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1 ~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs... - - - a
Continued from page 1
Smith struck the Davis cycle, causing damage to the front of
the cycle and damage to the left rear quarter panel of Ills car.
Smith told pollee that Davis's llghts were not working ·
Davis was cited lor assured clear distance and no rinanclal
responslblllty. He was transported by Pomeroy EMS to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Friday evening at 11:45 p:m. , Karen Cremeans 30 of
Langsville, was traveling down Wolfe Drive when she 'r an ' off
the lett side of the road and went up over and got stuck on a
·
·
wooden pole near a playground.
Cremeans 1976 Chevette sustained damages to the under·
neath of the vehicle.
She was cited by pollee for DUI and no finanCial responslblity.

Squads have bmy weekend
Units of the Meigs County Emergency . Medicat Services
resl\!llldl!d to fourteen calls for medical assistance over the
weekend. Seven calls were on Saturday and seven on Sunday.
Satlltday at 12: 30 a.m., Tuppers Plains went to Eden Ridge
Road for Flossie Reed who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Pomeroy at 1:13 a.m. was called to the pollee siation for Jose
Scott to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10: 10 a.m., Pomeroy transported Audrey Sau ters from the
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Nursing Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 11:50 a .m. was called to · Chester for Oris
Frederick who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Racine was called at 2:55p.m. toRo11te 124 for Jodi Hayes who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, lind at 3: 27 p.m. to
County Road 35 for Freda Ferguson, also to Veierans Memorial
Hospital. At 8: 20 p.m., Racine transported Danny Crislip from
an auto accident on 'County Road 28 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 1:28 a.m. Sunday, PomeroytransportedJeffDavls from an
auto accident on West Main St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10:09 a.m. , Pomeroy was called to Peacock Ave. for Henry
Werry who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Racine at 1: 01 p.m. was called to Fourth St. for Marlene
Fisher to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 5: 39 p.m. was called to Page St. for Gene
Daniels to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:13p.m., Pomeroy was called to Secol)d St. for Chester
Young who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Syracuse at 8:43p.m. transported Robin Imboden to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths-Emm~ Hayman

Archie Kimes

Former Syracuse resident,
Emma M. Hayman, 78, died
Saturday at the AmerlcarePomeroy Nursing Center, Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy, foUowlng an extended Illness.
Born March 15, 1911 at Fair·
· view In Letart Township, she was
a c!aughter of Harvey. and Edna
Boyd Cook. She was a retired
clerk from Elberfelds and a
member of the Syracuse Naza·
rene Church. She was also a
member of the Meigs County
Senior Citizens.
Survivors Include her husband,
Thomas Hayman, of Pomeroy;
three daughters, Helen Barnhart
Bailey, of Racine, Hazel Cadle,
Security, Co_lo., and Mrs. Gilbert
(Audrey) Hart, Racine; 10
grandchildren; 14 great grand·
children; five step-grandchildren: and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded In death by
her parents; a son, Howard C.
Hayman; and a sister, Lela
Riffle Robinson.
Graveside services will be
Tuesday. 1 p.m., at Letart Falls
Cemetery, with Rev. Glen
McMillan officiating. Friends
may call at Ewing Funeral Home
tonight (Mobday) from 2to4and
7 io 9.

Newspaper...

An:hie "Abe" Kimes Jr., S8 of
New H!lven, died Saturday, Sepi. 9,
1989, m ihe emergency room of
Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
·
· He was born Dec. 23, 1930 in
West Columbia, the son of the iare
Archie Kimes Sr. llild Nora Van
Merer of Mason. He was a c:Oal

miner,

He was preceiled in dealh by two
sons, Raben E. and James Edward
Kimes; and two broihcrs.
.Surviving are his wife, Cora M.
Kimes of New Haven; four
daughrers, Thmmy J. Chapman of
Point Pleasant, Rose M., Mary Par·
lene and Rhonda L. Kimes of New
Haven; two sons, Pavid W. Kimes
of New Haven and RandaU L
Kimes of Chester; Ohio; two sis:
ters, Mrs. Alice · Jioschar of West
Columbia, and Mrs. Norma Greer
of Vinton, Ohio; one brother, Jackie
L. Van Meter of New Haven·
moth~·in-law Geneva . Parsons:
Lettergap, W.Va.;
and four
grandchildren.
Services were Monday, I p.m., at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
Mason, with the Revs. Georg~
Hoschar and Clyde Fields . bolh
officiating. Burial was iri the
Evergreen Cemetery, Letart.
Foglesong Funeral Home was in
charge of lhc arrangements.

Continued from page 1

dent, Tom Yezbak , told the
Wallick's Mark Shoemacher
newspaper his firm also figured told the paper, "We do not feel
in costs Wallick did not, such as a that we got a fair shake" since
$40,000 gas line to the project, and Yezbak received the contract.
high land costs .
HUD Is also allegedly looking
Yezball. said he planned to Into a $3 million project In Derry
build the projE'ct on Outcrop's Township, Westmoreland
present site, whereas Wallick . County, the Press said.
proposed putting It .across the
"There's somebody who has It
road from the present village, the In for me," Yezbak told the
newspaper said. To build on the Press.
present site, Yezbak said he had
Yezbak Is the former chairman
to pay $150,000 to Wayne Reese, a of the Fayette County Republl·
bank president who owned the can Party and once chaired the
site, the Press said.
southwestern caucus of the state
Township Supervisor Ernest Republican Committee. Yezbak
Dodson . told the Press that ·told the newspaper he felt his
Wallick's plan would not have past political ties may have
worked because "we wanted the sparked questions about the two
blight taken care of In Outcrop." contracts he was awarded.
He was quoted as saying,
"I can understand where some" Building on another site one looking at me from the
wouldn't' have solved the prob· outside would say It looks funny,
lem of Outcrop."
because I know so many people,"
In addition, Y ezbak said his bid he told the Press ..'.'It's almost as
was based on using highest thoUgh you've automatically got
quality materials, the newspaper to be somebody's enemy to do
said.
·
business with them In
government."

Meigs announcements
Meeting ·cancelled
night (Monday) at 7:30 p.m . at
The meeting of the Southern · the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Athletic Boosters scheduled for All members are urged to attend.
tonight (Monday) has been can· Meeting changed
celled due to a reserve football
The Racine Board of Public
game.
Alfalrs will meet on Wednesday,
Job's Daughters
rather than Monday, at 10a.m. at
The International Order of Star Mill Park.
Job's" Daughters wlll meet to-

By United Press lnterna&amp;Ioaal
Frigid air rolled over the
northern Plains · states early
Monday, dipping temperatures
Into the 20s and 30s In some
portions of Montana, ·Nebraska
and the Pakotas, as showers and
thunderstorms covered much of
Texas and Oklahoma.
The Natloilal Weather Service
said freeze or frost warnings
were posted Monday morning
over Montana, Wyoming, southeast Idaho, north~esternSouth
Dakota and western North

Dakota.
Mlnnesoia across portions of nia Into New York state and
Midnight temperatures North Dakota, South Dakota, southwest New England.
dropped Into the 20s and 30s over Nebraska, Colorado and·Kansas.
More than 1 ~ lnclles of rain
western portions of the Dakotas,
Showers and thunderstorms was reported overnight In Hun·
Nebraska, Wyoming and Mon- also extended over the Oklahoma
tlnglon, W.Va.. more than two
tana, bui forecasters said no and Texas panhandles, across
Inches of rain was reported at
temperature records appeared northwest and central Texas Into Meridian, Miss, and Centreville,
to have been broken.
'wesll!rn Oklahoma.
Ala., received just under 1 ~
The weather service said show- . Thunderstorms In Texas late
Inches.
ers marked the eastern boundary Sunday produced small hall at .
Meanwhile, Hurricane . Ga·
of the cold outbreak, and rain Stratford and wind. gusts . to 44
brl!!lle 'weakened to a tropical
turned to snow In the central mph In Hondo.
storm In the north Atlantic laie
RocklflR .
ShOwers peppered southeast Supday night after a weekend of
By midnight EDT, showers Louisiana, Mississippi and west- havoc In whlcjl one person was ·
were scattered from western ~rn Alabama. NWS forecas-ters .. killed . and four others were
said rain also was scattered from
missing. In New York and New
West VIrginia across PennsylvaEngland.

Girl .Scout leaders ·meet

Former Big Bend East and Big borrow a kit from the Girl Scout
Bend West Girl Scout Service Field Center In Athens. AppointUnits met Thursday for the first .. ments must be made for Green
time as lite combined, Big Bend Circle sessions and appointment
Service Unit. The two service forms are available from Cogar.
units were comlilne4 by Black
New cookie sales kits, which
Diamond Girl Scout Council In provide program links · to Girl
July. The meetl!lgwas held.at the Scout badges, were distributed to
Pomeroy United Methodist the . leaders for · all age levels
Church.
except the Daisy level which
Discussed by the .leaders and ' cannot s~ll cookies:
Shirley Cogar, service Jlnli dlrec·
Gltl Scout calendars for 1990
tor, was ihls year's Meigs County were also distributed. 'i'he caFalr judging and how next year's lendars wlll be sold throughout
judging of Girl Scout projects Meigs County for $2 each.
It was decided that service unit
might be slmpUfled. It was
suggested that the different meetings wlll he held monthly on
judging areas might be color a rotating basts between Meigs,
coded next year. and that larger Southern and Eastern School
Information cards might be used. Dis trlcts. 1\feetlngs will be the
Also related to the fair, Cogar first Thursday of each month at 7
clarified some of the require· p.m. October's meeting will be at
ments for outstanding troop and the Syracuse United Methodist
outstanding scout.
Chqrch.
Leader training schedules
It was' suggested that the 1990
were outlined. It was polilted out Thinking Day might be carried
that most of Meigs County's out In conjunction with Pome·
leader training will be provided roy's Sesquicentennial Celebraby Cogar at her home In tlon, with troops selecting coun·
Minersville. However, local lead· tries which may have helped
ers may also attend training settle the Pomeroy area. The
sessions outside the county If Thinking Day program might
they wish. Leaders are being also be expanded to Include
urged to sign up for trainings as demonstrations of early crafts,
etc., that may have been brought
soon as possible.
Cogar has five Green Circle to the area by specific nationalltralners In the county who are lies. The public would be Invited
available to present Green Circle to the Thinking Day program.
programs to sc.out grOUIJS. Green
By next month's meeting,
Circle Is a pro~am which troops are to have selected a first
teaches children, and adults, to and second .choice for a Thinking
accept and appreciate the differ· Day country.
Also, by next meeting, leaders
ences In Individuals, and to
understand how Individuals can should be able to give Cogar a list
be deeply hurt If ihey are of troop committee members, as
excluded or treated unkindly, well as thetlmeandplaceofthelr
simply because they are differ- meetings, and the name of their
ent from what might be cons!· . troop sponsor.
dered the normal. The service · Salisbury Brownies wlll teach
unit will be purchasing Its own a craft or song at the next
Green Circle i{lt as soon as· meeting, and the Middleport
possible.
J u n I or s wIll provIde
Until then. the service unit will , refreshments.

Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ............ ..56%
Heck's ........ .. .......... ... ..... ....... 3,4
Key Centurion ......... .... ........ 13
Lands' End .. ............ ........... 27~
Limited Inc .......... .. .... .... .... 37~
Multimedia Inc ................ : 103~ ·
Rax Restaurants .................. 2'lf.
Robbins &amp; Myers , ........ .... ... 16%
Shoney's Inc ..... ... ,............... 12
Wendy's. Inti ..... .. ................. 5%
Worthington In!! .... ... : ...... ... 24~

Ohio Lottery

Giants edge
Redskins on
field goal

Northern Plains reports frosty weather

Pick-3

457
Pick-4

Page 3

•
Vol.40, No.89 M
Copyrighted 1988

40

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Aud·
rey Sau ters, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - John
Houck.
Sunday admissions - Freda
Ferguson, Racine.
Sunday discharges- None.

'
\

E:!;JSNOW
-RAIN .
~ SHOWER.S ::
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
9ccl~de~:
f.hp shows minimum ~mperatures . Atleast50% of any shaded area Is rorecast

R

9W

•-:- ''o/.:C?i ... e p~cicitation indicated

·

UPI

WEATHER MAP - During early Tuesdq momlag sltowera
aad tbunderslonns are forecast lor parla of the soullle~ Plalas.
Showers and thunderslonns are possible In moat of the soulllern
Plains, parts of the central Plalll8, the mid Mississippi valley the
Ohio Valley ,the Gulf Coast and the mid Atlantic Coast States. UPI

:
:
:
•
:

By NANCY, YOACHAM
Dally Seallael Staff
Aithough MUldleport VIllage
Council at Monday night's mej!t·
lng approved the first reading of
an ordinance restricting skateboarding to specific residential
· areas, the ordinance Is still not a
sure thing, as written.
Councilman Dewey Horton
prepared the ordiD!Ince which
would restrict skateboarding on
publ~ property, sidewalks and
alleys "the fulllenglh of General
Hartinger Parkway; two blocks
of Pearl St. ftom Ash St, to
":-a~rel St.; Second Awe. from the
.Jilddleport:Pomeroy line to Mlll
St,. Including one block north and
south on all streets adjoining
Second Ave.; and the fulllenglh
of Mill St."
As written, the ordinance
would prohibit skateboarding In .
all of tbe business sections of the
village, and In the Middleport

By United Press International
So"th Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
low In ihe lower 60s. Light winds.
Tuesday, partly cloudy with a
high aroun,d 80. Chance of rain Is
20 percent.

Murder ...

Contin_ued

fro~ pagel

1.-

Address: ........ .................. ..................... ............................................. ..

M

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XL

In rOmddt&gt;l'ation of &amp;ubmiUing lhla rntry lo partk-lpail" in ah~ Middl~
P_orl Blork Party SK Run, I waive all daime for mY, self, my heirs. and ufllgrJ~ for da.,aaRr.e, deman~e and action• I may hl\le againetlhe ho11.,
t~ponMors,. or promOion for tnju ry or UlnHs whirh ma) raull from my ;
partk-lpatlon. I further otai• Ihat I om plryoinlly n~ that I han ouffiol·
mtly lrainnl for thil~ "ent, and that this hu twen \lerln~d hy a phy•J..
.-I an.

Signalure: ....................................................................... .,............... ..
·--- ---- ..................... -·-······ .... ··-· ........... .

Par..,ral Si..-.•u"" of "l.i.~d;; -~R;·i·a· .. ··························

MAIL TO: Mick Davenport, 226 S." Third Ave . .·
Middleport, Ohio 4S'i'60

Co"f"tllletl•••·High S1h1111/ S•nlot~/ .
You have reached a milestone in your Iivas in
·
this final year of high scttool.
.Let us hal~ you appropriately note the accom·
phshment w1th full color senior,por:traitB taken in
warm and friendly surroundings.
·
We will show you from 10 to 12 previews from
which to make your final selection, and your portraits do have a lifetime guarantee. You'llllke our
reasonable price structure.
·
For an appointment or mora information, contact us after 6 p.m. weekdays, anytime weekends.

Five Points Class
TUESDAY, 7:00 P.M.
Mason, WY. United Methodist Church
MEMBERSHIP FEE $1 0.00 TO. JOIN

......... Charltlll

HMflkil

1hl Plloto Piace ·
IM .... St.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) . .;.. the project, which Is expected to from now.
Also approved was the transfer
state Controlilng Board. c~eate 600 new jobs and $85
Monday voted to . release $1 million In annual economic be· of $5.37 million In unused prison
construction money for the conmUllon In development money · neflts to the area.
for the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame
The ·board also approved the struction of Mansfield Correcand Museum· In Cleyeland, sche- release of $1.55 million to allow tional Institution. State officials
duled for cOmpletion In late 1992 . Phar-Mor to develop the Erie need $11.4 million more than
The money for the $56 million Terminal BuDding In Young· anticipated for the $65.6 maxi·
exhibition hall comes on top of $4 stown· Into a corporate training mum security prison. to house
1,250 lnmar,es.
million 1!1 capital funds approp- . center.
Much of the extra money was
riated In 1987-88.
The lease-purchase project
will be financed by the sale of made aval.table when Chllllcothe
Although CI.eveland was
cliosen for the.site several years 2,0-year bonds, ;md It Is expected Correctional ·Institution was
ago, s~sprs 1\a:ve ha.d difficulty . to c~ea\e ~new jobs.\)ver ihr~ . COI!ipleted lnl987 .a ! ·.a savings of
putiln i tlnanclai package to- years.
.
, _$6:1 million. The Ohio Departgether. Ground-breaking Is
The board released. $3 mUllan ment of Rehabllltation and Corplanned for next year.
for the construction of 20 cabins rection said another $2 million
Tower City Development Corp. at Maumee Bay State Park, with wlll be transferred to the Mansa completion date of one year flelil project later .
Is contrlbutlng$32mllllon toward

.

Name: ................ ........................................, ......, ................................ .

I

The

•

5KRun

&amp;Rother contract prepared and
signed by Pomeroy Council before Middleport has their next
regular regular session on Sept.
25. Haptonstall said he would.
Councll also requested that
another section of the present
agreement be reworded so that If
Middleport has to raise fees for
sewage service to customers
within the village, then ihe costs
to the two businesses In Pomeroy
Village limits would be Increased
the same amount
Essentially, · Middleport VII·
lage :'has no valid reason to
charge anyone In this situation
because we have no contract with
anyone&gt;'' said Mayor Hoffman.
"That's why we wanted the two
villal!'es to deal with each other
Continued on page 10

State spends another ·million
on Clev.e land ~rock'· m .u seum

· Extended Forecu&amp;
Wednesday through Fridq
Scattered showers and thun:
derstorms W!!dnesday and fait
'(hursday an!l Friday. High$ will
be mainly In the 70s and lows hi
the' 50s.

