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                  <text>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.:. ..

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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

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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

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Soft
Drinks

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-

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 '

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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
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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

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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.

- -·- -·

'·

�thursday, August 17, 1989

Commentary

.

•

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'

,,

.

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

~s:m~ ~.__
.......,,..,...,..r:::::~.~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlshe'r
PAT WHITEHEAD
.Assistant Publlsber/ ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcoine. They should be lessthan301
words lone. AU letters are s ubject to editing and must be signed wltb
aame, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubII&amp;bed. Leiters should be In good taste, address)Jig Iss.-, not pereonall·

lies.

·

Nation's social ills worsen
By LEON DANIEL
UPJ Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- America's working poor deserve help.
Not the deadbeals, people looking for a handout.
The working and deserving poor Include the growing number of
Americans forced to toll for less than a decent wage. And those who,
through no fault of their own, become homeless.
:These are people who deserve res~ct, as well as a helping hand.
. : More than half of the nation's poor -17.5 million- are in families
lri which someone works.
. The minimum wage at just under $7,0()0 a year Is $5,000 under the
poverty level established by the government for a family of four.
Almost half of the working poor don't have health Insurance.
Even a mild recession, a •new s tudy by the American .Affordable
Housing Institute warns, could render up to 14 million Americans
homeless.
··
·
: The study identifies these as people who live " one payc heck, one
.domestic argument from the streets."
; Current estimates of the number of homeless, growing by as much
-as 40 percent a year, range as high as 4mlllion. These are people who
:S leep in the public shelters or in the streets.
· They are ubiquitous. They live on steam grates only blocks !rom the
White House and the Capitol.
But there also are the " near homeless" who must double up with
friends or relatives because they are unable to find affordable new
.quariers.
'
•
; Former P resident Ronald Reagan's cutbacks in subsidies for new
·low-Income rental housi ng helped push many families Into
·homelessness.
·
And President Bush's self-dubbed "kinder, gentler" adminlstra·
non so far has ducked housi ng problems. as well' as the nation's other
worsening social ills.
Instead, it has stUbbornly resisted a fair increase in the minimum
·wage. It also has pushed for reducing the tax on capital gains. Such
:Policies uphoiq the Reagan legacy of benefitting the rich at the
:expense of the poor.
.
·. Some Democratic champions of the overdog have ioined
:Republicans,in the shenanigans to raise revenues by cutting taxes .
·• They have succumbed to the allure of quick reven11e generated by
tile rate cut. But gains on Investment sales would yield a windfall
sto]en from the future. Over the long haul, the Treasury would collect
less.
___
. In any case, favorable tax trea tment for capital gains Is unfair
because it vastly favors the rich.
Fortunately, there is a way Congress can and should benefit the
:working poor. It can do it by expanding the earned-income tax credit.
· By raising the maximum subsidy from $910 to $2,2.20 a year for
working families, Congress could release more than a million
Americans from poverty.
· Doing this would cost a n estimated $5 billion a year, which is big
bucks. But Bush and Congress proved they could move quickly to bail
out the savings and loan industry at a cost of $166 billion.
: The thrift industry was almost sunk by cr ooks who used fede ral
·deposit insurance to attract money from depositers which they
siphoned· off for their own use or invested recklessly .
• Taxpayers ta ke no pleasure in bai ling out an industry with such a
dismal his tory.
But they know it makes sense to inves t In America's working poor
.-men a nd women who deserve a chance to earn their ·own way . .

:foday in history
By United Press lnlernatlonal
Today is Thursday, Aug. 17. the 229th day ofl989 with 136 to follow .
The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus and Saturn.
. Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include
frontiersman Davy Crockett in 1786. black nationalist leader Marcus
Garvey In 1887, publisher-diplomat John Hay Whitney in 1904, actors
~onte Woolley in 1888. Mae west In 1892, Maureen O'Hara ln1921 (age
701, Robert DeNiro in 1945 (age 44 I and British poet laureate Ted
Hughes in .1930 t age 59).
On this da te in history:
.
In 1915, a hurrica ne struck Ga lveston. Texas, killing 275 people.
: In 1978. three Americans completed the first successful crossing of
the Atlantic by balloon. land ing their helium-filled Double Eagle Two
· rf.ear Paris.
· In 1987. kidnapped American journalist Charles Glass escaped and
was rescued after being held hostage for 62 day.s in Lebanon.

RONBnne Barr?"
"

I

' .

------------------~---------------------MOSCOW - . Mikhail Gorba· government officials or In the
Leonid .Brezhnev proposes where the Infant death rate Is
chev uses the word "Titanic" to homes. ()f dissidents, It seemed as
closing the shades on the cl11b car going up.
Gorbachev continued: "Our
describe the task ahead of him- If we were In the taverns of
and rocking back and forth.
rockets
can find Halley's Coinet
restructing the Soviet economy. Williamsburg, Va., two centuries
Finally It Is Gorbachev' s turn.
and
He means the adjective, ".gar- ago plotting a new, !pdepedent
fly
to Venus w~th amazing
He frees everyone from the train
accuracy,
but side by side with
gantuan." But the noun may be government.
Into the opeh countryside and
more appropriate.
joins them In exultantly shout- these scientific and technological
But those are Ute best and the
The Central Intelligence brightest, not the peasants. Tiley. ing, " No · ralls! No ralls! No triumphs Is an obvious lack of
Agency, In Its top-secret ana· too are enthused by their new
ralls!" But nothing, of course, is etf!clency In using scientific
lyses, predicts that Gorbachev freedoms, b11i are more conachievements for economic
accomplished.
.
No one knows the root of the needs.''
..
!las a two-year grace period to cerned abo11t the next meat If
prod\lce results or he will 1Je. glasnost and perestroika can't problem better than Gorbachev.
For instance, television sets
(lusted. On a te.;:ent three-week put sugar on their tables or soap Before he came to power., he are notoriously poor. Many TV
visit to the Soviet Union, we In their tables or soap In their wrote In his book; "Peres- sets In the stores I! ave no knobs.,
talked to top Soviet officials and · bathrooms, then maybe . they troika'·': "An absurd situation They have been stolen to put on
was developing. The Soviet' Un· old sets. About 40 percent of the
common people. Nothing we saw don't need Mikhail Gorbachev.
ion,
the world's biggest producer ho11se fires In Moscow start In
convinced us that Gorbachev can
A complex Joke Is ·making the
of
steel,
raw materials, ruel and faulty TV sets ..
achieve significant economic rounds: Post-revolutionary lead·
energy,
has
shortfalls In them
gains for his co11ntry In the near ers of the Soviet Union are on a
Gorbachev Is aiming tor tangidue
to
wasteful
or
Inefficient
use.
·
future.
ble
economic Improvements by
train which comes to a halt In the
Visiting the Soviet Union Is like middle of nowhere because there One of the biggest producers of 2000, but even that Is ambitious. ,
grain for food, It nevertheless has He plans to lure Western lnves·
visiting a Third World country- Is no more track.
to buy millions of tons of grain a tors, retool factories and divert
without the frills. The techl!,ology
Vladimir Lenin proposes an
and money thrown· at the mil· · extra wor.k day so the .peasants year for fodder . .
military rubles to .the clvlljan
. We have the largest n11mber of sector.
!tary has barely 'touched civilian can )ay more ralls. .
doctors and hospital beds per
life. Consumer products are in
Some American economists .
Josef Stalin orders every pea·
thousand of the population, and warn that.lfhedoesn't change the
short supply, even In the govern- sant in sight shot and then calls
ment stores, open only to the elite for prisoners from the gulag to at the same time, there are centralized · nature of commuglaring shortcomings In our nism, with Its massive bureau·
and tourists. The nation that put complete the tracks.
health services." The average cracy, It will matter little what.
the first man In space still adds
Nlklta Khrushchev s11ggests
department store bills on an taking the ralls from behind the life expectancy for a Soviet man else he does.
·. ·
,
1960s
and
has
dropped
since
the
abacus.
None
of
this
portends
a
decline
train and putting them out front
the Soviet Union Is the · only In the Soviet Union's status as a
Glasnost is very real, !!'tenu- In leap-frog fashion to the nearest
lndllstrlallzed nation In the world superpower, nor the slightest
ous. The air of freedom Is city.
unmistakable. In meetings with
retreat from world politics. The
Soviet people are remarkably
resll!eilt. They have survived a
~fff\ @I' 99 F~ l'«&lt;lttl\ $9111.-TEI ECS • .,.
clvU war, the Nazis and Stalin's
HULME 7·D
reign of terror. The lack otsugar
..e.o,
·'
and soap will not bring them
down.
Gorbachev · has been wise
eJ\ough to give his people back
one source of strength- religion.
The slow lifting of bans and
propaganda against ch11rches
has brought a steady resurgence
of faith. Older peasants who kept
the faith quietly over the years
are moved to tea'r s as they ret11rn
to churches that the state once
closed.
We saw a new cycle In a
Russian Orthodox church where
simple coffin and a few elderly
mourners In black were eclipsed
by a baptism just a few feet
away. "three Infants had been
brought to the church by proud
parents, now unafraid to practice
their religion.
For the moment, Gorbachev
has the support of his people. He
•
has proposed some solutions that
might work, bl!t it will be up to
the common people to be patient ··
and the bureaucracy to bend:
Otherwise, Gorbachev will go_
down in history as the Soviet
leader who arranged deck chali's
"We come in peace. Wtier~·s the. landfill?''
on his s!n.klng Titanic."

.a

t ..

)

High court stumbled on abOrtio:rt·
Justice Harry Blackmun, in
prose so frantic and unmeasured
it might have been written by a
feminist study group, declared in
his dissent over the Missouri
a bortlon case that he 'reared "for
. the Integrity of, and public
esteem foF, this court."
In the same near-hysterical
fashion, Biackmun claimed that
"never in my memory has a
plurality announced a judgement
of this court that so foments
disregard for the law ... " -and
that the decision, moreover, was
" profoundly destructive of this
court as an institution."
His fevered exaggeration
aside, Blackmun has a point. The
recent decision upholding a Mis· ·
sour! law that restricts abortion
may well erode public respect for
the Supreme Court, for it proves
how brittle and even mortal a
"settled" court opinion can be.
Americans like to believe their
justices decipher constitutional

truth from aged documents with consign the 1973 ruling, Roe vs.
the scientific precision of chem· Wade, to the ju·dtclal dustbin It so
lsts; it Is disllluslonlng, there- richly deserves.
fore, to learn that the court has
By not tackling the broader
simply been winging it In at least subject of Roe, Scalia wrote, the
one important case.
majority "continuously distorts
But Blackmun denounced the the public perception of· the role
wrong court for this unfortunate of this court." That role is not to
state of affairs. ·If the public is address "what I believe to be, a
disenchanted, the present court political Issue." as opposed to a: ,
majority Isn't to blame. The fault consltutional question, Scalia
lies with the 1973 maJority led by said.
·
Blackmun himself, which first
As a result of the court's
Invented a constitutional right to timidity, Scalia predicted, "we
abortion, substituting Its pol!tl· can now look forward to at least
cal and moral judgment for the another term with carts full of
democratic decisions of 50 state mall from the public and streets
legislatures.
full of demonstrators, urging us
As usual, Justlc Antonio Scalia - their unelecte.d and life·.
exposed this truth with eloquent tenured judges· who have been
clarity in his own opinion. Al- awarded those extraordinary,
though Scalia agreed that the undemocratic characteristics
Missouri law js constitutional, he precisely in order that we might
strongly opposed the mealy· follow the law despite the popular
mouthed Way In which the court . will- to follow the popular wlll."
sidestepped the Implications of
Can anyone doubt he's cor·
Jts own decision, refusing to rect? The court has already

BRADLEY, IlL ( NEA) -Mike
Jones ·and Don Underwo&amp;l, employees of a custom furniture
manufacturing firm , were cjeter·
mined to establish their own
company - but they had no
money, no work space and little
Idea of how launch a commercial
enterprise.
"We started in my garage,"
recalls Underwood. "That. was
fine untO we bought a bunch of
tools that took up all the space.
We lasted only about two or three
months there."
Financing was an even more
severe problem. "We were almost pennlles.s when· we started
this thing," says Underwood.
"We cani'e In with hardly any
money at all."
Jones, Underwood and their
start-up company, Creative Custom . Furniture, were classic
candidates for a business lncuba·
· tor - "a facility that provides
small ·e ntrepreneurial b\ISI·
nesses with affordable space;
shared support serviCes and
business development services
and business development servl·
ces such as financing, marketing

agreed to examine the laws of
three other states lhat attempt to
restrict abortion. What's more,
as Blackmun bitterly noted, the
Missouri decision "Is filled with
winks . and nods and knowing
glances to those who would do
away" with Roe altogether. ,
When the Supreme Court dis·
mantles established legal doctrine, it should do ·the deed as
quickly as possible. Instead, In
the Missouri case, the court
chose to tease us with. a glimpse
of where It might be headed, but
without providing any firm assurance it will reach the destlna·
tlon, let. alone precisely when.
Does the court hope to preserve
the pretense that its 1973 decision
had something to do with · the
Constitution? Sorry, but it Is filr
too late to maintain that that
judicial emperor is still wearing
clothes.

Robert

Walter.~

'

I'

l

with younger 111ayers~" Conroy .
·said. However, the Oaks have
some,. experience on defense:
with Willis and junior Shane
MaynardJn the secondary, Ken·
ney at .,ll""'backer and senior
Brent Michael at defensive end."
After some dlsc\lsslon as to
·whether or not Oak Hill should
leave the SVAC, It was decided
that the south Jackson school will
stay. Gallia County Local
Schools superintendent Nell
Johnson reached an agreement
with .the SVAC Board of Control
•, and t_he Oak Hill Union Local
School District that the Gallia
sc~o&lt;&gt;ls ~ould not be Plllled from
the league. "While we don't want
to .destroy the league'' by with·
drawing the Gallla schools, John·
son said, " It was agreed that Oak
· Hill shOuld continue exploring Its
options." .
VIkings show defensive hulk
"We might be big on D for a
change, with our tackles running
between 210 and 235 pounds,"
· said Symmes Valley skipper
Merrill Triplett, who will have ·
elgpt seniors on hand, Including
southpaw quarterback. Paul
Hayes, .last year·~ starter, and .
tailback fred Wilburn.

Eagles, White face
courtroOm battle

By JOE CIALINI
convinced'all four players w!ll be
UPJ Spons Writer
· present when the season starts.
WEST CHESTER, Pa. (UP!)
"I plan'ol) playing with all four
- Like most NFL teams, the of thein," Ryan said. "When ,we
Hhiladelphfa Eagles are used to got those !O\Jr guys here, we'll be
contract squabbles but this year
a hell of 11- team."
they 'fa'ce . ·a courtroom battle
against one of their best players
- deferi~lve end Reggie White.
White, who Is In the option year
of his contra·ct, has filed a federal
laws111t against his fonner agent,
Patrick Forie, who Is now an
assistant to Eagles president
I
Harry Gamble. ·
In the suit, White charges that
'Forte never told him about the
option year on the· contract and
that the agent was discussing a
position with the ' Eagles at the
same time he was negotiating the
player's contra~:
.
The Eagles and White's agent,
Jimmy Sexton, have been engaged in bargaining for a new
contract b11t have reached no
agreement.
The trial In White's case
against Forte Is scheduled to
begin Monday In U.S. District
Court In Philadelphia. The team
contends It Is not a party to the
su!t. }'Vl!lte'•s sl~ Is. 0ot,maklng
such a distinction:
"We've made It very, very
'
clear to the Eagl~ that ,we'd like ·
to get something done this ·
wi!ek," Sexton.said. "They·know
that. ~ Tiley.:',lqlow that R~ggle ..·
·wanl s this qone. before the. trial

.

•
··

'
'

. In addition, jllniors Jason
Sheppard and Kenny Daniels, a
5,9, 175-pound tailback tabbed by
several coaches liS the league's
best, wlll follow ~he lead of an
offensive line Triplett described
as a "hard·hltdng group, but not
big." Such hard hitters will have
the Job of helping to malnta!nlllg
the Norsemen's winning ways, as
they won seven of their last eight
going Into their Aug. 25 opener at
Rock Hill.
With a healthy mix of youth
and experience on both sides of
the ball, SouUtwestern has a very
good chance to break the .500
mark.this year, though ihey,llke
several · of the league's teams,
.will start the season with a new
quarterback, which could be
either junior Kevin Kiser or
sophomore Bill Potter.
However, the Highlanders,
who showe!llast year that they
can win consistently, have experienced running backs In senior
Josh Halslop and junior Chris
Metzger and veteran receivers In
-senior Joe Hammond and junior
Keith Carter, On defense, they .
have .several large and ag~es­
slve lineinen, such as senior
Brent Davies and Junior John
Sites, and hungry linebackers
such as Halslop and sophomore
Kevin Gillman, but could be
vulnerable to the pass In their
"60" defense, which leaves only
three In the secondary.
North (;alBa, wltl;l a crew of 46,
slightly . mo~ than last year,
seems to have the numbers to
challenge the Oaks and the
Vikings, whom the Pirates will

face on consecutive Fridays to Chad Johnson, and experienced
close out Sepiember. While they . running backs in Junior Joey
have a largely veteran line and Eclwards and sophomore Phil
veteran receivers, they will be Bradbury r unning behind an
protecting their new quarter- offensive front populated prim·
back, junior Brian Stout, and arUy l&gt;Y freshnlen and sopho·
several new faces · in ·the mores. ,First on the Bobcats'
backfield.
agenda will be to put an end to
Though the Pirates have an their six-game losing streak,
opportunity to build on last Instrumental In sending Kyger
year's 6-3 success story. which down to a 2·8 season.
includes a season-ending threeWith back-to-back 6·4 seasons
game winning streak, they must as benchmarks, Hannan Trace
also work miracles with the will most certainly struggle to do
green-In-more-ways-than-one se- as well this time around unless Its
condary to stop the pass and 18-man squad finds out where
Popeye . keeps hjs spinach. · A ·
force teams to run.
Postscript: the Pirates need to young. offensive line wlll !Je
win only one more league game called upon to clear tl\e way lor
to capture its IOOth all-time SVAC senior running back and fouryear starter Todd Saunders
victory.
Two former Ohio University while junior quarterback Eric
slandouts - head coach David Lloyd and offensive utilityman
Gaul and assistant coach J.D. Shad Johnson find ways to
Bradbury - • are the newest balance the Wildcats' attack with
additions to SouUtem's coaching a solid passing game. On deslaff as the Tornadoes seek to fense, they look solid In defendextend their three-game winning Ing the run, but the reborn
streak that they started last · secondary will have its hands full
season. They are looking to do so l~arnlng pass defense under fire.
When Is Easlern going to win?
by buDding around a 5·2 defense
that features strong linebackers From Tuppers Plil!ns and Ches.
and a quick secondary In addition ter to Long Bottom and Reeds·
to an I -formation offense po- ville, the .fans of the Eagles sat
wered by experienced running through a season-long losing
backs. However, the TornadQI!s streak last year, and nqw Arch
will have the task of training a Rose's troops are starving for
new quarterback and receiver victory.
Quarterback Jeff Durst, who
corps.
Kyger Creek, who last year took his lumps as a freshman last
had the unenviable distinction as year, may have learned enough
being the team Souther.n de- from his real-world apprenticefeated to end the Tornadoes'. ship to put defenses to the test
16-game losing streak, has a with his arm and his running the
returning quarterback in senior option. Though the Eagles'

strength Is at quarterback, with
senior Shaun Savoy and sopho·
more Wes Holter backing him up;
their weakness is a lack of team ·
depih, size and speed. ,

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1411-KII)
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, -.

,.j '

Meanwhile," wide receiver
Mike Quick, defensive · tackle
Mike Pitts and o!fellslve tackle
Matt Darwin remained unsigned
Wednesday and out of training
camp.
• .;.'
·.Negotiations between·thl! team
acid agents for the players were
not close· to , producing '11e~
agreements. ~·
·
:
·
"I don't believe they're bargaining In g\)od faith," said
Randy ·Hendricks, who 'TI'presents Darwin.
Jim Solano, the agent for
Quick, said the player wanted to
sign In time to. play In S11nday's
exhibition game agalns t the New
York Jets lri North Carolina, his ·
home state. But Solano said no
agreeme~t was Imminent .
.
· The Eagles have affeted White
a· contract that~ would ·.pay him
$7.55 million over five years and
make him the hlghest-palddele!l·
slve player In tlie league by
$10,000 a year over Bruce Smith
of the B11f!alo Bills. White -Is
seeking a, three- · or four-year
agreement worth $1.7 million per
season.
Sexton has, said tl\e. Eagles
should trai!e ~hlte If tl!ey are not
Willing to pay him what he wants.
But ·t eam owner Nonnan Bra· ·
'
' White will not be
man
has .said
traded.
·It White wins his lawsuit
against Forte, he co11ld then file
suit against tile Eagles to void the
option year of his contract and
preswnably ' become · a free
agent.
. It he losei, however, the option
ye11r would remain binding.
Even If Whl~ held o11t for an
enUre !Ieason, he WO\Ild still awe
the EagleS 01!1' year before he
could sign with any other team.
Despite all the rhetoric, Eagles
· coach Buddy Ryan . remains

'

SUMMI!A
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~---....

i ,;: ._

,.

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company/ Multbnedla, Inc.,

'

Castro

Sex'ton Said th-8t If the c;.ase goes
to trial; W.h'lte could become ·so
disenchanted with the Eagles·
organization that he no longer
would want to pJay for the .t eam
ulll.!er any circumstances.
S'exton and ·Gamble ialked
several times ;Tuesday without .
, .
bridging•the gap.
. "We·may be farther apart now
than we've .e:ver been," Sexton
said. "Generally, as~you move
toward a,:ctlma,x with these
tlilngs, yilu tend to ket clo.&lt;j,er.
That's not the ~ase. I'm not
optimistic at all."" ..

