<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11808" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11808?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T13:22:10+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42778">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/12dc5fe93b48e682ced89729ff4bdb5e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0ba6964b01ed32e0ff1f6cc28ca208bb</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="37145">
                  <text>•

Paga

D-8-S~yTwne.~~Sa~m~i~n~a~;;;;;;====~~~~~~~~~~~~O~h~~~~~~·m~A~e~u~a~m~.~W~.~V~a~.;=;=====;===;=~;===~I==~A~ug~u~~~13~,~19~8~9
TY/ade
Continued from 0 -1
D
r.
w
--~:.::.:::.::.:::.:::=..:...--~-::-:-~=----:--~
Canaday gives breakdown -of
1

Gallia real estate tax collection
GALLIPOLIS -:- Gallla County Auditor Ronald K. c a·naday announced Salurday the
recent completion of the Augu st 1989 real estate tax collection.
The gross distribution amounted to $5,848,506.24.
In addition, each of the taxing districts will receive from the state reimbu rsement for
reduction In taxes due to a 10 percent rollback, homestead and the 2%-percent rollback.
Following i8 a brellkdown of the dil.tribution:
,
Addioon Townohip
Ch•hire Tawnahlp
Clay Townhip
GallipOHo Townohlp
G..., Townllhip
G....,field Townohip
Guyon Townollip
Horrioon Townllllip
Huntington Townahip
Morgon Townohip
Ohio Townohip
PorryTownohip
Raccoon Township
Springfield Townohlp
Walnut Townahip

Total Townships

FIRE LEVY
FUND

GENERAL
FUND

RD • • BOG .
FUND

822,4211.14
37.437.29
• 2.274.90
6.727.44
5,902.87
1.418 .27
1.622.89
1,064.13
2.236.81
2.205 .44
811 .110
1,}46.67
4,053.08
5.366.97
1,283.69

$11 ,213.48
4&amp;;814.70

$3,585.28.

2 ,361 .16

11 .186.32

3,064:86

1,228.72
1,163.18
898.86
2.074.99
809.08
746.86
1,351 .02 .
6,954.46
S32.042.01

$96.166 .77

RE-IMB. FROM
STATE

$1,261 .50
1.341.46
1.006.88
1,194.73
3.166.311
140.06
406.34
397.16
461.99
596.79
306.14
434.08
763.18
1.810.88
242.83
$13.506.92

;j

IMP.
FUND

GENERAL
FUIIID
Goltipolio City
Choohiro Villoge
Crown City Vllloge ·
Vinton ViHoge
•

•

Rio

Gran~e

Village

ContervMie Villoge
' Total Corporation•

$23,536.77
. 109. 1'8
205.34
.. 61 :64.
' •.86.37
.'116 .33

$1 ,392.02

$24,004 .43

$1.392.02

.

