q
WllatiUY Pooley's
appearance on an
Inflammatory TV show leads
to murder. (AI Q
,

9 •1121

l1J l!venlng .....

37 Part
is Minor
38 Talk,
talk, talk
39 Ogle
40 Dismissed
41 Alleyway

ACROSS
1 Singer
from ·
. Canons·
burg, Pa .
5 Failure
(sl .)
9 Using
speech
10 Ward off
12 Simple
13 Put .oul·
a baUer ·'·
15 Exclude
16 Thrice

DOWN
1 Coiffure
item
2 Mountain
nymph
3 Connubial
sjtuation
4 Cheer for
Belmonte
5 Emptiest
6 Unhidden
7 Rail into ·
8 Nickname
·for Venice

(Lat.)
. 17 Moisture
. 18 Precis
20 "First"
lady
21 Direction
of the
sunrise
·22 Black (Fr.)
23 Telegra - •·
pher's sound
24 Ship-shaped

Yesterday's Answer
11 Roman 26 Weddi,n g
fountain
site
14 Type of 27 Bageller
pitcher 29 Lunkhead
16 Trial run 30 Foreign
19 Stride · 34 Make
22 Breeding
out
place
36 One (Fr.)
24 English 37 · - the
river
President's
25 Invent
Men"

b-+-+-

clocl&lt;
25 Dramatis
personae
271nform
-28 Danube
tributary
29 First
first lady
31 "Make

10:20 (I) MOVIE: Riden,. High
COuntry (NR) (2:00) ·

10::111 CD Newa

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

. ...

...., ,

.·The entrepreneur In yoit"wlll be vying tor
·e.xpreealon 1~ tna year IIIMCI and you
could become Involved In f10rN!: taacl·
~ltlng anletpiiUI. This II well a"d
good. provldad you do not opreact your·
1111 too lhln.
• LIO (.,luiJ 23-Aug. 211)11 your manner ol
dDing ........ .-.Illata with .,_, who
8llll*'ttr JC!I!, lt'l bell you
.bend a tillandinake
•rattler than , . _ , . . that lltay do 10.
' i.fo, treat ,.,.....n to 1 blrtlldiY gift.
a.ltiil fOI' ,_- Aalro Cll'l!lh Ptadlalklnl ·.

.om..,..._..

lor thl Y"!'r ahead by mailing $110 As· a forceful personality coerce you loda~
tro-Graph, c/o lhls newspaper, P.O. Into agreeing to something thai does
Box 9t428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. not serve your best Interests. II you fall
Be sure lo stale your zodiac algn.
' to opeakcup, you could regrelll later.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) Do your best ' PISCES (Feb: 211-March 20) t.1ake evto eradicate grudges Instead ollrylng 10 ery ellort nOlle tall behind your 1181 of
nurture ..them today. Reopening old thlriga you hope to acoompllah today .
wounds won'l resolve unresolved Is- Once you IM!gln to run late or lellhlngs
....i, bul It could conlilbute to l~ttarn- overlap, you're likely lo do a poor job.
lng your ulcer.
ARIEl (~ 21·Aprll 11) Fun dlver'UBRA (Sept. 21-0c1. ' 23) Frlenda Ilona are likely lo take precedence over
lhould not be Imposed upon tor apeclal your more 11rloua obllgallon1 today
favors today. They may reluclanlly con- ·a"d...., yoU later tally the books, you
cur with your wishes, but Inwardly they could show Iones In both time and
could resent being forCed to do..,_
, money. •
•
·
SCORPIO (Oct. M-flllw. 211) It laau like TAUIIUI(AprH:IHieJ 20} When you
you will be more etlecllve tOlley II you . zoom out 01 the ltllrtlng blockatodly,
are able to operate, lndeQertdtinUy of you could be atew llrldes atiMd of tna
otllera, especllily In m1t1«1 t.,.. per.
res1 01 the field: However, you might
lain to your ca.....
peale eerty lnd ond up 1 poor flnliher.
UGITTAIIUS (HoY. 23 Dao.l11 Keep Ql... IMar 21-.IUM 20) Ulually
your locus on your work lodly, tape- you're the type ollndlvklual whO grupa
clally II you have a dlfficuH Ullgnment lltuatlonl quickly and 1'*1 lrtes 10 proWith whlclt to conlond. 11 you 1e1 your caed In •loglcllluhloll, but today your
mind wonder, lhere to a good CIWace lmpu.......,._ could cloud yciur
you m~-.:• a 111rtou1 mlltlka.
thlo~ ~
~
(Dao. 211--. 11)8ubdue
C
(oli..l1-.lttlr., Strive to be
lncllnaUona todiy to lalla ~fl. -mindful tflan -.1 of your ponon,IIMCial rlaka, parlloulat:fY lilt h8a to do
at p
' h tocliy. Don't ..... anv·
With sometltlng .....,. h8a . tNng al.,..ln your oar with the docn
mora conltoltlwl you do.
unlookad, II you're going to be
ACM"IIIUS (,.._III~M. 1t) Do nQiiet , gone llnly a..., mlnut•.
J '

