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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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.
The Daily Sentinel-Page. 3

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Q!:b

Bmi!i1
~v

=·-

'""-''--r•
. .........

ROBERT L. WINGETt'
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aullllant Publlsher/ControUer

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be Ieos tbaa 300
wonll loq. AD leiters are eubjl!&lt;:t to edlt•c aad mutt be slped with
D&amp;llle, ad....o aod telephone number. No unolped leitilt's wiD be pub· .
' llohed. Letters sllo.uld be In COOd t ..te, addr&lt;!lobtclosueo, aot peroo.W~

ttes.

.

Tax the problem to
pay for the solution
'

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Congress is in recess, the president is in
Kennebunkport and Washington has a couple of weeks to doze In the
late summer sun before the rat race resumes after Labor Day.
The first order of business, President Bush declared before taking
off for Maine, wjll be a new comprehensive drug-fighting plan to be
presented by former Education Secretary Bill Bennett.
We are told the pian would stress penalties for all drug users. call
for more prison space to hou•e them and send more money to both
states and cities in this country and foreign countries to fight the
·
' .
narcotics trade.
-Bush called the proposal "balanced. decisive, effective and
achievable" and said, "It will target all aspects of the problem."
To be formally offered the first week In September. the Bennett
plan will cost about $7 billion a year, or approximately $1 billion more
than being requested for the current fiscal year. As someone noted,
the increase would amount to about the cost of two B-2 stealth
bombers.
Bush also said the extra money to pay for theca mpaign would have
to come from other federal programs because he is not- read his lips
- going to ask for higher taxes and he is goimg to meet the
Gramm-Rudman law budget deficit reduction targets.
The president said he has detailed hiS budget experts to decide what
programs should be cut and that decision wiU be made after he
returns to Washington next month.
-It may.be begging the question here toassum.e that the president L&lt;
going to call for more cuts In social programs to pay for the drug plan.
But Bush certainly did nothing last week to quell speculation to that
effect, and his administration, while talking a somewhat more
moderate game than the departed Reaganauts, has done little _to
Indicate it believes such programs do any good.
Hopefully, the president will use his vacation to relax and shuck off
some of the cares of office. Maybe he can even do some quiet
reflection about progress toward the "kinder, gentler" America he
has called for and how his "no new taxes" pledge has affected it.
Specifically, he might ponder whether any more money can be cut
from housing programs, where the reductions and graft of the last
eight years are being blamed, justifiably or not, for the national surge
in homelessness, or from education programs, the very area where
Bush announced he wants to make his mark.
The point here Is that there reallly Is somethlng_totheold saw about
foolish consistency being the hobgoblin of &lt;man minds because of all
the reasons that might be given for raising taxes, fighting drugs
probably would be the most likely to be accepted by the public .
'Not only that, it probably would not even be necessary to take in one
cent of new income taxes to finance the drug fight. A small bump in
alcohol and tobacco taxes probably would do the trick, and have the
added attraction of using two substances whose abuse is a part of the
problem to help pay for the solution.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 22, the 234th day of 1989 with 131 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
French composer Claude Debussy In 1862; Charles Jenkins, Inventor
of the conical drinking cup and brakes for airplanes, in 1867; writer
and critic Dorothy Parker in 1893; blues musician John Lee Hooker in
1917 (age 721; heart surgeon Denton Cooley and science fiction writer
Ray Bradbury, both In 1920 Iage 69); French fashion designer Marc
Bohan in 1926 (age 631; and actresses Valerie Harper In 1941 (age48)
al!d Cindy Williams In 1947 (age 42).

Berry's World

Kansas City tops California

Prige-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomtiroy-Middleport. Oh~
Tu•day, August 22, 1989

Questions linger ·a bout Gander crash _ .
wASHINGTON - It Ill up the glaze of Ice oii the wings had
dark morning, then "blew up like forced the plane to stall during
take&lt;iff and crash. _We have
.a mushroom 1 llkea bomb."
That's how Judy Parsons re- learned that the State Departcalls the morning o!Dec.l2,1985, ment had a letter from a tipster
when a chartered airliner who blamed terrorists, jlut kept
crashed In Gander , Newfound· that letter top-secret until the
land, and killed 248 American Canadian safety board issued its
soldiers on their way home from findings.
.
Egypt for Christmas.
As wereportedrecently,a U. S.
TheU. S.and·canadlangovern- lntelilgel!ce source claims that
ments apparently don't want to . Amer_lcan officials leaned on
hear the words "blew up" or Canadian officials to steer clear
"bomb" In connection with the of any conclusions pointing to
crash. Parsons was.noi Invited to terroriSm. That meant steer
tell her story at the formal clear of people like Parsons who
Inquiry . Instead, her testimony saw something that couldn't be
was hidden !rom members of the explained by Ice on the wings.
Canadian Avlatlon Safety Board. · Parsons was in the parking lot
It lends credence to a minority ·of her rental car business next to
faction on the safety board which the Gander runway making sure
· suspects that the jet blew up In the cars would start that mornthe air.
lng. The airliner took off, and
u. s. and Canadian officials then the .pre-dawn sky turned
have dodged the "ten:orlsm' ' bright. "There was a streak of
tag. The U. s. government light, gray-bluish light, then out
welcomed the Canadian board's of that light came .this bright
findings last November that orange oval object. It blew up

Fo~

r-;.5 BiLLioN
oNe?
WeL~, ~T LeasT He'.S .

'

'

NeGoTiatitiG.

Jack Anderson

like a mushroom, like a bomb. I .
could see pieces gong up In the
·
sky and then falling," Parsons SonsofZion."Thelettersaldthe
told us. Her account was echoed eras)! was a "cold-blooded preby two other ~yewltnesses.
meditated act which Involved an
Pollee and aviation investlga- expert sabotage of the aircraft·
tors Interviewed Parsons and ... with the complicity of several
then told her she dldn' t need to go Egyptian and Lyblan (sic) met o the pu bllc 1nqu 1r ty, tha t they chanlcs
and other Anti-U.S .. and
Antl-lsraelllndlvlduals."
would use a tape of her testlmony. They didn't Parsons now
The State Department
feels lllle "I saw something I stamped the letter ''lop-secret"
shouldn't have seen."
and shared It with 25 high-level
Our associate Jim Lynch has Intelligence posts In the White
uncovered more documents that _ House, the Pentagon, the State
show ,the U. S. government took Department and the Justice
the terrorism prj!Specl seriously. Department. .
A Beirut-based group, Islamic
Within two days after the
Jihad, took Immediate credit for crash, the State Department
the crash, but U. S. Officials asked the Egyptian ~overnment
publicly called I bat hoax.
to thoroughly search Egyptian
Privately, the United States Airline planes that were being
had another clue that It was
used to fly other U. S. troops In
terrorists. Within a month after Egypt
the crash, a U. S. diplomat jn
Five months after the crash, U.
Mauritius, a tiny Island off S. planes bombed Libya, ostensl·
eastern Africa, received a letter bly In response to known terrorist
from a group calling Itself "The acts that the Reagan admlnlstra·
lion said were the work of
· Moammar Gadhafl. If Reagan
had the Gander crash In mind, he
didn't say so publicly. After the
1983 bombing of the Marine
barracks in Beirut, the prospect
of 248 more soldiers dead at the
hands-of terrorist may have been
too embarrassing to admit.
SHELL-GAME - The
Gramm-Rudman Act was supposed to reduce the budget
deflclty by forcing spendlngc11ts,
but that Isn't happenillg. Eleven
programs were exempted from
cuts making It almost Impossible
•
to balance the budget. Meanwhile, the government agencies
that are not exempt are simply
juggling their finances. For
example, Defense Secretary Rl·
chard Cheney simply shifted his
payroll ·two days so he could
charge It to 1989 and meet his
Gramm-Rudman goal !or 1990.
MINI-EDITORIAL- U.S. officials were skeptical afler Fidel
Castro made a show of purging
drug dealers .from his top mil·
ltary ranks. Customs Commis·
stoner William Von Raab called ·
Castro. ''another p!ece of narcotrash floating In the Caribbean.''
Yery bold. Now, if only the drug
enforcement actioii was as 'bold ·
as the rheto.rlc.
..,

-

'

Military spending isn't a bonanza
KANKAKEE, Ill. !NEAl .;_
ployment Research Associat_e s
Nobody will ever confuse GNB concluded that for almost threeInc. with Lockheed or Raytheon,
fourths (321of435) ofthenation's
but the producer of heavy-duty congressional districts. •'the mil·
batteries for cars, trucks and itary budget takes more out of
Industry is this commun-Ity's them In taxes than it returns to
leading military contractor.
them in ml_lltary contracts and
Operating from a nondescript salaries."
manufacturing complex across
Although that lnbalance can be
the street from a soybean fieldon
justi!led In terms of shared
the western edge of Kankakee,
sacrifice to provide national
GNB Inc. holds a modest Defense security, In recent years olliclals
Department contract to make of the Defense Department and
batteries lor Navy submarines.
It~ contractors have sought to
Indeed, very little economic portray military spending as an
activity In Illinois' 15th Congres- economic bonanza for everyone.
sional District Is attributable to
When ·Congress threatens to
the federal government's mil- halt funding for a weapons
Itary budget. E. Jane Dodds, an system, for example, representaaide to Rep. Edward R. Madigan,
tives of the firms holding· the
who Is serving his ninth term · projects contracts a~d subconasthe district's representative, tracts ()!ten bustle about Capitol
characterizes the military pres· Hill with studies, · maps and
ence as 'very minimal.''
charts purporting· to show that
Moreover, according to a non· jobs almosy everywhere In the
profit economic consulting firm country depend upon it.
in Lansing, Mich., the pattern
The "Bankrupting America"
here Is duplicated In many study. authored by Dr. James R.
congressional districts through· Anderson, Is flawed because
out the country.
comprehensive and reliable data
In a recent report entitled Is available only for prime
"Bankrupting America," Em-

contractors, even though much
Defense Department work Is
done by subcontractors and their
sub-subcontractors.
But the prillclpal point it
makes Is not only valid but also
devastating: "The Pentagon Is
draining tax resources from 321
congressional districts and channeling them Into only 114 districts. Military spending Is thUs a
principal source of drastic Imbalance In the federal tax burden
and budget allocation."
The detailed analysts In
"Bankrupting America" Identifies Virginia's lOth Congressional District as the leading beneficiary of Defense Department spending. Not surprisingly,
It encompasses the WaShington,
D. C. suburbs where the Pentagon Is located.
Other "winners" Include the
two Hampton Roads, Va .. districts where the Navy's Atlantic
Fieet is based and the two
Missouri districts In the St. Louis
area where McDonnell Douglas
has its headquarters and manufacturing !acllltles.
"Losers" Include all of the 22

~

,l

Robert
Walters

dis trlcts In Illinois and all of the
18 districts In Michigan, as well .
as 29 of 34 New York districts, 22 .
of 23 Pennsylvania dlstrlcs, 17 of
21 Ohio districts and even 26of45
districts In Callfornla, ·a state
widely presumed to benefit handsomely from defense spending.
The 15th Congressional District In rural Illinois, about 60
miles south of Chicago, has two ·
military facilities - ·an Army
ammunition depot outside Joliet
at the northern end of the district
and Chanute Air Force Base near
Rantoul at the southern end.
But congressional aide Dodds
says the Joliet arsenal already is
"In caretaker status." while the ·
Pentagon commisison studying
base-closing possibilities has
called for the abandonment of
Chanute.
Adds Dodds: "Everything I
have seen is that we get little or
no return" for the money the
dis trlct' s taxpayers pour into the
Pentagon budget. Moreover, taxpayers elsewhere generally fare
no better In their relatlonshp with
the Defense Department.

-

•

- ~

~

toyNEA. 1nc .

"As vice president. I've come up with a pro. gram for the homeless - teaching them how
to play golf "
·
I

I

The recent Supreme Court
decisions, typically denounced or
saluted as "conservative," have
shown again that in America
today most conservatism can be
described more accurately as
Nee-Moderate Liberalism.
Here Is how to test the NML
Idea:
Consider the four big recent
·court decisions. Consider how the
other linked parts of our political
system will probably react. Con- .
slder what liberals wanted ln.say, 1960 - before liberals
started going off the deep end.
Consider where we are today and
where we're likely headed given
the temper of thepublic. And then
ask: Is this conservative?
The big four court decisions
are flag burnillg, affirmative
action, the death penalty and
abortion.
Flag-burning Is the easiest. No
one favors burnillg the flag, but
the decision Is hailed by liberals
as a near-ultimate expression of
free speech. Of course, the public
thlnkl It's a bummer. AccordIngly, the decision may be
overturned by a conslltutlonal
amendment. But It will be tightly
drawn, dealing with one parti~u-

By DAVE HARRIS
Dally Sentinel staff _
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·port Dusters, sponsered by Fenney Bennett Post 128 of the
American Legion, finished this
season with a perfect 12-0 record
in the Meigs-Mason Girls Softball
League for 15-8 year olds.

This marked the first year that
the Dusters have competed In the
older division.
·Along with the perfect regular
season, the Dusters also won the
league tournament by defeating
Racine 15-5, New Haven 13-4, and
won the championship with a
second victory over New Haven,
&amp;,5.

Ben Wattenberg

{I

The team also competed In the
Point Pleasant Invitational posting a 1-2 record. losing to Boyd
County, Ky. 4-3, defeating Waverly 10-0 before losing to Wellston
4-0. The team finished with an
overall record of 16-2.
The Dusters were coached by
Ed 'Baer and assisted by Rick
Ash and Mike Gerlach.

third baseman Bobby Rose
booted his ground ball and took
second when Rose couldn't handle a soft liner hit by Mike
Macfarlane. Kurt ·stmwell
bunted for a hit as Lance Parrish
had trouble picking up the ball.
Kevin Seltzer singled, scoring
White, and Macfarlane came
home on a sacrifice fly by George
Brett.
"That was a three-run swing
right there," California Manager
Doug Rader said. "The play at
the plate was significant because
It was a close. game but I don't
feel It was the turning point. The
real turning point was when we
mishandled the three balls. And
you've got to give Soberhagen
credit because he's a heck of a
pitcher."
Wlllhi Fraser, 3-6, who came on
In the first when California
starter Chuck Finley had to leave
with a sprained big toe, took the
loss.
· '·' The X-rayys were negative,
nothing broken, but there may be
a stress fracture," said Rader of
Finley's injury. "We'll have to
walt and see."
Finley pitched to only tbree
batters before belrlg removed
with the Injury. Stillwell led off
with a triple off Finley and
scored on Brett's grounder to
give the Royals a 1-0 lead.
The Angels tied the score 1-1 in
the seeond when Wally Joyner
singled, went to second on a wild
pitch; took third on a single by
Chill Davis and scored on Brian
Downing's sacrifice fly.
The Royals broke the tie In the
fourth when Bo Jackson walked
with two out, stole second and
scored on Jim Elsenrelch's bloop
double.
The Angels pulled to within 4-2
when Downing hit his lOth home
run leading off the seventh.
Elsewhere in the American
League:
Athletics 8, Tigers 1
At Detroit, Mark McGwire's"

a

' two- run home run finished
four-run first Inning while Curt
Young, Gene Nelson and Matt ,
Young combined on a four-hitter.
TIJe victory gave Oakland, which '
begins a series Tuesday In Texas,
a half-game lead over California
In the AL West pending the
outcome of the Angels' night 1•
game at Kansas · City. Frank
Tanana, 9-11, was the loser. The
game was watched by 6,197, the
Tigers' smallest crowd since ;
·
May 19, 1983 (5,868) .
Orioles 5, Brewers 0
At Baltimore, Cal Ripken Jr. ;
belted a three-run homer and ~
Stan Jefferson added a solo
homer to power the AL East
leading Orioles . past secondplace Milwaukee, which droppe~
1 1-2 games behind. Jeff Ballard,
13-jj, won his second straight and 1
recorded his first shutout of the ·
season. Jerry Reuss, 8-7, gave up :
a first-inning run but left the :
game with a recurrence of the ·
strained left hamstring that -·
sidelined him for 11 days.
Yankees 6, Red Sox 4
• -,
· A\ New York, Jesse Bar!ielil
doubled in two runs and scored on
a wild pitch by Roger Clemens to
cap a three-run sixth Inning":
Clemens also walked In an- _
insurance run In the eighth to
give Bucky Dent his first victory
as Yankees manager. Clemen~.
12-9, dropped to4-51n his last nine slarts. Walt Terrell improved to ·
2-3 and Rich Gossage pitched
one-third of an inning for his firs\
save.

Sports briefs

Hockey
: ·,
Pittsburgh Penguins star cen'- ·
ter Mario Lemieux is close to an
agreement that would make him ·
hockey's second $2 million-ayear player, the Pittsburgh Post- :
Gazette reported. Wayne ·
Gretzky of the Los Angeles Kings .
is hockey's highest-paid player,•
earning a reported $20 million ln
an eight-year contract.

The Daily Sentinel
'

(USPS 1411-9110)

I

-·

A Dtv ..loa ol Multimedia, Inc.
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MmDLEPORT PJml,IES - Members of the
Middleport Phlllletl Pee Wee Glrlll team are front
row (1-r): Amy IU-, Jennifer Vllllar, Aagle
Blake, Kenda Reyaoldl, Mariana Staats; Ste·
pha.nle Burlilln, and Carrie Rartaon. Second Bow
Danlelle Peclduun, Fraaelae Laudennl&amp;,

A. .a Jl111k, Amy Harrlllon, MJsty Ebenblldl, and
MeiiAa Wllfoq. Third row (l·r): Head Coach
Steve Burtoa, alld assistant coaches Mike Wilfong
and Grec Vlnlac. Absent from picture Ginger
Dun&amp;.

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MORRIS SCORES - Wulllngton running back Jamie Morris
heads toward the end zone on Ills way to score the KedsklDs' first
touchdown In the first quarter of Monday night's preseason game
against the host Minnesota Vlklnp. The Vlklnp rallied lo post a
24-13 victory. (UPI)

Sports briefs

MmDLEPORT RANGERS - Members of the
Middleport Rancers T-Ball Team were first row
(1-r): Jason Kn•ht, Jimmy Gilkey, Tara Wyatt,
Tyler Stewart, Andy Hyaell, Josll Lynch, Amber
VIning, Johnalhan Acree and Trever Buck.
Second row (1-r): Ty)IOJI Lee, Brllnl Bevaa,

Michelle French, Heather Boyles, Michael Dorsi,
J.C. Buzzard, and Brandon Allensworth. Third
row (1-r): Head Coach Greg VIning, and assistant
coaehell Tercy Wyatt, and Keith Lynch. Absent
from picture Michael Hawkins.

Horse Racing
Unknown Quantity, the 4-yearold bay gelding belonging to
Queen Elizabeth II of Britain,
will not run in the Arlington
Million outside Chicago. The
horse Instead will run In the
$50,000 Summer Tan Handicap
Sept 4, the final day of the
International Festival of Racing
at Arlington International
Racecourse.

WHY YOU SHOULD
INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH CD.
NOW!

Vikings defeat Redskins 24-13'

but that the states can Impose
Jar act. The decision's potent
Impact wUI remain. Free speech,
some restrictions.
Including symbolic speech, Is a
But almost whatever-the court
very broad concept - the tradidoes next, one can expect that a
tional liberal position.
very great majority of women
will be able to get legal abortions .Important logistical and educaThe afflrmailve action decision Is said to be conservative In the very great majority of tional.role to play to see to it that
because the court has returned to· acses. If Roe v. Wade remains In poor women are -not denied an
force, abortion is a constitutional option available to the middle
a "colorblind" society. No. Colorblind was the marching an- right. If it does not, many states class.
That's where we are · now:
will make it legal.
·
them of liberals during the great
Conservatives
accepting and rat civil rights debates. What the
Seventeen states had a least
court has modified are the
somewhat legal abortion prior to ifying some earlier commonsense llberal beliefs. But will
concepts of "reverse discriminaRoe v. Wade. Assume, for
tion" and quotas, which were, In
model-making purposes, that Nee-Moderate Liberalism con·
truth, antithetical to real
only those ·states would again tinue? Or might this cou-rt now
liberalism.
have legal abOrtion. Today, those start to roll back authentic
What aout the death penalty?
states have a population of 100 aspects of liberal thought? '
Dubious. The system, and that
million people. But there are
The liberal view was either to
prohl\llt the death penalty or
almost another 90 million people Includes the Supreme Court, Is
curtail it. The recent court living In states that adjoin those
retl'ectlng the broad sweep of
decisions mildly expand · the · states. Typically, although not
sensible public opinion, which Is
reach of the death penalty, but
measurable In polls. Americans
always, a cheap bus ride could
due to earlier decisions, and
want a colorblind society, not a
then get even a poor woman from
coupled with how the lower
an Illegal state to a legal state racist society or a quota society;
courts now actually practice, we
they want a legalized death
where abortion would be safe,
remain with a curtailed death
relatively lnexpens lve and per- penalty, not a blood bath; they
penalty.
haps even free.
don't want the flag burned, but
Abortion: In the early '60s It
they want plenty of free speech;
In total, that's almost !10
was Illegal. Liberals said it
percent ·ot all Americans. The
they want abortion to be neither
criminal nor capricious.
·
should be legal. The new court
rest might have to travel further
decision says that !or now
The
public,
moderately
liberal
- not likely to be a big problem
abortion wil remain legal nationfor the non-poor. Private philan- ·on these social Issues, Is getting
ally, according to Roe v. Wade,
what It wants ..
thropy would then have an
~

Colllpstoa. Seeond row (l·r): Kim Hanning,
Chrllsy Weaver, Kelly Smllb, Kerl Black, Trlcla
Baer, and Marcy HID. Back row (1-r): Mike
Gerlach and Ed Baer, coaches. Absent when
p_lcture was iaken were Kristen Stanley and Rick
Ash, coach.