Middleport Block Party

Shirt Size (adult) S

26 Ctnto

A Muttimedia Inc. Newspap•r

Hill resldentl'al .area. Skate·
received •Complaints from res!·
Area businessman BlllHapton· business to pay the sewage fees,
boarQers would be permitted In dents regarding the ''bellger- stall was at Monday's meeting to and that Pomeroy wishes to pay
oiher residential sections "so enc.e " of some skateboarders. resolve protllems regarding the Middleport on a monthly basis,
long as they do not infringe on the Hoffman said he also received $1,200 yearly payment by Pome- whldi at the end of a year would
safety of pedestrian trllfflc."
· comments from some of the roy to Middleport for sewage still be $1,200.
The safety of skateboard rid·
youngsters who ride skateboards service being provided by Mid·
Middl~port Council is willing to
ers, as well as the safety of asking that their riding not be dleport to the Subway Sandwich. accept the $100 a month, but
pedestrians, were the key factors
prohibited.
Shop and Domino's Pizza. Both pointed out that Pomeroy did not
behind the proposed ordinance.
Alter the discussion and-read· businesses are In Pomeroy Vll· pay for the service as agreed
Failure to abide by the ordl·
lng of the proposed ordinance, !age limits.
upon, even he lore they were told
nance would result In a warning Councilmen Raul Gerard and
At the time the two businesses the upfront payment was Illegal.
for a first offense. On a second William Walters voted no on the wept In, Pon;teroy agreed to pay Acc,ordlng to Ml,ddleport, Pon;te.violation by the same person and
skateboard ordinance, .· as tli~ .$1;200 ' eael\ Janll!lrl:' for · rox .1$ already In .arrearage for
. '
If the person Is a minor, the
written.
service the rest of the year. the service, although Pomeroy
skateboard would be Impounded
· .I( was Gerard's opinion that as However, Pomeroy Clerk Jane did pay for · November and
for .30 days ·. and par~nts or written, · the propOsed ordinance ·· Walton has InfomledHaptonstall · December of 1988, and sent
guardians would be notified. A does not solve the r.eal problem tl\at she has been advised by the · anoiher $400 check In January,
second violation by an adult or a which he .feels Is .that many state audltor~s office that It Is which for some' reason, was
third violation by a juvenile youngsters who ride skateboards Illegal for Pomeroy to pay up returned to Pomeroy.
would constitute a minor- are "not acting responsibly" front for services : Haptonstall
In order to resolve the payment
misdemeanor.
when. riding. Gerard said he explained that Pomeroy lias been problem, Mayor Fred Hoffman
Much discussion took place would prepare an amendment to coUectlng $50 a ,month from each suggested that Haj)tonstall get
before the reading of · the the proposed ordinance, which he
ordinance.
will present at the next meeting
Both Horton and Mayor Fred for possible Inclusion In the
Hoffman reported they have ordinance.

-----------~eailier----------~•.

(ENTRY FORM)

)Female(

1 Section. 10 Pageo

New. skateboard ordinance 'not a sure thing'

CoiTedion

AGEaool9/16/89 ...................................... Male(

•

. . Pomeroy-. Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. September 12. 1989

Toledo man killed in house fire
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Fire
swept through a west side home
early Monday, killing a 22-yearold man who was watching the
home for his grandmother.
Deputy Fire Chief Bob
Thrasher said the body of Tom
Buster was found on the second
floor of the home. The fire was
discovered around 4: 30 a.m.

MotitiY cloudy tonight. Wg~
today In mid 70s. Rain likely
Wednesday. IDgh In mid 60ss.

6380

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 9-12-69,

four detectives: "Two weeks ago drove to Florida from their dalzy
the team was · halved to
. . two farm home near Wlllshire, Oblo;
detectives who place a few calls AltE'r a visit to Disney World, the:
each day and keep lri touch with women checked Into a Tampa·
the oth·e r law enforcement motel about 12: 30 p.m. June 1.
. · ' Ninety .mbwtes later lnvesd·
agencies ... •
Tile Rev. ·a;~ry Luderman, ' gators learned, tMII' otlhtiiibbtlt!
pastor of the Zlon-Schumm Luth· was seen parked at _a boat ramp
eran Church In Schumm, Ohio, on the Courtney Campbell Parksaid lie wasn't aware that the way. Three days later, boaters
"It started, It looks, like on the pollee department had stopped found the bodies of all three
first floor," Thrasher said. "The Its intensive Investigation. But women floating In the bay, tied to
stairs were completely burned the pastor said he wasn't sur- cement blacks.
out, very little fire upstairs and prised.
Without new leads or lnforma·
most of the fire was confined to
Luderman, who .. ~.-Uer served tion, Fouts said there wasn't
as a spokesman to Hal Rogers, enough work to keep anl( Investl."
the first floor and the stairs."
Pollee said gasoline was appar- · the husband of Jo·an Rogers, said gator busy on a full-time basis .
ently used to start the fire, and . the pollee detectives tried very Fouts said the few letters, and
they were looking Into the possl: hard. But, "When you run out of calls that the department Is now
blllty that Buster may have leads .. . what else can you do?" receiving are more likely to offer
started the fire himself. The lie said.
advice than new Information.
blaze began on the ground floor.
Eady thl~ summer, Rogers'
"We pay attention ·to everyA neighbor S&lt;lid he tried to 36-year-old wife and their daugh· thing," said Fouts.
e?ter the home to save the ters, Michelle 17, and Chrlste, 14,
.victim, but heavy smoke. made
rescue Impossible.

----Stocks--...--Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Lo.ewt
Am Electric Power .... .... ..... 29-v,
AT&amp;T ......... .... .. ,...... ........... 3934
Ashland 011 ............. .......... .40\lo
Bob Evans .. ............... .-........ ,15'll!
Charming ShOppeS ............. .15):1
City Rohling Co .................. 15~
Federal Mogul. ...... :...... ,..... 25110

Monday, September 11. 1989

CLEANING UP THE PABK- Members of tile
Po!Deroy 'febelo ·Pad 24t were busy Mond!IY
evening _p tllnc the mini park on Court Street
back In order. The mach needed work was done by
Cl~n Crow, Adam Riffle, Adam.Tbomas, Jerod
.Warner, David Andel'lliln, Brian Young, Sieve

-Ben

-

Freeman, Georre Wright,
Clark, assistant leader. The pack
was dolllg the ~ork as a service project for the
commljnlty and may take the tallk on as a full 'time ,
. pro)ect1

•

Ohio GOP maps. plans ·for
Apportionment BOard seats
By LEE LEoNARD
Assembly districts during the
UPI Statehouse Reporter
1990s.
- ·
COLUMBUS - State Republl·
The Apportionment Board In·
cans are gearing up for a special eludes the governor, state audl·
fund- raising effort for the 1990 tor and secretary of state, plus
elections, emphasizing grass· one legislator from each party.
roots organization and targeting Democrats control the board, 4-1.
seats on the five-member state
W.R. Tlmken, clial~man of the
Apportionment Board.
Ohio Republican Finance Com"Ohloans are ready for a , mlttee, said President Bush has
change from the scandals, cor- been lnvi\ed to kick off the
ruptlon and pandering to special fund· raising campaign with a
Interests that have characterized Columbus appearance Oct.16.
Tlmken said the new lund·
the Celeste adminiltratlon," Republican State Chairman Robert raising. plan Is pattered after
Bennett said Monday.
"Victory '88" in which the party
Bennett said "Victory '90" wm raised and spent fl!Oney for the
be · an attempt to use local successful Republican presldenRepublican congressmen and tial campaign over and.above the
county officials to generate mo- · Bush campaign's limits.
ney that the state party can · Tlmken said the "Victory '90"
funnel to certain statewide money will go directly to the
candidates.
candidates rather than to party
The chairman said he hopes to over bead expenses. "~epubll·
raise $1 million for Republican cans are eager for this type of
candidates for the Apportion· commitment," he said.
·ment Board, which wlll realign
Chairman of the program will
boundaries for the Ohio General be Rep. Bob McEwen, R·Ohlo, of

Hillsboro.
Rep. John Kaslch, R·Ohlo, of
Westerville, said the coi'Jlmll·
ment of Republican congress·
men can ma!&lt;e a difference In
fund· raising. "The congressmen
are concerned about the state of
·
the party," he said.
Bennett said 56 to 63 percent of
most county officials are Republicans, and the state GOP wants
to take advantage of their cam·
palgn organizations.
He also pointed out that control
of the Apportionment Board Is
necessary for the Republicans to
gain ·· a majority In the Ohio
House, which has been Democrat
since 1973.
With control of the Legislature,
he said, Republicans could red·
raw congressional boundaries In
1991. A once·large Republican
edge In the Ohio delegation lias
eroded to an 11-10 disadvantage,
despite the fact that Republican
candidates still receive a major·
tty of the vote.

Ohio _......,
ACT, SAT scores drop
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
College entrance test scores of
Ohio high school seniors d~opped
this past year, but state educa·
tlon · officials said they are not
oVl!rly concerned.
The Educational Testing Service reported ihat Act scores
droppecf In Ohio by 0.2 polntfrom .
the composite of the class of 1988.
This year's composite In Olllo
wu 19.i. The national average
wu 18.8, A perfect score Is 36.
, The SAT scores drppped by one
· pobit- In the ' verbal section and ·
two points In math rtom the 1988

averages. Ohio's scores were 451
Ohio SAT scores 'have dropped
In verbal and 497 In math. The · · In both verbal and mathematics
national averages were 427 and since 1983-84, but Bandy said the
476, respectively. A perfect score ACT drop may have been a
Is~.
,
'
one-year Irregularity.
·
Irene Bandy, assiltsnt super·
Bandy pointed out that more
lnt.endent of public Instruction, students than ever took the
pointed out that scores In other entrance tests. She said Ohio
states also dropped and that Ohio students In the top range
students were still above the
achieved scores eq ilal to the 1988
national averaee.
group.
The standardized entrance exBandy also said educators
aminations are used to predict
were ' encouraged that more
whether a graduating senior Is. minority students took the tests
equipped tp handle coUege . thil year and their scores were
material.
· better. ·

MINES MERGED - Tim Colemaa, a senior
mlnlag eagl-r at Soulllern Ohio Coal Com·
pany's Melp Dlvlalon and aa AtheliA resident,
shows how close surveyors came to determining

the exact location of the merger between the
Melp No. 1 ud Raccoon No. 3 mines. Behind
Coleman Is the conUnuous miner that made the
final cui from Meigs No. 1 Into Raccoon No. 3.

Meigs Mine No. ·1, Raccoon No.3
establish a 'first' for .AEP -mining
ALBANY - Years of planning
aboveground hal led to an
historic event beneath the hills of
southeastern Ohio.
Souihern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs No. 1 and Raccoon No. 3
mines . have been physically
connected, establishing a "first"
for American Electric Power
mining operations. The mine will
offiCially be renamed Meigs No.
31In the near future.
Southern Ohio Coal's Metes
Division has been working to-

ward the connection lor two
years, according to AI Hillard,
mine superintendent for the two
underground mines. "A continuous rn111er cut an entry from Mine
No. 1 Into Mine No. 3," Hlllard
said.
Meigs Divis ion employees In·
valved In the connection Included
Ralph Prater, a miner operator
from Hamden; Carl Johnston, a
.miner helper from Ewlngton;
Randy Llevlng, a roof bolter
frOIJI Albany; and· David Beck·

ett, a roof bolter from Athens:
The merger was planned after
company geologists determined
the best location for mining
through a rock formation which
existed between the underground
mines. That operation, com.
pleted In May, Involved the
development of two large tunnels
through ·a 700-foot- long sandstone channel.
Hillard said the merger also
Involved extensive Coordlnahon
with state and federal agencies.

�TU81day, September 12. 1989

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

g0::l.

~~ ~'-""T"•~c::l;.=o
~v

,•

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT Wllft'EHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/C'/ntroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gen¢ral Manarer

LETI'ER8 OF OPINION are weleome. Tiley ohould be IMolhullll
wel'do t..r. AU lellel's are oubjecllo edltlnr and mulli be alped wllb
IIUIIIIe, addrtu and lelepboae number. No uDOiped tellers wm be pub·
llahed. Leller~ abould be In rood laote, addrtuiiiJII•-· 110lperooaaiJ.
liM.

Bush's war on drugs:
the first battles

Page-2-The Daily Sefrtinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tualday, September 12, 1989

Perestroika working
UGLICH, U.S.S.R: - A watch
factory In this city of .40. 001) on the
Vol~ River Is a ,shining exaJllple
of the magic of perestroika (econ·
omlc restructuring) at work. Un·
fortunately, It Is an Island In a sea
of centralized planning, long Unes,
red tape and empty shelves.
·
The factory produces rela·
tively high quality
w;ltches.
And while the term Russian
workmanship may stlll be a
laughable oxymoron, this fac- ·
tory oflO,OOO workers may be the
model for a different future. The
fact that It already turns a profit
and workers are benefltlilg Is
nothing short of revolutionary. .
A visit to this factory was arranged within hours of our request to see It, an extraordinary
occurence In a country where,
only five years ago, the request
WO!Ild have languished.
The factory's Deputy General
Director, Vladimir Kryiov, explained that they ae the only
plant produclng ,''Chalka" (Sea·
gull) brand-name watches, primarily for women. And he was
proud to say that perestroika had
alowed them to profit. Under
perestroika, he explained, the fo·

•

m some sectors
..

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
cus Is on consumer demand, not
state orders. And his watches spent by Soviet consumers shop- Important ·"dissipation of en·
sell rapidly In Russia, as well as ping for phantom products. Sales ergy," a mlntl-numblng order
In 47 other countries, Including clerks wiil spend only 11.6 billion that keeps mariy Soviets busy
some Western ones.
man-hours walt ing on them. In when there 1$ little lese to do ex·
The bottom line: Annual who- . ail, their shopping time Is equal cept drink vodka at home.
lesale Income is 77 million ru· to full·tbne annual employment ·
The Infamous Soviet lines al·
bles. Krylov say they reinvest for 35 million people.
most Instantly form and stretch
about 11 million rubles back Into
We came across two examples for blocks on word that a shop
the business. Another 7.5 million of what might be called line-lore. has new shoes or some other
js funneled to the workers In the
First, the right to stand In line. items available. Young wives to
form of housing construction, va· can be Inherited. If a parent, older grandmothers routinely
cation resorts and other fringe · whos Is registered lor a piece of carry just-In-cases string tote
benefits. The remaining 7 million furniture or a car, dies; one o!the bags, because they never know
can be distributed hi salary hikes children can Inherit the place In when they might jump Into a line
and bonuses.
line . .
waiting for fresh meat or other
Krylov Is an ardent champion
Second, an article In 1979 by an goods. Often It Involves ,three
of Gorbachev' s reforms. He and author of children's books, Yuri lin'es - one to Identify an Item
other Soviet officials fear that Druzhnlkov, depicts lines with and Its price, the second to pay
the shortage of goods - the humor and pathos: "I was born for It and the third to retrieve It
workers' Inability to spend their In a line." It seems his mother
money - Is the most dire pitfall was waiting In line to be~ regis· with the receipt.
When It COll)eS to ·DOD·fOOd
posed for peres troika. The Soviet terro' to give birth when labor Items,
he disparity Is out of sight.
Union Is In the middle otlts worst pains struck. The poor woman Few Soviet homes have washers,
consumer-shortage
crisis In had forgotten per papers. She
dryers, vacuum cleaners or even
years.
quickly dispatched her husband electric mixers. Sovleis ' make
Waiting In lines Is more than for the papers, but he returned to 800 million pairs of shoes a year,
an Inconvenience; It Is a subcul- find Druzhlnlkov had been born but they wear out quickly, and
ture In Russian life, the ugly face in a hospital corridor. With some the demand Is great for more.
of a faltering society.
seriousness, Druzhnlkov has im· When Soviets buy Soviet, they
One Soviet government statts· plied that If Russia didn't ha·
Inspect !abies to see
tlclan estimated that more than veelines, th~y'd have_to Invent anxiously
when they were made.It'sgener.'
65 million man-hours will be them. The billions of hours are
ally believed that Russian goods
made at the first of the month
will be twice as good as those
made at the end of the month,
when factories rush to fill quotas.
RX WARNING &amp; Beware of
cosmetic surgeons advertising
on television.
Congressional Investigators
are sounding an alarm but doc·
•
•
tors performing surgery outside
• • •
a hospital setting. The medical
profession has Its share of snakeoil salesmen, particularly from
the ranks of cosmetic surgeons.
Some of these doctors lack credentials and use false or mislead·
lng advertising to lure unwary
clients.
·
The federal government has
•
been oblivious to this scandal or
has chosen to turn a blind eye.
Over the last several years, pea-_
pie seeking facellfts, nose jubs,
breast
enlargements and other
•
•
cosmetic operations have died as
• •
a result of the surgery. Others
have been physically and emo•
tionally scarred. What they have
In common Is having had the operation performed outside of hos·
pltals, often In doctors' office or
Harry's) • • • • • • • • • ~
clinics ..