$4,352.06
22.63
46.33
361 .45
16.86
4 .63

~~~

$4,792.95
.•

GENERAL
.FUND
.
Gallio County LSD
Gellipoli~ City S.D.
Symmoo Voller LSD
Vinton LSD
Totol Scllool

BOND
FUND

. .129,683.50
122.482.74
716.82
57.93

U ,701 .868.63 · $585,404.34
762.321 .03
3,083.13
206.32
t3,467,478 .01
GENERAL
FUND

*252,900.99

$686,404.34
BOND
FUND

GJV Vocational S&lt;:hool
Lewrence Co. Vocational School

$372,381 .04
314.63

$76.50

824,133.66
90.13

Total Vocational School

$372,696.67

$76.50

$24,223.69

GENERAL
FUND
Gallia County

Mcintyre Park District
169 Boord
Gonerol Health
Bossard Memorial Ubrary
Community College
Totol Mlocelloneouo Fundi

$41,149.69
6.051 .39
13,554.33
2,795 .21
2,531 .50
6.384.79

$633.561 .36
93,170.75
231 ,503,49
51.371 .68
50.725.35
168,726.44 .

$72,486.81 ·

$1,219,059.06

Attends event
GALLIPOLIS - Robert G.
Hood of Second Ave., Gallipolis,
was among 50 · retailers who
attended the 30th annual Haggar
Institute at Philadelphia College
of Textiles and Science. Hood Is a
salesman at the Haskins Tanner
Co., Gallipolis.

Buy supplies now
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Buy supplies now If you can.
Gary ·Schnltkey, agricultural
economist at Ohio State University, says late summer and fall
purchases of next year's farm
supplies could be a good deaL
Compare any discounts and
bonuses you get for buying now to
what you could earn by lnves tlng
that money elsewhere. Schnltkey
says to check bank financing for
s~~j~~ll~~nab[~~e~fi&lt;o~r~e accepting any
&amp;&lt;
alternatives.

GALLIPOLIS MEN ATTEND MARKETING SCHOOL -Tom
Shepherd, telemarketing cootdlnator, and Bill Gray, media
director of the Ohio Valley Bank, Galllpolill, were amon1 the
students who graduated from lhe Ohio Bankers AuoclatlonSchool
of Sales and Markelln1 Planning at Miami Unlvel'lllty In Oxford,
Ohio recently. The resident training school Is sponsored hy the
Columbus-based OBA, In cooperation with the Miami University
School of Business Administration. Class Instruction ran 4'h days
'
with 28 hours of classroom hours and five seminar hours.

Stewart allowed b11yers and sellers
to enjoy lhe evening entertainment
. !&gt;y Pl!tty Loveless.
Livestock sales for this y~
totalled $96,492.20. There were
$90.706.20 in original sales with
resales bringing in$5,786.00.
·
The sale began with the market
lamb auction during which 45
, lambs were sold. The II 0-pound
Grand Champion market lamb
shown by Amy McDade of
Southside sold for $8 per pound. It
was purchased by City Ice &amp; Fuel
of Point Pleasant Kevin Hughes of
Ashton sold his IIO-pound Reserve
ChampiD!l market liunb to Peoples
Bank for $6 per pound. This lamb
was then resold to benefit the
Mason County Fair Queen Pageant
On resa)e it was pW'Chased by
ET&amp;S Sand and Gravel, Smith
Buick, Johnson's Supermarket and
McDonald's of Henderson and Gallipolis for $4 per pound.
Anothet noiable resale during the
market lainb aucti,on was that of the
sixth place lamb shown by Jenny
GiUs of Point Pleasant. It was orginally bought by Jim Cochran
Auto Sales and Bernie Riddle Insurance for $2.25 pet pound. They
then donated it for resale to benefit
the Fair Appreciation Dimer. It was
purehas¢ by Valley Brook Concrete for $1.75 per pound.
Eighty-three market hogs were
sold Friday evening. The 235pound Grand Champion hog shown
by Shane Cook of Apple Grove was
sold to Hllffelt's Outlet Carpeting ·
of Gallipolis for 4.75 per pound.
Della Hogg's Reserve Champion
Hogg which weighe&lt;l 230 pounds
was purcllased by River City Farm
Supply for $3 per pound.
Marcum Farms bought lhe hog
shown by Jeremy Hughes of Ashton for $1 per pound. It was then
resold to benefit lhe Mason County
Fair Restroom Project. When the
auctioneer announced the beneficiary of the resale the crowd .
cheered and he commented that it
was "a very wonhy cause". On
resale the hog was pun:hased by
-.City Ii:e &amp;_ Fuel for $1.50 per
pound.
H there was a "most sol&lt;!" award
given during the fair livestock sale,
it would go to a hog shown by
Craig Tolliver of Ashton. It orginally sold for $.95 per pound to
Donald Tolliver of Columbus,
Ohio. He then resold the hog with
the proceeds going to the Americl!D
Cancer Society. It was purchased
by Newberry's Paco Seed for $.90
per pound who then resold the hog
to benefit lhe Mason County Fair
Restroom 'Project. The third sale
was JTiade to G.R Shinn Trapping
Supply for $.90 per pound. The hog
was sold for a fourth and final time
to benefit the Masqn County Special Olympics. G.R. Shinn Trapping Supply then bought 'lhe hog
again for $1.20 per pOund.

There were two other resales
during lhe market hog auction. A
hog shown by Barry Pierson of
Leon was bought by Shoney's for
$.90 per pound. It was then resold.
with the proceeds to go to the
F
Mason County Fair Board • to ann
Family Inswance, Larry Jones,
agen~ and Dennis Brumfield, CPA
for $.85 pet pound.
·
Edison Mayes and Bud Hatfield

·

Ohio Lottery

Bengals,
Browns
_post wins

...

Lee Johnson and Tommy Joe

~-

.r

of Gallipolis Ferry purchased a hog
shown .by Kelley Je ffers of
Southside for $1.05 per pound.
They then donated· the hog for
resale to benefit Johnny Green of
Letart Green is a leukemia patient
and 4-H member whose hog had
been shown aml sold by another 4H member due iO Green's illness.
On resale the Jeffers hog was
puchased by ET&amp;S Sand and
Gravelfor $1.20 per IJ()uno.

Pick-3
491 &amp; 585
Pick-4
1692
Super Lotto
25-26-34-35-36-40
Kicker 059776

Page3
.,

Variable cloudlaeu toallht.
Low In mid Ilk. Chance of raiD
20 percenl. Tuesday, partly
cloudy, bazy. Hlp In mid I!Gs. ·
Chance of rain 30 perceJ!It.

•

..'

...\

'
.

Vol.40, No.89 ..
Copyrighted 1989

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Mondav. .~ugust 14, 1989

•.

One arrest re orted

~ Raids - net

1989 BUICK lEGALS

$75000 2.9o/o
FACTORY
REBATE

01

FINANCING

.k'

1989 BUICK CENJURYS

ssoooo

By MICHAEL SHEARER
SenUnel News staff
The war against people grow·
. lng marljuanjl jn Meigs County
continued Ibis weekend as -l aw
enforcement officials confiscated more than $1.7 million In
marijuana plants and arrested
one man.
The Melg5 County Sheriff's
Del;lartrnent conducted the raids
In conjunction : with the Ohio
National Guard, Ohio .Bureau of
- Criminal Identification and U.S.
Drug Enforcement agents.
· Chief Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby
said helicopters from the Na·
tiona! Guard and BCI were used
to spot mariJuana patches from
the air. Once suspected patches

.01

' .

were seen, gmund units then
raided the sites.
- 1•
On Saturday, officials found
538 plants. On Sunday tliey
confiscated another 617 plants,
Souls by said.
·
During Sunday's raids, off!·
clals found 25 plants at the
Michael P. O'Neil residence on
Flatwoods Road In Chester
Township. O'Neil consented -to
have his house searched and
officials found about $13,000 In
cash, LSD, several bags of
marijuana and a• substance belleved to be cocaine residue.

211 Conto
A Mukimodlo Inc. N&lt;iwiP"'IIf

'',.

.
:

r

I

O'Neil was arrested and
charged with cultivation of marl·
Juana, Soulsby said. He added

. .1 L,~~~~ ~~~

f l~ '

that a se~c ll~'rllnt~s
b~m!' ~ Rllad In Salem Township, said
1
obtained by t d~ 11!11'~ "_'\!../ S(iuisby. Charges will be flied
another search wdU!1 lk on· against Blevtnd{)r cultivation of
dueled Monday morning.
marijuana and lie also may face
BCI Is bringing In a drug· other charges, Soulsby said.
sniffing dog for the search, and
Blevins and Gray will be taken
Souls by said he expects to find
to a grand jury at a later date, he
more marijuana plants.
said.
· Another 326 plants were conflsSoulsby said the raJ!( areas
cated ·from the Merisa Gray were selected from tips received
residence on Molloons Run Road
from l'l!sldents and he encour1n Salem Township: A. charge of aged more residents to assist the
· cultivating marijuana will be department.
·
filed against Gray, he ,added.
. Anybody who knows someone _
Gray gave officials permission growing marijuana can the sheto search her house, but Soulsby
did not say what was found .
On Saturday, 452 plants were
confiscated from the Ersel Blev·
Ins residence on Hampton Hollow

.

.

r iff's depariment, he said, ad·
ding that people can remain
anonymous.
This was the second time this
summer that the_department has
conducted a major drug eradlca·
lion effort. In June, officials
confiscated about $6 mllUon
worth Of plants.
"We' redolngour~sttogetrld

The Meigs County raids were
pwrt of an ln~nse nine county
operation that also Included
GaiUa, Hocking, Jackson, Perry,
Ross, Athens, Vinton and Wa·
shington Counties. This Is the
first year the National Guard has .
used Its helicopters to assist In
the war against drugs.

•

of marijuana,'' Soulsby , said, , During the two days of raidS,
·'We want to show people the · law enforcement officials
days are gonewhenyoucangrow . throughout Southeast Oblo u_tllmarijuana In your backyard and lzed 19 helicopters arid the state
get away with it."
mobile drug laboratory.

Pomeroy Village vs. U. S. Corps of Engineers

Settlement out of question;
case expected•to go. to co_u rt·· .

FINANCING

Despite ''requests to settle" of Engineers, has also called
decision. Right or wrong."
from both attorneys In the u.s.
suggesting a settlement.
The district court case Is the
District Court case of the VIllage
However, Cain and Turner, as result of Turner and Cain buck·
of Pomeroy, Office Qfthe Mayor, co-defendants In the case. are lng local authorities who did not
versus the u.s. Army Corps of holding firm In their resolve to want them to construct an Ohio
Engineers, Huntington, W.Va. , see -the case through to a court River boat dock along East Main
and Dottle TUrner and Jimmie decision. The case was supposed St. In Pomeroy, despite the fact
· Cain, Pomeroy property owners,
to have started tomorrow In U.S.
that lhe two own the river bank
Turner and Cain want their day District Court, Southern District
property. When existing local
In 'court.
of Ohio, Columbus, but, Calps ordinances could not put a stop to
' According to Cain, Sally . reports, the case has been
plans for the dock, the action was
Cremeans-Stron, Cincinnati, at·
continued until Sept. 26. ·He
takeil to district court on the
torney for the plaintiff, called · .received the news of the conn.
premise . thl!t the !fock Is a
""'"' nMrn .,. Jut 'l'llui'Bday ,w ith the;/,'1\llalk?n thl· · '.mPmi!1t'. When . ' hindrance !1\ Pomeroy's, his tori·
request tor settlement and four · Crerhe!lii'$-Strong called again cal district., The district court
stipulations for·eatn and Turner,
suggesting a set Dement.
action was pursued by Dr. Frank
If the settlement was aceepted.
"But we've been through too
Porter, Letart Falls, who heads
AssiStant U.S. Aitorney James much," stated Turner, "and Pomeroy's Historic Preserva·
Rattan,- representing the Corps we·~ not giving up. We want a
Continued on page 10

All '89 LeSabres, Park Avenues,
and .Skyhawks at qearance Price!

1911 EASTERN AVE.

1 Section. 10 Po-

l.7 .million/wOrth of marijuana

.

FACTORY
REBATES

''.

GALLIPOUS, OH.

·-

....

Cash flow still a
problem for farmers
PLANTs CONFISCATED - Melp County
Chief Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby delsplays some of
the 1,155 marijuana planla confiscated by the
Sherlfr s Deparhnenl this weekend. The depart-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Low cash reserves could be a
good reason to let someone else
finish out market livestock . If the
cost of feed and s upplies needed
to raise an animal to market
weight is more than the current
return , don' t bother . Gary
Schnltkey. agricultural economist at Ohio State Universit y,
says many lives tock breeders go
ahead and' feed out their market
animals whether or not It's
profitable. The extreme weather
of the past two summers has hurt
the cash flow of a Jot of farmers.
He says farmers who can' t afford
to take a financial risk shouldn' l
feed out lives tock this winter
unless risks can be reduced using
futures or forward conlr acts.

meal wu uslllted Ia tile raldll by the Ohio Bureau
of Crlmlllal ldentlllcatlon, U.S. Drur Enforcement A1ents and the Ohio N a&amp;lonal Guard.

Organize tax

reeords

now J

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Tax time Is months away , but it's
not too early to organize records.
Agricultural economists at Ohio
State University remind farmers
that good records of crop plant·
jng and harvest costs are critical
at .tax time. Be sure to keep
receipts for sales and costs
related to storage or marketing
II'a in and livestock.

'

,

•

Ballard's
ham salad
recalled

.

'l

Ii

I _ .,.
The Centers for Disease Con·
trol bas reportlid that Ballard's
L.--- __ ,_.....•
·J
Farm Sausage, Inc. of Wayne, W.
Va. Is voluntarUy recalling 1,140
pounds of Its "Ballard's Ham .
Salad" because of possible con·
tamlnatlon, according to the
Wesdall puts aaolher of lhe colorful carousel
CAROUSEL GOING UP - &amp;felp County
Meigs County Health
hol'888 In place on the trad!Uonal ride whlcb
falrcoers will have plenty of opportunity to ride a
Department.
seems
never to lose Its appeal.
painted pony a&amp; ll)e Melp County Fair. Here Joe
sOme of the product may be
contaminated with the bacterium Llstellia monocytogenes
and could ca:tlse /serious Illness If
eaten, It Is reported.:_ .. ,.
truck driven by . Charles L. .
•1 The ' product !las been dlstrlb·
An Albany area youth was .clear dl$tance and not wearing
seat
belt
after
his
1977
Dodge
100
Spires,
58, 307Happy Hollow Rd .,
uted In Kentucky , Ohio, VIrginia
Injured In a car·blcycle crash
pickup
truck
rear·ended
a
1980
Rutland,
stopped to make a lett
and West Virginia and Is sold In
Sunday at 8 p.m. In Scipio
Chevrolet
Chevette
driven
by
turn
Into
a driveway . Fltchpa·
12 ounce and five pound plastic · Township on S.R. 692, just south
Donald
Fltchpatrlck,
57,
of
trick
stopped
behind Spires, but
· containers with plastic lids. The
of mUepoat 3, according to the
,
the
Impact
from
Ellis' coWslon
Ga!Upolls.
name "Ballard's Ham Salad" Is
Ga!Ha-Melgs Post of the State
Ellis was driving west when . with Fltchpatrick's car forced
Imprinted across the lid and
Highway Patrol.
"Est. 21~" Is printed Inside the
Christopher L. D' Augustlno, 8, ahead of Ellis a"d Fltchpatrlck, the car Into the back of Spires'
USDA Inspection seal on the
Rt. -2, Albany, was taken by the a 1981 Chevrolet S·10 pickup truck.
label.
Meigs County EMS to O'Bieness
All of the recalled product
Memorial Hospital · In Athens,
bears a "sell by" date of Aug. 30.
where he was admitted for
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE
Imprinted In Ink on the bottom of
treatment of a wound to hi~ left
the 12 OUI\Pe containers and on
calf. At last repo~t he was listed
,
MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1889
the top of -the (lve pound contain·
In fair condition.
7:00 P .M.-Welgh·ln St~rs. Lambs, Swine
ers. The ham salad Is sold to
D'Augustlno was riding north
•7: 30 P .M.-Openlng Nlglit service
grocery stores, delicatessens,
when he trl~ to turn left Into a
'
Mel_. Co. MiniSterial Association
restauranta, nursing bomes and
\ I
driveway. At that point he turned
TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 198t
other Institutions, Ills reported .
Into the path of a 19!0 Ford Pinto
9:00 A.M.-Admission wUl be charged at gates
Although no lllDeues ha\Te
driven by William N. Boring, 25,
10:00 A.M.-Draft Horae Show
been reported, the USDA's Food
of Athens. Boring was driving
• 10:00 A.M.-4·H Horae Show
Salety and lnlpectlon Service Is
south wllen the collision
1:00 P .M.-Flower Show Judging
strongly urgiJII coDBumers to
occurred.
P .M.-Judging 4·H Rabbits
1:00
avoid even tasUng the product
Neither Boring nor D'Auifils·
2i00
P.M.-Judging Sr. Dlv. Poultry
and to ret11J11 It Immediately to
tlno was eltect.
3:00
P .M.-Judglng 4-H Poultry
lhe establishment where It was
A Rutland youth wu cited In a
4:00
P .M.-Kiddie Tractor PuU...., Show Ring
purchaled.
.
three·vehlcle, bumper·IO·
5:00
P.M.-Talent Show- HUI Stage
Consumers with queaUoDJ
bumper coUlstoD SUnday at 11:05
'7:00
P .M.-Demolition Derby
about the recall may phone the
a.m. IDRatlalldTowallhlponS.R.
8:00 P.M.-Junior Fair Swine Showmanship a. Judging
·toll-tree USDA Meat and Poultry 124, half a mUe west or mUepost
9:00 P .M~-Midalght Cloggera - Hill Stage
Hotline at l·IIIJ0.535.4555 from 10 . 14 . .
a.m to 4 p.m. Mollday through
WIWall) J. EIIJI, 17, wu cited
'-Grandstand Attraction
,_,,.,. · •
for not tn~latalnlng ulured
FrldaY·

t~-· ,.-~· . .
'··~:;')

Loan shopping
a good idea _
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Loan shopping Is a good Idea as
you review your farm 's fina ncial
situation this fall. But let your
current lender know you're shopping, says Gary Schnitkey, agricultural economist at Ohio State
UniverSity. Because rates a nd
terms vary, find a loan situation
that fits your operation and
ab!Uty to repay debt. Large,
long·term debts should be fl ·
nanced with Jong·term loans.
Trying to get by with short loans
that you can't repay In the
operating year leaves the risk of ·
the lender not re newing the note
on the same terms. You could end
up stuck with higher Interest
rates and shorter repayment
schedules.
·

.

Alba~y

a..

atch For Our
Final Sale
Coming This
eek!

After years .ofresearch, ·
weve developed somethil:lg to help
y9u keep your eye on the ball.
Wtth a Mitsubishi big screenTV,you dont ever have to worry about missing the ball.
· Because all our models feature the clarity of our Diamond VJSiori' II technology, which
produces one of the brighteSt pictures available.And since there\; a 120°horizontal viewing
angle, you don't have to be right in front ofthe set to see what's going on. .
All of which helps make it a remarkable surface for playing sports. J..w1 SUBISII

•

......

.

' ' ,OMEROYI OHIO

ROY

111111UITI
IAIUK
I f AnoN

•

•

Boh's Electronics

UPPER RT. 7

MIDWAY TAKING !IJIAPE- The dozen carnival rldea of The
Bates .Brolll.ers Amusement Co. of Wln~riiVIIJe were IDinl up
Sunday afteraoon oo lhe Rock Sprlnp fali'p'ouads Ia preparation
for tile openJna of the 128tll Melp County Fair. The rides will bepu
operallon Tuesday altermon.

Meigs _County .Fair

begins this evening
The Meigs -County- Fair off!,
In th e yarlo~s categories the
clally opens tonight at 7: 30 wlth
entries were draft horses, )3;
religious services by the Meigs
dairy cattle, 16; beef cattle, 14;
County Ministerial Association
sheep, 49; poultry, 18; farm
at the grandstand.
· .
· crops, 250; hay show, 18; flower
Three church choirs and sevshow, 214; flower show, 245;
eral singing groups will be
domestic arts, 239; painting, 26;
featured In lhe hour long service
photos 220, baking and canning,
to Include reapoaslve readings,
381; grange, 5.
lessons, and prayers.
H the number of entries In open
claues ts liny Indication, the 1989
Melp County Fair. promises to
be blaer and better. Entries
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI)
were up by 137. Thla year's final
Attendance at lllet;&gt;hloState Fair
fliure wu1,808, while laatyear a
t~ the 2 million mark SUn·
tptal of 1,671 open entries were . day, pultlng It ahead of last
reglitered.
year' a record number of vialtora.

Ohio attendance
tops two million

l'•nl

EMPIRE
OF
i. i

boy ·inju'red in auto crash

GAUl POLIS, OH. · ·

.,

,J

"

�.

~• .A~--1~1989

Commentary

Giants edge Patriots, 20-17

Pllge 2- lhe Deily SeJJiinal
Pomaoy-Midclaport. Ohio

Monday, August 14, 1989

.

,·

..

The Daily Sentinel

St.

111 Court
Pomeroy, Olalo

DEVarED TO THE INTERE8T8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

,_

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

- ~~ ~._

.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WWI'ESEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M1111acer

'

LE'l'TEKS OFOPJN'JON we welcome. 'lbey llllouJd be 1-llaulll
wordo Ioiii· AD leUera we llllbjoct lo ecllllocud mtu&amp; be olped wlib

name, addr•oud lelepbone DIIIDber. No u•lped lelten wUl be pab-

lls-.
LeUenlboald be ID pod lule, acldr•siDiill-, lilt peraouiiI,IM.

Speculation revived: Celeste
will be next .OSU president
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatebollle Reporter
COLUMBUS ...:. Gov. Richard Celeste's appolnonent last week of
his former aide, Alex Shumate, to the Ohio State University board of
trustees, rekindled speculation that Celeste wlll be named president
of the university when he leaves the governor's office In 1991.
Shumate, a Columbus attorney, served as chief counsel and deputy
chief of staff for the governor before returning to the private sector.
He Is one of at least four close associates Celeste now·has on the OSU
board.
.A heavy majority of the Ohio State board has been appointed during
Celeste's 6 I!! years as gover nor - seven of the n!ne members.
Celeste has nowhere to go when his term expires, and It has been
suggested that he would be well-suited for academia. Moreover, Ohio
· State president Edward Jennings has suffered some Image bruises
.
during his tenure.
The OSU president's salary actually Is much higher than the
governor's, although that will not be true In 1991.
Celeste has Indicated, however , that he would be Interested In
returning to the private sector In an administrative capacity.

Testimony sheds new ·light o~
Pan Am bombing ______ __Ja_ck_A_nde_rso_n
suspect the deadly baggage was
WASHINGTON - The bomb
loaded Dec. 21.
that brought down . Pan Am
Their ·testimony has been
Flight 103 was traced to a
cassette recorder In the w~k· · sealed at Pan Am's Insistence,
age. But r the most explosive
but our I!Ssoclate Jim Lynch has
ev!Qence 1n the resulting lawsuit
obtailied some of the details.
against Pan Am may have been .
Koch's job was to train Alert
found the day after the crash at
Management employees on how
the bottom of a stack of papers on
to search baggage for bombs. He
allegedly testified tbat he did not
a desk In · Frankfurt, West
·see the letter, . known as the
Germany.
A young West German who
"Helsinki war~ing, " untll the
morning after the plane exploded
worked In Pan Am baggage
over Lockerble, Scotland, killing
security reportedly has testUied
In a secret deposition that the
270 people. The warning to the
State Department warned the
U.S. Embassy In Helsinki from
airline In early December about an anonymous tipster specified
a possible terrorist bombi!Jg, but that a bomb would be loaded on a
that he didn't see the warning. Pa.n Am flight In Frankfurt.
untll Dec. 22, the day after the
Lee Krelndler, 11n attorney for
crash.
the relatives of Flight 103 vic·
Two West Germans were flown
tlmS, summarized Koch's story
to New York last month to give
secret depositions In the lawsuit · In a meeting with U.S. District
Judge Thomas Platt: "The night
brought against Pan Am by the
families of the victimS. The two of Lockerble he (Koch) got an
men, Oliver Koch and Werner emergency call from his boss,
(Ulrich) Weber. And Weber said
Schultz, wprked for Alert Man·
In early the next morning.
come
agement Systems, Pan Am' s
And
he
comes In early the next
security affiliate at the Frank·
furl airport, where Investigators morning, 6 o'clock. the next

morning, and there Is, obviously,
Koch's presence Weber takes out
confusion and concern. And he Is a date stamp, backdates It io
asked to do a number of things.
Dec. 9, whlcb Is wbenherecelved
And he Is · asked to work on It, and stamps the Dec. 9 on it.
Weber's .d esk with his computer.
And that apparently was the one
