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                  <text>Pllu•

Ohio-Point

20, 1989

W.Va.

Entertainment · announced for
Farm-City Day event SepL 9
.

By Connie while
GalllaSWCD

TO PERFORM AT FARM CITY DAY -The
Slaad3' River Shutners will perform at this year's

Money Ideas

Farm-City Day event ln. Gallla · Colin~ on
l!alurday, Sept. 9; ·

· Equities

GALLIPOLIS - Every "yeah· · tor) is considerably lower than a relative basis, the Over- thebut" reason given
why the the peaks reached during the . Counter ma~kets have not performed as well as New York
summer of 1987.
market cannot
Stock
Exchange Issues.
This relatiVely low level of
vance Is well·
(Mr.
Evans Is ao lavestment
turnover , In relationship · to the
known to the InBroker
for
The Ohio Co~pany ln.
peaks of 1987, suggests that
vestment
their
Gallipolis
otuce.)
investors generally do no believe
community
In the sustalnablllty of the
since the Fall of
current rise. Before the equity
1987. Each has
market generates a meanl.ngful
been rehashed
peak In share prices, turnover
over and over
must
Increase slgnlficantly from
again - these "yeahbuts" are
current
levels.
simply not new news!!
This
development
·would reWhat Is news, is the fact that all
flect the fear of the next Impend·
major stock averages, exceptfor
ing decline being replaced with
the Dow Jones Industrial Averthe greed of .missing the next
age, are trading at all-time highs
major advance.
In spite ofthe "yeah buts" .
One segment of the market·
Additionally, no evidence curplace
that Will benefit from this
rently exists that suggests a top
transition
from fear to greed will
for equity priCes Is Imminent.
be
small
capitalization stocks.
Price and unit volume are two
Over
the
past
twelve months. on
key elements to our analysis of
companies, Industries, and the
marketplace. Volume trends In•
dlcate the strengthofthedemand
for a product/service, while
price adjusts for the strength or
weakness in tliat demand. ·
•
.. Cumulative breadth (a mea~llre ofthe total number of stocks
rising or declining In price) of all
stocks on the New . York Stock
Exchange continues to be In a
strong uptrend.
Currently, It stands at the peak
levels reached during 1987 when
equities traded at all-time high
prices. Its present level Is consistent with the performance of
!he broad-based market averages, which have just r~ently
exceeded their all-time highs.
On the other hand, · turnover
(the marl&lt;et value of shares
traded divided by the total
market value of all shares - a
demand-driven market- Indica'

to

GAI,.LIPOLIS - Down home
fund and excitement Is what the
Shady · River Shufflers plan for
you at this year' sFarm City Day.
The event Is hosted by the
Herman 8t Bernice and Lloyd &amp;
Marlene Wood famUy at Gage
tram U ,a .m. to a. . p.m. The
entertainment wUI begin arter
the wagon tours around 1 p.m.
Clogging Is a·tradltlonalAppal·
achlan style dance, one of which
seemed to be way of relaxation
for people In days gone by and
still remains so for people of all
ages today. • Not only In the
Appalachians, but down on the
farm.
.
HOedown dancing to good old
fiddle music on a Saturday night
was alwa:,os greM excitement.
That same excitement Is present

a

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seciind year at the Ohio State
for ·the Shady RJver Sl\titners.
·
Fair.
They are planning to show you
They are active In community
how they keep trac)ltlon alive
projects
such as .entertalnmeni
with their traditional dance
for
the
senior
Citizens, chlldrens
spirit.
hilspltals,
grand
openings, and
The SRS team consists of about
..
30 active members ranging In school func,lons. ·
It has been a busy season so far
age from 3 to over 40 from our
for the team, appearing at the
trl-county and surro11ndlng area.
They enjoy "meetlng people and Middleport Forth of July celebrapromoting "clogging". They tion and Ariel 'rheatre In Galllpo-' .
have done exhibitions for over 3 lis on July 3rd during the'"Out.ol
years at benefits, al11mnl the Attic'' craft festival. There IS.
toattenct
dinners, co11nty fairs, various stUI a long )ls(of,evel!ts
4
al)d
enjoy.
·,
holidaY. ·ev'e nts, presentation
See you down on the farm!
fu nctlons, and this wUl be the

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.g GREEN FEES FOR THE
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PRICE 'OF

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With purclla" of cart ro•tal.
Subject to aw.-.alllity - - t call for tH finN.
,
Present co..an at
of play.

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OVERALL GRAND CHAMPS - The grand
champion pullers In SaiiD'day's final kiddie
tractor puU at the Meigs County Fair were, from
left to right, Ja11on Roush, of Pomeroy,ln the 56 to
75 pound weight class, and Jonathan ·Smith,
Racine, In the 35 to 55 pound class. Winners from
each preceding day of kiddie' tractor puUing

:'-t ., .
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Three winners from three age
classes made the list of national
:

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lhe.New Geilemtion of

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quallflfed for Salurday's grand champion pull-off. .
Both of the grand champions received trophies
' and a $:10 dollar bill for their outstanding efforts. ·
The popular kiddie pulls were sponsored this year
by Dan Smith, Auctioneer, Racine, and Ferrel·
!gas, Minersville. With the grand champions are
Smith and Bob Sheppard, ol Ferrellgas.

:Meigs children qualify,for
Nationai,~-Kitldie·~"~raet6r Pull· ·
Nine Meigs County children
qualified Saturday at the Meigs
County Fair to participate In the
· National Kiddie Tractor Pull to
be heJd In )ate January at the
Ohio Power Show, held at the
. Ohio State Fairgrounds in
Columbus.

Miller promoted

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1 Section. ., 0 Pages . 25 Cent~
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

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Cliffside Golf Club 1
Spe_eial
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POMEROY - Five Gallla
County employees have been
recognized for their years of
service with the Meigs Division
of the Southern Ohio Coal
Company .
Recognized were:
-15 years, Robert E. Adkins,
VInton, Mobile equipment opera··
tor at Raccoon No. 3 mine; Gary
L McComas, Vinton. surface
utllltyman at Raccoon No. 3
mine; William L. Oiler. Vinton.
flreboss at Meigs No. 2 mine and
Nell D. Watson, Northup, section
superviser at Meigs No. 2 mine,
- 5 years, Randall L. J.ones,
Thurman. section superv.Jser at
Meigs No. 2 mine.

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) The 1991) farm bill debate has
started and farm groups are
basing their positions on three
main Issues.
Carl Zulauf, agricultural ecort·
omist at Ohio State University,
says most groups agree that they
don't want cuts In farm support
ald. They also want more flexibilIty to plant other crops on
program crop base acres and
want the Agrlctiltural Stablllza·
Uon and Conservation Service to
11pdate the yield levels used to
determine government program
payments to farmers .
Updating the ASCS yields on
C()rD alone could mean as much
aa S500 mllllon In · additional
s11pport payments.

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Coal finn honors ·
Gallia employees

Debate underway

Page4

Low near 70 tonight. ·Chance
of rain GO percent. Tuesday,
high In mid 80s. Chance olraln
60 percent.

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OLDSMOBILE

We're _Gen_e Johnson Chev.-Oids.
Ga~hpolls' newest Oldsmobile® dealer. We invite
you to visit our spadous
showroom. You'11 see the
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Pick-3
263
Pick-4
8574
Super lotto
5·6-12-14-19-29
Kicker 561614

preview held
Saturday

GHEVROLET

CHESHIRE
Dennis J.
Miller, Rt. 2, Patriot was pro·
mated at the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek Station. effective August 16, 1989.
from G11ard In the Personnel ·
Department to Associate Chemist in the Chemical Depart·
mentm, according to announce·
men! today by Plant Manager
Raymond H. Blowers. Jr.
Miller. who joined OVEC as a
guard In 1979, is scheduled to·
complete requirements In November 1989 at the University of
Rio Grande for a Bachelor of
Science Degree, with a minor in
chemistry. Miller and his wife ,
Grace have two children. one son
and one daughter.

Ohio Lottery

SVAC grid

qualifiers, including Ada,m Chevalier, Jeremy Roush and Brett
Parker, first, second and third
places respectively, In the three
to four-year-old category; Tyler
Johnson. Me.Ussa Klr.k and Brad
Parker ,In the five to six-year-old
category; and Justin Roush,
Larry, Ritchie and Joshua Ervin,
In the seven to eight-year-old
category.
·

The national pull qualifier was
arranged by Dan Smith, Auctioneer, Racine. However, the pull
was conducted entirely by
members of the National Kiddie
Tractor Pull Association. The
national qualifier was held fol·
lowing the last of the local kiddie
tractor pulls which were held at
the fair.

Tractor pull results · are announced
The downpour Friday night
Despite Saturday night's cool
necessitated
the postponement of
damp weather and the mud
the truck pull and It was
:underfoot from earlier rains, the
combined wllh the tractor pull to
Center Field of the Rock Springs
fairgrounds was packed for the · provide a full evening of entertainment for fairgoers.
"combined Meigs County Fair
Cash In five places ·ranging
truck and tractor pull.

from $175 \O $15 was awarded In
the four classes of the truck pull,
listed first through fifth
respectively:
6,000 pound stock truck: Eric
Russell, Gallipolis; T erry
Continued on page 12

QUARTER HORSE ,WJNNER - Sunrise
Power, owned by Pan Houdashelt, Racine, and
jockled by Dan Sickels, raced to the first place

spot In the first race, a 660 yard dash during
Saturday's quarter horse races at th~ Meigs.
County Fair. The races featured a lot oflocal color
and talent.

Quarter horse ·races said
spectacular at Meigs fair
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By JULIE DILLON
Dally Sentinel Staff
Horse racing fans observed
son...'ope;!tttell'lar -rorclng' at•'sa: "'
turday's quarter horse racing at
theMelgsCountyFair . The races
featured a lot oflocal people in a II
of the races as well as In the
winner clrlce.
Sunrise Power, owned by Dan
Houdashelt , Racine, and ridden
by Dan Sickels, raced to the first
place spot In the first race, a 660
yard dash forthree year olds and
older.
Second place went to Lit tle
Cherub, owned by Chu ck and
Marge Shields, Millfield, and
ridden 6.v Sammy Newell. The
third place spot went to Justa Go,
owned 'by W.A. Adams. Nelsonville, and ridden by Rick
Cullison.
The second ra ce, a 300 yards
dash, again for three year olds

and · older quarter horses, found dash, featured a local In the first
Lassies Flash In first, owned by place spot, Rock Springs Rose,
Wayne and Misty Wiggins, Co- .owned by Dave Sayre, Portland,
• shoeton, · and tldden by. T-ammy and· ridden· by 'fammy Morrison.
Morrison. 1Second place went to Second place was captured by
Billy Dee Great. ·owned by Adams Liberty Lady, owned by .
Jennings Beegle, Racine, and Alan Adams, Nelsonville, and
ridden by Dan Sickels. Third ridden by Lance Dreher. The
third place spot went to Divine
place went to Baracuda Buck,
owned by George R Harris, Surprise, owned by Nancy Hou Dayton, and ridden by Rick .dashelt, Racine, and ridden by
Dan Sickels.
Cullison.
The final race, also a 220 yard
The th ird race was a 220 yard
dash,
again featured local color
dash which found Bar Wheels,
owned by Jennings Beegle, and as Cornets Chip, owned by
ridden by Dan Sickels, in the first . Jennings Beegle, and jockled by
place sj&gt;ot. The second place spot Dan Sickels. raced to .the first
went to Smooth Luke, owned by place spot. Second place went to
Mart Damron, Ironton, arid jock- Ole Roy s Sugarbar. owned by
Ied by Sammy Newell. Third Earl Cleek, Portland , a nd ridden
place went to Homestretc h by Tammy Morrison. The third
Hemp, owned by George R. place spot was capt ured by;
Harris, Dayton , and ridden by Master Jaguar, owned by Dan'
Sickels, Athens. and ridden by'
Tammy Morrison.
The fourth race. also a 220yard Rick Cullison.

Locations listed where contraband
was taken during recent drug raids
An order to des troy contraband
taken In recent marijuana raids
conducted throughout Meigs
County has been flied In the
Common Pleas Court. The fol·
lowing contraband· Items and
locations from where the contra·
band was taken were listed on the
order to destroy.
-Thirty-one ' marijuana
plan Is taken July 13 from prop·
erty In Scipio Township, Route
143, Pomeroy .
-Thirteen marijuana plants
taken July 18 from property In
Lebanon Township, R.ainbow
Ridge, Racine.
-One mariJuana plant taken
July 27 from Sutton Township,
Welshtown Road, Pomeroy.
-Six marijuana plants taken
July 28 from Bedford Township,
Route 33, Burlingham:
-Six marlj11ana plants taken
July 29 In · t.etart Township,
Route 338, near Apple Grove.
. -Four marijuana plants taken
July 31 from ltutland Township.
Route 143, Pomeroy.
-Thirty-six mariJuana
plants takeJ:t Aug. 3 from Le-'

banon Township, Sellers Ridge,
Portland.
-Th irty-.one n:tarlj ua na
plants taken Aug. 5 from Olive
Township, Pine Tree . Drive
Tuppers Plains.
-Twelve marijuana plants
taken Aug. 12 from Salem Towns hip, Nelson Road, Rutland.

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Township, Shady Cove Road.
Middleport.
-Thirty-five marijuana
plants taken Ailg. 13 from Salls·
bury Township, County Road 3
and Route 7, Mldqleport.
- One-hundred-ten marl·
juana plants take Aug. 14 from
Bedford Township, Eastman
·Road, Pomeroy.
.
-Ninety-one marijuana
plants taken Aug. 14 from Bedford Township, Route 681,
Pomeroy.
-Fifty-four marijuana
plants taken Aug. 14 from Le·
banon Township, Route 124,
Racine.

-Sixty-one marijuana plants
taken Aug. 12 from Salem Township, County Road 10, near
Dexter .
-Five marijuana plants taken
Aug. 12 from Rutland Township,
Nichols Road , Rutland.
mud and rain. ;Even wl.lh the inclement weather, •
LARGE CROWD VIEWS TRUCK PULL - A
-E ight marijuana plants
there were some pretty good pulls by the drivers. •
large
crow~
was
on
hand
for
Saturday
night's
taken Aug. 12 from Ru \land
-One-hundred-twenty-three
truck
pull
at
the
Meigs
County
Fair
despite
the
Township, Shepard Road,
marijuana plants taken Aug. 14
Langsville.
from
Lebanon Township, Route
-One-hundred-ninety-five
124,
Racine.
marijuana• plants taken Aug. 13
-Seventy-four marijuana
from Salisbury Township, Sto·
.plants
taken A11g. 14 from Bed·
ry's Run Road, Middleport.
ford
Township~
'B unker Hill,
-Sixteen marljuan&lt;t plants
Henry Satkamp. 61, Hollands- :
County Intersectio n.
By United Press International
Pomeroy.
,
taken Aug. 13 from Salisbury
burg,ln a one-vehicle accident on •
Hamilton:
Virginia
Hood,
35,
A
UPI
survey
showed
at
leas
t
-Thirty-nine
marijuana
Township, Story's Run Road,
Hollandsburg Richm.ond Road hi
Hamilton,
when
vehicle
failed
to
15
people
killed
In
a
dozen
plants taken Aug. 14 from Bed·
Middleport.
·
Darke County.
·
inake
curve
or\
Butler
·County
weekend·
traffic
acc
id
ents
-Twenty marijuana plants foid Township, Bunker Hill,
Sunday
road. left roadway, striking
around Ohio.
taken Aug. 13 from Salisbury Pomeroy.
Batavia:
Todd Starkey, 28,
utility
pole.
Three of the victims, all from
-Eighty--one marijuana
Wilmington,
,
In .a one-car accl·
Salurda.v
plants taken Alig. 15 from Bed· Newark, were killed In t~e crash
Columbus:
Spencer
Sturgis.
dent
on
Ohio
28 In Clermont .
ford Township, Bunker, of an au tomoblle and a van on a
County.
25,
Columbus.
whell"tbe
motorcy
Pomeroy.
·
Franklin County road Saturday .
Greenville: Larry Basl)ore, 22, ;
-Thirty-seven marijuana The dead were Identified as cle he was operatlngcrashed on a
Columb11s
street.
West
Milton, In a one-vehicle . \
plants taken Aug. 14 from Bed- • Sherry Habedel, 24, Donna An·
McArihur:
Gary
Barber,
~6.
accident on Ohio 722 In Darke t
ford Township, Bunker Hill, · drews, 46, and her son Matthew
A·communlty skin testing clinic will be held at the Syracuse
I
McArthur, when his motorcycle County.
Andrews, 12.
Pomeroy.
M11nlclpal B111ldlng In Syracuse, to~lght (Monday) from 4: 30 to
left a rural Vinton Co11nty road.
Warren: David Omeraha 10
Also killed on the state's
-Twelve marijuana plants
6 p.m. by the Meigs County Tuberculosis Office.
.
.
Ravenna:
Timothy
Kondlk,
18.
Vienna,
In a one-caraccldetu'on ~
roadways
this
weekend
were:
taken Aug. 14 from Salisbury
Joan Tewksbary, R.N. will be giving the skin tests which are
Mantua,
when
his
motorcycle
township
road In Trumbull
Friday
Night
Township, State St., Pomeroy.
available to all residents of the community. Pre-school tests can
Co11nty.
left
a
Portage
County
road.
Millbury:
Lori
Hestet,
19,
-Twenty-six marijuana
be obtained at the clinic as well as workers lit fall festival and
striking a ditch and several small . Lancaster: Stephen Gloydd
plants taken Aug. 15 from Ches- Toledo, when she failed to stop
25, and Ronald WIU!ams, 20,
booster activities. Coq tin ued on page 10
trees.
ter Township, Vinegar St., ·her car at a stop sign and struck·a
Continued on page 10
Greenvll'le:
Motorcyclist
tractor-trailer at a rural Wood
Racine.

Ohio records 15 highway deaths

Local. riews briefs--

Clinic scheddled tonight

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Monday, August 21, 1989

_ Com~entary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pom~roy , Oblo

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AKEA

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ISlm~ ~L..-ro,..,..,.,c:l,~
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher ·
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/fontroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu thaD 300
to editing and muot be olped wKh
name, address and telephone number. No unslped letters wiD be publis bed. Letters should be In 100d lute, addresslnr;lsaues, not personal!·
ties.
,

wonts loar;. AU letters are subject

To your health,
Mr. President!
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- A year after George Bush surprised the nation
with his selection of a running mate, Vice President Dan Quayle still
hasn't convinced some of us he's qualified for the White House.
So we're cheered by recent press reports disclosing that the
president has cut way back on pori\ rinds, a snack known to· be
. dangerously laden with artery-clogging cholesteol.
Also comforting are news photographs of Bush jogging, playing
tennis and otherwise keeping himself healthy .
Let's hope the president gets lots of rest on his vacation in Maine;
which he surely will find less stressful than Washington.
Ali Americans - Democrats as well as Republicans - fervently
wish Bush the best of health.
As for the Heartbeat Kid, Quayle discounted a new Washington
Post-ABC News Poil indicating 52 percent of those surveyed consider
hiril unqualified to sit in the Oval Office if something should happen to
the president.
· The vice president told the Post he now feels "confidentln the job,"
saying, " I think we are off to a good start."
Quayle attributed the popularity gap between him and the
president, who enjoys a voter-a pproval rating of about 75 percent, to
his bruising campaign and newness to the national scene.
"I don' t think people have the knowledge an·d information about me
they do about the president, " Quayle said.
When the pollsters asked voters if Bush should select a different
running mate if he seeks a second term, 43 percent of them said he
should 11nd 38 percent said he shouldn't.
Those figures must have cheered Jack Kemp, charged wfth ridding
th e Department of Housing and Urba n Development of sleaze left
over from the Reagan years.
A 54-year-old conservative Republican with a populist streak, tpe
new HUD secretary remains a form idable presidential aspirant.
The former congressman who starred as a quar.terback for the
Buffalo Bills must walk a political tightrop he is to replace Quayle In
1992 or run for president four years later.
While retaining his "conslderable support in the GOP's conservative
wing, Kemp hopes to broaden his appeal to voters by battling poverty,
I
Illiteracy and drugs.
On the housing scandal, Kemp dares to assert that corrupt
conservatives give conservatism a bad name. But he knows it could
be risky to complain too loudly about hanky-panky on his own party's
watch.
Mean ttme, the vice president's boosters cite the decline In the
number of Quayle gags to prove their marl no longer Is a national joke.
And after ali. as Quayle' s spokesman David Beckwith has put It,
"Throughout history, the vice pres idency has been the butt of humor,
and it will always be so."
As for the president, he plans a da ily vacation routine of jogging,
tennis, golf, fishing and boating.
Concerned America ns nodded approvingly when they read in their
newspapers that upon arriving at Kennebunkport Bush said, "I want
to get my body in shape."