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Addicted as we Americans are to labels,
President Bush's anti-drug plan has to be called a "war." The
question Is whether It will be VIetnam or World War II when It gets to
Capitol Hill.
·
The fate of Bush's proposal will depend on a number of factors,
5ckedules A&amp; B
Including at least the following:
(form 1040)
1. The president cannot expect to get his plan enacted with one
spe~h. He Is going to have to use the "bully pulpit" of the presidency
to keep talking about the need for action against narcotics until the
public and especially Congress Is sick of hearing about it. He Is going
to have to push hard.
2. Congress Is going to have to put aside partisanship and
pre-conceptions In considering the Bush plan. The Democratic
leaders of the Senate and House must convince their troops to take the
risk that the president and his fellow Republicans In Congress will get
the bulk of the credit for the program.
3. The president also Is going to have to be prepared to make some
compromises. If he takes the position that his plan Is the only one that
will be acceptable, as he did on the minimum wage, he will end up
with a bill he will have to veto, or nothing at all.
Specifically, If Bush applies his "read my lips" no-tax Increase
pledge to the financing of anti-drug efforts and Insists on cuts In social
· programs to pay for it, he is going to run Into big trouble. There Is a
very strong body of 'opinion In Congress that any proposal to finance
new or expanded federal activities without new sources of revenue Is
demagogic fakery.
At the same time, congressional Democrats must avoid the
Impression that they want to use the need for anti-drug money to
mask a tax Increase to resurrect any number of other domestic
programs cut back during the Reagan years.
· Without at tempting to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the
·Bush program, it must be noted that the recent history of ambitious,
wide-ranging proposals Initiated by the White House has not been
bright with success.
1~ta\ lten\lz.Ed
Jimmy Carter's energy program In the 1970s Is the example that
comes to mind of a vast proposal that yielded a half-vast program.
Daiutt'JQ)S
12 (Not IOC~i~
Carter's big problem was that he and his associates didn't have the
foggiest notion of how to do business with Congress. He apparently
believed that because energy was a major problem that directly
affected the public. Congress would be under undeniable pressure to
enact his program.
You say your child has been million. "I was never Interested
While he did call the need for action on energy "the moral
acting like a spoiled brat? Bully· In running the Mariners to lose
equJvalent of war," Carter sent his program off to Congress and sat
back expecting It would return to him within a few months ready to
lng other kids? Comilng them out money," he once std. He's such a
sign into law.
of their allowances? Getting In smart man.
Com·pare that with the way Lyndon Johnson dealt with War on . ·snits?
But parents - there Is another
Hey, loosen up, mommas and set of values you might want to
Poverty legislation after John F. Kennedy's assassination. Aware
that he had both a major wave of public goodwill and a huge
poppas. Your tyke just mght exposethelittleurchlnstobefore
Democratic congressional majority worklng ·for him, LBJ laid on the
grow up to own aprofessional ba· you run out and buy them calcu·
whip personally and frequently to get the legislation passed. The
seball team .
lators. Some of us, you see, are
Like Mr. Steinbrenner, per- hopeless romantics who think
anti-poverty bill he sent to the Hill passed the House without
amendment and got through the Senate with little change.
haps New York Yankees fans the game of baseball was· divl·
The poverty program later became a cropper, but that was a
have lately taken to calling him nely Inspired. We find pictures of
matter of lax administration and loss of Interest by its White House
unprintable names, but George ourselves In the family album
and congressional sponsors. The same thing could happen to Bush's
Is a tough guy. He's had to fire 17 wearing mitts bigger than we
anti-drug program when It arrives In the real world, but not If he can't
managers, but It's always been were. We remember the sting of
get it passed In the first place.
their fault. They just wouldn't . a bat on the lrst sunny spring
listen to him. Pay no attention to day . We can vividly recall when
what the last manager claimed. every little town had a team and
The problem, said Dallas Green, they played Sunday doublehead·
Is that "George doesn't know a ers and you could get a hot dog
(bleeplng) thing about baseball. and an Ice-cold Coe tor a quarter.
Or like George Argyros, the
We remember Mickey andWil:
California businessman who re· lie. Billy Cox and Nellie Fox.
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 12, the 255th day of 1989 with 110 to follow. centiy sold the Seattle Mariners Larsen In '56 and Marls In '61.
to a group of Indianapolis lnves· And God's team, the O's of ' 66.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward flill.
tors. He's a guy tliat knows the The pitchers who beat the Dodg·
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
value of a buck. So what If he's ers In four? Bunker, Drabowsky,
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo. They Include sold and traded off enough ta- McNally and "Pancake" Pal·
Richard Gat ling, Inventor of the Gatling gun, In 1818, newspaperman len ted players to form an All· mer, of course. Don't challenge
· Charles Dudley Warner In 1829, critic H.L. Mencken In 1880, French Star team? He knew what hew as me on my Birds (Orioles).
It offends us sentlmentalis,tsentertainer Maurlce Chevalier In 1888, U.S. Olympic track star Jesse doing: He paid $13 million for a
team
In
1981
and
sold
It
for
$76
no,
It nauseates us- to think that
Owens In 1913, country music singer George Jones In 193:1 (age 58),
circus anbnal trainer Gunther Gebei·Willlarns In 1934 (age 55),
actress Linda Gray In 1940 (age 49) and singer Marla Muldaur In 1943
(age 46) .

Schedule A.-Itemized Deductions
.

Please leave baseball to the fans

Today in history .

]o~eph Spear

the game we love so much has ion since 1922. (This Idea, Inc!·
fallen Into the hands of ·bean- dentally, was first malntloned by
c~tuilters and buffoons. Baseball
the always prescient Washington
o«&lt;ners as a class were never mo· Monthly magazine In May 1986.. )
del citizens, but the Stelnbren·
2. Cities could try to 'munlc·
ners and Argyroses seem differ·
tpallze" their teams·. Just seize
ent. They are not what I would . them ·by right of eminent do·
call balanced personalities.
main, pay the owners a fair price
As diehard Mariners fan and and give them the boot. Boards
Washlnglon reporter Jim Lynch could be appointed to •un the fl.
put It, It's siily to have a "greedy nances, managers.to direct team
California Investor toy with the activities. With pride restored,
team as though It were a housing fans might flock to the stadiums
complex" and "clear a 500 per· and spare the taxpayers any ex·
cent profit on a business that he pense. It's not exactly capital·
has bombed at."
Ism, but since when was Major
I fully agree and have asked
League Baseball a free market·
the Spear Foundation- a small
place?
Washington think tank
with
Both schemes carry two hidden
which I am affiliated- to come
but Important benefits. First, we
up with Ideas.
fans/laxpayes could ban . plastic
So far, there are two:
grass forever- eliminate 11 from
I. Fans In given areas could
the face of the earth and make It a
form
"cooperatives,"
sell crbne even to mention It 1n mixed
"shares" and buy their teams.
company (Trust me, I have had a
Boards of directors could then be
vlson: The fields of hell are cov·
elected by stockholders to hire
ered with artificial turf).
managers who would run day-to·
Second, private owners would
day affairs. Stock prices would
become as extinct as the original
be fixed, speculation would be
dodo birds, thus obliterating a
forbidden. The Green Bay Pack- whole genre of negative role meers hav(\been run in sbnllarfash·
dels for our children.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Giants edge Redskins 27-24
on Allegre's 52~yard kick . .
WMiHlNGTON (UPI) -Raul
Allegre kicked a 52-yard field
. goal as time expired and Phil
Simms threw for two touchdowns
Monday night, rallying the New
YorkG!antspasttheWashlngton
Redsklns 27·24·.
.
The Giants have won eight of
their las tlO meetings agalns tthe
Redsklns dating back )o 19~
(excluding a 1987 strike replacement game). Including their last
three. The Redsklns' record In
season-openers under Coach Joe
Gibbs fell to 3·6, with New York
dealing Washington an openinggame loss for the second straight
year.
Simms produced two scoring
drives In the final minutes to save
the Giants, who squandered a
21-10 fourth -period lead.
On the final 36-yard, five-play
drive, Simms passed for 15 yards
to Mark Bavaro and a pass
Interference call on Clarence
Vaughan on a thlrd·and·twogave
New York a first down at the
Redsklns: 41. Then Simms
passed six yards to Mark Ingram
to the Redskins' 35, leading to
Allegre's kick. · '
·
Simms' 44-yard pass to Odessa
Turner set up Allegre's first field
go,a.i, a 32-yader, that tied the
score 24-24 with 2:17 left In the
game, Simms engineered a g.
play, 54-yard drive, but Charles
Mann forced the field goal when .
he sacked Simms on thlrrd-andgoal at the Redskins' nine-yard
line.
.
Simms completed 11 of 19
passes for 254 yards, with touch·
downs of 30 yards to Turner and

62 yards to rookie Dave Meggett hands ofdefender Darrell Green
an~ two Interceptions. Ottls
at -the goal line for a 30-yard
Anderson, starting In place of Joe touchdown catch with 47 seconds
Morris, wtw will miss the entire left In the first quarter.
season with a broken foot, rushed
Simms connected on a 62-yard
for93yardson23carrlesandhad touchdown pass to rookie Dave
a 14-yard touchdown run.
Meggett to complete a 91-yard
With his team trailing 21-10, drive on New York's next possesWashington's Art Monk ran free sion for a 14·0 lead at 5: 58 of the
of defenders Sheldon White and second period.
Carl Banks for a six-yard touch·
Chip Lohmlller hit a 24-yard
down catch from Mark Ryplen at field goal with 1: 28ieftln the half,
6:45 otthe fourth quarter. Monk's but only after the Redskins failed·
catch moved him past Harold on. three straight pass plays after
Jacklion Into lOth place on the , reaching first-and-goal at the six.
NFL's ali-time receiving list and
Washing! on missed a chance to
was his first TO reception ever score In the third period when
against the Glant,s.
Kurt Gouveia jarred the bail free
On the second play of the from Meggett on a punt return
· ensulng drive, linebacker Monte and punter · Ralf Mojsiejenko
Coleman stepped In front of tight recovered at the Giants' 24. But
end Bavaro, reached down with Taylor and fellow linebacker
his right hand and Intercepted a Steve DeOssle stripped the ball
101" Simms .pass. He returned It from Riggs .six plays later and
24 yards down the right sideline Greg Jackson recovered the
for a touchdown with 7:21 re· fumble at the New York eight.
malning In the ' game to give · . Washington pulled within 14·10
Washington a 2,4·21lead.
with 1:56 left In the third period
Ryplen, becoming the third as Ryplen completed a ,48-yard
opening-game starter In three touchdown pass to Ricky SandyearsforWashlngton,completed ers, who split defenders Mark
22of32passesfor349yards,wlth Collins and Terry Kinard on a
two touchdowns and one Inter- post pattern to end a 95-yard
ception. Gerald Riggs had 111 drive.
. •
yards on 24 carries In his debut
But the Giants took a 21-10 lead
with the Redsklns.
with a 73-yard scoring drive that
Giants lineback~r Lawrence culminated In Anderson's 14Taylor started the Giants Initial yard touchdown run through a
·scoring drive In the first quarter hole plowed through middle of
'when he knocked the bali out of Wai;hlngto;m's defensive line at
the hands of Riggs at tile Giants 1:34 of the fourth period.
21 and Mark Collins recovered.
The game marked the beginSimms then led the Giants on a nlng of the 20th season of Monday
72-yard march, with Odessa Night Football on ABC
Turner pulling the ball from the television.

.,

first-place votes to rise three
spots and replace Nebraska at
No.2.
"I think Its flattering that they
think that highly of ,us after one
game but I still 'think It's a little
too early to make an evaluation
on our team or any other team for
that matter;" Mlami ·coach Den·
.nls Erickson said.
The Cornhuskers and Auburn
also opened their seasons with
huge victories In mismatches;
Nebraska beating Northern 1111·
nols 48-17 and the Tigers staying
fourth-ranked with a 55·0 pasting
of Pacific.
Michigan, opening the season
this week against Notre Dame,
received seven, first -place votes
and Improved two places to
round out the top five. No. 6
Clemson and No. 7 Colorado
moved ·up three anci four· spots
after Improving thl!ir records to
2-0. .

. Idle Arkansas stayed eighth
and was folloWed by West Virgl·
nla, the other 2-0 team In the Top
20. No. 10 Syracuse's 43-3 romp
. over Temple helped the Orangemen jump five places.
Most notable In the upheaval of
the Top 10 was the tumbling of
Paclflc-10 powers Southern Cal
and UCLA. The lillni entered the
ratings at No. 11 after beating the
Trojans.
"What happens with the presesaon poll is you have to base lfon
the previous year.and having to
play a team like USC didn't help
our chances either," Illinois
coach John Mackovlc said. "But
we knocked them off, and we 're
where we are today .
"It's excltlng for our team. We
have a lot of young players who
haven't been In this position
befo.re, and It's a real motivating .
factor."

Berry's World

---- .

(() 1NIIIy NEA. Inc.

testlng30top-selllnggenerlcpro· . for the same brand-name drug
ducts, and ·s tartinga massive re· can be as much as 40 percent dlf·
Inspection program of the 20 top terent In strength from one
generic-drug makers.
another.
In the meantime, .the FDA
The generic Industry counters ·
keeps Issuing assurances that It any criticism of this standard by
has found no Instances of "un- correctly stating that the 20 per·
safe" generics being offered for cent plus-or-minus strength dlf·
sale.
terence Is the same standard apTo many doctors and pharma· plied to any given production run
cologlsts, the question Is not In the name- brand pharmaceutlreally one of safety. Rather they cal industry.
·
question whether ali generics
But the generic Industry does
are clinically as effective as the not have to undergo the same
brand-name products they seek blind clnllcal trials as . name·
to repalce. It Is a debate that has brand drug companies do when
raged In the medical profession they first Introduce a drug. Nor
for over a decade, and It seems to do they have to go through any
have grown hotter In recent kind of long-term clinical studies
months.
comparing their generic drugs'
At the heart of the problem Is effectiveness with that' of the
the standard employed by the original
FDA for acceptance of a generic
Thus,· most evidence for or
product as a. name-brand dlipll· against the effectiveness of gencate. The generic compound eric 'drugs tends to be anecdotal
must be
h 1 1 ·1 1
a c em ca equ va ent, - Individual doctors experiencand concentrations In the blood· lng problems with the use of genstream must not vary by more erlcs for specific patients.
tnan plus or minus 20 percent.
That is not to say th t th
The latter standard Is what Is
a ere
have not been organized studies
causing doctors the most pro- of generic-drug effectiveness.
blems. It means that a generic The FDA Itself appointed a Blo·
maybeupto20percentstronger qulvalence Task Force that ·has
or weaker tban the name-brand met since 1986. After 50 meetings
drug It replaces. More Import· attended by over 800 experts It
ant, two generic replacements coniuded last year - In a rep~rt

\

Robert}. Wagrrz.qri
that seems to damn with faint
praise - that there Is no deflni·
tlve scientific evidence provingthat generic drugs are not as ef·
feclve as brand-name drugs.
But a number of physician specialty organizations - especially
those whose members treat pat~
ents using medications tb control ,.
hear! condition, seizure disorders, .·
allergies, asthma, metabolism
and dermatological conditions have warned that variance · In
treatment outcome among pat~
ents may be related to use of generics.
Perhaps the most extensive
study of generics has just been
completed by the American Academy of Family Physicians. It
too reaches no definitive conclusIons aboUt the overall elfecttveness of generics. But the study
does make &gt;Orne strong statements about who should not use
generics: those w!lo take a dnig
for· extended period, (60 days or
more); the very youna and the
elderly, because they ae highly
susceptible to small dosage dlf·.
ferences; and those taking other
medicines at the same tlnte, be·
cause there has been little test'
ing of generic-drug Interactions

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Only a few loose ends remain as
Ohio State coach John Cooper
fine-tunes his Buckeyes for Sa·
turday's opener against Okla·
homa State in Ohio' Stadium.
With a veteran offensive team
returning, most of cooper's con·
cerns are over a rebuilt defense
and the kicking game from · a
team that was 4-6-1 a year ago.
"Personally, I feel a lot more
confident," Cooper, starting his
second season at Ohio State, said
Monday. "!.know our players a
lot better. I think we're all
anxious to play a game."
Several Buckeyes, Including
starting tailback Carlos Snow,
are nursing minor Injuries, but
Cooper expects most to be.ready
for the Cowboys, who dropped a
20-10 decision to Cooper'S' old
Tulsa team Saturday night. ·
Snow has been slowed by a
lingering sore knee, which under·
went arthroscopic surgery durIng the summer, while tight end
Jeff ElliS missed the last two
days of practice with a hamst:
ring pull.
Cooper, however, pronounced
quarterb;lck Greg Frey ready to
go, along with his backup, H;lrk
HerbS treit . Both had tender
shoulders early in fall practice.
"Both Herbstrelt's and Frey's
arms have recovered," said
Cooper. "Now that we're In
one-a-day practice sessions, they
haven't had any trouble throwing
the football."
Cooper said freshman Dante

Harness Racing
Owner-manager Lou Guida of
Lawrenceville, N.J ., won seven
of the eight stakes races his colts
and fillies raced In last Saturday .
Sandman Hanover won the
$410,000 Messenger at Frees tate
in Laurel, Md .. in 1:53 2·5, the
fastest time in the history of the
stake which was launched ·at
Roosevelt Raceway In New York
in 1956.
Football
Four-time Pro Bowl line·
backer Rickey Jackson of the
New Orleans Saints was its ted in
stable condition with facial injuries following an early morning
two-vehicle accident. A team
spokesman said Jackson would
require surgery for a fractured
cheekbone and will be sidelined
Indefinitely.

Lee, a 5-10, 175-pounder, will also
see action at tailback after a
surprising showi ng In practice.
" Dante Lee will play,'' said
Cooper. ''Not just to rest Carlos
Snow, but because he's earned
II."

