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                  <text>T~~Ma-Sentinal

.should consider all
.ea&amp;•s for remodeling barns.
. COLUMBus, Ohio (UP!) R _a hi"'* an exlstlitg building
aD rai1e bop Is a great way to
IMII~·If you save money.
Dllll't try to make do 'with
IGaMtllllla that won't do. Michael
Vwabuizen, livestock structures
lpe\:lalllt at Oblo State tlnlverllty,uyal'ftiiOdellngan existing
bat llulldlq or modifying
. . tllwr klllll of barn for swine
Ill!! Is economical as long as It
doetn't cr.ate more problems.
"If remodeling Is going to cost
more than half the cos1 of
bulldlna new faciUtles, you
lllo\lld take another look, " Veenllulzeu says. "But If you can save
25 ~rcent or more by remodel·
laa aJICI not create too many new
problems, I'd say remodel."
The key Is not creating problema that com prom tse efficiency
or ease of operation when rernodellq old barns, Veenhulzen
says. He'll talk about remodeling
barll$ for swine production at
Oblo State's Swine Technology
n.y, Sept. 8. The event will beat
tbe Western Branch of the Ohio
Agricultural Research and De.welopment Center on State Route
C between South Charleston and ·
Springfield. The theme for the
day Is "Remodeling Yesterday's
Facilities for T!lrnorrow's
Needs."
Beware of hidden costs and
problems, Veenhulzen says. It's
easy to forget the cost of extra
time It takes to clean a remodeled barn that doesn't have the
most efficient manure handling
equipment. Costs of earth movIng, new wells and higher energy
demands are other Items often
Ignored In deciding whether to
remodel or build new, he says.
To reduce headaches in the
future, Veenhulzen suggests payIng at~ntlon to three Issues when
deciding whether to remodel. or
build new: the soundness of the
existing structure, Its location
aild environmental concerns.
-Structural soundness. Make
sure the building Is worth rerno·
dellng In the first place. Check
the foundation, alignment of
walls and the condition of the
roof. Make sure the building has
enough existing space for the
job-you can always parti lion off

•v.

extra space. Pay attention to
little things, such as the location
of support beams~ you don't end
up with posts In the middle of
doorways or pens that are too
small.
-Lo~atlon . Think ahead. Is
that old barn upwind or down·
wind from the new housing
development? Can. you get a big
enough truck · to the barn to
dellv!!r supplies or pick up hogs?
Is there room for expansion?
How does an exls ling building fit
Into the overall production plan?
Can the location be secured from
unwarited ,guests? Is there some- ·
where to put manure? If you're
using natural ventilation, do
woods or hills block the air flow?
-Environmental concerns.
Pay attention to the environment
the old barn offers for pigs as well
as the people who work. Don't
compromise eliher's heaith just
to fit the existing building. Make
sure the .building has at least
enough space for the number of
pigs you intend to house there.
The building must be adaptable
to the proper ventilation, heating
and cooling needed to keep pigs
and people healthy. Perhaps
most importantly , Veenhulzen
says, there must be a way to
handle manure effectively and
safely.
"I can't say enough about
environmental problems In remodeling old barns for hogs, ·• he
says. "We're finally learrilng to
pay attention to things like space
and ventUatlon, but waste handling stUI gets forgotten too
often.
"It's too hard to go back and
put a pit In an existing building.
And to put In outside storage
means the location must already
be suited for It-no nearby wells
and a ·landscape that will allow
convenient transfer of manure
from the building to storage. The
. temptation Is to Ignore waste
handling concerns and deal with
them later. That's when you end
up scraping barns by hand or
deveiop a water contamination
problem. We can't afford those
kinds of problems. Think about
waste when you think about
remodeling."

Its almost time tQ plant grass
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ment with regular applications of
Late August pr earlY September fertilizer."
Is the best time to plant new
Kentucky blu~grass has slow
grass. That's when heavy dew , . gerl!j,inatlon and establishment
shorter days, cooler temperarates. Pound recommends using
tures and adequate soil moisture bluegrass cultivars resistant to
provide Ideal growing condi- leafspot. These improved varietions. Choose grass that has the ties are slightly more expensive.
appearance you want and takes
If you want grass that will
no more maintenance than establish quickly, a ryegrass
you're willing to give, says Bill mixture will be sufficient. Pound
Pound, turfgrass specialist at doesn't recommend using annual
Ohio State University.
or older varieties of perennial
When purchasing lawn grass ryegrass. Annual ryegrass .will
seed, look at whetl!er the variety form only a temporary cover; It
,grows besnn sun or shade, its usually lasts · for one season.
quality and the amount of care It Older perennial ryegrass usually
needs, Pound says .
lasts only a few years because of
"The least expensive seed poor winter hardiness; he says.
selections are likely to give the
"Newer varieties of perennial
poorest results, but expensive ryegrass have Improved mowing
seed doesn' t necessarily guaran- quality, greater cold tolerance.
tee good results," he says.
better disease resistance and a
In Ohio, Kentucky bluegrass. darker green color," Pound says.
perennial ryegrass , tall fescue
A good choice for lawns in the
and fine 'fescue are recorn ' southern third of Ohio is tall
mended for lawns.
fescue, Pound says . "Tall fescue
"Kentucky bluegrass is the is heat and drought tolerant and
predominant turf grass in central will -remain through most Ohio
Ohio," Pound says. "it requires a summers without supplemental
medium to high level of manage- Irrigation," he says.

Review has tips on pesticide spraying
right equipment and using the
correct kind of spray, but It
really helps to see what happens
when you don't do things right."
says Erda! Ozkan. agricultural
engineer at Ohio State
Universit y.

LONDON, Ohio (UP!) - Vis·
llors to the 1989 Farm Science
Review can learn just how much
. difference it makes to use the
to right nozzle on pes ti c ide
sprayers.
'We talk about choos ing the

August 27, 1989

Ohio-Point Pla11111t, W.Va.

OSU researchers ·studying
what makes a pest a pest
WOOSTER, Ohio CUP!) leafhopper has done very well on
Researchers at Ohio State Unl- them, too, Nault said.
versltyarestudylngarestudylng
The leafhopper also may ma. the wild ancestors of corn to find nlpulate map' s domesticated
out how It was naturally resistant plant by Infecting It with corn
to the corn leafhopper.
stunt and maize bushy stunt
Lowell Na11lt, Ohio State Unl- moUicutes to make It even a
verslty entomologist, and his better host, he said.
Molllcutes are bacteria withassoclates at the Ohio AgrtculturaJ Research and Development out cell walls. Once the plant Is
Center In Wooster, are looking at Infected, there Is an Increase In
how the corn leafhopper lnte- the number of tillers, or shoots at
racts with maize and two of Its the base of ·the plant. These
additional. tillers may provide
wild ancestors.
"To understand the problems better conditions for future genwe have with corn ln.t hlscountry, era lions of the leafhopper, Nauft
we have to go back to their said.
origins," said Nault. noting that
The corn molllcutes can overrnoder,n-day corn came from winter only within the adul!
plants domesticated 8.000 years leafhopper. So young corn plants
ago In the region south of first become Infected with the
Guadalajara, Mexico.
molllcutes when the leafhoppers
"Once we understind their migrate to them from wintering
origins, we will be far better sUes.
prepared to tac.kll! problems
"By the time the offspring of
anywhere that corn Is grown," he the overwintering adults are
said. "In the context of natural ready to Jay their eggs and begin
plants, such ass the wild ances· a second generation, corn growth
tors of our corn hybrids, you · has been stunted and nutrients
really don't see Insects and have been diverted to the disdiseases causing serious eased tillers," Nault said. "Since
problems."
the leafhopper lays Its eggs In the
The plants, Insects and would· leaf whorl of the corn plant and
be pathogens have co-evolved each tiller has a whorl, the Insect
over ebns so. that only success- effectively may be Improving
fully adapted plants have sur- breeding conditions for the next
vlved. But prqblems arise when generation by Infecting the
humans alter natural varieties of host."
pllints to suit their OW!! needs,
But plants and Insects may
Ignoring long-establiShed adap- also benefit from organisms
lations between the plants, In- consider plantpathogens. The
sects and pathogens, Nault said.
The research is focusing on the
corn leafhopper, which trans·
mils the diseases that cause corn
GO BACK TO SCHOOL
stunt and maize bushy stunt In
corn. The pest can't survive Ohio
winters but Is a serious problem
In warmer climates, especially
the American tropics.
The research will help us to
understand Insect and disease
resistance, Nault said.
Currently, he Is studying the
Interplay between a mOdern corn
hybrid and the leafhopper Dalbulus rnaldls, Infected with the corn
stunt and maize bushy stunt
CIOSS·IIAI,.EI LOW
pathogens. In the same study, he
Is looking at ·Other, non-pest
species of leafhopper and how
they have co-adapted with different species of teosinte and
The Shot Caft
Trtpsacum, perennial ancestors
Gallipolis, Oh.
of corn.
.
.
'
The modifications that man
has made to the wild ancestors of
corn fit his own purposes, but the

process of natural selection
chooses and adapts species of
molllcutes, -plants and leafhoppers that aid · each other's.
development.
"It we can understand this
process · of adaption In natural
varieties and transfer the knowledge to agro-ecosysterns, perhaps we
be better able to
manage diseases of maize on a
worldwide scale," he said.

will

DAIRY QUEEN'S
.

PLAYER OF THE.WEEK

·~·

Tips for garden
produce listed here
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) . - A
home economist says gardeners
shol,lld carefully refrigerate and
freeze fruits and vegetables that
aren't eaten soon after they're
picked.
Sharron Copln of Ohio State
University offered these lips for
storing three of the most common garden crops:
-Tomatoes. If your tomatoes
aren't fully ripened, keep them at
roorntemperature away from
direct sunlight.
f'irrn, ripe tomatoes start to
lose flavor when refrigerated.
But they can be stored In
temperatures of 45 to 50 degrees
In 85 percent to 90 · percent
humidity for seven to 14 days and
maintain their flavor. Normal
temperature In the refrigerator
vegetable tray Is 35 to40degrees.
"If you chill tomatoes for too
long, they will get a mealy
texture and lose their flavor,"
Coplin said. Tomatoes do not
freeze successfully. If you wish to
freeze them. they will only be
good for cooked products.
- Corn. Corn should be picked
when the kernels are mature In
the husk. "Chill sweet corn
quickly. for the faster you cool It
down, .the slower Its sugar will
change to starch," Coplin said.

Thore'1luot - • 1 burger Hko
the bo Homeotyten Ultimate. II'~
mllde with not one. b!ft two juicy
Homeotylon pelt leo (thet'1 I whole
1/3. lb. of beef"). Then lt'1 topped off
with melted ch-e. ITeoh tottuce,
ripe tomltoa. lhory bacon, •nd our

own tnty uuce. You can IH why
lt'11ho ultimate tute. It' 1 perfect! Try
· qna today ~t your D•iry Queene
Brazlere atore.

.,.._coo-...w...-

#23 SHAWN SAVOY
EASIEIN EAGLES
6'·2", 155 Ills., H
In Eastam's loss
Friday night to
Waterford, Shawn
carried the ball 14
times for 116 yards
and 1 touchdown.

~~~P 25°/o OFF

HIGH TOP &amp;
LOW ·

CHA

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STOlE
'•

''

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Monday, August 28, 1989

By NANCY YOACHAM
will be implemented this year In
all the grades·. •'Students and
Dally Sentinel Staff
The 1989-90 schOol year In · , teachers will be Involved In
making our written .language
Southern Local School District
will be "a year to look forward
come alive," says Hill.
to"l!thedlstrlct'sComrnltteefor
Also, during the summer,
the Advancement of Career
teachers attended science workEducation has Its way . The
shops which provided inforrnacommittee has plans for many
lion to·aid them In helping their
exciting events over the coming
students take more Interest, and
months to benefit students at all
In turn, excellln the sciences.
age levels.
In the planning stage for
According to . committee
grades seven through 12 Is a
member and teacher Jan J{lll,
"Carnival of Careers." In this
''students · and teachers from · program, students wllllalk with
klnderdergarten through KJ:ade people from various job areas
12 will have some new and
and participate In activities
different challenges" throughout Involved with a variety of differthe corning year, including .two ent jobs. As a follow-up to the
challenges which directly affect Carnival of Careers, Nancy JohnSouthern's school curriculum In . son, an . Internationally known
the areas of writing and science. motivational speaker, will be
More writing Instruction, on presenting workshops for
the part of teachers, and writing students.
·
demands, on the part of students,
'fo motivate lifelong reading

POMEROY, OHIO

habits In Southern's students, the
district's Chapter I Reading
Program hat the various schools,
will be having a uniform book
week this year with "Get In.The
Reading Mood" as the theme.
Educators are even working to
develop a model for measuring
student gains so parents can
better understand their chUd·
ren's academic development.
As alway,, sports Is an Integral
part of Southern's system, even
though financial hardship has
made It necessary foF the district
to make certain cutbacks In
sp()rts. Boosters, made up of
parents, ·community, staff, the
board of education and the
administration, "are working
feverishly," says Hill, to raise
the necessary funds It takes to
continue running a complete
sports program.
In addition to all this, parents
should be on the look out for a few
other events which are planned
for the coming year Hill says .
For example, klndergaFten .
parents should be aware that
their children will undergo educational screening In the fall.
Parents will be notified as soon
as theresultsofthescreenlngare
complete.
Parents are also reminded to
take advantage this year of
parent-teacher conferences.
"It's a great way to meet
gentlemen, from left, Matthew Ash, Andy Fields,
teachers and find out how your
WAfriNGFORTHESCHOOLBUS-It'sanew
Billy
Davis and Scott Hubbard, who were on the
children are progressing," says
school year, and all around Meigs County,
steps
at Syracuse Elementary at 8 a.m., walling
HilL
· students were up bright and early this morning,
·
for
the
bus to take them to thel~ respective
Help Is also needed this year .earerly JooklnJ forward to their first day back In
schools,
Southern
Kindergarten, Junior IDgh and
from. even more .pl!f.l!~ts in ll!e ·- clas,llll.s . • WJ;!!~ ~~be everyone WI!Jin't exactly .
High
School.
·
·
on-going "Everybody Counts" · eager, but everyone got up early,like these four
program. which is designed to
And as always, Hill, and the Week. varied sports and band is comprised of representatives
help non-handicapped children
other
members of the Committee competitions, and the end-of-the- from all schools In the Southern
through junior high age, develop
a greater understanding of lhei.r for the Advancement of Career year Southern Academic District. ·Committe members
hope to contribute this year to the
handicapped peers. This Is the Education, encourage parents Banquet.
lives of all Southern Local
the
AdThe
Committee
for
·third year at Southern for Eve- and students to look forward this
students.
vancement
of
Career
Education
year to national Right to Read
rybody Counts.

Immunizations required for all students

WELCOME BACK - Students at Southern IDgh School were
welcomed back to a new year of claSses with this grand opening
sign and lots,of balloons. From left, Danny Sayre, ~na Sayre aad
Matt IDII were out and about on Sunday afternoon, attacltlng
_ balloons here aJ!d there around the school, as their parents
arranred the wordln1 on the _slgn.
·

Parents were reminded today double-check their children' s
by the Meigs County Health medical records to see if they are
Department that all students are properly vaccinated.
required to be properly ImmunUnder Ohio School Immunizaized against measles, mumps, tion Law, all children must have
rubella (German measles), po- four or more doses of diphtheria,
lio, diptherta, .tetanus, and per- teta,nu,s and pertussis vaccine;
. tussis (whooping cough).
. three or more doses of polio
Children who are not properly vaccine, on rubella immunizaImmunized will be excluded from tion, one mumps Immunization,
schools beglnnll)g on the 14th and one measles Immunization.
school day until ·vaccines are
Rubel)a, mumps and measles
received, It Is reported. Jon vaccinations must be given on or
Jacobs, local health department
administrative officer, suggests
that now Is the time for parents to

OHP reminds drivers of bus rules ,
Bill AND BARB MILLER

1 Section , 10 Pages 2&amp; Centa
A Multimedia Inc. NeWIPaper

Southern schools.plan ·to .'challenge' students

·Twin City Machine &amp; .Welding

THANK YOU ALL .
BILL AND BAll MILLER

N SHOES

Vol,40, No.79 M
Copyr'Vhted 1989

Tonight and Tuesday,
partly cloudy with scattered
showers and thunderstorms.
Low near 70 and high near 10.
Winds sout!J 10 to 15 mph
tonight. Chance of rain 40
percent tonight and 50 percent
Tuesday.

•

a1

FORMER OWNERS

We will always remember our many good
friends and ioyous times .in Meigs County.

.

•

992-3322

We are returning to Columbus, Ohio wherewe moved from some 18 yeci~s ago.

Driving Force

Page4

700 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT .

·We wish the "New Owners" of Twin City
Machine and Welding, Mike and Vickie
Haley•••the Very Best in the Future.

STARTS MONDAY, AUGUST 28th

PICK-3: 738
PICJ(-4:. 1073
Lotto: 7, 25, 32,
36,39,44
Kicker: 244785

end year

Congntulttlotlll

We would like to thank our many cus·
tomers and friends that ·we have made
over the last 18 years in Meigs County.

TENNIS SHOE SALE

Ohio Lottery

All-Stars

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Potato early dying disease grad·
ually chips away at potato yields,
cu ttlng them by 30 percept to 50
percent In some cases. Farmers
usually · never know what. hit
them, says Richard M. Riedl!!;
plant pathologist at Ohio State
University. In September, he'll
team up with other scientists in
an International project to com,
bat the problem.
"Early dying disease In the.
United States is usually &lt;llttlcult
to diagnose," Riedel says. "It
develops oveP eight to 10 years.

we

··-·

Middleport

Scientists study .
dying potato disease

Opening day for schools has tlnue while children' board or description of the driver to the
arrived, and motorists should disembark. During the red flash- ·law enforcement agency with
expect to see more school buses Ing stage, all other . vehicles on
jurisdtciion In that area.
In the mornings and afternoons, the roadway must stop, Carper . , When · the Highway Patrol
according to Sgt. G.C. Carper, said.
·
receives a complaint that a
assistant commander of the
school bus vlollition has oc·
It the bus Is stopped on a
Gallla-Melgs Post of the Ohio roadway With less· than four
curred, Carper said a thorough
Highway Pairol.
Investigation will be conducted.
lanes. au' traffic approaching
The Ohio Revised Code has from either direction must stop If a positive ldentlflcation Is
rules In regard to stopping for a within 10 feet.from the front or
made of the driver, a summons
school bus, Carper said. It states rear 'of the bus, and remain so will be Issued, he said.
·
that when a sch.ool bus Is stopped until the bus begins to move or ·
If the driver Is found guilty, the
on a roadway to pickup or drop the driver signals motorists 16 maximum penalty Is a $500 fine,
off passengers, regulations apply proceed.
.
and loss of driving privileges for
to other drivers on the road.
a year.
When stopped on a street with
Carper said when a bus driver · more than four lanes, only traffic
"This Is a serious violation of
is preparing to stop, amber proceeding the same direction . ·the law," Carper said. Troopers
warning lights are activated. must stop, Carper said.
from the Ga!Ua-Melgs post will
These flash until the bus is
Bus drivers and parents alike
be foilowing school buses on
completely stopped. Other vehi- should be conscientious to these
opening days, and continue to do
cles are not required to stop laws, Carper said. When . a
so during the year In an effort to
during this preliminary stage, ,. motorist Is observed unla,wfully · deter passing of stopped school
but Is makes sense to prepare to passing a stqpped school bus,
bUses.
halt, he ~ald.
every effort should be made to
"Let's make a consolidated
V\'hen the bus stops, the red , get the license nu'm ber and a . effort In making this school year
lights begin flashing and con·
a safe one for all, " Carper said.

Racine council endorses complex
A 22-unlt apartment COJ;Ilpiex
to be builtin Racine near the hgh
school has been endorsed by
Rac;tne Village Council. Local
businessmen, , Greg Bailey and
Jltn Clifford, attended a recent
village council meeting to explain plans for the project which
will Ill! funded by Farmers Home
Admin Is tratlon. Council endorsed · the project because the
apartments will be · Joe ally

owned, and also because of the
need for housing In the Racine
area.
Council au thorlzed Mayor
Franil Cleland to check further
Into self-Insurance for tbe village., This authorization was In
response to a letter received
recently, Inviting tbe village to
participate In a self-Insurance
plan.
·
Council also authorized the

!

m!lyor to seek a legal' opinion
with regards to Items be!nileft,
or vehicles being parked and left,
on village streets.
Clerk Jane Beegle reported
that the .7 mill renewal tor fire
protection for .the village ha•
been tiled with the Meigs County
Board of Elections. ·
Council also discussed the
village trash collection service,
(See RACINE, pare ~&gt;
\~

after the child's first birthday .
Imrnunzatlon Is also required
·for children enrolled in daycare
and Head Siart groups. It Is
Important for children attending
daycare io' be Immunized against
Haernophilus Influenza b (Hffi) .
Although not required by law,
this vaccine protects younger
children who are more susceptible to this disease which may
lead to meningitis, It Is reported.
Between 2,000 and 3,000 mea-

s les cases have been reported In
Ohio during 1989, Jacobs noted,
with most' 6t the .cases being
among college, senior and junior
high school students, so he also
reminds coUege students to
check their vaccination records.
All students, whether in kindergarten or college, pose a threat to
themselves and other students
when they are not immunized In
Inadequately immunized, Jacobs
concluded.

Clear opinions expressed in poll

While this year's reSponses to a
poll taken by U.S. Rep. Clarence
Miller (R-Lancaster) Clarence
Miller at the Meigs County Fair
reflected, a mixed philosophical ·
stand on questions dealing with
foreign affairs and environmen·
tal poUcles, on others, such as
using the military to help combat
the flow of drugs, public opinion
seemed clear.
On that question on Miller's
poll the results were an overwhelming 91 percent In favor of
using the military for drug
control.
Residents In their poll re-

sponses also favored using the
military to assist the U.S. Border
Patrol In preventing the flow of
Illegal aliens Into the country, 86
percent In favor and 14 percent
against. r ·
On the proposed amendment to
make English the official language, the opinion was also
one-sided with 82 percent of those
polled feeling that such an
amendrnen t Is necessary .
Eighty percent of the poll
participants also Indicated that
there should be laws limiting the
amount of foreign Investment In
this country. Sixty-four percent

supported an amendment to
protect the American flag from
desecra t ton.
Concerning the nation's Central American policy, by a
margin of 63 percent to 37
percent, poll participants felt the
U.S. should abandon Its 1977
treaty to turn over the Panama
Canal should General Noriega
continue to hold power In that
country.
When ques tioned about the
AIDS epidemic facing the nation ,
65 percent of those responding
were In favor of mandatory
(See CLEAR, page 5)

CWA reaches tentative agreement
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
Bell telephone Co. officials said
a tentative contract has been
reached to end a two-week-old
strike, but the Communications
Workers of America said Sunday
picket lines · will remain "ntll
strikes against other Anierlt~h
companies are settled.
No details of the three-year
proposal reached Saturday were
released:
"We still have some formall·
ties to go through," said Ohio Bell
spokesman Keith Jamison.
"When those are taken care of,
l!'e will release the details."
Jamlso11 said he had no Idea
when the union members would
return to work.
Gregory Hill, union president
of the CWA Local43191n Toli!do,
said the union will continue to
operate piCkets as a show of

solidarity wlih strikers at other
Arnerllech companies.
Ohio Bellis one of s·lx subsidiarIes of Arnerltech in Chicago that
serves five Midwestern states.
Other BellS are located In IIUnots, Indiana, Michigan, WisconSin, along with Amerltech
Services.
"All six Anierltech companies
went out together and we'll all go
back together," Hill said. "Nobody will go back until we all
have a settlement.
"The company has agreed to
the contract," said Ohio Bell
spokeswoman Mary Lou Ringle.
"It's all clone from our point of
view.''
She said the company hoped
the CWA would return to the job
Immediately .
"We want them back," said

Ringle. "They 'II be accepted as
soon as they return."
Company spokesman Powell
Caesar said management employees should continue to report
for strike-duty assignments until
further notice.
The union made a comprehensive wage proposal Thursday, the first meeting between the two
sides since the CW A struck Ohio
Bell and other Arnerltech companies Aug. 12.
The two sides met again fo~
about 90 minutes Friday. Saturday's agreement cane after
about three hours of of talks that
covered both afternoon and evenIng sessions, said Ringle .
The 11nlon had been urging
Ohio Bell customers to withhold
payment of iheir phone ,bllls as a
show of support for the CWA.

�Commentary

Monday, August 28, 1989

Paga 2-The Daily Sa 11inll

'

Pom~~oy-Midclaport,

Monclav.

Ohio
Aug111t 28. 1989

..

DEVOTED TO THE INTER~TS QF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

q;,v· rn.....oL.-..,....,,...._=·.

~m~

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Cootroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be l... tlulll300
words long. AU leiters lll'e subjecllo editing and mUll be slped wltb
name, address and lelepboae number. No un.olped lellero wUJ be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good Iaaie, addresolllg ISoiiH, nol peroonaJJ.
lies.

GOP attempts to change
legislative apportionment
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stateboll!le Reporter
COLUMBUS - Majority Republk:ans in the Ohio Senate believe
'they finally have a chance next year to solve a problem that has been
a thorn in their sides for almost two decades.
The Republlcans are .going to try to devise a new method tor
drawing State legislative districts to replace the existing one, which
they say does not give them a fair shot.
And they are going to attach it to a bill they figure Is so important
!he Democratic-controlled House will not be able to turn it down. That
would be House Speaker Vern Riffe's bill to place spending limits (In
legislative and statewide election campaigns.
: Riffe has iaken a personal interest in that bill, and normally what
the speak~r wants, the speaker gets.
The blll already has cleared the House,· and Senate President
Stanley Aronoff, R-Chiclnnatl, said las I week the Senate wlll deal with
, lt "dellberately."
; "We'l,l send back a lair bill," the Senate leader promised.
; It might seem strange that the Republk:ans dominating the Senate,
19 to 14, would want to change \he legislative districts.
Consider this: aside from a shaky 4·3 advantage on the Ohio
Supreme Court, the GOP has nothing else in state government. Zero.
Nada. And hasn't ·since 1978, except for one term by maverick Gov.
;James Rh.odes.
,
• S(nce tile 1972 elections, Republicans have been so far down in t~e
t&gt;hlo House that a lot of people knock at the door wondering If
anybody' s home at all.
· .So nothing w111 be done with Riffe's campaign spending bill until the
GOP changes the way legislative districts are drawn.
They wlll have to hurry . In two years, after the 1990 census, the
boundaries will be aligned by the state Apportionment Board
according to updated population ligures.
: That board includes the governor, secretary of state and auditor, as
well as one state legislator from each party. Each of the other offices
is now held by a Democrat. Any change in the apportionment method
will require a co nstitutional amendment approved by Ohio voters.
"The Senate is persuaded that an hOnest and fair apportionment is
proper, " said Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R·Clncinnatl.
Aronoff concedes that Senate Republicans, through excellent
strategy, hard work and piles of money, have fared extraordinarily
\Vel! with " unfair" districts.
· "By rights, we should only have 12 senators," he said.
· Aronof! argues that "fair" districts, that is those bent toward
Republican candidates from the way they are now, wm actually hejp
control spending, because the GOP won't have to spend so much to
win in them.
Aronoff &amp; Co. has Republican National Chairman Lee Atwater on
its side. Atwater told rep 0rters in Columbus last week that "our No.1
political goal nationally is reapportionment. "
To th e GOP chairman, that means realignment of ·congressional
boundaries. But t~ose are drawn by state legislatures, and Atwater
explained that Republicans must capture the Ohio General Assembly
to accomplish his goal.

Berry's World

·~
~l)yNEA,
II\C,
"So, tell me, darling, how's your
cholesterol?"

.

Today in history
By United Press •nternational
Today fs Monday, Aug. 28, the 240th day of 1989 with 125 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Us new phase.
The morning star is Jupiter.
;fhe evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
:rhose born on this date are under the sign of Virgo. They include
German poet,
novelis t and dramatist Johann von Goethe In 1749·
Etizabeth .Ann Seton, first U.S,.·born saint of the Roman Catholic'
Church, in 1774; actor Charles Boyer In 1899; psychologist Bruno
Bettelheim in 1903 (age Sli); actor-dancer Donald O'Connor In 1925
(age 64) and ?ctor Ben Gazzara in 1930 Cage 59).

Dn this date In history:
1n 1922, a New York City realty company paid $100 for the first radio
commercial, on station WEAF.
.
In 1963, more than 200,000 clvll rights protesters led by Martin
Luther King Jr. staged an orderly "Freedom March'' In Washington,
D.C.
In 1968, !he Democratic party nominated Hubert Humphrey for
president as thousands of anti-Vietnam war demonstrators battled
pollee In the streets and parks of Chicago.

WASHINGTON - When It
comes to money on Capitol Hill,
Jamie Whitten Is the man to see.
The Democratic congressman
from Mississippi has the comb!·
nation to the safe.
As the chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee,
Whitten can make and break
pol(tk:al careers by granting or
denying money for hometown
projects. It stands to reason that
Whitten's home dlstrk:t Is sitting
pretty.
Thls session of Congress, Whit·
ten, with help from the Na tiona!
Aeronautics and Space Admin is·
tratlon, delivered a multi·
million-dollar gtft to northern
Mississippi - a plant to build a
new generation of solld rocket
motors for the space shuttle.
Never mind that the old solid
rocket motors are working fine.
Never mind that NASA's own
Aerospace Safety Advisory
Panel recommended against the

new motors.
~sence, the panel said, If It ain't
Never mind that they will cost broke, don't !lx lt.
the taxpayers $1.5 billion over the
The NASA officials who favor a
next live years. '
new rocket motor sealed the deal
The project Is going to Whit· when they decided to bulld the
ten's district. End of debate.
project In a never-used nuclear
"It's the chairman's (Willi· plant In Yellow Creek, Miss.
ten's) baby," one House appro- Whitten saw jobs and votes, and
priations staffer told us. "It the from that point there was no
chairman wants It, he gets it."
turning back.
It wouldn't matter If Whitten
The proposal was bounced over
had authOrized a surfboard lac· to the House Science, Space and
tory. Most of his colleagues Technology committee for an
wouldn't question him because · endorsement. They wrangled ·
they are afraid he would squelch behind closed doors about a $121
their own hometown projects.
million appropriation to begin
research on the new motor next
The issue of a new solid rocket year. But, "If it wasn't in
motor Is far from settled wltliln Whitten's district, I would have
NASA. Tile safety panel issued a been surprised If we would have
thick report In March wondering · even considered It," said one
aloud why NASA would put Its committee staffer.
energies Into a new "advanced"
Committee sources told our
solid rocket motor. The existing associate ·Jim Lynch that Rep.
"redesigned" motors have been Robert Roe, D·N.J ., chairman of'
working well since the shuttle the space committee, tried to
program got back on its feet. In play hardball with Whitten. Roe
.

Jack Anderson

CINCINNATI CUPI) - Tom
Browning Isn't overpowering
and doesn't throw a blazing
fastball, but knows how to win
and keep the opposition offstrlde.
The 29-year·old Clnclimati
Reds .le!lhander's string of complete games ended at five Sun!lay, but his string of victories
grew to seven straight when he
blanked the Pittsburgh Pirates
1-0 with ninth-inning help from

·

is a big promoter of a space
station and he privately threatened to block Whitten's plant 11
Whitten didn' t support the space
station ..
The only one bold enough to
challenge Whitten publicly was
Rep. David Nagle, D-Iowa. He
can't fathom why Congress
should fund ·advanced shuttle
rocket motors against the recom·
mendatlon of the NASA safety
panel.
When tbe dust settled, the
approprlatlons committee had
rubber-stamped Its chairman's
pet project and sent It to the
House floor, where It was passed
without a peep about Whitten' s
self-interest. A simllar approprl·
allons bill Is working Its way
· through the Senate with an.escort
of Southern senators.