Dusters cop Meigs-Mason title

.-

Courting the Neo-Moderate Liberals.

.·

DUSTERS WIN CHAMPIONSHIP - Tile
Middleport Dusters won the Melp-M- Girls
Softball Leacue with a 1S.O record. The Dulers
also w·on lhe leapes toumamenl. Overall, the
. Dusters finished with an 11-2 reeord. Team
members Ia the first row (l·r): Tara Gerlach,
Love Baley, Gerl Hawley, Reva MUDen and Mary

By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Writer
While the Oakland Athletics
and California Angels battle for
first place In the American
League West, the Kansas City
Royals continue to win and climb
closer to the top spot
The surging Royals stopped
. the California Angels 4-2 Monday
night for their seventh straight
victory. Kansas City pulled to
within 4% games of tl)e divisionleading Oakland Athletics, who
defeated Detroit Monday to
move one game ahead of the
Angels In the AL West.
Kansas City hosts the two
teams In back-to-back series this
week.
Bret Saberhagen, 15-5, In·
creased his personal winning
streak to six games in helping the
Royals snap California's fivegame winning streak and move
the Angels out of first place.
_ "I was really pumped up
tonight," said Saberhagen, who
won for the 12th time ln his las 113
decisions. "I wanted to get us off
to a good slart In this series. I'm
really feeling good. My fastballls
better than It's ever been."
Rick Luecken came on in the
ninth for his first major-league
save. The victory tied the Royals'
longest winning streak since
June of 19!18.
California suffered through a
'disastrous fifth Inning. Jack
Howell was thrown out at the
plate by right fielder Pat Tabler
on a controversial play.
Tabler's throw was In time to.
nab Howell but catcher Mike •
Macfarlane lost the ball after
making the tag. Umpire Dave
Phllllps ruled Macfarlane held
the ball long enough for the out
In the bottom of the fifth, the
Angels mishandled the ball on
three straight plays as the
Royals scored twice for the
winning margin.
Frailk White opened the Royals fifth by reaching first when

MINNEAPOLIS, (UPI) Coach Jerry Burns Insists the!'~!
Isn't a "quarterback controv·
ersy" on his Vikings,
Still, one would have to wonder
after Minnesota's 24,13 NFL
preseason victory over Washlngton Monday night.
Starting quarterback Wade
Wilson was Ineffective. The man
armed with a new three-year,
$1.1 mUllen contract, was only 4
of 10 for 52 yards and two
Interceptions by the Redsklns' 1
Brian Davl9.
Backup Tommy Kramer. had
better numbers. He was 13 of 23
for 245 yards, better than the
three Washington quarterbacks
(Stan Rumphrles, Bill Kenney
and MarkRyplen) who combined
were only 13 of 36 for 138 yards.
Rich Ga1111on, . the Vikings'
third string quarterback was 5
for 8 !or ll5 and directed two
fourth quarter drives which
produced touchdowns by veteran
Allen RICEl and rookie Rick
Bayless tor a come-for-behind
victory.
•'Tommy looked good and
Wade played well even thllugll we
I

,.

dldn' t do a good job protect lng
against their first unit," said
Burns. "Gannon had a good
outing. He put us ahead and then
got us an Insurance touchdown. I
wouldn't trade our three quarterbacks for any three In the league
but that's not the first time I've
said that."
"We just couldn't seem to get
anything goillg early," said Wll·
son whb was sacked twice by the
Redsklns' CllarUe Mann. ''They
are goOcl -defensive team and 'i t
took 11s a while to pick up the
rhythm of what they were
doing."
"Any of the three of us would
like to be the starting quarterback," said Kramer. "But It isn't
something I'm dwelling upon .
That's not my decillion. I Just go
in there when they want me to
and do the best I can."
Although Kramer had a good
night, It might have been even
better except for two Interceptions which weren't his fault. One
was a ball which went Into and
out of the hands of VIking Hassan
Jones and was plckl!ll off by
Wulllllltn'a Ravin Cald-11.

a

The second came when rookie
wide receiver Jarred Delaney
pulled up on a pass and that pass

was picked off by Davis for his
third interception of the game.

you've been
holding back Wlliting for a great rate,
is it. But you've
got to act fast.
This offer from
Central Trust
«

."'is

is available lor a
limited time only.
For more information contact
yqur nearest
Central Trust office

Clll G '\ ala 446-4902
992-6661

••••pert

THE CENTRAL TRI..Sf CQ\faNY
Tltt &amp;M 71tat Aolt-M1'Jiintp lf4Jpell.

)

'

�.'

Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 22. 1989
Tuesday, August 22. 1989

:; Reds top Chicago Cubs -6-5
By ~OBERT J. MURPHY
UPI Sports Writer
· • CHICAGO (UP!) - The Chicago Cubs' lead In the National
.• League East shrunk tol~ .games
•• Monday night &amp;"fter they lost
:: their fourth straight.
:· Todd Benzinger doubled with
: : two out In the lOth Inning and
• • scored on a . throwing error by
: ; third baseman Domillgo Ramos
·.· to rally the Cincinnati Reds to a
:; 6--5 victory over Chicago.
• · "It's a tough loss," said Cubs
starter Rick Sutcliffe, who failed
to hold a . 5-1 lead. •'We played
three tough games In Houston
• and came up empty. We played
hard tonight bui have nothing to
show for it.
"We're s truggllng as a ballclub
right now. It's something we did
earlier and came out of. We just
have to turn it around."
.
Benzinger. who also homered
· · and singled In the game doubled
· : off Calvin Schiraldi, 3-6.'who was
• brought In to start the lOth. Joe
: Oliver hit a potential inning~ ending grounder to third but
• Ramos' thr.ow bouncedpas t first
• baseman Jl;lark Grace allowing
: the winning run to score.
' Norm Charlton, 6-1, pitched a
scoreless ninth for the victory.
John Franco pitche&lt;! the lOth for
" his 26th save but not without
defensive help.
Chicago had a chance to tie the
game in their half of the lOth
when Ryne Sandberg drew a
one-out walk and Mitch Webster
followed a double to right. But
Rolando Roomes. relayed the ball
• In to second · baseman Ron
• Oester, who C\lt down Sandberg
at the plate.
"They were scratching and
· clawing for everything they
· could get," Reds manager Pete
Rose said. "We'd like to be where
they are and are not, so we're
trying to play the spoilers.''
With the loss, Chicago's lead in
the N.L. East fell to 1\&gt;l games
over the charging New York
• Mets, whO beat the San Francisco Giants 4-1 Monday . The
Cubs hadn 't lost four straight
since June.
Also spoiled for the Cubs was
rookie Jerome Walton's hitting
streak, which was snapped at 30
games after he went 0 for 4 with a

walk.
The streak was the longest In
modern day Cubs' history and
was the longest in the majors this
year. Walton fell four games shy
of tying . the all-time rookie
record.
" I was thinking about it the
whole way through, but there
was not a lot of pressure on me
like somebody was going to kill
me If I didn't get a hit ," Walton
said. "I was just going up there
swinging the bat every day and
seei ng what happened."
He added: " I wanted to get the
rookie record but couldn't get
there."
Tra)ling5-4, Ci_nclnnati tied the
score In the eighth on Joel
Youngblood 's pillch-hlt homer
I No. 3) off Steve Wilson.
Ci ncinnati scored three runs In
the seventh off three Cub
pitchers to pull within 5-4. Oester
started the scoring with an RBI
single off Sutcliffe. Jeff Richardson greeted reliever Dean Wllkins with another· ~BI single . .
Wilkins , who was making his
major-league debut after being
called up from Iowa of the
American Association (AAA) ,
walked pinch hitter Dave Collins
and was · relieved by Wilson.
Roomes pinch hit and greeted
Wilson with a sacrifice fly · that
scored Oester and pulled the
Reds within 5-4.
"With Sutcliffe leading 5-l in
the seventh, .' felt prettx good,"
Cubs manager Don Zirqmer said.
"We've had a four-game bad
streak. It shows-you how quickly
things canturn around."
The Cubs took a 3-0 lead with
two out in the first off starter Ron
Robinson. Andre Dawson lined a
two-run double Into the left-field
corner and scored on a single by
Shawon Dunston.
Su tel iffe retired 10 in a row
until Benzinger led off the fifth
with an opposite-field home run,
his 14th blast of the year, to pull
Cincinnati to 3-1.
'Cjlicago increased Its lead to
5-lln the sixth. Sandberg opened
t·he inning wlth I:Jis 25t.h homer of
the year and third in two days.
Grace tripled to right field with
one out and came home on Vance
Law's sacrifice fly.
Elsewhere in th~ National
League:

Mets f, Glaats 1
· Ron Darlillg was In total
command of his pitches Monday
ev~nlng. And both he and his
opponents knew it.
Darllng scattered seven hits
over eight and one-third Innings
and struck out a season-high 10
batters, leading tile New York
· Mets to an easy 4·1 victory over
the NL West-leading San Francisco Giant.s.
Darling, 12-9, sllowed pinpoint
accuracy as he walked none and
came within two strikeouts of his
career ·high. Of his 10 strikeouts,
five were on called third strikes.
" It seemed like every' pitch I
wanted to throw, Barry (Lyons,
catcher) put the right finger
down," Darlillg said. "We "were
In great sync."
"This is the best I've seen
Darling, " said Kevin Mitchell of
the Giants. the major-l.eague
leader In home runs and RBI,
whO was caught looking twice.
"He put his pitches where he
wanted to. They were pitcher's
pitches. Two .straight strikes I
dldn:t agree with, butlwas out."
1 Darling, who won his fourth
straight start, said Monday night
was one of those rare times when
TAGGED OUT- The Dodgers' Mike Huff turns
Wallach, who tags him out In the second Inning of
he felt he could make the perfect
Monday night's game in Montreal. (UPI)
the comer after rounding third base, but doesn't
pitch.
get away from Expos third baseman Tim
"Mentally, you always know
what you want to do, but your
pitches are a little off." he said.
''That's why It's so much fun
when It works. "
·Jose Uribe was the only San
not to see the' game, but to have quickly toward o,UIJU this year.
ARLINGTON, Texas (UPli Francisco starter not to strike
the ticket stubs 'as poto;&gt;ntlally bu t he is In the midst of his best
Nolan Ryan, who at age 42
out against Darling.
season of the 1980s. He Is on a
valuable souveniers.
Randy Myers got the final two continues to throw 95 mph
"My attitude has always been pace tha t ,could bring him close to
outs in the ninth forhls 22nd save. fastballs past yet another generSan Francisco's only run came ation of befuddled batters, Tues- that I didn't want the fan s to go 300 strikeouts this year. something he has no't achieved since
on a solo home run by Pat day night reaches for another away disappointed," Ryan said.
1977.
"Nat.uraliy,
I'd
like
to
do
it
in
a
fabulous
career.
milestone
Sheridan in the eighth Inning.
In addition; ' a strong finish
With the Oakland Athletlcs Tuesday night. If I didn't, I'd
Sheridan, who had entered the
could
bring him 20 victories and
probably
feel
worse
about
it
than
.
serving
as
the
opposition,
Ryan
game as part of a double switch
he
has
done that only twice in his
f!lnS
would."
.
the
in the sixth, belted the first pitch will try for his 5,000th strikeout.
career
- in 1973 and 1974.
When his 5,000th strikeout
from Darling into the right-field It would be one more proud
Through
it all, however, the
bullpen for his second homer of achievement for ihe man who comes, be it Tuesday night or in
the year.
has thrown the most no-hitters his next scheduled outing Sunday !act that he is close to 5,000
night against the California An - strikeouts still comes as a shock
Gregg Jefferies banged out .rflve) and who has established
·
three hits and Kevin Elster and strikeout standards that may be gels, ·It will serve ·as a symbol for · to Ryan.
an amazing career.
"I remember ,when I struck out
Howard Johnson added two each forever unmatched. .
.
ll'his Is Ryan's 22nd season In my 4,000th man (In 1985). someas the Mets won for the 11th time
Ryan will take the mound for
In 14 games and dropped the the Texas Rangers .Tuesday the big leagues. He Is the oldest body asked .me about 5,000," he
Giants' lead to 11-2 games over night rteedlng six strikeouts to player In the majors and he is said. "They just said It In jest.
"! thought, 'Lord, help me. I
the idle Houston Astros.
reach 5,000. In oniy two outings ·h aving his best season In years.
never
thought I would have a
Mike LaCoss, 7·8, lasted five- this season has he failed to strike
"During the spring," Ryan
chance
for 5,000 because It would
plus innings, allowing nille hits out that many.
said, "I qidn' t ·know what to
be so hard for me to stay around
and four runs, striking out two
A sellout crowd of more than expect this year. I was with a new
long enough to do lt."
and walkillg two.
42,000 will be on hand. Within team (having signed - ~s a free
So what about 6,000?
The Mets broke on top 1-0 In the hours after Ryan's most recent agent with the Rangers) . I knew
"1 may be able to do It If I play
fourth inning when Johnson led outing, in which he struck out there -vould be heat in Arlington.
in
!hat 35-and-over league they
off
wlth
a
double,
went
to
second
eight
in
Seattle
to
come
up
six
I
was
pitching
in
a
new
league.
Carter set up the score, interceptare talking about," he said.
on
Darryl
Strawberry's
single
But
I
felt
5,000,
the
last
10,000
If
I
pitched
enough
short
of
Ing Carlson and returning the
Ryan's bid for 5,000 strikeouts
lnnrngs, I'd have a good shot at It
ball 11 yards to the Los Angeles and scored on a sacrifice fly by tickets to Tuesday night's game
K~;'vln
McReynolds.
come in the opening game of
will
were sold. One fan in Maryland
(5,000) ."
19.
,,.
New
Yprk
pushed
its
lead
to
3-0
a
six-game
homes tand against
called the· Rangers ticket office
Not · only has Ryan closed
Del Greco also hlt from 29
In
the
fifth.
Elster
led
off
with
a
(wo
leading
teams In the
the
In an attempt to bUy 12 ticketsyards out. Tony Jordan and
American
Leagu ~ West.
·
double
to
the
gap
in
right-center,
Lydell Carr contributed scoring
"I
don't
think
It
(the
where right fielder Ernest Riles
runs for Phoenix.
excitement over his achie'
got
underneath the ball but failed
Gary Hogeboom played the
to
make
the
catch.
One
out
later.
vemnt) will be a "distraction to
first half for the Cardinals and
our
players," Ryan said.
Eister
went
to
third
on
a
single
by
TORONTO (UPI I - Terry
"I've only played Chris once
completed 9 of 15 passes for 150 ·
Jefferies
and
scored
when
Juan
"Hopefully.
the big crowd we
Phelps, only one of two seeded before," Minter said, "and last
yards and two interceptions.
Samuel
hit
into
a
forceout.
will
have
will
cause excitement
players to play Monday, was time I think 1 got one game, so I
Tom Tu pa finished and went 4 of
in
the
ballpark
and that will
Samuel
stole
second
and
scored
upset in straight sets by Cathe- can't do much worse than that.
12 for 96 yards. Jim Everett was 6
on
Johnson's
single.
have
an
affect
on
our team and
rine ~ulre at the $300,000 Cana- I'm just going to go "'into the
of 16 for 112 yards and one
we
can
get
the
homestand
off to
The
Mets
chased
LaCoss
with
a
dian Open Tennis match this time and have some
interception in the first half for
run in the sixth. Dave Magadan Championships,
a good start. W~ are still In the
fun."
Los Angeles.
race."
pennant
to
third
led
off
with
a
walk,
went
14th,
loSt
to
the
Phelps,
seeded
ln othe• first -round action.
The Ram s also scored on a
In addition to the sellout crowd,
1-yard run by Robert Delpino, a on a single by Lyons and scored French woman, 7-5, 6-4. The only Gigi Fernandez earned a second·
on-Eister's
second
double.
th
e
Rangers have received 200
,o ther seeded player to see action round match against Navratil39-yard field goal by Mike
Padres
8,
PhiDies
2
requests
for media credentials
Monday was 12th-seeded Radka ava Tuesday by routing Iwona
Lansford . and rookie George
At
Philadelphia.
Garry
Temgame
- most in club
for
the
Zrubakova of Czechoslovakia, Kuczynska of Poland 6-0, 6-1.
Bethune's recovery of a blocked
htSTnlrV
pleton
tripled
home
two
runs
and
who defeated countryman Petra Kathy Rinaldi will meet Sabatini
pun t in the end zone.
a
two-run
home
Blp
Roberts
hit
Langrova 6-3. 7-6 (9-i).
after beating Cammy MacG re·
The Cardinals tied it 17-17 with
hlg~light a five-run second
run
to
.
The top 11 seeds drew byes , gor, 6-3. 6-2.
10:03 left in the third quarter.
State Au to
Other Americans to advance to
Her rmann was sacked by safety Inning. Dennis Rasmussen, 6-9, Including three-time Canadian
Tim McDonald, and the ball allowed six hits. Don Carman, champion and No. 1 seed Martina the second round included Donna
off en;
popped to Jim Wahler. The 4-13, uncorked two wild pitches Navratllova. second-seeded Ga- Faber, who defeated Larisa
somethin1~
rookie tackle from UCLA then and reliever Randy O'Neal threw briela Sabatini, the defending Savchenko of the Soviet Union
rumbled 40 yards to !he Los one to eq\lal the Club .record of 69 champion, and third-seeded 3-6, 6-2, 6-2; Robin White, who
special
Chris Evert.
stopped Leila Meskht of the
Angeles 10, and Carr scored on for a season set back in 1962.
Dodgers
6.
Expos
1
Anne Minter of Australia ad- USSR 6-2, 6-1; Ann Grossman,
the next play .
At
Montr~al, Rick Dempsey
vanced
to meet Evert after who defeated Maureen Drake of
The first of two interceptions
and
Alfredo
Griffin
each
drove
in
lfs tbe SERIES ONE .
recording
an easy 6-3. 6-0 win Canada 6-4, 6-2; Shlmn Stafford,
by LeRoy irvin set up Delpino's
two
runs
In
a
four-run
second
over
Rene
Simpson
of
Toronto.
TD that produced a 7-0 Los
who beat Anne Grousbeck 6-4, 6-3
Business Policy...
Angeles lead with 5:42 left in the inning. Los Angeles starter Tim
and Marianne Werdei, who depackaged protection for
Belcher, 9-12, lasted eight lnfirst quarter.
fea!l&gt;d Sara Gomer of England
nillgs and allowed five hits. Mark
retail'!ltores, oHices,
6-4, 6-0
. Langston; 10-4, took the. loss
cbiU'ches, apartment~~,
In otljer matches : · Louise
despite retiring 15 batters In a
Field, Australia, defeated Judith
drug stores. SlmpUfied
row late In the game.
Wiesner, Australia, 6-3, 6-4; Jana
. Baseball
lu content, coaveolent
New York Yankees outfielder Posplsilova, Czech"o slo va kia.
1u format and very
Luis Po ionia was found guilty of beat Molly Van Nostrand 6-4, 6-2;
affordable.
having sexual intercourse with a Nathalie Tauziat of France
."'i'rw \ 'o rk ........... . ....... .IIIP 31) •.Uti Jl,~
stopped
Soviet
Natalie
Medvedchild
after
pleading
no
contest
to
Mortrt•Lll .....................liX d1 .5-U ~
Sl. l .oul .~ ......-............. .. .66 ii .•i:ri ~
Four local drivers will be the misdemeanor charge he had eva 7-6 (7-2) , 7-6 (7-41; England's
~
Pllhthul"'th ...................;i 2 il .Jt.l I ~
partllpcating
in the West VIrgi- relations with a 15-year-okfglrl. Clare Wood routed Switzerland' s
Phlbt.dl'lpll.la .............. .. ~ il .103 to •.~
\\'rst
nia State Championship for late Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Eva Krapl 6-2, fr-O; Isabelle
~un Frund sto .............i l :.1 ..1111 model
cars at the Ohio Valley
Thomas Doherty ordered a pre- Demongeot, France. blasted
Houl!ll:on .... ........ , .. lit 3~ .3 a6 11,~
~u n Di e~ .... .. . .
ti2 511 ,,96 91l
Speedway on ,Route 68 south of sentence Investigation and sche- Catherine Tanvier, also of
214 EAST MAIN
Lo!i 1\n~l ~ ...... ·............\, 16 ..n:l 12
Lubeck
Saturday.
France,
6-3,
6-0,
and
Kartne
(' ln0nmil ... ,........ ........ 59 66 .-i7'l It
duled sentencing . for Oct. 2.
POMEROY
Mll.lnt.a .. ... ....................'JO ,,. ..Wl :!0•
The
local
drivers
are
Marc
Quentrec
of
France
defeated
Polonla
fa.
c
es
a
maximum
sent992·1187
Mu.,;la,f'N fteMtjl~~;
French, Middleport: Rolando ence of 90 days and a $10,000 fine. Bettina Fulco of Argentlrta 6-2,
!'ian Dh•go K. Phillutelphlil t
Nt&gt;w \ ' ork 4, San FranciM:u I
Esparza and Larry Bond, Al6-2.
Basket hall
t.u~ t\nl:clt· ~ 6, o
'WOnlrt"IIJ I
( ' lnt'lnr~dltl, ftdtaJil!&gt; S
bany. and Andy Bond, Coolville.
In the only doubles match on
Bill Fitch was named coach of
TlW!IdQ~ 's Gllmfti
Late
models
will
run
a
50
lap
opening
day , Grousbeck and
the
New
Jersey
Nets,
replacing
C'lndnmtll Rrownlnt~~l2· 111) Ill Ch ln&amp;J;IJ
(Krurmi"r ft.O), :!: :!0 p.m .
feature paying $4,000 to the
Nana Mlyagl of Japan defeated
Willis
Reed.
Fitch
led
the
Boston
Hou!Con ! Dcshale!i111·6J at Plll!lhui'JI:h
winner, and $100 just to start the Celtlcs to the NBA championship Hu Na and· Jane Thomas 2-6, 7-6
t8m llry ~7}. 7:35p.m .
San Dl e 1o CHurm l:l-9\ at Phlllldl'ipltll'
feature. Also semi-late models In 1981 and Is the fifth wlnningest (7-2), 6-2.
I HOWf'll fHII,'I::I~p . m .
,
will
be runnillg for $400 to win and coach In NBA history with a
S!ln Fruntl!i('O !Kneppt'r 5- JI) :U Nt-w
\'uri!. (\'lola 1·21. 7:35 p.m .
$50 to start.
record of 762-714. He also
(
Loll r\n~ fo!. (ValenzUPia ~II) ut
Drivers from eight states are coached Cleveland and Houston.
Monl.rt•ld tGro.~li9-IU , 7:3:ip.m.
St. Loti!! (Pt~wf'r -1·5) at Atlanta
expected to attend the first ... The Philadelphia 76ers signed
tLIIIIqt16~~ot7- 7) , 7:.&amp;0 p.m .
annual W, Va. State Champon- Kevin Holmes to a one-year
" 'rdne!ltfa)l'" Gamf'!&lt;l
San Francl!k•o Ill New York
ship
which Is one of the biggest contract. The 6-8 forward from ·
Chwlnrallat &lt;'hlu•o
racing
events for the Ohio Valley , DePaul was drafted by the 76ers
Loll An~H Ill Monll"f!al, nll(ht
S~tn Dtl'_.at Phlladelllhl~t, nllthe
Speedway
this season.
In 1986 and has been playing In
Hou•onat Pillllhvl'!h, nlpt
The gates will open at 4 p.m. Switzerland.
St . LoWs at Atlanta, nla-hf
wlth time trlalsstartlng at 7 p.m.
Cycling
and racing will begin at 8:15p.m.
American Tour de France
Calendar
winner Greg LeMond Is thinking
of breaking wlth his Belgian
'
TlU!!Id 1\Y'!I Sports Calendar
Plan toumey
Rowllnr
team to join the American
Canton, Ohio- 1115,000 Ebe .Str PIIA.
7- Eleven team. LeMond, who has
Se nior Champlomlllp
The Eastern High School At- a contract with ADR until the end
Bo.dn.,Ju nlor Wrller-1 Jlflt!l
hletic Boosters will sponser an of .n ext season, received a lucraAtluntlc CUJ•, N .•J. - John Wf.flle)'
RUSSELL, KENTUCKY
softball tournament at Eastern tive offer from 7-Eleven . .. . The
Ml'f'kin-' t ·!i. AIJ.-.do Roju
Tennltt
High SchOol on August 26 and 27. International Velodrome AssOCI·
.lerk:ho, N. V1 - Hamlet lflunlllmenl
Entry
fee Is $60 and you hit your ·atton has authorized th~ first
ToroMo- 1110,000 Plilyu'!l Cllt!Ue~~p
01 lllnpttltlllhlp~
own ball. For more Information Moscow Open cycling event In
call !192-2576 or 667-&amp;427..
February.
.

.Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

I
DAIRY SWEEPSTAKES - Winners of the
Dairy Sweepstakes prizes at this year's Meigs
County Fair were, from left tQ right, In front,
Laura Eastman,. Michael Perry, Jackie Farley,
Brent Rose, Billy Schultz and Nora E;as~an. In
back are. David Smith, PauiSmUh, Mike Parker,

j

Jerry Smith, Chuck Parker, Jeff Rose, Jill
Taylor, and 4H advisoi'S, Jim Parker and Eddie
Holter. Sweepstakes prizes were awarded Friday
_evening, just prior to the · 4H-Junior Fair
Llvestocf! Sale. ·

Ryan on verge of 5,000th KO

I

I

JiJ

JERSEY WINNER - Winner of the Jersey
heifer donated to the Meigs County Fair by the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company was 4H'er
'l)son Rose. With T.-son are4H'erJil!Taylor, and

representing Farmers Bank, Bruce Reed. The
winner of the little Jersey was announced during
Dairy Sweepstakes presentations on Friday
evening.

CHAMPlON OF CHAMPIONS - A memorial
trophy w.ill hang for the ne•t few years at the
Meigs County Extension Service office In memory
of young Scott Burke, an active Meigs County 4H
member who died tragically last year, just
shortly after the Meigs County Fair. The trophy
will be engraved each year .with the name of the
faii-'s ''Showman of ShoWmen." Once filled , the

memorial plaque will be presented to the Burke
family. This year's showman of showmen was
Michelle Guess, pictured here wltb members of
the Burke family. The trophy was announced
during Friday evening's Dairy Sweepstakes
presentations at the fair. From left to right are,
Bob Burke, Randy Burke, Michelle Guess and
•
Gay Ann Burke .

Rams edge Cards, 23-20
ANAHEIM, Calif. iUPI) Rookie Jeff Carlson hit Willie
Anderson with a 45-yard touchdown pass with 20 seconds Jefl
Monday night, giving the Los
Angeles Rams a 23-20 exhibition
victory over the Phoeni x
Cardinals.
Carlson, a left-bander from
Weber State who replaced in·
jured Marl&lt; Herrmann in the
third quarter, found Anderson
along the left sideline. The wide
receiver caught the ball at the
5-yard-line and coasted .\n after
beating Car l Carter on the play .
The Rams, 2-1, trailed 20-17
when they took over on their
40-yard line with 78 seconds left.
Carlson, who helped keep the
drive alive with a 17-yard pass to
Ron Brown on 4th-and-12 , finis hed 8 of15 for 116 yards and two
interceptions.
After CarlSon's game-winning
pass. the Cardinals, 0-2, moved to
the Los Angeles 5 on a 53-yard
pass from Tom Tupa to Jay
Novacek as time expired.
Herrman will be out for 3-4
weeks a Iter suffering a fractured
r ib in thethird -q uarter sac k.
AI Del Greco's second. field
goal of the game, a 37-yarder 10
seconds Into the fourth quarter,
had given Phoenix a 20-17 lead.

Phelps is eliminated

,

HOLSTEIN WINNER - The Meigs County
Better Livestock Club provided thlslltde Holstein
heifer which was won hy David S~llh during

Dairy Sweepstakes presentations on Friday
evening at the Meigs County Fair. With David are
Paul Smith and 4H advisor, Eddie Holter.

Pizza party
held by church
The children of Faith Full
Gospel Chu rc h, Long Bottom,
recently enjoyed an evening of
fun and pizza ea ting in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Those participating in the
evening included Ricki a nd Chris
Bar,ringer, Heidi Nelson, Becky
Driggs, John Driggs, Angie and
Andrew Reed, Matt Martin,
Tasha Eddy, Bill Barber, Hope
Ingali, Valerie Queen, Rocky
Hupp, J .D. Nelso n, Rachael
Hupp, Jason Barber, Melissa and
Brandon Smith, Shawn Reed,
Tara a nd Amanda Souls by ,Steve
Soulsby, Autumn Reed, and
adult s, Cheryl Eddy, Tammy
Cowdery. Dolly Reed, Teresa
Smith, Steve Reed, Sue Reed,
Debbie Barringer, Craig Reed
and Bobbie Reed .

Sports briefs

Four drivers to
take part in races

Majors

8,.R£GAN

B,\' Unlll'-d Pres!'!lnll'rrutkllllll
r\MERif 1\N LE,\G UE

Ew-;t
M'
BultlnJon&gt; .................... G5
.!VIIIwaull•t• ..... .......... .. .. 6(i
Toronto
tl:J
Bo11lon , .. .... .. ..... .. .........~M
Clf'\'f'IW1d .............. ... ...511
New l ' nrk.. ............... .. .,;7

L Pd . liH
5!1 .52-1 ~~ , SJ~
1• .1
Iii .5011 2

DtfroU ................. ... .... n

7M .371&gt;

w .... .. .... ... ........

w... .

O~tkland

1,, .-17'l

~· ·l

R!l .-ltill
41)1 .-l:lfi

,
11• .1

1111.~

............... ....... 76 -1!1 .80K -

California .... .. ....... .......74
K""*" Clty ..... ............"il

n .GO\!

.!173

I
P1

T I'XIl-'1 ....................... ... &amp;5 l7 .53:1

!JI't

~ :1

Mln..-!ioi..ll ....·............... 60 63 ..filii II)
66 .-163 111
l 'hh':ti{0 -- .....................32 1'! ..&amp;19 '!:111
~·attlr ........... .. ............ 37

Mon:lli.,V'II Rl"'~l ~

Oakland 6. Det roll I
Nt•W York 6, Bo8lon 4
Baltlmoft" !J, Mtlwaukl'l' 0

Kll.n!Wi ( 'II)' -1, l :allror•ll 'l
Tut'MIII,Y' t!Ga m c.~

rBo111on tGardn er 1-7) Ill NPW \ ' ork
(('udU't'l t--3) ,7 :38 p.m.
Mllwau)r(' IBoAio 11-'l') ut Balllmnn•
(.Joh..On'l-2), 7:!1-S pi .m.
.
Detroit (DuBois f-11 al Toroftlo {Siolllf'm)'h' 4-5). 7:25p.m .
Sf'ltllk- (Ban .,_.llld 11-5) Ill ChovrlaJid
(Farrell 1·12), 1:35 p.m .
Chl4*~ (lUna 5·11) at MlniW'86tu
&lt;Rawlf'J -l -ll),ll: 05p.m .
Calltclr•a tWlUil-11) Ill K&amp;nlllll!l City
(Guhltu 11-10),11: 35 p.m.
'
Oakland ( Wrlch 11-7) al Teu.,. (Ryan

1-1-7 ),11:35 p.m..
W.-..ud~'A Gamf!'M
Bo11t0n at NI!W Yoril, •I (IN
St&gt;atlle at Cln-elllnll, alahl
Dd rok a1 Torn•, ., ...
Mlht.. ukee at BIIIUmore, nll(ht
Clllcaco at Mlnrrsou. nl«fft
Callroralll. id K:an . . City, nlpt
Oakland at Tens. niJht

"""

W L Pet.

GB

HARDEN MEMORIAL - The Sandy Harden Memo1·ial Award
was presented at this year's Meigs County Fair to 4H'er Chu ck
Parker. Presenting the award ·during Friday evening's Dairy
Sweepstakes presentations was Eddie Holter, 411 advisor.

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

"EVERYONE WELCOME"

I

PHOTO SPECIAL

FREE
No age limit
Limit I Per Person
One Special Per Family
Single or Groups
Taken

Augu$t 23rd thru 27th
CHESTER
NAZARENE CHURCH

I

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
lor public hearing Case
No, 69-1 01-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procuremen! practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Component , and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m., on September
16, 1969 at City Council
Chambe~. 218 Cleveland
Avenue. S.W., Canton,
Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opport~nity
to be heard. Further informalion may be obtained
by contacting the Commission .

IN LIVING COLOR

REVIVAL

NIGHTLY 7:00 P.M.

LEGAL NOTICE

8110

1

EVANGELIST
DAVE CANFIELD

NATIONAL LEAGUE
0111&lt;:. ·:'""" '"'':........~~ ~ IIIII -

~.~!'Ln...

LEE MEMORIAL- This year's Bob Lee Memorial Award was
presented by Maxine Rose, of Racine, at left, to Meigs County
4H'er .Jill Taylor. The memorial award was presented during
Dairy Sweepstakes presentations Friday evening, just prior to the
4H-Junlor Fair Livestock Sale.

.

TUESDAY, AUG. 22
PRETTY BOYS - A total of 88 boys were entered Ia Saturday's
Pretty Baby_C\lnlest at the Meigs Couaiy Fair. From left to right
are, Lltde Miss Amanda Fetty, daughter of Mike and Janice Fetty,
Pomeroy; Gregory Alan Taylor, Pomeroy, winner In the 0 to thre~
months category, with mom, Kim Taylor; Justin Douglas
Browning, Long Bojtom, three to Alx montbl, With mom, Terri
Browning; Dakota li:ugene Anns, Pomeroy, six to 12 months, with
dad, Gene Arms; David Allen Maxson, Reedsville, with mom,

Becky
with
mom, Carol
Ashton Eugene
two to three
years, with mom, Linda Well; Justin Owen Smith, Racine, three to
four years, with mom, Melln.d a Smith; Derek Shawn Clark,
Racine, lour to five years, with his aunt, Connie OSborne; and
Lillie Mister Daniel Sidwell, son of Dan and Vanessa Sidwell, Long
Bottom. {lift certificates for the wlnneu were provided by Tiny
· Tech Preschool, Middleport, and Buttons and Bows, Pomeroy.

PHOTOGRAPHERS
HOURS
.
11 TIL 7:00
VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL MARKEl
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PHOTOS BY HOllEY POITIAITS

'

..

�----

August 22, 1989
TUelday,

Payne reunion held recently
Nancy · Lease, Beth, Travis,
The eighth annual P aynereun· Tammy, Marysville: Mike Cle~:ve~as held recently at Ash mans and Rose, Marysville;
Attending wer(;' Freda Payne '- Kenneth Payne; Pomeroy; DoCarsey, · Middleport; Bob and nald Payne, Lori Howard and
Judy Jacobs, Columbus; Lisa
Brandy, Columbus; KevlnPayne
and Eddie Marcum, Eddie Lee, and Lori Frye, Harrisonville;
Laura and Krlsty, Obetz; Donny Cindy l'dltchell, and Nicki, PomeStelmetz, Krls Wilson, Adam and roy: Terry and Michael Payne,
Nicky, Racine; Rick and Connie Pomeroy; Wayl\e and Patty
Steinmetz, RickY. Amy, and Payne and Jackie, Columbus;
Danny, Pomeroyu; Bob and Scott .P ayne and Holly, Colum·
Sally Welsh, London; Jim Welsh, bus: and Klmmy Parks and
Marsha and Angel, Marysville: , John, Columbus.

lUI h OIBLS - Tbelle younc. ladles were selected trem
a 1 • Marta as the prettiest girls In the Melp County Fair
....... IIIIII,J Coates&amp;, held Sa&amp;urday afternoon In the &amp;bow rlag.
1'1.- Ill&amp; .. rlllll are, Little Miss Amanda Felly; Alllha Compaon,
btnl, Ia tile 0 to three months category, held by mom, Usa
Cs 1 M; Erlnne Nle~~le Kennedy, Middleport, three to six

:

.•
:
•

• •
1

On, wldl ·mom, Theresa Kennedy; Jessica Dawn Lamm,

a11lnllle, atx to 1! months, wltb mom. USa Foster; Abby Jane
..,_llri, Pomeroy, 12 to 18 months, with mom, Janie
Stewart;.
.

l)eat of the Bend

. ~ays

•lniekloacl com:till down
road. And that's
:probably good
,- at least It
;keeps you on
your toes one way or another.
Another ot lite's little chal·
leages came my way Friday
nf8ht when I was scheduled to
pbotoeraph all of the animals,
,the young people who raised
'·them and whoever - at the
livestock sale of the Meigs
County Fair.
I had gladly committed to do
this about a year ago and hadn't
really given it too much thought
·undl Friday evening.
Suddenly, I panicked:
' "Miz Scarlet, I ain't never
photographed livestock before. ''
A while before ihe sale In
counseling sessions with June
Kloes and Barb Fry I voiced my
apprehensions about the actlv-

lty. Both ladles had a positivE'
approach and assured me that I
would be o.k.
.
Now what I know about livestock you can put In a thimble and
still have much room to spare.
However, the cr~ial hour
arrived . anp I reported to lh\'
show ring still with misgivings. I
had conslderl'd throwing myself
In front of a truck, but reasoned
that going ahead with the photo·
graphy could turn out better in
the long run.
I was greeted by Jim Sheets,
sale chairman, who took me to an
area In the show r lng where a
neat backdrop •rhad bl'en
constructed.
"We want the anbnal~ framed
Inside this backdrop, " Jim
stated. ''Now where do you stand
to do this?"
I nervou sly took a position.
where I thought It would work
and that seemed fine to Jim and to me.
As quick as a wink Jim and his
group built a fence around my
location wlth the !'ntranceway at
one end. This was where the

'"---Announcements-. Seekla&amp; reelpes for cookbook

Center on Wednesday from 11
• When Pomeroy celebrates lt' s a.m. to 1 p.m.
150th birthday the sesquecentenOn f'rlday the representative
, nlal committee will have avalla· will be at the Racine Departmen t
ble for sale a cookbook made up Store from 11 a .m. to 2 p.m.
ot "old time" ri'Clpes of mothers,
Those Interested by sign up at
gr11ndmothers. great grand· the Pomeroy Library or Senior
mothers, etc. It anyone has a . Citizens Center five days a week
.recipe they would like to contrib- from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m . Proof of
ute to the cookbook, en titled age or disability must be
''Treasured RE'Clpes from the presented.
Past" send It or drop It by the
Dally Sentinel ofllce In care of Mens softball to1urnament
Julie E. Dillon. Any church
There wlll be a men·s softball
women's organizations are also tournament on Saturday and
encouraged to coUect reclp€'S fo r
Su nday .at Eastern High School.
the book and turn them in to the The cost is $60 plus your own ball.
Sendnel office. The deadline for Call 992-2576 'or 667-6427 for
submitting ri'Cipes Is Sept. 15.
information.
,Middleport blook party
Middleport's annual block
party will be held on Sept. 16.
Interested pardes should reserve
booths by calHng Debbie or Mike
Gerlach at 992-6898, Lennie
Eliason at 992-6485, or Brian
'Johnson at 992-3481. Booths are
reserved on a first come first
serwd· basis, so call soon to
reserve a booth.
-RIItland block party
:.The Rutland Fire Department
and ladies auxiliary will be
having a ' block party on Sept. 2.
There will be craft shows,
entertainment, and food. At 2:30
p.m. the Rainbow Cloggers will
~Qnn throughout the afternoon. At 3 p.m. the Belles and
Beaus square dancers will perform, and from 6-10 p.m. the
Wyoming Wolf Band will perform. Call 742-2421 or 742-2580
for Information on contests and
craft
., table reservations.

Golf tournament
' There will be a Florida scram·
ble with lunch and tee off at 1
p.m. on Sunday open to men and
women. Cost Is $40. Proceeds will
pfor the Southern Boosters. For
Information call 992-6312 or
992-3671.

Revival
'The Chester Naza~ene Church
will have revival Wednesday
through Sunday with evangelist,
Dave Canfield from Russell, Ky _
Services will be nightly at 7 p.m .
The pub)k: Is lnvl ted to attend.
Solldlea a loeal1111nouncernent ·
: 'S chool for the Southern Local
District willbeglnonAug. 28. The
aame bus routes and time schedules will be followed. The school
also operate on the same
time schedule.

will

Met1 llnuU,e re•rese•ta&amp;lve

A representative of the Golden
~eye .C ard will be at Pick and ·
sa.w1 Grecery StGre In Salem

Softball tournament
There wlll be a softball tourna ment on Saturday and Sunday at
the Middleport Park. Contact
Gene Wise at 992-6224 or Rick
Ash at 992-5960 for information.
Hymn sing
The Stiversvlll€' Word of Faith
Church will be having a hymn
sing with the Soul Seekers from
Columbus on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Pastor Gary Holter Invites the
public.

TO PlACE AN AD CAU 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

.....

Movie
The First Bapdst .Church of
Middleport Will be showing the
film "Twice Pardoned" on Wed·
nesday at 7 p.m. The movie Is
based on the life of Harold
Morris, whose contacts with the
wrong crowd eventually led him
to the Georg"' State Penitentiary
In 1970. Falsley charged with the
murder, he faced two lifE'
sentences.
After receiving a pardon from
the Governor of Georgia In 1978
and through this experience, he
shares a testlmony for young and ·
old alike of how ordinary people
can get Into trouble In a world of
alcohol, drugs, and crime. His
message of faith and, hope In
Jesus Christ has changed the
lives of youth and adults as well.
The public Is lnvlle4 to attend.

tull3 ... , . . . ..........
•Pta. ot M fiMo Ill ~, •

·• NO SERVICE CHARGE ON
STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTS
I
t

' '

·'

Your Good Neighbor Bank

PEOPLES · BANK
New Haven
882·2135

Point Pleasant
675·1121

Mason
773·5514 .

® Equlll

L.lnc*

'

._,is douW• price of 1d cost.

not,......,..,,.,.
.., in

•7 """ • • type OfttJ . . ..
•ttmiftll •
for error• efler first d'W' . fChedt
for erron tirlt d~ ad
peper ). c.ll beloft' 2:00 p.rn
tiW' Itt• DUb6iMiOn "' mlk1 eottec\ioft.
•Adf lhM rmttt be peid In Hltl'ane~ . .

Ads

Card ofTh•k•

tt.ppy

'" Metftof..,.,.

