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                  <text>"••
,_ 111 10-The Daily Sa1tillel

'

Pornaoy Midclaport. Ohio

'

•

.-;;;;......;_Area deaths· ~- -Local news briefs-- Hay 4amaged by bam ·r~re

. Ruth,Dye

Rulli Ann Dye, 53, of l.etln.
died Sllurday, AU&amp;usl 12, 1989 in

Vcieenns

~~

Memorial

Hospital,

Sbe was bon July 6, 1936 ill
Midlanil, Pa., lbe dluaht« ol lbe
Dewey llld Hazel Nicbolsoa

Slillweaoo.

Sbe was a member of tbe VFW
Posl
19926
Awtilialy IIICI tho AliiCriclll LeJioa
S~.Jolmson

Smith-Cipc:Un Pull 1140 of New
· ifa~n. She ll1ellded The FathCr's
House Church in HlrlfOid,
Survivors include ber husband,
Robert P: Dye of Lewt; 11m1e sons

llld daughftB.iJi.Jaw, Robert P. and
Sue Dye of Wuhaw, N.C., Donald
W. llld Joyce Dye of l.etln,
Richanl W. and 'Jerri Dye of New·
port News, V..; Olie daughler and
son-in-law, Linda L. 11K1 Scott
BRWC:r, of New Haven; seven
· gnndchildren; four . brodiC:rs,
Robert W. Still~on of Beaver,
r._, Kenneth ~ Slillwagcn of
Elyra, Ohio, Darrell R. Stillwagon
of Hunlington Beach. Ca., and
Thomas D. Stillwagon Of G~
.Town, Tem.; six sisters, J. Florine
Broderick of Wellsville, Ohio,
Helen J. Kidder of Easl Live!)IOOI,
Ohio, DoN J. Dye of Industry, Pa,
Thelma M. Miller of Grove City,
Pa., Frances E. Stillwagon of Mid·
land, Pa, Linda .Lou Eolarianni of

Monasa,Pa.
Services were held Mondav
1:30 Burial was in Sunrise

Memorial Gardens, Lelarl.

.Mary A. Stapleton
Mary Ann Stapleton, 87, of
Ewlngton, died Monday at Oak
Hill Hospital.
Born June 17,1902, In Ashland,
Ky ., she was the daughter of the
late Charles and Llza (Childers)
·
Wheatley.
Also preceding her In death
were her husband, Luther J.
Stapleton, In August 1968; one
son, Charles Stapleion; one
daughter, Audrey Comer; and
two brothers.
Surviving are four sons, Ed·
ward Stapleton of Logan, Ohio,
Damon Stapleton of Pomeroy,
Naamon Stapleton of Ewtngton,
and Thomas StapletonofLondonberry, Ohio; eight daughters,
Mrs. Carl !Opal) Fox of Lake
City, Fla.. Mrs. Darrell (Anna)
Harbour of Salt Rock, ·w.va.,
Mrs. Raymond (Kathleen) John·
ston of Accuville, W.Va., Mrs.
Owen (Foe) Haynes of Romance,
W.Va., Mrs. Larry (Francis)
Anderson of Parkersburg,
W.Va. , Mrs.· Peter (Jo) Fitch of
Martella, Ga., Mrs. Rasco
/Hilda) Payne of Sissonville,
W.Va., and Mrs: Alan (Myrtle)
Goble of Batayta, Ohio.
Also surviving are 44 grand·
children;, 68 great ·
grandchildren; 12 great~great ·
grandchildren; four . sisters,
Myrtle Hayes of Phoenix, Ariz.,
Laura Lyons of Ironton, L!lllan
Stewart of Ashland, Ky., and
Marguerlta Alexander of Baltl·
more, Md.
Services will be Thursday, 11
a.m. at the Vinton Baptist
Church wtth the Rev . Marvin
Sallee officiating. Burial will be
In the Marcum Cemetery In
Wilkesville, Ohio.
Friends may call Wednesday, 4
to 8 p.m. at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home In Vinton.

· William K. Oiler
William K. Oller, 69, of Racine,
died Monday at Veteran's Mem·
orlal Hospital In Huntington,
W.Va.
. Born Sept: 3, 1921t In VInton, he
was the son of Alva Cecil O!ler of
VInton and the late Flossie M.
(McFarland) Oller. He was a
retired welder from Buckeye
Steel Company In Columbus.
He Is survived by three sons,
William Eugene Oller, Stanley
Wayne Oller and Thomas Lee
Oller, all of Greenfield, Ohio; one
daughter, Debbie Kay Patton of
Greenfield; four brothers, Robert Oiler of Racine, CarJOtler of
Grove City. Ohio, Paul Oller of
Marengo, Ohio, and PhllUp Oller
of McDermont, Ohio; and two
sisters, Helen Hafchar of Cincinnati and Mary Blankenship of
.Prestonsburg, Ky.
·
He was ·preceded In death by
two brothers and three sisters.
Arrangements will be an·
nounced by the McCoy·Moore
Funeral Home In Vinton.

Daryl Sawyer~~
Daryl Leo Sawyers, 32, of
Middleport, died Monday ~t his
home.
Mr. Sawyers, a son of Leo and
Lucille Mills Sawyers, or Cheshire, was born Oct. 13, 1956 In
Columbus. He was a 1974 gradu·
ate of Westland High School,
Columbus, and was employed by
his father as a mechanic.
SUrvivors Include his wife,
Valarle Kennard Sawyers; a son,
Matthew, and a daughter, Amy,
all at home; his parents; two
sllter.s , Sharon Elliott, of Athens,
and Carol . Ann Ro~r~n. of
Roanolle. Va.; and IIIIi father-In·
law and inother·ln-Iaw. WilHam

and Dorothy Kenilard, TrJmble.
Services for Mr, Sawyers wJII
be Thursday, 1 p.m., at the
Rawllngs-Coats·Fisher Funeral
. Home, with Rev. William Price
otrlclatl118.· Burial will be In
Gravel Htll cemetery. Friends
may call at the Funeral·Home on
,Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

John W; COU@henour
.

.

·' 69, Rt.1,
John W. Coughenour,
Cheshire, died Tuesday morning
at Holzer Medical Cenler.
He was born on April 12, 1920 In
Chester, son of the late Clinton C.
and Faye (Swisher) Coughenour.
A World War II Army veteran,
he retired from the Kyger Creek
power plant In 1982. ·He was a
member of the Cheshire Masonic
Lodge No. 456, where he was a
32nd degree Mason. He was also
a member of the American
Legion Post 128 In Middleport.
He was preceded In death by
his wife, Ethelyn EarJeen
.(Swisher) Coughenour, who died
In 1980.
.
.
SUrvivorS Include his daugh·
ter, Mrs. ReVa Hancock of
Corydon, Ind.; and two grand·
sons, Travis W. and Chad W.
Hancock.
Services will be Thursday at 2
p.m. at the WIIUs Funer11-1 Home.
The Rev. Ron Hammbnd will
officiate. Burial will be In Gravel ·
Htll Cemetery.
Friends may call the. funeral
homeWednesday·from 7to9p.m.

Trixie Clark

n~

said minor in mishap

The GalUa-Melgs Post ot.tlle State Highway lnvesllcated an
accident at4: 46 p.m. Monday In Meigs County, on SR. 7, 108-feet
north of milepost 9. One driver was slightly Injured.
Troopers said a 19110 Chevrolet Chevette driven by Douglsas
A. Strayer, 28, Kent, Ohio, stopped In traffic. HIJ vehicle was hit
· from behind by a 19115 Plymou!h TurJstmo, driven· by Terry J .
Bailey, 24, 'Pomeroy. Damage was mine( to both vehicles.
Strayer suffered a complaint Injury but was not Immediately
treated.
·
,
Thli patrol cited "Bailey to G•lllpolls Municipal ' Court for
failure to stop within the assured clear distance.

Police investigate 2 accidents
The first occurred at 4: 18 p.m on the ·Pomeroy parking. Jot
when a car driven by Shelby Pickens, Racine, backed Into the
left rear fender of a· car operated by Shelby Davia, Pomerqy.
According to pollee, Davis was backing out of a parldng place_
when Pickens started to move and the vehicles collided.
'
Pickens was cited for Improper backing and ·no financial
responsibility.
·
The second accident occurred at 10: 06 p.m Mo!14ay night~
Spring Ave., Pomeroy. Pollee reporled that a ti:UCk,drtven by
James Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy, was struck by a car. owned by
Yvonne Edwards and driVen by Joey Relhnlre, Jr., 21, of
Pomeroy.
·
Pollee reported that there was light damage to th 'rear left
side of the Taylor truck, and to the right front fender of the
Reltmlre vehicle.
Reltmlre was clled for leaving the scene of an accident, OWl,
operating.under suspension, and no financial responsibility.

EMS has nine Monday calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered Monday by units of
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
.
At 12 a.m., Middleport was called to Page St. for Henry Myers
who was Jaken to PleasanfValley Hospital.
Rutland was called at 11: 05 a.in. to State Route 124 for Dirrell
Sawyers who.was dead on arrl'\'al.
· ·
'Middleport was called at 1: 27 a.rn. to Railroad St. for Dorotjly
Roush who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2: 14 p.m., Pomeroy was called to the Meigs County'
Fairgrounds for Grorla Frederick who was taken to Veteran$
Memortalllosplfat..
...
.
.
At 3: 11 p.m., the Middleport Fire Department and the EMS
unit were called to a tractor fire on Story's Run. Richard
Wal'necke was treated at the .scene.
Rutland EMS was called at 5: 38 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Jerry Back who was taken to Holzer Medical center.
At 7: 43 p.m., Middleport wa:s called to State !lou te 554 for
Muriel Spires who was taken to Holzer Medical center.
Pomeroy at 7l50 p.m. treated Phyllis Vanlnwagen, Lincoln
Heights.
.
'
At 10: 57 p.m ., Middleport was called to the Riverside
Apartments for Shirley Roush who was taken to Veterl!.'ls
MemorJal Hospital:

Trixie Clark, 88, 847 Second
Ave. , Gallipolis, died Monday 'at
· her residence !ollowtng an ex- .
tended Illness. · ·
....
Born June 2, 1901, In Harrison
Township, Gallla CQunty, she
was the daughter of the late
Thomas a,nd Effie (Bosler) Neal.
She was a retired employee of
·Clark's Jewelry Store In
GaJUpolts.
Preceding her In death was her
husband, Buell Waugh Clark on
Oct. 15, 1985, whom she married
Aprll23, 1921, In Pomeroy.
. Also preceding per In death
were one Infant daughter, one
Continued from page 1
great-grandson; one brother;
'
.
,
and one half-brother.
People are looking for leaner peppers and potat~s In a flour
She Is survived by one son,
choices, and avoldtug red meat, tordlla ..
Neal Blaine Clark of Gallipolis;
he said, adding Bob E:vans
granddaughter, Nancy Vaughn
Sausage Is probably the leanest
~
of Gallipolis; grandson, 'Joe
on the market.
·
Clark of Pomeroy; and one
He also noted the company Is
.health,
great-grandchild.
looking Into foreign markets -in
lltJmB, Gr,
A resident of GaJUpoUs· for 58
Canada and Japan, If trade
andbf ' S I
years, she •Was a member of the
agreemen Is are favorable.
~al:
Grace United Methodist Church, .
Both the sausage and ·restauProgressive ·Bible Class, and
rant divisions are moving Into
Church Circle.
·
the VIrginia market, according
8ervtces will be Thursday, 1
to.Carroll .•They will opel' res tau·
p.m. at the Waugh-Halley-WOocl
rants and place products In the
Funeral Home with the Rev. Joe
Norfolk and Richmond areas In
Hefner officiating. Burial will be
November, he said.
In Mound Hill Cemetery.
· A new Item was distributed to
Friends may call Wednesday, 2
the local shareholders for their
to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m.
testing and Input - a breakfast
Pallbearers will be Tom Phil·
taco - manufactured by subsl·
Ups, Dave Phillips, Johnnie Notdiary Owens Country Sausage
Company.
ter, Alfred Clark, Ronnie Halley ,
Marlin Kerns, and Skip
According to Owens President
Meadows.
Stewart K. Owens, the Item Is
quite popular In the southwestso popular In fact, they cannot
produce enough to satiSfy consumer demand.
·
Dally stock prices
''This (breakfast taco) Is a
(As of 10 a.m.)
novel Item here, but Is an
Bryce and Mark Smith
accepled Item tn the Southwest,"
of Blunt, Ellis a. Loewl
Owens said.
The Border Breakfast Is sa us- .
Am Electric Power .... .. ... .... 29~
age or ham, with eggs, cheeses,
AT&amp;T .... .... .........................38l!
Ashland on .... ....................37l! •
Bob Evans ....................... ... 15~
Charming Shoppes .............. . 16
City Holding Co .. .. .. ............ 15%
Federal Mogul... .. ............... 23~
Goodyear T&amp;R ............... .. .. 55~
Heck's .................... ...... .. ..... ~
Key Centurion .... .. .. .. ......... .123,1
Lands' End .. ............ .......... .28%
Limited Inc .............. ........ ..35%
Multimedia Inc .... .... .... ..... 106~
Rax Restaurants .... .. ... ......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. 16%
. Shoney 's Inc ........ .... ............ 12
Wendy's Infl ... .......... .. .... ..... 5%
Worthington Ind ....... ...... ....24Y,

Bob Evans· · · - - - - - - -Ft:ll'...

. Appraxlmalely 115 round bales
of llay 1J! 'the Pomeroy Pike area
of Melp County were destroyed
or dUIIIIPd by . fire Monday
night, according to Information
from Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulaby. A vandal, or
vandala, set fire to the bales on
three different f,rms In the area.
The fires were set sometime
between approlilmately 1 and 3
a.m.
According to reports, tile lara·
est aiJ)Ount of hay - 90 bales
from the Gary Michael farm,
Pomeroy Pille, Racine - was
destroyed Qr damaged. Fifty of
the Michael bales were on
Pomeroy Pike and 40 bates were
on Wood Road.
About six bales on the Mike
· Elberfeld farm, also on Pomeroy
Pike, were also damaged or
destroy~.
'
The Chester and Pomeroy Fire

Deparbnents were called to both
the Michael's and Elberfeld's
farms. ·
·

Ohio

Power..

On the David Watson farm, ;;
Bentz Cemetery Road,- CoOlville, 1
.15 bales were destroyed by fire.
The Tuppers Plains Fire ~ ~
partment was called to tht:
Watson farm .
Value of the damaged hay
bales totaled approximatelY,
$2.200 according to a sheriff s•
departmentapokesman.
.,;
1bere· are no suspects In tiM!
matter. .
. ,•1
.
'
The sheriff's department also•
reports the theft of a trencher
with trailer. from the Chuck'"'
Bar1els residence on Frank"
Road, Pomeroy. The theft oc-"~
curred sometime between 9 p .m.,
Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday.
According to a report of tbe
Incident, a vehicle wllli a trailer~)
hitch ·apparently backed Into tlJe:··
Bartels yard, cut a cable whlc
held the trailel"to a tree, and lett:;.
with the trailer and the trencher.':;.
Value of the trencher and.'l!
trailer Is $3,000.
·~
There ·are no suspects at thiS.,
time In the theft.
· fJ

.

'

Continued from page 1

Hospital news
Veteru1 Memorial
Monday admissions- Dorothy
Roush, Middleport; Edward
Capehart, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges -Clifford
Connolly, Robert McDaniel, Paul
Saunders, Brenda .Handley; SU·
ale Windon.

'

The 1989 Junior
and Senior
Fair Schedule
.
.
. .

Vol.40, No. 71 M

Copyrighted t989

Pull held Tuesday In the Show Arena. The
competition will .b e held every day thla weeli at 4
p.m.

5:00 P .M.-Talent Show-Hill Stage
"7:,00 P.M .......Demolltlon Derby
8:00 P.M.-Junior Fair S.wlne Showmanship and Judling
• 9:00 P.M.-Midnlabt Cloaers-Hill Stage
.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16 ,
~:15 . A.M.-Junlor Fatr.~ Showmanship ancLJudling

:.
·
Follow~!~~ by pPen Class J udling
12:00 Noon-4-H Flawer Sjlow Judling (Jr. Falr.Bldg.) ·
.1:00 P .M.:-Beef Cook·Off'-Hill Stage
,2:00 P;M.-Horse Harness Racine
2:00 PM.-4-H Style Sl)pW:-HIIl Stage
. ·
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Rlnl
4:30P.M.-LIItle Miss lr Mister Contest-Hill Stage.
"5:30 P.M.,ll.Junlor Fair Parade
.6:30 P.M.-Wyoming Wolf Band-Hill Stage
· 7:00 P.M.-Youlh Awards Night-Show Ring
7:00 P.M ...,.Ailltque Tractor Pun-Tractor Pull Area
"8l30 P.M.-Charlie McClain &amp; Wayne Massey-Grandstand
8:30 P.M.-Kidde Games-Show Ring
"Grandstand Attraction

complain on the
child · revealed that

Scout
results
revealed
One-hundred·twenty·ntne Boy
Scouts participated this year In
the Meigs County Junior Fair.
entering a total of 319 projects in
1S•dlfferent categories, Including
PUMP YOU UP .._ Television stars Hans and
Meigs County youths who told the crowd that lhey ' Indians, Frontier, Models, Art,
Franz made an appearance at the Meigs County
wanted to "pump you up." The duo then displayed
Collection or Hobby. Ropes,
Fair on
during the talent show.
their balling musclfl!! for lhe crowd.
Outdoor Nature, Cooking,
However, Ihe
stars were
two
Games, Wildlife, First Aid or
Safety, Electricity or Battery
Operated Craft, Science, Country, Woodcraft, Welding, Photo·
graphy and Day Camp Projects.
Judging of Boy Scout projects
took place on Aug. 10.
Two persons were Injured In an
Al.J projects were judged on
accident at 2: 25 p.m. Tuesday 111
their
own merit to receive A, B
Letart Township, on the Apple
and
C
ribbons:
Grove-Dorcas 'Road, 3.4 miles
The
awarding of Grand and
spouth of SR. 124, according to
Champion ribbons for
Reserve
theGallla·Melgs PostoftheState
the
various
projects was based
Highway Patrol.
upon Ideas, usefulness and
Troopers said cars driven! by
workmanship.
Jon VanMeter. 17, Syracuse, and
Receiving Grand ChampiOn
Elmer B. Parsons, Jr., 34,
ribbons
!rom each of the ranks
Racine, collided on a curve.
exhibiting
were Matt Milhoan,
Damage was heavy to VanMe·
·Tiger;
Josh
Jftll, Wolf; Michael ·
ter's car and moderate tQ the
Leifheit,
Bear;
Jamie Broderick,
Parsons' vehicle.
'
Jared
~tewart, Tender·
Webelo;
· Parsons suffered mlnorvlstble
foot;
Matt
Craddock,
Second
injuries, according to the patwl,
Class;
Nathan
,
Baloy,
Star;
and
and was taken to Veterah's
Bobby
Johnson,
Life.•
Memorial Hospital. A passenger
Reserve Champion ribbons
in the Parsons· car, Marvin
went
to Christopher Gilkey,
PLACE - Flve-yeu'old Mindy O'Dell was the winner of
Teaford, 21, Racine, was Injured
Tiger;
Andy Kitchen, Wolf;
the Talent Show competition· held at lhe Meigs County Fair on
and was treated at the scene.
Brandon
Smith, Bear; Adam
Tue~~day aHernoo~. O'Dell's hallel perfonnance heal oulslx other
The patrol cited Parsons for Smith, Webelo, Chris Chapman,
older conlestanls and won $15.
failure to yield one-half of the
Tenderfoot; Matt Craddock, Seroadway.
cond Class; Nathan Baloy, Star;
No one was Injured In an and Bobby Johnson, Life.
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE
accident at 10 p.m. Tuesday on
The following boys received A.
SR.
7, the patrol reported.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1&amp;, 1989
B and C ribbons.
Officers said Brian E. Dur·
-6:30 P .M.-Wyoming Wolf Band-Hill Stage ·
From Pack 249, Pomeroy, Carl
ham.
18, Pomeroy, attempted to Carmichael, B; David Anderson,
7:00 P.M.-Youth Awards Night- Show Ring
pass another vehicle driven by A; Wade Pooler, B; Adam Smith,
7:00 P .M.-Antique Tractor Pull-Tractor Pull Area
Ricky
L. McKnight, 31, Pome· A. B; Shawn King, two A's; Steve
~8:30 P.M.-Charlie McClain &amp; Wayne Massey
roy,
then
cut back Into his Jane of
· 8:~ P.M.-Kiddle.Games- Show Ring
travel, striking· the McKnight Hoover, A; Josh Hooten, C; J .R.
Blackwell, two B's; Wesley
car. Damage was moderate to
THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1989
Thoene, two B's; Joseph McCall,
McKnight's 1986 Olds De! Ia 88 two A's; Matthew Ault, B;
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
and minor to Durham's 1977Ford
'
_ J.
.
(Free Gate For Senior Citizens)
Steven McCullough, B; Adam
Granada.
1: uu P.M .- Pet Show - Show Ring .
Thomas, B; Keith Ash, two A"
The patrol cited Durham was B; Clay Crow, B; Charles Tyre ,
2:00 P.~.-Horse Harness Racing
cited
for changing lanes without B; Jared Woods, two A's; Juad
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull
caubon.
5:30 P.M.-Group Therapy Band -Hill Stage
·
Roush, three A's, B; Michael
Thepatrolalsotnvestlgatedas · Stacey, A; Ryan Pratt, two A's,
6:00 P .M.-Open Class Sheep Judging
car-deer accident at 6 a.m . . Ryan Well, A, two B's; Daniel
Followed by Junior Fair Sheep Judging
Tuesday In Olive Township on Custer, two A's; CurtlsHansdne,
7:00 P.M.-CircleD Wranglers- Hlll Stage ·
SR. 681, 0.1 west of milepost 23. A; Jason Roush, two B's; Scott
7:00 P.M.-4-H Horse Fun Show
Officers said a 1986 Ford Pinto Sellers, A; Matthew Smith, two
8:00 P.M.-Ho~se Pull-:-, center Field
driven by Cheryl D. Young, 30, A'sj John Davidson, A; Matthew
•8:30 P .M.-McGuffey Lane
.
Reedsville, struck a deer but the. Justice, two A's.
•-Grandstand attrl!ct!on
Continued on page 14
continued on page 7 ·

Two hurt
in mishap

·CHARGE ON
• NO SERVICE
'
PASSBOOK .SAVINGS
. ACCOUNTS
.

