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                  <text>Wednesday. August 2, 1989

Ohio

Rutland block party set
Plans ior the Rutland block
party, wtllch will be held on Sept.
2, are adv;~nclng and·wllllnclude
a full day of activities.
A craft show will be held wlt)l
participation open to anyone.
The fee Is $5 per table:
Bingo will be played through·
out the day and there will be a
fish fry and beef bar-b-que.
Free entertidnment will be
provided by such groups as the
Wyoming Wolf Band, · and the

Me!gs High School Band, and
there will be a dunking machine
cosponsored with the Me.lgs High
School cheerleaders . .
Free drawings will be held
throughou 1 the day with the
stlpuli on that one must be
present to win.
There will also be a Mrs. and
Mr. contest, and a Prince and
Princess contest. Further lnfor·
matlon on this may be obtained
by cat'Ung 742-2421 or 742-2580.

Middleport Gardeners meet
ELIZABETH A. JONES

Jones birthday
Elizabeth Ann Jones recently
celebra ted her second bir thday
with a par ty at her home In
Pomeroy .
Refreshments of cake and ice
cream were served to Margaret
E. Jones, CharlieE. Jones, Mary
Uribe, and 'Jerry Uribe, J r.
.

,J

50s. dance
set Friday

The Parents Dance Commit·
tee, Inc. will be sponsoring
another 50's and 60's adult dance
on Friday night from 9 p.m . to
midnight at the group's dance
hall which is located in the
former Elberfeld's Warehouse
on Mechanic Street in Pomeroy.
Due to the success of the
previous dance the group has
decided to do it again. There will
be lots of music, dancing and fun
for everyone. The cost is $2 per
person a nd optional 50's and 60's
attire may be worn .
Refreshments will be served
&lt;1nd there will be no alcoholic
beverages permitted. There will
also be more·dance contests.

Janet Bolli), past state president Of the O)lio Association of.
Garden Clubs. presented a
flower arranging demonstration
using various types of flowers ,
·some frqm her garden as ·well as
wild flowers, when members of
the Middleport Amateur Garden'
ers met at the home of Daisy

Blakeslee for a picnic with
Elizabeth Loshe as co-hostess.
Marge Fet IY presided at the
short buslness)JlE;'ellng In which
plans for the ·fair flower shows
were discussed.
Favors made from sea shells.
by Mrs. Blakeslee were given to
those present.

Bailey wedding anniversary set
Ted and Linda Bailey, Patriot,
wll! be celebrating their 25th
wedding anniversary on Aug.8.
The couple has three chll~ren,

4-H news
CentervDie Eledrons
Mefting was called to order and ron call

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bailey,
Gallipolis; and Jorl Beth and
Christa Jo, at home.
The ~ouple graduated from.
Southern High School, and their
current address Is Route 2.
Patriot, Ohio, 45658.
..

I

Retirement
parry·held

I .

Dor(ha McKenzie was recently
honoll!d with a surprise retirement party at the Pomeroy
PoUce Department . given by
Chief Gerald E. Rought.

i

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and fair passes were turned ln. The
meeting was adjourned and recreation
was played.
News Reporter
Amy Patterson

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No.62M

ust 3, 1989

Ohio, Thursday,

.2 Sectiono, 12
A Multimedia

26 Conu

Cicippio execution .is
delayed ·by extremists
plo appeared to be hinting that
~'My dear wife and people and
·Beirut, J,.ebanon i'UPil the · captors would also · kUI ·.all the human societies and
Pro-Iranian extremists agreed to
another U.S. hostage, Edward
especially the Red Cross, don't
delay the execu lion of American
Tracy, If Israel does not free the
. hostage Jo5eph Ciclppio by four
leave me," Clclpplo said on tne
Hlpe, reading from a statement.
hours Thursday after he pleaded . ShUte sheikh.
Tracy was kidnapped by the · "So to help me move and demand ·
· with his captors to spare his life
Revolutionary Justice Organlzil·
from the American people to
and begged for the .released of a
Oct.21,
1986,
and
Is
widely
lion
oblige Israel to release Sheikh
Molsem clergyman he.ld by
thought to be held together with
Abdul Karim .Obeld Immediately
Israel.
Clclpp;o. Ciclpplo was taken
because this kidnapping Is not
Clclpplo appeared on a video·
human."
·:
tape delivered to a We~ tern news Sept. 12, 1986, and he and Tracy
are the only two hos~ages held by
Clclpplo, 58, the American Uni•
agency, saying the threat \O hang
the organization. .
verslty of Beirut's deputy comp,
him was "very serious." He
The group originally said It troll~r. appeared haggard and
hinted that a death sentence also
would kUI Cicippio Tuesday bu I bearded and spoke in a trembling
may be looming over a ·second
and
her
dqhter
to
have
a
home
rent-free
for
one
granted a two-day reprieve after voice. He wore a yellow-striped
American
hostage.
HOOSIERS ON A MISSION- The Youth Group
T-shirt.
Jan
Bunch,
kneeling,
lronl
rlsht,
Is
the
year.
a
plea by. his Lebanese wife.
In a •. hand-written statement
from lhe Spartenburg Vatted Methodist Church
. ·
coordinator
of
lhe
project.
The
group
has
been
dellvered with the tape, the
(lndlalla) are spending this week In MelgsCounly
staying In lhe Pomeroy United Methodist Cl!urch.
Revolutionary Justice Organlza·
doing repairs on a local residence to enable a lady
tion said lt was extending the
deadline for killing Ciclpplo from r-6p.m. (lla.m. EDTl to 10 p.m. (3
p.m EDTl.
"We have decided to delay th~
execution until 10 p.m. today In
· The Eastern Local Board of Education will hold an
!'e$ponse to· ,request by Clclpinformational meeting on school funding; whether io seek
pio," the grO!JP said In the
additional property tax or an Income tax, at the Tuppers Plains
statement..
Elementary School at 7: 30 Monday night. .The public Is
During the two-minute , tape,
. encouraged to attend the meeting to learn about the .flnancial ·.
Clclpplo urged Israel to Immeproblems of the district and have Input Into solution decisions .
.•
diately free the ranking Hezbol·
lah clergyman that Israel! commandos abducted from Lebanon
County United Methodist Cooper- . repaired a ceiling In the ba· last week.
/ .By REV. DON MEADOWS
Two Meigs County youths were among 49 participants who
alive Parish. Working in con, throom, repaired plumbing, re"! appeal to each per~oh who
Probably their parents
received
graduation certificates at the conclusion of Junior
junction with Jackson Area Min· constructed a burned out room have honor, who can move to
wouldn't believe II .
Cadet
Week
Thursday at tpe Ohio . State Highway. Patrol .
lstrles CJAMl. the work camps ' 1nto a covered 'back porch and release Sheikh Abdul Karim
They get ou I of bed before 7 are being hosted by the Pomeroy
Academy
In
Columbus.
done some Inside work on a Obeld: Don't be late because
a.m. Help !lx their own breakMary M. Parker of Chester and Jane A. Williams of Syracuse
and Racine pnlted Methodist
bedroom.
they are very serious to hang us
• {ast. ~at -: wltlJ.o\!t cgmpl;\lnlng cl1urches. , .
members of the first combined Junior Cadet Class, which
were
,
· Materials for the .work-.· have · · anjl tht period comes ·very soon
"·a oollt• J!OriiXllQrlt. Then th·ey
is
composed
of high school students from all over Ohio, that
The group hosted by the been financed by lndlvldu~;~ls In and the hours are very little. •'
make their beds. do 'dishes, pack
In
training encountered by regular Highway Patrol
participate
Pomeroy church lsJrom Spar tenthe Pomeroy United Methodist
By using the term "us'' Ciclp·
thetr own lunches and are ready
cadets.
·
·
·
burg, Ind., ami they're doing Church. the ·United Methodlsi
by 8 a .m to go to work.
In previous years boys and ·gl·rls had separate Junior Cadet
repairs on a private dwelling In Men, the Meigs County Ministe: . They'teon 'thejobat8a.m.and
•
Weeks. ·
Minersville. Their work will rial Association and Jackson ·
don't give any back-talk when
The
program
Is
flnimced
through
volurttary
contributions
mean thai a lady In Meigs Area Ministries.
they're asked to do something.
from the Ohio State Highway Patrol and the American Legion
County. who is trying to get her
Tbe Iowa group at Raclpe Is
They do II. Then ask, "What do
AuxiliarieS.
It Is coordinated by the American Legion and Is
feet on the ground with a new job,
painting the Sutton United Meth·
you need fOr me to do nex I?" ·
conducted
by
the Academy's staff.
will be able to llve a year without odlst Church, ·which Is part of
They eat lunch without a fight.
having to pay rent.
Southern Cluster II, whose pasWork until 4 p.m. Shower Her landlord signed a year's
tor'ls the Rev. Kenny Baker. The
without a hassle - cook their
lease which guarantees this, plus. 14 youth and advisors, Including
own supper, again do dishes and
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
Deputies of ihe Meigs County
another year of rent for not more
their pastor. the Rev. Len Eber·
get ready for bed. And, t()ey do all
responded·
to nine calls on Wednesday.
.
•
than $100 per month. David
hart, are from the Windsor Sheriff's Department arrested
· thls·for no pay. In fact, they each
.At
1:26
a.m.
the
Middleport
unit
was
called
to
Race
Street
for
Slater, coordinating the work for
United Methodist Church In Des three adults and one youth on
'Debbie Miller who was taken to Veterans Memorial.
liad to pay $15 and provide their the Pomeroy Chljrch, estimates
Moines, IO. They traveled 799 Wednesday, and are Investigat The Pomeroy unit at 1:26 a.m. went to Amerlcare for Audrey
own food to do 11.
ing a breaking and entering as
the value of the work being done miles to get here. ·
And, they're between 12 and 16 by the youngsters from Indiana
Smith who was transported to Veterans.
well as an auto accident which
Why? Why would people ·
The Ru nand unit responded to a t:all on Happy Hollow Road at
years old. Teenagers.
also occurred on Wednesday.
;~t $2,500 to $3,000,lncluding more
especially
youngs.ters
come
6:20
a.m. for Richard Erwin who was taken to Veterans and
Normal kids? You bet!
According to Sheriff James M.
than $500 in building materials.
another·
state,
spend
their
from
And special.
later transported to the Chillicothe V.A. Hospital.
They capped an old cistern own summer vacation, spend Soulsby, deputies took a report
They're In Meigs County this with concrete, painted the house,
At 10:38 a.m. the Middleport unit went to Story's Run for
their own money. wtiy would they from James Starcher, Swan
week as part of two Work Camps, built steps, re-Inforced the floqr,
Gertrude
Searles who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
do It to help people whom they'd Road, Long Bottom, In which it
The
Pomeroy
unit and fire department were called to an auto
being conducted by the Meigs'
stated that sometime on Wednesnever m~t?
Continued on page 5
Maybe Nicole Rae Ferguson day between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
~=----~~
(who claims she has a fan club of · someone entered that residence
by forcing a door and partially
eight people l has the answer:
"We. well, we just wanted to do ransacking one "room.
Deputies Investigated an accisomething worth living for," she
dent at 1:30 p.m, on Wednesday
said.
Christa Cloyd, of the Indiana In Which Kriss J. Meeks. Cool·
group, said: "We wanted to do ville, traveling north on Route 33,.
something to help somebody. . apparently going too fast, turned
Two people were Injured II) an Carl, 42 .. Pomeroy, were both
An!!, we've learned a ·lot. One onto County Road 19 and.slid Into
accident at 11: 15 a.m. Wednes- taken to Veterans Memorial
thing we've learned Is that we the guard rail damaging II and
day on US 33, two miles north of Hospital by the Meigs Emerhis 1981 Camero. There were no
take a lot of stuff Cor granted."
Rock Springs, in Meigs County, gency Medical Services.
• Many people "take a lot of stuff Injuries j&gt;ut Meeks was cited to
accerdlng to the Meigs-CalHa
Carl suffered contusions, a bra-·.
Meigs County Court for failure to
for granted"- like kids are lazy,
Post, State Highway Patrol.
sions and possible Internal Injurthat they think mostly about contrGI.
Troopers said a car, make Qr Ies. She was treated in the
Arrested were Edward Fisher,
lhemse.lves, that they can be
model not available, driven by emergency room and admitted to
Oak Hill; and Christopher Randifficult to handle.
Glendon Faulk, 63, Pomeroy, the hospital.
These two groups, along with som, Racine; both on charges of struck the rear of a parked 1975
Faulk suffered contusions and
no operator's license; Candice Ford LTD owned by Madhu
their adult advisors, provide a
abrasions
and cardiac· contuTillis, Rutland. on a bad check Malhotra, Frank. Road, Pomefresh reminder · that people do
sions. · He was treated In the
charge; and a 17 year '?ld roy. Damage was heavy to both
care, that tJley aren't out just for
juvenile from Oak H!ll who w!ll cars. The accident Is still under emergency room at Veterans
themselves, that people are
Memorial Hospital and transappear In Juvenile Court on a lnvesatlgatlon.
basically good . If given the
ferred
to the Intensive care unit ·
charge of consum lng.
challenge and a chance. . .
Faulk and a passenger, Sandra at Holzer Medical Center.
While here the . groups haye
attended worship services at
their host churche~; and toured
the Belleville Locks near Racine.
They've gone s~mrnlng and
taken boat rides on the Ohio
River. Thursdlly night they were
treated to a wiener ro.ast at the
George Wrlglit firm.
_
Members of the Spartenburg
team Include;· The Rev. Steve
Brackney, pastor; Brandon and
Heather Wise, Jan Bunch, Crista
and Charleen Cloyd, Kenny Fraz·
ler, John and Chris Harris,
Matthew JohMon, Debbie and
Juon Norton and Debbie
Peti!I'BOn.
Those In the Iowa II'OUP
Include Nicole Rae Ferguson,
Matt .(Batman) Gut~. Rebecca
Lewis, Erbl Kenlledy, Tawnya
Eberhart, Paula Biondi, Krill ten
, WASil DOWN- Pomet'OJ llrem" wen ealled
Brodie, Sara Chrllten, Jennifer
Wll'flllble
WedDIIIIIIQ' to wub dowa the hllhWIQ' after u
Sharp, Sarah Maharry, Steve
Ia ptiiiiiDI the
Uabed Metllodlal
•I Robin) Davll, .Br.uce Riordan,
aookleat on US •• two mllel north nf Roell:
Churcll, Tile ....,.., Rev. Lea Der11art, Ia atudlq
Sprlap. Tbll 1111 Ford LTD ewaed by Madba
Connie
Biondi, and Rev
Malhotra ol Pomeroy wu Jlarked off the roadwiQ'
Eberhart. ·
OD the Poud ld rllb&amp;.

Local · news briefs:.-

For Teenagers

Area .churches ·sponsor two
work camp ·sessions ·in Meigs

Public invited to ·Eastern meeting

a

Youths take part in cadet week

...

1989 TAURUS

1989 TEMPO

l989 CROWN VICTORIA .

Sl ,000 CASH BACK
1989 FESTIVA

Sherifrs
deputies
prolle B&amp;E

S1 ,000 CASH BACK

S1 ,000 ·CASH BACK

1989 -ESCORTS

1989 THUNDERBIRD

Squads respond to nine calls

Two injured in US 33
automobile accident

S1,500 CASH BACK

BACK
1989 BRONCO &amp; BRONCO II

.S750 CASH BACK

S1,000 'CASH BACK

1989 ECONOLINE .VANS ·

UP TO S1

BACK

UP TO S7 50.00 ON FORD
F~SERIES PICKUPS

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992-2196

MIDDLEfORT

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HONORED -Dorlha . McKenzie, right, long .time JIOIIce
dispatcher was honored recently with a surprise retirement party
for 15 year's of service hosted by Pomeroy Ponce Chief Gerald E,
Rought.

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
HOUIS: I A.ll.-6

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GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

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Partly cl9udy tonight. Low
in mid 78s. Chance of rain 20
percent. Friday, humid. ffigh
in mid 80s. Chance of rain 68
percent.

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

1

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was gtven. Old and new business was
discussed. A meet lng was held for the
advtsors to check project books on July 19,

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Page 4

Chief Rought presented Mrs.
McKenzie with a plaque from the
department for 15 years of
service as a dispatcher. Jane
Walton · presented Mrs. McKenzie a gold necklace on behalf of
the Village.·
A cake decorated with a
telephone and radio microphone,
and punch were served to those
mentioned and Capt. Joe Kirby ;
Lt. James Webster; officers Joe
Fields and Jim Stacy; dis·
patchers, Charles Knopp, Shelly
Fortune, and Ellen Rought;
deputy, Thomas Smith, from the
Meigs County Sl!erl!f's Office;
Jane Walton, clerk; Rhea Deem,
water department; Terri Long, ·
tax administrator; Pat Thoma,
mayor's secretary; Kellle
Snider, metermald; Betty Baronlck, council; and Jan,Jenklns.

Ohio Lottery

Robinson
stops Astro8 .
on 2. hits

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Commentary
111 Court street
Pomerw, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBESTS. OF '!;BE MEIGS-MASON
AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGErT
~bllsber ·
·
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulltant Publlsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manqer

LEnEBS OF OPINION are welcome. fte, ollooald be 1-lhllll SOO
wordo

Jeac. AD letien ore ...,jeclle Hllllll ... -

be 11.... wllb

owno, acWr-ud leloplooae....,ber. l&lt;lo unalpedletlen wW be pub• lllbed. LeHers "'-ld be Ill J'004 lUte, --lllllu-,liei ......OOaali·
1...