Yetd &amp;II•

.20

••. 00

.1 .30/ doy

...

;

f11liiii!JI l.l'!flf'll!:

CALL 992·6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certifi.t lic:ented Shop

WANTED

&amp;1 Houllheld Goodl

12--...Mfthenctt.e
-

2-Ift~

3- Annoucem•••

U-Am. . .
14-Milc.
11-hiiding lupP'•• •
11-"-tl for lllfl
17-Mulicll ln11rum.nu
11-Fruhs a v~ ....,..

4- Givtl..,.., •

1'-"-PP\' Ada
1 - LHt Mid Found

7 - Y•d lelt tpetd in ldltlnct l
1 - P\!Mic &amp;eltA A11ctkln

9- w.n• 1o luv

_DEAD OR AUVE

•WIShers •D ryers
· •Range •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"MUS! Be Repairable"

St-For &amp;Me or Trade

cl•iifiad ditpl~ . Bu•"'•• c.rd ..-d t~~g• not~\
litO IPP. . ~the P:t . Pl-..,1 A.,e.tar and 1M Gllli·

Supfilil:"
I. II VI'Silll'&gt;

foil Ill

polit Dally Tribuna, •.citing owr 11.000 hom•

..

'

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPEA
TUESDAY PAPER
WIDNIIDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

DAY IEFOAE PUILICATtON
-11 :00 A .M . IATURDAV

- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

- 2:00P.M. WlDNEIOAY

- 2&gt;00 P.M. THURSO/I&gt;V
..;.., 2 :0Q P .M. FRIDAY

. SUNDAY PAPER

1 1 - tt.IO W-.ct
1 2-Situ.tion w_..tlld
1 3 - lni&amp;Hance
14-Bidin•• Tr.tnlng
1 5-Se~toot~a lnltruetion

11-Radlo. TV a CB
17- Milcetlen.OUI
1 8 - 't\lented To Do

Aep~

21 - B..... •• OpPOrt~y

.

Gallia County
A~ta 'Coell

! ,

11.&amp; ·

Muon Co .• WV
At• Coda 30'

441 - G.IIipOitl

182-MHhl.,ott

387 - Ctt•hite
388-Vimon , ,

91&amp;- Ch••r

241,21614l378-

FUo ,G ,.nlie
lluYift 01&amp;1.
•rabi• Din
Welnut

23-~............ t:el

'

Meitl Coumv
At. . COCII 114
Pon~~~erov

143..,-Pon•ne!
247 - LMtn hill
949-Rtolne
742-Ruttend
117-Coohllle

171-lt1 . Pl.....t
411-Leon

576-Appte (;rove
773 -.. ~.. on
112 - N..., H.-wen
11&amp;-Letlr1
137- lufhllo

31 -Hom• tor Slle

32- MoileHom• tor S11e
U-FIIfmt tor lilt
l4-IU1ina• luiliings

Cat Retultc Fatt

ter\,...ci'ibed ImProvement.

lc tiallw8l'
.-.
followa: which- 1o " " ' -

Raptace

••lotlnti .tone

arCh culvert with • new cul-

vert. Conetruct new int•·
section et U. B. 33 end B. R.
124. end NbuHd 1 oectlon of
S. R. 12• from the intenac·
tion to • 'polntolot ofthe cutvwt.
Sold ponjon of highway
within the municipal corpo:
retlon llmlto being herelnef·
ter referred to 11 the improvem.,t. ond
WHEREAS, tho Vitifun. dalru coope!ltion
fram the Dlractor of Tronojlorllltlon in the pt.,nlng,
datgn end COMiruction of
uid Improvement.
NOW. THEREFORE, Be It
ordained by the Council
· of the 'foil IItie of Pomeroy.
Ohio:
.
SECTION 1 (Cooperotionl
Thei llld Vll111ge hereby
requMts "the cooperetion of
the Director of Transpot1e·
tion, In the con of the above
dacrlbed improvement ao
follow a:
SECTION 1-A; Thot the
oum of 10.00 It hereby opproprlted for. the Improvemont of the highwoy a de·
ocrlbed herelnlibovo. by the
Village.
SECTION II (COMont)
Thot it i8 daclerod 1o be In
the public lnterast that the
can- of ..id Village be
and 'IUCh conunt ls herebY
alvon to the Director of
conatn~ct

agreements

and

opactll contrect1111l obligetiona.
SECTION IV
,
IMaintenance. Par.king Treffic Control Slgnlil end Dovic•! '
Thot up&lt;m comptotlon of
..id·lmprovemont, ..id VII·
loge, wHI ti..,Mft• keep
uld hlghwev op., to trefllc
et ott times. ond
(o) Maintain the Improve·
ment in accordance with the
provltion of the lllltutH rototlng t"-ta ond moko em·
pte finencielond other proviliofte for 1uch mllintenance;
end
lbl Meintain the right· of·
woy ond keep It free of ob·
struction In 1 mann• Ntis-

factory to the State of Ohio
end hald Hid .rlaht·of·WIV
lnvlolllll for publ[c hlghwoy
purpooas end p.-mlt mlignl.
po-" blllboerd, roodllde
ttlnde or other prl¥111 In·
ltllllltlono within the right·
IJ!·WIY tlmltt: ond
(C) PI- .end nutlnuln ell
trifilc control devloeo con·
fonnlntl to the Ohio Monuel
of Uniform Tnfllc Contra!
Devloll on the Improve·
mant In compHID.. with the
pro~~io&gt;lona
ol
Section
41111.11 end Nllled - ·
tlono of the Ohio Revilod
C-:ond
(dJ Regutete perlo!ngln the
lallo!"lntl ononner: Periling
willie pro....... within the
project lmltoot ell tlmM.
(aiCTION VJ
(Right·of.w.y, Utllty Reor·
reng11118!1t ond Dotnlll ond

lles-*lltllel
let Th81 ott ulltlnl ttreet

Llllb7lly
I'

We Service All Makes
5-4-89-1 mo.

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION
)MIINII: GIEG a. ROUSH

:,11111n

••J ;. ' " · GENERAL

' ' ••~

.

, .• . COIIIIERCIAL

t:MMI

41-Hou... tOf "'"'

42 -Mobtle Homes tor Ren1

IISO ST, SYUCISI

81 --Homllmt'fovtments
12- PiwmtMng• tMaing

992-7611

.83- Eacw•ttno

17-UpMisWv

obligetlono made or agreed
to in Sectionolo)', lbl, (c).ld).
(ol ond (fl hereinabove. LikowiH. the State11gr- to eccapt rHpon•lbitlty for eny
and att dilmagu or deimo
for which it i8 legotty Noble
ariting from the negligence
of its officera, employeea or
ag~tl in the l*'formanceof
the State'• obttgetiono mede
or agreed to.ln Sectlono 1•1.
lb), ·lei. (d). (e) and Ill herein·
obove,
Tbia ordinance is hereby
declerod to be on emergency ·

•id Improvement and eeld

m~ure

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augulll 8, 19B9. in the
Meigs Countv Probelecourt.
Cue No. 211334,
Goldie
HeinOOf, 24686 Apple Grove
Dorcu Road. Racine. Meigs
County. Ohio, 411771 , was
appointed E118CUtriK of the • ·
tate of Roy H. Heiney, do·
ceMod, tole of 24866 Apple
Grove Dorcas Rood, Recine.
Meigo County, Ohio, 46771.
Roben E. Buck.
Probeto Judge
Leno K. Neooolrood. Clerk
(8), 15, 22. 29 3tc

by r,eaaon of the

compenl• hevo agreed to need for.e•pedltlng highway
make any 8nd all nec81Ury improvements ·to promote
ptontremoveto orreerrenge· highwoy Hilty. and promenta in euch manner 11 to vided i.t receives the affirmabe .ciMr of eny conotructlon tlvevoteoftwo·tltirdo of tho
cettodforbytheplen•of ..ld membero .elected to Counimprovement end Hid cam - ell, itohotl take effect and be
panlas hove ogreed to mHo in Ioree lmmodilteiy upon
ouch nao•011rv roerrengepasuge end approve! by
menu lmmodlotety ofter noMoyor; otherwit&gt;o, it
tlflcatlon by oald Vlll,e pr
tHe
be In
the Depertmont of ronoportotion. ·
(d) Thlt ilit&gt; hereby agreed
thlt the VIllage ahett It Ito AnHt&gt;
~111~~::;,~!;
own lixp.,,e, make ottreer- Att•t• Batty'
rangemen11 of water meina.
Richard '"lii8F,
oervico lin•,· fire hydront"
larry Wehrung, Pn•lotont
valve boxes, ..nltery _ . , .
of Council
or other munldpllly Owned 181 16. 22. 2tc
utlltielend/or any eppuno- 1--~-----nanceti thMito, which do.
Pu
not comply with the provl·
olonoofDirective No. DH·P·
PUBLIC NOTICE
411,
Tho Mei1111 County Boord
(e) That the conttruction, of Manto! RetordotioniOOY·
iiiCOnttruction. M'ld/or reer- etopmental
Ditabilttiea is
rangemont of both publicly ptoclng for oelo a 19B6, 69
and privately owned utli- pMaenger Ford school bus.
ties. referred to in aublec- Bua ia equipped with a
tions lei end (d) obovo, shoU Thomas body, Ford g81o11no

1-----==--:--

engine.

Seated Bido witt be receivod It the Meigo County
Board of Mentel Retardatlon/Doveiopmontet DiOI·
bllltiH,
1310 Cerllton
Street, P.O . Box 30~. Syca'"""· Ohio 45779 unt114:00
p.m. Auguot 2B, 19B9.
Biela will be opened at
4 :16p.m. on Augutt 28th,
1989. Seto ofthe buo wilt be
-••dod to the hlghHt bid·
dor.
The Meit11 county Boord
of .Mental Retardetion/ Oo;v·
otopmantet Dioobllltiel ras·
..,.. the right to reject eny
or ell blda.
(71 30, 31: (8) 1, B. 16. 22.
21

Public

The family of Hazel D.
(Grandma) Hayes of Syracuse, wishes to tx·
press deep apprecialion'
to the nurses of lnten·
sive Care, Operatina
Room, 2 North, Dr. Msrk
Brown, Scott¥ lucasand
volunteers at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. for
their Iovine care and
support.
A special Thank You
to Rev. McMillan for ~is
hours of .vl&amp;il, prayers
and spiritual support.·
To the Syracuse IIIII·
rene Wo1111n's Minis·
triu for the wonderful
meal they provided us,
and our ntl~ and
many frleads who IIIII
flowers, food and who
prayed with and for us.

Chlld1111,
Grandcllild1111 elld

Grtlt-Grsndo~ldl'lll

992-5288
f•

'(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 $econd Avenue, Box 1213
.
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
-Mulbeny Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

z

1n1

YEIY IEISONAIU
HIVE IEfEIEIKES
614-915-4110
8/4/89-tfn

PI.UMIING &amp; HEATlNG
Ntw lowtion:

161 North S.ond
Mitldt.,.,t, Ohio 45760

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE
W• C•rv Fi•hln"g IUppll•

Voqr• Phone
Ca.b le 1!11111 Here
IUSIIISS PHON!
16141 992-6550
IISIDINCI rHONI
'(6141

More lnformtlon
7-17-'89' 1 mo. p~

IN

Mastic -

1'600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAUUD
992-5275

(erlainl•d ®

W.indows
FREE ESTIMATES

Call

2

5-

II

Howard

L

BINGO

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-99711

I

THUIS. E.l. 6:CS P.M.
SUM. Ll. 1:45 P.M. 1
DOOI PIIZI
Z H.D. FREE with coujJOn and; I

I
1
1

P1r Game

MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Pert~ _ _
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

lt. 33 North of
P-aray,

.

ll&lt; #005-12

SWEEPER REPAIR

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE

DUI\1P TRUCK
Sand·Stone·Dirt

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Nawland

7-18·'89-Hn

WATER
SERVICE

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WWS
CISTERNS

•

Writesel

ROOfiNG~
NEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
·ng
Gutter Clean 1
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·21 .6 8

D&amp;R
~
TA\;KLE
BOX
OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS
LIVE BAIT
ETC.
21fl Mi. Below
lacine Locks &amp;
Dam At Antiiquity

1·

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

Speeltlltll'' ·

AU MAKES AND

MODELS

and MORE
222 East Main.
POMIIOY, OH.

992-6872

EAGLE RIDGE

.

SMAll
ENGINE REPAIR
PAm &amp; SEIYICE
•Lawn .Mowers
•Riders
•Chain Saws
•Weedeaters
3 ml• off of Rt. 7

It Melgo Memory
Gar dono

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDQIIG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING co:

···-Wt

"Free E.tlmltes"

PH. 949-2801
or Its. M9-2160

LW.
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

742-2421

NOW OPEN
WRIIOOIIS

a•

AJIA. .IRSFOI
IIIII (ly Day or

WHirl

$18,., .., ""
949·2526
mo.

3

•SHRUB
TREE
TRIM 'a nd RE·

MOVA~ .
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWoqo ..

BILL SLACK

992-226!
EVEN.GS

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, Po-ey Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trt•••l••lea
. PH. 992:5612
or 992.·7121
4'25-tll

.-,

Anno~:ncements

ABSOWTELY NO TRESPAS·
SING on Pant110te Pf'OP'I'ty
betwHn Rl. 62 to river; fi,Y))1

1·13-'18·1fn

4

-

Giveaway

$40.00 frea merchandl•lult 'f9r
hosting 1 Houu of Uoyd ~"~·
ChOOH trom glttl, lO'l1 1

lashtono,

(owolry1 Chrlot"""'

decorations and nome d•cpt.

Call todayl614-192-5316. . -~
4 ktttons 6 2 colo. 814-441-3419.

4 klttana. 5 weake old. 614-44&amp;·.

.,.n3
..~2=·~~~~--~~

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT
alDOl TIACTOIS

elCHO PIODIKTS
etiOWAID IOTAVATOIS
•Y AIDMAN MOWERS

•INTERSTATE IATTEIIES
-LAWN MOWER REPAIR

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Sttltm St.

Rutllo..t n

St ...... 614-441.Z1De.

Fr.. to good home. 5 .m't;~, old

Shophord. Shoto.l14·245·9o79.
and

247-3522
St. Rt. 338
tetart

Falls,

Ohio
8-ZI-89·1 mo.

~ ·-r~

old

Lost &amp; Found

6

.,

Found w1nderlng In Kanaua•.

Siamese cat. O!Mner ldan1Tty

614·367·7123.
Found:

...

male

W•lk•r

Cool)

Hound.: Hllnlsonvllll lrN. Call

to ldontlly. 114-742·2224.
LOST: Whlto Chow, 2

y;;:-·6li,

No collar. Rtward. Edgtmonl ·
Or. area. 61 4~39Q.

===.:...:.===-~·Lost: malt B..glt with 0111nge

collar.

. Aug.16"

In

Sal!""

Township. 61 4-742·2633.

B&amp;W
GARAGE
CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

.-

wk~.

tlttortrelnad.lt4-446-762i.

7

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

....

FOUND: Male Collie at Spru1c,e

· Yard sara

''
1'

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

'I

.

-.

3 family. Swlndall'a, Fairfltld
Church Rd. August 25, 26. Adutl
clothu.L. houseflold, farm items.
I a.m.· I p.m.
,

All Yard S1lts Ml.tSt Be P11dln
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.rO.

lhl day b1fcra the ad Ia 10 Nn.
Sunday edition • 2:00

p:m.

Frlday. Monday tdHion • 2;00
p.m. Saturday.

East Korr Bethel Church Rd. Fri.
6 Sal. 9-4. 197V Dodgo. 20 lnt:h
chain 11w.

JONES TilE
CENTER
•New a. Used Tires
•Custom Pipe Bending

•Oil Chengeo
•Graue Jobs
•General Ch....,
Maintenance
•Computeriled Balancer

992-3897

St. Rt. 124
Middle~1ort,
(Next to
Top

MEET THE
STAFF
PEIM SALE .
Now lhru Stpt. 9, 1989

10% OfF AU PERMS

Oh.

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Located at Voley Lumber
In· Mkldloport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
for Most 2 end 4~ cvcle
engines
Stock Pons for
Homelite, Witedaatar.
Tacum..h. Briggo &amp;

Stratton.

RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS.
9UI-7PM
EXCEPT

HOUDAYS

We Buy All .
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,''
Stainless Steel,
Etc.
Give Ua A Call

Today"

992-5114

' 'I.-tid OffBn-aAt
· Jet. of Rta. 7 • 143.
Oh.

P1. Pleasant

..

&amp; VIcinity

Bosldo ol Brumllold'o Garage!

Ashton.
Nice J temt-Chell(
~0,:~~· 25 6 Saturdoy, 211. "t

WALK-IN WELCOME

Pomeroy,

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

Middleport

169 N. 2nd

Middleport

RADIATOR

SER~ICE .

We can r~r and rt·
cara radiafars and
heater car11. We can
aha acid boil 01111 rod
ovt rodiatars. We also
repair. Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-21911

M lddleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

NO SUNDAY

. 1-17-1 rna.

CAIIPGROUNDS

Ohio

· 6-5-'89-tfn

1·1-1 mo.

..

Announcements

City. &amp;ce &amp; Fuel property tG l 9ct)l.
· Lane. Panta.ote Companv

POMEIOY -IAGUS
CLUB

pun:hise ot min. H.C. Pack·
Mt. Li•~ I coupon Jill customer per bintD sesston.
Wo ray •5o.oo •• Gaowo .
Over 110 hoplo '65.00

KUKD' AKD YMa.

Vinyl Siding
Seamlns Gutter
Replacement Windows
· Blown IIJSU)ation
' Storm Doors &amp;

5/ll/19 '"'

3 Announcements

,. 1 HI JAil'(
' (' ( t~ "';" iV I ' I (
,Vrlti{;•"p(t'
~JH

co~ .

J&amp;L
INSULATION

ALLEN'S
HAULING

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

Business Call Anytime
992-2371
·Services
1.;:::::::::;1 "=========

"W•••I•I eown

Troln lo De e'l&gt;roteNionot

ea:

·stop By and See Us! -Financing Available
MASTERCARD and VISA WELCO ME
BILOW HOUDAY INII, UIIAUGA, 0•0
(6141 4U·4712'
7·18·'89·1 mo. pd.

Yellow female tiger, 8

J----------1

POMEROY, OHIO

.

Now Taking
Registrations

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augulll 111. 19B9. in
the Mei1111 County Probete
Court. Case No. 26348.
Marlene Friedman, 8894 Be·
rend Street, Worthington,
Ohio, 43085, wao oppointod
AdmlniltrltriK of the •tote
of Dovid J. Goodwin, deceased. lolo ol 200 La•IOOf
Street. Pom•ov. Meigs
County. Ohio, 46769.
Robert E. Buck.
Probeto Judge
Leno K. Neaoelrood, Cl01k
181 Z2. 29: 191 6 , 3tc

Fabric
Shop.
992·2284
.-

IN MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

Notice

OFFERED AT

l...:..-----,----

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

'

negligence of ltti oHicera,

8fT! ploy. . or .agent• in the
performonce of the VIU~~ge' •

::c

do
it for you. ,

painting. Lot

5·25-'89-tfn

84-Eiec:lric81 t. Retrlg . .tiOn
85-Gennl Hautino
86-Moltlfe Home R. .w

46-l,.c. tor Retu
47-Wemad 1"o R.n1
41-Eauitmlftl for Ren1
41 for Lea•

end public woy right·of·woy
within the V111~~ge which il
noceooery for the afo,.eld
imp.-mant, ohe11 be mede
IIVllileble therefor.
lbl Thot the State wit ecquire any addltionel rlg!tt-ofway required for the con·
struction of the afo,...eid
improvement.
(c) .That errengemento hove
been or wit be made with
end ogreemento obtained
from aU public utility compli·
ni• who11 lin• or ltNC·
tu,. wHI bo efflctod by the

not to interfere unduly w~h
thooporationofthocontrector constructing the impro-vementondatlbeckflttlngol
tronchH mode neceaury by
ouch utllty reerrengement•
lhall be perfo!med in eccardonee with the provltton•
the Ohia Deponment
Tr.,oportetion Conlllruc·
lion ond Meteriat.Spactflco·
tion• and oholl be subject to
opprovet by tho St.te.
Cfl Thot the lnatallotion of
ell utility facilities on the
righl-of--y ahott conform
with tho requirement• of the
Federal . Highway Adminlotratlon Polley end Procedure Memorandum 30-•
"Utility Relocation• end Adjuttmentt" end the Oeponment of · Trenaportation" 1
ruiH on Utility Accommodation.
lgl That tho Village hereby
agrHI to accept rMponlibility for ony end ell dem~~g•
or cl•m• for which it is
l"tt•lly Nebte orl•lng from the

lATHS

•EXTENIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL .BIDING. ROORNG
· -METAL IUILDIN08
. -NEWHOMES
SINCE 1969

Public Notice

be done in such a m~~nner ••

CONTRACTORS
RESID£NTIAL

-•CUBTor.f KITCHEHI &amp;

Public N otlce

. , Public Notice

1ncf to requnt cooperltion
from the Olroctor of Tren·
IIPor'tation.
WHEREAS, the Village
has identified the need for
end . propo- the improve·
mont of e ponion of the pub·

14- He¥ a Grlin
15-&amp;ttd &amp; ftrtilztr

31-Flell lsu.e w••d

46-Furnilh" Aooma

ORDINANCE NO . 68"
Name of Street: Main Street
ond Bridge St.; Route No. B.
R. 124.
Dote of Enactment: Aug. 7,
1989.
An emergency ordinance
enoctod by the VI111!90 o' Pomeroy, Meigs County, Ohio,
In the metter of the hereinef·

192-5335-915·3561

3&amp;-Lo11 • Acre11•

4J-ftrrns tor Rent
44-Apnrnent tor A1n1

Public Notice

11 - f~tm i•u•m•n

11 - AU1ol tor SMe
72- Trucks for &amp;lie
1J-VWtl. 4 WO ' s
14-M010fCVCitl
15- loltl &amp; MOIOfl tor Sl4e
71-Auco Pens 6 Aec•IOfi•
77- Auco Replir
71- C.rnP•"g EQ~..,.,"''
79-C8rnP•I. MOIOf Hom•

22-Mone,' to Lotn

following. telephone exchanfles ...