~~~~(,.~
. t:@N\OC RAe y
. ~MOC~c~
l:@MOCRAc~

~~~~--~ -

f:@MOCRA~"u

....

In .vitro fertilization is pregnant issue
Sarah: Overstreet
slon wlll probably cause ,rouple
attempting In vitro fertUizatlon
to provide for the posslbity of
mar(tal breakup or death.
But if Young decides in favor of
Mary Sue Davis; that life begins
at conception and that the
embryos must be considered as
potential children whose best
interests must be served, he may
be !uellng those who would llketo
see the in vitro fertUlzatlon
process outlawed. They argue
that since U!e begins once an egg
Is fertUized, and since not many
of the ferllllzed .wggs are ever
successfully brought to term,
most of them are created only to
die. Therefore, they believe the
process Is wrong.
Regardless of its outcome, the
Davis case forces each of us to
examine our···OWn belle! regard·
lng the . right of parents to
artificially begin or terminate a
pregnancy. My own conclusion Is
that I can't make that decision
for anyone else, and I hope the
right of parents to make it
remains protected.

woodstoc·k 's 20th was a media orgy
I let the 20th anniversary of the generally did their best to act out
Woodstock "festival" go by be· their contempt lor the larger,
cause I didn't think the event was "sq11are" society from which
worth discussing. But the media they had so ostentatiously
have Indulged In such a bathetic dropped out.
orgy of sentimental reminis·
Thanks to pooJ' planning (a
cence on the subject that I have central charactefistlc of their
concluded it deserves a column type), they fast outran the
after all.
sanitary and medical facilities
To hear the media talk, Wood· that had been set up for them,
stock was some sort of hippie and the area became a fetid mire
apotheosis of the good, the true that stank for years ·a!lerward.
and the beautiful. In fact, it was Watching the whole affair slide
almost the precise reverse.
toward disaster, tl)e locals
' What happened · was that pitched In and managed to rescue
nearly 400,000 scruffy represen- most of those suffering frpm
tatives of the generation then In really "bad trips" or struna out
its 20s .descended on a farm In from other causes.
upstate New York In August 1969
for the avowed purpose of listen·
In retrospect, the partlclpantl
lng to rock musk:.
in the defenders of this spectac;le
They sprawled all over (and decided It was downrqht admlr·
heavlly trashed) their host's able for at least two reasons: It
farm, as well as the adjoining was the first time that a gather·
property o( many of his neigh· ing of "flower children" had
bcirswhohadn'tlnvltedthemand . reached such a critical mus that
wanted nothing to do with them thoae present concluded they
and wanted nothing to do with represented, collectively, somethem. For three days, they thinK p!nuinely new under the
drank, copulated, and smoked, sun (they even called It "the
sniffed and shot drugs, and just Woodstock NatiOn"); and the

William Rusher ·

helping hand offered by the
larger · co~unlty was Interpreted as evidence or a new
kindliness in interpersonal rela·
Uons, generated by the Spirit of
wiped their noses and bottoms W()()dstocl&lt;.
The real explanation of the becomes intelligible.
Almost as instructive as Wood· ·.
whole phenomenon is. far .Jess
appealing. Its techniCal name is stock Itself Is the fuss the media
· ha,ve made over Its 20th annlver·
mass lnfantUism.
sary. The media reveal themThese people weren't called
selves best by what they admire.
"flower chlldren" for nothing.
Let some discredited, down-on·
Children is exactly what they
his· luck socialist ·o r even commuwere: Big, overgrown babll!ll,
nist die, and his obituary will ·
who had never learned to accept
Uke the life story of
.sound
adult responsibilities or play a
someone
wbo deserves, at a
mature part In adult society.
minimum.
to rest in Arlington.
There are such stunted nerds in
every generatiOn, but Woodstock
wu the first time theY · ever
The hippies, in short, were onto
assembled In auch numbers that
something important and
they mistook themselves for a . promlalng.
movement with something seI prefer the comment of the
rlmil to say.
· late AI Capp, when a scraggly
Once this Is understood, the
member of the audience at one of
rest · of their behavior - the
his college lectures demanded to
rampant self-lndul(ence, the
ltnow Where he stood on legalized
failure to plan lnteUifently, the
abortion. "Legalized abortion!" · ·
belated and muaby IJ'Itltude to
Capp exploded, gtarlq around
the surrogate "parentl" from
him. "Where waalegallzed abor·
nearby towns who figuratively
tlon whell we needed It?"

Red Gary Redus leading off the
ninth - that prompted Helms to
call on his ace fireman, Franco.
"I'd made my mtnd up that If
the first man up In the ninth
reached base, I'd bring in
Franco." Helms said. "I didn't
want to take a chance of
Browning losing 11 after pitching
such an outstanding game.
That's why I had Franco and
Dibble ready."

Franco answered 'the call with
his 28th save and second in the
past two days when he mowea
down Bob Bonilla, Barry Bonds
and plnchh11ter Jeff King on a
pair of force plays and a strikeout
to give the · Reds their flfth
victory .in their last six games
and seventh in 10 outings.
"When you've got a bullpen
that good, you've got to use 11,"
Helms commented. "There was
a Utile grumbling in th.e dugout,
but that didn't bother me. We're
out there to win games, and
that's what we did today."
Franco, warmil)g up at th~
start of the ninth, had been
alerted by Helms to be prepared.
"He told me to be ready if
someone got on base, " said
Franco, who had pitched two
innings in relief the previous

.

.

.

all over again.
On the Other hand, Mary sue's
''No strings"promise must sound
pretty hollow to Junior. What
responsible man could father a
child and 'then have nothing more
to do with lt,knowlng the uncer·
talnty and pain· that child would
exJierlen.c e. There Is no such
thing as a "no strings"baby. And
besides, why. would he want to
father a .baby with a woman he
dldn'llove?
.
Empathy aside, the Davis trial
took on the sideshow aspects of
many divorce trials. Mary Sue's
iggs had been fertilized for less ·
than two days when they were
frozen; that makes each of them
an entity of between four and
eight cells. Yet a French geneti·
cist testifYing in Mary Sue's
behalf told the judge that leaving
thes embryos In cold storage
amounted to "putting tiny · hu·
man · beings in concentration
camps...deprlved of Uberty, de·
prlved even of time .. "
·
Judge W. Dale Young's dec!·
slon could be critical to Infertile
couples. If he rules in favor of
Junior Davis, and.declares the
embryos joint property, his dec!-

Johnny Franco.
"Sure, I'd have liked to. have
gone all the way," Browning
admitted, "but I was flat out
tired in the ninth and he (interim
manager Tommy Helms) did the
right thing, when you have guys
like Franco and Dlbs · (Rob
Dibble) out there in the bullpen."
Browning, now 14·10, struck
out six and walked two. It was his
second base on balls - to former

Karkovice's first grqnd s.l am
takes ChiSox to 9-3 victory

A CoNTAGiOUS OUTBRiAK iM Poi.~D ~··

Sclentists,philosophers,medlcal
Junolr's sperm,and two were
unsuccessfully Implanted in
ethics experts and even colum·
nist Ellen Goodman and Su· Mary. Sue·~ womb,Them,Junlor
preme court justice.Sandra Day sued for divorce.
Now the Davises are flghting in
O'Connor have cautioned us: Our
artificial fertilization technology court to see whO gets custody of
is way ahead of our thinking the embryos. Mary Sue says she
process on the subject, and it~ son should, because the sperm was
a collision course with the law.
donated when Jurilor was wllllng,
We've had a few fender bend· and her part of the process was
ers already: For one, there's the painful. She doesn't want to go
case of the wealthy couple whO through It again, and says it may
died, leaving behind several be her best shot at having a child.
frozen embryos. The embryos . · If Mary Sue wins, she wUI have
were created artificially with the the embryos implanted In her
husband's sperm and the wife's womb. And, if she is able to gtve
eggs, in a process cailled "In birth, she promises she won't ask
vltro.fertlllzation. "
Junior for any suport.
The couple ·had Intended to
Junior says he should get
have the embryos implanted in custody, because he has with·
the mother's womb, hoping they drawn his consent to co-parent
would produce at least one child. with Mary Sue,and he doesn't
But when the potential parents think he should have to father a
died, the question was, "What child against his will. If he wins,
should become of these embry· he plans to deep the frozen
onlc potential heirs to the embryos in . cold storage
fortune?"
indefinitely.
And now we have Junior and
Ican'thelpbutempatjllzewlth
Mary Sue Davis, of Maryville- both Junior and Mary Sue.Mary
,Tenn. The Davlses tried to have Sue wants a child, and her
children using in vitro fertlllza· chances are sllm: At least she has
tlo. Originally, nine of Mary better odds with the existing
'Sue's eggs were fertUized by embryos than if she has to start

The Daily Sentinii-Paga 3

Browning, Franco_ tip Reds to 1-0 .triumph over . Jlirates .

The Daily Sentinel _ .NASA falls victim to-pork barrel tactics
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.
.

·-·

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ron
Karkovlce, who has been getting
batting tips frmn the team' s new
batting coach, showed how those
Ups paid off. Sunday, he had his
first career grand slam an'd
drove In a career game-high five
runs, enough by himself, as the
Chicago White Sox beat Cleve·
land 9-3, and swept a three-game
series. It was the first time
Chicago had taken a road series
since winning a two-game set in
Milwaukee in May.
Just before Karkovlce's big
hit, While Sox manager Jeff
Torborg was laughing.
''We were sitting on the bench
when they waljted Steve Lyons to
load the bases · and Ozzle
(Gulllen) said 'They.thlnk this is
the old Kark, not the new one',"
said Torborg.
The "new" Karkovlce hit a 3·1
pitch over the left field fence to
put the White Sox up 7-nn the
third.
"When It went to3-l, IMI.ew I'd
get a fastball·, " said K.ovlce.
"I was only looking to get the run
in from third, lnstea!l. I get all
· '
four ln.
"I'm am a differ~nt hitter,"
said Karkovlce: "And I'm am a
different person, and I have
(White Sox hitting coach) Walt
Hriniak to thank."
Hrlnlak came oVer to Chicago
after gaining a stellar reputation ·
. as a h11tlng coach with the Boston
Red Sox from 1977 through 1988.
In 122 games in .three seasons
with the White Sox, Karkovlce,
had a career batting average of
.168 with nine homers.
Entering Sunday's game, Kar·
liovlce was hitting .273 with three
homers.
.
...,.
Rookie Chicago starter Greg
Hibbard, 4·5, going seven In·
n ings, did not allow an earned
run and gave up only four hits
and one walk. He struck out a
career-high six. . .
.
Shawn Hiliegas and Ken Pat·
terspn each pitched one Inning in
teller of Hibbard.
·'It was a coach's decision for
me to come out, but why not," he
said. ···we had a big lead and why
go out there and pitCh well for
seven innings and.give up some
runs in the.ejghth and ninth when
there a~e. !NY~ out In tht::
bullpen."
'
' .
Greg Walker and Carlos Mar·
tlnez each had three hits and
scored twice in Chicago's 14·hil
attack.
Kar.!l;ovlce's grand slam off
Cleveland starter John Farrell,
7-13, capped a six-run third for
the Sox.
' '
Cleveland drop~ Its third
straight after coming off a
. three-game sweep of the Seattle
Mariners.
The Indians are now eight
games under .500, 9&gt;n games
back of AL East leader Balli·
more, which comes to Clevehind
for three games beginning Tues·
day night.
.
Each team scored in the
second inning. Carlos Mardnez
doubled to left and scored on· a
single by St,e ve. ·Lyons wblle
Cleveland's Joe Carter !loubled
to right center and scored when
Chicago ~hortstop Scott Fl~t~h!!r
let Cory Sny(\er's •grounder .toU
between his legs for a two-base
error.
In the third Karkovlce provided 'the clout that ended the day
for Farrell. He gav_e up seven
runs and seven hits. Ed Wojna
· was summoned to stop the White
· So*'rally.
.
In the third, Karkovlce threw
wlldly on an Brad Komminsk's
infield hit lllld ,terry ' QI'O)Vne
scored. But Karkovlce .Binlled
home his fifth run In the fifth
inning.
'
. Steve Lyons doubled home a
Chicago ~un in the seventh and
Cory Snyder led offtheCleveland
ninth with a homer.
In other AL games:
A'a 8, Bo:yala 8
Only strong · pitching efforts
have stopped Kansas City lately,
and Bob Welch camrheup with
one for Oakland.
..,
Welch oiatd~~led '):'pip ~C10rcroli :-:
by toilslng a six ·hitter throup
eliht Innings Sunday ,leadlq the
Athletics tD a 6-0 victory cnrer the
RoYals, who 1011 for only tbe
second tb)'lf In lftlr 181 t ' 13
gaml!ll. With the lou, Kanu•
City standl3% gaml!ll behind tbe
first-place A'I' In the American
Leque Wen;
· ·
"Welch pltc~ -~ ·w.ell,!': .
KaniBI Cliy manager-John Wa:

than said. ''He is having an sixth consecutive win. Joe Price,
outsta.nding year. It took two 2·5, allowed two hits over two and
very good pitchers (Welch and two-third innings. Rookie Brian
Callfornla's Bert Blyleven) to DuBois, 0-2, took the loss for
beat us this week.
Detro11, which has lost eight In a
"!twas a great week," Wathan row.
continued. "We did what we l!ad
Orioles 8, Y~kees 5
to. We got back. in the race and
At New York, Bob Melvin
showed both teams we came to . slammed a three: run homer to
play."
cap a four-run Baltimore second
The win moved Welch's record inning. Bob Mllackl, 9-11, scat·
to 15· 7· as he has won his last four tered eight ,hits in pitching his
starts. His last defeat was third complete game. Greg Ca·
against Seattle back on Aug. 7.
daret, 4·4, gave up six runs "I was just trying to throw four earned -In four innings. Cal
strikes, because it was awful hot R!p)(en, Jr ..hit his 18th home run
out there," said Welch, who has for the Orioles.
now defeated every team in the
mue Jays 5, Brewers 4
American League. "It was a
At Toronto, George Bell
·good thing that we got a lead knocked·In two runs with a triple
early."
and extended his hitting streak to
Rookie right-hander Gordon, a career-high 18 games
16·5, had his five-game winning
streak snapped. He allowed all
six of Oakland's runs on six hits,
The Daily Sentinel
while striking out five and
(USPSIU.. .)
walking three.
A Dlvllloo of Mulllmedla, IDe,
The A's staked Welch to a 3·0
lead in the second Inning ·and
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
aeded another three runs In the
· meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
seventh on a three-run home run
llshlng Coml"''ly/ Multlmedla. Inc.,
by Rickey Henderson.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph, 992·2156. Se·
oond class postage pald at Pomeroy,
·"He has improved his third
Ohio. ,
pitch, which is the fork ball,"
sal&lt;! Oakland manager Tony La
Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Russa of Welch. · "(Pitching
Ohio Newspaper A•octation. National
coach) Dave (Duncan) has
Advertising Repre~entatlve, BranhamNewspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
WQrked with:an of our pitchers on
New York, New York 10017.
developing a third pitch. Out of
the 24 outs, he -threw 10 to 12 outs
POSTMASTER: Send addrESS changes
to The Dally Sentln&lt;i, U1 Court St.,
that were probably on the fork
Pomeroy, OhiO 457111.
ball."
Dennis Eckersley relieved
SUBS(BIPTION RATES
By Carrier ~r . Motor Boule
Welch in the ninth, extending his
One Week ............................ .. ......$1.40
consecutive scoreless streak to
One Month .... :............................$6.10
One Year ... , ..... :.... ................... $72.80
24 and two-third Innings.
SINGLE COPY
In -the-second, Stan Javier and
PRICE
Mike Gallego drove In runs with
Dally ..... .............................. 25 Cents
·singles and Hender.son added
notdetrt'li.i tO pay thecardr
another run'With a sacrifice fly to • · Subscrt~a
rter tnay remit in advance direct t·o
right field. Gordon retired the
Tbe Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wm be gtven carrier each
next 16 Oakland batters before
week.
walking Javier and Gallego in ,
No tubscrlpttohs by mail permitted in
the seV.en th to set up Henderson's
areas where home carrier service is
three-run homer.
available.
ThP Royals have been shut out
Mall SubocrtpUons
a .league-high 15 times this
lUkie Molp Coual)&gt;
season.
13 Weeks ..................... ............. $19.24
26 Weeks ........ , ... ............ .... ..... $3'1,96
. RecfSox 7, Tilers 1
52 Weeu ........ : ......................... $74.36
At Boston, Ellis Burks lie!ted
•
Oulwl.. Melp Coual)&gt;
his fifth career grand siam and · 13 Weeks ....... :: ............ .. ........... $m.80
26 Weelal .................•.•••. ..... .....• $40.30
Nick Esasky hit ·a three-run
52 Weells ................ ,..... , ........... $75.40
homer to lead the Red Sox to their
.
.
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WlnningJlam led off the third
afternoon.
"I'm feeling good now, " added with a single and moved to
the little southpaw, who had been second on Quinones' sacrifice
In the throes of a slump that had bunt. Winningham stole third
seen him go ().4 when he was easily and Eric Davis· and Ken
plagued with .control problems. Griffey both walked to load the
''I'm not walking anybody and bases. Todd Benzinger grounded
I 'm getting them to hit the ball on hard to Redus at first, who threw
the ground, and that's what I to shortstop Jay Bell to retire
have to do."
Griffey. But Benzinger beat the
The Reds, who open a six-game return toss to flr.st while Win·
road trip Monday night In St. ningham crossed home plate
Louis, were held in check by with the big run that eventually
.
three Pirate pltc11ers, starter spelled victory.
Kramer's lnabllity to cover
Randy Kramer and a pair of
ex.·Reds, Doug Bair and Bill . first on the play because of a
Landrum.
groin pull could wellhavecostan
Limited to just four singles, inning-ending double play.
two by Luis Quinones and one
"I felt the pull in the first
each by Herm Winningham and inning," said Kramer, 4-7, who
Joe Oliver, Cincinnati broke gave way to Balr in the fourth
through for the only run of the inl)ing. "It was hard for me to get
game in the third Inning.
(See NL GAMES on Page 4)

[·

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.

I

Point Pleasant,

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Copyright &lt;. t ~ Devoe &amp; Aayoolds Co.

POMEIOY, OHIO

PRO ·CAR CARE ·and TIRE CENTER
Supports

•

Ben Hickel and The Hickel Racing Team Ben Would Like To ·
Give ·Thanks To:
•Miio9 ·A.u.to Glass
•Leroy James ·
•Sorden Tool and
Machine
•Bob &amp; Blanche Hickel ~·
•Git• Olver

Ben has been a
local racer with fine
' sportsmanship and
success for the past
16 years. Join Pro
Car Care in
supporting Ben in
the seasons to come.
Come out and
support Ben at the
area races.

·. fnd·.&amp;·liDERSoi StREETS

~ MASON W.VA.

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Page 4-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, August 28, 1989

Monday, August 28, 1989