He'Zbollah outlaws
have earned retribution

Thursday. August 3. 1989

th:~:&lt;;;~:and:::~a~= ~:!~dy

~~~~sci~~?::~~ ~:ns~~::

lion Service do when 'It has more
criminals than jail beds? In at
least one case, INS Investigators
let the 1llegal. aliens draw straws
and thell set the winners free.
These were not simple lmmlgrants who crossed the borcler
looking for a better life. They
were known drug pushers who
crossed the border looking for
trouble. Ah!glily.placedsource!n
the INS told us what happened.
INS agents descended on a group
of criminal 'aliens. 'The agents
knew before the bust that they
had Jail beds for only 10 people.
But they l!ad the misfortune of
busting 12 - 11 with prior
criminal convictions. All 12 had

lion just to keep somebody In
Jail," one INS regional official audit that made the INS look like
told our associate Daryl Gibson. the Keystone Kops.
It happens every day In INS ·. The audit didn 't mention a
offices all over the country, and It videotape Nelson had produced
Isn't they only problem the INS of his years In office. You won' t
find It at your video store, butiNS
has.
Last month, President Bush source~ say they rec ~ntly got
politely told INS Commissioner 1\0tices that there are stU! plenty
Alan Nelson to hit the bricks. of copies available for any
Neison was replaced with an staffers who want a souvenir of
acting director, DeputyCommls- 1 the Nelson·years.
sloner Jaines Buck. Nelson was a
In spite of the audit, t~ II~S
holdover from the Reagan era claims 11 Is better off tQday than
who told anyone who asked that .(n the past. Four,yearS. ago, the
he would be mighty glad to slay agency had a piddling budget of
through the Bush era too. But $434 million to arrest every
Nelson' s fate was sealed In criminal allen, process every
March by a Justice Department citizenship application and check
every visitor and student coming
. Into the country. Today the
· budget Is closer to $1 billion. But
II stU! !~n' t enough, . especially
when the money Isn't· m,naged ·
well.
"
Even under a new administration, the future loo)ts bleak. Bush
Is rumored to be considering
Gene McNary as the new INS
commissioner: The name won't
ring a bell outside St. Louis,
where McNary Is a local polltl. clan, not an Immigration ellpert.
He has been executive of St:
Louis County for mor~ than 10
years.
The top INS post is a thankless
job. If the INS Is too tOugh, It Is
branded as heartless. If It opens
the doors to too many "huddled
masses yearing to breathe free,"
America gets more "wretched
refuse" than the taxpayers can
afford.
.
The last thing career INS
people want Is someone with
political ambitions. Polltlct•ns
want to be popular, and the INS Is
.no place to make everybody
happy and stUI do the job right.

T~e et-tVi~oMMeNT~l.iS.TS
~Re ~L.ReaPY

•

VPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON
President Bush must convince Iran and Its
Hezbollah hit men In Lebllnim that the retribution they have earned
may not be swift but It Is certain.
Bush deserves bipartisan iupport while he chooses from a very ·
short Ust of options a suitable response to the claimed execution of Lt.
Col. Wllltam ·Higgins.
•
·
. · The Marine's abductors, aided and abetted by Iran, earned the
;death penalty even before tbey boasted Monday they had executed
·Higgins by hanging.
. Now It Is up to Bush to see that the punishment the Hezbollah
·
:terrorists deserve Is carried out.
: Bush must not be distracted by those who would falsely blame
Israel for the crisis.
·
· : Hezbollah claims 11 carried out Its threat to murder Higgins
:l)e(;ause Israel did not release Sheik Abdul Kari.Jfi Obeld. abducted
:last Friday by Israeli commandos.
· But Israel was justified, morally arid mllltarUy, In takmg out of
.-action a terrorist commander whose operations threatened Its
• borders·.
.
.
,
: · So now It Is up to Bush to render similar justice- surely, If not as
:-swiftly.
·• He must assure those ,responsible for taking hostages .and
:-murdering them that -later, If not sooner- they will pay fully for
·:their crimes.
:: Those who demand reveJlge must be patient. The president'
:·deserves time to choose and Implement options that Will punish the
: guilty wh!le sparing the llmocent.
One of the first actions Bush can tal\e Is to warn the new president of
: Iran, Hojatolislam Rafsanjanl, thai' Iran Will pay a steep price If It
·' continues to sponsor Hezboltah's crimes agalnsi humanity.
: There are signs that Rafsanjanl wants Improved relations w!tli the
· west.
-: Rafasanjanl must understand that will never happen as long as
:·Iran directs and bankrolls In Lebanon the Hezbollah version of
: Murder Inc.
·
• Bush has few diplomatic options. Lebanon has no viable
: .government. The United States and Iran do not have diplomatic
· : relations.
Military options also are limited. The most practical ones Involve
bombing or sheiUng Hezbollah or Iranian targets. Such actions
:"Inevitably would kUI lnnocen ts.
·
· A hostage-rescue operation would. be difficult . The captors of the
: eight American hostages other than H!ggii\S are known to shuffle
; them among. different locations In the Shiite Moslem slums of
· southern Lebanon.
' It Is difficult to see how a rescue force could get' the hostages out
:·.alive.
·: As vice president, Bush headed the Reagan administration's task
: force on terrorism.
, On March 6. 1986, in response to a question, Bush said hebelleved
· mmtary retaliation to counter terrorism Is justified "where It could
: l!e surgically done."
·
At the same time, Bush ruled ou.t "wanton destruction of human life
· in order to show some muscle and show some retaliation. '• ·
:~ As a bomber pilot in World War II, Bush knows there Is noth.lng
·:neatly " surgical" about dropping explosives on populated areas. He
. knows that bombing is a dirty business that can kill Innocents.

aTracKiNG Ve~u~
HoT 'liR PL.~tl.
.,

Jack Anderson

'

DOVBLE PLAY - Qoston's Jody Reed JumJIII over BaiUmore's
Cal Rlpklm (8) during a.lhlrd Inning double play Wednesday night.
The Orioles raiDed lo defeat Boston 9-8. (VPJ).
.
.

Memphis toumame~t
moves· to new home_

' Remember Jimmy Carter's
HUD scandal? Probably not,
because a Democratic Congress
never rushed ' In to capitalize on
the Influence-peddling and profiteerlng done at the expense of the
poor during Carter's term.
Yet the scandal existed for
anyone with eyes to see. The
Boston Herald, for one, managed
to see It. In 1980, the Herald
exposed the fact that people who
contributed more than $1,000 to
the Carter re-el~tlon campaign
were awarded a staggering 90
percent of Massachusetts' $2
billion In 1979-80 HUD Section 8
housing awards. Incredibly, every single developer who ~ontrlbuted the maximum amount permilled under law was awarded
such funding.
·
Only a naif would believe ihat
Massachusetts was an Isolated
case, back then, of Influencepeddling at the Department of
Housing and Urban · Development . .such practices undoubtedly thrived elsewhere as wen,
for that Is the nature of programs
designed to benefit the rich and
powerful as much as the poor

themselves .
Powerful contractors, landlords and developers do not
passively walt to be tapped by
government bureaucrats for partlclpation In fe,d eral programs.
They frantically pursue such
funding- and the sleazy among
them pursue It with every questionable tool at hand.'
.They did so In the Carter
administration: they did It again
(with a vengeance) In the Reagan administration: and they
will repeat the performance 1!1
the Bush administration, unless
Cong~:e~s prevents them.
Fortunately , Bush's new team
at HUD seems to understand
this. In a recent speech In Des
Moines, for example, HUD
Under Secretary. Alfred DelliBovl ·pointed out that "housing
and urban policy In the United
States continues to be heavily
Influenced by certain 'PQverticlans' wllo have turned a legltl·
mate public need Into a very
profitable Industry. I refer, of
course, to the special lntere5ts
who lobby not for better housing

but Instead for -bigger government programs designed to fat ·
ten their own profits.'
"These are the profiteers who
lobby to enact legislation which
benefits contractors, greedy developers and JaJ4(1lords .. . They
oppose vouchers; block grants
and similar programs designed
to reach people 1n need, while
they press for Impersonal subs!dies for new construction and
politically controlled and often
mismanaged housing agencies."
What should· be done? Don't
"reform"· the corrupt construetlon and · rehab!lltatlon programs. Terminate them. Simply
give poor people rental stipend%
(vouchers, In current parlance)
and lef them choose their own
housing.
After all, when the poor can't
afford food, we provide them
with food stamps, not gardens.
The same logic should apply to
housing.
To Its credit, the Reagan
administration dld manage to
shU! the emphasis of housing
policy toward direct subsidies of

the poor. It would have completed the task, too, thus averting
the current HUD scandal, had
Congress and the developer
lobby not dug In their heels. ·
Critics of vouchers maintain
they don't work In tight mark~ts,
where. the only solutiO!! Is
government-subsidized construction. But as John Welcher
(now with HUD. formerly with
the Office of Management and
Budget) pointed out last year Ina
research paper: "No prograrn
works well In tight markets, at
least In the short run .... But few
markets 'remain tight for a long
time."
New York City is an exception
to Welcller's rule, blit Its chronically tight housing market Is the
artlflcfal product of draconian
rent control. Congress has no
duty to support easily corruptil)le
,housing programs just bec\luse
New York and a few other clUes
stubbornly slit their wrists.
If we really mean to prevent
future HUDscams, we have no
choice: Redirect revenue' from
housing develo.pers to the poor.

Atlantic City loses bet on. gambl~g

'

need of refurbis hing. "We're
going through a really bad time,"
admits one middle management .
employee.
On one recent Sunday afternoon, a llneof almost 100 seething
. Incoming guests snaked through
.the hotel lobby. When many of
them were told that res.ervatlons
.were lost, rooms had not been
prepared and keys to rooms were
not available, tempers became
short and shouting matches
erupted.
.
In recent years, the conventional wisdom about Atlantic
City held that although the
casinos were enjoying spectacular profits; relying on the newly
created gambling Industry~ s revenues to revive a blighted city
was a failed social experiment.
But the recent experience of
the Atlantis, Resorts and other
hotel-casinos where growth ·is
faltering suggests that the Industry miscalculated Wh@n It as·
sumed that the opulent vulgarity
of Its gambling palaces would
somehow compensate for the
bleak city's decay.
Indeed, the Casino Control Act
of 1977, the state statute that
authorized gambling here, required the Industry to reinvest
part of Its revenues for urban
development In Atlantic City and
elsewhere In New Jersey .
But &lt;;as!no lawyers promptly
found loopholes In the law that
enabled their. clients to evade
.payments untD enactment of
remedial l•latlon In 1984 that
requli'ed each casino to spend
1.25 percent of Ita annual gross'
revenuea for 25 years on urban
renewal projects.
Moreover, _the vast majority

are "day trippers" of modest
means who come and go by
chartered bus, remain here for
an average of only six hours,
gamble relatively little, spend It
all on slot machines a(ld receive
free rolls of coins and coupons for
free meals from casinos anxious
for any business they can attract.
"Atlantic City was once only a ·
'

.

Robert Wt.ll~ers
•

0

slum, " says one.local resident.
"Now, It's a slum with casinos."
An even more ·.cynical visitor
describes the city as "one of the
few seashore resprts Ill the world
that would actually be Improved
by !he arrival of . a major on
sllciC'
,'

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He added, however; that the
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPl)
The $1 million Federal Express course Is only 15-months-old.
St. Jude Classic opens Thursday . "No golf course Is mature ina_
at a· new course that , design year and three months,"' Green
consultants Fuzzy Zoeller and said. "It's going . to take some
·Hubert Green admit still has a time to gel the course I~ perfect
condition."
few bugs ·In lt.
..
He has found things he does not
"We thlnk we did a pretty good
job," said Green, one of. the PGA like about the way the 'course
turned out, bu I would not discuss
:rour pros competing lor the
·
$180,000 first prize at the Tourna- specifics.
are
some
things
we
"There
ment Players Club at Southwlnd.
knew when we built the course
that were questionable, things I
The Daily Sentin,el
want to see changed, " · Gr~n
s;~ld , "but I. don'twant to tell you
(U8P8ltwtll
what they are, in case I get
A DMIIoa ef Mlllllmedla, lac.
outvoted you'll think that I'm a
Publlabed every ollternoooo, 1\IOn&lt;lay
wlm,p."
·
thrqh Frlclay, Ul Cqurt St .. Pom.-oy. OhiO. by the Ohio VaDey Pub·
The real reviews will roll In
lllhiDI Compaay!Multbnedla, lac. ,
Sunday, he said.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 99:1-215&amp;. 5e·
"We have'156 players playing
cond class pottalt .,.td at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
this week approximately," he
said. "There'll be me and Fuzzy
Member: Untied Press International.
lnlaad Dally-Press A.sociatlon and the
and 154 critics out there. Yo11'1l
Ohio Newspa_per Assoclat km. National
need to ask them, don't ask us."
A.dverttstng Representative. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
The · tournament · has been
New York, New York lOOU.
played for the past 30 years at
Colonial Country Club and was
POSTMASTER: Smd addreas changes
to .P.e Dal),y Sentinel, Ul Court St.,
supposed tomovetothE&gt;newTPC
Pomi!I'(Jf, 01o1o 45769.
course last year. But Tour
officials determined It wasn't
SUBSCRIPTION BATD
B)' Carrl• or Mohr Bou&amp;e
ready. so one last · tour!)ament
One Week ........ ........................ .. .S1.&lt;60
'was . played at Colonial, with
One Month .............. .. ,.. ..............$6.111
One Year ................................. milO
JJodle Mudd notching his first
SINGLI!'COPY
career win with a 15·under 273.
PBICB
Green $ays it's just as well the
DaUy, ............... .. .... .. ............ 25 Cents
tournament stayed at Colonial
Subscribers not desirlng to pay the car-.
last year.
rt« may remi t In advance 'direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
' 'The players as a whole are
basls. Credit wW be gtven carri« each
tired of playing TPC courses too
wey..
early," he said.
No subscriptions by maO pl!l'lllltiEdln
That sentiment - along with
ar eas wher e home carr ier service ls
the
typically stifling August heat
avaUable.
that has plagued recent!\lfemphls
Mall '-crtpllooo
tournaments - may aecount for
laalde Melp Couaty
the lack of top names In ibis
t3 Weeks .....~ .. :.. .. ..................... $19.24
26 Weeks .. .. .... : .......... .. .. ........... $37.96
year's
field.
.
52 Weeks .... ... .. .. ....... ,............... $74.36
Mudd
is
back
to
defend
his
title.
Oalalde Melp COIIDIY
No. 5 Payne Stewart and lOth·
13 Weeks ... .............. .... .. ........ ... $1!1.110
26 Weeks ......... .. ....................... $40.30
ranked Mark O'Meara are play·
52 Weeks ... .. .. ........................... $?!1.411
lng, as are No. 12 Tim Simpson
and No. 14 Hal Sutton.

Subsidize
·the
nnnr,
pot
HUDlunis
.
·
r~Vincent Carroll

By LEON DANIEL
UPJ Senior Editor
'
WASHINGTON - It Is sadly Ironic that affluent oldster s could
. ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (NEA)
torpedo a landmark law that would benefit theelderlyby covering the
- Hundreds of bags of nickels,
·cost of medical catastrophes.
dimes and quarters that once led
. There are moves In Congress to make major revisions In the
a roman tic life fueling slot
Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988- just 13 months after
machines are destined for more
·President Ronald Reagan signed it.
mundane uses as they are hauled
The legislation had the support of a broad coalition, Including the
In carts from the Atlantis Hotel
powerful American Association of Retired Persons.
and loaded Into an armored
But no one - not even the politically savvy AARP- anticipated the
truck.
fierce opposition to the income-based surtax Imposed on beneflclar·
A trio of forlorn hotel officials
les to finance the catastrophic care program.
silently watches the coins' depar· An affluent coupie could pay a supplemental premium as high as
ture. In the three-tiered casino,
$1,600 a year.
,
the ilghts are out, the slot
· But few oldsters would get hit that hard, according to calculations
machines are silent, and the only
··of the Joint Committee on Taxation.
occupants of seats at the blackAbout 59 percent of the elderly would pay only $4 a month. Only 5.6
Jack tables are bOred security
percent would pay the $800-a-year maximum.
guards.
, Jt was perhaps not surprising that some of the most affluent of the
For the ' first time since gam· oldsters were the first to denounce the surtax as excessive. ,
bUng was legalized In Atlantic
:. They wrote Irate letters to newspapers aild their congressmen.
City by a 1976 statewide referen~ They cal ted radio talk shows to complain. They l!otly c~ntended the . dum, the number of casinos has
•.surtax Is a confiscatory device that, In effect, boosts their income-tax
~lined (from 12 to 11) rather
·rate unfairly.
·
tban · Increased. Although the
· • As a condition for supporting the law, Reagan Insisted that the
Atlantis remains open as a hotel,
beneficiaries finance it.
state regulators recently ordered
.In the past, Medicare benefits for the elderly retired ba~e been
Its casino permanently closed
.financed malnly ·froin payroll taxes. But Congress wanted I() avoid
becBIIse of Its precar lous finan·: Imposing a huge tax burden on future generations of workE!I's.
cial condition.
. The smart money says Congress probably Will cave In and reduce
Moreover, other hotels whose
·:·the surtax for the atnuent, shifting more ottbecostto the less well off.
casinos continue to function are
:There Is an unlikely possibility the law could be repealed.
experiencing unprecedented fi: : In enacting It, Congress wisely .decided that a flat monthly
nancial and operational difficul.' prelmum paid by all 33 mdllon beneflclarln would be unfair. So It
ties. Consider, for example, the
: devised the Income-tested IUJIPiemental premium - the surtax.
Pllaht of Resorts International,
~ A formidable opponent of the surtax II lhe·National Com1111ttee to
which has special symbolic value
: Preserve Social Security and Medicare, headed by James Roosevelt,
because 111 casino was the flnt to
a former Democratic congressman from California.
open here In 19'18.
•
: The committee sends out mailings containing postcardl whiCh
. Burdened by a long-term debt
~senior citizens can send to Coqrees demanding repeal of what they
of more than $900 million after an
iave brallded the "senlorHnly Income tax."
unsettling series of corporate
• 1beae people need to be mnlnded that there are 37 million adults
ownership chanaes. the hotel II
and cblldreil .ln ~United Statl!ll- nearly 111 percent.of the populljtlon
undergoing what one executive
- who have no medical Insurance at all.
/
eaphemlltlcally describes ali a
• Nearly 118 percent of the unlllllll'ed are working people, many of
"IeVere transition."
.
:whom earn too much to qualify for Medicaid b!Jt still live lA poverty.
· Morethanadozenoflhehotel's·
• The United States needl to de\rlle lm•Jtutlve way• to provide
bnportant poa1tio11.1 are unfilled,