Today :in history ,
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Aug. 21, the 233rd day of 1989 with 132 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
illustrator Aubrey Beards ley in 1872, jazz great William "Count"
Basie in 1904, mys tery noveliSt Anthony Boucher in 1911, Britain's
Princess Margaret in 1930 1age 59 ), basketball center Wilt
Chamberlain in 1936 I age 531 , country-pop singer Kenny Rogers in
1938 1age 511 and actress Patty McCormack in 1945 1age 44 l. ·•
On this date in history:
In 1940, exiled Bolshevik leader Leon Tr.otsky was assassinated In
Mexico City ·op orders from Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.
In 1951. the United States ordered construction of the world' s flrst
atomic submarine, the Nautilus.

Berry's World

Monday. August 21, 1989

.Peaceful Soviet countryside
Zagorsk,U.S.S.R.- Thousnads
of Soviets make a pilgrimage
here every year to drink from the
sacred waters of a Russian
Orthodox monastery. Unbe·
knownst to the pilgrims, one of
the deadliest biological weapons
plants on earth is just a few miles
away.
We joined the crush of Soviet
visitors to this city of about 85,000
which lies 40 miles mortheast of
Moscow. The fithful and curious
come to see the Trinity St.
Serglus · monastery complex,which dates from the 14th
century when a teen-ager ,Sergius Radonezsky,had a vision to
build a monastery on thfe spot.
A small building covers a well
out of which many Soviets
believe healing waters flow-the
Soviet equivalent of Lourdes.
They nock to the building with
bottles,cups and buckets to drink
thfe water and carry some home
to their friends.
It Is hlghiy unlikely that the
pilgrims, or even thes monks·

,know that former Soviet Premler Leonid Brezhn!!'f,ln the
early 1970s.ordered the Sovlert
military to develop biological
weapons nearby.
The facility is known benign·
lyas "The Scientific Research
Institute of Sanitation.'' Through
acc_e ss to sensitive U.S.lntelll·
gence reports given to the
National Security ·c ouncil, we
have lerned that what goes on
there has little to . do with
"sanitation."
One rece.nt classified report
says the Sanitation Instltutse Is
"known to be under military
control," specifically under a
secret program in the Ministry of
Defense called the 7th Main
Directorate responsible for hi-ologlcal weapons-"BW" in
military slang.
There are only two"conftrmed"blologlal wefapons sites in the
Soviet Union, according to the
Intelligence reports-the Sanitatlon ' Institute at Zagorsk and
these Mlcroblolglcal and Viral-

~

ogy Institute at ·Sverdlovsk.
But the decret report names
seven other"suspected"sits·
-Malta,Omutnlnsk,, Berdsk,
Penza, Kurgan, A,)csu and Pok·
rov. Another top-secret report
notes that "on-going construction at 1110S't of these facilities
demonestrates ·continuing Soviet
commitment of resources io
their BW program ... "
We questioned several Soviet
officials about the Zagorsk Sanitation Institute, but none ofthem
admitted that they had heard of
it. One person in Sagorsk said
some of the people there seemed
unusually concered abo\lt "some
kind of envir-onmental acci·
dent,"but he didn't know why.
They should be concerned. The
only othet"confirmed"biologi·
cal warfare faclllty,at Sverdlovsk, was · thes scene of an
accldeqt a decade ago t!Jat left
hundreds of civilians dead. The
Soviets put a lid on Information
about the accident.
The .
recentNationaiSeur-

Jack Anderson

By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Sporls Writer
Kevin Bass demonstrated he
can be both forceful and humble.
The Houston·Astros outfielder
delivered a commanding performance Su'nday by smashing two
home runs, the second a gamewinning grand slam in the ninth
Inning, to lift Houston to an 8-4
triumph over the Chicago Cubs.
Bass ' blast off reliever Mitch
Williams snapped a 4·4 tie and
provided .Houston with a sweep of
the weekend series with the
Cubs, moving the Astros to
within two games of the first·
place San Francisco Giants in the
National League West.

ity Council report on the Incident
says, "An accident at Sverdlovsk
occurred at Cantonment 19 In
early April 1979,releasing anthrax Into the environment. The
number of deaths reprted ranges
between 40 and 3,000, with the
best estimates In the 200to 1,000
range. The symptons of thes
victims were most consistent
with Inhalation of anthrax and
were characterized by .a sudden
O!Jset ,very high fever and respl·
ratory distress leading to death."
U.S.offlcials secretly protested
the Incident as proff that the
Soviets were toying with biologl·
cal weapons. The Soviets
claimed the outbreak of anthrax
was caused by bad meat bought
on ther black market.
'The good !'ews ls Information
from Western Intelligence sources that Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev has downgraded the
imporiance of the biological
warfare faclllties,and thee are
idlcatlons he may shut some of
them down In the near future.

MARAUDER sophomore tailback Terry McGuire turns up field picking up short yardage.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
exhibition season is a time to get
mistakes out of the way , and the
Browns hope they got a big one
out of their system · Saturday
night In a 24-211oss to Pittsburgh
at Cleveland Stadium.
With the Steelers facing a
fourth-and-goal at the Cleveland
4.with less than 2 minutes' left in
the game, the Browns second.
defensive team . was left to
combat most of the Pittsburgh
starters with only 10 men on the
field. Quarterback Todd Blackledge took ·advantage of the
mismatch and hit Weegic
Thompson with a 4-yard touch·

"I was proud of our the way our
guys played In the second half,"
Noll said. "Of course, it wasn't
their first-line people out there.
Their first-line people looked
tremendous."
The Steelers, 1-1 In exhibition
play ~ had moved to the Cleveland
4 on a roughing the passer
penalty on Chris Pike. Blackledge then threw three lncompietlons before he found Th.omp·
son cutting over the middle in
front ol Cleveland 's Stephen
Braggs.
.
The Browns, who led 18·7 at one
point, had goneup21-17 wlth8:02
lett on a 39-yarrl Dan Plock! field
goal: Cleveland, n. also scored
on a 24-yard Bernie Kosar pass to
Ozzie Newsome, Matt Bahr field
go'lis of 31 and 41 yards, Ploeki's
27-yard field goal, and a safety.
'J'uetda,y'M t.\.hlefl
·
Pittsburgh also scored on a
'rtndrindl al ('hie: a~
1-yard touchdown run by Rodney
HomCqonal PIUiilhuJ'II:IIi. nl111hl
SlUI Dlt&gt;_.at Pllllllldt•lphllJ, nl~tht
Carter, a 43-yard Bub by Brister
Sa111Fr. .d!lll'o at Nl'WVortc, nl~
pass to Dwight Stone and a
Lox ,\n~t"M at Molltn&gt; .. , nl~
St . Lou~ al r\tbdltu , nl~~;hl.
19-yard Gary Anderson field
goal.
Calendar ·
Carson said he resisted the
Mo.-.ta.v · ~ Sporl!l ( "ull'ftd~tr
- - urge to put his first defense back
Bow tin~~;
in at the end ..
( 'anton,· Oh._ ...-..111!\,0tn EhorM•· PR:\
"I don't think it's smart to do
Sl'nlor fllampioiWihlp
that,"
Carson said. '"I've been
Foothall
caught lri situations ltke that
NFL t~xhlhltlon
where you want to put your best
l\" .lt;hln~on ul Mlnl'l'!'lolol, II piAl ,
players back in the game and
PttoPnlx 11i LA ll!anlK. II p.m.
come out winning the football
game, and It will do you more
harm than good.
SATIOI\'Al. t' Om'BALL I.F.i\Gl 'E
· "We stayed with the group we
had in there, which wa~ most of
!ol.Uurdlf¥'!1 R1•1nM s
our
backup people. It was dlsap·
l•clanapoll~ :U , Gnot!n llu,w 2.1
pointing to lose that way because
San Uit'J:') ~-t. (llh~ llKU ~
I thought we played well"
Tampt. Bll,\' ~. ,\UWIIU 0
Thompson said the win was
Hoolllon :!G. Mhmll6
important.
("Jftt'lnraCil!l, Ortrllill :1
ftulfiiiO J,,!\'~· O_rlt•IUIIO j
"It's Important to come from
Plltft ... tl 2-t, {11'\'f'II&amp;Rd 21
behind and win, thai's something
Ouii!P :~. L!\ K».ldC't1&gt;4 .
we haven't done much lately," he
Sun Frun"'ll&gt;w·o :1~. I}(Oonwr 17
said..
·
Nt&gt;W F-'lKiand 17, SraUh• U
Cleveland
dominated
thP first
Sundii,Y'!Ii ftll'lll.. !i
half,
especially
on
defense,
as tire
N\' GllltltlN U, K11n,_11 City j
Browns
registered
five
sacks
on
Nl' -IM i'l Ill, Phllluk•l P.hl• lfl
the night, three in the first half by
Michael Dean Perry. Carl "Big
\\'.,.hlnAfdnul Ml•rr.tMa, Mp.1n .
Phot•alx ut t, ,\ RiUn.oo, II p. m .
Daddy'' Hairston sacked Rick
\\"•·~IQ'. ,\u.: . ~1
Strom in the end zone In the
~an llt~·a:o al S».n Fruol'i:-t'O, ~p . m .
second quarter lor a safety.
Frldll,'' · ,\uJ'. :!l
Kosar played the first half and
Mlllf'l'll 61.1 WOIPIWnr;tun. Mp.m .
completed
11 of 22 passes for 120
lh-1 roll ad Sc \lllh•, 18: 3e p .m .
yards
and
the
touchdown. Brister
SalurdllYo ,\ul(. •
played
two
quarters
and comRtaff u1o ,.~ torrrn Bu,v at M 11id6Kon. " ''"·•
pleted
II
of
16
passes
for 118
2 p.n1 . ·
yards.
·
Nt•"· F.nK~und Ill ,\ll~ta. 7: :"tp.m.
Pitt:o;hUtJh al Phllad••lphi 1L 7:,:11 1'1 ·"'·
The Browns led 15-7 at half·
time, and went up 18-7 on Ploicki's
Tumpt Bll.\' al lndlu•mpolh;. 7 : :&amp;11JI.m .
first ·ueld goal. Alter a fumble by
Cleveland's Tim Manoa, Brister
!\"\" oh-1"111 N\. tilllfiiK. Mp.m .
h.lt Stone, who had beaten
fh•wl..cl ll\ Pho.•nix , fl p.m .
Braggs,
with the 43-yard scoring
lluiJIL-.atlh•n\t'r, ~ p.RI.
pass.
Ml• ..·~oh&amp; 1U LA Rami', !t I'·m .
Anderson kicked a 19-yard
Hoa.&gt;Con ""' L:\ Kllidl'rl'i "' Oa kla.nd.
field goal 1:40 into the fourth
('ulll.. 10 p.m.
quarter, but Plock! countered
~11.-IIQ"o 1\·~ · r.
Kun~~M~~ ( ' It~ at t'hil'llfCO. II p.m .
with a J9.yarder on Cleveland's
Mowdll,\'. i\ujll . ~
.riext possession to give the
("lnc-tnmtliU Nrw Or~id'l,., M p.nl.
Browns a 21-17 advantage.

down pass with 1:29 left to give
the Sieeiers the .victory.
"We didn't have 11 g~~ys and
that obviously helpe&lt;;l on that last
touchdown,~ ·
said ,Cleveland
coach Bud Carson, adding that
the confusipn came with the
rotations in the defensive
backfield.
''Ten men on the field bothers
the hell out of me. It shouldn 't
have happened. It's going to get
straightened out.''
Pittsburgh coach Chuck Noll
had many ol his starters In on the
iast drive, which covered 81
yards on 10 plays.

Scoreboard ...
Majors
B,\1 Unllt'd Pri'!'M lnll'r•lioml

AMERK'AN LEAGU•:
E11,;t
" ' L Pt·l , GB
Rulli mort' ........... .........U !It .5111 MU\II1UI ...l' . . . .. ........... ... 15 Ill .5Ui
•.,,
Toronto ,... ................ ...13 II .5811 I 1,
Bo!ilon ...... ........... ....... .Sil 1-1 ..&amp;15 5'·1
t1c'VI'a.nd .... ............... .$11 H ..fll' 6'·'t
N- Yorll ................... .$6 lit ..Jill tll'l
[hotrolt . .. ........ , ...... ......·1'1' j1 .31!1 17 1'!
•·.i •
•. W('MI
-

--

f'ulllornl;a ,, .... .. ............1-1 -Ill .187 Oaklllnd ............ ........ ..75 t9 .llt5 .....,
Kan!Wi City ......... ........ 711 S.1 .Slit . 11,.1

I

TI'J.WI,............ ~ .............65
MlnfJ!l'Nolil. .......... :........60
Sl'a&amp;ttlf' .... ................... ;.il7
('hll'll"o ........................ S2.

1
-·· f

~.-diQ''!i

Ro!iton :1.

William Rusher

lessly that HUD had approved
more than $16 million in rent
subsidies for certain Denver man of avowedly conservative
hosing projects two years after •views," that he "acknowledged
Joseph Coors, "The welthy Colo- making large contributions to the
rado brewer and a friend of
Nicaraguan rebels," and that he
President Reagan " had written once described Oliver North
to Pierce indorsing the under oath as a "tremendously
proposal
wonderful patriotic Amerl·
It appears that Pierce, after can"- data guaranteed to set
receiving the letter, ordered the liberal teeth on edge but scarcely .
project (Which might otherwide relevant to the Issue.
have been rejected) given "very
Which is what, prlcisley? That
careful consideration." Shenon Joe Coors, who was living In
sees a nefarious "patter" in Colorado at the time, put in a
which HUD was "more likely to good word for rent subsidies for
approve projects endorsed by some Denver housing projects,
prominent Republicans.''
and two years later ·they were
Note the spume that flies off approved by HUD!
the · crest of Shenon's article.
Shenon conceds, by the way·
Coors is described in the very , that "there Is not suggestion that
first sentence as "wealthy· Mr. Coors had any financial
, "though It lsn' t alleged that he Interest In the program, "and
spent anything on thes proposal adds that Coors' letter asserted
except thes quartet itcostto send he was motivated only by civic
the letter. He is also tagged as "a pride.
friend of President Reagan" Gosh. What do you suppose the ·
though he didn't go to HOD Times would have -charged if
through Mr. Reagan or so much Coors had refu.sed to endorse the
as Invoke his name.' ·
project? Mr.Shenon ought to take
Further on in the article, an aspirin and lie down for a
Shenon tells us that Coors is "a while.

I had the offest sense of deja vu decided to admit blacks when its' each time.
l didn't find out why
had to
as I listened to the radio repor a whits-only rule was challenged.
few nights ago. It was cou; oed • Things didn't go so well when I go through the . membership
with stunned disbelief- a feeling witnessed vertually the same charade until a few weeks after
the swim club sudenly closed. By
of "this can't be happening," as if story 20 years ago. Near the
I had just driven my old Camara small southwestern Missouri
that time, some of Is had stated
over the lime line and into the ,town where I went to high school college and weren't paying much
Twilight Zone.
was a rural swim club.It was so attention to ousr old hangout, but
the gossip eventually reached
In what I considered gra- much nicer than thepblic pools In
clousiy even tones, an adui.t the large city nearby that the city those•of us who had hung up ousr
two-piece suits and transistors:
church worker was recounting kids were happy to pay the extra
the horrible experience of taking money It cost to to there. The pool
A nice lady. from the big city
nearby had taken a busload of
her group of teen-agers for a itself was huge, filled with
swim. They were ail working piaygroung equipment we could
boys from a local boys; ranch to
temporarily on church-span· swing, slide and plummet off the swim club. Most of the got
sored social welfare projects in when we weren't lying on the through the line and were lsssued
the. small town of Saluda,S- surrounglng grass listening to . membership cars, but then the
.C.,and were going to cool off in ousr transistor radios. It was
gateileeper suddenly announced,
the town pool. Only they didn'ts definitely teen heaven,clrca 1967.
"We have no more memberships
I didn't understand why we had avallable.Sorry." The member·
end up swtmmlng. The poolkeep·
ers refused to let three of the kids to buy memberships to the c'ub. ships had run out just as the first
In because they were black. :
They only cost a dollar tor the black child reached the front o!
After the dust from the br6u· whole seas~n. and sometimes we the line.
haha set ted, town apologists had to wait in long lines while the
The nice Jad)t had what my
pointed ot that. the Saluda Swtm gatekeepers checked them. We mother would have called a hissy
and Tennis Club, owned by the paid another fee every time we fit, right there on the grounds.
Jaycees, had always been main- went In allyway,so I dlldn't She then called the city council,
talned"as a private-member· ulnderstand why they dldn'tjust wrote to the newspaper and
ship club,as any city has country do away with the silly cards and raised such a ruckus that the
clubs," Yet the club quickly charge us a nlcilel or so extra nearby city fathers demanded

we

,

j

· .

Sarah Overstreet
the club tether open up, or close
up. The ownerrs decided that ·
rather than admit blacks, they
would close.After an unsuccessful run as a troutfaram, the swim
club closed for goo'd.No child has
been trned away from a recreatiomii facility in the city because
of color slnce.
Years later, I discovered by
accident who the nice lady
having the hlssy fit was. Harriett
Baldwin was a doctor's wtte who ·
moved here from the· South and
couldn't beUeve her new home in
the North could hold such despicable ldeals.As she recounted the
story to me years later, her
speech still marked by a
Southern accent, she sounded for
all the world like the South
Carolina Methodist youth leader
deacrlblng ther recent incident.
Now's as good a time as any to
tell her:Harrlett,you've always '·
been one of my heroines. What
you did had more of an Impact on
my young life than anythiing else
I can think of.

57 -~33 ' 9
6J ..ljql u•!