Meigs-Gallia All-Stars finish at 11-4

..
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·~~: :j , A.... t "
• • fl!il •

MIDDLEPORT ALL-STARS - First .row
(L·R ): Assistant coacli Pat Hill, Nakoma Tyree,
Adam Krawsezyn, Ryan Rowe, Jason Stewart,
Eric Jones and Gary Stanley. Second row (L·R):
Assistant coach Mike Younl(, Jered Hill, Dusty

IDU, Brett Newsome, Mike Donnelly, Chal! Cox,

Jeremy Grimm, Chad Duncan, and bead coach
Rich Gilkey. Mlssidg when picture was taken was
Pat Young and assistant coach Rudy Stewart.

1'/~ ~(IIJleS ••• __cc_o_n_un_u_e_d_fr_o_m_P_a~g_e_ll______________________________~
over there (to first) In the third
Scott Scudder, 3·5, will face the
and It was hard for me to stop. I Cardinals' Rick Horton, 0·1, In
should. have made that play, and
the series opener !n St. Louis.
; then we'd have been out of
There's a ch11nce that three
• trouble ... -.
· Reds on the disabled list- Barry
Pittsburgh, which had won five Larkin, Paul O'Neill and Chris
in a row prior to Ioslpg to the Sabo- may return to the club In
Reds Saturday, had one runner Pittsburgh . Friday. All three
get as far as third base against jotned the Reds' Class AAA
Browning. That happened In the Nashville club Sunday In Louis·
eighth Inning when Jose Lind led ville for a four or five-day
off with a s ingle, stole second and medical rehabilitation program.
_took third on Blll Hatcher's Larkin has been out since July 11,
grounder to first. But Browning O'NelU since 'J uly 21 and Sabo
made Bell his sixth strikeout since June 27.
• victim to protect the shutout.
In other National League

•

Majors
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
Team
W L Pet. GB
Baltimore 71 60 .Stz
Toronto
69 61 .531 11-f
Boston
64 65 .496 6
Milwaukee 65 67 .492 61-f
Cleveland
61 69 .469 9%
New York 58 74 .439 13%
Detroit
47 85 .356 24%
Oakland
Calif.
K.C.
Texas
Minnesota

Seattle
Chicago

'..

77 52 .5t7
75 55 .577
67 61 .523
65 61 .504
57 72 .H2
56 71 .431

Honslon at Cblcago
Atlanta at Pittsburgh, night
Cincinnati at St. Louis, night
Montreat at San Diego, night
Phlladelphll\ at San Fran·
cl!•co, night
New Yorl&lt; at Los Angeles.
night '

I

3\4
10%
13

21
22'h

~suJts

Baltimore 6, New York I
Toronto 7, Milwaukee 0
Boston 5, Detroit 2
Chicago 4, Cleveland 3
Minnesota I, Sea!Ue 0
Kansas City 2, Oakland 0
Te.as 3, Calliom Ia 2
~nday's

Monday's games

Oakland {Stewart 17-11) at
New Yorl&lt; (Hawkins 13-11) ,
7:30p.m.
Detroit (Robinson 3-3) at
Boston (Boddicker 11·9), 7:35
p.m .

. Milwaukee (Flier 4-2) at
Toronto (Cerutti 9-7) , 7:35p.m.
Seattle (Dnnne2-8)atMinne·
"'ta (Smith 111-1). 8:05p.m.

ALL-STATE COMPETITOR- Steven Morgan Clay, grandson
of J.M. and Mildred Gaul, Is pictured here with his grandparents
alter playing In the Slate finals ofthe Dixie Major League Baseball
Tournament for players 11·12 years old In Conyers, Ga. Clay was
part of a 13-member all-star team from Alpharetta, Ga., which has
participated at the state level for three straight years.

Clay pushes Georgia all"'stars
to second in state tournament

Tuesday's games

Oakland at New York, night
California at Boston, night
Chicago at Toronto, night
Baltimore at Cleveland.

night
Seattle at Milwaukee, night

Texas at Minnesota, night
Detroit at Kansa.'t City , night
N t\TIONAL

Team
'.

Chicago

Montreal
St. Louis

New Yorl&lt;
Pitt.
Phil.

LEt\G UE

East
W L Pet.
73 57 .561
,71 59 .546

GB

59 .5U
69 60 .535
56 73 .434
52 77 .403

-~ 70

Wes t

S.F.
Houston
San Di ego

Cincinnati

L.t\.
Atlanta

71 56 .569
70 60 .538 4
66 64 .508 8
63 67 .485 II
62 68 .477 12
52 78 .400 22

Satunl~y ~s

results

Clnclnnall6, Pittsburgh 4
Atlanta 5, Chicago 3
San Francisco 8, Montreal 3
Sl. Louis 5, Houston 3
Los Angeles 4, PhlladelphlaO
San Diego 9, New York 4
Sunday's results

·-

Bartrum injured
·i n MU scrimmage
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
Former Meigs Marauder star
Mike Bartrum was Injured In
Staurday afternoons scrimmage
at Marshall University. Bar·
trum, a redshirt freshman, had
moved to the starting position at
tight end after Eric Ihnat had
mlnor knee surgery last week.
Bartrum was injured on a
running play when he was hU
from behind. According to Sunday's edition of the Huntington
Herald-Dispatch, the 1988 Meigs
graduate suffered sprained liga·
ments In his right knee. He will
, in Iss from two to four. weeks ,
Bartrum was recruited as a
quarterback, but was switched to
tight end shortly after fall
workouts started last year. Mike
had an outstanding spring and
was In a battle with Ihnat for the
position left open_by the gradua·
lion of All-American Sean Doc·
tor. Ihilat appeared to have a
slight edge due to experience.
Marshall will opf'n the 1989
season Saturday afternoon at
Fairfield ·Stadium aga lnst
Catawba.

Point Pleasant 9-4, behind the
superb defensive piJiy of short·
stop Brett Newsome and catcher
Jeremy Grimm.
In the Championship game
against Parkersburg Tri-C, the
Middleport team rode the strong
pitching of Stanley and took
advantage of late inning home
runs off the bats of Jeremy
Grimm; Chad Duncan and Gary
Stanley to defeat the Parkersburg team 10-8 to force a second
game. Tr l-C than rebounded to
take the title game with a 5-3 win.
with Middleport getting' runner·
up honors.
·
In the 12-teamWellston tourna·
ment, the local All~ Stars opened
play with a . 5-4 win over the
Chillicothe Clippers, with Mike
Donnelly picking up the victory
and Krawszcyn hliting another·
home run. In games two and
three of the tour.namen t Middle·
port defeated the Chillicothe
Eagles 11·2 and Rock Hill 6·1,
behind the pitching of Chad Cox
and Dusty Hill. Nakoma Tyree
and Jason George led the way·at
the plate. A conflict with the

-

Championship g11me In Belpre
forced the local team to forflel
the next game with Wellston to
drop Middleport into the losers
bracket. Middleport bounced
back to defeat Or. Pizza of
Athens 6-3 and advanced to the
Championship game against
Wellston. Middleport won the
game 8-6 to hand the host team
their !lrst loss as Cox picked up
the win, Wellston bounced back
to defeat Middleport to win the
title by a score of 15·9. Tenent
bias ted three home runs to led
Wellston to the victory. ·Gary
Stanley blasted two home runs In
a losing effort lor the locals.
Stanley was named the tournament's MVP for his efforts.

Four Racine residents were
Injured In a two-car crash
Saturday at 11: 20 a .m. In Sutton
Township o_n S.R. 124 at mile post
29, according to theGallla-Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Injured was one driver, Roger
L. Grace, 24, and his passengers
Scott M. Grace, 12, Ryan L.
Grace, 9, and Todd L. Grace, 14.
All were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Meigs
CountyEMS.
.

PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) ~'This Is a crazy Idea; It's
Voyager 2.photos show Neptune's probably wrong," said geologist
strange moon Triton appears to Laurence Soderblom ot the U.S.
be dotted with bizarre Ice volca- GeOlogical Survey. "But It's the
noes that periodically explode In best we have at the current
crystalline showers of frozen time. "
nitrogen, shooting Icy plumes 20
Voyager 2, now cruising out of
miles above the frosty surface.
the solar system on an endless
Tl)e surprising theory, an- space odyssey, cruised past
nounced Sunday at the Jet Triton Friday at an altitude of
Propia~lon Laboratory, shows
24,000 miles, five hours after
Triton may not be a dead world · passing a scan_t 3,000 miles above
after all and may Instead be the clo11dtops of Neptune to close
undergoing active volcanll;m to out Its once-In-a-lifetime tour of
this day In the cold reaches of the · the outer solar system.
outer solar system.
Researchers Sunday released
a spectacular photograph showIng Neptune's gossamer rings
stretching all ihe way around the
planet and a tape recording of .the
By United Press International
machine-gun-like bursts created
South Central Ohio
by Voyager 2's passage through a
Tonight and Tuesday, partly ''halo'' of microscopic dust part!·
cloudy with scattered showers cles surrounding the eighth
and thunderstorms. Low near 10 planet from the sun .
a11d high near 90. Winds south 10
Other data showed Neptune's
to 15 mph tonight. Chance of rain
40 J)ercenl tonight and 50 percent magnetic field Is tipped a whop·
ping 50 degrees from the planet's
Tuesday.
rotation
axis, raising the posslbll·
·· Ohio's Extead_ed Forecast
lty
of
filckerlng
auroral displays
Wedaesday throu1h Friday
equatornot its
over
the
globe's
A chance of showers each day.
poles.
Highs will be In the mid· 70s to
· As for Triton, Soderblom said
mid-80s. Lows mainly In the 60s.
three types of "cryo-volcanlsm"

'

Sports briefs ........

THE OHIO
· HUMANITIES
COUNCIL
•is holding a ·

Weather

NAMEDMVPStlUtle' of lhe Middleport AU-Stars was named the
MVP for excellent play Ia the
Wellston Tournament.

The first full day of school In
iheEasternLocaiSchooiDistrlct
will be held Tuesday, Dr. Dan
Apllng, superintendent an·
nounced )oday.
.
Lunches will be served with
prices to be $1 .10 for elementary
studen~. $1.20.. tor high scbodl
students, and 50 cents for
breakfasts.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4574

..._ ......

. ·.:

~.

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*-DifO - --~~
-·-

CITIZENS' FORUM
on the Humanities to gather public
response to Coundl Plans and
Goals for 1989-1992.

•"
:· ,
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"

JOHN.LJtk

CANDY
[PG)

FIIJD'IT 7:JO,!I:l0

SAlUAIMo¥ I SIJNOU
1: 1o.J : 10.1:10.1: to

Eleven calls for assistance
were answered over the weekend
by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
.Six of the calls were on Sat11rday
and five on Sunday, ·
. At 11:29a.m. Sat!lrday, Racine
EMS and the fire department
were called to an auto accident
on Rou~ 124. Art Cpmpson was
treated at the scene. Ryan 11nd
Scott Grace were taken from the

,.
,.

•t&lt;,.

..
,....
.•1'".. '

'

, ...

.

·~.

Cincinnati I, Pittsburgh 0
Houston 6, Sl. Louis 3
Chicago 3, Atlanta 2, 10 Inn.
Montreal 6, San Francisco 3
Los Angeles 8, Phlladeiphla I
San Diego 13, New York 7
Monday's games
Houston (Clancy 6-11) at
Chicago (1\laddux 14-10), 2:20
p.m.
Atlanta (P. Smith 3-13) lit
Plttobu11:K (Walk 11-lll, 7:35
p.m.
Cincinnati (Scudder 3-$) !II
St. LOuis (Horton &amp;-1), 8!'.!5
p.m.
Montreal (Gro1810-4ll at San
Dlep (Ben.. l-2l,li:05p.m.
Philadelphia . (Howell 111-8)
at San Frandsco (Reuochel
15-S) , 10:01 p.m.

CONYERS, Ga. - Steven
Morgan Clay , grandson of J.M.
and Mildred Gaul of Chester, was
honored as a member of the
Alpha retta All-Star Major
League (Little League, ages
11-12) baseball team that placed
second in the state to three-year,
perennial champion Rockdale In
the Georgia State Tournament at
Conyers, Ga.
The Gauls made the trip to
Conyers to see their grandson
participate in the tournament.
Clay is the son of Larry and
Patricia Gaul Clay of Alpharetta .
The Alpharetta All-Star team
pounded its way through subdistrict and district play, where
It emerged champions both times
before nearly .pulling off a win In
· the state. Alpharetta, with Clay
as a kingpin to the club, won the
district in extra innings before ·
finishing with a 12·2 mark at ·the

eight-team state finale.
There were 885 boys participating in the tournament.
Clay will be a seventh grader
this school year at Alpharetta Jr.
High School, where he excels Jn
soccer, basebalL footbali and
swimming.
Clay hit a grand slam In their
fourth night of state play, boost·
lng the Eagles towards the finals.
In one game the Eagles
pounded out 14 home runs en
route to the district crown.
It was the third straight year
for the Alpharetta team to
participate In the Dixie Youth
State Tournament.
Tom Haire, 13-year veteran
manager, said, "These boys are
tremendous athletes and have a
good chance to play high school
basebalL All the boys had a good
attitude throughout the
playoffs ." ,

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and convenience to your home, and the electric
HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT
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·
For more great remodeling tips, call us today
at 992.-3786.

Rocine
...
(From

RACINE, page I)

With the increase In fees to dump
at landfills outside the coun~y,
the village will have to Increase
pickup fees to custoll\ers to keep
from loosing money. Council w)ll
continue to monitor receipts and ·
expenditures on the service.
Present for the meeting were
Councilmen Bob Beegle, Henry
Bentz, Carroll Teaford and Rl·
chard Wamsley; Mayor Cleland,
Clerk Beegle; Fire Chief Robert .
Johnson and Street Commis·
stoner Glenn Rizer. Councilman
Scott Wolfe arrived shortly before adjournment.
Due to the Labor .Day holiday,
the next meeting of Racine
Vlllag~ c;:ouncll will be Tuesday,
Sept 5, at 7 p.m.

•
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.•.

.' .....
.....·. ..
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..,
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The 50th wedding anniversary
celebration of Otis and Edna
Knopp will be held on Saturday at
the Bethany United Methodist
Chil rc h at Do rcas, near Racine,
from 2-4 p.m.

..

6DMILLION
PRESCRIPTIONS

suriercold volcanic activity
Involving Ices Instead of molten
rock - appear to have been at
work In the past, "resurfacing"
the moon with creeping glaciers
of Icy magma .

LET US PRICE YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As o! 10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Bluat 1 Elils II lloewl
Am Electric Power ..... .. .. .. .. 29'\1
AT&amp;T ,., ... ,............. ............ ~39%
Ashland Oil ................ .. ......37%
Bob Evans ...... .... ...... .. .. .. .. ... 15
Charming Shoppf's ..............16%
City Holding Co .. ................ 14%
Federal Mogul... ............. .. .. 25%
Goodyear T&amp;R ... .......... .... ... 54
Heck's ..... .. ... ... .. ......... .. .... ... .. ~
Key Centurion ............ ........12%
Lands' End .... ..................... 27%
Limited Inc ........... .... .... .....36%
·Multimedia Inc ................. 105~
Rax Restaurants ... .... ........... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. .......... 16~
Shoney's Inc ........ ... ....... .. ... 12%
Wendy's Inti. .... .. .... ., ........... 5%
Worthington lnd ................. 23'\1

VMH report

One thing
worse than
having high
cholesterol
is not even
knowing it

IT'S THEONE
SYSTEM THAT DOES
.

Correction

weekend runs

HEAT
PUMP
SPECIAUST

..•'

There wlll be a s pecial meeting
of the Shade River Lodge In
Ches ter for degree work on
Tuesday at 7p.m . All masons are
welcome.
·

FILL OVER

RITE AID
DISC
COLOR
PRINT RLM

SUAVE

SHAMPOO OR
. CONDITIONER
16 oz.

311 EXPOSURES

79 '

MENliEN
SPEED
-STICK

TYLENOL
ANTI-PEIISPIIIANT
DEaRANT EXTRA-STREIHITH CAI'UTS
2~

oz.

100'S

EVERYDAY SPECIALS
ON COCA-COLA PRODUCTS

••
•

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... .

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with 24 percent favoring lnc iner·
atlon, and four percent more
landfilis.
When asked if the U. S. should
continue with the developme nt of
a permanent manned space
station, 67 percent of those polled
were in s upport of the program
while 33 percent opposed federa l
funding for the project.

-~--~-..-~~mm~~Al~D~~~~~~~~~~mrl~s

SATURDAY ADMISSIONS- .
Alfred Farley, Pomeroy; Janie
Elementary students new to
Shuler, Langsville; Teresa Cre·
the district are to report to the
means, Pomeroy; William
school ne;lrest to their homes . Frecker, Racine; Roberta Dai·
tomorrow, students In grades 7 to . ley,' Middleport; Michael ~ub·
12 are to report to the high school. . ·bard, Syracuse.
Information on workbook a11d
SATURDAY DISCHARGESother fees will be furnished on the
None.
flrSdt day of school.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS · All bus routes remain the sa!Jle
Dennis Musser, Pomeroy; Henry
as last year, Dr. Apllng reports.
Myers, Middleport.
. SUNDAY DISCHARGES Minnie Thompson, Alva Reed,
Wanda Sellers.
•
accident to Veterans Memorial
Bahr
reunion
set
Hospital. At 2:25p.m., LlfeFlight
transported Scott Grace to Child·
The annual Bahr reunion will
ren's Hospital, ,Columbus. ·
be held on Sunday at the VFW
Middleport was called to the
building off Route 7 north of
Overbrook Nursing Center at
Tuppers' Plains. A basket dinner
2! 18 p.m. for Leona ·Schaffl!r,
will begin at noon. All relatives
.and again at 7:20p.m. for Vernon
·
and friends are welcome.
Weese, both taken to Veterans
•'
Memorial' Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 7: 34
p.m. to Route 3:t for Charlotte
-Eakins to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 9:23p.m. to the
Arbaugh Addition at Tuppf'rs
Plains for Jack Lan~e. also lo
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday, Tuppers Plains
was called at 4:-02a.m. to Forked
Run State Park for Elton Ritchie
who was taken to St. Joseph's
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Middleport was called at 1:06
p.m. lo Clteshlre for Eugene
Buckley, and at 1:31 p,m,·to Cole
St. for Donald VanCooney, both
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
Syracuse was called at 2:20
p.m. to Dusky St. for Ruetta
Crow who was taken .to Veterans
· ·
Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 7:45 p.m. was
called to the Overbrook Nursing
Center for Henry Mfers, also
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

;j. .EMS reports ~I

FREE AND OPEN TO AU
4:00-6:30 p.M.
TUES. SEPT. 26, 1989

Dairy lorn Sou thea st•n Olio
C~tural Arts Ctnt•
aoo Dairy .Lane
Athens, Ohio 45701
For more information, conttKI the
Ohio Humanities Coundl
16141 461-7802

Eastern classes begin Tuesday

Special meeting

(From CLEA!t. page tl

government AIDS te~ lln g.
On the matter of the PresiInjuries.
·Roger Grace, driving a 1979 · dent's Clean Air proposal s .. poll
participants expressed their supFord Fairmont, was traveling
.
port
of the proposals by a 73 to 27
west when a 1978 Ford Thunderbird driven by Mark A. Compson, percent margin. In rega rd to
solid waste di sposa l, 68 percent
28, of Racine, went left of center
thought recycling centers was
and had a head -on collision with
the best policy option to deal with
the Fairmont. Compson was
the household was te problem,
driving east at the time. •
Compson was charged with
DWI and cited for driving left of
center.

Scientists·pondering ice volcanoes

'.

'

. Cycling
American Greg LeMond
surged twice hi . the last few
kilometers and then outsprlnted
four challengers to become the
fifth cyclist In history to', win the
Tour de France and the world
road race title In the same year at
the rain-plagued World Cycling
Championships at Cnambery,
France. LeMond, 28, finished the
262.5-kllometer race in six hours,
45 minutes · and 59 seconds.
Dimitri Konychev .of the Soviet
Union finished second, Sean
Kelly of Ireland third and Steven
Rooks of Holland fourth. The top
four finishers were all credited
with the same time. The strenuous course and strong ·rains kept
all but 42 of the field of 190 from
finishing.

Scott Gtace, who was treated
for . head Injuries, : was later
transported to Children' s Hospl·
tal In Columbus by LlfeFiight. A