health care for Its citizens. The catastrophic care law was a a
and ita executlvet acknowledge
good·faltb effo[1 to protect tbe elderly. 11
. that guest roolbiiJ are badly In
(

been deported at least
" We had space for 10, " the INS
source said. "We had the al!ens
draw lots. Two of them got the
short stick and they went back on
the streets."
. The official INS line Is t hat
there 1s a ·s'pace cruneli In federal
jails, but th!!l no criminal allen
goes free as a result. In most
cases, that' s true. What the INS
does to keep aliens In jail Is
almost as bad. It spends a small
fort11ne renting jail space from
local sheriffs when the federal
detention facilities fUI up. And If
the sheriff needs those beds fo.r
local criminals, the aliens are
"evicted" and shuffled around to
other jails. ''I can expend eight to

H"" '

By LEON DANIEL

:Catastrophic care
:law threatened

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·INS continues ·to face jail space crunch

The Daily Sentin-el
Bm~ ,...,_,._
..,...,~...;....

Baltimore rallies to defeat Boston 9-8

' P~2-Th8 Daily Sentinel

·.

111AS1VtCRAFT
P-70
60,000 Miles and

No Charge
Replaceme~ Warranty

By TOM WITHERS
VPI Sports Writer
For the Balti more Orioles ,
hOme never looked so good.
The American League East
leaders left home two weeks ago
leading by 7% games. But after
dropping 12 of 13 games on the
14·game, four·clty trip the Ori- .
oles went Into Wednesday's
game with the division lead on
the line.
Down by six runs after five
ln~lngs , Baltimore rallied to
score three runs In each of the
sixth, seventh and eighth Innings
a nd held on for a 9~8 victory over
the Boston Red Sox. The Or ioles
are heading home battered bu t
still on top by two games.
"Tonight was a very big
obstacle for us to overcome,"
said Baltimore Manager Frank
Robinson. " It was a very tough
strea!(. We kept waiting fo r
something good to happen because we were due."
Nothing seer/led to go right for
the Orlotes the past two weeks.
Th~ scored just 35 runs In the
flrsf 13 games. · The pitcl!lng
wasn't sharp and the defense that
was airtight In the first half of the
sea~on became porous. .
"It's two big games in the
standings," said Cal Ripken J r.
who dellverel) the key hit. "Both
oi us would have been tied,
suddenly we have a two.game
lead again."
The win halted Baltimore's
t!ve.game losing skid and
snapped Boston's flv e·game win·
nlng streak.
After rallying to tie the score
6·6 · In the seventh, · Baltimore
scored three times In the eigHth
to take the lead. Phil Bradley
drew a one-out walk from reliever Eric Hetzel , 1·2. R!pken
followed with a double and
Bradley scored all the way from
t!rst. Mickey Tet tieton walked.
With a 3·0 count on Keith
Moreland, Hetzel left with an
l·njury In favor of Mike Sm it hson.
Randy Milligan delivered a sacrifice fly', with Rlpken scoring
·after jarring the ball loose from
catcher Rick Cerone. Craig Wor·
thlngton stroked an RBI single ..
making It 9·6.
"Everybody on the bench was
kind of down early," said Milligan. " We were trying to get some
key hits, something that we
1\aven't been doing lately." ,

Balti more closed the gap to 6·3
with th ree runs in the sixth.
· Tel tieton led off with his 22nd
homer and firs t since Ju ly 18.
Mo reland followed with a single.
One out lt~ler , wit h a 1·0 count on
Worthington. St anl ~y replaced
starter Jo e P rice. Worthington
doubled Moreland to third .
Reliever Mark Williamson, 8·3,
who surrendered a two-run ho·
mer to Nick Esasky In the ninth,
pitc hed two Innings to gain the
win, Mark Thurmond got the
final out (or his third save.
"This one makes ·u a lot easier
to go hom~." said Baltimore
rellever Brian Holton. " We've
had a reaily tough stretch on the

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·Elsewhere in the American
League:
Indians 1, Brewers 0
At M!lwaukee, Tom .Candlotti
and J esse Orosco combined on a
six-hitter and Jerry Browne
drilled a home run for the
Indians, .who snapped a fou&lt;game losing streak. Candlotti,
10·6, gave up six hits over eight
innings. Orosco worked the nlntn
for his second save; Chris Bosi6,
12·7, allowed six hits In his sixth
complete game. '
,
Yankees 7-3, Twins 6-4 . ·
At New York . Don Mattingly's
double In the opener ·made a
winner of Lance McCullers, 4-3,
who pitched four and two-third
Innings in relief. Dave Righetti
went two innings fo r his his 17th
save . .Gary Wayne, who relieved
Minnesota star ter Roy . Smith ,
fell to 3·3. In the second game,
Kirby Puckett doubled home
Greg Gagne from firs! with none
out in the lOth Inning to lift the
Twins. The Yankees squandered
. a bases-loaded opportunity with
none out in the ninth.·
Blue Jays 8, Royals 0
At Toronto , John Cerutti
hurled' a two-hitter and Rance
Mulllnlks and Lee Mazzlll! each
drove 1!1 a pair of runs . Cerutti,
8-5, lost his bid for a no·hitter
when George Brett doubled with
· one out in the seventh. Mazzllli,
obtained . on waivers from the
New York Mets Monday, went 3
for 3 with a homer. Mark
Gublcza. 9-9, lost for the fourth
time In his last five decisions .
Tigers 6, Ran1ers 4
At Detroit. Gary Ward and
Mike Heath homered to account
for five runs and rookie Kevin

Agassi, ChaJtg advance in
Volvo lntemational meet

FELIX BLOCH GOES FOR A STROLL

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'
STRATTON, Vt. CUPil The 17·year·old American lost
Andre Agassl and Michael Chang the first three games, Including
relied on their distinctive
two breaks , but won 10 of the next
strengths Wednesday to with · 13 behind deep groundstrokes
stand the wave of upset s that
and well-timed rushes .td net.
swept· six seeds from the second
"When I'm down, I just think
round of the $602,500 Volvo about the same things: make no
International.
errors and concentrate as much
Upset victims Included No. 4 as I can." said Chang, playing his
. Kevin Curren, No. 5 Amos fl'r s t tournam e nt sinc e
Mansdorf , No, 6 Jay Berger, No. Wimbledon.
7 Yann!ck Noah. No. 11 Paul
Returning from a · break of
· Annacone and No. 16Scott Davis. "nearly four weeks " Is a little
Agas sl, the No. 1 seed and
tough." he said. "You' re out of
defending champion, used his match pla y and match
powerful top-spin groundstrokes
toughness."
to beat Marty Davis 6·1, 3·6, 6-3,
· Agassi, who wo.n six tourna·
overcoming a concentration ments last year. is looking for his
lapse In the second set.
first title of 1989.
Chang, the No. 2 seed and
During the match "I fell like I
French Open champion. capital· concentrated, then I didn't, then I
!zed on his sound strategy and did , and I didn't." said th e
shotmaklng under pressure to 19·year·o'Id frll'm Las Vegas, Nev .
defeat Sweden's Johan Carlsson "But that ' s my life story so I'm
7.5, 6.3 In their first meeting.
get
used to It ."

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his career, tying hlm.for ni nth on
the all· time list . Jerry Reed, 3·6,
took the loss.
A's 2, White Sox 0
At Oakland, Calif., Storm Da-·
vis, Gene. Nelson . and Rick:
Honeycutt combined to blank'
the Wh ite Sox, who were shut out
for the second straight day.
Davis, 10-5, h'ur led five Innings.
NelSon went two and two· thi rd
Innings a l)d Honeycutt pitched an:
Inning a nd one·th! rd to pick up:.
his 12th s~ve. Melldo Perez , 7-12,
took the loss.
·

r oad.''

ASIC FOI DETAILS

,.,

Ritz scattered seven hits to
become the first Detroit pitcher
In seven weeks to win consecutive starts. Ritz, 2-1, struck out
nine and wa i ked three to notch
his fi rst career comp lete game.
Mike Jeffcoat fell to 5-4.
·
Angels 7, Mariners 0
At Seattle, .Bill Schroeder
belted a three· run home run and
Tony Ar mas and J ack Howell
also homered to back the slx ·hit
pitching of Bert Blyleven. Blyleven, 11-2, notchl!jj his third
shutout of the season and 50th of

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PRIS8

The Daily

OhiO

,

t· .

•

�.'

P'9a 4-The

3.1989

Thursday,

Ohio

•

Robinson two-hits Astros for 5-2 · wm .

YOUNGBLOOD SCORES -Cincinnati's ,fo'el YoungbloOd slides
under tag of Houston catcher Craig Biggio to score, giving the Reds
a.2-0 lead In the fourth Inning. The Reds weal on to win 5-2. (UPI)

' lly Unt&amp;t-d Pre-s r.aerr~~oUot»&gt;
A.MERIC.\N LEAGUE •
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Mllw.1u lrt•............... ,...:3:! 5.~ AM6
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Mlnii'Mota ...... .............!1.1

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Clt"&gt;'f'larld { !'lild~ols H ) at Bo.~t o n
!&amp; lion D-0), 7;35 p.m .
K~~onsa.,..; l'l1,. ( f:onton IJ..I) ai Toronlu
!Kt•y 7· 1:!). 7: ·35 p.m .
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l·:l), 7:35p. m .
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Sports Transatilon.;

lly Unil.t'd Pr#.Ns lnh•r milo !til
Bluif'tlli.ll
Ro" lon - t"lat•l'd pltcht't' .John llop!~Gn
on tht• llHI~t.Vdlsahlt"d list : t· WI('d up
pih·hl'l' Tom Boll- from l"a"·t•·lit'l nf
tht" lnlrrnllllolld Lfoapt' l ,\A,\) .
Major ..... ~ 8JLW;rball rrope-rlk&gt;M Naml•d f'l&gt;ancls Vlncrnt chidrman .
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.

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Portllll.nd of th(' l"llclfk Coast l...t-~WK'
(A.AAJ.
PIU!ihu.-.:h. - PIM·('d plkher Boh
Klp~r on !Hay dl!whlt'd 11sl. rl'lf'OUt"
tlw to .July ~I ; rt'callf'd lnneldt•r.·
..... ti¥Jdl'r Sl·ott Ut tk' from Bullaio of lilt'
A.merln&amp;n A,;,.oclutlon (1\AA).
Su fiaaj.JH4'0 - Plll.l'f'd pltcht'l' Rick
Rt&gt;u~h~ on llw 15-d~ dl..ahlrd ll,; t
rl'lrOilt'lh•l' to .July :HI; •·aiiPd up pht·hl'r
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11.11d forwud .\ drloln f~lctwrll .
Colk&gt;~~:e

N&lt;\TIONI\L LEAGUE
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Monl;rt&gt;al ..................... 6:1 H
("hlnt j!:O ...................... .iiO l'l'
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Tlntntd~Q&lt;'II Gamrs
HouMton {Ciury 11--SI au Clnclnn~~tl
{Brown lnl{ H·IO), 1!;3$ p.m.
Nt:w York !Conr 11·5) at St. Louis cHill
11-1~ , l t!l5p.m·.
Olt•IIP (MII.dliikll·IH ut Pblladrlphla
{Ruffin 1--1), 'l': S5 p.m.
·
Molllltt'll I MIU'Iiftz 12·1l Ill Pllt~l')th
(Wal k K-7), 7:!5 p.m .
·
SIU'I IMI'ii:U (Sehlltu- 1·0) at r\llant»
(Smolllii ·K), "7:.1(1 p.m.
San FNnds.:'O (Swan n 6-0) Ill LoN
J\nllt'lfl&gt;l { Ht'nftl~r 12·11), 10:lS p.m.
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\'liorlh SI.IU' f'Onfl'rrnt·r - f'lillmt'd
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Football
Dt•n"''' - O.•lrnsl"r 1•nd Rulon ·llltw'S
fl'llrt&gt;d.
lndhm~~opull" - Si l{nl'd lrt't' u~l'nl wldt•
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\t."a.-.hln,;ton - Slp· d quartt.•rhat·k Bill
Kt•niY':V ·

By JOE ILi.UZZJ
UPI Sports Writer
Ron Robinson has had mor~
elbow operations than victories
over the past year. But the
Cincinnati Reds pitcher hopes he
may finally be ready to _spend .
more time on the mound than In
the hospitaL
Rol!lnson permitted just two
hits and no runs over five and
two-third Innings for his first
victory In more than a year
Wednesday night to help pace the
Reds to a 5'2 win over the
Houston Astros.
Roblnson,1-1, was making only
his fourth start of the year after
undergoing elbow surgery at the
end of last season and again at
the 'start of this season. The
righthander struck out three and
walked three to gain his first
victory since June 18, 1988.
"It's been· a long road back,"
said Robinson. "I've worked
very hard and It has paid off for
me.
"! want to go out every fifth
day, strengthen myself and work
on my endurance. That's the big
thing. It's been awhile since I've
had a Win, so every win seems
like a big one to me."
..
Said Reds manager Pete Rose,
''Robby Is getting better with
every start- If we can keep him in
shape the rest of the year, he's
going to be a real force next
season."
After Robinson began to tire In
the sixth Inning, the Reds called
on three pitchers to preserve his
win. Rob Dibble gave up two hits
and one run over one and
one-third innings, Norm Charlton yielded a homer hi the eighth
inning and John Franco pitched a
shaky ninth for his 25th save.
With two outs In the rilnth,
Franco let Houston load the
bases but managed to get Rafael
Ramirez to line out deep to right
fl~ld to end the game.
. Houston s(arter Jim Deshaies,
10-5, lasted five Innings and
issued four costly ·walks In
addition to giving up four hits and
three earned runs.
The Reds, taking advantage of
three walks by Deshaies In the
fourth, batted around to 'grab a
3-0 lead. Cincinnati loaded the
bases on a double by Rolando
Roomes aild walks to Joel
Youngblood and Todd Benzinger .
Joe Oliver singled up ihe
middle to score Roomes and
Youngblood. The Reds re-loaded
the bases on Ron Oester's single
and Deshaies served up his third
walk of the inning to Mariano
Duncan to force In Benzinger.
"That inning was the .. ballgame," said Deshaies. "It's a
cardinal sin to Walk a run in. 1
walked three th at inning and I
was trying to be too fine with my
· pitches. When you nit -pick like
that. you can get in trouble."
The Astros trimmed Cincinnati's lead to 3-1 in the seventh on
back-to-back doubles by Ken
Caminiti and Eric Anthony off
Dibble. But heads-up play by
Dibble later in the innil\g kept the
Astros from getti ng any more
runs. Dibble cleanly fielded
back:to-back hot smashes up the
middle and trapped a pair of
runners off third base.
"Dibble' s pla ys turned the
game around," praised Houston
manager Art Howe. "If he

· ~~~

NIKE 'TRUNK

CHAPM:~ SHOES'
.

to rid himself of the habit of
Matt Galante.
checking
out the Twins on the
"Matt got a little excited and
wanted to get the kid an inside the scoreboard.
"I caught myself and asked ·
parker," said Howe. "That was
probably Matt's first mistake all myself what I was doing. I'm not
a Twin anymore," Vlollt said
year. I've made about 1,000."
after
pitching eight strong tnElsewhere In the National
nnlrigs
and the Mets rallled for
League:
three
runs
to defeat St. Louts 4·3.
Mets 4, Cardinals 3
Phlllles
8, Cubs 0
Frank Viola will be .u nder
At
Philadelphia,Dickie Thon
P,ressure to produce In New York,
bias
ted
a
pall'
of
homers
and Ken .
so one thing he'll need to do
quickly Is put Minnesota behind Howell tossed a three-hitler Cor
him. Afterall, the Mets are now his first major-league shutout.
paying the bulk of his $7.9 mlll!on Howell, 9-7, struck ·out nlhe and
walked one In going the.distance
contract, not the Twins.
lor
the first time. Scott SanderVIola,.aided liy a two-run single
son
~~·
7,lasted only four Innings.
In the ninth by Kevin McReyLenlly
Dykstra also homered for
ooids, made his National League
·the
Phlllles.
debut a successful. one Wednesday night, but he's going to have

.

-

I

.~

lJfr

Jane Warne, and Joyce Warne,
and eight great-grandchildrenBesides his parents he was
preceded In death by his ·wife,
Norma Bingham Brandeberry,
In 1985.
Funeral services wll be held
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Goolvllle with
the Rev. Roy Rose officiating.
Burial will be. hi CoolvllJe·Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral lipme Friday from 6 to 8
p.m. In lieu of flowers, contrlbutlons may be made to the First
Presbyterian Chu·rch Organ
Fund, 51 State Streel. Gallipolis,

Adam Brandeberry

Board to meet

,
The Racine Board of Public
Affairs will meet at 9:30 a.m.
Friday at the Star Mill Park.
Football meeting
Scott .Wickline, coach. has
. called tor a meeting of the
. Southern Junior High football
· players at 6:30 p.m. Monday at
·the Southern High Schoo!football
building. . .
Speaker named
. . Howard Thompson, executive
' director-of Pike Co11nty Chamber
· of Commerce, will be the speaker
at the Tuesday meeting of the
PomeroyChamberofCommerce
to be held at noo~ at Main Street
Pizza _ All members and other
are urged
.. ··~-...___ _..,. Interested
to attend. Individuals
•

. Ella Kathleen Durham, 55, of
Adam . Brandeberry, 91, of
Harrisonvl!le, died Wednesday
Gallipolis, fonnerly of Coolville,
at Camdem . Clark Memorial
died Wednesday at his Gallipolis
Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va.
residence.
.
·
Born on April 29, 1934 In
Born In Cutler. he was the son
Blakely, W.Va., she · was the
of the late Charles a'nd Barbara
daughter of · MariOn Lawhorn
Gill Brandeberry. He worked as
Durham and the late Hobart .
a Iarmer and was a life-time
larry Bailey
Durham.
member ofthe Ireland CongregaShe attended Cherry Falls ,
tional
Church. ,
'
Larry Edward Bailey, , 52,
Chapel in Chery Falls, W.Va;
He
Is
sul'vlved
by
one
son,
D~.
She Is ' survived by five brqth- ' Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
died Wednesday morning ai Keltli Bralideberry, Galli(iolls:
ers, Oris Durham, Jr. of Bolalre,
Holzer Hospital followlng an one daughter, DorothyL. Warne,
W.Va., Harold Durham of Lelv·
Columbus; five gra1!dChlldren;
extended Illness.
asy, W.Va., Clifton Durham of
A laborer · for the Helners Dr. Aprll Magnussen, Tom Bran- · 45~31.
Wellston, Edsel Durham of BidBread Company in Gallipolis, deberry, Roger Brandeberry,
well, the Rev- Theron Durham of · Mr. Bailey was born on Aug. 10,
Harrisonville; two .slsters, Del~
ew
rt'
1936 In Pomeroy, to the late
.· .
J.
rls Groves of Galllpolls, and
,L·. '
Elmer S. Bailey, and Ena Evans
Dolly Cook of Looneyville, w. Va. Bailey . . ·
Continued
from
page
1
,
·
· •
Tuberculosis
testing
In· the Melgs c ourt of Common
She was .Preceded In death by
accident on Route 33 at 11:17 a.m. In Which Glendon Faulk and
PI eas • Bank One • Ath ens, N-A ·•
He attended the Southern BapMrs Joan Te k b
R N
two sisters, Louise Roberts and
Sandy
Carl
were
transported
to
Veterans.
Faulk
was
later
taken
·
·
w
s
ary
·
·
-·
Pomeroy,
is seeking $9,405.74
tls t Church lh Pomeroy and
Sandra Moffett.
to
the
intensive
care
unit
at
Holzer
Medical
Center.
Meigs
County
Tuberculosis
s
f
1
Nurse, will be conducting a
rom tan ord J _ Moon, Pomerecently joined the Pomeroy
Services will be at 1 p.m . . Church of the Nazarene. He was
to
Route
684
at
6:09p.m.
for
R
.
ussell
r
· et a 1•
. The Rutland 'unit went
oy; J ane. Mo
. on, Po meroy;
'
community tu· berculon skin testFrld~y. at tli~ Vinton · Baptist
Eshelman
who
was
taken
to
Veterans.
1
1
1
1
.
also an army veteran.
· lng clinic at t·he c·hester Fire-.. n a orec osure act on.
Church With the• Rev; Theron
At6: 12 p.'m. ,the Pomeroy unit was. called to Rout.e 14.3 for·
· ·d
·survivors · 'include .'his wife,
hOuse in Cheste,r, MoOI,Iay from . R ay D - Llttl
. e has b een grante
Durham and the Rev. Paul Sharon S. Bailey, Pomeroy; a
Gladys McKee who was transported to Holzer.
a
judgment
from
Raymond
.M.
4: 30 10 6: 30 p.m,.
Taylor officiating.
The
Middleport
unit
at
7:10
p.m.
responded
to
a
call
on
N.
Litchfield
in
the
amountof$3,553
.
. daughter and son-In-law, KriSten
This ls .the final evening clinic
· 'fhe Court has also ordered
Filth where Floyd Brown was taken to Veterans, and at 11:21
Burial will be ·ln Miles Ceme- " and Rodney Rpush, Watertown,
tery In Rutland.
·
p.m. theTuppersPlalns.unitwenttoScoutCampRoadforLinda
being offered for persons who Paul Haye to pay $1,720.80 to
N,.Y.; a sls~r. Iris ·Collins,
·'
·
'
P
ersons
who
was
transported
to
Veterans.
·
'
'
·
~VIII
Reed a·skinIntest
to assist
their
Frl11nds may call at the McCoy- · Pomeroy; two brothers, Myron
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._ _..;....,.;,;....;.....;.._ _ _ _..,._ _J organizations
serving.
food
at . Ingels Furnltore and Jewelry,
Moore Funeral Home in VInton Bailey and Donald Bailey ,lloth of L
Inc.
on Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Pomeroy; a mother-in-law,
Thelma
Hawley, Minersville;
CeeU Rathburn
one grandson. and several nieces
•Veterans Memorial
· Cec~ E. Rathburn, 78, of 'and nej)hews.
Wed!lesday