.

Senior Jaymes Bryant. listed
as N&lt;l. 2 on the tailback depth
chart, Is one of those who has
been slowed by injury.
"We have a veteran offensive
football team," said Cooper,
"and 1 don 't make any bones
about It -I expect that offensive
team to play well In this bail
game and throughOut the season.
''The questlon marks we have
about our football team are in th,.
kicking game and on defense."
Defensively, Cooi&gt;er promised
a number of new faces as he tries ·
to rebuild a defense which
surrendered a school-record 283
points last season. Ten of the 22
players listed on the defensive .
depth chart . are first -year
players.
"We're going to be a young
defensive team," said Cooper.
"But, I think those guys are
talented. We expect to much
improved on defense."
Only three defensive players
who started last year's season
finale against Michigan are
listed as st.artlng against Okl a~
homa State: end Srecko Zizakovlc and cornerbacks Zack
Dumas and Vinnie Clark.

Preferred drivers
deserve preferred rates
There should be special car insurance for more mature. safer driv-

ers.
Now there is .

It's Statu Auto Companies' Medal- •
ist Auto policy.
The rates are lower. The coverages
are broader .

If you have had no violations or atfault accidents fOr three years and
are at least 25 years old, you could
be qualified to become a Medalist ·
policy holder. enjoying special. reduced rates.
· And if. v;ou are middle-aged (4564). you'll get the biggest rate.'
break of all.
'Nhat' s more. as a Medalilt policyholder you are not ch.-ged for yow
first accidBnt. that's effective immediately. too. There'snothreeva•waiting poriodto qualify, once you own a
Medalist poli.,.
Call us about this car insurance
breakthrough for· safe drivers.

I

'

OGAN

Insurance Servlce!l

214 EAST MAIN

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Mid·
American Conference officials
said .Monday free safety Brian
Johnson of Western Michigan
and tailback Adam Wilson of Ball
State have been chosen the
league's players of the week.
Johnson, a junior from School·
craft, Mich., made five tackles,
deflected a pass and returned an
interception 37 yards for a
touchdown In Western's 24-20 win
over Louisiana Tech.
Wilson, a senior from South
Bend, Ind., rushed for 84 yards
and a touchdown In 26 c arrles and
caught seven passes for 74 yards
and ano.ther touchdown In BSU's
.31-31 tie against Rutgers.

(U8P81U-HII)
A Dlvloloo ol Mulllmeola, lac.

'

lll'e Zaeh Meadows, Jeremy Johnlion, Chuck
Shamblba, Kasey Tbomp80n, Eric Toops, J.P.
Staats, Nick Smith and Adam Thomas. Behind
them are coaches ·Tom Roush, John Thomas,
Mark Smith and Mark Venoy.

As of September 12th we will no
longer be at the Middleport office.
OAC honors
We sincerely thank all our clients
for their past patronage and look
bestowed
' forward to seeing you at our new
(
location.
on Smith, Prelook
Please come and visit us at our
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) ~Ohio
Athletic Conference platers of
more spacious ·and comfortable
the week are Heidelberg, defensive tackle Steve Smith and John
office in Athens. We have plenty
Carroll tailback Steve Prelock. •
of convenien.t off-street parking.
A junior from Annville, Pa.,
Smith made 12 tackles, lneludllli
R. CRAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S.
seven solos, In Heidelberg's 21-3
victory over Olive! last
530 W. Union StrHt
Saturday.
,
Athtns, Ohio 45701
'Prelock, a senior from,Willow·
lck, rushed for 213 yards and
Toll Fret 1-·100.·527·0922
three touchdowns In 29 carries
and caught two passe~ for 11
592.. 1413
yards In John Carroll's 19-3 win
Wt'U all ~t . thtrt, too. Janet, Rhonda, Tonya, Paula
over Kenyon.
·

Iff·SblfeAutO .
.IFJ ., _,...
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The Daily Sentinel
MD&gt;DLEPORT RED sOX- 1\lembers'of the "
Middleport VIdeo Touc;h Red Sox were (kneel bar,
L-R) Matthew Nelrler, Scott loh1180D, Chris
Imboden, Glenn May, Tl!mmy Roullb, Tanu
Laudermlilt and_ChriB GIJ~ey. Slandlng players

~

~RNER \..!;:}

Johnson, Wilson
MAC top players

Do generic drugs work just as well? · .

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
the fast-growing generic drug
scandal, an old debate has been
thrust Into the spotlight again:
Are generic drugs as effective as
the n~me brands they seek toreplace·
b Generic drugs are copies of
rand name pharmaceutical~
whose patents have expired.
They are usually marketed as
cheaper alternatlves. There are
currently some 8,000 generics on
the market, accounting for about
a third of the multibillion-dollar
prescription drug Industry.
Before a generic drug can be
released, It must pass a series of
FDA-mandated bloequlvalence
tests. The current scandal has
emerged over thepastyear. lt In·
valves charges that FDA generic
drug Inspectors were bribed to
c~rtlfy some generic drup, and
t at drug companies cheated
during bloeqlvalence tests and
on subsequent prod eli t 1•
Ing
u on es
&amp; far, the FDA has removed
four generic drugs from the market and has Initiated steps to re- .
move 28 more made by two drug
companies
believed to have
cheated on tests and f·' lfted
.
..s
production records. In addition,
the FDA has announced It Is re·

Sports briefs

·Buckeyes tune up for
opener vs. Cowboys

Upsets, routs land six new
college grid teams in Top 20
Jly LISA HAR~
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - A week
of upsets and ro!lts produced six
new teams In the Top 20 Monday,
with Notre Dame retalnl!lg Its
No. 1 place In United Press
International's · weekly college
football ratings.
'
The biggest tumble In the Top
20 was by Southern Cal, which
lost 14-13 on Labor Day to IllinoiS
and plunged from No. 3to No. 16.
Notre Dame did not play this
• we.!!k,, a!)d received 705 of 735
possible points from the UPI
Board of Coaches. The Fighting
Irish, the defending champion.
have held·the No. 1 position since
last October.
The Irish captured 39 of 49
first-place votes to keep their top
ranking by 84 points over Miami.
The Hurricanes, who trounced
Wisconsin 51-3, were named on
every ballot and received 'two

outstretched arms of diving defender Clarence
Vaughn (31) and the goal posts to edge the
Redsklns 27·24. (UPI)

KICKS GAME-WINNER - As time runs out In
Monday nl(ht's game het.ween the New York
Giants and Waahlns&amp;oa, the Giants' Raul Allegre
( 2) kicks· a 5Z.yard field goal that clears the

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THE CENTRAL TRIEI' CO\m\NY
The BaM T1rat Mdfes Things~

. ..... ,...,.III•J. . .A s.i.t.t~ ,.1111111., .... "'t...... ht• tffft'lln 6/J'l/"

�Tu11day, September 12, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Cleveland
.....

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Transactions

1ll Su F'nln11:35 p.m.

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HoUlton - Named Ray Palfl'r110n
prPNidenl: and ·Sit'Vf' P.at.erSon •rneral

Nr\TIO\'A.L FOOTBALL l.EAGUt;
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Montreal - Called up pitcher Mark
Qardn'!!l' and purt:h*K'-11 tht' l"Onlnal'l of
lnHeldtr Ju nlor No boa frMI l•tlanapoll~~o
ol tbe r\mft'k: . . All!!OC'IIIIIllon ( .\A.\).
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f'n:l ofdlf' Me Mon.
\J .!t. ~hMII Fetleratlon - Nauned
,Jim Morrill t.'Oiuh of Ill.. U.S. llllllonal
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NFL standings

..
,

Ariza•,

Sl., Ohio sa . , Ort~n, Pt'nn St ., South
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College Ratings

Gaintw

Mlhrallee • OUlad

•
•

8UIIIhQ' , Sept. 17

N\' .Jtts at C:levrlu., 1 p.m. ·
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Mlna"Aot.llllll Chk'!llo, -1 p.m .

Teua (ltfu 11-11) lit KUIU Clly
(G11bla. 11-IIJ, 8; SI p.m.
MlhruiiP~ (IBeMo IW ) at OUlud
CWeldiJI.1J , II: IS p.m.
...... !H~Ial l ·Z) d . Se ..Ue {Blink·
he . . 11-1), II: IS p.m.
New \ 'ort ( Terrfll 4-I J at Callornla

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Ho••••

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Smith lo -4·3'!'111' conJnl1.
NM~.' &amp;J,;t-d Placed kl!ard Ron
\to'oolt'n oa laju~d n-ftt!rw; slpt!d
ll~bad1er Bruce ScMkz.
N\' ·hi'! - Slpl'll IIJ.. ttnd lilly
Grl(p: wlt.l\'ed tl«tt e ftd Grf'&amp; Wer~r.
TIUtll* 8_, - Wldnd fl'f't' art"nl t11ht·
cn:l Ron Middleton: re-slpd tl«tt end
Jilc:kk- Wldker.
Hot:kry
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Onrtrr.
Dftnk- Slpedcenlt'rShawnlurrlo
II. multl·)'l'IY'I'Onll'll.d.
NHL- .4.nnow'lceda 'l•.~..-~~-~f'ment
with tht' r\8('· Radio Net: work lor l,J.I&lt;l.
hroulc.-1 rt1hiKio lhf'AII.StarG 11.mr IUid
Slanil')' rup fll'llll10.
Socn•r
Hrr!flry lr\ISA )- Siped ~lllltndf'r
L~trr)' TuW'~ .

Eastern
team
in super rebuilding year
By SCOTf WOLFE
The Eastern High School girls'
volleyball team is enjoying a
super rebuilding year under
veteran head c:oach Pam Dou·
thitt here in 1989.
Nine players have been vying
for the starting nod on the "six
man starting rotation. while a
couple of reserve players also
occasionally see varsity action.
Team members include one
lone senior Carrie Bernard, a
second year player, while Toby
Hill, Lorrie Ba ker, and Mandie
Harris. all juniors, make up the
heart of a strong front line.
Four sophomores and one
freshman formulate the re·
maind er of the squad. Those
playe rs are Tabby Phillips, Mary
Jo Reed, Tiffany Gardner, and
Lee Gllllla n, while Carrie Morris·
sey Is the lone frosh. .
. Coach Douthitt has been ex·
·tremely pleased with the team's
enthusiasm and looks for them to
get better with each game, cltlng
ihat a lack of experience Is one of
this team's few setbacks .
EHS seemingly has a good
start on returning to the cham·
pionshlp seasons of the mid·
eighties, and at the same time
has a bright fu lure ahead.
One asset of this team is the
team's a bility to have different
people hed the serving point list ,
an exhibition to the fine overall team play .
Reserve players are Carrie
Bernard, Jenny Deem, Amy
Well, Stephanie Otto, Lisa Hof·

'
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costly -

Ph0enll It , [~h~l 13
Su t)'anci!K'O · 31, hulallllpolhi U

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Oall.laM .. ................... .Ai H .tell KM-. Ck y ~· .... , .. ...... .AJ II .511 4

Texa~~ ... ...................... ,'lS

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Stadium

s-· OrleMM:tH, Dllliao~ o

New \ 'orl ................... ,l'f '7M •.(tl IS%
OewiMCI ........ ........... .11 'l'M .-11/5 14%
Dftrtll ........................11 N .J'Jt IS %

canlerlll~ro ...................l!

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fman, Michelle Metzger, Kellle
Ridenour, Sherr! Smith, and
Sarah Harris .
Add this group to the current
varsity group and EHS could
have' something brewing for
future SVAC championships \l'lth
continued hard work.
Don Jackson coaches the re·
sPrves, while also assisting Dou·
thitt with the varsity and sharing
dutles at tll e Jr. High level.
Scorekeepers are Cindy Pitzer
and Edna Driggs, while Manager
Is Brian Hoffman.
Junior High Players Include
Jaime Wilson. Kathy Bernard.
Wendy Rach, Amber Well, Anita
Thomls , Missy Harris, Marllyn
Kibble, Jessica Radford, Becky
Driggs, Heidi Nelson, Michelle
Schultz. and Jamie Ord .
·

SVAC standings
(All games)
Team
W L PF PA
Oak Hlll .... .. .... ..... 3 0 96 22
Symmes Valley .... 3 0 86 46
Kyger Creek .. .... .. . 3 0 57 28
Soutllwestern ........ 2 1 60 34
North Gallla ......... 1 2 55 60
Eastern ...... .... ...... ! 2 46 55
Hannan Trace .. .. .. 0 3 16 106
Southern .............. . O 3 6 47
Saturday's result
Warren Local JV 12, Southern .6
Friday's games
Hannan Trace M Eastern
SOuthern at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Soutllwestern
Oak HIU at Symmes Valley

c·oNGRATULATIONS -·
PENNY L. SMITH
***********

Penny is our second week winner in
the Daily Sentinel co-sponsored
Foofllall Contest.
(

·.~

For All Your
Bedding Needs ...
See .A Perfect
Sleeper

ARGUES CALL - Reds manager Tommy
Helms (center) argues a close call with first base
umpire Fred Brocklander (far right) In the
second Inning of Monday night's game with tbe
Dodgers in Los Angeles. Helms contended that

.

first baseman Todd. Benzinger (between Helms
and Brocklander) tagged out the Dodgers' John
Shelby, who was called safe on a slow roUer to
first. (UPI)

Pickoff play allows Cubs
to notch 4-3 win over Expos
Cubs' Rick Wrona opened the
By TOM WITHERS
inning with a double and Mark
UPI Sports Writer
Montreal's Jeff Huson became Langston, 11·7, appeared to have
the latest victim in the thrilling the rookie picked of! but his
National League East divisional throw eluded second baseman
Damaso Garcia. Wrona movedrace Monday.
Huson, brought In to pinch· run to third base on Garcia's error,
in the top of the ninth inning, was then scored on Jerome Walton's
picked off first base by Chicago one·out single.
Cubs'. reliever . Mitch Williams
Greg· Maddux, J7.11 , allowed
that preserved Chicago's 4·3 three runs and six hits In seven
victory over tlle Expo~.
and one· third Innings en route to
The loss dropped the Expos his 11th victory In the last 15
into fourth place, five games decisions.
"We've won 'em In all different
behind first·place Chicago. The
Cubs increased their lead over ways this year,'; Zimmer said.
second·place St. Louis to 3~ "This Is a new one."
gameF, as tlle Cardinals lost 3·1
Elsewhere In the National
to the Pittsburgh Pirates. The League:
New York Mets remained 4~
Mfits 5, Phillie!! 2
games off the pace with a 5·2
At Philildelphla, Kevin McRey·
triumph over the Philadelphia no Ids homered and drove ln four
Phil lies.
runs to lead New York. Ron
After Les Lancaster had re· Darling, 13·12, gave up five hits
tired the first two batters In the and two runs In six and one· third
ninth, Damaso Garcia and Mike innings and Randy Myers got
Fitzgerald singled. Williams was five outs for his 23rd save.
brought in to face pinch hitter McReynolds gave the Mets a 3·0
Nelson Santoven ia and after lead ln the first off Bruce Ruffin,
throwing a ball, Williams earned 5·9, with his 20th homer. ·
his 33rd save bouncing a throw to
Pirates 3, Cardinals.1·
lirst baseman Lloyd McClendon
At St. Louis, Neal Heaton
that caught Huson off first to end combined with two relievers on a
the game.
three·hitter and Pittsburgh
Montreal manager Buck scored three runs In the seventh.
Rodgers protested the game, Heaton, 4·7, allowed two hits over
claiming that McClendon de- six Innings and Doug Balr
ceived Huson and that a balk worked the nlnlh for his first
should have been called.
save. Rlcky 'Horton, 0·2, allowed
"The first baseman cannot three runs In six a.nd one·thlrd
deceive. the runner when he's off Inn lngs in a losl ng effort.
the bag," said Rodgers. "It's
Padres 7, Astros 3
been ruled a balk before. It this
At San Diego, Garry Tern·
Isn't a balk, then you might as ' pleton socked a grand slam In a
well get ·rid of the rule. "
six-run Padre sixth. Calvin Schi·
Because McClendon was be· raldl won his second consecutive
hind the runner on the play. he start- both agalnsttheAstroshad to break toward the bag so as since being acquired from the
not to deceive the runner.
Cubs. Schiraldi, 5·6, allowe d
"j'vlltch has a good move and I three runs and four hils In six and
knew the flr st·base coach one·third Innings. Jim Deshaies,
couldn't help much with the 12·9, took the loss.
crowd noise," McClendon said.
Glan18 3, Braves 2
"When I went to the mound, I I old
At San Francisco, Will Clark's
him, 'Let's pick him off. ' He said,
RBI single snapped an eighth·
'OK, on the second pitch.' We inning tie and ' Scott Garrelts
worked on it in spring training." notched h1s seven ill straight win.
" It was a planned play between
Garrelts, 13·3, who entered with a
Mitch and Mac," said Cubs league·leadlng ERA of 2.19,
manager Don Zimmer, " so that allowed two runs and W;e hils
made it legal. If McClendon over eigh) innings and Steve
hadn't made a break. then it Bedrosian earned his 20th save.
would have been a balk.'"
Tony Castillo fell to 0·1.
Plate umpire Doug Ha rvey
Dodgers 8, Reds 2
agreed.
At Los Angeles, Tim Belcher
"If I the pitcher) throws to the
scattered six hits over six and
guy standing back there, then it's one·thlrd Innings and Eddie
a balk," said the crew chief . ."If Murray belted a three-run ho·
the throw is to a guy breaking to mer. John Shelby af\d Lenny
the bag, .then he can do that."
Harris led a 16·hil DOdger attack,
Huson fought back tears hi the collecting four . hils each.
clubhouse before he spoke with Belcher, 12·12, posted his fourth
reporters.
straight win. Ron Robinson, 4·2,
"I was shocked that It hap· gave up five runs ln three and
pened," he said. "Ask anybody two·thlrd Innings.
here, and he'll tell you that I'm
In the American League:
one of the best baserunners In the
Orioles 6, White So" 3
organli:at ion. If It had happened
For Baltimore to remain In the
In May, jt would be a different American League East ~ace, the
story. It's part of the game -a Orioles need to find a way to
bad part of the game."
provide their other pitchers tbe
The Expos blew a pickoff play same kind of support they give
of their own in the seventh. The Jeff Ballard.