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

12- Wemed to luy
13-Livntoc:k

Tr~nspn,

Classified page.&lt; cot1er the

Ffi'EE ESTIMATES
Take tho pain out of

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

tv" 1: r 1.1\ .1 11111 st:

1-catd of ThlftU

Cl•l will

Moat Foreian 1nd

NIASE Cenrtled Mach.,ic

.10
.0&amp;/ dey

013.00

lin'ERIOR.fXTEIIOR

Rep.ir• ,

.30
.42

~A Clllllfl.a ailvertiMm- plKIIII1ft The Deily a-llin .. leli •

tho ebovo d•crlbed impro·
vement. in accordance with
· pion" •pecificetiono and H·
timet• "' opprovod by the
Director.
SECTION Itt
(Authority to Sign)
Tho (he Moyor, of .. id VII·
loge, 11 hereby authorized to
entet; into maintenance and

•

mtctwenoe.

•Free Mil - OW.~Wey 8ftd Found . . under 16 Wordtl will be

parking

• NO SERVICE CHARGE
ON
.
•
PASSBOOK SAVIN.G S ACCOUNTS

.

.

••.oo

eon•cutiiHt runl. bro.., IIIIC,8111WII Mch•tecl

M•on c::oumi• must b• pre·

•Re.-.. 1.&amp;0 llilcount tor INh ,.td

franaportetion to

OUR SERVICE IS WORTH
CHEERING ABOUT!
• STAFFORD, SLS, AND PLUS .
STUDENT LOANS AVAILABLE
TO QUALIFIED ,BORROWERS

16
16
16
16
16

Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp; Se~~ial
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

·LINDA'S
PAINTING

SYIACUU, OHIO

Oomettic Vehid•
A1C Service
All Mlljor &amp; Minor

0 ... 1&amp;Worell

Rate
....00

, Word&amp;

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Smith family ga~~ers

Youth outreach
The Rejoicing Life Church wlll
be sponsoring a Sp€'clal outreach
for youth at the Pomeroy parking
lot on Saturday, Sept. 2 at 7 p.m.
Special guests are "The New
Ll!e Drama Team" of Cleveland,
Tenn. who wlll be doing a variety
of skits dealing with many topics
and Issues relating to the youth.
The public Is Invited, and any
churches who wish to participate
can call Pastor Mike Panglo at
992-6249.
The New Life Drama Team
wlll also be at the Sunday 10 a .m.
service at the church which is
located at 333 N. Second St. In
Middleport.

·VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

RA

I'OLICIES

STUDENTS!

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

01"

The Daily Sentinel- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

On photography and livestock

lly 11011 HOEFLICH
,. You just don' I live long enough
·to' escape new
Seems
llli:e there's al-

,.

..-

22, 1989

.,_. outM~e MlliijJI. Gillie

The descendants of William an Hlldred Carson, Donna Grate,
and Mary A. Wright Carson held Harold ·Carson, and Jeffrey D. 1
a family reunion recently at the Carson.
Legion Hallin Rutland.
From Burton Carson, VIrginia
After the dinner, the Shady Carson, Nick Carson, Don anQ
River Shufflers presented an Betty Carson)
.
Sarah Marie Jeffers, Pomeroy, 18 to h IIIOIIIbs, held br ·dad,
Interesting program of clogging·
From George Carson,. Geral·
Howard Jeffers; Renee Denise Bailey, Pomeroy, two to tlree
dances. Door prizes w~re given dine c. Reed, Adrian Carson,
years, with mom, Sherrie Bailey; Amanda Jean Prld~.
to various family members. Dixie Sayre, Len Capehart, and
LanpvUie, three to lour years; and Jennifer Leigh Prld~,
Prizes for oldest members pres- Wayne Adney Capehart.
Langsville, lour to live years, wllh their mom, Tamml Kennedy,
ent were given·to Eliza Diehl and
Members of. the Nl'llle Carson
and their older sister, Jessica Priddy; and Utile Mister Daniel
Geraldlae Reed.
Swick clan present werE' Frances
SidwelL The contest was sponsored by the Middleport BullaMembers at tending of the Hysell, Guy Hysell, Madeline
and t&gt;role!lllionnl Women. Judges were members of the GalBa
Herbert Carson clan were Eliza Painter, Ivan and Evelyn Wood,
County Bf'W.
and Naomi Diehl, Bonnie Diehl Edna Mae Swick, Mary Allee
Draper, Lahoma Diehl White, Tracy, · and Jim and Pauline
Chester White, Luella Rowsey, Haggy.
·
Bill and Mona Carson, Dawn D.
Bonnie Diehl ·Draper and La·
Carson, William B. and Gene!· homa Diehl White are in c~targe
vleve Carson Smith, Justine of planning nl'xl year's reunion,
lives lock would enter and leave lng my "show rln~" when I, Rutherford, and Vera Flo Dailey. which will be he\d July 29, 199().
during the photography session,
apparently got a picture within
From Homer Carson, Kenneth
•
·
"Geez, what a group. My own the limited time frame.
private show ring," I thought.
One of the auctioneers, Dan
My next encounter was with Smith, then announced that It
Meigs Agricultural Agent John was time to bring on the cattle.
The annual Smith reunion of and Mike Walls, rharles Smith,
Rice.
,
And that's what they did.
·
"I want you to forget some of
Cattle, . too, It seems have the late Samuel and Lillie Smith Yvonne and Leslie Whittington,
your principles tonight," he St\ld.
minds of their own. Most of them was held recently at Lake Loretta, Misty and Jeremy At·
"We want these pictures taken really weren't very lnte~sted in Snowden. The afternoon dinner klns, Sherry and Michael Davis,
fast. Forget the prlnlclples a bout gettlng near the neat backdr()p so was served to 92 relatives and Shaumiand Billy T11ckett, Angel,
posing."
that they could be properly '· friends In attendance. Ronald Tracy, Mind!, and Tammy Hers" Okay," I replied, "I can do "framed". Fact of the matter. I Smith received · the traditional· ley, Bill' and JoShua Feasel,
that."
think they could have cared less. Smith reunion cup that Is passed Charlie, Bradley, Brandon Wood·
throughout the famUy from year ruff, David, Steven\ Cindy, SteThen an attractive young lady
I keep yelUng:
to year.
phanie and S!f!Vie Rupe, Marjoapparently Involved In the sale
"Nice cow. Nice cow."
For
entertainment
the
group
rle
Banks, Gene and\ Rose , Barb
approached me saying that sh€'
Did they pay any attention?
enjoyed a day or fishing, volley- and BIIHe Rupe, Pat!J;. and Hank
hoped I would pose the animals Naw!
nicely for the photographs.
·
We moved right along, how- ball, swimming, horseshoes, and Horsley, Bruce Dlngu,ss, Joe and
I informed her of Rice's ever, and thankfully, the final an auction. The following people, Monna Andreoni, Rhonda An·
were awarded gifts, Hank Hors- dreonl, Rodney, Diana, Candice,
ins tructlon ~ she slowly smiled animals sold were the rabbits.
and moved on.
Now take my word for It, those ley, Misty Lane, Bruce Dinguss\ and Eric Walker, Paul, Ri!a a.nd
Adam Walker. Daryl, Danny,
At any rate, I advised everyone ra bblts really cooperated. Great and Dianne Walker. .
EIE'Ction of officers for n('xt Shannon, Missy and K~thy
that I would give it my best bunch of bunnies!
year was held. Darlene Vana- Walker
collegE' try.
Auctioneers Smith and I. 0.
Othe;s attending wer€' Molly
The first of the anbnals sold McCoy apparently knew that It man waseli'Ctedpresldent; Gene
Rupe,
vice
president;
and
Deband
NlchoU Webb, Bill Ohlinger,
were the sheep. Now they were, was my first time "In the ring".
Rose
,
secretary-treasurer..
Barbie
Warrell, Stephanie Trim·
ble
if you'll pardon the expression, with camera.
I guess they
Attending
were
Betty
Schnee.
ble,
Ann
Hatfield, Renee Young,
"regular lambs". They stood wanted me to fl'el at home. They
qulety in front of the backdrop enhanced my evening with over mann, Raymond and Lydia Frances and David Haggy, Beth
Smith, Archie. Debbie, Tyson, · Hlldbrand Stephanie Yarolney
with all of the ni'Cessary person- , the public address system with
and Alison Rose, Jim, Darlene, · Amy Little, Johnny oOucett:
nel involved and I snapped away . comments In my dl rection.
VIncent and Morgan Vanaman, , David and Michelle Watkins,
My confidence soared:
Dan accused me of bidding on
"A piece of cakE'!" !thought to sheep - I probably poked my Darrell, Cathy, Matt and Bobble Troy Manual, Molly Wlllbarger,
myself.
glasS€'5 as I do abouteveryseven ~ean Smith, Joey Ricker, Carla Eric Mazzlo and Chrissy Bass.
Whammy! They brought on seconds - and then he finally Smith, Donald, Carman, Tona, · The Smith reunion will be held
the hogs.
decided ihat · I was seeking and Pat rick Smith, Israel . next .year on the flrsf Sunday In
Grimm, Ronald, Ronnie Smith August.at Lake Snowdfm. ..
It was at this polntln tlr'ne that L permission to go to the restroom.
discovered that hogs do have I . 0. was definitely impressed
minds of their own. They are with my rolled up trousers legs.
controlled In the ring by a Hey, I. 0., where I was walking It
canelike stick. I guess I was worked for me -when you don't
expecting a bit and bridle .
know anything
about farm
Believe me, the hogs were a 100 anbnals you roll up the trousers.
percent turn around from those It's a reflex action.
sheep which had been such good
The sal~ wrapped upenf.huslas·
babies. lnsplteofmyrequests- tically and the film has gone to
and I was pretty nice aboutthls- processing.
Meantime, I'm
to stand still for the photos, the lighting a lot of candles to help
hogs did their own thing. And I ensure that I don't end up wlih
became an expert at side photos showing only curly taUs
stepping.
on hogs or th€' wrong end of the
However. Sheets and his crew cattle.
using square pieces of wood
All and all, the challenge was a
maneuvered the hogs Into posl· blate and I gave it my best shot.
lion whill€' I attempted to get the Mlz Scar let. Bless those subdued
photos In the two second lap~ sheep and rabbits.
before the hogs again did their
TRIPLETT WINS CLASS . - Clyde Triplett's 1982 Harley
Hang In there. You'llgetanew
thing. II was a good system and challenge too. I hope you enjoy
Davldsan won class champion ¥ the 49th annual Sturgis Black
once I even got a round of yours as much as I did mine.
Hills Motor Classic In Sturgis, ·S.D. The sportster anniversary
applause from a group overlook· Meantime, do keep smiling.
model was entered 1n a week long bike show sponsored by J and p
Motoreycle Pramotlou.

...

Classified
.

Carson reunion held

•

-

TRI-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
SINCE 1976
ROACHES o FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member No1ionl1 Pest
Control Assn.

Tol ''"
1-100-535-2199

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUilT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At IIHsonablt Pricts"

Pll. 949-2101
or les. 949-2860
Day ar Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

4-16·16-tfn

'".! "' .

&amp; VIcinity

•

Wed. and Thur. 2 miles, Hpltl
Run. Women's glrft and boys:
cloth11. Q~o~Uta, baby cardlilt,
mite.

8

...,'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

W. VI.
State Chernploo
Auctlonoor. Rick Pooroon uconud In Ohio and Wut V1
rgln...
BooklnliJ Auctlont, 30~7ZI

5785.

9

••

Wanted to Buy

·'.'

Chov~

2 front fondorol 1956

Sedan Musl bt n good cCWltt..
PaSsenget door for 1956 Chn,y

Sedan, 1.4ust be In good cond.

304-594·1754, attar 4p.m.

.,

Complete household• of fur·
nlture &amp; antlquu. Alao wood I
coal haaters. Swaln't Furnlt~

6 Aucllon, Third _6 Olivo, 6141
448-3159.
' .u"

Fumllure and applillncH by tha
pltce or enUre houlehold. Ftlt

~~:.· bolng pold. c..n 81 ~;
Hortlcultu,. bune. Phone

675·1627 . .

304~

Junk Cars wllh motora $50 ,11:

down. w/o motors, 125

&amp; down.

Richord Gtorgo, 814-388·9095.

Junk

cart1

whh or

with~

moloro, Colt Lorry Llvoty lt~J
388-9:)03.
,;&lt;J
OuUta

~

Pre 1940 qulltl. Any condhloh,'

Cosh Paid. Calll14-8t2·5657-!ir
814-592·2411 .
•
TOP CASH p.old tcr 1N3 mc;;uji
and newer u1M cars. Smllh
Butc-·Pontloc, 1911 Ea~
Avo., Gtltlpotla. Coli It 4-41f-,

~1

2212.

'

Uoed fumlturo ond houHI!;;i;l
appliance..
2041.

Phone

'

11 ..74._,
~ .~

UHd turnltUN ltv the ploce ;;
•ntlra houoahold llloo eeillnt:}
114-742·2455.
WANTEO&gt; S01ro 01 Aar
ea:er-cycl1. Will
,·
,.aoonablo prtco, Celt
-•nerlp.m.
Wonted to Buy: Yon with 1 11
tcr whaolchatr. 114-3~418.
type

~

--

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

�LAFF·A·DAY

42

Mobile Homes ·
for Rent

31,., 1412 bath, 14x70 with ax•
pondo, 2 mi. from town. Rat: I
Dap. raq'ad. 114-4411-4824.
A nloo fumlahld 3 l&gt;r.. 1 112
mlloo from ao~r.'d:; No pata.

AVO!( • AI w....... 10t Ia 2141.Call ......,.

$250mo. l14-ol

.Attontlan LPN.. Full-lime, 3 to
11 ::10 P.M. - · Oporilng for
LPN lnlo-ld In lOng t•m oaro
oloo
port-limo.
..--

Trlll•r nice clean, untumlahtd,
ret.rllftCII requited, Route 1 Ol.ll
~acuat Road on rlghl, 304-8751071.

w..- a ••o. .._.tn

44

-

pr+~tgt~;

Apartment
for Rent '

In ' .,.,_ IIMnlo Hmo
C4Nor lion, thou Fri. 1-

f~Uiwing

4.

•

1BR unfum. opt. Aanga &amp; ralrig.
provldad. W11or, aawago, garbage, paid. O.p. I Rat. 614-4414345.

72 Trucks for Sale

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Safn and chalro prlcod lrGm
$395 to $H5. To- $50 oncl up
to $125. Hlcl.. a-bada $390 to
$595. RacllnM'O SZIS ta $375.
Lampo $28 to t125. Dlnattoo
$109 and up to $4115. WOod
tabla w-t chalro $215 to f7GI.
O..ka 1145 up ta $371. Mutchoo
$400 &amp; up, bUnk bado
with ....n,... $2i5 and UP' to
$395. baby bodo $110 - an « bait aprlnJIII lull or twin
178, """
•riC! 1111.
aat• $275 ' U)l, King nso. 4
6rawer cheat Ht. Gun cablnete
I, 8, &amp; 10 gun. Baby IIIIIIIIHH
$35 I $4,. Sid lnlmoo $25,
Ouaon Slza 135 6 king fnma
$50. Good Hiacllon al Hdraom
IUitH,
metll
Clblnelt,
haad-· no and up to $85.
eo daYII Nme u caah wllh ..,...
provH creclh. 3 mi. out lutavlflt
Rd. Opan I A.M. to 5 P.M. Uon,
thru Sot; Calll14 411 G322. ·

Television
Viewing

..

1174 Chevy Pickup, I .....
trar\1., 1 ayl., new tlrel, rune
good. 11,1100. -2-3531.

11

.•

'

1115 Cflovroltl 810 '7~~~ '
13100. Call ohar I:OG 11
~
7801.

a

au-

73 Vans

TUES;, AUG.

.

anoo. ,

8

22

Eplllodee
• CIJ (I) • (I) 1111

'101 ,...,.

(JJ Home Run Deftly

I 11

1

1115Jimmyl-1~::~ Volllairo

NO! 60 TO SLEEP!
61:51DES. ~ PVT ALL THE
MARSHMALLOWS AWAV..
'

-ion.

·=

N 0 G U Y .·1

1"'.-

.

-. Q
rcc
cas ,...,. Q

.

"

..'•,

....._

GNKITH

121 On 8tlge

6:35 Cll Carol aumen

TO GET ANSWER

V

UO,DOCIIyr.

lncorM

potential.
Dotal'- (1) .10WIHOOO Ext. Y·

,10111.

Eam 1110nof typing at homo.
130,11011/yHr lncolriO potential.
Dolallo, (1)10W117.eooo Ext.ll-

Will babysit In my home.
Reaeonable r.t•. Refar~nc•
avlillbla. All agn, . IIIG
waokando. Colll14-245-578&amp;.

llobiJ. -11118 14•7G wllh
axpando,haot r.ump, akyllght,
dlahwaahar, d opoaol, 3 tiOcfo
room1, I 1111111, 304-175·7453.

Will babplt In my homo. Ma ..
j clun anvlranmenlj
weekc:laya only; near achoota.
:104-G75-1145.
Will do t.byalttlng In my home.
Waokdaya only. 614-4411-81 DD.

REPOSIIEBSIED mobllo hom•
olnglao ond doubJ.1. Wa llnancol 800-8M-4752. Frao can and
hH dailvtry.

,..._.,C..

Financial

4562.

Growth -rtunfty lor mon ond
women to join one of tho
natioM
INdlna
natwork
mrrbllng oomparilu:. 114-912·
7563.

HELP WANTED A larga Callfor·
nl1 Co. hn IXpilndlld to thr

Gllllpoll-. pt, Plnunt arrr. We
have •
tull-tlmt
positions
IVIIItbla. WI 1r1 looking for
toml honest &amp; hard working

thrt can atilt lr.
inedlotaly. Qood Co. bonalha.
peoplli

For lnltrvhM' call 614-446-1458.

Thaaa poalilona wiU bo lillad
quickly.

HELP WANTED Local company
.hiring
fer
lull·tlrne

now

.mP'o~tnt.

No rzp. I'Jic..,.

srry. Evrnlng work, hghl lifting

Involved. $300 per w..k. ·Profit·
1hrrlng a other btntfltl. For
pertonal lntt"'lew. 614-4467451.

HIGM SCHOOL GRADUATES •

lookl~ for a job, but don't hive
experJence? Join the Army
Nallonal Guard far rr..·tnllnlng.
Coil-a• aaislance, manthly
PIYChtck. part-time military

21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO.
recomrnendt that ~u do
business with people you know,
and NOT to und money
through the maN until you hive
lnVMtlgatld the otltring.
Moorman Feed nHCtl local
reprNintatlve, before buying a
tranchiN conelc:lar thl1 oppor..
tunity: Camblnlltlon \ob &amp;
bulln... wllh good ncome
potential.
Prolft-'onal
Satntaervlc:t oppol'lunhy, aolld,
aupportlva training program,
1xc.
benefit
pickag•:
retirement.
profh
aharlng,
hospltll, medical, aurglcal.
good
1c;tvancemnat
·pos·
tlbilitltl. Call Dave Wheeler 11
114•773-3367 aHtr &amp;p.m. and
.wMkanda. ·
Vending Route. Big $ Maker,
to&lt;:al prime treas, new mac:hinea, Mil cheap. 1-800..344·
5685.

MPVicl. 3Q4.17$oo3950 01' 1-1()0..

642-3819.
INA RUT
nrtd of minimum wage?
Boring, dMd tnd Jobs. We're
looking far I llv.ly JMGPI• wha
wanl more oul of life lhtn just
getting by, Eam while you 1..m.
(814) 286-0422
'

Cloud Tun. &amp; Wed.

Real

Estate

31 Homes for Sale

For tala. Someone to llkl over
payment• on 1987 Clinton
Mobllo Momo.l bodrooma, 1112
balha. l14-3711-11326.
USED MOIILIE MOMES Chocl
.. llrll. Good oalactlon alngiH
and doubloo 1100-6211-0762.
We buy uttd mobile homo
CASH TODAYI loo-8211-0752,
oil. 315. (Ohio onlyj. Aok lor
Rar.
33 Fanns for Sale

acru old houu 4 tl'lllar
hool&lt;-upo 11 mi. South of Oat·
llpolla on AI. 71R•ducod ta
$1i500. 114-887-1220.
By OWner. Bunco Rd. 235 acrn
mil. One of thl beat locatlona In
GaUII County. Good producing
farm, houu. bulldlnga. Mull
... to a~reclate. 814-441.C286.