report on his condition was not
available at press 'tlme.
Ryan Grace was treated apd
released for multiple bruises and
a cut to the left arm. Roger Grace
was treated and released for a
back sprain. Todd Grace was
treated and released tor minor

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Clear...

Four injured in Saturday crash

·.·

results

Boston 7, Detroit! ·
Baltimore 8, New York 5
Toronto 5, Milaukee 4
Chl~ago 9, Cleveland 3
Minnesota 8, Seattle 5
Oakland 6, Kansas City 0
California 5, Texas~

•

Tuesday's games

West .
79 52 .603

Saturday's

...
•

New Yod&lt; (VIola 1-3) at Los
Angeles (Hershlser 14-91, 10: 35
p.m.

games:
E,;pos hanging on
The late-season Wrst Coast
swing can often determine a
team's fate down the stretch.
Right now, It appears the Expos
are hanging on while the Mets
are slipping off:
Montreal Is 2-1 on its current
nlne-game trip In California,
while New Yor)c Is 0·3. The Expos
have already hurdled the tough·
est-obstacle, playing In Candlestick Park. If they can survive the
next two series In San Diego and
Los Angeles, they can concentrate on the Cul)s.
"We've got a great opportunity
now," Andres Galarraga said
Sunday after his 20th homer of
the season led the Expos to a 6-3
victory over the NL West-leading
San Francisco Giants. "We're
only two out (of first place),
we've got great pitchers and
we're starting to hit the ball."
The Giants are a league·
leading 41·22 at home and that's ,
where the Mets will be winding
up their trip.
New York l!inps _ Into Los
Angeles Monday riding a five. game losing · streak, Including
three losses at San Diego.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Melgs-Gallla Area Little
League All-Star basebaU team,
sponsored by Pat Hill Ford of
Middleport, recently completed
a very successful tournament
season.
Competing In the Belpre and
Wellston Invltatlonals slniul·
taneously, the Middleport All·
Stars complied an overall record
o(U-4. Rich Gilkey was the head
coach and_was assisted by Mike
Young, Pat Hill and · Rudy
Stewart.
In lite 16-team Belpre Invitational. the local All-Stars opened
the tournament by ·defeating
Belpre 9-0 behind the two-hit,
16-strlkeout performance by
Chad Cox. Dusty Hill powered a
solo home run to lead the way for
the victory. In the second game
Hlll pitched a no-hitter to.lead the
All-Stars to a 8·0 win over
Marietta.
· The local team lost the third
game to ?ol!lt Pleasant 9-3,
despite a long horne run ofthe hat
of Jered Hill. Middleport defeated Williamstown 6-4 In the
loser's bracket, as Gary Stanley
pitched tour Innings of no-hit ball
to complement a three-run homer off the bat of Adam Krawzcyn. Middleport then advanced
to the Championship by ellmlnatlng Dr. Pizza of Athens 8-6, and

Poma oy-Middleport, Ohio

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Monday.

'
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Se~t_inel

The ·Daily

'&gt;

By The Be11d

•
Classi 18

Monday, August 28, 1989

Page-6

Community
calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY -Meigs County
Churches of-ChristMen'sFellowshlp will meet at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ on Monday
evening at 7: 30 p.m. All men are
welcome.
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Garden Club will hold an open
house for all garden clubs on
"Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Methodist Church. Betty
~an, regional director, will
demonstrate flower arranging
using the three clubs' flower
show and schedule. Eva Robson
and Octa Ward will be the
hostesses.
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS _:_The Meigs
·County Pamona Grange officers
and everyone that Is to help
• present degree work for Ins pee- tlon will meet at the RockSprings
· grange hall on Tuesqay at 7: 30
p.m.

Dye family reunion held
Fifty-four descendants of
James W. and Melissa Dye met
recently for a family reunion
FamUy and friends gathen!\1 at
the ''Hills 0' Home'' residence of
Lav!nna Brannon tor the event.
The states of Florida, Ohio,
West VIrginia, and Indiana were
represented.
A large circle formed on the
lawn for table grace by Nina
Sanders, an!l food innstructlon
by co-hostess Eileen Kirkbride.
Teenagers an!l adults enjoyed
volleyball and the younger children had smaller playballs, bal. loons, and bubble gum.
Maxine Miller presided over
· the gift presentation. Mrs. Miller
was the oldest; Eline Preston, a
guest, the oldest lady; Thurman
Dye, oldest man; Amy Dye
Morehouse, traveled the farthest; Trlstle Simmons, youngest;
Chris Castlnlas, to married soon;
and Debbie Holbrook, door prize.
Communications of updates of
the family history were sent by
Paul Morehouse, Jr., and a phone
call from Marie Smith, Spencer,
highlighted the day which was
breezy and cool.
.
Next year's reunion will be the

-second Sunday In August.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Thurman Dye, Mr. and Mrs.
Winston Collins and son, Winston, Mrs. Bessie Bennett, Mr.
and Mrs. Thorn Dye, Tracie and
Shawn, VIcki Phillips and Jim
Schubert, all from Akron.. ·
Ella Harris, Sue and Jim
Dougherty, Stacy aqd Steve, all
from Moundsville, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Essex and
Kelly, Maxine Miner, Athens;
Rick Hoback, Marlon; and Amy
Morehouse, Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Applegarth
and twin sons. Sean and Mark,
Indiana; Zena Folan, Eline Preston, and Chris Caston las, all from
Dayton.
Mr. ani! Mrs. Robert Hill,
Mansfield; Mr : and Mrs. WilHam
Kirkbride, and Todd and Lynn,
all from Lexington.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael HolbrQOk and Ben, Logan; Rev. and
Mrs. Robert Sanders., Deedrah
Simmons Tboinas, Tyler, and
Trista, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Murphy, Kodl and :Dusty, Mr.
and Mr-s. James Brannon and
Jamie. and Richard Coleman, all
local.

Wyoming Wolf Band will per- also be games and contests
Flower show &amp;o be beld .
form.
Call 742-2421 or 742-2580 throughout the day.
The Rutland Garden·· Club,
A BB g\ln shoot contest will.
for
Information
on contests and
Rutland Friendly Garden Club,
·Rutland Friendly Gardeners, craft table reservations.·
take place from 1-4 p.m. and at 4
p.m. there will be a greased pig
and the Friends and Flowers
contest with three classes. RegisGarden Club will pre,ent a Youth outreach
flower show on Sept. 9 and 10 at , The Rejoicing Life Church w!il tration for the greased pig
the Rutland Civic Center. The be sponsoring a special outreach contest Is at 3 p.m. Anyone under
theme for the show .Is "The ·for youth at the Pomeroy par king the age of 16 must have written
permission to take part in the pig
Change of Seasons Down a Jot on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Special guests are "The New contest.
Country Lane."
Lite Drama Team'' of Cleveland,
Tenn. who will be doing a variety Goodnight reunion
Guthrie Story reunion
The Goodnight reunion w!il be
The annual Guthrie-Story of skits dealing with many topics
and
Issues
relating
to
the
youth.
reunion will be held on Saturday
held at the Zion Lutheran Church
at the Athens County Fair- The public Is invited , and any . on Saturday beginning at noon. It
grounds In the 4H •bulld!Qg. f!. churches'who wish.to participate will be a potluck dinner and all
basket dinner will be served at can cali Pastor Mike Panglo at family and friends are welcome.
noon. All relatives ·and friends 992'- 6249.
The New Life Drama Team
are Invited.
will also be at the Sunday 10 a.ll).
Quote of the
service at the church which Is
Seeklnc 'reclpes for cookbook
When Pomeroy celebrates it's located at 333 N. Second St. in
By United Press International
150th birthday the sesquecenten- Middleport.
Laurence Soderblom, · a U.S.
nial committee w!il have availaGeological Survey geologist disble for sale a cookbook made up Chicken bar-b-que
cussing scientists' conclusion
The Olive Township Volunteer
of "old time" recipes of mothers,
based on data from theVoyager2
grandmothers, great grand' Fire Department will be having a
probe that Neptune's moon
mothers, etc. If anyone has a chicken bar-b-que dinner on Triton is dotted with active
recipe they would like to contrib- Satwday from noori to 6:30p.m. . volcanoes that may erupt in
ute to the cookbook, entitled at the Reedsv!l!e Fire House-. The 20:mlle-high plumes of ice and
"Treasured Recipes from the cost Is $4.50 per person. ,, •. ·
gas:
Entertainment will be proPast" send it or drop It by the
"This is a crazy Idea; it's
Dally Sentinel office-In care of vided by the Country Blend Band probably wrong. But it's the best
JuUe E. D!ilon. Any church from 7-10 p.m . .and there will . we have at the current time.·~
women's organizations are also
encouraged to coUect recipes for
the book and turn them in to the
"
Sentinel office. The deadline for
Eileen Martin, Mike, Chris, and · submitting recipes Is Sept. 15.
Vinson Martin, Chester; Tom,
Suzanne, and Danlelle Kibble,
PLEASANT VAllEY HOSPitAL
Middleport block party
Brian Beeler, Long Boitom;
Middleport's annual block
Osby, Mary, and Adam Martin,
party
will be held on Sept. 16.
Missy Foster. Syracuse; Jeff,
Interested
parties should reserve
Luelle, Ryan, and Nathan Marbooths
by
calUng
Debbie or Mike
tin. Renilda and Sarah Marshall, Gerlach at 992-6898,
Lennie
Columbus; E!ruce, Madolyn, and ·
Eliason
at
.992-6485,
or
Brian
Stephanie Sand Ifer, LinglesJohnson
at
992-3481.
Booths
are
town, Pa.; Edna Martin See,
reserved
on
a
first
come
first
1304) 675-1244
Rick Martin, Middleport; Mr.
served
basis.
so
call
soon
to
and Mrs . Robert Persons, Ga!U) .t
reserve a booth.
,. ..
polls; Ben Reap; Marietta; Barbara and Valerie Harris, Nevada
Rutland block party
Smolko, Greensburg, Pa.; DoThe Rutland Fire Department
nald Dodson, Langsville; Leona
and
ladles auxiliary w!l! be
Marlin. Jim and Karen Gibbs,
having
a block party on SaturLes, Sheryl, and· Stacey Gibbs,
day.
There
will be craft shows,
Pomeroy.
entertainment, and food. At2: 30
p.m, the Rainbow Cloggers will
perform throughout the afternoon. At 3 p.m. the Belles and
Beaus square dancers w!l! pereasy. The onlY hard and fast nile form, and from 6-10 p.m. the·
among the soft and ~low Is that a
contestant's Inseam measurement be at least 4· % Inches
smaller than his wal~t.
Racers must stop midway
through the course. A truck
bearing kegs of beer and hot dogs
ALBANY, Ohio - The follow- the twinkles are. reserved for ing employees from Meigs
the finish - replenishes the County are being recognized for
contestants before they continue their years of service at Southern
their arduous journey.
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Twenty-seven people took part Division this month:
in this year's race, most of them
15YEABS
easily meeting· the criteria for
Robert S. Davis, belt reP,alrparticipation.
• .
man at the Raccoon No. 3 mine.
"I've been training all year- Davis resides In Raclrie with his
round," said Lloyd Roberts of wife, Jonetta.
Milwaukee. "I drunk lots of beer,
David A. Hensler, machinist at
but I don't eat a lot of twinkles. I the Meigs No. 1 mine. Hensler
take the austerity approach.' •
resides In Racine with his wife,
Rebecca. daughter, Rachael,
and son, Nathan.
Clair W. Might, mobile equipment opera tor at the Raccoon
interviewer, because, "I "know No. 3 mine. Might resides In
from experience that biogra- Middleport and has three children, Amy, Randy, and Sandy
phies have a limited audience."
Garey.
Paul A, Musser, rockduster at
It was not unusual for Stone to
the
Meigs No. 2 mine. Musser
spend as long as seven years
resides
In Rutland with his wife,
researching his topics to reDeborah;
son, Kevin, and daughcreate the atmospllere and surter,
Amanda.
roundings of his subjects, who
Charles W. Warth, Jr., prep , - - - - - - : - - - - - -7--:-- - - - - - - - - - :
also Included President Andrew
plant
utliityman at the Raccoon
Jackson's wife, Rachel, In "The
No.
3
mine. Warth resides In
· President's Lady," Sigmund
•
Pomeroy
with his wife, Jennifer,
Freud in "The Passions of the
daughter,
Amy,
and
sons,
David
•
Mind," Jack London In "Sailor
and
Darr!n.
'
on Horseback," Eugene V. Debs
Hershel
W.
White,
continuous
In "Adversary in the House," and
former Chief Justice Earl miner helper at the Meigs No. 2
inlne. White resides In Racine
Warren.
with
his wife, Patricia, daughte~.
To put realism and life In to his
Jennifer,
and son, Timothy.
P!ssarro novel, Stone and his
David
R.
Wright, mechanic at
wife, Jean, who edited ali his
the
Meigs
No.
1 mine. Wright
manuscripts, travel~ the same
resides
In
Albany
with his wife,
French roads as tlle artist did In
Geneva,
and
daughter,
!&lt;ass!e.
the late 1800s, visiting places he
lOYEABS
lived, farmlands and rivers he
Robert E. Davis, section super· painted, and studios where he
visor
at the Meigs No. 1 mine.
worked.
Davis resides In Dexter with his
"I don't believe In . Inspirawife, Hazel, and daughters,
tion," he once said.
Louise and Mitzi.

· POMEROY - The 16th annual
Mar dn family reunion of the
descendents of John Edward and
Mary Frances Blankenship Mar-.
tin was held recently at the home
of Sheryl and Les Gibbs,
Pomeroy.
Coffee and donuts were served
· during the morning and a basket
: dinner was . enjoyed In the
·afternoon.
A business meeting was held
with Suzanne · Kibble being
· elected president and Tom Kibble secretary and treasurer for
1990. It was decided to change the
reunion back to its original date
..of Labor Day weekend.
.
· The 62nd birthdays of Eddie
·; Martin and Edna See were noted.

Prizes were awarded to Albert
Martin, oldest and for having the
most children present; Madolyn
and Bruce Sand!f!er for traveling
the farthest; the youngest was
Vinson Martin; the newest married couple was Bobby and
Debbie Martin; and -Tom Kibble
won the door prize.
After the meeting an auction
was held with Mike Martin as
auctioneer, assisted by Osby
Martin. Sarah Marshall, Ste·
phan!e Sandifer, and Valerie
Harris delivered the Items to the
buyers.
The remainder of the day was
spent vis!ttng . and playing
games.
·
Attending were Albert and

'

JOH.N A. WADE, M.D. Inc:

.

Ell, NOSE &amp; TIIOAT
GENEUL ALLERGIST
"WE HAfE IIEARIIII AIDS"

:Fit, lean invade short, fat guys' race.·
·
.
CROOKED RIVER RANCH,.
Ore. !UPI) - The worst fears of
·'The Short Fat . Guys Road
Race" organizers were realized
Saturday . The race was
infiltrated.
By thin people.
By people who exercise.
Senior race steward Bob Ward
admits the race, held as an
annual event in central Oregon,
was dl!ter~nt this year.
"I suspect the evil influx of
aerobics," Ward said. "At least
seven or eight people actually
ran the course."
That was a first. No one
actually ran the previous two
ra ces.
The race is celebrated each

year as a tribute to the "glorious
American heritage" of obesity,
Ward said.

"This Is. a backlash against the
dangerous dieting fad undermln·
ing the nation," Ward said. "Is
Santa Claus thin?"
The refreshments after the
event were used as bail to lure
rotund runners across the finish
line.
The race was held on a 1-mile
course, all downhill . .Cheating is
encouraged, and horses, fire
engines, golf carts and other
four -wheel vehicles are used to
ferry the racers to the bottom of
the hill and coUect edible
rewards.
Requirements for the race are

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUN !;lAY

POLICIES
•Ads outaide Meie-. Galli•

run 3 d.,, at no ch•ge.
•Priw of .c1 for aH c10iUI l«t•• is double price of ad cost .
•7 POiM Mfte type only ueed.
•Sentinel is not retponaitHa for errortlftar first d~ . (Chedc
for errors first d811 td runa in paperl . Call befortl 2 :00p.m .

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Meigs employees'
service honored

2

In Memoriltm

In Loving Memory

of

Scott Alan Burke
Aspecial friend
and classmate.
Sadly missed but .
always

remembered.
I miss you!
Love, Tracy

in Momoriltm

In Iovin&amp; memory of
my hu.sband. Chief J. .J.
Cremtlns. who passed
away Aug. 28, 1985.
4 years ago I lost you
My world stood . still.
· You meant everythin&amp; to
me
And you always will.
I learned to go on
without you
But life will never be the
same
lly world lost its special
mean ina
the day you went
away.
I miss you so very much.
Your Iovine wile,
Teresa &amp; children

them "Lust for Life" about
painter Vincent Van Gogh,
"Clarence Darrow for the Defense." and "Love is Eternal,"
about Abraham and Mary Todd
Lincoln. "The Agony and the
Ecstasy, " the basis for a 1965
film. was one of several books he
wrote dealing with
Michelangelo.
Stone's last book, "Depths of
Glory," his story of French
Impressionist Camille P!ssarro,
was published in 1985.
The author once said he bel Jeved " the best of all plots lie In
human character." He wrote .
biographical novels. he told one
'

Flame Fellowship meets
Severa! members and friends
of the' Letart Flame Fe!lowsh lp
met at the home of Gerrl Tate In
New Haven, W.Va. for the

Wolf Pen notes
WOLF PEN - Mrs. Richard
Wynn, Westin and Matthew,
recently spent a few days with
h~r parents Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and her sister Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Barr and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Suinmerfie!d and Crystal were weekend
vjsitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Haggy, Stephanie and Brad, and
'Mr. and Mrs. Donald Russell.
Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew, were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Reeves
were weekday · visitors ·or Mrs.
Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp
attended the Peterson family
reunion recently held at the
Rutland Park. A picnic dinner
was enjoyed.

•

August meeting.
The evening began with a swim
and covered dish dinner. Paula
Sayre, Portland, sang special
songs during the dinner. Ginny
Cadle p,Jayed the guitar and led
the women In praise and worship,
Three new members, 'Paula
Sayre, Marie Show, and Doris
Snowden, were given their pins
and membership cards.
Patty Wade, wife of Pastor
John Wade of the New Life
Church of Ripley, r~ad from the
book of Deuteronomy.
At .the close of the meeting,
members were Invited to the
home of Loretta Collier the next
evening for an ali night prayer
meeting.
The dusk to dawn meeting
began at 7: 30 p.m. with 19
attending at different times
through the night and morning.
Catherine Newberry, vice
president, coordinated the even·
!ng's events. Patty Wade also
spoke at this meeting.
Another dusk to dawn -meeting
will be planned.

Lettn to fltnl With The .
•

Income Tax Course
llaneftt from the -lngly --changing tax lawai

• Learn how to prepare your

Aug. 28, 198.8.
When evening shades
are fallin&amp;
·
And we sit in quiet alone
To our hearts there
come a longing
If he pnly could come
home.
Friends may think we
have forgotten hilll, .
When at times they see
us smile
But little do they know
the helrtK~e
Our smiles hide all the
while . ·
'
Sadly missed by his
parents. sister and
brother,
Did, lou &amp; Rlndlll

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" .... sMd=
1111 frtt inforlllllion
lllout ,_ Ill PIIP•IIion course.-----------U.~:

____________________________________

AOOIESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