Vincent Carroll

and management."
.
Calif.. and scores of "'o ther
That definition Is provided by smaller communities.
the National Business Incubation
Incubators serve entrepre· ture moved in 1~ years ago, It
Association, an Athens, Ohio, ne11rs ·tong on commitment 'and required a relatively modest
trade association that believes dedication but short on expertise 4,000 square ·feet and had only
lncubat.o rs can play a crucial role and experience. ''There are a lot two employees - co-owners
In reducing the high mortality of people with really good Ideas Jones and Underwood. Today.
rate traditionally experienced by but wlthoutaclueas to how to run the company employs 14 people
new companies.
a business," says one expert in and &lt;iccup!es 13,000 square feet.
According to the U.S. Depart· the field. "It's Important to
The growth of business !ncuba·
ment of Commerce, 50 percent of remember that no company ever tors has not been without travail.
all new businesses fall within started big," adds another.
A major fire here two years ago,
tnree years and 80 percent are
They typically rent space at for example, destroyed almost
gone )VIthln five years. But NBIA modest rates and allow tenants to one-third of the Bradley Indus·
claims that the success rate for share the cost of secretarial, II\Ial Park and devastated many
Incubated buslnes.ses In 80 per· receptionist and telephone· of Its stsrt-11p tenants.
'
cent -the Inverse or the national answering services as well as
Nationally, NBIA extravaaverage.
facilities and equipment ranging gantly predicted a few years a~to
Inc11bators are a phenomenon from conference roonis .and that there would be 1,000 !ncuba·
otthe 1980s. Only about40exlsted loading docks to computers ahd tors . by 1990. . Recent trends
In 1984 but today there are photocopiers.
suggest that the industry will not
approximately 330. Although
Incubators often are In older be able to claim even halt titat
they are scattered throughout commercial biiUdlngs that. have numbet by next year.
the country, the states with the been rehabilitated. In the Brad"There . was a lot of hype
heaviest concentrations are Penley Ind11strial Park here, lor Initially and people had unrealis·
nsylvani!,l, Dllnols, New York, · example, the Area Jobs Develop- tic expectations of what lnc\lbaMichigan, Wisconsin and Ohio.
ment Association rents space to tors COIIId do," says one know I·
New York City, Chicago, Los fledgling firms In a refurbtshed edgeable observer. But the Idea
Angeles and other big cities bave stl"liCture constructed almost a of providing· sheltered quarters
them, b11,t so do Scottsbluff, Neb.;
centiiJ'Y ago for the David Brad· for fledgling •firms remains a
Pocatello, Idaho; Florence, S.C.: ley Farm Implement Co.
. so11nd concept with great
Fond dil Lac, Wis.; Santa Cruz,
·
When Creative Custom Furnl· • potential,

.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tribune Staff·Writer
·
Once again, Oak Hill and ·
Symmes Valley are projected to
battle for this yeat!s .. SVAC
football championship, and even
lf.·.anyone . knows who hjis the
strorlgest an~ quickest horses ·
~tween them, no one Is tamng.
io\s far as departed players ate
concerned, the Valley graduated
seven, while the Hill lost 12.
However, the Oaks will have 66
players, 25 of ·whom are freshmen and only, nine pf whom are
senlprs, on.hand to piay'when the
season beglns·otl Frld~JY. Aug. 25
against Alexander In Albany. .
Oak l:llll chlel Jeff Conroy said
his team can run, but with a new
qual'terback in sophomore Alan
Potter, "we have to see what he
can do throwing the ball." If
Potter falters, senior Chopper
Willis will come In from his
flanker position to pick up the
slack. The revamped lille, aver·
aging 185 pounds per man, will be
relied upon to .give Potter and
veteran running backs Josh Ruff,
Rob. Adkins a9d'· Nick Kenney
room to run. "
"My better players have gra· duatted; and I'm replaCing them

Stalits .' "

•

•

•
"Why can 'I you b8 more like

Jack Anderson

Incubators hatch newborn
business
•

Berry's World

.

'

A herculean• task

The Daily Sentinel

Oak Hill, fSy(llllles Valley picked to · battle .for gridiron title

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 17, 1989

-

The Daily Sentinei- Page_.:.3

Pomeroy..;.Middleport, Ohio

"""'

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�The Daily s8ntinei-Page..:..s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

to.llefeats Boston 7-3;
edge closer to No. 1 Orioles

Cubs post 5-l win over Reds .

By JOE ILLUZZI
series Thursday.
UPI Sports Writer
"We'd love to be able to play
The Toronto Blue Jays would
them here, " Blue Jays wlilnlng
love to ship something from 1he
pitcher David Wells said of
city on the River Charles to the · Fenway, where Toronto Is un·
city near Chesapeake Bay.
beaten since Aug. 10, 1987. "As
Namely, Fenway Park.
long as we could switcti fields
Toronto posted its 15th straight
with Boston, I feel we could win
Fenway Park victory ·Wednes - lt.
day night by rallying past Boston
"But we're looking forward to·
7-3. The victory plaaced Toronto
this weekend. Right now I think
1~ games bel!lnd AL East·
(the Orioles) are getting scared.
They were 'si_x or ·s even games up
leading Baltimore, where·· the
Blue Jays open a four-game
and having tun. But now I think

they havE.' a lot to worry about
and I don't think they'll hqld up
their end of the bargain."
Those are strong words,
mayJ?e strong enough to wake the
Orioles, who in the last month
have seen thelrleadshrlnkby·4~
games. Baltimore enters the
series with Toronto having won
two of three In Detroit, but the
r .
Orioles didn' t took good doing it.
They had 11 hits In three games.
"There.' s not anybody realty
standing out hitting," Baltimore
first baseman Randy Mllllgan
said after :he Orioles lost 4-0 to
.
.
·
the Tigers. 'Everybody seems to
be In a mini-slump When it's like
that, It's tough to ~core runs."
·
~n other AL games:
Indians
6, Athletics 3
Earth," King said. " He's done it
At
Oakland,
Calif., Brook Jacwithout drugs. "
oby
's
third
single
of the game
Tyson said the people selling
l
Ignited
a
three-run
eighth
Inning
drugs have to realize there is no
and Joe Carter knocked In three
i
future In the business.
\
spark
the
Indians.
runs
to
" I'm making millions of dol·
.tars and . nobdoy can take it ·Oakland 's loss, coupled with
away,'' he said. "Nobody can California's. victory over Mlrine·
break the law everyday and get sota, redu.c ed. the A's lead In the ·
STEALS THmD - Oakland third baseman
steal of third on a wild pltcb In the fifth Inning of
AL West to one-half game.
away with it"
Carney Lansfonl gets a facelul of the Indians'
(UPI)
Wednesday
Blue Jays 7, Bed Sox 3
The boxing exhibition Is free,
.....' ' ,. night's ~~:arne In 'O akland.
.
,...
Brook
Jacoby,
who
goes
head
over
heels
In
his
At
Boston,
pinch
hitter
Lee
but every person at leaSt18 years
old must register to vote before Mazzllll looped a tie-breaking
entering. King and Tyson jo,intly two-run single over a drawn-In
announced the event with Coun- Infield to cap a three-run eighth
cil President George Forbes, inning rally for the Blue Jays.
who likely will run for mayor of After 1'ony Fernandez hit a
game-tyi ng double, •Mazzllli, hit·
Cleveland.
ling
only .211 entering the game.
"George Forbes Is my
.
'
hit
his
winning single.
partner," Tyson said. "He's my
not be an announcement.
By DAVID HA,RDING
Tigers 4, Orioles 0 ·
man."
_ "I don't know If. there will be
United Press International
At Detroit, Frank Tanana
National League President Bill any statement." she said from
pitched a two-hitter for his first Wlilte:W.eclnesday was reviewing
•
the NL's New York offices: "The
shutout In three seasons and the ·prevlo,us night's shoving leag\le preskjent Is reviewing the
Dave Bergman hit a solo home match beiWeen Cincinnati man·
matter. He'll get the umpires'
run. Baltimore · shortstop Cal ager Pete Rose, Reds second
reports and possibly look at video
Rlpken Jr. played in his 1,207th basema'n Ron Oester and umpire
tape but I really don't expect an
straight game ·to tie' Steve Gar- :Joe West, a spokeswoman for the ann~uncennent today.
vey for the third longest consecu - league said while promising no
"Unless there's a suspension
The SVAC fOotball preview will tive game plAying streak.
Involved,
we may not have any
forthcoming
statement.
be begin Saturday · at 6 p.m. at
Brewers 5, Yankees 1.
s
tatement
," sl!e· said. "Tho
NL
media
and
public
affairs
Kyger Creek High School.
At Milwaukee, Mark Knudson director Katy Feeney, asked
league
doesn't
announce all
Kyger Creek will play Symmes and Chuck Crim combined on a
di sc iplinary action·. only
about
an
outburst
following
the
Valley in the opener, andSouthw· eight-hitter to help the Brewers
suspensions."
estern will take on Hannan Trace complete a three-game sweep of Reds' 12-lnnlng, .5-2 loss to the
The Reds refused coll}ment.
at 7 p.m. Southern and Oak Hill the · Yankees and extend their . Chicago Cubs in Cincinnati,
'Rose
apparently shofed Wes.t
will face each other at 8 p.m., season-hig!J winning streak to ' corrected reporters· by c ailing
the co~fllct an ·"al!Ei gejj sev.e ral times before·being pulled
lollowed by North Gallia and six. Milwaukee Is tied for second
away from a group of milling
·
Incident.
"
Eastern at 9 p.m.
In the AL East with Toronto;
players ·and umpires behind
Speaking
fo.i'
the
game's
urn·
All engagements will ccinsis t of while New York plunged to 7 1-2
home plate. .
plres,
crew
Gh!ef
Jerry
Crawford
two 12-mlnute quarters.
games out.
,.._...., fttuho&lt;lll , ... !fl.....
"I was 'right In the middle of
. said after the ' Incident a state·
..__......... ,, '"'!"'C• a...-,
Angels 7, Twins 3
- o ! l•u c.,•.. --... •
It,'' Rose said' after the game.
ment would be 'issued Wednes·
At Anaheim, Calif. , Mike Witt ·day, but Feeney said there might
(See WHITE on PageS)_
fired a six-hitter over eight
innings lor his first victory in
more than five weeks and rookie
Bobby Rose belted a tie-breaking
st. t.• - olu.~~H l.nthiH .Jim
homer. Rose's lirst major league
u•mu lo t.o•wUJe Of dlf A.mrt~t" llll
homer came against Shane RawAuotl.tkln tA.AA); nl~d up ei&amp;e!wr
TI'Mid Z.ll.-lrom Lo-..tne .
ley . 5-11, to help Witt Improve to
C•llel"
8-10.
llldlaM. - Df!l'lart'd punter•whko noC!!Iftr Tom Belylli'd al·ademleally
,
Rangers 3; Mariners 1
hrlll';lhl~.
'
At Seattle, Nolan Ryan and•
WlllleM - N"ine-d AI Zellml'r IUillifltanl
•m.lln~ c oat'h 11nd a!uhllant hlllf'hail
Jeff Russell coml)lned on · ·a "-.
~ell.
four-hitter, arid·. Chad Kreuter
Follthall
Phel'nlx. - Waive-• de l.nRive hack
and Rafael Palmelro each hit a
,!;lrvt!GI'f'~ry .
solo home run. Ryan,14-.j, struck ·
- Nl' ,l~lltndel'li - Sllltfll'd fref"aaenl
out eight and needs six strikeouts.
pitf' ndf'r Glm Ht&gt;mly to a mull-ye~
•"~Uitnni .
to become the fir~t major leaguer
Thul'!ldlQ '!i Sport K c·ah.•nthtr
to record 5.000 in a career.' Scott
Bankhead, 11-5, had his winning
Lyj1n ,
Frant' l'
World
·
c....
, ......,,.
streak stopped
at nine.
· Golf
Royals 5, White Sox.4 " ·
Atla.nta- M' allll"r fu p
' '""' Ro &lt;k. Colo. - PGA $1 m""'"'''"'~
At ... Ch.tcago . .. llob .. Boone
''"''""'"'~' Swim min~
squeezed home Pat Tabler with
WiihExchange
Bonn,\\'t'!'iiGl'rma.n,v-19thEuroPfart
OOe OUt in the eighth inning tO
Ch...,pl!&gt;nohl,..
snap a tie and rally KansasCity.
• Comes with a 50-month
&amp;,....,,..•• Lalu'.T~nlllfi
N.\'.- u.s. N.,,...,
Brei Saber hagen, 14-5, won. his
limited lifetime warranty
"':t~~!:~~~~~"t~~t·d .Jn!ll'y &amp;nk
fifth straJght start. He has woh 11
of his last 12 decisions. Jetf
• Fitsmostdomesticand
Ch'!'::,:;....~hlo ....... , UP
Montgomery notched his eighth
import cars or light trucks
M......... "'"'"' ....,,.,.....
save and Bobby Thigpen fell to
• Meets or exceedsoriginal
Ch..-npioNihlpM
2-5.
equipment requirements

.
·
.
t•gh
·
•
•
. yson to I t 1oca1 celebnttes
T
•
1• d ·
h•b•t•
bouts
lD an I• rug ex I I IOD
By RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Heavy·
weight boxing champion Mike
Tyson said Wednesday he will
fight local broadcast celebrities
In the first of a series of events.
designed to help educate tile
public about the dangers of
drugs .
"I used to smoke cigarettes
and drink beer," Tyson said. "I
didn't quit smoking cigarettes
until-a couple years ago. I took
pride In myself and just quit .' •
Tyson will fight the celebrities
ln one-round exhibitions Sept. 2
at the football field at Cleveland
John Adams High School. He also
will spar will regul'ar training
partners.
"We should have 20,000 people
out there to make an Impact,"
promoter Don King said, "just
like a revisltation of Woodstock."
Tyson. who moved to northeast
Ohio last year after his divorce to
train at King's complex In rural
Orwell, 35 miles east of Cleveland, said he wanted to become
active In inner-city problems
because, " I'm from where
they 're from ... from streets of
broken dreams.· :
"This is just the first step.
There are going to be a number of
things ," Tyson said. "We'll visit
schools and colleges."
King said Tyson Is a natural
role model. ·
"He's a super champion. · I
think he's the baddest man on

......

•

•.

White reviews fracas ·
between Reds, umpire
.

SVAC preview
set for Saturday

. . __.. . . _---c-....

_. ~

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Majors
By United Pl't"'ls lrller •t lollll
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Chln.J:o ....................... :u

W f' dnhday '!l Res ult !!
~. Nf'W l 'ork I
C'alllornht 7. Mlnlr!io&amp;lll 3
Tn:WI J; St&gt;ili tlt' I
llfotmll 4. Rllllimon- D

Mllwaukf' f'

To-:olllo 7, Bo"lon :1
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"The Heat Pump.
Nmeteen years .

'

of comfort~~~'_

. RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) Portage County · prosecutors
rested their c;~se Tuesday In the
tiial of Kent State University's
head athletic trainer John Faulsllck, accused of practicing med·
!cine without a license.
Prosecutors said Faulstlck .·ls
not a certified physician and
could not dispense prescription
medicine, but frequently did so.
But defense lawyer Bernard
Del Guzzi told the jury his client
never represented himself as a
physJclan and ·dispensed pain·
killers only after being legally
delegated that 'lluthority by
school physicians:
KSU's chief health center
pharmacist, Edwin Ritchey, and
the school's health center dlrec·
tor, Jay Cranston, ' are also ·
charged With Illegally dispensing
drugs and w!ll be tried
separately.
.
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~

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'

Bowlin((
Rookie Sharon Todd of Bowling
Green, Ky., holds a take a 62-pin
lead over Leanne Barrette of
Oklahoma City after four.rounds
of the pj,OOO Albuqlierque Open.
Todd averaged 232 for a 34-game
total of 8.233 and bowled one of a
reCord· tying seven 3110 games In
the tournament •.

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~~at~sn~e~~~-~~~h1a!o~·~a~~o~

STATE OF THE; ARM ADDRESS - Glan&amp;s pitcher bave
Dravecky and his wife J'an look at e~h other during a news
conference Wednesday after the Draveckys' arrival at the airport
In ·San Francisco. Dravecky b'olle his arm while pitching In
Tuesday nlght'a game agaiJWt tile Expos In his aecond start of the
season after cancer SU"'ery on hla left arm. ( UPI)

·

W
e

h;te
. ...

___

__

!Continued
_ from P. age 4)
____;__..__..:.......:.

"You ·know what happened last
year. (Rose Was fined $10,000an!l
suspended 30 days after pushing
umpire Dave Pallone.) Let's s~e
what happens this year." ·
~ Feeney said the lncldent' was
"totally separate" from Rose's
Jegal bat tie against Commls·
stoner Bart Glamattl Bl\d would
be dealt with as such.
·
A federal judge In Columbus,
Ohio, last week temporarily
blocked Giamatti's disciplinary
hearing on gambling charges
against Rose until the question of
jurisdiction over the case ls
. decided by the 6th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals In Cincinnati.
In blocking the hearing, U.S.
Dis trlct Judge John Holschuh ·
also granted Rose's request to
maintain his "statUI' quo,'' pend·
lng appeal, mea111Di Glamatti ·
cannot take any disciplinary
action against Rose.
'This li a totally separate
. matter,'' said Feeney. "Pete

'

.

,..

~......---

·Rose Is not Immune. He's subject
to discipline by the preslden t for
his.i:&gt;n·fleld actions, just the same
as any other player or

w•

o.W••~•••""'•·•~

manager.''

Igniting the fracas was a called
third strike by plate umpire. Bill
Hohn that retired Oester and
ended the game. Suddenly, the
umpires and Reds players were
pushing and shoving.
A number of onlookers, among
them Cubs manager Don
Zimmer, Indicated West actually
pushed Oes ter two or tliree
times. It was then that Rose
!J1tervened and apparently made
.contact with West.
.
"I've got nothing to say,''
Oester said In the dressing room
later. "You guys (reporters) saw
it. Write it."
··
Zimmer said he was surprised
by West's behavior.
"What b1,1slness does he (West)
llave In pushing Oes ter twice? "
he askeii. ·

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KSU tra.ner's
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·Mets 7, Padres 2
By BILL WOLLE
Rose said. ''I think the Cubs have
UPI Sports Writer
an excellent chance of winning
At New York. Darryl StrawOn March 31,1988, the Chicago the Eastern Division, especially berry crashed two homer s and
Cubs made one of their most If Dawson starts hitting. They've Howard Johnson smacked his
Important moves toward putting got fine pitching and those two 29th homer to le&amp;d New Yor!&lt; to
together a contending team for kids (Walton and Dwight Smith) its eighth victory In n'lne games.
1989. They traded Mike Curtis for both have been just great."
Ron Darling, 11-9, won his third
Mike Bielecki. ·
,
Andre Dawson went 3 for 5, hit straight game and Don Aase ·
Though the move did not draw his 14f6 ·homer and second In two earned hi s second save and first
much attention, the Cubs added a days and drove In two runs in since Opening Day. Dennis Raskey Ingredient to their pitching addition to robbing Lu.is Qui- mussen, 5-9, took the loss.
staff by making the trade with nones of a homer in the sixth
Expos 4, Giants 2
the Pittsburgh Pirates. Whereas Inning.
At Montreal, rig ht fielder
Curtis Is not even pitching in the·
"I'm showing more·patience at Candy Maldonado committed a
majors, Bielecki has become a the pll!te, and that's helped, " two-out error that allowed three
bellwether on Chicago's pitching said Dawson, who broke out of a Expos to score In the eighth ·.
· -staff.
·
5-for-63 slump Tuesday with a Inning. The Expos trailed 2-1 In
Bielecki won his 14th game and game-winning, three-run homer the eighth when they loaded the
rookie Jerome Walton extended In the 12th inning. "Sure, I think bases off Craig Lefferts and
his hitting streak to 26 and we can win It, and 1 want to help Steve Bedrosian. 2-6. Nelson
knocked in. two runs Wednesday us do it."
Santovenla hit a fly ball which
night , sparking the Cubs to a 5·1
Chicago, winners of 10 of their was dropped by Maldonado. Tim
victory over the Cincinnati Reds. last 13 games and 23-11 since the Burke, 7-2, won In relief. Kevin .
Bielecki, 14·5, limited the Reds All-Star break, br oke a 1·1 tie Mitchell hit hls3l! tll homer for the
to one run and three hits while wltb four runs In the sixth inning. Giants.
walking one and striking out With one out, Dawson hit his
Phlllles 6, Dodgers 2
·At Philadelphia , Steve Jeltz
eight In eight Innings. Steve second homer In the last two
Wtlson worked the ninth. Tim games. Walton, hitting .311 , singled to break a sixth-Inning tie
Leary, 8·10, surrendered five doubl~ home two more runs and Ricky Jordan drove In three
runs and .eight hits In five and later In the Inning to knock 'out runs. Jeltz singled of.l Tim
two-third Innings.
Leary.
Belcher, 8-12, to score Jordan ·
from
second with two out for a 3-2 ..
''¥Ike has been our most
Elsewhere lrt th e senior
consistent pitcher and Is one of circuit.:
lead. Don Carmari, 4·12, gave up
the big reasons why we're In first
Pirates 5, Astros 4
six hits and two runs In six and
place," said Chicago Manager
At Houston, · Bobby Bonilla one-third' Innings. Roger McDo·
Don Zimmer, whose charges drtlled a controversial home run well earned hts 14th save.
Cardinals 3, Braves 2
lead the New York Mets by 3~ with two out In the 12th to lift the.
At St. Louis, Tim Jones capped ..
games in the NL East .
Pirates. Bonilla drove a pitch
Only 2-2 for the Cubs last year from Larry Andersen, 3-4, off the a three- run eighth Inning rally
: STEALS SECOND - The Dodgers' Jose
catc.h er Darren Daulton In the fourth Inning of
and
just 12·19 overall In the fence in right -center, stopped at with an RBI single to lead St ...
·Gonzalez sleala second base as Ph!llll!!l second
Wednesday night's game In Philadelphia. (UPI)
majors
coming Into 1989, Ble. second and claimed that the ball Louis to a tour-game sweep.
sacker Tom Herr tries to grah a had . throw by
leckllowered his ERA to 2.82.
• had hit above the home-run line Trailing 2-0, St. Louis took the ·
Rose also had praise for on the fence. Afte r a brief lead With Pedro Guerrero, Tom
BieleCki, ·who now has won six meeting among the umpires the Brunan~ky and Jones driving In :
straight and eight of his last nine drive was declared a home 'r un
runs. Jim Acker,'o:~. took the Joss
"(DraveckY)
'
told
me
in
the
·
starts.
'
·
Bonilla's
16th.
Neat
Heaton
im:
in
relief. Frank DIP!.no, 6-0, was .
.SAN fRANCISCO (UPI)
nqw t(lls, and be In the spirit he's
clubhouse before he went to the
"He threw strikes against. us proved to 3·7 and Bill Landrum the winner In relief and Todd
Pitcher Dave. DraveckY, who
In - It's arnazlnl!:. •• , .
hospital
ti\at
he
could'
feel
the
anl!
he laid down a· great earned his 17th save.
Worrell gained his 18th save.
won the hearts of baseball fans
Dravecky, who had not been
bone
moving,"
Kennedy
said.
two-strike
bunt
to
get
a
run
In,"
.
last week · by reooiindfrijf:ifl'(ifff"""' expected"·to · pitch .again at the
cancer surgery with an lmproba·
major-league level after the "That (cancer) operation made
ble return tq the San Francisco
cancer surgery, likely will miss
Giants, left his teammates on the
the res I of the · 1989 baseball
'
·
road Wednesday after suffering
season. He was to arrive In San honey or never to come back."
another !levastatlng setback.
Francisco at 5: 45 PDT and be
· In his second major-league 'taken Immediately to the Palo
. '
start since a cancerous tumor
Alto Clinic for further baseball season because of the
tumor In his left deltoid , the
MASON, Ohio (UP!) _ No. 1 his concentration after gaining a
after winning the first set and
lnterrupled his career, Dravecky
examination.
muscle
thal
joins
the
upper
arm
seed
Boris
Becker
of
West
big
lead
)n
his
opening-round
going up 5-4 in the second.
was cruising against the Mont·
"It's a crying shame," Giants
to the shoUlder. The tumor and Germany overcame a slow start match Monday, managed to keep
But Grabb won three straight
real Expos Tuesday night when
slugger Will Clark said. "Dave's
much
of
the
muscle
were
reto
eliminate
Patrick
McEnroe
of
his
poise
thr&lt;;JUghout
Tuesday's
games
and snatched the second
he collapsed to the ground after
first start (a 4-3. victory over
moved
Oct.
7
by
Dr.
George
Oyster
Bay,
N.Y
..
6-4,
6-1
Wedcompetition.
set.
The
two pl;~yers fought an
deUv,e rlng a pitch in the sixth
Cincinnati last week) changed
Muschler at the Cleveland Clinic. nesday in the second round of the
"Once I got going and won the even third set and forced the·
Inning. Dnivecky, ,33, was re·
the meaning of the seasontor11s.
Dravecky
was
told
he
likely
··$602,500
Thrlftway
ATP
Cham·
first
set. my mind was 100 · match to a deciding tie-breaker.
moved from the field on a
because It's not about baseball,
percent on the match," said Crabb won the first three P91nts,
wou.ld never be able to use his left pionship at Kings Island.
stretcher and taken by ambu·
It's about life. "
Defending champion Mats WI· Becker. ·
but Chang came back to win the
lance to Queen Ellzli beth Hospl·
With the .Giants leading the arm normally again lmt he
underwent
rigorous
physical
·
lander
of
SY{eden,
the
No.
3
seed,
Wilander.
who
ha
s
not
won
a
tie-break
8-6, advancing him to
tal, where he was /{·rayed and
M~ntreal Expos 3-lln the bottom
therapy
during
the
offseason
and
and
fourth-seeded
Michael
~hamplonshlp 1thls year, said
the·thlrd
round
.
examined by Expos team sur·
of the sixth Inning at Olympic
worked
his
way
back
to
the
Chang
of
Placentia,
Call!.,
also
:playing
well
in
the'
·
ATP
is.
"The
last
two
times I've,played
·
Stadium, Pravecky collapsed as
geon I&gt;r. Larry Cougl!n.
Giants
through
the
team's
minorwon
second-round
.hatches
at
the
Important
to
him.
Jim
he'
s
been
a really! tough
• Initial examinations showed a
he was making his first pitch to league system.
. ........................... --·Jack Nicklaus Sports Center.
''I have to do pretty well here to player, " Chang said. "He seems
s.t ress fracture of the lett arm
Montreal outfielder Tim Raines .
On Aug. 10, he pitched In the
Wllander cruised past Joey not lose so many points that I to have a natural Instinct at the
which I'!!Qulred surgery last
Raines said he "ran right to the
~ptember for ':emoval of a
mound. You ,could he~ the pop major leagues for the first time Rive of West Palm Beach. Fla ., become seventh seeded at . the net. Whenever I hit a passing shot
. In more !hart 14 months and In a 6-4, ·6-4, and Chang beat Jim U.S. Open," Wllander. said.
he hit the ball right back at me.
c~ncerous tumor. DOCtors be·
all oVPr the field ."· .' ..
Chang, who lost to Grabb two. That got to be a little bit
lleve this Injury may have been
Said ' San Francisco catcher masierful performance, led. the Grabb of Tucson. Ariz .• ~-3, 5·7,
Giants to a 4-3 victory over \he 7-6.
weeks ago; said he thought he anl)oytng."
related to the surgery, as the
Terry Ken~dy: "I heard the pop
Becker, who admitted he lost would have a two-set victory
(See ATP on
Page, 6)
humerus which he fractured was , when hi' threw the pitch. I knew Ctnclnnati .Reds, glvtng ,up only
r""':""'~":'"""--------------------:--_;,------....;---.,
frozen during the cancer . what It was. His arm Is broken. · four hlts ·over eight Innings.
operation.·
. The Giants went on· to win the ... ' "
~t~ame 3-2 and Dravecky wasl .
given credit , for the victory,
raising his record to 2·0. Ora·
veckY probably will miss the rest
of the baseball season.
At the Montreal airpOrt Wed·
nesday, Dravecky was a picture
of dejection but tried to sound
'
upbeat.
"I feel very good about the fact
that we won the baligame,"
Dravecky said to a group of ·
reporters, "I feel- .flne. I have to
HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT
go, guys." .
. Dravecky's courage In the face
of his latest setback has touched
the entire team.
, "I've never mef a person quite
like him In all my life," said
Giants manager Roger Craig.
When you buy an electric heat pump,
"To go through what he has, and