Your Good .Neighbor Bank

PEOPLES BANK
Point P*liant
675~·1121

MotOn
773·5514

while both doors were shut,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
neither was IQcked, that the
Dally SenUnel Staff
The in-school suspension prob- student was observed at least
lem of the Harrisonville Elemen- every half·hour, that she did
tary School where a practice has have restroom privileges .and
been to dtsctpUne children by that she was there lor less than
assignl!tg them to work In an 8 lt four hours.
Bob . Smlddle, parent . of a
14 foot closet was discussed at
length at Tuesday night's meet- second grader at the schOol, was
Ing of .the board of education of spOkesman for the delegation. He
reported that there had been a
the Meigs Local School District.
A delegation of parents from community meeting held last
the Harrisonville school met with Friday and that the committee
board members to question what would like to see In-school
the practice wtll be when school · suspension held In a room with
outside windows, suggesting
starts this fall .
It was pointed out by the either the library or the music
parents as well as Superintend· and art room, a discussion ·.with
ent James Carpenter last night parents of the child Involved
that using the closet for In-school about the discipline, a responsl·
suspension has been the practice ble adult with the child at all
times , lnteratton betwen the
of the principal and teachers at
child. arid the adult with some·
the school for many years.
·· It only came to the board's . learning going on, and access to
attention earner . this summer water and liatliroom facilities.
· It was further noted during the
when the parents and grandpar·
ents o( a siudent assigned to the meeting by Doris Trader, also a
parent, that Channel 6, Colum·
room made a formal complaint
bus,
had been to the Friday night
In open session before the Board
meeting
to hear the story of how
of Education. The parents
dlsclpUne
has been handled at
charged that their daughter had
the
school.
She also said that
been placed in the room, that
petitions
containing
144 signa·
both doors were shut, that only a
tures of parents and grandpartransom was open, that she was
ents had been sent to the State
served lunch In the room, that
. sh~ was only occasionally supervised, and that she was told when
could · to the re~~room. .

~~~;}~.i~f~~~~~;~~:~~~~~~
0~responded
r~
following

~

'

211 Centl

A Multlmediolnc. NeWIPIP"'

Suspension issue tops
Meigs board ·agenda

_ TUESDAY,-AUGUST 15

'SEE YOU THERE!

1 Section, 14 PlgM ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 16, 1989

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•NO SERVICE CHARGE ON .
STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTS ·-

N•w Hav.n
. 882·2135

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WORKING HARD~· This youngsler was trying
his best to gel a full puU during the Kiddie Tractor

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Thursday's meeting or Racine
American Legion Post 602 bas
been canceled due to the Meigs
County Fair.

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and that a representative o{
WQOdlands cen1er had recona-~
mended tbe transfer to the;..
AtheR$. Mental Health Cen1er: ·"
The lnl:ldent remains under \
Investigation by Pomeroy PQI~ ·

• STAFFORD, SLS, AND PLUS
STUDENT. LOANS AVAILABLE
TO QUALIFIED ·'BORROWERS

Canceled

8647

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Variable cloudl-tonlcllt.
Low In mid .... Chance of raln
21 percent. Thursday, partly
cloudy. 10 gh near 80. ChaDCe
of rain 30 percent.

Pick-4

legislators and other loclll and'"
state leaders.
;
Last year, Ohio Power's eco- •
nomic development efforts aided ·
local groups In adding 2,568 jobs·
at 146 Industries throughout the .~
area served by the company.
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OUR SERVICE IS WORTH
CHEERING ABOUT!

Any junior high student who
plans to participate In sports this
school year may' have his physl·
cat at Meigs Junior High School
at 6 p.m. Tuesday (today) .
Athletes should wear shorts and
t -sh lrts. Examining physicians
wUI be Dr. Mark Brown, Dr.
Doug Hunter, and Dr. James
Witherell.

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Stocks

Physicals today

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unit of the Emergency Medical
Service to Veterans where he
was treat~ In the emergency
room.
.
It was reporled by the hospital
that the wound was superficial

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Ohio Lottery

Cubs rally,
defeat Reds
in 12th frame

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Continued trom page.1

with what we have In our service
area. That Is the reason for the
Industrial targeting study," he
added.
Cop!es of the targeting study
also are being sent to Ohio

Man...

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Department . of Education re-.
questing an Investigation Into the
situatiOn .
In response to the commentS
from the parents, Supt. Carpen,
ter said that as a result of the
loves ligation which the board
held In regard t~ the Kennedy
ch.lld Incident the board d~ld~
that "we were to have a dJscl,
pllne gul!le or procedure and that
they wan ted to check each
building's dtsctpUne procedure. •1
He reported that the principal$
had come back to work on Friday
and that as a result of twQ
meetings the principals ha4
come up with some things which
the board has not yet had time to
review. He said that the pro))Clse4
guidelines set up dlsctpUnary
options for grades K through ~
and then any other methods of
dlsctpUne much have parents
approval.
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He detailed the proposal, no~
yet adopted by the board, for the
parents as follows:
:
Detention, he said, would be I!
loss of recess, with repeated
detentions to result In notlflca;
tton of the parent of the problem:
In-school suspension would JJe
removal of the student from the
Continued on pa~~:e 7
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One man arrested in ·
Meigs marijuana raid

One man was arrested and
another 366 marijuana plants
were confiscated Tuesday as
local Jaw enforcement agencies
. continued their effort to catch
people growing the Illegal drug.
David B. Dillard of Racine was
arrested after the Meigs County
· Sheriff's Department observed
marijuana growing on his property. Dillard consente~ to have
!;lis property searched and he was
consequently charged with cultivation and possession of
marijuana.
· Chief Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby
said since the current drug
eradication effort started on
Saturday 2,084 plants have been
confiscated by the department.
Each plant Is worth about $1,500,
making the total value of the
plants $3.1 million.
Dillard was the second person
to be arrested during the effort
and charges are pending against
another two people.
Helicopters from the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal ldenttftca·
tlon and the Ohio National Guard
are assisting In the effort.

The Sheriff's Department also
Is Investigating the recent rash of

hay fires throughout the county.
On Tuesday, seven more fires
were reported In a ddltlon to
Monday's fires when 115 round .
bales of hay were burned:
Soulsby said the matter ts undei
Investigation and would not com~
ment further.
In other matters, Wes Arbaugli
reported to deputies that some::
one stole $8 In cash and $40 In
candy from the Eastern Athletic
Booth at the MeJgs County
Fairgrounds on Tuesday. A
wallet, pair of pants and a Ugh(
green duffle bag also were taken:
The sland's cash drawer waS:
found near the stand .
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MtchaeJ'Ingram of Reedsville
told deputles someone stole tools
from his garage on Success Road
on Saturday and Sundl!-Y . Ingram
said he had left his garage door
open.
Sheriff James Soulsby also
warned residents Wednesday
that If they go to the fair to lock
their vehicles. All valuables
should be putln the trunk or out of
sight, he said.

,..._Local news briefs-Mayor Seyler Jines five
Four people forfeited bonds and five people we re fin ed in th£&gt;
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler on Tuesday evening.
Forfeiting wer.e . Joseph Perry, .Shade, $63, traffic light
violation; David Nance, Syracuse, $63 driving under suspen·
slon; Marjorie Baker, Middleport, $63. open container in a
motor vehicle; and Clarenc!l Spencer, Jr .. Clinch burg, Ky ., $43,
.
Illegal left turn.
Fined were Cynthia Stanley, Mason, W.Va .. $213 and costs,
petty theft; Jerry Reltmire, Jr. , Pomeroy. $263, leaving th£&gt;
scene of an accident, $50 and costs, no financial responslbllty .
$63 and costs. driving under suspension, ~nd $375 and costs ,
O .U.I.
Also fined were EJecta Martin. Gallipolis . $63 and costs ,
Illegal left turn , $63 and costs, no operators license; Ruth
Snodgrass, Racine, $63, traffic light violation; and Scott Ray
Wygant, Sturgis, Mich., $375 and costs, D.U.I. , and $313 and
costs, concealed. weapon.

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Five fined by Mayor .Hoffman
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In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman on Tuesday
evening, five t tvlduals forfeited bonds while two Individuals
were fined.
Forfeiting nds were Carl E . Dunlap, Gallipolis, $460 D.W.I.
and $60, w g way on a one way street; Eric Priddy,
Middleport, 110, disorderly manner; Jerry L. Collins,
Jddleport,
, a pinning tires; CarolS. Toops, Middleport, $60,
nlng a
p sign: and Jeffrey P . Nelson, Middleport, .60.
fa re to eld.
Fl
re James A. Wilson, Gallipolis, $25 and costs, Illegal
exhaust; and Thomas J . Richardson, Pomeror. $25 nne.
excessive speed.

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Wednesday, August 18, 1989

W0111~n's· study says sports
in high schools _are oversold

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Commentary
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

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Pomeroy, Oblo

DEVOTED TO THE INTI!:BESTS OF TJlE MEIG8-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETt'
Publisher
PAT WIQli:EHEAD
Aasls&amp;aD&amp; .P ub.r/Coatroller

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport•. Ohio
Wednesday. August 16. 1989-i

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Popular Soviet leader stages comeback ·.

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gea'e ral Maaacer

LE'lTEII8 Oli' OPINION are weleome. They lbould be t..otliu 310
wordo tone. AU letters are subJed to edit.., ud mull be olped wllb
.....,., addreuud telepM!Ie number. No Dll!lipedlettero l"'m be pub1!-bed.l.ett"" ~be In cood tute, addreu.. alooueo, aotpenoaall-

uee.

Contra shutdown
inevitable for months.
By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The protests from Capitol Hill and the
White House about the Central American presidents' plan to disband
the Nicaraguan Contra guerrUlas are the post-death spasms of a
policy that failed long ago.
.
The Central American presidents, In calling lor the Contras to lay
down their arms and disband by early December, brushed away
protests tha.t they were acllrlg hastily.
The presidents seized the political leadership of a policy that deeply
affects them - waging war. By moving .to formally dissolve the
Contras, the Central American presidents are actually saving some
political face for President Bush.
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Without the Central American presidents Issuing the death notice,
Congress ultimately would have had to do it. Protests about moving
prematurely on the Contras are hollow.
A new, popular president and his supporters In Congress can say
that the Contras should be kept together In case the Marxist-led
Sandlnlsta government falls on Its pledge to Its neighbors to hold
democratic elections In February.
Bur the Idea that the estimated 12,000 Contras are an effective
military Ioree is a diplomatic fig leaf. Bush and his politically savvy
secretary of state, James Baker, know it.
Congress voted to effectively cashier the Contras In 1988 by refusing
President Reagan's request to appropriate more money for arms.
Bush and Baker can count votes. They are pragmatists. They have
no Illusions a bolt! the Contras being the "moral equlv!llent" of our
founding fathers, or that Congress will pay for more war.
Political reality was defined for Bush and Baker- as It should have
been for the Contra leadership- by that 1988 vote In the House.
Bush has not asked for ,more arms. Instead, Bi;lker brokered an
agreement to feed and care for the Contras pending those elections In
February.
Even a stolen election as in Panama- where the United States has
tangible security interests - would not lead to more arms for the
Contras.
Without Washington paying.for arms , the war had to end. All that
was left was to arrange the best political deaf for the Contras, the
United States, and Central America.
It can be argued that that was the Intention all along of the guerrilla
war that began In 1981.
But it was largely a made-In-Washington policy , founded on
Reagan's belief that a "red tide" would sweep out' of Nicaragua,
backed by the Soviets and Cubans, and engulf Central America and
destabilize Mexico, unless the United States used a proxy army to
blunt the Sandinistas.
The Contras never had a strong political base- In Nicaragua or
Washington. And they were viewed In Central America as the tool of
the CIA and a vestige of Yank~ imperialism.
Widespread support among the Nicaraguan people never arose.
Had such support existed - even under the harsh rule. of the
Soviet-armed and Cuban advised Nicaraguan junta- Congress may
well have responded with its own consistent support.
The Western allies, many leaders In Central America, and critics In
Washington Instead saw a poor country struggling under the
combined throttle-hold of Its often inept leaders, the Contrat: and a
U.S. economic embargo that left the Nicaraguan economy In ruins.
Central America as a whole is struggling to feed, clothe, and
educate Its people. Even In Honduras and El Salvador, among the
poorest of the poor and Washington's strongest supporters, patience
with the Contra poliCy has run out. They know It Is useless to walt It out
a little longer.

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MOSCOW ·- The Soviet un- Yeltsin a man of the peOple ln .
ton's second most popular Moscow - he easUy won 90
leader, Boris Yelts!n, Is a burly percent of the vote ln March
ex-pugilist whose remarkable against a party-supported candlcomeback qualifies him as the · date. He ranked second only to
Muhammad AU of Soviet politics. Gorbachev In popularity In a
He has been counted down and·· recent Soviet opinion poll.
out more than once. It he stays on
At the moment, the Soviets
his teet this time, It wUI be a clue love Yeltsln because he Is an
that Mikhail Gorbachev's peres- outsider - pushed out of power
troika .h as a future.
by Gorbachev In 1987 and put
we met Yeltsln, a people's ·back Into power this year by the
deputy In the newly created voters In the first contested
congress, tor a rare eJ~cluslve election In the Soviet Union In 70
Interview. The taU ,' white-haired, years.
Yeltsln peppers his speeches
58-year-old en gl neer has a stevedore's grip and eyes that swiftly· and commentary with assaults
. alternate between mischievous on the Politburo, reveling In·its ·
rejection of him. Every public
humor and ,dark anger.
He has charisma aplenty and denunciation of Yelts!n by the
surprising candor. At first, his party Is anotber I'eaf In his ·
answers came In staccato bursts gai'land.
· ·
'·
.
·
of ' 'd" and "nyet." But gradually
At the age of 11, little Boris
he opened up with explanations blew oft a iew fingers when he
and allusions to his personal life tried to take apart a· hand
that are unusual In a Sovlei grenade. That didn't stop him
leader.
from moving up through the
Those qualities have made
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Jack Anderson·:.,

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HEL.LO. M.Y ~E \S ~.

OVERARME~S .

ANONYMOU$

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.1 SOt.'P 0~~ NINE BIL\.\ON
OOLLAA~ WOttt'H Of A.'-MS
10 11\tJ.t) WORL~ (OUfml6 .
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YEAR ... AN I~C.lEA~r

OF b61. ! KNOW r.
CAN'l AAN~Lf EVEN ONf

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'ffitRV ViORL.l&gt; ~ltM$ ~L[
·' DN€ f-.v.M? ~l..f Al.W/t..YS
LE~V~ To AltQ'mER ...AN"P

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A~OTHE~ ....Af«1 ANOTt\E~ ••• .-

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Chang~s

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Sonics hire Celtics' Jones

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.s ought in insurance regulation·.: ~

The Director of the Ohio dent, or a single misdemeanor
Department of Insurance, Mr. · mo'&gt;(ing viola(ion. In addition, the
George Fabe, has proposed a Department Is seeking to require
number of changes in automobile a company that refuses to Issue a ·
Insurance policy regulation p.olicy to an appllc'\'nt for private
which are designed to Improve passenger auto Insurance to tel)
Insurance regulation and make that applicant why he was turned
coverage more affordable. This down. The notice should be In
comes as good news to all the writing and should cite the
motorists who have become specific provisions of the comfed-up with Inconsistent and pany's underwriting guidelines
on which the rejection was based.
exorbitant rates.
Another recommendation
In a letter to the Chairmen of
both the House and Senate would allow or require every,
Committees on Insurance, Direc- insurer offering private pastor Fabe outlined a number of senger auto insurance to offer a
proposals. Many of the proposals discount ori the comprehensive
were recommendations of the premium to an Insured person
Automobile Insurance Task owning an automobile outfitted
· Force, a group of Industry, rHh an anti-theft device. In
consumer, state, and city offi- addition, a "no-fault" Insurance
cials appointed by the Director to option should be provided · to
those persons Interested In purstudy auto Insurance Issues.
Among the proposals was a suing It according to the Direcrecommendation to prohibit In- tor's letter .
Director Fabe has also recomsurers from cancelling or nonrenewing physical damage cov- mended that legislation be
erage for a single c.omprehenslve enacted to require all companies
loss,' a single not-at-fault ace!- to charge the same rates to ,

Sen. 1an M. Long_ :

persons living within the same
county. Currently, some counties ranee Committee. The Insurance "'
are divided. ·Into zones where Consumers' Counsel would be,, ,
different rates are charg~ .tor empowered to Investigate and ;.
the same Insurance.
,
challenge rate lnc~eases, ,monl- 1 ; 1
One of the more popular to~ abusive practice$, act on.,,
proposals offered by Director policyholder complaints, and edFabe calls for the creation of the ucate consumers about , ·,
Office of Insurance Ombudsman Insurance.
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within the Department of InsuDirector Fa be's proposal to •'l
rance. As envisioned by Director create an Office of Insurance ...-.
Fa be~ the Office would serve as Ombudsman Is similar to the ,:,
an. additional, Independent advo- legislative proposal . described ; .:
cate for consumer ·IntereSts In · above except that lt would not ' !
rate filings and resolving claims create a new administration. o./
disputes flied by policyholders.
However, the Dlrecter has lndl- t&lt;.J
Currently, legislation. Is pend- cated that language should be , ;
Ing to create the Office of Included to protect tbe Ombuds-·
Insurance Consumers' Counsel man from obstruction from lh!'&gt; •l
to advocate on behalf of Ohio's Department, thl;! General Assem- •n
Insurance consumers. This con- bly, or other parties.
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cept Is patterned after the highly
The General Assembly Is cur-· ·
successful Ohio &lt;Consumers' rently In recess, .but the Chair-. ·,
Couns~l. which represents the
man of the House Insurance ~ ,
public In the area of regulated Committee has' Indicated t!1at he ..
utitllties. Senate Bill 222, of will be scheduling hearings :~
which I am a co-sponsor, Is throughout the summer ·to de- 'l
currently pepdlng In the Senate velop a · comprehensive ·auto,,.i
Financial Institutions and Insu- Insurance reform package.
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· CHICAGO (NEAl- For three In states throughout the count,ry. more impressive state execu~ ,
communities In Illinois- Mount Illinois, for example, has spent lives) was host to the National· .
Vernon, TaylorvUle and Robin- almost $335 million In the last Governors Association annual
son·- the really exciting news In decade to bulld a dozen new meeting In Chicago.
late July was the disclosure that facUlties - Including one that
Assessing the governors' per- ,
they had been selected as sites · opened In Mount Sterling In the !ormance can be a maddening ·
for new state prisons.
spring and another that will open task. On one hand, they are
respilnslble for . some truly lm·
"Needless to say, the economic In Canton In the autumn.
Impact will be terrific," exNor does anyone want to talk aglnatlve and beneficial soluclaimed the overlayed mayor of about the fact that Illinois, like lions to contemporary problems.
Robinson. "That's a payroll of all other states, only recently On the other hand, the sorry state
about $10 mllllon,'.' announced started allocating more resour- of the criminal justice system ·
the ecstatic board chairman of ces to rescuing troubled youngs- typifies their most disappointing
the First Trust and Sav!ngs·Bank ters whose delinquency, truancy !allures.
of Taylorville.
or other misbehavior often Is the
Economic development has
When Gov. James R. Thomp- first sign that they may be become an Increasingly lrnporson visited Taylorvllle to make destined for a life of anti-social tant task for the governors. Many
the formal announcement, he activity.
des'e rve credit for encouraging
was greeted by a marching band,
The state does even less when the growth of small businesses
a cheering crowd and signs on they begin u~ing drugs, when Inside their states and for conretail outlets saying "Thanks, they flrJt turn to crime and when vinclng larger corporations aeek·
Big Jim."
they are well on their way to lng expansion sites to locate
aut nobody In TaylorvUle, In becoming Irretrievably lost.
where constituents can gain
the slljte capital of Springfield or
But when they finally become access to new jobs, ,
anywhere else In Illlndis wants to such a menace to others that they
In the process, bowever, the
discuss the Implications of hav- must be Ioc ked up for IntermIn a- governors have engaged Jn a
log the construction and opera- ble periods, then the state Ia gla!l frenzied effort of dubious value to
lion of penal Institutions consl- .to·help by dispensing $20,1100 per sell their economic futures to
dered a malar form of economic prisoner per year to Incarcerate Japan. "There are now mote
development by the towns· In them.
states that have offices In Tokyo
which they are to be buUt.
Only few days after the new .lhll!lln Washington, D.C.,"Iowa
Indeed, prison construction prison sites were annouiiCed, Gov. Terey Brans tall, the NGA 's
has become a booming Industry Thompson (one of the country's new chalrlnan, annouaced with-

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offering any Indication that •·
he had considered the dange.;s
Inherent In that situation.
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Most of the gover 11ors are, 1 ,
constantly seeklngcreatlveways .,"
to market their state's resources,. , ,
but a major NGA report Issued..
durlngtheChlcagomeet!ngcltes ,d1
an example that borders on. the ;,,
bizarre: "Chicken feet _ a .r;
discarded Item In America_ are
a gr!l!llt delicacy In some other ,]-.
coun t r1es."
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For years. the governors were , ;
oblivious to the fact that their 1
educational systems had deterlo- : ·~
rated so badly that they contrlbule!l to this country's la.ck of i"
com!Jetltiveness In • the global ,; ;
marketplace. When they'became ,; :
aware of the problem; however, ,~,
most state executives mov~ "'
with energy and determination IQ·, 1 ~
correc1 1t.
,
Dealing with the governors Ia ~ :
not unlike coping with the littl,, &gt;"
girl of nursery rhyme fame who" .•
had a curl In the middle of ber
forehead. "When she was good, f
she was very, very goecl _and 1, ,J
when sbe was bad, she was
horrid."
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United States, . British golf
amateurs clash in Walker Cup ·

Floyd selects Watson, Wadkins -for
American Ryder Cup ·l2-man team

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advantaged."
In a "disheartening" finding, .
the study · says varsity sports
actually hurt · urban blaCk females In the work,place. Only 5
p!1rcent of such women held
"high-status" jobs compared
with ~9 percent of the
nonathletes.
The study found "no evidence''
sports was a detriment to good
grades. The report claimed ml·
norlty athle\es achieved higher
test scores than nonathletes.
They also were said to recE,&gt;Ive
higher grades though the report
did· speclty what courses the
students 'look.
The study warned athletes
about the "false promises" of
professional SP'Irts, It also urged
teacl\ers and parents to expect as
much from students In the
Varlan, Michelle Vounr;, and Kathy Plants.
NATIONAL LEAGUE ALL-STARS classroom as on the field and that
Second row - Coacb Mel\'ln Johnson, Sheila
Members of the National Leape All-Stars of the
"pass to play" standards be put
Hendrlcks,Cath)' Lambert, Shelly Winebrenner,
Meigs-Mason girls softballleape are, first row,
In place.
·
Tracy
Hy&amp;ell, Kim Hanlnr;, and Tara Humphreys.
left to right - Katy Zuspan, Tera Gardner, Jan
"Spread tile word the 'dumb
Williams, Reva Mullen, Cathy Jo Hlgr:lns, Lorrie
jack' Image Is false," the report
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said. "The message should be
athletes perform as well or better
than nonathletes."
The report was funded by
Miller Lite and Its research
conducted by Don Sabo of D'Youvllle College and Merrill Melnick
and Beth Vanfossen, both of the
State University of New York at
team: Greg Lesher . . Lebanon, member of the 1977 team, Is the
ATLANTA !UPII - The first
Brockport.
Pa.; U.S. Amateur · runnerup u.s, captain and Geoff Marks,
Among those on the advisory of this year's two international
Yates, Atlanta; PGA who competed In lg69 and 1971. Is.
Danny
P&amp;~ei attending Tuesday's news golfing battles Involving, the
rules
official
David Egar. Ponte Great Britain's captain.
conference was Anita DeFrantz, United States - the amateur
"These are two fine teams ,
Vedra.
Fla.;
Robert
Gomez, Las
an International Olympic Com- Walker Cup Matches- begins its
representing
the best . (amaVegas. Nev.; public links cilammittee . representative and. a two-day run Wednesday In Its
teurs)
of
their
countries and
plori Ralph . Howe III, West
former Olympic rower; and ' first visit to the Deep South In Its
we're
delighted
to
have them,"
Sayville, N.Y.; Kevin Johnson,
Rlchai-d Lapchlck, director of 67-year history.
said
·
Jimmy
Gabrielsen,
a
PembrOke, M_ass.: Doug Martin.
Before professionals became
The Center for Study of Sport in
Peachtree
member
of
the
host
Van Buren, Ohio; and former
· the'domlnantforcelngolfcompeSociety.
national junior champion Phil Club who played In the 1971
tltlon,
the
Walker
Cup
Matches,
The Women's Sports-FoundaWalker Cup Matches and capMickelson, San Diego.
tion was established In 1974and Is which began in 1922, were one of
. The British team, which ln- tained the United States team In
a non-profit organization advo- the world's top golfing evf!nts. . eludes golfers from Ireland, Is, 1981. "From my own personal