8&amp; .-163 IH'!
'J;l .-t II 23

Rt&gt;11ulh

MII"..U a....-1, 1-llnllllnp

Oakland3. Mlniti!MOII&amp; -t , lti•Nnl'!
Detrok 5. NP"" \' ork~
Toronto$, Balllmono I
Ttoxax 7. O.lt•a "o i
falifornla 7, (1f'\l(')atld -1
Kaniii!Ji Cit)' U, St•lllk• !\

Media is getting hyper aboud HUD
It would be exaggerating to
pie who are anything but poorcall the recent media attention to as Congress· Is well aware. For
influencepedding at the Depart- the money isn't simply doled out
ment of Housing and Urban to the needy; It was spent in this
DeveloP,ment a
':feeding case, on low-cost housu;g, And
frenzy, but It does seem to be that, of course, Involves cnntracgetting a little hyerthyroid.
tors and .all sorts of other
Theallegatiqnsalldatebackt() entrepreneurs involved in
the time of President Reagan' s " development."
only black Cabinet member,Sam
This· puts a premium on the
Pierce, who was Secretary of services of people who know
HUD for thes entire Reagan enough about the bureaucratic
administration. The hidden . ropes at HUD to put eager
agenda is to damage Mr. R~agan "developers" In touch with offi·
a bit, though no one has dared cials at HUD who had the
assert that he was even aware of auth.orlty to approve proposed
~he situation, let alone Involved in low-cost housing projects. What
tl ·
thse media have discovered is
Actually, the sort of problem that some of those knowledgea·
that arose at HUD is absolutely ble middlemen were paid large
endemic In any governmental fees for their help-though the
activity that intails the expend!· fees were not necessarily exces·
lure of money. In this case, as so slve, given the profits made by
often,billions of dolars were the developers.
appropriated by Congress ostenBut the media haven't been
sibly to aid "the poor"- a content to stop there. Take Philip
gesture that, whatever it may or Shenon, a New York Times
may not actually to for poor reporter who has been one of the
people, caresses a warm, tender chief bloodhounds on the trail of
spots In ths psyches of liberals.
this suppose&lt;! "scandal.'' Late In
Unfortunately such expend!· in jul)l ,In an article on page one of
lures greatly benefit many peo. the Times, he reported breath-

At New York, Willie Randolph
However. foUowing his perbelted
his first National League
sonal heroics on the, field, Bass
homer,
a three-run shot with two
displayed · his humble, teamout
In
the
ninth Inning to power
oriented style in the clubhouse as
Los Angeles. Alejandro Pena,
he reviewed the victory.
" I know It's a liflfor the club, " 3-2, worked two perfect Innings of
Bass said. ·'We've just swept the relief and Jay Howell pitched the
first-place team In the East. I ninth for his 25th save. Don Aase ..
·
can't get gangbuster stats. All I 1-4, took the loss.
Padres
5,
Expos
2
can do is try to 'help.''
At Montreal , Ed Whitson and
Bass, who has hit .410 since
Mark
Davis combined on a
recovering from a broken right
,six-hitter
and Jack Clark
leg that kept him on the disabled
cracked
a
three-run hom(!r.
list from May 28 through Aug. 11,
Whitson,
15·9,
went 6 2·3 Innings,
went 3 for 5 In the game and also
yielding
four
hits and one run
scored twice. He hit a solo homer
while
fanning
five.
Davis went 2·
in the third inning.
'J.3
Innings
to
pick
up his 31st
Loser Les Lancaster, 3·1,
save.
Bryn
Smith,
9-8,
went seven
walked Rafael Ramirez to open
the ninth. Lancaster was re- innings, giving up two runs and
placed by Williams. who walked five hits.
Gianls ~. Phlllles 2
pinch hitter Craig Reynolds and
At
Philadelphia,
Ernest Riles
hit Gerald Young to load the
hit
a
two-out,
ninth-Inning
grand
bases. After Bill Doran struck ·
slam
to
lift
San
Francisco.
Roger
out, Bass belted his third home
McDowell, 3-6, yielded the blast,
run of the season.
which
capped a wild ninth Inning
Danny Darwin , 11-3, got the
for
the
Giants. Jeff Brantley, 7·1,
win tot Houston despite allowing
Morgan 's Raider Steve Camp- a game- tying solo homer to Ryne worked the final two Innings for
bell broke loose on a 75 yard run Sandberg, his second oft he game the win.
around his right end early in the and 24th of the year, with two outs
'P irates 7, Braves 6
second quarter, and the Raiders' In the ninth. Darwin was attemptAt Atlanta, Rick Reed com~
· defense held off a couple Meigs ing to save what would have been blned with three relief pitchers
threats to defeat Meigs 7·0 In starter Mike Scott's 18th victory on a seven-hitter and Jay Bell
Saturday night's preview.
drove in two runs, snapping
nf the season.
Both teams played good deChicago pulled to within 4-3 In · Pittsburgh · three-game losing
fense, but ha~ problems getting the seventh on Sandberg's first streak. Reed, 1-3, gave up six hits
the offenses rolling. .
homer of· the game off Scott.
over five innings, striking oui
In the reserve scrimmage,
Elsewhere in the National five and walking none and Bill
Jeremy Ruple plunged in from · League, Los Angeles dropped Landrum recorded his 18th save.
short yardage to tie the score at
New York 5·4, San Diego de- · Pete Smith, 3·13, took the loss.
six, ·but JeremyPhalln's pass for feated Montreal 5-2, San FranCardinals 8, Reds 1
the ex.tra points was Incomplete.
cl5co passed Philadelphia 5·2,
Ai Cincinnati, Jose DeLeon
Phalin played a good game from
Pittsburgh edged Atlanta 7-6 and pitched a six·hltter over eight
his quarterback slot.
St. Louis crushed Cincinnati 8-1. Innings and rookie Todd Zelle hit
In the freshman scrimmage,
In the AL, It was: Baltimore 7, his first major-league homer to
once again defense was the name Toronto 2; Texas 7, Chicago 1; lead St. Louis. DeLeon, 13-11,
of the game on a 49 yard
Milwaukee 6, Boston 3; Detroit 7, struck out three and walked
touchdown jaunt by Casey Miller
New York 6; California 1, Cleve- none. Tim Leary, 8·11, allowed
was the games only score as
land O; Oakland 5, Minnesota 0; six runs on nine _hits in 3 2-3
Morgan defeated the Little Ma - and Kansas City 5, Seattle 4.
innings. Tom Brunansky stroked
rauders 6-Q.
his 17th homer of the year.
Dodgers 5, Mets 4

Morgan tops
Meigs 7-0 in
grid previeW

Steelers rally, top Browns, 24-21

Getting deja vu about civil rights

J·

·Cubs drop 8-4 tilt to Astros;
Dodgers top Mets; Giants win

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...

The Daily $1ntinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sulltl(f 's Rt·~ult!i

Raltlmon• 7, Toronlo "!
Tt'XW' 7, Cl!lt'M . . I
Mllwau II•• &amp;. 8o111on :1
o.trett 7, Nt•W York 6
C'iilllernhl I, OnC'Iilltdt
Oaliland s, MlnrrKObl •
Kan~ ( ' II .~ 5, 1'11'111111' I
Mond")''K fiamf'M
Oakland (\'oun• 3-H) at ~lmlt tTananat-IIH, :I;JI p.m;
'
Bo1110• (C'Jrmt'•M 11-tU al N•"'-· \ ' url
(TM'rrll I-ll ), ,7:31p.m .
Mllwaulu•f' (ftni~ ""HI id Bultlmon·
.

!R.IIIIlrd 1Hl.7:31p.m.
('alltorllla lf'I•Jcy 14-HJ

w Kan~M C'lty

(Jiiatltrhll,lt'ft IH),H::JrJp.m.
Tut'!Oda,y'll Gamt"'
Bcu•to• al N1•w \ 'orll., niP~

Mllwatu Ire WB•Jtlmono, niP~

Dt1roll id Torotio. ni~~M

l'it'6&amp;IU4' ld ( "In(' land, .nl ~
&lt;'hlf'qo a1 Mln.rMaW. al~
l"altfotnhto id ka•IMM fit)', nlidlt
O~&amp;ki!Uid Ill Tru"- nllthl
N/\TION"/\1, Lt;AGl JtJ

Ew&lt;l
" " 1. Pt•l.

GB

fllkultl ....................... 71 l'i~ .i7:1 Nf'w York ................... .IIM iUJ .illloa 21 l
MOitrt'ld ..... .. ..............tit! H .15-t.K a
Sl , lAHd~ .. .... .. .... .. .. .. ....fi&amp; f57 .i;Ji -i 1t
l'kW.u.-.h ........... ....... .G:t' il .-12;1 IM 1·t
l'hllluMphi" """"'""".OO 7:1 ,-111'1' •.ro•'l
WI'S I
...... ... .. ..71 5:1 .~7;i
llou~on ... ................. ...f!l :15 .iUMI
S~toDII.'«U ............ .... .. ..Iil ti;i . ~92
nnl'lnrut !. ... ...... .: ........~ Ill .-ttitl
Los t\nl{"lf'ti .......... .......iUI titl AIH
,\tlalttu ......... .... ...........ilt 7-t .-t03
SW.unii\Y'K HC'MIIII~
NI'W \'ork .J.I..oJt ,\n~·h-s 1
l'hllad••lphl~&amp;l. Sa FruntiM'II II
St . Lolli!! 5. flndn!IUII
Atlant.a -1 . PIIWNIJI:h :1
Monf;n•allt.l'ian Dtr~ I
lln•i4nn K. O.k11~• -1
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Lol" ,\nfiCI'I~ I, N1'W York -t
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SLUI

Fr~tndi'K'O

2
10

1:1
13
lll

Cincinnati routs Detroit, 35-3
PONTIAC, Mich. IUPil - . himself while returning it a short 53-yard driVe started by Clncin·
Safety Barney Bussey returned · distance to the Lions' 31. Eslason . nail's eighth interception of the
night.
one of eight Cincinnati lntercep- threw a 27-yan) pass to Eric
lions 27 yards for a touchdown on Kattus, who earlier tipped a pass
the first play of the seco'nd half into Detroit safety Devon Mit·
The Daily Sentinel
and ·scored on a 70-yard run with chell's hands, to put the ball in
a fumble recovery Saturday position for a next-play scoring
(U8P8ltli-t8)
night to · spark the Ben gals to a . toss to Jennings.
A IM• loolon of Malllm..Ua, Inc.
35-3 exh.lbition victory over the
. Cincinnati, 2·0, picked off two
Publlshed every afternoon, Monday
Detroit Lions.
other Hippie passes aqd also
through Friday, 111 Court St., PoDetroit quarterback Eric Hip- Intercepted Detroit starting
mer'oy, Ohio, by the Ohto Valley Pul&gt;
llJhlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.•
pte threw Into cov.erage from his quarterback Rusty Hilger three
Pomeroy, Ohio 4l769, Ph. 992-2156. §e.
own 17 and Bussey grabbed the times and Long once to effeccond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
ball, continued a curi to his right lively blunt the Lions' "S,tretch"
.and streaked untouched 27 yards four-receiver offense.Member: United Press International,
to boost Cincinnati's 7-3 halftime
Detroit, 0-2, got beat 25·24ln Its
Inland DailY PressAssoctatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper AssoclatJon. National
lead up to 14·3 only 16 seconds opener and every point the Lions
Adverttslng Representative, Branham
into the third period.
have ·allowed In the two games
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Bussey picked up a ball has come off a turnover.
New York. New York 10017.
fumbled by Detroit's third quarDetroit's only score camP on a
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3:59 into the fourth quarter to the first half. He also missed a
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McClendon bobbled the bail from Kent State at the end of a
available.

Make up races main
fair draw Saturday
By JULIE DILLON
Daily Sendnel Starr
Hor'se racing fans were again
treated to a full afternoon of
races, both harness racing and
quarter horse racing, due to the
rescheduling of Friday's rained
out harness races.
Friday's full harness racing
schedule was run on Saturday
before the quarter horse races
and racing fans were treated to
some excellent runs.
Sunday Solar owned by Burton
Walker, Sunbury, and driven by
Terry VanRhod.en, look the first

Mo1M111,"'" Cha.rnc&gt;S
i''ht.n Dl•·lO ( R•mUKtM•n 15-!1 Jill Phllat.dt•tphlll ~ · f ' arnw.h -t-It), i : :m p.m.
S11n fo' riUiciNt"D (L~ " OMII 7·71 ul Nt'•·
\'ork 1Oarllna: ll ·flt, 1::11 p.m .
lm An _..,JP..jlltolchPr Il-l~) Ill Monlft'lll
(lun.,.ton lll--.1), 7 :&amp;\ p.m.
{'\nclnndl lRohln80n \!-I) at
tSutdUf1• IJ.!t) , M:f.'i p.m .

Back To School Special

C ' hii"II.~O

KIDS,.
TREAT MEAL·
.

Sports briefs
Tennis
Ivan Lend! won the ·Player's
Internal tonal-Canadian Open for
a record sixth time Sunday when
he crushed John McEnroe, 6·1,
6-3 In the final to earn $143,500.
l.e~dl, 29, ranked No. 1 In the
world, required only an hour and
12 minutes to dispose . of
McEnroe.
· · ·
... Steff! Graf won the Unit~d
jersey Bank Classic women s
tournament Sunday by defeating
Linda Ferrando 6·1, 6-2 In the
semifinals and Andre Temesvarl
7·5, 6-2 in the flnals.,Graf, the No.
1 player in the world, was forced
to play both matches on the same
day because the semifinals were
rained out on Saturday. Graf has
won 62 of 64 matches this year.

'

Mall Subocrlptlons
Jnolole Melp County

place spot in both the first and
Continued on page 4

13 Weeks ... ... ... .... .. ........ .... ....... Sl9.24
26 Weeks . .. ................... : ........... $37.96
52 Weeks .... ...... .. .............. .. ...... $74.36
Outside Melp .County
13 Weeks ..... ... ... .... ............. .... .. S:lll.BO
26 Weeks ........................... ....... Ul.30
~2 Weeks .... .. ...... ............ .... ..... . S75.40

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101'5 I U - I COOUIG.

-

�\

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 21. 1989

Monday. August 21, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
-

'

By G. SPENCER 9SBORNE
Edwards or Bradbury. The reOVP Staff Writer
ceiver corps - Vinson, Shane
Symmes Valley, Hannan
Swisher and Jamie Bush -was
Trace and Oak Hill were the
barely'tested.
.
winners In the first three contests
The Valley knocked on the door
In the SVAC gridiron preview
again when Wilburn ran a sweep
Saturday night at Kyger Creek
to the right side and galloped
High School. North Gallla and
away for an apparent 35·yard
Eastern did not score In the
touchdown halfway through th e
finale.
second quarter. However, an
VIkings 8, Bobcats 0
lllegal motion penalty negated
Symmes Valley tailback Fred
that run, and the Vikings never
Wilburn scored on an ll·yard run
got so close.to theendzonefor the
early In the. first quarter and
rest of the engagement.
followed with a two-point converThe Vikings' defense, while
sion run to give the Vikings the
having Its troubles bringing
Edwards and Bradbury down ,
victory.
.
The Vikings and the Bdbcats
was successful in keeping the
did little In the P,sslng departtandem from breaking anything
longer than 20 yards and in
ment. preferring to allow the
rushing attack of Vikings Kenny
putting the&gt; heat on Johnson,
Daniels, Jason Sheppard and
forcing him out of the pocket
Wilburn and Bobcats Joe Edwhen trying to pass.
wards, PhHiip Bradbury and
Wildcats 2, Highlanders 0
Oops!
·
Brian Vinson move the baiL
That must have been the
In the last half of the first .
quarter KCHS quarterback Chad
reaction of running back Blll
Johnson started to throw the bail.
Potter wnen he realized that he
but mosuy· in the flats to snapped the ball into the end zone

for a safety with 1: 21 remaining
in the contest. His miscu e gave
Hannan Trace its only points of
the game.
The fi~st quarter saw the
Wildcats run the ball out of its
thre&gt;e-back alignment with a
reasonable degree of success
(read: runs averaging five to
seven yards). However. when
Trace tried going airborne with
one of quarterback Eric Lloyd's
passes, it fo.und the hands of
Highlander .defensive back joe
Hammond at the SW 33 In the
gam!!'s first two minutes .
The Hlghiariders did little
passing and ran mostly out of the
l·formatton, with Chris Metzger
and Kevin Kiser taking turns at
quarterback and g1vlng the ball
to fullback Josh Haislop. The
Southwestern line of Brent Davies, Kevin Mannon, Chuck Spurlock, Chris Ford and John Sites,
among others, did an effective
job . of clearing the path for
Haisiop, Potter and Hammond.
The Wildcats' running game,

A surprise birthday party and
p,lcnic was held recently for
Raymond (Mac) Proffitt by
friends and relatives at hls home
In Racine.
The picnic dinner was video
taped for viewing later that
evening while games and swimming were enjoyed by the
chlldren.
Present at the event were
Mary Lou Proffitt, Joe and Kay
Proffitt, Ron, Joyce and Jason
Quillen, Mike;· Mindy, Dolly, and

By now the fog; which started
penalty. When the Oaks got the
featuring Shad Johnson at fulball again. they made It pay off In rolling ln during the Southernlback and Tlldd Saunders and
J.J. Bevan as halfbacks, also did
the second quarter with a 29·yard Oak Hmgame, was more fitting
Its job !If consistently ·notching touchdown run, the first of two tor a Vincent Price thriller than It
runs of four to six yards a carry, scoring runs by_ running back was for a North Gl!.l!ia-Eastern
scrimmage, but take the field
thanks to solid blocking from
Brian Stewart.
Shane Wells, Bryce McClellan,
With 10: 34 left ln the game and they .did.
As was true of the other
Mike Chandler. Ron Lambert the Hlll on top18-0, Nease got the
scrimmages.
the running game
and Cole Barirum.
ball again. and this time, he went
was
dominant,
but for much
to .t he right side of the line and
At the conclusion of that game,
Oak Hill was presented with the outran the Oak Hill defenders 65 more obvtou·s reasons. However;
SVAC All-Sports championship yards for the touchdown. That by the second quarter Pirate
trophy. Varlou11 championship one counted.
· quarterback Brian Stout started
trophies were presented to Oak
Stewart's four-yard run put the to throw more, as he was getting
Hill for basebalt"and girls' track, · Oaks ahead . 24-0 before the the feel for where receivers ·
North Ga!Ua (or boys' track and following two-point conversion Clinton Kt1IIY and D.J. Hammel
Symmes Valley In softball.
finalized the scoring In tJ:!at were.
Oaks 26, Tornadoes I
scrimmage.
The Bucs were able to put Billy
Southern was only able to
oh sweeps against
Wllllamson
Oak Hlll's offensive line did Its
make Oak Hill's defensive line job In giving Its running backs the Eagles' defense, but just like
pay for being a bit too aggressive room to run while sticking to the the passing game, there was no
in its pursuit twice - when Tornado linemen and line- satisfaction at the end of the
running back Travis Nease broke backers . like peanut butter series . No end zone In sight.
loose . for a pair of 65-yard throughout. With senior Jarred
Both teams fumbled once. with
touchdown runs. ' The trouble Circle at the controls, Southern
the Eagles' miscue ~oming on a
was, only one of those counted.
a !red out Its passing game with sweep and the Pirates' mistake
After the Oaks went ahead 12-0 some effectiveness. but was not CO!T\Ing after a pass play. All told,
on a pair of three-yard touch- able. to use· that route to get into the fog kept both teams in the
down runs, Nease's first romp the end zone. ·
·
middle third of the field for most
,was called back because of a "
A scoreless .SCrimmage
ofthe game.