\

•

_

.__

_.._...~

.•

•

I

�p.gi

8-The Deily Saatiilel

ThiM'Sday, AuguSt 17, 1989

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ybftth.
tabbed as strength of 1989 Meigs .football squad ·
. .

••

roy and Howard combined to
rush for over 1, 700 yards and 20
The Meigs' touchdowns between them. Also
uhder first-year graduated fr(lm last years team
Staggs, welcomes Is honorable mention picks Scott
Nelgler and Matt Peterson.
ba~k 13 lettermen irom last
"We have a battle going on for
· _,)leli.r's team that finished 6-4
almost
all the startlng posl·
overall and 6-2 In the Tri-Valley
lions,"
Staggs
said. Incumbent
CoJderence, good enough for a
Eddie Crooks {6·0, 180) returns at
seeOild-place finish.
"Our strength would have to be quarterback, with sophomore
· our youth," according to Staggs, Jermey Phalln (5-ll, 184) giving
: as the Marauders will field a him a battle for the starting nod . .
: ieam with 45 players on the Sophomores Frank Blake (5-9,
· roster, but only 16 In the top two 150) and Jeremy Rupe (5·9 184)
will battle It out for the fullback
· gr&lt;!des.
The Marauders lost sixteen slot. At tailback sophomore
seniors from last ye;u-s team, Terry McGuire (5·10, 171) has the
. among them the was the TVC . edge, but he has been hamliered
· Most Valuable Offensive Player by Injuries, Freshman Mike
: of the Year, Jeff McElroy, and Cremeans (5-10, 162) 1:night also
: all-TVC first-team picks Wes see action at tailback. If McGuire
: Young and Wess Howard. McEl· Is healthy Cremeans and Eric
Har.r ll

Heck (5-2114 ) will batt)lilt outfor
wingback.
·
At tight end senior Jay Humphreys (6-2, 174), sophomore Snawn
Hawley (6·1, 171 ). and junior
Geoff Cogar (6-1, 187) are all
expected to see action. Junior
speedster Kurtis English (5-10, .
145) and sophomore Kevin
Musser (5·9, 142) lead the battle
for split end, with sophomores
Robby Wyatt (5·9, 147) and Matt
Haynes (5·9, 132) also getting
playing time. Musser Is coming
off an excellant scrimmage at
Athens.
'
senior Jim Durst (6·1,160) will
get the nod at center. In the battle
for the guard slots it will be
senior Dennis Booth (5·9, 218) ,
juniors Aaron· Sheefs (6-0, 229)
and Burt Kennedy (6-0, 213) and
sophomore ~nnls Edmins ton

(s:o, 170) . Doug Stewart (6-4, 2251

and McGuire lead the way at the way we know what we are made
corners both sophomoi'J!s, with . or."
Heck and Haynes also expe~ed
S.taggs I~ a 1978 graduate of ·
to see action. Crooks; English . GaiUa Academy · High School,
and selnor Randy Haw!~ (5-9, · where In 1976 he was first team
158) all with playing (ime at ' all·S~OAL and second team
safety return ..'Musser, Wyatt and all-dl,ttrlct. J;n 1977 he was. named
sophomore Steve Caruthers (6-0, first team all-SEOAL, all-district
143) also haye a chance to see and all-state. He Is a 1983
action.
graduate of Marshall University,
"We didn't look very sharp at where hewasastartingoffenslve
the scrimmage . jn Athens," gu¥.d for three years. Prior to
stated Staggs, "but we are con\Jhg to Meigs he was an
picking up the new system pretty assiStant football coach and
well. Our schedule . Is ,~~,_etty junior high wrestling coach at .
tough, . with . Trimble, 'lllnton Madison Comprehensive High :
County and Belpre as the f&amp;ams Schoo1·1n Mansfield. Prior to that ,
to beat In the .TVC. An\J lour he was an , ass!stlant football ,
non-league games. are against coach at Burbon County High ·
two of the top three teams In School In Paris, Ky . He will be ·
southeastern Ohio (Gallipolis assisted by Rick Edwards, Joe
and Waverly) . I'm glad we play Johnson, Steve · Patterson and
Gallipolis In the first game. That Tlm·Dunn.

leads the way at tackle, with
Juniors Randy Corsi (6-0, 252),
Mike Mayer (6-2, 220.) and
sophomore Charles Mash (6-0,
185) , along with, Kennedy also
e.xpected to see''aetton at one ot
the slots.
~ ;\On the "50" ·.· defense wur
feature Durst, Hawley , Cogar
and junior Terry Reuter (5·9,
175) with a chance at the ends.
Stewart and Booth lead the way
at tackles witlrMash and Mayer
expected to push for jobs. At
middle guard Junior Dave L~s ter
(6-1, 224) and Sophomore Bill
Anderson (5-10, 192) along with
Sheets and Booth wlll compete
for· the job. Seeing action at
linebacker will be Humphreys,
Rupe, Cremeans, and Edrnln·
ston. Returning starters Blake
F

·Redskins' May still . among meanest in league
c

1988season. He figured the Ill will
By WILL DUNJIAM
UPl Sports Wrller
that he had spread would forever
CARLISLE, Pa. (UP!) - Wa· prevent such a trip to 'Hawaii,
shlngton Redsklns guard Mark leaving him as the only member
May, a Pro.Bowl performer last of the original "Hogs" offensive ·
season, says a little spit and a few line not to play In a Pro Bowl.
punches and kicks here and there
•'There was a little glimmer of
do not necessarily make him a hope, but the prospect of going
dirty player.
was almost eliminated from my
May earned a bad-boy Image mind," May said.
during his first few weeks In the
But even his worst enemy
NFL by bad-mouthing defensive would realize that May earned a
linemen during games and deliv- berth last year.
e.rlng a fist or a foot when
Amazingly, May allowed just
. properly provoked. May, now one sack In 592 pass attempts
entering his ninth NFL season, during the entire season - and
has toned down his behavior that was .b y NFL sack leader
during the past few years, but Reggie White of Philadelphia . He
remains one of the most ornery . was also the only Redsklns
linemen in the league.
offensive player to start every
"I haven't made a loto(frlends· game last year and missed only
out there on the defensive lines four offensive plays all season.
across the league, but I'm not
''If there's anybody who's got a
paid to do that," May said after a great heart, a champion's heart,
practice at the dub's Dickinson I'd have to say Mark May Is that
College training site. "·A Jot of guy," Redsklns coach Joe Gibbs
people kind of say I'm a little said.
May knows exactly when his
over-2ealous on the 'field
reputation as a dirty player
sometimes."
As a result, May was plea- began. It was his first day of
santly surprised when he was training camfas.a rookie.
May, who won the 19800utland
voted by his fellow players to the
NFC Pro Bowl team after the Trophy as the nation's top

DELIVERS FOREHAND - American Andre Agassl delivers a
: forehand during his &amp;-3, 3-6, 6-3 victory over Shelby Cannon In
· Wednesday's second round of the Canadian Open. {REUTER)

:ATP toumamenL •.
:, In the only evening match. No.
Z: seed Stefan Edberg of Sweden
rolled to a 6·4, 6-1 victory over
Brad Pearce of Provo,- Utah.
;· The two pl;lyed evenly through
Jhe first eight games of the first
:sf!t. Edberg then broke Pearce's
6ervice and won his next service
game to take the set. He played
xtrtually flawless tennis the rest
of the way.
- ·'I feel pretty good," said
£dberg. "I'm not playing perfect
,set but I'm hoping to pick up my
;game every day ."
·
~ In other matches, fifth-seeded
:Brad Gilbert of Piedmont, Calif.,
':defeated Jason Stoltenberg of
:'l).ustralla 6-3, 6-2, Jim Co'u rler of
:bade City, Fla., downed Robert
·S eguso of Boca Raton. Fla .. 3-6.
:6-1, 6-4, sixth-seeded Aaron
;:Krickslein of Grosse Point,
&gt;Mich., ousted Englishman Chris
: Salley 6-3, 7-5, Nlclas Kroon of
~weden eliminated Pieter AI·
&gt;drich of South Africa 6-3, 6-3 and
: ~ete Sampras of Rancho Palos
·verdes, Calif., downed Andrei
::O!hovskiy of the Soviet Union 7-5,
:!2-6, 6-3.
" Ramesh Krishnan of India
'Bdvanced after Javier Frana of
~Argentina withdrew in the third
··set because of an eye irritation .
:Frana won the first set 6-4, but
:Krishnan came back with a 7-6
;win in the second ,set and was

..

(Continued from Page 5)
leading 4·2 in the third when
Frana wlthdre11•.

"I got Into fights In my first
nine practices. I probably got
Into a fight with Fred Cooke
about the first !lve days, one with
Nell Olkewicz, one· with Rich
MI.lot, one with Coy Bacon,'.' May
said.
·
"I didn't take anything from
anybody. If at tlie end of a play ,If
somebody pushed me aside or
pushed me In the head, I'd turn
around and give him a shot,rlght
back. They thought I wils a smart
aleck and they said, 'We're goihg
.
to get the SOB."' .
Then, he got Into a fight with
Randy White of Dallas In his first
NFL regular seson game.
"In the second half. we kind of
went at it, Said a few WOrdS 11nd,
went at It again, spit at each
other and kicked at each·other,"
May recalled. "One time I was
coming off the field after we
threw a couple extra shots at

each other and (White) chased
me across the field. I never knew
he was behind me until someone
on the bench yelled io me. He
kind of gave me a little hand '
gesture and ran back to his ·
..
bench."
But the 6-6, 283-pourid May, just
as Intense but less volatile now at
age 29, Insists he really hasn't
done anything wrong.
"I never thought I was dlrly,"
he said. "I never cheap-shotted .
anybody , I've never clipped '
anybody or anything like that. I
have said a few·thtngs to people •
and we've thrown a few pu,nches :
and things like that."
·
Redskins offensive line coach
Joe Bugel said 1988 was May's
best season despite havlrig to ·
alternate at right tackle and
right guard due to Injuries and ·
the acquisition of former Pro •
Bowl tackle Jim Lac hey.
•

"He's probably one of the most
. tenacious players I've ever .
coached," Bugel said of May .
"Every year he has the same •
at tltude - he just does not want
to get beat:"

,By The, B,end
'.

People in

•'

th~

news.-_____,

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Prl!lls International
JOANNE FRANK ABOUT PI\_UL: Joa111ie Woodward says
she regrets never becoming a su}lerstar and at tlmes has even
resented husb;md Paul Newman because of his celebrity status.
Despite great respect In her profession, Woodward told Lear's
magazine, ''I would have l,lke,d a bigger career. I would have
liked to be a major star." ,Woodward says she took the
traditional wifely role by having "one ba))y after another" and
that she thought "there must be something wrong with me for
wanting to be more than. a wife 11nd mistress" to Newman. "I
felt an enorrno11s rivalry .with Paul; although I wouldn't admit It
to myself," Woodw~rd says. "In · truth, 'I was always .
uncomtortablf that Paul was so· much bigger than I was.
Uncomfortable ami'. even angry because · he was living my
fantasy,belng what I had always wanted to be- a star."
·•. SHATI'ERED IN SHEA:, The RoWniS,&amp;oaes are opening up
Shea Stadlilrn to r&lt;M?k 'n' roll for the.first tlme In six years. TThe
Stones will bring their ·'Steel Wheels'' tour to Shea, the home of
the New York Mets, Oct. 26and Oct. 28lmd Ne'rYorkCityParks
Commissioner Henry Stern said an.o ther show might be added If
tickets for the tlrst two sell quickly. Shea has been dark to rock ·
. since the Po lee played there In l983.&gt;and Stern said the Stones'
visit would revive a Shea tradition tlfAt started with the Beatles'
his torte performances there 25 years ago.
LITERARY GLASNOST: John le Carre's latest spy novel,
"The Russia House," Is bound not only for. movie theaters but
also for the Soviet Union. A Soviet publishing hOI\se has bought
rights to the thriller with plans for; publication In the spring
while two magazines also will serl;illze it. Filming of "The
Russia House" will start In Moscow and Leningrad on Oct. 2
with Selllf Connery starring. The movie will be illrected by
Australian Fred Schept,sl, w.ho made "A Cry In the Dark" an,d
"The Chant of Jimmy Blacksmith," from Tom Stoppard s
script.
·
.
· ·
BAD DRIVING: Chicken magna.te Frank Perdue flies when
he's behind the wheel. The Washington Post peeked at Perdue's
driving record and'found that he was cited for moving violations
37 Urnes between 1968 and 1988, resulting In 34 convictions. ''I'm
just a fast driver," said Perdue, who's best known for starring .
In commercials for his chicken company . "I'm often late for
where I have to be but that's no excuse for speeding. I regret the
Infractions. It's not something I'm proud of." lljoneof Perdue's
violations Involved driving while Intoxicated butln 1974 he was
Involved In a wreck that killed a man on the Pennsylvanlllj
Turnpike. Perdue was charged with manslaughter but the case
·
was later dropped.
GLIMPSES: Former Israeli ·Prime Minister Menachem
Begin will be In the hospital for the next two or three days after
complaining of fatigue. A spokesman for a Jerusalem hospital
said Begin,, who turned 76 last week, was undergoing tests and
rio serious problems ·were expected .. . Las ·Vegas crooqer
' Wayne Newton had a role In the latest James Bond movie, ·
• . "Lieence to K)ll," and now he's making another moVIe, "Ford
' .Falrlane." Newton's singing contracts how have clauses that
allow him to change the performance dates If a movie role
'
comes up.

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Page,..;.7

·~

Family medicine
o
Asso!!t!o;';~;,!:!'·o~.F~mUy

What is leukemia and its types?

within weeks or montl!s. but In ·
chronic leukemia the condition
may be fairly mild for many
Medicine
years.
Oblo 1.Jnlventty College of OsteoYour ...
arandfather may have
pathlc Medlclrie
either an acute or a chronic type
type.
h
· •QuestiOn: My grandfather as Of leu kemia, but the ch•onlc
•
been Ul an d hi s d oct or says he h as .,· Is more common In older·lndlvfd·
leukemia. What 1s leukemia?
uals. It Is not rare for Individuals
Answer: Leukemia Is a dis· to have chronic lymphocytic
order of the blood and blood- leukemia for 20 years or more.
forrnlng cells. Leukemia Is Leuke mia Is a serious Illness
. needs treatment, but It
named for the particular type of Which
'tnecessarUylmplyableak
blood cell which Is Involved, like doesn
·
outlook.
granulocyte or lymphocyte, and
Q tl
Wh t
bed
f
a can
one or
by the speed.with whlchsystorns leukueesmlaof:
develop - acute for rapidly
Answer·. The treatment of
developing conditions· and
leuke·mla
depends on Its type.
chronic for slowly. developing
The treatment of chronic lyrriones.
phocytic leukem·ta· ·is ofteh little
In leukemia the controlled and
th. an continued observation
more
.orderly growth and maturation
of blOod cells Is Interrupted by to be sure that the condition does
rapid growth of the leukemia not deteriorate. '!'his may go on
cells. These cancer cells, which for many years before lntervenare a lot like healthy cells, grow tion with "cancer drugs" Is
and squeeze out the normal ·. necessary. Other leukemias, like
blood-forming cells. The end acute lymphocytic leukemia In
. result Is that the sufferer feels children, require prompt use of
tired and run down, and develops drugs to stop the Illness.
Infections eas lly. He or she
The drugs used to treat leukefrequently develops anemia and · mla are poisons. That Is, they kill
problems ~lth tM spleen. ner- · the -rapidly growing leukemia
vous system and circulation. In cellsandsome!lfthebody'sother
acuie leukemia deaih rnay rome healthy cells. As you might

Is supporting
this man
God's will?

guess, It requires careful atten·
lion to see that precisely the
proper amount ot exactly the
right drugs are given to kill the
1 h t killing the
leukemia w t out
f leuke ,
1
patient. n some ypes o
·
mla . very large amounts
of
these
t be sure
drugs are necessacy
1
11 o . killed
that the leukem ace sare
·
These large doses also kill the
healthy blood-forming cells, a
condition whichf normally
would
t reserve
be fatal. There ore, o P
1 h bl d •ormlng
some heat Y
oo ., trans
cells, a "bone marrow
·
plant" Is performed, and some of
thehealthybonemorrowlstaken•
b f
the drug
from the pat 1ent
d h e ore.
gl
b k
treatmentd an
ven ac
· Thit en edure
r~ ·
afterwar s.
s proc
~
suits In about 30-35 pecent of
1h
te 1
h c tic
children
·
· w t acu edymp o Y
leukemia
cur ·

Ann
Landers

Looking for

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.\NN LANDERS

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en..... Syndiellr

Dear California: Thank you for
sharing your bitter experience.
Events that have been given wide
publicity these P!lSI few years
have let . tile world know that
being Involved with a church
does not make a per~on moral,
decent or trustworthy.
·
If you really want to do some
good In this world, go to the
pastor of the church and blow the
whistle on that bum.