CITY: ---------SlATE: ---'----&lt;IP: ~..:...__..:.;_

PHilliE:

------ ---man
1

AI potHCIJ:XJfJng Dciry QUeen• a-oz~.- StorM, Dolry Queen• Stores ore P'oud lfXlnSors

of1he Chlldreri's Miracle NetwOO Telethon. whiCh benettllocol hO~Iols tor cl'llldre!'1 .

•

llJ All U.S. Ptl On .AM DQ. c;,Jp

NORTH SECOND AVE.,· M~DDLEPORT, OH•. .'
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15

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1.4.00

.20

Public Notice

otico

NOTICE TO TRUCK
DEALER.S:
· In accordance with . ••c1ion 307.86 of tho Ohio Roviaed Code. aootod bida will
be rocelvod by tho Boord

1 Cerci of Thenkl
The family of
DAVID REESE
would like to
express their
gratitude to all
their friends who
helped ease their
· loss.
He lives with us
in memory,
And will
forev~rmore.

Meigs County Commillion-

ert. Court Houle, Pom•ov.
Ohio 45769. until 12 noon.
Sept. 13. The bids wilt then
beopened"1 P.M.onSopt.
13. t9B9 and read otoud for
tho purchoo• of:
TWO NEW 1990 SINGLE
AXLE DUMP TRUCKS
ONE NEW 1990 'h TON
MOOEL
PICKUP TRUCK
WITH 4 WHEEL DRIVE
Bid apaCificotiona mll'f be
picked up e1 tho Meigs
County Engineer' a Office or
tho Meigs County Commio-

sionen Office.
Tho Meigs County Commiuionera may accept the
loweot.bid, or oelect the beat
bid for the intended pura
pose, and r•erve the right
to accept or reiect any or all

bict. and/ or any part ther•
of.
•Mary Hobatotter, Clerk
Boord of Meiga County
Commlesion•i
(Sl 28; 191 6 2tc

3 Announcements

'

NEW LISTING ,- POMEROY - AI.JJrge older home with 7
rooms, 3 bedrooms, lamily room, dining room, and garage in
basement. Home has a beautilul view o( the River, central
air. Iron! sitting porch, and a woodburner. Just $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING - POMEROY- Abusiness lor sale wrth all
fixtures. Achance to own your own bus1ness. Just take over
where present owner leaves off. Call lor more details.
NEW LISTING- PORTlAND - SHARON ROAD - MINI
FARM IN THE COUNTRY..:. in Southern District. 14+ Acres,
l'h story house w~h 4bedrooms, 2 k~chens, 2 baths, 21iving
rooms. carpet, natura! gas heat, garden and well water.
$39,500.00.
ANTIQUITY- One story home with 3 bedrooms, and coal
lurnace. Would make a great summer place, has 3 lot~ in·
eluding river' frontage. $11,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Beautiful Colonial home! level lot, 2 car
garage. has ornate trim attic studio w/skyight. Well in·
sulated. REDUCED $49,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- GOOD STREET- This nice I'h story home
leatures 3"" bedrooms, modern k~chen w~h dining bar. all
storms &amp; many other features. Includes trailer lot. Call lor appointment. REDUCED $25,200.00.

9l:

TRI•CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

·'.'Ill II[)

It ) 1 (

,',

}1/

Announcements
3 Announcemenis
-

HAVE A GOOD
IN am DD'nllll:ln' co~.
MID VAal:8.
StOp By and See Us!_ Flnancln• Available
D
MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME
IILOW MOUDAY IIIII, I&amp;IIAUGA, OliO
(6141 446-4712
. 7-18-'8!-l mo. p4.

Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Se~~itel

CJ 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·

1',100-535-2199

WANTED

..... Location:
161 North S.Cand
Mlddloport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

DEAD OR AUYE
•Washers •D ryers
•Range •F reezers
•R efrigarators
"Must Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
1'12-5335-'115-3561

1\i:E;.::O:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;
1'1
DRViCLEANING
SERVICE
OFFERED AT

Fabric Shop

We SetVice Atl Makes
5-4-89-1

•New • U•ed Tires
•Custom Pipe Bonding
•Oil Changoo
•G,...eJobl
oGenerat Chuolo

Maintenance
•Computerized Balancer

"W•4•1ng sow•

St. Rt. 124

742-2421

992·3897 .

Middleport, Oh.
(Next to

Hill Top G

. ~AGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
PARn &amp; SERVICE
•Lawn Mowers
•Riders
•Chain Saws
•Weed eaters
3 mHes off of Rt. 7
at Meigs Memory
Gardens
8-17-1 mo.

Business Services
Howard l. WriteHI

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

$18 Ptr Day &amp;up
949-2526

FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL
•UGHT HAULING

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-cycto

•FIREWOOD

PH. 992-3922

· 6-21· Utfrl ·

BILL SLACK '

992-226t
EVENINGS
4 / 8/ 89/ tfn

50 DIFFERENT WOOD
• COAL STOVES.
INSERTS. FURNACES

GEAIY'S
BODY SHOP

APPAUCHIAN
WOOD STOWS

Midtlltport, Oh.

lrr C•p..tw, OL Off 1U

691-6121

Roger Hysell

. Rt. 124,
Garage
p_,oy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR
Alt1 Tr•••l~tlo•
PH. 992:5612

or 992·7l21

WITH lOOMS AND
APAUMENTS FOR
RENT (By- Day or
WHk)

Gutters ,
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

IAicated •• Yalty luntller
ln"llitldlepert, Oh.

Stock -,..no lot
Homelite. Weede•ter.
. Tocumooh. Brigga •
Stratton. .

NOW OPEN

Kitchen table and 4 chalra to
giva away. 614-e85-4405.

CHESTEI. OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

550 Pogo St.

OPEN
7 :30 A :M .·6 :00 P.M.
8·23·' 88 1 mo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION

MM1ic - Certaintood®
Vinyl Siding
Seamlen Gutter
Rtpktmnont Windows
llawn lrrsulatlon
Storm Doors &amp;

FRE'E~~~:iATES
Call 992·2772

mo.

Auto &amp; TIUCI

IIPAII

CUST!JM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A I Rictsoncibie Prices"

6-26 -'88-lfn

SWEEPER REPAIR '
All MAKES AND
' MODELS

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE
222 East Main

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

POMEROY, OH.
992-6872
6-5-'89-lfn

FOUND · 1976 ·svmms

V•ll•y

FOUND

Meadowbrook

Found:

County

area

Garage

.at

Fairgrounds, small tan .!lnd
whllo ltmolt dog. 614-247-2475.
lrioh Sttlor Dog. Malo. 614-3888711.

We con r~r and rt·
cere rad~aters and
hlattr ceres. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiaters. We also
r~pair Gas Tanks •

PAT HIU'FORD
992·2196

Middleport,

Loll: Langsville maL 1700 lb.
MtrlfQI'd I&gt;YII. Robert ••tty, etot742-2878.
.
Lost: yellow tematt Collie.
Black and gray mingled mala.
Stub tall. Juu 'Cruk trN. 61.4742-2805.

Outside
K-Mari,
G1tllpolla,
blllforil containing 1200., plea
tur•,
ldenllflelllon Clrda.
Reward. Lillian Napper, 61 4-11~2·
~38.

21ft 'Miles Out New
lima Rd.
in Rutland, Oh.

S-'SAN COLEMAN
742·2na

Call for Fill Speelale
1st visit FREE
-Possibly more.
1-24-'19-1

Yard Sale

7

SUN'S UP
TANNING

mo.

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE
Now thru Sept. 9, 1'189
10% OFF All PERMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

I(AY'S
BEAUTY SHOP
169

look-alike dog. Haa a rtd collar
on. Rtward. 614·245·5059.

N.'2nd
Mildlapart
9'12·2725

D&amp;R

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Y1rd Saloa Must Bo P1id In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2;00 p .m.
thil day before the ld Ia to run.
Sund•r edition .. 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. Monday odlllon - 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

W.
Ya.
State Champion
Auctioneer. Rick Pears~_, llcenNd I" Ohio •nd Wast VIrginia.
Booking Auetlona, 304'-na..
5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Complete households of turnhura &amp; antiques. Also wood &amp;
c011 heaters. Swain's Furniture
&amp; Auctlot\, Third &amp; Olivo, 114446-3159.
Fumltura and 1ppllancas by tha
place or entire household. Fair

pricoa being paid. Call 614-446-

3158.

.

•

Junk Cars with motors 150 &amp;
dawn. w/o motors, $25 &amp; down.
Richord George, 614-388·9095.
cara with or without
motora. Coil larry Llvoty 114388·9303.
Junk

...........

.

Pre 1940 quUta. Any condition.
Clah Pold. CIU 614-1192-5657 or

TACKLE BOX

614-592·2461.

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS

Remodeling lnterkM', exterior
painting, rOofing, concrate
wo~ electrical 1. plumbing.
Exp. Haa reflrancea. Pleaae cs11
after 5p.m. 614-256-1611.

LIVE BAIT
ETC.
2112 Mi. Balow
RaciM Locks &amp;

Dam At

An~iauitv

'

TOP CASM paid lor 11113 model
and newer uud cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 11111 Eaatem
~ve., Galllpolla. Call 114--448-

2282.

UMd tumlture and houaehold
appliances. PhoM 114-742·

2048.

ALLEN'S
HAULING

11600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED .
992-527

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

NEWlAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Djrt

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

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

•VINYL BIDING
•ALUMINUM SI~G
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO".
....... lult
"frM Ettim..•"

Pl. 9"·2101
or let. M9·2160
NO SUNDAY

•o•s

.•ZEf011UCTOIS
.elCHO PIODUC1S
etiOWAII IOfAVATOIS ·

•n=·au IIOWIIS

247·3522

MOIIIS
IQUIPMINT

.741-1455
S.lorro St.
IIIIIIIIII.Oh:
11311/1111

Wont to Buy; Usod .Mobllo
Homos. 814-44e;Q175.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

Now Taking

11

Registrations

1350/Day procenlng phone or- ,

992-staa

darsl Peopla c1U you, No experience necessary. Call (retuna
dabla)1·315-733-6062 extension

P-2732A.

2 br., furnished.- $250/mo.
$250/depoiH. 2 parson mu:. oc-

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INTERIOR·EIITERIOR
FRi:E ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
painting. Let ... do
it for y•u.
VERY .BASONAILI
HAVE REFE.NCES

614-915-4110

8/4/89-tfn

EQ. . .NT

Uaed furnltura by tha placa ar
entire household 1110 selling.
114-742-2455.
'

IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

7-IJ-'89-tfn

Cun!N08a

St. It, 311
letwt

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949-2860

lfNI'IRSJA1E IAW.S
LAWN IOWEI IEPAIR

WELDING ·

992-6756

Lost &amp; Found

6

Lost: Brown. white ftmale, Banjl

8-l-lmo.

7-12-' 89-1110.

I&amp;W
GAUGE

(~ll

Whht tong haired female half
grown killen, 304-675·7545.

liully gray killen, 304-675-3665.

SER~ICE

SYRACUSE, OHIO

NIASE Certified Machanic

3()4.

Keys · found on Blue Tartan
porlllng lot. Bird on ring. 6141192-9941.

SERVICE

Repairs

Long hair kiHens 6 wka old,
675-5043.

Mlgh Schoirl claM ring, 304-675- .
4261 .

985-4422

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
Mo•• Foreign ilnd
Dom•tic Vahides
Ai C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

to giveaway. 614-446-7100.
6ft. high stockade fence, 148ft.
long. 614·992-3359 .

II houH broke. 814-446-2637.

'

CAMPGROUNDS

Giveaway

3 seven week old mala kHtens

Giveaway, to nlc• home. Sritall
black .hair ten\ala dog, 1 yr. old.
Exc. wHh children, ttaa shota I.

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

JONES TIRE
CENTER

992·2284
POMEROY, OHIO
Speellllatt"

wish to adopt ona or two lnlarit•
and glvolhem a happy lulure by
legal adopllon, eall collect 1·
etl-7411-3&amp;98.

Gentle gray stripe adult malt
cat. Also assorted 5 montha kit·
tens. 614-446-0317.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

To• FrH

aecurt

4464.

:X: ~614} 446·7619 0( (614} 992-2104
z 417_ Sec:ond Avenue. Box 1213
- Galhpohs. Ohto 45631

National Pest'
Control Assn.

Financially

Blue Damson plume, 304'"675-

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

lember

PLUMNG &amp;

Adoption :

couple, on• from West VIrginia,

!:::==:.:===========:§~~~4
Television listening Devices

SINCE 1976
ROACHE$ • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

·!JI I hi I M&lt;Y
·! 0\ lJ'l\1( ',1!

enginea

'NEllY E. CLEWID ....................................... 992-Slll
JEAII TRUSSELL....... :......................... ;..........
DOt11£ TUlliER .............·................ :.............. 99 ·SitZ
JO IIILL .. --·-................................................11
OFfiCiooooouo•••
. . ••••••"'"'' "''' "' ' ''"''''''''" ' '''"'''''"l•225l .·'

5113/Hifn

LW.STEW
TRUCKING

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR

6DB
E.Mai,n..lllil

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

Call Anytime
992-2371

B-1-1 mo.

• 7-13-'89-1 mo. pd

SOUTHER II DISTRICT- A4 bedroom ranch home w~h full
basement on IJIIPDX. 'h acre lot. One car aaraae. also a 2
bedroom rental home on same lot. TWO FOR THE PRICE OF
ONE!' $29,000.00.

71-10-0IHM

ov., 15 Words

Rate

949-2168

RUTlAND - Nice ranch wdh alarae lot that is level. Rear
deck. ·one car garage. vinyl sidina, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths,
huge pretty IV!chen. Two heat sources. $37,900.00:

tax return with confldencal
• Help othare prwpare their tax r..umt.
• CI••• 1Mg111 laptembar I. 1989 .. 118 E..t Main Btrwt,.
Pom.-uy, Ohio 41711, Ph. at..:a92·8874.

Words

'

POMEROY- Older 2 Story homt~ gorgeous woodwork, lire·piace, nice k~chen cabinets. 3 bedrooms, equipped k~chen,
central air. garage and storage. $39,900.00.

-1)

Days
1
3

who departed this
life one year 110

SMITH RIOGE - Approx. 35 acres ol vacant grOund, wlh a ·
5 to 10 acre hayfield and the rest in woods. Approx.ISOO ft.
ol road frontage. $16,900.00.,

.,.....,21·

H&amp;R BLOCit

Vlrd S81•

brother,
Scott Alan Burke

Author Irving Stone dead at.86
LOS ANGELES I UP!) - Author Irving Stone was remembered for bringing history to life
through his best-selling biographical novels which explored
- such diverse figures as ·Vincent
·van Gogh, Mary Todd Llncolit
and Michelangelo.
Stone died late Saturday at
Cedars-Sinal Medical Center at
the age of 86. He had been
admitted to the hospital July 24
complaining of difficulty swallowing and died of heart !allure.
hospital spokeswoman Paula
Correia said Sunday.
The author's 25 books · sold 30
million copies worldwide, among

Happy Adl

A claiSrfi_. edw.nr.ment piK. in The Deily Sentin .. , ...
cesn - clalified dlspl.,, Butin•• C•rd and leg Ill ncnicesl
will alto..,..,. in the Pt . Pt..,nt Register and the Galli·
· po~ Daily Tribune, twaching owr 18,000 hom•.

In loving memory of
our beloved son and

In memory bf SCOTT ALAN BURKE
who left us 1 year
ago, Aug. 28, 1988.
When evening sun is settin&amp;
.
And wure silt in&amp; quielly
1lone
in ourlleartscomealontinc
If Scott could pnly come
home.
Friends miY think we
, 111ft foriOtttn you,
Scott
.
Wht11 at times thty see us
smile,
But. oh. how little they
know the heartache
Thll our smiles 1re hiding
all the while.
We miss you ·so much
Scott' Alan.
Pewpaw &amp; Grand1111
Douates. Uncle Richard,
Aunt Joyce, Kelly &amp;Jarrod. Aunt Blrbie, Uncle
llike Cortnie &amp; Ashli

a

Card of ThMk&amp;

In Mamori.m

16.00
.30'
$9.00
8
.42
tO
113.00
1&amp;
.80
Monthly
11.30/doy
16
.06/ doy
Rat• are 'for C!)nMcutive runs , broken up datf • will be charged
fnr each d• as .-pareteads.

Ott Results fast
2

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

dlf ah• DUbll~ton to mike co,ec1ion.
•Ads th• must be peid in adwance ere

following telephone exchanges...
ArltCodel14

Muon counri• m~o~d be pr•

•Aactivt t .IO discoum for tdiPiid in advance.
•free eda - Glve.,.,IIV and Found·ada unCI• 15 wordt will be

Classified pages cover the
Gallia County

Of'

plld.

day

Martin family gathers .at reunion

WATER SERVICE

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Announcements

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

28,1989

MOIIU
HO.E PAll
.' oMobile HousePanL

liMobllo H"rne
Rentela
•Lot Rentale

992-7.t79

lt. SS N11111 ef

cupancy.

No pats

Wllar

a

pold. In city. ~of. Roq'od.
114-446-3671 after 5:00p.m.
HWor

RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM
EXCEPT
HOUDAYS

We Buy All
Non Ferrous
Metals, ·
Plastics,
Stainless Steel,
Etc•
Give Us A Call
Troday"

992·5-114

Loottad Off By(III8At
Rta. 7. 143,

2 nurua aldH, aho~ clark, • In·
quire It Odds and Enda Shop,
Middlopon. .

AVON I All Areas I Shirlay
·

Spoon, 304-675-1429.

AVON - All oroao, Call Marilyn

Waavtr 304-882·2645.

IE ON T.V. mony naldod tar
commercl•la.. Now hlrlng all

IQH- For ca1t1ng lnfor. 815-7'79-

7111 Est. T-413.

BEAUTICIAN. Salary plua com·
mlsalon.
Peld
vacation•,
holldaya. ~hona: Hair Ha"p-

penlng for Interviews. 61.4-441-

3353.
Ia an TV many ntMed for

commerclale. Now hlrtng 811

agn. Far ca.tlng Ito. Calf 11 ~
77'1-7111 .

-

.

CRUISE SM!PS now hiring all
pooltlonl. Both oklllod 1nd' unoklllod. For !nformotlot\ caD 11&amp;.
77t-6507oat 1111.
ChlldCiro In my homo. C:loen a.
loving anvlronJMnt. Reasonable
nt•. Choohire • -· &amp;14-311701151.

EARN MONEY lloodlng boobl
530,000/yr. 1 - IIOiontloL
Dotello 111106-8174000 Eat y.

101n.

· ·

�•
Page

11

8- The

Daily Sentinel

Help wanted

Pomeroy42

LAFF· A-DAY

2BR, 12x65 In Porter area. ~p.
r41q'ed. Pay own utllitiel. 614·
388-9604.
3BR, 1·112 balh, 14x70 wit h oxpando, 2 mi. from town. Raf. &amp;
Dop. roq'od. 614-448-4824 . .

delivery. ~, miH out on thla
·t.nt..nc oPP.Q'rtuntty call tpr
lrll ..,.,.,.,ion, Call t~G-227·
1510.

79 urtt with old farm hou11
Point Pleasa nt araa, 304-6756749. 304·768-li252 or 304·7766059.
.

Couploo and lndlvlduato for
bUeln... ol your own. locll
Amwey dlatrlbUtor

••••zou

lor aplendkl opponunhy.
1182-7513.

Small 2 bedroom trailer,
Hartford, WV. $175. month plus
utllitleo, 304-882-2904.

,._.

Trailer nice clean unfurnished,
re ferences required, Route 1 out
Locust Road on right, 304-6751076.

ENGINEERING TECHNICIANS
Hiring lmmodlatoly tor high tach
poeltfon. QuaUtlcatlone: *High
ocl1ool diploma · ' Ago 18-24
•Abl• 10 ra1oca11 (all ••IMMel
. paldl •Malhlaclenco bockgrouncl
WI P'""ldo good pay and
bonallta, full modlcal covorago.
couoao
credit
lor
tralnlnoJexpert.nce
available.
Cell f-800 -282-1384, Monday.
Tnuradoy,9o.m.·2p.m.

44
() '"' ~ ... ,........ s~...,. ... ""- -~~ .,._..,,..,...,.

Experlenced body mar'!, prefer·5
raaro oxparlonc;o, Poworo Body
Shop 1 304-675-7950.
..

II :~

·~==========r-==========1

'a . :.

••II

Wanted to Do

. All type conertte work done,
paUoa, altHwaiU, pragn1 etc.
814-446-6611 evening•. and
114-441-8813 attamoona.

1985 Clayton. 3 bedroOm 1 112
balh. Llko now. Will tako pay off
614-949-2901 .
1988 Rodman 9octlonol 28"1511'
3br'., 2 bath, CIA, mult be
moved . 614-446-8504 after S.

2 br., location Kerr. Wat.- paid
$175, ron1 pluo dopOelt. 514-4451354.
;2B;;;R:=-:fu
::m=
. 7:
,1-;d- wll"'h:-w
- u- ,hor
- .,..&amp;
dryer~ 112 mill E. of Porter on
654. 614-388-11983.

(

Apartment ·
·
lor Rent ·

1BA unfum. a pt. Range &amp; refrlg.
~ovlct.d. Water, eewar,, jar·
4313: pald. oop. &amp;Ror. 14 46-

"Today, Miss Wilson, I feel .
(" k
• it OUt..,
1 e (I'lS hlOg

Family looking' for matUre 1
dopondablo non·omoklna olttor
Wanted to Do
32 Mobile Homes
tor oldo~r lady. 8:00 tn1 5:00 18
Mon. thN Fri, tome evenlnge,
for Sale
own traneportatlon and refwen-. Care lor elderly In their home.
c. raqulred. Stlary _nagot•bll. Phone &amp;14·446-2427.
Ropty 10 Box e- 23. care Pt. Pit.
1987 Dtnvllle, total eler;trlc
304 67"~ 14x70, heat pump, 3BR, 1•112
•
Ph
~o;plstor, 200 Moln St .. Pt. PH, H
tj'
-or~
ono
·
.
•
~
bat
h. 814·245-9244 onrtlmo,
1 6'
25!50.
245-11877 aftor 6.
Fumltur• delivery l carpet In- Mill Paula's Day Cl ra Center.
etalter. PrevloUI experience sate, affordable, childcare. M· F 1989 CLOSEOUT SALE. Want I
f red b
1 ed
eLm. .. 5:30 p.m.:J.
· A 11 2'A·l0. Luxury Home tor tha price of a
prlo • r
Fut nl01 f'lq u
AP.. Botoro, a•ar sch . Drop-Ina ~In Jane? Check our 14x72, :z
p y: 1 optl urn tu..-, 151 ~ond
II
I
d