And he looks down and he sees given to the FAA.
the Helsinki warning on Weber's
"Koch has the priginal one
desk. And he goes crazy. And he without the date stamp, and It
says what Is this? ...
· wUI be marked as an exhibit,"
"And Weber says: Oh, my God,
Krelndler told Judge Platt.
don't worry, don't worry, It's
The spokesman said that
nothing, forget it..
·
Koch's account " Is simply not
"So Koch says, how can I
true. There Is no reason to
forget It? This Is a warning of a
believe Mr. Koch Is credible." He
potential bomb. It Is my job.
speculated that Koch's undated
"Just forget it. Be.qutet or you copy of the warning "could be a
wfil get In trouble."
fabrication." Pan Am claims the
Alert Management's proce· Helsinki warning was distributed
dure In Frankfurt reportedly was . to security people.
to stamp all correspondence with
If t)le victims' relatives can
the date that It was received and prove Pan Am was ,guilty of
then distribute It to security "willful misconduct," they could
people. But Koch reportedly demand more settlement money
testified In his deposition that from the airline. They will likely
there was no date stamp on the argue that the Helsinki warning,
Helsinki warning when be found which was posted In U.S. embas·
it.
stes around the world, was not
, Attorney Krelndler continued passed on to the man whose job II
with Koch's account for Judge was to look for bombs In
Platt: "A few days later the FAA Fr11nkfurt.
was supposed to arrive, and In

FIRST DOWN - Jlpffalo Bll.. I'UIInlal back
Rob Riddick powen his way ihr11111b the BenpJs'·
defense. to pick up.a flnl down In Su.n day'e AFC

Consumer watchdog William Spratley-bashed the utilities last week
for their profitability, claiming they are not sharing their 20 percent
profits with consumers .
.
But Spratley conceded under questioning by reporters that he's
lea rned some lessons from his recent battle with the Legislature and
will " be more sensitive to legislators" from now on.
Spratley said he willliave more of his In· house staff testifying on
matters Instead of calling In outside experts.
The Legislature threatened to C\1 t the Ohio Consumer Counsel's
budget and limit his term starting In 1991, but that proposal has
~ talled for the moment.
'

.

.'

What are our rights?

What America ChOOSeS tO. efidUre __
Rus_he_
·r
period rather than knuckieunder retaliatory but that It was only an . blted by any religious Injunctions
to the demands of their captors. episode. An Isolated act of to turn the other cheek or leave
That policy, however, was · retaliation, like this one, will vengeance to the:Lord, know this
knocked Into a cocked hat by the promptly be met (as this one and count on it. It gives them a
apparently unilateral decision of was) by reciprocal and, If possl·
simply unbeatable adyantag.e In
the braell government to kidnap ble, overwhelming brutality.
the game of tit-for-tat.
Sheik Abdul Karim Obeid, one of
President Bush Is well aware of
The only kind . of retaliation
the Shiite leaders who has been that would be effective against this, and painfully limited, as a ·
deepll( Involved In the kidnaP' the terrorists In the Mlddle'East
result, Iii what he can do. George
pings. That triggered - and the Is one that would necessarily
Mitchell; the Democratic leader
IsraeliS certainly ought to have Involve acts as merciless and
of the Senate, lined up squarely
known It would trigger - out· random as their own. U we
behind the president In any
raged responses by his followers ordered all Western nationals out
action he might take, but (please
and allies. (As a matter oftact,lt of Lebanon, then sent In troops
note) "behind" him, not beside
Is worth wondering whether the and systematically killed 10
him, let alone In front of him.
Israeli action wasn't a deliberate adult male Shiites In the Bekaa
Let's you and him fight, Mr.
attempt to worsen relations Valley for every Western hostage
President; I'll hold yqur coat.
between the Western powers and put to death, we would certainly
In short, despite our over·
the Arab states, which had been diminish the local enthusiasm for
whelming frustration at the
getting warmer recently.)
killing hostages - and they
dllernma, we Americans would
almost Certainly rather endure·
would run out of hostages to kill
In any case, I have long been In long before we did, even at a rate
the ra~dom kldnapptngs and
favor of retaliation against the of 10 for one.
kil.llngs of U.S. citizens In the
terrorists. The trouble, however,
But we In the West choose not to · Middle Easl'than pay the price,
with this particular retaliatory behave that way. And the Shiite
moral and military, that It would
episode was not that It was b!rrorlsta, not themselves lnhl·
take to end them.

Who's entitled to whose income __
Ove_rs_tree_t.

Today in history

.

'

pre.s·e ason tilts · over weekend

The recent dramatic return of
world attention to the problem of
the hostages held by terrorists In
Lebanon should at least serve to
remind us that we are In this
mess largely through our own
choice.
The hosl!lges, to begin with,
were In the Middle East In the
first place because they chose to
live and work there, even though
they were all (like the rest of the
world) on notice that It was a
highly risky place to hang out. It
Is a good question - and It has
. been asked - just how high a
Dear Editor:
my husband carried and fixed In
price, In blood and treasure, the
What Are Our Rights? I have the lot. I packed water from my
major
Western nations can rea·
asked this question often In the home to give It a good start. For
sonably be asked to pay for their
las t 5 years. My parents had the first time In 5 years we had a
release.
purchased a lot at Beech Grove nice lot until someone scalped It
As a matter of fact, there
Cemetery, where my father Is
In several places last week. (I
seems to have · been a tacit
riow burled. My husband and I hope that worker learns to read.)
agreement, on the part of Wa·
have sown grass seed numerous I love my father.
sblngton and other Western cap I·
times to have workers scalp It
I make sure thai there are
tals, to let them languish In
with a lawn mower when It had a flowers on his resting place. We
captivity for some Indefinite
good start.
mow It as that Is all I can do for
(Yet a cemetery above my
bini now. So please keep your
mother ' s hou se hasn't been mowers off that lot! ! Read our
mowed ln years .) We have talked s ign. I am sure there are others
with workers, posted a slgn·"not who need an occas lonal mowing.
to mow" , and talked with people
This Is my last plea as next
associated with . the cemetery time I will take a more drastic
One of the inost fascinating
about not mowing the lot. All to measure legal or otherwise; as I
stlldles In human sociology, to
no avail.
feel my father deserves that
me, has been the unspoken,
An understanding worker did
much. Don't you?
Intuited entitlement that some
save us some sod last year that
Nancy Greenlee Thoene
people believe . theyhave to
another person's material goods.
This has been especially Inter·
estlng to observe In cases of
death. I've watched people come
By United Press lnteraatlonal
Into a relative's house and lay
Today Is Monday, Aug. 14, the 226th day of 1989 with 139 to follow.
dlbs on Items long before the
The moon Is waxing, moving toward full.
owner's demise. I've also seen
The morning star Is Jupiter.
otherwise godly Christian
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
women break Into their dead
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include
sister's home to get the sUver.
pioneer psychologist Richard von Kraffi·Eblng In 1840, naturalist
And It' s also been an Interest·
Ernest Thompson Seton In 1860, writer Ernest Thayer ("Casey at the
lng phenomeaon to watch tn
Bat'' ) In 1863, novelist John Galsworthy In 1867, singer Buddy Greco
marital breakups. To see a
Iii 1926 (age 63), rock musician David Crosby In 1941 (age 48) and
per~on's contrlbut,lon to a maractress Susan Saint James In 1946 (age43) .
riage, as he or she perce~eves It,
all written out In legal~. can be
On this date In hl~tory:
.
grand entertainment.
In 1900, 2,000 U.S. Marines joined with European forces to capture
I remember when Johnny
Peking, ending the·lloxer Rebellion against the We8tern presence In
Canon' s wife wanted half his
China.
.w ealth In the divorce (although
· In 1935, Congress passed the Social Security Act and President
quite a bit of It had been earned
FrankUn D. Roolevelt Immediately signed It Into law.
before they were married), beIn 19«1, Presldeat Harry Truman announced that Japan had
cause her help and support had
accepted terms for unconditional surrender, ending World War IL
enabled him to perform at h!J
In 1966, the unmanned U.S. Orb! ter 1 spacecraft began orb! tlng tbe
belt. Please. U he waa a great
moon. •
comedian capable of earning
I·
--several million dollars a year
' A thOUibtfor the day: Novelist John Gal1worthy wrote, ''The value
before he married ber, It stands
of a MDtlmeDt II the amount of sacrifice you are prepared to make for
to reaaon that lhe w~n't re~ponit."
.
'

Letters to the editor

ralsl(ig their exhibition record to
By United Press Jnternatlonal
FOXBORO, Mass. (UPI) 2·0.
. .Mark Ingram scored on a 37-yard
Quarterback M ;~rk Ryplen,
pass fr om Mike P erez and Raul
star ting · for the Injured .Doug
Allegre connected on a . pair of
Wllltams, played the enti re first
field goals,leadlng the New York
half and completed 9 of 22 passes
Giants to a 20-17 victory over the
for 132 ya rds .
New England Patriots In the first
exhibition game for both teams.
. Allegre hit on attempts fr om 42
DENVER IUPI) - Reserve
and 37 yards.
quarterback Gary Kubiak com·
New York, whic h never
pleted 13 of 20 passes for 167
trail!!(!, took ..a 10.0 lead midway
yards and a touchdown to lead
through the S!!COnd quarter and
the Denver Broncos to a 17-13
led 10·7 at ha lftime and 17·10 victory over the Los · Angeles
after \hree quarters. .
R!lms.
The Patriots used three quat· ·
terbackS, playing Tony Eason fo r
The Broncos gained a net 12
the first half, Doug Flu de In the · yards In their first two posses·
third quarter and Marc Wilson In slons behind starting quarter·
the fourth quarter .
·
back John Elway. Elway was
sacked three times and com·
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) pleted no passes before giving
Mike Prior returned an lntercep· way to Kubiak with five minutes
lion 53 yards for a touchdown and left In the first quarter .
Indianapolis scored 24 first-half
points en route to a 31·7 exhibition
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) victory Saturday night over the Tommy Kramer threw for 165
New Orleans Saints.
yards and two touchdowns Satur·
Prior's Interception was one of day night to lead the Minnesota
five recorded on the night by the · Vikings to a 23·13vlctoryoverthe
Colis, who are 1·0 on the exhlbl· Kansas City Chiefs In tbe exhlbl·
lion season. ThP Saints fell to 0·1. tion opener for both teams:
On Indianapolis' opening ser·
The Vikings dominated the
ies of the game, Chris Chandler first half, c6ntroiling the ball for
connected with Clarence Verdin 21 :07 but only got Chuck Nelson
on a 57-yard touchdown strike. field goal with 4:17 left to take a
Verdin badly beat two Saints 3-0 lead.
preseuon 1ame In Clnchmatl. The 1aln kepllhe
defenders for the score. With the
Jimii• drive alive aud netted them a field 1oa1, but extra point, Indianapolis took a
the Bengals won 24·20. (UPI)
7-0 lead. ·
On the third play of the second
half, Kramer scrambled to his
PriTSBURGJi (l:JPI) - Roo- left imd hit Leo Lewis down the
kie running back Joe Mlckle.s right side for a 33-yard m pass,
scored on a 6-yard run with 5:32 giving the Vikings a 17·3 lead .
Kramer, slotted-second on thi
left Saturday to give the Wa·
.
.
shlngton Redsklns a 21·14 exhlbl· VIkings' depth chart behind
tlon victory over the Pittsburgh Wade Wilson, completed passes
of 22 and 27 yards on Minnesota's
Steelers.
The Redsklns drove 87 yards In next drive to set up a l ·yard TD
12 plays for the winning score, toss to Alfred Anderson.

~~,?.gals,
B~wns
.
win
clos~
.
. ..

•

The miserable 13.8 percent approval performance of local school
Issues last week may have been a function of the summer doldrums,
with people on vacation and· not thinking about school.
But It may also have resulted from a belief on the partoftoomany
voters that the state of Ohio took care of the schools last month with
enactment of the state budget and a so-called school reform biU.
Celeste pointed with pride In May to the high percentage of school
levy successes and said that belled the Idea that his education
Initiative would ruin things for local school districts.
It's possible, however, that people want to see whether the state
" reforms" work before spending any more of their tax money on the
schools .
It takes a highly organized effor t to collect 306,000 signatures on
petitions to place an Issue on the Ohio ballot. Two people found that
out recently, to their chagrin.
·
Sta te Sen. Charles Butts, D·Cleveland, spearheading an effort to
get campaign expense reform, failed In his attempt to get that Issue
on the November ballot. So did Elyria developer Alan Spitzer, who
.
wa nts a statewide vote on casino gambling.
Neither Butts nor Spitzer started early enough. They will continue .
their efforts and probably have enough signatures to get their
r espective Issues on the ballot In November 1990.
·
But It won't be the same. This fall, they could have commanded
plen.ty a!' media attention because there are no major campaigns.
Next year, the two Issues will likely get. lost In the midst of the
campaign for governor and other statewide offices.

The Daily Sentinai- Page- 3

Pomaoy- Middlaport, Ohio

slble for much of the money he
earned during the marriage, let
alone before it.
I'm equally amazed at Sandra
Jennings' much· publicized go for
actor William Hurt's gold. People magazine covered,the trial
where Jennings, Hurt's ex-lover
and the mother of his child, tried
to persuade a judge that although
she and Hurt were never legally
married, they had a conimon-law
marriage because they live together for five weeks In South
Carolina, where common-law
marriages are recognized.

said about her three-and·a·halfyear relationship with Hurt Is
·true, It was no day at the beach.
Of course Hurt should have to
support Alex, his 6-year-old son
born of the.union. But Hurt was
giving Jennings $65,000 a year
before her lawsuit. She says the ·
reason she filed suit was tbat
Hurt started demanding receipts
and an accounting of what sbe
buys. "It dehumanized me," she
complained. Hurt's brother says
the suit Is partially because Hurt
wasn't regular with the pay·
ments, keeping her "guessing
about when ' the payment would

Jennings, filling in for God who
was unable to be at the trial
because of previOus commit·
ments, testified In His behalf.
"We. had a spiritual marriage,"
she told the court. "We were
married In tbe eyes of God." For
that non·le&amp;al but nevertheless
God-eyeballed arrangement, abe
wants "flnllllclal security. I want
Alex and myself to be able to live
In a comparable llteltyle to Bill."
U she proves her comm!JI·Iaw
marrla&amp;e claim,. she may be
entitled to as mueb u balf of
Hurt's earntnglalnce 1982.
u even part of what Jennings

come ln."
.OK. I CIIJI accept ·that. No one
likes 1to wonder when the rent
money's going to hit the mailbox.
But If we're talking about Insult
and tardiness, wby doesn't she
just sue to force Hurt to pay his
$65,000 on time? Why does shl!
suddenly feel entltled to balf tbe
money be's earned In the laat
aevenyean?
Here's why, In ber own worda,
from a pre-trial People Interview
(I swear I'm not makin&amp;thla up):
"I was there for blm three-and·
one-half years, supported blm,
took care of blm, did everytblJar

for him. I did h~ laundey:'
Using that logic, I figure I'm
entitled to about $50,000 a year
myself from men I've supported
1111d done laundry for over tbe
years. (I wasn't smari enough to
pick future defendants with as
mucb earning power as William
Hurt.)
.
U I could . have Jennings' ear
for a mqment, as she .clalrna to
have had God's eyes, I'd say
something like, "What? You
Cllll' t live on $65,000 a year? •
Here's my copy ·of 'Kinta From
Heloise,' maybe that wUI help,"
or "Hey, get a job." But with
$65,000 a year coming fr.o m Hurt,
why would she need one?

CINCINNATI (UPI) -When a. went to 0-2,' while Cincinnati third quarter when Norwood was
wide on a 53· yard field goal try.
game ts on the line· - even an made Its 1989 exhibition debut.
" I don't think you can say any ·Five minutes Into the fourth
exhlblli(ln garile - It's a great
spot for an eager rookie to make exhibition game show~ you whii period, Breech kicked a 45-yard
a b!g lmpresslon .on his coaches. your club can do,'.' said Levy. field goal to boost Cincinnati's
And Eric ·Ball certainly lm· ''They're just games to evaluate lead to 17-13.
The Bills bounced back with an
pressed the Cincinnati Bengals . players."
•
80-yard
drive In eight plays,
coaching staf' Sunday nlght r '.
Echoed Wyche, "We looked at
by Doctor's 3-yard m
climaxed
With Cincinnati trailing Buf· a lot of rookies tonight, built was
falo 20·17 and only 57 seconds a good football game. It was a run with 3: 181eft to give Buffalo a
20.17 lead. But that left enough
remaining, Ball crashed . one ~thriller for the fans. "
yard for ,t he wl~nl!lg to)lchdown
Star Buffalo quarterbac~ Jim time tor the Bengals to march 77
In the Ben gals' ~4·20 victory over Kelly did not play. Fra11-k Reich yards and Ball to score the
the Bills.
quarterbacked the Bills the first · game-winning touchdown with
"I was. hqplnglo get lbe.bail on haJr and completed 11 of 19 just 57 seconds left.
that· pla)",''· sald·Ball, Cinclnna· ·passes tor 96 yards, with one
Browna2II,' UOIII M
tl' s seconil-rrnind41raft pick fr,!llll • Interception''
PONTIAC,
Mich. (UPI)
UCLA. · ''I '!Ike the pressure. I ·
Ealasoa, last year's UPI AFC
Backup
kicker
Dan Plock! kicked
would have done anything to get Offensive Player of the Year,
JO.yard
field
goal and reserve
a
that touchdown."
· · · playec! only the first quarter,
q-ua
P.terbaelt
~
&gt;Mike:· Norsetb
"'Ball ik&gt;o~:~qo~~~~~;.;. c:gmptetlng,"': fust . one of.,rlo•!\'11:
plunged
a
yard
for a third
natl coach Sam Wyche-sald of his passes for 62 yards, with one
club's leading rusher (33yardsln touchdown ar.d one 111-terception. quarter score Saturday night to ·
give the Clevelatid Browns a
eight caules) . "Our entir.e offel!·
slve line' did an excellent job·on
Ickey Woods, !be Bengals' 25-24 exhibition . victory over
that Jast•llrlve.!!_
••
. • - rookie rushing sensation a year Detroit ·despite an Impressive
After Btfflno roiili:lt! Sean Doc· ago, was held In check In his 1989 debut by rookie Lions' quarter·
tor scored on a 3:yard run with debui- gaining only eight yards back Rodney Peete.
Peete, l)etrolt's sixth-round
3:18 left to ·give the Bills a 20·17 In seven carries.
draft
choice from Southern Call·
advantage, the Bengals began
en thesecondplayofthegame.
fornla,
guided Detroit to a 17-15
their 77-yard, seven-play win· Buffalo's Nate Odornes Inter·
halftime
lead by throwing for 155
nlng drive with 3:09 left behind cepted Eslason's fist pass of ti1e
backup quarterback · 'l'urk year at the Bills' 47 and returned yards -1411n the second quarter
Schonert.
It ~2 yards to the Cincinnati 21. -and a touchdown .
He completed 11 of '23 passes,
Key plays were Schonert's That set up a 34-yard field goal by
29-yard pass to Kendal Smith and Norwood and gave Buffalo a 3·0 shrugging off early jitters to help
a controversial 22-yard pass lead just three minutes Into the the Lions' new "Stretch" four·
receiver offense rack up more .
Interference penalty on Buffalo's game.
,
yardage In one half (292 yards)
Chris Hale that gave Cincinnati a
·Cincinnati, after going the first
than the conventional offense did
first and goal at tile 2 and set up 12 minutes without .a first down,
In all b\'t two whole games last
.
exploded late In the first period
Ball's TD. .
. •
season.
"II was a bad call," said Hale, when Eslason teamed with
Tony Paige, who carried 13
a rookie from SOuthern Cal. "The Brooks on a 62-yard m pass.
times
for 116 yards, ran 56 yards
pass was thrownupforgrabsand Brooks caught the ball at the
the receiver (Ciirl Parker) and I Bengals' 45, slipped a would-be and Robert Clark caught a
went up at the same time. I made taqltle by Kirby Jacksqn,'JiiCked 41-yard touchdown pass one
second before halftime - only
sure I didn't touch him. I was up a block by Tim McGee and
1:28 after All Haji·ShEtlkh kicked
shocked when the fiag came scampered Into the end zone for a
a 22-yard field goal at the end of a
out. "
7-3 Cincinnati lead.
76-yard drive . .
SaldBuffalocoachMarvLevy,
Just seconds later, Buffalo's
Defensive tackle Carl Hairston
"Chris made a fine pll!y. II was Ronnie Harmon broke loose on a
rumbled
73 yards with an Inter·
weil·tlmed, I wouldn 'I tell him to , 34-yard run and then Kinnebrew
cepted
Peete
pass to give Cleve·
do anything different."
bolted 39 yards for a touchdown
land
an
early
15·7 leaa after the
Cincinnati scored earlier on to give the Bills a 10·7 advan(age
Boomer Eslason's 62-yard pass · at the end of the first quarter. ·· Browns had scored on a safety
and two Matt Bahr field goals.
to James Brooks and rookie Erik
Cincinnati regained the lead,
Norseth dove a yard for a
Wilhelm's 23-yard pass to roo~le 14:10, at the start of the second
touchdown three minutes from
Rich Glcewlcz. Jim Breech perloil ·when Wilhelm tossed a
the fourth quarter to give Cleve·
added a 45-yard field goal.
23-yard ID pass to GiceWicz to
land a 25-17 lead. It came four
Buffalo scored on runs of 39 cap an eight-play, . 65-yard
plays after Stephan Braggs reco·
yards by ex-Bengal Larry Kinne- march.
vered a Detroit fumble at the
brew and 3 yards by rookie Sean
· ~uffalopulled to within 14-13at
Doctor. Scott Norwood kicked a halftime on Baumann's 27-yard . Lions' 46.
Plock! booted a 30-yard field
34-yard field goal and rookie fleldgoalwith27secondsremaln·
goal
at the start.ofthesecond half
Charlie Baumann added a 27· lng In the second quarter.
to
put
the Browns In front,18 -17.
yard field ' goal. ,
The Bills missed a chance to
Paige ran a yard for the Lions
Buffalo's • pre-season record take the lead midway through the
to cut the lead to 25-24 with 10:59
to play but the second of three
Interceptions thrqwn by veteran
journeyman Bob Gagliano, who
quarterbacked Detroit In the
NEW YORK (UPI) - New victory against the New England
second half, nullified a chance to
go ahead.
York Giants quarterback Phil Patriots Saturday.
Simms was In the last year of a
Simms ended a 20-day holdout
Sunday, a·greelng to a coniract $3.8 million, five-year contract.
extension worth $4.2 million He was to receive receive
Baseball
$8JO,OOO this season, near the
through the 1991 season.
real es't ate devel·
Indianapolis
·bottom
of
NFL
quarterbacks.
Simms, who wanted to be paid
oper
Michael
G.
Browning said
Simms,
who
w&amp;S
voted
MVP
among the top quarterbacks In
no
deal
to
buy
the Seattle
he
has
when
the
Giants
won
Super
Bowl
the NFL, was expected to report
Mariners,
though
be
said
he has
XXI,
boycotted
training
camp
to the Giants training camp at
talked
to
the
American
League
after being unable to reach an
Farlelgb Dickinson on Monday.
team's owner. Browning said·
"It feels great to be back," said agreement with the team.
even
If the talks with owner