E••rton
Shintom
Multi Tech
Scott

WE REPAIR All .MAlES

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Thursday, August 17, 1989

Dear Ann Landers: It's too late
far me, but maybe my lettet can
spare some other woman the
pain and humiliation that I have
suffered.
. Ii began last August when I
moved to a. new city and started
to attend a small, local church.
The ·people seemed warm and
friendly. Soon after, I signed up
for a mid-week singles Bible
study class.
Almost Immediately, a nice·
'
looking man In the group took an
•
•
Interest In me. I was flattered
and pleased when "Carl'' said he
was soon to become associate
pastor of the church. I was
.Cousins born same time, same coincidence. Speculation was Impressed that a man of 27 would
that Wednesday's full moon n;1ay
Jllace
be elevated to such ~an Important
" POWAY,
CalU. (UPH -Two have ~n a factor, he added.
.
'
.
''People who work In hospitals position.
•pregnant sisters-In-law who were
One Saturday, Carl Invited me
'·both due to deliver Aug. 24 gave have found that a full moon will to accompany hlm on a d~lve so
::birth prematurely to Infant girls bring out anything," Jourdler ·
we could get to know one another
•in the sanie delivery room four said, ''If something strange Is
better. As we drove along, I
'mlputes apart, a hospital spoke~- gplng to happen, It'll happen mentioned that I had been In a
around a full moon."
:man said Wednesday.
'
serious auto accident a few years
' Laura and Suzanne Brendls,
--earlier and a settlement had just
marded to two brothers, we'n t Kayno Interrupts mall service
been reached. When he learned
Into labor Sunday and gave birth
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. the amount of money that I was
Monday, 10 days ahead of sche(UP!) - Rain, snow, sleet and . about to receive, he said God had
·
be
dule at Pomerado Hospital in dark Qf ·night may not stop the
Poway, sal~ hospl,tal spokesman , mall, but a Labrador mix with a revealed to him that I was to
~lain Jourdler.
.
pit bull's smile did a number on . hlk~~~~l weeks later. afte~
: The newborn Infants, each the 17homeownerslastweekwhenlt· much heavy courting, we set a
second · daughter born to her ~h~:d a mall car:ler back to her .. wedding date. for September.
. parents, were almost identical in
r~h · arrler Edith, Baln has
Ordinarily. Ann, l would not
size at birth, said·Jourdler.
e c
• •
have fallen for .his story, but
,"They weigh nearly the same, . refused to resume mall delivery because this man was Involved
they are almost tile same length to the nelgborhood that Kayno, with the church, r believed him.
and they have the exact same the 2-year-old hound, calls home Carl proceeded to run my life and
head and chest measurements, .. until the dog Is muzzled, said kept saying that It was "God's
he said.
Michael Chambers, manager of will." I was afraid to contradict
· Me lynda N aoml, daughter of the-South Side post office branch. hi
Tony and Laura Brandis of
The problems with Kayno and
~~ moved Into my apartment
Escondido, was born 9:17 p.m. three other dogs who share his saying that God told him It was
).VIopctay,. weighed 7 pounds, 3 ~ yard began In April, when one of all tight. It turned out that II!! was
ounces and measured 20 Inches them jumped a fence, chased Indeed elevated to a higher
long.
' ...
ll;t.ln and nipped at her heels, positiOn In the church built didn't
Allsha Michelle, daughter .of Chambers said.
thl
I
hi
Delivery In the area was halted pay any ng. gave m money
Leo and Suzanne Brandis of
)i;scondldo, was born at 9:.21 th&lt;1t for about a week Ufttll a different for clothes, gas and Incidentals.
night, weighed 7 pounds, 3 ounces carrier took over Tuesday. Resl· He told ,me not ~~ give to the
dents had to pick up their mall at church anymore, but to give the
and. measured 19 Inches long.
the post oftlce until the new ~0 ~7w t~ him because It was
11 ·
' Suzanne Brandis, 29, was carrier was on the job, Chambers
od
Whenever
I questioned him
brought to the hospital Monday · said. ·
h
ldl
Postal regulations allow carrl· about his nonpaying job, e sa
afternoon antl Laura Brandis, 28,
came In a few hours later. The ers to refuse delivery If they ate would be punished If I did not
tWo women were wheeled Into the In danger, provided the mall Is trust ·the "spirit of God." This
frightened me so I continued to
delivery room at the same time available to patrons.
Chambers predicted that the ·go along. MeanwhUe, he went out
and they recuperated In adjacent
cu·t In service, which was not the and· bought a Jaguar, which I
hospital rooms.··
. Jourdler said hospital staff first In the neighborhood. likely pa~{~~~ met this tnan, had
1
1
could not remember a sl.m llar would not be the last.
planned tp use my Insurance
money to finish nursing school.
When he told me God didn't want
me to be a nurse, that was the last .
, FORT .LAUDERDALE, Fla. . shoricu t to the parking lot Is straw. I finally realized that God · ·
· (UP!) - A couple of condo more convenient than from ibe did not want me to support a lazy,
self-Indulgent !reeloadJtr
dwellers have flied a lawsuit front door.
"It's the only natural thing tq whether he was In the mihlstry or
seeking court permtssldn to use ·
their own back ·door.
· do," Henrletla Binns said.
not.
•
·
Pr'operty · managers lor the
Their lawyer, Benjle SperUng,
I now jtnow that just because
Bonaventure Condominium or- said he would take depositions someone works tor a church
dered Henlif!lta aqdAifred Bl.nns from every first-floor resident of doesn't mean he Is an upright
to .stop entering and exiting the 39'unlt building In the Bonav-· person. Ministers do not have an
through their patio door and · enture . complex west of Fort 800 number to heaven.
Using "God" tocontrol, maniptllreatened legal action In a July · Lauderdale. He wants to show
ulate, bully and extort Is cruel
13 letter, complaining that the that O~fis use thler patio d?Drs
Binns were wearing an unsightly and don'Nhlnk It ls ·a nuisance.
and sadistiC. My emotional scars
will take years to healancl I may
path In the Jawh with their . ·"I.lauahaboutlt, built's really
-frequent t'rlpa from the back door 11ot alau(hlng maqer," Spt!tUng never fully trust a inlnllter or
to the parking Jot. .
laid. "You don't glve.up •!I your church agaln. My money Ja gone.
I am now underaolng· treatment
' Thecondo'srnanagementcom- ~;lgbts when you buy a condo.
Pliny, NCSC ·Housing Manage- Entering and exltlrlg a door.!- for depression as a result of this
ment Corp., told the Binns their about as baste as you can aet. . nl&amp;htmare. I suffer from lnsorn·
nla and suicidal tendencies.
walking pattern Is "destroying
Sperling said he probably
AI for Carl, .be's stU! at the
the landscaping and Is viewed as cannot rely on legal precedent to
same church In hll nonpayln&amp;
an eyesore by other owners In the argue the case belore Broward
building.'"
County Judie Geoffrey Cohen.
job, drlvln&amp; other people's cars,
''I would doubt II there IB any
living with another woman and
preci!dent
o
..
'somethlng
like
tbls
having a wonderful time. I am
The Binns flied a lawsuit
because
It's
so
ridiculous,"
he
sadder,
poorer, but wiser. - A
11eeklng permission 10 use their
said.
CruaW CbriiiUaa ln.Callr.rala
door . Aug. 8. They said the

:Quirks in the news

.

Cycling
Soviets continue to dominate
:the World Cycling Champlon~hips at Lyon, France. Viatches·
·tav Ekimov won his third 4,000·
~meter Individual amateur
:pursuit title. The silver and gold
·medalist In the 1988 Olympics
'ctefeated Jens Lehmann of East
·G ermany.
~
· Olympics
: The 1994 Winter Olympics In
Llllehammer, Norway, will have
no demonstration sports. OrganIzers said four sports -dogsled
racing, ski orienteering, curling
irnd bandy -had applied.
:
Rugby
·: At least eight French players
1.;-ft for Johannesburg to play In a
match marking the centennial of
the South African Rugby Federa·
lion. The French government has
tlireatened them with sanctions
fOr defying a ban on South
Mrlcan sporting even ts.
~
Tennis
: Chris Evert, a six-time U.S.
Open champ, will compete In this
y.ear's event as well as next
week's Canadian Open. Evert,
34, has said she plans to retire
&amp;Oon.
Top seed Shawn
McCarthy ot Alpharette, Ga ..
was upset by Robin Deitch ot
East Rockaway, N.Y., 6-4,6-4 In
the quarterfinals of the U .5.
!llatlonal Amateur at Kiamesha
Qke, N.Y . Among the men. top
SCed Joby Foley of VIrginia
Beach, Va., and No. 2 Michael
slllmon of Pittsburgh advanced
to the quarters. No. 3 David
Lqmlcky of Middletown, N.J.,
lost to No. 13 Rob Bernstein of
ROchester,
N.Y., 6-4,6-4.
. .

•

lnterlo{ lineman as a senior at
Pitt, hel!l out of camp for a few
weeks ~s a rookie. . When he
flnaljy showed up, May received
a rude reception by hIs new
teammates.
'

The Daily Sentinel

.·

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FAIRGROUNDS

ALL RE AINING
INVENTORY
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WILL BE LIQUIDATED ON

THURSDAY 11 AM till 8 PM
FRIDAY · 11 AM till 8 PM
SATURDAY 11
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SUNDAY 12 NOON till .6 PM
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BEDDING, RECUNEIS, END TABLES, LAMPS

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Pau•

8-The Daily Saati1el

ThLnday, August 17, 1989

Pomaroy-Midclapowt, Ohio

The Daily

.Clouds hamper eclipse watchers
the Museum of Science In Boston,
By VINCENT DEL GIUDICE
where organizers set up teleVPISclence Editor
MUlkins of amateur astrono- scopes and played,spacy music.
mers and enthusiastic stargaz- But most moonwatchers lelt
ers peered skywatd through disappointed as heavy clouds
patches of thick clouds to view a lingered overhead.
Poor visibility also blocked the
rare total lunar eclipse as
view
from Providence. R.I.,
Earth's shadow shrouded a
where · photographer Timothy
coppery-orange moon.
The eclipse was the first in Barmann thr~ .a n "eclipse
seven years visible east of the party" but never actually saw,
Mississippi, bulfrustrated moon- the eclipse.
"We had planned to watch the
watchers In most states only
caught fleeting views or the eclipse from the the poroh. but
celestial oddity as clouds co- the weather just dldR't cooperate
vered nearly 60 percent of the here In Providence," Barmann
said. "I had been reading about
country.
·
Despite tlte clouds, sky- this all. week and it was such a
watchers from Connectlcu t to disappolritment we couldn't see
California streamed io observa· it."
But In Arlington, Va., Emily
forles, camped ·out on porches,
patios and park benches to see Nolte caught a clear view of the
. Earth's shadow gradually swal- eclipse from a street corner. "I
think it's really exciting to watch
low the moon.
: In Washington. D.C .. clouds nature do what it dQes. It's a
broke minutes before a faint magnificent event. It's moving,"
.
shadow rolled across the glowing she said.
Near. the Pro Football Hall of
lunar surface and. the moon
eerDy slipped into obscurity over Fame In Canton. Ohio, laborer
the revered monuments of the David Hanninger gushed: . "It
was really a trip because just
nation's capitaL
about
sunset you could see strips
; On the West Coast, scores of
Southern Californians watched of clouds passing in front of it and
the color was pale pink.''
~he tall-end of the eclipse through
To the southwest, In Kettering,
partly cloUdy skies from Griffith
Ohio, residents were having a
Park Observatory.
• "It was really neat,'; said Jess! tough time zeroing In on the moon
Cook. 15. of Santa Clarita, Calif.. through the clouds. "There are
JNho watched the event with her · families outside walking around
sister. "We saw a · sliver of the with their kids and looking up In
moon. · ... It was really strange, the sky," retiree Frank Stroblno
said. "They're pointing, but
j(lnd of a pinkish purple."
· President Bush, vacationing in there's nothing there."
Frustrated moonwatcher Fred
Kennebunkpdrt, Maine, had
clear skies to vieW the lunar Fontanella said rain showers
event from his seaside summer blocked his view from Haledon,
•
llome with his wife, children and
gTandchlldren.
. David Goodson, 4, watching
the moon from his vantage point
In Farmers Brl!nch, Texas, said,
! 'The earth squlshed•it."
; Residents of the Eastern and
Central tlme .zones had the best
SACRAMENTO (UP!) , i.llew of the eclipse, which began
Amanda
Blake, who played Miss
· :soon after the moon appeared In
Kitty
on
the television series
the eastern sky.
"Gunsmoke"
for nearly two
: The Initial phase, called the
of
cancer, hospital
decades,
died
penumbra. began a.t 8:23 p.m.
Shew¥
60.
officials
said.
EDT and the moon gradually
' Blake died at Mercy General
grew. darker until jt was com·
pletely blacked out by Earth's HospUal at 7: 15 p.m. PDT
Wednesday following an 8·year
shadow at abouUO: 15 p.m. EDT.
: The moon remained com- battle with cancer, a hospital
pletely in shadow until about spokeswoman said.
From 1955-1974, Blake played
.JI: 56 p.m. EDT. when it graduthe
titian-haired Kitty Russell on
ally lightened and resumed its
"Gun
smoke," the longest·
:normal glow at about 12:.56 a .m.
running
dramatic series in netEDT.
work
history
and one of the most
About 200 people crowded atop
programs
ever. .
popular
the five-story parking garage at

N.J .. early In the eclipse. "We
couldn't see a thing," Fontanella
said. "We're locked ln.''
In Chicago, where clouds presented an intermittent problem,
astronomer James Sweitzer at
the Adler Planetarium said,
" Unlike a sola~ eclipse, watching
a lunar eclipse is perfectly safe
unless you try watching It while
driving a car. You don't have to
worry about bizarre rays and so
on."
During the . daylight . hours,
mUIIons waited e,ilgerly lor night
to fall. At a political rally In
Miami, the president spoke oft he
eclipse. ·
"Go outside tonight, and take
your children, your grandchild·
ren ... and as you enjoy the magic
of a summer night - and as you
think about the magic of a lunar
eclipse - think also about the
magic o! America, a land where
dreams come true, a land where
anything is possible," Bush said.
The last total eclipse of the
moon visible from North Amer- ·
lea occurred In December 1982,
and the next will not take place
Dec. 9,1992.
From early time, lunar ec·
lipses have captured the atten·
lion and imagination of the
human race, although the sun's
rays bouncing off ihe moon
usually prevent It from completely disappearing from view.
During an eclipse on May 18,
1761, however, the moon actually
vanished from sight. apparently
because of debris from the
violent Mexican volcano Jorullo
two years earlier.

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6'11

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We will be Pleased to inspect your damaged jewelry
ano estimate the cost o1 repair. It often takes very
!ittte to make oamaged jewetry like ne~o~ again.

.a.m .............

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accept the challenged the CJI:.new Eagle Talon
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DOHC engine. And 0-60 in 6.3 seconds.* .
Go aheOcl-ifyoore ready.lfyolve got the
guts, we've got the car.

-·

CLEVELAND (t)Pl) - ABCTV's new weekly news maga-·
zine, "Prlmetlme, " will feature
a segment Thursday night on
allegations that Cleveland narcotics detectives allowed the sale
of drugs to raise money lor a 1985
cocaine Investigation.
A spokeswoman lor Rep. Louis
Stokes, who Is to be interviewed,
said Thursday morning the
show's producers had again
changed their minds and decided
to air the segment Thursday
night.
It was ·initially scheduled for
this week, but producers called
.,
Stokes and Cleveland Mayor
t-H FLOWER SHOW -Sherry Jewell, left, WC11J
Wedaeaday. Ruby Burke, center, won graad·
George Voinovlch -who also Is
graad champion In tbe junior dlVtaloa' of tbe t-H
cbamploa Ia the senior division, and Lisa Stethem
to be Interviewed - Wednesday
Flower Sbow at tbe Meigs Couaty Fair on . won reserve champion In the jualor division.
and postponed it. They changed
their minds again late Wednesday or early Thursday .
The Issue concerns claims by
drug
tlealer Arthur Feckner that
,.:;;;:::==
.
Cleveland narcotics detectives
· KANA,UgA..,..Revl~allnnowin Church of Christ In Ripiey,
helped raise $450,000 to finance a
SUNDAY
. progress at:.the SUvQi- Mem·o rlal W.Va., and Is married to the
"sting" operat.lon by allowing
POMEROY -The annual him to sell13 pounds of cocaine in
; I?r~ill . Baptist Church in Ka- lorm~r Jennifer Grover, daugh·
-·nauga. Rev. Ralph Dean, Hunt. ter of Ken and Mary Gr.o ver of Dorst reunion will be held on a public housing project. .
Sunday .at th!! ·Lancaster fair·
· W.Va. is the evangelist. There
theZiQncongregatlon.Acarryln
An Investigation resulted in
, will be special singing nightly. dinner is planned for noon on :grounds. A potluck dinner will be five officers being Indicted on
served at noon. All friends and drug trafficking charges last
Pastor Dennis Parsons Invites Sunday and the public Is invited
relatives are Invited.
: the public.
to attend.
year. However. a Cuyahoga
POMEROY -The second an- County Common Pleas judge
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Ash
nual reunion of the descendants found them Innocent after ruling
REEDSVILLE
-There will be of Dannie alid Flossie Brlckles Ohio law permits police partici: Street Freewill Baptist Church
men's slow pitch soft ball tourna; will have revival today through
will be held on Sund.a y, Aug. 20, at pation In drug sales as part of
• Friday at 7:30 p.m. nightly . ment held on. Saturday and
the Old Holiday School groupds undercover operations .
Sunday at Eastern High SchooL
; Norman Taylor from Evans,
on Gilkey Ridge Road. A basket
Voinovich ·Said his review of
The cost Is $65 and ·hit your own
;·w.va. will conduct the revival.
lunch will be held at noon. '
the case, found evidence of pollee
baiL Call 378-6406 for
'
complicity in the d~ug sales.
POMEROY -The Hazel Com; POMEROY - The Pomeroy Information.
The mayor said he had little
munity Church will be having a knowledge about the sting until
· group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
home coming on Sunday begin- he was given lnves tlgatlve reREEDSVILLE -TheS.V.A.C.
: meet on Thursday 'al 7 p.m. at
ning
at 9:30a.m. The Joy Singers ports two years after the opera·
football
preview
will
be
held
on
: Sacred Head Catholic Church .
Saturday.
will be performing. Dinner will lion.
FRIDAY
be served at noon.
CHESHIRE -The Community
BASHAN -The Red Bush
· Action Agency will be having a Church ot'Chrlst on Bashan Road
CHESTER -The Chester Uni. free clothing day on Friday from will have a weekend meeting on ted Methodist Church will be
: 9 a.m. to noon at the Old high Saturday at 7 p.m . Sunqay
having a cluster meeting on
· school in Cheshire.
·
Sunday at 7:30p.m . The French
morning 'worship is at 9:30 a.m.
and evening worship is at 6 p.m. City Clowns will be entertaining
: KANAUGA - Special singers Denver Hill. Foster. W.Va. will and the public is invited to
Bill and Katherine Cremeans, be the speaker. The public is att,end.
.
1111d ~die and DorothY Boyer_ .
,...,_,_
. , ,·
\itllr til! slifgfhg ai the' 's uver
·
• • • •
Memorial Freewm Baptist
Church. The public Is Invited to '
attend.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State can range from a very mild
health officials are warning illness with relatively lew sympHARRISONVILLE .:_Mission- Ohioans to watch for signs of St. toms to a deadly illness. Elderly
ary service at Harrisonville Louis encephalitis, with ho· people usually' are more severely
Holiness Chapel ~Ill be held ·on meowners being warned to re- affected.
An 'epidemiologist with . the
Friday at 7:30p.m. Rev. William move standing water that may
Sullivan. doing work In Mexico provide a breeding ground for Ohio Department of Health,
Ellen Peterson, said people
and Cuba will speak. Pastor Earl disease-carrying mosquitoes.
should
check their property for
Fields invites the public.
.The warning was issued after a
that would hold rainanything
sparrow trapped recently on
water,
such
as tires, buckets or
RUTLAND- The Zion Church Cleveland's west side was found
of Christ of Route 143 Is planning to have antibodies to the ence- old gutters.
a weekend homecoming revival phalitis virus. Encephalitis can
"Any. malfunctioning septic'
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. be spread by mosquitoes that bite
tanks discharging untreated waGreg and 'Jennifer Wallace, diseased birds. ·
Jol)nson City, Tenn., will be
Symptoms of St. Louis ence- ter should be corrected, sinGe
leading the services at 7:30p.m. phalitis Include fever, head· mosquitoes thrive very well in
on Friday and Saturday, and acl)es, fatigue, lethargy, a stiff sewage and polluted water," she
10:30 _.'O m. and 2 p.'m. on Sunday. neck, nausea and vomiting. It said.

3 LB. TUB
SPRUD

... .. . a.,

Introducing the all-wheel drive
· Eagle Talon TSi. ·

4-H fair booth
winnerS named

Case makes
'Primetime'

B
.Picked and Packed at its' Peak/

Truck pull slated

The Meigs County fair truck :
Winners in Wednesday's beef
pull will be held at 7:30 Friday :
night In the Center Field.
.
cook·off at the Meigs County Fair
were Mary Rose, first; Kathy . . Classes ot the pull will be 4800, :.
Parker, second; Addalou Lewis,
four wheel drive , modified; 6200
third; and Connie Qulvey, fourth.
four wheel drive modified truck; ;
5800 super stock truck. and 6000
stock truck pulL
::
Premiums ranging from a high .·•
of $175 to $15 will be awarded In ..
the pull which Is sanctioned by ;..
the Southeastern Ohio Truc.k ..
The Meigs 4·H Pleasure Riders
Pullers Ass6clation. · Stock an!l · :.
received first place for best 4·H
fair booth display at the Meigs ·super stock trucks will be permit· :·
ted to compete in the 6500 pound .•
County Fair. The Salem Center
Go Getters won second place,
modified class , chairmen .~
and the 4 x 4's and Eight Is announce .
Enough Clubs won third place.

Winners In Tuesday 's talent
show at the Meigs County Fair
were Mindy O'Dell, five year old,
ballet clance, first; Kim Crites,
dance routine, second; Loretta
Smith, singing "Amazing
Grace," third; and Katie Saunders, jazz dance, honorable
mention.

CANNED

Harvest Fare
.

PNIB • CRIJOIY or CRfAMY

Blake's character ran a saloon
and was unspoken girlfriend to
Marshal Matt Dillon playro by
· James Arness.
'
Born Feb. 20, 1929, in Buffalo,
N.Y., Blake also appeared In the
movies "Duchess of .Idaho,"
"Stars In My Crown " "LIII "
"Sabre Jet," "A Star'Is Born:"
"About Mrs. Leslie," and "High
Society."
.
Her other television credits
Included "ExJ)osure" and ;,Ca·
valcade of America "
Memorial service~ will be held
in Sacramento, where she lived
for the past two. years.

Beef COOI'GOJJ
winners named

Talent show
winners named

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Man. &amp;Fri. til I p.m.
446-3045

ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE
I

111

�ThUISday, August 17, 1989

.The Daily Sentinei ~ Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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BOY SCOUTS -Joba Pinkerman, at left, dlstrtct ' execudve,
: MGM DistriCt, Tri-State Area Council, Boy Scouts of America,
· presented the awards to the out!jtandlng Individual scouts and
: outstanJJing troops In Meigs County, during Wednesday's Youth
Night activities at the Meigs County Fair. With Pinkerman, I tor,
are Bert Mash, of Salisbury Pack 246, outstanding cub scout;
Nathan Baloy, of Pomeroy Troop U9, outstanding boy scot~t:

OUTSTANDING 4-H YOUTHS - Recipients of SlOO ..vlngs

Becky Broderick, accepdng the award for outstanding pack on
behalf of Bill Young, cubmaster of Salisbury Pack 246; Boger
Stearns, cubmaster of Harrisonville Pack 237, also selected
outstanding pack In a tie with Salisbury; and Fred B.aloy, of
Pomeroy 'l,'roop 249, accepting the award for outstanding troop on
behelf of leader, Bob Arms. The awards were announced by
Brenda Neu!zlllig, publicity director for area Boy Scoudng.

boads and clock trophies during ·Wednesday's Youth Night

aetlvltes at the Meigs eoanty Fair were Steven Grady and David
Rice, Ito r, selected as oulltaadlnl Meigs County 4-H youths for the

year.
,

- Winners of Grand Ch'iunplon Showman and
Reserve Champion Showman In Tuesday's Melp County Junior
Fair lkbblt Jadtinl are, I tor&gt; Me!ts.. Clllford and Amy Weaver,
, respeQtlvely; Clllffor4 Is a member of the Rockla' Robi11114H Club,
u.d Ill.' sboWif wUh ber Du~b rabbit. ~eaver belongs to lhe Meigs
· Marvela
1111d II plctnred wltll:ber Black Rex.
·

BEST OF THE SHOW - Tbe award lor Best of Show In
Tuesday's Meigs Junior Fair Rabbit Judrlng goes 1o a New
Zealand Red rabbit, owned by .Josh Bollllh, at left. Roush Is a
memberoftheWlllopCiub. TheBestOpposltelntheshowlsJenny
Clifford's Holland Lop. Clifford Is a member ofthe ROckln' Robins.