FonunaC

a Q]) wKIIP In Cincinnati
l1Jl Andy Orilllllt

QDTopCerd
7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:30 S CIJ Femly Feud
(JJ Prolellllonll Golf Fred
Meyer Golf Challenge .from
Porlland, OR, Final Round (T)
Fred M"yer Goll Challenge

Fum. Apt. 1 bf., 240 ullllloo Pd.
920 Founh A.., Oalllpollo, 114441-4418 after 8p.m.
Fum. EHidancy $175 uilll!loo
Dd. Share bath. 6Q7 Second,
O.lllpollt, 614-446-4416 oHor
lp.m.

ING{lfPifNtS' IN
O(tPE(l OF

Fumlahad
Z
bodroom
lpartmtnt, 1250. per month plut
aloclrlo. $100 d1poaH. 304-675-

IM~TANCf.

3900.

45

Graclou• living. 1 and 2 bed·
room lpil'lmen.. at Vill1ge
M1nor
, and
Al ....aiae
Apartm1nla In Mlddlaport. From
$184. C.lll14·992·7787.
Now accepting application~ far
2 bedroom apt, lully carpeted,
1ppliances, water and tr11h
plckupa provided. Maintenance
frM living close to -'topping,
35 Lots &amp; A Cre&amp; g e
banko ond schooll. Far mor•ln128.5 ac:rn IUhabla for toml- formation call 304-882·3716. Eont lnlertltad In • qultt place qual opportunity houalng. Secto relax and to get away from a ::
llon
::.:.:.:a:.:•::•:::.c•::!:P::I•.::d.:..__ _ __
buay actwdule. Thit property Private, 2 bedroom garage
lncludea: cabin. ltke, 1 6' apartmlllt, ac:lulta, no pelt. 304ttatlonary picnic 1ablt, special 1575-1055.
place
for . campffre with 1 .,---'-'---~--­
•tatlonary IHinchaa around Regency, Inc. 2BA, apt., new
campfire lite, two twlngth¥01· plush ctrpat, new p~int,
loyball, baokotboll,h - • oao, ullllt[a.a1 parltally paid. $175/mo.
bam, gooc:l hunting, approx. 400 Call ;w~~~?S-5104.
Chrlstmat
trHt,
Umber, I , - - , - - - - - - - - 1 bt
b •
1
1 • hi
Tara Townhouse Apta, 2 br., 1·
a~ceo m:!.t'm:'nt~,. L~tt:l 112 baths, CA. dlthwashlr, dl ..
Lower FIYI Mill R011d, Gtltlpolle . paaal, private encloud patio,
Ferry, appror:. al:r: mil•• from pool, playgr.ound. Water, Hwtr,
Point Pleaunt. Uinterttlad, call lr traah rncludtd. Starting at
304-743-5741.
$281/mo. Calll14-3417·7&amp;50.

managerlbookkpper for area

auto ageney. Elperlenctd with
auto •gency books necessary.
Valery opened. Sand Resume to

Boz 88 J~ckson OH 45640.

""-.. INtfAT
tt p~ofiT"?
•

tries to clear the name of a
retarded farmhand. (R•2
(I) fl (I) Who'a lila
o?
· .Angela astounds Tony and
Mona w~h a lurid escapade
from her past. (R) Q
(l) Nova Take a rare look at
beautiful, desolate Wrlingel
Island. C
Ill lila a..ch Boya: D.C .
Belch Party FilmfKI at ihe
Washington Monument on
July 4, 1985, 700,000 .lana
turned out to celebrate wfth
The Beach Boya. James
Watt's apol&lt;&gt;gy _leads off the
show. (NR) (1 :00)
. liJ 8112l cas ·Summer
Plrtyhellll A lrontler sheriff
trias to keep peace on the
planet Icarus .
E all MOYIE: lila Sonl Of
.
0 MOVIE: Mild To Hold iPOJ

,•

f3UT 1HE

Lii ,

1m 23ft. Holldoy Tro. . .r.
aontalnacl 1 twnlng, ... or
114-llfl2.7o71.
1171 Wlnn1b11a. '24 fl ..... _
.. $8500. 304-175-4410.
For Solo: 171 Volkawogon
WHifallo compar' at-, oink,
rofrlaantor, runo • looka - ·
124110; 1974 Winne.... lllolar
Hame, .tove, ~ lurMDI,
oomode, ru,. 6 kliob pel.
$3000. 114-3111 17GI.

tr... •'' '•
.,,

Furnished
Rooms

1m l'onl Folnnont $5011 ar
moka olfor.l1~4'-1122.
'
1m Ford Thundallllnl. Good
candHion. Call Torn Andanon,
114-lt2-3341attar I p.m.
11110 Pontloo Orand Prix, good
condition, $1400. Pllona 304175-7155.
1912 Buick Roaol, 2 dr., V6,
euto, crulu, AMJFM tt.,. e~~­
..ne, tltl 'WhHI, power windOWI. Good oondMion.- t2,100.
114-441-1'1011.
1U2 Camero Z-21, V.,, auto:,
... 304-178-3193.
11112 Choval good aond., $GOO
114-2111-1411.
1111~ Oldo omaaa 4 dr AC,
outo., AMIFII, tfllll. 114-4454141 after I • wwUndL
11112 Pontloo .1-2000 2 dr.,
COUpe. new, enalne. exhaull,
~-- AK, 'iJCI VOC 114-

1tlll'onl- " - 11110;
1m CIHI'Y lurtlna&amp;
t11S.I144111'"

c.-.

~­
*-·

"
"
;:

•.

~·.

•'

•'
••'

82

Pert 3' cas TIHiadaY Movie

~1o'i.E: The Long Dark
¥1R)(2:00)

9:30 CJl Prote-I Boxlag

WHAT HAPPENT TO
ALL TH' SANO

:.

Jj

IN YORE

•'
•'

SANDBOX?

,,

' r

,,

.,

CARTIER'S PLUMBING
ANDHUTINQ
Car. FOUI1h ond Pine
Galllpola, Ohio
Call 114-441-341&amp;1 ar 114-4411477.
Plpo R In or Plpo It M . C.W.
Onlaon Plumbing &amp; Trenching
,drtlns &amp; wat• Rnet, 11 ~• '
0151. Mornlnp or Evenings.
Electrical

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

&amp;

Refrigeration
1111 Piy1lto!llll RoManli 1 dr,
Pl. AIC, IWal nloo cor. o14-2111211.PIOQ.
1111 Ponlloo Grand Am=l
dr,
outo.tronL,AC,--.
Cllltal, wu. 11~1
or4411 70.

Raoldantlol
ar aorn,_.iof
wiring, , _ oarvlco or -""- "l.
Uunied ellctrlctan. fUUnour
lfaolricol, 304-1'18-1711.

85

J a J Wa1w lorviaa. Swimming

Call It('

R6R-Iorvioo. -

:m&amp;.- ._,.eon-

.....iillll-111411ol,_11,_
Ollnt - - - ; - ·
m1ar11...,._11114.

WI-'•

=

CIOVIIINUIHT IIIZID Vlllloft1
~100. ""'*- ... II d I

r;:;-o....·;~~
lOtH.

lmmldlot.-1idci ..
W.tar

Houll"'l

,.•• ~ ...... m-. voaum. dii!

e::;nr.. 2,000 to 4.000 ••J&gt;II!Ry,

~-:-r.-

--·..,.. ..._
QOYIRNMIHT IIIZID VIII I 1
1100. ""'*- ........

"

....

-·w
1111lniHtlll.
.... Z4l.
....
,For
.......,
2t,IIGII

toms, -

-· ....

Call

::

87 Upholltery
.:
=~~~·
-ray'1 Upholalortng ·.
!lolnl "' _ , - 24 ...

Tho
In
luri!ltii'OI
upholaiorlrot. Call 104-171.4154
·
Q
(11
.
?
.
.
.
llirhHOIII......
bl. 8-10111.

you. Mall $2 to Ml)chmaker, c/o thla
- -· P.O. Box 91128, Cleveland,
OH 44101· 3128.
VIIIGO tAut- Dslepl. 211 Clever ldeu
are likely to !:on1e to you more proluaely
than they to to your contemporarloo todey. Be patient end helpful to the lea
lmaglnatJW.
LIBRA (llepl. DsOcL 211 There II a
poUiblllly lhat you mlgllt want a bigger
ot the pie today than what you' re
entitled to In IOI!Ielhlng you'll do eolllctlvwly With othen. Don't be greedy.
· SCORPIO (Ool. :M Nov. 211 YOU'll be I
very euy penon to get llong with todey, provided
doe&amp; thing•
. yout way. Should oppolition ll'lell, your
warmth II apt t o -·
IAGITTAIIIUI ( - . 23 11-. 211 II
might be will today to keep anylltlng
good - n l n g yoilr car- to yourMit. someone who d - not have your
IM!II ~ttlt- 11 heart may try to upMI

P'-

General Hauana

=a-:--..,...

(I) fl (I) Anylltlag But Love
Hannah and Marty get a
romantic surprise wh'en IIIey
work all night. (R) Q
121 VldeoCountry
10:00 C1J 700 Club
D (2) 101 Midnight Caller A
blind woman cannot convince
police lltat she witnessed a
murder. (R) Q
Cil
thirty-tiling A
visit from his dad promiMs
to rescue Elliot from his
failures . (R) Q
(l) l1Jl Newa
a11 Evening News
10:20 (I) Ernaat Goii' To Spllitlt
Mountain A behind the
scenes lOOk at the creation
of Dlaneyland's newest
attraction lrom the initial
concept to lite actual
construction on lite site.

aw

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

84

Kevin and Paul explore the
confusing social an ot going
steady. (R) Q
l:OO D (2) iiJl In The Hut Of
lila Nlgltl Chief Gillespie and
Virgil Tibbs battle lor control.
(R)
(I)
(I) Ro-nne
Roseanne' s birthday bash lor
Dan creates an uneKpected
commotion. (R) C
(lJ Struggle For DIIIIOCI'ICY
Host Patrick Watson
a.plores freedom of
expression. Q
Ill Pltw, Patil end Mary'•
25111 Annlv....., The
enduring folk trio gallters to
celebrate llteir anniversary
with renditionS of classics
like Ill Had 8 Hammer and
Blowin' In lite Wind. (NRI

Movie (2:00) C

::l:

815-3102.

a (I) The Wonder Yeara

a1l Leny King 'Uvel
111112l 'II Tomonow c - a ,

Ran.. TV 8orvloo, _..lzlng
~
In Z&amp;nHh ou MIYiclng moot
,
othor branda. Houoo coilS,- · ~
. . . IPPiiii\CI ,..,,.. WY .A- -1
304-178-23111 ' Olllo 114-441- ,.,
24U.
Rot1ry or coblo tool driUing.
Moal walla aomplalld .....
Pump ••• and MrYiaa,
•

121 Neahvllle, Now

8:30 (I)

(1 :50)
9) MOVIE: 'Niahlllllre II
Bitler Creek' CBS Tut~aday

,'

••

~-

-or:

.'·•''
"

BASEMENT
-,,
WATERPROOI'INQ
Uncondltlonlll Hlallmo guon111o
1M. Local .....tneel turilllhlcl.
F- aotlma1oo. Coli collocl 1·
114-237-, cloy or nlgllt. A o
o•r•••••m•nt
W.iorproollng.

(2:001

IIJ Murder, She Wrote

a

•
'•

•'

Soptlc Tank Pumt&gt;llla $90,_Oallla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Jackaon, OH 1-IOQ.S37-9521.

IIIII Chryolar- YoriiM',ohapotaadad, IIDW7W722:'

•'
"

Improvements

1184 Chavy Cho¥1111, now
clutch, 1710. lluot ••f Call
- o n 4 I 9 p.m., 114-441-

11114 Ford Muotong, 13,511. 304178-4410.

·'

Home

81

SWEEPER ond -ng ...... ,..
re,.lr, ~~Mte, 1nd aUiri»&gt;M, Plcll
-. arlcf delivery, DIVll Yacuun1
CJeantr, ont hlllf mila up
oaorvn CI'Hk Rd. 114-4410214.

11114 Chon lmpato, 13.000; 1112
Ford F-1110, outo.4110, lld1
13,000. lotfl no. oondllonhigh mlloogo.IIDW'/8-2111.

· •,
·'

Services

11112 block Tnono-Am, T-Topo,
Belgllntarlor, new tlrH Alpin.
...-.o epttm, PS, PB, PW, Air,
,.~ulft engine, runt like new.
Looka Sllotp.l14-1756.
11113 Co'llpo O.VIIIo. $8,500. 1142411-11473.

4103.

t,

~

M~

OF
CAU:ELLATIOO lURE
BASICALLY~ 'SAME'-

',.'

°

---

e

a11 PrlmeNewa

,,

Alhton bllutlful one ICfl lot•
with river fronttge, public water,
Please sand r~sum. Ia: P.O. barn and pond. 2 11ona Clyde Bowen, Jr. 304-576-233&amp;.
Furnis hed
tHiciency,
919
Box15, Pomeray, Ohio.
tireplacn, one In master bedS.c:ond Avenue, Gallipolis. All
room, new carpet, appraised As hton, beautiful one acre Iota utltiUII pal'tl, thart a batt!.
53
Antiques
Now hiring p'rt-tlme Rn 'a l $76,000. Must •••· $59,900. 304· wtlh river frontage, public water. $135/mo. 614-446-3945.
LPN't, tny shlff tvallable, com- 458-1839.
3
Clyclt/Bowtn,
Jr.
304-S'16·Z
3I.
Aooma
lor
rent
·
week
or
mo'nth.
Buy or tell. Rlverlrw Antlquet,
pet:Hive wages. Contact the
dlrKtor of nursing, Pinecrest 6 rooms and bath. On S to 4 Aahtan, laro- building loll, Starting at $120/mo. Gallla 1124 E. Main Str11t, Pomeroy.
C3re Center 555 Jackson Pike. acres. Westpoint Rd., Hartford, mobile hamu p~~rmltttd . Public Hotel. 614-448-9580.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 Lm. to &amp;:00
614-448-7112. E.O.E.
W.V. $22,000. H14·282·9218 water, prlcn reducad. Clyde
p.m., Sunc:lay 1 :00 to 6:00 p.m.
coiiKt.
Bowen, Jr. 304--57&amp;-2336.
SIHP'Ing room• with cooking. 614-992·2526.
Ragla1arld black
Lobrodar
Now takl~ appilc:atlons. for IX•
Alto trailer apace. All hoo~·ups.
peritnctd doughnut maker and AU new 3 br., hom• located on Leva! loti 7 mllet North of Hoi· ' Call lhtr 2:00 p. m.~ 304-713- Top Ctth peld. Old turnlturt Ral~avar, 1 yaar old. 3G4-5'18-·
2310.
cuboarc:lt,
qulltl,
orla~;'llal,
tor part-lime/full-time helP'. Ap- AI. 160. Prlc:td to move. 614· z•r Hospital. 614 3818849.
5851, M11on WV.
ply In ~rson between 10 &amp; 4 at 388-8711.
palntlf19S, tO)'II, ar •ntire ...ate
Woodland, 132 acrH, $35,000, Working In Columbue? Need a call collect 304-625-3275, cr · 57,
Knlght·a Paatry Palace 529
Musical
Jackaon Pike, Spring Valley Farmer't Home Admlnl11ratlon Rl. 7, MloW Eureka, Call 614- c:latn, quilt tiHplng room? 304-623-6854.
·
Instruments
Plaza, Gllllpolle OH 45631.
loans available. Approved tee· 44&amp;-4411 aftar 7 p.m.
I;;.,;,;.:::..::..;::.;,;,;.
&amp;14-6411-0018. _ _ __
tlonal now on display. French
54 · Miscellaneous
Artly Woocl'o1ilnd clorinot, Exc.
46 Space for Rent
Opportunity now ••allabla lor Cllr MobiJ. Homos. 114-446Cond. $121.,114-381-852taHar ~
manager of long-term care 9340.
Merchandise
p.m.
~
Dietary Depl. Previous exp. &amp; 4 Government
Homul
NHd
Commercial IPIC:I 1400 aq.ft.
yr. c:legree, D.P. or A.D. proforComer Second and Pine. Amplo 1 •ofa )liMper, 1 recliner, 1 floor F - Squire a - . ' wllh
rad. Salary c:omensorate with repair. Fix 1 •• 11 • From S1·00 ·
rid
c 11 614-446 4249 446- furnace. 304-m-5338.
Baamaltar 10 Ban Amplllllr,
nperienc:e. Contact Mr. Tim 714 -520-7879 • Ext. H3.
41 Houses for Rent
P;2s ng. 4'~ .. 25
·
'
2: 'or ........... ·
Lindeman or appl11, at Pinecrest HARTFOA~ room• bath ap2 Antlqua NCR cash raglstaro. oxc. cond. 11100 firm. 114-3818872 aH• 5 p.m.
Cart Canter. 614-446-7112. prox. 4 acrta,,.Wtat Point Road, 1 br., houM, 1701 Chntnut St., Counlry Mobile Homt Park, Working order. 814-441-3881.
·
Hanford, s 22 ,000• Call coHtct 1• Stave, refrla. tum'ld. $75 Route 33, North of Pomeroy. 2 tlckata tor Cleveland BrowM Individual
E.O.E .
guitar
la..ana,
Part time job? Work ow·n hours? 614·282·9218.
dapotlt, S15oTa.o. 114.C41-3870. lots, rentals, partt , sates. Call Faotbaln preflrred uatlng Tick· boglnnaro1 Hrlouo gultalfat.
114·992-7479.
MUIIc,
Jill
Brunlcanl11
Avon. $5. to ttart. We Nil "Skin Neat, clean, A· 1 condition. 2 2 br., houte, aultabla for cour.la, 1:,:~:::.:~.:...,...,_..:,_-:­ •t• available far all gamn. 114- W1maioy
· lna1ructor, . , , _
So Soft". 614-992·7180.
blks downtown. Same block no Plfl. Dlpotlt, plua utlljt 11, One ac,. lot, tra ilers allowtcl, 25&amp;·1267 814-445-2289.
11()77, llmhld -nlng1.
A.D. only wanted. 18 hours per schoole. Orlvt by 110 Stet• Nllr•nc~. 114-4-41·1004.
city water, Gatllpolla Ftrry. 304· 24 gallon lpplebutttr, klttll,
w11k. W.I.C. counseling. Mtlg• Strut.
3 bedroom houH tor rent In 675 ·2722·
'
10h.lJiesh Satellite Sy1tem. One Kimbell coniOit plano, txCII'iant condhlon, 14 montha old.
1
~:.!'._niY IINHh Dapl. 6 4-Qg:z.
MObile Homes
Srrocu&amp;l. Phono 614-992·7689 . PRIVATE 2 112 ACRE trailer lot, p,.·atyla Nordic Trac Extrcl• Take over
low
monthly
32
-...:;
after 5 p.m.
1.9 mlln right on Nontlup ,Machine. 614-245-5114 after pal'manta. Phona :104 112-33k
&amp;p.m.
for Sale
3 bodroom, 1000 aq. ft. ranch Potrlot Road. CALL 614·642·
Stanley Homa Products It
looking tor 1 few good, ttaady 1-,-,:~-.....,_;...,.---- houtl for rent. ca~ted 2232 during morning.
8 atand1 of bnl, all good P.A. SyatM'n. PIO¥Y XR 1500, 5
aalnparsona. If you art lnteres- 10x47 2 br., mobile home, good throu_ghout, total electric. Fan.- Two trailer · spacn, Route 1 ahape, 5 emply hlvH, faclory- chonnol hood. 2 SUnn COlumna.
tad In working tnd like people, cond., renhec:l lot, Kanauga, cld In back yard. Located 1
macle. All good condition. 614-4411-1782.
Locutt Road on right, 304-675- Smoker and honty, $125 aU. Suzuki Omni.Chord. Like nN.
und your rnum1 to The Dtlty $2,000. 614-448-8759 614446- miiH from Holzer Hoapital on 1071.
Phona 304-SM-2150.
Sonllnal,
P.O. Box
7295, I:7-=85:::6::,.--:--:--:---'-::'- : - - Rt. 110 nnr North Gallla Hlah
Paid $2251/ asking 1110. 114Pomaroy, OH 45769 and plaaaa 1_ 55 2 •·•
G od
School. $350. por month, $3!0. 49
F
L
C
992 •5•• oSundi• colla
1
Include your telephone number. ...~.u.
Call &amp;t4-21&amp;-131t altar ~-~..:o:.:.r..:;::e::a::se:::.,,___ $omplett king • 11 wattrbed,
.., .-.
-,
·
11 .,on.' Call114r~
1192 :••
51. con- depoalt.
1.1
019
6pm
:;
200; Magic: Chef gaa ra~g:· S8
Taking applications at Domina
obi h
· ·
Vtry nice apacloua 2nd floor, 3 axe. c:ondiUon, $100. Call
Fruits &amp;
12' 60 m 1• oma aoma fur- 4 bod room brick ranch, oH AI. br., apt. unlumiohod, a1ova &amp; 675-6624.
Pizza. calf &amp;1Hi2-2124.
Vegetables
nHure, lot tox100 llat lot on Sun 87. Lta11, dtpotlt, rettrencee, retrtg, hlatorlc home downtown
Wanled: Experienced Nu,..lng Valley Drive, ready to movtlnlo. no ptte. 304-175-7887.
S2751'mo. UtiiiiiH extra. ret. Couch and chlr, $100; lovt....
'
Anlttant , pleaat apply In per· Prletd negollonablt 814-448-- l-:-'..::..:.=7'--=.:.:;:;.:::.,;-:--=-.,.- req'd. Call614-446-4425 ,
I chair, S75 or all tor $150. 304- . C.nnlng PMChM now In
aon al Sctnlc Hilla Nursing Ctn· 8005.
5 roam houu, Krodel Park.
675-4123 after 3:30.
Mlton. PUrl Ptum., Orapu
lor boiWHn 81.m. &amp; 4p.m. Mon
Phona 304-882·3745.
ond Appl• will follow arDI01d
thru Fri.
1971
Liberty.· $3000.
or 1::::- --.,-.:.c.:.:.,..,...-Dining room table, the chal..., Labor Day. lob'e Marktt,
two leall.t1, walnut finish., AJ.o, Maaon. WV. 304-Tn-1121.
reasonable offer. Mult 1111. 614- Nice country home, 2BR, on old
Wanted: Rat! red lady or couple 992-3507. '
Rt. 110 approx. 2·112 mi., from
nlct old lru!lk. 114-4415-8743.
lo live In upalalrs l()lr1ment of
HMC. Nlct yard, pltnty of
Canning tom1ton far ala.
oldorly lldy to aosost In caro 1974 lhrH bodroom, 12x70 ahada. 114--1~27 aftar 7:00
Household
Eloctrlc atov1, $50. 304-675- Bringaontolnera.I14-247-M1.
51
only when nttdtd. 614-992· Holly Par1c with U~ut and un· p.m.
sn1 .
GoodS
Fl
ood -o to d 111 2 1
Canning tom~~.~~hohal
dorpinnlng. Nlca. $7&amp;00. 114- F
7329,
or rant or . . . on land conraw
, ••
a ap ;
on • y_. conta-, ...aa.- I •
!li2·246i.
c:h•vy dump truck. Phone 31* aur aontal111ro 1·1 f2 mf. 8. of
tract. Vary nlu 2 bedroom
Situation
12
1974 Moblla Homa, 2 br., 1 bathl ho..a,
nawly
ramodalad, GOOD USED APPLIANCES 458·1981.
Galllpoill on 81. Rt. 7. 114-251dtck, partial tumlahad tota batemenl Pomara• 114 742
Watharl, drutrl, rtfrlgtrltort,
•••5
Wanted
tlectrlc. Asking $5,700 or but
'
•·
• •
''
For Salt· Concrete and Plastic ~-=·:...,......,:::--=---=-ott.r 814-245ot21i or 814-446- I272
:=;,:='·-~.....,--:--.,.,-,- ~:e:·Riv~~·as~ a!rJ:!Ia:t~·:. aaptlc tankt. All sltlt. RON Far ule. Sllvar Queen Com.
Care for lldtrty In lhtlr home. 4204.
Llka naw duflax. L1rga IIYing Crasl Molal. Calll14-448-7398.
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack· Starting Soi.Aug.11. 11.00 cloa.
Phone 304-57e-2il60.
room, fully equlpptcf •luxe I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;,,J!•:on::;,!o~H~.1~-800~-6~37~-9~5~28~.==:-J Contlcl 114-7424711 or 114742-2710.PIIoeycuonMfnowl
Chlld cart. 2,3,1: 4 year olds. 1978 14K70 3 br., .2 bathe, on kHc:htn, dining area. 2BA, r"
Acroat trom Park In Middleport. ~"i-~':O:.nlad lot. $8,000. 114- ohoworlbath, waahar, doyar
SNAFU~ by Bruce Beattie
JIR Produoo. Com, tomotAtllrtncl IUppllld. 114·992·
hool&lt;-up, a1tachad garago, AC,
•-mbor8; 114-1410820. AuiiOftlible ratn.
1978 14x70 Elcona located on carpetHI. 2 mllu At 588,
13 a,
State At. 790 near Merc~llla, Available Sept. tat. 114-4461
- We care for tkterty and han- prk:e reduc:ec11 to $7500 114-251- ~280=2·:...,._ _ _ _ __ _
dlceppecf In ow homt. 26 yeara
F;nm
Supplir',
experience. LPN on call. Low nnoretHS&amp;- 1521'
42 Mobile Homes
&amp; L Vt:Stoc k
Income home. Ctll114-9i2·68n 1981 Naahua, 14xso, 1x21. axfor ..ent
aftlf 7:00 p.m. for more lnfor.. pando, rrden t~. :ti300. 814n
mano,n.
38&amp;-;74 .
2 btc:lroom trailer, partially ru,..
81 Farm Equipment
illl3 Triumph, 14x&amp;O, 2 bad- nlohad, you poy utllhln. Phona
SChOols&amp;
15
raom1, 11-i bathe, cenlral air, 304-475-2535. 10:10 CoN
lo -... •
wathtri*Ytr: IK10 deck, un- I:;--;:-:-;---;-....,..,:-:-:-:-Instruction
.................. 131M+ '!"•
dorplnnlng. Vary oooc1 condition 2 bodroom, fumlohod. Air conmodal Cllllf 1100 iound
•
on rented" lot. 364-8754:0.7 or dhlon, waahtr, dryer, $235 per
RE-TRAIN NOW!
month plue dtpcMiland utllltl11.
12111. 11t - 1111
SOUTMEASTERN
BUSINESS et4-317-7120,
114-992·747G.
COLLIEGE, 521 J1ckaon Plkl.
Cal 114-441-43417. Rag. No. 111- 1NS 14X70 3 'br., II'IUer, lnlny
111raa. 111,500. 114-245-9122.
2 br., furnlahld. t250/Jno,
11-10558.
•
$2501d-R . 2 pomn ma~. oc1185 Doublewf• liD. cond. cUpency. No 1)111 wattr &amp;
18 Wanted to Do
Mua1 bo movad. . wm llnanco - r paid. In cky. Rat. Aaq'ad.
amall down paymant. Uoro/lnlo. 114-441-34171 aH•r 5:00p.m.
Ba~Mtlng, Chrla11an homa,
811-4411-1110 or'l14-446-4831.
Rio O,.ncft area, t.va n~feran­
2 br., located In Evergr...,,
c.. I .,. Oatil Uptrilnce Cll 11117 Donvlllo, tolal -trlc chlklran accepted. CabiO T.V,
14x70, hoal p~ 3BA, 1•112 114-4411-311'7, orl14-3411-5223.
altar2::10 114-245-11252.
JohnDMNM Forll! H•uJJIIt
bath. 114-241
onytlmo,
with 2 holda. Alllo -~~~ I
2 br., locotlon KM'r. Wa1ar paid
Call lor 11doriY In 111alr homo. 245-1177 aftar 1.
............. lelh ......
$175,- piUI dopollt. 114-448-114-441-2427.
•lantacindMitin.3QW7aoGII.
MHR MOIILI HOMES ho uo ' 1384.
Roof painting 6 -lng trollar ,., your uaod homo Rt. 23 .,..,-- - - - - , - - - - J.._IA Frick 01
Saulh, Plkalon, OH, i114-28i- 2 br., t(IIIM' lor rent. AI. 211.
roofo, hoUo'!,. 6 bama, 1rH Unll.
114-IG
1imotl.l14-3,..2320.
2557.
::11;,;4...:;·2:51
::;:..~;;;5;,;
51::..- - ---- 1313. '
·-~-