Beat of the bend

By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Writer
The Oakland Athletics started
the scoring Sunday with Rickey
Henderson's speed .a nd finiShed
It with thepowerof JoseCanseco.
Rickey Henderson stole a base.
In the first inning an.d e'&lt;entually
scored the A's first run and
Canseco blasted a two-run homer
to lead Oakland to a 5-0 victory
over the Minnesota Twins. The
victory kept the A's two percentage pclnts behind the California
Angels In the American League
West.
Oakland's Mike Moore and
Todd Burns combined to stifle
the Twins on five hits. Moore,
16-li, was overpcwerlng through
eight Innings as he became only
the second Ainerlcan League
pitcher to notch 16 victories this
year.
PHO'I(l FINISH
The second race of
Corp., Circleville, and driven by Carol Elliot, and
"We always need more runs,"
:: Saturday's harness horse races was a photo finish ·
Dixie Tutu, owned by Roger Spencer, Pomeroy,
;' race between by Hey Hey , owned by Plum Run
and driven by Don Spencer. The first place spot Canseco said. ''You should try to
score as much as Y!lU can. You
w.a s captured by Hey Hey.
never really have enough."
That's the kind of thinking you
do;;velop when you know one
slip·up could cost the pennant.
The way these teams are playIng, the outcome may no!' be
decided until that last moment.
"I hope lt doesn't comedown to
the last' game of the season."
Canseco admitted. "That would
be terrible. I think the next 15
games are going to determine&gt; lt .
We have a long road trip and so
do the Angels. I think we're going
·to have a big edge because we
have ali our players back and our
pitching is getting stronger."
Minnesota starter Allan Ander·
son. 14·10, had a personal fivegame winning streak snapped.
Rickey Henderson seemed to
&lt;~.. ~· · unsettle AndP.rson as he led orr
·\.. '
the game in typically aggressive
,
fashion and the A's forged a 3-0
lead.
'
Henderson opened the · first
with a single; stole second one out
later and continued to third on
catcher Brian Harper's throwing
error. Terry Steinbach followed
with a two-out RBI single, Dave
Henderson doubled in Steinbach
Mark McGwire followed
WINN ER - Nina Yorktown, owned hy Fosler
harness horse races at the Meigs County Fair. A and
with
an
RBI single.
York, Jackson, and driven by Don Spencer, raced
large crowd was on hand for the races which had
made It 5-0 in the
Canseco
to the first place spot in the lith race of Saturday's
been rescheduled due to Friday's rain.
eighth orr relief pitcher Dave
West. With one out Lansford
singled and Canseco followed
c_o_n,_in_ue_d_fr_om_pa_g_e_3 _ _ __
with his seventh homer of the
season.
races with the trophy blanket by place spot was Hanky Panky,
"I felt good," Moore said. "I
seventh races for three year old
Ben
H.
Ewing
Quarter
Horses
.
owned by Don and Sedonia
filly trotters. No Stalk owned by
George and Jerry .Kemp, Oak- Winning seco nd In the fou r th race Spencer, Vincent and Marietta,
and third in the tenth race was and driven by Don Spencer.
:.daie , Pa . , and driven by Ron
. Swimming
Mac'
s Show, owned by Ma r ietta
The ninth race was again for
· Newhart placed second in the
Janet Evans, winning her
Cutlip, Wa'kefield, and driven by three year old filly pacers and the
:.firs t race and third in the seventh
fourth
gold medal of thecompetl·
Joe
Andre.
Third
in
the
fourth
first place spot, as well as the
· race. Third in the first race and
tlon,
and
fellow Americans Tom
race
was
Red
Roman,
owned
by
trophy blanket by Smith Nelson
second in the seventh race went
Jager,
Dave
Wharton and Mike '
Willard
and
Rosa
lee
Estep,
WavMotors. was captured by Barbie
:to PMC 's Polly Wally owned by
Barrowman
all
set world records
erly,
and
driven
by
Willard
Osborne. owned by J. Deviriea
Pauletta McCormick, Jackson.
in
the
Pan
Pacific
Swimming
Estep.
Second
in
the
tenih
race
and R. Belcher, Pennsylvania,
·.a nd driven by Ralph McCormick.
at
Tokyo.
Jager
Championships
was
won
by
a
local
horse,
and driven by Ron Newhart.
,• In the second and eighth races,
clocked
22.12
seconds
for
the
Nothing
But.
owned
by
John
Second place went to Shannon
again fo r three year old filly
50-meter
freestyle,
Wharton
h!i!l
ty,
Middleport.
and
Hagger
Blessing, owned by Frank .John. trotters. first place in both races.
driven by Ron Newhart.
so n, Hamden, a nd driven by a lime of 2: 00.11 in the 200·meter
. as well as the Humphrey Bros.
The fifth and 11th races for Ralph Guthrie. The third place individual medley, Evans broke
Memor ial Blanket Tr()phy. went
Hillco trotters featured a good bit spct was won by Crownllme her own record for the 800-meter
to Hey Hey, owned by Plum Run
of
local flavor with W.E . Towson, Ettaket , owned by Esther jCrow- freestyle with 8: 16.22, and Bar.Corp., Circleville, and driven by
owned
by Augusta Barnhart , nover, McArthur , and driven by , rowman won the 200·meter
Ca roi Elliot. Second place in th e
breaststroke after setting a reAthens,
and driven by Terry Earl Owings .
.second and eighth races went to
cord
of 2:12.89 In the
to
first
ln
the
VanRhoden,
racing
Dixie Tutu. owned by Roger
preliJ1'linaries.
fifth
race
and
second
in
the
lith
Spencer, Pomeroy, and driven
race, and also winning the
'by Don Spencer. Mountain Lady
blanket
trophy by WMPO Radio,
Grey . owned by Brooks Wells.
Second
place In the fifth
Lite
92.
Ashla nd, Ky., a nd driven by Ron
r ace went to Cia rene H. owned by
Newhart, took the third place
John Haggerty. Middleport, a nd
spctln both the second and eighth
driven byRon Newhart, who also
:races.
raced to third in the 11th race.
• The third race featured three
Third In the fifth race but first lri
:year okl filly pacers and found
the 11th race was Nina York·crowntime Esther , owned by
~sther Crownover, McArthur. . town, owned by Foster York.
and driven by Ear10wtngs. ln the Jackson, and driven by Don
· first spct. Second place went to Spencer.
The sixth race, for three year
B.B. Honeybee, owned by R.
old
filly pacers, found Missouri
:Handsch~maker and H. WagQer.
Yorktown,
owned by D. Pfeifer
•Marletia, and driven by Ron
and B.. Penn, Waverly and
'Newhart. T he third place spot
Piketon, and dr iven by Tom
. went to !.H. Puppet, owned by
RUSSELL, IENTUCIY
McRoberts, In the first place
Gary Peck, McArthur, and
spot. Second place went to
driven by Terry VanRhoden.
: The fourth and tenth rae~ for Heavenly Hope; owned by RI;Hlllco pacers found J.J . Star Bret chard Kelly, London, and driven
"EVERYONE WELCOME"
'In the winners circle for both by Kay Kelly. Winning 'the thlrct

~Make

was putting up zeroes so it
worked out. I had a good sinking
fast ball. They are a good hitting
team but I try not to think about
who's on deck or who's on base
but think about each pitch."
Oakland fhird baseman Car·
ney Lansford singled In the thir"d
Inning to extend his hitting streak
to 16 games.
"We could do absolutely DO·
thing with the bat," Twins
manager Tom Kelly said.
In other AL games:
An&amp;els 1, Indians 0
At Anaheim. Calif., Kirk
McCaskill outdueled Bud . Black
to give Califo"rnia its fifth
straight victory. McCaski11,13-7:
retired the last 12 batters in
orderon his ·way to· a league·
leading fourth shutout. Black, .
9·10, allowed only tl\ree hits and
no earned ril,.s in pitching his
fifth complete. game ot.the year.
Royals 5, Mariners 4
At Seattle, Bo Jackson hit his
26th home tun and Steve Crawford, 2-0, pitched five shutout
Innings of middle relief to lead
Kansas City to its sixth straight
victory. Jeff Montgomery
notched his 11th . save. Brian
Holman, 5·6, went the distance
for Seattle as the Mariners lost
their fifth straight.
Tigers 7, Yankees 6
At Detroit, Fred Lynn ho-

Dorothy Reeves . . Brandl and
Robbie Reeves, Chester, are
spending a few days with their
grandmother. Dorothy Reeves .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield and Crystal, Medina, were
weekend vlsltorso!Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Russell and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Russell and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, and Mr. and M:rs,
Charles Knapp, were · recent
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs . .
Kevin Knapp and family.

By BOB HOEFLICH
tal Hospital . The hospllal's booth
Into each life some rain must did a land office business during
fall .
the fair and that's where I spent a
However, I
great deal of my time. lt was my
suspect
first experience of being involved
members of the
with the hospttal employees · ln
Meigs County
such an extensive project. ·
Fair Board won·
They're really a great group of
dered why so
.. people. I was impressed with
much of It had to
their attitudes .and willingness . .
pout Into such. a
There was· only one slight ·
short time span for last week's problem and that occurred
annual Meigs County Fa.lr.
·
within the last half hour before
The hard rains which hit the the hospital booth closed at 4 p.m.
fairgrounds on Wednesday, Fri· ·Saturday. The ·hard rains came
Mr. and Mrs. Don Anderson,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bowles
day and Saturday - that's three and the Rock Springs Grange South Carolina , spent several attended a cookout at the
out of the five days of the fair BuUdlng became packed with days visiting their relatives, summer campsite of Jim and
had to be disheartening for board people getting out of the rain. In Bessie Graham. Paul Anderson, Betty Bowles, who live In
members who work the year the confusion, someone lifted a . Frances Sampson , Dorothy Pat"askala.
around getdng it all together for disc camera which was to have Frum and daughter, Misty .
Mr. and Mrs . Russ Eshelmann
that one big week.
been awarded as one of the
While here they celebrated their and Buddy celebrated the EshelOpening day of the fair hospital's door prizes . Shame- wedding anniversary and her mann's 24th wedding anniverTuesday - was great. Good tnay the God of Phottlgraphy brother, Harold Graham's birth- sary at the home of . their
attendance and good weather bring you blurry pictures.
· day with a dinner party. ·
granddaughter. Carrie Lynn Gil·
and then the walls came tum- ·
At last year's fair. people were
Local residents have received key, Otway.
.
·
bling down throwing a damper on eating the heat and dust- thanks
news that Sammy Lewis; a .. Mr. and Mrs. Duane 'S tanley
the fair. the partlclpan ts · and to the drought; this year, people former resident now living In and Mr. and Mrs. Steven Stanley
those planning to attend for the we water logged. But take heart. Florida is out of the hospital and attended the Ohio State Fair.
remainder of the week.
fair board members, the law pf recouperating from major
Mrs. Anna Croson and daugh·
However. fair board members averages says that 1990 should
surgery.
ter, Connie, Dunbar, W.Va. viare adults and J'm sure by this be perfect. So hang In there -we
Arlene Marklns Will lams, Pho- sited her brother, Paul Andertime In their lives have learned appreciate your work - and do enix, Ariz. spent a day visiting son, sisters, Dorothy and
that there are some things you join the rest of us who keep her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Frances, and niece, Misty.
just can't control - one of them smiling.
Duane Stanley.
being the weather. I don't even
want to talk about death. taxes
and the rest of the stuff that gets
·
beyond our grasp.
Of course, the harness horse
racing schedule got fouled up by
the weather. Wednesday's program had to be thrown over to
Thursday and Friday's racing
had to be moved to Saturday.
Every year, businesses contribute trophy blankets given as
special awards for the horses
making the best time in their
races or divisiOns. The winners
of ·those blankets were not
announced previously so here
they are:
Wednesday - with the races
actually not held until Thursday:
In "the two year old !Illy
1
· competition, Shan.e Rack owned
by Shirley Duckworth and Leonard Mlllsagle, Marietta, had the
TUFTED PLUSH
winning time and won the trophy
IN SUBTLE COLORS
blanket provided by R. N. 'MoC~mpare
tors. In the three year old trotter
'at
competition, the trophy blanket
10.99
donated by Brogan-Warner Insurance went to Hopeful Chris,
* Crush and soil resistant
owned by Don Spencer. formerly
* Popular easy to maintain
of Pomeroy·and now of Vincent.
• Pic- from &amp;!amorous colors
Terrescort, owned by Wilma
* FHA==~M~"'f''!
Styer, Waterford: won the trophy
blanket provided by Hartley
Shoes in the two-year-old colt
division. Wilma Is a sister of
Brooks Sayre, well known local
driver and trainer.
TREYIRA PLUSH
On Thursday. Lady B's Crown.
owned by Ray and Anna NeCompare
whart, Marietta, won the trophy
·at
blanket provided by The Dally
15.95
Sentinel for the best t'!"O year old
sq. yd .
colt trotter. Mac's Chris, owned
• 20 Beautiful colors
.
by Jack McDonald of Ports• Stain Resistant of Trevira
mouth, won the trophy blanket
* 5-Ye.- Warranty
for the fastest three year old colt
pacer. This trophy was provided
by the Sugar Run .Mlll and is
&amp;
known as the Fred Goegleln
Memorial In tribute to the late ·
Mr. Goegleln who was a long
. lime, effective member of the
local fair board. Mighty Sabrina,
DIAPERY DEPARTMENT
owned by Burton Walker, SunSPECIALS
bury, won the trophy blanket
provided by Gloeckner's Cafe
CUSJDM-MADE
O
and this was for the fastest two
IANGABACI CAIPET
DRAPERIES"'"'
OFF
year old filly trotter. I
Compare
· And the winners of the, Little
MINI BLINDS H.
OFF
F•ctorv Repr•ent:Mive wiU H In
Miss and Little Mister Meigs
store Thurs. •nd Fri. , Aug. 24 &amp;. 25.
County Falrcompellllon do have
.Sq.
Yd.
parents.
·
• Foam Paddin&amp;attoched
·Amanda Fetty and Daniel
• ldnt lor Do-11-Yoursotl tnstattion
Sidwell were selected as the
•100% Nylon Pile
·
oU ,;is fl.
winners this year and they really
IICIUdel:
j
Llvlnt Room
made an attractive couple of
Carpel, Pad
Don or ledtoom
youn&amp;sters in their. appearances
and lnalllllllan
at fair events.
1--------:=.,n-:=o::-:u--:g:th-10.-'-r.,-:- - -- ------ --- - - - Amanda Is the daughter of
Janice and Mike Fetty, Route 7,
CONGOLEUM and
Pomeroy, and Daniel is the son of
11 I Room
u ft .
Living
1
Vanessa and Daniel Sidwell of
.
lncludel:
11
1 7.6 tt, o~n
TARKEn VINYL
Carpel. Pad 1
- ..., Hall or
the Chester area.
Coincidentally, Janice and Vaand lnslallallon L
· _J ••d•o•m
nessa both work at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Janice is an
enough lor:
12 .• U ft . ~
S1AiftJIG AT
Sq. Yd.
Ll•lng I&gt;O!" 'P
aide In the Home Health Nursing
. 12 •12 -lt .
'Service and Vanessa Is in the
I
- ...,___ Dinlnt Ro.om
lwcludes:
operating room. ·
.
1
. 11a131t .
ENHANCED HI·LO
Clfllll. Pad
Hallwey or
'
Speaking of Veterans Memor-

WITH THIS

ur-.a. .

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..........

lEAK G
CARPET·SALE!
F ALWE,EK!

About·lt!

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Middleport, Ohio, with Drastic Price Reductions on our
entire Carpet Vinyl line. Choose from Plushes, Sculptures, Tone on Tones, and much, more more. Don't miss
this fantastic sale.
HURRY IN -SALE ENDS SATURDAY!!!

up races main fair ... __

' ,;~5

$

899

50 Yo
600Jo

j INSTALLED~
/ L

~PECIA~~-- \ \'

$.2 99
$39 9
99

·-----'"'""""&lt;&amp;7~~~~----....-..
·20YOS ~no~lolr:

L __J

JOYOS

I

REVIVAL

f .

II .

August 23rd thru 27tll

CHESTER
NAZARENE CHURCH

'499

IN MULn COLORS

Compare

1~.~9

EVANGEL.IST
DAVE CANFIELD ·

NIGHTLY 7:00 P.M.

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Warner,
Dayton, were recent weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Warner and other relatives .
Mr. and Mrs. LesUe Frank,
Sara.h and Mat thew were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs . Eugene
Haning and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Russell,
Harrisonville, were recent visitors . of Mr. a nd Mrs . Robert
RusselL
Mr .. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
Chester, were recent visitors of

WE'Rf CELEBRATING

Sports briefs

•

.Wolf Pen· community notes

And though a cloud may pass
Nichola Pickens. who won
between them,
Grand Champion ln Creative
the sun will always warm the
Writing with free style poetry.
also received the outstanding of "earth, ·
no mat ter how dark the cloud.
the day at the Ohio State Fair ln
Pickens was. Inspired to write
Columbus recently.
this poem when her grandHer poem, entitled "Grand:
mother, Sue Goeglein, died in
rna's Loving Memory ," received
April of 1984. The poem Is a
nothing but praise from the judge
tribute to her and her memory .
that day.
Where the old lie.
there He fond memories of
loved ones gone before,
But. In a house over the hill.
memories of a loving grandmother live on.
Oh! Grandma is not dead but
asleep,
she lives on ln the mind and
heart of the child
who ate her gingerbread ,
and picked he[ flowers, and
warmed her heart.
For the child ls the earth ,
and Grandma ls the sun,

EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA!

AU.tuntl...

""

officers reports were given and
the sick or the area remembered.
A card was signed lor Mary
Virginia Reible at Overbrook
Center. Her thankyouforflowers
was noted and also news of Rev .
and Mrs. John Iliff, now serving
an Interim ministry In Arizona.
The meeting clased with unison
prayer, and Carrie Kennedy
served a dessert course to !4
members and a guest, Mary
Elaine Russell. Evelyn Strauss
was the contributing hostess.
Favors were booklets Inscribed
wllh "God's Words of Faith."

Harrisonville happenings

mered, Edwin Nunez, 2-2, got the
victory and Mike Heimeman
finished for his fifth save . .The
loss went to Eric. Plunk. 4-3, who
surrendered Lynn's · gamewinning blast. Jesse Barfield and
Wayne Tol)eson homered for the
Yankees.
· Brew~rs 6, Red Sox 3
At Milwaukee. Char He O'BrleiJ
ripped a three- run home run to
propel the Brewers to their ninth
victory In 10 games. Jaime
Navarro, 4-5, pitched one and
one-third innings for the victory.
Tony F.ossas relired all eight
batters he faced for his lint
major-league save. Boston· starter Mike Smithson. 6-12, allowed
four runs on seven hits til five am)
one-third inningS.
Rangers 7, White Sox 1
At ChiCago, Ruben Sierra and
· Steve Buechele belted homers
and Charlie Hough, 8-12, p)tched
his fourth complete game of tbe
season. Sierra's 21st homer came
In the third inning off loser Steve
Rosenberg, 3-9, and broke a 1-I
deadlock.
Orioles 7, Blue Jays 2
At Baltimore. Mike Devereaux
homered while Pete Harnisch.
3-6. and Mark Thurmond out·
duele&lt;l · Dave Stieb, 12·8. Thur,
mond, who allowed one -hit over
the last two and two-third Innings. gained his fourth save.

UM*Itll81

"Christmas in August" was the
theln e ofDlane Ho.lley's program
at the recent meeting of the
Friendly Clrlce of the Trinity
Church.
Based on anclen1 church traditions. Aug. 15 was observed as
the d~ath date of Mary, mother of
the Lord. Thus, on that day . far
removed from the distraction of
hoUday commercialism. one
goes back totheamazingmlracle
revealed ln the manger scene,
and th e message of God 's love
and grace for us.
During the business meeting

Michael -Hlll, Mary. Jake, Josh
and Jayla Hall, Don, Donna,
Jeremy and Rachael Rose, Ray .
Jackie, and Erica Ginther, Ray mond and Grace Furbee. Flor·
ence Adams, Clair, and J .C.
Cassady , Vicky and Matt Hill,
Dale and Leatha Proffitt, Trlsh
Wolfe, Fern and Dorothy Norris,
Julia and Clarence Norris. Margaret and Dave Yost, J.C . Wyatt,
Juanita Sayre, Helen Hayes,
Gary and Donna Gibbs; and
Julia, . Chris, and Craig
. Randolph.

A little rainfall...

A's down,.· Twins 5-0 to keep
pace with Angels in AL West

Outstanding of the Day
named at Ohio State Fair

Friendly Circle holds meeting

Proffitt birthday is observed

Vikings, Wildcats, Oaks capture SVAC preview contests

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, • ttytoa Jllll 111 olopnl
,Subtt tono on tono

*

AI portlelpotlnQ Doky ~· ~ Sfofes. Dairy Queen' Stores 0(8 t=l(OUd ipOnsors
o# fheChlkho'l Mlfocle NefwOrlt Telethon. which benefttt IOc::ol f'IOStliiOIS 101' Chilet-.n.

'

.

® ""a.U.S.P• 011., "MD,O ¢ofo

.

NORTH SECOND AVE., MIDDLEPORT, OH.

1,

991-2156
·- .

'

"

"'

.

L _

·J-.

3 leftroom1

INGELS
CARPET
175 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH •

• ·Scotch..d SUinlleto••

CAM D.O. Cor,,...

. 40YDS l

and lnalaHIIIon

9t!

'1·
1 ·.