admissions- SanColumbus, died Tuesday at Ooc- · , Services Will be Fr !day at 2 dra Carl, Pomeroy; Audrey
A DMIION CJII' DUll¥ CORP'OA.II"lON
p.m. at the Ewing Funeral H,ome
tor's ~ospltal North.
Smith,
Pomeroy;
Douglas
He -was a 1929 graduate of . with the Rev. David Hunt ·anlj Enoch; Syracuse; lind Elza GilRlltlaad High School and was a · Rev.. Glenn McGlung officiating. • more, Pomeroy.' ··
surveyor for 31 year sat Je'nnlngs · Burial will lie In the'Beech Grove ' Wednesday discharges
Lawrence. He was a World War Cemetery. Friend~ may call at Helen ·HarriS, Lovercla Evans,
the funeral home on Thursday
II&lt;tl.$. Army Veteran.
and Tectdl Smith.
}rom
2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
He Is survived by his wife,
Barbara; chlldtenBettyMantey,
Bill Rathburn, Bob Rathburn,
Bonnli'i Carr, Sue Graham and
a Tandy 1000 TL,
.Joan King; 20 grandchildren;
several great grandchildren: one
Plus a Bonus Pack, at
great-great grandchild; nieces
~ No Extra Charge!
and ,nephews; and a sister,
Almeda Hurst.
•
Friends may call from 5 to 8 &lt;
' '
p.m. Thursday at the Sc~oedln-,,
Suite
215
LDW Ae S15 Per .Month •
ger North Chapel, 5554 (i:arl ·
Road, where se~ces will be fteld
·. Pleasant Valley Hospital
Monitor Pollee, Fire, Rail
onFrldayatlla.m.withtheRev. ' ,
Aircratt, Military, More
Medical
Office
.Building
Odell Manley officiating. Burial
low , . ses Rag. Se,.,.t•
No crystals 10 buy! Includes new
' '
will be In Forest Lawn Memorial Per - h · ltema1916,85
BOO MHZ band. #?0-135
,- Now Accepting Patients ·
j&gt;ark.
• CM·S Color Monitor' • Mouse • Quicken
! '
'
'
Bryon Smith
• MemaryMate • PFS:Firat Publleher
Monday through Friday 8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.

' Loc"al n·

s brl.'e,ls

Meigs
. cou

news

llad18

Obstetrics &amp; Gyn~cology

IS~~£) Save

. ~0 •&amp;178S

.· 12P

Bryr;m Smith, 76, of TulSa,
Okla, fonnerly of Pomeroy, died .
July : 19, ac~ordlng ·to word
received by Mrs. Carl E. Moore,
Pomeroy, a cousin:
He was born on July 26, 1923 the
son of the late Jess and Anna
Houck Smith, at Pomeroy. Survl-~
vor;S !~elude a daughter, Judith
Poole, two grandchildren, all of
Tulsa, an aunt, Mrs. Myrtle

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Find oul what's up down under iltthis 35,000
square loot exhibit. There's a world class display of native Aboriginal art, a look at the
Sydney Opera House, and live entertainment ·
featuring Sydney's own S!QaiAwayl (Five
'
shows daily in the Buckeye Building.)
Numerous shops sell everything from adven·
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well as such
culinary delighiS __~-­
asgourmet
lamb, beef and
other down
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992...- 2156

6aall

114-MHAII•
t-8INIDEIE

'

5

ferent kind ol horsepower, there's the Ohio
Championship li'uck and Tractor Pull, Aug. 7
and 8; and the National Tractor Pullers Asso·
ciation's Grand National Pull, Au~ . 14·1'7-.

Fatr ope~ Thursday night, August 3 at 6 p.m
For more tnformalion, dates and times call ,

N16·653 Remole batteries 1111r1

save

Rough and ready cowboys
and cowgirls ride and wrestle cantakerous animals in
the Bob Barnes Professional

~-~Of! 1·71 (17thAve.axii111);Columbus. Ohio

Low Atl11 Ptr Month •

Picture·in-picture, 9screen channel search.

Slf\9ll~~ideband CB Rad~o

·PimJIIIIInePtwtr.
Rodeo.Aug.4·6.Foradif~

27915 3~~95 34995

sory jackS. #21·1663 Balt&amp;ri&amp;S e:.tra

Win a new Nissan
hardbody truck! Register· ·
any day oflhe fair in the Country · . Pavilion
and on August20 you may drive home in a
brand new pick up, compliments of Nissan and
the Ohio State Fairt(Drawing at 2 p.m. al the
Ricky Van Shelton show) . .
ITS

LOW .b S15
,Per Month· .

Our best! Full array ot acces-

Our new Campbell~ Circle
Center Theatre puts you right
in the middle of thrilling
motion scenes on our 180
degree screen. __ the largest in
the country. It's also included in
your admission price.

Fascinating exhibits,
thrilling midway
rides and top-name
entertainment are
just part of the pageantry of the annual OHIO
STATE FAIR in Columbus ___ the largest sll!te
fatr tn the world . The 1989 fair promises to be
See more than 23,000 animals including the
the best yet. Best of all, one five dollar admis·
finest cattle, swine, sheep, horses, goats, even
sion buys you a whole day of fun ... inciiY&lt;I111g _____ llamaS! Be sure to visit the annual
McDonald's• midway rides and
celebration of agriculture with
Grandstand entertainment!
prize winning vegetables, fruits and flowers.
And don 'I miss the Sale
of Champions, Aug . 14,
the greatest junior fair
livestock sale in the cmmtr·v

SEND ' S

40

5
,.. stals to Buy-Ready
No
"'Y
To oseon All 40 Channels

jot(k C. FouM • (it:ncr.d Mllnii.J'.'r

1le firrM fllr

5

the Meigs County Fair. Mrs.
Tewksbary noted.
All are.a residents, Including
boosters clubs , PTO's, church
groups, auxiliaries, and others
are u·rged to take advantage of -.
the free service.
Children who will be entering
kindergarten may also receive
their required skin test at that
time.
· ·
Census bureau
' Representatives of the Census
Bureau will be In Pomeroy on
Aug. 11 to recruit workers for the
1990 U. S. Census. Anyone interested in being interviewed should
call 992-5667 before Wednesday.

AUGUST

~
~

~O~~!.~!L~Y !!~!~ ~
~ ~·

Smith Mortz(eld, Kenosha ,
Wise.. several nieces, nephews
and cousins. He was preceded In
death by' his parents , this wl!e,
Mary, two sisters, Hlldred Willis
and Amy Hall, and a brother,
Jesse David Smith.
Gro11veside services were held
In Tulsa.

RED.~ HOY,

Pldl Dill PldUp

REFRESHMENTS • DOOR PRIZES
• DISCOUNTS •

Page

deaths----------.;;.__- .Meigs annou~cements .

Hospital news

Friday, Aug. 4, 1989, 10-4·
COME I" AND SEE THE
COMPLETE LINE OF FALL
NIKES INCLUDING
FOOTBALL CLEATS

-__;._~Area
Ella Durham

•

Pomeroy · Middleport, Ohio

DIJS 01 SWine ud Roses. ., .

SHOW
'

doesn't make those plays, we're
right In the game."
The Reds upped their advantage to 5-l In the seventh. Herm
Winningham doubled off Juan
Agosto and Duncan walked. Luis
Quinones bunted for a single,
with Winningham scoring and
Duncan taking third on· first
baseman Glenn Davis' throwing
error. Eric Davis singled In
Duncan.
Houston made It 5-2 In the
eighth on Craig Biggio's eighth
homer of the year off Charlton . .
Houston's Gerald Young
tripled In the third Inning, but
was thrown out at the plate trying
to stretch it into an Inside the
park homer after getting the
"go" sign from third base coach

Thursday; August 3, 1989

ASK.FOR .BRIAN OR DAV.E
AD DEADUNE WIDNESDA
Y, AUGUST 16, 1989
.
.
'

'

I

•

Check Your Phone Soc* for the ...... , . . . Store or Dealer Neareat You

·-----.,_ ..,......,..,.._

Moat M8Jor Cradli C.• rcl• Welcome

....

�Page 8:-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Augult 3, 1989

Pomeroy-Middlapon, Ohio

•

83,100-

To Sa.U., You lloneyl

·•

WeBave~tYouWantAnd

YIIJI.IID 11111ar

If-

We Want You To Shop Us!
We Muat Move Our 1989 lnveutory To
Make Room For The 1990 Model&amp;!
Selection llu Never Been Better And
· Pdcee Are Lower Than Ever Before!
Don't Miss Tbt• Chance To Get Your
.Ab1olute Belt Deal!
Now II The Tbxie To Buy A New
· Ford, Lincoln, Mercury, Jeep,
Or EaeJe From
.
•The Ohio Valley Auto Warehouae"

•

•

$

NOW

5299
1

$24 ' 085

75

DELIVERED

.

FORD E-150 CONVERSION VANS

2.9%
FINANCING
AVAILABLE ON
SELECT
M

NOW

$12,755

·O.Ier To Retain Rebate, Tox,
Title &amp; Fe.. Excluded

1989 RANGER "S" 4x4
#9730

Announceme.nt ts

.

Melp Band Boosters
The Meigs Band Boosters wlll
meet on Aug. 7 at 7 p.m. in the
high school band room . .

wtc pick up dates
The Meigs County Health De·
partment Wishes to announce the
following. WIC pick up dates for
August. July 28, 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. Aug.1 and 4, 9-11 a.m.
artd 1-3 p.m. Make up·dates are
Aug. 7,14,and2l.from9:..11a.m.
and 1-3 p.m.
· The shot dates for August are
Aug. 8 and 22, from 9-:-11 a.m.
·
·.
and 1-3 p.rl). ·

FamUy reunion
The famUy reunion of the
descendants of Phillip Wilkinson
Nicholson and Corinna Cornell
Nicholson Will be held on Aug. 6
at Forest Acres Park In Rutland.
A potluck dinner will be held at
12: 30 p.m. All friends and fan\lly
are Invited. :.

#9849

..

·Dulor To Reteln Rebate, Tax,
Title &amp;
Excluded

-Deelor To ....... Robele, T111, Tille &amp;
F- Includad With Appro* c..dlt

F••

'

Community calendar

Youth footb~l
.
entertainment , and food
Sign
up
for
youth
football
will
.
available.
be
Aug.
9
at
6
p.m.
at
the
Homecoming revival
Pomeroy
.Sen.
i
or
Citizens
Center
Tile Zion Church of Christ of ·
for fifth and sixth grade boys and
Route 143 Is planning a weekend
cheerleaders.
/.
· ·
homecoming revival for Aug. 18,
19, and 20. Greg and Jennifer Hart reunion '
Wallace, Johnson City, Tenn.,
The Christian and Mary Hart
will be leading the services at reunion will be held on Aug. 13 at
7: 30 p.m : on Friday and Satur-' the Letat't Community Building
.day, and 10: 30 a.m. and 2 p.m. on In Letart, W.Va. A basket dinner
Sunday .. Wallace Is from the will be served ~t 12:.30 p.m.
Ripley Church of Christ In Blood pressure clinic
Ripley, W.Va., and Is married to
The Harrisonville Senl9r Cltf·
Uie former Jennifer Grover, zens will be holding a free blood
daughter of Ken and Mary pressure clinic on Aug. 8 from 10
Grover of the Zion congregation. a.m. to noon at the townhouse,
A carry In dinner Is planne&lt;l for
noon on Sunday and the public Is Willford reunion
The Willford reunion will be
Invited to attend.
held on Sunday at the home of .
Dorat reunion
The annual Dorst reunion will Theodore Willford on Dewetts
be held on Aug. 20 at the Run Road. A potluck dinner will
Lancaster fair grounds. A po- be held at noon.
fluck dinner wilL be served at
noon. All friends and relatives Harrisonville OE'il to meet
The Harrisonville Order of the
are Invited.
Easrern
Star No. 255 will have a
Crusaders
regular
meeting
on Aug. 8 at 7:30
The Caped Crusaders Clown
p.m.
In
Harrisonville.
Tr.oupe will perfonn at the Alfred
United Methodist Church on
Sunday at 7 p.m. Refreshments Racine OE'il to meet
will be served and the public 15
The Racine Chapter Order of
Invited to attend.
.
the Eastern Star will meet on
Trustees to meet .
Aug. 7 at 7: .30 p:m. All members
The Sutton Township Trus.tees , are asked to at rend and refreshwill meet .on Monday at 7:30p.m.' ments will be served.
at the Syracuse munlclpat
Beegle Reunion
bulldlng.
The Beegle family picnic will
Softball tournament
be held on Sunday at the Star Mill
There will be men's slow pitch Park In Racine with registration
soft ball tournament held on Aug. at 11:30 a.m. and dinner at 12:30
19 and 20 at Eastern High School. p.m. Entertainment will be proThe cost Is $65 and hit your own V\ded and a business meeting will
ball. Call 37~~6406 for be conducted at 1:30 p.m.
Information. ,

Smith,..birth

Chester D
of A meets

THURSDAY
Township Trustees will meet on
RUTLAND -The Past Ma- Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the home
trons of the Harrisonville Chap- , clerk, Barbara Hannum.
ft was reported · that Zeda •
ter 255 Order of the Eastern Star
Ritchie and Leda Krautter were •
will have a yard sale at the home ' MIDDLEPORT -There will · home from the hospital at the . ,.
of Avariell George, Larkins be a round and square dance on recent meeting of the Chesll:!r
Street, Ru tlarul, on Thursday and
Friday fr1J1118 p.m. to midnight at Council 323 Daughter s of
Friday, Aug. 3 and 4 from 9 a.m.
the Middleport Legion Annex. America.
to 4 p.m. Rain will cancel the Music will be provided by True
Betty Young was councilor for
sale. ,
·-···-Country. Ramblers. The public Is the meeting In which the pledges
Invited.
to · the Christian and American
RACINE -The American Le-'
flags, and the Lord' s Prayer
glon Post 602 will meet on
SATURDAY
were repeated, and the first •
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Refresh,
DORCAS-The Beegle reunion stanza of the "Star Spangled '
ments will be served.
square dance will be held on · Banner'' was sung. Psalm 102
Saturday from 7-11 p.m. at verses 1-11 were. read, ·
Ronald and LeAnna Beegle's off
MIDDLEPORT-TheEvange:
Attending were Mary Holter,
line Chapter 172 Order of the 124 at. Dorcas. Those attending Thelma White, Kathryn Baum, ,
Eastern Star will meet on Thursare advised to bring a lawn chair · Ever.e tt· Grant, Alta . Ballard, :
da:y at 7:30 p.m. VIsiting will be and refreshments.
Elizabeth Hayes, Betty Yollng, •
the deputy grand matron, OfflcE.sther Smith, Dorothy Ritchie, •
ers are urged to wear street
RUTLAND -There will be a' Erma Cleland, M~e McPeek,
dress.
round, square, and slow dance on Lora Damewood, Opal Hollon,
Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight Charlotte Grant, JoAnn Baum,
POMEROY -The Public Em&gt; sponsored by the Ell Denison Sandy White, Ruth Smith , Ada •
ployees Retirees lnc. meeting
Post . 467, Amerl~an Legion. Bissell, Faye Kirkhart, Sadie
will be held on Thursday at 1 p.m.
There will be a live baiid, snack Trussell, Doris Koenig, Doris ·
at the Senior . Citizens Center In
bar, and refreshment stand. The Grueser, Bulah Maxey, and ·
Pomeroy. Public· employees of
public Is Invited.
Marcla Keller.
all retirement systems are invited to attend as State Representative Mary Abel,' 94th House
District will be present to discuss
pending legislation as It pertains
to retirees benefits and taxation.

2 -BIG REASONS TO
SHOP WITH US ...

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of AA and AI-Anon will
meet on Thursday at 7 p.m at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church on
Mulberry Ave.

BACK TO
SCHOOL SALE
NOW IN
PROGiESS!

TUPPERS PLAINS -The Ia,
dies auxiliary of the V.F.W. Post
9053 of Tuppers Plains-will meet
on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
,

'

REEDSVILLE · -

.JOHNSONS VARIETY STORE
992-3481

• .

· w~EKEND
....

... ,,
·~

SPECIALS!

"·

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

..

BERKLINE

''·
BRriTANY .JO SMITH

Recliner
Sale
. Beautiful and ,durable

SCHOOL DAYS
SAVIN·GS DAYS!

SJ,OOO CASH BACK

fabrics. Wall·away
Recliners, Racker /Recliners
and Swivel Rackers.

Reg. s2 49.00

·. Sale S19900

. Reg. S33UO

°

S271 0
Reg. S419.00
·
Sale S3350o

NOW THRU
SATURDAY,
AUG. 5
.

'

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

The Olive

Sale

S2,000 CASH BACK

CLEARANCE "
ON All
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE

j

FRIDAY

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Towns!Jip Trustees will meet
Friday at 6 p.in. at the Pagevllle
Township building.

Rick and Candy Smith, Roush
Lane, Chesl)lre, are annoupclng
'
the birth of their first child, a
Alfred UMC
daughter, Brittany Jo.
The Caped Crusaders Clown
Born July 11 atPleasant Valley
Troupe will perform at the Alfred Hospital, . the Infant weighed
United Methodist Church on seven pounds and twelve ounces .
Sunday at 7 p.m. Refreshments
Paternal grandparents are Hawill be served. The public Is . rold Eugene Smith, Florida, and
Invited to attend.
Harriet June Smith, Pomeroy:
. Maternal grandparents are
Block ,..-&amp;y
Lee and Be a Wood, Rutland. . '
.~TIUI/~Utland Fire Dep!lflm~nt-··- ··· Other children lhclude Ricky
and ladles auxiliary will bl! Jr., Randy, arid Robpy Smith,
having a block party on Sept. 2. Rutland; and Brandy Tobin,
Tl!ere will 1M; craft shows. Cheshire.

1989 MERCURY TRACER ·

Thursday. August 3. 1989

Page-7 .

Taylor reunion
The,Taylor reunion will be held
:at the Popl•r Ridge Church on
Sunday at !)oon. Everyone
welcome.

A.P.R.

WAS 1 16,476

.

..

:1

. .
Recipes for cookbook
· Whep.Pomeroy celebrates It's ·
1501h birthday the sesquecenten·
nlal committee will have avalla·
l;lle for sale a cookbook made up
of ''old time'' recipes of mothers,
grandmothers, great grand·
mothers, etc. If anyone has a
rectJ!I! 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. Dillon. Any church
women's organizations are also
encouraged to collect recipes for
the book and· turn them In to the
Senthiel office. The deadline for
submitting recipes Is Sept. 15.

#9719

•O..IerToretaln Rebate, Tax, Title&amp;
F- Included With Appro* c..dll

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

.
YIIR liD IlL£
Turnpike of GalllpoU, ea,_ "Yea"
.

EXCLUDING CLEATED FOOTWEAI

_(·: MEN· • WOMEN'S ·• CHILDREN I
1977 CHRYSLER

CORDOBA

Skld!ID2Q, 2

*• CG11P1. v..... MllthM,

~bdk

"'*

WAS .

1981 FORD LT.,

lOW

WAS
$5495

'4718

WAS

$995

URNPIKE
..

1911 FORD
CROWHVIC

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

·I&amp;

--···rBt·--. .--"'"-WAS

1915 OLDS CCITLfiSS

--·••a::a.:.••llo!*..,....

--:.':It------

AM:liMGlt,4•,..,_.....,v...,..~~ctu,.ao

WAS

Offers You The Best Selection ,
Of Pre.owned Cars And Trucks
In The Tri-Counly AI
Affordable Prices Too!

••

WAS

. • 711

$6295

1916 FORD
CROWtt-VIC

A ROOKs.

·•·~~~ Sh\~uPHOLSTERED
Glider Rocker

·~

,.

--······-- ---.
___
,.., ____ _
. --·····...···--"'""'
.....................
.......
...
.;.
-wA.s
lOW
$7995

Beautiful and
. comfortable accent
chairs. Assorted wood
· finishes and fabrics.

.. . .

1917

--

Spe~itl p,;~,

WAS

$5995

...,..--1--

DON'T

_,,......1.-·~'"'':''•':."*·"'"­

•ss OUR

Carpet Sale

" " " MWII ~ ,._..,..

WAS

$6995

, .I

OOINO OM
NOW!.

WE ALSO CAllY SOCKS, GYM SHOES, T-SIUUS, BAGS &amp; MOlE
"YOUR BACK TO SCHOOL HEADQUARTERS"

.'
992-5627
'

. 1'

USE 0111 VISA.
MASTDCARD OR
AND.RSON;S CHARGE

OPEN

Monday-Saturday
9:30·6:00 P.M.

. MII)DLEPOIT

992-3671

.,

.

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(/.

-

-

. .. -··

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,,

.•
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�-·
Plga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Not necessarily gay
Dear ADD Luden: I grew up
In a small town In Iowa and have
always wanted toile a nurse. My
dream became a reality last
year. I love what I am doing, but
It certainty has made me realize
that Ill ave lived a very sheltered
life.
,
For tbree weeks I have been
· working In the emergency room.
:Ann, something very shocking
happened -last nlcht and I need to
knoWn what li's.!Ill al)out.
A man was brought IJ1 at 3 a.m.
wlth a heart attack. When l
helped to undress him, l was
. amazed to see that II(. was
wearing lace Pa.ntles under his
shorts. One o! the doctors satd,
"WeU,l'll be damned." las ked I!
he knew the patient and he said,
"Yes. He's a prominent lawyer In
town, well known and greatly
respected. "
How could that man have kept
his hOmosexuality such a ~.
dark secret? !\pparently he has
managed to keep his "other life"
completely under wraps. lncld·
entally, the man Is married and
bas lour children. Thanks for
helping me understand. - Lob 1o
Learn Ia Dubnque
Dear Dubuque: Males who
wear women •s undies are generally not homosexual. In the case
of the prominent lawyer, he
probably has grown up with this

Drew Webster post meets

Ann
Landers

!etlsll ud may be perfectly
normal in every aspeet o! Ills ll!e.
While we are on .the subject I
I
•
.'
wUI tell you something else. Most
• homosexuals took, walk. talk and ·
bell ave In public just like everyone else. The only area In ·
which ..-t homosexuals are
" dl!!ereat" Is In their sexual
my
my
orientation.
fer~~ale cousins or aunts. This
Dear .t.J! Laadera: l have a
leads me to believe It Is not
problem that l bope you and your
hereditary.
experts can help me with. I am a
I've seen dermatologists, but
, 42-year old woman with a 20they Insist on doing a hormone
year-old ~teret. I shave my face
balance check, \VIllch .w ould
·· every morning. If l am colng out
require time spent In the hospl·
at night I must shave again . If I
tal. This would be Impossible for
didn' t, I would ·h ave a beard as
me because my secret' would