7:3&amp; (I) Major LIIQIHI lleHblll
8:00
(2) 101 Matlock Ma~ock

Katie Elder (2:30)

~veninga.

3 bedroom ranch , 6.5 aertt wl1h

9) 111112l iiJ) Jeopardy! Q
Ill all M•A•!I•H
a11 Cro11flre

121 Crook l Chi..

CDMfS AfTif(

tlttfniiJ on 4.75 acrn (3 acrn
wooded} loeatiH:t on blacktop
read. Mutt Still Price Reduc~
$1D,500. Phone 614·992·6506

5881.

New and used ear sales person.

(I) Entlltllnmlnl Tonight

f1 (I) USA Today

l1J)Benaon

2 story house, 7 rooms, 1'n
blthe, full basement, new

3 bedroom brlek haute whh
large lot, Mid Way Drive. Naw
H!lven. Good Cond. 304·~

(T)

-vone

ThM'e Ia a strong probability In the yar
ahead that tre!ldl wll develop In WIIYI
where your authority ov. other1 will be
greatly IIIP~· Arr~te you
Ptlllntly manage lhould prove lucky.
LaO (.lulr . .Alii- 211 Inexperienced
. . . _ OOUid gum lltlnga up lor you
21 . .
you
today In 1 d1l wtw -llluatlon. Try . n pllr011ng IOI!Ielhlng
IOGIII today 11'1
to wortc only With people who .a re eml·
qulllfttd. " - wharlto lOok tor bill to rwtrlcl your gueet flat to people
w1to.,. compatible w1t1t- enotlter.
r - lt1d ,ou'l ftnd H. The Mtro- Mllconlenta could ruin lite .n.lr.
Graph Mataltllt8ktr lnatenlly rM&gt;IIIa
AQUAIIUI (,_
~an
whiCh IIQnln I'OIIIIIIIIOII(y perfect tor

e:m::nDIL

..,,Jy

11

111"

E,... 11)
\

eye out lor people you oro responalble
tor today, becauM the)' might be·taken
advantage of by someone unacrupulouo
and need your protection.
I'IICII (,.......... all201 You'll have
no difllc:ulty In wlnl)lng arguments or debet• today M your .,_tatlon Ia
peaceful. Preulng polntltCIO .,_,,..,.
ly will invite • healed responoe.
...._, llllrall 21·Aprll1111n flnanclll
or bulll*l mann today follow the
dlclat• of your own Intuition and ,...
aonlng. Oulllde oplnlonl or lnllulneel
COUld ' - ! your eh.- tor IIIC CIll .

TAUIIUI (Apll E ..., . . Seek com-

peniCilli today wholllllltl and lnt-le
are tightly IIWI to yours. lndMdullla
wholllltauGMI are not In hermony with
youre could- dine ot.
WEI (IIIJ 21.,_ E) n may not
prove will to attall411 IOI!Ielhlng lm·
poltent today. Ullthltlmlat your dfa..
polllto Improve upon your ptane. Con·
templlllon . , . _ ,our polllbiiHiee.
CAIICIIII ~ 21-- 81 Your
lrlendl Will IlPPI lOIIta you more today H
you acceptlhlnt u 1118)' are lrtllelld ol
trying to ntlke them-· Keep your
crllloll TU(IIIIIIIonllo younell.

foremost Social Realist
painter 18 rev"lld at his
bell. (1 :00) Q
• Q]) llamiY Mtlllr

1210na-.
10;50 (I) MOVIE: The Rlflum Of
lila Ptnlt Plnt111f 101 (2:00)
1 t:OO (2) MOVII: The Hiding Pilei
(PO) (3:00}

S(}) Cil SCIJ Gil EC

llllllewa

EAST
.QJ87S

Mllody '

f8 Crook l ChiM

...

.,

.AJt

By JamH Jacoby

tu

i

...

•Jn

. IDdeed little learning is a danger•;
ous thing, particularly at the bridge
SOUTH
table. After West's opening three-dia.K4
mond bid, South got to three no-trump.
. .Q104
tKJ3
West, who remembered reading about
+Qtoau
someone wbo led the queen from a suit
like his own a1ainst no-trump, sucVulnerable: East-West
cessfully smothering the aiugleton
Dealer: South
'.
'
jaclr. in dummy, tried leading the
queen of diamonds. Declarer won the SM..
WHI
Nor..
3+
Db!.
lt:inJ, quickly ran live club tricks, and P111
Allthen led a heart up to the lr.ing in dum- 3NT
•
my. Declarer of course was hoping
Opening lead: Q
that Welt also held lhe heart ace. No
such luck! East won the ace of hearts
· ·
and returned a diamond. That waS' La_n_d_dec_l_a_re_r_c_a_n_f_o_rce_o_u_t_lb_e_a_ce....Jof ·: :

.

•..

..

•.

+

seven tricks to the defense and down hearts Biter lordnl out the ace of dla· .'
three lor declarer.
In fact, West had made what should moods to malr.e Dille tricka. West's •
ba been f •·t
b 1 d'
th
proper lead, when be bas no outside '
ve
a a ... error Y ea mg e card that might win a triclr., II t1!e nlDe ·_
queen of diamonds. II is very unlikely or 10 of diamonds. Then, wbea East ,
lor fl()meone to pre-empt in second po- takes the ace of hearts, the defmM: .
sitloo with a good suit and a side ace. wUI still have communicaliott to run
South should know that the ace of
hearts surely will be in the East band. thJ!!~~ ~,!;,.
Therefore, declarer should play lpw on "Jocobr• CardGamto"(rmt,_ rrllll 1111 flU.., the queen of diamonds lead. West can tbe I•~&lt; O.Wid J..-,1 ,,.. ,......u.blo "'
take the ace but no more diamonds,
pob!IIW frT Plurw- . •

•J_,.,. _,..- •

_ll&lt;&gt;lll.,..

...

CROSSWORD

..

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Horse
5 Laughing

42Wet
43 Czech river

DOWN

sound
1 Deserve
9Zoundsl
2 Plato's
10 Joshua
market·
or Ella
place
11 Meander
3 Deterio·
12 Appear
ration
14 A Gershwin C Dutch city
15 An Arden
5 Henry
1 6 - Rio, TX.
Aldrich's 13
buddy
17 Designate
6 Birthday 15
18 Thrice
reminder
(Lal.)
7 Tough
21
19 Bikini
guy (sl.) 22
part
8
On
a
23
20 Fencing
rampage
weapon
10
Embank·
22Khayyam,
ment
24
lor

one

..
Spread
glee
Summer
(Fr.)
Sty
Buddy
Late
cookery
expert
Enticed

27 Lovely
lass
28 Shoemaker's
tool
30 Reverence
32 Type of
thread
33 Bury
38 Vouch
39 - vs. Wade

.

'

·.

23 Foundation
25 Assistant
26 Esau's
father
·ln·IBW
27Whomwe

.,

.

all "loved"
29 TV's furry
little
creature
30 Church ~Ktllt r
31 Yale
1..--1--1--~

•

student

34 Furrow
358adly
31Ciangor
37 Nonsense ·

.'

.·

3t Remainder

40 Play
a part
C1

.

'

OeiHade

DAILY CRYPI'OQU&lt;ri'ES- Here's how lowork It:

I IH

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

,•

''

One letter stands for another . In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fDnnalion

of the words are all

.....

'

...

hints. E .s ch day the code letters are different.

....".

CRYPTOQUOTE

8-11 ·

NAU

NRDMTMYD
LUFU

Ill Magnum, P.l. Miulng

' .,
. '
. '

.AKt7

8YauCaniiAII8r

·=="".,_

1-U·It

.,

YWDMVKMUJ

I~A:rt!1Q

.. ·.'·

------...., • '

NORTH

S Q]) ArMftiO HIH (1 :001
.
a:J MDMfline
Ill T.... l'tM The Dlllllkll
IIJ Miami VIOl
.

11:308~&lt;=(J)
(0:30)

.. '·
.,

a· t I

.AU2
•KI72

Two errors
cancel out

(0:30)

. 10:30 (l) P.O.V. America's

-

BRIDGE

a)l~yllne

IIJ Miami Vlce

•

to be as big as you IMAG~IN:!:E:!:D::.·-

out

1111 8112l 101 Wheel Of

.

'

Aghut - Deily - IoniC - Volume - IMAGINED
All" unwrapping a large box only to linp a small toy, the
boy turned to his mom and Mid, " ~me things never turn

(I) S (I) C_, AHIIr
(l) l!l MacNeil/ Lehrw
Nlowellour

BEAUTIRJL APARTMENTS ·AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 JackSon Pika
from t1121mo. W.lk to ohop 1
moviH. Call814-441-2561. EOH.
Countryside Apartment• now
h11 one vacancy. 2 BR deluxe.
no poto, aoc. dip. 114-446-1817
after e.

woodlc011l furnace, remodeled,

Malntenlnee man, Phont 304675-4424.
NHdad
.
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51

The Dailv

Tunliay, August 22, 1989

Pomeroy- Middeport, Ohio

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�Midwest soaked by more showers
By United Press International
~·ort Ransom, N.D., and l-Inch
forecasters said. Small hall fell
Ralnshowers drenched the hall fell near Beresford, S.D .• the along with more than 3 Inches of
upper · reaches of the. Midwest NWS said. ·
rain near Lincoln, Neb., and
early Tuesday, the National
Wind gusts from thunder- heavy rain caused flooding at
Weather Service said, while rain storms reached 60mph and small Roc a, Neb.
·
also extended In a wet swath hall fell near Primghar, Ind.
Heavy rainfall caused flooding
across much of the South.
W!ods also gusted to 60 mph near streets In the Minneapolis-St.
Rain was scattered over parts Black Wolf, Kan.
Paul area of Minnesota. where
of Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska,
Wind gusted to 66 mph at flood . waters were as hjgh as a
Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Edina, Mlnn., andupto70mphat foot deep. · ·
Mexico and ' Colorado, forecas- Hutchinson, Minn. The high
In the West, meanwhile, thuntE'rs said.
winds were blamed for damage derstorms also caused street
Showers and thunderstorms causedtopowerllnesandtreesat flooding near Hobbs, N.M.
also extended from southeast Howard Lake, Rush City and
Rain fell early Monday over
Louisiana across the Florida Dalbo, Minn.
the northern Pacific coast and
Panhandle and along the Florida
An Inch and a half of raln 'fell In
from eastern Washington acr6ss
coast . Rain also was scattered ·just 20 minutes at Lincoln, Neb.,
northwest Monta na.
·
·
'
from northeast New York state
Into westcentral New England.
NATIOIIAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAsT TO 8 A.M EDT 8-23-a9
· Golf ball-sized hall fell near

Southern...

FULL UP - Holstein heifers and their owners
llUed the show ring of· the Meigs County Fair
during the two-year senior heifer calegory of
Friday afternoon's Dlstrlcl 6 Holstein Show.
Showmen and their cal tie from all over District 6,
which Is comprised of several counlles Including
Meigs, Gallla, Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence, Pike

.--Local news

Continued from page 1
County Emergency Medical Services.
Racine at 12:.15 a.m. to Fifth St. for David Reese to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 12:54 a.m. to Vance Road for
· Amos Cross to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 6:02
a.m . to the Arbaugh Addition for Grace Kuhn to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:50 a.m. to Spring Ave. for
Gall Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 6:52a.m.
to Pearl St. for Hazel Wedge to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 8:05 a.m. to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
Center fo r Bertha Baker to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 9:45 a. m. to West Main St. for Agnes Penrod to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at · 4:23 p.m. to
Mulberry Ave. for Ruby Frederick to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 6:51 p.m. to lincoln St . for Josephine
Blevins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; RuUand at 7: 17p.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Gary Myers to Holzer Medical Center; ·
Rutland at 10:57 p.m. to Vance Roaa for Marilyn Withrow to
Holzer Medical' Center.
·

-Area deaths· --David Reese
David K. Reese, 51, of Racine,
died Monday at Veterans Mem·
orial Hospital following an extended illness.
Born on May 31. 1938 at Miami,
W. Va., h.e was the son of Carmel
l. Reese, Charleston, W. Va. ,
and Stella Hall Fleshman, Le(art
Falls.
Besides his parents, he is
survived by his wife, Patricia
Reese, Racine; two sons, Mark
Reese, Middleport , and Gary
Reese, Racine; and two daugh·
ters, Karen Reese, San Pablo,
Calif. an d Dora Ev.ans, San
Pablo, Calif. Also surviv ing are a

sister, Wanda Fisher. Charleston, W. Va.; two brothers,
Douglas Reese, Newport News,
Va., and Gary Gene Reese,
Norfolk, Va., and a half·
- brother, Frederick Fleshman,
Nor folk, Va. and four
grandchildren.
He was a veteran of the U.S .
Navy.
Graveside services wlll be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Letart Falls Cemetery. The Rev.
Steve Deaver will officiate and
burial will be In Letar t Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home 6 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

Breach of contract suit
filed against Meigs woman
A $25,000 suit has been flied In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Patrick Sean Bailey,
GalUpolis, agai ns t Judy Ellen
Dancy, Mi(jdleport. charging
breach of co ntract .
In the case of Lila Louise Green
versus Keith Myers, et al, a
restraining order has been issued
to prevent Ihe defend ants, Keith
and Judy Myers, from cutting or
removing, or having ot hers to do
so, wood from real es tate involved in this actio n.
A motion to suspend the
defend an t' s sentence in the
State's case aga inst Char les
McCloud Jr., has been denied by
the court. However, the court has
granted a motion to return the
defendant's bond money .
David L. Shuler, after signing a
written waiver of extraditio n to
Louisiana, voluntarily accom·

panied Iberia Parrish officers
from Meigs County to Louisiana.
Dismissed by the court were
the cases of the State of Ohio, ex
rei, Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr.,
At torney General of Ohio, Columbus. versus Charles Leist and
Mar ilyn Leist, Colorado Springs,
Colo. ; Home National Bank,
Racine. versus Roger Dean
Mlller, et al; McArthur Savings
and Loan Company versus Otto
Falls, et al; and the State of Ohio
versus Michael E . Bennett.
Finally, Judge Crow has
stepped down as presiding au·
thorlty in the case of Putman
Transfer and Storage versus
B&amp;W Trucking, Michael Burke,
due to conflicts of interest
resulting from his former family
law practice or his term as Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney . .

Meigs announcements
VFW meeting
The VFW Post 9053 in Tuppers
Plains will have a meeting on
Thursd ay at 8 p.m. at the ·pos t

Continued from page 1
with $5 an hour to be paid to
non -certified substitute
personnel.
The board approved driver's
education program at a cost of
$100 per pup!l with AAA, South
Central Ohio Division, and ac·
cepted Jessica and Paul .Chapman as tuition students at the
Syracu~~e Elementary School.
The bid of Lambert Insurance
Co. for bus Insurance was ac·
cepted by the board.
Approval was given for the
Meigs Couniy Board of Educa·
lion to use a classroom at the
junior high school for a multi·.
handicapped class which will
. GsNow
RAIN
Q sHowERs
service all three school districts
In the county.
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold
. . Sialic
Occlud~d
Attending the meeting were
WEATHER MAP - During early Wednesday morning, rain Is
board members, Scott Wolfe,
Charles Norris, Gary Willford, . forecast for paris of. the Pacific Northwest. Showers and
thunderstorms are possible In parts of the Plains States, the Gulf
Danny Evans, and John Murphy,
Coast,
most of the Mississippi Valley, the Oblo Valley, the lower
with Supt. Bobby Ord and TreasGreat
Lakes
and lhe mid to north Atlantic Coast States. (UPI)
urer Dennie Hill.

and Scioto, participated lntheshow.Foraboutthe
last 10 years, the show was held In Wellston.
However, last year It was voted to begin holding
the show on a rotallon basis throughout the
District 6 counties. The last time the show was
held In Meigs County .was In 197S. The judge for
Friday's show was Jim Lewis, of Orient.

briefs~···-----.

m

AEP warns...
Continued from ·page 1
slons from power plants.
The president's proposal calls
for a 10 million ton reduction
from 1980 levels in the year 2000
and requires the nation to hold its
sulfur emissions at that reduced
level forever .
"Economic growth requires
the co nstruction of .new power
plants in the. future, the emissions from tbose new plants
would have to be offset 100
percent by further reductions at
ex is tin g plant s, " White
explained.
.
"However, under the admln·
$!ration's bill, those existing
plants would, themselves be
required to meet very stringent
emission limitations. In addition,
each generaUng unit at virtually
every one of those existing plants
would bP subject to Its own
individual tonnage emissions
cap.'·
·'The point Is that even Initially
it will be difficult to find and very
expensive to achieve the emis·
sion offsets required to permit
the construction of new power
plants .
"As time passes and the
limited ava ilable emission
offsets are gradually used up, It
may become impossible to find
additional offsets at any price.
"It is at that point that either
the admlns tration's legislation
brea ks down or the nation's
eco nomy breaks down."
Ironically, just when the nation's electricity consumers need
more power, other provisions of
the Bush bill will effectively
prohibit the full use of existing
power plants to power fu lure
economic growth or to prevent
energy shortages. The adminls·
!rat ion's proposal would limit
virtually every generating unit to
its respective annual output
averaged over an arbitrarily
selected period of time.
Du ring that period , when the
Midwest was beginning to
emerge from the recession of the
early 1980's, the plant utilization
factor. or capacity factor, for
AEP's coa l fired plants averaged
54 percent.
"Our plant utilization has now
risen to 58 percent as the
economy improved and AEP Is
striving for a capacity factor of
65 percent by the yeu 2000 In an
effort to maximize the utilization
of this valuable existing plant
resource," he said.
·'This will require us to reduce
our system average S02 emls·
slon rate below 1 pound per
million BTU in order to acconi·
modale this growth.''
However, the potential for
squeezing out even further emls·
s!on reductions Is very limited
since AEP will be.operatlng a tan
ex tremely low system wide aver·
age emission rate of about 0.96
pounds per million BTU as ·a
res ult of the Bush bill's Phase 2
requirements.
The AEP chairman said he hoped
"a more moderate approach
bala nc ing environmental,
energy and economic considerations aga inst a background of
scientific uncertainty and the
emerging clean coal technolo-.
gles will prevail."

Hospital news

.fW

Stocks

Daliy stock prices
(As oliO a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewi

Pick-3
747
Pick-4
0203

•

Yol.40, No.71 M

lty" &lt;J,nd was joined by members kindergarten through sixth Parents will be notified In writing
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Larry . Rupe, who made the grades In the district now \ re:
Dally Sentinel Staff
prior to the date of assignment of
Detention-Loss of Recess A county-wld.e schedule of motion to add the speclflcatlort;
the after school detention. Par·
disciplinary options for grades and Bob Barton In the opinion This Is a loss of the student' free ents will be responsible for
that the board owes that special · time during the student's school providing transportation to and
kindergarten through six, COJ,I·
talnlng a specification that at the assurance to the concerned Har- day. This may be assigned by the from the after-school detention.
risonville parents.
teacher or the principal. Student Students so assigned will be
·Harrisonville school the cloak·
at
last
night's
meeting
a
Again
will
be supervised by a class· under the jurisdiction of the
room will not be used as an
delegation
of
Harrisonville
parroom
teacher. Repeated loss of JuvenUe Court officers.
Isolation room, was adopted at
.
ents
attended.
recess
will result In notification . Corporal Punishment - CorTuesday night's special meeting
sevThe
problem
developed
to the parents of the problems.
of the Meigs Local School Dis·
poral punishment will be admln·
eral months ago when parents of
In.School Suspension - Stu- lstered according to the board
trict BOard of Education.
The schedule was adopted by a a youngster confined·for several dent will be removed from the policy. Parents will be notified of
4-1 vote, with Board Pres(dent hpurs to the cloakroom, an 8 x 14 regular classroom of a student the action taken.
Richard Vaughan voting "no" room with both doors closed and during the student's school day.
Suspension from School because of the Harrisonville only the t~ansom open, charged Parents will be notified In writing · Students will be suspended from
spec!fleatlon. He charged that Inappropriate disciplinary of the In-school suspension prior school In accordance with the
to the suspension. Any student board policy .
'
addlpg that special Issue to the abuse.
In
the
disciplinary
options
who receives In-school suspeneounty disciplinary options scheExpulsion from School - Stu·
dule could set a precedent of schedule adopted by the board, it sion will be subject to constant dents will be expelled from
selective treatment under parent states that "If any other methods supervision.
school In accordance with the
of discipline are used, they must
After.Scbool Dententlon- Will board policy .
pressure.
be held at Meigs High School on
Board member Bob Snowden be with parent approval."
At the Harrisonville ElemenThe schedule of options for
regularly scheduled dates and · tary School, the cloakroom will
contended that the specification
Is for the "good of the commun- discipline of children enrolled In . times by the Juvenile Court.

With summer coming to a
close, It's time for school to start
· again. Dr. Daniel Apllng, sul&gt;er·
lntendent for the Eastern Local
SchooiiHsbicthasreportedthat
school will begin tor the district
on Mondi!Y for teachers, and
Tuesday for students.
·
Tl~e schedules and bus ro)ltes
will remain the same as last
year.
.
Lunch~s will be served begin·
ning on the first regualar school
day, Tuesday, at a price of $1.10
for elementary students and
$1.20 for high school · students.
Breakfast will be available at a'.,
cost of $.50.
. ·
i'·
Elementary st.udents who are
new to the district are to report to
tbe school nearest their home on
·Tuesday. Students who are In
grades 7·12 are to report to the
high school sometime before the
opening of school, between the
hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Information pertaining to
workbook fees and other Items
.wlll be furnished on tile first day
school.

Huck
denied
Ravenswood Aluminum tenninates bond
estimated 43 salaried employees
EASTERN JN..SERVICE - Gary Walker, an
electronics teaeher at Meigs ID1h School, served
as the IIIBtructor lor a l~ge group of Eastern local
teachers at a computer In-service day at Eastern

Scholarship
pstakes

I

....... Grand Prizes/ lt,(}()()Sch,rJI•~"'~
1st Prlz•sl $6()() Clothes Shopping
Winners In Every Store/ Csnon S.Dlgit
No Ptnt:lw4 NII:•SMJ~YI s.. Jt&gt;SttJIO o;rpJ., tor o.toiisJ

Pocket Cslcu/ator

MEAD

5 SUBJECT NOTEBOOK ......................J~:.!a.~.t............. NOW $149
MEAD

3 SUBJECT NOTEBOOK ..................!!1:11.~!... NOW
200SHEET

99(

SPIRAL 5Ci'SHEET

MICHAEL JACKSON
NOTEBOOK

39C

·MARKS-A-LOT'
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NOW

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BIC
ROUND STIC

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EACH

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INDEX CARDS
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Prescription .Shop
271 NORTH, SKOND
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not be used as an Isolation room. Cab to transport a student to
Pomeroy Elementary. ·
Other Action
Several teaching positions
It was also voted to enter Into a
were filled and resignations service agreement with OSBA to
provide consultant services In
accepted at the meeting.
Mary O'Brien was employed grievance arbitration. Amy
as an elementary teacher for the Mann was released for transpor1989·90 year, Becky Zurcher was tation purposes to attend Eastern
named head · teacher at the High School by a four to one vo~
Middleport Elementary School, with Snowden voting against the
and Jim Niday was employed as action.
varsity assistant football coach.
The bid of Downing, Childs,
.The resignations of Steve Oh· Mullen, and Musser Insurance
linger as . substitute teacher, was accepted for fleet Insurance.
Todd Snowden as juniOr high
All board members, Richard
football coach, and Phoebe Ca- · Vaughan, Larry Ru pe. Robert.
rey as art teacher were accepted. Snowden, Robert Barton, and ·
The board entered Into pur· Jeff Werry, Supt. James Carpen·.
chase services agreement with ter, and Treasurer Jane Fry,
Scott Fife to transport a student were present for the meeting. A
to the Oho Schooi for the Deaf, 40-mlnute executive session to
with Deborah Fisher to transport discuss personnel and pending
a student to the Ohio School for litigation was first on last night's.
the 'Bl!nd, and with Blue Streak agenda.

Eastern Local students will ·
.retunl to classes on Tuesday

$1xty·three arrests were made
during July , according to the
report of the Middleport Pollee
Department. During the month
109 accidents were Investigated,
126 meals were served, 197
parking tickets were writ ten, and
$583.77 In parking meter collec·
tions were made.

.Hospital news

26 C.nto

A Muhimedie Inc. New..,eper

Meigs Board adopts disciplinary options, 4- ~

Police report released

RULERS

2 Sectiono. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday. August 23. 1989

Copyrighted 1 989

A marriage license has been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Tony Ray Roush, 18,
Coolville, and 'Mechele Denise
Hughes, 18, Reedsville.

39C

•

a1

Licences issued

FILLER NOTEBOOK
PAPER

Low tonight In mid !lOs.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Thursday, partly cloudy. Jngh
In mid 80s.

Page3

Am Electric Power ............. 29'n
AT&amp;T .............. ..... ..............37}8
Ashland Oil ........................37'n
Bob Evans .................. ........ 15'A!
Charming Shoppes ...... ... .....16'!.
City Holding Co ....... ,.......... 15%
Federal Mogul .... .. .............. 23'A!
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ..........53'A!
Heck's ..... 1.......... ;... .. ........... V.
Key Centurion .............. ...... 12%
Lands' End ......................... 27'18
Limited Inc .... .................. .. 34%
Multimedia Inc ................. 1061h
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... ...... 16%
Shoney's Inc .................. ...... 12
Wendy's Intl .................. .. : ... 53,4
Worthington lnd .................25%

are Invited to be guests at a
dinner hosted by Middleport
Lodge363, F . and A. M. ,Sept. 2at
6:30 p,m. at the Middleport
~orn e.
Masonic Temple. Reservations
Racine American Legion
are to be made by Aug. 26, 'to
The Racine American Legion Bessie Kl ng, 992-3747 or Vlrgl·
Auxiliary will meet on Thursday · nla Buchanan. 992-3393.'
at 7: 30.p.m .
Dinner slaled
Members of Evangeline Chap·
ter 172, Order of the Eas ter n
Star, ami their husbands or wives
By United Press fnlernatlonal
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a
chance ot ·Showers. Lows will be
Hol2er Medical Center
between 70 and 75. West winds 5
Discharges Aug. 21 - Clara
to 10 mph. Thechanceofraln !s40
Adkins, Laura Blazer, Connie
percent.
Veteran' IIJemorlal
Duty, Leonaril Fitzpatrick. Ml·
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
Monday
admissions - Hazel
chael Hakes, Mrs. KavlnHudnali
with a chance of afternoon
Wedge,
Racine;
Agnes Penrod,
and daughter, Ma ry Hysell,
thunderstorms. Highs will be
Pomeroy;
Howard
Damron,
Teddy Johnston. Clara Kay,
between 85 and 90. The chance of
Pomeroy;
Mildred
Smtih,
PomeDebbie Lewis, Mollie Logan, rain Is 50 percent.
roy;
Ruby
Frederick,
Pomeroy.
Cleo Lus ter, Judith Moore, Billie
Extended Forecast
Monday discharges - Patti
Moss, Bernice Ratliff, William
Thursday throu1h Salurday
Johsnon,
Bonnie Shaffer, John
Rawlins, Twlla Rose, Charlotte ·
Fair through the period, with
Hlte
,
Stella
Bush, Floyd
.Rowland, Helen· Sheets,' Gall
highs In the 80s . and early
Reynolds.
Taylor and Delores Wall.
morning lows In the 60s.

Weather

~

Ohio Lottery

Ryan sets
·strikeout
record

992·6669

MIDDUPOn, OHIO

Ravenswood Aluminum term!·
nated an estimated 43 salary
employees Tuesday as part of
new profit strategy and Internal
restructuring, ·company off!cals
said.
According to today's Jackson·
· Herald. the West Virginia company cited operation losses dur·
log· the past few months and
market conditions beyond their
control as the reason for the
terminations.
Many of the people who were
dlsmlssell were lOng-time em·
piOyees of Kaiser Aluminum,
before it was purchased by
Ravenswood. One terminated
worker told the paper that many

HIgh School on Tuesday. The ln·aervlce was
conducted to better famUiari2e the teachers of the
district with the new computers that have been
purchased with Ohio lottery money and which will
be dlstrfbuted dlstrl~t wide.

.

By MICHAEL SHEARER
()VP News Staff
A man charged with murder·
log a Putnam County, W.Va.
of the terminated employees will . reduce all controllablE' costs.
Sh.erlff's Deputy was denied bond
receive severance pay that will
- The restart of the fourth pot at a hearing held on Tuesday .
equal eight months of salary.
line early next year, hopefully
Raymond Huck, 34, Cow
. The w9rker also said he was increas lng prime metal produc· Creek, W.Va. , was denied bond
not suprlsed by the company's lion and reducing dependence on by Putnam County Circuit Judge
move.
more costly outslde .sources.
Clarence Watt, said Putnam
- The continuation of capital County Prosecuting Attorney
. Ravenswood President Em·
melt Boyle said the company's expenditures to expand large O.C . Spaulding.
Huck Is charged for the Aug. 17
future will depend on whether It block anode production.
- The narrowing of Ravens- -murder of Deputy John Janey
·can can be more efflcent, more
productive and more quality wood's product line to enable the along with two Gallipolis men,
company to concentrate on Its Robert ·Gray·, 31, Brentwood
conscious.
· The company said that this was best products and refine quality Drive and Robert It Bates, 32,
, Eastern Avenue. Huck also Is
the first step In a major cam· control.
- The contraction of Invento- facing a fourth-degree arson
palgn to reduce costs and In~
charge.
crease profits. Five points were ries to reduce carrying costs.
Another 'factor which contribJaney was shot and killed while
outlined by the comapny.
·-The Immediate !mplementa· uted to the decision was high he was attempting to arrest Gray
and Bates for allegedly trying to
lion of a comprehensive plan to prices for outside metal scrap.
set fire to Huck's house. During
the weekend, Gallipolis City
Pollee found materials that Huck
allegedly had Bates and Gray
store In Galllpolls to avoid
Of last year's 33 . school age classes In Southern, Eastern l)r
destruction In the fire.
students, six students were from Meigs Local School Districts. ·
Spaulding told 'the court that
the Ga!Hpolls Developmental
One or two other former
Huck also Is being Investigated
Center. Carleton School was on Carleton students may "\ be en·
on another charge and should be
contract with GDC to provide the rolled In a new county-wide
denied bond. Huck argued that he
educa tiona! services td the six Multi,Handlcapped class which
needed to be released In Order to
students. GDC transported the will be located at the junior high support his family .
students to Syrac11se and reim- building In ,Southern District,
The judge did state that Huck
bursed Carleton School for the reports John Riebel, superln· co11ld ask the court to reconsider
educational services provided. tendent of Meigs County Sc!hools. his motion on Sept. 28, Spaulding
However, this year, GDC will be
However, although school age said.
.
served by the Jackson County student eni'OUment will be down
A bond hearing for Bates will
Board of Mental Retardation at Carleton School, the number of be held on Aug. 28, but Gray has
Developmental Disabilities, preschool children - ages three not requested a bond hearing yet,
which entered a lower bid toG DC to five - and·also Infants - 0 to he added.
three - to be served this year by
to provide the needed services.
Preliminary hearings for the
Four of last year's former Carleton School has Increased, first-degree murder charges will
Carleton students have moved · according to Wedemeyer.
be held on Friday morning for all
Approximately 12 preschool· · three men, Spaulding said, ad·
from Meigs County, Wedemeyer
says. and several others will be ers will attend classes at Ca- ding that this will be the first test
entering regular kindergarten or rleton ·this year. In Jact, says
Continued pn page 6
Continued on page 6
Developmentally Hand~apped
I

Carleton School enrollment down
By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Sentinel Stall
The loss of a contract to
provide services to school age
children from the Gallipolis
Developmental Center, and . the
transfer of several students to
the public school system, will
mean a. .decrease In this year's
school age enrollment at Ca·
rleton School In Syracuse. Carleton Schoot operates under the
auspices of lhe Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation
Developmental Disabilities.
Accordlna to Lee Wedemeyer,
Carleton School superintendent,
the number of school age chUd·
ren- ages six to 20- atll!ndlng
Car let on School this year will be
about 21. Last year's school age
ehrollme111 was. 33.

''

School started somewhat ear·
ller this year for the teachers of
the district . Twenty two of the 50
teachers In the district took part
In a computer Instruction Inservice day · held at the high
school on Tuesday . The purpose
of the in-service was to better

familiarize the teachers with the
11 computers that have been
purchased with Ohio lottery
money and which will be dlstrl~
uted district wide. The In-service
was Instructed by Gary Walker,
an electronics teac1Jer at Meigs
High School.
.·

Meigs Local has new
programs available
With Monday being the open- and reading will be taught In the
ing day of classes for students of same manner In all buildings this
.
the Meigs Local School District, coming year.
"You may have heard of the
Supt. James Carpenter has released a statement evaluating term, competency-based edu·
changes made last year which cation. If you haven't you wlll,
will remain lri effect this school because all students Will be
term, and setting forth new required to take State competprograms which · students can encY, tests beginning In the 9th
expect as they begin school next grade which must be passed In
order for the student to receive a:
week.
The superintendent's state- full diploma. .
"The State Department of
ment, In part, reads:
"As we beg!nanewschoolyear Educatlqn Is also requiring that
It would probably be a gqod Idea students receive ab!lltles and
to l.ook at what happened last achievement tests beginning in
year so that we might have a kindergarten and then at every
better Idea of where we are, so other grade level.
''The State Deparmtent also
that we may better determine
how we should proceed this year . states that we must give com pet·
"The 1988·89 school year was ency (es ts to all students in
one In which we started to look at grades 4, 8 and 10. The students
our reading program, and our · will be tested In the areas of
first goal was to make sure that math, English composition, and
reading was taught the same way reading. Those students who do
in all elementary buildings. A not reach an accepiable grade
committee was formed of must receive remedial work or
teachers and administrators. intervention.
"There . were two groups of
The reading comm lttee made
Continued on page 6
recommendations last spring,·

Local news briefs---.
•,

Meigs sheriff probes B &amp; E
The breaking and entering of the Pick &amp; Shovel Carry Out at
Salem Center Is being Investigated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.
According to Information from Sheriff James M. Soulsby. the
establishment was entered early Sunday morning by the front ,
door. Cigarette papers, chewing tobacco, cigarettes, lighters
and a number of lottery tickets were stolen. ·
.
Larry Wright, Langsville, reported that during the pa§t 10
days, someone. took the doors from a 1978 Flreblrd that was
·
sitting on his property.
The sheriff's department also reports that several mailboxes
on Dexter Road were damaged over the weekend. from 8 a.m.
Sunday to 10 a.m: Monday.
Also on the weekend, deputies took an accident report Sunday
night In Racine. According to the report, Chad Wolfe. of Racine.
was operating a 1984 Chevrolet pickup owned by William
Parsons, also of Racine. Wolfe was pulling out of the parking lot
behind the Racine Laundramat. He cut the wheel too soon and
struck the left front fender of a parked vehicle owned by Chris
Diddle, Racine. Diddle's 1987 Mercury sustain~ light damage.
There was no damage to Wolfe's pickup. No citations were
·
Issued.

Meigs driver injured in wreck
PaulL. Smith, Jr., 49, Long Bottom, was slightly Injured In a
one-car accident at 9: 15 p.m. Tuesday on CR. 34, 1. 7 of a mile
north of SR. 124, the Melgs-Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol
reported.
·
Troopers said Smith was headed south on CR. 34 when his car
went off the road, striking a fence and a ditch. Damage was
minor to the 1978 Chevrolet Chevette.
·
Smith suffered minor visible Injuries and was taken to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County Emergency
medical Service.
The patrol cited Smith for failure to maintain control.
Continued on 11age 6
0

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