-~

__ _
,.._...

Call

992-7028 Todayl

I

I

I

j .•

�..
Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel
-

1

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

.-People.in the news--

By Unlted Prettslnternallonal
A DROPOU'J"S REGRETS: ABC anchorman Pdt!r Jennlnp
•• ~mes across as the epitome of Intellect on the air but that's
. misleading, he says. Jennings Is the subject of an Esquire
: magazine profile that says he read nothing butcomlc books as a
. kid, dropped out of school In the lOth grade and that when he
: mentions that he attended Carleton University in Ottawa, he
~- really means he went to Carleton's night school for a week.
Jennings now wishes he'd been a better student and says his
• spelling and grammar are weak. "I never sound neatly as
sophisticated as I'd like to be," he says. " Because God graced
me with a halfway decent set of pipes, the ability to talk to
people and a look, a demeanor, that is not distracting, I've
. . gotten away with bad grammar." Jennings told Esquire how he
•. and his third wife, writer Katl MariOn, reconciled after he
• · learned s he was having an affair with a Washington columnist,
... ·and how he \S still trying to Impress his father, who was a
·• pioneering broadcaster in Canada.
• MARIE OSMOND's ENCORE: Country-western singer
. Marie Osmond gave birth during the weekend to an 8-po·und ,
_9-ounce girl named Rae heal Laren Blosll . The 20-iilch baby was
" born Saturday at Utah Valley Medical Center In Provo. There
~ were no complications. Mother and baby were doing fine.
Osmond, who starred on a television variety show during the
_ 1970s with her brother, Donny , has a 6-year-old son from her
previous marrigage to first husband , former Brigham Young
·. University basketball star Stephen Craig.
ROCK ON 'l'HE AUCTION BLOCK: The rock 'n' roll a uction
season opens in London next week. Three auction houses · Sotheby's, Christie's. and Phillips - will be selling off Items
"such as a smashed, autographed guitar trotr~ Pete Townsend for
·. about $1,000 arid a working Eric ClapiOn guitar, that Is expected
to bring betwee n $4,000 and $5,600. The members of U2
autographed and donated two guitars, a bass. a drum set and
, synthesizer used In the movie "Rattle and Hum" and the
instruments are expected to draw In $32,000 to $48,000, which
will go to a fund set up for relatives ofthose killed Ina soccer riot
In April. A torn and creased handbill advertising a Jan. 18,1963.
Be &amp;ties performance In Morecambe, England, Is expected to go
for$800 even though there Is a cigarette burn right In the middle
of Ringo Starr's autograph. The auctions also will include Items
from relative newcomers Madonna, Boy Geofle, George
Michael, Terrence Trent D'Arby, Slnead O'Connor and the Fat
Boys.
D.A. KENNEDY: .J ohn f'. Kennedy Jr.,. only 'son of the late
' pres ident, Is being sworn In Monday as an assistant Manhattan
district attorney In the nat ion 's larges t city. Kennedy, 28, Is
among "the new crop of 64, "rookie" prosecutors. Last year,
Kennedy was named as People Magazine Hunk of the Year.
GLIMPSES: Dolly Parton Is often the subject of wlld·storles
'· In the supermarket tabloids and she took a s hot at them In her
show last week in Mansfield , Mass. " I hope they use recycled
. paper," Parton told the crowd. "I 'd hate to think they cut down
, good trees for that crap. " .. . Nobel Prize-winning Soviet
• scientist Andrei Sakharov will make his first visit to Japan in
October to attend the second Nobel Laureates Forum.
- Sakharov's lecture will be titled " Perestroika . and It s
Implications In the World. " Sakharov, known as the father of
the Soviet hydrogen bomb, a ud his wlfe, "Yelena Bon11 er, also
will visit Hiroshim a during their tourol western Japan.
~~---------------,;.,._..,._ _ _ _ _...,1
·~:

Man, .91, weds in Wisconsin
MENOMONIE, Wis. (UPil -'
Lester G. Hanson. 91, became th e
oldest bridegroom in Wisconsin
history when he married Evelyn
Keiser, 80, at a home lor the
e ld er ly.
· The bride wore an off-white
suit with touches of blue 'Satur-.
4ay for w,hat was descri bed by
rJurses · at the Dunn Coun ty
flealth Care Center as "just a
beautiful wedding. "
Their fellow residents at the
home had honored the co upl e
e'a rller this month with a shower.
and all the residents of their wing
.were among the JOO guests at the

cere mony. A reception with a
cake trimmed with blue decora tions followed the exchange of
vows.
"We're looking forward to a
happy life together," the bride
sa id. "He's a wonderful .man, a
peaceful man.·:
The couple met for the first
time In April when Keiser moved
into the center.
'
"I just moved Into his room,"
th e bride said.
State officials confirmed Hanson was the oldest bridegroom in
Wi sconsi n's history.

Black farmers honor Nelson
ATLANTA (UPI) - A black
farm group gave country s inger
Willie Nelson a trophy Sunday for
his "co lor blind" efforts to raise
money for America's struggling
farmers.
Since founding his charity
operation - Farm-Aid Inc. four years ago, Nelson, a former
T-exas farmer . has helped raise
about $12 million -largely from
three bene fit concerts held in
1985, 1986 and 1987 for
America's struggling agricult ural communit y.
The Federation of Southern
Cooperatives, a group composed
of black and other minority
family farmers in 11 Southern
states, cited Nelson for $700,000
in co ntrlbu tions since 1985.
T he money has provided edu"
cation, telephones hotlines and
e m ergency a id such as food.
medicine and heating to poor,
rural minority farmer s l n Ala·
bama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky , Louisiana, Ml s ·
souri, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Mississippi and Texas.
". Jerry Pennick of the federation
said bla ck farmers have suffered

. 1..

greater hardship than their white
counterparts because of racial
diS&lt;'rimlnation at the market ·
pla ce and the flnandng ta ble.
"Unlike some of the governmen t agencies in the past, Farm
Aid has been color blind." said
Pennick, associate director of
the group that represents 30,000
farm families . "He (Nelson) just
has . been very instrumental In
keeping black farmers a part of
th e American agric ultura l
system ."
Nelson received a trophy fitted
with a plow and inscribed with a
message of the farmers' grail·
tude from about 10 representa·
lives of !he organization.
Penn;ck sa id the group symbol·
ically represents a ll of the
nation's esti mate d :l.5 million
black farmers, 98 percent of
which, he sa id, live In the South.
Nelso n, on his summer concert
tour, played at Atlanta's outdoor
Chast~i n Park after the back·
stage ceremony .
Born in Fort Worth, Nelson, 56,
grew up as a 1arm boy in the
central ·Texas town of Abbott.

JOHN. PlUSAfiT
A. WADE,
M.D.
Inc:
YAUIY HOSPITAL
Ell, NOSE &amp; THIOAT
GENEIALALLEIGIST
"WE lAG IEARIIIO AIDS"

Rock Springs Grange meets
Election of officers was con·
dueled at the recent m!!i!tlng of
the Rock SprlngsGrange.
NPW officers are WIIUam Radford, master; Linda Broderick,
observer; Pat Holter, lecturer;
Roy Holter, steward; Roy
Grueser, assistant ·steward;
Opal Grueser, lady assistant
steward; Kathryq Miller, cha·
plain; Jim Fry. treasurer; Frances Goegleln, secretary; Harold
Blackston, gatekeeper;· Barbara
Fry, clrls; Helen Blackston,
·pomona: Nancy Morris, flora;
Rollin Radford , executive committee; and 1 Louise Radford ,
pianist.
Mrs. Fry reported at the recent
meeting of the
Rock Springs
.•

The Chester Council 323
Daughters of America met recently at .t he hall for their August
meeting with VIrginia Lee as
councilor, a nd Betty Denny and
Lillian Demosky as hostesses.
The ple dge to the Christian and
American flag was given as well
as the Lord's Prayer. "The group
also sang the first stanza of the
Star Spangled Banner.

.

AUGUST 21 THUR SUNDAY
. AUGUST 27, 1989

C':)Q,...._,,Q,.....,

r:w:l

·

e....,

Scarecrows fooling more people
than birds
. CHARLOTIE, Mich. (UP!)Don and Edith Hale originally
posted their scarecrow couple In
the ' family garden to deceive the
birds, but instead have fooled .
'675-3398
passersby.
Jt.ls not unusual for a driver to
1-800-344-3331
pass by ttie couple's farm 7 miles
'
west of Charlotte and wave to - - - - - - - - - - - -

ltll!l

.

0

Fabric Shop
992-2284
. POMEROY, OHIO

"Wed•••ttow•
Speelllllfa"

RAVE

r8 9¢

WIL-CAR SUNDRY STORE COUPON

oubfd• M-'•· 0.1111

!50¢ 0FF!
ANY TWO PAIR OF

I.

:

PANTY HOSE OR

:

I

KNEE mGH HOSE

I'

____
· ._... ________ _.J
L
COUPON Bli1'IRB8 8-27-89

.

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

99¢

DISCOUNT PRICE

• Leern how to prepere your own 111x mum whh confidence!
" Help othen p...,.,ethelr 111x retuma.
' • Cl••" begin hpternl* I . 1989 et 81 I Eaet M1in Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio 411789, Ph. 114-882-8174.
·

- -----· --- ·----711-10-0IMM

PI••• s•d "".lr• inlurlllllion 11191t r•r tu preparltlon caurse.
IAII£: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __

' ADDI£S$: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
CITY: - - - - - - , -.sT.ATE: - - - - - - liP: --~
PHOIE:

------------

1-Cant of Th..u

5- HipP'f' ....

8-Lott end Found
7-Y•d Sele(paid in adv•nca)
8 - Pulllic lila&amp; Auction
8 - W..ted tD luy

Happy Ads
V.-d

&amp;••

;),~~\/1('1':

Niching over 11,000 hom•·

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
'SUNDAY PAPER

1 1-Hel, Wlftted

DAV BEFORE PUILtCATION
-11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY .·
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
- 2:00P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 :00P .M," WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M " THURSDAY

Classijied pages cover rhe

!tU- GIIIipDht

. 882 - M.ddt.-ctf1

317-Ch•hirl '

388-Vinton
241- FUo Grandt
256-Gu.-n Din.
643-Arabie Din
379-W .. nut

Pom•oy

985- Ch•.,

843- PorU•nd

247-Letert Falli
849-Rtcine
742-Aut'-"d
667-Cootvillt

1 3-lnlurtnce
1~-Buttn•• Trainif1g
11-Sc~ls &amp; lnltruetton

TV.

18-Aidto.
Cl Aep.;r
17-MIICINeneDUI
18-WIIIted To Oo
21- B~•in••Opponunity
22- Monl¥ to Loen

following telephone exchanges ...
Meio-Coumy
AreaCodel14

18.00
$9.00
113.00
11 .30 / dov

.

'- ·~
.30

.42
.110

13---

HOI ahuld Ooodl

•r

tine~

14-Milc. M•ch ..dill
56-.....,.g Suppti•
18-PM:s tar Slla
17 -Mu.cellnstrurnents
58-Frutu&amp; v . . . .bl•

59-For l~e or 1'r•dt

~.1''1

:,1'1111111':.

\

, I . I II t: k

' 12-Stl:uetion Wented

- "2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Gellie Cot.anty
ANtCodt 614

Ov" 15 Words

uoo

f nqrlrrvn~&lt;~ni

•A cle11ttiecl ectve"iMm.,t pltte.G In The Deity SentinM t•-'
cept - cl•tlfi.:l dlapllfV, &amp;uain•• Card and lege! notices)
will el1o· epp. . in the Pt. Pl. . .nt R..,_tar 1nd th• Gal.liDaily Tribune,

Rete

51
12

•-GMIWIY

•Acts t"-1 mtJit be Ptid in 1dv1nce.,.

pohl

16
15
16 .
16

2 - lnMtnMHtt
3-Annouc.....tl

176-Pt. Pl ...tnf ,.
458-Leon ·

576-Apple Grove

773-MIIon

112- N.w Heve"
895- l.atan
137-Buffelo

23- Pt-o,_._.

loervioe~

3, -Hom• for Sale
32-Mobitt Hom• tor Selt
33- Farm• for Sale

81 -F•rm Equipment
82 - W.nted to Buy
83- LN•todl
84- Hav • Grain
65- Sied &amp; Fertilizer

Hl-'89·1 mo. pd.

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Qhio

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

···-hilt

PH. 949·2801
or Itt. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY

50UNCE REG.

4.6 OUNCE GEL

County

Meigs

Probate

Court. Case No. 26275,

Methel L Bowen, State
Route 7." Tuppers Plains.

Tr onspnrl alliin
71 - Auto• lor Slle
72-Truck• for S•l•
73- Vanl 6 4 WD' t
74-Motoreycl•
75-8oets a. Motor1 for s•e
76-Auto P•t• &amp; A.cc•IDf'i•
77-Auto Repair

34- Bu•in•s luildin11
36-lOtl. Acre.gt
31- Aael l11.t•t W-.ttd

WATER
SERVICE

·1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Call Anytime
992-2371

PLUMBING &amp; lu:a'""'"
Ntwlonliool:

161 North Socond
Midclleporl, Ohio. 45 760

OH .• was appointed Exect,J!

IUSINfSI I'IIONE
16141 992-6550
IESIIINCI PHONE
16141

M. Bowen. deceased. late of
Tuppers

SER~ICE ·
We can r~air and rt·
core radtaton and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FOlD

",

Business Services
POMEROY,O.

BINDER

992-2259
NEW LISTING - l'qMEROY - Mobile Hom e. 12x55. 2 bed·
room, wrth tront porch. Stttin g on a 71!170 lot with a I ca1
garage Asking $7.900.00.

}89
EVERYDAY DISCOUNT
PRICE 2.49

·· FOAM FORMULA .

NEW LISTING- POMEROY - Mobile.Hom e. 12x55 with 2'
bedrooms, bath and built on porch. Would mak e a·good ren ·
tat Asking $6.900.00.
NEW LISTING - POMEROY - House on·'? acre lot, 2 bed·
rooms, I bath. carpetin&amp; part basement and ut ility room.
$10,900.00.
NEW LISTING - CHESTER- Anewe(lhree beijroom ranch
wrth lull basement, garage. Equipped kitchen. cenlr~l air
Well insulated, electr ic heat pump, approx I acre lot
$37,900.00.
NEW LISTING - LEADING CREEK - 2 bedroom Mobile
Home in mint condition wrth 30 "" en closed lront po1ch.
Fully furnished wrth everylhin~ needed. even pots &amp; pans!
Nice storage unit. Just off Le adrn gCreek Road. $12, 500.00"
HARRISONVILLE - Approx . 4'h acres at beautilul nice lay·
ing hay field now Homesite later El ectric availabl ~ Lot ro8d
frontage. $7,500.00.

.

B&amp;W
GARAGE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

247-3522

St. Rt. 338
L1tart
Ohia

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT .
•ZROI -liACTOIS
elCHO PIODUCTS
etiOWAID IOTAVATOIS
•Y UllMAN IIOWIIS

etiiTUSTAn IATTEIIS

,LAWN :~wi;EPAIR
EQUIPMENT
742-2455

lutlanti,Oh.
6130/ffn

POMEROY- New wiring, new ~lumbi ng,
new drywall, new roof are already completed mthiS _4 room
home w~h 2 bedrooms. Could hilYe 3·4 rooms upstarrs"Full
bssement. Gleat for rental. Just $11,000.00

MOBILE
HOME PAll

IIEW LISTING- RUTlAND - One floor pian wrth 3 bed·
rooms. l'h baths, dining area. large level yard. garage, and
woodshed. $39,500.00.
·

Parta

11Etf LISTING -

HEIRY E. CLELAIIb .: .......... ,.............:........ :... 992..&amp;19i
JW TRUSSELL .......,. ..................... ...... ,....... .Mt-2610
OOmE TURNER ............................................992-5692

985-MII
OFFICE.~ .......................... :........................... 992·225 .

JO HILL ........................................................

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE
Now lhru Sept. 9, 1919

100fo OfF AU PERMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP
169 N. 2nd

Middlopart

992-1725

1-1-1 mo.

Salom St.

tor

matlon leading to arrHt and.
conviction of person{&amp;~ thft
broke Into a building on my
pro~y, Long Hollow R011d:
and 1tol1 a wOod splitter, amali
gasoline type. Ann Alee, 304;

675·3598.

., .

Attention! $200 reward tor 1n;
fomudlon Ieiding to ,arr•.t and

conviction of person or peraon1

guilty of •hooting 2 walker coon
hounde lound dead on Ca. Aft"

26 (Irish Rldgo) Call colloc:l 614'
. 288~961.
:

4

Giveaway

$40.00 tree merchandise just tor

hosting I HOUII of Lloyd party;
Choo11 from
gifts, toys;
,fasMione, jewelry, , Christma,
decoration• • nd hom a d.eor;,

Can today! 614·112·5318.

2 lltiers kitten•. 112 Siamese, &amp;
pe;rt·SitmiH. 614-446-4287.
"

2 ouldoor kiUena, 5 mo. oid;

Whlt•grar temaln. Togtthlr

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX
OPEN 6 AM-9., PM .
7 DAYS .
liVE BAIT

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

Yellow femlll tiger, 8 wk•. old
an.d litter t111lned. 614-446-7628. ~

2 112 (lti. Belo*
Raci111 Locks &amp;
Dam At Antiquity

Sand-Stone-Dirt
(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

DUMPTRUC~

ETC . .

H!-' 89-Hn

•Mobile Hcime

' eMoblla Home"
Rent1l1
•Lot Rantlia

99t-7.U9

lt. SJ ......

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

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign end
Oom"tic Vehicles

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Mastic - Ctrtaintootfl!l
Vinyl Sioli..

Stamleu Gutter
Rljllo&lt;tmtnt Windows
llown IMulation
Storm Doors &amp;
•
liintlows
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992·2772

7-1 ·'H-1 mo.

111-CO.
&amp; PEST CONTROL
5IIKI1976
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS '
BEES •WASPS

••• ber lilt loall Ptll
. Control Assrt.

Tal FI'H
1·1010-5

992-21

Middleport,

Now Taking
Registrations
992-5288

All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs

NIASE Car1ifil!ld Ma chani c

CAll 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

For More 1nformtion
7-17-'89·1 mo. pd.

Certified licens• Shop

. dn

WANTED

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; G,ARAGES
"AI Reoson.le Prires"

PH. 949·2801
ar l1s. 949. 2860
. Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16·16-Hn

•Washers •Dryers
•Range •Freezers

•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairoble"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
192-5335-985-3561 .
We Service All Makes
5-4-89-1 mo.

DAVE 'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

LINDA'S
PAINTING

loca!MatVahylumbor
In Middleport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES

For Most 2 1nd 4 -cycla
engines
Stock Parts tor
Homelite, Weedeater.
Tecumseh, Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

Tab the pain out of
pain!ing. L1t me do
tt for you. ·
VEIY REASONABU
HAVE REFEHNCES

PH. 992·3922

614-985-4180
'

8/ 4/ 89-tln

6· 21·'19-tfn

r---"B"i:Noo-':"'1"1

SWEEPER REPAIR

II

All MAKES AND
MODELS

1

I

MARTIN'S

1
1

POMEROY EAGUS ·
·
CLUB

224 E. MAtN ST"
992·9976
THUIS. 1.1. 6:U P.M.
SUN. 1.1. 1:45 P.M.

DDOI Plt21

FURNITURE
and MORE

2 H.D. FREE w~h coupon and
pulthiSe of min. H.C. Pack~
Lim~ I coupon per cus-

ace.

222 East Main
POMEROY, OH.

tomer per bin&amp;Q sessron.
We Pav ~so.OO P~r Game
Our

992-6872

U&lt;

TRUCKING
•Gravel
•limestone
.•Fill Dirt

•

t 10

People 'U.OO

Per Game

#005·32

2-J.ttn

JONES TIRE
CENTER
•New 8t Used Tires
•Custom Pipe Bending

•Oil Changes ·
•Gre,.se Jobs

•General Chauis
Maintenance
•Computerized Balancer

992-3697
St. Rt . 124
Oh.

742-2421
28-'89-1 mo .

· Television Listening Devices
Dependlble Hearing Aid Salas &amp; S•nrictl
~

Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
EXCE"
HOUDAYS

:i

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:1: '(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
-

We Buy All
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless StHI,
Etc.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

or at

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

romoval. 304.at5-33541.

6

.

Lost &amp; Found

Found wanf;tarlng IR Kanauu.a..
Slameat CIL OWntr .ldtntlf}l.

614·367-7123.
•
LOST: While Chow, 2 yro. oldo
No collar. Reward. Edgtmont
Dr. area. 81...,.46-0391.
'

Lost: Mala Beegle. Brown,
whlteJ.. black. 1 v••r old. BarrlrP
ger, Hldge Rd ., Portland are.;
614-853-5178.
•

lost: Mala and famall Walke(
Hounds. Last ... n In WilloW,
Creek area. 814·992·3028.
•

Yard Sale

7

.•.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ALL Yard Solos Must Bo Poid tn

Advance. D£AOLINE: 2:00 p.in.
the day blfara the ad 11 to run.

Sunday odltlon • 2:00 p.m.

Friday. Monday edition • 2:op
p.m. Saturday.

Public Sale

8

&amp; Auction
I

Booking

5785.

9

Auctions,

wanted to Buy

2 trent tonders 19511 Chevy
Sedan Must ba 1n good eand.

Pas11ngtr dqor to;r '1956 Chivy '
S.dln. lAusr be In good cond:
304...594·1754, •tter 4p.m.
·

Complete households of fur·
nhur• &amp; antlquts. Alto wood-&amp;
COli heater•. Swaln'a Fumltur•

4 AucUon, Third 4 Olivo,

u+

446-3159.
Furniture ond opplloncoo br 1ho
ploco or onUro household, Fair
prlcat baing paid. Call

3158.

614 4 44~

'

Hortlcuhur• baan•.

Phone 304:-

675·1627.
Junk Cir1 with motors, $50 ~
down. wfo motortt, $25 &amp; dGwn.
Richard George, 614-388·9095,:
Jun.k ears with or wlth.Du1·
motors. C•ll Ltrry Lively &amp;.14~
388-9303.
'

Quills

.

Pre 1940 quilts. Any co!"dition.

Cash Pold. Call 814-992-5657 ar
114-592·246! .
TOP CASH paid tor 1D83 model
snd nowor usod caro. Smi1 h
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 EaS1orn
Ave., Gallipolis. Cotl 6!4-4462282.