'

III MlmorY: Fabric Of The
Mind Discover hOw the
memory works, wlty It
sometimes doesn'l, and how
it might be Improved; visit
several renowrltld memory
rtiBIIIIrchere. (0:30) Q
ID,(!J) Johnny llencli Hill Of
F-Speclal
121 Hew c-try
11:00 (I) Piper Chait

•liJINIWI
rn Cil

•

double"
32 Mln!ng
find
33 Sprite
35Mother -

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

Cll am e1121

(!) MIMIIPDIII Sound Take

an otlbellt and occaSio~lly
irreverent look at hoW
Mlr~eapolla has beCome one
of \he hlppeat places to be In

~~:u8~.

3 . Sttr.o. The
PLene

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words.are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYFI'OQOOTE

Afternoon

a You calla. A liar

IL

VNGUBJB

V X B v ·1

t1 :30e&lt;Jl liJI Tonight Show
(1)~(0:30)

· I\L~

.iE!i?:..• CNok. Cllue

12:00 (J) lite -

7128

• lite 0..,,

~..::.w:~,-

SB

.s

B

FQ0 I

HU J B

SBXB · RBJBX

vo

IGURv ·o.
IGlQYG

YLURY

IL

ZIU B . - J v Q J B R v X y Q 8 0
Yeetenlar'• CrrlttCNIJIIOt.r LITERATURE .IS AN

OCCUPATION IN WHICH YOU HAVE to · KEEP.
PROVING YOUR TALENT TO PEOPLE WHO HAVE
NONE. -JULES RENARD

,.

'~

'

. lf) IHI KIOCI Fea~~!&lt;es Svndicale. fl1&lt;:

·'

�26,1989

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

'•

STOCK
YOUR
FREEZER

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM . .

10 LB.
MEAT SALE

298 SECONDST.
POMEROY, OH;

GROUND

STORE HOURS

.

.

-~

Voi.4D. No.67 M
Copyrlilhted 19.8 9

$. 1]9~

$ ..69
·Pres.t1ge Ha.m••.•••• . 1

. ·(
Sliced Bacon ••••~~... 79
·
$
19
.Sausage .•.........~~.. 2
HOMEMA~E
Sandw1ch Spread •..• 99
BRANDING IRON ..

HlllSHIRE FARMS SMOKED . /
•

U'.S.D.A.

~HOI~E

.LB.

Round Steak ••••••••

U.S~D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

.

Chuck Roast •• !~ ....

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

LB.