Simms will earn $1.3 mllllon In
Simms, who has played his entire ·
George
Argyro1 had resulted In
10-year career with the Giants. 1989, $1.4 million In 1990 and $1.5
the sale ofthe Mariners, the team
"I regret I bAd to hold out, but I mUllon In 1991. The Giants
would not bave been moved to
$,'U
million
over
three
offered
· just want to get back to wor~.
Jndlanapolll.
The Mariners have
years,
but
Simms
was
-kiD&amp;
a
That's it."
contract worth $1.6 mllllon per an appraised value of $76.1
mUllan.
·Althourh nqodattona are not
year.
,
A restrictive clause In the
Slmml's
'
agent
David
Flahof
complete· between the twO sldel,
·S imms will report to camp In
and Glanta' 1eneral rn1111ager team's lease with tbe Klqdome,
George Y011111 reacbed a c:om- · Its horne stadium, was partly to
order to prepare for SUnday's
promllt on the terms of tbe blame. The owner can mQve the
exhlbiUon Iaine agal•t the
coldnlet and an expected to team If the Mariners fall to draw
. ((anlas ctty Chtefl. Jeff HOI·
complete tbe \letalll on Monday. 2.8 million fana
. teUer star'ledln. the Olanta' 20-17

Simms ends 20-day holdout ·

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
11~!·1

446·4524

~'

I&amp;.L8Uftll.ll
....... ...n',......, l
ALL . . . aJ,ID

TAMPA, Fla: (0PI) - Vinny
Testaverde threw two touchdown
passes and scored himself on a
2-yard bootleg In leading the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers to a 41-23
. pre-season romp over the Hous·
ton Oilers .
A crowd of 37,830 saw the
Buccaneers spot Houston a 9·7
advantage before reeling off 24
straight points In the second ·
period. Testaverde, the NF L' s
lowest-rated passer In 1988, com· .
pleted 9 of 22 attempts for 137 .
yards In t)te opening half before
yielding to rookie Kerwin Bell •
· and veteran Joe Ferguson.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSIU·IA)
A Dlvllloa of Malllmodla. ·hl.,_

.

.

'

Published every atternoon, Monday
through Friday, Ill Court St.. Po·
m..-oy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Ushlng Company/ Multimedia. Inc_.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!56. Se·

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Member: United Press International,

~ Inland Daily Press Association and the
Oblo ~ewspaper Association. National

Advertl.llng Representative, Branham
Ne-:: JI)Qper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address chiOIII"'
to The DallY Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Poml!'oy, Ohio 4ii71l9.
SUJISCIIIPTION RATES

By Carrier Dr Molw Route
One Week ...... ...... .... ...... .. .. ...... ... $1.40
One Month .................. ............... $6.10
One Year ................ ............. .... $72.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ............ .. .............. .. ..... 25 Cent s

Subso:-tbers. not ~eslrlng to pay the car~

rler may rem.lt tn adVance direct to
The Dally Sentinel OIJ a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit wW
week.

~ gtven carrier

each

No subscriptions by mall permittEd In

areas where home carrier servtce ls
available.

MaU-.rlpUona

l1111de Melp County
13 Weeks ........ .. ...... .. ... ............. $19.24
26 Weeks ...... ..... .... ............ ....... $37.96

52 Weeks ........... .. .. .. .... ........ ..... $74.36
Oatalde Melp Count)'
13 Weeks ....................... ........... $al.lll
26 Weeks ..... ............... ......... .. .. . $40.30
52 Weeks ................ ..... .......... :.. $75.40

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 24, 1989
RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

-Sports.briefs-

'

:[

..... __.,.....

MILWAUKEE (UPI ) -G~een
Bay rookie quarterbac_k Anthony
Dllweg.directed two second-half
scoring drives and Randy Wright
threw. two touc hdown pa sses to
lead the Green Bay Packers to a
. 28·27 victory over the New York
· J ets In the exhibition opener for
both teams .
The Jets had a cha nce to win In
the fi nal 17 seconds, bu t Pat
Leahy's 44-yard field goal off the
soggy turf fell far short .

.

992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
..

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1989
'I

�Mets make move ·i.D NL East; Cubs lose

By Th_e Bend

•'

By .JOE IU.UZZI
UPI Spo111 Wrller
The timing Is about right for
the New York Mets to make their
move.
Las 1 year, New York pulled
away to win the National League
East In the final six weeks of the
season. This past weekend could
mark the launching point for the
Mets' drive toward their second
straight divisional title.
The Mets claimed four of five
games at Shea Stadium from the
Cardinals and moved within 3 1-2
games of (lrst place Sunday after
· the Cubs and the Exposboth lost.
·"Everything Is coming together· at the best lime of the
year," said Mets starter Bob
Ojeda, who won his fourth
straight decision after New York
shaded St. Louis 3-2. "This team
Is playing as a unit, notllkeltwas
at the beginning of the year."
· And they are doing It all
without Dwight' Gooden. Over th.e
last two weekends, theMetshave
swept Montreal and taken four of
five from St. Louis, two of their
primary rivals.
Gooden, who has a slight
muscle tear In his pitching

shoulder, could very well miss leaving, the bases loaded In the
Plratet 6, Expos 4
the rest of the. season. In his eighth. . . •
At Montreal, .Andy Van Slyke
absence, however, the Mets have
"I think In one-.third of our
and Bobby Bonilla hit consecuobtained Frank Viola and tbe games this season, we've gotten
tive home nini•'to spark the
club seems to have raiUed two runs or less," Manager
Pirates and Bo' Walk, 10-7, who
around that' move.
Whitey· Herzog &amp;aid as his club
allowed eight h1ts through 8 1-3
The pitching staff shut down fell to 61-2 gaines oft the pace. ·
Innings. Bill Landrum notched
the Cardinals over the weekend,
In other games, Philadelphia
his 16th save. Pascual Perez fell
limiting them to 11 runs In five downed Chlcqo 5-3, Pittsburgh
to 6-12.
·
games. Pitching Is the Mets' tripped Monti-eal 6-4, Los AnDodgers 3, Oodcen ll
torte and It's going to have to geles topped S~n Francisco 3-21n
At San Francisco, pinch hitter
carry them If they expect to win 12 Innings and Cincinnati Mlk~ Sharperson delivered a
·
the division.
· blanked Houston 5.(),
sacrifice · fly with the bases
"If our pitching holds us In,
In the AmerlcJ!.il League, It
loaded In the 12th Inning to lift the
we're OK," Mets Manager Da- was: Baltimore 6, Boston 1; . D!Jdgers. JayHowell,3-3, pitched
vey Johnson said. "(The Cardi- Milwaukee 5, Cleveland 4 In 10 four Innings for the victory. Don
nals) have a way of making good Innings: New York 9, Minnesota · Robinson, 11-8, was tbeloser. San
pitching look sloppy - they put 7: Kansas City 8, Toronto 3;
Francisco's Kelly Downs made
so much p~sure on you. Our California 4, Oakland 3; Chicago
his first start since May 1 and
guys dldh' t get rattled."
6, Seattle 4; and Detroit 4, Texas
pitched 6 2-3 ·solid Innings.
Reds 5, Astros 0
Ojeda, 9-9, scattered seven hits 2.
Phllll!?l'-1, C'!bs 3
. At Houston; · Tom Browning,
over 71-3 Innings and threw just
At Chlcato. R.tcky Jordan 11-10, scattered six singles to
89 pitches, 57 for strikes. Don
Aase and· Randy Myers balled drove In three runs to lead the
record his second shutout and
sixth complete · game of the
out Ojeda In the eighth lnntrlg to Phl.l adelphla . over Chicago,
which remained In first place by ·season .. It was Browning's 23rd
secure the vcltory;
St. Louis rookie Ken Hill, 6-9, 2 1-2 games. Cub:s rookle 'Jei'OJ'ne . 'Victory In his last 26 decisions
allowed five hits and two runs Walton extended his hitting agalr)st NL West teams. Jim
over six Innings. But the Cardi- streak to 24 games, the IODieStln Clancy, 6-10, 'allowed three runs
In four Innings and lost for the
nals couldn't get mo.re than two the majors this season, but he left
hits an Inning, stranding four ·the 'game In the seventh because sixth time lri his last· seven
runners In· scorlng position and of a bruised left shOUlder.
· decisions.

DOUBLE PLA V - Dodgers second sacker Willie Randolph
· makes the throw to first for the double play In splle of WID Clark's
a.tlempt to break It up In Sunday's game against the Giants In San
· · FranCisco. The Dodgers went on to post a 3-Z Victory In 1Z lnnlnp.
(UPI)

:McEnroe cops first
.:o utdoor title .in months
INDI-ANAPOLIS CUP!)
John McEnroe won his first
:Outdoor tournament In I6
;months, . scoring the final 13
points Sunday to defeat Jay
Berger 6-4, 4-6, 6-4, In the finals of
the $415,500 U.S. Men's Hardcourt Tennis Championships.
" By the end !felt I couldn't lose
a point, ... McEnrOe said. "The
momentum kept building. It was
a tremendous feeling. I don't
recall something like ·that
before."
McEnroe took the $5I,OOO top
prize and his 75th career singles
title at the Indianapolis Sports
Center In his first match ever
against Berger, who upset Stefan
Edberg and Tim Mayotte to
reach the final.
McEnroe double faulted on
break point to fall behind J-2 In
. the third set and Berger held
·s erve !or a 4-2 advantage.
. "I was feeling a bit discouraged," McEnroe said. "I wasn't
doing the· things I knew I could
do. At th~ end. It all came
together."
: McEnroe held serve to trall4 -3
and.then began his run, breaking
Berger twice and holding serve
Without losing a point.
" If I play like that , I'll be
satisfied at the U.S. Open,"
McE nroe said. "I would play
a;nybody anytime like that. The
danger Is ·to assume I will play
that well. It took two hours to get
to that point. That is ·the way you

want to play more often."
McEnroe, who lost to Boris
Becker In last year's Hardcourts
final, broke Berger In the lOth
game to win the first set .
McEnroe beat Berger with
strong service. returns, two for
winners and two that Berger hit
Into the net.
McEnroe took the set with a
lunging forehand return that
surprised Berger by landing just
Inside the baseline, barely allowing Berger time for a weak
return attempt.
Berger broke McEnroe for a
2-llead In the second set and won
his next four service games to
even the match.
McEnroe, ranked sixth In the
world, won at Lyon and Dallas
earlier this year but earned his
first outdoor title since April of
1988. The three-time Wimbledon
winner and four-time U.S. Open
champion was sidelined the past
month with a shoulder Injury.
But McEnroe showed no signs of
pain at the Hardcourts, breaking
his opponents' serves on 2J of 51
attempts.
McEnroe, 30, has suffered his
only losses this year to the
world's three top-ranked players
- Becker, Ivan Lend! and
Edberg.
Berger, whQ had not advanced
past lhe quarterfinals of a
tournament since taking a month
off after the French Open, was
pleased with his play.

Majors

fl II .It! IYr
II l'f .UI Ill

8)· Unllt'd l"rK" lnlt•r ... l ior.. l
t\MERK' i\N Lf:i\GUE

SIUI Fr•ndM"O

Ea.• I

llil.ltlmol'f'
Mlhw.ulrr
ToroMo
Bo11loa
flll"leiiUid
Nf'W Vorlt

" ' L Pra.

GB

511 51 .-IN
57 sa AN
57 II ..tl\3

21J,
2\or

$5

M'Mtt

Oakland
C~o~llforn6~

Kan..,. City
Te~~:M

Mlni'IPio&amp;a

!Moid'tlf'

•

t

~~

Chl('l1~o

NMf York 3, St. l.ottllll
Montreld II, Pltbh.11h 2

Atlanta 5, San Dler;o ..

..&amp;!1 I 't ltt

..en

8u rll i.Y '1

.a

New \'orl3, St. Louis~

Philadelpltla S, Ollra«o :11

CIIICI nratl 5, Houlllon 0
Lo11 An!P!Ies3, SUFrandACD!{ntnR. )

MJhntukr., 5, nner.nd I

a.umo"' I, ._..n 1

r~nlb

Pl11abUI'I{h 6, Montl'l'al

211111

Toronlo s. Kan~ Clly 1
llo.ton II, &amp;.ltlmoft' Jl, 13 ln~t.
Dftnk I,Tnaa5
Sl'alllr ... Cllil('all:o :11, I linn.
Sun:le'sltftull"

-II .. .411 1111-~

Hou!llonl, (1nclnMIIIi
9, Phlladt'lpNa T
,_.. Anxf"'e. S, San floanciMo 1

1~ 1.&lt;,

61 ,-171 U ltt

50 n
!ht~~·,. Rf'lldb
MIIUIPIIo&amp;a 8, New l'orlc l
Oakland It, C&amp;IHornl• 3

Chle&amp;II:O

~• 11 .nt •• ~ot
• •e .ns u

N.tUrdiQ''I ft'lullll

11 n .102 6!1 17 .Sill I
11-1 5! .55! G
61 55 .521 9
Sll
$i

stst.sttll

Au ana.

n ...,, s•rt

.t37-l .3111

17 51 .51!1 14 54 . I.U: J

Houlllon
Saa Dlr«U
Clnrln•U
1m All~e!!

liCI 58 .Sii $9 10 .4N t•~r

.........

n 11 •.att tiYr

Wf'flt

MoadiiY'II IMif'A
PlltliNrrh IDrahft H) al Moat ....
I Marti"" l~t) , $p.m.
AUanta (SmoMz 11-11 Md P . 8atltb

S· ll l al 81. LoW" (Mapane l.a.T Mid
Ho114ao-t) ,I DH),f:3S p;m,

MllwauH~5 .

Oevf'lud-t,lllnn.
New Y•rlll, Mln,..llota 7
Kan- CIIJ II, Toronlo 3
Callfor*• 4, Oaldflnd a
Clilc~tJo I, S.lll.tk&gt;"
Det rok t, Tn.u I
Monl-:r'• G"mf'll
Toronto CGol:m J.l) IU lo1110a (llod·
dldr;er 11-8), 7:35p.m.
IWilm•~ (Thunnond ~~ IU Detn~ll
tMerrtll-1&gt;. 7:U p.m.
N.w Yo;t (Ha•Wn11I:II-IIJ at Mllwau·
kee CPeterf'll Hl.II:JI p.m.
Ku. . CW.Ji.t.q••• I-IJ M Chkap
(0.1•• J.l),
p.m.
• • • - • t.Uder. . IJ.I) .,_ C::all.,..
... (llte.WIIIW), II:SS p.m.
'l'llelll.,'aGAmft

•=•

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

S~tn

Tuelld ..,. •• Plneti
Dlf!p M New fork, nllfll

Loa .t.n~f'll M PbUadelpllila. niJhl
San Franc:IIH.'O 1t1 Molllrr.-1, nl~~tt

Chlcqo at Clnda..,l, nlrllt
Allanta at 81 . Louie, nlpt
PIIIP11Jh at HoUioa, nl~

Boxllll

N••

Re•o. Nn. - Mlcllllel
VI. lru
BarWey, IIF miMeweiPI dt .. fiPIFHih ..l
Nn.ExiiiMtle•

Chtupll Mllftii.&amp;,.Jn,
0.11

a.JIMten! • DeiiWM, .....
New l'erkatlll..._ 1ft, aiJIII
a-cN,MOIIap,ai,W.
Clftofl- .. o............

8flltat- PGA lka..rsGft .........
CI..O&lt;

......... c............ ..

A.l .. qlll!iqat, Nrw Mn:Jct- Vlt1l ...
111... .t AIIM.......
..

1'.- ............ ...

,...,

NATIONAL LEAGUE

WLPd.GI
. . . .1'71 -

.........

If II .Ill

T•••

M...... h, N.l. - V•lt41.Jer.,- lull

_..,,

S.IIIIQ'I Sp.ta Tru•elle•
Cle.t... d - ltee.IJeoll ......, ....
Z.wlla aM • ..,•..., ••• Y•lllllll lralll

cow.• Ifill••

CAAA)·

v

Wedding reception ·held recently
RUTLAND -An outdoor wedding reception Darlene and Jack
Ryan, was hosted recently by her
parents, Babe and Jack Shiflet,
at their home In Rutlal\d.
The decorating was done by
Jamie Blaettnar, Becky Triplett,
and Vera Holiday. The tables
were decorated with mauve and
blue floral arrangements, can. dies and bows. The pool area was
also lighted .with candles and
flowers. The buffet meal was
served under a tent decorated
with bows and blue lights.
, pavld Anthony superVised the
tlghtlng and music, and Mike
Clegg and Gale Sbrlmplln did the
cool!lng for the evening · event.
·Assisting with the serving was
Denise' ·· Shiflet, Rosanna An•
(bony, Barbara Eades. and Francie Shrlmplln.
The evenings events Included
dining, dancing, and swimming.

.CHA.RLES J . AND ANDREA C. (RIGGS) AI)KINS

Adkins, .Riggs.· wed in ·May

HoneRaelng
Trainer D. Wayne Lukas com·
pleted a spectacular weekend at
Saratoga Racetrack Sunday
when he saddled the favored
. Stelnlen to win the $123,200
Bernard Baruch Handicap by
five lengths. The Baruch was the
third Grade I stakes victory of
the weekend for Lulcaa. On
Saturday he sent out Open Mind
to Win the Alabama at Saratoga
and Caraon City to capture the ·
SapJina II Mo111110uth Park:
'.

'
Inning of Sunday's game hi Cleveland.
The ·
Brewers won 5-4 In 10 Innings. (UP I)

DIVES FOR BALL - Indians left fleld~r Dlon
.James dives unsuccessfully for a short popup off
the ba.t of Milwaukee's Mile Felder In lhe fourth

His downfall came In the sixth
when Chill Davis singled and ·
Jack Howell walked with two out
before Anderson's blooper. Claudell Washington followed with an
RBI slngte·that made It 4·1.
"(Anderson l winds up bitting a
pitch you want him to hit for a
soft trlple," Stewart said. "You
wonder how this game works."
The A's scored twice In the
seventh on Javier's run-scoring
groundout and Walt Weiss' RBI
single.
"We won the series; · we came
to win It," Oakland Manager
Tony La Russa said. "I'm just
disturbed that we didn't win this
game too, when we were so
close. "
Dave Parker's l6th homer had
given the A's a 1.0 lead In the
first. Armas' ninth homer of the
year tied It In the second.
Elsewhere In the American

-Sports briefssoccer
Bordeaux remained atop the
first division of French soccer
following an Impressive 1-0 victory at LHle. Du.tCh striker Pleter
Den Boer scored off a pass from
VIncente Llzarazu In . the 54th
minute. After five matches the
club has four victories and one
draw. Defending champion Mar·
sellle Is In a four-way tie for
second, two points behind Bordeaux, after a 1-1 draw at Nice.
... Austrian first division soccer
clubs Rapid and Sportclub signed
a special agreement In which
three Sportclubs players will join
Rapid beginning Tuesday.
Cycling
Tour de France winner Greg
LeMond and an estimated 1,500
additional riders representing
more Ulan 70 countries are
scheduled to · compete In the
World Cycling Championships In
Lyon, France starting Monday .
The seven-day track events conclude Sunday with the professional points race. Following a
two-day break, road championships will be held Aug. 23-27 In
Chambery.

'

League: Detroit topped Texas
4-2; .Baltimore downed Boston
6-1; Chicago tripped Seattle 6-4;
Kansas City ripped Toronto 8-3;
Milwaukee edged Cieveland 5-4
In JO ; Innings; and New : York
shaded Minnesota 9-7.
At Arlington, Texas, Lou Whitaker's two-run single with two
out In the ninth led the Tigers.
Kenny Rogers, 2-2, gave up a
single and walk before Jeff
Russell relieved and hit Dave
Bergman with a pitch to load the
bases. Whitaker then stroked a
single to center. Mike Henne- ·
man, 9-4, who entered the game
In the eighth Inning, picked up the
win . Guillermo Hernandez
. pitched the ninth for Ills 15th
save.
Orioles 6, Red Sox 1
At Baltimore, rookie Dave
Johnson pitched a six-hitter and
Craig Worthington hit his 11th
home run as the Orioles managed
a split In their !our-game series
with the Boston Red Sox. Johnson, · 2-1, notched his second
straight complete game victory .
Tom Bolton, 0-3, was the loser.
White Sox 6, Mariners 4
At Seattle, Ozzle Guillen drove
In the g9-ahead run with an
eighth-Inning single and Carlton
Fisk drove In !our runs with a
home run and a double. Flsk'shomer was his eighth of the season

'

and ·33lst lifetime, tying him with
HaQk Greenberg for 49th on the
all-time home run list. Bill Long,
5-5, pitched five Innings of middle
relief for the Sox, while Keith
Comstock, 1-1, took the loss.
· Royals 8, Blue •Jays 3
At Kansas City, Brad Wellman
scored on a wild-pitch strike out
to Bo Jackson to start a four-run
seventh Inning and break open a
tie game. Jackson and Danny
Tarlabull homered in support of
Tom Gordon, 14-4. John Cerutti,
9-6. took the loss.
Brewers 5, Indians 4
.
. 10 Innings
At Cleveland, Robin Yount
ended the game with a sacrifice
fly to lift the Brewers to their fifth
victory In the last six games. Dim
Plesac. 3-3, failed In a save·
attempt but got the win. Yount
collected his 79th RBI off Doug
Jones, 4-7, as the Indians lost for
the seventh time In the last 10
games.
V ankees 9, Twins 7
At Minneapolis, Jesse Barfield
·had four RBis, Including a
tie-breaking two-run double In
the ninth, and Ken Phelps hit a
three-run homer to _help New
York outs lug Minnesota. Yankee
reliever Lee Guetterman, 4-5,
gave up one hit over two Innings, ·
while Jeff Reardon, 4-3, was
roughed up for the loss.

HEAT
PUMP
SPECIAUST

IT'S THE·ONE

SYSTEM THAT DOES
IIMPSI&amp;~1·

Looking for

HEAnJIG &amp; COOUNG

·iensible

Efficiency and
~gh QuaUty
Make This One

life insurance?

' -Sports briefs-

Calendar
.

•

Monday, Augult 14, 1989
Page 6

At the conclusion .of the evening,
the couple was toasted prior to
their solo dance. They then
opened wedding gifts.
Attending were Bob and Debbie Buck, Dr. and Mrs. R.
Charles Holliday , Jamie and
Rick Blaetblar, Kathy Haley,
Ethel Shank, Kathy and Stacie
Reed, Bryan and Julie Zirkle,
Gale and Francie Shrlmplln,
Carol and Phil Ohlinger, Becky
Triplett, and Joe Anthony.
Out ·of town guests Included
Sgt. David and Rosanna AnthOny, Mary Carolyn and Larry
Wiley, Ethel RollSh, Bill and
Wilma Brown, Kim King, De·
borab and Junior Adkins, Gerald
B. · Rood, Debbie Massie, Sue
Brown, . Denise Shiflet, Mike ·
Glegg, VIrginia Richards, Mike
Ryan, Barbara Eades, Heather
Hussell, and Ed and Velma
Patterson.

Bridal shower held

Angels
slip past
Athletics·
By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Spo111 Wrller
The California Angels started
out Sunday wondering If the
clock was going to strike midnight on their Onderella sea~on.
After losing three straight
games, they were In danger of
being swept Ill their lait series of
the season with the Oakland
Athletics.
·
· Instead of turning Into a
pumpkin, the .-Angels went Into "
high gear with ·the ace or the
pitching staff, Bert Blyleven,
sitting In the driver's .seat.
Blyleven outdueled A's stopper
Dave Stewart and won his eighth
straight decision when Bryan
Harvey escaped a ninth-Inning ·
jam In a 4-3 triumph.
Oakland and California entered the weekend ~rles separ·
ated by percentage points for
first place, but the Athletics won
the first two games to take
control of the top ·spot.
A loss would have put the
Angels three games behind.
Instead, . California moved to
within one game of the first-place
A's In the American League
West.
Blyleven, 12-2, allowed seven
hits In seven Innings. The 38year-old right-hander, owner of a
league-best ERA of 2.36 and 266
career vlc~orles, has now
stopped losing streaks of seven;
five and three g11mes this year.
"When there Is a big game you
just try to be consistent and keep
your team In the game," said the
Netherlands native, who has six
vlctoiles following Angel losses.
"I just say, 'OK, keepitcloseand
utilize your defense." '
The game's key hit came from
rookie Kent Anderson, who ·
snapped a 1-1 tie In the sixth
Inning with a two-run triple.
Starting at shortstop In place of
. Injured Dick Schofield and batting only .203, Anderson blooped
his two-out triple down the
right-field line off o!Stewart,
16-7, to snap a 1-1 tie and highlight
a three-run outburst.
''I wouldn' t say I was nervous,
maybe a IItie over-excited," said
Anderson, only 2 for 11 since
replacing Schofield Thursday
night. "He had been pitching me
away so I was looking away."
Harvey, who hurled two In'
nlngs lor his 17th save, got In
trouble In the ninth when Stan
Javier's fly glanced off the glove
of center fle1der Devon White for
a three-base error.
Harvey bore down and caught
pinch hitter JoseCanseco looking
at a third strike, then fanned
pinch hitter Dave Henderson to
end the game.
"If I come In and mess It up
they go three games up," Harvey
said. "There was pressure, but
there's always pressure In the
ninth."
Stewart, bidding to become the
AL's first 17-game winner, allowed seven hits and three walks
and struck out nine - Including
Lance Parrish four times -In his
fifth complete game.

The .Daily Sentinel

IT ALL.

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

'

:COOIIII

45412wtl ....
. Gollp... GIL

'

16141 441-1104

•

·'·'

l''

Vaselaney, South Euclid. They
wore gray laffetta tea length off
the shoulder gowns fashioned
with bouffant Skirts and fitted
bodices accented In the back at
the waist by large bows, and they
each carried tulips.
Serving as best man was Brent
Adkins, Gallipolis, brother of the
groom. Ushers were Brad Ables,
Alea; Hawaii; Chr!Ji Barnum,
Morgantown, W.Va.; Eric Cos-.
tine, Morristown: Marshall
Esler, Mason: Dean Knisley ,
Upper Arlington; TeddOhllnger,
Chillicothe; and Nick Riggs,
Akron, brother of the bride.
,
· Registering guests was Nancy
Knisley.
A receptioned followed at the
Shriner's Club In Gallipolis.
The bride Is a graduate of the
Rio Grande School ·or Nursing
and Is employed as a registered
nurse at Overbrook Center In
Middleport.
The groom has a Juris Doctorate froin Ohio Norther-n University, belongs to the American Bar