NOTICE

TO ALL RESIDENTIAL·
CUSTOMERS OF
MANLEY'S TRASH SERVICE
Due To Increased Landfill Cost
All Trash Collection F111 Will
Be Increased To $10 Per
Month Effective 9-1·89.

The Orioles gave Ballard their
usual backing Mon(jay night,
taking a 6·3 victory over the
Chicago While Sox and moving
within two games of Idle Toronto
at tlle top of the AL East.
· 'They've been backing me
with runs all year and continued
to do if tonight.' ' said Ballard,'
17,·7, who has been supported by
an average of 5.8 runs over his 31
starts this season.
Ballard, 6·1 in his last seven
starts, scatte~ed nine Chicago
hits over six innings before Mark
Williamson and Gregg Olson
finished up. -Olson pitched the
ninth to post his 25tll save,
extending his own rookie record.
"It was a wacky game,'' said
Ballard, who became the first
Baltimore pitcher since Steve
Stone In 1980 to defeat all 13
teams In the American League.
" ll'ltade good pitches when they
weren't hitting me."
Every Chicago player In the
lineup had a hit off Ballard.
Baltimore batters stru'ck out 11
times.
· · Phil l!radley had four of the 10
Baltimore hits, scored twice and
stole two bases as the Orioles won
for the seventh time In Its last
Elight games at home. ·
"IChlcago) finagled two runs
In the second Inning, but we came
right back," Ballard said. "The
team is ·really fighting. Thai
picked me up.''
Elsewhere in the AL:
Royals 8, Twins I
At Kansas City, Mo., George
Brett and Jim Elsenrelch each
drove in two runs and Larry
McWilliams posted his first
American League ~ictory.
McWilliams. 1·0, won his last
game May 3 as a member of the
Philadelphia Phlllles. Mike
Dyer, 3·5, took the loss for
Minnesota.
~ports
Marbters 2, Red So" 1
At Seattle, Brian Holman and
GoU
two relievers combined on a
Orville Moody, one of only four
seven·hltter as the Mariners
snap(led a six ·game losing players to win both the U.S. Open
streak. Dave Valle's RBI single and U.S. SeniOr Open, presented
capped a two· run fourth Inning as a pair of newly designed putters
Seattle extended Boston's losing to President George Bush and
streak to six games. Holman ran Vice President Dan Quayle In
his record to 6·9 and Mike Washington. Quayle gave Moody
Schooler posted tils his 27th save a golt shirt and cap emblazoned
to set a. Seattle record. John with .:the seal of · the· vice
preslden_t.
Dopson, 10·7, took \he loss . ..

-

.- ~

..........
BAUM·
LUMBER

CHESTER
985-3301 or
Mew York Jets VI. Cle¥111•• 915-3303

773·5514

·

Pltat~nt,

P~ll•••l,.la v1. Wuhi•tto.

MIDDLEPORT
'

'

614-992-5141
S11 Fmeleeo VI. Tt111p1 .. ,

·· DAVJS!QUICKEL ·

BILL QUICKEL
MI~1111 VI.

New ~11glead

PH; 992-5432
228 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pho111K VI. SetHie

North C•roll•• St1te v1. W•k• F0111t

Detroit vt. M•• York ll11t1

The Communily Owned Bank

1989
FOOTBALL CONTEST
S200 IN CASH PRIZES

th\Farmers

c:J
992·2136 - -

TUPPE~ PLAINS

us.nas

992·2137

667-3161

w~·

.. Grown Bee.... w. Havr Helprd Oth.... IO Grow

Member FOIC

NOTHING TO BUY-ANYONE MAY ENTERI
S20.00 EVERY WEEK TO THE WINNER

Member Fed••' Reserve

Melt• VI. Miller

CONTEST RULES
The conteat it open to anyone except employee• of Th&lt;i Dally Sentinel end their immediate
families.
.
.
An award of '20.00 will be given to the peroon picking the mon winners. In cue of a tie
·
one winnolr will be drawn from 111 corriCI entrle1.
All ENTRANTS MUST USE THE ENTRY BLANK BELOW.
Games for this week will be found In·the edverti1ement1 on this pege. U1t the name of the
team you think will win oppo1he tha neme of the edvertlaer.
. .
Decision of the judges will be flnel end entries become the property of The Dally Senttnel.
This conten will continua for ten week• from tha date of flrn ln1ertlon.
IF MAILED ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED NOT LATER THAN FRIDAY.
Clip the coupon·baiow .... fill it out and send to .. :
.
·
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court Street
• .::-;~. , ;·
1
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769
.

ADVERTISER

Bank

POMERoY

PAT HILL
FORD
461 S. Third

Middleport

992-2196

PAT HILL
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH-DODGE
399 S. Third,

'~CHRYSLER
fM MOTORS
Middleport, Oh.

Easter• VI. H•••u Treee

JIM COBB
CHEVROLET-CADILLAC
OLDSMOBILE-GEO, IN(.

WINNER

992-6614

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Pomery, Oh.
301 East Main
Southern vs. Ktt" Cruk

BAUM LUMBER

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE &amp; MORE

VAUGHAN'S
DA viS-QUICKEL' INSURANCE

222 foil Main
992-6872
Pomeroy, Ohio
Beside Buttons 8&amp; Bows
Mike 8&amp; Chris Martin • Owners

EWING FUNERAL HOME

H - Ph. 985-4396

FARMERS BANK

HOURS: 10 A.M.-6 P.M.
Buying Good Cleon Fowniiure-(omplete Au dian Service

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

Point Plemnt VI. Athtal

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS :
992·2174
500 East Main
' Pom~roy, Ohio
"We've Got The KeyB To A Better Deal"
"PEIFECT PICII"
' You'D R".!~e $100.00 OFF on a
New or Used Cor or Truck!

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
RAWLINGS-COATS-FISHER
PEOPLES lANK
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
K&amp;C JEWELERS

Wahtllll

vs. Rn•••••o•

BANKEONE:

ANDERSON'S
DAIRY QUEEN

992-6669
· 271 North Second
Middleport, Ohio .
_
For AD Your Prescription and
Sundry Needs See Us"
O~lo Stitt ••· Okll•••• St1te ·

Pomeroy,· Ohio

212 W. Mai!:'

VALLEY LUMBER

Eighteen Thousand People Who Ca.re.l

PLEASERS

BANK ONE, ATHENS. NAtA PARr OF THE CARING ,TEAM
Alhens, Ohio
Member FDIC

MARTIN'S tURNITURE &amp; MORE
DAVE'S EXXON

Welltte~ fl.

CROW'S RESTAURANT

Oelllpolle

~Your Complete Athletic

Footwear Store"

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

992-2057

'·

691 West Main
PoiWtroy, Ohio
· Mle~lt.•• ... tlttfl

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Mary Dillard,C.M.'A.
'

Gail Hoveatter \
Linda 'Ii'ent ·
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Pomeroy, Ohio

LOCKER 219

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SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN·"'USSER

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

992-3322

RACINE MOTORS .

Appointments and Walk;il)s Welcome

138 Main St., New Haven, WV

North Ctroll•• VI. IC.. t•ek'

405 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-3471

o•lo U•lvenlty VI. Easter• Mlehls••

NSURANCE
THE COURTHOUSE"'

915·3308

HOME' liE'

AGENCY INC.

•AC1f0SS FROM

Chester

CHERYL CARPENTER
HOME PH. 949-2710
Dtllll VI. Atl..tl

Se1th Cartllll

992·2556 .

-~

L HOME

RIDENOUR
. SUPPLY ..

At The End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

882-2136

Accepting New Patients
Monday, Tuesday, Thursd'!Y and Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.;
Wednesday :
9 a.m. -Noon .

.

Middleport

W11klf .S.eelalc

W. Va.Ntw Haw•, W.Va . .

675-1121

POMEROY, OHIO
992-3768
•
L. A. Rll.trl n. 1Ca...1 Cit'

RACINE
MOTORS

SOFT DRINKS • FRIES- SANDWICHES ,

MEMBER FDIC
SECOND STREU JACKSON AVE. Sth STREET
Pt.

MillE HALEY • OWNER

WELDING • FABRICATION • SUPPLIES
COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICE
RADIATOR REPAIR and REPLACEMENT

(lAVE liED

ADOLPH
DAIRY VALLEY .

Bank"
Mo.n, W.Va.

MACHINE and WELDING

17 COLE ST.

Racine, Ohio

fl.

TWIN. CITY

Fieri•• Stete fl. LSU

555 Park St. 992-6611

"Your Good Neighbor

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Office Staff:

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BANK

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Cerry-Out Beer • Hunting Ucen1e1

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992-2342
Ml11110tl VI. Chletto

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991-9907

INSURANCE .

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VI. Cl•eluatl

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Formerly Bend Area Medlcal:center

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992·3671

DAVE'S EXXON
FOOD STORE

East Main St.

.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

ANDERSON'S

By RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (UP!) - City
officials said Monday renovating
Cleveland Stadium lnto.a modem
baseball and football facility
· would cost $137.8 million, $47
· million more than Browns owner
Art Modell originally announce4.
City architect Paul Volpe said
Modell, owner of the Stadium
Corp., was working with all the
data he had available when he
unveiled his plan to renovate the
stadium last month. At the time,
Modell said the proJ.ect would
cost $90 million anil was aimed at
satisfying Indians owners RIc hard and David Jacobs.
Volpe said Modell's original
estimate did not Include Inflation
before the project is completed,
professional fees and otllercosts.
In comparison, Volpe said build·
lng a new baseball·football sta·
dlum In the Central Market area
downtown would cost $194.3
mUllan.
The new estlmates were dis·
closed Monday durlng a meeting
of local political leaders, lnclud·
ing two candidates for mayor Cuyahoga County Commissioner
Tlmotlly Hagan and Council
President George Forbes.
Forbes and Hagan declined
comment when they left the
meeting together.
Volpe and Cleveland Mayor
George Volnovlch said no prefer·
ence had been chosen and that
they only wanted to disclose all
the Information now available.
The estimates do not take Into
account what m&lt;mey would be
generated by thesaleoflakefront
land If a new stadium Is built, or
what money would be generated
by the sale of land at the new
stadium site If the exls ling
stadium Is renovated.
Three other options are also
being considered.
The estimate for building a
baseball-only stadium Is $155.8
m lilian. Long-term renovation of
Cleveland Stadium for football·
only would cosi$122.6 million and
. short·term renovation for
· footliall·only would cost $16 .
million.
The estimates were prepared
with the he Ip of Turner Construe·
tlon, the chle~ cOntractor• for .
most major projects 'in Cleveland, and HOK, a Kansas City
architect firm specializing In
sports stadiums.
Volnovich admitted, however,
that one possibility Is that nothing will change and 58·year·old
Cleveland Stadium In its current
condition will continue to be
used.
"If you can't have a consensus,
. iorget It," Volnovich said. "If the
public and private sectors come
together . .. we're oU and
rul)nlng."
,
Volpe said a decision must be
made by tlle end of next year on
whether the downtown land that
has been acquired and cleared
fora new stadium willbeusedfor
tl\at purpose.
Another Issue that has no1 been
decided, Voinovlch said, was
financing. But he did say at least
some · .tax money would be
needed.

.

EWING ·
FUNERAl HOME

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·.Foot•all '891
Catch All The:
ExelteMeatU

BANK ONE

MIDDLEPORT ..... 992·5627

PAT HILL FORD

NAME •••••
ADDRESS

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Ara1 8ael1e

�--"'

··- ---

•

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7

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel.

By The·Bend

Classifie

Tuesday. September 12, 1989
Page &amp;

TUESDAY
POMEROY -The Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter, aeta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m . In the social room of Grace
Episcopal Church.
CHESTER - The Chester
Township Trustees will meet on
~ay at 7: 30 p:m. at the
townhall.

-.

Area Chamber of Commerce wlil
meet TueSJiay at noon at Velerans Memorial Hospital. Guest ·
speaker will be Jack Monda,.
director of the Small Business
Development Center of Southeastern Ohio. All members are
urged to attend.
·

MIDDLEPORT -A Revelation Seminar wlll be held on
Tuesday evening In classroom
HARRISONVILLE -Harrl·
126 of the · Meigs Junior High
sonvllle Senior Cit lzens will spon· School In Middleport. The last
sora free bloOd pressure clinic oil · book of the New Testament and
Tuesday troni 10 a .m. to noon ai
Its messages and other prophethe townhouse. Following the cies w!ll be discussed. Free
clinic, members are urged to seminar study materials will be
attend the speCial meeting.
provided and the class will be
filled on a first come, tlrs t served
POMEROY -W.M,F.I. will
basis. The class will begin at 7
· meet on Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at
p.m. and will last approximately
the home of Ruth Williams.
one hour. li will continue on
Tuesday
and Friday evenings.
RACINE -Racine Lodge 461 F
and AM will have a regular
WEDNESDAY
meeting on Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle·
. Work In the F.C. degree. All
port Amateur Garden Club w!JI
members urged to attend. Remeet at the home of Elizabeth
freshments will follow.
Loshe on Wednesday at 6: 15 p,m.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy

There w!ll be. potluck and also
election of officers.
RACINE -The Racine Board
of Public A!!a!rs will meet on
Wednesday at 10 a .m. at Star Mill
Park.
RACINE -The OAPSE 453
Southern Local will meet at the
Southern High School on WedJ1eS·
day at 7 p.m.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS -The Meigs
County Riding Club w!Jl have a
meeting at the show ring at the
Melg8 County Fair Grounds on
Thursday at 6 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
Springs Grange· wlil. meet on
Thursday even!ng"at 8 p.m. at the
grange hall.
POMEROY· -The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and Al-Anon w!ll
meet on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Chu"rch on
Mulberry Ave. For information
call 1-800-333-5051.

Announcements
Seeklag recipes for cookbook
When Pomeroy celebrates It's
150th birthday the sesquecenten·
r!lal committee wlll have available for sale a cookbook made up
of ' "old time'' recipes of mothers,
grandmothers, great grandmothers, etc. It anyone has a
recipe they would like to contr!b~~ to the cookbook, entitled
''Treasured Recipes from the
Past" send It or drop it by the
OIIIIY Sentinel otf!ce In care of
Julie E . Dlllon. Any church
women's organiZations are· also
encouraged to collect recipes for
tire book and turn them In to the
Sentinel office. The deadline for
S)lbmlttlng recipes is Friday.
Middleport block party
· Middleport's annual block
party w!IJ be held on Saturday.
Interested parties should reserve
booths by calling Debbie or Mlke
Gerlach al . 992-6898, Lennie
Eliason at 992-6485, or Brian
Johnson at 992-3481. Booths are
reserved on a first come first
served basis , so call soon to

reserve a booth.
c.;ountry Hymn Timers
The Country Hymn Timers are
planning a reunion hymn sing on
Sept. 23 from 7: 30 p.m. to
midnight at the Church of Christ
In Christian Union In Middleport.
The service wlll be under the
direction of Dan Hayman. Sam
Anderson, pastor of the church,
Invites the public.
Hysell reunion
The Oscar Hysell and Charles
Reed Hy5ell family reunion will
be held on Sunc;lay at Fort Meigs
In Rutland beginning at 12: 30
p.m. in shelter no. 3 . .
Roush reunion
The Gideon and Artemes!a
Roush annual reunion will be
held Sunday at the Star Mill Park
In Racine beginning at 1 p.m.
Those attending. are to pr!ng a
covered dish. Ail relatives and
friends are Invited to att.end.
Homecoming
The Morris Chapel Church.

Racine and Portland Goad. w!IJ
have their annual homecoming
on Sunday . Dinner w!IJ begin at
noon and there w!IJ be swclal
singing featuring the Gabriel
Quartet. David Curtrean,.pastor,
Invites the public.
·
Hymn sing
The Mt. Olive Community
Church In Long Bottom w!llhave
a hymn sing on Saturday at 7
p.m. Jaoy and the David Dalley
Family w!IJ sing. The public is
Invited to attend.
Horse show
Thf' Meigs County Riding Club.
Inc., will sponsor an open horse .
sho.w at the Meigs County Fair
Grounds on Saturday. Exhibition
barrels w!fJ begin at 5 p.m. and
the show w!ll start at 6 p.m.
Yearbooks In
The Eastern High School year
hooks are In and may be picked
up Mol1day through Friday from
11:25 a.m . to 12:30 p.m.