cating equal opportunity• for The Walker Cup Is now overshadowed by the Ryder Cup, which ·led by PE,&gt;~er ;.tcEvoy, who has elfperlence I can say It's an
women In sports.
played on four Walker Cup experience they'll never forget. "
matches pros oft he United States
Although there are 10 golfers
teams;
and Garth McGimpsey,
against Europe, and runs Sept.
on
each tearn , only eight play at a
·the only other golfer on either
22-2.4 In Sutton-Coldfle id,
The format calls lor
time.
team with previous Walker Cup
England.
foursome
matches Wednesday
experience. Both are former
The United States. which will
and
Thursday
morning and eight
be gunning for its ninth consecu-. . British Amateur champions who
singles
matches.
each afternoon.
have played in the ~asters.
live victory this week. holds a
A
match
win
Is
worth
one point, a
The other foreigners are 2028-3 edge In the amateur Walker
year-old Craig Cassells, 23-year- tie a half point.
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series, winning last in 1987 by a
The Walker Cup was donate&lt;!
"Tom Watson Is playing very appearance for Watson since 16.5,7.5 ·margin at. Berkshire,
CASTLE PINES, Colo' ( UPil
old Russell Claydon who was low
well and I think I would always · 1983. He did not play on'either of England.
- American Ryder Cup captal n
amateur in the Brttlsh Open, ~ President George Bush's
. .,
have considered him .even If he the ·last two teams - both of
Raymond Floyd, feeling he
23-year-old Stephen Dodd, 22- grandfather. George Herbert
This year's U.S. team Is led by
had not been.'' Floyd said. "He . which were beaten by their ,45-year,,old Jay Sigel of,Berwyn.
needed more veteran players ln.
year-old Andrew Hare, 25-year- Walker, who was president of tbe
has won five British Open and he European counterparts. It Is the Pa .. who Is making his seventh
his' bid to end tbe United States'
old ~ames Mllllgali, 21-year-old U.S. Golf Association.
was terrific over there this year first twO' match losing streak (or Walker Cup appearance, and
two-match losing streak, TuesEoghan O'Connell. 20-year-old
(coming close to a ·rE'COrd tying the United States In the 62-year 24-year-old U.S. Amateur champ
day chose Toll'\ w,tson · and
Darran Prosser, and 22-year-okl
The Daily Sentinel
s'ixth win I. Tom Watson Is a very history of the biannual event.
Lanny Wadkins to fill out the
Nell Roderick.
Jj;rlc Meek~ of Walnut, Calif. ·.
Wadkins' top Ryder Cup moformidable opponent,!!. think&gt; he
12-man team that will meet the
Fred Ridley of · Tampa, a
OtMr members of the U.S. ,
(USPS 145-. .)
can bring some Intimidation to ment CBIT\e sill years ago when, ·
European ·squad In England next
'
1\
Dlvlolott
ofMIIItlmedla, Inc.
with the United States needing
the table."
month.
him to at least tie Bernard
Watson and Wadkins ·have
Published every arternoon, Monday
tllrough Friday, IIJ Court St .. Po·
Floyd said he thought Wad- · Gallacher In order to keep the
combined to play on eight Ryder
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubklns' recent play couid'be traced cup, he almost holed his third
Cup teams and In 33 matches.
llshlntt: Company / Multimedia. lnr.•
to pressure Involving the·Ryder shot at the par-5 18th hole at the
Pomeroy. Oblo 4576\1, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
They •bring much-needed expereasons.
SEATTLE !UPII KC.
cond •class postage paid at Pome-oy,
Cup.
PGA
National
Golf
Club.
The
rience to a teaiT\ that will J!ave
"I ani . coming to Seattle
Jones. who won eight champi~Jn­
Ohio. ,
"Lanny hasn't p~yed very re~ultlng birdie allowed Wadkins shlp rings as a player with Boston
five lirsl-time participants.
be&lt;:ause it is a quality organiZaMember: United Press International .
well of late," Floyd said. ·'Lanny to halve ·the match with Gall- and two more as theCeltics ' head
•'Obviously, ..1 had a Jot of
tion and it is committed to
Inland
Daily Press Associ at ion and the
names to choose from," Floyd. was a player I actually expected acher and the United States won coach. was- named Tuesday an
winning,'' Jones said. "Bernie
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
to be on the team (by quallflca· that Y.ear by a single .point.
' assistant . coach and . consultant
Advertising Representatlve, Branham
said. ·'There were .a lot of names
and I go back a long way and this
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
lion through the points system). I
· This year's event wUI he held with the Seat.tle SuperSonics.
that came to my mind. But I think
is a unique opportunity to renew
New York, New York 10017.
had a long conversation with him Sept. 22-24 at The Belfry In Sutton
for the task at hand. which Is to
our working and personal rela"We looked at all the people
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
wl n the Ryder Cup. these players alter I told him he was 'one of the Coldfleld, England. Thf Ul)lted who have contributed to their
tionship. It will be fun to get back
to Tile Dally Sentinel, IIJ Court St.,
picks,
.
States
leads
·the
oVerall
competlwere the fellows I want~d to have
on the bene h."
·
organlzatlol)s and found no one
Pom&lt;roy. Ohio 45769.
. "I think he got .Into · the . lion with 21 wins, 5 losses and 1 with as much knowledge, ex peJones said It was "totally my
on the team."
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
tournaments
lately and changed
This Is the first year the
idea to step down .. from his post
rience, dedication and loyalty as
Br CArrier or Motor Route
·~·
.
the
priorities
In
his
golf
g'\me.
Watson
has
participated
In
·
American captain has been alwith the Celtics, denying any
K.C. Jones." Seattle Coach Ber·
One Week .. ,,,,,.,,., .. , ,, ,,,,,, ...$1.40
One Month ............ .. .......... ......... $6.10
suggestions that he was forced
lowed to make a "wild card." Those priorities coneerned mak- three Ryder Cups with a . 9-3 nie Bickerstaff said. '.'We are
C&gt;ne
Year ... .. ........ .................... m.IKI
Ing the Ryder Cup team (by match record. Wadkins has been fortunate and ecstatic that he has out of the job.
pick for his team. · The rules
·
SINGLE COPY
governing this year's selection ·earning enough, polntsl,. He put . In five Ryder Cups with a 13-7·1 consented to join thP 'Sanies
He said It "felt good" to leave
PRICE
too much pressure on; himself.
record.
,
required that lOspotson the team
coaching lor a year and work In
Dally ,,,,,,,.,,,,.,,, .. .. ,,, 25 Cents
family. I look forward to renew"He agreed with me and I just
"I considered another , half Ing our relationship."
be deelded by' a points system.
the front office.
·
Subscribers not deslrlngtopay the carThe ·uth spot was to go to the feel he didn't perform as well as1 dozen people," Floyd said.
"But
all
along,
therP
was this
rier may remit In advance direct to
Bickerstaff worked as an asThe Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
he knows how here at the end. But ''There was Jack Nicklaus, Lee . slstant to Jones when he coached
PGA champion and the final
coaching part of me that yearned
basts. Credit wUI be gtven.carrla; each
player ·was ,to be selected by ther.~ Is not a ~~ ter match-play Trevino, Andy Bean, Craig the Washington, Bullets In the
to get back into It," he said.
week . .
player In the world. In a head-to- Stadler, Larry Nelson and Ben mld-1970s.
.Whitsitt said Jones "has been a
Floyd: . · .
..
No ~ubscrtpUoru; by mall permitted In
head
competltlop, I can't think of Crenshaw. Ben was another I
But since the PGA champion·Jones, 57, played · with the winner everywhere he has gone
areas where home carrier service is
,
expected to 'be on the team."
available.
Payne Stewart - was already a tougher guy."
Cel tics from 1958 to 1967. winning -as a player at the University of
The rest of the American team
European captain Tony Jack· eight . championship rings in · San Francisco, as a player with
one·of the top 10 qualifiers, Floyd
Mall Subocrtpllons
Includes Mark Calcavecchla, lin. when notified of Floyd 's those nine year. He later coached
the Celtics, as head coach with
was given two selections.
Inside Melp County
13 Weeks , ,., .,., ,,,,,,,, , ,,.,, $19.24
the Bullets, and as head coach
The choice of Watson had been Paul Azlnger. Tom Kite, Curtis decision. said they were what he the team for five years. winning
~Weeks ............... .. ... .... ..... .. ... $37.96
a foregone conclusion, despite a Strange, Chip Beck, Fred Cou- expected.
with the Celtics.
NBA championships In 1983-84
52 Weeks ,., ,., ,.,,,,, , ,,.,,., ,, $74.36
"I'm not. surprised by their and 1985-86.
O.hklr Mrlp County
"He's vastly experienced and,
reocctirance of putting problems ples, Mark O'Meara, Mark
13 Weeks ,.,,.,,,., .. , .... ,.,,, ... $:!1.80
perhaps
more
Importantly
,
he's
at last week's PGA. The selection McCumber and Ken Green. Azln· selections," Jacklin said. "They
}Je last coached Boston during
26 Weeks ........ ............. .. ......... . $10.30
the kind of person we wan I to be
of Wadkins, however, was some- ger, ·Beck, 'couples, McCumber are both very good players and the 1987-88 season, and last year
52 Weeks ,.,,.,,.,,., ,, ,, ,,.,,, ,, $75.40
thing of a surprise since Wadkins and Green will be first-time experienced In British condi- was vice president of basketball Involved with our organization."
. . tions. But these two names don't' operations lor the Celtics.
has struggled '\vith ' hls game In Ryder Cup team members.
It
will
be
the
first
Ryder
Cup
Intimidate our team. ''
recent' months.
Jones coached Washington for
lhree
years,' leading the Bullets
__ Sport8 briefs ___
Into the NBA title series In 1975.
MODEL HOME
He made Bickerstaff his assistLOCATED IN
Horse Racing
ant when he took over the old
A group of Houston Investors Capital Bullets before the 1973-74
MIIIDLEPORT, OH 0
unveiled plans to b!!ilcl a $56 season.
ON
· million track that Is expected to

.

rna:,;.

Even good governors can be hot·rid

•

By FRED LIEF
In urban schools" were not
UPI AUia&amp;alit Sports Editor
affected.
' NEW YORK ':.... . High school
- Minority athletes are more
sports have been "oversold as a likely than nonathletes to Tel!~
vehicle of upward mobility" for themselves as popular and Inminority students and largely valve themselves In comm~nlty
' servf to reinforce "white prlvl- activities-.
lege,'' a study by the Women's
- Girls, In particular HlspanSports Foundatlon reported . lcs, receive as many benefits
· Tuesday,
from sports as boys.
·
The study also debunks the
- High school athletes are
notion of the "dumb jock,'' moreaptthannonathletestostay
claiming minority athletes actu- Involved with sports as they grow
ally do better In sc1\ool than older:~ ,
·
in inorlty students who are not
The n&gt;port, based on lnft;~rma­
athletes, However, ' the study tion from the u .s. Department of
cautioned, reasons for that have Education, surveyed high school
more to do with · a student's sophomores ln .l980 and charted
!amUy background than with their progress at 2-year Intervals
varsity sports,
unU11986.
The 37-p!lge . study, ''The
The study designated athletes
Women's Sports Foundation Re- as those who played on varsity
port: Minorities In Sports," was teams In their sophomore (1980)
aripounci!d at a news conference and senior (1982, years. Blac~.
and made In con1unction wltli Hispanics arid women were the
The Center for the Study of Sport only IT\Indrltles examined.
In Society at Northeastern
"... the data show lbat high
University.
school sports have been oversold
It examines more'than 13,000 as a vehicle for upward mobil·
high school students over six lty," the report said In Its
years and purports tobethemost summary. "We unearthed only
comprehensives tudy done on the meager evidence th.a t sports help
effects of l\lgh school sports on minority youth to climb the
American minorities and IadderofsuccesslncoUegeorthe
womel).
work force durtng the four years
The study comes with the foUowing .high school."
opening of the school year weeks
The report asserts the percepaway and with many high school lion of sports as a training ground
football,'.teams already gE,&gt;arlng for life ""as Illusory for mlnm'l·
for practice. It also comes at a ties. The expectation· that sports
time of widespread concern over translate Into a good job was
deteriOrating educational stand- deemed "highly unrealistic" by
ards, rep'lrts of Illiterate college · researchers.
i
athletes and arguments over tile
'' ... It was .mainly whites, not
wisdom of big-time sports .hi Hispanics or Afro-Americans,
schools.
,,
for whom athletic participation
In other findings, the report proved to be related to \Jpward
says:
mobility after high school. With
- High school sporll! slgnlfl· ~exceptions, high · school
cantlY lowers thedroputratefor sport served "as a reinforcer Qf
some minorities In suburban and white privilege. giving advanrural schools, but' droPoUt rates · tag~ to those .-who w_ere already

ranks as a manual laborer In .
factories. Then he educated
~·
himself as an . engln~r and against the conservative party : ·
became a factory boss. From
there It was a natural step to local ldealogues, but Yeltsln's rhetoric ·:
party chief and . then Politburo Qlevltably offended even Gorba- ~·;
member.
chev .' In a speech In 1987, Yeltsln
In 1981 at the 26th Party meant to praise his mentor, but. Congr~ss, Yelts!n was as fawn- hjs tonguegotawayfromhlm. He :·1
log as the next comrade about Implied that Gorbachev himself:
then-Premier Leonid Brezhnev. :was moving too slowly, As soon ;;
He would later admit that he as the words were out, Yeltsln l,
"lacked the courage and political knew he had gone too far, and
experience' • tq do otherwise.
offered Ills resignation on the ·, :
Gorbachev promoted him to · spot. Gorbachev waited a decent ,
Moscow party chief In 1985 and Interval and accepted.
The bureaucracy hoped he
told him to clean house, but would go away, but lie didn't ,
Yeltsln got carried away. He
It
illd 11 1 .
00 e •.
threw out lazy functionaries and because Muscov es co
mingled among the people, ,i•• goofYeltsln. Theyelectedhimt9 '!
standing In lines for food, rlc;llng u the congress . an!~, for the
the buses, . arguing with shop ment, he ' speaks with earned ·
clerks, all to see how the Moscow
bravado. He also knows that at ;1
system worked,. Of course, It
any moment the gates could
didn't work well, and )'eltsln
shut on glasnost and the Boris ·
complained all the louder.
Yelts!ns of the Soviet Union .,
Gorbachev used Yelts!n as a
would find themselves talking to':
stalking horse, pitting 111m
the walls In a gulag.

I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

I

.

Officials negotiating for
Raiders to come .home

•'

'

1991. Los Angeles and three other
cities are wooing the team. ' ,
Oakliln,d Mayor Lionel Wilson
said It was difficult to assess tbe
chances that' the NFi. ·team
woulil return. .
.
, , .
"It would appear to me we are
very close," Wll~on said. "On the
other hand, when I. read ~era~,
menta Is .upping the ante by-an .
extra $20 mUUon, you wol!der ··
what Is goinli on."
Sacramento, . Irwindale, Los
Angeles aild Oaklanil have made
offers to the team since Raider's'
boss AI Davis annouiiCed he was
. unhaPPY with his team·~ ~
'tlon' In Los· Angeles · al)6 Its "
treatment by Los Angeles Coliseum officials.
East Bay offiCiala have ..ld
publiCly they ciJinot matcll' ·the.
financial Incentive packages beIna. offered by other ciUet. ~
are buklng Instead on the bond
and 11toven ran base that remains
I 11'0111 wJill tile RaiderS deaplte
The Raiders contract with \he thE,&gt;Ir ell!!'' seasons away from
Lo1 Anceles Collaellm explrel'ln • the area.
f,
•
'

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI)
Officials of Oakland, Alameda
County and the Oakland Coli·
seum ended tlielr latest round of
negotiations with the Los An·
geles Raiders NFL football team
Tuesday and submitted a final
offer to lure the team back to
their former East Bay home. · ··
Oakland and Alameda County
officials said they made a few
technical, but no ' substantive
changes In an earlier offer. which
Included a franchise fee worth ·
a bout $32 million.
They have Insisted that the
plan would Involve no new taxes~
bu! would be financed tbrougll
tiNt sale of. municipal bonds,
repl!ld with profit• from the sale
of hixury boxes to be Installed at
Alttleda County Coliseum.
I
lliey refused to disclose
I
ruiliher
details ')'uesdq and
I,
Raiders officials made no
cpmment.

boost the l~al economy by $150
million a year. The track pro,posed by the Houston Turf Club, .
one of two groups seeking a
license, would be built on a
·300-acre tract 18 miles north of
Houston.

Jones replaces Bob Kloppenburg, who will leave the bench to
become a full-time NBA scout for
the team. Team President Bob
Whitsitt said Kloppenburg had
requested the move for · health

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Pat

10ey, Oltllt

,•

�Pea•

4 The Daily

s. tlitel

Wednesday, August 16, 1989

Pomeeoy-Middleport, Ohio

Shoving match · between West, Oester, Rose ignites melee. ~1
CINCINNATI tUPI) - An
orderly ~~:arne 'between the Chi·
cago ·Cull6 and Cincinnati Reds
erupted Into a wild finish Tuesday night with ·a pushing match
involving players and umpires.
, Almost lost In the heat of the
melee "that spotllghted Reds
second baseman Ron Oester,
Reds manager Pete Rose and
umpire Joe West was a three-run
bomb off the bat of Chicago's
Andre l'.&gt;awson that propelled the

It was tben · that Rose. Inter· . ·
vened and ~pparentJy made
contact with West before cooler
heads prevailed and the skirmish
tlnally ended.
"I've got nothing to say," said
Oester later in the dressing
room, " You guys (the reporters )
saw 11. Write it."
Zimmer. whose Cubs now lead
the NL East by 3'h games over
the New York Mets, commented
later that he was surprised at

~::: t~~ ~e~.innlng

w~.~~~:uas~~~~s does ~e tWes I) s:~~~~: ~~te~0 ~~e0 ~~~ ~e~s~:

5-2 victory
J ust what the final upshot of
the post-game outbur5t will be
remained to be seen after .crew
chief Jerry · Crawford ·reserved
any comment until Wednesday
and Oester declined to discuss
thp Incident. ·
"I was right in the middle of
It ," said Rose, who apparently
shovpd West several times bef?re he was pulled away from the
group of milling players and
umpires behind home plate.
"You.know what happeried last
year (when Rose was fined
$10,000 and suspended 30 days
after pushing 'umpire Dave Pal·
lone. ) Let's see what happens
this year." ·
·Igniting the fracas was a called
third strike by plate umpire Bill
Hohn that retired Oester and
ended the game. Suddenly Reds
players and the umpires were
pushing and shoving and a
number of onlookers, among
them Cubs manager Don
Zimmer, indicated that West
actually pus!led Oester two or
thr'!e times.

have in pushing Oester twice?"
asked the Cubs manager.
Speaking for the umpires, crew
chief Crawford announced that
" we have no comment now,
nothing to . say, but we'll ,have
something to say tomorrow
(WPdnesday) ."
Rookie righthander Mike
Roesler, the fift!l Reds hurler,
was the victim of Dawson's
400-plus blast that landed half·
way up the left field grepn seats
wtthtwoout'andtwooninthe12th
inning.
"I just made a bad pitch on an
0·2 count," said Roesler; 0-.1, who
had walked Mitch Webster and
Mark Grace after Ryne Sand·
berg had been gunned down
stealing by Jeff Reed for the
second out of the inning.
" It was my job to get the ball
lnsidetoDawsonandlgotitright
over the plate," added Roesler.
' 'I thought I had Grace struck
out, but I didn ' t get the call.
(which would have been the third
out. )"
"He made a mistake to me,"

pointed out Dawson, who had return for Dave Dravecky. .
been·5·for·63 prior to hammerlnfl:
The San Francisco Giants
his 13th homer. "I goi my hands · left·hander : who staged a remar·
extended and hit the ball on the kable comeback from cancer
sweet part of tbe bat. And! knew. surgery on his pitching arm to
It was gone wben I hit lt."
.
win l!ilaln In the majors last
Jerome Walton, the Cubs stari· week, was dealt a season-ending
clout rookie centerflelder, took Injury Tuesday night.
advantage of the extra-Inning
Dravecky suffered a stress
battle by extending his major . fracture of the humerus bone In
leagueseason·highhiltlngstreak the same arm while delivering a
to 25 straight games with a pitch In the Giant's 3·2 victory
leadoff single !Q the final inning. over the Montreal Exj&gt;os.
rookie hit streak of 34 by San
Dlegci's ·Benito Santiago of two
years ago.
~ ·r w~s lucky to get those extra
at-bats," Walton admitted, "but
I 'really didn't feel any extra
pressure. I was jusfhoplng we'd
win tile game."
_
Chicago startl!r Greg Maddux.
who limited the Reds to four hits
through eight innings, had eight
strikeouts, seven of them against
the Reds' Eric Davis (four
times) and Rolando Rooines
(three). ·
Dwight Smilth' s homer staked
CliicSgo to a 1·0 lead in the first,
buttheRedsmovedah.ead,2·1,1n
the ·third when Maddux wild·
pitched the ~cond run home. The
Cubs drew even In the seventh
when Rob Dibble. who replaced
starter Rick Mahler, thre\Y a
'two-out wild pitch that allowed
Shawon Dunston to ·score from
third.
In other National League
games :
· Dravecky out lor season
All In all, it was a bittersweet

f '

:2

.•
I

.

.

.....

SHOVING MATCH - A shovln1 match broke
out between home plate umpire Bill Hohn (far
left) and the Reds' Ron Oesler (far right) In
Tuesday night's game against the \&lt;!siting · .
Chicago Cubs. Oesler commented on a called

third strike that elided lhe game, aod witnessed
rf)ported that Hohn shoved Oester, starting the
melee. The Cubs had already posled a 5-2 victory.
·( UPI)

·B lue Jays top Red Sox 7-2
fourth inning when Esasky's line career shutout. Doyle Alexander
By TIM McMANUS
drive to center went for a triple dropped to 5-14 for the Tigers.
UPI Sports Writer
Brewers 1, Yankees 0
. The Toronto Blue Jays should as Wilson slipped on the play .
At
Milwaukee. · Ted Higuera
,scored
on
a
passed
ball
Esasky
have moved into Fenway Park
hurled
a six-hitter to win his sixth
by catcher Ernie Whitt.
ins lead of the Sky Dome.
Toronto pushed its lead to5·1 in s traight start and extend MilLloyd Moseby , Manny Lee and
Rance Muliin.iks each smackPd the seventh on Whitt's sacrifice waukee's winning streak to a.
solo homers Tuesday night to ' fly, but Boston got the run back in season-high five games. Hlgu·
help Toronto beat the Boston Red the bottom. of the inning on era, 9·4, is 12·2 lifetime against
Sox 7-2. The Blue Jays have \\'On Greenwell's RBI double off re· New York. Yankees starter Clay
Parker, 3·3, took the complete
14 consecutive games at Fenway iiever Frank Wills.
game
loss. Greg Brock singled
Park . dating back to Augus t of
The double ex tended Green·
home
the
only run of the game in
1987. Toronto. whichis 2Y, games well's hitting strea k to 16 games
the
fourth
Inning.
behind th e first-place Baltimore and Danny Heep followed with a
Royals
10, While Sox 6
Orioles .. has one more game left walk, but Ward came on to strike
At
Chicago,
Kurt Stillwell
in Boston on Wednesda· •it:ht out Esas ky with the bases loaded
before moving on to Ba ·
and retire Jody Reed on a popup. triplecttwtce, drove in three runs
" We' re finally coming into our
Toronto added two more runs and scored the go-ahead run to
own," Moseby said of the Blue in the eighth on a solo homer by lead a 15-hit attack. Tom
Jays. who have compiled a 17-16 MuUiniks and and an RBI single McCarthy, 1·2, took the loss.
Terry Leach, 3-3, pitched five
record since moving into th e by Moseby.
SkyDome June 5th. " Last yea r.
The Blue Jays have live more innings of scoreless relief to earn
we played our best baseball in
games on thPir current road trip. the win. Danny Tartabull rapped
Septe mber."
then play 13 straight games at the his 15th homer for the Royals.
Marbters 2, Rangers 0
Dave Stieb. 12-7, picked up the Sky Dome .
At
Seattle, Brian Holman and
victory for Toronto. working fiv e
Elsewhere . in the American
Mike
Schooler combined on a
innings. allowing one run and League:
.
13-hit
shutout
to help the Marin·
fivP hit s. Stieb. who has won fiv e
Athletics 5, Indians 2
of his last seven decisions. struck
At Oakland, Calif., Rickey ers thwart . a one-hit complete
out two and walked three.
Henderson and Jose Canseco game by Charlie Hough, 8·11 .
Duane Ward, the th ird of three belted home runs to help Storm Holman, 5·5, earned the victory
Toronto relievers, pitched score· Davis win ·hts fourth consecutive while Schooler posted his 24th
less ball over th.e final two and start. Dav is, 13·5, picked up his save. The Rangers stranded 14
two-third innings for his 12th ·seventh victory in nine career runners in the game.
An1e1~ 3, Twins 2
save. He retired Nick Esasky- decisions versus the Indians.
At Anaheim. Cal if., Bobby
Boston's leader in RBis -twice Dennis Eckersley notched his
with the bases loaded.
24th save. Rod Nichols, 3-2, took Rose had three hits and drove in
the tie-breaking run in only his
While Toronto produced 15 the loss for Cleveland.
third
major-league game to lift
.hits, stole three bases, and
Orioles 2, Tl!'ers 0
the
Angels
to just their third win
turned four double plays, the Red
At Detroit. Cal Rlpken Jr. and
Sox committed three errors, Joe Orsulak whacked solo home in the last eight games. Chuck
misplayed two balls in the runs to back the three-hit pitch- )"inley Improved to 14·8 while
outfie ld , a nd standed 13 ing of Bob Milackt. 7-10, who reliever Bryan Harvey notched
baserunners.
pitched his second complete his 18th save. Twins rookie Mike
Bos ton starter Mike Smithson. ga me of the season and second Oyer, 1-3, took the loss.
~11. was tagged for eight hits,
including two home run s, In
two-plus innings.
Moseby. who was 3 for 5 with
two RBI. led off the game with his
lOth home run of the season and
GO
Wilson singled. As George Bell
struck out, Wilson stole second
and continued to third on catcher
. AI ONE LOW PIICE
'
.
.
Rich Gedman's throwing ~rror .
He scored wt~en Fred McGriffs
routine fly ball fell between left
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Lee hit his third homer of the
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Tony Fernandez made it 4·0 with
991-2114
a third· Inning RBI slnile.
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games. McRe).-nolds h(t his 15th :
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Willison , 14-9, Jeff Musselman,
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innings of scoreless retlef.
PhUIIes 7, Dod1ers &amp;. · •
At Philadelphia, Ricky Jordan :
hit two home runs and knocked In :
three runs. Jordan hit a solo •
home run off reliever Ray I
Searage, 3·3, toleadoff theelghth ~
inning and break a 6-6 tie.
Jordan, who has nine homers this.,

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Browns' Dixon willing
to play free safety

,....

MENTOR, Ohio (UPI)
Three-ttime Pro Bowl corner·
.back Hanford Dixon says he's
willing to·make the switch to free
safety, but plans to tell Cleveland
Browns coach Bud Carson he's
not willing to be a backup.
Dixon, the "Top Dawg" who
gave the Browns' defense its
nickname, started at free safety
Saturday night against the De·
troll Lions, the ·first time In his
nine-year career he'd started
any position ·besides cornerback.
Felix Wright, the starter at free
safety last year. moved to strong
safety.
,Strong safety was held down
last year by a rookie. Brian
Washington, but another 1988
rookie strong safely, Thane
Gash, has performed well
enough In camp this summer that
'he's considered ahead of
Washington:
Monday, Carson said Dixon did
a good job in his debut at the new
position and added, "Right now,
we're more committed to him as ·
a safety than we ·are as a
cornerback because., mentally, I
think ' he's rnore committed to
that."
Anthony Blaylock, a fourth·
round draft choice last year,
started at Dixon's cornerback
spot against the Lions.

"I have ito problem with
to free safety)," Dixon
said after Monday's practice.
:'I'm just glad!t's·o~e position, so