heavy as any man.
then be ·revealed. ·
· . This problem became appar·
Could you· check with your
ent when I was In blgh school. · experts, AIID? I am In desperate
Kids can be so cruel. l tried
need of help. Just sign me depilatories and waxing. Neither
llopetul In Mluourl
was successful, so 1 began to
Dear Hopeful: I contacted Dr.
shave an41 wear heavy makeup.
RobertL. Rosenfield, a professor
Then the hair began growing In
In the department of pediatric
other plaet!tl. My arms and legs
endocrinology at the University
were co\'Wed with long black
of Chicago. He said you are doing ·
halr . Aslfthatwasn'tbadenough yourself a gtave disservice by
the darn stuff started growing on
refusing to seek proper help.
my stomach. 1 now shave over
You probably have a hormonal
three-fourths of my body.
Imbalance that can be Identified
I have four children · (tbree without hospitalization. You
daughters) and none of them has
should go at once to tbe endocrl·
this problem, thank ~- Also, no
no logy department of any major
one else In my · family suffers
medical center.·There Is help for·
from this strange malady - not
you, but you must seek it. Good
my grandmothers, my moth~,
luck.

.!
.·. ·&amp;:t.

Meigs County property transfers
Compiled by:
Emmogene Holstein Conp
Recorder, Meigs County, Oblo
Donald Pigott, parcels, to Tim
B. Wolf, Olive.
John Fisher Jr. and Sarah Sue
Flsher,1 A, toMarkS.Mooreand
Diana L. Moore, Chester,
ThOra Margaret Schettlne, Donald Schettlne, William Alan
Blackwood, Marta H. Black·
wood.' Phillip Owen Blackwood,
Deanna K. Huckabee, Charles R .
Huckabee, Cynthia D. King, and
David M. King, pt. lot 138, ''to
Gregory Winebrenner, · Paige
Winebrenner, Ken Young and
Betty Young, Pomeroy VU!age.
Charles Strauss Gibbs, dec'd,
cert. of trans, to Mart«ene
Harltlne and Jack Harllne,
Pomeroy.
Charles Strauss Gibbs, dec'd.
cert. trans, to Donna Gibbs and
Gary L. Gibbs, Sutton.
Carol Ann Harper, lots, to Jay
Hall Jr., Middleport VIllage.
Jay Roberta Saver, Mary Ruth
deLamerens, and· Art deLamer·
ens,lots5andpt.IOt4. toDavldL.
Weber and Deborah S. Weber,
Olive.
David L. Weber and Deborah
S. Weber, lot 5 and pt. lot 4, to
Dirk J. Kreiss and Allison L.
Kreiss, Olive.
Roger Westfall, Sheila WeSt·
fail, Arnold N. Spencer, and
Frances H . Spencer, right of
way, to Monongahela Power Co.,
Olive.
Charles J . Blake, Irene M.

of

Beat of the Bend
By BOB HOEFLICH
Once upon a time in Meigs
County, there was a gnJupknjJWn
as the Voices
Liberty.
The group
looked good and
sang well.
It
was a class act.
Mrs . June Van
Vranken who di·
·reeled the group moved away
and the organization was eventually discontinued .
However. in reflection some of
the group feel that it 's time to get
the music back on the road and so
a survey is being taken to see If
other former members are interested. Also. it is felt that there
l)iight be other singers In teres ted
in taking part in the reorganized
group. Incidentally, if It does fly
again, the first appearance of the
Voices will be at the Middleport
Block Party in September.
If you're interested call Donna
Arnold. 77H198; Lynn Kitchen,
773-5634; Sharon Hawley, 992·
6377; Nancy C;~le, 992·5438. or
Carolyn Thomas as 992·3128. Of
course, a quick response Is
needed in order to get going as
soon as possible.
......

Ellen Rought. Iva Powell,
Margorle Fetty, Grace Pratt, ·
Veda Davis. Catherine Welsh,
Faye Wlldermutll, and Fern
Clleesbrew, all past presidents of
the American · Legion Drew
Webster Post 39 auxiliary were
honored recently when the group
met at tile post home.
All were presented with carna·
lions by Gerrl Miller, president,
and a poppy corsage was. pres· .
ented to Mrs. Welsl! for the
longest membershiP in the unit.
Florence Richards, past eighth
district president, Installed the
newly elected officers for tile unit
and also presente~~ Mrs . Miller, a
gift from the unit as well as one .
from her father, Gerald E ..
Rought, fourth · dlvlslon com·
mander. On behalf of the unit
Mrs. Miller presented a rose bud
and gift to Mrs. Richards.
The colors were advanced by
Mrs. Fetty, assisted by Mica
Jones, junior member, and the
Tiny Tot Color Guard consls Ung
of Jessica and Ashley Hamilton.
· The group also acted as sergeall·
t-at-arms during the
ceremony.
Mrs. Davis reported that she
sent a birthday ·card to Rulli .
Massar, who rece11tlY celebrated
her 97th birthday, and was also a
past president.
The unit presented a check for
$75 to Mrs. Davis, state representative at Athens Rehabilitation
Center, for a pizza party to be
held Aug. 8 In honor of the

Monongahela Power Co., Olive.
Blake, Arnold N.'Spencer, F .r an•
vet~r11ns.
ces• H. Speocer, right or way, to
Ronald L . Swain and Pearl J.
Janet Jenkins, membership
Swain, right of way, to Mononga· chairman, reported the first
Monongalll!la Power Co., Olive.
Melvin R. Van Meter, Sr., to bela Power Co., Olive.
transmittal was sent to the
Charles G. Sheets, Jr., dec'd,
lots 21 and 22, Nancy K. VanMedepartment. Thirty-six
affld and term of life est. to · members have paid their dues
ter, Syracuse Vlllage.
Arnold N. Spencer and Fran- Dorothy Sheets, Salisbury.
early, and only 70 more need to
Frank Cleland and Delores
ces H. Spencer, right of way, to
pay before considered goal.
Monogohela Power Co., Olive.
Cleland, allJmended affl!., Tl·
Mrs. Welsh reported on the
Larry L. Mitch, pt . . lot, to mothy M. Nease, dec' d. Sutton.
Chillicothe blrtllday party that
Gerald G. Jacks and Je Ann L.
John Gow, Lea Michell Gow,
was held recently. The unit took
· Ronald Van Meter, Jean Van
Jacks, Middleport Vlllaee.
two sheet cakes along with other .
Clyde W. DUcker dec'd by · Meter, undivided Interest. to snacks. She reported that over
admln., to Paul A. Lee and ~a thy . VIllage of Racine, Sutton.
100 veterans were served.
A. Lee, Scipio.
Elberfeld Realty Co., E 'n of
Mrs. Rought .noted,that the unit
Larry D. Hyselland Pimela L. Lot no. 117, William D. Childs and
Hysell, pare~!. to U . S .'A. Joan Childs, Pomeroy Village:
Marilyn Martin, aff!d., Emma ·
Farmers Home Adm., Rutland.
Mark, Stacy Stockton, Lena
Patricia A. Bentz, lots,
Baxter, James Baxter, Stanford
U.S.A. Farmers Home Adm.,
Stockton, and Allee Stockton,
Middleport VIllage.
Perry L. Mite II, lot, to Larry L. Meigs.
LOS ANGELES !UPH - Ed·
Stanford Stockton, by P.O.A.
Mitch, Middleport Villaae.
die Murphy keeps a close eye on
Mary B. Elk, tracts, .IOCharles and Allee Stockton, by P.O.A .. 1
his millions. A Rolling Stone
acre, to Douglas B. Eblin Sr:,
Francis and Christi Francis,
. lntervlewer asked Murphy if he
Ollye.
Janet M. Eblin, Bedford.
knew how much money he was
Dolly Wolfe, dec'd, cert of
Robert G. Elk dec'd, atrld, to
worth and the actor said. · 'Oh.
trans, to Carl Wolfe, Delores
Mary B. Elk, Olive.
yeah, to the dime.... It's an
Casper, Jane Hill, Donna Hill, ·
William E. Slater Jr .. parcels,
~bsession . One of my major fears
Letart.
·
·
to James H. Hlgglnbottham.
Is 'that I'd get that call - "Your
Olive.
Tina A. Hendricks, pt. lots, to
accountant's gone with all your
Donald F. Hendricks, Jr: ; Syra·
Dora Pierce, 'n l!Cre, to Rod·
n\oney.' So I know where every
cuse VIllage.
.
m~y Pierce, Jr. and Tammy
dime of my money Is and no one
Thora llah BlackwoQd, dec'd,
Baker, Olive.
can sign checks ro·r me."
Robert S. Montgomery and affld., to Allen Dean Blackwood.
Murphy says financial consid·
Aretta M. Montgomery,100 A, to Thora Margaret Scl!ettlne, WI!·
erations are one reason he will
Sandra Kay Patterson and Larry Uam Allen Blackwood, Pllllllp
never marry or eyen live with a .
Owen Blackwood, Dianna K. .woman. "Just because · you're ,
Shelton Patterson, Letart.
Norma J. Coleman, right of Huckabee, and Cynthia D. King,
rich and you married somone.
Pomeroy VIllage.
·
way, to Monongahela Power Co.,
·this person doesn't have to be
Olive.
Thora !lab Blackwood, dec"d
rich for the rest of her life If the
affld, to Allen Dean Blackwood,
Marvin L. Keebaugh and Marmarriage
doesn't work."" he
jorl J. Keebaugh, right of way. to Pomeroy VIllage. ·
says.

Ia

"A lot of people · scoff; "Oii;
money Isn't everything.' Well, If.
you were making a lot of money.
you'd see it differently The Idea
of giving somebody (my house)
and $20 million would blow mymind.''
That didn't stop Redd Foxx
from betting Murpliy $1,000 that
he would be married within an
11-month period.

Bank is hoping that someone joy If you return It tO· her.
comes lortll with her diamond
wristwatch.
Odell Smith of Ash St .• Middle·
Actually, the watch has great port, Is home after undergoing
sentimental value to Linda.
angloplasty surgery at a Colum·
Following the death of her bus hospital. Earlier he under·
father, the late Paul Darnell, went partial lung removal
Linda's motller gave her money surgery at St. Mary's Hospital tn
to purchase a nice gift In memory Huntington, W. Va. Seems like a
of her father. Linda after much double load -we wish hlm well.
deliberation selected the watch
and she wore it only on special ·
If you're tired of working for
occasions. She believes she lost It your money, perhaps, you can
In Pomeroy recently.
get affiliated wlth HUD. Do keep
If you found the watch, I can smiling:
assure you Linda will jump with

•

Classified ·pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...
~IIi• Cou"'y

Are•Codt814

Mei11 County

Muon Co .. WV. .

· Ar..·Code814

AreeCode304
676-Pt. Pl ....in.

•sa Leon

571 APPI• Grow

n3-Mason

LA
.SUMMER SPECIAL
Name &amp; Year
on Wallets

1.... 1b14
2.:..8x10
4-5x7

937

Public Notice

Sealed proponla will be re-

ceived ot the:
DIVISION OF

thtroot.
The Director of Natural
Rnources reservM the right
to reject any or •II blda. or to
occept the bid which em·
brat• such combinatkin ai-

and apecificationa prepared

DEPARTMENT .OF
NATURAL ' RESOURCES,
THE. DIVISION OF RECLA·
MATtON.
COLUMBUS.
OHIO. BIDS
WILL BE
OPENED IN THE SECOND
FLOOR . CONFERENCE
ROOM OF 1B511 (BUILD·
lNG H) 'OF THE FOUNTAIN
SQUARE OFFICES OF THE
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES.
Tho U.S. Office ol Surface
by .~he

~g~~N~L~~~:rrio~s

:~E AP~f:.:~~TOW~:
RATE REQUIREMENTS OF
SECTION 4116 OF THE
OHIO REVISED CODE ARE
AlSO APPUCABLE TO THIS
BID.
,
Bide aro -led ond ed·
dr•llld to: OEPARTMENT
OF NATURAL RESOURCES.
DIV!StON OF RECLAMA·
TION. 1866
FOUNTAIN
SOUARE. BUILDING H. BE·
COND R.OOR.
COLUM·
BUS. 0Ht0 .43224. No biddor ....., w~hdr- hil bid
w~hinoilty(IIO)d"''•olt•the

ectuat dllo of the. opening

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX

the aite 1.11 mile aouth of the,

interlitctlon of State Route
#1 24 and #7 on Stott Route ·
7
# Copieo ofthe plen1.0peci:
focationund propoulformo
wHt be forwarded from the
Divilion ol Roclomo.tion.

Study
.Woodworking

check in the amount ol
•20.00madepayabletothe

Department ol Natural Re·
ioun:n. Thoae may otoo be
purch01ed
with Cllh
the
exact
•mount.
Planain and

'

2·

Furniture.And .qabinets.&gt;·... . ...... ,."'""~'"· ""
· .,...,

1

1,\

'

, 11

In Memoriam

In loving memory of
my husband,
MATI WEAVER, on our
4th wedding anniversary,
August 3rd.

Parts I Serlice On

•

2112 Mi. a.low
lad L ck &amp;
Ill 0 I
Dam At Antiquity

u .....

VISA· MAeTERCHARGE
HOURf Mon.-Fri. 9· 7
~··· Sunday
8-li
Clooed

949-2969

BA~LET,

TAP
&amp; JAZZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON

PLUMING &amp; HEAliNG
Now,&amp;.dllotll

16111i!rth. Socett4
Mlll•••rt, OIH 45760
~m &amp; SEIVICE
We Cony Flehint 1\1.... •

Your Phonl
Bille He,.
IUSIIIS$ PHONE
16141. 991-6550
.IDIO!!Iia PHONE
16141

Now Taking
R•gistrotions
992·5298

~ ..bile

. , , lnf-tlon
7·17·'89-1 mo. pt

1.wish we could spend to·
day
The·way ~ WIS meant to be.
Someday, only God knows

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

when.

1 ' I

LIVE .BAIT

for

We'll be back together
I

IYAN SIIVICI CEml

IN MIDDlEPOI'f, 01110

To Construct Fine Quality Custom~Made

1 1 ':

~IS

OIEGOH IAIIS, CIIAIIS

!lp&amp;Cifications become the L

In Fine Woodworking Technology.
Graduates Will Have The Skills Needed

II

YARDMAN MOWRS

ECHO SAWS &amp;

apin.
.
Until thll day, I'll be ri&amp;ht
.here,
Holding our dau&amp;llter and
our precious· memories ·
dear.

Happy Anniversary.
Baby;
I Love You.
Patty
11

J.miM•tY...y ......r
In llltldleport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERI{ICE
For Moot 2 end 4-cycle
engln•
Stock Porto for
Homelite, Weede•ter.
Tecum1eh. Brlgp •
Stratton.

Now.-d L Wrltasel

ROOFING

. .NEW ..;_ llEPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

PH. 992-3922

SIIKE 197•

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES
Immediate full time and part time openings are
available for licensed practical nurses to work
in the Medical/Surgical Unit and the ·Skilled
Nursing Facility. Salary commensurate with experience. Excellent fringe benefits.

Have a FAMILY AFFAIR
at the Hilton East
just minutes from the FAIRGROUNDS: ,,;;

$39.95
per room, per

n~t

r

plus applicable .tax

(Kids stay free)
.Ask for the FAIR SPECIAL!!

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

'

'

OBSESSION, 3.4 oz. Spray .................................... '45 00
KNOWING, 1 Oz........ _. .. ~ .................................. .'..... '36.00
~~jT~E LAUDE~ YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz .................... '14:60
OMZ RBETH TA LOR'S PASSION, 1.5 Oz ............... '27.00
B EROSE, 1 Oz..................·............................ •1&amp; 00
SHALIMAR. 1 Oz ...•.... ~ ................... : ..................... •23:00
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1. 7 oz .................. '24.00
g:~~ 2 Oz ................. :·· .. ··~·. ·· .............................. ·: '47.60
, 2 Oz ....................................................... ~ '29 60

August3 thru August 20, 1989
I. .

• FREE Parking
• Indoor POOL
• Exerdse RoOm
• Great. Food at

][HILTON EAST

LIZ CLAIBQRNE,:.1 Oz.................. ." ........................ •22:110

4560 Hlhon Corporate Drtw
1-70 It H 'IIlii Road

PRESCRIPTION .SHOP.

~ Ohio ,232-4180

614/868 1380

0...1_ .. ..,....,....

'

w.·.. )lllt ~~~~- from ~hmgl!

-------

271 NOITH SICOND

r

'

.

_.992·6669

ROACHES •. FtEAS
TERMITES • ANTS

SPID!:RS
BEES • WASPS
Me11bor Nil Ioiii( Post
~ontrol Atso.

.r

••• frN

1·100•U'5 ·2199

Contact:

Rhonda Dailey, R.N .• Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, DH. 45769
. (614) 992-2104, Extension 213
EOE

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ESTATE AU

THURS., AUGUST 3-5:30 P.lit
Located North of Pomeroy, Ohio on St. Rt. 33':' Ike

Co Rd 18 to the rllht then straiaht across Old'33
to ihe home of the lite Mtry L llered ith at 37720
Rock SprifiiS Rold. Watch for SIIRS.
.
.
The AuctlnHr overlooked these Items that ·will be
auctioned at &amp;:30 p.m.; 1984 JHP ClttrokH, 24,000
milts. 4 door. loaded with extr1s; diamond rln1 &amp;
wtddi" band.
Clttc:k Sunday Times-Sentinel paper on Aua. 30,
1919 for comple~ listin1s. ,
Cast 1126314

ll9ttllll ~bsMITH-AUCTIONEER

Not llsponllblt far Accidtntl ar Lo11 ol Proplllr

GIVE AWAY-Part r::~• puppits. Phona 304-67
1fttr 5

thing for every on~~.

3059.

-

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK

lott: EyegluHI In black caae,
Ch11hire1raa. 114-446-6698.

Willi

...EWHOMU
SINCE 1969

DUSIY Sl. SIUCISI

992-2284

POMEROY, OHIO

mo.

..

....

•IErOR TIACTOIS
•ECHO PRODUCTS
•HOWAlD IOTAVATORS

•Y AIDMAN MOWERS
etNTEISTAR IATTOIES

NO SNAY

BILL SLACK
992·2269

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

EVENINGS
.

4/B/89/tfn

STAFF

PEIM SALE

•New • Used Tires
•Cuatom Pipe Bending
•Oil Chal1ga
•Grease Jobs
•Genwal Chassis

100/o OFF All PERMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

Maintenance

•computerized Balancer .

lAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

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

Mldtl. .l

(Ne)lt

Neighborhood
Yard Solo!
August 3rd~4th. 10:00-4:00. Cor·
nor Sixth :ot. ond Cotilge Rd.

Bedroom auhe, thairt, ster.a,
lampe, Qll grill, b&amp;w T.V.,
drape1, children 1nd aduh .
clothing, child's play houae, .
odds and endl.

Third houH below Sloan'• Floor •
Covirlna

In

Mlnt,.VIIII, .

Aug.1st,2nd,3rd. Something lor~·

everyone.

United

Mothodlst

Church ·

baHment. Tuppers Pllln1, OH.
Aug. 3,4. 9-5. 3 point hitch plow, '
rotraway Md, 48 cup drlpulator,
20 folding chair~~, cklthlng, .

9-4.

mlac.

lint

. :

.,

Yard tale. Aug. 'f..t. 210 South

4th.lllddloporf, Dhlo.

8

3 lamlly. AI Euroko. Thuro. &amp; Fri.
Bedding. toys, lntlquet, bookl,
dish-.
ltwelery,
atereo,
flowers.
ALL Yard $1111 Mutt B• Paid In

.'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

w.

Va.

S1ate

Chlmpion

Auc:llon11r. Rick PearsO!'J licen- .
11d in Ohio and West vuglnla. .

Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Booking Auctions. 304-773- .
tho doy botoro lho ed 11 to run. .57:,:8::5·:....__ _ _ _ __
Sundoy edition • 2:00 p.m. "g
Friday. Mondor edition • 2:oo
Wanted to Buy
p.m. Sotur&lt;ily.
::=:=::::::--::=::::-:::;:;::o:~:=-

Complltl houuhoktl of fur· ·
ni1WI I lntlqun. Alto WOOd •
coli haatar1. Swain't Furniture
• Auction, Third 6 CMiv1, 614-

842 Fifth Avenue,

Aug. 2,3,4. tO

441-3159.

hind McDon11d'e.
apcl. blc:Yc.., clothn, mlac. . ·

Furnhure and appllanc• by the

piece or entlrl houllhold. Felr

Augull 4-1 Rt. . 7. ·Cheohlro,

prleu being pold. Colt 814-44113151.

Good uled plano. 614-4464671 '
1fttri:OO PM.

01~e S.l1: S1artt Aug. 1. 3
Fan11DII. 110 Fourth Ave. Lote
of clothee tor 1111

Junk C1111 wfth motort $50 I
&amp;down.

down. wlo motors, $25

Rlclwd Goorgo, &amp;14-381-11095.

MoVIng Sale: 1 mile South of

Rio Orondo, SR 325, Sot. 9:005:00. Anttque dl•hn, tablu
comer china c1bln1t, elc:.

Junk car• with .or wlt!'10UI
mOtore. Cell Larry Llnly 114-

Moving Salt: Thrul., Fri., Sat. 05. Stove, duk, dinette ... bed.

Quill•
Pre 1940 quills. Any condition. ·
C1sh P1id. Call 614·992~5657 or .

388·9303.

37Po~omouth.

614-592·2461 .

TOP CASH paid for 1983 model .
and ntwar used cart. Smllh
Bulck;-Ponllac, 1911 Eaattrn
Avt., Galllpoli•. Call 814-446-

to Hill top Grocery)

Saturdar Aug 5th. 0.5. Comer 2282.
Third &amp; !)rope. Flrlt IIIIMI. Wllllo,

~~,

I

WATER
SERVICE

I
I
224 E. MAIN ST.
I
192·9976
1
THUIS. E.L 6:45 P.M, 1
POMEIOY .UGlES
ClUI

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

pun:h• ollliL H.C. P1t:l·
llf. UmM I coupon I* cust - P11' bjnJI IIHIIIMI.
Wo Pay.150.00 Pw Glome
o... 110 PooploiU.OD
Per Game

u, •oos-u

E;lradbury AG., Ruth Barnhlrt't.

Rain cancelt: ..

A'duls, children•• dothlrag many
hous•hakl lteme, collecllble,
anllqLM turnltt.~re. 614-367·7201.

JONES TIRE
CENTER

IOOIPIIZE

'

Yard Sale

Monday, Augull 7th.9:D0-8:0II.

children. clothll.

•FIREWOOD

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

2 H.D. FRU with COUJIOII. and; '

PH. 949·2101
or ln. M9·2160

Urge garage ale. Coleman•'
blhlnd Church of Christ, ·
AHdtvlllt, OH. August 1st, 2ncl,
3rd, and 41h.
.

lo Sob McConnlck Rd. 10 opeod
bike. weight IMtnch. baby bod,

•LIGHT HAULING

SUN. 1.1. 1:45 P.M.

"fr• Eatlm1tt11"

7

114 mi. on Bulavillll Rd. aH
Georg• Cruk, 41h, 5th. Stereo,
lOll IVIrthing, 8·?

8·1·1 mo.

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

bed tram1, misc. ho~o~lthola
htmt, S.ara 10 HP tractor·
mower, 10 HP WhHihortl
mower. Frl and Sat.: Aug.4,5. 2.
mil.. North of Cheat«, on SR 7.

·

Vinyl Siding
Seamless Gurter
lloplocemont Windows
llown lnsulalion
Storm Doors &amp;
WindGws
FREE ESTIMATES

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

EQUIPMNT

BINGO

or 11 4·992·2178.

· Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

1·

992-2725

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
lNIULATION

Girls 10 speed bike, humidifier, ·

Lost: Schn1uzer. Anawer• to
Jasmin. Lost In Pomeroy