Associ a tlon 1 !]allIa Coun (y Ba.r
Association, and the National
District Attorney's Association.
He Is the assistant prosecuting
attorney for Gallla County.

Good, bad oh nurses'
salary, Working area
a

:more heated
O!lar Ann Landers: I was• . can't recall
response. Read on.
delighted \, see YO\I tackle the
problems ot nurses In your
From Clearwater, · Fla.: I've
column. I could w~lte a book on
been a nurse for 26 years. I'm fed
the subject, hut for ·now here are
up, worn down and burned out. I
can' t collapse because somebody
a few comments that I hope you
will print.
·
·
must take care of these sick
people. There Is no budget for a
I've been an R.N. for 22years. I
secretary so we do paper work
can't count the number of times.!
while patients yell for medicahave covered for doctors who
tion and plead for someone to
"made a mistake" because they
take them off the bedpans. 'the
were drunk or exhausted. You'd
profession Is a shal11bles.
thlrik they would be gratefUl, but
In return we get treated II~ dirt.
The patients take their cues from
San Francisco: Our hospital Is
the doctors and adminiStrators.
a
beautiful shell. The buUdlng Is
They see that we are not
magnificent,
but patient care'
respected, so they call us "glr·
stinks.
Hospitals
lose money, but
lie," "waitress" and worse;
suppliers
get
rich.
It's like the ·
People will pay a teenager $25
Pentagon
scandals.
The taxpayto mow a lawn, but they resent a
ers
got
ripped
o!f,
but
some huge
nurse being paid $9.49 an hour for
companies
made
zillions.
The
making decisions that could
administrators
should
be
held
determine whether they live or
accountable.
die.
Evanston, 01.: I was not
We have the highest misCarpleased
to read all those comriage rate of any profession. We
plaints
from
nurses. Ask any
have the third highest divorce
why
she
chose the profesnurse
rate. We have the second highest
sion
and
you
will
find that It was
rate of alcoholism. Show me a
because
she
had
a
genuine desire ,.
nurse over 30 and I will ShoW you
to
serve
humanity.
I wouldn't
a woman.wlth a wrecked'back. If
change
jobs
for
any
amount of
I sound ·bitter It's because I am money.
One of Mally In 8&amp;. Pe&amp;erilbul'J,
Fla.

Dear St. Pete: I could fill
today' s paper with letters that
resulted from that column. I

Fultz twins
are born

of Our Best
Buys.
CaUme!

POMEROY - Andrea Christine Riggs became the bride of
Charles Jeffrey Adkins during a
double ring ceremony at the
Trinity Congregational Church
In Pomeroy on May 13 with the
Rev. Richard Freeman
officiating.
·
The bride Is the daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Keith Riggs, Pomeroy.
.The groom Is the son of Mr. ;md
Mrs. Charles Adkins, Jr.,
GaiUpolls.
·
· Music w~ provl&lt;1ed by Ralph
Werry, organist.
Escorted to the altar by. her
father, the bride wore a white
lace taffetts and organza gown
faShioned with an open neck and
back. The leg of mutton sleeves
were accented with largetaffetta
bows highlighted with lace flowers. The lace bodice dropped Into
a basq11e waistline that flowed
Into a full skirt and a · chapel
lenght train. The skirt and train
wer,e edged with lace decorated
with seq ulna,and pearls. ,
Jill Ol!llnger, · Chillicothe,
served as matron. of honor.
Bridesmaids were Pam Ewing,
Columl!Us: Ann A:dklns, Gallipolis, sister· of the groom: Connie
Adkins, Rio Grande; and Stacey

Melanie K. Fields, bride elect honored recently with a shower
of WI!Uam Marshall III, was · "af the American Legion Post 140
In New Haven, W.Va. , hosted by
Kim Harbrecht, Madeline
McClung, 'Eileen Fields, Becky
Benson, and Mary Roush.
Games were played and prizes ·
· won IJY. Sonia Kearns Zuspan,
Paula Brooker, and Brenda ·
Haggy.
Attending were Brenda Haggy,
Betty Maynard, Patty Barton,
Helen Fields, Resa Harris, Corlnna Bass, Sonia Kearns Zuspan, i:&gt;ee Spencer, Paula
Brooker, Lynn Arthur, Barbara
Goodnlte, Trudy Marshall, Con·
nle. Johnson, Judy Stewart, Margle Warner, ·Pat Burton, Karen
Johnson, pam Simpkins, Char·
lotte Rousll, Thelma Roush, Sally
Ross; Kim Harbrecht, Eileen
Fields,
Mary Roush, Becky BenWILLIAM F. STEWART
son, Madelln~ McClulli, Erma
Folmer, Samantha Roush, Anita
Folmer , Julia Willoughby,
Skip and Jane Stewart, Potn'e- Donna Grinstead, . Ada Grinroy, are announcing the birth of a stead, Shelly Duncan, Jane Bird,
son, William Franklin, born July Donna Northup, Rachel Beasley,
Teka Westmoreland, Rochelle
19 at Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed seven Gillispie, Janie Gillispie, and
pounds and (Wo ounces, and was Martha and Linda Sayre.
20 Inches long.
Maternal · gtandparents are
William B. Capehart and Mary
R. Burton: Middleport. ·
·
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Stewart, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
There are two other children at
home, Emily and Becky
Johnson.

Stewart birth

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS ·

.. 1919: lM Anpl•
Tlf¥1 Sylldl...ar. •lid

C..11n Syndl••• ·.

'.

Charleston, S.C.: My husband
was hospitalized four times In
three months. Heaven bless
those nurses! They are God's
angels here on earth. I have
never seen such dedicated, carIng people anywhere. They have
my everlasting respect.
Los Ancelea: If the nurses ·a re
unhappy about their salaries tell
them to pack their bags and come
to California. According to the
Los Angeles Times they can
make anywhere from $40,000 to
$80,000 a year. They · also get
added bonuses for signing up,
like athletes . I'm sending four
pages or ads to prove lt. - EHM
Artesia, N.M.i When I was
hospitalized 20 years ago, I got
back rubs, and a nurse nutted my
pillows and turned out my light at
night.. Last month, the day after
surgery, I had to get my own
glass of water while still hooked
up to the IV. I! you ask me,
tnday' s nurses go Into the profession to tlnd a doctor husband.
Dear Readers: You've heard
only half the 'story. Tllere's more
tomorrow.

CODY J , HYSELL

Hysell birthday
Cody Joseph Hysell, son of
Randy and Genla Hysell, recenlly celebrated his first birth·
day with a party at his parent's
home In Rutland.
A clown theme was carried out
with cake, Ice cream, and chips
being served to Rachel Hysell,
Andy and Nellie Grover. grand·
parents; Karlln Grover, grandmother; Charlotte Hysell, Au·
tumn Hysell, Norman and Dora
Hysell, Glenn, Debbie, Kindell,
Kristin,. and Kelly Brown.

{

Fair time ar'rives...
By BOB HOEFLICH
contingent, of course, on what the
The quiet, sleep)! Rock Springs . weather does. Weather like last
Flllrgrounds . again was awa- . week's would be good, huh? ·
kened Sunday as
Farmers Bank President Ted
action got unReed
readily admits that he, too,
derway preparIs
a
traditionalist
- he says he's
atory to the 1989
still
trying
to
cope
with auto.
Meigs County
malic transmissions on
Fair.
automobiles.
The some doBy the way, the bank hu thla
zen rides of the
Bates Amusement Co. were year donated another electric
being set up as well as the game water cooler for use on the Rock
stands .. Sevi!ral food stands were Sprlngs Fairgrounds during the
In operation and the Junior Fair fair. The bank gave an Identical
Building was .beginning to look a cooler last year- and they are
lot like the County Fair as booth dandles. One of the coolers Will
preparatlo115 got underway by be used .outside of the new
commercial building and the
young people of the cC)unty.
Mary Gilmore, new fair board other outside the granae hall tot
secretary, was at her office this year's fair.
getting .her feet wet with the
And many Meigs County famiproblems that will be overwhelming when the fair really lies have followed tradition rolls Into lllgh gear on Tuesday. there's that word again ....: this
Margaret Parker, president of summer with their annual family
the Meigs County Pioneer and · reunions.
Among them was the 25th
Historical Soc.ty, was among
annual
reu nlon of the Mart and
those on the grounds and comLouise
Theiss
Crary Family held
men ted that this will be the 13th
on
Aug.
6
with
Don and Maida
year or the fair for her son,
Chuck. You may remember that Mora ho5tlng the event at their
Chuck, only two days old at the river' camp . .
• time, attended his first Meigs · Forty-six family members
CountyFalr13yearsagoandhe's. from Ohio, West VIrginia and
attended every day of all of the Michigan enjoyed the made-l'ofairs since that ilme. Looks like order beautiful day. Maye Mora
he lias some sort of a record gave prayer preceding the picnic
dlnnPr.
going there If this continues.
·The center of attention of the
reunion
were five little ones
The Morris Equipment Co.
ranging
from
one and a half to
movedagigantlctractorontothe
four
years,
enjoying
the river
grounds as a part of the com·
activities. The five are the fifth
party's display during the week.
generation In the lineage, all
Veterans Memorial Hospital great-grandchildren of · Jlelen
Maintenance Supervisor Don Crary Fisher who also had tbe
Beegle got the extensive lattice · largest number of family present
work used as a part of the - a total of 22.
hospital's booth In the grange
Aren't the homegrown lornabuilding to the grounds and
painted and tri place over the .toes and com tantsstic?! Enjoy
weekend. This, In preparation, while you can - they're too soon.
for final decoration. of the booth gone. And do keep smiling.
today. A number of hospital
employees - they'll be wearing.
blue !-shirts featuring the hospital logo - will be on hand
· throughout the afternoons and
evenings of the fair to handle the
activities that will be taking
pla~e at the·booth.
· It looks like a good talr -

--------

-------

CAL"U
II '1111

ADP .

Gift shop opens at Dairy Barn
Come celebrate the Grand
Opening of The Udder Place, a
unique gl tt shop In the Dairy
Barn Southeastern Ohio Cultural
Arts Center gallery Friday evenIng, 6'8 p.m.
Every one Is ."Welcowme".
Refreshments will be · served.
.The first 30 people will receive

"Cowplimentary" gltts. There
wUI be a drawing for eow T-shirts
and cow mugs and a special
preview of The Collection of
Collections exhibit.
· The Dairy Barn Is located In
Athens .~ mile off R.tchland
Avenue .on Dairy Lane .

JOHN A. WAD.E, M.D. Inc:
PliASAIII YA11 0 IOIPIIAL

Ell, lOSE &amp;TIIOAT
GEI EIAL AUIIGIST
"WE Uft IIEARIII Altf'

I

.

.

(JI4t 675·1244

(~~~

Congrorulollo,./
F10m d&gt;e 011/o lottery Commission and the
Stale 'of Ohio, ID the thousands of Ohio IDnery Sales -'9enls who
have he/J&gt;«i mole our Hrst 15 )'lOts so success/u/1 W.'ve 1'ti4Ch«J

billion in ticket sales, and .,..·m grrrlefullor your effotts.
1'\o\ol:l also llle Ia thank the millions of lvn./aving Oltioans who play
the IDttery games, becovse witflout )OV them would be no IDttery.

CNer $8

--

ZIP CODE #46720
CHESTER
Gaul'a Market
4841 0 State Rt. 248
Keebaugh'a Reotau,.nt
Stele Rt. 7

Tony' a Carry Out
221 Mill St.
Fruth Pharmacy
788 N. 8tcond Ave.
Hilltop Gr::",T
37481 State I. 7

ZIP CODE #45741
LANGSVILLE
Uttle Coal Bucket
Rt. 1
Pick • Shovel Market
State Rt. 1 24

ZIP CODE #4&amp;788
POMEROY
Kelly' 1 Kor .....
100 Main St.
Debur
1&amp;47 Nye Ave.
Vance' 1 Aahland Serv.
Rt. 4
Pom1roy Sundry Store
108 Main St. ,.
Wheley'a Grocer{
40781 State Rt. 881
Poorman' 1 Grocery
31850 Klng~bury Rd .
SuperAIIIII'Ica
278 W. Meln St.
Jeff'1 Carry out
. 1 00 ~IllY St.
c•DPannzol

ZIP CODE #45743
LONG BOTTOM
Ro11'1 Grocery
" 33500 aa,han Rd.
ZIP CODE 1145780
MIDDLEPORT
Sur:;America
48 Gan. Hartlnget Pkwy.
Gil PIUI
382 N. Baoond Ave.
Sundry St122 Seaond Ave.
Blue Tartan
803 Third Ave.
"'-lptlon Sho~
271 N. S.oond w . ..
Awo.

(,

Beat of the Bend

·-Rt.

7
D-'11!1111on
402 E. Main St.
Gloeckn•' 1 Cafe
110 E.. M81n St.
Shammy' • Drlvllnn
101 W. Main St.

Big Bend Foodland
700 W. Main St.
7-33 Carry Out
1800 Nye Ave.
Kroger'• .
700 E. Main St.
Five Pointe ExprHa
34070 State Rt. 7
ZIP CODE #46770
PORTLAND
Ha"II ·Ftrma
Rt. 1
ZIP CODE #45771
RACINE
Ebai''a Gulf
Elm St., St. At. 124
Sun Fun Plnnaol
Third St.
Joe' 1 Country Mer..t
Main St.
ZIP CODE 141713
TUPPERS PLAINS
KMh't'elhoT
42014 tall ftt.
Lodwldc' I Market
State Rt. 7

'I

�P'&amp;QI 8

Monday, ALJ91.1't 14, 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Monday, August 14, 1989

Quote of the day

Business Services

By Unlled Preas IaterJI!IIIonal
Rep. MervYn Dymally, D ·
Calif., who last month nominated
Rep. · Mickey Leland for the
Worid Hunger Award, discussing
the apparent death of the Texas
De!flocrat In \l . plane crash In
Ethiopia.
"If there' ever were a person
who 1ave hl8 life.In the pursuit of
ending b)lnger In Afr.t ca, that
per.s on was ·... Mlckey ·Leland. He
was never afra ld to. travel to the
mosi difficult areas, calll!lg
attention' to the plight Of tho~
who were hungry. starving, and
.' Ul. tf
.

1

'

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru. FRIDAY I .A.M. to 5 P.M• .
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

out the theme, "Today's Youth Competlallor a
Bdler Tomorrow." By the lime the lair officially
opens, the buDding will be ruled with displays by
·Melp Coualy youth 1roups.

. FINISHING TOUCliES - Sherrl Smith of the
Queea aad Kln1 Bees 4-H Club puts the flnlshiDI
touch on the club's display in the junior lair
buUdiDI Sanday afternoon. The display carries

r-.
~ People

in the n e w s - - - - - - - - - - - -

By WILLIAM C .• TROTl
. United Press International
STONES TURN tJP AT CLUB: The croWd at Toad's Place In
New Haven, Conn., had a big treat Saturday night - an ·
.. impromptu show by the Rolllag Stones. The band took the stage
at aboutll p.m . with 700 people jammed In the rock club and
another 1,000 or so dancing In the streets outside. "It's great to
get some people to play for, you know," Mlck Jagger told the
crowd. "Welcome to New Haven. This Is the debut show of the
1989 tour . Only 55 more togo." The Stones have beenrehearslug
In Washington, Conn., about 45 minutes from New Haven since
mid-July In preparation lor starting their "Steel Wheels'' tour
In Philadelphia Aug. 31. The Stones' 50·minute show featured 11
songs, including new material an d standards like "Start Me
Up," "Tumbling Dice" and "Miss You." AboutlOO inembers of
the inside audience were Invited to Toad's to celebrate the 40th
birthday of New E ngland rock concert promotor Jim "-opllk,a nd
another 200 were gues ts of the Stones.
·
GOLDIE LOCK'S EX-HUSBAND OUT: Goldie Hawn is
having trouble putting her marriage to e ntertainer Bill Hudson
behind her. Hawn, who took up with Kurt Russell after
divorcing Hudson, says Hudson'sdatm tha t she won't le t him
visit their kids is a lie and "part of a vendetta against me. " The
real problem, she told Vanity Fair, is that she wouldn' t go along
with Hudso n's reques t to sign a document that would let him
borrow money on their Malibu home. " I was atlvlsed a nd , of
course , I said to him, 'I am no longer your ·supporter, "' Hawn
says. ··so he is still trying to live off me. Listen, if he has a beef
. with me , tha t 's lair. Let him call me and face me- like a man .

.

He' s behaving like a woman scorned. We were together lor a big
3 'h years and I've got to live with thts .for the rest of my life."
Things· with Russell are a little more congenial - ·. "We're so
happy," she gushes- but Hawn says they s'Uil have no plans to
marry.
.
BUCK BACK l'ROM 'HEE HAW' HELL: Country star Back
Owens realizes that he probably damaged his career In those 16
years he spent pic kin' and grlnnin' on ','Hee Haw." Owens was a
hard-core honky·tonker but ended up playing on what he once
called "a sbow of fat old men and pretty young girls" thatforced
him to locus on comedy more than music. "But they paid me a
lot of money to do that show so I more or less looked the other
way and · winked ... ," Owens says In a Washington Post
Interview. "Weekly TV, that's death for recording artists. It's
too much exposure. There's no longer any mystery . You
become another household item."
ROMEO, ROME() FIX THE-BALCONY: JuDet's balcony In
Verona, Italy, has been reopened to the public but Romeo won't
be allowed to climb around on it. The balcony, open to tourists
and used In a sum.mer production of Shakespeare's "Romeo and
Juliet," was closed briefly out of fear that heavy rains and
cracks discovered would cause It to conapse but temporary
repairs were made and the 13th century balcony was reopened.
But, since a collapsing balcony would be too tragiC anendlngfor
Shakespeare, the Romeo In the production must flee from an
adjacent third· story window Instead of the balcony. Legend has
It that the balcony, from which the two star-crossed teenaged
lovers of rival families secretly professed their Jove for each
other, will be fully restored at the end of the season.
.

Objection to environmental,enforcement

.

California Anti-:abortion
protesters
arrested
'
,.

: ROSEMEAD, Cal if. cUP!) Sherlfr s deputies arrested 68
antl·abortlon protes ter s for
blockading a women's clinic ·
Sunday In a demonstration that.
hampered the medica l facility's
operation for several hours.
The Jates t In a series of
demonstrations by the Operation
Rescue anti -abortion group began about 10 a.m. at the Fatnlly
Planning Associates offices
about 10 miles east of downtown
Loa Angeles.
More than 100 bymm·chantlng
anU-abortlcintsts blocked the
ctoonolthecllntc, prompting Los .
A,JIIelel County Shertfr s depu·
del to order them to disperse or
faice ~rm t for ue.peSIIng.
I

(

.

About 35 protesters compiled, cllned to give her name, also
but at lea s t 68 others refused and esdmated tile antl·abortlon for·
wer e escorted away by deputles ces at about 400.
about 2:40 p.m ., Deputy Chris
But deputies said people were
Wah Ia said. All of those arrested already Inside the cllnlc when the
were cited at the scene a nd demonstration began and the
released, deputies said.
facility was not shut down by the
Unlike other demonstrations _protest.
by the militant antl-aboriton
But Wahla added that "at the
group, none of the protesters had time· of the demonstration there
to be physically ·dragged or was no one goln1into or out ofthe
carried away from entrances by cllalc."
.
the roughly 60 deputies at the
Th!! demonstration came 1n the
scene, Wahla said.
midst of a trtal for Operation
Rescue
founder Randall Terry
A woman answeriJII the telephone at the cltntc said tbe clinic and four othen fai!IJII charges of
had been closed by the prQtest, trespass and conspiracy growing
despite the presence ot about 200 out of a March 25 demonstration
a bordon . r lgbta couaterdeinon· In Los Angeles. Jucy aelectlon in
s !raton. The woman, wbi) de- the eue wu scheduled to con-

tinue Monday In Los Angeles
Municipal Court.
.
On Saturday hundreds of a bor·
lion opponents and · their
a bortlon·rights opponents staged
noisy but peaceful demonatra·
lions across Southern California.
While tbe abortion rights actl·
vis ts maneuvered (o keep entran·
ces to the clinics clear, the
antl·a bortlon18ts moved from
cllalc to clinic In an effort to set
up their prolelll before the
counterdemonstrator• had
staked out polltlons protecting
the entraneea.
The two aidea exchqed ver·
bal volleys during the half-dozen
~emonatratloiUI beglanlng at
dawn. .b ut no one wu 8J1'elted.

&gt;

Llstea up

MeiP ~ounty

GaUieCoumV

· Are• Code'l14

311-VInton

2•1-Alo Grand•
211-Qu.,.n Diet.
&amp;43-Arabi• ·Oist.
379-WIInut

Are• Code 51 4

Pom•ov

675- Pt.PI4158- L.eon
571-Appte Grow '

9815-Ch•u.r
843-Portllnd
247-Lehlrl FaUs

773-MNon

949-Aicinl
742-AuU•d
-117-Coolvilla

937- Buffolo

882- N.w Hwen
895-lA1 art

0·15 WOROS t6-2IIWORI!S 21:35 WOROS
· es.oo
1 DAY
$4.00
S7.00
3 DAYS
· ss.oo
$10.00
. ea.oo
u .po
$1 ,3 ,00
I DAYS
.at6 .00
. $25.00 .
10 DAYS
113.00
$21 .00
t MONTH
$51 .00
s&amp;o.oo.
*33.00

·

IOOI.Pitzl

for ellr.h d• 11

COPY DEADLINE -

~NOAY,APER

TUIIOAY PAPER
WIDNUOAY PAPER
'OIUIIIOAY "AI'ER
FRIDAY PA,III
SUNDAY PA,.ER

OAY BEFeRE PUBliCATION
- 11 :00 A.M. SATUROAY
- 2 :00P.M. MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M. WEONESDAY
- 2 :00P.M. THURBOAY
- 2 :00P.M. FRIDAY

...,.,..t._, ada.

Cat

Ret~~lts

·

I

'"T

Public Notice

in the

On
lll!tlgo

Court, Cue
26276,
Methot L. Bowen. Stott
Route 7, Tuppero Ploino,
OH .. woo •ppolntod Executrix of the 11tate of Hom•

M. Bowen. docuoocl.ltttof
Stata Route 7, Tuppero
Plelno, OH.
Fred tl. Craw, Ill
(81 7, 14. 21.&lt; '3tc
Public N otlce

I
I

·~

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Tho Atheno, Billie, Hock·
lng, Jockoan, Meigs, VInton
Solid Wute Monogemont
Polley Committee meeting
in 1e11ion on Auguet 9 .

1989 edaptocl the following
rtoalutlon:
WHEREAS, the AGHJMV
Solid Wolle Manogomont
Polley Committee wlohte to
ralu fundi far some or oil of
the purpoooo lot forth in
Ohio R. C. 3734.671EJ; ond
WHEREAS, the AGHJMV
Solid Waste Management

ootid waste policy cam.
mltteo of 1 solid waste men·
lgemtnt district, prior to the
approvol of the ealld wnto
m•nagament plan, to adopt

a r•olutlan totobllahlng the
propoood omount off- on
tho dlopoul of oolld wutt ot
1 oalld wnto dla-1 focHity klcatad in the dlatrict.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE
IT RESOLVED: thot the
AGHJMV Solid Wooto Mon-

agement Policy Committee

prapooto the fallowing fees
be cotl~ed 11 each solid
wute
diopol8t iocility

Polley Committee wlohte to . located in the Diatrict.
levy
fHI upon the djopo ..l • t1.26 p• t"n for oOtid
NOT!CE TO BIDDERS
wutee genoretod w~hin the
of
aolidwaate
lit IIOIIdw•t•
The iJoord of Education of
dlotrlct;
diopout
faclUtieo
i~ ' the dlo'
tho Melgo Loco! School blo· trict as authortred DUriUIInt f2. 60 por ton far aalid
trlct ct.ir• to · receive
Qenereted outSide
oeoled bldo for the follow·' to Ohio R. C. 3734.671BI; Wlllt•
tho
boundor18o
of the ·dlt·
ond
ing:
trlct.
but
lnoldo
the otete;
WHEREAS.
Ohio
R.
C.
1. Fleet lnaurance
2. Geaollne and Oil Pro- 3734. 6?1Bi outhorilto the and • 3. 76 Ptr ton tor solid
ducts
In order to be conaiderd,
8
Public S•le
all sealed bldl .oholt be , ..
1o Audion
ceived in the Tr8Murer"a0f·
fico, 320 Eaol Moln Street,
PomtwOY, Ohio, an or before
12:00 o'clock Noon an
NOTICE OF EX~CUTOR'S SALE •
Tu•doy. Auguot 16. 1989.
On Saturday. August 19, 1989 between
The lolird of Education
the .hours of 1:30 P.M. and 6 :00 f.M. all
reserve~ the right to •ccept
or reject ony ond
bldl.
the houeeh~ goods, hou1ehold effects
and · personal ' property owned bt 'thl late
En'na s ·m ith ancj Genilvieve Meinhart will
Meln
P. 0 . Box 272
be sold at private sale. Sale to beat the resi·
·Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
denca of Erma Smith end Genevieve Mein·
1817, 11, f4, 3tc
han,located at 207 Spring Ave;, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Ca1h in hend on day of sale. Sala sub·
ject to approval of Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio.

..

!'

..,attee gelierated outside

the boundarllo of thlo ltetO.
The SWMPC inv itoo pub·
lie

co~mant

1600 GAUON
WADI SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIU HAULED.
992·527

608
E. Main

' 992-2259
NEW LISTING- SHARON ROAD- Ofl Co. Rd . 35, Racine, 5
acres, pr ivacy, lots of shade trees. 24x55 home, 'with latge
living room. 3 bedrooms, wal~· in closets, 21ull baths, utility
room and barn. $39,900.00
.

lnslnnce call:

SUNNY HOLLOW- Apptox. 3011 acres, wrth sprin&amp; electric ·
available, all minerals. ASKING $14,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Would make a great rental or a home for a
young cowple. Has 2 bedrooms, din ing room, one floor, all
carpeted, new roof, and 2 lots. $14,500.00 '
.

2

In iliernoria m

In lning rnemary of
ow silttr,