I can concentrate on lt."
·
But he adi!ed, "Wherever I
play, I know I'm good enough to
start, and I have· to start. I.don 't
think I could accept a backup
role. I'm sure·· I can start for
somebody. There's 27 · other
teams. Tlike it here and I want to
play hPre. bu 1 not as a backup."
1"\l,e Dixon on Page 5)
(movl~g

SkUng
.
Mike Holland, who earlier this ,. ·
s.ummer retired from ski jumping, will return for the 1989·90 ,
World Cup circuit. Joining Hoi· '
land on the national team are Tad ;
Langlois, Kurt Stein and Krls ,;
Severson .. .. Todd Wilson Dan ·•
O'Meara and Matt Laue' were "
named to the 1989-!lO U.S. Nordic ·,
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He said he would deliver an
ultimatum to Carson sometime
this week, perhaps TUesday:
"Let's just say. ther~ are SOIJle
things . I have to get 'clear,
because right now I'm just not ·
too happy with the way things are
going," Dixon said. "I've been
around awhile. When you're
dealing with me, you're not just
dealing with any pl!lyer."
Carson said he was happy with
Saturday night's performance by
Blaylock, who had six tackles ·
and one pass broken up, although
he also drew two costly penalties.
Complicating the ·situation was
the performance of two other
· cornerbacks- Mark Harper·and
·· stephen Braggs -each of whom
forced two Detroit turnovers.
Carson says he wants five
cornerbacks. With Frank Minni·
field - another ·three-tlme Pro
Bowl selection - entrenched at
the other Cornerback, It appears
Blaylock, Harper, Braggs and
free agent Kerry Glenn have the ·
other four spots sewed up.
That creates a logjam at
safety, with Dixon, Wright, Wa·
shlngton, Gash and rookie Kyle
Kramer . competing for three or
four spills.
Another complication would be
Dixon's salary, with his threeyear contract for $2.1 million far
too much for a backup at any
position.

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or the Whalers.

.HELP. MAKE-OUR COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

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then begin preparing for the '
season opener.
,
"We're a · week short in our ~
preparation," he said. "We have ;
two fu II weeks of double sessions •
and then the third week is our :
game. That makes it tougher ~
because we' ll have to back off in t • ·
the second' week and start to get
ready for a game in earnest." !
And that first game Is an ;
important one, as Berndt has :
bee~ empha~izing. to. his team. 1
"I m prepare!! to win · on
September 2nd and I'm not
looking down the road," he said. ·
"We're getting ready for the
most important game on our II
schedule in our opinion.
•
' 'This staff and these players· l
have not been in competition J
against an outside opponent and 1
that makes It an important •
game."
.
.
Berndt said he Is convinced he
can revive ·Temple football,
which has registered few wins on •
the field and few fans in the :t
stands In rece.nt years.
"If we're going to play at the ·;
Division !level, and we are going ·'
to play at Division I, then we have
to be able to compete with .~
Syracuse aqd Penn State (Tern- ·
pie's second and third oppo- ·:
nents) ," Berndt said. "We have "
to be able to walk on the field and
know that , regardless of who the :
opponent Is. ·we can beat them." ~

•reet•

..\r..WMtWt.: ......

· ~ ............... ......,....11 II .Ill II
Mla . .ota .................. .11 II .41H II

I

By JOE CIALINI · '
percent of 'his passes for 1,539
UPI Sports Writer
yards and 15 touchdowns , and
PHILADELPHIA tUPI)
who has the edge over senior
One day before the start of Victory Lay.
two-a-day practice sessiOns and
"Matt Baker has looked very
nearly three · weeks before the sharp." Berndt said. "He' s
opening start of thp season, new clearly our No. 1 quarterback.·
Temple coach Jerry Berndt
Matt has taken ahold of our
coined a .nickname for . his offense and has a better under·
offense.
'
standing of it.
''You can bet the ball will be in
"He's very conSistent, not
the air a lot," Berndt said making any mistakes ·and he's
TUesday . ~t •., the Owls' ann,ual
very, confident. In the spring,
pre-season •· me(lia day . . "We ·Matt struggled for the first two
might be known as 'Air and a half weekS with the new
Temple."'
system. Now he's confident
With proven wide receivers in about what he's doing. He likes to
juniors Rich Drayton and Kevin
throw the footbalt and we're
McCoyandatalentedtightendin · going to throw the football a lot."
senior Maurice Johnson, Berndt
That's music to Baker' s ears.
plans to take advantage of them
when the season begins on Sept. 2
"That makes me feel good," he
.
at Western Michigan.
said. "From what he's seen, he's
"We have to get them the ball got conflde~e in the passing
and thal means throwing the ball game and' .confidence in the
to them," said Berndt, who Is in
quarterback ·and that will just·
his first season as Temple coach
make me work harder to be
after three years at Rice and five
successful."
at Penn.
The Owls will begin two-a-day
The man likely to be do ing the
practice sessions with pads Wed·
throwing is junior Matt Baker,
nesday and Berndt said he wants
who played In 10 of Temple's 11
to finish installing his new
games last season, completing 52
offensive and defensive systems·.

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·By BOB KEIM
.
Accurst .ts referring to the there's less of a va lue on No.1's · amount of money, a ~ound
UPI Sports Writer
growin g number of players ·hOid · for the fut ure,'' Accorsi said.
a pp roac h to r un ni ng an y
lng outfor longerperiodsof time.
He's right , of cour$e. It's like busi ness.
MENTOR, Ohio tUP I)
There is no shortage of lnforma·
The end res ult of all this Is that a nything else these days . Pay
But what agents and players
lion on college seniors in the tea ms with high fi rst round picks , more, get less.
fall to address Is the depreciation
weeks preceding the NFL draft . actually lose out the fi rst year. A ' Players are trying to get the caused by each day of a holdou t.
By the time draft day rolls long holdo~ t puts a young player most for their talents. In a When a player comes back, he is .
around, scou ts , fa ns and so far be hmd he rarely reaches business where a career can end thrust int o action in an effort to
members of the media can click the level he would have if he had in one play , it's an understands - catch up, going against h4ngry
· off pertinent fact s on potential the benefit of a full training bie approach.·Owners are tryi ng players who have been practic· '
first-round picks. How big Is he? camp.
.
to get the mos t talent for the least lng a nd hitti ng lor weeks.
What's his time in the 40? Can he
The Browns are doubly cursed .
pass block?
this year. Top choice EriC
Ultimately, thOSe are the im· - Metcalf,. around whom the ..
CO(JC
· portant questions. But imme· · ~r.owpJ! were going to ll]Old their
YOUNGSTOWN,. OHIO (UJ&gt;l) · COiJ.Ch in YSU history . Dom ·
diately after a team picks a new·r1Jnninggame- andgaveup
player, another factor comes into four draft picks to get -Is sitting John Strola, an assistant to RosSelli was 25 when he was
·
play, one that gives owners and out. Receiver Law yer Tillman,
basketball coach Jim Cieamons na med in 1940.
general managers headacl)es for whom the Browns traded a
at Youngstown State Unive rsit y
Stroia se rved as athletic direc·
and frustrates coaches.
first round-pick to choose in th e
the past two years. was na med tor and basket ball coach at Ohio
St a te-Lima before coming to
Call it the slgnability factor. second round, is sitting out ,
TUesday to replace Cleamons.
Unfortunately, it appears this Is repC?rtedly until he gets first·
Cleamons resigned last week · Youngs town State.
to become an assistant to Phil
the one area where moderri round money for being a second·
athletes aren't nearlY as compe- round draft choice.
Jackson, the new head coach of
tent as their predecessors.
" I think we've al ready reached . ·the NBA Chicago Bulls.
As of Monday, .just 10 of the 28 the poirit where he tM etcal!) has
"We are pleased to be able to
players taken 'in the first round hurt us," coach Bud Carson said.
fill our basketball coachin g vahad ·slgned contracts. Only one "Our ptoblem is we don!t have
caney wi th John Stroia," YSU
player drafted in the top 14 was &lt;)De, we've got two roster people
athletic director Joe Malmis ur
sal d in m a k t n g the
under contract, and that was . · out. That puts us at a little more
Troy Aikman of Dallas. the top of a' diSadvantage."
·
announcement.
It may sound a bit preposter"There are quite a few qualipick In the d·raft.
After agonizing for months ous. but isn 't the Idea of the draft
lied coaches out there," added
Malmisur. " However , John is a
over which player to take wii ~1 to improve your team? The
the all-important first round Browns staked much of their . highly qualified coach with a
pick, coaches at the start of future on these two players. Yet ., burning desire to succeed and a
training camp realize all the th.e way things are goin,g, they
loyalty to the Youngstown State
team has to show for it is an may get more out of defensive
basketball program that I simply
c.ould not overlook."
empty locker with an expensive end Andrew Stewart. this year
name above .
than e!ther Tillman or.Mefcalf.
Stroia , a native of Merrillville.
"I don't have to noti ce the
Stewart was a fourth· round·· Ind., is a graduate of Wisconsin·
difference " Browns executive pick, but he signed before train·, · Whitewater, where he was a
vice President for football opera · ing camp and has a month, of' three-year . basketball letter
· , MASON, WY.
lions Ernie Accorsi said . "It 's a practice under his belt.
winner. At 30, .he becomes the
''In my personal opinion,
second-youngest head basketball
statistical fact."
·

Gerrtd. _. Carlin Mc1Uaat'1' 11114
to....,..· o.r~Ger\lta.
New ,..,_,. - Al . .d forwert Bll.l

AMERICAN U:t\GUE
W L Pd.

Top picks ·ar~n~t much help these days

t'lltflll"• - •pq ...,... T•m

lA

a, \l•Ktd Pre~ • laler..a ..._.

a ~~:~:c:io~ a~~~b:ll~ h~;~~~
[~~~~{~t::~ r:~~~- ~:~!:~: 1f~~ :~~nio~ t~: fi~~:":tn';~n~n ~i~ :
turned last Thursdayto a thund·
the old Dave Dravecky.
two-year career. Philadelphia :
erous ovation at Caridlestick
Dravecky, 2·0, went five·plus reliever Jeff PJlrreii, 11·5, al-l
Park. He hurled eight Innings in a innings for the victory, allowing lowed one hit in tltr~e irinlngs.
,4·3 victory over the ·Cincinnati" two runs , four hits and three
Cardinals 9, Braves 1
Reds.
I·
walkS and Steve Bedrosian
At St. Louis, JoSe DeLeon
However, his inspiring return posted his 16th save .
pitched a threP·hitter and Milt I
from surgPry to remove a tumor
The Giants took a 1·0 lead in the Thompson drove in four runs , ~
from the deltoid muscleofhlsleft fifth Inning against Bryn Smith. including a solo home run. •
arm .ended in the sixth Inning 9-7. Pat Shetldan singled, moved DeLeon, 12·11, who set down nine :
while making his first pitch to to third on a single by Terry of the first 10 batters .he faced •
Tim Raines with the Giants Kennedy and scored on Jose with four strikeouts, struck out !
leading 3-1.
.
Uribe's fielder's choice. ·
10. Atlanta 's only run·came on a
"Iheardthepopwhenhethrew
The Giants made It 3·0 In the homer by Jeff Treadway with .
thepitch, " GiantscljtcherTerry ' sixthwhehWUIClarksingiedarid two out In the ninth. Derek I
Kennedy said. ''l knew what It scored on Matt Williams' ninth Lllllquist , 7-7, allowed four runs :
was. His arm is broken."
home run.
. in five and two-third innings.
l
The injury was aJractureofthe
Montreal made It 3·2 in the
Astros 3, Pirates 2
1
bone · that extends from the siXth when Damaso Garcia led
.(lHnnlngs)
I
shoulder to the elbow, which is offwlthhisthlrdhomer.Andres
At Houston, Ken Caminiti !
likely. to sideline Dravecky for Gaiarraga was then hit by a pitch singled home Eric Yelding from
the rest of the season.
and later scored on a sacrH!ce fly second base in the·llth )im!ng to 1 '
' 'He told me In the clubhouse by Tim Raines.
ll(t Houston. Gl~nn Davis opened o
before he went to the hospital
Mets 3, Padres 2
the 11th with a ·single off loser :
that he could feel the bone
At New York, Kevin McRey· Mike Smith, 0·1. Yelding pinch I
moving. Thai operation made the nolds homered to tie the score ran for Davis and was sacrificed !
bone brittle. I don't know whafls
and Kevin Elster doubled in the to second. Caminiti deliverel!
better, tohaveatasteofhoneyor
wln!Jlng run during a ninth· Yelding with a single to left to
never to come back."
inning rally that carried New make a winner of Larry An· ~
Dravecky immediately fell to
York to its lOth victory in 12 dersen1 3·3, who worked one :
inning. ·
•
4

Sentinel- Page- S

The Cleveland Beat

BerndJ·plans to sh_ow 'Air. Temple'· !

&lt;;

~-

and grimacing In pain. He was
removed from the field on a
stretcher and ta.ken by ambu·
lance to Queen Elizabeth Hospl·
tal. where he was X- rayed and
examined by Expos team sur·
geon Dr. Larry Couglln.
"I have never seen anything
like that • since I have been In
baseball, " said an emotlo·nalSan
Francisco manager Roger
Craig. "He .was pitching a

I

'
V
1 ..

the ground, clutchlnghls lef~arm

. The

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

W8C.nHelp

KING SERVISTAR HARDWARE

4~05
... ,

,,,

North Second Avenue, MIDDLEPORT
,,

�--------------Wedneedey,

IIIII•POI•m•••oy-·M-iddi•I8POI'IIi_t._Ohio_.

-- . -

.'

August 16, 1989

•• •

ELF

•
.••
•

..
•

••
••

....
..••.·

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, QH;
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., AUG. 1 3 THRU SAT., AUG. 19

·-

...••

Farrar reunion held

...

GAY 90's

.,

BREAD
20 OZ.

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••••
..
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.~

,
~

••

.

I

'&gt;

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2/Sl

•

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•
• ,.

The 18th annual Farrar family
reunion was held recently at the
farm of Junior and Bess Miller in
Jackson.
rwenty:nine family members
were p~ent for the covered dish
dinner. Blessings were asked for
food and friends before the meal.
H,orse shoes ·and reminiscing
were enjoyed IIY aU.
Gilts or silver dollars were
presented by Steven Bobo to
James Farrar, eldest; Kara

STAR-KIST 61/2 OZ.

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CHICKEN

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KELLOGG'S
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COFFEE F-ILTERS"
200 COUNT

HOME GROWN

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Cantaloup.s:!&lt;:••••••• 99&lt;

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KEMPS PAIL

GALA
•

Paper Towels •••~~••. 59&lt;

Ice Cream ••••••••••••

•• COUPON • •••
••• •

M~~:S~uCOFFEE

$599

ss99147

oz.

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powoll's 541ptr Valu
Goo4 Sun. lug. 13 thru Sat., Aug. 19

·~ ·

GRANULATED SUGAR
SLBS.

$139

limit 1 ,.,. c..t-r
Good Onii At Powell'• Super Valu ·
Goed Siin. Ug. U lhru Sat. Aut· 19

t·•

CLOROX BLEACH
limit 1 Per CustGood Only AI Powoll's Super Yalu
Goad Sun. luq. 13 thru Sat., Aug. 19 .

•

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. . ..

Scout results revealed on 319 projects at fair

I

By BOB. HOEFUCH

The beat of the annual Meigs
TuesCounty Fair got
day 11nd attend·
ance
to be a~:~r~~~~
e
- the weather,
· beautiful. ·
The beat of the
harness horses
on the track will
start today and continue through
Friday afternoon. The racing
program is a bit of a family affair
for the Spencer family. Roger
heads the program for the fair
bQard - and us1,1ally has some
good horses in the competltlqn.
On hand to give him an assist at
the race office are his wife,
Phyllis and his daughter, Debbie
all knowledgeable about
horses and racing due to many
years of experience. Inclden·
tally, Roger's nephew, Don
Spencer, will again be at the fair
as a harness horse driver. Don
drives his own.animals as well as
those belonging to other owners.
Middleport's talented Dale
Jacobs was among' first fair·
goers lin Tuesday. Dale com·
ments .that the inns are getting
steeper 11nd the weather warmer
- has nothing to do with age,
Dale s·ays. I'll drink to that .
At any rate the fair Is blooming
nicely and, o{ course. the Bates
Brothers rides on the midway are
always a popular activity for the
young and lhe young at heart.
Don't look at me- I'm allergic to
anything racier than a merry-goround .
-----~---

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ANNOUNCING

TD ORIGINALS
EXCLUSIVELY
AT

EMS has 14
Tuesday ~ails

Stocks

.

.

$]39

cale,ndar

The moving van was scheduled
to pull out of Middleport today
carrying the belongings· of Mike
••
•'••'
and ·Jan Buskirk and their
Jay, Beth and Brian.
••' children,
Mike Is employed .by Southern
~
'·
Ohio Coal and now will be
•• ',
•
working near Coshocton. Jan has
'
been working as adml$stons
••
•'
coordinator for Amerlcare •• '
Pomeroy.
·
•
One of Jan's co-workers had
.,.: - f
••
this to say a bout her:
••
"It was a pleasure to have
• •
i
,.
worked
with Jan. She was
•• .
always ready to help someone
''
and make their Ufe bel ter. Her
••
,~
beautiful smile and kindesses
'•
will be missed by employees and
residents alike. we wish her the.
. Goodyear T&amp;:R .•• ••••..•••• •••• •••55
best of everything."
. '·
Heck's ........... ... ... .... ............ ~
Now
that's
nice
and
one
•••
Key
Centurion .................... 12%
thing
for
sure,
the
!!fltlre
family
•'
•• ' will be missed In the Middleport Lands' End•..•.•. , •. .•. ,,,,;,,,, •.. 28%
•
••
community where they have Umlted Inc ........................35%
resided for the past several • Multimedia Inc ................. 106%
••
Rax Restaurants ..''~~' ............. 2%
••
years.
RobbUts &amp; Myers ................ 16%
••
Shoney's
lnc1 ...................... 11%
Eunice Ott would appreciate
some lnfonnation from some of •Wendy's Inti ........................ 5'U.
~ ~ you genNIOIIIII. out there.
Worthington
Ind ...:.. ............. 25
.
.

.

FRITO'S

Suspended...______

Ward, three B's, C; Jesse Ward,
A,twoB's,C; Jeremy Council, B.
C; Marcus Ward, two A's; B.J.
Workman , four B's; Shawn
w·orkman , tWo A's ; A.J . ·
Vaughan, A, B; Matthew Eskew,
iwo A's, B; Nathan Eskew, two
A's, B; Monty Hunter, B; Matt
Titus, B; Jeremy Michael, C;
Robbie Diddle, B; B.J. Kennedy ,
three A's; Derrick'Boten, A, two
B's; Jordan Hill, three A's; Josh
Hill, jhree A's.
Troop 249. Pomeroy, Nathan
Baloy, two A's, C.
·Troop 235, Chester, Rod New·
some, B; Terry Newsome, A.
Troop 245, ¥1ddleport, Jeremy
Hartson. B; Jared Stewart, A,
two B's; Willie Johnson, A, three
B's; J. Bunch. C; Matthew
Craddock, A, B; Bobby Johnson,
two A's, B, C; Chris Chapman.
twoB's, C.

Lawrence, two A's, B.
Pack 235, Chester, Eric Tuttle,
three C's; Eric Dillard, three
B's; Daniel Otto. two B's; Travis
Thomas, two B's, . C; Kevin
Keaton , two A's, two B's; Matt
Keaton, three B's. C; W. Aaron
Will, A, B, two C's; Wesley Carr,
A.. two B's, Bobby Keaton, two
B's, twoC's; DavldVanlnwagen ,
two B's; Eric Hollon, two B's;
Eric 'Hill. A, B; Mike Tuttle,
three B's; Joshua Will, A, B;
Joshua Broderick, A, three B's;
Zachary Bolin, B, C; Travis
Adams, B; Joey Sisson, B, C;
M.atthew King, three B's, C;
Aaron Schaekel, B, three C's;
Nathan Radford, two A's, two
C's; James Cllfford, three B's, C;
Rick Hoilon, two B's, C; Micah
Otto, two B 's; Josh Starcher, two
A's, two B's.
Pack 240. Rutland, Wilbur

112 W. Main

Pomero

992-2851

Great weather, great fair

.•'

OF 24

11 OZ. PKG.
89&lt;GALLON

..•~

...,•••,
••
"

HEINZ

REG. $.1.99

CHEER DETERGENT .·

••

\.

12 OZ. CANS

•••

FLAVORITE

l

i

.

36 OZ. FRENCH ROAST OR
31) OZ. ADC, DRIP, REG.

I

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$ 99 NUGGETS, TENDERS, PAmES-1 0.5-12 O{t.l 59
Banquet Chicken .. :,
Ra1s1n Bran •••• !~~;.. 2

POST .cE~EAL

'·
,••
•.
\;

R. C. COLA

S QT. PAIL

•,

I

'

Cream Cl1eese •• :.a:~. '9"&lt;
.7

.,

":,,

32 OZ. BOnLE

KRAFT PHILADELPHIA

•••

.

89&lt;
CATSUP

2°/o ·Milk.••••• ::~ •••••• .

'

~

$

.

'

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•

•

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

•

u oz. ilox

•·

.. .

THURSDAY

,,~...
Beat of the bend
'.
•
•..
..

CORN FLAK'ES ~

·-•"'-.
•

••,

MIDDLEPORT -'The Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church
will have revival today through
Friday at .7:30 p.m. nightly.
Norman . Taylor from Evans,
W.Va. will conduct the revival.

!' "

LB.

.......

KANAUGA -Revival In now In
progress at the Silver Memorial
Freewill Baptist Church In ·Ka·
nauga. Rev. Ralph Dean, Hunt,
W.Va. Is the evangelist. There
will be special singing nightly.
Pastor Dennis Parsons Invites
the public.·

i ••

32 OZ. BOnLE

c·ube ·Steak •••••••••• $229 .
SUPERIOR ASSORTED
$l 39
Lunch Meats .•••.L:.••.

..
.¥
•
•,

WEDNESDAY

,•
.,
.,

BUCKET

J

Continued from page 1
Miller, youngest; Bess and Jun·
Pack 246, Salisbury, Jamie
lor Miller, farthest traveled; and
Pack 245, Middleport, Andy
Broderick , A, two B's; Josh
Violet Farrar, Martina Farrar, Kitchen, three A's, B; Philip
A, two B's; Adam
lvor and Betty Farrar, Juanita · Birch, three A's, C; Ricky Witherell.
White, A, three B's; Adam
andDonCJark,andJeanetteand Hoover, A; Robert Qualls, B;
Jenkins, A, two B's; Bert Mash,
·non Bobo; most children.
Caleb Shuler, three A's; Austin B; Timmy Peavely, three B's;
· The· couple with most grand· . Carr, , B; David Neutzllng, two Vincent Broderick, two A's, B, C;
children were Junior and Bess · A's, two B's; Christopher Gllk~;&gt;y, J .D. King, A, B; Michael Lelf•
Miller.
two A's, two B's: Tommy Roush, hell, A, threeS's; MickBarr, two
Jell. :Farrar. president elect, two A's; Brandon Smith, four B's; EironAidrldge, two A's, two
was given charge of next year's A's; T.J. King, A, C; Joshua B's; Pete Sisson, A, two B's;
reunion Will be held on the last
Lynch, two B's; Joe Weaver, B;
Billy Young, 1'(, two B's; Ryan
Sunday of July In 1990.
Kyle Werry, A.
Ramsburg, three A's. B; Daniel
Pack 237, Harrisonville, James McDonald, A, B; Joshua Wilson,
Chapman, three B's, C; Jeremy B, C; Ryan Will, B; Matt
.Lowe, two A's, two B's; Jason Milhoan, two A's, B; Sharon
Carman, A, two B's, C; Eric
GalUpoUs: Mr. and Mrs . Jim Jarvis, A, C; Timmy Stearns, A, White, two A's, B, C; Chad
Newell, Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. three B's: . Johnny Headman, Tolmer, A, two B's; Joshua
Royce New"'ll, Coolville; Mrs. thi'ee A's, B; Kyle Smitty. A, B; Leach, A, three B's; Chris Ball,
A, B; Shawn Harris, three A's, B:
Roger Hornslly. Lacy and COdy, · Kevin Nee!. B. ·
·
Evan Struble, two A's, B; Jason
Coolville; Mrs. Scott Sams, Bel·
pre; Mr. and .Mrs. Guy Sial·
· naker; Akron; Mrs. Edith Curtis
co.,.n_u~n-ue_d_f_ro_m.....:..p...:ag:..e_l_ __
and daughter, Anita. Akron: Mr .
and Mrs. Ted Sedgwick and regular Classroom during the given approval for early graduaDonnie, Tuppers Plains; Mrs. school day, with parent to be tion, and a foreign exchange
Gertrude Robinson, Tuppers notified In writing of the In-school student was accepted as was
Plains; and Mrs. Melvin Whaley. suspension prior to the suspen· Keith Hunt as a tuition student.
The board approved the budget
Pomeroy.
sion, giving the parent the
opportunity to come to the school and objectives of VICA and the
to discuss the problem, again Meigs Cheerleaders, ·and deslg. naed Bank One as the depository
with constant supervision.
·
.
After-school detention, he ex- tor school funds.
In other action, Jane, Fry,
plained, started at the high
schOol last year and Is handled by treasurer, reported that funding,
FRIDAY
CHESHIRE -'}'he Community the Juvenile Court. He said that $87,975 In·Title VI, special educa·
Action Agency will be having a students from sevetal schools tion funding; $259,418 In Chapter
free clothing day on Frldily from are sent, that the detention Is I, reading and math; $5,046 from
9 a.m. to noon at the old high always held at the high school at . the Dwight Eisenhowe{, math
regularly scheduled limes, and and science grant: $9,730, drug
school in Cheshire.
·
·
that parents are . notified In free grant.
KANAOGA - Special singers writing prior to the after-school
Bill and Katherine Cre!lleans, detention. He further noted that a
· and , Eddie and Dorothy Boyer juvenUe court officer runs the
will be singing at the Sliver program .
Memorial Freewill Baptist
Corporal punishment, suspen·
. Church. The public Is Invited to . sion from school, and expulsion
attend . ·
are all · handled according to
Units of the Meigs County_
board policy, he concluded.
.
Emergency
Service responded to
~peatedly the Harrisonville
. HARRISONVILLE :...Mission·
14
calls
on
Tuesday.
ary 'service at Harrisonville delegation asked for assurance
At12:49 a.m. the Chester Fire
HoUness Chapel will be held on that the closet would not be used
Friday at 7: 30p.m. Rev. WilHam again for dlscipUnary purposes, Department was called to PomeSullivan, doing work in Mexico with Carpenter countering that roy Pike for a hay fire. At 12:59
and Cuba will speak. Pastor Earl "the board unanimously said a.m. the Pomeroy Fire Depart ·
that It would not happen again." men! also responded to the hay
Fields invites the public .
Asked about disciplinary ac- !Ire.
The Pomeroy unit at 2:04 a.m.
tion, Carpenter said that lhere
was
called to Lincoln Heights for
are penallties for repeat viola·
PhylliS
Vanlnwagen who was
tors. He did emphasize, however,
takell
to
Holzer Medical Center,
that If the principal makes
and
lli
2:06a
.m. the Middleport
repeated attempts 'to contact the
ubit
was
called
to assist.
Mrs. · Ott writes that she is parent and the dlsr.uptlve bel;lavThe
Orange
Township Fire
trying to find the burial place of a lor continues, then ·the teacher
Department
responded
to
great-aunt who died in 1906 In
has to do something to modify
,another
hay
fire
located
on
Bentz
the community of Bashan.
that behavior. "We want to
The name of the aunt was Eliza Involve parents in our discipline, Cemetery Road at 3:44a.m.
At 4:18 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
Diantha Noland Blake who was and · .work wltl!, them", he
went to East Main Str:eet for
known as Diane E. Blake and she emphasized.
·
died on Oct. 12, 1906. · · Her · In other action at the board William Teimyer who was taken
husband was a blacksmith In · ·meting the resignation of John to Veterans Memorial.
The Chester Fire Department
f.omeroy and his name was Blaetlilar as distributive educaat
10:42 a.m. was called to
Ausblrn (Bernie) Blake. ·
lion teacher was accepted. Chris·
Cherry
Ridge Road for yet
If you can help, please advise
tine Dowler was hired as a DH
fire, and at 10: 46
another
hay
Mrs. Ott whose address Is P.O.
teacher at the Meigs Junior High
a.m.
the
Orange
Township F.lre ·
Box 69,105 E. MainS!., Mt. Orab,
School, and Marjorie Blake.
Department
was
also called to
Ohio, 45154.
pending certification, was em·
Cherry
Ridge
on
the
hay !Ire.
played in the new nurse assistant
The Pomeroy unit responded to
In spite of a bag of problems. program.
a
call
on Mulberry 'Ave. at 11:46
E·mp.
t
oyed
as
substitute
David and Dorothy Sayre .of
a.m
.
in
which Ada· Warner was
teahcers
for
the
1989-90
year
Antiquity just keep smiling.
to
Veterans Memorial.
taken
were
Margie
Bartee,
Tammy
Since last ·November, David
The
Tup~rs
Plains unit all: 09
has been in University Hospital, Chapman, Debora !I Davis, Linda
p.m.
transported
John Thomas
Columbl.ls, three times - two Dye, Betty Hutchison, Betty Ann
White
from
the
fairgrounds
to
times for the balloon test which Loftis, Steven Patterson, Ann
Veterans.
didn't work out so well, and on Sisson, and Terry Wayland.
The Salem Township Fire
Employed as subsdtltute bus
March 2, he had open heart
Department
at 1: 50 p.m. was
surgery. Incidentally. It's Dav- drivers were Kathy Johnson,
called
to
County
Road 1 for a hay
id's second open heart operation, Vernon Little. Cynthia McMII·
fire
.
lan, Ro~ter Smith, donna Stacy,
the first bel~ 17 years ago.