Uud tumlluro ond housoh1&gt;td
oppllonces. Phono 8!4·742·
2048.
: .
Usod Mnl1uro br 1ho ploco oc

entire h(~Mlsahold 1lso aalllng.

6!4-742·2455, "
··
WANTED: soorw or Alr-Dyno

ty~ exer-eycle. Will PlY
r..aonabla price. Call 304·895300&amp; 1ftar I p.m.
'

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted · _

$350!0ay processing phone 'orders I Ptopll Clll \IOU . No IX•
perlence necessary. Call (retun.
dable) 1·3 15·733·6062 utensicm

'
-P·2732A.
Z nurses aides, shop_clerk, . lri·

quirt at Odds and Endt Shop,

Middleport .

"i

AVON t All Aroos I
s -... 304-675·1429.

S~lrtfY

:.

AVON • All sreu, Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882 2645.
4

Adulls • ..rn exlre monl'y
delivering
the
Charlas1on
Gazene fn Point Pteasant-Sand
Hill aroa. Mileage altowanc•. t·
800~88·5!40 .

Planla.

Ask tor Kon
:·

Attention LPN'I FuiHima, 3 fo
11 :30 p.m. t hltt . Opening for
LPN lnttrtated In long t•rm care
1110
part·UmtJ
piositlons
available or evening &amp; nr9ht
shift. We oHar c:ompeliiiVe
wages &amp; exc. benefit pJcka'ae,
ApplY. In peraon Scenic H1111
Nurs ng Canter Mon . thru Fri. 8-

4.

Babysi tter nHdad my home.
Raccoon Rd. MuSt be melurt 1
dtp~ndlble.
Partlmt. 01y1,
lftningt,
few
wNkands,
Rot...,.H noodod. f14-441-

3431.
CRUISE SHIPS now hiring all
potnlono. 801h ulttod Inc/ unUIItod. For lnformollon calt 815m-6507

Give Us A Call

Dlmon.tr1te tor P1rty Pl•n FrM

S300 kl1. No cotlocllng. No

Today"
Locetld Ott BvPIII• At
Jet. of Rt8. 7 • 143,

A large 2 story house, fra• lei

to Buy: Van with a un
io.i::===:==::·:.;::;~ Wsnted
for whaelchllr.
lt4·37g.2438.' '

L. w.

RECYCLING

992-5114

4 pupp'- to give away.l14-i4t;
3084 or 114·247·2822.
•

DEAD OR AUVE

6-5-'89-tfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

:

IN MIDDLiPOIT, OHIO

A/C Service

Fred W. Crow. Ill
31C

THREE-IN-ONE

$100.00 REWARD

•

0317.

(8) 7, 14, 21,

M;;un

•
lnfor,

3 Announcements

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

1600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE
LIMESTONE
SPIEAI» .
DIRT HAULED
'

Si!l Vll.l:~.

trix of the estate Of ttomer

608

4-25-tfn

5-17-tfn

Bch. Fl.

"THEWIDZ"

or 992-7121

"' / 8 / ,9/ tfn

ALLEN'S
HAULING

Your Phone
Bills Here

}29
E.

992-2269
EVENINGS

992-5275

lijijlilll

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICE

:~: ~;;:~:~;

BILL SLACK

7-24-89 1 mo.

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

State Route 7 ,
Plains, OH .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•FIREWOOD ·

"'free l:stimates··

We C1rry Fl1hing Suppll•

NOTICE. OF
APPOINTMENT OF
· FIDUCIARY
On July 31 , 1989. ;n the

7 -12- '89 ·1 mo.

•LIGHT HAULING

5/ 13/19 Ito

Equipment
79-C.mp•s &amp; t)liotor Hom.•

-'1-Houlll tor Aen1
42 ~ MobHt Hom• tor Ran1
43- F•rmt far Rant
44-Ap.artmant for Aent
Furnilhed ROoms
41- Spen tor Aent
•7-WIIAted to Rent
•e-&amp;:quipmtnl tor Aen t
41-For ~•e

. Get R11ultc fast

_.a~~u.~

949~2168

A11 n111111 1.1: 1111· 11::

•7 point Mn11ype on'v ~ .
•&amp;eminel il not re.poneible for enou ef1er first dl\i. ICh.ek
fDr errors first d't ad runs in p81M1f') . Call before 2 :00p .m .
d., af'l• Pt.lbliCIIIion to m•• corrclian.

Cerd of Th.-kl
In Mernuri.m

Words

•6-

LILT

Income Tax Course
• Benefit from the ,...,lngly tiVer·changl,.gtax lawel

Muon coum i• """' be pr•

$18 Per Day &amp; Up
·949-2526

PAITS &amp; SERVICE

SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDIJIG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Monthly
16
.06/clly
AltM.,. tor conMcutiHI runs.l;tro...,.upd..,lwlll bec:h•ted
... toreMhd•u

•Ra.we t.IO discoum fDf' acts peid WI advence.
.
•free adl - GNe.-wey and FotJnd . . unct• 1 I words will be
,..,. 3 d-r• It no eh•ge.
•Prt. af ad for all capiUI teners il doubt• price of ed colt.

COP'f DEADLiNE -

24 COUNT BOX

Of

WNkl

Announcements

only to good home. 614-446"

1
3
6
10

--

,.id.

I

Days

WITH ROOMS AND
APARTMENTS FOR
RENT (By Day or

FREE ESTIMATES

8-17-1 mo.

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru F.RIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
-

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Roger Hysell
Garage

. at Meigs Memory
Gardens

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

&amp;VUIDAT IDCOVJIT PIIIC&amp; l.GII

NOW OPEN

NEW- REPAIR

•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE MOVAL

3 mites off of ·Rt. 7

Classifie

.. HAIRSPRAY
IL_;I

ROOFING

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
•Lawn Mowers
•Riders ·
•CI!ain Saws .
•Weed eaters

70UNCESIZE

OHIO RIVER
CAMPGROUNDS

Howard L. Writesel

1·1·1 mo.

to E11nl With The

H&amp;R BLOCit

I

0

OFFERED AT

JUST A;PEDALIN'- Here,
the first contestant In the
National Kiddie Tractor Pull
pedats hard In his attempt at
the Meigs County Finals on
Saturday In the show ring.

0

SUPER SENSE

WANl

992-2156

PRICES GOOD MONDAY,

It was announced that Clarice
Allen was hOme from the hospital
and that Eileen Clark and Bonnie
Landers were not well
With some members attending
the state session, cake and Ice
cream and tea were enjoyed by
Betty Roush, Doris Grueser,
Ethel Orr, Chal'lotte Grant, Everett Grant, VIrginia Lee; Lora
Damewood, J ean F'rMerlck, and
Goldie Frederick.

Thief eludes FBI, achieves celeb-· Dolly and Kenny - tne two
rlty
figures standing In the middle of
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (UP I) -A the garden who are named after
thief who gave federal author!- singers Dolly Parton and Kenny
ties the slip and escaped with a
Rogers.
·
satchel full of bank money has
"That happens · aU the time,"
achieved celebrity status at the , Edith Hale said. "People wave at
condominium complex. where he therillnstead of us, and Dolly and
s taged the crime, but the FBI Is Kenny never wave back. I don't
not a mused,
want people to think we're not
Reskh:mts of the Lakeshore
hospitable."
VIllage complex were eyeing
The Hales' scarecrows are so
each other this weekend and
lifelike and original that they
wondering about the Identity of werenamedamonglOwlnnersof
the clever thief.
the Great American Scarecrow
The man escaped with $150,000 Contest In this month's Mother
In bank money Thursday "after
Earth News.
FBI agents failed to spring the
Dolly and Kenny are slmUar to
trap they had set for him along
overgrown Cabbage Patch Kids
the Florida Turnpike.
·
In the !lliddle of Edith Hale's
"He has to be living •at the
gladlolas and Don Hale's 'corn.
Shores,'' ·Ed Beitler, 47. a resl"I'm not sure how good ihey
, dent of the 640-unlt development,
are with . crqws, but they 're
told The Miami Herald. "How
pretty good lit fooling people,"
else could he disappear so
said Don Hale, who has lived on
quick?"
.
.
the farm with his wife for 48
Embarrassed FBI agents gave
years. "We always "run out real
up their door'to-doOJ search for
quick whenever we've had a bad
the .culprit late Thursday. News
wind, because they get blown
of the successful heist has since
over and people think we've·had
arouse~ the curiouslty of the
a heart attack."
neighborhood and the Ire of the
The Hales were among more
FBI.
than 100 readers of the Mother
"You're turning this guy into a
Earth News who sent in entries
folk hero," FBI spokesman Paul
for the scarecrow contest and
MUle~ complained to The Miami
editors chose the top 10, said "
Herald, which has written about · senior editor Terry Krautwurs i.
the caper fo'a three days running.
Edith Hale said she decided to
The man telephoned the First
make a scarecrow three years
National Ba~k of Homestead
ago-partlytoscarecrowsaway
Thursday morning demanding · from her strawberries, bu I
money. He. threatened to shoot
mostly because she wante d
missiles at the bank If his
something to do.
«jemands were not met.
"When I started to make the
Bank officials contacted the
first one, I just kept stuffing and
FBI. which promptly set a trap to
stuffing, and flnal~v . why , there
catch the would-be extortionist.
was Dolly," Edith Hale said. "So
Bank officials withdrew $1~.000
then, of course, I had to have
from the bank's vault. put the
Kenny ."
money In a satchel and dropped It DCLUIIVI-••1
by the side of the turnpike.
The thief s urprised FBI agents
by darting out of some bushes ,
snagging the satchel and then ·
hightailing II Into Lakeshore
VIllage. One agent gave chase,
but only caught a glimpse of the
thief.
The FBI believes the thief may
sti ll be in the complex, and some
residents agree. "I think It 's an
inside job," said resilient Bll I
Hishon, 27 .
Others expressed support lor
the thief.
"Good luck to him," said Keith
, Langston, 31. "He didn't hurt
anybody. And in thlsdayandage,
A new wildlife series! An eKtraofdinory
It's rare to see someone get away
view of nature through lhe eyes of animals
using the latest techniques in spedol
like that."
effects photography.
The crime also was discussed
a t Sa m 's Hideaway, about a mile
,WEDNESDAYS AT IPM
away.
" It looks like the perfect
crime," said Eddie Guadayol, 28.
The~~I' Channel
''T h e g uy outsmarted
. . . . . America's Family Network-

The Daily Sentinel-

Ohio

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

·

everyone .'' ·

Pomeroy-

Business Services

Qutr• ks" 10
• t he
news

a few pennies spent he~e
comes back folding money _

ADS
WORK

Monday, August 21, 1989

Grange that all contests will be
judged at the September Pamana meeting.
·
Mrs. Grueser gave the leglsla·
live report on several Issues, and
It was also noted that Thomas
Foley. new speaker of the house,.
Is a seventh degree member of
the grange.
It was reported that Betty
Conkle and Mildred Jacobs were·
Ill.
Roy Holter gave a report on the
new vaccination to help cows
produce more milk. According to
Holter, a survey shows that more
low fat milk Is being consumed
than whole milk.
Refreshments were served by
Roy and Opal Grueser.

Ches.ter Council D. of A meets

(304) 675-1244'
J'

Monday, August 21. 1989

Hllvarlng. For Interview : 81,..

ft

H~IVII

A

llf81ZDDt&amp;UHICOUJIII.MAM

0111-

MD . . . ..

Stop By and See Uo!- Ftn111clna Available
MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME

mow IIDIIIAJ IRII, UIIAIDI, o•o

.!41~·471~

441·7002.

DOnlot ·Aulolont nHdod lut~
11ino oxporlo- pnlortod, but •
nac nu nnry. Bind resume to
lox 001 clo Oatllpolio O.ltv
Trlbu"!c. 125 Third Ave. Q».
llpolla un 45U1.
---,

�i

Ohio

The

Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

. Monday, August 21 1989
.

'11

44

Help Wanted

Apartment
·for Rent

y .............

(lo()(Js

CI1MI

ni Ltt.nng 1~. Ft Wont!. TX
'

I
I
·trltll.·
"'_-_. ,_T~I~D::E=Y=~~ !
SHATAG
1

.......

EplliOdel

elll

w e(J)

Gil eo

®~Runllerby

I

CD , _ Of ChOice Leam
how to handle preuure In
waya tl'tat 881V&amp; your beat
Interest.
CiliiHdlng Rainbow Q
,eiiD H7lllliY Daya
·
llJI F-·Ofllfe ..
0 Cartoon Exp~M~~
8:01 (I) Allee.
· 8:30.(JJ G NBC Nlfihay ......

~INK

SOMESODV

JUST60T SACK
FROM THE 1/ET
WIIERE HE HAP
HIS TEETH
CLEANEC'..

, _.

......-.:.__ ""»-"'

.

iii SportaLook (0:30)

l1l e(J) ABC Newa Q
(l) llodr Electric
(!) 3-2·1 Coract Q

.

9 JelfwlaliS

,,,,

8:311 (I) Carol Burnett
7:00 ()) F - Mtllphy
e!ll PM Magulne
SportaCariiw (0:30)
'()) a()) Cunilnt Affair
CD (!) MltCNeft/ Llhtw

0

..
OWnoro,f~~~~~~~:-=:,=

Livestock

ATTENTION HOfH
Point PI,. lo now COf!Ying ·to~k.

Paint Plus, 2415 Jackaan Ave.,
Point Plaaunt, phone 304-8754084.
Four month old wunllng colt.
Extra nice AQHA Chtalnut ~lth

J' 0 I

J Cycle, Wt now bore cyll""
dtra, flit Nrvlce for boring and
piston delivery, Gary Kinnaird,

m

0
0

'·

Newllltour ·

1

304-875-11165.

Building
Supplies
·Block, brick, sewer pipes, wlndawa, lintels, Me. Claude Wln-

Horae Walker, aaddl11. ~4·675-

chrome. W.lndlhletd. lncl!ldeo ·2

Po~y

AFG. . S1200;

Reg'od · QuaHor

Rio Grande, ot1 Coli 114- '
horMS tl'llnlr:ag flclllty
245-5121 .

ltrt,

a

trailer.
Naeda p•rt·llme horse .t,..lner
for halter I weltem pleuure.

614·26&amp;.e522.

Phone

Bob.

Hoelllch •fler Spm. 114·99~·
S2t2o
'

. ~OVLP

. CHECK .II
CASHING

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

STANP ON
t'IEAC&gt; ANI&gt;

"198r Stratoe 181 pro·.very exr
tro option troller, brakh, &amp;
travelrng covtr. 814-288-5919. ·

1967

C~oo-&lt;:reft

you.
VI')U'PI

Many thing• rettored $5,000. Or
make ofter. 114-245-8122.
·

8·2,/

Transportation

$300.·304-871-1159.
1971 VW V.n. Good cond. bht
otfor. 814-448-0915.

1973 Catalina Pontiac. excallant
condition, 2 door, owned by

lady. C~ll304-675-1898.

1974 Corvette white with black
Interior PW, t-tope, AC, four new
llret. Exc. cond. 114-446-7441

·

,

·

·1

·'

Auto Pans &amp; ·
Accessories

76

C4 transmission..~ tJ51 motor whh ,
~hone 304-675148~.

O,_Nnti
IHl Major Lattgue BaHball

J,&gt;
'"'J&lt;!

dtNaatwtllaNow

409 Chovrolof HHdo porto lor

email boX', dump bed' ,&amp; hoi_,, , "

"f1J.E,

?xt ft. long. 81 4'24HOI7.

·
POOR BOY TIRES, ,304-6753331, front end allnmont $1U5I

1977 Camaro. Fair condition,
n.w parte. 307 automatiC. $650.

614'992·3537.

1971 Monte Catto; Y8. auto,
alun1. wh-1111, white black Inter·

lor, ~650. 814-446·2588,
1978 Cedlllac CouAO de VIlle.
Fair condition, $1500. New tires,
battery, healer fan. Call614·992·
6417 bot- 8:30-4:30.

1971 Chryalar LeBaron, exc.

condition, PB, PS, AC, AMIFM

VJELFAR£, rr AFPEARS.
IS S'nLl 11-\E. CHEA1100...

4,000 good used · tlrH, !Mm
tires, ·new tlreL
.

'

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

79

.

•

" ·,.

ttel'llo. Leather Interior, good
tim.' No rust. 814-448-3832 8-5

AND

614-446·1304 alter 5p.m.

Services

or

81

58
12

Situation
.wanted

Labor

Day. Bob'a Mukai,
~ucn, WV. 304-773-5721 :
Canning lomatoee for Hie.
I
81 • •47 2911 •
BI
r ng co "I1 " " '· ...... •

Phone 304:576-2060.
NOW HAVE VACANCY For ol·

darly man, or woman. Excsllent
Care. 304-675·7541 .
We car1 tor elderly and han·
dlcapr,ed In our home. 26 years

Box 961 , Vlntcxt, OH 45686

15

Schools &amp;
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS

COLLEGE, 529 Jackson Pike.

·can 614-446·4367. Reg. No. 86·
11·10559. ..

18 Wanted to Do
All types masonry brick blocks,
stone 1nd' concrete. Free EsUmate&amp;. 304-n3·9550.

BabysiHing, Christian home,
Alo Grancfe area, have references &amp; day care eXP'rlenca call

after 2:30 814·245-9252.

Roof painting &amp; coatlng1. trailer
roots, houses, &amp; barne, rree ••·
1imate. 614-379-2320.

In my homt.
Reasonabl• rates. Refaranc11
tVI IIable. All agel , also

Will

babysit

Wetkendl. ~Ill 814-2"45·~788.
WID babysit In my home. Have

raterencn; claen environment;
only; near schOQis.

Fruits &amp;
·Vegetables

Canning . puchll now In
season. Pears Plume, GraPH
and Appl" w1II follow around

Cart tor tldlrly In their home.

exper anca. LPN on call. Low
Income home. Call 614·992·6873
at1ar 7:00 p.m. for more lnlormatlon.
Would like lo tlnd nice lady
companion for older gentlemen.
Contact Ernest McKinney P. 0 .

Buick Regtl, 2 . dr., V6,
crulu, AMlFM ltereo cat·
tiH whHI, power win·

Canning tcmatoea,~!.OOJbuohel

• your container, to.OO!bushtl ~
our contamer. 7·112 mi. s. of

Galllpollo en St. Rt. 7. 614-258&amp;535.
For sale. Silver Queen Com.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
10x47 2 br., mobile homa, good

cond,, ranlted 'lot, Kanauga,

:;2,000. 614·446-e759 614·4487656.
12x5S, 2 bedroom. Good con-

dKion ..Call614-992·5858.

12x60 mobile home some furnll uro, lot VOx100 flat lot on Sun
Valle~ Drive, ready to movelnlo.
Priced na~otlonable 114·446-

8005.

.

Slartlng Sat.Aug.11. $1 .00 doz.

School. $350. ptr month, $35"0,
deposit. Call 614-286-1316 after

&amp;p.m.

Marine Radio EllfC. cond. $75; 2

Gas clothes dryer. Elec. clothe•
drYer, $200i Seuzukl 650 motor..
cycle; S3SO Good running cond.
Anlique mantle clock, $100. 614·

cucumbers,
!3!3.

59

btane.

614443-

For Sale

446·7109.

. BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

2454.

1H3 Lincoln Town Clr • one

owner, eXc. cond.,. all power,

1984

Chtvr Ct.vetle,

new

clutch, 1750. ' Mull IHI Call
bolwoen 4 1 a p.m., 11 4-4414803.

304-576-2398 Ohio

·~

~J

•

.

'

614-448-

YO'RE
GOOOER''-1
ARY A'-IGEL,

802.

.

.

0214.
Sepllc Tank Pumping $90LGallla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Jockson, OH 1-800-537-9526.
.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Phone 304-882·3745.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
~

..

Gallipolle, Ohio

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Pipe It In Of Pipe h out. C.W,

Davison Plumbing &amp; Trenching
drain• ' &amp; wll« finn; 11 ~-4460159. Morning~ or Evenings. .

Electrical &amp; · .
Refrigeration

INO'IlCEf
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING
recommendl:

that

rou

buol,_ whh poople you k~»W,
end NOT to Hnd throllflh the maU until you hovo
'lnVHtlgalod tho ollai:lng.