(

COLBY LONGHORN
""'

•

LB•

o&lt;

• •

Sl 59

•

Lee Wedemeyer and Keith
By NANCY YOCHAM
Black. Originally, Meigs IndusDally Sentinel Staff
trie~ had planned to submit a
The Meigs County Commls·
grant
for $50,000 with a $10,000
sloner~ .. meetlng Wednesday In
local
match. However, the
reglllar session, au thorlzed per·
sonnel at Meigs Industries In county has just received notificaSyracuse to proceed with a public tion from ODNR t hat any county
hearing on a proposed grant which falls below the state
application for recycling doUars · median Income Is not required to
from the Ohio Department of supply a match. Therefore, the
grant request will be upped to
Natural Resources.
The grant application for $60,000.
Although a recycling grant
$60,000 must be submitted to the
application ·submitted last year
state by September. The public
by Meigs Industries was denied
hearing on the · proposed grant
by the state, Wedemeyer and
application has been scheduled
.for Monday, Aug. 7, 1 p.m., at the Black are optlmistlt that this
carleton School Meigs Industries · year's request will be approved.
."This year's request Is differbuilding In Syracuse.
Present for Wednesday's meet- ent," explained Black, since
Melp Industries would operate
Ing lr001

10 LB. PKG.

$)490
.

CHICKEN
LEG QUARTERS

$490

.
'

BACON

New Potatoes !!~..
1

.49
·2

$

· 10 LB. PKG.

$)090

$1 49 COUNTRY STYLE
RIBS
2°/o Milk •.••••••••:~~.
, SPARE
10 LB. PKG.

FLAVORITE

4
I
$1
................
Yogurt

NEW COUNTRY

.

. 6

oz. CTN.

ll

KEMP'S PAIL

Vinegar •••••••••• ::~••• $) 59 Ice Cream •••••••••••• $ 99
$ Quart Pail

2·

•

$) .4 90
FISH 'N'
BATTER.
10 lB. PKG.

Lotsa Pop ••••••.•••••• 79&lt; Sherbet .....~ ... ;·.:~•.. $) 19 $)1 90
KEMP'S

·

•

···~~

ALPO DOG FOOD
U-23.5 OZ. CANS

2/Sl

lilltlt 2 , .. C.t-·
.
Good Ottly At Pewll'1 S.W Valu
Galli S.~ lily 2:1 lllno Sat~
29

•••

SURF I)ETERGENT
147 OL lOX

$599
limit 1 Pw c..,_
Pewlll's •
Valu

2:1 thru Sat.,

~,

29

CUBE ·
TOILET TISSUE
410ll
PICG.

s109

32 OZ. BOrnE

3/S2 '

STEAK
10 LB. PKG.

$1990.

-.

~-

~·

• ,~·.[fl/ (1)

The two are among 20 Meigs County 4-.H leaders
participating in a county-wide anll·smoklng and
tobacco campaign.

THE GAME OF LIFE- There;s nothing "cool" about smoking
clgarelles. In fact ; says 4·H junior leader Steve Grady, smoking )s
a game of roulelle. Cancer, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, or
• coronary heart disease can "get" you.

Twenty Meigs County 4-H leaders
take part in anti-smoking program

·i'"

BULK SLICED

U.S. NO. 1 WHITE

-

-.

JUST ONE - Eve1ry
· 4,000 chemklals Including %00 known poisons, .
.. lakes 14 mlnules off your naturaiiUe,.accordlnglo
Christine Schultz, left, and Carrie Gloecknerr.

10 LB. PKG.

$490

'

·"" Ct.·~~). .

CHICKEN·
LIVERS

'

res pectively.
Meigs County Development
Director Kim Shields presented
the commissioners with a $65,000
check from the Ohio Department
of Development , which Is part of
the package deal for the sale and
expansion of the Twin City
Machine Shop.
In a .related ma tter, the commissioners established Sept. 6, 7
p.m . , In the ·Meigs Common
Pleas courtroom, as the time and
· piace for this year 's required
public hearing for Community
Development-Block Grant lund·
lng. Meigs' new CDBG a]Iocatlon
from the Ohio Department of
Development is $114,600. CDBG
applications must be submitted
to the state by Oct. 31.