At 2:30 p.m. the Raclru&gt; Fire
Usa
Thornton, and Larry
Dorothy had a kidney opera·
Department
went to Apple Grove
Tucker.
tion at the Holzer Medical Center
on
an
auto
accident
call in which
Juanita Lambert was granted
in November and a gallbladder
John
VanMeter
was
transported
operation In March. She's been . a medical leave of absence until
to
Veterans
.
.
.
Oct.
1.
undergoing therapy for the past
The Pomeroy unit at 7:26p.m.
Action on the bids for fleet
13 weeks, three days a week.
responded
to a call on Spring
David has just returned to his insurance were tables. Sherrie
Ave.
for
Audrey
Arnold who was
employment at the Ohio State Car I and Shelby Napper were
to
Pleasant
Valley Hospl·
taken
Liquor Store In Pomeroy . . Dotal.
and
at
8:08
p.m.
another
rothy is retired.
Pomeroy
unit
was
called
to
Lottery numbers
And what's in store? Well,
Village Manor for Donald Van·
David Is up for cataract surgery
Cooney
who was transported to
CLEVELAND
t
UPH
Tuesand Dorothy will be undergoing
Veterans.
day's
winning
Ohio
Lottery
surgery on a hand before long.
Finally, at 9:48 p.m. the
But they'restlllsmlllng. Inclden· numbers:
Chester
Fire Department was
PICK-3
tally, they thank you, you and you
called
to
Pomeroy
Pike again for
294.
for the visits. flowers and calls.
another
hay
fire
.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
. Seems to me those demolition $1,180,048. with a payoff due of
derby drivers should have some $333,112.50.
PICK·f
good recommendation on head·
Clarification
8647.
ache remedies. Rough! Do keep
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
smll!ng .
The anniversary party for Mr.
$214,955, with a payoff due of and Mrs. Charles Barrett Jr.,
$92,200.
which will be held on Sunday in
an open house event .
Dally atock prices
(As of 11 a.m.)
LieenftS issued
Bryce aud Mark Smtih
of Blunt; Ellis A Loewt •
Marriage licenses have been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Am Electric Power ........ , .... 29¥. Court to Donald Eugene Dye Jr.,
AT&amp;T .................................38¥. 21, Middleport, and Carol Lee
Ashland Oll ......................... 38
HendriX, 19, Middleport, and
Bob Evans .......... ................ 15~ Donald Joe Stehunetz, 28, Ra·
Chllrmlilg Shoppes ..............16"' cine, and Christina Marte Wit··
City Holding Co .......... :..... .. 15% son, 23, Racine.
·
Federal Mogul .................... 2~%

Comm~~:nfty

,.' ·
,•'-~.
·..•',,

CATSUP

59
Chuck Roast .....'!•• $1
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.
.$
9
19
Round Steak .•••.L:... .

•

•'
,•

12 OZ. PKG.

CHOICE BONELESS

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"....

NESTEA

Bacon ••••••••••••••• ::·••• 89&lt;
KY. BORDER
. .
W1eners ••••••••••••••••• 89&lt;

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69&lt;

SUGAR CREEK

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birthday with a surprise party at
her home.
·•
Attend!ng were Mr. and Mrs.
David Lindsey, Natalie and Ja·
son Pickerington, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Oatley, Athens: Michael
Dalley, Pam Hartley. Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Newell,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Meek, Kimberly, and Ryan, Mt.
Sterling, Ky.; Kathy Newell,

f\

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·Whole Fryers ••• ::·.~· 6 ·9~
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Page-7

' . . Newell birthday·celebrated
Adda Newell, The Plaln.S; was
... honored
recently on her 75th
•

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Wednesday. August 16, 1989

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LOAF

GRADE

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8 AM-10 PM

The Daily Sentinel·

By The Bend

' =
•·.

$1 7 9GA1101&lt; :

STORE HOORS
Monday thru Sunday

_.

'·

VINEGAR
We Reserve Tile Right To
limit Quantities

....

::

• 11 , •

. ·!J

Looldngfor
18D81ble

life insurance?

...........
c.Jlmel

450 2.. Aw.
. . . . . . Oil.
t6141 "'·1104

Allslale·
we--.

-Uitl

.

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IRISP &amp; SERVE VACUUM PACKED

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••• ~.~••• S1.19

SMITHFi.ELD

SHREDDED 12.19 ll.

.

c·OOKED HAM •••••••••••• ~m.~ Sl.9 7

ECKRICH PICKLE LOAF

LUNCH MEAT ••••••••••••••• ~.~••• S2 .19

ECKRICH

JUMBO BOLOGNA .·~ ..... ~.~••• S1.79

HOMEMADE

MEAT ·SALAD ••• ~ •••••••••••• !.-..•....... 79&lt;
BEAVER VALU'Y GRADE A

MEDIUM EGGS ......I)!l.L..89&lt;
KRAn 16 SLICE PROCESS

AMERICAN
CHEESE ..................... s
S.HEDO'S SPREAD

1.87

TUMBLER
MARGARINE .........ML.S9&lt;

WINESAP
APPLES ;.......... J.!.B.-. SJ.3 9
IDAHO BAKING
POTATOES .....!9.!P.;. S2.98
CEUD PACK

CARROTS .........!f.N-....39&lt;

ORE IDA

ONION RINGS ••••••••••••••• ~~~~~!~ Sl. 99
FRESH LIKE
CAULIFLOWER •••••••••••••••• !~.~~. S1.3 9
MINUTE IWD
LEMON AID •••••••••••••••••••• !!.~! ••••• 99&lt;
TOES •••••.••••••••••••••••~!.~!...... 89&lt;
DUNCAN HINES
BROWNIE MIX •••••••••••••1!~!.~~~. S1.19
DINn MOORE

.

BEEF STEW •••••••••••••••••••• !~.2!•• Sl ·•99
RUFFIN
3D GAL.-2D CT. $1 99
TRASH BAGS ••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

IIIAR DBUXE

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE ••• !~.~~•. S1.49
LUCKY LEAF
APPLESAUCE ••••••••••~~~~••• ~. 2/S1.2 9
ICELLOGG'S 11 01.

·

FRUIT LOO~S CEREAL ........... 52.49

INSTANT

NESTEA .~ •••••••~ ••••••••~ ••••• !~.~!~•. S2.49

IVORY LIQUID ••••••••••••••• J.2.~.~•• 52.5 9
CHA-N
BATHROOM TISSUE ........4.!~~ 51.59
CHif·IOY ·Al-DIE

�16, 1989

WedneidiiY, August 16, 198~

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the ignition keys a nd fired up the
and hi s par tner splashing In the
SAN FRANCISCO &lt;UPli
If
·
water . s aid poii·ce spokes man
• you're' going to steal a boat , you engine a bout 6:30 a .m.
The two, who police 's a id had
Warren Omholt.
should first know how to operate ·
Witnesses pulled Willey out of
been drfnking , backed the boat
one .
.
out
of
its
slip
at
·full
speed
and
the
water and Dauksha wa s
Two really bad .sailors we re
crashed
into
the
rear
of
an
arreste
d by Treasury agent
arrested Monday after they lost
unoccupied
40-foot
hou
seboat
.
Charles
Deatri ch, who happened
· control of a stolen 43-foot motor.
·
The
collis
ion
knocked
Willey
·
to
be
In
th e area, pollee said.
boat , rammed and sank a nearby
overl)oard
·
and
sank
th
e
Damages
were expected to top
• houseboat
and then smashed into
..
houseboat.
$50,000.
police
said .
. a pier , police said.
Police
said
Dauksha
then
' PollcesaidChdstopherWiiley,
~
jammed the throttle to full speed Cup cop bans plastic foam
19,
and Michael Dauksha , 20,
'
eomethlatl' you can't
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla .
and
slammed into the dock. He
apparently broke open the cabin
(
t;Pl)
-A county official banned
door to the 43-foot vessel, found . fled the scene while the boat
plastic
foam cups from . the
drifted with Its motor running

Quriks ·in

the news'·

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DOII't ~&amp;ell
operl&amp;e

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Broward Count y Governmental
Plastic foam cups never deCenter and said e ve n unwary compose and can sit In landfills
vis itors will be fined $1 If they for ce nturies, Grossman said.
bri ng cont r aban.d CliPS· into the She bought dozens of paper
bUilding.·
coffee cups and distributed them ·
County Commiss ion Chairman · to office workers.
Nicki Grossman Issued the ban
Grossman acknowledged her
Monday, citing e nvironmental order has dubious legal author·
concerns.
ity, but said she would be the
"Hey, I'm serious about this ," · self-appointed cup cop, person- ,
Grossman said . "We have a real ally looking for violators and .
environmental problem with Sty- collecting the fines herself. Even
rofoam and we might as well visitors ·who unwittingly carry
start tackling the problem right plastic foam coffee cups to public
meetings will be fined, she said.
here.''

AOIIERTISEO ITEM POLICY-Ea ch ot 1hi!se itdllert•~ ed i1ems •!i rcqu•rctJ ·to bt·, r ~; td d v
available for sale in each Kroger Store , e.~~'cep T as specif ic d!lv noted in ·n~~.s- .:.d 11
we do run out of an adven i&amp;ed ttem. we w•ll oHer . .- oU you r chOtce of iJ
compa tabltl item ." when available _ rellect'mg the ~ ame sa v • nr~ o; or a r&lt;Hn che r. k

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COPYR IGH T 1 9~ .
THE KROGE R CO ITEMS AN D
PH1CES GOOD SUNDAY . AUG 13 THROUGH SA TU A

O' AY AI Hi 19, 1989 .. 1N

GALUPOUS AND POMEROY STORES.

which will entitle Y~:~u _
t o purchasti the ad ... ertised ilem at the a d ve r1 •~ti-d pr1 c.:
w•thin 30 'Hays. Only one vendor coupon wil! be a cc epted per •tt~111 pur cha -,.!11

,'

Page 9.

WE RESERVE THE AlGHT TO lt!VIIT OU A "' T IT IES N ON!
SOLD TO DE A LE RS·

.
HORSES AND PONIES -These competitors,
age 9-14, are showing their horses aad ponies in

one of the horsemanship classes ·for the 4-H Horse
Show held on Tuesday morning at the Meigs
County' f'alr.

TAKING A RIDE- - Many people were enjoying
the rides at the Meigs County Fair on Tuesday

~fternoon. Here, some ·chlklren are moving In
. every direction while they ride the Scrambler.

Painting .contest winners

WINS THIRD ..:. Loretta Smith won third place at the Meigs ·
County Fair Talent Show held Tuesday afternoon at the ffilllop
stage. Smith sang the song Amazln11: Grace '!'nd won 55.

PLACES SECOND - Kim Crites performed a .d ance routine at
the Meigs County Fair Talent Show on Tuesday afternoon. Crftes
wqn second
and SIO for her perfo~apce which included

Juanita Lodwick, Chester, re.
ceived the best of show award for ·
her water color painting which
she entered iii this years painting
show at the Meigs County Fair.
The reserve best of show was won
by Shanon Codner, Syracuse.
With a total of ·30 entries the
winners were, In the junior
division of oil painting, Shanon
Codner, first; Ronald Allen
Vance, Albany, second; and
Steven Vance, AI bany, third.
In the ser.lor division the '
winners were Juanita Lodwick,
first: Dale M. Jacobs, Middleport, second; and Jeff Darst,
Middleport. third.
Winning in the junior division
of acrylic painting was Shannon
Codner, second. In the senior
division, winners were Da\e M.

Low·~Prices.

Jacobs. first; Jeff Darst. second;
~nd Suzan Annette Thoma,
Porneroy·, ihtrd. .
.
Shannon Codner also won in the
junior division of water color,
wltp senior division . winners
being, Juanita Lodwick, first;
Carol Nicholson, Middleport, second; and Rebecca Edwards.
Chester, third.
In the other media division the
j untor winners were Shannon
Codner. first; Ronald Allen
Vance. second; and Melissa ·
Dawn Vance, Albany, third. In
the adult division the winners
were Rebecca Edwards. first;
Annette Marie Grate, Che$ter.
second; and .Juanita Lodwick,
third.

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CRASH AND BANG - About lilly cars spent
Tuesday night bangln11: Into each other at the
Demolition Derby held at the Mel11:5 County Fair.
The winner of the event was Tony Beck of

GaiUpolls and second place went to

Sims of

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K'"r·ogering for low
rehouse Prices" on the items you
buy .the .most. Look for special i•save More Than A Lot" signs
· thr:o.ughout the store and stock. up. on the ·savings!

By United Press lnternatiDnal

President Bush, declaring that
If he could find a way to use
m llltary force to. free the Amerl·
can hostages In Lebanon without
jeopardizing Innocent lives, he
wo111d take action without

hesitation.
"If I could find some action diplomatic, military, prtvatesector, publiC-sector - that I
thought would help get hostages
out or guard against luture
hostage-taking, . I would take
such action."

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The 1989 Junior
and S.enior Fair Schedule

Diet Coke or
oca Cola Classic
12-Pak

Cans

88

J

2· LITER BOTILE . . $1.19

·o
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U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

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Cubed
Steak

•

P1111nd

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00

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1(-

~

1:00 P.M.-Pet Show- Show Ring
2:00 P.M.-Horse 8arness RacliiK
t:OO P.M.-Kiddie Tractor PuU
.
5: 30 P.M.-Group Therapy Band - Hllf Stage
6:00 P.M.-Open Clus Sheep ;fudging
Followed by Junior Fair Sheep Judging
7:00 P.M.-CircleD Wranalers- Hlll Stage
7:00 P .M.-4-H Horse Fun Show
8:00 f' .M.-Horse Pull- Center Field
'8:30 P.M.-McGuffey
Lane
.
\
' l
•-Grandstand attraction
,, . '
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1~-oL

$

'

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1188
4:30 P.M .-Little Miss &amp; Mister Contest-Hill Stage
'5: 30 P.M.-Junior Fair Parade
6:30 P .M.-Wyorrilng Wolf Bank-Hill Stage
7:00 P.M.-Youth Awards Night- Show R!Dg
7:00 P.M.-Antique Tractor Pull-Tractor PuU Area
'8: 30 P.M.-Charlie McClain'&amp; Wayne Massey
8:30 P.M.-Kiddie Games- Show Ring

..•-

S~rite,

Pound

..

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-----

REGULAR OR NATURAL

Polar Pak
Ice Cream

White House
Apple Juice

y,:Gallon

64-0L

00

Cottonelle
Bath Tissue
4-Roll

,00
REGULAR OR UNSALTED KROGER .DRY
ROASTED PEANUTS 12·0Z . .. 12.00

COUN f RY OVEN GINGER SNAPS 20·0Z. BAG
BUY ONE GET ONE FREE

I

300 SHEETS ' PER ROLL 1·PLY .

&lt;'

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",,,.

FROZEN

••

fox De Luxe
Pizzas

•

&amp;.8-7.6·0Z.

•"

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BUTIERMILK, SKIM, 2%
OR HOMOGENIZED

THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
APPLE, CHERRY. LEMON.
PEACH OR BLUEBERRY

Sealtest
Milk

Lunchbox ·
Pies

%-Gillon

,00

~

"'

·"'•.

''
,.'

For.
KROGEII G~AOE A LARGE EGGS
• 18·CT .. . 19&lt;

•

•.

KROGEII REAL SOUR CREAM OIPS

8·0Z .. . 2 fOR II .00

~

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California
O'Hepry Peaches

992-2556
d

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"At 1hi hd Of 1'he ,_.,.,...... lrliilg1"

-~-·~-(~··;

.'

Pound

1-LB. $1 .29-+Li. 0ECAFFEINA.TEO $1 .99

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SEE YOU THERE!

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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY : '

jPOIIIIOY, OHIO

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

I

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY

'&lt;

U.S. GRADE A

3-lb.

(Free Gate For Sealor Cit!:lena 1

11 PC. SHRIMP

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Spotlight
Coffee

TlllJ'i&amp;sDAY, A'VGUST 17, 1981

------Quote of the ddJ----

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drivers or· each neat then advanced to the feature event.
The winner of the first heat was
Barringer and Herb Patton of
Lancaster finished second . Goff
won the second heat and Lytle
finished second:
In the third heat. Beck, the
eventual winner, took first and
Scott Meeks of Athens finished
second, Glen Miller of Hadenvilie
finished first In the fourth heat
while J eff Ward of Bidwell took
second.
Terry Albright of West Colum· ·
bia. W.Va. won the fifth heat
while Simms took second in the
hl'jlt before going on to finish
' ec,ond In the feature event .

S1.39
WnH FRIES .................... S1.94

f '

'j,

..

Demolition Derby winners

•*

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BEST OF SHOW.-Juanlta Lndwlck, Chester, received the best
of show award for her water color painting at this years show at the
. Meigs County Fair.

Langsville, fourth to Eric Lytle of Belpre and fifth
to Don Barringer of Pomeroy.

DERBY PRACTICE? - A smaller version ol the ilemolltlon
derby was being held all day Tuesday at the Bumper Car ride at the
Meigs County Fair. While the competition was not as Intense,
children were allll doing their best to give their 'friends a bump."

.,

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'"- ..

THE . PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Gary E. Vigorito.
Secretary

1 GaJUpolls. Third place went to Delman Goff of

An overflow crowd gathered at
the Meigs County Fair Grandstand Tuesday night for the
annual demolition derby.
The event featured about 50
cars and was won by Tony Beck
of Gallipolis . Jeff Sims ofGallipo·
lis took second and Delman Goff.
of Langsville crashed his way to
a third place finish .
Fourth went to Eric Lytle of
Belpre and Don Barringer of
Pomeroy finished fifth. The top
drivers split $1,000 in prize
money.
The top five drivers first had to
find a way to keep their car
running through one of five
preliminary heats. The top two

' ····" ";

All interested parties will be
given an opportunity· to be
· heard . Further ·information
may be obtamed by · con'
tacting Hie Commission.

-_- .. -;#'

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Atid,M ore.

,.

LEGAL NOnCE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set for
public hearing· Case No
89-102-EUFC. to review
the fuel procurement practices .and potic1es of Colum·
bus Southern Power Company. the oPeration of 1ts
. Electric Fuel Component
and related matters . . This
hearing is scheduled to
· begin a!' 10:00 a.m . on
Septembef 5. 1989. at the
olfices of the Public
Utilities Commission. 180
East Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio 43266-0573.

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BONUS AAK
10-LBS. PLUS 2·LBS . FREEl

Tidy
Cat 3
12-lb. '

�•••

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Pega 10- The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeloy- Middlaport, Ohio

Meigs Flower Show winner
t@
kes best of· show .in first try
By CHULENE HOEFLICH
awa'rd between 1\aren Thompson
Bryan Fox. a first-ti me exhibi- and Trisha Davis.
a&gt;li in a senior flower show, took
th&lt; bes t ofsh ~ award in artistic
The second flower show of the
design al Tuesday's show, "Let's Meigs County F:dr will take
GO the Movies", at the Meigs place on ThursdayCounty Fair.
In Tuesday's show ribbons and
The 15-year-old youth, grand- prem iums were awarded in three
soo o! outstanding arranger, Pat places in the 25 classes of the
Holter, won the award with his show. The winners listed here
exflibil in " Some Li ke It'Hol", a · first through tllird , respectively,
mddern design In a tali ora nge a re as fo llows:
contai ner featuring butterfl y
Arllsti c Design
week, croton leaves; and Osage
"The Last Emperor", moriorange branches.
bana , Japanese manner: P at riTaking the reserve best of cia Holter, Pomeroy, Alice K.
sh&lt;lw In the exhibit was Judy , Thompson, P omeroy; and Betty
Snowden, with a crescent design Dean,. Pomeroy.
In :the class "Ten Comma nd"Gone with the Wind", mass
ments" with Betty Dean winning design: Joa n Snowden , Rutla nd,
tilE: special nature, art and Dorothy Karr, Pomeroy, a nd
industry rosette for her · fl oor · Patricia Holter. " • "'
arrangement in ''Giants. " In the
"Some Like ltJ!!Jt", includ ing
senior division the winner of the warm colors: Patricia Holter,
horticulture award went to Pau- Dorothy Karr, and Lorri Bar nes,
lin!! Atkins who accumulated the Ru tla nd.
most points with . her r ibbon
"Twins", using two contai nwiimers In specimens.
ers, one des ign: P eggy Crane,
Winning the best · of show Middleport, Joan Snowden, and
rosette in the junior a rtistic Patri cia Holter.
design division was Jennifer Fox
"Ten Comandme nts" , an inspiwith her "Three Men and a ra tional desig n: Joan Snowden,
Baby" design. Ben Crane was the Betty Dean, and P atricia Holter . .
reserve best of show winner wit h
"Accide nta l Tou r ist" , ab-his " Wizard ofOz" arrangement, stract: Judith Hill, Rutland,
while there was a ·ue for the Betty Dean, and Patricia Holter .
junior horticulture sweepstakes
"Gia nt", floor a rrangement:

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Betty Dean, Dorothy Karr, and
Patricia Holter.
''The Wizard ·Of Oz", a lavorlte
design, junio r class: Jennifer
Fox, Pomeroy, Ben·c rane, Middleport, and Tricia Davis,
Pomeroy.
"Three Men and a Ba by".
Includi ng a doll figur ine, junior
class: Je nnifer Fox, Ben Crane.
and Tricia Davis.
Horllculture Division
African vio let, s ingle bloom :
J uanita Lodwick, Chester , Karen
Lodwi ck, Pomeroy, and Pauline
Atkins, Rutla nd.
Afr ican violet , d ouble bloom,
Pauline Atkins, Juanita Lodwick, no third.
Flowering plant: Mary King,
Long Bottom, J im King, Long
Bottom, and Pauline Atkins.
F oliage plant: J im King, Long
Bottom, Karen Lodwick, and
Ju anita Lodwick.
·
Ferns: Pauline Atkins, Juanita
Lodwick, and no th ird .· 1,
Cactus and succulent : Peggy
Cr ane, Pauline Atkins, Evelyn
Hollon, Racine.
Marigold, car nation flowered:
Betty Dean, Eva Robson , Pomeroy, and Patricia Holter.
·
Marigold, chrysanthemum flowered: P atri cia Holter, Pauline
Atkins, no lh\fd. .
Zinnia, large dahlia: Howard

Public Iii otice

Public Notice

.
IN THE
· Tu~on . """ ............. 596.58
'Earninga of
COMMON PLEAS COURT
, lnv..tmant.o...... 23,041 .71
OF
ExtraCurricular
·
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Actlviti.. ..... .... 52,128.0&amp; ·
HOME NATIONAL BANK.
Ploinlifl Clau Materials
- vs. • f0el ............... 5,409.89
Misc. RICiipls ...... .. 349 .5&amp;
AOBEAT A. GIBSON and
Grants in A id
PANSY GIBSON,
Defendants Stilto
Sources ...... 1.913, 777.78
CASE NO . 89-CV-128
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION Fed. Sources ... 130,983.47
To Robert D . Giboon Md Tot. Receipts IOpemlng) ... 2. 702.337.30
Panay Glboon. whoao last
DISBURSEMENTS:
kn-n addraoa wu 611677
State Route 124, PortiMd,
Ohio 45770: you are hereby
notillocl\h.. you hove been Instruction ...1. 536. B04. 52
named dol•dont.o In a legal Supporting
Services ..... 1.030,626.43
action entitled Home Na ~
tional Bank. Plaintiff, vo. R o- Extracurricular
Act !viti.. .. ....... 66, 362,86
bort· D . Oiboon and Pansy
Oiboon, Defendants. This Debt Sorv . ...... .. 1&amp;.482.50
action hao uoignod Total Diaburse.Opor) .... .. .... 2.64$,246.1 1
Cue Number 89-CV-126
and is pending in lhl Court Exc. Rcpta . . Ovet/ (Undorl
Dis b ............. ... 113,081.19
of Common Pte• of Meigs
OTHER FINANCING
County, Ohio 46769.
SOURCES( USES)
The ob[ect of thi1 com·
plaint Ia for judgment on a Contributions •
Donations ..... ... 37.907.48
note which ia due and P-r•·

Operating Tra ~atero•
· ln ................ .. ..... .. 961 .31
Refund of Prior Years
· Expend ... ................ 64.04
Operating Transfers- ·
Out ... : ............. :.. 1951.311
Toto! Other Fin. Sourc..
(Uses) ..... ............ :.. 873.00
Dioburumonts &amp; Other
Us11/ NII .. .... .. (3, 259.191
Beginning Fund
Cah Bal .......... t B.066. 31
Ending Fund Cosh
Bolonco ........... 14,796.12
NON-EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
OPERATINO RECEIPTS
Food Serv!ca
Soleo ....·.. ...... ... B6,81 3. 70
Clua Materials
·
&amp; Foeo .... .. ....... 10.1116.84
Mile. Recaipts ..... 24.305.94
Grants in Aid 1
To\. llooelpu (()periling) ...... 121.63.6.48
OISBUASEMENTS: '.
OPERATING
DtSTRUBSEMENTS
Employees Solorin
• Wageo .......... 71, 036.56
Employe• Retirement
ble. You era required to an- Proc. Fm . Sales &amp;loss
of Asl8to .. ... ...... 1,046.82
Benefits ........... 35, 191 .36
swer the complaint within
PurchHed
28 days after I hi IMt publi- ProC181 !Tom Sole
of Noteo ....... ... 38,000.00
Servicn....·....... t5,405.13
cation of this notice which Operating
·
,
Supplln &amp;
will lie published once each
Tronofwro-ln .... ...... B10.58
Materialo ...... ... . 96,519, 10
week for six auccllaiva
Advances
-In .. .. .. 43,895.89 Other Obiacto ......... 699.90
· woeka. lhl laot publication
Total Disburse. ·
•
wilt be modo on August 18, Re:fund of Prior Years
Expend . .... ,... : .... 3,722.26
Oper) ............. 218,36~ . 84
19B9, and lhe 2B dayo lor
~ xc . Rcpta. Over / (Underl
answer . wHf commence on Operating Tr.,.sferaOut •. : ... .. ....... (37,670.681 · Diab ..... .. : ...... (97.218 . t6)
lh........
.. .(26,395.B9)
.
NON-OERATING
In ella of your f•1ure to AdvMces-Out
Refund
of
Prior
Yeara
RECEIPTS
anawer or otherwise reaR-pts .. ... ..... ... (188.071
CDISBURSEMENTSI
•
pond a roqu Ired by tho Ohio
State Sources .... 111.402. 4B
Rulli of Civil Procedure, Total Other Fin.
Sources(U.•1 .. .. 12,248.28 Pad. Sourcu .. ... n.073. 38
judgment by default will be
Oiobursemonls
• Other
Operating
ronderlld,abalnat you lor the
Uses / Not ...... 116.339.47
Transfers-In .. .. . 36.780.00
rallol&lt;lomMded In tbo comBeginning Fund Cash
Advances-In ...... 26,396.B9
plaint.
· Bolonco ... ... ... 148.856.08 Refund of Prior Years
Dated: July 10. 1989
Expend... .. .... .. .... ...... 1, 11
· Larry E. Spencer. Ending Fund Cosh
Bolonca ...... ... 264.994.53 AdvonC81-0ut ..... 43,895.89
Clerk of Courts
EXPENDABLE
Total Other Fin . SourMeigs County Common
TflUST
FUNDS
iUoeol ............ t 1D. 736.96
Plaao Court
REVENUE
RECEIPTS
Dioburumants
&amp; Other .
(7) 12. t9. 26:
Extracurricular
Usoo/ Nat.. .. ..... 13,520.79
(81 2. 9, 16, 6tc •
_Acti)litial .......... 36,259. 33 Beginning Fund Cash
,
Misc. Rocoipts .......... 26.00
Balonca .... , .. .... 13.036.21
' Grenla in Aid
Ending Fund Caoh
Public Notice
Total Receipts Balance ...... : .. .. 28,557.00
(0porolingi ...... 36,2B4.33
-TOTALS
DISBURSEMENTS:
Taxeo .... ...... .. .. 578,060.29
NOTICE OF
EXPENDITURE
Tuition .... ,... ._.......... 696.56
APPOINTMENT OF
DISBURSEMENTS
Earnings on
,
"
FIDUCIARY
Extracurricular
Invest.
....
:
........
2~.041 . 71
On Augull 11. 1989, in
Activitiao ......... 39 ,418.1\2 food Service
tha Meigs County Probote Total DiabursementlSel• .... ..... ... ... B8,813.70
Court. Case No. 28340.
iOpor) ......... .. ... 39.416. 52 Extr8cuiTicul•r
Martha A.
Cunningham, be. Acpll. Ovor/ CUnor)
Aclivltieo .. , ...... B7.3B7, 38
3.2 240 Bailey Run Road, PoDiob .......... ...... 14.132.191 Cleos Motarilllo
,
meray. ·•Ohio 4117119. wao
OTHER FINAI\ICING
&amp; F -....... ..·.. .. 16,928.73
eppointed Adminlatratrix of
-· SO,URCES(USESI
Misc.
tha estate of Charlel EarnMt Contributions &amp;
Aecelpls .. .. ... .. . 24,6B0.49
Arnold. doca•ed. · Iota of
donations ......... .. .. 808.96
Grar\ls in· Aid
37999 Arnold Road, PoState
meroy, Ohio 45769.
Sourcn .. . .-.. 1,913.777.78
Robert E. Buck,
Fod. Sourcos ... 1:!0.9.8 3.47
Probate Judge
(ena K . Noualroad.
Clerk l2""'1n1iAeimiilfiii~-­ lo_tal Re~eipt\ - . _ . _ '
181 t 6, 23, 30 3tc

· D~":J:fe~~~s

.

'
.
.
.
JUNIOR ARTISTIC WINNERS- Jennifer Fox
took best of show, and Ben Crane, reserve best of
show In the junior artistic arrangements division.
J e11nller's modern design featured Queen Anne's

t.ace·, gum branclj, R!ld baby's breath, while Ben
, used red zlnnlu and doc)l In a verllcal modern
deslgil for his reserve best ol show winning
arrangement.

.

,.

Ervin, Racine• . Eva Robson,
Pomeroy, Betty Dean.
Zinnia, large cactus: ·Eva
Robson, Pomeroy, P atricia Hoi-

•'

ter, and Peggy Crane.
Zinnia , large flowered, junjor
class: Karyn Thompson. Racfrie.
Laura M. Mitchell, Pomeroy,

Kat hryn T. Mitchell, Pomeroy.
Marigold, large fl owered:
Tricla Davis, J ennifer Fox, and
Ben Cra ne.

\o

.

NATURE ART
Betty Dean's floor
. AND INDUSTRY AWARD.
arrangement in "Giants" won her a s pecial award. She used a
hayfork carrier out of a barn as tile container for her design with
plant material oil red gladioli, caladiums, and celosia.
.

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW - This beautiful arrangement of
red roses, miniature carnations, and ming fern in the inspirational
class, •'Ten Commandments" accessor !zed with a Madonna and
child won the reserve best. of show award lor Judy Snowden.

.

'

·-

,,

Nationwide
Insurance offers

-=~=cis

'
Notice

a brSak on their
·. auto insurance.

LOCAL
SCHO'OL DISTRICT
Combined Financial Report
of tho Board of Education
for tho Fiscal Yeir Ended
· Juno 30, 1989
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Taxes .............. 676,050 .29

If you are young and

marrieditJationwide may

be able to save you money

on your auto insurance.
«;:1!)1 your local