''

Cannon shoot
set Saturday
Gov. William Dennison .Camp
No. 125 of the Sons ot Union
Veterans· of the Civil War· are
hosting a picnic and cannon and
musket shoot on Saturday at
Lackey's Campground located at
Guysville at 1 p.m.
Travelers will take Route 329 to
County Road ' 40 and cross the '
first bridge to get there. The cost
is $3 for adults and $2 for
children. Families are also asked
to bring potluck and table
service.

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BFi!T PROJECTS - Awards for the grand
champion overall Girl Scout projects In the Meigs
County Fair were presented Wednesday during
Youth Night activities to, Ito r, Becky Collins,
accepdng for Kim Sayre, of Syracuse Brownie
Troop 11211; .Jenay CIUI&lt;&gt;nl, ol Salillbury Junior
Troop 1028; and Sherry Johnson, of Meigs Cadette

Troop 1100. Nancy.Voacham, at right •. of Racine
Junior Troop 1042, received a new traveling
award for the outstanding Girl Scout booth at the
Meigs County Fair. The awards were presented
by Shirley Corar, director oft be Meigs County Big
Bend Service Unit. •.

OUTSTANDING - l;lrent
Rose, Racine, ollhe SOuthern
FFA Chapter, Is Meigs County's llutstandlng FFA member
for the year. ROse was named
to the honor. at Wednesday
evening's Youth Nighl
Awards Presentations lit the
Meigs · County Fair. Sarah
Wiles, of SOuthern FHA, was
participating In the Ohio Slate
Fair on Wednesday and could
not be present during Youth
Night til accept her awanl as
outstaading FHA member In
the county.

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STATE FAIR RECOGNITION - Recorntzed during Wednesday's Youth Night activities at the Meigs Couaty Fair for their
"oulltandlng of the day" projects at the Ohio State Fair were local
4-Her's, Ito r, Nicole Pickens, in creative wrttlag; David Rice, In
electricity; and Meredith Crow, In cooklnl'. Kristen Heines also
received outstanding of lhe day at the state latr In woodworklnr
but was not present for the pi~ture. Rice's project,lntroducllon. to
the World 11f Electronics, was also selected as the overall best
project of lhe day.

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~ · PLACES

. - Kim Cri~s performed a dance roullae at
the llt!!!Js·(;ounty
Tatent Show on Tuesday alternoon. Crites
won se:corid ptaee and $10 for her .perlormance which Included
several cartwheels.

After the dinner, members of
the camp will be demonstrating
Civil War musket shooting and
cannon firing. Reservations can
be made by calling 698-6298. For
further information contact
Keith Ashley.

A HANDFUL- The reserve champion award for the market pen
of rabbits at Tuesday's Melp Couaty Junior Fair Rabbit Judging
goes 1o Bobert Hoffmaa, at !eft, while the rrand champion award
goes to Kelly Ervin. Ervin Is a member of the Country Crltlers
Club. Her market pen Is White New Zealands. Hoffman belongs 1o
the King Bee Club. His rabbits are mixed breed.
·

--Announcements

. ·

soqn ;1s possible due to class size
Weight control class
.
The Meigs County Health De- limitations.
Those wishing to register may
partment will begin a series of
·call
the Meigs County Health
six-week classes for weight
];)epartment
at 992-6626. Pleas!!
control at 6 p.m . on Aug. 22 and
23.
.
Indicate your preference of TuesThere will be a choice of nights day or Wednesday evening
.
for the classes or Tuesday or classes.
Wednesday and classes are free Seeking recipes for cookbook
When Pomeroy celebrates it's
to Meigs County residents . ·
150th
birthday the sesquecentenEach class will be two hours.
nlal
committee
will have availaAttendance in required .at only
ble
for
sale
a
cookoook
made UP,
one two hour session weekly .
Classes wtll include nutrition of "old time" recipes of mothers.
education, stress management. grandmothers, great grandweekly weigh-ins, relaxation mothers, etc. If anyone has a
. lecimiques, recljles, diet recall recipe they would like to contrib· sheets. exercise techniques, and ute to the co.okbook, entitled
"Treasured Recipes from the
other phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the Past" send it or drop it by the
number of people who can be Dally Sentinel office In care of
admitted to each series of classes Julie E . . Dillon. Any church
which are to be held In the "women's organizations · are also
conference room of the multi encouraged to collect recipes for
purpose building · on Mulberry the book and turn them in to the
Sentinel office. The deadline for
Heights in Pomeroy.
Residents should register as submitting recipes is Sept. 15.

Middleport block party
Middleport's annual block
party wlil be held .on Sep't. 16.
Interested parties shOuld reserve
oooths by calling Debbie or Mike
Gerlach at 992-6898, Lennie
Eliason at 992c-6485, or Brian
Johnson at 992-3481. Booths are
reserved on a first come first
served basts. so cail soon to
reserve a booth. :
Rutland block party
The Rutland Fire Department
and ladies auxiliary wlii be
having a block party on Sept. 2.
There will be craft show~ .
·entertainment, and food.
GoU toumameat .
POMEROY -There will be a
Florida scramble with lunch and
tee off at 1 p.m . on Aug. 27 open to
men and women. Cost is $40.
Proceeds will go for the Southern
Boosters. For information call
•·
992-6312 or 992-3671.

.

Big bull really · is Awesome
By DAVID HARDING

OUTSTANDING -Outstanding individual ami
troop awards In Girl Scouting were presented
during Wednesday's Youth Night activities at the
Meigs County Fair. ln.front, I tor, are outstanding
individual scouts, Cinda Clifford, of Chester Daisy
Troop 1037; Bethany Cooke, of Chester Brownie
Troop 1067; Anita Collins, of
Junior
Tr•OOD 1204; and Heather Burke,
Cadette

Troop llOO. Outstanding troop awards went to, I to
r in back, Beth Theiss, leader of Racine Brownie
Troop 1259; Nancy Yoacham and Brenda Jones,
of Racine Junior Troop 1042; and Sarah Johnson,
of Meigs Cadette Troop llOO. Racine Junior Troop
, 1042 also received a new traveling tr11phy as the
outstanding troop in Melp County.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
The ·Ohio State Fair's tobaccochewing Buckeye Big Bull for
1989 sure lives up to his name.
Standing 5-foot-4 at the hip and
weighing in at a solid 3,010
pounds, Awesome most certainly
is . His head alone would fill a
bushel basket.
"He's just a very big . bull, "
said Maynard Beam, 55, of
Liberty View Farms in Wilmlng·
ton, whose daughter Pam raised
the beast from a calf.
·
Just how big is Awesome?
Well, factoring in his 10-foot
length, he's bigger than most
sedans on the road today.
. Or looking at it another way,
he's bigger th;m Ohio State
University's entire offensive
football team - 11 bruisers including one . of the ·biggest
interior lines in the nation.
averaging 290 pounds.
Consider: The fair's Grand
Champion steer this ' year, .a
·Chianlni-Angus crossbreed, tips
the scales at a mere 1,245 pounds.
Awesome Is nearly 2 \1, times as
heavy.
A&lt;Nesome's awesome dimensions have more to \Jo with
genetics than a voracious
appetite.
"He's out of a big mother and a ·
sire that throw.s tall calves."
explained Pam.
But the big guy can still put
away the grub. When he's not at
pasture, downing who knows how
much grass, Awesome will go
through a bale and a half of hay
every 24 hours and five to eight
gallons of water a day.
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And when he can get a way with
it Awesome eschews his cud for

AWABDS TO RIDERS - Rachel Downie,
: lldvlaar for the Meigs 4H Pleaaure Riders,
: pre~~ented , awards durlnJ Wednesdq'e Youth
Ntpt adlwlttea at the Melp County Fair t.o ltle .
wlnaers of Tuesday's 4-H Horse Show. From llo r
are Lori Hayee, grand champion lllowman; Sara
l:raiJ, novlee vand claamplon; Kandt Hysell,

f

novlee rese·flrv:e!'~:~':!,~ Molly 1\mbaa, J1'8Dd
champion proclactt.on; and
May, reeewe
champion pndadlon. Amy Meiqer, reeerve
champion ahowman, wu not pre~~enl lor lhe
picture. 'toban wu also selected u the
oulatandlnr pleasure rider In Meigs County.

a 'juicy chaw of Red Man or Mail
Pouch. ·
"Chewing tobacco, " said Pam,
"he loves it. He'll take It rlghtout
of somebody's back pocket."
Tobacco Is not a regular part of
Awesome's diet, but he tries to
get It whenever .the opportunity
presents Itself, she said.
''There-are a couple of people
around the farm who offer It to
him, and he takes It every time,"
Pam said.
"I woutdn' t want to mess with
him," said fairgoer Anne HardIng of Orient, staring In near
disbelief as the gigantic bull rose
In his pen · to. stretch his mammoth muscles.
ThiCk Iron fellclng surrounds
Awesome's fairgrounds enclosure, but when
he leans against
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the rails even a little, it's obvious
they c11uld not contain this bovine
behemoth if he wanted to get out.
·:A lot of times, when bulls get
this big, they get mean and you
can't handle them," said Pam's
father. "But he's stayed very
gentle."
.
Awesome Is truly a blithe bull.
"Because of his size, if he
wanted to go somewhere, he'd be
there, " said Pam, 29. "But the
kids have been crawling ail over
him. He's very docile around
children. I've got a little nephew
who likes to ride on his back.
"He's Intimidated a lot of
J&gt;e?Ple because he's so big, but
he s probably the tamest of any
animal on the farm. "

Awesome is a Llmousln, a
French breed of beef cattle
known for their colossal proportions. He's fully mature at age 4
and has already collected numer·
ous honors, including Grand
Champion at the 1986 Michigan
State Fair and Senior Champion
at the 1987 Kentucky State Fair.
. The firilt people to wear eyeg'were the 13th century Mon,ols,

notes

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· Offer qc»od Now thru Sept. 30, 1989

Offer Good Now Thru September 30, 1989

· .$ .P EC.f AL PRICES

LP GAS TANK

'

The Kids' World Almanec. bese eyeglasses were made of convu·sbaped ·
quartz with frames of torlotse sbelll.
In the 17oo8, Benjamlri · 'Franklin
came up with the idel of comblnlnl.
farsighted and nearsiglited g ) into bifocals. The lirlt contact 1enaes
were made in the 18801, tbougb Leonardo da Vinci had tboqbt of them as
early as the ISOOs.

co·MPLETE·LY INSTALLED

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·WITH 20' -OF COPPER

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MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE .
THURSDAY, AUGUS'l' 17, U88
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
(Free Gate For sftior CitiZens l
4:00 P .M.-Kiddle Tractor Pull
5: 30 p.M.-Group Therapy Band - Hlll Stage
6:00 P .M.-Open Class Sheep Judging
Followed by Junior Fair Sheep Judging
7:00 P.M.-CircleD Wranglers.:.. Hlll Stage
7:00 P.M.-4-H Horse Fun Show ·
8:00 P.M.-Horse Pull- Center Field
'8;30 P.M .-McGuffey
Lane
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 19g9"
9:00 A.M . .:..Junlor Fair Dairy Show
10:00 A.M.-Junior Fair Goat Show
· 11 :00 A.M ..,.Showmen ol Showmen Contes't
(ln Show Arena)
1:00 P.M .-Pork Cook-Of!- Hill Stage
2:00 P .M.-Horse Harness Racing
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Ring
5:00 P .M.-Jonnie Belinda- Hill Stage
6:00 P.M .-Shady River Shumers- Hill 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 Band
'Grandst.a nd attraction

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Plus Tax

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'(304)

* Installation Includes 20' Of Copper, Over 20' Of Copper Extra!

Phone
(304)

~, 675-1 17'00

...

.675-2460

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ForD ;r 1 ,, ,.,_. ... .,...

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"J'OVR PETRO.Lit.NJ£ LP GAS DEAtER"

ASKlfOR ·cAROLYN THOMAS

SEE YOU THERE!

ASK FOR CAROLYN fHOMAS

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�:Page 12-The Dllily Santileel

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

.-·-Local news briefs___, ~ociety. to ~ffer
EMS has six Thursdny calls
..

The Meigs County Emergency Medicai Services TePorts six
calls on Thursday; Orange Township Fire Depar:tment at 12:42
a.m. to a hay fiJ'tl on Keebaugh-Follord Road; Rutland at'S: 22
a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Charles Yeauger to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; Middleport at 9:45a.m. to Race St. for Mary
, Durst to Veterans Memorial · Hospital; Middleport Fire
Department at 5: 33 p.m. to a transformer fire on Hobson Drive;
Rutland at 8:31a.m. to Route 124 for Bernice Hoffman to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 9:32 p:m. transported Avanell
George from the the Meigs County Fair to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Trade deficit doWil in June
WASHINGTON CUP!) - Record exports and sharply lower
imports drove the nation's trade
defiCit down nearly $2 billion In
June to a seasonally adjusted
$8.17 billion, the loWest monthly
shortfall in more than four years,
tile Commerce Department reported Thursday.
The department reported that
the value of U.S. goods sold
abroad reached $30.91 billion
during June. breaking the pre· ·
Vious record of $30.76 bllliOf! set
in April as U.S. companies
sharply increased their foreign
sales of capital goods and eonsumer products.
,·
Meanwhile, the value of lm·
ports declined $1.5 billion from a
record high in May to $39.08
billion, reflecting declining
American purchases of foreign
automoblles and automotive
parts, oil, capital goods and
industrial supplies and
materials.
The $8.17 blllion trade shortfall
was the lowest since a $6.8 billion
deficit in Becember 1984 and
roughly $1 billion lower than
what was generally expected by
economists.
The good news comes on the
heels of what was generally
considered a poor May perfor·
mance when the deficit ballooned
to a revised $10.08 billion.
"This Is very encouraging
report, particularly in the big
decline in imports," said Alien

Area...

Continued from page 1
&lt;!!strict's cash flow started, the
pewly proposed tipping fee sche·
dule is $1.25, $2.50 and $3. 75, to
make up for the loss of opera·
tiona I monies during the waiting
period which is required prior to
enacting the fee schedule.
. One public hearing to discuss
the proposed fees is required
within the district, and that will
be held in Meigs County on Sept.
14.
..The commissioners reiterated ·
the importance of the solid waste
issue and the need for establishing a fee schedule, since, If fees
are not adopted, the responsibility for funding the district
reverts to the individual counties, which in Meigs County's
case, would amount to $82,000 a
year.
Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts and Highway Superinlli ndenl .Ted Warner discussed
with the co mmissioners several
roads on which county highway
employees are working. Roberts
reported that blacktoppillg is
underWay on County Road 28,
and that th e installation of a new
bridge on Blake Road In Salisbury Township has just been
completed.

· Sinal, chief economist with The
Boston Co., an. investment advisory fil'llJ In New York. "Imports
look ilke tl!ey a.re topping out,
which Is what is absolutely
necessary for the trade deficit to
make a s)gnlflcant move toward
a balance."
But other analysts noted that
the June report continues- what
has generally a year-long stretch
of fluctuating monthly reports
with only a slight overalldownw·
ard trend In the sshortfall. ·
So far this$ar, America has
run up a $54.3 · bil)lon trade
shortfall with other countries,
only marginally lower than the
$60.16 billion deficit for the first
half of 1988.
Driving the deficit down
further will be difficult because a
stronger dollar
makes U.S.
products more expensive io
foreigners and Imports cheaper
to Americans, they said.
"This (decline) is the las.t oft he
breed because of a rise In the
value of the dollar," said Irwin
Kellner, · chief economist for
Manufacturers Hanover in New
Yor~. "I don't think we are going
to see any further lmprovernent
for at least another year. It's
going to be a drag on the
economy."
"The process Is certainly very
slow," added Sandra Shaber, an
economist with The Fu lures
Group, a Washington consulting
concern.

Licenses issued

• CLEVELAND fUPII ..., , The ' Tlie 8-year-old Oh1o Fund cur·
SOciety National Bank said It will ~~jltly has assets of· about $25
soon ·offer ·a-eneral investors a ·· million from ' trusl customers,
mutual fund that invests exclu- such as pension funds.
slvely In Ohio com pan les.
.Starling next · year, general
The bank, In cooperation with investors will be able to particithe Wlnsbury Co. In Columbus, pate In the fund with a minimum
said It will open the Ohio $1,000 Investment. They will then
Regional Equity Fund early next own a part of more than 60 Ohio
year to the general public. Ban!&lt; .companies.
officials said they believe the
The fund's portfolio manager,
fund Is the only one investing Denis Amato, said he locates.
solely in Ohio-headquarted undervalued Ohio companies,
firms.
, primarily ones with revenues
Society said It will also offer exceeding $25 million and with·
three other mutual funds to the out large amounts of debt.
'
public next year. Currently, al( . Current companies in the
four .funds are available only to ' fund's portfolio Include tne Ferro
SOciety's trust customers.
· ·.. Corp., a speciality coatings and ·
The Ohio Regional Equity . ·chemical company; National
Fund is one of about a dozen City Corp., a bank holding
funds specializing in specific company; GenCorp Inc. , a plasgeographical areas, -according to tics and· aerospace firm; and
the Investment Company Insti- Reynolds &amp; J;teynolds, a Dayton
lute, a Washington trade manufacturer of business forms.
organization.
Although Amato concedes
The fund Is expected to attract some Industries are not heavily
. investors Interested In Midwest represented in Ohio, such as the
compahles, as wen as Ohioans oil and e.nergy sectors, he said
wishing to buy stock in compan- Ohio has enough firms engaged
ies located within their own state.
In different Industries to keep the
fund reasonably well diverslfie,d.

Amato said slightly ~or: th~n·, \ nd t~ch!'olbgy a~eas,. ;f.h!! tu,rid·
50 percent or the fund's stock ·· c·urre,ntly has about 20 perc~nt of
Investments are now In the· its •sllets in short-ierm. cash
capilal goods, basic lnduslr)l, ' in~e&amp;t,ments.
•.

. :..

WARSAW, Poiand CUPI! Lech Walesa's Solidarity labor
mo'lement and two smaller poutleal parties agreed Thursday to
form a coalition that could mean
the first non-communist government in postwar East European
history.
Walesa, Peasant Party leader
Roman Malinowski and Demo·
cratlc Party 'l eader Jerzy Jozwiak met for 40 minutes in
advance of a meeting called by
President Wojciech Jaruzelski
on the governmental crisis In ·
Poland.
"They have agreed on a stand
to form a coalition government of
national responsibility according
to the proposal of the chairman of
Solidarity," said .a statement
released after the meeting

Divorce granted
·A divorce has been granted In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Sonia F. Jackson from
Ronald A. Jackson. The plaintiff
has been res toted by the court to
her malden name, Ash.
-A divorce action has been filed
by Pamela Jane Re~. Belpre,
. against Gregry Lee Reed,
Reedsville.
'Lisa Ann Mollett, Middleport,
and Michael Alan Mollett, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and Donna
Rife, Middleport, and· Kenneth
Rile, Middleport, have flied lor
dissolutions of their marriages.

Caldwell's two fac!Uties in unllcense.d n~rsing homes,
Springfield were operated as Hertzer said.
boarding homes, which, unlike
Meanwhile, health off.iclals are
nursing homes, do not need a · Working with a Department of
state license unless they offer Aging ombudsman to monitor
medical care, or if more than two residents of Caldwell's homes
residents require skllled nursing and help those who want to
care.
relocate.
The health department spokesStringfellow left the hospital
man Is claiming Caldwell vio- . for placement in IOOF Odd
Ia ted the guidelines tor unli- Fellow-Rebekah Home ofOhlo, a
censed board-and-care homes.
licensei;l and Medicaid-certified
"Because' there were more horne for Intermediate care
than two residents dependent on residents, a spokeswoman at
tl)e se•vices of others, one of MercyMedical said.
whom required skilled nursing
Caldwell's homes had been
care ... then w!!'re saying she's under a ' 'lengthy ... Investigation '·
running an lllegal nursing In -which numerous cotnplaints
horne," spokesman Randy were received about the faclli·
Hertter said.
ties," Hertter said. The depart·· T~department further asked ment obtained search .warrants
the attorney general· s Medicaid and entered both homes March 13
fraud diVision to investigate and one of the homes July 24 for
whether. patient abuse or neglect u.nannounced Inspections.
took place at tlie Caldwell
During the July visit, "It was
facilities.
urged that Stringfellow, identlAnd local prosecutors were . fled as belng In need of skilled
asked to file criminal
nursing care, be relocated to a
' against C;~ldwell for
licensed care faclll(y," he said. ·

• The Area's Number 1 ·Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A•.M. to 5 P.M.
.':·· 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'

•.

8-in-1 Universal
IR Remote Control

•Priat Of ad for all uptul lmeta ia double price af ad coat.
"7 point linalypa ontv . -.
•
•s..mn.. II ..ot ,...:MMWible tor •forttfter first d., . (Ct'ID
lar .......
acl&gt;unalll p-1 . Cott-..2:DOp.m.

firll••

dW attr·ltUbll•ioft to m•• correction.·

•a. t._. mull M

Save

$39.95
per room, per night
plus applicable tax

•A cl ... ifled . .enilemn plec.t in rht DailY Sentinel f• ·
.... ct•llftad diapl.,. luain•• C.d and 1'- ctll notice~)
wll aiMI -e»P. . in the fll't. Pl.-...t Algil.., end the Oelli•
• polll Daily frtbune. NIChing qwr 11,000 hom•.
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY. PAPER
TUUDAY PAP'ER
WEDNUDAY PAP'ER
THURaOAY P'AP'ER
FRIDAY PAI'£11
lUNDAY PAPER

Cut

5995
~5

1

300 Off

14J-Arabia Dt.t.
3,._w..nut

gggoo
*26, 2818 •

R~tulfl

-onalllt

"At

PH. 949·2801 .
or ln. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CALLS

1-C..dotThMu
2-lnM-.y
3-Annoucementa

•-o~we-

..