Second
quarter
growth
modest

$)290

$ 69

3 LIT.ER BOTTLE

area.

VInton. County has been with· the county.
out a jail for several years, and
The commlssloner.s will be
·many other jails In the area are asking Sheriff James M. Soulsby
having problems meeting state to at tend the meeting with them.
and federal jail requirements.
County Engineer Philip Ro·
Although Meigs County 's cur- berts · reported that highway
rent jail facility Is still in use with department crews have begun
no plans lor closing, the commis· paving County Road 30 from
stoners feel they should attend County Road 28 to the Instersec·
such a m eeting for information tlon of County Road 34.
purposes. "The purpose of the
Roberts also ·submitted force
meeting Is to examine the possl· · account agreeme nts for highway
blllty of Interest In a regional department work In several area
jail," noted Commissioner Rl· locations, Including slip repair on
chard Jones, and since Meigs County Road i In Columbia
County's jail facility Is likely to Township, at a cost of $9,594;
become a future problem, due to bridge repair on County Road 28
changing state and federal re- . In Sutton Township, $5,319; and
qulrements , 'the commissioners repairs to two bridges on Bailey
feel their attendance at such a Run Road In Rutland Township,
meeting Is vital to the Interests~! at costs of $15,613 and $17,306,

10 LB. PKG.

( 'f ,.

FLAVORITE CIDER or WHITE

" a donation center with route
collections" only arid "not a
fiiU·fledged buy-back center."
Meigs Industries, If granted
the money to start their donation
center operation, would rely
'fipon local buy-back centers to
take the recyllng materials.
Black said he has contacted local
buy-back centers, and that
owners of those centers have
Indicated willingness to support ,
the grant proposal.
. ·
The commissioners received a
letter this week from the Vinton
County Commissioners, proposIng a meeting of VInton, Hocking, ·
Jackson and Meigs Counties to
ascertain II there is interest In
bulidlng a multi-county jalllnour

10 LB. PKG.

.•

•

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpepar

JTM
BEEF PATTIES

1 .
$ 89
Cheese •••••••••.•••••.•••. 1

Rump Roast •••.~....
'

$1.99

.,·

2 Sections, 12 Pagn 26 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, T!lursday, July 27; 1989

Proposed grant ·application due ·by September

GROUND
CHUC-K
.

Warni and humid t onight.
Low near 70. Chance of rain 30
percent. Friday , high near 90.
Chance of rain 60 rcent.

•

10 LB. PKG.

.·SUPERIOR ~ONELESS-5-7 LB. AV:.. ..

Pick-3
.042
Pick-4
6358
· Super Lotto
10..17·10.29-31-34
Kicker,946805

Page 3

BEEF

PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., JULY 23 THRU SAT., JULY 29, 1989

Ohio Lottery

Reds lose
lOth in
a row, 6-2

r

.By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
·
Dally Sentinel Stall
"Smoke, smoke, smoke that
cigarette; puff, puff, puff, 'till
you smoke yourself to death ...... "
Millions are doing just that, but
t!J.e message which Meigs County
4-H Junior Leaders are telling
teenagers across the county this
summer Is " don't start. "
An anti-smoking and tobacco
campaign Is underway with 4-H
club members through funding
provided by the American Lung
.Assocla lion.
Donia Crane, summer pro·
gram assistant with the ·Meigs
County. COQperative Extension
Service, Is heading up the program which Is geared to get
teenagers to say "no" to smok·
lng. About 20 juntor t~acters are

lpvolved In the educational
program.
Winner of a logo contest for
t·shlrts worn by the junior
leaders in their presentations
was Greta Riffle who came up
with "Smoking is a Drag.... It can
Make You Gag."
Other contests In conjunction
with the anti-smoking campaign
are being held and prizes will be
awarded to the winning entries In
skits and posters . ,
Eduj:!ating youth about the
dangers of smoking Is theempha·
sis of the programs which en·
courage teenagers to stand their
ground and not yield to peer
pressure.
Besides the individual club
programs being held this
swnmer, demonstrations will be