Concern about breast drugs expressed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
head of the Food and Drug
Adrntn!stratlon has expressed
concern about the health risks
from drugs that. stop milk production In mothers who opt
against breast feeding, accord·
!ng to a letter made public
Monday.
In the Aug. 23letter _addresse&lt;;l
to a public advocacy group that
raised early questions, FDA
Commissioner Frank Young said
his .agency had "Initiated action"
to stop such use of the drugs that
" have not been shown . to be
needed." Initial FDA action
commonzy Involves a notice. of
roncern to drug manutactl,lrers.
A copy of the Jetter was made
available to United Press Inter·
national by the advocacy organization, PubliC Citizen Health
Research Group, which warned
In June that the drugs Increase
the dangers of heart attack and
stroke. Bes(des stopping milk
production. the medications also
control breast enlargement.
Dr. Douglas Teich, a "phys!cian
and Public Citizen researcher,
said hls group estimated that 15
percent, or 700,000, · of the 5.
million women who gave birth in
the United States last year were
prescribed the drugs.
• · FDA spokeswoman Susan Cruzan said twoofthreemanufactur-

ladies .circle
meeting held
The September meeting of the
Faith Gospel Ladles Circle was
held at Bellev!lle Dam with a
covered dish picnic.
'
In attendance were Dorolhy
Riebel, Audra Ruckman , Pat
Martin, Mary Allee B!se. Ver11a
Rose, Debbie Barringer, Diane
Jones , Virginia Walton, Dolly
Reed, Erika Boring, Emma
· Durst, Vivian Humphrey, Cheryl
Eddy, Karolyn Boring, Sandy
Cowdery, Thelma Smith, Paul!ne Baker and Bobble Reed.·
Shut-In calls for this past
month totaled 46.
Sandy Cowdery presented the
devol!onal program, '"Taking a
Second Look at Life.'" She also
held a "snowball auction."
The door. prize was won by
Pauline Baker.

e rs agreed to stop marketing the
drugs . Sandoz Pharmaceutical
· Corp., of East Hanover, N.J. ,
"has not a greed to comply," she
said. But Dr. David Winter, a
Sandoz spokesman, s;lid, "There
is no new safety data to suggest
there is a problem."
ln his Jetter, Young said the
drugs "are likely to present risks
which. since the drugs are not
therapeutically required, make
them unacceptable. "
"We estimate · that If 100
·women are given these drugs, at
best 10 may benefit, which means
that at "least 90 percent of the,

10
Monlhly
M•i 811 , G.lll•

By United Press International
Gerhard Meyer, one of more
than 6,000 East German refugees
who emigrated to West Germany
In what could be the largest
exodus since the construction of
the Berlin Wall 28 years ago,
explaining why he fled:
'
"We and particularlyourch!ld·
ren had no outlook for the future.
That's why we were determined
to leave."

Faye Wines. and children, Tre·
sea and Brett, and a friend;
Larry and Peggy Grimm, and
daughter. Marcy; Nell and
Jackie Baker. and daughters ,
I,lsa and Courtney, allofWesterv!lle; Kerry and Karen McCullough, and children, Krls, Kara
and Kory, of Cleveland; Linda
Wines Cleland, of Houston.
Texas.
Bessie Rowe, of Wyandotte,
Mich., Howard and Gayle Rowe,
of Southgate, Mich.; Barry and
Carol Jones, of Centerville;
Vernon and Marge Rowe, of
K!lleen , Texas; VIrginia Rowe,
of Pomeroy; Jerry and Gail
Rowe, and daughter, Jennifer.
Racine: Ed and Judy Nelson,

Car show planned
The Oldies But Goodies Car
Club of Meigs County w!ll be
having Its first annual car show
on Oct. l4 In the Pomeroy
parking lot.
Registration will begin at 9
a.m . and coni!nue until noon.
There w!ll be a $5 registration fee
and awards will be given at
approximately 4 p.m .
Dash plaques will be given to
the first 50 cars to enter. Other
awards will include a trophy for
tlrst and second place In each
class, as well as a Bes I of Show
trophy, and a Longest Distance
Trophy.
The 17 classes offered to
exhibitors will include produc·
t!on through 1949 production
'

1950-1959. production 1960-1969,
production 1970-79. production
1980-89, corvette 1953-1969,
corvette 1970·1 ~.79, ~orvette 1980·
89, a!rconvertlbles, special Interest, street rods through .1948.
street machines 1949·1962, street
machines 1963-1974, street rnachines 1975 and up, trucks: all
two wheel drive, trucks: a ll four
wheel drive, and musle cars
1963-1974.
The show will be held rain or
shine and there will be 50's and
60's music played throughout the
afternoon, as well as games
pertaining to cars.
For more Information contact
Gene Whaley at 992-7013 during
the day, or B!ll and Sharon
Neutzl!ng at 985·4317.

A warm, friendly police dog
BERKELEY, Calif. tUPI) The Berkeley Pol!ce Department
will tlnally get a drug-sn!ft!ng
dog -a warm, friendly spaniel.
The City Council In the poUt!cally liberal city has refused for
months 10 authorize a trained
pollee dog, such as a German
shepherd, for drug searches
because of the !mage acquired by
polfce dogs during the Civil
Rights bat tiel of lhe 1960s.
As It happened, however, no
other breed could be found that
was trained to sniff out cocaine
and other drugs for tbe pollee
department's narcotics unit. Not
even a bealle, which seemed lhe
next dol of choice.
Publicity lasl month about the
city's attitude produced numer·

ous offers from breeders and
trainers all over the country and
a nice, friendly spaniel was
selected for the job, city spokeswoman Peggy Sullivan said .

Pomeroy; Jay ~nd Cindy Rowe.
and sons; Ryan and Jeremy;
Brenda Tuttle, and sons. Mike
and Eric, Racine.
John and Betty Van Meter, and
children, .Alicia and John Ri•
chard Van Meter, Syracuse;
Dennis and Gertie Manuel; Steve
and Denise Co.ffman, and sons,
Andrew and Anthony; all of
Racine; Wayne and Ada Rowe,
and granddaughters, Cherrlssa
and Tiffany Barnes; Racine;
Raymond and Kay Rowe, and
sons, Jason and Corey; Eunice
Wilson, and son, Brent, all of
Racine; Jim and Yvonna Persinger. and daughters, Angle and
Rowenna Garten, and a friend ,
Leigh Lelferts, Long BOttom;
Rose Yocum. Paul R owe, and
ch!ldren, Joshua and Roschelle,
Racine; and Elsie Sleeper, and
daughter, M!ssie, of South Be·
thlehem, New York:
Reunion visitors Included
Frank and Delores Cleland;
Carrie Roush; Rod and Marge
Grimm; Tina Sloter; Audrey
Ours; and Mark and Nancy
Yoacham, and daughters, Ca·
m!lla and Lena, all of Racjne.
The 1990 reunion will also be
held at Forked Run State Park on
the Sunday before Labor Day.

Slindereila
meeting held
Mary Browning lost the most
weight in the Monday night
Sllnderella class at Five Points,
and Shirley Johnson was the
runner up.
In the Tuesday Mason class,
Joan Vaughan was the winner
and there was tie for runner up ·
between Diana Hottman and
Connie Goodnlte.
New members are being accepted Into the fall classes.

t-----------------------""'1
HYMN SING
Saturday, September 16, 1989
7:00P.M.
MT. O~IVE COMUNITY CHURCH
LONG IOnOM, OHIO

.

Jaoy and David Dailey Family
PUBIJC WELCOME
...

7-. Y•d Stle(paid in tdvancel
8- PubUc s.... Auction
&amp;...:...W.mldtoBuy

E111plil v111 en 1

•

Farm

SPr\ill P;-,

- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2:00P .M. MONDAY
- 2 :00 P.M . ·TUESOAY
- 2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY

Meigs County
Area Code 614

Maaon

Re,rl

C ~ .• WV

892- Middlspon , 1575-P1. Pl......,t
317 - Ch•hite
Pom..-ov
461-Leon
576-'Appto Grovo
381-Vinlon
981-Ch•tlr
773- M..on ·'
2415 - Aio Grind•
843-Ponllind
211-Guyan Oist. 247 - latart Falls 812- New H.ven
896-LIIIrt
643-Ar•bia Dist. 9'9 - R.cine
379 - Walnut
•· 742-Rt.~tland
937.-Butflllo
6157- Coolville

..•

MODELS

C•ll

fer

Fill Speel•l•

POMEIOY, OH.

S1tppi1P.o

992•6872

71 - Auto Parts &amp; Aec•IOii•
77 · -Auto Repair
71-Cimping Equipm..t

79- Camp•s ~ Mot Of'" Homei

'1-:-Hou• for Rent
42-Moblle Hom81 for Rent
43- Ferrns tor Rent
44- A,.nment for R1nt
46-Fumishlld Rooms
46-Sp•c• for Ren1 ·
•7-Wtntedto .Rent
•a-Equipment tor Atnt
49- Porll•t

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Sr.rvrct:s
81 --Home lmprowmants
82-Piumbing 6 He•ing
13-Eacweting
84- EIKtrical • Aefrig•ttion
85.:..-oen . .l Hluling
86-Mobile Home Re,air

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

87-Uphol--,

NEWlAND ,
ENTERPRISES

"At Reasonable Prim"

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

949-2860

(614)
Grant

WANTED

Public N atlce

'

(304) 1711-1112

~

MICHAEL B. CARLISLE, DDS GENERAL DEI'fTISTRY

•Washers •Dryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mus1 8o lepoiralllt"

nollce.

1917, B. 11 • 12• 1 3• I. • 1 •• · 7tc

·1

Cerd of The...

The family of
RUSSELL CULLUM&amp;
· would like to thank
Dr. Mark Brown.
Veteran• Memorial
Ho1pital. Ewing
Funeral Home and
David PrentiCe
during tha death of
our hutband and
father.
Special thanks to
our neighbors and
friends for the
food, cards,
flowers and their
kind word• of
sympathy.
. Etta Cullum•.
Helen Swartz
and son•
The Family Of
EDITH M. SPENCER
wishes 10 1henk ell ·
. who sent flowers,
food, end cards. A
opeciel ihenks to
June Ktoes, Linde
Flelda. Lula .Grant,
nelghboro,
pall beflrero, Ath ·
Street Freewill
Baptiat Church. thoee
who worked at the
cematery,
pallbearers, Major
Glenna Rummel end
Rev. Leslie Hay;me~ .
All you helle done 11
greatly aJiprecillted.
Thank you •~Jain.
May God Blesa
, Each Onel
The Feml

In One Of Our Full Time Prosrams
Accounting/Com puling
Food Manag!!menl and Catering
Auto Mechanics
Industrial Maintenanee
Basic Law Enforcement
Machine Technology
Carpentry
Nursing Assistant/Orderly
Cosmetology
Offtce .Services
Diversified Medical Occupations
. Welding
Electricity
Paralegal
Electronics Servicing
FinimcYI Aid o~nd/Tuillun Subsidy M1y 8t Availlblf To ()wllfifd Applico~nts Frum A Varirty Of 5uurtl'5: PELl
GRANTS; VETERANS BENEFITS: BUREAU OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION; GUARANTEED STUDENT
LOANS: SINGLE PARE!IIt'IHOMEMAKER GRANT; I.T.P.A. (COMMUNITY ACTION AGENCIES).

Call, Wrlle or SlOp In For Mo.. lnfor.-llon About Our Tnlnl"' ......a....

The Adult Education Center
Tri-County Vocational School
..

Toll Free .1-800-637-6508 .
•••

1np

......_

in

eatate of Clarence GMta. de-

good concltlon

cured Party,

Document• frorir·the office
Se- of
the Architect ,betllnnlng
def..,tl having A-It
22, 1819 on lhe fol·

Sl NCE 1969

IISo' ST. SYII.CIISl

992-7611

5·25-'89-tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

IITERIOR-EXTEIIOR
. FREE ESTIMATES
Taka the pain out of
painting. Let - do
it for you.

YEIY BASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES
A

614-985-4180

.

t8J 23, "" '1) 5, 12. 41c
r

POMEROY, OHIO
We lu,Y. All Non Fer·

.. Carporot•, OH. Off ltl

1600 GALLON
WAm SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIU HAULED
992-52

R.,L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTER, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

JONES TIRE
CENTER .
•N- • Uood Tlru
oCultom Pipe Bonding
•Oil Chongoo
•OrMieJo._
- . .. . . Chaolo

M•ntenance
•Computetb:ed Belenoer

992-3897

St. Rt. 124
Middleport Qh.
(Nut to HIU Top Gro,cory)

JRI·CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTIOL
SINCI 1976
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • .ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS
le•blr llltiontl Pest
Control ~ssn.
fal Fr.•

1·800·535-2199

60 DIFFERENT WOOO

APPALACHIAN
WOOD nOYES

698-6121

Metals, Plastin, .
Stainless Steel
rous

(PAYING TODAY.
AUG. 30r 1989 I
CLEAN, DIY
ALUMINUM c•Ns

4l(perlb.
#1-COPPEI . ........90' lb.
#2 COPPU •..•.••.• 7S• lb.
RfD BRASS .......... 50' lb.
YElLOW BlASS -.40' -lb.
RADIATORS ••••••••. 35' lb.
HOURS
7 Days A Week
9 a.m. ' 7 p.m.
At

Jet. S.R. 7 &amp; 143
On The .Bv·Pau

8 · 36· ' 89· 1 mo.

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR
located at Valoy L.....r
In Middleport, 0~.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4-r.ycle

engines

Stock Porto for
Hom81ite, Weedeater,
Tocumoeh, Briggs 8o
. Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

Announcements
3 Announcements .
New Shop: Tr•••ul'lln of the

Hills, will be opolng soon. tt Y&lt;\U ',

are an artist or mab craflt we
would llkllto sell your crallona ~
for you, &amp;14-384·8872 or 814- ;
598-4098.
·..,

Reduce safl and f•st whh Oo:Besa capsules end E-V•p ·
"Water Pills" at Fruth Pharmacy.
;

Giveaway

4

3 puppi.. halt Irish Setter l half German Shepherd. 6 wka. old. •
614-446-8059.
. •
6 monthl mi.ll puppy, hi(l •
shot•, nMds good home owne.....
allergic to animal fur, 30,-87$1-...

=32~1~
..~----------~ ·

Beagle pups 8 WHka old 304- ~
675·7'818 or 1575-6011. ·
·

FJH 5 kiHens, long hllr, all
colors, 304-675-5553.
..
Fr111lrewood, you cut 614·388-

9743.
Kittens 304-675-6720.
Kltlons Golorot Collcoo.otrlped 1
mixed. Vary friendly. 10 gooa

home. 814·256·1793.

6

".t

•·"'

r.,

I

Found In vicinity of Eddy
Cl'lapel, mala Beagle wearing..
red collar, 304-675-4821.

oUGHT HAULING

5758.

•FIREWOOD .

Gann•n Shepherd, answerw to,,·.

Found: Kuhn Cog.

,

I
I tH

•

BILL SLACK
992-226t
EVENINGS
.11/88/ rtn

B&amp;W
GARAGE
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
·REPAIR
CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

247-3522
St. lt. 338
Letart

"Cody", friendly, reward! Lost In ,

Haven Htlghtt •rH, 304. .2.. \
2260 or 614·388-~486.
•

. LOST: Mala, all whtta lang- : '
haired eel. Blue collar. Spruce
Sl., 4th Ave. a ret. 614-388·90N.
Lost: male Schnauzer. Black· ·'
/grey, Pom.,oy EJamenl•ry 'School area. Reward. 614-112· •
6078 .. 614-9112·2118. .

Yard Sale

7

--------··
Gallipolis
. ''
&amp; Vicinity
ALL Yard Sa let Mutt 81 P1ld lh ;
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.. 1 •
tht d'ay before lhl ad Ia to run.
Sundsy edition • 2:00 p.m. •
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00 J
p.m. Saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity:

c:J 'He~rinc Evaluations For All Ages

Frld•y; SepttmMr 1!i, 1-3 on ..
Salem St. Rut11nd. Lillie glrla
clothing, aduh clothing, atroller, '
btdspraa,:ts, bicycle, chain Nw,
1171 Ford Truck, balhroom
Yinhy, etc.
"·

~

9

PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR
•

Business
.· Services

Lic:enself Clinical AudioiO&amp;ist

l: ,614) 446-7619 Of (614) 992·2104
z iU7 Sicontl Amue, Box 1213
- GIIUI!Oils, Ohio 45631

o1 ' ,

614-245· :
• ·.

LOST Black &amp; sliver ..mill '.

z ·LISA M.• KOCH, M.S. ·
iE

'

··.

Lost &amp; Found

Found: 9 mo. old Btsstt Hound, 614-245--9448 or 614·2,5-956t ·Male.
. •

Dependlble Hearini Aid Sales &amp;Senrictl

, I l

· ·

kilt tnt, 5 week old, ~ntr \
trained, real cutt, 304-675·5579: :-

8·7· 11·1 mo.

1nln for car•rs In

..

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

1 mo.

,

..._....;-.--''-

1-ll·'·tfn .

Call Anytime
992-2371

FULL TIME .ADMISSIONS
COORDINATOR

112·2104

.

1,DOD GALLONS
POOLS, WEllS
CISTERNS

'

Veter1n1 Memorial Hoapltal. 1 JCAHO-ttc·
credited, nat·for·prOflt hoapltl!l. 11 looking
for a Patient Review Coordinator. The Patient Review Coordinator will be re1ponllible
for the a-ament, pllnning.lmplementll·
tlon, and eveluetion of the ho•phal'• Qual·
lt\1 Aauren~ and UtiUzetiOII Menegement
Plen1.
·
·
Quallflcetlon• Include a Regiltered NurH
with 1 current Ohio nursing IICenH. Prior
Quellty A11urance and Utlllutlon Menagement experience preferred.
Plu• call or lind • , . _ to:
Margaret Holm. Allilhlnt Administrator
Veterena Matnorlll HOIJIItal
1111 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 411789

ALLEI'S
HAULING

WATER
SERVICE

Help Wanted

E.O.E.