1-Happy_Adl
1-Loet Md Found
7-.Vetd teleCpeid in advence)
8-PuWic llle &amp; A.achan ·

Mr:rciJJilrlr::l'

&amp;1-Hou.-ald Qoodl •
12-lporllllg . . .
13-AMioual
14-Miac. M • o l t &amp;15-8ulding Supplia
11-Pelt tor ....
.
&amp;7-M"IiCIIIInlftfUmlnta
51-Fruna • V N - •

&amp;9-For s•e 01 t~e

I rn:lir v•nr•n !
S••r v1r:r:s
11-HelttWMied · ..... ·
12-1•..- .w......
13-ln..,...w
14-·-··T-iftt
11-&amp;ohooll• lnltiUOtk»n
16-11-. TV. Cl Aep"'
. 17-...............
11-WMIOdToDo

·' .

F r• rr :;rrp rl•r·s
(, I I ~If' IIll k
1

11-Farm ICIU..,_.'
12-W..,... to 8uy
13-LiYaalock
M-H., • o...m
11-Selld &amp; fenlil:er

· i1 -Horn., tor lola
12-Moblle Hom• for S1le
U-Ferme tor •••
:14-luoin•ollfllclinto

JI-Lota • Acre...

7i,. -AUtos tor ....
72-Trucks for ·•••
73-v. .••4wo·, .
74'-Mo•-cl• ·
7:5-Boetl • Mot911 for •••
71-Auto ,_,. • Ace• lOri•
77-Auoo Repair
78-C.mping Equipment
7~-Cimp•• a MOtor Hom•

M-Aell £aute Wlni_.

224 E. MAIN ST.

.

2

40% Off

1495~,5

In lovipg memory
of our sister,
Leone Hensley,
who paiHd away
August 7, 198~
and her husban(l,
Charle11 Hensley,
April 22, 1972.
Gone but not
forgotten.
Ada, Mae and
Leota

• Electronic Horcn'l!!!!i

• 3" Salety. Rellec:tor

614/868·1380
Don't po$S us by an).(ime .. .
We're just minutes /rom everything!!

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

In Memoriam .

992·9978

Wo

'"T 10•so.oo
P• Garno
,..,.. •u.oo

PJr Gemt
U• "005-31

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

•SHRUB &amp; 'TREE!
TRIM and REMOVAL
'
•LIGHT
HAULING
•FIREWOOD

EVENINGS
4/t / 81 / tfn

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
New locatlont
161 North Secllllll
Milllllaport, Olio 45760

~·=.:.c=.,~-~=l,
1i11t1 I .:W. THD
Ifill • - .

• A M/FM 'lUnar • 12 Pre.sate
• Digital Fluorescent Display
~31-3003

MOIIIS ·
. EQUIPMENT ·

LAWN IIOWER REPAIR -

MOIIIS ·
EQUIPMENT

Reg.,329.95

742·2455
Salam St.

Lo'-' As S15

lutlaiiii,Oio.

6/30/lta

Til-CO. TEI.TE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

Telephone

MOIIU
HOME PAIIC

'
Baneries e~tra

N20-135

279~!

• Remote On· Screen
Programming of

1-Year/6-Event Timer

Save~-··

399.115

• Wlrelen Remote

Anention R. N.'s

Reg 139.15
Low Aat15 '
P~~r ~onth•

791.00

•40CI!annlll

Five Wllltl .

Low All21 Per Month •

LCDChlnnel

Dliplay

ean..~ao · ltconnoth McCulough, A.PII.
Ch.t• Alfflo, R. Ph.
ROftlld lllnnlllg. R.Ph.
- Mon. 1lwu lei: 1:00 a.m. IG 1:00 , .rn.
IUftdlll' 10:00 a.m. 10 4,00 p.m.
. PH. lt2·211&amp;S
PR!ICRIPTION8
E. Main
fllandly larvioa
l'omaroy, OH.

Hom•-

Help Wanted

A1nericare-Pomeroy

'16-513 Remote balteries exira

499'!*
Antenn1ex1re

11

Ym1r l:arecr and
~ouls

pt.'r~unal sari~f&gt;Krion

l'(ln

m;.~t~.:h

-Mobile
Pa~ _ .
•Mobl.. Home
Rental•

•Lot R•ntala

'192·7&lt;179
lt. 33 llor'tll

SIIKII9n

ROOFING

ROACHES • FLEAS

NEW- REPAIR

TERMITES a ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
lrlembor Natio•l PHt
Control Assn.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Tol Free

1-100-535-2199

.AmeriCIJrt.. Pom~my. h11'1 tin

immt'\iinr.~ openin~

fur o

paHime .-nd/ t'r full· time R.N . desirin~ dOJY shifr, SII.OO

per hour plus bonus Rare for ead1 )'Car of ex pcriem.l.'.
Flexible schettuling, t:llmpctiriv(l sa lary and benef,rs
'
nffer"l.
·

· \\MT ADS briRg
VaCIIiol Money

LaRue Hill, R.N., D .O.!I/.

0p•WaallMtMe'•l

Amtr il·;trr-Pnmrmy

66n9

Ruc:k1prin~ Rd.

•

FREE ESTIMATES
Call YY:Z•J

Ptlmeruy, Qhiu 45769
i614l 992-6606
E.O.E,

MEET THE
AAFF
PEIM SALE

991-2156
.

......

.. ..... .

~

RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

EXCEn

HOUDAYS

We Buy All
Non Ferrous

WALK-Ill WELCOME

tM N. =w~.

11,::Wiill-t

Garwga lo Yard. O.J. WMa Rd.
oil Rl. 110. Aug. 17·16-11. H.
Lawn, gordon, ~untlng, llahlng.
Lolt olavarytnlng.
,

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION

992·5-114

n:,_

- ··
,
COIIIriERCIAL

Glr~~ge B•le. Aug. 17, 11,
5. 2·112 mllu o~ Glorg1'1
Croak Rd. Boys clolhea .... 3
m011. :IT, Gl~a ololhn (aome
new, 7·14. Bib~ bid, high chllr~
toys. Loti of miac.

•CUSTOM ICITCHENI. !IATHI
•I!XT!NIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING. ROOANO

Garwga SOla: Patriot H. Furniture &amp; m11c. Aua. 11.
· ·

.OWNII: GREG I.

~R~E~S~ ID~E~NTf~IA;RLSI

-MEJALIUILDINOS

Gorwga. 2 family. Handpalntacl,
1rt1, cn~tt., clothn, houHhoiCI.
11-5. Fri., SOt., - n garage .,._
hind,
Addevllle
Elementary
School. Addlton.

•NEW HOMES

SI NCE.: 1969

I!BIIY ST. SUAC1151

992

Michigan Sola. School clotllea,
XX·large c1o1h11, 112 prlc~, toye,
atarao, lull bact, mioc., Rt.141 . •

OHIO liVER
CAMPGROUNDS

Moving Solo: Bokor Rulclonca.

Rt. 7, Satvrdlly, Aug. 19. 11-2:00.
Firwtllmeitama.

NOW OPEN

Yard SOla: Fri., lo Sll.-.. t-41. 491
Oak Dr., Spring Valley ...111po111:

APARTMENTS FOR
RENT1By Doy or
Wnkl
$18 Per Day &amp; Up

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 FAMILY YARD SALE ·Aug. 16
&amp; 19, Fndty 1o Saturday, 11-5; .
Milton Road, camp Coni•~·

949-2526
7-12·' 89· 1 mo.

81G COMMUNITY YARD SALES •,
Laon-Badan Road. Thuraclay,
17j Frldly, 18; SIIUrdly, 1U.

WANTED

SALE.fumllurw,
ouotatna,·
clothing &amp; miac. Rami. Friday &amp;
Slturdliy, 8 1 . m .~ 12 noon.
Flail.,. Warailouoa (behind
Wedge Apartment•). Moaman
Avenue, BellemNd.

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers

•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

YARD SALE • 2112 N. Main
SlrHI. Waclnnday, Thurwday • ·
Friday.
·

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

8

192·5335-915-3561
We Service All Makes
·

·

Tnura., .Fri.hllat. 1 mila out 21•,
oc:hool clot H 6 rnloc.

WitH ROOMS AND

5-4-89-1 mo.

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

'Pubnc·sale
&amp; Auction

W.
Va.
Slota
Champion
Auellontll. Rick P1111on IICiflotd In Ohio and Wut virginia.
Booking Aucllontr, 304-7735785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Complell hoUMholdl of fur.• ,
niture l antlquH. Alao wood a·
coel heatera:. Sw1ln'1 Fumltw.
&amp; Auction, Third I Ollg, 1144441..1158.

-oFFERED AT

Fabric Shop
992-2284

Fumlturt end appliencu by the
piece or 1nllr1 ho\.IMhold. F1lr ·
pricao baing paid. Catil14-446- ·
3156.
.

"Weddh•tto••

Junk
with molo,. S50 &amp; ,
down. wla mota,., $25 I. down . .
Richard George, 114-3118-11095.

POMEROY, OHIO

5-17-1111

c,,.

S~ulallsts"

Junk

cara whh or without
41!rry Uvtly 614- ·
.
388-9303.

8+ 1 mo.

m~1or1 . C./I

Television Listening Device.s
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen,icel
C!J 'Hearing Ev1luations For All Ages

Oulha
P11 1940 qufltl. Any condition.
Caah Ptld. Cartl14-1192·5657 or
114-582·2481 .

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist

TOP CASH paid for 11183 modtl
1nd newer UIICI call. Smith
Buick-Pontiac U111 Eut.m
Ava., Gallli»/la. Call 114-4462212.

a

% ~614) 446-7619 Of (614) 992-2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Glllpolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.llulbeny IIJ!s, Pomeroy, Ohio

Uoad lumit..-e and houHilold
appllanc:aa. PhoM 114·742-

2048.

Uud tur~ture by thl piece or~
enure houalhokl allo eel ling.114·742·2451,

Wanled to buy, O.k Dlnnate
to..- chalra. 814-4411-0n7.

s.t,

Employment Serv1ces

Stainless Steel,
Give U1 A Call
Today"

morer

Ceder br., IUHI. Lemps and
other "•mo. 17th I 111h. Thur"'
6 Frt., on Krlntr Ad. off 211,
third houea on lett.

Plastics,
Etc.

atone
)era,
knlck-kniCkl,
hlindm•it•
lten11, · boye,
younamerw ~loth11 l!ke new,
ALL Yard Sal11 Muat Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day balora lila ad lo lo run.
Sundly ldltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday aclitlon • 2:00
p.m. Slt\.lrdly.

Metals,

""" thru s.t- .; 19ft

UY'S
BEAm SHOP

,.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _. .1

j

Wlllllows

100/o Off All PEMIS

well imo rhe 21sr ccmury. Juin the future ...
Jnin r~ Amrrjc:are-Pomertl)' Team!
'I

INSULATION

Mastic - CertaintiOd&lt;el
Vinyl Siding
SaaltHu Gutter
Rapla&lt;1-t Willllows
llewn lnsuletioli·
Sta1111. D.rs &amp;

..

S~QO.OO Si~n On 8unus
.
Our Nation's dtm&gt;tnd fm k)n,~t·term care will otend

CONTACT:

J&amp;L

Aug. 18, S.? K1r01an1 hMtera,

PH. 992-3922

Call, Anytime

992·5275

4 femlly, Centenary tDWnhoult,

Homelite, Weadeater,
Tecumseh. Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTEINS

949-2168

10.8:00 Fri, 10.2:00 SOl., 3
lamlly, clotho, lop - rnllc.
Mllchall Rd. Galllpollt.

In Middleport, Oh.

WATER
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mosl 2 and 4-cyclo
engines .
Stoc~ Parts for

3 mile• oH .ot Rt. 7
at Meigs Memory
Gardens
8·17- 1 mo.

ml11cl

CoiHI

Yard Sale

1

DAVE'S.
SMAU ENGINE
IE PAIR
Located at va•y Lumber

•Lawn Mowers
•Riders
•Chain Saws
•Weedeaters

1600 GAUON
WATEI SEIVICE
UMESTONI
SPIEAD
DIU HAILED

Brawn

· (Next to

PAITS &amp; SEIVICE

ALLEN'S
HAULING

lost:

female dog. Blue collerf In
Vic inity Bull SKin Rd. I found
614-25B-12t 0 614-2151·1335.

Oh.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
EN.GINE REPAIR

7-13-'89-1 110. pd.

yuur

in h ~plrh, cure's fasl t."St ~row, int: marlct-r --.:
l.tm~ot Term Grc.'
,
·

Howord L. Wrltesal

Lost: Brown Chaokbook, Bank
ol Athlond. VIcinity ot'Oillo Vo~
lay
tHink
or
Downtown
Foodltnd. 614-446-3111.

992-3897
St. Rt. 124

NO SUNDAY

992-2371

~ In Aodnay .,.., reddlafl
brown dog, look• llki a German
Sllepiltrd. 114·245-5021.

Maintenance
•Computerized Balancer

··--Wt

5113/191fn

Mobile Cellular
'

CAll 992-6756

oi'INANCIAL.AID AVAIL

22985

Reg.
349.95
Low Ao 11s
Per Month•

NIASE Certtflld M1chenic

LOST: Wilha C-, 2 yra. old.
No collar. Reward. Edgemonl
Or. arM. 814-44&amp;-e710.

-General Chassis

BISSELL
SIDING CO•

992-2269

Lost &amp; Found

LOST July_ 4, 1tlll! VIcinitY 91
Cornatalk/Soulhoide (2) Halt...,
18
moe.
ofd,
1
broWnlblaekfWhtlli . 1
darlc
brownlwhHa, 1100. A...ard. :J04.
675·7218 or 115-filt.

•Grease Jobs

•VINYL SIDI.NO
•ALUMINUM SlDIJIIG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

PH. 949-2801
.o r 111. 949·2160

6

•New &amp; Used Tires
.Custom Pipe Bending
•Oil Changes

4-25-tfn

"Frea Ellllmat•"

Stray lclttano 814-441-3787 altar
5p.m.

JONES TIRE
CENTER

mo. pet.

BILL SlACK

.

Odd (arw, 304-m.aaos.

7 -26-'89.- 1 mo. pd.

Rt. 124, P-oy Ohio

1/4/19- 1111

AUTO - DIESEL

•ZETOI 11Ac:TOIIS
efCIIO PIODUC'Is
eHOWAID IOIAVATOIS
•1 AIDMAN ilowas
etNTEISTAft IA1TEIES

•19915

7-17-'89-1

6064.

742-2421

lnfernltion

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Aleo Tr••••lteiOI
PH. 992-5682
or 992~7121

R~ira

Save
$150

More

FREE ESTIMATES

VAUGHN'S

Business ·Services

Fraa puppiH, Raccoon Rd. 114446-411S2.
.

992~5218

For

Roger Hysell
Garage

6 14·985·4·180

,

Middleport,

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Djrt

Now Taking

LINDA'S .
PAINTING
YEIY IEASONAILI
HAVE IEFEIENCES

homo. 304-4137·2815.

PAT HILL FOlD

L. W. STEWAR
TRUCKING

BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON
Registrations

SYUCUSf, OHIO
Moat Foreign tnd
Oomeslic Vehid•
A / C Stt'viCII
All Mtjor a lll!inor

lr

B~up, male, f.month• old,

to

FrH Firewood. Cut at your own,
risk. By IPpoinlrnant only. 114446·2917.

•-s··••·tfn

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

Take .... pain aut of
paintifll. Let me do
it for you.

7;

3 German Shepherd puppiee. I
waaka old. 304-895-35M.

992-2196

POMEIOY, OH.
992-6872

IN MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

•

2 male kin- to g ' - ,
wk. old, f14-441-23t3.

rod

222 East Main

NEWLAND
· ENTERPRISES

SERVICE

J,

MARliN'S
FURNITURE .
and MORE

2-Hn

IISIDIICI PHONE

1

1

o..r

16141 992-6SSO

f X! ur1vr ',t
·WOHL&gt; f'HOL..l ',

ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

I

2 H.D. FREE llith COUJIOfllftd•I
pun: h. . or·min. H.C. Pad!-· I
IlL limk I coupon per cus- 1
tomer per bi,., senton.
1

Your Phone
· l~·-•:0: Cabla Billa Hera
IUSIIISS PliO..

')ffP~T.Uf!Y

SWEEPER REPAIR

IOH PIIZI

Wa Carry Flahlng luppll•

3 Announcements ·

W1 can '!fair and re-

Giveaway

Ladl• 1/ze 10 medium drell
thoaa, oucumbarw. 814-245-

TIIUIS. f.l, •=45 P.M. 1
SUfi. 1.1. 1:45 P.M. 1

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Fast

4

4·16-86-lfn

BINGO
POMEIOY ..UGLES
CLUI

Announcements
Announcements

corl radiators and
heater cores. We can
.... acid boil an.r
aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

ETC.
21fi_Mi. lelow
lad•lodt• &amp;
Dam At ~ntit,Mity

DOy or Night

'

SER~ICE

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS
LIVE BAIT

Prilts"

16141 YU-mi4

Columbus, Ohio 43232-4180,

o• Ali. Pusc•mo•

· .,tat

'a"'"'"~~· ~~ ,8 .., carp.

110.00
.11.00
U&amp;.OO
160.00

f I II d II r:I d I

882- Middt..," 176-Pt. P I .Pomwoy
•ae-Laan
.
911-Ch-r·
1'71-Appla Gr773-MIIon
.
143-Ponland
247- LMen Fill• 112-N_H_
· 891-LII..-t . 1
9•1-Aeclne
7o12-AUtlend
937-BuH . .
117-Coolvllt

--Gallpotll
317-Ch•Nr•
;~I- Vinton
241-,llio Grende
2M-Gu¥1ft Diat.

4560 Hilton Corporate Drive
I·70 at Hamilton Road

TO 1HOSE 60 AIID OVII.

- 2,00 P.M. FRIDAY

County
Area Code &amp;1•

][HILTON EAS1

10°/o DISCOUNT

.:- 2'00
~:gg ~ =~e::EAIYDAY
P.M. THURSDAY

~aigs

• FREE Parking
!I Indoor POOL
• Exercise Room
• Great Food at

IIID•ET
ADYACAIE

-·

following telephone exchanges ..&gt;

August 3 thru August 20, 1989

P.C.S.

DAY IEFDRE PUILICATION ·
~11:00 A.M . IATUIIDAY
- 2:00P.M; MONDAY

t&amp;.OO
1.8.00
113.00
S21 .00
161.00

. 26-311 WORD&amp;
17.00

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX

CUSTOM BUilT
HO,E.S &amp; GARAGES

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

oon•autW. rufta.·broUnu•d-rswlll beat. .,..a

.Classified pa_ges c~v~,r .the .

33%

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

OHIO .WElFAU
COMPENSATION
GENERAL REUIF
UNITED - 1 WOUIIS
IOILIUUUEIS
.PAID

8 DAYS
10 DAYS

•-w..... ,. .• ""

•

AM/FM Stereo Car Cassette

.

Happy ~~
Yard lot•·

.In Momo&lt;lam

..; 1¥15-1901 Batler.es ex~ra

at the Hilton East ·
just minutes from the FAIRGROUNDS ..

,..t4 in ectv•nce . .

Cord ot TIIMioa

30

S4.(10
U .OO
ea.OO
113.00
133.00

.

-.nd•

run 3 d•• 8t no ch•ee.

' • A'eplacas Up to Elght.Remotes
• 7-Day/5-Event Timer
· • Replays Up to 48 Commands
At the Touch of a Key

Have a FAMILY AFFAIR

1 DAY

1 MONTH

•oou•

BISSELL
BUILDERS.

7-ll-'19·tln

"Q. 15 WORDS "'1'-ll-;:;2iiil'iiwwo'-IIDI

3 DAYS

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Business Services

RATES

.ouo.W. ....... Qellle or M•on countiel mull be pr•
'
'"•...,. 1.10
tor edl ~id in .ctvence.
•FM. . . -ONe.._. Md Fo"nd . .
1 &amp; word~ will be

I

J

Pomaroy-Middlliport, Ohio

Poland·may have
non-communist
government

·A marriage license has been

issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Wliliam Eldon Morris,
20, Reedsville, and Melissa Mar·
lene Wells, 18, Long Bottom.

DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - The
Olllo Department of Health in- ·
ltiated legal action Wednesday
against a Springfield woman who
operated a home where an
elderly resident was mistaken
for dead and taken to a funeral
parlor.
. The resident, Carrie St~illgfellow, 87, was released Wednesday
from Mercy Medical ·Center,
where she was taken for tests
after regainillg consciousness
just .be.fore being embalmed.
Doctors said she had apparently
suffered a heart attack Aug. 5;
ca~slng ,her heart and breathing
tq stop briefly ;.... and leading fo
her bizarre brl!s)l with death.
The health department asked
Ohio Attorney General Anthony
Ce!ebrezze's staff to seek legal
action prohibiting the operator of
the home where Stringfellow
lived, Robbie Caldwell, from
operaUng the facility, and
another she runs, without
licenses;

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4574

17, 1989

State seeks saqctions ·against home
where woman·was · mistaken for dead .

unique fund·, \o··pubJic

1

Weather
By United Press International
South Central Ohio
'l'onight: Partly cloudy, with a
slight chance of rain. Lows will
be in the mid 60s. Light northeast
wind s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday: Partly cloudy, with a
chance of ra in. Highs will be nea r
80. Chance of rain 40 percent.
•
Extended Forecast ,
· Saturday through Monday
A c hance of rain Saturday,
mainly over eastern counties.
Fair Sunday , with a chance of
s howers and thunderstorms
Monday. Highs will be mostly
between 80 and Saturday and
Sunday and between 75 and 8~
Monday. Early morning lows
will range from. the upper 50s to
the middle 60s.

Thursday,

Thursday, August 17, 1989

11

.sc•

='•!.

.

Help Wanted

AVON
·AM
w
....,,
_a,_,
_ s.Cal

&lt;.

a

Attention LPN'o ,ull~rna.
lo
11:30 p.m. altlft. Opening tor
LPN ln._aclln long 1..., oara
1110
pert-time
piD ..IIDi•
available or ...nlng
nk1ftt •
ahift, Wa · ~Ill'.. ·

AMI...._
--·-~-­
••See Ua! - Flnanclnr Available

:=

DteDWiWIMI .... ..,

Slop By

MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME

•ow ...,..., ..; IJIIIIiA. tiiiCI

a

~-;:;_-,:~.~*ill:: .

Nu 111 cenw Mon. 11wu Prl. e.

4.

--~--....-.,--~

IWIIJn

... _...

-................

.... . _.......

.--_

--·

·-·-..-........·-··

�,...... 14-The

17. 1989

Thursday,

Sentinel

l.AFF-A·DAY

42 Mobile Homes ·
for Rant
2 br., loattd '-' Ewrgr..n,

I
I

N~ lurn. SIR, 4-112 owllao from
Qollloollo. No polL S25Q/Ino.
114..4W031.

- -.1400.

ForLease
Very ..... -ioUo 2nd ttoar, s
br., opt. unlurniMod, otovo I
ratrlg,
hlotortc
homo - mUtiiKioe
,,.., ..,.
Nl(d. Colt ltH41 4421.