.--Local news briefs-_,
Three injured in Meigs wrecks
One driver was Injured In a two-vehicle cotllslon at 5:15p.m.
Wedne.s day at the junction of SR. 248 and TR 112 at Chester, the
State Highway Patrol reported.
T~POpers said a 1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo driven by Dean A.
Mays, 16, Chester, pulled from the township roap onto SR. 248
and collided with a 1986 Chevrolet Cavalier driven by Kathy D.
Osborne, 35, Long Bottom. Damage was heavy to the Mays
vehicle and moderate to the Osborne car.
Mays suffered a visible Injury and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The patrol cited Mays lor failure to yield the right of way.
·Both drivers complained of Injuries In an accident at 3:15p.m . .
Wednesday In Meigs County at the junction of US 33 and SR. 7.
,The accident Is still under Investigation.
The patrol said Jessie A. Curtis, 78, Pomeroy, turned left onto
US 33 Into the path of another car driven by John R. Manley, 31,
Rt. 1; Bidwell, There was heavy damage to botltvehlcllis.
C4rtls and Manley colilp!alned. of Injuries and both were
· taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Deputies probe incident
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are·
Investigating a reported Incident of contributing to a minor.
The l.ncldent occurred late Wednesday evening and Involved a
14-year old boy who was transported by the Syracuse squad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for treatment.
.
Deputies took a breaklnl and enterln&amp;.report on Wednesday
evening from Tom Parka, Reedsville. Upon Investigation It was
determined that the Incident waa a domestic matter and would
Continued on paae 12

,,

held by the junior leaders oi4·H
at the Meigs County Fair. '
As pointed out by Christine
Schultz and Carrie Gloeckner ln. ·
a recent demonstration, 350,000
Americans die prematurely
from the effects of smoking,
while m!llions more live on with
crippled lungs and overstrained
hearts. They lis ted cigarette
smoking as the major cause of
emphysema, chronic bronchitis,
lung cancer, coronary heart
disease.
Just one cigarette, they
pointed out, speeds up the heart·
beat, Increases blood pressure,
upsets flow of the blood and air
Into the lungs, causes the skin
temperature to drop In the
fingers and toes, takes 14 min·
utes off your natural life, and
contains 4,000 chemicals of which
200 are known poisons.
NOT A PRETTY PICTURE - Using "Mr. Smoker", Donia
The two ·talked about second
Crane
demonstrates what goes Into the lungs alter smoking just
hand smoke noting that babies
one
clgaretle
as pari of the anti-smoking campaign being carried
have a much higher rate of lung
out
In
the
county
by the Meigs County 4-H junior leaders.
disease, like pneumonia and
bronchitis, If they are around
smokers and that even asthma Is
aggravated by cigarette smoke
In the air.
"There's nothing cool about
smoking" commented Steve
Grady as he spun tbe roulette
wheel of diseases caused by
James L. Fitzpatrick, 21, of victim sustained Injuries from
smoking. The junior leaders also · Ball Run Road, Pomeroy. ap- the defendant's fists, Including a
· talked a bout the harmful effects pearing this morning ·before .serious Injury to the throat. This
of chewing tobacco which not Meigs Common Pleas Judge Injury was consistent with the
only cau~s stained teeth and bad Fred Crow Ill, entered a plea ·of cause of death, as ruled by the
breath, but oral cancer.
guilty to a charge of Involuntary Franklin County Coroner's of·
To demonstrate the lung dam· manslaugher In connection with flee, which was blood In the
age of cigarette smoking, Donia the July 2 beating death of his trachea and lu!IJ(s. ·
Crane brought out "Mr . step~ather, 53-year-old Robert E.
Story pointed out the state's
Smoker.'' She first used a filtered Boynton.
·
willingness to accept Fltzpa·
cigarette and then a non·ftltered
Boynton died as a result of trick's guilty plea to the charge,
cigarette In the contraption to Injuries sustained In a light with since, should the case go to trial,
show the "goop" goes Into the Fitzpatrick. The light occurred the defendant could possibly
lungs when a single cigarette Is In Fitzpatrick's home, a camper· raise the question of self defense.
smoked.
trailer which was parked behind Also, said Story, the defendant
Club members were thenalven the ·home In which Boynton lived has shown great remorse since
straws, asked to hold their noses, ·with his wife, Fitzpatrick's the Incident, as well as having no
and breathe through the straws mother.
prior crlrnlnsl record.
. to "get thefeelforwhatlt'sllketo
· According to testimony by
The state recommended to
have emphysema", the primary Fitzpatrick, and statements by Judge Crow a sentence of two
cause of which Is smoking.
Metp Prosecutor .Steven Story, years to 10 years, with 10 years
And then they were aski!d to both Individuals were under the being the- maximum allowable
wear the "I've Said 'No' to Influence of alcohol at the time of sentence under the law, but no
Smoklna" campalp buttons.
the fight. 'D uring the light, the
Continued on page 12
'(
:I