JEFFREY l. WARN.ER
· Rioprouniatlvt
302 Wftt 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH. 46769
Phone: 814/992·5479
Ret.: 814/ 992·2477

LEONA HENSlEY,

. wllo poattl away
August 7, 1916;
'Also in

memory

of

htr husband,

NATIONWIDE
!
!!tSU~~!!_C,!

CHAilES HENSLEY,
April 22, 1972.

G- but nol
· forgott111.
Ada, Mat, t11111 Leota

5

Happy Adl

H&amp;R Block Tax
Course .B egins Soon

may be obt.ned from Mayor

Sort Hondrlc:ktr, SWMPC
Cholrman, 8 Eoot Wuhinll'
ton Street Athena. Ohio
46701 , 614-692,3338.
IBJ 14, 1tc

WANT ADS bring

·Vacation Money

·-

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD- Beautiful ranch lype house in !he
country. 3.98acres wrth scenic view. Two W.B.F.P.,Iull base·
menl, garage, many ~her leatures. $84,900.00.
LETART - MANUAL ROAD - Mobile home srte. one a.cte
landsCllped for mobile home or building site. A steal at
$3,500.00. .
STARCHER ROAD - _POMEROY - 64 \1 acres, vacanl
ground, gas and elect:ic available. Spring for development.
CALL FOR DETAI~ REDUCED PRICE $48,000.00. ·
POMEROY- Abeauldul modern kitchen compliments th1s 3
bedroom home. Full basement, newer dec~ lots ol closet
space, nice woodwork! PRICED REDUCED!! $4i ,900.00.
POMEROY- 2 or 3 unrt apartment bid !I. in Pomeroy.Needs
some replir. Located. on a good street. PRICED TO SEll!!'
$16,900.00.
'
.

CLELAND REALTY CREW WIL BE
LOOKIMO.FOR YOU AT OUR MEIOS
COUNTY FAIR 800THII

WANTED
DEAD 01 AUYE
•Washers •Dryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mutt 8t RI!Hiiralllt"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

992-5335~915-3561
Wfi Service All Makaa
5-4·89-1 110.

·JONES TIRE
CENTER

•General Chania
Maintenance

.us1ness
Services

•Computerized Balancer

J&amp;L

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

H•••er
...........
JeAtt &amp;J•

•

f t HA'VE A OOOD IIIUCTDf 8IZ DIJ"PEElB!ft COLOitl. IM81

992-3897

' St. Rt. 124
Middleport, Oh .
(Nex·t to Hill Top Groc:«y)

6·16·tfn

4

Giveaway

Female

Baaet hound

ma-.

boxer pup to gtvMway. 114--251-

YA8Jte.

8301.

Stop By and See Uo! - Financing Available

'

:

to loving homo 3 yro old
Doberman Shephard mlx:fd1
304~75-3t43,
.
•

Froo

. MASTERCARD and VISA WELCQME
IILOW HOUD&amp;Y 1111, KAIIAIIGl, OIUO
146·•171l

1:::;====~~;;;~~;;;;~~~==111
&amp;

11it.
KIHent to loving home. 30W7'5:

Television
Devices
MI 1• dog . pltl Col·1~, PI 11 0 ...
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales Sen1icej man Bhophord. t , .., o1~C
CJ 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
~!~~ d~ ~~~~. ~
992-55t9.
. .

z.

a:
~

.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:z:: 1614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

z
-

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

IIIOWAID IOTAVATOIS
•Y AIDMAN MOWBS
t!JNTEISTAn IATrlUS
LAWN MOWER REPAIR

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

calf, moll~ faca) Vlntan·E~o ·~

Rd. Vlrglt ~uotlco, tl14o:J8&amp;.9898. "•
;:.:::.,:.::;:;;:..:=.==::::;-=,.:.::,=
,,
Lost: Sllvar Cl••• Ring, VIctory "'
Chrl1tlan H.S. Ruby Stone, at : ,

l.oaltld at Valley l.umber
I• lllddlopart, Oh.
PARTS.AND SERVICE

lalrgroundo. 8t4-448-254t.
..
Loot: Tueocloy on looley St., :
Pomero~, 2 ktttene. Black. tan ";
apoto ond gr11 tlgor, 114-112· .,
5990.
•,

_________

,

Gallipolis

'

7

Yard Sale

For Mosl 2 and 4·cycla

engines
Stock Parts for
Homelit8. Weedeeter.

'',.
&amp; VIcinity
..,..,.....,...;....;.~;_;,;....,..,......, .

St~ettOn.

cloth•• boy1 1lz11 8·14. Ear- ·•

Tocumaah. Brigga 8t

742
Saltm St.

LOST '*mal• German SMpherJI,,

blk tan &amp;. red. 7 112 mo Old on .,.
Wato~oo Rd, Loon, Aug 5, :J04. ;

fact) 2 ~111111 (Red .ltMr, heifer •'

DAVE'S
SMAU ENGINE
IEPAII

•2f'IOITIACTOIS
elCHO PIOOIKTS

Lost &amp; Found

458·t929.
•
Loot: 2 red COWl (t with moltey ;'
'

or at
Veterans Memorial Hos1~ital
Mulberry H&amp;t$. Pomeroy.

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

6

PH. 992·3922

6· !1·'19-tln

10-6

Aug.

14,

15.

School '

ciao bll.i, mlac. clothtoLtoyo,. ·,
tumhure, from HMC: tn.1tO, ~
Flrwt Rd. poll Rt.554' Int.,_ ,,
T~rn

tlon.

ltft on HomMe o ad ,.

drive (before Hunt'• grocery) . .,.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

MEET THE
STAFF
PEIM SALE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Now lhru Sept. 9, 1989

"Free Eatlmetu' •

KAY'S
BEAUty SHOP

···-lult

100/o OfF All PERMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

PH. t49-2801
or las. M9-2160
NO SUNOAY

I 69 N. 2nd
Middleport
992-.272

_•::.
lti,n•_,,..m_l..:c
l•cc.lnc.:(.:c
S•.,.xt'o-"'n)'-.-,..,- :
17 Mlldlson Ave., Galllpoll•t Fri., ..

Uan, &amp; Tuee. Lola of Chllaren• "'.
dothoo good for ochoot.
~.

ALL Y1rd Sal•• Must Bt PMI In '

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. 1·
the dey e,.~ore the ad 11 to run. ~ '

Sundoy ocllllon · 2:00 p.m. "
Friday. Monday edhlon • 2:00 .,
p.m. Saturday.
..
"

Rnchodulod 5 fomlly. Aug. •

14,15 11. 9-1. 1 112 mlln from '~·
Choohlro, 554. Clolhlng1 baby
clothing, h•m•, atroler, Dattwy

4-whleler, diahla, cYf'lalna,"r'
bedapr.ade,
windows
klngowood coollwoodburnor, ·a~·
Suzuki 230 Quad Runner, portable dishwasher, mlac.

INSULATION

Mastic - Cortaintotd41&gt;
Vinyl Siding
Seamless Guttor
Replacomtnt Windows
· llOwn lnsula~on
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, ' - o y Oltia

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Alto Tr••••l ..l••
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
4-25-Hn

SYIACUSf. OHIO
Molt Foreign 1nd
Domllltlc Vehid•
A/ C Service

BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAJZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON

All M .. or 6 Minor

IN MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

Repairs
NIASE Certifl«&lt; MIChlllie

Now Taking
Registrations

CAll 992 ·67 56
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified LlcenMd Shop

992-5288

YARDMAN MOWERS
ECHO SAWS-&amp; 111MMEIS
OIEGON IAIS, CHAINS

IYAN SEIVICE CENTEI
Parh &amp; S•wko On
Alllakeo
VISA · MASTERCHAAGE
HOURS: Man.·Fri. g. 7
Sat. 9·6
Clooocl Sundev

949·2969

8·Z8·'88·dn

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE
OFFERED AT

Fabric Shop
992-2284

POMEROY. OHIO

"wi••lng gow•
S••cl•ll•h"

1-1·1 mo.

3/ 17189 tin

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BISSELL
BUILDERS

JIWNII: GIEG I . IOU$11

CUSTOM IUlT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reason all It Pricts"

PH. 949·2801
ar Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

Pomeroy,

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

,.., ,
••••

..

~

!f'l~

GENERAL

RESIDENTIAL
COIIIERCIAI

•CUSTOM KJTCHENI. IATtll
•EXTI!NIIV! AEMODELINO
•VINYL SIDING &amp; AOOANG
•METAL BUILDINGS
tNEW HOMES

SINCE 1969

II SlY ST, SY UCUSI

- ~
· ..

MlddleporJ
&amp; VICinity

3 llmlly garage eale. Crew Rd.,.' ·
Nhlnd F1lrgrounds. All slzt

clothing,
Truck
topper,•.
household lt1m1. Aug. 1!5,18,17.
Tuesd1y, Wednndlt)', Thursday;·
1Q.4pm.
. r•
Friday, Saturdly, Mond1y. 572

High St., Middleport. JoAnn .'

Conant.

Oull~s

.

.. .

Wanted to buy. t ·600·~45-6525. .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

'

..

. "W::-.~V:-::1-.--:S::-to":'to~-;C::-h-om-p-:'lo-n,·

Auctlonear. Rick PNriDnlllc•'h· '
Hd In Ohio 1nd Wnt V rglnra.
Boolclng Auctions, 304·773- ,

5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

32 Callbor Con aiAomatlc hand ·~

gun. 8t4-448·1528.

··

Complete hous1hold1 of fur. ~
nlturt &amp; antlqun. Also wood ·&amp;-:
coal heatera. Swain's Furniture
a. Auction, Third &amp; Olive, 81~~

446-3t59.

.

&gt;

Four 16 Inch Stock whHie lor

Ford truck. Cotl614-992-3640. "
•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BIU .SLACK

992-226t
EVENINGS

SWEEPER REPAIR
All MAlES AND
MODElS

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

222 East Main
POMEROY, OH.

992-6872

, . s:•at.tfn

4 / l / 89/tfn

OHIO liVER _
CAMPGROUNDS

NOW OPEN
WITIIIOOMS AND

APAITMINTS FOR
RENT (8y Day or

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS
UVE BAIT
ETC.

...

2V.ILW.w
..d...... ,

LW.
TRUCKING

MOBILE
HOME PARK

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

•Mobile Home
Parts
· •Mobile Home
Rantala
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

It. 33 North .of

Pomeroy, Ohio

1 mo.

.

.

~·

HHa.tltt
. .

Fum Hurt and appllancH by ths~
piece or .mire houHhold. Fair
bolng pold. Coli It~ :

r,';:,•

Junk Cora wllh motofW1 UO &amp; ,
Alchord Goorgo, 814.:188-UOIS. :

down. w/0 motor., S25 • dow•.

Junk care with or wlth'out,.
motors. Call Llrry lively 814- •

388-9303.

Quihl
'·
Pro 1140 quiHo. Any condhlo~, ,
CHh Pold. Catl 6t4·99Z.Sfi57 qr
6t4-592·2461 .
TOP CASH paid for t983 modo!

and nawtr Uled cars. SmitH •

Buick·Pontl•c, 1911 Eastern '
Ava., Galllpolll. Call 614-44&amp;. •

2282.
PI.UMIING HEAliNG
Now t.c.lion:
161 North S.CIIIfl
M' l' port, Ohie 4576!1

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE

WHII)

IU
TACKLE BOX
Loe• W.e'e Forlf

•

8/ 4/89-tfn

..........

SER~ICE
Wt can r~r anti ,..
cart ratliaton anti
htattr· cores. Wt can
also adtl boil anti rocl
radiators. Wt alto
repair Gai Tanks. ·

PAT HILL FOlD ·
992-2198

Middleport, Ohio

mo.

drrna.

'

Announcements

5/13/19""

•New &amp; U11d Tires
•Cuatom Pipe Bending
•Oil Changa
•Gre•eJob&amp;

•

YEIY IEASONAILE
HAVE IEFERENCES

7· 13·'89-1 nio.

992-2371

$18hrDay&amp;Up
949-2526

. taftBiocklsoffn.gaBulc
lnco1111 Ta Colne lta"lll
Slptli1.,. 5th. nw. wl bla
diOb of 111011q or Mn~lll

614-985-4180

Call Anytime

7·12·' 19-1 mo.

honre, car,
and bfe I ress

949-2168

,&gt;

. ALLEN'S
HAULING

on it~ proposed

ourchergos an lendflll tip·
ping -andwltholdopubllc heoring ot 8:00 p.m. an
Thuf-'ay, September 14.
t 989, at tho Molgo County
Senior Cent•. lll!ulbeny
HoighU.
Pam•av. Ohio
46719. Further j ntormotian

Call 992-2772

. lfe, lleJ/tll,

FREE ESTIMATES
Takt the pain out of
painting. Ltt mt do
: It for you.

.

WATER
SERVICE

Fast

IMURIOR-EKTEIIOR

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

1,000 GAUONS
POOLS, WEUS
. ·aSTEINS

POMEROY,O.

t-

NEW- IEPAII

2 H.D. FREE llrithcouponllld•'l
. pun:h., of 11in. H.C. Pact.! I
i .11.. u..~ 1 coupOn per cus-'
tllfJII' lllf binJ) MSSIOIL
;
. Wo
.
•
so.oo
'"
Game
Owor . t 0 Ptoplo 165.DO ·
U&lt; 10os../l' Ga'"' 2·3·trn '

'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

ROOFING

-A•• Me for con•autit' !'Unil. bro'-" upd-.,swiU be chwg•

FOI"'•••

'tJ

Are• Code 304 ·

912- MidcH.,..,.

·

A decibel (dB) Is a measure of tbe
relative ··loudness or inte!Wty of
sound, accofdlnc to Tbe World Alma·
nac. A ·20-decibel . sciund ls· IO times
louder than a 10-declbel sound; 30
decibels Is 100 times louder; tO deci·
bela 'is 1,900 t1111e5 louder, etc. One
decibel Is tbe smallest difference bel ween sounds detectable by tlie human ear. A 140-decibel sound is
painful. ·

M•on Co .. WV

RATES

Driver on cocaine, marijuana
swindler Went to great lengths to
sues o&amp;ller motorist
'
co,nceal his Identity but forgot to
MIAMI (UP)) - A driver who · change his car's license plates,
had no license and tested positive
making It" easy for Kansas
for cocaine, ·marijuana and a leo'
authorities to Identify and nab
hoi Is suing the owner of van she · him.
'
ran . Into, accusing the other
Duane " DOug" Lorrilnac, 25,
driver· of carelessness and
trle~ to hide his Identity by
negligence.
repainting his white 1979 Ford,
Mlkl Kyoto Squires was tick·
but authorities said the VIrginia
eted after smashing Into the rear
plates on the vehicle stOod out
of an electrician's company van,
like the proverbial sore thumb.
accco'rdlng to a police report.
_
Two pollee officers saw the
Three mon~hs after the July. suspicious car in a motel Jot ·In
1988 · accident, she and her
Lenexa, Kan., a · Kan5;l.S City
husband, Nigel, flied a personal
S!Jburb, and ran 1,1 routine plate
Injury lawsuit against theelectri·
check. They discovered the car's
clan and the ·driver of his van.
owner laced federal fugitive
The suit asks for a trial by jury
charges and waited lor him to
and seeks In excess of $5,000,
return.
claiming their carelessness and
When Duane Lomtnac and his
negligence caused Squires "pain
brother , Robert Lom!nac .Jr.,
and suffering, dlsabntty, dlslig·
both of VIrginia Beach, came to
urement and mental anguish."
the car, . the policemen were
Jack Reeve, owner· of East
waiting ,
Coast Electrlc Co., sald ·he was
The two men were bel ng held In ·
outraged.
Kansas while federal au tborltles
"It aggravates the absolute
arranged to transfer them to
hell out of me," furried Reeve, . Hampton Roads, Va.
who said he already has spent
Duane Laminae. was · wanted
abo.u.t. $8,000 defending... the
lor-skipping out on il·$'50,000bond.
He and his tather, Robert Lo·
lawsuit·.
"Someone · with alcohol, co·
minac Sr. , last · month pleaded
caine, marijuana and no driver's
guilty In U.S. District Court In
license Involved hi a reat·end
Norfolk to holding a long list of
collision ·has no business suing fraudulently obtained American
anybOdy. This Is completely Express cards and bilking the
ludicrous."
credit company of $132,500.
'

following telepfrone exchanges ...

317-Ch•'*•

Quirks in the news

next year," Watkins said . " Give
WASHINGTON {U P I) -Des·
"There are elements of the the weapons facilities has Intenplte repeated promiSes that his
me some wiggle room and then
!House·passed bill) that worry sified following revelations ear·
agency's badly polluted nuclear
let's work together.
us a great deal about my ability Iter this summer that the FBI has
"I can't fix It overnight ," he
weapons plan ts will meet envir·
to manage In the field," Watkins launched a criminal probe Into
added. " But I can n. It enough so
onmental law s, Energy Secre·
said. "People could set up local Improper W'!llte disposal activl·
we can codify the right things
tary James Watki ns Is raising
r ules that would make It impossl· ties at the department's Rocky
Teacher gels education In ponce
objections to enfo rcement legis· · In to law ."
ble lor me to operate a key Flats plant near Denver.
work
In par ti cular , Watkins ex · element of national security."
latlon. saying it leaves him too
The Investigation Is reportedly
PITTSBURGH (UP I)- Police
pressed co ncern about a bill
little "wiggle room "
·
But during debate on the House focusing on a possible cover up of say a high school teacher in the
pa.S's ed las t month by the Hou se
In a recent interview with
bill, which was approved on a illegal activities, but Watkins
United Press International , Wat·
that would allow state· officials 380·39 vote, lawmakers noted the said he Is convlm:ed many of the Pittsburgh suburb of Mount
Lebanon has been charged with
and the Envtrorimel)!al Protec·
ktns also said he believes many of
legislation has a provision em· violations under scrutiny do not · pretending to be an undercover
' the environmental viollltlons at .!ton Agency to penalize the
powering the president to ex· Involve deliberate wrongdoing
tbe weapons plants were "unwit·
Energy Department and other empt from EPA and state en· meriting criminal sanctions such pollee officer.
Gregory Pandrock, 41, was
leaeral agencies If they violate
tlng" and therefore It would be
lorcemenl action any facility as prison .
arrested·
Friday and charged
federal toxic waste disposal
" unfair" to subject pla nt manag·
Rather, he said violations
deemed essential to national
with
Impersonating
a pollee
laws. Similar legislation has
ers to criminal penalties such as
occurred because the depart·
security.
officer, possession of a controlled
been Introduced In the Senate by
prison Ierms.
Key congressional leaders ment had a long history of substance and weapons viola·
Se nate De mocr atic lead e r
On the enforcement legisla ·
have praised Watkins for for· · Ignoring environmental laws and lions, pollee said. .He was jailed
George Mitchell. D·Maine.
tion, Watkins said Congress
thrlghtly admitting the depart- plant managers received no In lieu of $100,000 ball.
should trust him to move swiftly
ment's problems and putting direction from top department
agains t poor envir onmental
Pandrock allegedly " Inter·
Watj&lt;ins suggested s tate offi· forward cleanup plans. But they officials on proper waste disposal
wactlces in his d ppa rtment and
cials might exercise their over· also have told him bluntly that he practices.
viewed': a hot. dog cart mer·
·hold off on pending bills gjving
"There are circumstances that chant, then told the girl he was an
s ight powers too zealously, possl· cannot stngle-handedly assure a
state officials and the E nviron· .. bly disrupting his ability to fundamental change of direction preceded those violations, which undercover officer and showed
menial Protection Agency new
In the very large majority- not her a gun and a pollee patch.
In the Energy Department.
operate facilities needed to main·
oversight powers over federal
At a recent hearing by the nearly all of them - were
Pollee said the hot dog mer·
taln the nation's nuclear wea·
facilities .
Senate Governmental Affairs unwitting, were people doing a
pons arsenal.
chant alerted uniformed officers,
Watkins said he has as ked
job thinking that 's what the boss who followed Pandrock to his car
" I think It's premature to move Committee, Sen. John Glenn,
tawmakers to give him a year to
·wanted
and the boss not that and found 43 rounds of ammuniD·Ohlo,
told
Watkins
he
had
too aggressively on adddltiona l
put his agency 's house In ordef
heavily
Involved
in what should tion and some unldendfied piUs
"every
confidence"
In
his
ablll·
thumoscrews on the system that
before they establish additional
be
wanted,"
Watkins
said.
ties but that new oversight laws
could well lead to what 1 would
beneath a seat.
enforcement measu es fo r th~
"I believe people who· have
call mischief in the system where were essential to any long·term
Steve Makoroff, one of the hot
weapons plants, where thou
solution.
wittingly violated the law should dog cart owners, said he dld not
we Jose control and , all of a
sands of acres are contaminated
"I am concerned about the go to jail, OK?' " he added.
suddPn , you can have some
believe Pandrock was an underwith radioactive and toxic c he m•
"What I don't want to do Is say cover officer because the Pan·
l' aprldous action taken ... to he lp short tenure of the average
cals due to decades of was tP defeat the best nationa l inter. Cabinet secretary and what will people who have been put In here drock was wearing matching
dumping.
est, " hP said.
happen If a less conscientious ... where they have never been shirt and trousers tle·dyed yel·
He said the environmental and
asked to do anything dl(ferent, low and green.
I energy 1 secretary in the future
Watkins sa id a prime example
management problems at the
where they have been following a
of "capricious"' state action was .may allow (the department's)
"He didn ' t blend In like an
weapons plants were so severe
nuclear program to slip back to cow path built over J5 years of undercover cop," Makorofl said,
New York GOv. Marlo Cuomo's
and deep·seate!l that it was 'e ffort to di smantle the Shoreham the severe problems It now neglect, and all of a .sudden we "If h'e was dressed in Levi's and a
unrealistic for Congress to lm·
nucl ear power plant on Long · faces," said Glenn, who . as put them In · jail, I think Is Polo shirt, I probably would've
pose hard·and·fast requirements Island. Cuomo contends the plant chairman of the governmental unfair," Watkins said. "It's hard believed him. He just looked so ·
for quick solutions.
affairs panel has led congres- for me to blame people when a
is unsafe, but Watkins has
bizarre."
" I am saying, give me a year , bitterly assa iled the shutdown as sional efforts to address the system has been · so poorly
weapons plant crisis.
attended for so many years."
then moni tor me and If you need
' 'irratlon.l l" and contrary to
Credit card swindler slips up
Congressional concern about
to do more ... let's work together
sound energ) !JOlley.
VIRGINIA BEACH. Va. cUP!)
A convicted credit card

Classified pages cover the

_.46- Qalllpoli•

By United Press Interaallonal
jScandanavian mothers, accounting for the sudden appear·
ance of a newbprn in a household,
told children babies were
brought by storks . Mothers also
said they were bit by the bird to
explain their sudden need for bed
rest.
·
Harves&amp;Moea
· The Harvest Moon, the full moon
nearest the autumnal equinox, ushers
in a periQ!I of several successive days
wben the moon rises soon after sun·
set. Tbis phenomenon gives farmers
In temperate latitudes I!J:tra hours of
IiCht in which to banrest their crops
before froet aod wtnter come, notes
The Worlcl Almanac.

•

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9876
1'11111$. I.L 6:45 P.M.
51111. 1.1. 1:45 P.M.

• The Area'·s Number 1 Marketplace

Now you know

NO DRINKING POSTERS - Doala Craae, 1111 Pblo 'S late
Ualvel'llity stadeat worklal as a junior lair aulslllllt ial &amp;lie Melp
County Exleasioa olftce.lblll summer, dt.playalwooUbe clever
carllloa type po~~len with warnlap, oa the d1111J8r of drlnklag
alcohoL The 51i po11ten made by Min Crue aad t-B·juator leaders
will he po11ted In \larloua bulldlnp aad oa IJie ~ duriJIII the
lair. The project Is sponsored by Melplu\lealle OlftceCarl Hysell.

BiNGO

I'OMEIOY -EAGLES
CLUI

Til-CO. TIUITE
I PESt CONTIOL
SIIICI19U
ROACHES •. FLEAS
TEA MITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
lhllltlr llltlonai Pest
. Control Alltt.

,.......

-100..535-21.9

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CL£ARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK ·

Sand-Stone-Dirt
(614)
1

•.... a.

RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM
EXCEPT
HOUDAYS

We Buy All
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel,
Etc.
Give Ut A Call
Toda y"

992-5114

Located Off Svp,•aa•"l
Jet.
Ata.

Used furniture 1nd houa•hold

tppllanc••·
2048.

Phon.

UMd turnltu,. by the pi~• o;
entlrw household alto aelllng.

. 6t4•742·2455.

'.

Employment Services

..
,'

11 Help wanted
::;-:::::::-:;~~~':""'
' '
2 nur111 aldu,· lhop clerk • 1{1· •.
quire at Odds and "Ende iihoP,

Middleport.

&amp;.)

~

AVON I Alt A,.10 I ShirleY:
Spooro, 304-1711-1421.
AI PI' Article tl Tronolara oitd";
YICincloi,
Bir:tonq.'
ot the Nogtllted
betwlon thi MlTA oncl
'
Board ol Education, tt. Me9l i
Loco! School Dlltrlcl '"

.-liiil..

the loltowlng VICIIIOJ to. ao
ra-r tNiftlno IIIII: 1111' •
trtiutiYe EducotiOn T-hor at
Molgo Htgh School.
.
DOAvon
• UmMed
limo"blttM.
Gnflf'
u.oo ..,_.
.. _ ,..

=rlriot-;::,:,.......
~ "!'...e"11M

eon
2141. li..1iYft'-..
II

J

614-742 ... ~

,. •• : : '
104 - •

·----••

�,
The Daly Sentinel

Monday, August 14, 1989

Pomeroy- Mickleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

51

44

Houaehokl
GoOd a

m

N' CARLYLEe lly Larry Wriaht

lor Count., Rock
:1a4'171-1411.

•

.,TY-IINdodtaJ

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'I

-

. 7711-7111.

!}; :'(
1

t.tbol..=e: ..'::o'!.. ~

=.n=•:z·=P=-~
w

1111 710 Cl Hondo

::,.lfty...,"':' ~~c"::..:

1B Wanted to Do

- .__
- . _·- Tille
11 a Child .•. oio In my hoiJII" ·Roc-·
.
I poo111on
.._,
·
coon Cralk Rd. Clay « hool

::c::'.2.,~

1:..:: ~

,' •' 1a
-...
- ...
• n
• d o1'
,...id'_._
""'::"
.....
ov-a.!_I!
!!:0 1 :!.
~
- - ,__.,....
- ......
I .
oq...' edl c1tlon 011 nllf'llnol may
' 10: llr. .JJ-- Ut&gt;-

·itliiiJ-Piko.Goll' -Hpola,OH411A1,EOL
; EARN MONEY Rndlng boobl
potontlal.
: Dotolla (I)~- Exl. Y·
, 101•

· a3Q,-,r. -