N~ 31R trollor, IIIM!ndo, living
....., largo ront. City och-.
314 Third 111., Konougo,l14-441-

51

BORN

-

t174 Chovy .. ?Jek..,P1• ""'"~
304_._1see.
till lronoo U t opel., $1200:
114-44fo7720.

Television
·. Viewing

fW No.'( t.lM'f.
I? !lOr GL'l'~! .~.~~~

72 Trucks tor Sale

49

•

1117 hoH '"" Chovy lllck""P•
4WD, Cal oftor I p.M. e1 W~243e.
For Solo: 1177 Ford ...-11 .
dnvo. s~ BIN hu 351
modltiOd bUIH-upoonglno. lt4211-t2U 114-211-133'5.
GMC 1.2 dlaul, 58,000 oetuol
miiH, CN;IIInal OWntr, IX. ooncf,
614-446-2 57.
.

Goods

73 Vans

THURS.. AUG. 17

8

• EVENING
6:00 (]) Bonanza: The Loal
Ep!Mdea
• (]) (iJ . . (I) ((II Ill@
a5l Newe
· !D Home R~n Derby
·
11J Shining Tim• Slallan E;1
(!) Reldlng Rainbow 1;1
at «ll Happy Day1
I!)) Facto Of Life
II) Ca11oon E1pweos
6:05 (I) Allee
6:30 8 (I) I!Jl NBC Nightly Nawo

Merchandise
Household

The Daily Sentinei--:-Page-16 .

....
r:~:~' S(C~4ll¥\-J&amp;£~s· .....

-.,

411-1~.

Locuot Rood .., right, 30U751071.

.. clop. Nll'od.I14-44MJ27.

.~v-.~idcleport,
...-.. .. ___Ohio
._,. --

Autos tor Sale

1171 Dodgo . . . . 1400. .

Two trailer opocN, ~outo 1

chld,.n occoplod. Cab!&lt;! T.V.,
114 4tl Ml1,eri1W41-Im
2 br., tro!lor, • tllpooit
,.quwod.l14.ai-11D. ·
21R mobllo- tor ron!. Rot.

7471

71

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wii1bt

46 Space for Rant

D065 LIKE TO BE
SCRATC~ED BEIIIND
T~EIII. EARS, DON'T

't'OU COULD AT LEAST

OF COURSE, 't'OU CAl-if EXPECT
ME TO DO IT FOREVER..

KEEP DOING IT UNTIL 't'OUR
. ARMS FALL. OFF,..

---

T~E't'?

&amp; 4 WD'I

~ Spo111Look (0:30)

~

fll (I) ABC Newa 1;1
Body Electric
3-2-1 Contact 1;1
1111
@ CIS News E;1
ID «ll Love Co-.:lion
.I!JlllllowBiz Today
(iJ
(!)
(!)

e

il))Jeffer80111

a OnSIIge
6:35 (I) Carol Bumen
7:00 (]) Fatltlr Murphy
.
• W PM Magazine
(D Spoi11Cenler (0:30)
(I) 0 (I) Current AHair
(!) (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NeweHour
IIIJ Ill «21 I!Jl Wheel 01
FortuneC
«ll WKIIP In Cincinnati
iiJ Maneyllne

Roorrango ~""' · of tho
four ocramblod words be-

•

low to form four slrnp l~' words .

I

ENMADE

Is

rul c. I r I li.

Ql Top Card

'

7:05 (I) Andy GriHith
7:30 • (I) Family Feud
@ Speldweek Highlights of
lha past week's auto races
as .well as racing news from
'around the globe are
featured.
(i)'Enterlalnment Tonight
0(1) USA Today .
IIIJ @ I!Jl Jeopardy! E;l
IDilD M•A'S'H
iiJI Croullre
® ll!lajor.League llaooball
.CrtiOk 6 Chaoe
7:35 tll Andy GnHI1h
8:00 (]) MOVIE: 0. Henry' I FuM
Houll (2:00)
a5l eo.by Show_Theo
visns a voodoo doclor lor
help wilh Justine. (AI C
® PrOfelllonel Goll PGA
International from Castle
Rock, CO. 1st Round .(T)
(I) fll (I) A Mttn Celled
Hawk A.diplomat has put
poisoned heroin into·the drug
pipeline. (R) .
·
(!) Dance Of The Cranes
(!) Vlnlage: A Hlotory Of
Wine Northern Limits
!ill Ill@ 41 Houro 1;1
. IDilD MOVIE: The Name of
1111 ROll (R) (2:30)
iiJI PrlmeNewa ·
iiJ Mllliler, She Wrote

.

({fALL'( Goor VP$1T.
INHIN J: TO£.#&gt; HIM
.I: WA~ QVITTING

tff

e

a

Nlf&gt;CT Wflfc -"'.:.
. tff THOVGffT IT WA)'

THIS' 1/tlff/c.

•

0

~..

•w

,tnc.

a

·
Storeroft llontogo, 11 II. wiiiC·
thru. 221 H!'L.vory _l_ haurL
P)lono,,ltc--.
o,.,lnfl!!,
Of 114-MI-2112 tlly.

.aa.,

76 . Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
POOR lOY TIRES, 304.el'IS3_3_t, front ond ollnmont StUS.
4,ouv good uood llr-. oaml

tlrw, new tlr...

Transportation
NMw and uMCI oar HIM ptl'lon.
PIMH Hnd rMume to: P.O.
Box 15, PomlfGYi Ohio.
Now taking application•, tor ax-

.,.,a.nced douahnut maker and
lor port-timo/IUII-tlmo holp. Apply In 1"'"2n bllwHn 10 &amp; 4 11
Knight 1

P11try

Palace

Building
Supplies
Block, brick, - • lli,.Oo, wl,..
dowo,_llntolo, otc. Cloutll Wl,..
torw, "lo Grando, OH CaH 114245-11121.

529

Jackson Plko, Oolllpollo OH
41131.
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE INDIVIDUALS NEEDED. JOIN THE
ARMY Nollonol GuonltNi~·tlmo.
Monthly poychock, 20 yoor
Part Uma job? Work own hours?

3 br. home for aale, by own1r1,
2 m1. from town, elll an~lme

R.D. only wanted. 11 hourw per

acrtl. Westpoint· Ad., Hartford,

Dragonwynd Caftory Konno!.

w.v. $22,000. 1414·282-9218

.Parilan.

collect
7 naome, 2 acres, good Qlrdtn,

water. $15,000. &amp;i4·797·
Tho FrW1Ch Art Colony lo now chy
oc:copllng opplleotlono tor on 2744.

uperienced dln9 lnalructor.
Ballat· praterred. Tap &amp; Jazz a

plul. Call Taml

II

614-44ti-3U4

tor an appointment.

Want lndoll'!ndoneo ond tlnon-

clal aecurlty? Develope 2nd Incoma through your
own
bualnHI. Wa ahow you how.

7.99% · tlxad rata mortgage
money available, 2.75 points, 30
yr. term. "Loans available on a
fair and equal basis regardlen
or race, color, ancestry, nation..
orfgln, r~lgbl, nx or physic ..
handicap. WlHman Real Eatate,

114-446-3644.
,lll n- 3 br., homo toeatod on
114-192·7583. .
At. 160. Priced to move. 614·
Wontod: Exporfoneod Nurwlng 388.e711 .
Aatlt1anl, pla111

~pply

In par·

35 Lots &amp; .Acreage
2 ocro lot ,lohton, Mason 80,
publie watar, $20,000.00. 305-

46

Space lor Rent
ly - · 4 br., 3 112 batho,t4
-::6:.:-11::1183~.;--:;-;-:--;:---::=ter b«waan lll.m. I 4p.m. Mon 1)001, 18 acraa. Lots of dtek.
opoeoii 1400 oq.ft.
bam. $119,900 614·245·9579.
2 ac,. lot, Aahton, Muon 80, . Commorclol
thru Fri.
public water, $20,000.00. 305- Comer SICOnd an . Plna. Amplt
porklng. Coli lt4-44f.4248, 446Wanted: Rotlrod lady or eouplo IY ownal'll 2 bedroom homa. fMI-8983.
.
2321, or 446-4421.
to llva In up~alrs apartment of

eon at Scenic Hilla Nursing Cen-

elderly lady to assllt In cara

=

~... ~~~~n,

priced aow.rad,

only whln needld. 114-9i2-

Farmar't Homt Adminlt1ratlon
loan• available. Approved secWortt AI J-tome, tam $300 1 day. tional now on display. Franc:h
Taking Phone Ordert. Ptople Chy Mobile Homes. 814-446--

7321.

coil you! Brondo 714-897-3262.
Situation
Wanted

12

2 mobile home loti on lucat
Lana, approx. 1 ecrt. Phone
Somerville AIAhy, 304-675--3030

or 675-3431 .

11 Cubic ft.

s..r. frMzer about

tO yoan old. •n; 114-441-7131.

For~

tt7l $300.00.
LTD, Goltod
Y.e onQino,
runo
aoocl,
l'olornlno
Ooldlng $400 oo 31J4.45tl-tl38
'
. .
.
1178 Ford von-15 po-ngor,
Country Mobile Home Park. $1,500i floor turn•ce, t1 DO; pet
Routo 33, North ol Pomeroy. eago, olzo 21" x IS" long, w .
Lota1 rantala, parta, ulta. Clll Call S04.e7t-2etl or 176-1174.
614-oi2·747S.

Slam1N

1nc:l

Hlmoloyon klftono. ~ llud
llfVtce. 114 441 3e4( oftor 7
p.m.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
Point Pto-nt, 3Q4.e7tl-2013, tO
gal eot ' up •t4.H ond tO got
comjlloto $43.25.
Groom ond Supply 8hcp "-!
Grooming. All broodL All otyloL
Ia- Pot Food Doator. Julio
Wobb. Catllt-o0231.
Roglllorod Troolng Wol&lt;or Coon
Hound tor 1111. Molo, a yo1r1.
~'';.;00;;;..;•1;.;1.;.4-t.;.9;:WO:.:;:::;t9;.;•- - - ·
57
Musical

1t84

8077, ltmftod _.,lngo.

3p.m.

58

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

9340.
HARTFORD.e roomo bolh opo

Wa care for atdtrly and han-

axpw'lanca. LPN on c111. Low

Income homa. Calltl14-992.a&amp;73
aft• 7:00 p.m. for mora lnfor·
maUon.

SchoOls &amp;
Instruction
·RE•lRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 121 ........., Plko.
Call 114-4411-4317. Rog. No. ltl11·10851.
.
15

18

wanted to Do

Blacldop road, tlmbarj tprlna;
rur.. water available, $40.000.

lt4-44fl-nn.

Mult laava area. 3BR, horne 1

112 b1th1, exc. cond. ZO ecr...
CRy IC:hOOIItl mi. from town on

Fnon~z.~I:J.• Rd. m.voo. cou
Neat, ciNn, A-1 condhlon. 2
blkl downtown. lema block

Rentals
r

41 Houses for Rent
I room houeo, Krodol Pori!.
Phono JOWG-3741.
Fuml- s 1'00111 coltogo. 1 br.,
In lown, ,.,.,._ I cfiDOIIi
,.q'd. No IM!'L 11~54t.

---· _.,..._

l'

1

:J,1;n'l1,

I vPo..;tor·k

reenlist as a personalitr E;l
1211 Elvis: The Echo Wll
Never Die A re.treshing look
at lhe King oJ Aock'n Roll
·told by the people who knew
him best and loved him most.
(1 :00)
.
10:00 (]) 700 Club
8 (I) I!J) L.A. Law Sifuentes
represents a Mexican beer

company. (A) 1;1
(D Auto Racing
(iJ Ill (I) Primedme Live
With Sam Donaldson &amp; Diane
Sawyer
.
. (!) Newl E;l
(!) Moyers: A Second Look
Examine the Bill of Rights
throu~h the stories ol five
Amencans. E;l
·
!Ill e@ 'Knoll Landing'
hel 01 Knoll Landing Story

WAIT

THIS 15 JEST
. BETWIXT

A SECONT,

ME AN' YOU,

ELVINEY

LOWEEZ.Y!!

1 4-44f.

Cr k Ad

revolves around a cui de sac
on which family lives
intertwine. IJ

I!Jl Evening !lew•
10:30 (!) Maatorplece Theelrti
Harriet and Guy are reuniteo
in Athens by Prince Yakimov.

i

Davlaon Plumbing I Trenching

'
"
"'
=
-···~-· .
.
1030 Cere-..... ~ •

-

Cllltl
.....
lnd11100
....., _

="&amp;'-~j':o. :~':a

lltl.lo1011t.

104.S'IWtlt .

87

r
I

Z 0 NE0 S
sure - the - !"
~-T.~;r:.,l..:.:.-rl:...;lr-=;-~t:e-1 C) Comp_lete the chuc kle

1 -.l-.J-..1~-~...J...~
A

V

-

••

Coni)IICIIan

a

Cloolll Clle..
12:00 (]) MOVIE: 0. HHrY'I Full
HouM(2:00)

as

(1)1 ... AMA lupercroee
' (0:30)

t

. _ you IIIII ,_..:: II- today.
Allltaugll you mltlht
10, you -

=-'llllldllllp.
IIC. r.-e IWIIr ., SIIDttld H
llfOWIIIIG I I r to ohlnat or llltw woUr
pllniiOIIIIIIIhlt to •aarne~ 1n
,..1 scud tleaiQJmtld. Don't .,.me
or 011 ....._ !wen a
lhlft _ ,

--·"- - ·

!II Meg~um, P.l. Novel

..lnliltld
... -,., :p; lkllll
to "'-'*
In lhld be-

IPOII• thing.

...

0@ Pat Salak Sltow

tMIIIODIIII ~ you I milliOn .....
10M wily- _, ~. lmple!Mnt
!111m
,_.
_ ,"_
_ll!pll'leltce
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Upholstery

'·

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,

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

.

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Ill ...... lltow

I'

quoted

by filling in ·the missing wofds
you de'Velop from step No. 3 below ..

FORI. ' I.

... UNSCRAMBLE
U ANSWER

II

III

SCIAM-LETS ANSW!RS

8·1(.

Muslin - Occur - Befit - Hansom - CUN/CS

My Idea of creative marketing would be to own 16 doUghnul
shops and three weighHoss CLINICS.
. . ·

BRIDGE
.

NOiml
.Al062
.QJ62
U76

Unbalanced
no-trump hand

1-1'1-lt

.QB

. WEST

EAST

•Qsu

•u7

By James JIICOby
· If you hold an uns~pported king, it is
nice when tbe player who leads that
suit is on your left. For that reason,
South opened today's bidding with one
no-trump, One d~ not normally think
of a seven~rd suit as part of a balanced band suitable for no-trump, but
South's red ltinp were sjnppers that
would attain their maximum effectiveness only if South became
declarer.
After the no-trump opening, North
bid two clulls, looking for a 4-4 majorsuit fit. When South denied a major,
North bid the game right away: And
what if North had only in9ited game
with two no-trump? Despite minimu111
high-card points (lli), South sllould accept. If tbe seven-card club suit does
· ks sh ld
~~m:.ork, nine tric
\)U
come
When the queen of diamonds was
led, declarer, won and ran off tile club
suit. Beea- West thought be needed
to guard the king of spades, be dilcarded a diamond. that enabled declarer
.
to knock
out the ace of hearts and
make an overtrick.
At another table, South opened with
one club. West doubled for takeout.
When South jumped to three clubs,

•u•

.7H3
.10842

tAQJ3

• 953

.J4

••

SOUTH

.K lD

tK5

.AKJI0742

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Sooollo
INT

Well

Paoa
Paoa

2t

Norllo

2+

3NT

Opening lead:

Eut

Pua
Allpua

+Q

1---------:----.;;J
"·
North bid. three no-trump': AI'""''"" "8
- ........
spade was led by East, North could not
come to nine tricks without playing
hearts. West put East bact on lead
with tbe spade,queen. and • , diam!Mid
through dummy's K-&amp; let the c:oatract.
For sure, it's good bridge to open
one no-trump with a long good minor
suit and partied side-suit kinp. · ·

~-~-~~-·~·Br1&lt;tlo·w
"J~OfJCMdGims./1rl'lt~s
rriiUio/atlw;
u.. Jail! Olfraltl J~l .,. - •. - •t
e
Alnlf Boilh

1«&gt;-·
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··
...

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSlPH
ACFIOSS · 36 Crown
1 Palm leaf . 37· Greek peak
4 Musical
38 Knell
symbol
' 39 Function
8 Done with
9 Nocturnal
DOWN
lemur
1 Type of
11 Wall ·
molding
Kelly's
2U.S .
crea1ion
mlli1ary
Yeaterdey'a Ariewer
12 Road
. decoralion13 Withered 25 Type of
and secret
3 Nigerian 15 Likewise
anesthetic
14 Yale
4 Red wine 18 Cross out 28 Call il
student
5 Thea1er 21 "I am the
quits
· 15"Whose
box
captain
29 Spirit
Honey
8 Before
of my - "
lamp
-You?"
7 Allain
22 Nureyev 's 31 James 16 Scottish
contenllield
Jones
river
ment
23 Night light 34 Chairman
17 Brain (sl.)
8 Frank
24 Stitching
19 That
1 0 Derrick
term
35 Mrs. Hoover
woman
-::--rr-,.,.-..20 Breeding
place
21 Except
22 Rambo's
knlle
23 Dawdle
24 Unscathed
25 - and fish
28 Tree
27"- ·
Academy· ·

(1984 film)

-..

-.
-.

..

•

30Beverage
31 One (Ger.)
32 Crisscross
33 "Gypsy"
stage
star
35. Film
director

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'f.E~- Here's how to work It:

1117

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

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

!Ill USA Today .,.
i1J SparU Tan!lllt · .

, . . . , . (April • " • . , Don't 1111
your . . . lhOI1 today..,.,. If • 1111111"

nlntlilondltlon. t7800 l'lnll.~1~
.

I

(l)c-.c
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e (I) Nlaltlllne ,..,

11..-dlltr ~ ktRUIIICII

•r Ill lllodo, 110- run-

.- ......._... _

..

lntentlilnl

from
blltlnd
"" tile rille
- Wllln
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poeed,
yo.~ ""'
ol 1*111
con-

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I

.----::-------,hope I break even today, 1

Ill Mllml VIce
lit You Cell h A Stir
11:311 (]) llalmln
0 W IIJ) Tonight Sltow
® l!portiCenler (0:30)

I

~ While al the racetrack a
·. .....;R;..I~ '.:U:,....:..:H...;E;...::S:,.....--11
1
r
1
.
;:; young
tenow turned trom the
.
_ .
.
betting window and said, "I

@ Moneytlne

n.,. taclttv If

-~...,....,Voup

!Ill Ill @

..

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•liD AreeniO Hell (1 :00)

., All lltoulcl

' you qtillelly 01 all lit ... ~

(I) (iJ . . (I)

I!Jl Newo

"*"lllr·
llrGb 10 - m e l dlllort tile-·

1174 110 ....... IliON btllldour,

I

•

~ wltll cere today llld you
lhould ~. plel~ Clay. ~
It only IM• one 11-.1 brullt

· · rotn,
Watorvolu .Haullnto
,._,.blo
. dl ..
CIOVIIINMINT SIIZID YlhloiH - . 2,000 to o,ooo capocHV:
Glotoma, _... wolll, oto. Call
.100. . lko
1

11:00 (]) htmen

IC!timee•.
PIICII (Pell.. Msrall•) Select your

Mill ....... IWftrll
go 11r.o011t1y 1n .,_. •

llD Berney Miller

®Newo
Iii On Stege

bell today. Howe-. lhlllo only true of
lllluallone whenl you a.n your reward&amp;,
nol with gomblee or get-rlclt-qulck

Olf¥lllllo-Chl~ .~. . .

81 Fann Equlpmtnt

of a hOusekeeper .

1:30 G (I) a5l FM T1&gt;d tries to
persuade his ex-wife to

~Otlt.

Gladys never was much

,

1l
~~~

tor Rent

I!Jl Larry King Llvel

II) Thul'lday Night Fights

I

t't.:!l:".....·

, or 441-7130.

Mobile Homes

···-.-·

0.0

thinks is an extraterrestrial .
(A) E;l

J'AMic eAILEY~A
l!&gt;l!&lt;n-ID\Y~~! '

l-

1200 novlgoblo wolor front.

ochoolo. Drlvo by 110 Stall
Strlll.

n•

II)@

wl- ........... ... . . locko, drain• I water Ann, 814-44.,
0151. Mornlnp or Evonlngo.
rolly-1alsi.eo11.
tiiU Chryolor Now York••• good 84
Electrical &amp;
ohopo loodod, SOU71-2722:
~afrlgaratlon
1111 ford EooM Wagon, 11t50;
1171 Cho3t'e':~notlo comoro, RNidontlal or commorolo!
.718.814-2
.
wiring. now "' -lrO: ·
IIIGirlclan. Rldonour
1111 Cho11f0111 Spoctrum 2
Eloetrleol, 304-1176-1711.
•,
"--·
rod, a ooood. front "'"'''
d~vo, 47,000 miiOL Ono -"!~
uanomlcll 41 m~ $3&amp;00.uu 85 General Hauling
104..112-32011.
J 6 J Wllor 8orvtee. Swlmmlna
1111 POI'illoo Suilblid QT, a dr.
Willi. Call 114'
PIIPI, outo. lrln:~.:~..,.
........ ~·1
II I AWllor Sorvlce. Poolo, cl•
CIOVIRNMENT IIIZID Ylh._ ferM, niiL lm....tlat•t,OOO or
...... •too. , ......... =~-- doUvory. Call 304-·

vaulted living room; 11 acrea,
p,..,en oU I pt welli 2 rentalt,
1 carriage houH; On Campaign
Crook 112 mi., from nvor wfth

114-2

CMvltte,

1uto., PSIPB, elr, ,_.....!!'liM, I'Mr

Phone 30W7~24D.

Largo 2 llory houoo, 20140

.dlcapDid In our home. 28 y11r1

Cttevv

g
The.Equallzer A
girl seeks help for a man she

Plumbing &amp;
11114 ford E-~. 4 - · oil"' 82
doni 4 ooood; Good -hlon.
· Heating
.1450. 114 -837$ lfllf 5:00
p.m.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
,
IIIU 112 llloreUry Lyn1 12,000
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Plno
mi., outo. $2500; 111U Oodgo
Golllpollo Ohio
Ornril, •••· air, arulee. control,
121100. lt4-441-17St or lt4-44f. Col.l &amp;14-141-3888 or lt4-44f.
oWn. ·
·
7104.
IIIU Chov- Monti Carlo CL, Pill'! . H In or Plpo It out. C.W.

prox. 4 acr'lt, Wnt Point Road,
Hartford, &amp;22,000. Call coUld 1·

614-742-3018 bafora

Ill (I) Miulon:
impoulbltt IMF goes on
deadly mission that costs
I hem one of their members .
(RIC
·
(!) (!) Myoteryl Harriet
enlis15 Lord Peter's aid to
solve the mysterious events.