Elementary Schod area. 614-

INSULATION

Call 992

MOIIIS

I69 N. 2ntl

992-

SyracuH.

lost: langsville 1m ·1700 lbo

Masli&lt; - Cerlointlld®

Now thru S.t. 9, 19'9
COIIERCIAL

Gan~ge tale. Friday August 4J.. 0.
4. Bill Arnatt raidance, Alh ~t.,

2754 ori7S.1175.

992~076

aom-

0111tg1 1111. 4 f!lmlly. R1ln or
ehlne. Aug. 3rd .. 11th. Curtalna.·
ehM11 Kkt1 Clothlng-1h01a. .
misc. At. 124 ilcr011 from Sub '
Station. W1tch for algne:.

J&amp;l

·MEET THE

•CUSTOM .JrCHINI a lATHS
•UTtNIIVE RlliiiiODILING
•VINVL IIIMNG. ROORNQ
•fliT AI. IUtlDINOI

gamn, color computer,

ctotheo. booiut.

Horolord bull. Robert Filly, 114742·2876.

1·13·'U·tln

Fabric Shop

GEIIEIAL

mllee north of CNater on At. "1. ·
Fallow tlgrw. Ho\11-'tald good•,

Spenlolo.

Pert~_ ·· ·- .
· •Mobile Home
Rentals

7·11·'89-lfn

"

Brlttony

LOST, male Slberean Huakey,
light blue eyM, 1nawer8 to
Cody. lomlly pot, we mlso him
vary much, pl11u call 3&lt;)4-875-

Grant A. N.wland

•••, .

LOST·2

lt. 33 North of
Po1111roy, Ohio

OFFEIED AT

JIWNEI: GIEG I. IOUSII

Goroge Solo! Augutt 3rd,4th. 2

Found : HI of keye July 311t at
Pomtroy
Sundry.
Contact
P~rOy Pollee. 614-992-6411 .-'

992-7479

DRY CLEANING
·sERVICE

ROUSH
CONSTIUCnON

Lost &amp; Found

MOBILE
HOME PliK

'

(614) 667-3271

lth Ave. Mrddleport. Loll of nice
klml. ·
·

dog. Addnllto SchOOl aroo. Colt
614·367·7760.

•Lot Ftantala

4-25-lfn

8·1·1

Frld.y, Alig. 4. 1o.:4. 442 Soulh

n1Nd1

FOUND: Bltck I Whhl .. rntlt

•Mobile Hcime -

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

"We441•t gow•
Sp.. llllsts''

IVIryOnll

1320.

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

-

Bart"1 Third AnnUIII Yard Saltl

orange 1nd white, Greer Road
and I Mill area. C.ll 304-875-

Roger Hysell
(;c-rage

· Sand-Stone-Dirt

·

6

or ~t
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hils·. Pomeroy, Ohio

DOZER

SITEWORK - ROADS
. ClEARING

con.1ol1 TV,
repaired, 304-675-111 B.

' ··

Auguot 4th 5th. Rt. 124 Lonii ·
Sollom, OH. Somllhlng tor .

laving hom• 304·

Qusar

446-7619'or (614) 992·2104
Avenue. B01c.l213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ,

&lt;

Grado School. 9:0G-? So,..

Call Anytime
992-2371
l/13/19tfn

Z·l·lln

AueMII, Baker Estate.

Used Carous81 Sllda Pro)ICior.

Phono 304·57&amp;·2021.

Vord Solo: Thuro. F~ .. Sol. 2
miiH out ot Gall 1poU1 on Rt. Used tumitwe end household
588.

appllanc11.

2048.

Pt. Pleasant

Phone

614-742·

Used furnltu,.. by tha piKe or
enllr1 .household elso 18lllng.

&amp; VIcinity

614·742-2455.

Aug. 2,3,4i 2218 and 2221 Jefferson Ave. 4 F1mlly Salt.
llnent, jeans, glen, much

Employment Services

mON.
Aug. 3,4,5. 2110 N. Moln st. s:oo 11 Help Wanted
till 7:00 (bock yordj. Hugh -';-;-:::;:~:::-;:::O::;:::.;::::-=­
"Movlng
In"
S•l•.
Fur, i350fDty processing phone orhou.hold, Home Interior, ehalr dtrsl Peopl,r call you. No axhair dryer, house pllnts, perlence nec:etury. C1ll (refunmatertal, clothing, CB and morw. dable, 1·315·733-6062 extension

L W.SfEW

TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

742-2421

BISSELL
BUILDERS

We

SER~ICE

can r~air and r•·

cor•

CUSTOM BUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Wlhlml High School. Eddie 2 nui"Ht lldn. shop cl•~..t, In· ·
Val'IMatra, starea, c:lothet, loya, ' qulr11 et Odds end Endt :&gt;hop,

radiators

and

hlatlr cor11. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We aleo
r•oi• Gas Tanks.

"At Reas011ablt Prices"

PH. 949-2101
or les. 949·2860

PAT HILL FOlD
992-2196

Day or Night

Middleport,

NO SUNDAY CAllS

blkll.

Mlddloport.

B1ck Vtrd Sale, ~rat Ever, 2321
Lincoln Ave, Pt. Pit. Aug 3,4,5.
111:00 until 5:00 PM.

tmall 11l1ry, cere for lady/part•

Jara.
Y•rd Salt 1712 Jefferson Blvd.
Thure 1:00:5:00 Frl 1:00·5:00.
Bib)' clothel, mens euw"o'rn'o,'n'",,
38, mise ment 1nd
clothll, etc.

WANTED

DEAD 01 AUVE

•Waeh•r• !10 r(&amp;rl ·
•Rang• •F""'zers
· •Rafrlg•rators
"Mwt le 1.-fraWe'~

992-SUS-981·3561 .
We Service AU Mlk•

1600 GALLON
WA111 SEIVICE
UMESTOIIE
SPIEAD
Dill HAUUD
992-527

AU MAICES AND

.MODELS

MAmN'S
FUI.IURE
and MORE

APA.,_N1S POl
lENT (ly Day or

Give
A Call
Today"

Ill lestllllin

. PG II JY, 011.

......72

•·5-'19-tfn

11¥11
CAMPGIOUIIDS
Wnl IOOIIS AND
W...l

$11Pw lh!J &amp; Up
949-2526
7-1Z·'II·t - ·

u,

DIESEL

SERVICE

SYRACUSE. OHIO
Molt Foreign and
Dom•ic Vllhid•
AI C Service
All Mlljor • Minor

HOUDAYS

NOW OPEN

011~

AUTO -

OPEN 7. DAYS
9AM-7PII
EICEn

We Buy All
Non-ferrous ·
. Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless StHI,
Etc. 1

I·HH 1110.

SWEEPER REPAIR

VAUGHN'S

RECYCLING

All 1r111, Cell Mtrilyn
We1v1r 304·B82·2645.
'

Repotin

NIAIE Cerllfled Mlch..ic

CAU 992-6756

"DOC~' VAUGHN
Centfl• Lla.nud Shop

8-211·'81-lfn

Aug. 3, Slturdoy only, 2011

Je~

ferton llvd.

Pomeroy,
Midd leport
&amp; VIcinity
1 day only. Friday, Aug. 4. t-5.
J11n Stout. 2285, 7\h St.,
Syraouil.

,lot.

.._.~,·

At per Article I Transflrt anl:t ·
VacanciH, Sitctlon 8, Pos11rtg,
of the Ntgolleted AgrHmtnl
Htween the MLTA tnd lhl ·

Boord of Educollan, tho Melgl
Loco! SchOOl Dlllrlct lo posting
•t-~e following vacancies tor hs
rogulot t.. chlng otalf: Second

Teicher at POmeroy
E11m1ntary, · DH Teacher a1
M1lgt1 High School, Gl11a' Junior
Higfi BaSketball Co.ach, Mentor
ani:f LUnry Supe~vls'Or.

Gr1d1

2 llmllr Yard· 1a1o. Aug. 3·5. Rt.
1 to A . 143. 314 mile out 143. Avon - llmllld time only $5.00.
Olckaraon, 3DU1 Rl.143,

•lppolntment fH "billtd to your-

p~~~D~h~lo~,~=~:::-:~ first order", elz• up ''" (billad

:. on your order). Plu1 receive
::..-::;:·-·•· A.uguet 3rd,4th. Jult oft· $30.00 lr11 prQCfucte. Ctll'

I k;f~ino"

124 toward Rulland. Marilyn Woavor 304·&amp;82-2845. ·
1tgno. Homo lnllflor,
heat.,., wlng-blck
cloth.., mlec:. Rlln

Announc~ments

Baby aliter, matur. reliable pereon for 2 tchool age children
prefer my home, North Point
lchool area, 304-175-2120 Ilk
tor extenlon No. 1122.

4
1 Mote lUll Colored Clltj .12w11.

old, t/2 Pwolon Cit

Oontat Aeolllont. Full·llmt. E•

c.- Cot

perience

1owu. o1c1. 114-44u-

MCHNry,

~,... ,.d,

but

not

Send reeurne to lox

001, cJo Galllpotlo Dolly Tribune
121 Thlnl Avonuo, CloiHpaiil, Oil

992-5114

LoariarlJOff IVPIIIil

I

time 614·448·7572 days., 614446-1980efter .s p.m.
,·
1 embhiout people nllc:lld 1mmedilttly. local bnnch cit
national network marketing
company. Excellent part-time ·
Income. 614-992·7563 Monday
through friday 8 :00-11:00 a.m. ~
AVON 1 Ail Areas I Shirley.
Spears, 304-675-1429. ·

Yord Solo, 3 mltoo Nonh out Rt. AVON •

2, Aug. 2 and 4.

ALLEN'S
HAULING

-

3 nn., unfurnished ept. No rent,

Verd Sale 2400 Madison Ave. Fri
1 Sat. lawnmowert Home Interlor, Roto-=tiller, clo1~, c..nnlng

Yard S.le, Kldt elothn, toy1,

KEN'S APPUANCE
SDVICI

N.

Augllll 41h,5~h~ ~ of eo...
I~• 1nd Long; n•r Autltnd

Aug. 5, Lrono Addn buldt P-2732A.

'111-CO. TEIIIITE
&amp; PESI CONIIOL

Help wanted

a:
~
z

Public

mile. 114-11!12~587.
Augull 4th.5tlt. 8:00-4:6o. Rill" ·
aocroot, t milo pelt Ealtom .
Algh School. Pot carpo..er.
.·

1nd goldtn RttriiVIt mlxld.
Great children• dOQ. 114-742-

.
Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; SeiYicel p.m.
Kittens to
Eval~ations For All Aps
0 ·
675·1t99.

7-13-'19-11110. pd.

6·21·"19-lfn

Solid &amp; Striped. 114'258-17113.
FrN pupploo. 61~189 . 11·

F,..., pupploo. Smoll Shepord

z

Flat· ·

lock Grove Rd. Car Mil, blby .

tar 6.

(6141 41•·4712
7-11-'19·1 mo.

· ·

$6.0 .00

t•

EAGU IIDGE .
SMALL EIGINE

.AIID '9'MD.

IILOII HOUDAY 111•,IMIUGA, OliO

promote the beat interoot of
the State.
Ao provided in Section
123.151 of tho Ohio Reviled Code and Adminiotra· ·
tive Rule 123: 2·11-02 .o f
the Deportm..,t of AdmlnPublic N otica
ilt!ttion Serviceo. the CON·
TRACTOR ohell m•ke' tvtlf'l
- r t to .,,u.., that certi-·
PUBLIC NOTICE
fled minority buoin111 tub·
NOTICE lo hereby given
controctora and m1teriol·
men participate in the con· thot on Seturdoy. Augult 6,
tract. The total volueofoub· 19B8. ot 10:00 a.m .. 1 pub·
contracto ewarded to and lie 10te wNI be hold ot 105
moteriolo ond
oorvic;.. Union Avenue, Pom.woy,
purch01ed from minority Ohio. to Hit for ceoh tho fol·
lowing collllter•l:
Ford Eocort ~ 4 dr .
\':~~=~: :"..=.fl':,:"n:.. H81984
1 FABP1 32XEW290666
11184 Ford Eocon SW
IN~O~~~~E R~QU~::
CURING BIDS FROMCERT!· 1FASP0928EW1 30805
The Farm•• Bank and
flED M8E SUBCONTIIAC·
TORS AND
&amp;UPPUERS S.VIngo Company. Porn•
MAY CONTACT THE &amp;TATE eroy. · Ohio. reaerv• the
EQUAL EIIIPLOYII4ENT CO· right to bid at ttu.. ule. and
ORDINATOR BY CALUNG to wlthdrow the obovo cotle16141 416-8380 OR THE Mt· twol prior to oato. Funher.
NORnY BUSINESS DEVE~· The Farmwa Bank aftd Sav·
OPMENT DIVISION BY CAl.· inp company rnervn the
UNG (6141 488-6700 OR right to reject any or ott bide
TOLL FREE ON i '11001 282· oubmltted.
Further, the above coll8j
1085.
teral
will be sold in the conAPPROVED FOR PUBLI·
CATION IN. Th·e Dally Senti· dition it ia in with no exnel, Pomeroy. Ohio. on Au· presMd or .implied warrangiven.
gull 3. and 10. 1989.
(8) 1. 3, 4 3tc

!====7:·:24:·:1:9:1:m::o-~

property of the prospective

We Offer A Comprehensive 'JWO-Y~ar
Program Leadlng To An Assoeiate Degree

\1\

•a:

Stop By and Sey Us I - Fiaanclog Available'
MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME

I ternoto propou11 •• .may

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS '
ETC

Department of Natural Ae·
oourcoo. upon reUipt of a

There's Stlll Time To Enroll ln .The University Of Rio Grande's ·
•
. Fine Wood~orking Technology Program

'

IJf

fill

bidderund no refund will be

Deportment of Natural Ro-

project.
THE ESTIMATE
FOR THIS PROJECT AS
DETERMINED BY THE Dt·
VISION OF RECLAMATION
IS $393.647.00.
A pre-bid mfttlng wHI be
held on Wedneodoy. August
16. 1989 ot 11:00 a.m. at

'

28·31 WORDS
$7.00
810 .00
S16 .00
125.00

tor e..:h d., u MPer••• ads .

made. Addition•! inform•·
lion 01ay be obtained from
the Division of Reclamukm.
aourcM, . .1 86&amp; Fount•,_

Mining Reclamation and En·
forcement ia
aupptying
100% of the Iundt lor this

•

10 DAYS
1 MONTH

Public Notice

Squore. Building H; Second
Floor. Cotumbu1.
Ohio.
43224. (Phone: (614) 2851058).
Etch bid muot be occomponied by • BID GUA·
RI\NTY, IT!eeting the roquiopened thereafter for fur· rem en to of Section 153.54
niahing the material• and of the Ohio llevioed Cod&lt;i.
CONTRCTORS ARE ,.D.
performing the tabor for tho
execudon and conetruction VISED THAT IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVI·
of:
SIONS OF THE JANUARY
HOOVER-PEACOCK
RECLAMATION PROJECT 27. 1872 EXECUTIVE OR·
OER BY THE qOVERNOR
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT OF OHIO. AND AMENDED
EXECUTIVE · ORDER 84-8,
NUMBER MG-Sb-16
15. 1184.
In accordance with t'he plana FEBRUARY

MOM! Our photographers ari mothers and know
. that everything must be ." JUST RIGHr'

For Further Information Contact
Lonnie Bini Or !Ianford Lane
The Unlftratty or Rio OI"IUIIIe
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
(6141 245-6353. Or
1·1100-282-7201. Ext. 3ot

3 D"'VS
6 DAYS

Bufh~o

DEPARTMENT OF .
NATURAL RESOURCES
1856 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
- SECOND FLOOR
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224
unU Wodn•day. Auguot
30. 1.889 at 1 1:00 a.m. end

ONLY S13595

at $50.95.

·

REC~AMATION

112 Wallets

August 31

18·26 WDIIDS
14.00
$&amp; .00
1&amp;.00
$8 .00
18.00
$13.00
$13.00
f21 .00
$33.00
$51.00

_.

Balle~···

ewing, babwo chanst~r, blby ·
cloth• and maternlfy dOihll'-, ~
Avon, cr~tt1, Iennie r'IICUI,

Cute klntne to good horne.

0· 15 WORDS

DAY

1

Public

REBID
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

toum-up inCluded

Price Hst avalabla:
Other packages itarting

clothing. Greg

wood• Rd.
•
Augult 3, e-5, Aug. 4, e-2. Hom· .

glvt eway. Kltlena have -long
hair. 8t4-i8S.3839 or 81 4-MS.

812-NewH~

5 Poses

Offer Good on Sanion
Phototraphed by

Aug. 41h,5th. e-5. Ouollty glrlo

clolhlng, tlln 4-1, bop size 11, .
waterbid 1
bicycles,
toye,
t.dtpreaill and drapes, Misc.

homo, ollogeo, 304·87~t777.
Colllo pupa ond boby klllono lo

1R HAYI: A GOOD
DIPP'aaT COIOitl. IIAI

..

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Cats •nd kitlene to alve to good

886 LM•r.t

z

OH.

Pomeroy,

Black cat and klnent. 304-175-

RATES

Seotinel Page 9

_G_Ive,_.aw_•Y;...__.....

3342.

JADE
STUDIO·
E.
St.

Jackson

Dailv

32249.

• The Area~s . Number 1 Marketplace

CHECKlHE

Main

Business Services -4

·lassifie

At home

1 \II (I!

Linda Mayer of The Farmers
l

]ayMar winners

Winners at Jay Mar's Tuesday
received a citation from thE'
Ladles
League were Margaret
deparnnent for reaching goal.
Folirod,
low gross and low putts;
and 100 percent reporting for the
Norma 'Custer, low net; and
year.
·
Velma
Rue and Norma Cyster,
Mary Martin, absent from the
.
chip
In
hole.
meeting, was recognized with a
certl!lcate trom the past presl'
dent's parley for "nomlnee ·ror
member of the year." Also noted
was Pearl Knapp who received a
Dwight Wallace, Middleport, .
500 hour pin, and Mrs . Martin, a
has
been released from Holzer
1,000 hour pin for field service.
Medical
Center after 'undergol!lg. ,
The meeting closed with a
loot'!mrgery.
He lsrecuperatlng
prayer for peace by Mrs. Davis,
at home.
~·
chaplain. Plans were made for a
white elephant sale and a dish
towel shower at thE' next meet·
J
lng. Members are to bring any
object for tile sale, along with a
''
new towel for thE' kitchen.
Refreshments were served by
the unit.

18.1

The

Ohio

No Mrs. Murphy

A real class act...

_ _______

Did you ever wonder what we
would do In this day and age if we
didn't have the Meigs County
Eittergency Medical Servlces?
Bob Byer, administrator of tile
program. reports that units of
Middleport. Pomeroy, Racine,
Rutland, Syracuse and Tupll!!rs.
Plains made .201 runs in tile
month of July alone. The units
traveled 5,281.4 miles In answer·
tng the calls for aid and In
addition there were two Light·
filght calls.
Among the 201 calls, 97 patients
went to Veterans Memorial Hos·
pital; 35 to the Holzer Medical
Center; nine to Pleasant Valley
and 13 to other Institutions.
In addition to the 201 runs made
by the community emergency
unlls, the transfer urilt made 59
rulll traveling 2,658.2 mlle8 on
ttio.e trips.

Thursday. August 3 .' 1989

Pomeroy-Midtlleport, Ohio

,.,.. 41h,1!!!1111t tl004:1111. S

ltmlly. 111. H1 Dtrwlrt. FolloW
ligna. Now craft oullllltoo. boby
Homo. much morWI lloln or
ehlne.
•

45131.

Eom lion~ typing II home.
130,1!00/Y- Inc- patonllal.
.Dttolto. (t!IOMI74000 Ext.l4512.
.
I,

'

�,,

10-The

Sentinel

Help lflanted

LAFF-A-DAY

- pr-· .

Thursday, August 3, 1989

Ohio

Elloy Wllflll hoollonl Pay! A1o

46

54

Space for Rant

Miscellaneous

KIT N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wright

74

Ponieioy-

Motorcycles

Merchandise

· Coli
lor Information. 1104-'4..al10
Elll 313.

KID ...

•

Phon•-

THURS., AUG. 3 · •

ou
::.r
NIH
tducatNMW

have uport.- • lnt•;
and morkitlng, ·and
blckground In
biologl"l ..:loncu, prolorrobly
In ,_ra·u.dla~~l flelde, you
oltould bo !.liking with uo. lluat
hiVI rolioblo tionOporlollon.
Sllary and Commlulon: Sond

.

"

.

1~ ri~L~~r~

EVENING

In

8:00 (}) Bonanza: The Loll
Eploodea

naum• to lox 007 c/o O.tll~lla

,

Dolly Trlbu!!!1 125 Thild Avenue,
Galllpollo,"" 45131.

• rn w • w
91-•

l. .1'

RNdlng 'RainbolN Q ..
e(!) [l)
HaPPJ Dlyl
,..
®F-Otute

.

8:05 (]) Allee

I ATE 'TilEM ALL ..OF COURSE,

~:30 D (}) 91 NBC ~~htiJ Na. WI

11J Cartocllt EXJIIUI

(I) Cl&lt;ll ABC

t

I .

1

1
t
~

--~1 ..;

'.....rlv..:..Ar-1a:.-rrE..:.Rr-1

~ Sportal.oak (0:30~

NOW, 1 DON'T FEEL SO 600D...

1·

r

,

SllE 80U61o1T ME FIVE
MARSIIMALLOW SVNDAES, ANP

'

....,_,;r.W. ;.;A,. .,;L;;..r.O...;;G.....-11

till • G2l

(!) H-. Run De"Y
.
&lt;lJ Shining TI!IIJ Stillion Q

Merchandtse

11

........

Daily

Television
·Viewing .

~lllb I HAVOO
AAD~IWAt;A

HVAC lnataJior wanted to lnllall
~till • -merclol .,..
tema. I y..,. 11p. Apply at:
YotH Halting • Coot inti 'HI W.
College, Rio Glondo, OH No

The

Middleport,
"
·-·-~

~

·
·

I

Th.e su(est way to make
red hght turn green, is to try to
find something in the -.

a

I

SLA,PO ' T
1---,;I'MI~;... .:.....:~8~ f)

...;..I
--.1.---.1.._J.:.....J.--.1.'-.J

-Q

(l)tlodyii!Jeclrlc
(!) 3-2·1 Comacl Q

L

1111 • G2l cas New• Q
GIIID Lova Connect!O..
1m 8howlln Toct~y

PRINT NUMBERED

•

lETTERS IN SQUARES

®JaH.,_o
QD On 81881
&amp;:35
cerot Bumatt
7:00 rn MOVIE: Tlia Spirit Of St.
Loull (NRI (3:001
.
Dl]) PM Maglizlna

I'

c~uckle

Compleie rho
quoted
by filling in the missing words
you davelop,from ,;ep No. 3 below.

.

w

·. SCRAM.lm ANSWERS
~ •~
Fourlh - Guide - Quell - Rather - GO THERE

(!)~(0:301

"My new apartment isn't so far away," the graridmother
consoled her grandson . "BaBldea," she added, ''far away.
is only far away. II you dOn't GrO:..T.:.;H;.;;E:::R.:.:E::..'_'
NORTH.
1-:1-it ·

(I) Cl (I) Current AHalr

m &lt;Il MaoNIII/I.IIioer
NewaHour

tl

Applo Grova homo, 2 bodroomo

baoomant, nlco cond, priced
,..duaad, ehown byu appolnln:-nt only, 304..J76-24...

NHd money for back to .chooe
clotl'\ea imd Chrhs,tm. .7 Work

your

own

houre;

BV OWNER 1 2905 llapll Avo. 3
bedroom bnc:k with ga111ge, full
baMmtnl, br11zaway, central
air, fireplace, comer lot, much
more. 304-525-8929 after 1:00
PM.
.

ahowtng

Houn of Lloyd home Decor,, By own., 3 bedroom ·horne In
tashione, toys, gifts, Ctirlatmae upper Monkey Run In aood
decoration•. FrH $300 ldt. FrM condition. Calll14·992-3933.
,,.lnlng, Pll~' auppU•. No col·
Farmer'• Horne Admlnlltratlon
~ Ktlng. No delivering. Alao,
bool&lt;ill!l portln. lt~1002 loanJ avalla~e. Approved IIC..
tlon~l ~ow on display. French
Diana Sanders.
City Mobllt Hom•. 114-446Now hiring tar all thlfta tpply In 11340.
person, Mon-Sun. 2-4, asK- tor
Sonney Wendy't 390 Sliver HARTFORD· I roams, bath, a~
Bridge Plaza, Galllpolll, OH prox. 4 ac'". Will Point Road.
$22,000. Colt Colllel, 1~14-282·
45631 • EiOIE.
821a
PI~ limo LPNj lioxlablo lltlfta, I :-:=~-;-,-,.,--::--:------­
Cart Haun o Point Pltlllnt, New Llatlng.Porttrbrook-3 br,
apply In pe:rson, Route 1-lolf brlck-2 blthl, LR, FR, Kit, heat
326, Pt. PH, Rt. 62 N.
pomp,
ln.g..,und
-1-City
Schoolo-$70,~ . 614-245-8375.
Part lime position o~n C.rt
Haven, L.aundry/HouHkeaping, Nice 8 room home, 28QS Birch
tppl~ In per1on, At. 1 •Box 321, Avenue, 3 bedrooms, tor mal
dining room, tamllu roam. 304Pt , P . AI . 62 N.
175-3757. .
'
Part-time mtdlcall1b technician
tor a lully equipped phYIIclan't Small home. Buy cheap; en..
labor~~tory. No shift work. Apply large lt. BaauUtul location. 15
In person. Madlcal Plaza, 203 min. to Galllpolle or Mercerville.
J1ck,son Plk•, Galllpolla. 1:30 to 114-251-8200. ,
,
5:00.
32 Mobile Homes
Point Plasant &amp; Mason Gino'•
S1ores ar• now accepting a~
for Sale
pUcatlona for all poe,tllon ..
12155, 2 btdraam. Good con.R.D. only wanted. 18 hours por dillon. Coll.14·11:1-5858.
week. W.i.C. counseling. Melgl
Coonty HoaHh Dopt, 1114-1192· 121&lt;85 1910 Croolino, 14x80 1172
6626.
Am•rlcan Recandltlan like new,
gu hut. 2 br., centnl •lr/$6850.
Nurs e
position 114-446-0175.
Roglstered
available.
Excellent- salary, -=-'-~----------benefits, tuttlon relmb...-stmant. 12x85 3 -~rooms, 2 batha,
S!gn on bonul!. Call for an Inter- l:i,SOO. 304-875-2722.
vki w LaRu• Hill, DON, 114-1126601. EOE.
1176 141170 3 br., 2 botho $8,000.
114-31'7-7808.
Siner for 7 yr In our home GaJ.
llpolls Ftrry ar~~ , 304-e75...285D.
1080 NathU114x70, 2 bedroom
2 bath, gardan tub, cantril air:
Vl't SHUIY Shop hal lmmedlatl dlshwasMr, . atovt; tlraplar:.,
opening lor good hair drttur, waaher/dryer hookup, porch,
apply In per.an, 304-175-5503. · m1ny extru. Sell or rent furnished or unlumlohod. 114·1111Wanted. Rellablt woman to live 3919.