(!) Ma(Or I . . . . Be_..'a

nanapa.per, 1-'.0 .• tsox M14:ttl, t,;I8Veland, . tual outeome 01 lmportlnt _ .. are
OH -44101-3428. Be eure to state your turning In yOVI favor at t1t1a Ume. Don't
zodiac algll.
·
· let aetbacke 0'&gt;81 whelm you or tllllpt
VIRGO (AIIg. 2J.Iepl. 22) R_... you to t-In the towel ,._ui'ely.
·Judgment on lnforma11on p88lld on1o PISCES (hit. • "an!! a) All of your
you 1oday. Hyou do 11111, you'll be able lnlllllwelnenta a good Mel bed aide
. to evaluale n-..a~e~y and then act on . to them. II you want to come out on top
II In waya tha1- your beelln1ereata. todey, eotlcentrata notaiY on the p08f.:
·
LIBRA (llpL 2J.Oct.
:II) You
could tobe tlv8IIPIICII ol the altuatlon.
··lnatrumenlalln
eilllghtenlng
a friend
A-S (lllniii21·Apd •1 R&amp;-evaluahl
day who can't- to- the loreat for en enterprtae you're lr1¥111'4d In that fa
1he tr- In a critical situation. Volun- prmntly turning a ploflt. lt - · ••II
t - your aalla1.-ce Without being can be an _ , bigger prod,_. than
asked.
'
hllbaen.
SCORPIO (Oct. M-Nov. 22) Compan- TAUIIUa
You'l be reklila· Will IPPNciale. your. coo-n lor lllatlc regarlllng Y.0UF (101111 Mel Ob(lotheir problama and Welt.e today be- tlvM todlf Mel for IIIII , _ you'll
CIUM you'l II- ~ !Ilk to them lnlhlnd .n w thnt c1tanoe oiiCihiiWtg
• ateed of at them. Thla Ia a merwloua them.
In waya your common

4-lllllia...- - - ··

•

Allldentlal or· eommarclal
wiring, new 11rvlce or 'Npalri.
Llcenud electrician. RIIMncwr.
Eloct~cal,

9 0 ......

().GRAPH _
.ASTR..,..--____

(April.....,.,

304-875-171111.

: · AIIII-21,1M

Business
Opportu nlty

"
10:21 CD Lagandw of Laualthlr
Dick Cavett pays tribute to
two 01 America's comic
legends, Jack Benny and
Groucho Marx. Baled largely
on film lnten~lews
10:30 9) a 0 Ne-rt Michaella
tha object of his
~ychOiogist'a aflactlons. (Rl
10:351]) MOYIE: Baclt She~
(2:15)
11:00 CD Batman Minstrel's
Shakedown
elll w et1l a eaz

Call 614-446-3888 or 814-4454477.

84

ll!...,q Nawa

. e0ns1ag1

304-875-1145.

21

IF.,! DD'-I'T GIT A'-IY IJIT!S-·
I'LL GIT ME SOME
'NIIJIJLES

SWEEPER and aewlhg machine
repair, parts, and tupplles, Pick
up and delivery, Dav.la Vacuum
Cleaner, ont half mit. l.tP
Georg•• Cr11k Rd. 614-446-

weekdays

Financial

a

MAW

P:~ •ale' and urvlce, 304-

6

82

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

''

·,'

ROIIIY or cable tool drilling.
Molt wells completed same day.

5 , room hoUse, Krodel Park.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

a

Unco,ndltlonel lifetime guanm·
1H ..A:.ocal reterenc11 fumlahed.
frHT aallmalaa. Call collect 1•

1983 Camaro Z-28, l·t•, etc.

ccnd. 12,000 miiH. 114-367·
n57.

0 Llrry King IJVal ·
(I) Prime Time WIM!IIfill
8:30 (!) Mancini I Friancla (2:00)
all •
Dailgttlng wWhen Mary Jo's mugged •.
aha learns ee~-detanse from ,
a teaCher. (R) r:;J
dt VtdaoCountry
10:00 Ill 700 Club
@ Proeall 1989 From
Newport, AI (1)
(l)N-a
11111 • a Murphy ~~own
Murphy loses 1he will to grfl
when her guest dies on the
air. (R) g

,.
,,

Look• Shorp. 814-448-1758.

J&amp;R Produce. Com, tcmato11, ·1-814-448-3111.

depth fish llndal'!l $40 &amp; $60.

Home
Improvements
. '

Ron'• TV Servl9e, apeciallzlng
In Zenith ·also servicing mosl
other brands. House calfs, also
some appliance rep1lrs. WY

Contact 614-7424:716, or 614- . •ulom~Uc
overarlve,
new
742·2790. PlaCe yo'-'r order nowl Michlen tiM, new banery, ell·
Yerlblack luther top, 11500.00

3 bedroom, 1000 sq. ft. ranch
house tor
rent Carpatad
throughout, total electric. Fanced in back yard. Located 8
miles trom Holzer Hospital on
Rt. 160 near North Gallia High

guest stars. (R) Q

Good condhlon: $2,100.
614-446·6701.
1982 Pontiac J-2000 2 dr., 814-237-o486, doy or night. R o
er•Batement
Coupe, new, engine, exhaust,
aterproaII ng.
,_
tires, brakee. An. J;JCJ VGC &amp;14·
. ·
Fetty Tree Trlmmlng1 etump~·
4461i:i030.
"
1982 block TroM'Am, T-Topo, removal, caii304.S75-b31 .
Beige Interior, new tlr..&amp;.. Alpine
ltereo 1y1tem, PS, PB t~W, Air,
re-built engine, runs hke new.

a

"

For Sale: 179 Volkswa(JO:n
Wastfallai camper, .tovt, smk, ·,j
refrigerator, runt &amp; lookl good. ' ~ .
$2450; 1974 WIMai;)ago Uotor :
Home, tlove, sink, furnace, 1 . '
co'mode, runt 6 looks goOd. ~:

$3000. 614·381-8706.

8:01 (I) MOVIE: lmlhltlotl Of Life
(2:30)
8:30 D Ill G Hogan Family
David asks his new glrllrfend.
Sara, to marry him. (J:I) r:;J
1111 0 NeWhart Dick visits
Micltaalln the ·Sinl1arlum and
meets a fiery artist. (R) Q
9:00 e!ll d5J MOYIE:
'Sayw1tcb: Panic At Malibu
Pier' NBC Monday Night At
Tlta Movlea (2:00)
.
(l) Amettcap MI._,. LOOk
beyond 1ha laughs to
examine the artistic growth·In
Simon's wor1&lt;. Q
all Ill 0 Murpliy Brown
Murphy dates the world's
smartest man. Buck Henry

616 C6JEC110fJ 10

1! lOOks like you will form a practlcalwlllanoe In the w-r lltead that wtl be pred~ upon utlllllrian rMieda. It will be a
good arrangwmen~· that will tum out
bal•llclil for bOth partlel.
.
LBO(,.,., D-At• II) In an lm~
mau. todlf, don't ptay your
trump.cardl untH you IN 7Ift you , _
raw oppo1111on Slzad up. Pathelpa bread
1 MitiOr changu
n Mled for ~ In thl coming year.
8Md for your ---~.::rr PNdiOtiOne
todlf. IMII S1 to
rwDII.
1111!1.

"m

cto

quality.
.
IACII'ITAIIIUS (Nov. a-Oeo. 21) Do
not - • your lltlln18.oni!Tiall encleJv- ·
ora today. Conditione ere r a t ' * - - ·
al and you oould be quite fudty at put- '
ling tC?I'* ~ lmpmllwe.
CAI'AICOIII..,_ INan. 1f) Today
you could be IOrtunlte In l~ol8
that have lllght 11,1 ........ . of ohanca.
t l _ . , tltll. 11911 not you
altould
your IUOk on far out

rx-

. _ or fooltalt

nv-.

AQIWIIUI ,..... "" ......., Tile-- ·

:11-.lune

•1 Be nelth«

obvfoua about your Int.,_
t1011a todlf. Tile former will tip your
hind to thoae whO'n be pulling eglllnat
you; the 11tt1r could C8UM a ION of
relpeCI.

CANCIII (..... :11-.IIIJ II) II there Ia
~

potenllllll'

~

that you're atMmptlttG to .,.,..,. today, don't ptar the tan. .•ate. Slw8 It
With • lltiiiY pall 11 poulble:

.

G,_..a1 Hb (0:30)
eiiD AIUnlo HaH (1 :00)

. g.._,_

"

Beat 01 Canon

m~-(0:30)

~E~mal

lfu"T~Q

0 llporhl Tonight
Pat._ .....
1111 ~ P.l. Kapu
IIICIOOitiCMM

aa

12:00 Ill MOVIE: Llaatl'a Goi.t
AIMnlln (2:00)