: ENOIHEEAINQ TECHNICIANS
• Hlrlna 1 - l y far high ' pooi1Ton. Quotlllcatlona: 'High
' . . - diploma "Afo 11-24
: ; : : .:ot':"''"~':...,n;.::
, wo ~,r:v:• pd pay lnd
•-·-- lUI Miclcal - , : ;
·· Co!lego
-credit
1 ~~IIYO!Ioblo.
' Cd 1~2-1314, - , . .
: ~. ta.m.-2p.m.
' Eom llonoy typing al : $30,000/yllr 1 - IIOiontlal.
, Dotollo, 11)101-117-eoGO Exi.B' 4112.
1 .,_'N!:'II and Clvl llarvlco
· .lobo.
Your orea.
' 1 •,1110 t fit
1 -lot1
1.
o 1 ' 141
• m

Diotrlcl.l1-72'tl .
·
.,_,..
~hlldr
-r·1,. - c
on 1n my
home. Clean • loving environmont. Cholhl,. a-. 814-317·
0151,
..
Aool painting 6 cootlng trallor
roolo,hou_o!!.,~~rno, 1,.. . .
llmato.,10&lt;Jno-zJZU.
Will ba::r:t In my homo.
R-ona
. . - Aolaroncn
avaltotllo. All - · olao
wooklndo. Caiii14-245-57H.

21

OHIO VALL~~C:C.SraNO CO.
nd• tn.
•-• you do
r~~com,..
bull.,... whh ~oplo you know,
and NOT to 11nd money
throuah lha mall until you have
lnvooOgoted lha ollo~ng.

hlri:;Jo

:m~~;g~
I '

5-~

" It you

have oxporlonco a lntl(o
ill' In ..... r i rMrbl:lng. and
educational background In
!&gt;fOioglcol 10...,_, prelombly
• Jo! flllllhdk&gt;ll lllldo, you
' thould • lllklng whh uo. Muot
~ tranoponotlon.
SoiarJ and Commloalon. Sind
' )HUmotollolr007cloGolllpolla

31 Homes lor Sale
2-3 bedroomo, bath, buomoilt,
garage. 4.11 acroo on IChoot
tiuo Uno. 114-1111-3374.
~ bed"""" brick house with
largo lot, Mid Way Drlvo. N-

.&amp;:~~!::';, :L~Ird A~ue. ~:."·
Lady to iiVI In and caro lor IIdirtY lady wlh light houla•Oik
In achlnge tor I0!1d homll1nd
mall Slllry, mutt have refwwt.
CM, 304-175-1585.

llakl olllra money whh out
~• 1ng your "14-7""•
1113.
llatura ~-. Mod babYolnor

Good

COOd.

304-7731

3 bedroomo, 2 •tho, hoD
flnllhed buement, new furnace
and ~-• air, garo-, k--•
yard.
MI.
A==.
Point PIMAnl. Priced on inopoctlon. 304-l75-ln4.

=''=::,=.~·=:

32 Mobile Homes

=~!~=:;~~~r.~

11180 N01hua 14•70 ll~ndo,
-porchoa,
3 ton
contot air cOnd, 2
und~nnlng, wahaar
a .. ry.,, ...,;.;:--bulb Iii bar, on
nt 11 lot, •13,000.
""'~-0
ro
~"~
5421

2 br., lurnlohld a~nmont.
utllnloa paid. 107 112 Socond
AVI. 123Wmo. Dip. twq'd. 114:m:.:::41:.:;71:.::_
· - -- ...,.-.,-For rent or Ieaia. ont bedroom
apt. TWo offici ono
· - ldNIIOI' dotiOj or doCtor.
Uptown location. 104-171-2114

rOr sa18

•

11117 Donvlllo, total oloctric
14x70, hat pump; 3BR, 1-112
bath. 814-245-i244 anlfllmo,
24!1-9177 oftorl.
2 bed.- with 4 ocrao. Hood
quick 1111, make ollor.l14-114t2117111'814-141·24341.

63

colaklg typo -lgnment. lntor-

viewing eoon In
151-1104..

rour 1,.._ .,....,

Pan~lmo !Iaiii I
'-rM~n nMded 10

Service Aop.
order &amp; mer·
chldl.. product• In large r.t•ll
oto,... Will travel, Approx, 30
hra. per WHic. SoUd position
whh tu1 n~ndlng Co. S.nd
A....,..... to Bo.: 001 c/o 0.1-llpoUI Dally Tribune 125 Third
Avo., Golllpollo, OH 4!5831 .
Pan~ltno

-lctlllb tocllnlclln
for a fully oqulppod phvalclan'o
laboratory. No ohlft -lL Apply
In ~noon. Medical Plou, 203
Jackaon Plkl, Golllpollt. 8:30 to
1:011.
A.D. onty wanted. 18 houre:ir

-·

...._ W.I.C. counseling. Me •

Co&lt;lnty HIIHII Dopt. 114-

Socfot

•

Sorvk&gt;lll!llocha~

PlenMr, 1 tuU-tlma poaltlon .,...
qulllng 1 ISW Dog-; provloU10
ellnlolil
bockground
and
of
area
knowledali
agonciH7IIr¥fcll
doolrabto.
Cilmplt- _.,and bonelho.
CGnbocl
PI-nt
Valley
HoiPital, Point PIMNnt, •WV
255!0. 3CM-175-4:MO. EDEIAA
TlloplloM ootlchor to · -'&lt;
-nlngt!. Exeellont ~J pluo
bonue. Stori lm-latlly. 114H:I-m1 . sunday co111 . . _
ted.
Wont lndopondoneo and lloanclal -urny? Dowllo~ 2nd Incoma through your own
--Wo-you - ·
114412-'IIIA.
Woo1&lt; N. Phonl
- · oam
1300P·~·t
Toldng
Onloro.
call youl 1 - 714-e97-328 •

12

Situation
wanted

and _,. ftw oldorly In
Pun• Of· 11..,2•7204.
NOW HAVE VACANCY • For oldotly man or 1!'01Mn. Excollont
CIN. :IOW'IIo7141 .

1111 • J Cycto,

~

Ul acr-. 3 bedraom fnm•l eel·
lar, part baHmtnt, out b dgt,
lruM ,,..., drilled well, 8 t/2
mu.. N, At. 2. 304-675-76i0.

All new 3 br., home located on
At. 160. Pric.d to move. 014-368-1711.

good ohapo. -

=.

w-

WhHichalra • MW or UMd. 3
-ric1400
-"
ean
Aooer- Medtcal,
tat·2106.

-

!!OI!IY ........

mi....

Q!l Crool&lt; &amp;,Chtll8

8:00 I]) MOVIE: Indian .Paint
(2:00)
G C2l 1111 ALF ALF spies ,
Jake 's mother slealing
Kate's broach. (A) 1;1
(!) SUperBouto Ali vs Frazier
II, !Tom New York, NY, t974
(A)
.
C1J It (I) NFL PreBeaaon
Footbtln D
.
·
(lJ (IJ Nollonal Geographic
Special This special tracks
t11e grizzly bears· str~gles
to coex.ist with man.
011 Ohio State Fair '8 The
Sale Of Champions
• (!]) Sale Of Champion•
i1J PrlmeNawo
tl2l Kall Allie Allie

.

t&amp;

45

Furnished
Rooms

Ash1o"' biautlful one acre loll Roome tor rent. w.ek or month.
with river lron.. ge, public water.

Starting

Clyde IBOMn, Jr. 304-57&amp;-233e.
Aahlon. larg• · building lola,
mobiiO hom• pormlttocf. Public

Hotel. 614-4441-1580.
SIHplng

.t

$120/ma.

I'OOIM

0.11111

whh cooking.

Al.a traHer IPICI. All hook·upe.
water, prlcee reduced. Clyde CaH oHor 2:011 p.m., 304-773Bowen, Jr. 304.&amp;n..2331.
5151,Moaon wv.
Leon, half acN, city water, ecC:HI lo creak (tor tlshlng)

46 Space lor Rent

304-5111-iOT.I.

Commorclai opaco1 1400 oq.n.
comer Second ana Pint. Ample
partclng. Call 61~24D, 4462l25, or 446-4425.
~

18,oqo. Putr.m COuntw Realty,
Lovol loto 7 miiH North of Hoi- -pllal. 814-388-1649.
Woocland, 132 acr11, $35,000,
Rt. 7, below Euraka, Call 114-

448-4411 after 7 p.m.

41 Houses tor Rent

Country llobllo Homo Park,

Pans

A&amp;~~o
&amp;
Acce110r1es

e

POOR BOY ' Tlilii, 104-e'llo

a-.u....'1:.SJ

79
Valloy Fumlture
N•w and uatC:I furniture and. IPplla...._ Call 114-446-7172.

pocket of Chip 'sEI,':ns. (A) Q .
k
.
Stallion Relumt (PG) (2:00)
11J - F Prime Time:
au-slam Countdown In
an eKcHing wrestling
spectacular, the Ultimate
Warrtor takes on the mighty
Haku, while the Hart
F01.1ndatton confronts the
Powers of Pain in a
bone-crunching tag team
malch .
N11hvlle Now
1:30 (2) 1111 Hogan Family
David is attracted to a girl he
constantly clashes wrth . (A)

iiJI MOYIE: Tlte

Floh Tanlt, 24, .Ia- Avo.
.:.;;=~~~~;;...::=-=
-up304-175-2013,
10
intlq,. dlnMte Ml. Will Mil got aot
t1'UI
and 10 got
chNp. .114-112·7171. ·
oornptote t4UL .

I..,_

Buy or 1111. Rlvorlna Antlqlllo,
and llupply llhDp Pal
1124 E. llaln St"""t, POma...,. Houra: M.T.W; 10:00 i.m. to 1:00 -Ina.
llml Pal .._ l)lllor. Jllllo
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. Wobb. Call Ill 11111211.
114-992·2126. .
Now 10 - · •autlful Ngr..
Top Caoh paid. Old fumllln torN Colllo pupcuboaird1,
cfultt' or&amp;ental, .,._ • ftrothalrod
ono to go1 onol
p.~lntlnp;, toye, or entire Mtltl Excoplionll-qulllty,
Dodlg-.
call contc:t 304-121-3274, or Sho4o, w-iMI
confllocl-oya
304-523-11154.
chacl!. l14.ft4.

· "8harp.l14-446-1711.
onglno; ..... ..... Loolui

53

Antiques

&gt;

.

1t12 'frani.Arn, T·Topo,
llolga Into,._, -~~- Alptno
lteNO eyweem, " ' PI, PW, Air,

All-All---

54 MISC8111!n&amp;OUS
· Merchandise

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1182 PoniiH T·1,000 811101
AMIFM oa..., ~ oond.
Strong oconomloal llalo car.
l11i000. 0.1.0. 114-4441-2110 Sat.

-~~-~-

a
a

·

11183 Chivy Cavalier, 17,000
mlr... .tanct.rd tn~rwrn18Um,
• -30447~10.
· - " · f2,0011. Of
bMI:
otter,
1114 Fwd EMOrt. 4 door, ......

dard 4 llllld. Good condhlon.
11410. 114-H:I-6375 anor 5:00

i i1J

........ ·a -. "- ..
Serv1ces

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP~ .
r COULD &amp;W..ISH
r HOI..D Tl"IE R:M'B&lt;

IIIlO v.,..., 434 Tronehat
wlbackhoal blade. 40 hp. 61444&amp;4BH or 114-441-44n.

OF L-IFe' AND De4.TH

OveR YOU, At:-~T.

Route 33, North of PorMroy.

Lota, rtntllt, parte, ulaa. Call
614-982-7479.

,...-

THINKS I'M

·eo;,.

011 e il2l II Tomonow
Comet, Pan 2' cas Monday

2232 during momtng.

lat, 4 Hdrooma, 3 batt., f.mlty

e

room, 2 11replacee, boat hou..,
In the 80'1, PU1nam County
Realty, 304-581-9013.
~ - .,.

Farmer'• Home Admlnlstl'lltlon
loan• •vallable. Approved aeetlonal now on dlaplay. Frtnch
City Mobllo Homao. 114-4441i:MO.

9:35 (I) Major League lataball .
10:00 I]) 700 Club
(2) 1111 Emply Naot Harry
writes a love letter for
Charlie . (A) D
(!) Mutuot Of Omaha'• Spirit
Of Ad'lentura Struggle to
Survive,
i1J Evening Newa .

.......

e

BARNEY

Small home In Rio Grandll on

SOME VARMit.IT
JEST STOLE MAW'S

Lako Drive. 2 br., bath,
llvlngroom, kitchen combo whh
rtftlgaralor, ateatrlo range. Gu
Fum-. electrta wattr heat.,,
waeher and dryer hook""'P In
baNmenl. Excelllnll for Nntll
neer coli~•· By ownllf 114--4482871 before 2p.m. or 114-2451611. 125,0110.

CHOPPIN' AX !!

®Newt
10:30. (2) 1111 Beby Boom 1;1
(lJ Haws
(IJ Somllhlng Magical A
QI'OIJP of children with
cerebral palsy join olher kids
to produce a musical; watch
as relatiOnships develop
beiWeen handicapped and
able-bodied kids.
On Stage
11:00 I]) Betman Hot Off The

Small homo, Laka Drlvo, RIO
Gr~nde, 2 br.. bath, living room,
kHchen combo wtlh refriQINtor,
tle~rlc water h•tert WlilhaJ..
dryor hook"'P In o a - t .
E~ c. for rentll nNr colltge. 814441·28711 beiOro 2p.m. or 114245-5811425,000.

121155, 2 bedroom. Oood condition. Caiii14-H:I-lll51.

tur-

nHure, lot 10z100 fltt lol: on Sun
Valley Drive, rudy lo mav•lnlo.
Priced nogotlonabiO .,......,
10111.
11hH 3 bedr&lt;&gt;Omo, 2 batho,
$4,500. 304-175-2722.
14&lt;70 I 12x50. 114-318-1717.
1871
Uboriy.
s:rooo. or
,.aeonable offer. Mu.t Hll. 11...,
N24107.
'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Inlhe~aiiHdlftaoklllkeyouwllbe
ibiB to
llddltlonal e.rn~nge
lrld
--11111111llniOttlly. One 01 yaur blggUt paruna

-11'11111-gi!W'8'-

ntlaht COIM tram lll.u.IIG ......,...._
Ub ,...., • • • 121 Your 11111nC1111

MHR MOIILI HOIIU

lot , _ -

- .... f'lllot!lll.
-7.

a.. ..

homo. Rt. 21
OH, ·~~-

'

,.

llonlln gellllll took qulla favorable lor
you today and there's a PQIIIblllly you
might profit In ..,.... man..- from
IOIMthlng Where 111011 olllte work hM
olrMdy been clone by another.
PilCH (Flit. :oM: oil Ill) Making
good will geiiUrW toward lt1endl today
will be Nke -..g .-ell for a fUture,
boun111ul .._._ Let !hem know you
cere now and they'll let you know they
cere lalar.
AJIII8
21·Aprll 11} This 18 a ,
good day to W«k on projeC!a you c:onalder laborl ollove. Your productivity
u o!Moulu othenl.
can be oulatlndlng If your hlndo and ·
ICON'IO (Clot. 1111 lllu. 12) Memb4n mind enjor tlte IDea you perfomt.
.
olllte oppo11M o-tlder will lind you TAl II II (Apll • " 1 II} Important
p 111111r altJICtlve locllly. If you~ IWIH!JCe a.~ b e _ . , . . . . . today If ·
to Q1P1U111a an IIIII - . If could be a you ...,.bnint with poiiUve tlllnklng, ·
·vary P'&amp; IF tl day for you ooelally.
' II!* lilly Ill lltuatlonl lltat haft CCIIIIIAOtrTAIUUI (Notr. II liM. 11) lf l l)ltlllwllli•ll. ThlnkolyourMIIua
you're In Mid 01 a lf*lal f8VOi' or a ,
parlloul.- lrtciMclu-''1 eupport locllly, . ...• • ,..,.,.,....,
Mel
don't 111 llll'llld to vorae yaur raque~~. · OliN 1n eottdlliDI~alend to benelt you
..... PillliiWII to your pt lllnt piMa . II IIIII IIme III~WIJ, _,II- '
lhOUid be...., to hlfp.
talllot~alltaln ~ br peo.
C.APNCGNt (DM. ll:lhlan. 11) Your pia oUtar lflln youraell.
Nil oh•tUII'tl today are
CAIICIR (,_. 11 J Is II) Plo•tnt ·
.-ound your Wit, o1t1rm and lntiiiiCt. : a.n be eotRing yaur WIJ IOCiay
You'lbelbletodowlthyaurmlnd~ train 111 lltdiVICiual w1to II U111Nollft
olltera can't e1o
muac1eo or big 1 c1.- 1!1 you. It ... be lite type of lntor·
mouth.
' mdan liOII _.. be lbleiO hOld laD

c-..

wrnn..

lrendl look ub•nel)' -.glng at
IIIII IIme lltd IIIII COUld Ill one of 1 ' daya where you . . llltl to eparllnce
more peelll
b'Ot.llllll· MIIQr
cNnglln allied lor Lao In the oomlnO ~- llend for yaur AlbO-Grlph
IN 1diiiiiOIII today. 1\11111 •1 to A8tro- , AIIUAIIUI (,. • M. 11) Condl- 1 from tellng Olhn.
'
I•

"*''

'

Qraph, c/o this ~. P .O. Box
91428, CkMIIand, OH 44101-3428. Be
..,. to awe your ZodiaC otgn. .
VIIGO (Alii. IJ.Iepl. II) Sliuatlona
you have 1 11rong hand In maneglng or
Pill 101-'!y directing ohould go off rather
for you locllly. lf'l lmportent lhal
· you play a kay role lnllead Ola IUIIOrdlnate one.
"
UIIIA (lepl. :D-Oct. 21) Tltera are MY• • lnterelllng opportunltlel nov.lng
llrOiind you today In . , _ or from
toUrc. you'd IIMt •lCI*t- Be ~1..-y alert, beoelll81011111 wltl nol be .·

-ered .

-•halt

arana-

(2) (I) •
IIIINew•

(I)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Mold ,
. 5 w.w. , .
pla1ie

IIDl • il2l

9Asian
river
a lion
Ill Prospec4 Three
. . live
(prel.)
Til se1ies 5 Gemstone
12 Simpleton 6 Choice
13 Bring in
colton
15 Continent 7 Mountain
(abbr.)
peak
18 Anecdotal B Grant
collection
a
17 Unused .
favor
18 Threefold 11 Province
20Hackman
of Italy
or Wilder 14 Aviary
21 Shopping
refrain
site
t6 Auk
22 App1aise
23Cubic
meter
25 Inebriate
26"Ecce - "
27 Paul
Bun yon·s ox I,;-·-+ ·-+-·-~
28 Golf club
29 Verdi opera b -+ ·-+-32 Unit of
radiation
33 As wrlllen
(mus.)
34 By way of
350uake
37 Hand (sl.)
38 Considered

IIJMiamlVIce

a You can 1e A Slar
11:301]) llllman Cat &amp; Tlte Fiddle
e (2) 1111 Tonight ll!ow
(1)~(0:30)

(i)ChHIIQ

-~·Chi

.

Md

~=~Tonight

,._-a

........ Now

1114

.,

hinl~ .

Each day the code letters are different.

8 -lt

Valo,e
I From
Cll
·-·
· ProManhattan
llellch

dl Pat=Sitow
e(!])
z- .
11J NeWINIIihl
IIJ
Ham-

•

CRYPTOQUOTES

12:00 ill MOVIE: Indian Paint
. (2•00)

Beach';'CAl'['"'

'

One letter stand, for another. In this sample A is used ·
for the three I:s, X for ~ two O's, I'll'. Single letters, ·.
apostrophes, the length and fonnatiDn or the words are all

(f) EutOPHit Joumal

e (I) Nlahtllna 1;1
Taxes

part

31 Horse
opera
33 Punch
36 Actress
Farrow '
37 Highway
gUide

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFEI.LOW

·

·

all USA Today
11J 8pCN1a Tonight
• c Pat lljak Show
1B Magnum; P.l. Dealfl

cake

27 Sacred
Buddhist ,.
symbol
30 Tenth

.

lJl Home Run Derby

iiJI Talel P'rom Tlte Darklldtl
Florance Bravo

19 Munch·
hausen
20 Di ·ving
bird
23 Jersey
is
one
24 Corrida
star
25 Polisli

llAII. V C:RVPTOQUOTES-: Here '11 hoi¥ to 'll'ork 11:

· (lJ For EllpOrl
e(!]) A,..,lo Han (1:00)
IIJ~IM

OOWN
1 Milllary
student
2 Love (Fr.)
3 Culmin·

victory.
39 Yeam
40 Accept
41 Equal

Qrlddle

•

CROSSWORD

a

a

32 Moblla Homes
· for Sale ·
12xeo mobile home eome

w..

Q!l VldeoCountry

-=
--

HE~Y

.'IOU WITH&lt;.li.8T
aJE LITTLE:: STEP.

(!) Amerlca'l WlldtlrMII
(lJ (IJ AmerlcM Maotera
lfi.:depth eKploration of
Baldwin draws on archival
materlal.lj!

Movie (2:00) Q
• (!]) MOVIIE: Ordlna.,
People (A) (2:00)
iiJ Lany King Llvel
9:15 (])
oulng'• Oreateat Hill
9:30
C2l 1111 Knight&amp; Dayo 1;1

==: t':N"::".:.'=
Scllc)cO &amp;
11111ructlon

(A)Q

PRIVATE 2 112 ACRE tillllor lot,
U mlloo right on Northup
Potrlot Road. CALL 114-1142-

Wo lor oldatly and han- 1872 ElcCino. 3 bedroom, I 112
:::::. tip out, carpolod. Good
Mlon. . - . 114-114840'79.
- - Cotll14-llt:I-IIT.I 1874' Champion 141115 HR. 1
7:00 p.m. lor mora lnlor- bath , .... -4'? ll,'loi. 114241-1211, 4 .. tzu..
1111 do .......... In lilY 1R l ,........ Plalnl. F - I n 1174 Champion 141111. 21R, 1
bath Ioiii441
-1204.
· ........
p1anty of TLG. 114-111'· ltl-tfll,

15

Detlgnlng Women
Hoping to make e•tra
money, Charlene becomes a
saleslady. (A) Q
9:00 G (2) . 1111 Golden Olrlo
Rose 's new bOVfriend tlas a
sexual-dysfunction problem.

Pcir - · '10ft. """'i&gt;or.-otovo,
$100.
114141 10111fter 4 p.m.
I

p.m.

Mualcel
lnatNmentl

a

discovers a condOm in the

:a3:_3_f, ...,
4,1iua ..... : ..... .
tlnll, new Ur11.
,"'

·

e

IIJI eenoon

5

batlo.,.

Q!ITopCord .
(2) Family Feud
Cll Major Laague laoebal
Magazine (0:30)
(I) Ent-lnment Tonight
8(1)UBATCicl8y

011 .1121 1111 Jeoplirdyll;l

1m llblr-if!- boat,
lllhD. Depth
lnftndo;
I
alloofaty
oqulllftllnl
1m Cedlllac Sedon DoYIIII,
~.ooa
full pnnr, ofiiW oludad.I1W'II-2421 oltor lp.m.
manr . . . pana. 11 .......
IOATERSIIM-~MOIOI\II-.
1'-t Prnllllon MoJ)IIe
1171 Ford LTD, A~ .. arta,
• come to~ t-114no. running oond., new tlrt1 I'
, """' and Uiotl Pane.
fiOO 080, will trada lor
or truck. Behind Cl,_. on
luck Rldga, ApL 20. 11,....._
•10011 114-3417-GIIS.

.A

Holdup plays by ded~re~ are de-.
tAU
slped to sever the defenders' commutKQ17f
nicatious. But a holdup can alao be ·
by a defender to deny declarer an WEST
EAST.
entry to the proper band. In the cur- t 8 4
tK106
rent deal, declarer won dummy's • J ltJ 9 &amp;
.K5U2
• J 10 4
heart ace and quickly played ace and . t Q.8 7 2
of spa~. ~t took tbe king a.nd , +A J z
• ·109
the jack of diamondi. Declarer
SOUTH
won his king and played a club to dum·
tQI75
my's king, West ducting. Declarer
·
.QI7
DOW picUd up tbe last trump IS be
tK53
played a spade back to his~· and
+&amp;53
!hell came anotber club.
t could
Vulnerable: Both
take the ace, but that was the last trick
Dealer:
North
for the defense. Tbe good clubs in
dummy took ·care of declarer's third _ .
Well
diamond, and South still bad a trump
left for dunmy's last diamond.
It
Pus
But 111ppoae East does not swallow
the spade jack with the king but fol- ,.,
Opening lead: • J
lows smoothly with the 10. Declarer ·
may not know to overtake with ~Ia.• ,
.
queen. U the spade jack boldi the tnclt lli&amp;mond and the trump king for a _.
in dummy, what then? A spade lead 'trick set. ' .
·
goes to East's king, and now' tbe dia·
U you're East, you bad better plly
monel jack lead will beat tbe CCIIItract. without besilatiOII, or South will retd
Declarer can get to his band only once you for the spade kinl and play ~
(with the diamond king)- not enotllb queen on the jack. Now be will~ JD
to aet up the club suit with only one his band to lead a club as before, aad
loaer. Declarer will loae t:wo clubs, a the contract will make.

e (!]) M'A"S•H
iiJ Cro11nre

ollor ovor

35 Lots &amp; Ac•eage

Rentals
Elitanor Buffalo aru large river

Porlael

.......

NORTH

tAJ32

11J Miami VIce

cond. 15,0110. all• 5:011 Pll 3G41111 Chevy Delray Body on t75-4001.

-

..

BRIDGE

1B Andy Ortflllh

221 ~C wHh ":/:!':.and lloh
::::::::::::;:____ 1llno,
ndor. lh p II'
radiO,

trolllr wnh tioe wonclt.

-

F-nec
• (!]) WICIIP In Cincinnati
iiJ Moneyllna

lt74 boat 21 fllnboanl 302 """

71 Autoa tor Sale

S10ie Mel ~ng you like hiS been drutlcally REDUCEDI

NewaHour
(II e1121 1111 WhHIOI

7:30

..

8·11

·Quench - Prune - Fudr/e _: (Hndllr - REDUCED
You know you're getting Old when.you walk Into 1 record

a

"lilT llniNJI1 .... OVI'J OX•
Ira Clllllon trUo• · llnkll 6
travtlfng - · IIWN-1816.
II It lll•"'t Y-1\ull, boat,
-ly pal
'· -om boat
cover: 25 hit Jotoneon motor,
llootrlo oto~. maglo t• galv
boll trailer, 304-17H710.
14ft. Sl~Rn~ll Flohlng loo~ 10
H P J - . outllaanl. 114-ti2·
nee.

rranspor1at10n

SCfiAM.UTS ANSWIRS

~On Stage
7:00 I]) F..,_ MUfllhY
G (2) PM Magarlne
Cll SportaCenter (0:30)
(I)
(I) Culmtt Al!alr
CIJ (f) MacNeil Lelnr

75 BoatS &amp;'Mqtora
for Sale

::.~ =.u:llt~~~~~.:~~ ~!~~~~.,::~~~1~.,:~~

Aohton •autlful ona acro IOta
with river frontage, public Wlt•r.
Clyde - · J r. 304·571-2336.

Comp lete tho ehuckle qoottd

•
.
•
.
~V filiing. in the missing .words
L-.,..L.....IL-...L,.....J'--...L,...J you develop from stop No. 3 below.

.IIJIJelle..an•

· ·' IWH:I-1811
-illng•, .. 114-14t'ZII2 day.

:n,.

$250. mo. pluo $100. dopollt
Md electric 304-175-3100.

I

• (!]) l.crie Cannectlon
i1J Bhpwelz Today

oorldhlori. ·

~O:::rac::.:l:ou
..._o--:1:lv:-lng
- -.-1:-an--:d:-2::-:-b-:od

timber, Golllpcllo araa. on 218.
$21,000. 614-256·1560.

I

1--."l.'i-r,.. ._r,-,li,-,,,r-1 Q

011 e1121 Clll N- 1;1

KawMIId'ICXeo,ICXA1 .ncoftont

Fum. EIBoloner f175 UIIIIUn
lid. 81111'1 both. 607 Socond,
llalllpollo, 111 116 4411 oftor
lp.m.'
·

br

I

C1J elll ABC Newt !;I
(lJ Body EIICtrlc
(IJ 3-2·1 c:om.CII;I

wo ·-

Mfld,:IOW7I-1-.: ·'

room aponmonta ot Ylllogo
Manor
and
Rlvoroldo
A-~montoln
, ~· ~-· , _Mlddr;G,'n. From
Sornoono to tako ovor pa.r,monto o111. _,.,~.
·
on 11117 Clnton llobllo omo. 2 Lo~ u-lrl apL 236 Flrol
bedrooma, 1 112 balho. 114-371- A~
... KlloiMhan otovo:'L : " \
1321
·
$210/mo. plua ~utllllloe
USED MOBILE HOMES Chick ,.L No poll. t1
1121.
ua 111111. Qood aoloetiOn olnglll Now occoptlng appllcotlona taoand doUblll - 7 1 2 .
2 bedroom apt, holly carpotod,
w. buY uoed mobile homoa appllaneoo, wotor ond truh
CASH TOOAYI 1101).121.0712, plckupo prvvlded. Malntonaneo
3 • (~' on1 , •-• 1
living 1o ohopplng,
ext. 1u · ""'"0
y,. or banka enlachooll. For more In·
Ray.
.
tao-matlon call 304-182-3711. E·
33 F
,.
qual opponunHr houolng. Socarms O r u.. on
:.:.:..:l.c.occ
= •plo
::.._:I!-'c-::co---45 ICFH . old hoUH 4 ll'llllr -::h
Roganey, Inc. ZBR, apt., hook..,~ n · mi. Sou1 o 1 0 • 1• pluoh ca;r.rl now ~
npolla
•.
~ · .!!!!•ducod to ullllt~,g: tallY paid. Sl
11• 500• • ~7- Call
75-5104.
By Ownar. lunoe Rd. 231 ocroo SHADY LAWN APARTMENTS;
mil. 0.. of tha locotlono In 721 Socond Avo. Fumlohed
Oallla County. Oood producing oHiclonelasotanlng at l171.1r&gt;ldul

..itl3.

The waiter lid me to a table
and said, "This is tha border
L._r;.
_ .................._.._
___._ '" line between non-smoking and
.----~~=---. smoking. Please do not breath ·
NUL ~ NT
to - -1"

11J Certaon Exptell
L1111 (I) Allee
8:30 Gill 1111 NBC Nightly News

bora
eyeloo,• lui ....... .tor boling
aild pjllon dlllVI!J, lilly Kln-

vernon-

Need • ..., men, full and
pan-tltno. Mull hovo a clean,
nul appur~nce. It at IH.t 21 8 room ho""', Muon, 911 fur·
,..,. Old, "-v• 1 good driving nac•, walking dlttanct of
record and be •bl• 10 drtva a atorn, sn,ooa. 304-882·2971
van. &amp;nln-ln based In ll•lg• for appolntmllll.
County. Sond application to BOx 7 rooma, :2 acres, aood g,~rdNI,
mv. Pomeroy. Ohio.
city water. 115,000. 114-707·
Now takJng eppllc1Uone at 2744.
DomlnoM PIZza. 614 446 4040.
• PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE IN· 7.119% fixed rata mortgago
DIYIDUALS NEEDED. JeiN THE monty available; 2.75 polnlt, 30
AAMY Natlonol .Guard pan-limo. rr. term. "Loans available on • ·
Monthly paycheck, 20 yAr fair and equal bnlt regardlea
l'8tlr•m•nt, collev- . .latance. or race, color, anc•ry, na11onal
304-4175-3g50 or 1-8011-142·361i. qln, religion, HX or phyak:al
handicap. W!Mman ANI Eatala,
Part time Job? Work awn hoU,.? &amp;14-446-3644.
Avon. SS. to etal1. We Nil "'Skin
So Soft". 114-e92-7180.

Uveatock

Fum. Apt.l225ulllitlllpd. lbr.,
1078acond, Oilllpollo,l14-441.:.«:.:1.:.':'"::":.:l:!:p..:.m.::.._,-:--=c---,~
Fum. Apt. 1 br., 240 ulllhn Pd.120 Fou~h A.., GoUipolla, 514448-4411aftor5p.m.

50 ICnt on St. Rt. 143 with oil d~ntown Pqlnt ' Pleaunt,
and au. 10110 trailer In OOiiiOr. phorio 304-175'6678. Equal
3 br. homa far ••le,
ownere, 114492~239.
Houalng Opportunity.
1
2 m . trom town, cal anytime
eluding children ovor 1 yr, h:lr11
c:,;4.c.
"'.c.
46-:.7725
:.:.;=·..,..- . , - --..,.. 65 acrao i12 lb. tobacco baH Two apll, 2 bedroom lumlohed

In our hom•, In 0•=11 I• .,..,
•••• ~·~ II"'" 11.
.u • ..,._ ~ ·
·
Model8 eating call, an IQH In·

Wlll!i
IS FIVE ..

I;

R E FA T

1----.1;.:..~,,,._r--;1;...;,r.......t ·~

· for yourself.
(IJ Reading Rainbow 1;1
e (!]) Happy Doya
i1J1 F - 01 Life

MAIJ~.'{

1

llSparlllook (0:30)
(I) MajOr League la-11

111.·=•.:.3=•n::."='-=-==,..,...-=

Ta .. Townhouoo Apto, 2 br., 1·
•·
112 b8tha~ CA, dishwasher, dl..
lot •-~on Maoon ·eo - ' · pnvate enclosed .... lo,
2
ICrtl
~~~~ '
I
DOOI. playground. W.tlt, . . . ..
tebllc water, I20,000.00. ~ • t,.th fncludH. Starting at
5211/mo. 0.11114-3417·7850.
!~~;n;;;kh~iiJ[rinii'lr;;i 2 acre tot, Ashton, MalOn 80, Twin Rlvoro Tow.r-Houolng lor
· ~"!:'gJ' 1 "'· 520•000·00 · 305- tho Eldonr, Handlc::fpod and
Dloabled.
Local
noar