In and care for eldertr, couple. ::.:.:;_-----------No drinking, no amok ng. Must 1983 Triumph, 14X60, 2 btd·
ba responsible .. Call .-14--992· rooms, 1 blltht, centr~~l air,
5335 Or 614·985-3561. Near watherfdryer, 8x10 deck, unstortt and hospital.
derplnnlng. Very good condition
on r•ntad lot. 304-&amp;75-2047 or
614-367-7120.
Situation
12

*

Wanted
Baby slner needed tor 3 preschool children In my home In
Raci ne area. No week..nda.

Rafaranced required. 614-992·
5870.
WI car8 for elderly and handicapped In our home. 26 yeare
axpar~ance.

LPN on call. Low
income home. Call 614·992·6873
aHer 7:00 p.m. tor more Information.
Will carl tor elderly. Hav•
references. 614·667--3402.
Will tak• car• of elderlyf.oraon
In my home. 614-843·516 .

15

Schools

&amp;

Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Jackson Pike.
Call 614-446-4367. Reg. No. 8611·1CISSB.
18

wanted to Do

Plano lessons, In' my home. Jay
Or. area . Beginning to Inter·
med iate. 614-441..0200.
Wanted to Do: .babyslttlng In my
home
rHMr CheshlreiKyger
Elementery. 614-367·7628.
Will babysit In my home.
Reas onable rates. ReferencH
available.
a~es,
al10
weekends. C~i1614 ·2"45-5788.

..II

Will do hoult cleaning and
spring cleaning. Have references, 304-675--7209 or 675-7554.

21

1986 Rftnian S.Ctlontl 28'x56'
3br., 2 bath, CIA, mutt be
moved. 614-446-8594afler 6.

1987 Oanvllle, total electric
14x701 hat pump, 3BR, 1·112
bath. 614·245-9244 anytime,
245-9&amp;77 attar I .

Sale or rent. 2 bedroom, air fur-

niture. · Good condition. Must
move. $3500. S1arag• rooma extra. 614-892-7288.

33

Fanns for Sale

By OWner. Bunce Ad. 235 ICrll

mil. One of the btllt l'oeatlont In

Galli• County. Good producing
farm, houH, bulldlnge. Must
... to appreciate. 614-448-4288.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

2 acre lot Ashton, Mason 80,
public wltar, $20,000.00. 3051146.. 983.
2 acre lot, Ashton, Mason 80,
public walar, $20,000.00. 305146..183.
401 acrH for sale. Old Titus
propwty. Mlnaral rlghta 614-7422711.
45 acre~ ot ground. In Rott
\Ially back of SyracuM. Good
hontl1111, tlmblr. $15,500. 114882-389:1.
Ashton beautltul one acre Iota
with rivll' frontag• , public water,
Clyde Bowen, Jr. 304--516·2:136.

Tralllr nlcl clten unfumlahad,
refarencH rw.qulrtd, Routt t out
Loeoot Road on right, 304..7!11071,
.

44

Apartment
for Rent

move lc refrigerator,
no ,.tal$179 mo. Water . In·
clodod, $100/dopooll; Coli 114446-3617.
1

1 br., with

2 bedroom ap~rtmant, Gallipolis
Forry, WV. 304475-2548.
2 bedr~m aptt. tor rent. Car~
ootod. Nlco lilting, lollndry
facilltl. . avallablt. Calll14·ii237n FOH.
2 bedroomk In Raclnt. Gat, ott
lt'"t per lng. Cell 114-Ht2420 IYenlngt.
2 br., apt. 1 up I 1 down, Uppar.
AI. 7, wotor I garbrlgo paid.
Dtp. req'd. Kanauru. area. 614446-31140.
""

238 Fll'lt Ave., 1 br., rtvervltw,

kitchen
whh
stove
&amp;
rwlrlgtralor, 1$180/Mo. plua
dapoall. Ullllllu &amp; ,.terence, no
poto.614-441-4121

3 room fumllhld apt. around
floor: prlv•t• entnnc• and
pa,1dna, outaklr11 of Henderson,
all ~llftn lncludld 127!1.00 por
month. 304-875-6730.
BEAunFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT ~ACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackaon Plko
from $192/mo. Walk to thop &amp;
movies. Call614-446-2568. EOH.

I!Dl • &lt;D 91 Wliall Of
Fortuna C
•liD WKliP In Clnclnnaa
iiJ M0111,tlna
_® AndJ GriHIIIt

Bed 8 mo. Old. OUMn slzt. Ntw
cond. $t50. 114-448-22117.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used •ppllancaa, T.V. 1tt1. Open
8 a.m. to I p.m •. Mon •.Set. 114441-16'!, 827 3rd. Avo. Ga~
lipollo; ""
Full tlze bedroom suite. 5
drawer chest, drnur wUh 'mlr·
ror, oolid wood, Broyhill. Ukl
now. 614-892·2733 aftor 5pm.

11J Miami Vlce

Card
7:05 (]) AndJ Grlllilli .
QDTop

7i30 8 (}) Famlfr .._
(!) SpeadwHk Highlights ol

55

King elze wlttr bid, dining
room tabt~1 .couch and recliner,
814-317.0""' aftor 1:00 Pll.
PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Uold
HouHhold furnlthlng. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WV,
oali304-e75-1450.

Building

Block, brick. NWtr Dlpe•, window._ llnttlt, etc. Claude Wlntera, Hlo Grandt, OH CAll 814245-6121.

Conning tom1t- $5.001bu- yclur contalnor $5.001bushal •
our conlalntr. 1·112 mi. S. of
Galllpolio on St. AI. 7. 814-25e1131.
F-h ""nina pooohH. 114..um after .1 p.m.

56

Pets for Sale

::2-p-.~..-:b:-:,ood---:~D:.a:..c:;.h•.;h..:.o:..nd'=-=S1:-:25::

Financial
Business

Woodland, 132 acrea, $35,000
Rt. 7, below Eureka, Call 614! ·
4116-4416 aft• 7 p.m.

J&amp;R Producl. Com, tomltcuoumberll, "-"'· 114-843-5313.

ooch. 814-448-4o48.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Ltvestock

5
month old
Roglstorod
Alrodllo, tomato. $75. C'all 814742.:!450.
AKC Cockor Spaniol puppl.o.
$250. Thaso pups oro boaotlluli
114-1192-5883. .
AKC MlnWu,. Dachahund pup-

Real Estate

61 Fann 'Equipment
1450 Ollvor Tractor, $3,150.
round hey ballt;
$2,715. eoo Ford tractor $2150.
Ford F..,nt..nd loader. $41!1.
614·2-522.

w.v.

oo~.-

1.

'LE. 11,000
mllll. PS. PB. Air, Power Windows, Powor Slllo, AII-FII

1987 T~yote 4x4, red I ..,Rd.
t65 MF traotor wHh 850 NH, .Shorp. $8,500. 304.. 75-393&amp;. .
round btller, $8750. Lit• modtl
550 Olivor with 5 ft. buoh hog, 1981 Nluan Sontrl XE, 4 crt.
$3105.814-286-8522.
· low mi., clean take ovtr
payment•, caN Br11nda Far time
400 gallon Muellar Stain-len &amp; day. 114-lote-8407.
IIHII Milk Tank. 814-381H1148.
1188 Rod, Chi'YIIor LoBamon
New Holland. Slurry Maneaur Turbo, ]oldod, 814-446-3939.
Spreader, Ulld 1 yr., 11ft. Patz·
Silo I unloedlr, Uttd 1 rr., 114- CIOYERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcln
1.- $100. Fordo. llorcodoo.
388-11141.
Corvottu. Chovyo. Borpluo.
S.w chaine to lit any u.w.l. buy Buy.-• Qulde 1..SQS..I87..eooo,
one get one frtt draWing, ualllt ExL 5-10181.
and Maaon County flll'l. Sidera
llochanlc opoclai19~ Dodge oEqulpmonl, 304..75-7421.
24 $500. 814-446-3831.
Livestock .
63
72 TNCkS for Sale
ATTENTION H0r11 Clwnoro,
Paint Plut 11 now carrying tack. 18H Ford london 750 dump
Paint PLilo, 2415 Jacklon Avo.. truck, 5 • 3 Tr1n1. 332 motor.
Point PloiNnt, phono 30447!1- good condHion. $3,000 or .
ollor. 11~8837.
4084.

5492.

Blue tick coon hound, On•
Harpocord. 614-38i-1766.
Bord•r Colllt Pu~, All thotl,
-ready to go. 814~281-2491.
Dragonwynd Catt.,Y Konnal.
Poralan,
Slameu
and
.. Himalayan kiHtn•. Chow •tud
oorvlco. 6t4-446-3844 altor 7
p.m.
Fish T•nk, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleaant, 304-4175-2013, 10
gal 111 up $14.18 ond 10 gal
complete $43.25.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pit
Grooming. All brooda. Allltyloo.
limo Pol Food Doalor. Julio
Wobb. Call 81'!-448.0231.

64

&amp;

Grain

Caaltt•!Equallzer.
oondlllon.
evenJnga.

1881

Clll

cr-y

EKcellent

f1 4-11:14011

hlt~ton

11043,

;;;55=9;,..
---------------

Mlnla,ture Sc_hn1u1ere .. 2 male-,
1 san and pepr,r; 1 black and
gray. $150.00. I wuko old. Cal
304-575-2483. Aok lor Jonnllor.
Parakosts $6; Dov,. $3; 2 p.,.
roto $25ooch, 814-446-7765.
Pook A Poo popploo 1100,«1
taeh. Mother registered Apricot
Poodl•. fathar pure bred Ptkln~
gou, 304-675·2621 or 871-2128.
Reglllerld malt Wnl Highland
Whito Torrlor puppy. Born 4-119,
2947.Hao - · · '100. 814-742-

a

Regular B~H Cocker S~nlal
popplol/1150. 114-245.9122.

71

Autos for Sale

1884 Chovy lmpola 2 door, loctory 14/Cc $500. llrm, 304-!17!11313orlt~781.

::}4:::5.;."~464:,.;.:..-,----=-------

Mon:odu Benz Dl2,000 ~=tank,
rwtdy to roll. 114-44
,
tl77 4'WD 314 ton, runo """"•
....,...
body fair, nMdl tranemiUion
wort . UOO llrrn. 614-388-11688.
1176

wattr

11117 Oldsmobllo C~ins, now
paint ond 11'!1.1.!'~ o~glna~ oxc
co:nd, 304-17D-Or.H.
t874
Vontura
To bo
n It:
1110 Pontloc.
Second Avonuo
7&amp;8. Chlap.

bot""''"

1875 Chovrolot lmpola, AC, PB,
PS, exc ";~~~ cond, eom•
Tamo rabbHo tor oolo. All alzoo ruot, $800.
.:!019 or 182and colora. Jim King, Long Bot- 2471.
tom, 011. 614.S43·5274.
:::::-==-:::-:--::.,..-,::----:
1978 Uncoln llork IV. Good
Young rabbits bom June a"2, l\lnnlng concl11on with 10me
largo mht:ed brHd, tolld color oorlaco ruol. Flrot $500. 814male1. $5.00 aach. C.ll 614-44&amp;- 812.. 5114.
4680.
57

114-lote-23011, orlt4-241-te84.
ten 314 ton Chny, body aood
shape, ell good parte. tttlda
hud p1Ut. 1310. 114-381teal.
-~~-7-a""o"'Ho_vy
__p,...lc,...k&lt;~-p-,~h-oovy-:-IM-:-r,,
Just ...bulb, tranomruton. 114-

truck.

1978 Chovy c.ao truck with 1711.
rotlblck bod. Thlo truck II oo
sharp-It can reid and write.
$7,3~ 814-2116-&amp;522.
1m Chevy C.10, 112 ton, 8 cyL,
Scattedalt, 1 utamalla. Gooa
condHion. $2000. C.U· 814-11114421after 1:00 p.m.
11- " " - 3011
t 1 4 ••7
'" --·••
moor. 1 -- 7118.

Musical
Instruments

1877 Buick LA Sobro, 301 v ..
englntl 1uto, ci\IIM, PSJ PB,
goad 1 roo, ~ory Mom wnnt•,
78,000 mlloo, coU 304-875-:Uoo 1171 Ford
ayl .• etan-or 675-1'181.
dord on
• •1810 Chavy
814'
1978 ChtveH•, four speed, 1lr olckup. 4 - drlvo, ......
.
'
cond, make an offlr, aaH J04. 1148.:!749.
875·1725.

ep. •

41 Houses for Rent
2 bedroom
bath,
rMWiy
deeora1ed!. baaulltul cai'J)et,
Pomeroy. D14-092-5858.
3 br., homt Upper Rt. 7 ntar
shopping centar. $275/mo. plue
HCUrlty t;llpo11H Nq'd. 114-4411188, or 114441 88115.

2132.

Houle tar rent In Ct.t.ter.
Phonoi14-H2-7252.

N.w hoult, 3 bed ·room,, 2
bolito, doOollt and rallroncoo,

Ill• .t.Ho, 304 ..15-3878.
Pom~~oy.

2 bedroom, gas, ott
• - porllln~ big ·yard1 opo
ptla- l!lm
room, f1 ..n2215t or 114-74 -2972. .

79

expensive watch on the

•

street. (R~ C
(!) Mickey fltompaon•~ Off
Road Chlmplonlhlp Orand
Prix From Pasadena, CA (T)
W Cl (Jl A Man Called
Hawk Revolutionary tries to
kidnap his brother from an
American family. (R~
&lt;lJ To Sa Announced
(!) VlntagJ: A Ht11tiry Of
Wlna. Empire Of Wine

Motor Homes

1111

(2:001
(!)] PrlmaNIWI

1171 Wlnnoblgo, 24ft, oloopo I,
se,m.oo. Cllr304-t75-44ao.

IIJ Murder, Slia Wrote
QD N~1hvHII - .

8:30 a(})

91 Dill_. World
Owayna claims that Jesse
. Jackson has endorsed him
lor ortlce. IR) Q
&lt;Il World Of cartooning
8:00 D (}) 91 C._. Fraiser and
his wile rejeCt clviUzatio~ and
move to the wilds . IR) Q

Midll . Mini - · tow
1977
mlleaga,~AM . ''· .• ~- ;r
1978 Vagi Travol Trallar. 29 112

y'&lt; ...

e.PLOrz

B&gt;AI.. ~TAT~

/

///

'

;15ft. Coachman HI, Park Travlf
Trailer. $3500. 814-357.o447 or
814-149-2840.

(!) Tlturtdlly Nlgltl Thuildar
(1 :00~

W Ci (I)

Services
81

Mlulon:, ,
lmpeilllbta Christie, a one
time trlendly agent, becomes
the IMF' s adversary. (RI Q
&lt;lJ (!) Mpteryl Harri!ll ·
discovers disturbing events
have plagued her old college:

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT

i • G2lCBS~VIE:
Tlturtdlv Nlfllil

WATERPROOFING
.
UncondltiOMI lifetime guann·
IH. Local- Nftrtnee~ fumlshed.
FrH •llmat•. Call collect 1·
814-237-04$8, day or night. R o
aer•Baeement
Watorproollng.

'Oulliack

Sound'
Movie (2 :00~ C

iiJ ..., Klngl.lvat
11J Thurtdllr Nlgltl Flghte

8:30. rn

10:00 (}) 700 Club

Fetty Tr.. Trimming, atump
NlnOYII, Clll304-175-f331.

D !1l 91 L.A. t..w \/an
Owen senses Kuzak has a
dlllereni personal agenda.

Ron'• TV Servloe, apeclallzlng
In ZonHh ..,.Icing moot
other brandt. Houu calla, alto
.amt appliance repalre. WV
304-lll-2398 Ohio 114-44112454,

,,

W&amp;..Raclng
(I) Prima T1mto With
Sam Donaldson &amp; Diane
sawyer

Ill

r,.

AOiary or cable 1ool drilling.
Molt walls complettd tame
Pump llln and urvlcll,

:Z:

.

SWEEPER and oowing machlno
Npalr, parts. and suppiiH, Pick
up ancf delivery, O.vl1 .Yecuum
CIHRif, one htlf mHe up
Goorgu CrMk Rd. 114-44602114.

·

a

(l)NeWoQ

HERE COMES
'MY BROTHER
' BUSSA

. TRY

TH' · LAST

TIME
BUSSA LEFT HERE
YOU NEVER EVEN

TO BE

A LlnU
MA_NN!RI.Y,
' PAW--

~.

SOOD·

. BYE!!

•

'

Septic Tank. Pumping Ito, Gallla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jacklon, OH 1.. 00.137'8528.
82

!Ill

Dear John John's
ex-wife wants him to prllle~d
they are still married. (RI Q
QD VlclaoCounlr)'

Electrical,
roofing,
kitChen
bathroom replacemanl, fnlmlng,
concr.tt, dryall, ceramic Instal!
llltlan, all remodeling 304-175-2440.

1111-3102.

e G2l 48 Hour~

Schizophrenia, tho most
common form of men1a1
Illness, is explored . ~
ID liD MOVIE: Halll'llium !AI

1885 Shllll "'!mpar, 17, air
condltlan. Can be ••n at lSI
Burdotlo Addition. 304-1757301.

ft. Awning, air, v1ry clean. At
Browne T,..h., Cowt. 114-8122229.

a Cli111

7:35 &lt;IJ Major LIIIIUII Saaabatl
8:008(1) '91 Coabr Show

'11 ft. Travel Masttr ca,..p.,,
Sl"pe I . Fully contained. Gaod
ohapo. 11540. 11~ Fonl
Cougar, Now tirn now bonor,
$350: 30911 llcEihiMOy Htn;
lllddioport.
,·

(!) Moyers: A Second LOOk
Moyers lookl at some
people atlacted by changes
In social tipenCilng. Q
ID liD Samey Millar

N-•

(!)] l!...,lng
10:20 &lt;II MOVIE: Will Penny (NRI
(2:15~
.

1a:30 m M•ll1et'PIICe Th. January 1940: The Romanian
prime minister has been

a

assassinated.
GIIID Samey Millar

Plumbing &amp;
Heating ·

C,t,RTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
cor. Fourth and Plno
Galli polio, Ohio
Coli 114-446-3888 Of 814-448o
4477.

.

IIJ) Nawa
QD On 811!1141
11:00 (}) MOVIE: Tlia Spirit 01 SL
Louie (NRI (3:00)

'

• rn w a Cll
91 New•

&amp;
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

..

you/II be able to 10cceld today In han·
OH 44101-3428.
dUng...,....,.., • I a • dllllltna thil
VIICIO (Aug. . . IIPL 22) Mike almh hid lhtl 1*101'1 com.-., be1ttec1 .
e11or1 today •to .contact an ll&gt;dtvtdual PilCH (M.
Oon'i bo
who 18 llhPOI'Iaot to your lmmedlllla reluCtant to go to 1011'180rte . , _ lntelplant.t;outllltlllar you have IMn unable · ilglilce you ,..._. K you . . tn ,_, o1
to~. You-.ould be lucky in making
ldvlce or COIInMI todlly. m.~e one o1

MtfGt.l.i·

C..,._• Oat Ill au.. w1n u1111 you todly In allluatlortlnl"ftk:h you

~

tellltolllled and ~Ill. Their Inter·

..,liOn wllltetp you I'8IOiw • dllemrnll
lhaliii . . IMCI to be wlthQuluolullOn.
ICDIIJIIO (Ole. 14 ttn. M) Tod~y
you'l . _ • oppartunltr to 11ft oeepooll~lttty otl a lrllnd'l IIIOUtdlr.
· Your thauglttlut- will - " , _
bondl o1 -ldelltlp blllwal • you

2780.

Furnished

·=

Rooms
Roome lor r•nt ·week or month.
Stirling It $210/mo. Gallla
Hotol. '14-44MSIO.

ltel.
MIIU8 ,..... II Del 111 'rhao
r 1 • lion 01 _ . . i11tporW1t go.~~
1t1 within the,...,.. of IIOIIIbtttly t¢ar.
~.
_,., blllencled to you
I

Sl•plng room• wnh cooking.
Alao tralllr lpact. All haok-ups.
Call tfter 2:00 p.m., 304-7735851, M11on wv.
"

~~·=·~-~~~~:: to have

Space for Rent

111 A IOCial

todey coutd

.... 111111111
have
Ghost Hlde-and-.S eek

a ..........

__ ,_:_t

.

"

..

(I)
GJ USA Today
liJI Spom Tonlglrt
1121 Pllllalak Show
lBl M1!11nunii P.t. This Island
Isn't Big Enough
.

e

a

I(0:301~"'i'n=s........
Tonlfllil
.

TAIIIUI (April • " 1 10) II you get
oaugltt up In -type o1 oompe!lltva
1001a1 ln..,._,, today, play to w1n
wm.t malting Wln::ngalllltltlr olltle
!I' ilallll. The l-111tl*tgie to WliOY

(IIIIJ 11......_ •1 Today you
you kMi

by llllllllng
01
-hOw
- to
. make
You'l !he
- moat
c:t.ty
'~on

..-.

11....., II) W1tera 1m-

001•••·

a11gn

lltelulln
wllllkUIN olltalll.
'•

Cniok a Cltll"

12:00(1) tNt AMA sUparcr~ll
(0:30)_........

011111 lllart.

mly blallle to ......

+AQ7

It was aggressive for South to bid·
four hearts. A better choice after
North's raise to two hearts would be to
cue-bid three club&amp; to strongly invite
game while showing the club ace.
North woold now certainly bid game,
bolstered by the knowledge that his
cjub king was not a wasted value.
After a little thought, West led the
six of diamonds. That hesitancy before
leading told South he did not need to
fear that East held a six-card club
suit.. So 4eclarer could safely allow
East to bold the first trick with the
king of diamonds. You'll soon see why
that play was necessary. East returned a diamond. Declarer won the
ace and played queen of hearts. East
won the ace and returned a heart. AI
this point South could make the contract if the spade finesse was onside;
but the opening bid Irom East made
Ibis unlikely. Instead declarer played
A-K of clubs and then another clull
from dummy. But he did not ruff. Instead be discarded a spade. That left
East on lead. If he played a diamond,
declarer would ruff in dummy while
discarding another spade. If he played
a club, declarer would ruff; and dummy's last club would be a winner. And

1111 Pet Sajlllt .......

DIID Twllglll z-.

o Ne•af~Wd

1

ACROSS
· 1 Brazilian
seaport
61ndlan

weight unil

SOUTH·

+&amp; 4 2 .

.KQJ1098
t A4
+A4

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

Soo..

-

•• ·
49

Pass 29
All pus

Nor..

E11t

I+

Pass

Opening lead: t 6
a spade would go into the jaws of dummy's A-Q.
What il declarer had won the first
Irick with the ace of diamonds? East
would win the ace of hearts and put
West on lead with a diamond, and a
spade would come through dummy's
A-Q. And we'd have no trouble guessdeclarer's name - obviously

9 Still remem- cralt (abbr.)
bered

1

o Pay ettenlion to

45 Turn
upside
down

. 12 Sheets and DOWN
.
towels, e.g. 1 TV Immortal
13 Jockey
2 "Essays
14
Cordero
of "
15 New
3 Like
17
Guinea
some coats
town
4 "All About
20
18 Small, child ., ·· "
18 Big Power

5 Refer to

Yelterdey'a Anawer
Coat
feature
Lofty
mountain
Oct. 'birthstone ·

29 Greek
letter
31 English
, .. river
32 Eared
38 Jacket

23 Bell sound

. style

initials
8 Of doubtful 24 One of tbe 37 Dullard
19 Ornamental honesty
Churchills
(sl.)
mat
7 Bard's
25. Spellbinder 39 Family
21 Facial
feature

adverb .
8 Habitual

22 Explosive 11 " - Under
sound
lhe Elms"

28 Football
pass

member
41 Genera-

27 Author,
Ashley - -

lion

...--~....-

23 Uncovered
24Goose
27 Mushroom
28 Soviet
Inland sea
29 Cargo
weight
3 0 - fink
3' Ballroom
· darice
33 Had supper
34 Furrow
35 Number
for Moses
38 Pacer or

pi!!~ald
40 Playing
marble
42 Joan
Crawford
film

DAILVCR VPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It;

l r'3

AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

. One
. for

letter stands for another. In this sample

X for

A is used

lwo O's,

etc. Single letters ,

apostrophes, tJ!e length and fonnation

gf the words are all

the thi'ee I.' s,

the

hints . Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPJOQUOTE

8-3
If

liE

X

QMMZHER

XM

MLX MWO'E RFHN QMN
H· Q

KNHOQ

Gil Lata Ntglitoa.tdt..lll-

FEELFKOC

IIJ)
(2:30),

+KJ53
.A7
tKJ9
+QIOH

962
tQI076S2
+J7

landing

FE

li"=TICIQ
.
MO'tl~f...%-.., (PGI

. EAST

WEST
8109 8

43 Burt
Reynolds
· 111m
44 Military

.,..,.... Now

(1) AulD llaalng 1-IMSA
GTO, tram Poriland. OR (T}

+K86H

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IIJ New • • " - -

12:30.1])

·~43
tiS

CROSSWORD

91 Tonlglrt Show

ille One~'&amp;..
Ntahlllne Q

n11e1y 111111er u.n one.

=·

BRIDGE

(1)~(0:301

. , . , (111Nhl1·9111111 Sublllanllll
11111 tn the Oiling lor you el thttl ·
time..._. your WOlle or - • concemad, but - . you hope to ge1 or
glln wilt onty 11 a ol dedl-

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(!)] Croullre

lBl Major League Saaabatl

Uood pickup boda, Ford 1No-

Up.talra apartment. 3 bedroom
11¥111!1 room, kHchon bath. 1160:
38 N. Second, M1ddleport. 3
bedroom houH $125. Nlot
location, Fourth St., Middleport.
Rent or buy on land contract.
Coli 614-112·2403 Of 114-112·

Common:iol 1400 sq.IL
Comor locond ond Pine. Arnplo
parking. Colll14-4ote-4241, 4412321, "'446-4421.
.

1111 e G2l 91 Jaopardrt Q
.liD M'A'S'H ·

Theo's friend Denny finds an

TO IPINP IT·

Refrigeration

46

i

THOVJ"ANP ·WAY$

ASTRO-GRAPH ,

45

!

oNE WAY TO
SAVf IT NJP A

350 Pontiac Englno, $275, 350
Pontiac Tr1nomlnlon $75, Pontile Melge, 114-317·71QS.

(0:301
G(l) USA Today

Iii

ONI.'(

tlon • complete. Phona 304-1112604.

true~.