m

w-··1r

=~~

Pro IINIIII
Htlr100I8

~~~-tl Tonitlht .
llll'al ...... lltow
a liD Twlltlltt zONII•.,...

9 New Mlh Hllal•nnotiiJniWar
Ill NIPI!vlll NOw

1a:ao • (Jl 1111 Lila lllgllt Wttllt
DevldLI·-

(llleraan

a()) USA TOc!!Y

...

., ..

..

card trom A·K.J of ilpadea aad Q-7 of ;
diamonds. Wben be thretr the jltdt·of ..
spades away, declarer led a iplde: ..
East c:ou1d lllie two spade 1r1c1t1 bat' ~ ~
bad to lead away from the.- of ell· ••
amoada. South pui up the jlck to mate ·:
his coatraet.

_

.r-J~-·J....,.ooaf41i&lt;"Md :
._,_,,.CVo~au-·r.m-•AII.r.Mor; ·

·

,. a~ cna.w ~~on-.,._.
---on,.+'ll
f.b.r...._ _ "'_ :.
I&amp;&gt; .... IIE1III'IIPal 1NT11RP11111B-.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 42 Bounder
1 In which
way?
4 "Great
Expectalions"
character
7 Olympian
queen
8 Dutch

43 Lambkin's
mother

DOWN

1 Trojan
beauty
2 "Are you
, a man
-- mouse?"
3 By the
cheese
road
Yesterday's Anawer
10 Mora4 Praline nut 15 Brick .tray
27 Moisten
torium
5 Greek
11J Legal
29 Evil one
11 Medii. bean mounlain
wrong
30 Rub out
13 Wrath
8 Exemplar 21 Injury
31 Nuzzle
14 Shinto
7 Present
22 Place
32 Duffer's
temple
9 Sullen
23 Consortium
need
111 Macaw 10 Obscure 24llving
37 Yellow
17 Refer lo 12 Biblical
25 Morality
or Black
19 Sailor
lower,
tale
3111nexpenalve
20 Unusual
21 Socks
22 Put the
puck in

'·

...,
'"
.,,
.,

.
.,,'·
'

. .,

the cage
25 Jury list
26 Pastry
27-of
Jenkins's
Ear (1739)
28 Work unit
29 Effervesce

·.

·-

330netlme
34 "Giverest!"
35Deer
311 Stupid
311Jaded
40Gamishee
41 Run lasl

"-

.,

DAILY CRVPTOQUOid-Here's hew to wort It:

o...-v~ca

Batmen

...'

• •' ·

...
11111

AXVDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

" Ill You Can Be .A Stllr
11:30()) Batmlin Birblcued

e!ll o

.7••n
.AKt15

' WI-IS .

CROSSWORD

0 Murder, 8ha WI'Ohl

Chevrolet engln• 350 .. 305;' : ·

,.',

+J785
'
How would you play J-8-4 in
band, faclna A·K-9-&amp;,.5 in.dummy, for W£sT
EAST
.AKJlOI
no loaers? 'l'hat wu declarer's prob- . • e 6 ~
'
.lem in loday's deal. OJie appt'l!lcb ' • K Q 10 t8 f 2
.Q72
would be to play West, wlto had pre- • 10 s
. ..
+12
.
with three bearts, for both the +to
aDd the 10 Of diamonds. OrdlSOI1I'II
the ch•neei of success ·are 25
.Q7
pen:eat, but West's pre-empt reduces
"
'
•Ju
u.- cballc:es. A secaad aJ:~::Cb
+AKQUS
would be to play for a 3-2
ond
"'
spnt, with the ~ doublelon. PlayVulnerable: Neither
..
iDe out the A·K of dlamollds brings
Dealer: SQuth
dowD the queea a Httle over 27 pen:eat
of the Ume. Need!- to say, If declar- S..tlo
Nortlt Eul
p. .
' ..
er bad to give ap a diamond, the de- 1 +
s•
f+
feoderl would ~ckly cub out two 5 •
AD pall
spade wimlet8.
larer saw yet 80•
n.-Ona lead: • K
.,,.·
other path '10 IIUCCel8, less likely than
v,..,.....,.
,.
the other plays, but perbapa justified
. ·: '
by declarer's knowledgs ol W~t's. '--~~-"-----.:--.,..J

West wu a piayer w1to loudly procla~med 10 one and all that bis higli
•.""" ... were oaiy In his 10111 suit wbenbe made a weak jump bid. If be
te111ng the truth, be could DOt bold
a blgh spade or .the diamond queen. So
declarer played ace of hearts, cUbed
A-Kofclabs,rulfedtbebeartjackancl
cubed the diamond~ to aeelf any"'""' lon queen. He then
oue beld a ..,...e
ran off his remaining~- Comlnl
doWII 10 four cards, East bad to tit.

a........

transmission.

. ..

.

NORTH

'

'

,...._____,-------,

tendencies.

' FootbaH Q ·
CZJ Natlonitl QaograpiiiC
Spacl1l Look at the creature
whO 18N88, ~otecta and
g..oldas man. Q
·
(!) Galway Pleya Mltnclnl
. INR) (0:52)
9) !II 0 Kat, I AHia Lou
begs, and blackmails, Kate
Into accompan_ytng him to a
waddlr)g. (R) r:;J
• liD MltjOr League '

Starcnft Mo!*Qo. 18 ft. walk· . .ro'
thru. 228 HP, very low hourt. ·'· ~
Phone 614-992~68 evenings, ·J--.
of614-IM9-2162day.

Ill Crook I Cllaae.
7:351]) AndJ Grtlfltlt
8:00 ()) MOYIE: Llalie'a OINt
1\dvanbn (2:00)
D Ill G ALF ALF has an
allergic reaction to a baby
b&lt;ought to Kate's shower. (R)

Golf

,~

1961 VW BMtlt, runs -~.
nHdl IXtlntiVI bodV ~ work.

lafl~~'-~ldyl r:;J

NFL

::2"~'0·~------~~--~ ·'

71 Autos for Sale

PRINT NUMBERED
l~ITERS IN SQUARE~

•u

i()) Profeaalonel
e ()) Prdu-

Bass boat-1987 L•MI•u "18'5"
with Mercury 35 tip motor wHh 1~
power lrlm and auto oil Injection, Mercury Trolling motor
Shoreline trailer plue more. All ~
In good condition. Cell 114-1192· ·'

·

M

IHl IaMon

BOATERSII Mercury Mercrulser,
speclallet Preclsfon . Mobile
Marine, we come· to y-ou. 1-61~
259-5979. New and Used Parte,"

...

••u

7:05 'I ]) Andr Grlllltll
7:30 iD Ill Family Feud
@ Ma(Or LattgUe BeHIMIII
Mltaulne (0:30)
()) !,nerlalnment TC!fllilht
Q(J)USAT!Iday

'

V . by lillin~ in the milling -d•
you dovolop from .stop No. 3 bolow.

yourl

Andr Grtllltlt

0 Craewfirw

.fVL.L li OUT'
yovf( e~sr

Cobin Crul10r.

L..-.1..-.t.
. ..:...t.___.__...,__,

B.f Jaales laetlby

dtTopCanl

full face helmtta, one bell, one

·,, 1

•

BRIDGE

0 ,MIIIIIi Y~

mllu . Mti•Uc maroon, loti of

11619 or 175-67~.
with

9

."

~-,;~.:..,.~~-=..,I;;;....;F,..;;.;III'I--i A Complete tho chuckle quot,ed

·

OM_,....

Kawasaki KX60, KX80, IXCell•nt

bloze. Podlgreolncludh brother condition.
614·992·58116 ~
Hank. frleti Ray, and rou bit even!ng•, or t14.f4..~112 uy. 7 ;1
Hoza cot $100. 114-388-9645.
Roducod. 1987 Suzuki GS 450 L,
Polnh!, Querterhorut, Ellc1rlc I opH~j mint condition. 1,600

·

H~··

111 • a o Wheat 01
F-C
eiiD WKIIP In CinCinnati

'

',

large

box only to find a sman toy. the
"" boy turned to his mom and
·~::::::::::::....., said, "Some things never tum
M u L 0 y E. louttobeubigasyou-."
·

s

Alter unwrapping a

. SCilW LETS ANSWERS
B-ta
Octave - Grist - Rsjah - Zephyr - HEART
1had stirted secretariat achOol. My Instructor had thos sign
hanging over her desk: "Tact Is The Intelligence Of The

dt0nS18ge

Po- Unit. $55110. It 4·992-

I I I r I I;.:
I
r---;C::...,::O.,.:.I.,;I;...:.;NH· •

I'
rl'l'l
6 FOR
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS I
ANSWER
• I I I I I I I I. ·

1,.~~=-.s

1313.

I

•

0 Sltowlll&amp; Today

sawmill Frick u1· lnttmatlonal

2

1 I· 1 I I :

8:00 CD llonanu: The Loll

63

........

Television

.

KIT N' CARL'XLE® by 1...-ry Wript

51

The Daily

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 len&amp;th and formation tl the words are all

. hln.ts. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
P R DJ

BEU . JN

UNSZ

GZQRYXO

TQHR

JMRW

QD

E BE U.

.... .

..··.~

1-21
JMR

...

C R RI

YNJ '- JN

..

BQADNV

WQVYRZ
Y.... . . ,•• Crvpt. .ssotet A MAN NEVER SEES

ALL THAT HIS MOTHE;R HAS BEEN TO HIM, UNTIL
IT IS TOO LATE TO LET HER KNOW THAT HE SEES
IT. - W.D. HOWELLS
-~

C&gt; 1!1111 King Fealures SyndiCate. Inc:

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.

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·-

�•

Pon•oy-Middeport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Daiey cattle
judging results
are announced

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER _:The reserve
champion steer, owned by Alex Brown, Pomeroy,
was purchased by Foodland, Pomeroy, for St.75
per pou~. at ibe annual MeiJIS County 4-H Junior

Livestock Sale Friday night. Pictured, 1- r, are
Sheila and Bob Eastman, of Foodland, King
Steven Grady, Brown, arid Queen Greta Riffle.

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB - The reserve champion !a.hb,
owned by Michele Guess,.Tuppers Plains, sold for $3.5~ a pound to
Cole's Sohio, Tuppers Plains, at ibe Meigs County 4-H Junior Fair
Livestock Sale. With Guess are, I - r, Queeen Greta Riffle, King
Steven·Grady and Homer Cole.

.

Local news briefs ... - - - - .
c ontinued' from pa ge 1

Driver injured in Meigs mishap
One person was injured in a two-car accident Saturday-at
11 :30 p.m. on SR 124 in Rutland Township.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of Ohio Highway Patrol said Francis L.
Haggy, Middleport, was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
a lter the car she was driving was struck by another vehicle
driven by Flncent Vanaman, 18, Rutland.
Haggy was attempting to make a left turn while Vanaman
was trying to pass her on the left causing the two cars to collide.
Vanaman was cited for Improper passing and for npt wea ring
a seat belt .

EMS has 15 weekend calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered 15 calls over the weekend . Ten calls were on Saturday
and five on Sunday . Four of the weekend calls were to au to
accidents .
Saturday at 12.:40 a.m .. Pomeroy transported Edward Smith
from an auto accide nt on State Rou te 7 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Rutland at 8: 55 a .m. was called to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Richard Peyton who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
-At 10:26 a.m., Pomeroy was called to Union Ave. for Mary
Erwin who was transported to Holzer Medical Center.
Racine went to Fourth St. at 11:59 a. m. for Bonnie.M. Fisher
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Audrey Torrence, of Tyree Blvd., was taken at 12: 20 p.m. by
Racine lo Vetera ns Me morial Hospital .
Tuppers Plains at 4: 44p.m., transported Lorraine Osborne to
Camden- Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersbu rg, W.Va.
·
Rutland at 6:13 p.m . transported Victor Per ry from an au to
accident on Happy Valley Road to O'Bleness Memori al
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 6:41 p.m. was called to the Americare-Pomeroy
Nurs ing Center for Muriel Douglas to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 10: 10 p.m., Syracuse transported Brenda Hawley and
Joseph Howard !rom the fairground s to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
At 11:24 p.m. , Rutland transported Francis Haggy and
Charles Smeith from an au to accident on St ate Route 124 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12:16 a. m .. Middleport was called to Park St. lor
Tim Taylor who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 2:04a.m . 10 Stat e Route ? for Leonard
Fitzpatrick to Vete rans Memorial Hospital.
At 2:11p.m ., Pomeroy went to Cave St . for Chris topherGilkey
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 2:34p.m. went to McGuire Road for Edi th Manuel
who was ta ken to Holzer Medical Center .
Tuppers Plains at 8:25p.m. was called to an auto a ccident on
Stat e Route 7, however, no injuri es were reported.

Meigs announcements------'--Plan tournament
A softball tournament Will be
held Saturday and Sunday al the
Middleport Park. Anyone interesting In participating should

Weather
By United Press International
Sou ill Central Ohio
Tonight, showers likely and a
chance of thunderstorms. Low
around 70. Light and variable
winds. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Tuesday , showers likely and a
chance of thunderstorms. High in
the mid 80s. Chance of rain 60
percent.

contact Gene Wise. 992-6224, or
Rick Ash. 992-5960.
Golfers to meet
Students who want to participate on the Southern golf team
are asked to meet at the Jaymar
Golf Club Tuesday at 6 p.m. This
includes boys and girls, grad es 7
to 12.
·

Release ftre report
The Mldldeport Fire Department answered a total of 55 calls
during the month of July includ·
log 10 tire and rescue and 45
emergency runs. All vehicles
were driven a total of 938_.4 mUes,
Jeff Darst, fire chief reported.

Tractor.. ~
Continued from pa.ge 1
James, Eureka; Mike E;lliott,
GaiUpolls, Johnnie Henderson,
Logan, and Jim Blosser, Logan.
5,800 pound modified 4-wheel
drive: Brian Teaford, ·Chester,
James Holmes, Glouster; · Ron
Sheets, Gallipolis, and Paul
Poston, Logan.
5,800 pound super stock truck:
Jack Waldren, Bob Tubbs, Zanesville, Paul Posto.n, Vance
Hewitt, no address, and Dave
Holmes. Glouster.
6,200 pound modified 4--;-wheel
truck: Jack Waldren, Logan;
Jeff Johnson, Reedsville; Bob
Tubbs, Zanesville, Terry Halasz,
Corning, and Clinton Bailey,
Bas han.
In the Local Yokel road use
4-wheel drive truck contest, six
cash prizes were awarded with
the winners being first through
sixth respectively, Leonard
Brunner, Davisville; Ron Thaxton, Sissonville, W. Va.; Lee
Swain, Reedsville; Rex Zeebaugh, Parkersburg; Tim Taylor, Sissonville. and Mike Stewart, Parkersburg, VI'. Va.
Taking first in the 19,500 pound
semi-tractor pull was Don Rose
of Racine. The othe~ winners
wpre Chris Napper, ·Danville.
second; ~tan Radon. Albany,
third; Scott Napper, Langsville,
fourth;
Brian Bowling, fifth;
Roy Newell, Middleport, sixth .
Jeremy Stone of Dexter took
first in the 6,000 pound field stock
tractor pull, with David Hively,
Gallipolis, taking second; Kim
Bre--:er, Whipple, third; Stephen
Kit , Newark, fourth ; Terry Collins. Friendly, W. Va., fifth, and
Pal Barrett; no address, sixth.
In the 8,000 pound c1ass for field
stock tractors, first place went to
Dan Warren. Whipple. The other
winners, second through sixth,
were Tim Stone. Dexter: David
Hisely, Gallipolis : Steven Hlte,
Reform; Pat Barrett, Vinton;
Terry Collins , Friendly, W.Va.;
a nd Roger Stone, Point Pleasant.
Taking first In the 10,000 pound
field stock tractor pull contest
was Pat Barrett of Vinton with
Jim Dunn taking second, .John
Peck, third , Bryan White, fourth,
and Matt Ohlinger , fifth .

Reds edge
Cubs 6-5

0Gn Smith of Racine and Jill
Taylor of Bidwell took the
championships In the open class
dairy cattle judging Friday at the
Meigs County Fair.
In Ayshlres, Smith took both
the senior champion female and
the grand champion female and
also took a first and second In the
four year old and over cows. In
the class for two year old cows,
Jeff Rose, Racine, took ·a first.
Taylor took the. senior and
junior champion female and the
grand champion female In the
open class judging of jerseys,
along with two firsts.
Kathleen Parker, Pomeroy,
took four firsts and a second, Jeff
ROse, a first and a fourth,
Chester Roose, two fourth places;
and Elizabeth Bearhs, Pomeroy,
a second, In the jersey cattle
·
judging.

Li~ences

647
Pick-4

Low tonight lrt 'mid 708.
Chance of. rain 40 percent.
Wednesday, high In mid 80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.

6746

Page 4 ·

..

Vol.40, No. 76 M
Copyriphttd 1989

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomaroy-IIIUddlaport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 22, 1989 .

26 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Third ·Pomeroy business firm ·to get.facelift

Draft horse
contest results
are announced
The capabilities of draft horses
as well as\those ofthedrlversand
their team control were demon·
strated in an enjoyable Saturday
afternoon event at the Meigs
County Fair.
The annual draft horse conte's t
was held In Center Field with the
Fair Board members lleing assisted In staging the event by the
Draft Horse Association. The
$100 prize money for each class
was divided 'Into five places.
Taking lirst places in both the
wagon obstacle course and the
log pull was Rod Tuttle, with
Doug Carr taking first In the feed
run. .
Other winners In the wagon
obstacle course were Harold
Wallace, second. Carr, third,
Wald Spencer. fourth, and Mike
Brothers, fifth .. In the Jog pull
Carr took second and fifth. with
Glenn Tuttle taking third, and
Spencer, fourth. Wallace too!&lt;
both second and fourth In the feed
run, with Rod Tuttle taking third,
and Carr and Spencer tying for
fif!h.

Pick-3

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG - Purcbasl11g *be reserve
champion bog at the annual Meigs Counly 4-H Junior Fair
LlvesMck Sale Friday night was Fruib Pharmacy, Middleport.
The animal' sold for S4 a pound and was owned by Matt Titus,
Rutland. Pictured with Titus are, 1- r, King Steven Grady, Queen
Greta Riffle, and Sandy Bush, of Fruth Pharmacy.

------Lottery numbers-----Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Saturday 's winning .Ohio Lottery $7,638,116.
, Kicker
numbers:
561614 . .
PICK-3
Kicker ticket sales totaled
263.
PICK-3 "ticket sales totaled $1,065,793.
$1,471.146 , with a payoff due of
Divorce action filed
$598.844.50.
PICK-4
A divorce action has been filed
8574.
In
Meigs County Common Pleas
PICK-4 ticket sales tota led
Court
by Timothy Todd Klein,
$279,492, with a payoff due of
Va .. against Lisa Jane
Eustis,
$114,100.
· Klein, in care of Richard Cook,
Super Lotto
Pomeroy.
5, 6, 12, 14, 19, and 29.

By NANCY YOAC.HAM
Dally Sendnel Staff
Upon. recommendation of the
Pomeroy Historical Commission, an application for exterior·
alterations to a downtown building w.a s approved Monday night
by Pomeroy VIllage &lt;::ouncll. .
The building houses K&amp;C Jewelers and alterations · would
entail painting, installing a new
b~lc.ony, and replacing an old
clock with the store logo and
name. The application was. approved by council.
This would be the third build. ir\g on that particular block to

undergo a facellft. Alterations the excavation work that Is. to
have been completed to the Main take place to reopen ,the road,
Street Pizza building and are Young said. Jeffers Construction
underway at Brogan-Warner will he doing the excavation.
A retired· Pomeroy resident
Insurance.
has
offer.ed his services to the
Excavation work to reopen
village
at the rate of$1a day and
Wyllls Hill Road was to have
mileage,
to monltpr village propbegun ,this week, reported Counerties
and
report to VIllage
cilman Bill Young, although the
rain may have prevented the Council when propertjes are not
start of work. One end of the being kept In good shape, such as,
roadway has been closed lor when trash Is allowed.to pile up or
several years, due to a l~ndsllde · lawns are not mowed as they
and a resulting legal. tussle should be. Council would then
between a Wyllis Hill property notify the property owners who
owner and the village. Ho.iYever, would be given a set amount of
the property owner has agreed to time; as outlined , by village

'

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
·Gn 2 GREAT PAN PIZZAS
AT ONE LOW PRICE

issued

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio Department p! Human
.Services reported Monday that
Ohio hospitals, as a group, are
financially stronger than . their
counterparts nationally.
The department conducted a
study of hospitals' audited finan cial statements between 1983 and
1987 to assess the effect of
Medicaid payment policies on
hospital finances.
"The study round that Ohio
hospitals are better able to meet
short-term obligations and have
a stronger long-term solvency
outlook than their national coun·
terparts," said the department.
Albert Dyckes, senior vice
presid~nt of the Ohio Hospital
. Assooiatlon, said the sound financial condition of many Ohio
hospitals was "a tribute. to the
Ohio General Assembly," which
he said )las provided adequate

II

$1.70 COVERS •oTH PIZZAS

Domino's
Pizza
992-2124
WEST MAIN

as is done with customers inside
ihe village.
Walton was Instructed by At·
torney Patrick O' Brien, who was
also present for the meeting, to
ask for a letter froin the lawyer In
Columbus as to her statements
regarding the sewage fee arrangement between the two villages,
and to send a copy of the letter to ·
Middleport.
The meeting went Into an
hour-long execu live session on
pending legal matters, but no
actions were taken as a result of
tlte executive session.

Ohio hospitals · financially
stronger than counterparts

ADDITIONAL ITEMS

LIMITED
DELIVERY AREA

Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Craig Thomas Chapman, 23, Middleport. and Sherry
Sue Sayre, 21, Middleport; and to
David William Findley. 28, Ra·
cine. and Mary Amber Warner,
94. Racine: ·

,.,99,

ordinance, to comply with ~­
cannot pay the agreed upon
clean-up request, before any
$1,200 a year for service "In
further action would be taken.
advance." Walton said .It Is,
Council made no decision on the
according to the lawyer, peroffer from the local resident, but
missible for Pomeroy to pay for
~xpressed interest in such an · services as they are rendered,
arrangement.
which Is what Walton reported
Clerk Jane Walton reported
she has been doing, but that It is
that she has been told by a lawyer
illegal to pay In advance. Also,
in the State Auditor's office, who
Walton reported that the lawyer
specializes in village operations.
said there is no problem with
thai Pomeroy should not pay· 'up
Middleport -providing sewage
front" to Middleport for sewag~
service outside village limits, but
service to the Subway Sandwich
that Middleport authorities
Shop and Domino's Pizza .
should really monitor and collect
According to Walton, Pomeroy
the sewage fee themselves, just

POMEROY, OliO

reimbursements .. nave lleen defunding.
Dyckes said state support of valued to the point where the cost
the Medl.caid program, which of providing the services Is
pays health care .costs for lndl:. · greater than the payment. "
gent people, was hiked 10 percent
Rural hospitals in Ohio, though
in the current biennium -more stronger than their counterparts
than In many other states.
In other states , are not as strong
· The study found that operat111g as Ohio's' big-city hospitals, the
margins of hospitals rose sharply study revealed.
"Because of low occupancy
when Medicare and Medicaid
levels
- an indicator of poor
payment systems were revised
financial
health - and the high
In the mld-1980s, but have since
cost
of
replacing
aging facilities.
declined, particularly in rural
Ohio's
rural
hospitals
probably
areas.
face
trouble
in
the
luture,"
said
The study found that Ohio
hospitals with the highest volume the department.
"Most hospitals in the rural
of Medicaid patients are financially stronger than other areas will be In the red," said
Dyckes, adding that some have
hospitals.
Medlcalq reimbursement.. had to pass local tax levies to
which was ·ifone on a cost basis keep operating.
Dyckes said Pike County; Mt.
until1984, Is now done according
Gilead
and Coshocton are among
to a fixed value for each of 360
the
areas
that rely on local taxes
medical procedures.
to
underwrite
hOspital costs.
Dyckes said the hospitals favor
such a system, .. .although
the
.

Several arraigned in Meigs court
friends ~~eems to be teiUng him. The boys had fun
riding the tractln off io the side In the show ring
at ibe Meip County Fair, wblle the kiddie tractor
·
puBs took place nearby.

BUT 1'1"8 MY TURN - This little fellow Is

having a bard time convincing his friendS thai It's
still his turn to ride the tractor. "But yot~'ve
already had two turns," at least one of his lUIIe

AEP.warns local consumers
of problems with Bush plan

Ohio ...
Continued from page 1
of Ashville, in a one- vehicle
accident on Amanda-Clearport
Road in Fairfield County.
Circleville: Motorcyclist RIchard Akers, 29, Ashville, when
struck by an automobile on Ohio
104 in Pickaway County.

Welcome
To Meigs
County

Stocks

Mike Staggs

Daily stock prices
(As of 10 a.m. )

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
HEAD FOOTBALL
COACH
.

Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ........ ... ... 30
AT&amp;T ....... ... ..... ...... ...... ...... 39¥.!
Ashla nd Oil ....... .. ... ... .. ...... .38 ~
Bob Evans .. .. ..... ....... ... ..... .. 15Y,
Charming Shoppes ........... ... 16 ~
City Holding Co ...... ....... ..... 15¥.
Federal Mogul. ... .... ............. 23
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ...... 54%
Heck's .................... ..... ... .. .. . Y.
Key Centurion .... .. ....... ....... 1234
Lands' End .... ..... .. .... ......... .27'h
Limited Inc ...... .......... ...... .. 35'h
Multimedia Inc ....... .. ...... .. 107'h
Rax Restaurants ...... .. .. ... ..... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 16'h
· Shoney's lnc .. ... .. .. ....... :...... ll%
Wendy's 1ntl ......... .. .. .............6
Worth lngton lnd , _.......... ..... 25%
(Federal Mogul is ex dividend

The Farmers Bank ·would like to welcome 'you to Mei·gs County, and wish
you, your Coaching Staff and the entire
Meigs High School Gridiron Squad the
Best in 1989.
·

"The Shining Light In Banki,n g"
.

.

. .

'l

today)

Farmers
Bank

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Ed
Smith, Syracuse; MaryS. Erwin,
Pomeroy; Audrey P. Torrence,
Racine: Bonnie M. Fisher, Ra·
cine; Anita Holter, Portland.
Saturday discharges -Danny ·
Terzopplous, Dorothy Roush.
Sunday admissions - None.
Sunday discharges Ed ·
Smith, Anita Holte.r .

1

' t•t
992-2136
221 WEST SECONI»

POMEROY, OHIO
i

't

6 ...

Your Community O'wned.. Bank
MEMBER FDIC
1

I

985·3315
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS,

If the Bush Admlnstration's
acid rain bill Is enacted, reslden·
tial rates across the AEP system
will increase by an average of 12
percent with residential custo·
mers of several of AEP's operat·
ing companies experiencing rate
Increases In the range 9f 16-17
percent, according to W.S.
White, Jr., chairman of American Electric.Power.
"But the heaviest blow", he
said, "will fall upon our Industrial customers whose rates will
soar an average of 17 percent
with the Industrial customers of
several of our operating com pan-'
les experiencing rate Increases
ranging from 23 to 39 percent."
White describes the bill as "one

of harshest, least flexible and
most costly bills ever introduced
In the Congress" - one which
would jeopardize the heavy In·
dustries of the Midwest which
are vital to national security.
"The Bush bill's cost impact,
which would be concentrated
disproportionately In the Midwest, would be most severe," said
White.
The Bush acid rain propos;1lls
becoming recognized a~ an extreme, not a moderate, proposal
as more and more people become
familiar with Its details, the
chairman of the seven state
regional electric utility system
said.
The net effect would be a

Local news briefs-Tuppers Plains man crash victim
A Tuppers Plains man died this morning in a motor vehicle
accident on SR. 7, · 0.3 of a mile north of milepost 13, near
Chester, according to the Meigs-Gallla Post , State Highway
Patrol.
.The victim was Identified as Donald K. Se&lt;lgewlck, 42,
Tuppers Plains. It was Meigs County's second traffic fatality of
1989. The first was the August 3, death of 12-year-old Todd
William Michael of Racine In a tractor accident.
Dr. James Witherell, acting Meigs County Coroner, said
Sedgewlck had been dead about one-to-two hours when his
wrecl\ed vebjcle was discovered about 50-feet off the highway,
on the property of Lawrence and Mary Stewart.
Troopers said the accident was reported at 8 o'clock this
mo1111ni by the Stewarts: Details are sketchy. however, It Is
known that Sedgewlck's car went off the road, striking an apple
tree on the Stewart property. There was heavy damage to the
1988 yolk~wagen.
According to the patrol, the lights were still on and the motor
was running, '!"hen the car was discovered. The accident Is ,still '
under Investigation.
·.
· The body of the victim was taken to the White Funeral Home
at. Coolville, Ohio. Arrangements will announced.

Squads have 11 Monday rolls
Eleven calls were answered on Monday by units of the Meigs
Continued on page 10
·

l

•

wholesome loss of growth and
jobs.
.
Electric utilities eventually
would not be able to build new
plants, nor use existing plants to
achieve the most efficient operation and therefore the lowest
rates.
"The Bush biU would inhibit
the nation's economic growth not
only by raising the price of
electricity dramatically, but also
by making It extremely difficult
and, at some point In the future,
virtually Impossible to build new
generating capacity.
That would occur because the
Bush Bill Imposes a permanent
cap or ceiling on national emlsContinued on page 10

Several persons . were arraigned after recent Indictments
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court before Judge Fred Crow

m.·

Arraigned on a charge of
felonious assault was Greg
Hicks, who pleaded Innocent to
the charge. Bond for Hicks was
set at $10,000 with the under·
standl~g that the defendant is not
to go about Dale Riffle during the
pendancy of this action . ·
Also arrainged on felonious
assault was Gary Lee Withrow
Jr., who pleaded innocent. A
$10,000 bond was established lor
the defendant with the understanding he is not go a bout
Howard Lambert, pending the
conclusion ot- this action.
Donna Lee Ross was arraigned
on a charge of trafficking in
drugs, to which she pleaded
Innocent. A $1,000 personal recognizance bond was set for Ross.

Also released on a $1,000
personal recognizance bond
were John Coffman and Lonnie
Ross, who were also arraigned on
separate charges of trafficking
In drugs . Both men pleaded
innocent .
Mike Henry was released on a
$1,000 cash bond , with 10 percent
of the amount necessary to
secure the release, after he
pleaded innocent to trafficking In
drugs.
In the State's case against

Darrln W. Wise. an order has
been liled to bring Wise from the
Franklin County Jail to Meigs
County where · he will have a
hearing on Aug. 24 before Judge
Crow. Wise was IndiCted in June
In Meigs County on a charge of
receiving stolen property.
A warrant for the arrest of
Harvey Faw has been filed by the
court. Faw was indicted in June
for carrying concealed weapons,
however, he failed to appear for
arraignment on the.J; arge .

Durable goods orders down in July
WASHINGTON (UP!) -New.
orders for durable goO\ls felll.9
percent in July. the second large
monthly decrease in three
months , as bookings for non· .
electrical machinery and defense products fell sharply, the
Commerce Department reported
Tuesday .

The decline in the often volatile
indicator of activity at the
nation's factories follows a revised 1.4 percent increase in
orders in June and a 4.5 percent
drop In orders in May, the lliggest
one-month dip in orders since
July 1988.

Southem
board hires
personnel
Certified, non-certified, and
substitute -personnel to complete
the sla!f In preJ?aratlon for the
opening of school Monday were
meeting of the
hired at a
Southern Local School District's
Board of Education Monday
night.
Joan Hudak was employed as
the French and Spanish teacher
filled the position created by the
earllet resignation of Daisy
Fra~ . Hired as assistant band
director was David Deem. Added
to the substitute teacher list were
Margie Bartee, Tammy Chapman, Debra Dav!Jl, Steve
Deaver, Valerie Hansllne, Betty
.Hutchison, Betty Ann Loftis,
Steve P!ltter10n, Ann SISBOn, and
Terry Wayland.
Pay standards were set !or
substitute teachers at $50 a day,
Continued on page 10

MUDDY PVLL - One of the enlrlea In the
Gardea Tractor Pul gea boiled down In heavy
mud at the Melp County Fair on Saturday

afle..-n. Tlae event bacUo be moved " - the
racln1 track to the center. field since maJte.ap
racel!l were belag held on the track.
.

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37164">
              <text>August 21, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