Avanue, GallipoiiL BetwHn 10 welcome. 614-440-t224.
room, alan tub modal,
eterao, peddle fan, deluxe car·
t .m. I 12 noon. Sa!., Mon.,. &amp; Roof painting a coatlnglrtraller pet and mirrored wardrobe
Tuet. Aug, 26oo2D. No Phone roota, houses, &amp; barna, e• ee- door•.
S19,900.
Include•
·Ctlla,
tlmate. 61...,379-2320.
delivery and Ht up, plue central
Havo oponlng lot Sorvloo
air and vinyl skirting, lnslallod.
Will babysit In lnJ home. Calli 8~729 "045
Stat Ion Anend ant In Pomaroy. Reasonable
rate•. Reference•
• vu...
•
Writ laUII' of application to : P.O~ av•llabl•.
All
ages,
also Larga Selection of used homea.
Box 7298, Pomeroy, Oh. 45711.
w11kends. Call 614.2"45-5786.
8,10,12 a nd 14 .wide. Prlca from
Help Wanted: part-tim•, mult Will do baby sluing 7 dalls weak $300 to $8900. 1.S00.72t-4045.
have knowledge of paMIIng,
L
'
plumbing &amp; •lectrlc work. 614- .anytime, 2614 lncoln Ave. Pt. MHR MOBILE HOMES Sea us
192-409:2.
Pit.
for your used home, Rt 23
IN A RUT
Will do bobyoiltlng In my homo. South, Plkolon, OH, 6114·2692587.
Weekdaye onl~. 61 4-44&amp;-alGI.
Ttred of minimum wage?
Boring, dud end Jobs. We're
Mobile home for 1111. 2 bedlooking for 8 llvllr paoplo who
rooms , 10x50. $3000. 114-992·
want mor• out of life then Just
7352.
ganlng by, Eam while you teem.
USED MOBILE HOMES Chock
(614) 28H422
Cioood Tuoa. &amp; Wod.
21
Business
uo tlrst . Good oolaelion slnglu
ond doubloo 800-826-0752.
Opportunity
ln..SChool SUI!penalon Monitor
Unfurnished 2 br., total alec.
nNded • Eutem H.S. for '89!NOTICE!
washer &amp; dryer hook-up. Dap.
"110-. Rato of pay $5.00/hr. Work
lrregulerly asalgnad. Cont1ct 0HIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. req'd. $250/mo. 614·388-8318 or
Chari.. Moore at 61o\.NS.3321 recommends that you do 814-448-9004.
buslnese with people you know,
lor datau..
tnd NOT to Nnd monty We buy usltd mobile homn
JOB VACANCIES AVAILABLE IN through the mail until you haw CASH . TODAY! 8Q0..826-0752,
ext. 315. (Ohio · only). Ask tor
THE ARMY NATIONAL GUARD. investigated the oHering.
Enlfat . for tr" skill training,
VENDING
Ray.
monthly peyctclc, collage ••ais33 Farms for Sale
tance, part-time military stnflce. Turn koy business nondllng
304-1175-3950 or 1-800-1142-3619. Nabisco~ Kaebler, Frho Lay and
similar food products. No sal· 22 acre farm. 5 mila from GalLady to clean house every·other
~CO~.· on blacktop rd. 614....,~
week. Will negotiate waget. 614- ~~, ~~~:~i ~:~~: ;~me~::
pany. National census figural
446-9324 aft• 5 p.m.
show average gross earnings By Owf'llr. Bunce Ad. 235 acrH
NA"o and LPN"o pa~ tlmo; lull for $3,400 . per month. Requires m/1. One of the betnlocatlonl In
time AN. S.nd resume or call approx. 8 hra. par waek. You will Galllt County. GoOd producing
Care Haven of Point Pleasant need $8000 1o $24,000 cash for farm, house, buildings. Must
304-675-3005.
vending equipment. Call Don 111 to appreciate. 614-446-4286.
Edwai'ds. 1-800.686-6817, 9a.m.
Needed
oHice
35 LOIS &amp; Acreage
managerlbookkHper tor aru to 9p.m.
auto agtncy. Experienced with Vending ~oule . Big .$ Makar,
auto agency. books nacesury. local prime areas, new ma· 1 acre to ts G all! poll• Farry, city
3 4 7
Valery opened. Send Resume to chinas,
cheap. 1-800.344· water, 0 ·6 5-2722.
Box 88 Jackson OH 45640.
86.4
Acres
. . Located 112 mile
5665 ..
North of 554, 6 milea West of
A.D. only wanted. 18 hours per
Cha~hl re. Wooded • hilly. . 10
week. W.l.C. counseling. Me1gs
acres. Cleared land. Borders on
County Health Dept. Dt4-99~·
Real Estate
Van Zant Rd. 011 well with· In·
6626.
come. Free gas for resident.
Solid, 20x40 barn. No house.
Seeking mature Individual to
Bordered on S-Wast and 1\ionh
provide child care tor the Mid- 31 Homes for Sale
Sides by reclaimed strip mine.
nl9hl shih. At my hcime. Must
dr1va &amp; hava personal raferen- 2 story . housa, 7 rooms, 1 % Perfect otr hunting. L.ots of
ces. May 1ubmlt IaUer 1: som• baths, full basement, new deer, grouse and turkey.
thing about yourself Box Cia woodfcoal furnace, remodeled, $29,500. 614-446~1822 or 446010 825 Third Ave. Gallipolis, sitting on 4.75 acres (3 ac res 9591 .cc:--;cc-,-,:-;-cc-- --:--:OH 45631. May be needed for 8- wooded) located on blac ktop Ashton, beautiful one at:ra lots
road. Must Sell! Price Reduced
10 days per month.
$19,500. Pnono 614·992·6506 with river frontage, public water.
Taking applications a1 Donimo's avanings.
Clyde /Bowen, Jr. 304·576-2336.
Piua. Call614· 992·2124.
3 bedroom brick house wl1h lot and 112, In Villagt of VInton.
The Gallla-Melgs Comrrtunily large tot, Mid Way Drive. New Water, uwaga already. EsAction Agency, P.O. Box 272, Haven. Good Cond. 304-773- ta bllsned. 614-388-8318.
Cheshire, Ohio, 45620, has a job 5681 .
Woodland, 132 acres, $35,000,
opening In Ilia Job Training
Program (JTPA). The position 3 bedroom ranch, 2 112 baths, 2 At. 7, below Eureka, Call 614requires an MA Degree (prefer- car garage, nice neighborhood, 446-4416 after 7 p.m.
red), BA required, rn couseling family room witt! fireplace,
or testing. Ability to deliver il'!- close to e lementary school,
houSe assessment program to $92,000.' Poplar Heights, Pt. Pit.
Rentals
JTPA participants. Must have ef- 304~75-1317 .
fective
group/individual
counseling s kills. Ou1ies will in· 3BR, 2 bath, garage, 2100 sq. ft.
clude testing and interpretation. 112 acre, poet, citv schools, 41 Houses for Rent
Course work in testing tec hni· $70.000. 614·245-9375. .
ques and counseling ,required. 6 rooms and bath. On 3 to 4 1 br., house, 1701 Chestnut St.,
Must ha ve rel iable transpor. acres. Wastpoini Rd., Hartford, Stove, · relrlg. furn'ad. $75
tallon. This Is a full lime be nef it w.v. $22,000. 1-614-282· 9218 depos it, $150/mo. 614-446-3870.
posilio n. Applications can ba collect.
3 Rio Granda students (girts) to
obtained
at
the C.A.A: a
s hare home \Oflth other girt. 2
Cheshire office, or mailed to in- All new 3 br., heme located on bloc ks from
campus. No
terested individuals. For mora Rt . 160. Prieed to move. 614· s moking- drinking, drugs · or
information, call 614-367-7341 388-8711 '
parties. this Is educallonal set·
or 614· 992·6629. We are an E·
ting. 614-742-3033.
qual
Employment/Affirmative Fo r sale by owner, 7 room
Action employer. Applications house with garage, 3 112 acres 3 bedroom house In eountry
will be accepted thru September land, satilite dis h, city wa ter, With garden. $200 plut deposit.
$30,000. 2 1f2 miles out Dunham Phone 304-882-2686.
8, 1989.
Ad &amp; Pine Grove Rd jus t off
The Me igs Local Sc hool Dis trict leon Baden Road, 304-458· 3 bedroom, 1000 sq. ft. ranch
Is seeking qu alified applicants 1783.
.housa for re nt. Carpeted
for the posi tion of Reader Guide
throughout , total tlactrlc. Fen~
tor a visually handicapped Govarnmant
Homos!
Need eed In back yard. Located 8
student aUending Buckeye Hills repali'. Fix &amp; sell. From $1 .00. miles from Holzer Hospital on
Rl. 160 near Nor1h Gallle High
Joint Vocational School. Inter- 71 4·520-7879, Ext. H3.
School. $350. per month, $350.
ested persons should contact
Or. R. Charles Holliday at 614- MARTFOR0-6 rooms, bath, ap- deposit Call 614 ·286·1316 after
742·3113 or 614·992·2153. This prox. 4 acres, Wes t Point Road, 6 p·m ·
pos ition needs to be filled Im- Hartford, $22,000. Call ceHect 1·
614-282·9218. .
3 br., house, In town, Central air,
mediately.
nlce nei~hborheod . Can be
Wanted: Lady to stay with el- Hous a and lot In Leon area, Rt, s aan evenings. 614-446-4648 at62.
3
bedrooms,
living
room,
darty woman lri good physical
ter 5 :30p.m.
condition In country. From 9:00 kitchen &lt; &amp; balh. Completely 4 bedroom brick ranch, oft Rt.
unt il 5:00 weekda ys. Send remodeled Inside and out. 2 87. L.ease, deposit, references,
resume to: The Oaily Sentinel, healing s ystems, 200 amp ser- no polo.
vice. Naw kltchan &amp; bath. Naw
304 -1175•7887 .
Box 729C, Pomeroy, OH.
carpet through out. Owner
remodeled, 2 br.,
fina ncing $32,500, 304·586-2462 Comptetty
home, fuel heat. Southwestern
12
Situation
or 586-4374.
School District. Down depos it &amp;
MOva In now. Jugt renovated, i'eterence. Call in aveningi. 61 ,._
Wanted
s pacious home Point Pleasant's 245 .5204.
Experienced
truck
dr iver historical Ma in Street area,
looking for truck driver job. zoned res ide ntial only. 712 Main For rent or aale on land con·
Through Tractor Trai ler All iance St. low sevent ies, 304-875· 1348. tract V&amp;ry nic• 2 bedroom
house,
newly
remodeled,
Driving School. 614·992·7259.
basement,
Pomeroy.
614·742·
Have 4 room In my home tor el· 32 Mobile Homes
2728.
derly needing care. Reasonable.
lor Sale
Like neW duplex. large living
In Pomeroy. 614 -992·7204.
room. full"' aquippocf delu~~:o
A
12x60
mobile
home
soma
fur·
Student living In Gallipolis nlture, tot 90x100 flat lot on Sun kitchen, dining area. 2BR,
needs ride to and from Rio Valley Orlve, ready to move into. shower/bath, washer, dryer
Grande College. Call Nadena at Priced
negolionable 614-446- nook-up, attached garage, AC,
614-448-4335 In p.m.
carpetea. 2 miles Rf. 588.
8005.
Sap!. tat. 614-446We care for elderly and han ~ 1969 Shultz 12x50, may- leave o n Avallablo
2602.
dicapr,arl ln our .hom a. 26 yea rs re nted lot, wilt cons1der land
axper ence. L:PN on call. Low contract,
304-675-6984. t
42 Mobile Homes · ·
InCome home. Cali 614·992·6873
after 7:00- p.m. tor more Inter· 1978 14x70 Elcona loeatad o n
for Rent
mation.
State Rt. 790J nea r Merce rville,
price reducaa to $7500 614·258· 2 bedroom in Tuppers Plains.
. Will babys it In my home. Ex- 1977
or 614·256-1528.
$175. per month pfus utilities
perlaned
and
reference.
Reasonable rat ... 814·992·2866 1978 Bayview 14X65, 2 br., 614. and deposit. 614-667·3487.
or 614·992-6224.
379·2926.
2 bedroom, fumlshed. Air con.
Will car• for elderly. man or 1981 Nas hua, 14x60 7x21, ex· dillon, washer, dryer. $235 per
woman.
Experienced.
Call pando, gardon tub. 1&gt;9300. 514· month plue depoaH Mel utilltr11
anrtlmo 814-992·2225.
388-9746.
814·992·7479.
.
19B;z Nashua 14x70, 2 room tx· 2BR,
tumionod.
$250/mo
15
Schools&amp;
pando. 614-446.016.0.
1250/deposlt. 2 peraon max. OC.:
Instruction
No pats, water, IIWIIr
1983 T~umph, 14x60, 2 l!od· cur:ncy,
pod.
In
chr.
Roq'od. 614rooms, 1 'A bathe, central air, 446-3871 after Rat.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
5:00p.m.
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS washer/dryer, 8x1 0 deck, un COLLEGE, ~29 Jackson Pike. derpinning, Vot'J good condition 2 br., located In EvargrHn
Call 114-448-4367. Rog. No. 86- on ran~ed" lot. 304-675-2047 or children acctpCed. Cable T.v.:
614·367·7120.
514-448-3687, or 614-2415-6223.
11·1055B.
18

51

2BR mobile ho metlor rent. Iter.
&amp; dop. roq'od. 614-446.0527.

no cott.ctlng, no

Monday, August 28, ,,9

Ohio
KIT N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wript

Merchandise

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Come· )ojn tho htondly bunch.
Wo hovo I -11191 In tho oroa
"" onMgolie, outvalng - ' "
who warit 1o M ltielr own boe.... make their own houn and
moot ,_ poOI)IO. our tow• and
glfll. till thamHival with their
high quollly, and wlda varloty.
No Investment,

Middleport.

2 bodroom ape~mont, Mid·
dleport. Partially fumishad,
utilities not
included.
Deposit
rwqulred.
$175.00
per month,
In·
cludoo garba;o. 1-1114-892-2381
dayo.
·

2 bedrO(!m apts. for rani. Car·
peted. Nice aattlng, laundry
tacilltle• available. Cell 814·992·
3711 EOH

::':--'7-C."--:-= -:---::-:-:-:

2 br.~.lum. opt. $200 mo; $1 00
d!P· NO ~· · 11 4-446·9332.
.
35 W. 1pt. 2 br., 1 bath. private
, encloSad patio. Close 1o
groc:erv atom a lh pi~ c
.,
op ... en·
tar, water,
aawarJ. trash
provided. $265/mo. '-'Ill 61444f-8n7.
BEAunFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES "T JACKSON
M
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $192/nio. Walk to shop
l'!"'ovlae. Call 614-446-2568. EOH.
F.um. Apt. 1 br., 240 utlllias Pd.
920 F "'h A
G Ill Us 614
ou,.
ve, 1 po •
~
44S-C416 attar 8p.m.
Fum. Efficiency $175 utllltleo
pd. Share bath. 607 Second,
Gallipolla, 614-446.-1416 after
&amp;p.m.

a

Furnished 1 br., utllltin paid.
No p•t•. $215/mo. $5dJhpoSit, 6
mo. loaso. 258 Stoto Sf: &amp;t4-4463667.
F
umlshad
2
bedroom
apar1ment,$250. per month ptu1
elactrlc. $100 deposit. 304-6753900.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcloo
from $100. Fordo. 11-doo.
Corvonoo. Chovyo. Surpluo.
Buy.,. Quldo (1 I IOUI7~00
Ext. 8-1011t.

Goods
L:AYNE"S FURNITURE
Sofat and chairt prlcad from
$395 lo $995. Tabloo $50 and up
to $1 25. Hld•a-bodo $390 lo
$595. Reclina ra $225 to $375.
La mpo $28 to $125. Dlnoltn
$1 09 and up to $491. WOC!(f
ta ble W·6 Chalra $285 tO S785.
Desks $145 up to $375. Hutchn
$400 &amp; up, ·bun_k bld1 complete
with mattr••• $295 and up to
$395. baby bod a $11 o Matt,...
s es or box apring• full or twin
$78, llrm $88, and $98. Ouoon
seto $275 a up, King $350. 4
drawer chest $69. Gun Cabln.ta
6, 8, a 10 gun. Baby mau,.....
S35 A $45. Bod lromn 125,
Queen Size $35 &amp; king frama
$50. Good ooloc:tlon of b«&lt;room
cablnetl 1
suites,
matal
headboardl $30 and up to $65.
90 dayll aame •• c..h whh approved credit. 3 mi. out Bullville
Rd. Opon 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. lion,
tnru Sit. COII614-446-0322.

For Sale; 25" coior T.V. ·exc.
lipolis, urtcond. $300. 2 nt
working
wasnor &amp; dt"fOr, ox~. cond. 614446-3548.
·
GE automatic waeher, $95.
$95.
Whirlpool
washar,
Whirlpool dl"for, $95. Dryar, $75.
Maytag aula. washer I dr'y1r
eet. $150 aach. Aefrig., frolt
free, $150. Sldo by oldo rot~g . ,
$.150. Electric range, 30 ln., $95.
Frigidaire dryer, $75 . GE !irver,
avacado, $95. Gaa range, 30
Inch, $75. Skaggo Appllilncoo,
Uppar Rlvor Rd. 614-448-7391.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washll'li, dryerl, retrtgerator1,
rangoo. Skaggs Ar,•pllancoo,
Upper Rivar Rd. Bes da Stone
Croat Molol. Coll614-448•73118.
K·a nmora weaher and dryar, 4
years old, 304-1171-5375,
Kirby Sweeper, wit~ guarantea,
runs great, only $100 ~II collect
1-698-6379.
Mollohan Furniture' &amp; Carpe1 .
614-446·7444. Cluollty carpol,
most
nam•
branda,
lit
reasonable price. 9x121nstalled.
~tarting at $129 pad lnciUc:l~ •.
PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
HousenqJd lurnlsnlng. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleasent, WV,
call 304-675-1450.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Olive Sl., Gallipolis._NEW 6 pc.
room apirtments a1 Village wood group, $339. Living room
Manor
and
Riverside suites $199·$599. Bunli Mds
Apartments In Mlddlepor1. From with boddlng, $249. Full slzo
manreas &amp; foundation atartlng
$164. Call614-992·7787.
. $99.
Rlcllnera llartlng .· · $99".
Now occeptlng applications tor UESD Beds, dressers, bidroom
2 bedroom apl, fully carpeted, . suites. Desk! , wrlnga.r washer, a
appliances, water and trash complete llna of used furniture.
NFW Western boota $35.
rr':!u T:,~ro:l::: · .~a!ht:;:i~~~ Workboots
$18 &amp; up.· (SIMI a
banks and schools. For more in~ soft toe.) 61 4·446·3159.
formation call 304-882·3716. E~
qual opportunity housing. Sec· Sofa, rocking chair, straight
chair, coHee table, 2 end tables,
tlon 8 accepted.
.
&amp; ta mp. Call aher 5 614·3889025.
Private
modern
furnished
eHiciency apt. With garage &amp; Used appliances. Washers,
=~~~go. water paid. 614-446- dryers, rlingn, refrigerators,
mtcrowave ovens. Ken '• ApRegency, Inc. 2BR, apt., ntw
pllanca, 217 E. Second St.,
plush carpet, new paint,
Pomeroy, 614-992·5335 or 114·
utilities, pantally paid. $175/mo. 985·356t.
Call304·675·5104.
VI"RA
Tara Townhouaa Apts, 2 br•• 1Furniture &amp; Appliances
Rt. 141 In Centenary, 1/4 mi. On
112 baths, CA, dis hwasher, dis· Lincoln Pike. Mon.Sat: 9 a.m. till
posal, privata Inclosed fl&amp;t io, 6 p.m., Sunday 12--5. Open till 9
pool ~ playgro und. Water, sewer,
p.m. for appointments. 614-446&amp; trash rnctuded. Starting at 3158. Financing available, plut
$289/mo. Call 614·367-7850.
Instant cash reb at as up r'o '1 00.
Twin Rivers Tower-H~uslng lor Basset lntersprlng. Sl.. per
the Elderly, Handicapped and sofa, $349. Bas set swivel rocker
Disabled.
L.ocated
near $_149. 5 peice wood group1
downtown
Point
Pleasant, $319. Bedding/mattress set $99.
phone 304·675-6679. Equal Crib mattress $29.95; 7 place
Bassett postor bedroom suite
Housing Opportunity.
$999; 4 drawer chest $44.95i
Upstal~ unfurnished apt . Ca rBunk bods $149 or $12.46.
1
paled. NO pets, inquire at 300 Dinette/ table &amp; 4 chaira $149.
Fourth Ava.
Hutch $199; complete line of
oak &amp; country turnlshln.gs. Oak,
45
Furnished
Currlo Cabinet Curved glas1
front with claw feet $279 lr
Rooms
$15 .14.
Wood
microwave
cabinet
$129,
regular
Air
Furnis hed
efficiency,
919 compressors $99; gun$249.
·
c
abinet
Secof'ld Avenue, Gallipolis . All $199. 30 day warranty on stove,
utilities paid, share a bat h. refrigerator, washers, dryers &amp;
$135/mo. 614-446-3945.
dee p freezers.
·

1

'

by

0

n.uot, $1,000. 304-171-2467.

1t5l\NG..1,2,3

wom. TX

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

large metal dHk, chllr, $150i

Craflaman 12"' tlbtt new ac-

ceeeorllt, S150i Hondi 12s" 1
whool $750 now; 14" drill prou
112" cap. $150; U H.P. Mere,
Exc. corfll. $1SQO. 514-448-3691
614-445-~ •••r 7p.m.
Lono• fuol oil fum.c.. 125,000
BTU wliK 275 gallon oil tank.
614-992-2744.

2 Horolold Cowl ona' tolth call,
tho Olhol lo ~Mhon Ia*. 814911-311011.
I mont!l old !Htoli 11oa, $125 01
oflor. 614-114145~.
ATTENTION H - OWnors,
Palnl Pluo lo now oarrylng tociL
Palnl PLuo, :1415 Jackaori Avo.
Polnl - · , . . . 304-8714014.

8 ·28 '

pu-

Woodbumor $12&amp;; pcmr whh
colt for $150; woodon cablnll
$35. 614-245-5467.

I

Ear Corn. 304-175-4308.
For Solo: BOO lobacco otlcka .20
conlo oach. 40 Ralio 'ol Hay.
S15.00oacll. 114-441-0558.
Hay tor ute. 50 centll • bell.
Coil aflar 5:30 p.m. 114-9482461.
Hay for ute.
814·742·2083.

eo

11185 Honda XR 200, aood
cond., f800 or bat offir., l DU
Honda Big Rod ATC, good
cond.,
offor. 814441..189,
1917125 Suzuki OUod-Runnir, 4 - '
whHIIr, ~~ cond., foW
m'itoar, 8600. 11181 GN400
Suzu~ - . . r = : VOI'J low •
mllo111!1 good
.,.8600. 1143tl7·718v.
a I J Cyclo, wo now boro cyllnderw, flat Hrvlce fDr boring and
plolon dollvory, Gal"f Kinnaird,
304-871-11115.

Round boloa ••c quolilr, gron
ond Aftolll lt8 • S25. Morgan
Form, At. 35, PIIJ1r, 304-937•
2011.

4-.

dows, lintels, ate. C aude Win-

.

tm Chovy Camara, 350 V-8
Turbo, 4 borrol Quad, a &amp; II
onlft kft, alrshocko, now boHory,
5 mo. old Pook-•poo 1 block. &amp; · naw brakaa. Make ott.r. 114while. HouM tralnea. Shota. 445.0811 aft~&lt; 5p.m.
614·2415-5611.
1874 Corvotto wllho with black
AKC RoallloN&lt;I malo BHgla. 1 Interior PW, Mope, AC, tour niVf
yr. old. --aeautltul confirmation. tim. En. aond. 114MI-7441
Good proopacl $110. 114-1148- or 614-445-11421 .
56

AKC mala Chihuahua pup, 12
wko. old. 614-448-7765.
· .

1974 Ponllac Catolina. AIC PS,
PB, NT, 4 door, 71,000 mllet.
Good condition: $500. 114-8614481 .'

r.

58

1985 llonta COM Ch. l.oodod.
All - · eac. cond. $1200.
614-2511-8011 .

FruitS &amp;

86 ln. Trodhlonat aola, chair,
Thomuvllle Coff11 .. ble. Uka
now. All tor $400 or will ooll
oaparotoly. 814-448-0493.

1 • 4 dr., Oldomobllo. 11.._