~~~~~~:;,;,.,,...,,. I pravlouotr lldvorlllld 11 11200
KlttM'II, 'almoel pure Slameaa, Ha~ In the tllld $t.OO, 304-8T5- finn. Prlct now Mgotlonabl•.

$10. and $15. Phono 304-117!1-

260 Olda engine and tranamiJ..

$3750. 114-

'f,IJTH

/ft'ONEY 1$ THE~f'$

' Accessories

85; Chevy, Dodg-. 1hort or Song,
304.. 7!1-2288 or 175.e288.

~118~1~PI~ym~o~~h~-:R~o~ll~ant~,--,-:~~o
T'ana, ACa:t;s Ex. DOM.,

Tfie
TftDCJILE
.
.

Bank StateMents

&amp;

1981 c:ougar, toadld, 38,000
mlln. New 1lltlt. $8,000. Arm.
304 ..~~.

Roglolorod
Goldan
Rot~ov.r puppioo. 8 wlcs. old.
Had Ill lholo. Call304-882-2854.
AKC r.glst1red Cockar Spanlal
popploo. Boll, $150. 304-773-

Auto Parts

POOR BOY TIRES, 304475333t, !lonlond ollnmont $1U5I
4,000 good uood llroo, oom
t1r11, new tlr•.

Venn••

.AKC

76

Electrical

For Rent : Houu In Rio Grande,
1271/mo. pluo ~lit. 113-313-

• -lnd bath. On 3 to 4
oor• WIIIIDOinl Rd., Ho~lonl1
S22,o6a. 1.. 14-212-11210

1185 Ford Eoco~. 12500. 10,000
miiH. 11441...9305.

or 44&amp;.o010.
1987 lonnovlno

Rentals

Completly ,.modaled 2 br.,
horM In Cent•rvlll•. Dep. I ret.
.-q'd. 114-245-6204.

3 -oomf, 2 botho on 21.15
ac,.... bac:ii of Mason. 304--7735&amp;88. .
1 rooma and bath, cantralalr, 12
..:roo rand, rnlklll!l dlotance to
Point P l - . 304'f7&amp;-7235

1985 Dodgo Chragor. 2.2 onglno,
5 41,000 miiH- f2500.
114-'742·ihi3 aftor 1:00 p.m.

1 • Porrtloo Grand Am 2 dr.,
IIIIo. trans., AC, lloroo, lJi-FM,
c.osone, cru1oo. 11..-1aae

Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
,..commtnc:ls that you do
buslnoss with paoplt you know,
a.ndl- NOT to unci monty
throu~ the mall until you hlvt
lnveat•geted lhe otterlng .

1N5 Oodat Chlrg• 4
Jpeecf, exfra olean, ioW
I
well maintained, new brakea1
ahocka, ltrutt aMI more. Prlcea
to uli 11 only $4000. Coli 304875.. 531.

pin. Roody to go Augoot t .
Shott and wormed. Call 6t4-992.al23.

Ashton, beautiful ona acre Iota
with river fro,.tage, public water.
C1yde/Bowtn, Jr. 304-578·2338.
Ashton, larg• building Iota
mobil• hornet ptrmlned; Publici
water, prlctt reductd. Clyde
Iowen, Jr. 304-576-2336.

FNitS&amp;
Vegetables

WHI: Vlralnla Trul8, roof tru•
to ordar, Ro~o~tt 21, ont
milo North ol Rlploy. 304-372V323.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olivo St., Galllpollo. NEW I pc.
waod group, ~331, Llvill!l -m
IUIIH I1H458e. Bu'ni bedl
with bedding, $241. Full IIZI
mattma &amp; touru:lltlon starting
$99. Racllner• starting $91:.
UESD Btda, drtutre, bedroom
tuhtl. Dtskl. wringer wathtr,a
complett lint of used fumilurt.
NFW Wutorn booto
$35.
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Stool •
IOH too.l 114-446-3151.

58

Supplies

IH bUIU

R•frig, froM frM I atove Hlf·
c111nlng 4 yre. old, both whitt,
liko now. $600 lor beth. 614-44622111.

!loll-dolroat rolrigorotor, white,
Basement apartment. 1160. per $12!1. Moytag hoovy doty o~o.
monlh. All utllhi11 paid, fur- Wither, $100. Speed QuMf'l
nlsh.d. Sultab&amp;t for 1 or 2 auto waeher, $65. 110 electric
aduHs, Phono 614-992-2545 or ·dryor, apartment llzo, $85. 614614·149-2528.
742-2352.
Fumlshed 2 bedroom apt Sola and RCA HI·FI' ln'Cablnot.
reference and socurlty depasli Callaher 5 p.m ... 304·675-2474.
required, New H1ven, 304·882·
Uud lippll•ncas. Washars,
3287.
dryart, rangn, refrlgeratort,
FumlahH Apt, 1Br, $2101 microwave ovena. Kan'a Ap.
~llltiH pd., 701 4th, GallipoHo.
pllanca, 217 E. Second Sl.,
114-44&amp;.4411atter 7 p.m.
Pomeroy, 814-~2·5335 or 114Fomlshod Apt., 1BR, $225, 185-3581.
~lllliu pd. 243 Jackoon Plko,
Vi'RA
Galllpolla. 814-446-441&amp; atlar 7
Furniture
&amp; Appll1nctt
p.m. .
Rt. 141 In Centenary, 1/4 mi. on
Fumlshld, all utllltltl paid, In• Lincoln Plk•. Mon-sat: i a.m. 1111
cludot cable T.V. ldtal tor I p.m .. Sunday 12-5. Opan till 8
bachelor Baautltul rlvervltw In p.m. lor appointments. 814-146Kanauga. Foatert Mobile Home 3158. Financing avallablt, plus
Instant Clllh re6afn up to $100.
Park.l14-4ote-1602.
Baattt lnteraprtng. Sluper
Fum/shad, In Syracuse. Adultl sofa, $341. BaMit awlval rocker
praforred. Call614-992-2749.
$149. 5 polco wood groopo
$310. Beddlng!mllttrest HI $99.
Garaga apt. fumishtd, 29 112 Crtb maltr8n S2D.D5; 7 place
Nell. Gallipolis $225/mo. Ulllltlll BaMttl ~tor bedroom aulte
pd. Call 614-446-4418 altor 7 $999; 4 drawer chill $44.95;
p.m.
Bunk boda 1148 or $12.46.
table &amp; 4 ctw.ln $149.
Gracloue living. 1 •nd 2 bed- Dinette/
Hutch $199; complete llne af
room apartment• ill Ylllaga oak
&amp; counlry fuml•. hlnaa. Oak
Manor
and
Riverside
Cabinet Curvtd" glatt
Apl!rtmtnts In Mlddltpor1. From Currlo
front with ·claw ftet $279 lr
$182. Call 614-992-7787.
$15.14. • Wood
microwave
Large 2br.. apartment. First cabinet 1121, r•gular $249. Air
Avonuo, otovo rar~gorator, AC, I c·omt&gt;rao,IOfio' $11; gon coblnot
&amp; wat•r turn 1Med. Off Strttl $111. 30 day wu,.nty on atove
I ~~~·~2~25/~mo~.~8~14'4~
' ~4~6~-82~2~1. retrJgerator,. Wllhere, drytt'll
j&lt;
dHp ff'Mztrtl.
opt.
--'--7.7.-''-:---..,,.----stove, relrlg.
V1lley Fumlture
1 260fmo. plua dep. Utllttin I
New ai'NI us.ct turnituN and a~
rat. No pets. 614-448-tm.
pllancea. Cell 114-446--7572.
Now IJCCeptlng appllc8tlorw lor Hours I..J.
2. bedroom apt, tully carpeted, ;;W;::at;::l::;:rbod
= .-,-c,-cm:-1-wa-v""ot:1,-,-:$:-:2-50-.
appliances, water and trath Call614-992-2921.
pickups provided. Maintenance
Antiques
lroo living closa to ohopplng, 53
banks and schools. For mora information _call 304-882 .. 3718. E- =a.-,y-or-,-~~"t.-:R=:I,.:vo-rl"'no.....,A-nt-lq-..
-,-.
qual opportunity houalng. Stc- 1124 E. Msln Street, Pomaro•.
tlon 8 accepted.
Houre: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
,
One
btidrOom
apartment, p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
utilltltt pald, $60.00 a week, 614-992-2526.
deposit required. 304-675-3100
or 175·5509.
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

the past week 's auto races
as well as racing news from
around the globe are ·
featured . (NRI
(I) Entertainment Tonight

.

GOOD . USED APPLIANCES
Washare, dryerl, retrlgtr8tora1
rangu. Skioggo Appliancoo,
Upper River Rd. B11ldt Stone
Crall llolol. Colii14-441-T398.

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