Fitzpatrick enters
guilty plea on charge .

l

.~

.
.
WASHINGTON (UPII ~ The
U.S. economy expanded a modest 1.7 percent in the second
quarter of the year, contlnuin'g
this year's slowdown in economic
growth, . ·while Inflation hit the
highest level _in nearly seven
years , the government reported
Thursday.
The Commerce Department
said the gross national product,
the nation 's total output of goods
arid services, rose at the slowes t
three-month pace since the ,t hird
quarter of 1986, when the GNP
felll.8 percent.
.;
At th e same time. the depart·
ment revised upwardlts calcula·
tlon of economic growth for 1988
by 0.5 percent to a strong 4.4
percent, despite the negative
effects of the drought.
·
The preliminary report comes
on the heels of a 3.7 percent spurt
In growtli In the first quarter of
the year- revised down from 4.4
percent. More than half of that
gain was due to a statistical
anamoly as the economy re·
bo\lnded from the drought.
Without the rebound from the
drought , the first qua r ter growth
s tood at 1.5 percent . Taken
together , the two quarters of
moderate growth are in line with
efforts by the Federal 'Reserve to
engineer a "soft land ing," rais·
ing Interest rates to slow the rate
of economic growth and keep
lnflaiion from spiraling· out of
control.
Inflation. as measured by a
price Index tied to the GNP , rose
at a 5.2 percent annual rate in the
second quar ter, compa red with a
.4.6 annual rate In the first
quarter.
This was the hi ghes t quar terly
incre&lt;~se in th e price index sincE'
a 5.8 percent hike in the thi rd
quarter of i 982 and was due
primarily to higher ener gy pr l·
ces, as oil fie ld accidents a nd a n
OPEC production a greement
forc ed crude oil prices up .
All figures a re adjus ted for
seasonal fa ctors.
Analysts predicted the economy would continue to weake n in
the se~ond half of the year a nd
warned that the Fed's appare nt
success so far in bringing about a '
soft landing s till might turn to 1
!allure later If the slowdown In
groWth turns lntp a recession. "
" As far as a soft landing Is
concerned, It 's right on track."
said David Wyss,' chief financial
economist with Data Resources
Inc., an economic consulting
co111pany In Lexington, Mass.
''Obviously the risk Is In tryin g to
the land . softly, you might
overshoot."
··
The ted has beep ,, eulng
Interest rates over the. ~st two •
months reflecting concern over a
possible recession. ·
To reach the Bu$h administration's projected 2.7 percent GNP
growth rate for 1989, the econ·
omy would have to strengthen In
the second hall of the year.
hitting a 2.7 percent rate for the
next six months.' 1

.

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