Conning paoohoo now In
eaaaon. Paara. Plu"", Grepn
and Appln ¥rill follOW around
Lobor Dor. Bob'o Morkot,
llooon, wv. 304-773-5721 .

1987 Ford Touruo ahorp, blue,
outomatlc,_PS, f~a."r'lll, tin,
AC, AIIIFM. 11
7110 114366-e240.

1180.

1987 Cavatlor Z 24, - .
$1,1100. 304-871-8524.

F.1r1; SLI'P' ,',
&amp;[

'V")iC \

61 Faim Equipment

!lSI Good
John -nlon.
DoaroiO. -1p1. hftch,
Ind.
lndipan- lvo 112·7Q1.

· 114.

ALLEY OOP

. Accessories
Oat tank a. tool box corn-- "
blnatlon, tor. pickup uuciL $75. ,
114-448-4219.

POOR BOY TIRES, 304-871-.
3331, fronl end allnmonl $18.951.
4,000 good ....,. dr-, ..,.,
tiNI. naw tlrH.

,.

campers&amp;

..'

:

bearer
18 Catlike
mammal

•

·'

''

a•r•l•••mlnt
Watorprooflng.

·

_,''

'

~

Rolary or cablo tool drilling.
Moot wollo complotod oamo day.
Pump IIIH and Mrvlce_ »4-" •
895-3802.
, •

•
'

SWEEPER and oowlng machlno
and auppiiB, Pick
rapatr,
up anc:f delivery. Devlt Vacuum
CluMr, oni half mile up
Gaorgu Crook Rd. 814-4450294.

Pllf•.

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackton, OH 1-800o537-D528. ~

BARNEY

Plumbing &amp; .

AIN'T

oNE TIME.

Electrical

~,.
~
.1.~

30 Ginza drink 39 A
32 Describes
Bronte

22 Flat (mus.) 33 War god
24 "How wes 34 Medicinal
- know?"
plant

sister
41 Be ill
42 Doctrine

lavorltes

OOWN
1 Clobbers

'

DAILYCRVPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work II:
Graph. c/o lhll MWIPBP8I', P .O. Box
geouolr lor bolh parties concerned .
91428, CleVeland, OH 44101-3428.
Each will contribute what th8 other
UIRA lllepl. :D-Oct. 23) You are now
!liCks.
In an extremely fortunate achievement
Allll!l llllrdl 21·Aprl 11) H you've
cycle w111re you llhould be able lo attain
been thinking c:welully about taking a '
meaningful ob)ee:1iva. Do nol be afraid · cak:ulated rlok where your work or calo lhlnk big.
r - 11 concemed thlll you 11181 can bel·
SCORPIO (Oct. Ill ND11. :Ill Perlonal
ler your clrcuml1ancea. lhll 18 a good
clrcuml1ancea llltoul!! begin to take
day to gtw It a try,
baUellclal twill • Ql today and pooolbly TAURUI(ApriB . . , •1 New trends
bring Into baing somathlng lor which
ere developltljj !hilt you llltould flnd
you'va been hoping. Keep your dreams
pleUing aoclallr. E..n If you ,_,lly
allva.
feel you .,. ratl)ar popular, you ain't
SAQITTAJIIUI·(....,, 21 Dao. :11) Joint nolhln' yet.

isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample
for the three

hints. Each day the

••lfiiiiiiiiiiiL

roura""*·

.• ,
••

...

- .- - ,........... 111

Condl-

tiOntlft,_...loryou .. lhlltlrneln
illlueiiOnl 111at 01111 lor ca11ac:t1w 1111'·

PLD M
FOM

n......,

wltlt lndMdtllll wiiO """ you •·
panel upan a.n lncl knft . _ lo gal

ehlpa llllnllll In whiCh
pow. ly. MeMo
ently lnWIIved IIKIUicl work aut~. luck lain your -

,
'

'

YFZN

QNiw

•
),,

........

TFD
AB

YTOBVZ

VDMGVZZ. -

while '

·.

two O's, etc . Single letters,

the words are all

code letters are different.

SBXMZ

AO V LX

=t:c..:;'nr':•
;.,._... :J:!:.:''OIIYIO
to :=
or
vall'"'
,,.;::.~. Ctae

, ,
.•. ,

the

8-21

them to the marbtl"aa
gaining. ' : ' your w1ta i1b0ut you lncl , L10 (.......... ~111M Ia 11ft

QQVIIINIIIHT IIIZID Vellloloo llowroy'l

for

A is used

Clft'PTOQOOTE

• • • ,.., n...-.. •1 Mat.~ll opportunlllla .,. 111ntng at IIIla lint&amp; thai
coukl .,. o1 elgul.,_ll help to rou 1n
. 1)1 •luclky • ~ ~ ,_
_
~ eddlng to 'Pit YCAJI braalta
CAPRICOIIN ( D e l l . - 111 ...... .. .,. ,IP1 to COfiMI from ongoing
an u1111ng tMIIIat that 0111 , . . your
llldiUnd tlllnlt. Plrfcrrn to lila bell of C~NCIIII (,._
II) You're 11ft
your eiiOIII will .,. (n • _ , Cl"l8llv. CJWde, 10 don't •
~ IUncltl~&amp;.,ded.
maan your tNtghl lciMI. GM 1im11*

-.

I.'s, X

apostrophes, the length and formation or

venture~IOolt rat11ar 111omlllnll 1or rou
ln thiS tCme frame, eapecially If you gill
teamed up with a paraon wtto II bulcaL

."'

1/21

AXYDLBAAXR

*

-·

-

20 Aries sign
21 Yale grad

46 Birthmark

J &amp; J Wotor llonrlca. Swlmmlna

•;

Stevens

weight

44 Pallid
45Zoo

General Hauling

--:-.

28 Types

bows

.

Rnldontlal
or
commorclol
wll'fng, new ~ • npalra.
Llconood oloctrlclon. Ridenour .
Elodrica~ 304-871-1711. •
' ~.

caa

19 Tendency

43 Substance
lor violin

&amp;

Upholotating wlclng ~~ countr 24 yoaro.
The
bNt
In
fumlture
!fphaioto~no.
SOW71-4tM
llillrMootlmatoo.

230pera·s

athlete

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Wanaraon'e Walal Hauling,
. r o a - rotH, djj.
oounto, 2,000 Ia 4,000 capacM~I
""' loll: ,... lnoo' Ul, ~. allterne, PGOll1 Wll ... Me. Clli
tunaport lull lnleoled, 21.- 304-1711-2118
mheil, llllnt ....... 1 .....
87 . Upholstery
1111 ...,~--

20 Extract

37 Repeat
36 Asian

college

STOOD UP II

Refrigeration

85

lioness

Spanish
queen

. 40 Certain

BUT 1 GOT .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. FoUrth and Pine
Golllpollo. Ohio ·
•
Call 611 Ul 3888 01 114-448-·
4417.
•..•

84

Iitle

26

37 Greek
leHer

STOOD UP
SINCE!!

Heating

11181 ~ Aooord XU, I
tjllld, ioodod, 304-aN1M.

•

HE

. .....

teme, wiiiL tmmadlat•1,000 or
~..&amp;:.- dollvory. Call -

pt. ..,.,...

AN'

1 ALMOST
GOT HITCHED

~"If..

82

35 Famous

dential
nickname

'·

Septic Tank Pumping $90. Gallla

25 Gielgud"s

31 Chan
portrayer
3 3 - Marsh
36 Presi-

•

"

Ron'o TV Sorvloo, opoclatlling ' ~
In Zenith alto aarvlclng ·moel' ,!"~
other brand•. Hauu G1ll1, 1110 ~
eome appllanc. Npalra. WV t
304-871-2391 Ohio 114-448'

Yesterday's Answer

In Madrid

f'

,.

2454.

Paa

it was, East disca
..
rded, and declarer .
.
Simply WGD the ace and played anotber spade. West was on lead and bad the
· choice of leatllag lato the A.J of ella·
moods, playing the club king (which
would be ruffed) or play!Dg a beart, al·
lowillg declarer to ruff In eitbt!r band .
while gettiag rid of the poealhle dlamood 1,_. from the other. U Eat bad
fo~owed to the spade from dummy,
losmg to the slngletoo king in the West
band Wllllld bave achieved Ibis same
favorable result.

Met Miss

29 Temperate
30 Tille

i

'•

1

Allp.us

Eu1

Jones?".
18 Dwelling

27 Peerless
28 Enter

;.•

Marka Siding and Aoonng, FrH
Estimates, 304~713-11111.

HON~~.

KENNY~·

.,

FillY Troo Trimming ttump
romoval, call3q4-875-fj31.

I THINK I. QOT

EveRYTHI~ WENT 8l)O::
AND! WOK~ l-IP IN HERE.

WI-Y\T AREYC:U
001~ IN ~EJZE,

.,.,"
·

s•

N-

w..t
Paa

Opeaing lead: • Q

(Lat .)
&amp;Worry
9 Rabbit
11 Prosper
14 .._ You

16 Traitor
17Wool

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tlfell~e gUIIrlfttH. Local reterancn tuml1htd.
FrM ntlmat• . .Call coJIHt 1·
51.w37-G481, day or nlgtil, A o

-,.1.

Puddy - · •
7 Before

ony once
15 Conlerred

··''

Improvements

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Taut
I Taw a

,'·

~

81

.AJ6S

6 '"I

13 He bats

Home

.A
.7

5 Thwack

momenl)

,1

Servtces

SOUTH
.AQJ 10763

3 Torn apart
4Grampus

..

1177 Chev. camper. $1500. For
Sa Ia. 114-448-11851.
'

.108542

whic~

2-Kazan

. hour

10Wary
12"Devillish

114~92-7471.

••••
•nsu
ten

1 -

5Cache

Motor Homes

n.

EAST

ACROSS
(crucial

.

1D
Cllmpor. Salf.conlalnod,
air. $2100 with hftch. No Sunday
calla, pi-a. 514-892·2481.
1173 23ft. Holiday Traveler. a.n
contained, awning, Mil or trade.

.• K 7 3
tK85
.AQJ

by THOMAS JOSEPH

• !•

79

NORI'II

CROSSWORD

•
'1

Llka , _ 8 ft truck t o - $100. ·
~p=lo=a::::•a:.cal=l..:30::..:.,t::•82:;::..:-3:.'::'8=··:-=---:Nood body paM for 1971 DodQI
pickup truck, 304-882-3149.
,

r::.ez:.~
Call 11.C:
R a A Wator lorvloo. Pools clo-

frDm •100. ,_., Mara•••
COrvotiM. Chnya. lurpluo.
~UJO!" Guido 1-.el7o1000,

..

.

&amp;

Huwo_,_.,.._

e.

.......

I

Auto PllrtS

76

Pets for Sale

2543.

I S'TOPPfP PAYMINT
oN AL.L MY CfiEt:.t:$,
JiOW MUCH of A
H~AP STNT WOVtP
TfiAT GIVi Mf

r

mo.

Autos lor Sale

II --- If

for Sale

71

16 ft. 4x4 Inch O.k tlambera1
Morgan Farm, At. 15, Pliny, 304937-2018.

I l· I
•u5t

you don't mind loalng a finesae, as U·
lustrated In today's deal, but fint a
word about tile bidding. After North
bad made a foreing-to-pme jump
ralle Ia ~padea, Sooth could bave embarked upon a complicated aeries of
cue-blda. But Sootll did not really in·
teDd to bid a grand alam. It was tutllkely that bll parlller beld the apade king,
the club ace aad a dlamolld boldill&amp;
that Wllllld the three potential
loaen Ia that suit. And that would be
difficult to determine In any event.
But amalllllam was a different story - almoat anytbing In the North
band would provide a good play for,
m: ·So Sootll jumped rlpt to aiJ:
spadea Declarer now wanted to guarantee ir.e contract, and be did. After
wiiiDbtg the ace of bearll, be played a
diamond to dummy's king cashed the
bear! king t?trowiDg a c11imond and
ruffed dummy's last low beart. Thea
be played a club to dummy's ace aac1
played a spade. U East bad followed,
declarer would bave fine 11 ', not car·
ing If Weat won the alngleloll kinll- All

FRANK AND ERNEST

1978 18ft., Sunklot Jotboat.
Borkloy Jot drivo. Ford 460. a
lncho high rill. 304-875-1861.

tors, Rio Granda, OH CON 114245-5121 .

Supplies

Complete the chuckle qu oted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBlE•ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Tbere are circumstances in

•'

Motors

Block, brlc" uwar r,ipea, win-

Building

•

ByJamesJ~y

seso ., -

cenll • bell.

_

Heads I win,
Tails you lose

low ••

ter4 p.m.

&amp;

_

BRIDGE

mllap, $321. 114 441 1117 af.

75 Boats

the - . "

I1
~

aa

SCRAM-Ltr$ ANSWERS
Smithy- !.IItva - WIHNI ...;. Excise - WAITERS
Overheard at airport: "I always fly this airline. I belong to·
their frequent WAITERS club!"

w

64 Hay &amp; Grain
:--:----:;.:-:::::-:=--~

G Ri 0 0 F i

•

Editor to cub reporter:
"Jumping to a conclusion is
not hilt is good digging for

r Ie

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

1979 Hondo 750, $850. 114-4480312.
Suzuki,

L:. .,I~I.;.,~I.-.-II .»;

L-L.....J.'-.J.-J.. .,...J

Motorcycles

250

J

-;.ID.;.;A;..:II

ISN'T CROWDED ••

I

GS

ba· ·

ORRAYS

' I

BOATERSJI M•rcury Mercru1Hr1 1
epeclalllt
Precision M.oblle r
Strow toi oalo. $t.50 bolo. 814- ·uariM. ·~come to yo~o~. 1-11C.
446-4111 Evanlnga: 814-441- 259-6979. Now ond Uood Porto.
7157
.
lion boo1·1917 Landau ' 18'5"
with Moroury 35 hp motor with "
power trim and 1uto oll lnlectlorl, Morcut'J Trolling motor
Shoreline trailer plus more. All "
'
Transportation
In good condition. Call 814-112·

55 .

I

r

WELL., Ai LeAST IT

11187 Doclgo LE von, 30,000 · •
mil•, tinted gl•••~ 1~PIIIHI1• ,
gor, loodod, $8,700. 304-1171- ,

11181

tho

law to form four llmpl. word1 .

•

74

9

.;;..l.;;.
.s

..

5520.

Page-

lAM I
_!~~~-,!~ ~S• ••••

!orion of
0 1-rongo
lau.r 'ocramblod ward•

Livestock

Aftlpa ,b lly goat, Ahipa nublon
Sura Caldopot 17 cubic fool blUr goat, 81'1-211-93114.
Jrlprlght frHZtr, IJC, cond, C..
Ollarlor
Pony.
· Roglolorocl
nlng Jars. 614-448-3813.
Shown In 4-H and . - . Vot'J
Solid chorry dining room tabla Qlfttlo. QOO. Caiii14-H2-2315.
and four matching chaka tor
Umouatn
$400. Matching antiquo • - r Roalatorod
and cheat of drawert, 1830'1 "bull, 4 "" old, WI. approx 2~
watoriatl · oro,
$300.
Call lb. I1,80Q. Cuuan Umoualn,
185-3577.
Pomeroy 814.002-~ .

Twin btd whh manren and box
springs. Good condition. S5o.
614-992-1501 or 614-992-1776.
Whoolchalro • now or uood. 3
wh~lld oloclnc ocootor. Coil
Rogoro ModiC,I, 1-8.:1104.
Wood/coal bumor ·S250, Commodore 64 computar 1y1tem
$375, Studonl rofngorotor $75,
10 opd. blko $75, po~ablo calor
t.v. $50. wolght bonch a wolghto
$75, conaole ater.o $50, Homll
tor parts, 1979 lloreury, IKC.
cond.l14·245-8375.

W

_IIIA.;.;;"'.::.r:a;:.
..';....S..::......:(C

Sentinei-

~.2.-1-rt..;.;,Hl-=-E l--~1 1

•

~==~=======1;====~~~~~::'
54
63

JIR ProduH. Com, lornatoao,
cucumbln, ·ManL 114-1435313.

(

TV ...... ltiO. Ft

1971 Joop, CJ5, now tlrH, muffler, S1750. 114-441-4141 af..
ter I or on waakanda.

Canning tornalon lor oalo.
B~ng -~n·~ 114-24r-;1111.

Baby's first words caught Mindy and Ted
by surprise.

AUG. 28

•
•

&amp; 4 WD's

vans

The Daily

.EVENING

Pickup topper like new, fh Jeep '1,.
J.10 plckup,.t100. 814 411 1115, • _; .
441-41188.
·.

·73

MON••
01•

19114 F«d F350 d\101 whool olck
up1 4 - · cockplt 011-. :Jo4.
87o-11&amp;8.
•
11181 Chevy DooioY, loodad, -,
oharp, $14,500.114-258-8471. . ·. .;

Vegetables

1ei1~. . 1.2.3.

M

1172 Ford ahort whlll bue, l
, white 1pokad whHII, dual IX• ~

0

Ohio

Television
Viewing

1tll Ford 2 ton LWI, uDIIIwd \
condiUon. $700. 814-1143-42.._

:;::;.:::;________

ruce Beattie

Middleport,

1911 Ford dump truck, 304-178- •
7U3.

*··

B

Pomeroy-

'..

72 Trucks for Sale

AKC roalllonod Dalamallon
Cadillac,
Flootwood,
upplla bOm Aug 1, 3 ma'" &amp; 4 1177
emalel, $200. each. 3Q4-88Z· . kJadad. Look• good • runs
good. $700. 614~·7441 .. 6142666,
!146-9421. .
.
AKC; male miniature pinch• 2
yr. old. Obedience trained. 1978 Ford LTD II, 114-448-1625
Champion Slnod. $400. 614-251- $750..
6021 .
1978 Ford Mustang II, $550. Gu
Baaglo puppln luH bloodocl dryor, $25. 114-256'64711.
$25. ooch. 304-8915-3335.
1978 Ford Thundorblrd. Good
Chow Chow pupploo: 1 AKC condition. Clll Tom Anderson,
reg. mtle, red 1 I wkl. old, $200. 114-882-3341atter I p.m.
314 Cllow, 5 female, 1 male Rid 1978 LTD, 72,000 mlloo. 351 W.
&amp; light bluo. $75. 814-44&amp;:0814.
eng. axe. conc:l. $185. ·11 '-251-Dragonwynd Cattary Kennel. 8647.
Persian,
_Slam•••
and 1980 Pontiac Salfl~ - Station
Himalayan kiUena. Chow 11ud Wogon. $1500. 114-448-2t24.
sarvlce. 814-441-3844 after 7 Rune good, lookl f~lr.
Rooms tor rant · week.or month:
Furniture
p.m.
Star11n9 at $120fmo. Gallia New andValley
used
furniture
and
apHotel. '1,14-446-9580.
1911 Corvotto, rod whh ;ror onplia nces. Call 614-446·7572. Flah Tank, 2413 Jackaon Ave. tlor,
loadod with T-Top, vary
Point Pleaunt, 304-675-2083, 10 good cond, 304-112·3432.
Sleepln9 rooms with cooking. Hours 9·5.
gal ut up $14.H and 10 gaf
Also trailer space. All hook-ups.
j
complete $43.25.
Call aHer 2:00 p.m., 304-n3· 53
•' Antiques
1911 Dodgo Omnl 024, 4 opd.,
5651 , Mu on WV.
lront wliHI drlvo. $100 01 baal
~uy or s ell Rlvarlne Antiques, For aala. Whlfl, New Zealend oltor. 814·251-1322.
1124 E. Mai n Str'eet, Pomeroy. Robblio. 814·949-2835. '
46 Space lor Rent
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 Groom and SUpply Shop-Pot 1982 BUick Roaal, 2
ve,
cruiH, AM1FM lltr.o CllCommercial s pace, 1,800 s q.ft. p.m., Sunday 1 ;00 lo 6;00 p.m. Grooming. All brHdL AI ltyleL auto,
utte, tin whHI 1 power wlnCorner Second and Pme. Ample 614·992·2526.
lams Pet Food Dealer. Julie doWI. Good condition.
$2,100.
parking. Call 614-446~4249, 446- Top Cash paid. Old furniture Wobb. Calll14-448.0231 .
614;-44W'Iqtl.
2325, or 446·4425.
cuboards,
quilts,
oriental, Choice mtle AKC rwgleteNCI
Country Mobile Home Pa rk, pai nti ngs, toys, or entire ntata Beagle, 4 112 month, aU ehotl, 1982 camaro Z-28, v.a, auto.,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy. ca ll collect 304·525·3275, or roacfw to train, $100.00. 304-875- ax. concL 304-175-3183.
lots, nmtals , part s, sales. Call 304·523-6854.
7984.
11182 MaZda RX7. $800. 814'112·
614·992·7479.
1848 after 1:00 p.m.
Roalstorod AKC Cockor Spaniol
54 Miscellaneous
Office or small bus iness s pace
pupploo. $125. 614-948-2853.
1882 PlymOuth Aollonl, 4 cyl.
for rent In Middleport. All
Merchandise ,
De,OOO miiH, MW patt. exWhat'• 10 different about the auto,
utilities Included. Air con·
to~or uc. lf11orlor, vory good,
dilioned. $200./month. Call 614- 4 hives Bees, ,.asonable offer, Happy Jock 3-X Fila Collar???
34 mpa, mull: 1M to appNCII ....
h workolll N- avolloblo lor 114-441-8780.
992-5545 7:00a.m.-4:00p.m. or 304-882-2708.
colo
toolll
R
A
Q
Food
A
Supply
614·992-6348 evenlhgs.
·
Couch and chair, $100; loveseat 399 W Main St., Pomaroy.
·
1914 Cllevy Impala, S3,~~; 1982
One ac re lot, trailers allowed, &amp; chair, $75 or all lor $150. 304Ford F·1!10, auta.-;oou, N&lt;l1
wn.ra
10
dltforont'
ol;oout
111o
cit~ water, Gallipolis Fe rry. 304·
675~123 alter 3:30.
$3,000. Both exc. condition •na
Happy
Jack
3-X
Floo
Collar??
h
67 ·2722.
Ducks for Sale : 814·446·0159.
workall Now available for cat1 high mlloago. 304·571-2189.
Trallar lot tor rent. 614~367·7438.
tooll Bldwall Caoft Food J D 1914 Ford 4 In good c Fer Sate • Concrata and Pl18tlc Nor1h Produce.
dhlon. $1500. SH at 1'22 Butt.,..
Trailer space, 2 large lots, s ep11c tanks. Al1 IIZII. RON
nut, Pomeroy, OH.
Wards Trailer Rark, Addison ~VANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
Musical
57
Bull Ad. $75/mo. plus depos it. son, OH. 1·800-537·9528.
1915 Chovy El camino. ve luat
614-446-4265.
·
1 t
1
lnioclod. EKcollont condftlon.
Heavy duty Gibs on washer and
OS rumen S
Fully aqulppod. $1971. or mako
Two trailer s paces, Routa 1 dryer. 3 yeare old. Dryer haa
Locust Road on right, 304·675· new heating element. Also, Bell Bundy Clarinet In good cond. olfor. 6t4·861-3333.
1076.
Fuzz Buster, $75. 1 y•ar old. Sell or trade for an acouaUc 1985 Cnryaler Now Yorkor; good
614·742·2243 or 614-992·3640.
gultor. 814-448-9635.
11\ape loadod, 304-171-2722:
49
For Lease
fu
Individual
11uhar
11s1on1,
rth
1nte erm e 1ectr1c
maca,
•
!985 Ford Mullan; GT. 5.0, 302
Very nice spacious 2nd tloor, 3 used very little. $150. 814-379- ~~n~:;:l• .-.nu:.lc,guitar.',; inglno. T·Top, AIC, al - ·
br., apt. unfurnis hed, stgve &amp;: 2745•
Wamaley lnltructor, 114-441- 614-8115-4417.
rtlrlg, historic home downtown Jet 13x36 lathes In stock au~r 8077, limited openlnga,
1ill5 Ford Tompo; AC,PS Pl.
$27~mo. Utilities I Ktrt, ret.
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304-882·

SNAFU®

August 28, 1989

BORN LOSER

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Household

County Appll~nca Inc. Good
used applia nce•, T.'v. 1111. Open
8 a. m. to 8 p.m. llon.-Sat. 514446·169!r . 6Z7 3rd. Avo. Gal-

Monday,

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Y••••••'• C.,...._..: WE CANNOT SUPPOSE 1liAT SOME MEN HAVE A RIGHT TO BE IN
THIS WORlD. AND OntERS NO RIGHT. - HENRY
GEORGE

·'

�Page 10-The Dlily Sentinel

Four die in single Interstate 71 accident
.

Beat of the Bend

Gathering more 'stuff ·
By BOB HOEFLICH
Comedian George Carlin does
this bit about
together
our stuff and
then having to
have a r®f to
put our stuff
under.
Despite the
fact that we en·
ter this world
without bringing anything
us and leave the same way,, most
of us have an Insatiable desire to
co Uect stuff.
This was reenforced for me
Saturday when I attended the
estate auction of the late Edison
Hobstetter held In one of the
commercial bulldings on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Now I have alwayS held these .
auctions In fascination -and we
do seem to have many of them In
Meigs County - but I"ve never
seemed to have the time and
energy - not to mention the
wherewithal- to get into them.
However, we had known Ed!·
son and his late wife. Marcia. for
many years and they had ·
through . those years been so
helpful to the newspaper. They
always could come up with a
clipping, a photograph or both
dealing with Pomeroy and Meigs
County events from way back
when.
The newspaper advertisement
on the sale listed an electric
\organ and although neither Char·
lene nor myself basically know