Nationwide agent today to·
see Hyou quality.

5

Elolu Boston
985-4331
Treasurer of tha Board of .
..Education
(8)16 lie

'

Remembering
Alway•

EAS'f~AN

10per,t.) ..... :t,8ti9, 2118. 11
DISBURSEMENTS:
Instruct........ 1,536,804.62
Supp. Sorv..... 1.030,626.43 ·
EKtracurricullr
Actlvilieo ....... 105, 789.18
Debt Serv ......... : 16,482.60
Employeeo Salaries
&amp; Wag............ 71 ,036.66
Employe• Ret irement
Ben alito, .. ....... 35, 191 .36
Purchuod
SaNiceo .. ......... t5,405.13
Supplies &amp;
·Mater... .... ....... 96,619.70
Other Ob)Kts ......... l99.90
Total DiobursemonlsC0perl ........ . 2.907,616.27
Exc. Rcpto. Ovor/ (Under)
Oisb . ........... .,(4B.267.r161
Contribution• &amp; ·
donatlona.... .... . 38.716.4'1
Prac. Fm. Sola •
Losa of Auots .... 1,046. 62
ProC88U !Tom Sale of
Notes .............. 38,000.00
State Sourcn .....15,402.4B
Fad. Sourc.. .... . 77,073.36
Operating Transleratn .. ................ .. 38,521 .B9
Advances-In .. .. .. 69, 291 .78
Refund of Prior Years
Expend .............. 3, 787. 40
Operating· TranafereOut .. ..... .... .... (38,521 .891
Adven ...out .... (69.291 .781
Receipts of Prior Year' s
Receipts ............. (168.07)
To ... Other Fin. Sl!lir(Uoeol ..... ... .. .. . 173, 85B.23
Diobur~&amp;manta • Other
Usn/ Not.... ... 125.601.07
Beginning Fund
Ceoh Bal. ....... 180,748.58
Ending Fund Caah
Bolanca ......... 308.347 .86
Cosh in Banko
CNet) ................ 45,378.88
lnvostmenls ..... 260.968. 77
Tot. Fund Bol ... .306,347.65
SUMMARY
INDEBTEDNESS BOtiiDS
.Bal. Beginning of
Period .,............ 90,000.00
Bal. I -30-B9 ..... 90,000.00
MEMORANDA DATA
Auals.
Valuatlo~ ....... 30,969, 193
Property Tax Levies
Inside 10 Mill ... ..... 4,0000
Outside 10 Mlll ... 16.5000
ADM .............. ... .... 807.00
Number of Non-Cart.
Emplov- .............. 3B.OO
Number of Cen.
Emptoy- ....... ....... 59.00
I certify tho loll owing roport to be correct end true,
to the b•t of my knowiedge:

~-1

Linda Lou Stewart
Who Left us August
16, 1973

Estate General

608
E. Main1111iii

•

-

~

Lunar eclipse set for prime-time

""'···

WASHINGTON IUPI ) - Star.
gazers in the Eastern United
States will witness their fi rst
total lunar eclipse in seven years .
1J
Wednesday evening II skies a re
' "~
clear - a colorful, natural
·'· spectacle conveniently set in a
prime- time slot.
The Great Lakes region should _
have a clea r view of the moon,
a nd cl oud s should also move out
of New Engla nd in time for the
big event, said Bob Bell, a
met eo ro log is t at Na tional
Weather Servi ce headquarters In
Was hington.
The Mid-Atlanti c region and
most of the South will probably
not be as for tunate, with fairly
heavy cloud cover forecast for
most areas except Florida, Bell

fl. ' ·

,.

.-

GOOD U$ED

\"

,.'L

II

WASHERS, DIYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

'

'

BUNNIES, BUNNIES, BUNNIES - Rainbow
Rabbit Sale~~, near Racine, provided a new show
box far this year's rabbit judging at the Meigs
CotaltJ Fair. T•e Junior Fair Judpng took place
'l'lletdq afternoon. At limes, with their heads
paldq out lram their chutes, the rabbits

appeared to be at Ute gate, just before a big race.
Judglni the Junior Fair rabbits la 'Harry Rlee,
PortamouUt•. This year the Melp Fair Is also
feallll'lllg an open clAM rabiJl&amp; jud(lng which will ,
take place Saturday momlngstardng at8: 45Lm.

said.
The fu II moon will be tota lly
covered by the -Earth's shadow
from 10:20 p.m EDT uqtilll : 56
p.m . E DT. a ccording to astronomers at Sky &amp; Telescope magazine.

Representative
302 Wast 2nd Street
Pomeroy. OH . 45769
Phone: 614/ 992-5479
Res.: 614/ 992 -2477

Look's who's 32

·~NATIONWIDE
•

••4 n Thl• y..,

INSURANCE
I'Ucionwrrlcte il on Y'OIM _ .

\

Naia IWilll r .4 utu~~~rn.nnc:. eomp.,
Homo ~ . """-

(

'

Olio

'

PH. "6·1699

'

FINAL CLEARANCE

ON

1
!

SUMMER MERCHANDISE

•'

5·0°/o OFF

••
t

lOUIS: I A.M.·6 P.M.

•Mobile Hom..
Parts
· •Mobile Home

•ZETOI TRACTORS
lfCHO PRODUCTS
•HOWAlD IOTAVATORS
•YARDMAN MOWIIS
lfNTEISTATE IAlTRaS

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

Rentals
•Lot Rantala

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

992-7479
. 'lt•.33 North of
·Pomeroy, Ohio

742·2455
Salem St.
Rutland,Oh.
6/ 311/ lfn

- 1-13-'11-tln

MEET THE
STAFF

PERM SAlE
Now Jhru Sept. 'I, 1"119

10% OFF All PEIMS
WALK-IN WElCOME

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

.
DOZER
SITEWORK - kOADS
,..
· · CLEARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

We Cerrv Fi1hlng luppll•

Pay

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-226t
EVENINGS
4/ 6/ 89/ tfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

SWEEPER REPAIR
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

SYRACUSE,

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MQRE

CAlL 992-117 56

01.

"DOC" VAUGHN
Cenlfied Llcen1ed Shop

992~6872
6·5 -'89-tfn

· TAIDMAN MOWIIS
ECHO SAWS &amp; .,.._RS
OREGON .IRS, CHAINS
IYAN SIIYICE ClllrEI
Parts &amp; Swtrico On

SUNNY HOLLOW- Approx JO'h acres, wrth spring, electric
available, all mmerals. ASKING $14,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Would make a gr eat rental ora home lor a
young cquple. Has 2 bedrooms, dining room, one floor, all
carpl!led, new wof, and 2 lots. $14,500.00. ·
ROCK SPRINGS ROAD - Beautilul ranch type house in the
country. 3.98 acres with scenic view. Two W.B.F.P.. full basement garage, many other leatures. $84,900.00.

d•-•

rows.

LEI' ART - MANUAL ROAD - Mobile home site, one acre
landscaped tor mobile home or building srt e.. A steal at
$3,500.00.
.
.

The comfort and sweetnau of peace:

H••lf'll s r.·in f,. Ri•·r·
Friends &amp; Family

STARCHER ROAD - POMEROY - 64'h acres, vacant
ground, gas and electric 3'ailable. Spring lor development.
CALL
FOR. DETAILS! •REDUCED PRICE $48,000.00.
.
1

REALTY CREII IIILL BE
LOOKINO FOR YOU AT OUR MEIOS
COUNTY FAIR BOOTHII

TACKLE BOX
' OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7DAYS

LIVE BAIT
ETC .
21ft Mi. Below
Racine locks &amp;
Dam At Antiquity

I Next to Hill Top Groctry)

7, 24-B9 1 mo.

DEA., OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Range •F reezers

NOW OPEN
WITH ROOMS AND
APAITMENTS FOR
RENT !By Day or
Weeki

•Refrigerators
"Must le Rlpllir..le"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE·

$18 Pe.r

IY'I':ii•:I.J.U -915-356
We Service All Mak•

Dey &amp; Up

949-2526

7 · 12· 1 89· 1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

;

A¥1

CO. . EICIAI.

•CUITOM KITCHENI. aATHI
•EXTINIIVE IIEMODRINO

IVINYL IIDING a ROOANG
tMfi'ALIUilDINq&amp;
eHEW HOMIE8

I

t

•DlEPOII

\

I

l

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4 -c:ycle

,_,.,,

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
514 East Main
··2·6910 -

Ohio ·

·'

"'

BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ
,,••
DANCE CLASSES -·•
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON

124, P1111111roy Ohio

IN MIDDLIPOn, 01110

Now Taking ·
Registrations

992-5218
For More lllformtion
7-17-'89-1110. pd.

L. W.STEWAR
TRUCKING

SER"ICE .

We can r~air and 1'1·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also. ocid boil and rod
out radiator$. We also
rtpair Gas Tanks.

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

PAT HIU FORD

9.9 2-2196
Middleport, Ohio .
1·13-tfe

DRY CLEANING
SERVI(E
.OFFERED AT _

Fabric Shop

......

992·2284

POMEROY, OHIO

. .,.~~~

s•••l•lhte"

1-1-lmo.

Announcements

3 Announcements
WANTED • Single ma lt Cot'ftoo
ponlonohlp. 304-!;75-4603.·

4

Giveaway

2 male klneM 10 glvuwa~, 7
wk. old. 614-446·23!13.
3 German Shepherd pupplu, &amp; _
WHkl Old.

304~95-35g.f,

·e

Stock
olor
Homelilo,w-...,,
Tecumaeh, BriQIJI &amp;
Stratton.

6

Lost &amp; Found

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

LOST Jul~ 4, tNI: Vicinity of
ComslalkiSoutholdo (21 Hlllerlf
18
mos.
old,
,

EXCEPT

brown/white, $100. Reward. 304·
675-7211 or 675-6UI.

HOUDAYS

LOST: Whllt Chow, 2 rrs. Old.
No Coll1r. RtWIIrd. Edgemont
Dr• • , .., 114-44H780.

We Buy All
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plasti(s,
Stainless Steel,
Etc•
Give Us A CaU
Toda y"

992-S-114

Loceted Off ~YI~''-~t
Jet. of Rta.

PH. 992-3922 .

~

"'
'i

r

ln · IIUiope~t, Oh.

HEIIIY E. ClELAIID ....................................... 992·&amp;19i
JEAII TRUSSELL............................................ 94t.2660
DOTTI£ TURfiER ............................. ............... 99 -5692
JO HILL ........................................ ................915-4466
OFFICE ..••••••••.....•.•.......•~ .............................. 992·2259

1600 GAUON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
Dill HAULED

Roger Hysell
Garage

RECYCLING

.. GENERAl

-

••

Odd ioro, 304-773.5105.

»WNII: GIEG I. IOUSII

·,.\', •

ALLEN'S
HAULING

7-26-'89-t mo. pd..

OHIO RIVER
.CAMPGROUNDS

WANTED

~:::::::::::~ ,

5/ 1!/ 19""

D&amp;R

992-3897

7-13-'8'-1

992-2371

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

St. Rt. 124
M.iddleport , Oh .

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Call Anytime

PH. 949-2101
or los. 949-2160

DAVE'S .
SMALL ENGINE
IE PAIR
a..sw et Yalloy lu l

SUMMER HOURS
Mon.-Tue. 8·111; Thurs.-Fri. 8·6
Wed. &amp; S1t. 9-6
We Acccept Food Stampal

WATER
SERVICE

AI .....

992·

$orbee Sugarless Candies ~at. Flave(s
.... Sl,ll- 1 OL
SALE Sl 75 I 01.

949-2168

8/ 4/89-tln

Rt.

SINCE 1969
IISIJ n. S1MttiSI

Aug. 11·23 ICiasad Thur., .Aug. 11-falrl

614·915-4110

VISA • MASJERCHARGE

eOeneral Ches eja
Maintenance
•Compuleri:r:.ed Balancer

NEW- REPAII

FREE ESTIMATES

AI•• Tr••••lulo•

•New &amp; Uaed Tir•
•Custom Pipe Bending
•Oil Changes
•Gr-• Jotio ,

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES
Taka the pain out of
pain~"ll · Let mo do
it for you. ·
YEIY IEASONAILE
HAVE IEFEIENCES

.. .._ ....

3 unit apartment bid&amp; in Pomeroy. Needs
•ated on a good street. PRICED TO SELL'!

Many to Choose
Mint Patties
Peanut Iutter Fudge
Fruit Flavored Paffies Chocolate Fudge
Peanut Butter Cups Oreo.Pips
Bon Bons
Choc. Suckers
Chocolate Cherries
White Choc. Suckers

" At Rtesonable Prices"

"Fr.. Eltimetea"

prO,CEROT - Abeautilu 1 modern ki\chen compliments this 3
·
~rn home. Ful,l basem e~t. newer deck, lots ol closet
·.·-e woodwork! PRJC[I) REDUCED!! $4l.90Q.OO.

-SWEET TOOTH?
. HOMEMADE CANDIES

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

JONES:. TIRE
.' CENTER

'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NO 'SUNDAY CAll$.,
3-11-tfn

DooH i.•

Call 992·2772

1-100-535-2199

5-21- '18-""

•VJNYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

....
.'

FREE ESTIMATES

ToM Frea

1,000 GAUONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

NI.ASE Certified M1chanic

222 East Main

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

OHIO

Most Foreign and
Domettic Vehicl•
Al e Service
All M-&amp;or &amp; Minor
Rep•irs

''-.;J

Windows

UlTERIOR ·EXTERIOR

•LIGHT HAULING

H2· 77~i4

Storm

Assn.

LIN'DA'S
PAINTING

IISIIINCI PHONE

'

.,

Blown IMulation

Member Nalionll Pest

•SHRUB S. TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

Iii,~;.;~

POMEI~Y,

SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

Your Phone

16141

TERMITES • ANTS

Grant A. Newlancl

Now !Malian: ,

168 North Sacontl
Mitldleport, Ohia 45760

Vinyl Siding

Seamless Gutter
Repio&lt;tment Windows

(6141 667-3271

Sand-Stone-Dirt
7•18-'89-tfn

PI.UMIING &amp; HEATIIG

SINCE 1"'"

Malli&lt; - Certaintotd®

ROACHES • FLEAS

PH. 949-2101
or Ris. 949·2160
Day or Night

DUMP TRUCK

Middltjlort

169 N1 2nd

&amp; PEST CONTROL

J&amp;L
INSU-LAliON

Control

SPECIAL THIS WEEIC:

LEVI'S WEEK NOW IN
PROGRESS. ·
· :
AUG. l4•19
290 SECOND

.

Hepty BlrtUat
Dl••• &amp; Bee

SWEETNESS OF PEACE
After the clouds. the sunshine
After the winter. the apr·
in g.
After tho shower. lho
rainbow For life il a changeable
thingi
After the
night, the
morning
Bidding oM
ce•o.
After IHa' 1 car• and sor-

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

COUNTY ·
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe., Gallpollt

NEW LISTING- SHARON ROAD ...:. Off Co Rd. 35. Racin e, 5
acres,' privacy, lots of shade trees. 24x55 home, with large
living room, 3 ·bedrooms, wall\-in closets, 21ull baths. utility
room and barn. $39,900.00.

JEFFREY L~ WARNER

MOBILE
HOME PARK

.

~:;;;;;::tit=:::::;::;:::=::::; -'
··l...

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

3/ 17/ 88

992-2259

between Karen ·Thompson, left In front, and
JUNIOR HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKE\l
- There was a tie lor junior horticulture . Trlsha Davis. Pictured with them are, in back at
left, Pauline Adkins, flower show co-chairman,
sweepstakes winner at this year's Dower show
and Myrna Cordray, judge.
held on Tuesday at the Meigs County Fair

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hets. Pomeroy, Ohio

MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME
(6 Ul 44.._4712
7-18-'89·1 mo. pd.

U9-2969

POMEROY, _
o·.

.
.l''

AIID VMIS.

mow·HOUDAY IIIII, UNAIIGA, 01110

HOURS: -Mon,-Fri. 9-7
Sot. 9-5
ClooedSunuy

HaPPy Ade

.'"'

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
... Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Stop By and See Us!- F inancing Available

Public Notice

.

-'

::z:

Wit HAVE A GOOD BBUCTIOII 011

j

: SENIOR HORTICULTURE SWEErSTAKES - Pauline Adkins, left, of the Rutland' Garden Club, received the senior
horticulture sweepstakes award for her entries In the first olthe
two Dower shows which was held on Tuesday at the Meigs County
Fair. She l• pictured with judge Myma Cordray.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
Ill am DIP'fEUIIfT COLOitl. K• *

Public Notice

.'•

; elevision ListeninJ Devices
·!.
Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp; !lln1ial
~ Hearinc Evaluations For All Aces

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

•'

. ·'&gt;

· BEST OF SHOW - This modern design In "Some Like It Hot",
~sing warm colors, won a rosette for 15-year-old Bryan Fox. He
tOok the top award of the show lor his first exhibit In asenior flower
!!Jiow. Fox used butterfly weed, colored leaves and Osage orange
braaches In his arrangement in a tall orange container.

Business Services

Classifie

·••

1

The

•

brownlblacklwhflt;

dark

~

Loat In Rodney aru, rwddllh

brown dog, lookt like 1 O.RMn~ "'

Shophotd, 614-2411--5021.

Yard Sale

7

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

II,._,

4 tomlly, Contonarr • - · -:
Aug.
Koraoone fllllllrl,
otone
i•ro,
knlck-llniCilt,'
Hom10o
bora,
handmade
youngmen1 clot~l like new, :t

mo,..r

e.

,..

All Yord SalOl Mull II Pold In .
Advance. DEAtiLINE: 2:DO p.m ";
tho day botare lhl lid lito run. ·
Sunday odtllon • 2:DO p.m•. •
Friday. llondoy ICIIIOI! • 2:01!
p.m. S•turdar.

I•

)

1

"

�Page 12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A·DAY

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

Rentals
41 Houses tor Rent

01.-

S Rio Orondo
(glrlo) 10
lhlro homo Olhlr tid. 2
blocks lrom Clmpuo. No
omoldng, ddnkfng, drugo or
~loo.lhlo lo tducollonol 101·
ung. 114-742-3033.

Ceolw lor., """..
and
............
1l'lh • '"'"""'
,.h. Th....
·l frl, on K!IIW lid. oil 211,
Ullrd ......, on loft.
·.
Ganal
oil

a Void. O.J,

Whllo Rd.

Ill. 1110. Aug. .17·11-11. t-4.

tlohlnf.

Lown, ganlon IRiilllng,
.

1
1f18 olovory1nlng.

5 houoo, Krocflf Pork.
- - -·3746.
'
Fuml- 3 room collage, 1 br.,
ln town, rafw•nc• l depoalt
roq:d. No poll. 114-441-2543.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14 wide Z b1: CA, naw cond., 1

lllchlgon Solo. School clolhlo,
XX·Ia~ clolhll, 112 po:Jc., 1..,-,
.._lull bod, mlec., RL 141.

mi., from ijolzer, private lot.

11: Frtdar, 11i s.tur•r. 11.

" ,.,•,ne&lt;'
.:~·
I I•V(' ll l'X j . 0UIU
(' · 1ay, I .1IP

S1-.

1

KIT N'

Space for Rent

CARLYLE~ by Larry

Wri&amp;ht

49

71

Autos for S1l1

J~

gufdo. 1412-844-~

• 70 11to open '""lnge.

our, DIW'T IH
•

72 Trucks for Sale
1171 Chivy, 1 !on pick-up, dull

'(0U VE SEEN A DOG ALL
'(OUR LIFE, f.lAVEN'T YOU ?

'

I VE OFTEN WONDEREI/
MIAT MADE YOU DECIDE
TO BECOME A DOG ..

I WAS FOOLED Bl{
J06 DESCRIPTIO

--l ....

•

-

new procedure called

valvuloplasty for newborns.

iC&lt;lmoclr
•liZ Smothers
Hour The Smolhers

Brolllero

,.

Brother lake a tour of lhe
· lhings lhal scare us mosl. (R)

'AND MEEK

iGlrtala] (2:00)
MOVIE: Gina! Glrtaf

..

Pr!meNawa
0 Murder, Slla Wrote
®NiollvllleNow
8:30 t!J BiHiardo 1989 ·
Snooker-Pool Challenge (T)
· (5) Major LeefiUII
(l) f1 I]) Head Of The Cflll
Charlie starts moonlighting
as a TV pitchman. (R) Q
9:00 II (2) IDl Night Court Cable
cameras enler lhe courtroom
&amp; lhe slalf adopls TV
personas. (R) Q
(I) CJI]) Hooparman
Hooperman and McNeil musl
use ingenuity in aransporting
a body . (R) Q
CD (!) Champlonohlp
Ballroom Dancing 1988 Top
' professional dancers from
!he U.S. and Canada
·
· compete in lhe Lalin and
modern divisions of dancing
' in lhe competition held in
Cleveland. Ohio. (NR) (1 :30)
ill) e1!21 Jake a Tile &gt;
F1tman During a murder ·
(!))

-or

.

••-If

MORK ·MEEKLE ANO
LOOKWHOSA

6HE WI'S a.J~
•A

CRITIC ... He

emL..L LA~S

LUMe.eR...w:;K6
D~H"Ta&lt; ...
'

AT'KNOCK-

KNOCK\ .lQKES.

.

'

investigation, Jake discovers

McCebla has a son . (R) Q
Larry King Live!
0 MOVIE: Pegar Sue Got
Married (f&gt;G13) (2:00)
9;30 8 (2) IDl Nikki I Alexander
. Alex is stunned 10 find a
(I))

BARNEY
t.IERE COMES.

MISS &amp;OSSIP
19.9!1

OF

sobbing Russian woman on

SHE'LL SET MY
SUPPER BACK

hiS dOOrslep. Q
'
(!) Prolaoa!onel Bowling
(l)
I]) Coach Hayden
· faces pressure lo produce a
winning season. (R) Q
Cll Elvia; Heart a Soul
Explore Elvis' musical rools
and lake an inllmate look al

a

TWO SOUD
HOURS!!

J

his private life. Musical .

greals lrace lhe influence ot
gospel and blues on his
style. (1:00)
&gt;
10:00 (]) 700 Club
..
(2) IDl NSC Newo Special
Gangs. Guns &amp; Drugs•. Pari 2
of 2C
(I)
I]) China Balch Pifol
Nalch Aualen, llsled as MIA.
shows up wilh a POW
cohort. (R) Q
ill) Ill (12) PHpla MI(IIZine
On TV People Magazine

"'·

br

lot,

e

.,

r&lt;ll!'

e

newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
someone preaaure you Into making a
OH 44101· 3428. Be sure lo alate your
maJor dlltlllon today. 11 you feel you
zodiac sign.
need more time 10 think thlnga through
VIRGO (A... D-lept. 22) You're
thoroughly, by au meana, tlke 11.
preulng your luck with lhe -today II
PISCES (FelL 'IIHhrclt II) You might
BERNICE
you
are
lacluidalalcal
.about
doing
1&amp;haVe
10 contend with a aoll·eppotntecl
BEDEOSOL dfoua, bu1 nee 111ary Iaika. To avoid a aupervlaor
at work today. Quietly do
noprtmancl get than out of the w.y
your own Job u you - 1ft and let lhla
qulclcly and elllclently.
Individual hammer hla own nalfa.
LI8IIA (lept. 2I-Oct. D) II poealble,
ARIES (llarciii1·Aprll1t) Thfa Ia one
of !hose daya when II might pay to like
· - - of one whcl you d.rn to be
arrogant and dictatorial. You'll h... ill·
8 back aaat •• large (lllherlngl. Pu&amp;hy
tie patience for such IYI* today and . types who wiN be loOking to Inflate their
may not be able to fiOkl back 1 lew anown egos moy wind up having them
gryworda.
punctured lnatead .
·
SCORPIO (Oct. II IIDU. 211 h'a not fair
TAUIIUI (April 1N1ar 'Ill) You'll be
to tlke out your tru11ra11on1 on the famout of bouncl8 today II you ex~ lhl
Uy today. If the outlkle WOt1d hu treal·
entire houaehokl to march to your
11, 1_.
eel -you unld1)CIIY and you dkln:t IIIIa It, · d1U11111*. Trying to project your IU·
.._
• Why do the 111M to fOvacl 01111?
coUld r1IIUit In &amp;rgUIIINIII
You could be far luckier In the work IAGnTAIIIUI (llalt. II 'liM 11)
;:::..,:-..: COflfoindly.
&lt;*r 11....._ 'Ill) Plllllira
- . tn the ,..lheid than you llave Words.,. the 10011 of~ r-t
beiln tor PIIIIIPit claclde. Now Ia the loday yoqr c:,holcll of-!-' to ur ..._ 1111'1 naumr'ty the T...,. 11rang 8Uit
tltM tO . . . _ your ClrMml be they 1 fO whont COUicl be IJUIIa ~­ lncllhiiiiiOrlcorl*lg could 1111 you Into
IIIOmOIIOii. 1 big 1011 or it8rtJng your 1111. Take axtra Clf8 to ~ vwbaf- Clalp trouble today. Thlnl&lt; balin you
IPaak lncl haW
totennoe to tlllln
illin
-~~~1111 any lhoullht you . . . . .
·
L10 (...., . .- . II) AlthOugh your CAJIIIICOIIil (11M. 21 lr 11) Finan· to Olh8rl.
k-llone mlaht ba well-mMnfng to- clal dllflnga ocMCI be lralght with_,_ CAIICIII
IWitlr II) n·a quill
c1-v illhaq wlil not IPIINOiata your 11• · plluatlouuncl hldelan ctw 1 today. Be PGIIIblt IIIII todly could be - Of
t..,Pth•to ... them whit to do or how --rut you don't ~ yornlff (laltlng . , _ rllny Clayl when you lhoulcl have
to tun their a-, ~e.ap your own coun- · fmmaMCI In an arr~ lllalllwel beiln AVinG your petollll. II you
hllftn'l, ..,.... ftncl Utllllliltic: Upactao
aat. Lao, tr.t youllllf to • bfrlhclay gilt.
...... ..,..._ 111 Don't let lloniiNn't
nagotlablt.
Band fOr your Altro-Graph, c/o thla .
.1
,

visits the s·u mmer home of

Chrislis Brinkley and Billy
Joel: also learn aboul Robert
Redford's crusade to help
Hispanic sheepherders.
(1;00)
181ID l!lvla: One Night With
You This 1968 special.
teaMing Elvis jamming wHh
musician friends before a
small audience. heralded his
comeback to live
performance and making
hHa . (NR) (I :00)
·
(!)) Evening Newa
10:30CD aJ Hewl
(!) Ill Mofara' WOIICI Of
Ideal Elaine Pagell, Part 2
1210nllaga
11:00(]) MOVIE: l'lof"'oaet..
._,.

·=
~ ==-~0:30)

.-(2) Cll .1]) •

•

c.-.

'

'

'

(!])

0 Manayllna
0 Miami Vloe

Q

(1 :00)

.
• Y1111 Can 8a A S,.,
11:15()) MOVII: Walk Tile Proud
. Lancl (2:00)

;:,x;u:-s-

·--··

·

·

My

I

MOANSH

idea of creative
marketing would be to own 16.
doughnut shops and three
wBight·loss . ·

Ie

1---;.:.1..;.:I'~I'..:::.r-:1.:..lr--1

Complete lho chuckle quoled
by fiiUng in th' missing words
'-...L-....L......J'-..l.- -.L.......r you develop from srep No. 3 below.
.

•

•

•

•

.

"
'

..

f9 PRININTTHESE
NUMBERED LETTERS
SQUARES

0 ~~ic!~t~~~ mms TO I

I I I I I I I ..
SCIIAM-UTS · ANSWHS
1
-1 S"

Adjoin - Emety - Thump - PledQe - GRIME

.

The woman 's children had come home cov!'red .In mud.
Ona child had lost shoe, so the woman said she woukl
· return io the scene of the GRIME.

a

BRIDGE

•A at

NORTH

.K 7 3
tQ I l l
+A9H

By Jllllr.'l ,..cu~~y
With !lilly 11 high-i:ard points and

shortness in spades, South passed orlg·

inally - a conservative deeisiOII. But
after partner opened and supported
hearts, South quickly bid game. El&lt;·
pert play and some cood guessln~
were required to bring the contract
home.
Declarer WGn dummy's spade .ace,
played a heart to his queen and aaoth·
er back to dummy's kine· Wbea Weal
showed out of trumps, good luck was
needed. Fint, wllere was the diamond
jack? Declarer led the 10 from dum·
my. When East played low, deelarer
rose with the kine and played a dia·
monel back to the elgllt-tpol That
forted the ace. East returned a spade,
ruffed by deelarer. Now a diamond to
dummy's queen brought the good DeW?
that diamonds were splitting. But
South still had . lo lind the club king
with East. A low club was led from
du!llmY. and East rose with the king
and played still another spade. South
ruffed, but still had to tread carefully.
If he played his high trump, East
would later ruff in and cash a spade.
So deelarer cashed his fourth dla·
monel, throwing a club from dummy.
East was helpless. If be ruffed and led
a club, South would wln the queen and
pick up his trump. If be ruffed and led
a spade, deelarer would ruff in dum·
my, come to his band with the club

......

WEST
.KQ97!&gt;-

..

EAST
+Hn
.JIOH
+AU
+K 10

•t

• J7 3

+Ht%

sounl
+10
.AQ852
tKUt
+QU

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

w..r

s.....

N.,:,.
1+

4.•• •• z•
Pus

Pus

Eul
Pus

2+

Ali pus

Opening lead: • K

L----------..J

queen and pick up the last trump as
before.
1
·•
Correct trump management llverj
the dliy. Declarer could not afford Ill
draw trumps until he had set up hlJ
minor-suit winnen. Even lltollpdefender bad a trump stack. it wu to
no avail when South kept 1 1111111
trump in dummy.
,

JIIMOJ~~ - "JM:ob:fM .._... Ml
"haJ/&gt;:fotc.niGolDM" (rrriiiOB_ila_,
,.. ,.,. Oowlrl J~J ,,.. ...'!'I
bctobb. Boti .,. pd'l
Pllltat . . . .

®-----·
0

'..,.

....

CROSSWORD
br JH.O MAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

2 Dove cry
1 T both woe
3 Ill fortune
, 5 Disney dog
4 Fencing
1 Old TV
sword
show
5 ··- was an
11 Tremble
old woman
12 Painful
•
13 Of small
6 Slower
size
· (mus .)
14 Sll!etrac~
7 All agog
Yettenllty'e Anewer
18 "LA law"
8 Boundary 22 Slough off 34 Sound of
star ,
9 Victim
24 Flattery
. laughter
· 11 "Silent - ··
11 Pllcher·s
(sl.)
35 By word
19 Dated dane~:~
assel .
25 Asseverate 38 Lummox
21 caused ·
15 Corner
28 ACior
38 Court
to giggle · 17 Insincere
Calhoun
minutes
23 Glacial
lalk·
28 Pontiff
40 Shoshone
sand ridge 18 Bowfin
30 Pippin
42 Golf ball's
27 Nook
or
product
position
28 Utah city
Iunny
32 Part of
43 Old
29 Accept
20 Forsaken
a stair
days

o

,,
.,

·'

30Have
a confab
31

Wet

blanket
33 Attempt
34 Ma~on's '·
mixture
37 Inventor's

'·

SlOC.k ·
In -trade
39 Stimulate
41 Nursery
rhyme ~ing
44 Girl's
garment
45 Follow
48Change
47Mimed

.,

'•

••

DOWN
1 Donkey
f) AIL Y CR YPTOQUOTES- He~'s

how to work it :

8111

AIYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter ·slands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

•..,
LV

AVO

~JPP

KJN

NVX

ZXO

JPMJNK

IAVM

IAVM,

MQJO

NVX

KoiN
RPJXLSXK
Y•tent.J'• Crntt••••te: A GOOD TALKER OR

WRITER IS ONLV A PITCHER. UNLESS HIS AUDJ.
ENCE CATCHES HIM WITH HEART AND MIND HE'S
DEFEATED. -- WILSON MIZNER

· «&gt; 19119 King Featurn Syndic:•le. 1rw:
.,

..
'

CR\'PTOQIJOTE

Ilsi. I II (3;00)

a.

.

·

c

a.-

.

'

'i

Cll Growlrig Paino
Jason and lhe kids re minisce
abOul Maggie's elfecl on
1he1r Iivas. (R) Q
CD (!) Discover. World Of
Science Follow a dramalic

(I)

v.,

.

•

·

eC

2001h anniversary of lhe
French Revolution.
Performers include Stevie
Wonder. Placido Domingo
and Charles Aznavour.
(I) Enlertalnmenl Tonlghl
0 I]) USA Today
illl 8J C IDl Jeopardy! Q
.liD M•A•s•H
(!)) Croulire
1!11 Major League Baaeblff
® Crook a Chaoa
8:00 G C2l IDl Unsolved
Mylterlea A young man is
feared murdered by a
{~)~de molorcycle gang .

•

r------ --,

-

hosts a musical
extravagan~a in honor of the

..,."

'I·

_~ ,.Ir~E;. I:B:. .. 1~·.;Fr-;I.1~~· ..:t.!

rn

c-..,.

t:f

1'1~11.

.

IDl NBC Nlghtlr New•

CBS Newo Q
Ill liD Love Connection
(!)) ShowBiz Tod1r
1!11 Jefter.ono
121 On Stage
6:35
C!'rot Burnett
7:00 (]) MOVIE; Florence
Nightingale (3:00)
e rn PM Magazine
@ SportaCenter (0:30)
(I) CJ I]) Current Aftalr
CD (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour
illl Ill G2l IDl Wheel 01
FortuneC
181ID WKliP In Cincinnati
(!)) Moneyffne
1!11 Andr Grlftl1h
IHJ Miami Vice
121 Top Card
7:05 (5) Andy Grlftlth
7:30 It rn Famifr Feud
@ Track • Field European.
1rom Zurich (T)
(5) Paris '89 Candice Bergen
ill)

:.

r.ra-2=. ....... ,,ao

rn

.

II Cll ABC News Q
CD Body Electric
(!) 3·2·1 ContaCI Q

i:.lA':

s•-

•

worda.

._,. ....,;.C..;.;Rr,.:U:....;..C..;,O.......II

(I)

·-··

,.

~ mplo

tho
bo-

111 1!21

~ SportsLook (0:30)

..,.----------t

. ..

ill)

6:30 e

'

mil•, original owner. u:. cond.
614-446-2857.
:.:.:~;:..:::::.:.;._ _ _ __

bf'

CJ I])

GUC 1.2 dl1111, , U,OOO aCtual

1

4WO, Clll ·a fter I p.ft'!. 1514·3'11--

2BR mobllo homoo for ronl. Rot.
&amp;dop.roq'td. l14-446-0127.

(2) (l)

2431.

owner, llkt MWi

von. 304-875-142&amp;.
1987 hoW !on Chivy plck..,p,

l:fousehol~ ·
Goods

f.W to form four

10)
@

Sale or trailt for older truck or ·

Merch and 1se

Roorrongo lortoro of
0 four
ocramblod wordr

•

Newa
Home Run Derbr .
CD Degraul Junior High
Melanie refuses lo join race
when she ;s leased about her
firs! bra. Q ·
(!) Reading Rainbow Q
181ID Happr Driya
1!11 Facto Of Life
OJ cartoon E~preu
6:C)S CD Allee
.

1,000 IIIItH, 1

NMI

Eplaodft
•

$850. 304-773'9588.
1987 fotd Rongor, a opotd 32
mil• pw gallon. 34,000 m1111.

$275/mo. Ulllllln olllro, rot.
roq'd. Colll14-441-4425.

16

PfZUU

8:00 (]) Bonanza: The Loll

992-GIIA.