~~~l;n~st~ru~m~e~n~ts~:.j~ cluteh
• &amp; 9 021~!1"'
•
· ! ,
4110t3betw•n
p.m., 1,1~
' 4$4o1. ea
•
lndl¥iduol guhor
Sopllc Tonk Pumplng_Silo, Qolllo
l!olllnnora{ Hrlouo
Co. AON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
1 11114 Cougor, loodod, SI,OOO.
Brunlconlo
Muolc,
. !!!4.!!!".•loaclod. P,SOO. 61 1- JKkoon, OH t-B00-537.e5211.
Wamalay IMtructor, IUI-445- - -

61'4·282-9218.
Pe·rson nHdad to thara living
Houoo
- 138 S. Park Orlvo.
txpentH with Rio Granda
atudant.

(1 :00)

Services

-dill..,, 2 d-. -nod by
lady. Call S04.el'l-1801.
1171 Chivy Novo I cyl. Runo 81
• Home
fino, · ~
' Improvements
lotion.
$300." - uc. · - - 1177 Nowi)Ofl, lolr cond., $200.,
BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Pontlao ;i50 motor, axe. cond.,
Uncondhlonol tltotlmo gu...,...
$200.114-367-o613.
too. local raloroncn fumlohod .'
117$ Chovollo, tight bluo, 4 Frao ootlmotN. Call COIIICI t.'
apd., $.tOO. Cood wDrk car. 614- 114-237-G468, doy or nlghl R o;
3'11-2454.
a•r•••••m
lenl
Wolllprootlng.
1971 Allm Charger AC, auto, PS,
now tlroo. 79,1100 mlloo. $1800 Filly Troo Trimming, otump
114-211-11118,
.. movol, coll304-l75-f33t;
..
1110 Chovy Chotlon 1475, 1178 Ron'o TV Sorvlco, opoclollzlna'
Ooclae · Cl)ollongor $4211, 1171 In ZonMh otoo oorvlelng moil;
Pontloc Catollno $580. 814-44fo othor bron~o. Ho- collo, oloo
1711 or 446-7104.
oomo oppllonco -Ira. wv•1
304-1176-231111 Ohio · 11 4-4411982 Buick Skyhowll, cloon in- 2454
oldo ond out, olr -Iori,
·
54,000 1111ioL S2,tOO. 114-441' Rotory or eoblo toot drilling.
1743.
·
wotlo eomplolod oomo ~
Pumnp olloo ond oo-•-·
t982 block · TNno-Am, T-Topo,
41
··-·
Bolgo lntonor, now tlm.t. Alplno . ~1111
::=::;802
=.·:--:--.,....---­
otoroo oyotom, PS, PB ,.w, Air, ' SWEEPER ond oowlng moehlno
re-l&gt;uiH onglno, runo 1lko now. """''· po~o. ond oupplln, Pick
. Lookl Sharp. 114-441-1758.
up lnd delivery, O.vl1 Vacuum
Cloonor, ono hotl milo up

Avon: $5. to oto~. Wo ooll "Sidn :1.:.14:.-4:..:4fo=-::7725.:.::.:.·- - - - So Soft". l14•9'il2·7t80.
1 roomo ond bath. On 3 to 4
WMk; W.I.C. eoun..llng. Mtlga
County Hoanh Dopl. 'It 1-992·
1121.

~ Thurlday Night Thunder

,

rn

1073 Cltallna Pontiac_ IICIIIent

retirement, college aaalttance.

304475-3150 or 1·800.t42-3511.

-8:05 (I) MOVIE: Deliberate
S'tranger (NR) (2:00)
8:30 8 (I) 1iSJ DIHerenl World
.Kim anxiously awail!l the
results ol a pregnancy test.
(RIC
(!) World Of Cartooning
9:00 D W I!Jl Che2r1 Rebecca
promises sam anything if lie
finds the earring she lost. (A)

79

Whoolcholra • now or uood. 3
WhHiod oloetrle ICoollf. Call
Roglfl Medical, t.-.eafl-2t ()(,

Nallhvllle Now

.

L-..1--L..,....l-...1--1 ,

e

• I!)) Andy Grlffl1h
II) Miami Vice

l~llo~ loy ClAY I . POLLAN ....;::.·- - - -

----_;,
'-

Cln'PTOQUOTE

1·17
UM.
YARU

ARQAZSC

PROM

UOEYOVB

OXF.O

EZZPBVROU

MAO

OM

XV

-.

TXPZX

XEIIVR

OM

01111 Twilight Zone

i1J llt?WINigllt
.
ONewMite.._
.

•tlnhllrHow

UMKVLMBC VQUV. - BMR KEYJAPU
Yat...a.f'• Catjlt••••tes DO NOT SAY ALL
· YOU KNOW, BlTT ALWAYS KNOW WHAT YOU SAY
-CLAUDIUS
.
\

It;'\ ......... '" "' '

..

'

�'
PIPIIIIU-18-The

o.ily Sa:1tiull

Poniasoy-MioMaport, Ohio

Cubs hike
lead·in NL

Thundsty, August 17, 1989

Thunderstonns continue. to hit the Plains, South SuJier .Lotto pot grows to $12 ·million
By United Press lnlernatlonal
'•

Clouds covered much of the
country overnlgllt, disappointing
stargazers hoping to catch a
. glimpse of a rare lunar eclipse,
while thunderstorms moved
across the high Plains, parts of
the SouU\west and the East
Coast.
The National Weather Service
·said humid and unstable air
caused strong thunderstorms
and high winds that swept across
the Plains states. One-Inch hall
· fell at Mitchell, Neb.; and dimesized · hall was reported near
Hemingford.
• High winds hit several areas,
with gusts reaching 47 mph at
Dalhart, Texas, forecasters said.
Strong thunderstorms al so

·
.were scattered across Arizona.
The storms featured ·torrential
downpours of ralri and strong
winds that caused dust storms .
More than an Inch of rain was
measured In an hour at Gila
Bend, Ariz. , andhlghwlndslnthe
area blew out lights at a local
hotel.
Humid air flowing out ot the
Gulf of Mexico also· triggered
thunderstorms across Flqrtda
and the middle and southern
Mlantic coast states.
.A strong ·thunderstorm blew
down trees at Fort Lauderdale,

Fla .. 'late Wednesday, the NWS
said, and some of the trees
caused a warer main to burst.
There . also Will! . minor home
damage and doW)Ied wires from
the storm elsewhere In the area.
Treesalsowere· ~nockeddown

by thunderstozn:i· . winds and
blocked roads between Dadeland
andWestMlarnl, F1a: lnMontgo·
mery, Ala., neary2lnches of rain
tell in a 2 ¥., hour period.
The eclipse was the first In
seven years vlslb.le east of the
Mississippi, bu i frustrated moon·
watchers In mo.s t states only

Oh io Lottery
Pick-3

·East Division

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio's and the total pr ize payout was
ca11ght fleeting glimpses of the Super Lotto jackpot went un· $856,400.
celestial oddity as clouds co·
clal~ In Wednesday night's .
In the accompanying Kicker
vered nearlY 60 percent ·of the· drawing, Increasing the top prize game, there was one winner of
country.
to $1~ rnllUon for Saturday·~ the $100,000 grand prize. The
The Initial phase, called the game.
.
winning Kicker combination was
penumbra;· began at· 8:23 p.m .
None of the tickets sold for the 456159.
EDT and the moon gradually midweek game listed the six
In· addition to the one ticket
grew darker until It was com· winning numbers -a, 15, 21, 23, that had the six Kicker numbers
pletely obscured by ':Earth' s 29 and 37, a lottery commission In order, eight had the first five,
shadowatabout10: 15p.m. EDT. spokesman said Thursday. The whlchpays$5,000; 70hadtbeflrst
The moon remained com- jackpot was worth $9 million.
four, which pays $1,000; 730 had
pletely' In shadow until about
There were 197 tickets that had the fir st lhree, which pays $100;
11:56 p.m. EDT, when It gradu· five ofthenumbersforpayoffs of and 7,396 had !he first two, which
ally lightened and resumed Its $1,000 and 8,792 tickets had four pays $10.
normal glow at about 12: 56 a.m. of the numbers, good for $75.
Kicker. ticket saleS totaled
EDT. ·
Ticket sales totaled $5,553;055 $822,038.

122
Pick-4

Page 3

•
.Co

Of Our Year-End

Granted
defeat
_judgment

*

,.

..,,

-

Or Eqle Prom ·

•The Ohio Valley Anto W~ehollte"
'

.

...

26 Cants

.

.

•

Tlu'nplke of GaWpoUe Sa:vs "Yes"
To SavfDIYou Money! .
We .Have What You W~ And
. ' ..
. We Want You To Shop Us! _.
We Must Move Our 1989In.entory To
Make Room For The 1990 Models!
Selection Hu Nenr Been Better And
Prices Are Lower Than Ever Before!
Don't MilS This Chance To Get Your
Absolute But Dealt
Now Is The Time To Buy A New
Ford, Lincoln, Mercury, Jeep,

YEAR-liD SIIIIGS!

2 Section s. 14 Pages

A r,llultimedia Inc. NewiPaper

Jones may run for
•
state, representative

. *3,. . . ·.
YEAR liD UI.E

. A default judgment of
$18,648.77 has been granted Bank
One, Athens, !rom Herbert B.
Miller, et al, In a foreclosure
·action In Meigs County Common
. Pleas Court.
.. Bruce Dean Swift and John
.Martin Spires have been ap·
pointed by the court as Special
Deputy Shertfrs for the Meigs
.County Sheriff's Department.
The court haslssueda restrain-ing order against the defendant
'In the case of Fred~;~ M. Bays
versus Robert W. Bays.
Dismissed was the case of
·.Great American lnsurancy Com·
pany, et al, against S&amp;G Truck·
lng, et a!.
FinallY, Common Pleas Judge
Fred Crow Ill has stepped down
as presiding authortty In the case
of P&amp;M Paving versus Bob
Campbell, due to conflicts of
Interest resulting from his
former law practice or his
·former term as Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney .

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 18, 1989

r htad 1989

'•

•

Low tonight In mid 60s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday, mostly cloudy.
Hlghn ear 80. Chance ofraln50
percent.

3124

Vot.40. No.7J. M

3rd Big

-·

.

-·.:I

GELDING CHAMP - This Is .t he champion
gelding lrom Tuesday's Meigs County Fair Draft
Horse ~how. The horse Is owned by Wendy James,

of Gl!ysviUe, who was unavailable for the pl&lt;,;ture.
Holding the horse ·Is her father, Byron James,
Guy,svllle.

~--~-----------------------

., ~

-------------------~

•

•

:Qy NANCY YOACHAM
Rlglit now I have my hands full
Although Bennett discussed his
trying to do a decent job as
Dally Sentinel Staff
own Ideas as to the needs of the
· Ohio Republican Party Chair· · county commissioner."
siate regarding each of these
man, Robert T. Bennett, anSaid Commission!'r Manning • issues , he pointed out that be was
nounced Thursday during a R\Jush, "Rich Jones would make
only speaking for himself ahd not
meeting with Meigs (:ounty GOP a great state representative, but
for the candidates, whoever th e
officials, that Meigs Commis· we'd hate to los!' him on the
candidates may turn out to be.
stoner Richard Jones is being county commissioners' board."
Present for Thursday 's meet ·
considered as a possible' ·candlBennett pointed out that It wl!l
lng In addition to Bennett;
date ·for State Representative be some time before the final
Commissione r Jones, who also
'from this area.
announcement Is made as to who
serves as chairman of the coun·
The Ohio House and Senat!' the 1990 candidates will be. " It's
ty's Republican Executive Comseats of Mary Abel and Jan really a local decision. My job Is
riiittee ; and Commissioner
Michael Long have already been to keep the process moving. You
Roush, w~&gt;re M ~lgs Commistargeted bY State GOP leaders as can be sure the possible candi·
sioner David Koblentz ; Evelyn
seats they ·w ant to recapture In · · dates we'.ve approached will be Clark, Meigs Republican Centra)
the 1990 election, Bennett said . talking to each other and reach- Committee chairman; Paul GeJones Is on the list with a few lngsomedecislonsonthelrown."
rard; and David Payne, state
other area Republcans who are
Bennett also pointed out that
Republican party field director,
considered potential candldat!'s this Is the earliest that state GOI:' southeaster.n region.
for !he positions.
)eaders have ever started planJones noted that in his 12 yea rs
Commented Commissioner
nlng campaign strategies.
as executive committee chairJones regarding Bennett's sug·
According to Bennett, the mai.IJ man. this is the first time a stalf
gestion of his possible candidacy , issues in the next state election chairman has been to Meigs
"I'm flattPred to even be cons!· will be education. drugs, and
County. "! think that speaks wef!
· dered but I've given It no thought.
economic development and jobs . for Benm:tt. " Jones said. ·

~"'~·.

'

·Follow ABCs,
:leaders told
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio Superintendent of Public
Instruction Franklin Walter told
his county, city and local counter·
parts Wednesday to follow tbe
alphabet - from A to Z - to
make their schools better.
He issued his "ABCs for School
Leaders in 1989·90'' to some 1,000
attendees at an annual admlnist·
ators' conference. ·
' 'There are three basic con·
cerns \)f school administrators,"
said Walter, "concerns that
come before the complexities of
reform. Those three concerns
are attendance, achievement
and dropouts.
·
"First, we've got to get students Into the classroom," he
said. "Secondly, we have to help
them achieve more than a basic
level of proficiency . Then, we
llave to keep them in the
classroom and learning through
graduation.··
Going through the letters of th!'
alpha bet , Walter emphasized the
Importance of planning,, creatlv·
Hy, collaboration, hard work'·and
compassion in attaining educa·
Ilona! excellence.
He told the superintendents to:
-Accentuate th!' positive and
be attentive to all variables.
-I;!elleve In yourself and
others.
-Care about your school, staff
and students.
-Do everything possible to
make your school the best.
-Emphasize equity, student
a c hievement and teacher
performance.
· - Find new avenues to success.
- Gain community support.

tiOW IN STOCK!

s1500° 0 .,CASH BACK

'89 FOitD RArtGER
.
XLT 4 X 2

·ag FORD BRONCO II
STOCK NO. 9795

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Ctyotal Slut Cltarcoot mttolllc
Medium Gray Cloth Clploln Choir~
Proltrrecl Equlpmtnl Packogo
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XlTTrlm
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$16,671

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news

Veteran• Memorial
Wedneaday admissionsPatti Johnson, Rutland .
Wednesday discharges
Evelena Fet IY.

Flll'lllB, Racine. Owner of the Junior champion
mare Is Bryon James, of Guysville.

9

1915 CHEVY 5-10
=-~

· CHAMPION MARES - The tknlor champion
mare, at lett, from Tuesday's Meigs County Draft .
Horse Show, Is owned ·b y Herb 'E rvin, ol Ervin

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• Eloctrlc Ali&amp;'FM Sttroc/Ciooolto/Cicck
11205175 R15 SL Owl All Soooon Tlroo
ol.ug,gogo Rack
Tiro Cltrlor!Cargo Covor

'

• 5 Speed Manuol 010 Transmloolon
• Brt Lew-Mount Swing Away Mirrors
• Body~ldt prctoctlon Moldlngo

Dally stock prices
('As of 10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; l.oewi

~ospital

XLT 4 X 4

A. P.R.
FINANCING
AVAILABLE ON

Stocks

Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 29%
AT&amp;T ....... ... .. ....... .............. 39Y,
Ash land 0!1 .. ... ..... ...... ....... .. 38
Bob Evans .................. .... .... 15¥.,
Charming Shoppes ... .. ......... 16'h
City Holding Co ... .. ...... ... .... 15'1.
Federal· Mogul ......... ........... 23%
Goodyear T &amp;R .......... ..... ... .. 55
Heck's .... ........................... .. 'h
Key Cen turton ........ ... ... .. ... .1234
Lands' End .... .. ... ...... .... ;... ... 27
t.lmlted Inc .......... ... .......... .35%
Multimedia Inc . ..... ... ...... ... .107
Rax Restaurants .................. 2% . ·
R,obblns &amp; Myers ................ 17'h
Shoney's Inc . .. .. ..... ............. 11%
Wendy's Inti ........ .. .... ..... ..... 5%
Worthington Irld .... .. .. ..... ..... 25

2.9°/c,

STROi.UNGTO VICTORY -1nnii•IJ1o.811toellher...U611,

BuffJ, on wallldurln&amp;&amp;lle ~ ~1!11!1 pel...ompett&amp;loll. Duanw•

compe&amp;IDI Ia lhe 11 ud under dlvt.loa. Durlll&amp; &amp;be walk &amp;be dol
barely moved an Inch u Ita owner paraded around the lhow riD&amp;.
'

BIG DISCUSSION - Left to rl&amp;bt, Meigs
County Republican Central Committee Chairman
Evelyn Clark, Meigs Commissioner Manning
Roush; Meigs Co~mlssloner Richard Jones and
GOP Slate Chalnnan Robert T. Bennett discuss
what they believe wlll be the main Issues In ned

year 's state elecllon. Bennett's meeting with local
Republlcan leaders took place Thursday at the
Meigs County Courthouse. Bennett announced
during the meeting that Richard Jones Is being
considered as a possible candidate for state
representative from this area.

Charge girl with disorderly conduct

One man was arrested and a
A third man has been ar·
16-year·old girl will be charged
ralgned In the murder of a
With disorderlY conduct a s the
Putnam County, W.Va., sheriff's
result of separate Incidents at the
deputy yesterday. Also chargei:l
Meigs County Fair on Thursday.
with the fatal shooting were two
GalUpolls men. ·
·
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Rayrriond Huck, 34, of Crow
Department reported that 21·
year-old . Nicholas McKnight,
Creek, W.Va., was charged with
first degree murder and fourth · . Happy Hollow . Road, was ar·
degree arson during his arraign·
rested for disorderly conduct and
.ment yesterday before Cabell
removed from th!' fairgrounds by
County Magistrate Jack Neal.
deputies, who cited him to Meigs
County Court.
Huck Is being held In Kanawha
County Jail.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said
Also arrested and arraigned on
first degree murder before Mag· the female will be charged with
Is trate June Sovine were two disorderly conduct by lntoxlca·
Robert Gray, 31, Brentwood tlon. The d~&gt;partment Is lnv!'stl ,
Drive, Gallipolis, and Robert B. gating who furnished the alcohol
to the youth. She was released to
Bates, 32, Eastern Avenue.
Gallipolis.
her parents.
Gray Is . being held In Mason
Deputies also responded· to"' ii ·
Counfy Jail In Point Pleasant,
with Bates . lodged In Putnam
reported fight at the fairgrounds
near the highway garage. How County Jail In Winfield.
ev!'r,
when units arrived there
Hearings to set bond for the
was no fight In progress and a
three men were pending before
group at the scene was dispersed.
Putnam Circuit Judge Clarence
Deputies also Investigated two
Watson as of presstime this
·
accidents Thursday night. The
morning.
· The three were. charged with
first occurred at 8: 30p.m. on SR
the first degree murder or 124 at Bowman' s Run.
Robert G, Beegle, Rt . 3.,
Putnam County Sheriff's Deputy
Racine, was traveling east on SR
John Janey, 32, of Poe a, W.Va.
124 In his 1988 Mercury, when his
Janey was found at approxl·
car struck a deer. The deer was
mately l : 30 a .m. yesterday with
kllled and moderate damage was
8! gunshot wound In !he side and
head.
·
·
reported to the 'vehicle.
:According to various reports,
Another accident occurred at
Huck's Insurance company had 10: 15 p.m . on !he SR 7 bypass at
Informed law enforcement offi- Rock Springs . Paul Evans: Ra·
cials that several fires had been . cine, was making a left turn onto
reported at the Huck's property US33 south and failed to yield to a
In tbe past few monlhs.
semi travellrig east on SR 7
''We bad reuon to believe the striking !he truck.
fires were anon and reuons to
Light damage was reported to
believe arson wu goJna to be both vehicles and Evans was
· • committed !here (Wednesday cited for failure to yield. .
"''ht) ," !13ld Putnam County
Deputies also reported that a
.·; Continued on page 10
Windshield and back glass In

v(!hlcles was dama ged on King
Ridge near Harrisonville. The

complaintant declined to file
charges.
..

Tractor pull ·'still popular
The antique tractor pull was a
popular feature of Wednesday
night's activities at the 126th
Meigs County Fair despite the
heavy downpour of the afternoon
and the muddy condition of the
center field.
Taking first place in the
3500-3800 pound class for the $75
pr~&gt;mlum wa s the 1929 John
Duerr tra ctor .of Robert Ed·
wards, Letar t, W. Va . It was the
only premium winner In the
class.
In the 4501·5500 pound class,
the first place went to Edson
Hollon,· Racine, with his 1952
tractor, second to Henry Hart of
Burlingham with 1943, third to
James Cotterill , I?omeroy, with a
1943; fourth to Ted Smith , Ra·

cine, with a '41, and fifth ro Ben
Ewing, Pomer oy , with a 43.
In the 3501-4500 pound class,
Gale Diehl of Letart , W.Va . with
a '37 took first; Rodney Keller,
Pomeroy, wi th a '35, second;
~ert Edwads. J r., Letart . w.
.. with a '36, thi rd; Br ia n
Windon, Pome roy , with a ':l4,
fourth; and Roger Tayl or. I.Ptart , W. Va., with a '36. fifth.
Taking first in the 550J.6:\00
pound class was Larry Holl" nd ,
Racine, wit h a 1951Jractor. Ot her
winners In the class were Roger
Cotterill, Al bany, with &gt;I ·oo
tractor , second ; 'Tim Smi th,
Chester. third with a '52 trac tor :
Ben Ewin g. Pomeroy , fo urt h.
with a '43 tractor. and Ted Smit h.
Racine, fifth , with a '51 tract or.

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE ·
FR.IDAY, AUGUST 18, 1989
6:00 P.M.-Shady River Shulfiers- Hill Stage
6:45 P.M.-Dairy Sweepstakes Presentation and
·
Junior Fair Market Rabbit. Steer, Lamb a nd Hog Sale
7:30 P .M.-Truck Pull- Center Field
•8:00 P .M.-Restoration Jazz Band
SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 19S9
8:45 A.M. - Open Class Rabbit Show
1:00 P .M.-Pretty Baby Contest-' Show Rin g o n Hill
1:00 P .M.-Draft Horse Show -Center Field
•1: 00 P . M . ~Garden Tractor Pull
2:00 P .IVI.-Peggy GJllesple Stylettes Twirling- Hill Stage
4:00 P.M.-Barbara's School of Dance- Hill Stage
4: 00 P.M.-Quarter Horse Races
4:00 P .M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull
5:30 P.M.-Countcy Blend Band, Hill Stage
7:00 P .M.-Tractor Pull- Center Stage
•s: op P .M.-Butch Wax and The Glass Packs
•Grandstand attraction
--'----~-

' \~)
;

' .

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