the difference between middle C
and F ·Sharp, we decided to look
the organ over.
Saturday morning - sale day
- I was awakened In what
seemed to be the middle of the
night - actually,lt was Sa.m.and told that I would have to hop
to It If we were going to get to the
sale In time to look over the
offerings before It started.
Charlene had the Impression
that In order to see the merchan·
dlse being offered onf must get to
the sale location before the sale
starts. Sounded logical to me.
Perhaps, that's the general rule
at most auctions- but It was not
that way Saturday morning. At
the Hobstetter auction, the sale
Items were lined up In nice rows
and you could just look until your
heart was content while the sale
forged ahead.
There· were so many .famlllar
faces there - almost like Old
Home Week.
I did make an early contact
with Auctioneer · Dan . Smith to
advise him that I probably would
be poking my eyeglasses frequently - and doesn't everyb·
ody? - and that wasn't to be
considered a bid.
Dan was quick to iriform me
that he has long known the
difference between a routine
punch of the glasses and a bid.
Not only that, but he assured me
that I was bidding on sheep at the
recent Meigs Fair Livestock .
Sale. I had made the appropriate
gesture, Dan said. Then he
demonstrated. This turned out to
be a low, deep wave of the arm.
"He's gotta be klddin" I
thought. ' 'I haven't done a wave
like that since 1943 when I left
Meigs County for the army."
About the only wave I've done
si nee is the one where I bend my
elbow, place my thumb on my
nose and wiggle my fingers and I
only do this when In complete
seclusion . By the way, whatever
happened to that gesture? Has It
been completely replaced by
today 's " finger"?
At any rate I'm just going to
accuse Dan of mistaken identlty
and let it ride with that.
So now for the brousing of the
sale items.
The first things to take my eye
were some beautiful marble
topped pieces.
Then I got a little message:
·'These are prime pieces they always sell for top prices
and are In the realm only of the
serious collectors ·and the
dealers".
What the heck? I don't need
marble furniture tops. I've been
pretty happy so far With tops that
are just a tad better than
cardboard. We call that ratlonali·
zation - I do a lot of that.
Charlene then spotted a large
sternng sliver bowl. Looked good
tom~ too ..However, upon further
examination we found It to be
engraved with the Hobstetter
name. We decided getting our
name changed might be a long,
drawn out court procedure at this
point in time - so our enthusi·
asm for the sliver bowl waned.
I next found myself really
intrigued by two beautiful what·
not shelves, one designed for a
corner.
Again, the' message:
"These are prime pieces
they always sell for top prices
and are In the realm only of the
serious colleCtors and dealers".
· · I backed off again.
But in no time, ebarlene
discovered some old Fostoria
· pieces.
.
"I'd like to have these," she
commented. "They Just match

Monday, August 28, 1989

Pomelov Mldci!IPOI'l. Ohio

our pedestal cake plate.''
Now you probably think that I
passed along the bit about the
serious colleCtors and dealers,
don't you? And you might even
think that .I · would stoop to
mentiOJI that the pedestal cake
plate has been used about three
times in the past 25 years. Cake
is quickly consumed at our house
- no way, does It last long
enough to be put on a pedestal.
But I didn't do that. No sir! I've
learned t}Jat a little psychology
goes a long way.
' All I asked was: ·
"Now with every nook and
cranny overflowing, just where
would you keep these pieces?"

Involved. After ail, Dan Smith
tells me I already, have the low
arm wave. All I have to do now Is
figure out what he'ssaylng. Like
most folks, sooner or later, I'm
gonna have to have some more
stuff and auctions seem to hi! an
Interesting way to go with that.
Meantime, keep.your stuff under
roof - and If you'r-e wise, under
Jock and key. And do keep
smiling.

By Ualled Oress lnletaatloaal
A traffic ac;cldentin a construe. lion area on Interstate 71 Sunday
killed four people, raising the.
state's highway d~ath toll to _at
leastlO, the Ohio Highway Patrol
said Monday .VIctlms of weekend accidents
·
Included:
. Friday Nlpt
None.
Saturday
·'Euclid: David W. Guilford, 35,
Mentor, killed when his motorcycle crashed on street In Euclid.
Eastlake: I)Quglas Townsend,
25, Willoughby, killed when his

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Page4

•
Vol.40. No.IO M
coexrlghtod ,,.,

.

SALE
/Uarm morning

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1 Section, 10 Pogeo 2&amp; Centa
A Muttimedil Inc. New-.er
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in crash
An "18-]lear;()lit,a tudent, enroute
to Buckeye Hl.lls Career Center,
was killed in· a one vehicle
accident at 8:05a.m. Monday on
SR. 554, a b.Ou..t.t.llree miles eas t of
Porter, a~cordlng to the State
Highway Pat-rol ..
The vlctlm w.as identified as,
William "Billy" Roush, son of
Edward and Barbara Justice
Roush, Rt. 1, Cheshire. Roush
was pronouc~d dead on arrival at
Holzer Medical Center.

It was Gallla County's .s eventh ·
traffic fatality of the year. The
patrol has inves ligated five fatal
accidents this . ye~r. Including '
one in February in which three
Rio Grande College students
were killed.
Troopers said the accident
occurred when Roush's west·
bound 1976 Ford pickup truck
went of!the right side of the road.
As the driver folll(ht for control of.

the vehicle, the truck came back
onto .t he highway, went off the
right side of the road and rolled
several times.
Roush was not wearing a seat
belt and was thrown from the
vehicle which finally stopped
after striking the front porch of a
hOuse owned by Thomas Holstein, Rt. 2, Vinton.
The truck was demolished.
Damage was minor to the house.

Teen sentenced to life in slaying
W.Va. (UP!)
-A sou them Ohio teenager who
pleaded. guilty to shooting his
grandmother to death for no
known motive was sentenced to
IHe In prison Monday.
Donald Allen. 17, of South
Point, Ohio, would not enter the
courtroom · in Cabell Circuit
Court for the sentencing until his
relatives left the room.
''His big problem Is that he just
can't come out and face you all,"
defense attorney Keith Newman
told the boy's relatives. "In all
my years of law I've never seen

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•

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anything like this."
Allen pleaded guilty to shooting and killing his grandmother,
Verda Brammer, 56, in February
at her Ona home. Although Allen
confessed to the crime, prosecutors still do not know why he shot
his grandmother and then
wounded himself.
Allen; who was staying with his
grandmother the day of the
shooting, initially told ponce an
Intruder had committed the
crime. But his story fell apart
when police searching the house
found a list In his handwriting

detailing the planned crime.
The,list Included Allen's plans
for shooting Brammer, setting
up an apparent burglary, and
shooting himself.
In court Monday, Allen admitted to the shootings.
"I shot• grandmother, and (
turned the gun and shot myself,"
he told Circuit Judge Dan
Robinson.
"Had your g1'andmother done
anything to you?" Robinson
asked.
"No," replied Allen, with his
head down.

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Council members discussed waste disposal to be held at tl)e
SenUael News Staff
the recent hearing on t)leannexaSenior Citizens Center on Sept.
A ban on skateboardll)g In the tlon proposal with Mayor HOf- 14. .
.
town:s business sections Is under fman commending Councilman
The MiddlepOrt Block Party to
consideration by Middleport VIl- Bob Gllmore for his handling of be held on Sept. 16 was noted
lage Council.
·
.
questions at the hearing.
although Council admitted they
At Monday night's meeting of
The mayor said he was optim- had little lnformallon. Mayor
Council, Mayor Fred Hoffman Istic about the decision and that Hoffman will request that a
described skateboarding as a
he could see no reaSon why the member of the Chamber of
"real problem" In the commun- annexation would not be ap. Commerce or the activity chair·
lty."He acknowledged that there proved In view of the "village's men be at the next meeting to
is no place to skateboard but said compliance with requirements. discuss the plans.
that the sidewalks, streets and He again noted that only 12 of the
Oct. 30 from 6 to 7 p.m was set
alleys certainly aren't the place 43 property owners, or 28 per· for trick or treat In the
to do lt.
cent, declined to sign the annexa· community.
The po~slbiUty of erecting a . tlon petition. •
Improvements at Diles Park
place at the park was discussed
A decision from the Meigs was discussed and It was noted
but that was discounted on the County Board of Commissoners that the picnic tables are in bad
basis of the liability Involved.
is required within 90 d&lt;!ys, but at shape and probably wlll need to
Proposals for an ordinance the hearing It was indicated that ' be replaced. The posslblllty of
banning skateboarding In the the decision could come as early getting a school to take on the
village business areas were as 30 days.
con~ truction of new tables as a
presented by Mayor Hoffman.
Gilmore said that one thing project was discussed. It was
Concurring with the mayor on which perhaps has 1,10t been also noted that benches are
the .. skateboarding practices stressed enough Is that natural needed in the park for parents
which were described as danger- gas service will be provided to watching their children on the
ous not only to the skaters the residences if the area is playground equipment or those
themselves but shoppers and annexed. According to lthe coun· on the horseshoe court.
Other pedestrians, Councilman cilman, Columbia Gas Co. Is
Other matters discussed in·
Dewey Horton volunteered to under contract to service the eluded the erosion of the river
draft an ordinance to be pres- village and If that section be- bank behind Family Dollar, and
ented at the next meeting.
comes a part of the village, then a standing water prpblem on
It was the general consensus the gas company will be obli· High Street.
·
that not only the downtown area .gated to service that area.
Attending the meeting were
but also parts of Hartinger
Members were reminded ofthe · Mayor Hoffman , ClerkParkway should be Included In hearings on the Community Treasurer Jon Buck, and Council
..11:!~ !li.:micte.d a.rea should an Devel~ent. Block Grants to be members, Gilmore. Horton, Ge- __
·- ~~ ai:lopte~ ~Illage hekfOII S'ept. 6 and 7 at the ~s
rard, James,. patworthy, Wll·
~ouncll. ~- ·' · · ·
·:• '
Cunty Court House, and also of llam Walters, and Jack
the district meeting on solid Sat tei'fleld.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 29. 1989

Middleport to ·consider
ban on .skateboarding

H~TINGTON,

INSIST ON A GENUINE

Tonla'ht, shower~ ud thuncierstorma likely. Low near 78.
Wlllds variable leas than 10
mph. Chaace of rain 88 percent. Wednesday; showers
aDd thunderstonns likely ...
Mainly In the monlng. High In .
the mid 8Gfl. Chance of rata 60
percent.

PICK-3: 765
PICK4: 2654

MORRIS ·
EQUIPMENT

;

RUT LA D
BOTTLE
GAS

Saints top
Bengals, 27-1

"STOP IN TODAY"

EASTERN-MEIGS.SOurHERN-WAHAMA

EMPLOYER OF THE YEAR -Eber Plckeas, left, owner of
Eber's Gull, Route J.U,- Ractae, has been named "Employer of the
Year" for hiS work with the Melp County Schools Work stiMiy
Program. Pickens was awarded this ho110r for his wiiiiDgness to
hire students, for proYidlng training aud practical work
experience, aDd for cooperatlllg with the program requirements.
Pickens employed two students !Juring the 1988-89 year. Pictured
with him Is John Fosler, coordinator of the work study prOJil"&amp;m.

Ohio Lottery

VARIETY

===HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS

That did the trick- we moved ·
on.
We never located the organ.
We did ·chat with Bette Jean
Hoffman- a niece of Edison and
Marcia who ·with her husband
has purchased the Hobstetter
residence on Lincoln Hill Road.
Someone had erroneousiy removed the broiler tray from the
stove in the kitchen and had
apparently put it in the sale
items. Bette was trying to track
it down. Perhaps, ~he got lucky.
All In all, Saturday's outing
was neat and I do want to get
more Into this auction bit sometime soon. The "regulars" appear to make the auctions real .
social outings. They unfold their
chairs, make themselves comfortal:11e and have a ball whether
or not they buy more stuff. They
have the advantage of being
knowledgeable. I'm sure these
folks know the good stuff, from
the mediocre stuff, from the bad
stuff.
I'm looking forward to g!'ttlng

car crashed on an Eastlake
Cleveland: Dennis H. Arnwine,
st.reet and he was thrown out. • 5, Cleveland, killed when a car hit
Akron: William M. Bridge, 35, · the tricycle be was riding.
Copley, kllled when his motorcycle hit a trafnc lslan,d on . Ohio
Route 162 In ·summit County.
Lynchburg: Wanda K. Gregory, 32, Lynchburg, killed when
the motorcycle on which she was
a passenger collided wtth ·a truck
on a Lynchburg s tree't. t
.
·
Suoday
Lisbon: · Margaret\ C. Loesch,
82, Broadman, killed when her .
PRICES
car collided with a truck on Ohio
164 In Columbiana County.
Xenia: Bobby G. Lewis, 24, and
Jamie L. Harrjs, 25, both of
.Sirmlngbam, 'Ala., Larry J.
Pettway, 21, Camden, Ala .• and
Charleen Whitaker, 23, Columbus, Ga., killed w.h ena car driven
742-2455
by Lewis crashed In a construcSAlEM
miET
tion zone in Interstate 71 in
~..II! 01110
Greene County.

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, qcJN'T L,OOK DOWN- Thla 18 deflnl&amp;eiY. nola

Job 16r ..,._ who sallen from lear of hellhta.
This unldenUfled worker has been buay off aDd on
lor the. past week, lutalDng big, orange marker

''
balls on pow~r liDeB ..
River. Thla
one Is be~cled an Ohio Power One on
Boule 338 between Racine ud Antiquity.
(Sentinel photo by Nancy Yoacham)

•

•

AEP marks lines crosstng rtver
to comply with West .Virginia law
Marker balls are being placed
on Ohio Power lines that are part
of the American Electric Power
System, crossing the Ohio River.
According to Richard K. Bur·
ton, AEP public affairs director,
Roanoke, Va., AEP is Installing
thfj. marker ballS to comply wl th a
new West VIrginia Public Service Commission requirement to
mark specific lln.e s crossing the

river.
The West VIrginia legislature
In Its last session, directed the
PSC to determine which lines
should be marked, Burton said.
Ail lines crossing the river will
not n~essarily need to be
marked however; only those
designated by the PSC, Burton
explained. AEP has contracted

with a helicopter firm to install
the marker ba'!Is. Burton could
not explain the installation procedure, but electric service Is not
Interrupted dutlng installation.
It takes about 10 to 15 minutes
to completely install ·one ball.
Bur top says AEP's goal is to be In
compliance with the PSC re·
qulrement by the end of
September.

Couple files suit over

POMEROY William F.
Isaac and Elisabeth Isaac, Columbus, have filed a $70,000
judgment action in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
James R. Foreman, Portland,
and J .L. McCoy, Inc., Itasca, Ill.
The suit stems from an Aug. 25,
1987 incident In Cumberland
County, Md.. The complaint
charges that on that day, the
defendant, James Foreman,
while In the course of employment with J.L. McCoy, Inc. ,'
negligently operated a semi·
tractor trailer Into the rear of a
truck operated by the plaintiff, William Isaac. The accident
allegedly caused the plaintiff
serious permanent Injuries.
William Isaac Is requesting
, $50,000 In damages, and his wife,
Elizabeth Isaac, Is requstlng
$20,000 In damages. In addition,
the plaintiffs have asked for a
trial by a jury of eight.
Greg Laudermllt, appearing
recently In Meigs Common Pleas
Court, was given a suspended
sentence of six months In j$11 on a
prior plea of guilty to receMng
stolen property, as contained In
an amended Indictment. Laudermllt was placed on probation for
three years with the following
special terms.
-That he Is to participate In
the Melp County Community
Correction~ Program.
-That he Ia to pay to the Melp
County Com!lllslloners, for deposit In the general fund, $1100 as
partial retmbunement for attorney fees.
-That he Ia to pay $200 of an
original $1,000 fine.
-And that he shall pay court
costs, on or before Nov. 17.
In the alate's case aaalnat
phHe aom.....,. to the ope111t11 dar of the teau
Dt!VId .J. Priddy, tbe defendant
lllalelh-. llaee NYNEX II I CCHpo-. of the
entered a a voluntary plea of
event. (UPI)
·
ll guilty to an Indictment charring

---·---------·-·.

him with cultivation of marl·
juana. SentencingforPrjddyls to
like place on Sept. 1.
Arraigned recently on separate indictments of trafficking' In
drugs were Crystal Irene Sellers
and James E. Sellers Jr. Both
entered pleas of innocent and
each were released on a $1,000
personal recognizance bond.
Arraigned on an Indictment for
receiving stolen property was
Darrln w. Wise. Wise pleaded
innocent to the charge and bond

~eck

was set at $rU,OOOwith the posting
of 10 percent cash necessary to
secure release. Wise Is then to be
conveyed to Franklin County for
pending charges.
Carmen Kay Brinager has
been granted judgment of
$6,812.41 from Timothy Brionager. · In addition, Timothy
Brlnager has been given a
suspended 30 day jail sentence
for contempt of court for not
paying child support payments
(See COUPLE, page 10)

Rutland _Block Party
scheduled Saturday
A new tradition Is starting In
The Belles and Beaus square
Rutland. On Saturday the village dancers wlJ.I perform 11t 3 p.m .,
will observe its first block party and from 6-10 p.m. the Wyomsponsored by the Rutland Fire Ing Wolf Band will perform.
Department and ladles auxll·
Anyone interested in renting a
lary.
table for the craft show should
There will be craft shows, · call. 742-2421 cir 742·2580.
plenty of entertainment and a lot ·
There will also be a prince and
of food.
princess contest as well as little
Entertalll!llent will begin at Miss and Mister contest. The
2:30 p.m. with the Rainbow above numbers may be conCloggers who will perform tacted for any information rethroughout the afternoon.
garding the day long events .

Health dep811ment gets grant
State Sen. Jan Michael Long
(D-Circlevllle) and State Rep.
Mary Abel -(D-Athens) an·
noUDCed today die awardllli of a
$60,000 grant to the Meigs County
Health Department for the fundlq of a Child and Family Health
SerYices (CFHs) Program.
The CFHS program would
provide for community planning
and public aud preVentiVe health
care services to children and
families through a locally developed plan.

~--- ·-·· · --.-

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

LOng and Abel added that
although most Ohioans can receive health care through the
private sector, Ohio Department
of Health estlmates show more
than one million · women and
children in the slate have limited
·acc:ess to care.
Thete funds were awarded
through the Ohio Departrneat of
Health from the Maternal alld
Child Health (Title V) lllack
Jll"ant.

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