1111&amp; Sllvontdo rod a whlo pick
up hill !on, low mi1Nge1 ~
- r . wllh • -; looaoa,
$8,500. 1981 Kow..al 100,

br., 1pt. ~ unfumlthtd, ltovt &amp;
rtfrla, hlltoric home downtown

AUG.

....

l'IIAf UJLf

EVENING

rtbull englnlilonluto.,
lol~~-- condll
. 114-

Vory nloo apoclouo 2nd 1-, S

hu h

WED.,

wheel,

for Lease

The Daily Sentinel- Page 13

Television
Viewing

r7STATU're Cf LJAAITA'T\00:&gt; ~
V ~ tqe? TA'J.. ~~

FURNITURE
8olaoLAYNE'S
ond ollalro
prlcod from
$1188.
Toblll
Po ond up
73 Vans • 4 WD's
$3851o
YARD SALE • 2112 N. Moln
11'"~ -SP
. I'Vil ' f' jaj_Jr.J
. ajp JIHI"Iit•~
Nlco3B!IIrollor, oxpondo,llvlng
,.
F&gt;
room 1 lorgo ylird. Clly ochoolo. lo $128. Hlda-o bodo f390 lo
Woclnoodoy, lhurodoy a
Fridoy.
W iJI
tJjS('OiltilllH.' tl ht'Ca\I SP
m:nlrdSL, KonougLII'-446- $516.
$238 lo
$375. f~=--========
1177 114
Ford4411884.
F-1&amp;0 - · · oonct.,
Lompolloclln$21 1o $125.
Dlnall•
$1800
$101
ond up lo $415. Wood
Ml
lla
8
ICI 1180Ul
PubiiC Sale
()
1111 ('
!'('
Nlco fwn. 31R, 4-112 mlltolrom !obit w-6 cholro $288 lo $791. 54
74 MOtorcycles
. Merchandise
61 Fann Equipment
&amp; Auction
~~~~::o pola. $250/mo. Dooko $145 up 1o $371. Hulchot
$400 • UP, bunk bocfo _,ploll 1I ,.-,_-~;:.:,;;,;;;;;_;~;;.;;.~=
1982 Kowo11kl S50 LTD 4 cyl,
I P tulmll'l' ."
11on ~ •~1o
W.
Va. Sloll Chomplon ._..;.;,;.;,,;_;~.:.;.;.:.:,;.,;,...;.._..,.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....j Ttallor nice cloon untumlohod, wllh mortroa $29&amp; ond ':r, 1o '24
1174
310
John
o.bufldoior,
••• oond S710. 304-8711-1124 ot •,
$3'.11.
bobjr
boclo
s11o
111
on.
'llfth
s.
IUio
s~.
0no
1
AlicUonoor. Rick Pooro~J IiconroloroncH roqulrtd, Roulo 1 ou1
1 wey tin blade, ,.....,. run- 17~117. ·
,
1
Old In Ohio ond Wool Vlrglnlo.
LocuOI Rood on rlgh!, 304-175- ooo or boX •PIInfll full ot lwln _.,ylo Nordko Troc Elorcloo
$78, firm $88, ond $18. Ouoon llochlno. 114-2411-1114 oftor nino Cond~lon. STIOO firm. 304- 1984 XR500R &lt;lood cond. 1874·"
looklng Aud....... 304'773;_10::7:::6·~·- --..,--'-....,...-...,,.- oolo SZ7&amp; a up, King $110. 4 1
4x4 plck-11p. 114-441-4477.
• .;
.175'1 078.
5788·
·11 Help Wanted
31 Homes lor Sale
Troller opoco tor ron1. wtpotlo, drawer chHt MD. Gun Clbinatt p.m.
5, 8, &amp; 10,gun. Boby mo-.oo 40" Ttompollno, $21.00; Coploln 1885 llf lriCior Dloooi Sl119&amp;. 1•• 7 Fou~ro• 2511-R Porlocl ' ,•
9 Wanted to Buy
yord. Gorogo. 814-44&amp;- $35
IIF dlollf $31195. Lolo
a 84a. Bod lrlmil $211, ohalro tor von, oolao, $100. Coli 150
modol, $1500 Gohl round balor, · co~dlllon, low houro, many II• ,,
9
·
WAREHOUSE TRAINEES
Formor'o ~omo Admlnlslrollon
Quoon
Slza
$35
•
kl!'(l
fromo
oftor
4
p.m,
304-17J.4317.
Domplolo hcuoohcldl of lur- LMm inventory •nd ltock cOn- loan• 1vaMabt1. Approvtd ttc&gt;
$2515.1142811522
lru. 114-441-7521.
:
$50. Good Hltcllan at'Dtdroam
rftllft a onUquoa. AIIO wood a lrol. LlmHtd oponlngo. Full poy llonol n- on cloplay. Fronch
'ouHH,
mo1o1
coblno1o,
7,000
ITU
w
l
A.C.,
$7&amp;J
1981
Cuolom
eon
TaiL
Ha~oy
:
Cool hto1tro. Swoln'o fumhuro
!raining. If rou oro In lop Chy. llobUo Homoo. 614-441hoodboordo $30 ond up lo $85. Bro!hor flowfno Moohlno, Wflh • 20'1 0 JO lroclot $31&amp;0. 24-T JD DovlctOon. LO!o of chromo, ••· '
a Auc:llon, Third l ou.., 114- while
80 doyo oomo u coah wilh op- drawer wolnuf c o -. · $150. balor wHh bolo klcksr, $1195. JD -oodoo. Bluo, ollvor. 114-742· ,
phyolool
corid~lon,
undor
ogo
1
.
134:::0:...
.
-....,-:-=-;:--:-.,.-=-:-4.41-1151.
28, and .,. willing to nlocatt. :-:
mowing moohlno, $395. JD rok., 2803'oftor 5:00p.m.
•.
44 Apartment
provietore~. 3 mi. out Bulovllla 114.. 92-6114.
$895. 11 4-2118-1123.
Coil 1-600·282-1384, lion.· Houoo . • 131 B. Pork Drlvo.
Ad.
Opon
1
A.M.
lo
6
P.M
.
lion,
Baby
bod
ond
mon-•,
Pumklft ond oppllon- by lhl Thuro. 8o.m.-2p.m.
Phono 304.ji75-4240.
for Rent
111- ot onllro houoohold. Folr
1hru Sol. Colll14-446-0322.
ploypon, and lnlonllloddlor cor- 300 lnl'llroclot ·wilh wldo tron13 10 &amp; J Cyclo, wo now bore ··
pl. hlloh, fn11 -lng mochl.., cycle!, "'"! otrvl.. lor boring '
t:.o bolng pold. Coliii'-446- W.nl lndopondonco ond llnon- Mutt ...., arM. 3BR, home 1 1 bedroom lumlohtd opl In e place living room eulte. Ukt · Mit Ce/1114-11! 1311.
ron a bator, I pl. pull-lypo ond prOion dollvory, Gory 1(1,;; :
olol oocurfty? Dovolopo 2nd ln- 112 bathe. IJIC, c:ond. 20 ICrtl. Hendiii'SOI'I, ~75-1972 abr now. $175. 11l.ji92-3311.
Fl-, $30 lood opl~;' 2 !on Buoh hog, $3550. 114-2-523. Mrid, 304-1175-16115.
eome through your own Chy achoolt I mi. from town on 5;00.
Junk c- wilh
Counly
Appllonco
Inc.
&lt;lood
chow dump INCIL Phorio 304- Oloc Plaw ·$128. Tobacco ollcko Hondo CX500 81- Blko. Ex•· :
buolnoot. Wo lhoW you - · Frlon~~~~l:go Rd. $S9,900. Coil 2 bedroom 1pt1. for rent. Car·
&lt;~own. wlo mototl, $25 • - n. 114
614·2
%, or 448-7130.
..82·71183.
uood applfoncoo, T.'v. oola. Oaon 458-iaar. .
,, 0 conto ooch. H.or 75 conla lonl oond~lon. $550. OBO. 614- .
lllchlld Ooorge, 114-388-11095.
peled. Nice lilting, laundry
742-2357 ot 114-742-2388.
wood bumor, ball. 30U78-2281.
WOnttd: Rollrtd lody or couple Nttl, clean, A-1 condlllon. 2' lacllllioo IVIilablo. Coil 614-1112- a o.m. 10 I p.m. llon ..SII. 014- Fllhor cool Junk coro whh or Wflhou1 to live ln upetal ... apartmtnt of blks downtown. S.mo block 371! EOH.
445-1 81J!11• 127 !ltd. Ava. Go~ 1111 lop $200. long bod • - · John 34 Forall! Ho..-r . Hondo CX500, All lor ·,port.,, •
llpollo, ott
MO.OO; Full !ruck bo1 wkh 2 hoodo. Allla Cholmoro 2 $125.00. ot boo! ruoonollll of. ·
elderly lady to aallt In cart ochoolo. Drivo by 110 Slolo
""''eou
wry
u..,,
"""
2
rm.
bolh,
downrilalrol
fur·
. .303.
. . only whon noodtd. 114·1192· SlrH1,
0
row no-1111 plonlor. BO!h 11Cif. lor. 304-675-1228.
~
nlshld', 4 rm. &amp; .bath tum shed, =~r":do~'=P~':l ~75~ 2~ ::.~!
7321.
~30":"~~~ lonl
•1
.
QuUio
Now Homo, 1500 oq. ft. Uvlng no pelt, rar:, dtp. r.cJ'd. 614- block I While, $35. 304-&amp;75- 1&amp;78.
cOnctHion. 3CJ4.273.4211.
Kow011kl KXIO, KX801 oxcolllnl '
Pro 1140 qulho. Any condhkon. Wortc AI Homo, oom $300 1 doy. area,· 10 acr11 or more. Private 448-1519.
Lllo modo! a,ooo Ford Dlnof condlllon. ·
11•1192·5811, •
1273.
For Solo •
ond Plolllo lriCiot $8350. 1 N Fotd. Now ovonlngo, ot 114-14!1:-2182 doy. •:
Colli Pold. Coli 614-182-6617 ot Toklng Phcno Drdora. Pooplo approX. 8 mile• from town.
238
Firat
AVa.,
1
br.,
riverview,
i ) 4-6fl2.2411 .
coil you I Orondo 714-1197·3282.
Below market walue, 304-675-o
Full till bedroom 8u111. Chill, · ool&gt;llo lonko. AI ofua. .RON
kitchen
with
etove
&amp; droooor. Solid wood, BroyhiU. EVANS ENTERPRISES, Joofl. poln11 now 11roo1 rob\JIH - .
1428.
$1Bio. &amp;01 Fora ,_., Mallor 75 Boats &amp; Motors
rolrlgomor 1$1110/Mo. pluo Llkl now. 114·992-2733 aftor a - , OH. 1-.I37-H28.
'ij)P CASH poi&lt;l ior 1183 modo! 12
Situation
lriCior, &amp;21&amp;0. 100 Ford, Shorp.
Nlco 3 br., Living room, ~lnlng daposit. ut{nun • retarence, no pm.
onc1 uUd coro. Smhh
for Sale
$2595. 114-281 1522.
room,
utUIIy
room,
new
For
S.lo:
flbor
gluo
truak
IDp,
polo.
614-446-4926
Buick-Pontile, 1111 Eollom
Wanted
c~llnglhtatlng &amp;~nit. Jackeon
Full olzo woohor I dryor. $200. lor 811. bod, lnd - · ..... Naw Hollond I I hoyblnd, Oohl "11187" S1r11oo1a1 pro ovary ••,
~~ Golllpollo. Coli 11'-446ar... Nt., Cinema. 3 room, fumlahed. Working 114-441.0702.
rolrlgorol'!'! all In uc. oond. grinder mixer, both ua cond, In opllon 1rollor1 '-lli'okn1 I ,
221;,.
We can for tlder1y and han- Pike
dicapllld In Ow home. 28 ytaf'li Roooonoblo prico. 614-448-3838. adultt only. Depoelt and
114-1.
tnlvaUng cover. 11~...at11. ~'~,
304-273-4215.
G.E. uP!ighl lrootor-EIC. cond.
reflrance. 114-992-5142.
UNdl turnll.,. tncf houlaholcf 1xperl•nce. LPN on call. Low
Small
home
In
Rio
Grandt
on
$125.
Slo
ol
1100
9ocond
or
Fow
Ctdllr
Polnl
Amuoomonl
oppl._loncoo. Phone 114-742- lnoomo hotna. Colll14-1192-8873
15-112 fl. Sllrcroft, now 70 HP
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Livestock
llcko11, $12.00 lOCh. 304-1175- 63
More. llull oocnflco. Evonlng.,.;
~~
ahtr 7:00 p.m. lor mort lnfor- Lake Drive. 2 br., bath, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 614-448-7728.
llvlngroom, kitchen Combo with
2861.
114-445-8243.
ljood lumlluro bV lho p1oco ot 1:;;m::ll::;lo:;;n::..
· ________...;.._ refrigerator,
ESTATES,
536
Jackson
Piko
GOOD
USED
APPLIANCES
yr.
'
o
ld
pony
•
plgo.
Coli
~nor
I
electric range. G11
FumaCI', electric waler heater, from $192/mo. Walk lo ohop &amp; Washara, dryan, rtfrl~llora, Holl 112,000 BTU luol oU fur- a, 114-446-302&amp;.
BOATERSII Marcu:r. Mercrul,_;
""''" houo-.1 1110 oolllng. 15
Schools &amp;
114·742-2456.
opoclollll Procla on Mobile
wash• and dryer hook-up In moviH. eon 614-44&amp;-21188! EOH. rongoo. Sklgga Ap~ncilo, nace. Sotno dueling. Exhouol
010: 114- ATTENTION H - OWnoro, Martne, WI C:OII'II to you. 1-814banment. Excellent for rental For rent or least, OM bedroom Uppor Rlvor Ra. ...ldo Slono
Instruction
Pain! Pluo Ia now cilnylng rock. 251-6171. Now and Uliod Pmo. •••
nNr coli~•· By owner 114-448- apt. Two oHict lpiCII! one Croll Molol. Coi1614-446-T.I98.
Paint PLut, 2415 Jacktori Ave.,
RE-TRAIN NOW!
2871 boloro 2p.m. or 114·245- opoco ldoolfot dollal or aoclor.
Employment Services SOUTHEASTERN
PICKENS FuRNITURE
King 11- wood a cool, 2 end Polnl Plo001n1, phone 304-6~ Boso boo1·1987 Londou 11'5• .'
BUSINESS 5811 . $25,000.
tabfH,
large
'co"-:
table,
c~r.
Uplown loclllon. 204-675'2194
NowAJotd .
w~h Mo..,ury 31 hp mol or wh~ '
4084.
COLLEGE, 529 Joekson Pl~o.
.
Hou.,hold · turnlehing. 112 mi. 114-448-431111.
powor !rim ond oulo oil lnjoc· )
Coli &amp;14-4411-4367. Reg. No. 86- Smoll liomo, Loko Orivo, Rio Fum. AI&gt;!. $225 ulllllloo pd. 1 br., Jorrloho Rd. Pl. Ploooonl, WV,
Palnta, QlerttrhofMI, Electric lion, llon:ury Trolling m- ,
Help wanted .
11
Grande, 2BA, balh, living room, 807 Socond, Golllpollo, 814-448- ooll304.jl75-1450.
11·105SB.
.Urgo plclwo window" oxc cond. .Horoo
Wai~O!.r....~ddloa. 304-878- Shcrollno lrollor pluo moro. AI1·
kitchen. eombo with refrigerator, 441 e after I p.m.
'
I...Wn ClrpM 1ZX20 n.' 304-882· 1161 Dri71H1tw.
2 nu,..1 aldn, ahop clerk, . InIn good -lion. Coil 614-992·
t .lactric range, gal fUmace,
S130.
·
SWAIN
quire ol Oddo ond Endo Shop, 18 wanted to Do
2770.
•
water heattr1 waeMr and dryer Fum. Apl. 1 br;, 240 u!llllts Pd. AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
wilh
Rog'od
Ouortor
Parly
lllddloport.
MoVIng S.lo: chlny tllo-log honioo lrolnlng fai:llky • lrollor.
All lypos mosonry brick blocko, hook-up In DIHmtnt. Ere. tor 120 Fourth Avo, Golllpolls, 614- Olivo Sl., Golllpoilo. NEW 6 pc. lablo
villh four ohillro on~ oocfl· Noodo porl·llrM hor.. lralnor Slorcroft llonlogo, 18 ft. walk•
nntal near college. 614-446- 441o4416oftor Bp.m.
wood group, $339. Living room
AVON I All Aroas ! Shlrloy a1on1 and concrete. Free Ea- 2879
lhru. 238 HP, very 1- houro. ·
we
ad/coal
bumlnattow; iox1l
before
2
p.m.,
or
814-245llmoloo. 304-773-9550.
'&amp;pooro, 304-675-1428.
.IIIII 01 IUIIII, $1f9..$5H. Bunk btdt dog unnol wHh floor; 114-1192· lor hafttr • welllm p1111ure. Phone 114·812:-5808 evening•, :
$175
E"lclo
5811. $25,000.
Fum.
ncy 807 Second,
u
wllh boddinp,, $241. Full olzo
114-211 8!122.
or 114-941-2182 dor.
. (
pd. Shiro bolh.
1
3643oftor 7:00p.m.
AVON • All oro11, Coli llorllyn Coro lor lhl oldorly In lholr
Gall/pol._,
&amp;14-44s.4411
alter
mattrttt
&amp; ounclatlon atart na
TWo
1
monlh
old
SuffOlk
Romo
home, days only. 614.,.46·2427.
w.. 304482·2645.
32 Mobile Homes
$99. Rocllnoro oto~lng $9f. PORTABLE ~ AND LE:I'·
76 Auto Parts &amp;
· ·t\
. 6p.m.
UESD Bodo, drotl .... bidroom TEAS. Fru cMIIYtry. Wh#M''I lor oolo.I14-MI-2108 .
Avon • L!mhtd limo only $5.00 Oaycare for children In my
'tot Sale
Gracloua llvlng. 1 and 2 bed· aultH. Dnkl, wringer waah«, 1 1-100-633 3453 ..yllmo.
-1ppolntmlnl fM "billed to your home. Clean &amp; loving anvlron~~A;c;ce;s~s;.o~rl~es~~~~
64 Hay &amp;Grain
tlrat order", tlgn up frM (blu.q mant. Cheshire area. 814-367·, 12x55, 2 bedroom. Good con· room apartmante It Vlllag• comDtttt lint of uild furniture. ·
Manor
and
r
Rlvertldt
NFYI
Wutarn
boota
135.
SWIIIIIING
POOLS
S888
POOR
BOY TIRES, 204-875- •
on your order). Plul re;celva 0659.
dlliofl, Coll614-992·5858.
Apartmonlo In Mlddl~rl. From Workboolo $18 &amp; up. (SIMI l Sum- -lol on n poolo. Ei&lt;c. quiiHy Allllll grooo round 333.1, tronlond ollnm.onl "!,~;
Hugo ltK31 pOol. Hugo dock, balM 118.25. Morgan'a f•nn, 4,0uu gG0!1 uNCI tlr•,
$30.00
"" fo'r'a~'·
ooft loo.) 614-448-31511.
·2845.eou Nurwl~ anl11nt, .experienced 121:60 mablla home eome fur· $184. Coii6J4·992·77B7.
llodlyn Woovor
u-, now droa.
,
,- ·,
tonco, flft1&lt; a worronly. ln... ~ AI. 31 Pliny, 304-137'2018.
In private duly and nurtlng nlture, lot VOx1DO flat lol on Sun
lobyolner nHdod lot 2 lchoo~ homtt. Phone 304·458·1883.
Valley Drive, ready to move Into. ~ 0-:d·r:::''::••·~r~~o~:t!:~ :;~ ~~ru:;:~:~,1't"p~ follon l flnonclng ovollobll. Coli Hor In !hi tlold $1 .00, 3D4-67124 hro: 1.-.345'0948
ooo ohUdron In Now Havon. Coil
Prlctd nogollonoblo 614-44&amp;79
11571.
Campers .&amp;
Roof painting &amp; coaling, trailer 8005.
1ppllanc11, water , and trash :304:::;-41:.:7.::5-::58::58:::...
. -----,.
.
on ... 1, 304-8.12-2427.
Salolfto
Dloh.
Doric
lllr.
10
ft.
roof1, houstl, I bame, fr.. • •
plckupt provided. Malntlnanct Uaad appllanut. Waahw8,
_...:M.:.::o:.:t=or;;..:H..:.;o;,.;:m..:.;e:..:s....
· ~ ·:
- h. JVC Compocl Oloo. K12x65 3 bldi-oomt, 2 blithe, frat living ciON •• ahopplng,
Domonllrllalor Porty Pion Froo tlmete. &amp;14·311-2320.
btnkl
and tchoole. ,f or more In· dryera, rangn, rtfrlgerltcn, wood
$4,500.
304-675-2722.
Amp.
1141m
Cobrt
Camper,
30
ft.
good ;
Transportation
$300 kll. No collocllng. No Will bobyoh In my homo.
rormatlon call 304-882·3718. E· microwave avena; Ken'• Ap-- 892-6137.
cond., 614-'46-8909 or 61~9- .
dtllvarlng. For Interview: 81 4- Rusonable ratee. References 1971
Llborly. $3000. or quol opporlun~y houolng. Soc· pllonco, 217 E. Socond Sl.,
2140.
.
441·7002.
available.
All ·ages, also rea•onable offer. Mutt ttU. 614- tlon a accept~d. 1
Pomeroy, 614·882·5335 or 114a Sean wood coal heating ttcwt,
IXCiilont
condftfon,
$271.00;
985-3581.
.
71
Autos
tor
Sale
Dental Attlstant nHdtd fu .. wHkends. Call614·2"45-5786.
1192-3507.
1178 24ft. Yollowslono Avmlng. :
houllng ond Mocking wood ••~.
bedroom1
garage
VI'AA
lime experience preterrld, but Will babyell In my home. Have 1974 12x70 Holly Park wllh lip- One
1158 Chivy Oolror Body on AC, utrat, exc. cond. 81 ~46- ,
$35;00.
304-1751892:
not ntcHtary. Stnd ruumt to
Fumlturt &amp; Applllnc:11
-•
aood thlpe. IHt offer ewer 001,
BoJC 001 c/o Galllpcl'lil Dally raflrenc•; c1t1n environment; out and underpinning. , Nic:t. epartment,.. E•ntral hllt and alr. .
Phone 304-ti75-4023.
At. 141 In C.ntanary, 114 mi. on, W-hllro • now or uood. S S1000 114-317-0813.
TrlbuM, 825 Third Ave. Gal- w-.kdays only; nur schoole. $7500. 614·992·2469.
For Sale: 10ft. camper. ltovt, ·:
Regency, Inc. 2BR, 1pt., new Lincoln Pike. Mon.Sat: I a.m. till whoolod oloeldc oc001or. Coli
llpollo Oh 45U1.
:304:::;-11:.:7.::5·:..:11:.:4::5·: __ _ _ __
lhowtrL aiMpl 4, $700. ,
1978 -.14x70 3 br., 2 baths, on pluah
oorpol, now polnl, 6 p.m., Sundoy 12-6. Opon 1111 I Rog.,.. -leal, 1_..8-2104. 1873 C1t1Un1 Pontile, exeel'lnt r~trlg.,
10
condition, 2 door, owned by 114~41-4015 lner4 p.m.
Due to r11lgnatlon Pinecrnt Will do babysitting-any age. Call prlvalo ronltd lot. $8,000. 614- uiiiHios, porilally paid. $175/mo. p.m. lor oppofnlmonlo. 61'-446lody.
CoU
304-675-1898.
367-7808.
Core C..lar 1 highly ak.llltd 304-675-7742.
Cal/394-675-5104.
3158. Financing tnllabll, plua 55
Building
lnet1nt cath r161tM up to $100.
nursing tac 1llty, now hal a
1177 NIWPQf1, lair eonct., $200.,
1978
14x70
Elcona
locattd
on
SHADY
LAWN
APARTMENTS.
Bosoo1
lnlollfl'lng.
·
s::r.r
Supplies
potltlon open tor a llcenHd
Services
Pontiac 350 motor, exc. c:ond.,
State Rt. m, near Mercerville, 729 Second Ave. Furnished eofa, 1341. BttHI ewlvtl
ar
eoclal worker. This Is a
$200.114-387-0813.
prico
roducoalo
$7500
614-258olpoo, winofflcloncloo otortlng 11 $175. In· $149. 5 pol.. wood grou1111 Block, brick, department head levat · position
1977 or 614·258-1528.
.
eluding wllor &amp; gorbago. ldoal $31 9. Boddlngllnallrooo Ill $111. llnllfa. ..._ Cloudo Wln- 1171 Chovono, llghl bluo, 4 . 81
reporting directly to the Ad·
' Home.
.
Crib mattren $29.15; 7 piece lorw, 'liio Orondo, OH Coil I14- opd.L $400. Good work cor. 614•
mrnletralor. Dutln lnch.lde ad·
Financial
1979 Elcono 14x70, 3 bodroomo, for1 par1on. 814-4"46-2602.
24U121
.
BttMU
·poetor
bedroom
auitt
minion and discharge plarinlng
3711.. 454.
lmpi'C)vements
1 112 bafhs, ctntal atr, vinyl un·
lurnlohod opl. Nlco for $999; 4 drowor chlol M4.98;
and evaluation at rnldent't
derpannlng, appllancn, porch, Smoll
one
poroori
pdvllo.
114-448Bunk
bodo
S149
Dr
$12.41.
1871 Ram Chtrgtr AC, auto, PS,
BASEMENT
aoCI11 nalds tor car• plans. Ap- 21
56 Pets for Sale
$9,500. 3114-675-2949.
. ' 3356.
Business
'
Dlnolllf !able &amp; 4 chllro $141.
new tlrn. 79,0b0 m/111. $1800 ,
pllc•nts
with
equivalent
WATERPROOFING
'
1980 Naehua 14x70 txPando, Tara Townhouse Apte, 2 br., 1· Hu~ch Stlt; complete lint of 2·10 WHk
education or exparience may
Opportunity
Old Purobrtd ' :11:.:4:::-2::58-=..:1=15::1.:,.,......,...__,=,_.,= Uncondhlon•l lifetime guann- 11
tlso 1pply to: Mr. James Unnew 3 tan ctntal elr cond, 2 112 baths, CA, dlthwnhl.:, dlt· oak· &amp; country "'mlthlnge. Oak Blarn- kHtona, 1 molo ond 1 1880 Cfl!vy Cklllon $475, 1175 tH. Local rafarenCHI tumlshed. :
,
Currio CtbiMt CurvH glau
INOTICEI
porch.,, underpenn lng, wah .. r
deman at 555 Jackson Pikl. Gil·
Fr11 Htimattt. Call collect 1· ,
private enclosed patio, front with claw tNt $271 lr lornolo. 114 441 0015 01 441- Oodga Chollongar $425, 1978 114-237-o4811,
OHjO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. &amp; dryar, atereo, built fn barJ..!.n po111,
llpolla, 0H 45131, EOE.
doy IJr nigh!. R o ,
Wood
mlcrowavt 2417.
Ponfioc Collllno $650. &amp;1'-446rtcomnwnda th1t you do rontal 1o1, $13,000. 304·11~ pool, pleyground. Water, MWtr, 115•14,
a•r•••••ment.
&amp; lrath rncludtd. Starting at cablnl'l 1129, regular $241. Air AKC Aoglllorod ·Booglo pup- 1751 or 448-7504.
EARN MONEY Rotdlng books! buslnna whh p~ople you know, 5421.
•
$289/mo. Call614-367·7850.
· comprtston $99; aun eablnlil: pill. Worinocl ond llrot lllolo. 7 1880 Pornloc Trono-Am, 301 V.jl Walorprooflng.
130,000/yr. .Income pot1ntlal. and NOT .1o · ..net monty
•
Oolollo (1) 805-687-6000 Ex!. Y· through the maU until you have 1981 Liberty 14x60 28Ril on ron· Twin Rlvere Towtr-Houtlng tor $199. 30 dly warranly on etove, woou old. 114-843-6131.
Fo11y T- Trlmmlng1 _ olump •
hord~op,
.tully
loldociJ.
aoroao
ltd lol, Groon achool lot. 614- the Elderly, l;landlcapptd and refrigerator, w•shert, drytra I
10189.
,.rncwal, call304..a75-1:s:n .
'
lnvoollgaltd lho offoring.
C..C:ksr lpontol pu~ lllnlollft .., HIOO; 814 441 23:rv.
379·2443 bolwHn 4·7 p.m.
•
Dleabl.cl.
Locattd
n11r
dttp
fretztra.
E•m Money 1yplng •• home. Own your own apparel or shoe
lcmouzar
pupo,
Hlmoloyon 11182 B·-' ·•
.,......., • 1o 1 Aon'a TV SlfVIci, apeclal~ ,,
downtO;wn
Point Pltan nl!
n klftono.
All Roglolliocl.
a _,,_w.., c on n- In Zonfth oloo oorvlclng
130 OOOiyear Income potential. ttore.
•
Chooee
from: 1987 Danville, total electric phone
Volloy
Fum~uro
304-675-6871:.
Equ11
No
chocko.
Col1114-892'2807.
oklo
ond
ou1,
olr condHion, othlr brend1. Hou• callt, lllo ·:
Ool~llo, (1)805-687-6000· Elii.B• Jean/Sportswear, lad!•, mtn'e, 14x70, hool pump, 3BR, 1-112 Houolng Opportunlly.
New
end
•lid
furnhure
and
IP"'
54,000
mffoo.
$2,400.
614-448eome appliance rtJ)81rt. WY ;
4~2 .
chlldrerVmatemhy, large 1lzt1, bath. 114·245-9244 onyll""',
plloncto. Coli 11'-446-7572. - - eonory Konnol. 8743.
245·9677 oftor 6.
304-678-2399
OhiQ ., 4-448- '
petite,
Oancl'tRar/Atrobic,
unti.Jrnilhed
1p1.
CarUpstai'!r
Houra
8-5.
,
Perelan, •
SlamtM
and
Ftd.,.l, State ar1d Civil Str~lct bridal, lingerie or acce..orin
2484.
·· 2
br.,
kirkwood
furnllur•
with
plied.
NO
pets,
Inquire
at
300
Hlmalayon
klnono.
Chow
olud
11182
Ponlloc
T·1,000
oulo,
Jott.. Now hiring. Your area.
Add color analyalt. a,.nd malchlng bam ohapod oul· Fourth Avo.
53
Antiques
•·- 114 441 -·· n 7 AMIFM eatt., good cond. ROiiry or coblo loot drilling." - ~
$13 550 10 $59,480. lmmtdlolo ttore.
Hrv-.
- - • .,
Strong economical llnle car.
ope'nlngs. Call 1·315·733-8012 nam•: U1 Claiborne, HNhhtllll, :~~:.'nt on ronttd lot 11 4' 44 .. 45
~
Furnished
:a::uy;_or__oo:..:il:.:..:;.A::Ivo:.:r:.;lno:.:.A_m_l_q_uo_o, p.rn.
,, ooo. o .a.o . 614-44&amp;-2140 s.1. Moat well• compllttd tame
Bonnlo I Bill 81 Mlcholo,
Eli. IF2748.
Pump taln an
.· d NNice,
"j
Forenza, Bugfa B~y, ltvl, Camp
Filii Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo. l 9un.
1
Rooms
1124
E.
Moln
s•-·
Pomoroy.
881-3802.
... i
If you have experience &amp; Inter· Beverly Hlllthl,.•ll• Faye, Lucia, MHR MOBILE HOMES SH. uo
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 6:00 Pofnl Pio-n!, 304-671-2083, 10 1982 block Trono-Am, T-Topo,
.
~
ut In Nllt and marketing, and over 2000 at trw. Or $13.99 on1 for your usad home, Rl. 2:1 Fumlshod
4
11
10
1
SWEEPER
ond
uwlng
moc~lrio
~
offlcloncy,
819 p.m., Sundoy 1:OO to &amp;:OO p.m. gal Itt • 11 · ar:Mf
8'
Beige Interior, new tlrnpAiplnt
lducallonal b~ekgrOund
In price dttlgnar, multi tl~;r pricing South, Piketon, OH, 6114·289cotnpllll t43.25.
• PS, P B, W, AI r, ropofr, Pllrll, ond oupr.lloo, Pick • ;
. lftreo eptem,
S.cond Avonuo, Golllpolls. All 114-11 12' 2528 ·
blologlcol ocloncoa. pro1ol'flbly dlsc:aunl or family thoe 1tor1. 2587.
up ancf delivery, Da• 1 vacuum ~
ro-buiH onglno, Nno llko now. ctaa111r,
ulll~loo pold, aharo a balh. Top Cooh pold. Old tumfturo Groom ond Supply Shop-Pot
In poro-Mtdlcal floldo, you Retail prlc• un~levtble lor
one half milt up j
~SED
MOBIL£
.HOMES
Chock
G""""lng.
All
brotda.
AIIO!yloo.
Looko
Shorp.
114-448-1758.
top
quality
thole
normally
$135/mo.
614-448-394$.
cuboordo,
'uiHo,
orlonlo~
should be lllklng w!th us. Mult
GOOIIJot Crook Rd. 114-448- .
us
flrll
.
Good
Hltetlon
tlngltt
lorna
Pol
Food
Doolor.
Julio
have rlllabWt transpor1atlon. pdcod from S191o $60. OVor 250
Roome for rent. waek or month. ::ru~!:.!toy ~~~~It; Webb. Coii11..-.0231 .
1113 Chivy Covollor, 17,000 0284.
S1tary and Commietion. Send brands 2600 ttylta. $18,900 to and doubloo 800-828-0752.
mUM, atandlrd tran~ml11lan, Slpolc Tonk Pumping $90~Golllo - ~
11 $120/mo. Galllo 304-623-8884.
reaumelo Box 007 c/o QalllpoHt $29,900: Inventory, training, W• buy uttd . mobile homn Sllrtlno
Holol. ,14-448-8580.
runa • lookl aood, $2,000. or Co. ROH EVANS ENTERPHISES, i
Musical
57
Doily Trlbu!!'r 825 Third Avonuo, fixtures, airfare. grtoncl opening, CASH TODAYI BOQ.I26-0752,
- . 304-4'15-6470.
etc:.
Can
open
15
daye.
Mr.
Jockoon, OH 1-80Q.&amp;37'8528.
•1
Gollipollo, ut1 4~31 .
54 Miscellaneous .
ox!. 315. (Ohio only). Ask lor
Instruments
Schnoidir 407-318-8601.
1984 Chovy Chlmlo, now
R1y.
'
Join lho bnl oul·f~ In Rool EoMerchandise
Plumbing &amp;
Individual
gulter
.....,.,, oluloh, S7&amp;0. Coil - n 4 &amp; I ' 82
.'
tate call our Century 21 office
p.m.,
114
448
4803.
•'
!!oglnnoro1 Hrlouo gullodll.
lodly Ctn!Ury 21 Big Bond
Heating_
'
Real Estate
lluolc,
Jolt 1984 Ford Eocorl. 4 door, olenINnicordll
RealtY InC. 614-'4e-7101, Jim
Womolly inltruolot, 11'-446- doni 4 opood. Good oondlllon.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Cochr~~n brobr.
aon, llmHod oponln;o.·
$14&amp;0. 114-1192-537&amp; .... 6:00
AND HEATING
L1dy to live In and ctre for el- 31 Homes for Sale
Cor. Fourth and Pine
p.m.
derly lody w~h llghl houoowork
·
GolllpoiiO, Ohio
. •
In exc;lwngt tor good honil and 2·3 bedroome, bath, baMment,
1981 112 llorcury Lynx 12,000 Coli 614-446-3899 or 614-446small ~lary, muet hav.• referen· garage. 4.59 acrn on school
1111.1 IUIO. ' 12500; 1885 Dodge 4471.
en, 304-175-1595.
Omnl, auto, air, erullt. control,
6ul hl\8. 614-698-3374.
$2100. l14-441-175t or 114-448- Pfpo H In or Plpo II oul. C.W. •
Make extra money with out 3 IMdroom brlck haute with
Dovlto~ Plumbing a Tr8nchlng
7504.
INvlng your homo. II 4-753- forgo lol, Mid Woy Drlv~. Now
drain•· &amp; watar llnet, 114~
1113.
1885
Chovrolo1
-·Cillo
CL,
Haven. Good Cond. 304·7730151. Morning• or Evenlngt. 'J
1ut0., PIJPB, ..,, tlltJ..~!UIM, rur
Modtla calling call, ell agH In- 5881.
wl- dotoaao~.'::" &amp; Iacko, 84 Electrical &amp;
cluding children over 1 yr, for 3 bedroom•, kitchen, living and
roily.- 114---6011.
cataloi type lltlgnment. Inter· family room, Galllpollt Farry,
Refrigeration
vlew'ng aoon In your erN. 414- $43,500. 304-675-3950 or 3041885 Clvyalor Now Yorker, aood
....,.
loOdod,
304-178-2722:
858-1104.
738-11245.
Allldenllal
or
commercial
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
NEED IIOIIEV? I nood hllp, lui~ 3 br.l home for tale,
111&amp; fotd- Wqon, $1150; wiring, new llf'Yfcl or rtPII,.,
ownert,
limo pothionl IVIilablo. f300 2 m . from town, cal anytime 2 acr• lot Ath1on, Mason 80,
1178 Chi~ludlnofto Cl111110, Llconood ofocldclon. RldtnoiiO' '
Eloc!rlcol, 304-671-1788.
ms. 11 Will 1122
week. BIUI croa, lll.aii'Bhleld &amp; 114-44&amp;-m5.
public wolor, $20,000.00. 305pilei , ¥1CIIIont, for inlerYIIW,
1111112 N - pfok-up a opd. 85 General Hauling
7 rooms, 2 acrn, good garden, 948-6983.
114-441-4141.
Am/FII Slo-, oporto -11,
e!tY wetar. $15,000. 814·797· 2 acre
Athton, M11on 80,
oxo. cond-. ohorp. M700. 114- J &amp; J Wllor Borvloo. Swimming
New ancf UMd OM' UIH person. 2744.
public walor, $20,000.00. 301441-8271on• I p.m.
,..... tend rHurn• to: P.O.
946.jl983.
- · , clollmo, wono. Coli 614'
7.81% 11111td rate mot1gag•
24Wi99.
801 15, oy, Ohio.
tll7
Pan!loc
TNno-Am,
rad
T·
money evtlllblt, :2.75 pointe, 30 Athton bt•utUul one tere loti
1
Top,
·
IDS
lnglno,
fully
lolaod.
N- liking opplloollono 11 yr. term. "Loan• 1vallable on 1 with rivet fr'ont1g1, public w1ter,
R • A Wolor &amp;....leo. Poo~1 ~1a­
11.000 rillloo
010. oond. ttrr'l, wella. lmrnteUI...1,uuu
'fair 1nd equal batlt r.gtrdlttl Clydo lowM, Jr. 304-571·2331.
or
Dornlr- Plua. 114-448-4040.
112,3011. 11~347.
or rac.. cofor, an~ry, nallonel
z ooo a••- dollvory. Con 304PRIOR IIIUTARV SERVICE IN- origin, religion, HI or Dhnlcal Aohlon, booulllul ono ocro lolo
.
.
1111 ,, _ - GT, 2 dr. 17&amp;-6370.
DIYIDUALB NEEDED. JOIN THE haridlclp. W111m1n AN.I ~llate, wllh rlvor lrontogo, public wollr.
PBIPI,
Milo.
lro,._,
AC.
...,_
Woft...,'l Wilar Houlf!!g ~
ARIIY Nollonol Oulnl port~lma. 114-4.3644.
Clyde /B-, Jr. 304-671-2331.
,.ltonablt rat111 volume tile!"'
-hly poychocfc. 28 yoor
NOI, - · oond. 114411-802o.
~ 1' ')l 1 ~1Ji 1 '•
, . . , _ ....... _,.,. ..._ All now 3 br., hcmo locolod on Aohlon, IIIIJO building lolo,
counll, 2.000 1o •,000 oopochv:'·
QOVIRIIMEHI'
IEIZID
Vohloloo
claltmt, 110011. ..ua, etc. Cl'd ,
:IOU~ or !:ati0442-3111L AI. 1&amp;0. Prictd lo movo. 114- mobllo homoo pormlftocf. Pubiko
\ l 1', '\~1Ud'
'""" t100. .........
water, prlcu Muced. Clyde
311-6711 .
Cof¥11111. Cho¥yo. l u = :304~..~~~~··~~~--·--------~"'
Port'""" loll?- own houro? I=== - -- --,....,-- BOII!on, Jr. 304-578-2331.
...,... Guide t-.u7
Avon. Sl. lo - · We 1111 "'Wn ly ovrnor, 4 IIi'., 3 112 balho,
87
Upholatery
bl.l-101n.
8o lol". 114olll2-7180.
·- · 11 ocrn. Lolo ol dock. Lovll loto 7 mlloo NOrth or ,_.
81 Finn Equipment
::.::::~:.::.::::;..:.:77--- .bom. $111,100 I14-245-H71.
.., Hoopftol. 114---8841.
GOVIIINIIIm IIIDD 'lthlotoo _,.,., u.,-ortng - ·"
11130 CoM tl'llllar: lo ~ • ..... . , . ,..... •• =.... . vlolng ld eountr .... n yooro.~
A.D. • - 11 houro:i By owner~ 2 bedroom home, Wooclancl, r32 ..,., f35.ooo,
-W.I.C.-Ina.
In
tumn,..,
CouiiiY ...... Dljol. 11
• ftlct location, priced lowered, AI. 7, bolow Euroko, Coli 114oon ond wrtll, IHIOi.': Cof¥11111. Cho¥yo. ......... Tho
·'No more fillings. doc! I'm tlr.BCI ol being
upholotonng. Coil _..,..., W-,
i:JOU75-8831
.
448-4411 ofter 7 p.m.
&amp;828.
.
1100
.......
'
·
Duldo
(1)
IOMIT~
......1
....
1122.
torlroolollmoloa.
·.,·
Eof.lot011L ·
stopped at the 11irport metal detector!"