241'4

STEVE 6ARVE'r'
15 NINE ANP

balh,

sara

.

(lJ......,OIChalcll
Discover how to ·learn to
make cl10ices that are right

downllalro. Dan: 11~7&amp;7:1;
Altors: 11......._1111o.

2 br., ldrltwoocl lurnhure with
matching bam oha~ out·
building on rented lot. t14-4468785. ·
·
·
2 br., mobile homo gao lurnooo
1 otovo, .. ~lgorator, -her •
d..,... 114-251-I2SI.

Business
Opportunity

mlloo,

175-4117.

anCI

.1 1r1. 1

Cil Home Run Delby

IIIZ KawMakl 110 LTD 4 cyt,
oxc cond. t710. 304-171'1124 or

Y&lt;l J'( .
BEAU11FUL APARTMENTS AT
Dua to
raolllfMIIon
- ~~~=====~==:-r=========11UDGET
AT JACKSON
ear.
Conlorl
a highly
okllocll.
ESTATES1PRICES
Pika
, 1131 Jockson

=

~

I I I 1•
2

1-1-.r-rON
_N""'I:L_Y.,.-;1 {
1

elll 011 e1121

1111-

1NI Cl 800 ~ 12,0011
mllol, folded. 11;100; 1N5 CR
121 ak1 btkl, fBOO; 10 apoOd
bleyeii,IIO. 304-'17:1-1113.

3 r&lt;&gt;Om, lumlallocl. Working

:~::,ct~~~
3 room. untuml•hocl

· •rn Cll

Motorcycles

f7VO 114215.1820.

=== --.,...,--:---::';""";'-;1

~For_, .,..,

Trllluno, 125 Tlllrtl A....
lpola Oh 4&amp;111.

A/~ I(,., ' A/,

I.' I

Eplndee

ldlchon
whn
llovo
I
ralrlgorator, ·1S110111o. pluo
dapooH. Ut1IHIM I ,.loronco, no
pa40. I14-445-4i21
3 bedroom apt In uptown Pt.
Pl1., 114-441-5111 1or lunhor lnlonnatlon.

. ..~.......,. ... . . .. "•··~ ··· .. .,. . ,.,.......... ,
~,
"Wil h all t.he hunwd out
sat.e llih•s and dehris itt spal'f'
it.'s likP staring at. a .iuuk
I ,.

'i:

CLIFAS

e:OO ill Bonanu: 11te Loll
74

I

•

OOtid.
EVENING

:!31 Fll'lt Avo., 1 br., r l . - ,

.

CRUIA hiring. all
p r ,._ lo4h • - oncf un~ll!'l......
torln-lonoo1115TJWoOMQ" lit. .. 11.
- . -- F
~-=·~"" ~

11n Ford F·IIO uo.
11800114 4411114.

Z bedrOO!II apia. tao- ront. Carpoled. Nlco -IIIII. laundrY
lacllhloo ovdable. Cilii14-QQ,f.
1711 EOH.

--··. ___fibIi\ __

NOw hiring Ill
,., _..,. lnlo. Coii11S,

OOIIWI&amp;CIIII.

harronga lol'-n ql the
lour ocromblad -d• below 10 lonn fou r limplo wordl.

•

"-"Y. WY. 304-175~.

j

UMI

:=~··-·

1 bedroom tUmlol&gt;od apt In
Hanc~Moon, 304-175-1872 aHar
5:011.
z bed- IIJIII'IIMnt, Golllpollo

-

•
IOD

1115 lllvoraclo ..... """" pick
up hall lon, low mllor.&amp;"d.J
; with
-·
11,11011.
1111 'Kaw-ld
100,•

Apartment
lor Rent

..

14. 1989

72 Trucka for Sale

NO

N ,J

URNZ
JORZU

I. R ,I A
XRO
I

RZ

OV

· JORZU

UNSSNDBCO

.N OOK. -

R

ov

DKNZLJL

GQVEJ,.QX

y •••.,•• CIIIIIIII....IILOVE WORDS BUT I
DON'T UKE StRANGE ONES. YOU DOIM' UND£11.
. STAND THEM AND THEY DON'T UNDERSTAND
. I YOU. WIJ. ROGERS

.,

..

�tps
..---Local news briefs----.

Monday,~

Ohio Bell workers
walk off jobs Sunday

Squads respond to 13 calls
Units ot the Metas County· Emergeltcy Medical Service ·
responded to 13 calls over the weekend.
On Saturday at 12: 16 a .m. Racine' s. station 2 and squad unit
went to Morning Star Road on an auto acclden' In which Tonya
' Iqels was taken to Holzer Medical Center and Chad Taylor was
' taliea to Veterans MemoriAl.
·
. At 2:36a.m . the Pomeroy unit was called to Page Street In
),ltddleport for James Spencer who was trusported to
eterans, and at 4:58p.m. the fire department responded to call
~ n Gold Ridge Road for an auto ftre at the Banks residence.
!!\ The Racine unit went to Yellow Bush Road at 10:17 p.m. for
1
/ •Y
f elessa Runnel who was taken to Veterans, and at 11:52 p.m.
\ be Pomeroy unit was called to the Sheriff's office for David
.~cDanlel who was transported to Veterans.
.
· .'1 On Sunday at 2:47a.m. the Rutland unit responded to a call at
/ r.fetas Mine No. 2 In which Norm Shaner was taken to
· .
.
O'Bienness Hospital In Athens.
\ At 7:57a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Dark Hollow Road
for Bill Shaffer who was taken to Veterans.
, • The Racine unit at 10:22 a.m. went to Barringer Ridge for
Owen Dalley who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Rutland Fire Department and squad were called at 11:08
· a.m. to Route 124 and Noble Summit Road on an auto accldentln
ikhlch Donald Fltchpatrick was treated but not transported.
I /. At 1: 24 p.m . the Middleport unit went to South Second and
\ Hamilton for JusUn Seymour who was taken to Veterans.
The Racine unit at 4: S7 p.m. responded to a call at
Rlverhelghts Apartments In which Mona Lisa Haynes was
transported to Woodland Centers, and at 5:17p.m. the unit was
called to Letart for Zelpha Stewart who was transported to
Veterans.
· ·
·
·
Finally, at 9: 52 p.m. the Middleport Unit went to Riverside
Apartments for Brandon Roush who was taken to Veterans.

r

I

GD'l'Y·UP- Lori Hayes waa one of several competltonln the
poles coate.t cl8118 durillg Sunday's open hone sbow at the Melp
County Fatrgrouads. Even tlloqh the fair doesn't ll&amp;art unUI
Tuesday, there was a lot of activity there lbla weekend.

1

Settlement ... ·cmiunued from page 1
tlon Committee, and Mayor
Richard ~ler, with the blessing
of the Ohio Historical Society.
Initially, Turner ud Cain were
not Included as parties In the
action. However, when a federal
judge ruled that the two should
either be Included In the action or
the case dropped, Turner and
Cain were notified by Cremeans·
-Strong that they were ·being
named as co-defendants with
the Corps.
. Although both atiQrneys would
·prefer to settle the case out of
court, Turner and Cain are
refusing to accept the settlement
so easily.
As Turner reports, the stlpula·
!Ions by which she and Cain
would have to abide, In return for
the dropping or the case, are not
acceptable at the present time. It
Is Turner's understanding that
the stipulations were suggested
by a representlve from the Ohio
Historical Society, who has re·
commended that the dock be
painted earth tones, the roof of
the dock be either removed or
painted, and that very little

$100,000 injury suit filed
A $100,000 personal Injury suit has been f~ In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Wllllam Gregory Peck, and his Wife,
Della Peck, Cheshire, against Zinnia B. Dayo, New Haven,
W.Va. The suit stems from an Aug. 14,1987 automobile accident
at the Intersection of State Routes 7 and 124 near Pomeroy.
According to the complaint, both the Peck and Dl.yo vehicles
were traveling north on aou te 7 on the day of the accident. The
plaintiffs allege that a collision between the two, which took
place at the above mentioned Intersection, was the result of the
defen dan rs negligence and failure to keep her vehicle under
control.
The plaintiffs are requesting damages for Injuries allegedly
sustained by William Peck as a·result of the accident, and for
damages to their vehicle.
In other court matters, Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred Crow III, due to con!llcts of Interest resulting from
his former famUy law practice or his former term as Meigs
Prosecuting Attorney, has stepped down as presiding authority
In the cases of Regina Sue Davis versus Richard William Davis,
Charlene Barton versus William B. Barton and Patricia F.
Kitchen versus Edward E. Kitchen.
• ·

· Weather ·

Deadline for rll"8t·phase
non·vlolent offenders who otherWise would be committed to a
state penal Institution. It will
operate as a secure facility with
lock-ups and other measures
sufficient to to ensure the safety
or the surrqundlng community. ·
Job openings will be advertised
In newspapers throughout the
area In three phases. The first
phase will begin the week of Aug.
20, Crow said.
Anyone Interested In applying
for one of the jobs should contact
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services after Aug. 21 or watch
for the advertisements.
The deadline for first-phase
appllcatlons will be Sept. 1.
Crow serves on the Judicial
Corrections Board for the
SEPTA Center .

Harry A. Swartz, 73, of Route 2,
Coolville, died Sunday at the Pine
Crest Nursing Home, GalJ!pells,
following an extended Illness.
-A painter and road construe·
tton worker, Mr. Swartz was born
ori March 11, 1916 ai Alfred In
Meigs County, the son of the late
Val C. Swartz and Carrie
Worthen.
He Is survived by his wife,
Helen Cullutms Swartz, DarWin;
two sons, Allen Swartz, VIenna,
W. Va. and John Swartz, Pomeroy; ol)e grandson, Eric Swartz,
Vienna, W. Va. ; a sister, Mary
Swartz O'Brien, Pomeroy, and a
half brother, Ores Swartz,
Athens, along with several nieces
and nephews.
Mr. Swartz, a veteran of World
War II, was a member of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church. He also belonged to the
Modern Woodmen of America
and the Hemlock Grove Grange.
Funeral services Will be held at
1 p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. David Prentice
will officiate and burial will be In
Burlingham Cemetery. Frtends
may call at the funeral home
Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.

lnes Marchi
fnes Marchi, 85, Rt. 3, Galllpolla, died Sunday at Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
Born Feb. 26, 1904, In Bagnl dl
Lucca, Italy, she was a dau&amp;hter
of the late Roberto Buonamlcl
and Jmola (BarSittl) Buonamlcl.
Site was also preceded In death
by ber husband, Louis G. Marchi,
In 1980, and a daughter, Lillian
MIJ'Cbl.
SUrvlvln&amp; are · two sons. Bob
. MIJ'Chl and Gee Marchi. both of
Gallpolll; five ltfalldchlldren;
four pe~~t"lfuclcblldren; two
brolllln, Aladt.oBuoaamld and
Bnlllo Bu«M!!mld, both of Lucca,
Italy. aDCI oae 111111', Cel~

. ...
.

~

Divorce actions have been tiled
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Donlta AprU Pooler,
Pomeroy, against Oavtd EIJiott
Hendricks, San Francisco,
Calif. , and Carla Sue Kimes,
Long Bottom, against Randall
Lee Kimes, Pomeroy.

Hospital news

Licenses issued

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admlssloils- Harold
Jeffers, Pomeroy; and Melissa
Fife, Langsville.
Saturday discharges - Rl·
chard White and MaryNeutzllng.
Sundi!Y admissions - Bonney
Shaffer, Pomeroy: and Zelpha
Stewart, Racine.

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Gary Oliver Lane, 24,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and Atrlcla Lynn Louden 34, New Haven,
W.Va., and to Ivan Jerry Card·
well, 54, The Plains, .and Janet
Louise Nakamoto, 49, Rutland.

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
'GO 2 GREAT PAN PIZZAS

$999

Montreal
I
slump
•
·c ontmues

..
Yo!.40. No.70 M

.,.;

•

.
at

Meigs County Commissioners .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Alli!St night's meeting a letter
· Dally Senllnel Staff
The he!lrlng on annexation of was read from Conrail stating .
' property southofthecorporatlon that .,ompany has no Objectlo!l to
limits to the village's sewage annexation of the Hobson yards
lagoon to be held on Wednesday, to the vllllige of Middleport.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
Aug. 23, ilt 10 a.m. In the Meigs
that
he and village employee, B111
. County. Courthouse, was dis·
Miller,
had been to the Ohio
· cussed at Monday night's meetDeparmtent
of Development In
, lng of Middleport VIllage
Columbus
regarding
the vii·
·. Council.
!age's
housing
appHcatlon.
He
_ or the 43 property owners
· Included In the proposed annexa- said that the village did not attain
. :• tlon area, 12 have expressed the required number of points to
opposition to the proposal, and be In the funding range this year,
, one Indicated that he had no btl t that officials there had shown .
; objection but did decline to sign 'them what wo.uld, have to be done
the petitions which were pres- . to score higher when another ·
: ented ear Her this summer to the application Is made next year.

Read at the meeting was a for solld. wastes generated out·
letter from Sara Hendrtcker, side the boundaries of the state.
In her Jetter to the village, Ms.
chatrmap o,f the Solid .Waste
Management Polley Committee Hendrlcker said that until a solid
of which Meigs Is .a part, waste management plan Is
regarding the rate resolution adopted and approved by the
which was adopte!l at the Aug. 9 Ohio EPA, there Is no local
meeting and requesting repres· control over the Importation of
entation at the Sept. 14 public sol!d.waste Into this district. She
hearing to be held at the Meigs said th'at voting against the
County Senior Center, Pomeroy, surcharge means that only th.e
local taxpayers will pay for the
6p.m.
The resolution adopted at the plan Instead of a ll'laJor share
Aug. 9 meeting provides for fees ~lng paid for by out-of-district
of $1.25 per ton for solid wastes and out-of-state landfill users
generated within ttie six county · and haulers.
district, '$2.50 per ton for solid
She stesseil that It Is only
wastes gelierateil outside the tlirough the planning process
boundaries of the
but that the district may be able to
Inside the state;
ton control the flow of refuse Into the

"

materials.
Linda Fisher, Lucllle Haggerty,
Certified and non-cerU!Ied per· . c,.rol Hare, Betty Hutchinson,
sonnet hired by the.board at the
Valentine Hoover. Paula Horton,
mlll'le.vy for current expenses of recent special meeting Include C. Darla Kennedy, Dave Kucsma.
the E~tstern Local School Dis trlct D. Mcintyre, junior high football
Shirley McDon~tld, Geroge
will be placed on the November 7 coach; Debbie Weber, head McLean, Jenny Manuel, Brent
ballot.
teacher for the Riverview Ele- MarshaJII, Linda Mancini, Ina
·That was the decision of the mentary School; Judy Wolfe.and Meadows, Nancy Morrisey, Mike
Eastern Local Board of Educa· Margaret Cauthorn as state Miller, Kathleen Peyton, Lori
lion after holding three public funded library aides; Edna Ritchie, Nathan Robinette, Jozle
Informational meetings on Householder, accounts clerk and Roberts, Gayle Sayler, Jeff
school financing In the district educational aide substitute; San- Skinner, Deanna Spriggs, Grace
over the past two weekS.
dra Bowen, head cook at the Weber, Kay Wilson, Sandrll
Voters of 'the district have Chester Elementary School and Walker, Margie Bartee, Tammy
twice defeated continuing 12.4 Darlene Buckley assistant cook Chaprn11n, Deborah Davis, Llnyd
,,.,· operallll&amp; levies. ;;t•
.
, __ ca '!lt~ : h!1lh llllhopl, and Gle!l ..:rlirptn, Valerle. Hanstlne·, Betty
According to 1 Dr. . Daniel EasterUng, f BJU Hannum, . Ed 1 Ann Loftis, Steve Patterson, Ann
Apllng, the 8.9 mill levy would Holter.- Bob White and Cindy Sisson, and Terry Wayland: )
generate $275,535 a yea,r, allow' Rector as substitute bus drivers
In other action, the bpard
lngthe board to pay some back to to be used on an as-needed basis released David Fetty to aJtend
the State Loan · Fund, deal with only. ·
Meigs High School. '
theprojectedshortfalllnrevenue
Employed as substutte
Next meeting was set for 7:30
for the coming year, reinstate teachers for the 1989·90 school p.m on Aug. 231n the high school
board fund 1ng of extra. year were John .Barcus, Betty · cafeteria. Attending were Jim
curricular activities Including Boggs , Karla Brown, Kim Batey, Smith, president; Kathy Mallthletics; allow the purchase of a Judy Browning, · Nina Bias, nlcke. vice · president, and
new bus every other year, and Nancy Circle, Larry Cool), VIc to- members, Ray Karr and I. 0 .
provide minimal funding for new ria Diddle, Mike Edwards, Rick McCoy.
textbooks,
supplies and other Edwards, Marsha Egleston ,
horses aad wagon and left Racine at 8 a.m. with
aadclpated arrival !if the falrfl'Otlllds ar01111d
1
noon.

•

Bob Evans Farms net sales
up .7 percent over last year .

Ohio .Powel! promotes jobs

throughout
53
county.
~ea
.
-.

growth of Meigs County,

The demand for jobs, Indus·
trial growth and diversity are
among factors Involved In Ohio
Power Company's newest economic development efforts.
Ohio Power has announced
· that It has targeted 10 types of
Industries to receive data designed to ln~rest til'e m In the
53-county area served by the
company.
C. A, Heller, Ohio Power
president, said the project is
designed to promote' the a'dvan·
: tages offered by locating In the
communities and counties within
. thecompany'sservlcearea. "We
have an environment that Is
: conducive to economic growth.
· We plan to share data about this
· llfi!B .with lndustr~ wanting to
- I!J!:paild, and we hope to place
· companies In a manner that will
. prove beneficia! to. both."
· 'The comPitly's newest project
; Is an extenSion bf Its economic
• development program ..
"We've been · involved In eco-

"THE SHINING LIGHT IN BANKING".
.

'By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

'
·])ally Senllnel Staff.
"': A _tllrl!e-year emergency 8.9

OFFTOTHEFAIR-TbeHerbErvlnfamllyof
1ee11 here on their way to tile Meigs
Count;r Fait on Monday. They hitched up the

We, at The Farmers Bank, encourage all Meigs Countians to support the '89 Meigs County Fair. From the youth who exhibit to
those who make our great fair possible, we thank you for your
long hard hours of work!!
Like the Farmers Bank; you are a vital part of tile

area. The State Legislature has
village funds for the next two
mandated that the District must years . .
have a plan by June 24, 1990, and
To comply with county's
tf not then the Ohio EPA will do . budget commission require·
the planning and bill the counties ments, th ~ village set rates of ·
for It, leaving the local area taxation noting that there Is no
without a voice on the plan.
change from the previous year.
fn her letter to Council, Mrs.
It was noted th at plans by the
Hendrlcker urged ratification of Middleport Chamber of Com·
the proposed charge fee merce for the ann\lai block party
structure, ·c
on Sept. .16 are moving forward.
A letter from the Meigs County 'rhe mayor's report shOwed reCommlsslonerswas read regard· celpts of $5,765.90 for July.
Attending were Mayor Fre!J
. lng fiscal year 1981' Comunlty
Development· Block Grants. A Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Jon
public hearing was announced · .Bucjt, and Council member~.
for 7 p.m on Sept. 6 at the Paul Gerard, WilHam Walters,
courthouse. . ,
Jac~ Satterfield, Bob Gilmore,
Council vpted to designate . James Clatworthy, and Dewey
Central Trust as depository for Horton.

board to place three-year
emergency 8.9 mill levy. on. ballot

Raclae Ia

AUGUST 15-16-17-18-19

25 Canto

Inc. Nowop-

E~tern

COME TO RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16

'

M~ltlmodlo

:Twelve property owners oppose annexation

WE NEED YOU

MEIGS ·COUNTY FAIR

1 Section, 10 PogH
A

•

YOU CAN'T GET BLOOD FROM ATURNIP

POMEROY SENIOR CITilrN CENTER
1 TO 5:30

Partly cloudy tonlgbl. Low
In mid 60&amp;. Chance of rain 38
percent. Wednesday, high In
mld.SOS. Chance of rala 38
percent.

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, August 15. 1989

Copyrighted 1189

nomic development for many
years, " said J. G. Kennard,
economic development manager
for Ohio Power. "We work
closely with all of the communities we serve to both attract and
retain businesses and Industries.
We consider this latest effort an
extension of our commitment to
enhance the .deyelopment of our
service area ."
The ·company recently ·reviewed hundreds of basic· type
Industries, studying the history
of their employment, expansion
and uUIIty needs. Also studied
were the companies' sizes and
regional compatibility. As a
result of the study, 10 classlflca·
!Ions of Industries were selected
to receive mailings from Ohio
Power Informing them of potential plant locations In Ohio.
Scheduled to receive data
about service-area communities
are some 2,000 Industries, Involved In (1 )' miscellaneous plas·
tics products, (2) plastics mate-

MUaGSCOUNTYFAIRSCHEDULE

'

Farn1ers
Bank

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1.. l988
9:15 A.M.-Junior ·Fair Beef Showmanship a,nd 'Judging
Followed by Open Class Judging !
12:00 Noon-4·H FloWer Show JUdging (Jr. Fair Bldg.)
1:00 P .M.- Beef Cook·Off...:.. Hill Stage
2:00 P.M.-Horse JJarne8s Racing
2:00 P.M.-t-H Style Shpw-Hill Stage
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pun -Show Ring
•s:30 P.M.-Junior Fair Parade
6:30 P.M.-Wyomtna Wolf Band-Hill Stage '
7:00 P.M.-Youth Awards Night- Show Ring
7:00 P.M.-Antique Tra~or Pull- Tractor Pull Area
"8:30 P.~.-cllarUe McClain II Wayne Massey
8;30 P.M.-Kiddie Games- Show Ring
'
• -Grandstand atinction

Member FDIC

POIIIIOJ, OliO

,.

rials, synthetic resins and
nonnvulcanlzable elastomers,
(3) adhesives and sealants, (4)
electronic components, (5) spe·
clallzed Industrial machinery,
. (6) electrical equipment for .
engines, (7) motor vehicle parts
and accessories, (8) convertecl
paper, products, (9) telephone
and telegraph equipment, and
{10) all'mlnum extruder
products.
Many factors must be considered In economic development,
Kennard said. These Include
labor, available bul~lngs, land
and utllltes. "Computers are
used In sophisticated market
research to pinpoint the best
prospects for a region. Our goal
Is to match an Industry's needs
Continued on page 10

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
The sausage division of Bob
!:vans Farms saw a decline In
net sales·' dUring the past year,
· and the restaurant saw some
growth, stockholders were told at
the annual meeting Monday In
Rio Grande.
Overall, the company only
experienced a seven .percent net
sales Increase. They reported net •
sales of $108,336,000 for the
quarter ending July 28. This Is up
seven percent from $101,274,000
·one year ago.
According to officials, the
sausage dlvtston saw a seven
percent decline In sales and sold
three percent less total poundage
than last year.
What Increase occurred was In
the restaurant division, and after
the menu price adjustments, saw
little growth, according to seg. ment executive vice president

RobertS. Wood.
"After the menu price In·
crease, there was no real
growth," Wood told · the shareholders gathered.
For the first time In the
company's history, the restuar:
ants were rejected In a marketChicago - Wood said. Of the six
units In the Chicago area, five
were sold and another closed In
the past year.
In other. efforts to make the
segment more profitable, Wood
said the 24·hour weekend service
was discontinued, corporate and
local management structure was
altered, and new Items such as
Egg Beaters were added for the
cholesterol-conscious consumer.
. Wood also said the design oft he
restuarants Is being evaluated
and changed to serve the public
better.
The company Is operating with
223 restaurants, which Includes

'

the 27 new units opened la~t year
and the six closed In Chicago.
Two opened In the first quarter of
the year, and four will begin
operating the the second.
The biggest single problem In
the restaurant division Is the
quality of service, according to
Chalrman.of the Board DanielE .
Evans. He noted there Is a high
turnover of personnel In the
Industry and that affects profits.
Just as In the reStaurant division, .
the sausage segment saw a move
toward the more health-oriented
buyer.
Today's consumer Is looking at
their cholesterol count , and that
Is having an effect on the buyer of
Bob Evans Sausage, according to
Larry Carroll, execu live vice
pres ident of the sausage division.
"We hear a lot today about
nutrliton," Carroll said, and that
Is reflected In the buyer pattern.
Continued on page 10

Man treated
·for stab
wounds

Wllllam Tlemyer, 43, ·506 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, was trans·
fertoecl early this morning to the
Athens Mental Health Center
folloWing treatment at Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital for an appar- ·
.. ent self·lnfilcted stab wound.
·
Pomeroy Pollee were called to
·the residence at 4:' 43 a.m. by
Teresa Bartlett, 29, also of 506 E.
Main St. who said that she found
Tlemyer lying on the steps
outside tl)e house with the knife In
his chest,
Police iald .that she told them,
Tlemyer had been drinkln&amp;, that
BOARD JIIEMB~ - Memben of the Boanl
they had an ll'(lllment, and he
llf Dlne&amp;cn of Bob Bvaa1 Farma were pre~eat at
left. A short time later lhe said · tile aaDUlltaellboltlen meeb1 MltadiQ' Ia Rio
she round him on the steps. He · otaatle to uner aa:r q-tfo• aad report In tile
was transported by the Pomeroy
varlo• cllvlalo•. Seated.,_ left are Mewari K.
Continued on ):lBge 10 ·
0wen1, pn~ldenl . .of the •w.ldlaey OWen•

TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1188
"7:00 P .M ...:..Demolltlon Derby
8:00 P.M.-Junior Fair Swine Showmanship &amp; Judging
9:00 P.M.-Midnight Cloggers- Hill Stage ·

.
,..... '

Pick-4

.•

~,

"' {' 'I •

874

Page3

YOUR COMMUNITY OWNED BANK

WISIIIIII

Pi~k-3

8954

ADDiiiOIAL ITEMs
S1.70 COVIIS 10'111 PIZZAS

Domino's
Pizza
992-2114
.-

'

di'scussed. Pa ren\s who did not
attend the spr ing registration or
who are new lo the district will
need tq provide a · copy of their
student bi rth certificate and a
record of the various vacclna·
tlons and shots a lready received.
-Junior high footbau ·•·
.
All jun ior high students Interes ted in. playing football for
Eastern are to report·today at 4
p.m. at the ~i gh school.

Am Electrl~ Power ...... .. ...... 30
AT&amp;T ........ ... .. .... .... ............ . 39
1\shland 011 ....... ...... .... .. .... .. 38
Bob Evans , .............. :.......... 15 ~
Charming Shoppes ...... ...... .. 16';4
City Holding Co .. .... ...... ...... 15';4
Federal Mogul .................... 23%
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... ...... .. .... .54 ~
Heck's .. .... ............. ...... .. ...... ~
Key Centurion ....... ............ .12 ~
Lands' End .................. .. ... .. 28%
Limited Inc ................ .. ...... 34~
Multimedia Inc ..... ....... ....... 108
Rax Restaurants ... ...... ......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers _... ............ 16~
Shoney's Inc .. .. .. .. .......... .. .... 12
Wendy's Inti. .. ..................... 5%
Worthington
Ind .......... ........24~
'

Divorees sought

Ohio Lottery

---Meigs announcements---Kindergarten orientation
·
Two meetings will be he ld
regarding kindergarten orientatlon for the Eastern Local School
District on Thursday all p.m. a t
Tuppers Plains Elementary, and
at 3 p.m. on Thu rsday at Chester
Elementary for all parents of
kindergarten students.
This years full day a lternate
day program, teacher-parent
conference schedules w111 be

•

. .

Th~ Communications Workers
In addition, said spokesma~;~
of America's 10,100 Ohio Bell Greg Kenefic, the C'ilA will ask
workers walked off their jobs the public utilities e&lt; mmisSio,ns
early Sunday, inlnutes after
In eac h state where ·' he strikes
rejecting the company's latest are occurring to r.,bate the
offer.
·
payroll savings to the' ustomers
Contributing support to the to limit the companies' profits.
CWA were approximately 25
Kenefic said Ohio Bell Will save
local Ohio Bell employees, who an estimated $1 mUilon a day .
began picketing lnfront or the during the strike, admitting the :
GalHpolls offlel!, Locust Street.
tactic was an effort to .place ·
·~rm out here because Amerl·
pressure on the Bell companies. :
tech is. talking about changing
On the picket line In Toledo, : ·
the accounting procedure on our Harry Zetomer, a circuit tester, ·
retirement' fund. And I'm afraid predicted the strike would las I of what that will cause us later three weeks " simply because of :
on," said Mike Polcyn, vlrethe a mount of money the com· ·
presldent of Local 4321, which pany saves by not paying the
co,,ers the areas from Ironton to wages."
Ma ~letta to Zue5vllle.
••l'hey are offering an assign·
Norma Craden, president of
lng ilonu's and not actual pay Local 4315 representing iservtce
wage~ which Is base pay that
representatives and operators,
nev~ r increases With lnfiatlon,"
wore a red t -shirt emblazoned
Polcyn said. "Our pension Is with " CWA: I'll walk the line In
·good,. but It's not great. They '89" While pacing In front of the
wan.t to take our excess funds . Ohl9 Bell building ln. downtown
from our stock profits to use for Toledo.
•
corporate benefit."
"It was clear that not enough
Polcyn said the local union will progress was being· made In the
simply picket with no .. major right • direction," said Jeff Replans to ma'ke any scenes, unless chenbach, a spokesman for CWA
outsiders come In to take over Local 4309 in Cleveland. "No
their Jobs:
talkS a re sc heduled to start
"We're going to picket and again, but bo th sides are subject
that's all. We basically plan for to call and ready to talk."
this to move smoothly," Polcyn
Ohio Bell s pokesman Caesar
said.
Powell said In Cleveland the
The Ohio union members company was disappointed by
joined an estimated 51,000 em- the action because. It considered '
ployees of five Mldwes t Arnett· Its offer to be "a very good
tech telephone. companies as contract.''
"Baby Bell" strikes spread
The lates t company offer Is
across the nation.
Union Officials held a confer- worth more than $5,600 per
ence call Sunday afternoon, after employee over three years, up
which they termed the com· fror.. $3,338 In the company's .
pany's latest offer as .earlier proposal, Da vid Martin,
another Bell spokesman. said.
"Inadequate. "

..

Clanelll of Stockholm, Sweden.
She and her husband owned
and operated a restaurant In
GalHpolis for many years. She
was a member or St. Louis
Catholic Church, the American
Legion Auxiliary 27, Eight and
Forty, and the CathoHc Women's
Club.
Services will be conducted
Wednes4ay, 10 a.m. , at the St.
Louis Catholic Church With the
Rev . Wllllam R. Myers and the
Rev. Albert MacKenzie otrlclatlng. Burial Will follow Iii Mound
Hill Cemetery.
Friends may cali(I'uesday, 6to
9 p.m. at the Waugh·Halley·Wood
Funeral Home. Rosary service
Will be Tuesday, 8:30p.m.
Pallbearers Will be Bobby,
Mike and Scott Marchi, Remo
Rocchi, Don Robinson and Lawrence (Panzo) Bastian!. -

AT OlE LOW PIICE

Louery numbers

Stocks

--Area deaths-Harry Swartz

asphalt be poured at the top of Ute
river bank adjacent to the boat
dock.
·
Turner says she had no In tentlon of pourlnp: asphalt for the
private dock (Turner and Cain
were also.thinking of building a
public doc.klng facility).
As for painting the dock or
removing the roof, Cain says that
the treated lumber from which
the doc!C Is buUt shoul4 not be
painted so soon, and that he has
no Intention of removing the roof.
So, with the settlement appar·
enlly out-of·the'quesUon, as far
as Turner and Cain are concerned at this time, It would
appear that the case will go to
court, whether the lawyers want
It to or not.
Says Turner, "In my opinion,
the court system Is used too often
by authorities who are trying to
Intimidate people lntodolngwhat
they want. It's my property, and
I don't think anyone has the right
totellme.whatlcanorcannotdo
with it. I want a decision by the
court. I want a definite yes or
no."
·

CLEVELAND IUPil ~ Satur·
By United Press International
day's Winning Ohio Lottery
South Central Ohle
Tonight, variable cloudiness numbers:
PICK·3 Twice
with a low In the mid 60s. Light
491
and
585.
south winds. Thechanceofralnls
PICK·3
ticket sales totaled ·
20 percent. Tuesday, partly
$1,814,645,
with payoffs due of
cloudy and hazy with a sllght
$705,390
and
$635,212.
chance of showers and thunderstorms. High again In the mid PICK-I
1692.
80s. The chance of rain Is ~
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
percent.
$277,569.50, with a payoff clue pf
Extended Forecast
$189,500.
Wednesday through Friday
Super Lotto
A chance of showers and
25,
26,
34,
35, 36, 40 .
thunderstorms Wednesday and .
Super
Lotto
tlcket ·sales totaled
fair Thursday and Frlday. Highs
$4,738,437.
will be mainly 80 to 85 and lows
Kicker
near 60.
059776.
Kicker ticket Slilles totaled
$763,929.
Dally stock prices
(As or 10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis lo Loewt

applications September 1
POMEROY - The Southeast·
ern ~robatlon Treatment Alter·
native Center, a regional correction facility serving Meigs and
six other counties, will be hiring
people to.staff the new faclllty In
the near future.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III
sale! a variety of jobs will be
available and the Ohio Bureau of
Employment' Services will be
accepting the applications.
The SEPTA Center Is currently
under construction In Nelsonville
and Is expected to open by fall.
The center Will provide a sentencing alternative for people
convicted of non-violent offenses
In the seven county area.
The minimum security facility
Is Intended as an alternative for

1

14, 1989

-

....

..

·-·~·

....

--·

'
·~· -~··--~-·

...

Couatr;r Sauu1e; Larry carrou, exee~~Uve vlee ·
pn~ldent, NU•ge dlvlaloa; Keith Bradbaey,
execulve vice president aad treullft!l'; . . .
. Robert s. Wood, ex-the vice pi'CIIIdell&amp;,
reetauraat dlvlaloa. ( OVP llhoiD)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="183">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2773">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="37147">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37146">
              <text>August 14, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6805">
      <name>buonamici</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3568">
      <name>marchi</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2256">
      <name>swartz</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