f their {' ffect
at

P~y-Middlapor"... Ohio

16, 1989

Go'IOmrnonl Vlhlcloo
1rom $100. Cotvo11oo, Chlvyo,
Porohll • Olhor oonlloooltd
rlloo. loiiiMfl lhlo oroo. Fot

Counlry Mobllo Homo Park,
Routt 33, North of Pomeroy.
Lola1 ronlalo, ports, ooloa. Coli
114192·7471).
.
.
PRIVATE 2 1/2 ACRE !roller lor,
1.1 miiH rlghl on Norlhup
Polrlol Rood. CALL 114-142·
2232 dudng morning.
Two trallar tpacaa, ROute 1
Loculi Rood on right, 304-175,::10~7,:1.:...,..:'------------­

$250. 614-4ce.2300.
Z br., · locattd. In EvtrgrHn,
children IICcepltd. Clblt T.V.,
614-448-3197, .or 114-245-5223.
2 br., tralllr, riflflnCI &amp; dtpot lt 51
roqulrod. 614•258-1922.

""""'·' Fd. 1 Sal. 1 milo ou1 211,
och- clol~ l mioc.
Pt.PieBSant
&amp; Vl9lnlty
BIQ COIIMUNITV YARD SALES ·
L....,.lodon - d. Thuraday,.

46

August 16. 1989

Wednesday,

'

�Area deaths
Ada Wamet
Mrs. Ada &lt;Roush) Warner, 92.

296 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy,
died Tuesday at Veterans Mem·
orial Hospital.
aorn AU$. 19, 1896, to the !)lie
Frank and Minnie Smith Roush
of .Racine, she was a retired
school teacher, serving In the
West Carf(llton area In Meigs
County.
'
She was married on June 30.
1921 to Robert Warner, who
preceded her In death. Sbe was a
member of the Veterans MemorIal H.ospltal Auxiliary, the Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
and Pomeroy United Methodist
Church Women where she served
as a past president.
Survivors Include a daughter,
Mrs. Abby Stratton, Oakwood; a
son, Dr. Robert Warner, Middleburg Heights, four grandchild·
ren, two great grandchildren,
and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents and
husband she was preceded in .
death by three brothers and two
sisters.
Services will be at 11 a.m. on
Thursday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist (;hurc h with the Rev.
Don Meadows and the Rev.
Frank Fenton officiating.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home on Wednesday
from 6-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers Mrs . Warner
requested that donations be
made to the benevolence fund of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.

Clara B. Miller.
He graduated (rom Pome roy
High School, attended Ohio University and was a graduate of the
United States Naval Academy In
Annapolis, Md . He served In the
Navy for 23 years, retiring with
the rank of commander.
After roo:tlrlng, he was employed by Lockhead and then
· operated his own company. He
-had resided In California for the
past 26 years.
He was a member of the
Pomrroy Masonic LOdge F&amp;AM

•

Wednesday, August 16. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,.... 14-The Daily Sentinel
164.

Mary Ellen Cox of Hillsboro,
He Is survived by four daugh- Ohio.
ters, Brook Myers of Cupertino,
Services will be held at a later
Calif., Bonnie Miller of Mountain date In California.
Branch, Cal.lf., Blythe Gllgo of
San Jose, Calif. and Blair Car- ·
lotto of Cupertino, Calif; (lne
brother, Roy E . Miller of
Pomeroy.
Veterans Memorial
Also surviving are three grandjldmlsslons ~ Stella
Tuesday
children, two nieces, and several
Bush,
Pomeroy;
and Evelyn
cousins Including Edna SchoeFetty, Middleport.
nleb of Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - Zelpha
Besides hjs parents, he. was
Stewart and Audrey Smith.
preceded in death by a sister,

Hospital news

Two
...
Continued from page ·]

Weather

animal was not killed. No one
was Injured. Damage was minor
to the vehicle.

Court news

· The Meigs County Common
Pleas Court actions ot Arnold
Hayes, et al, versus Super AmerIca, and Ingels Furniture and
Jewelry Inc. versus Christopher
Haye, have been dl~mls:;ed by
the court.·

Ohio Lottery

.
.
on w1nnmg

By United Press Jnternatlodal
Soudl Central Ohio
Tonight: Variable cloudiness,
with a . 'low between 60 and 65.
Light north winds. Chance of rain
20 percent.
Thursday: Partly cloudy. with
a slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs will be
near 80. Chance of rain 30
percent

Cubs keep
-

Pick-3
5ll
Pick-4
3189

\

Super·Lotto

Page 5

3-15-21-23-29-37
· Kicker 456159

at

SPRITE,

Area leaders review
multi-county jail data

. Thif Week 't Special.:. ..

'

VIVA
ICE MILK

~

69

12 Pak
12 01.
Cans

•

•·

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS

CHUCK STEAK

9

oz.

. ·6 9-

JAR

::::::::;;,t: GALLON
.

1 ~ 01. PkiiJ.

'

.

TENDERBEST

GROUND CHUCK

49

Ehlto Stewart ·
Elmo Stewart, 77, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, died Wednesday morning
at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Sept. 1, 1911 in
West Columbia, W.Va.,sonofthe
late Clyde W. and Nora (Kearns)
Stewart.
He was a retired Conrailemployee who worked for the
company for 30 years.
He was preceded in death byy
seVeral brothers and sisters.
Survivors Include his wife,
Lillie M. (Blazer) Stewart, whom
he married ,on April 11, 1936; a
· son, William Elmo Stewart of
Gallipolis; a sister, Blanche
Irene Wells of Pomeroy; ·three
grandsons and two . great grandchildren.
Services will be Friday at I
p.m . at the Willis Funeral Home.
The Rev. Richard Vinson w!H
officiate. Burial will be In Rife
Cemetery .
Friends may call the funeral
home Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m.

SHOWMANSHIP - Awarcls for showmanllblp
In the breeding cattle competition during the
Melp County Junior Fair Beef Judifng were
presented liy 1989 Junior Fair King and Queen,
" Steven Grady and Greta Rlnte. Selected'a sGrand

TAGGED
VAWES!

.F~
.

[(

Pill

~, lllllllll

\

',

FOODLAND

t=

ou•c1.ua
•...
-···

......

~F~
~ =tolleonuut .
...... -···

O~AiiiGl ~VICE

.

99.~.
CAN

PURE SWEET

Granulated
Sugar

Services will be Friday at 1
p.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Roger Grace
officiating. Masonic services will
be held on Thursday evening at
7:30 p.m. Burial will be In the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday from 6-8~ 30

S1~L~
Soft
Drinks

.• -.. 59-C
·
1

1

~

2 LTR.

BTl .

We Reserve ThA Rinht To' I'""' Ouantr!IA~

(

•

44~

S3~!t

CAN

HEAVY DUTY

Homebest
Bleach

IIAQ

DEWEY SPitiNG
DRINKING OR

Distilled
Water

59~~z

ECONOMICAL

5 VARIETIES

.,

Dog

Food

JUO

GLENDALE

SUNSHINE CHUNKS

VIenna
Sausag'e

799oz.·

-

l?·mDonald A. Miller, 68,
of
Sunnyvale, Calif., a former
Meigs County resident. died at
his home on A'Ug. 12.
Born In Pomeroy, he was the
son of the late Walter B , -and

ARMOUR '

Orange
Juice

taiiiCitrfUno

nepl ~ ews .

Donald ,Miller

Champion Showman was Kristen Slawter, of the
Country Clovers 4-H Club, at le.ft with her
Hereford heifer. Reserve Champion Stephanie
Hoffman Is pictured with her Slmmental helfer.

Bell strike
in fourth· day

John Lee
John Richard (Dick) Lee,
Tyree Blvd., Racine, died Tuesday at Holzer Medical Center.
Born in Racine, he was the son
of the late Dale Lee and Lillian
Hobstetter Lee. He was a retired
postal service worker and he
attended the Racine United
Methodist Church.
Mr. Lee belonged to the Racine
Masonic Lodge 4Sl , Racine
Am ~ rican Legion. and he wa s a
veteran of World War II.
Survivors include his wife.
Fannie Lee Lee, Racine; three
s'sters, Wilma Harrison, Pome·
rov; Rose Clarke, EICampo.
Te:ms; and Norma (Bootie)
Tas&gt;ian, Cincinnati; two broth·
ers, J .W. (Jakel Lee, Racine;
and Russel Lee, West Chester; as
well as several nieces and

STEER CHAMPIONS - The honors for the
County Better Beef Club. His steer Is a Hereford
reserve and rrand champion steers went to Alex
and Llmousln mix. His reserve champion awards
Brown and Robbie Calaway, respectively, In
are held by his father, Sam Brown. Robbie
Weclnesday's Melp County Junior Fair Beef
Calaway Is a member ofthe Melp Creek4H Club.'
Judging. Brown, at left, Is a member of the Meigs
His steer Is an
Holding Calaway's awards
_ _..:;;ls;.;;hls~!!!!!~~~~~~.:_.......,

OROX BLEACH
12

Rlnso
Detergent

99~z.
IIOX

.

TASTY

Foodland
Catsup

89,~
ITL.

LIGHT CHUNK
OIL-WATER PACKED

Starklst
'lUna

59&amp;.
PLAIN • SELF RISING

HUDSON

Tissue

890

26 Cenu

2 Section&amp;.
A Multimedia

17 19'89

'·

William K. Oiler
William K. Oller, 69, of Racine,
died Monday at Veteran's Memorial Hospital In Huntington,
W.Va.
Born Sept. J, 19!!0, in Vinton, he
was the son of Alva Cecil Oiler of
Vinton and the late Flossie M.
(McFarland) Oiler. He was a
retired welder from Buckeye
Steel Company In Columbus.
He Is survived by three sons,
William Eugene Oiler, Stanley
Wayne Oiler and Thomas Lee
Oiler. all of Greenfield, Ohio; one
daughter, Debbie Kay Patton of
Greenfield; four brothers, Robert Oiler of Racine, Carl Oiler of
Grove City, Ohio, and Paul Oiler
of McDermott, Ohio; and two
sisters, Helen Hafchar of Cincinnati and Mary Blankenship of
Prestonsburg, Ky.
He was preceded In death by
two brothers and three sisters.
Services will be Friday, 11 a.m.
at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home In Vinton with the Rev.
Denver McCarty. Burial will be
in the McGhee Cemetery.
· Friends may call Thursday
after 3 p.m.

••

•

Everyday Low p,;ce9 and
~ 6' Week/g Special$ .... ·

COCA·
COLA

· Partly cloudy tonight. Slight
chance of rain. Low In mid 80s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday, partly cloudy. High
·near 80. Chance of rain 40
percent.
·

. Crea1111
Flour

S1lP

-

Prices E ~fec:tivtt Thru Saturd~ty, Auqu~t 19, 1 qi!R •USDA Fooci Stamps •nd WIC Couf'Qn~a Accepted. Not RtspOntlble For TypographiCII or Pletori•l Errora.

·

CLEVELAND (UPl) - The
strike by, 10,100 Ohio ~II Telephone Co. employees went
through Its fourth fuU day Wednesday with no movement reported as the company waited for
word from the union and the
union waited to hear from Ohio
Bell.
Communication Workers of
America members In Ohio joined
25,000 coUeagues at sister Amerltech companies In Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin at
midnight Saturday In going to the
picket lines.
.
"The feeling here Is that It Is up
to the company to come up \vlth a
In their offer," CWA
change
"'
SHOWMEN - With show. halters In hand, Grand Champion
Dis
trlct
4
spokesman Greg KeShowman Robbie Calaway, of the Meip Creek 4H Club, and
Reserve ·Champion Showman Aaron Sheets, of tbe Country · nefick said. "We can't tell them
what to offer.
Clovers,! to r, pause .for a picture after Wednesday's Melp County
"But we can clearly demonJunior Fair Beef Judging.
strate
we cannot accept their
•
current offer," he said. "Until
they offer something that makes
sense to us, we won't be
meeting."
Ted Garrison, the company's
chief negotiator, said Monday
the union called the strike and
promised to get back to the
company.
"We could have said that over
the shoulder. 'We'll get back to
you."' Kenefick said. "But until
they have something to offer, we
won't be getting back together."
There seems to be some
confusion.
"We're still waiting on them io
get In touch with us. We are
anxious to resume bargaining,''
Ohio Bell spokesman Powell
Caesar said. "There's plenty of
work to do and our employees are
welcome to retll.\'n to the job."
Meanwhile, the CWA was plan·
. nlng a meeting In Detroit Thursday. followed by a
demonstration. ·
"The meeting," Kenefick said,
• 'Is really to discuss strike
strategy and tactics."
LmLit: MIB8 .tND MBI'ER - o\mutla Fett)r, hmer.,, wu
Ohio Bell serves 3.1 mUllon
crowaed l.ltlle Mlu, and Daniel 'Lee st•hll II, Clreater, wu
telephone lines, representing 58
c~owned Uttle Ml•ter, at Wednesday evenlnl'• Uttle MIM and
percent of the telephone service
Ml•ter eontelt at the Melp Count)r Fair.
In Ohio.

..--·
I

...~-:- ...·

~-·

·

__..

By NANCY YOACHAM
meetings."
Dally Senllnel Staff
It was also reported during
A report ·on Tuesday night's Wednesday's commiSsioners'
meeting In McArthur to discuss session that a publiC hearing has
regional interest in a multi· been set for Sept.l4, 7 p.m., at the ,
county jail facility was presented Meigs Senior Citizens Center, to
by Meigs Commissioner Richard discuss ·new tipping fees for the
Jones during Wednesday's regu- six-county solid waste district In
lar weekly commissioners which Meigs is Included.
meeting.
·
·
Originally, tipping fees of $1, $2.
Jones. Commlssio~rs Man- and $3, for In-district, .out-of·
ning Roush and David Koblentz, district but In-state, and out-ofSheriff James Soulsby and state dumping,' respectively,
Prosecuting · Attorney Steven were proposed for the six -county
Story at tended the McArthur
meeting which was arranged by
the Vinton County
Commissioners.
Also attending the meeting, in
addition to officials from Vinton
and )VIelgs Counties, were com. inlssloners, sheriffs and prosecutors from Pike, Jackson and
Hocking Counties.
The meeting was called by the
Vinton commissioners to see If
any interest at 1111 exists In the
Local residents donated 61
region with regard to a multiunits of blood at the ·American
county jail. ·
Red
Cross bloodmobile visit
According to Jones, the only
at the Senior Citizens
Wednesday
conclusion reached at the meetCenter.
Ing was thai all the counties
Sixty-nine people attended the
represented share the same
bloodmobile
and 14 gave blood In
problems as far as providing
appreciation
for blood received
adequate jail services - lack o(
by
a.
relative
or . friend. There
space and difficulty In meeting
were
three
first
time doilOrs:
tougher state jail standards Loren'
e
Goggins,
Crage
Brown,
and that all the counties realize
Caralyn Barton.
the need for bringing facilities up
·Betty sayh! ·a'nd Teresa i'f·
• ~!r~~dards ',v!!_hjnjhe pex.l, t~- ... TySOJI»Di dllitfter-wrr"e· a«:otc~
nlzed for giving a total of four
A decision was made at the
gallQns of blood. Mark Matson
meeting, Jones reporte~, to
was recognized for giving a total
further explore the possibility of
of
two gallons.
a multi-county facility, and as
Doctors for the bloodmobile
soon as possible, to schedule
were Dr. James W!'therall and
another meeting with reprllSenDr. Wilma Mansfield, while
tatives of the State Department
Naomi London and Beulah W.
· of Corrections present to expJain
Ward
were the nurses. Clerical
grant options for such a facility.
workers Included Peggy Harris,
The position oi the Meigs Jean Nease. Caralyn Barton and
Commissioners, Jones said, "Is · Edward Cozart, representative
that we don'tknow lfwe'rereally of the Vietnam Vets Motorcycle
interested or not, but we feel it's Club.
still Important to attend the

area. However, the ' City of
Jackson vetoed the fees, as was
the city's right according to law,
as the largest municipality
within Jackson County.
Since the original fees were
vetoed, the solid waste district
must start over to establish a fee
schedule which · would provide
money for dis trlct · e~Cpenses.
Because of the delay In establish·
lng
fee . schedule and the
resulting delay In getting the
Continued on page ,12

a

Meigs Co~f.ltians
donate 61 pints of
blood wednesday

CHAMPION .tND RESERVE CHAMPION HOGS - Arlc
Patterson, right, of Pomeroy had the Grand Champion Hog 'a t the
Swine Show beld Tuesday night at the Meigs County Fair. Malt
Titus, left, Rutland, was the winner of the Reserve Grand ·
Champion hog at the Meigs County Fair Swine Show on Tuesday
nllht.

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE
.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1989
7:00 P.M.-CircleD Wranglers- Hill Stage
7:00 P.M.-4-H Horse Fun Show
8:00 P.M.-Horse Pull- Center Field
'8:30 P.M.-McGuffey Lane- Grandstand
FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1989
. .
9~00 A.M.-Junior Fair Dairy Show
10:00 A.M.-Junior Fair Goat Show
11:00 A.M.-Showmen of Showmen Contest
(In Show Arena)
1:'00 P.M ..,-Pork Cook-Off- Hill Stage
2:00 P.)VJ.-Horse Harness Racing
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie 'fractor Pull- Show Ring
5:00 P .M.-Jonnle Belinda - Hill Stage
6:00 P.M.-Shady River Shuffh.:rs- Hlll Stage
6:45 P.M.-Dairy Sweepstakes Presentation and
Junior Fair Market Rabbit, Steer, Lamb, Hog Sale
7:30 P.M.-Truck Pull- Center Field
'8:00 P.M.-Restoration Jazz Bani!
'Grandstand attraction
________ __j'
'

Retired-Senior Volunteer Program workers were Marlori
Ebersbach, VIrginia Buchanan,
DorotHy Long, Mary Nease,
Emma Clatworthy. Gertrude Robinson. Wanda J. Fetty, Edna
· Triplett, Pauline Hysell, Mace!
S. Barton and Gerald Wlldermu th. Canteen was provided by
Pomeroy United . Methodist
Women.
·
Donors included: From Pomeroy - Jefferey Warner, Marsha
'Bitr'llllart,

lllmota

Me~

Brenda Cunningham, David
King, Bryan Shank, Pamela
Miller, · Janet Ambrose, Mary ·
Spencer, Billy Spencer, Howard
Logan, Dale Thoene, Donald
Meadows, John Anderson.
Diana Harrison, Keith Phalln,
John Snyder, Lawrence Leonard, Loretta Brown, Patricia
Barton, Gerald Rought, John
Moore, Wilma Mansfield, Dan
Follrod, Carolyn Charles, Jeffrey McKnight, Stephen Price,
Donald Smith; Fonna Cullums,
Paul Marr, Edward Cozart, Paul
Rice.
From Middleport - Rhonda
Rathburn, Lorena Goggins,
Leafy M. Chasteen, Sarah
Fowler, Philip Richmond, David
Dodson, Gloria Peavley, Will am
Moody, Jean Durst, Ronald
Diles , Sr.
,
Donors from Langsville were
Alva Clark and Ellis Myers while
Stephen Nease , Portland , also
donated. Barbara Beegle, Mary
Cu r tis , Paula Browri, Loretta
Smith, Betty Sayre, Mark Matson, Craig Brown and A. Marie
Bush donated from Racine.
Syracuse donors ' included
Kathy Cumings, Dick Ash,
Teresa Tysonn-Drummer and
Rutland donors Included Marta
H. Blackwood, Fred George and
Avanell George,
•
From Reedsville donors were
Sherrie Roush, Mace! Barton:
· Caralyn Batton and from Long '·
Botton Paula Wood, Evelyn
Wood. Laura Hawley and Bruce
Hawley .
,
Other donors were John Sic, .
Harrlso.nville. Betsy Herald; :
Tuppers Plains. af1d Teresa L:
Coovert of Mason . W.Va .
. .

Gallia man
suspect in
·slaying
WINFIELD, W.Va . .(UPii
Two Ohio men were being
ques tloned ·Thursday in connection with the . early morning
shooting death of a Putnam
. County deputy sheriff.
·
Th~ Putnam County Sheriff's •
Department said Deputy John
Janey died around 1:30 a.m.
Thursday after being shot by a
. suspect In an arson case. Pollee ·
say Janey was shot while pursu.:
lng two men on foot.
:
The shooting occurred In the '
Cow Creek area.
:
Pollee said one of the suspects .
Is from Gallipolis, Ohio. Authorities did not relea_s e the home · .
town of the second suspect.
:
State pollee are Investigating
the shooting.

- -·- -·

'·

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