M ldclleport,

992-7479

eby; thio Agon cy wit aott ol Menuat ptuo ono HI oflho
public auctk-n •II of debtor• a
upon pav,ment of
!I&lt;IU'-1 ond Inventory at Drawlnp
UII.OO
dopoolt.
Addltlonot .
Jim McCutcheon Auction- coploo can be obtolned
-in' Company, Old St. paymonl of 121.00 porupon
oot.
Mory • Pike, Porkoroburg.
2.
Oopoolt
will
bo
r•'
WHt VIrginia, ot 10:30 A. funded upon return of the
M. on Soplombor 25, 1989. Project Monuol ond Draw(9) 8, 12, 21C

Must be able to work well with the publiC. Licensed Social Worker preferred. ~lary based
upon education and experience.
Send resume to
Administrator
Americare-Pomeroy
36759 Rock Sprinas Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

992-2198

•Mobile Home
P1rt1
"oiMobile Home
Rentals
•Lat Rentals

It. 33 North of
•-ray, CHilo

• COAL STOVES.
INSERTS. FURNACES

radiators. We also

PAT HILL FORD

MOBILE
HOME PARK

the Contrect sum.

been mlde in payment oftt• l-Ing blllo:
indebtlldn•• aecured ther· ·
1. Ono cllpy of I he ProjKt

____ - _____,._-

tHEW HOMES

Til COUNTY
RECYCLING

repair Glis Ta..s.

5-4-89-1

•P•

tin•• Admlni1tn1tion,

out

We Service All Mokea

coued. late of 402 Laoloy
Meigs
County, Ohio 46769.
Robin E. Buctc. tiona prepared by Mark T. the totll sum or .Um1 bid.
Probolo Judge
Tho Owner ruorveo the
Lane K. Nouotroad. Clerk Epling, Archltoct. 423 locond
Avenue,
Galtlpollo.
rlghl"lo
rejeCt ony or oil bido
tB) 29; (9) 6, 12 3tc
Ohio 45131.
.
and to waive Irregularity in
--.,......,.,...----~1 Bldo will bo r!IC8ived for: the bldo ond In the bidding.
Public Notice
1. Gonorot Tradill Contract.
.No bidder may withdraw
S.llod bldl wiJI "be r• ' hio bid · within thirty . t30)
ceived at lhe Arch~..:~· 1 of· dayo aflor lho actU81 date of
LEGAL NOTICE
flee
uirtl Tuoodoy, Soptom· tho oponlng 1horoof.
PuriUant to the approprl- ber 19. t989 at 2:00 P.M:
Upon oword of conlrocl,
olo provlolono of lhe Unl·
Bldo
rocaived
oft•
that
IUCCIIoful bidder Wili •bo r•
form Commercial Code and lime wMI not bo accepted. quired 10 oubmlt il Pvrfor·
the terma and condltlona of Bide wit be opened and rood manco. Labor and Matorlot
Security Agr0111'1onl doted aloud at I hat limo ond at that Paym*'t Bond glvon In I he
Fobruory 11. · 1984. bel- piece. lnterMted partiel 1re name of tt. Owner in a
ween TRIPLE C HYDO· Invited
lo ottond bid opan· clflc amoun1 equal to 100"
BLAST. tNC .. Ooblor. and ll'itof "the Contnct Sum or a
tho Wood County Bonk and · Blddtro moy oecuru:oplll ceohler'o
payable lo
toler, Auguat 20. 1911&amp;, II· of the propooed • Contnct the Ownerchock
equallo
1 00% of
signed to the U.S. Smott Bu·

. Street. POmeroy. ·

heater ceres. Wt con
also acid boil and rod

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

INVITATION TO BID
within 30 doys of bid open·
NOTICE TO RE·81D
lng.
Nollcelogivonhorobvthol
.3. NoportlatoetowlllboloMiddleport
Pi'aobyUrian oued.
Church, 1tl3 North Fourth
All bido to bo occompoitreot, Miildtopori. Ohio, nled by o bid oecurlty In lhe
wHI - t bldo for tho lot· form of a Bid Bond given In
towing projoct:
tho nome of the Owner in a
Roof Ropolr and Ropl-· l ·o~1ociilc omounl equal 10
ment, Middleport P-bytot·
of the oum or oumo bid
riMI Church. 183 North · executed on AlA Documonl
Fout1h Slroet, Middleport, A310, 1970 ·Edition or o
Ohio 45760, ocoorclng lo · coo hi•" 1 c - payable to
Drawingo and &amp;pacifica· tho Owillf equol 10 25" of

OF

11

The fa mlly of
HARRY SWARTZ
,would like to thank
Dr. Vallee, Plnecrelt
llluralng Home ltllff.
Ewing Funeral Home
and David Prentice
for hl1 kind worda,
.during tha dNth of
ow huablncl and
father.
Special tllankl to
our neighbors end
friend• for the
food. card•.
ftowara end their
kind wotda of
aympethy.
Helen Swartz,
Alan Swam.

h

. Public N atice

PubliC Notice·

980PF for the Kibble
FC!Updlltlon. Bornord ~. . , ,
in
Fultz, TNitH. lo avoltablo . · ,;;~nM .
ji~~:ji
for public lnspKtlon ot Ber·
'
·~:
nard V. Fultz low Office, Court. Ceoo
111'11 w. Second SlrHV Edna Triplo11.
Pomlfoy, Ohio 4"7$9. dur· Sir..,; . Pomeroy,
Jng regular buslnu houra for County, Ohio, 457119.
o porlod of 190 doysoubo• apPolntod Executrix , of lhe
quent to pub-llc1tlon of this

Receive "Hands-On" Trainins

NOTICE ·OF

SER~ICE
We caa ~r !lnd recon radiatars and

DEAD OR AUVE

.,

EVENING &amp; SAllJRDAY HOURS AVAILABlE

St. Rt. 691,0ff Rt. 33 Nelsonville, Oh. 45764
75~3511
(Mon.-Thurs.) · ·

667-3271
A. Newland

7-18-'89-tfn

992-2156
The annuli rlll)ort Form

otMETALIUILDINGS

Res. M9-2860
NO SUNDAY
.

. 4-25·

.•

I

9~9-28D1

8 ·17·1 mo.

I

IS NOW SCHEDULING PATIENT APPOINTMENTS

.

•EXTENirYE Rff\40DELINO
•YINVL IIDtNO • ROOANO

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tr••••lule•
PH. 992:5682
or 992-7121

. NO SUND. Y CALLS

PUBLIC NOTICE

•CUSTOM KITCHENS. lATHS

'."Free Eatimotes"

or

"

GENEIAl
· ·:·~
·
CONTIIACTOR
RESIDENTIAL
.• ,
•· COtlMERCIAl

Rt. 124, Pamero' Ohio·

Day ar Night

Public Notice

~r.- .

PARTS &amp; SERVICE

or Res.

POINT PLEASANT, WV

JIIQII: GIEG I. IOUSH ·

BISSELL
SIDING
CO".
... ._lulf.
PH.

St.,.~~!~~'!

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ENGINE REPAIR
•Lawn Mowers
•Riders
•Chain Saws
•WeedB&amp;tBrs
3 miles off of Rt. 7
at Maigs Memory
Gardens

74-MotorcyciM
76i-Boalt &amp; MOtors lor Sale

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Roger Hysell
Garage

SMALL

71 - ALitOI for S.. t
72 - Truckl far Sale
7~-V•n• • 4 wo·s

Salem

======~~ .L...::o-~f,!;!m

EAGLE RIDGE

Tr an;;po rl aIIll n

742-2455

Gauge OnlY. .
9·8· 89·1fn

222 Eastl'ain

· PH. 949-2801

992.~2156

Fac tar y Chobd 12

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

ht visit FREE

liVING ROOM SIITtS
BEDROOM SUITtS
DII~EnE SfTS
"NEW" lfCUN£RS

8/4/89-tfn

Get Retaltt Fatt

I

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

AU MAKES AND

SUSAN COLEMAN
742-2778

63-~ivostock

4

Beginning Sept. 17
Starn at 1:00 PJL

992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO

SWEEPER REPAIR

21/t IIIIas Out New
u- Rd.
in Rutland, Oh.

64-Hay &amp; Grajn
1&amp; - Seld &amp; FerUi1er

fslalr.

31 ..:..Hom• fOf sl;~e
32-""obill Hom• for Sale
3~ - Ftrmt tor Sale
34 - Busln•l Building~
36-Lots 1: ACreage
315-Rt.. Estlte Wanted

Aret Code 30'

441-GallipoUs

'

SUN'S UP
TANNING

11-Wtntld To Do

following telephone exchanges ...

Located Behind
Tractor Dealership

1·1·1 mo.

62-Wanted to Buy

21-Busin•• Opportunitv
22-Mone to Lo1n
23-Prot•lional l•vices

EVERY SUNDAY

"Wd•l•g go••
·Steelalletl"

11 - Farm Equipment

17 - Miaal~neous

- 2:00P.M. THURIOAY
- 2'00 P.M. FRIDAY

992-6756

&amp; LtVI'SIIILk

1 1- Hall) WtntH
12- Siluttion Wanted
1 3-lnaurance
14-Buain•• Ttlini"' .
15-Schools • Instruction
11 - Rtdlo, TV. CB Repair

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

Classified pages covet the
Galli a Countv
A•• Coda 151'

(~

61 - Household Goodt
52-Sporting Ooodt
53-Antiques ·
·
54 - Misc. MerchJndise
55- Building Suppll•
IUI - Peu for S'l le
157 - Muliclllnstrumenu
fiB - Fruits &amp; Veg.cabl•
69- For s•e or Trtdt

ljilhilihhll

2924 JACKSON AVENUE.

Fall Quarter Begins
October 2nd

"'

· - GiV..WIY
I - Happy Ad1
6-Loe1~ttd Found

..

Roe ·family reunion conducted
The third annual Rowe Family
Reunion was held Sept. 3 at
Forked Run State Park, Reedsv!lle, with a plcn !c dinner being
served at 12 noon. Ninety-seven
relatives and friends attended
the reunion.
Family members attending
the get -together included Jessie
Parsons; George Parsons;
Roger and Becky Parsons, and
children, Angle and Jim; all of
Ashland; Carroll and · Joyce
White, and sons, Keith and
·Kevin; Jerry and Darla Tucker.
and daughter, Nick!; Allen and
Deanna Tucker, all of Racine;
Gerald and Jean Wells ,
GaiUpolis.
Anna Wines; Bob and Carol

•

3- Annouctmentt

cept - cl•tified dist:MIV. Busin•• Ctrd and 1..11 noti0811
will alto epp._ in the Pt , Pl•••nt Register and the Gtlli·
. polis Daily Tribun&amp; ree~hing over 18.000 hom•.

FAMILY DENTAL CAJll

.

1 -C.d ot Th..u
.2 -ln Memory

•A clautfied a. .niMm.nt piRed in The O..ty Santin .. (M·

SUNDAY PAPER

.20
.30
.42
.60
.05/ do.v

AlllliJU Ill. I' Ill I! II Is

•s.,ninelll not respontible for errors after first d.-, . (Check
for enors firn de¥ ld runt in PIJ*") . Ctll before 2:00p .m.
d• tft• pubUc•ion to mllkecorrection.
•Acts thlt must be .-id ln .a cNance.,..
C.,d of Th.-ks
In Memori.m

FRIDAY PAPER

t4.00
.
t6.00
$9.00
S13.00
at .30/ doy

Fabric Shop

.

NIAsE Clftifled M•ch.,lc

jf-..,;.;·t;:o•=•=...=•=.,=•=•==·=•;;••:;:•~·----------

•7 point line type only uMd.

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
l)IURSDAY PAPER.

Ovtr 1&amp; Words

R.r•.,• forconNCUtlw runs. broken upd-vawiUIMI ch•gKI

run 3 dtrs at no ch •ge..
·
•P,ict of ad for an captt.ll•t.,," double price of ad cost.

""•

PAD&lt;
A111 PliDII

.

•R•~• $.50 discount for adt Plid in advance.
•f,.e lidl - GtvtMNay ..,d Found Ids und• 1&amp; words will be

· Beach, N.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Perkins,
Tuppers Plains, visited Mrs . .
Lola Clark and Mr. and Mrs. ,
Ernest Carr on Sunday.
Mrs. V!rg!nl&lt;l Gibson and Mrs.
Gladys Cumings spent the wee- :;
kend In Dayton with their sister
and brother-In-law. Mr. and Mrs."
Welby Richards.
·'
Mr. · and Mrs. Bim Cotterill ,~
have moved into their new home,
the formerHlel French property. •

Quote of the d4y

or Muon counti• mutt be pre·

paid.

Most Foreign and
Domlllic Vehidll
Me Service
AtfM.ijor &amp; Minot
Rep~ in

Rate

15
15
15 .
15
15

3
6

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Harrisonville happenings

SMALL
WANT ADS

Days
1

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

women who receive the drugs are
exposed to possible side effects
from these agents but are not
benefited," the commissioner
wrote.
Of the40drugs thatfalllnto the
category, only two are used'.
exclusively to control m!lk production and breast growth. according to an FDA oftlctal. The
others have other medical uses.
In June, a government advl· ,.
sory panel expressed cancer~ ·
about bromocr!ptlne, estrogen ;
and .androgen, drugs C(!mmerc!ally known as Parlodel, An·
drold and TACE .

Words

USED FURNITURE

OFFERED AT

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

SYRACUSf, OHIO

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156

'

Lola Clark and Frances Alkire
visited Thursday In Lancaster
with their aunt. Mrs. Ava Lutz,
age 95, and a resident of a rest
home. They also called on Mrs.
Ed Bresler.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball,
Columbus. spent Monday evening with Mrs. Frances 'Young.
Mrs. K.C . Welsh!s!nO'Bieness
Hospital In Alhens where she Is
recu per at In g.
Mr. and Mr s. Doug Bishop
. vacationed for a week in Myrilr

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

• The Area's Number 1 Mark•tplace

...;.;..~~.,......--------------~-~----------------------------------------··;

Community calendar

Business Services

,
Veterans
· 'llulbeny

Wanted to Buy

Complete houNholde of fur: •

nlture &amp; •nUqu11 . ._,eo wood

&amp;: -

coal he•t•r•. Sw•ln'• Furnhure
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Olive, 814441-3158.
·,

or at

Memorial HosJpital
Hits. Pomeroy,

Fum"ure ar,d app,i•ncn ~the "'
piece or entire houHhold. Ftllr ,!
prlcoo bolng paid. Call 11•~ "
3151.

MEO THE

STAFF
PEIM SALE

Now thru Slpt. 9, 1919 .

100/o OFF All PIM1S
WALK-IN WELCOME

KAY'S
BEAm SHOP

, •• N. 21111

iMI~~,trt

Junk c•r• with or whhout
motara. C.ll Larry Llvelp 114-''
381·1301
l
,

1

=-==------------.
Oullte
• "'• •
t!ro 1940 quina. ,,., cond"lon.- · 1
t!ooh Paid. CoU 614-8112·5667 or '

·vo l
TOP CASH paid for 1111 motNt •;!
ond nower uood - · - h ·
Bulck.Ponllac, 1811 loot.,. ..:.
~. aatttpollo. Catt 11~ ...
114-602·2411.

=

UMd fumlture lnd .,.

n•

Phone

Wlnlldto~~ut.

t~ ..... ''

114-71llo~.~~

a.,..,...... "(

lion d-.lf4-741 ....

l

~J

�Page 8- The Daily Seritinal
'

9 "' · WBntecl to Buy
UMd lurnltu,. 1w tho

~

ontlrw houHIIolcl -

LAFF-A-DAY

44

or

Mlllnt.

114·742-2411.

Porn.oy- Middlaport, Ohio

Employment Serv1ces
Help Wanted

Tuarday. September 12, 1989
BORN LOSER

72 · Tn.lcka for Sale

51

Apartment
for Rent

. . Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
.
.

Television
·Viewing

1br,_ ~po~ment, al utiiHIM I,.

ma. Dtp. roq'd.

11H4e-4222 loti•~m .

•

aI

TUES., SEPT; 12 •

.

o:::~"!"mb~_:. ~

low to fQim four limp"' wj&gt;rds.

1

t}J r!Is 1 1

'I

A· GELL

EVENING

i11!1 IllNewt(]) · 8ill 1111 8 liZ
(!) Horna Run Gorby

(7.) Ramona Ramona and .
Beezus find thamsalves
reoponaible for tha family's ·
dinner. (NRJ
Cil Square One TV (0:30) Q
. IBI!ll Three'o Companr
IHIFKbOfUfe
·
II) Cartoon Expreaa
, 13 American Mtgazlne
6:05 (]) levelly HUibllliea

~VRRV,8ECAU5E IFTf.lE
·
TEACilER SE~S 'I'OU, IT'L.L SE .
'I'OUR FAiiLT. AND 'IOU'll 6ET .
&amp;LAMED AND 'l'outl. &amp;E IN TROU&amp;l.E ..

8;30 .Ill 11!1. Nile Nightly Jllwo

.

ili SportsLook (0:30)

(]) Dill ABC Newa Q
Elec1rlc .
Cil 3·2·1 Contact Q

I!

I
!
whO'*'
I ; Po~~.·~"':':::
A young I!DY.

Hu T 0 y

I, 1~
.

I I

.

I

T

.

i

.

.

.

.

_ .

I

.

Dill PM Magazine

(]) Dill Cun:ut Affair
ID Cil MacNeil/ Lehrer

UNSCRAM8LE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER .

------~----~~----1

IIJ Wheel Of

IB1!11 Night Coun Q
ltJJ MoneYflne
IUIAndyQrlflllh

,0 Miami VICe Duty And
. Honor Stereo.
13 VldeoCountry
7:06 (]) JefleNOiti
7:30 DIll Fomlly Feud
00 MaW. ~eague llsaiHIII
Magazine (0:30)
(l) lintertalnmenl T011ight .
Ill ill USA Today
liZ IIJ Jeopardy! Q
181!11 M"A'S"H
IIJJ Croaoflre
IBI Major Llogue Ba-H
ra Top c:ord
7:35 (I) Santoni a Son
1:00 (]) MOYIE: Tha ~
Shephard Of Klngdoin·Come
(2:00)
.
D Ill 1111 MIUock An aging
blues musicia~ is framed lor
the murder or a rock star. (A)

.EMOTIONS
; RESEARCH

a. •

lAB

fi\Bodybuilding
ProiHalonal ,
.
Junior ·Natlonal

.
;

•

ChampiOnship. trom
Memphis, TN, Man's
Compat~lon (T)
(i) Ill ill WhO'I ~ 8o11?
.· To help her sell-esteem,
Tony asks "ngela on a real
lirst dale. (A) Q
.
riJ . (!l Nova Probe the ·
mysteries and legends wllich
surround. Easter Island. Q
®l • liZ Reocue: 911
181!11 MOYIE: Oxford Bluet
IPG13) (2:00)
ltJJ PrlmeNewa
0 MUIIMr, 8ha Wnlte
Joohua Peal&gt;oQy Died
Here ...Poa'&amp;Jiily'
Conversation With Dlnall
8:05 (I) Claoh Of The Chemplona
VIII
8::10 (l) 8ill The Wondtr Yura

a

All Kevin wants is to begin ~

.I

f
8

,(J.......-

Servtces
.

·~--------------~--~~

, il-IE?Re8 ONE
si.Jr&lt;e~r .

O'NTELL•..
\

carefree summer. (A) Q
ra Crooic I Ch·
9:00 DIll 1111 MOVIE: 'In The
Line Of Duty: The FBI
Murd4in' NBC Movie Of The
. Week (2:00) Q
.
(!) PtoleutOrial lOlling
(]) D ill A-nne Becky Is .
practically Inconsolable after ·
being humiliated at schOOl.

·'

g~,o;~

Examine experimental
democracies in Zlm-e
and Papua, New Gulnee. Q
Cil Struaate Far Democracy
Patrick Watson explOres the
conneCtion between wealth
and democracy. Q
®) 1B liZ MOVIE: 'Agatha
Chrlatle'o The Man In The

=(~~~~IS TIJI.May

ltJJ Leny King Live!
II) The EqualiZer Control's
Fetty Trwo Trtmmlna1 atump
,._,.,,call
304-e75-fa31.

goddaughter must provide
info to mobsters. (PI I of 2)
(0:46)
'
Noohvlllo Now
9:30 (]) Ill ill Chlckllll Soup A
middle-aged salesman retires
to work in a community
center. Q
10:00 Ill 700 Club with Pat
RobertiOit
(]) 8ill ute Ooea On
· Several members ol e romily
face big steps in 'their lives.

'

a

BARNEY

.JUGHAID ll

SLINGSHOT, BULLFROG,
BARLOW KNIFE, ITCHY
POWDER JAR OF ANTS,
BUBBL.Y GUM- -

61T READY
FER SCHOOL!!

g....,.
rn P.o.v. A 53 ye., old

retarded man finally prepares
to leave. home. 12:00) 1;1
.1!11 Cttmewatch Tonight
«JEvenlnglleWI '
0 The Equalizer McCall
race• to find Control's.
kidnapped aoddaughler. IPI
2 ol 2) 10:44)
,
tho! Ptll'lllfiYOI' oflmportMt - t o com- 10:30 (I).Major t.:aogue Ill abel
ptllllonl today, make doubly ... you
P.O.V. A smaR group or
" - your lliobl In order. Without a 1 · · (ZJ
miniSters atruggle to Mlp
ICilpt~ you might mill ar coilfuae pertlunemplOyed siHI worllere.
,_llnlormaUon. .
Alllll (Minlll :t1•Aprll ,., 11'1 been
Mllllt Iemay
Mid, "Wa earn our enemies, but we do
and the 12th precinct are ·
notiiWayl.dlllnte our~-" Today
d181gnated aa a special.
o uNII n 11 nlng pal might do aometlllng
squad.
lhat aompllcatea thlnga lor you.
1B1
Henllllfeii!IY.
,
• fillle In ~The
TAUIIU.
MlriOI Ba gullded
original members ot the
lod!JY 10 that you don't IIPP8W tMr1y
country mu11c group perform
............., 10 ~with wllom you'll
many of their hHo, Including
be ln'JOINCI. Kelp In mind, an Individual
WOke Up In Love, Kill You
w1111out OOitTOWIDn Iaiiie a hoUuwlthAll Over and 11'1 Be Me. ·

·,

BERNICE

BEDEOSOL
85 General Hauling
rooola,
clatoma, - · C:afl 114'
241
..211.
.

A &amp; R Wot., lorvloo. Poole, al•
toma, Willa. lm"'Iddato-1,00o or

.;'4,~- .,...._ .•

:mM-..."...,. c:o,, •

"""-* Rltoa, ~II dirt,-·
aravat, h - - L All your
noada,

304-1111--

304472..117

--~ Walor l{aullnfl,
,._blo ntoa, vaiiiM dli- · 2,000 lo 4,01)a OIPIO;.H~I

="~

.... ·~

Call

;

--·•"
tnt••18 ....,....

=

111
un- . CAP111C0M
you f1111111 be aCO......,_,
1rlflllllngr wllfl
dirgo
ohlngllln the WhO ..... .... lily to.rd you.
,.... aheld.
of a
~oniQIIy, llvolld piiiOI'I ata1u1 OOUid
will be
to U
10 ! " - uNIIII lotng of your
Y~~Ur llllletlc come mont. end
·
mare to the fare.
.
¥1110 (..... II I pL II)' Pui'IUit of
1*101111 imblllane. anCI OlljeciW.
OOUid -.py !IUfll' at .. lllon 10 -

.Your prlorlllee end .

:::=lflcant "'a:::::"

--!oelay

you
flllllll ~----dO
llll!lllllhat.,.
OOilb•r
to the ""--a

· of !IUfll' oa ttortc. . ..
Cl'llll III-WII.
~ wt-. to for roa1anoa Mel .
~

.....,_.

(

~f"·· -- -

------

ij~ 2m.,

C-'"'a

J &amp; J Wot., lorvlco. lwlmmlng '

fioull~&gt;g

You'll find II. The Allro-Graph Match·
·maker lnttontly ...,.. whlclllllgna are
~perfect for you. Mil S2 to
. MatChmaker, CIIJ lhla -Pifper, P.O.
Box 11428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
L.u (llpL 21-GoL D) Pertlclpatlon
In pleuurable dl-.lona might be uppeinNHI In your mind tOday end ....,
you del get lnVDMid In ..... mont Mrl·
oua apecta~ your elforta may leek lm·
. petua end qullly.
ICONIIQ (Oct. 14 Now. 21) TheN
might be 10111e minor ~tic dilnlpttona •ound your ilaule today. II~ be
up to you 10 !Mice llire no - melcee
. mounto!no out of rnolthlill, lnclt.!dlng
youl'llll.
IACIITTAIIIU8 (Nft. II 0.0. I'll At
,Your c»long. you hew able bodied-- , . ; ;:
G01111118ndlng today Mel
.,.with IOta of villllly, you'tl INioh IIMir your . . . . qu.HIIea wll be quite
ellorll:today, but Whtrlllfl on your own, evldll;t. Don't, howwuer
!IOU mlllhl not be .. lnduatrtoul.
- to IIIIP to whel- you iwue a

a Maroll
. . •1 If., you're

'.

1 - - ....,.

J..,

1'1
II) Ullin ...
_•.,-::till··.- Pallid onto you by.
IIIII GOUld mike or dan't f'UIII Iiiio·
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18 Slill
atlhe
17 West
Crucifixion
Indian
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19 Floor
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heroine
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31 Furrow
32 African

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33 James of
journalism
35 'Lulu"
compol!ef

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Marcel -

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�Paga 10-Thl o.lly Sentinel

TU811day. September 12. 1989

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Local news briefs--. New.~· -----------,------Continued from page 1

EMS receives six Monday calls
Unlts,of the Meigs County Emergency Service responded to
six calls on Monday.
.
At 7:40a.m. the Middleport unit was called to Roush Lane lor
Auburn Meadows who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
and at8:•a.m. the unltwenttoThtrdAve. for Jean Moore who
was transportee;~ to Holzer Medical Center. The unit transported
VerlKln lfease from :Page St. at 12:52 p.m. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. '
·
The Tuppers Plains unit at 7: 39 p.m. wem to station eight for
Teresa Dailey who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit responded to call at 9:50 p.m. on East
Second for Chester Young who was transported to Veterans,
and at 11:49 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to Bailey Run
for Belsla Roush who was taken to Veterans.

directly."
mile run which will start at 9 a.m.
In other .Council business,
Serving at the lire department
Lenny Eliason gave an update on will start at 11 a.m. al)d in
the annual Middleport Block addition to the barbequed
Party which will take place chicken, fish tall sandwiches wlil
Saturday . Details such as the also be sold.
blocking of streets and the route
Musical entertairunent will
for an early morning 5·K Run take place from 12 noon to 6 p.m.
were Ironed out.
and wlil Include the Sweet
Among Block Party attrac- Adellnes, two clogging groups,
lions will be craft and refresh· Denver Rice, a barbershop
ment stands, gamfs, musical quartet and others.
entertalrunent, a car show , a
A word of caution from Mayor
chicken barbeque at the lire · Hoffman was that this year,
deparlment, and more.
poUce 'officers will be citing
Eliason said that 100 runners anyone on the streets with·open
are anticipated for the 5-K. U

c
.
PJ
c
- - - - - -.-------.-.--' ommon eas . ourt ·
Judge Crow places Nuzum on probation
Joseph W. Nuzum, 25, of 1 to a term of six months In the
Ravenswood, appeared In Meigs Ohio State Reformatory for
County Common Pleas Court Women at MarysvJUe.
,_
Monday morning betoge Judge
According to Judge Crow.
Fred W. Crow Ill on a motion for when thelegislature changed the
shock probation, filed by his sentencing laws a few years ago,
attorney, John R. Lentes. Nuzum It made most third and fourth
was originally sentenced to a
degree fe!l:inies a determinate
term of six months In prison by sentence, which means that the
Judge Crow, upon a plea of guilty person sentenced to a determi·
to a forgery charge, a fourth
nate term, such as Nuzum, after
degree felony.
he serves the fuU time, has no
Nuzum was returned to Meigs supervlson upon his release.
County froin the Ross CorrecHowever, since shock probational Center by Sheriff James tion was granted, the defendant
M. SOulsby to attend Monday's is supervised for an additional
h·earlng.
period of time.
'
The motion asked the court to
reconsider Its earlier sentence
In the case of Nuzum, Judge
and place the defendant on · Crow ordered that he be placed
pt(lbatlori, since he had served all on probation for two years.
but approximately 30 days of the During that time he will · be
original sentence.
reporting to a probation officer
, Nuzum was charged In connec· and performing community ser·
tlon with an Incident which vice wor~..
· .
occurred in April of this year, in
Judge Crow advised the dewllich a forged welfare check fendari,t that any failure to
was passed.
comply with any and all the
Mary A. Rilfle, a co-defendant terms of the probation will result
with Nuzum In connection with In an additional ·Sentence of at
the incident, was sentenced Sept. least 12 months .

--Area deaths-Ethel Radekin
'

.She was prededed in death by
one son, Lewis Byron Blessing in
1988.
Surviving are her husband, Calvin T. Blessing; two sisrers, Clara
Capehart of Letart and 5ybil Norris
of Junction City, Ohio; one brother,
Goorge Rollins of Elgin,lL; .several
nieces and n~hews.
Service w1U be Thursday at 2
p.m. at the Letart Guiding Stat Advent Christian Church. Burial will
foUow in Evergreen Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home Wednesday, 6 to 9
p,m. or at the church one hour prior
to service.
'

Ethel C. (Grandma) Radekin.
97, 213 N. Pearl St., McArthur,
died Mol)day at her residence
.following a brief Illness.
· Born Sept. 4, 1892 in' Meigs
County, she was the daughter of
.the late James and Florence
Gal&gt;rlel Cummings. She was
homemaker and former Vinton
.County teacher. She was
member of the McArthur ReorganiZed Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints, the Vinton
County Gold Star Mothers, and
the Vinton County Garden Club.'
She Is survived by five daugh·
ters, Ina Sams, Columbus; ' Dena Donald Nicholson
Hoffman, Port Charlotte, Fla.;
Donald H. Nicholson, 57, ofThe
Georgia Phllllps and Mrs. Roger
(Betty) Bolen, both of London· Plains, died Monday afternoon at
erry; and Mrs. David (Doris) O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Miller, Mobile, Ala.; a daughter- following a brief illness.
Born in Athens, Mr. Nicholson
in-iaw,.Barbara Radekin, McAr·
was
a son of the late James
thur; special friends, Bob · and
Howard
and Eunice Marie Willi·
Kyle Mason. McArthur; eight
ams
Nicholson.
He owned and
grandchildren, 12 great grandoperated
a
construction
business
children, and one great great
In
the
Athens
area.
for
many
grandson.
In addition to her parents she years. · He also worked as a
was preceded in death by her carpenter through South Central
hu sband, George Radekin, Sr., Carpenters Local 356. He was a
on April 18, 1962; two sons, John U.S. Navy veteran, having ·
Edward and George Jr.; a served four years during the
daughter, Helen Maxine Ra· Korean Conflict, and was a
dekin; a grandson, Larry Gene member of VFW Post 7174, The
Hoffman; two bro)hers, George Plains.
He is survived by one son,
and Bing Cummings; three sisH. Nicholson Jr., of The
Donald
ters, Ema Cummings, Carrie
Plains;
lour grandchildren,
Webb. and Lizzy Harvey; and
Karen
and
Jimmy, of Athens,
three sons-in-law.
Services will be Thursday 11 and Pamela and James, of
a.m. at the James N. Blower Killeen, Texas ; and two sisters,
Funeral Home in McArthur with Evelyn Dishong, The Plains, and
the Rev. James Cummings olfl· Charlene Hoeflich, Pomeroy.
Besides his parents. he was
elating. Burial will be In Castor
. preceded in death by ·a son,
Cemetery.
Friends may call after 2 p.m. Robert H. Nicholson.
Services will be Thursday, 1
on Wednesday at the funeral
p.m.,
at the Hughes Funeral
home.
Home, Athens, with the Rev.
Norman M. Wright officiating.
Roger Gilkey
Burial will be In the West Union
Street Cemetery. Military .servt:
Roger F . Gilkey , 49, ofCQIUrt\ces will be conducted at ihegrave
bus, died Friday, Sept. B.
by VFW Post 7174. Friends may
Born Dec. 23, 1939, he was the
call
at the funeral home on
son of the late Virgil Gilkey and
Wednesday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
Myr tle (Norris) Gilkey of
Athens.
Survivors include a friend ,
Diane Wimer; three sons. Kenny
Dally stock prices
Gilkey, Roger Gilkey, Jr., and
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Robert Gilkey; one daughter,
Bryce and Mark Smith
Ramona; four brothers, Earl
of Blunt, Eilts A Loewl
Gilkey of Athens, Charles Gilkey
of Zanesville, Ohio, John Gilkey
of Gallipolis, and George Gilkey
Am Electric Power ......... .... 30~
AT&amp;T .................. , .. ............ 40%
of Logan; and five sisters, Joan
Ashland 011 ................. ...... .40~
Willison and Shelly Fuller, both
Bob Evans .... .............. .... .... l5%
of Columbus, Opal Rutter of
Charming Shoppes ......... ..... 16%
Albany, Rose Harriman of Za·
nesvi.lle, and Vera Gilkey of
City Holding Co ...... ...... .. .... 15'1.
Federal Mogul. .................... 25
Athens.
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .......... ..56%
Gravveslde services will be at
Heck's ................. ,... ....... ... .... 'II
11 a.m. Wednesday at. Bur·
Key Centurion ..... ........... ....13%
lingham Cemetery In Bur·
Lands' End ......................... 27%
Ungham, Ohio. Burial Is under
Limited Inc ........................37%
direction of the Rutherford·
Multimedia Inc . ... ........ ..... 102'&gt;(,
Shroyer Funeral Home, 1278 W,
Rax Restaurants .. ................ 2lt
Broad St., ColumbUs.
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ....... ..... 16
Shoney's Inc ..... .................. 12'&gt;8
Kalhryn Bleuing
Wendy's Int1 ............... ....... .... 6
Ka1hryn V. BIessing, 75, of Worthington lnd ................. 24%
Lewt. W.Va. died Monday, Sept.
(Landa' End II ex dividend
11, 1989 at Pleasant .. Valley today.)
Hospital.
Born March 27, 1914 at Letart, Boo8tft'8 to meet
she was a daughter of the late Wil·
1iam J. and Elizabeth R. Smith Rol·
The Eastern Band Boosters
tins. She wu a member of the will meet tonight (Tuesday) at
Letart Guiding Slar~Advent Cflris. 7:30p.m. In the band fOOm at the
hfih .SChOQI.
tiali chweh.
·

In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, the Central
Trust Company of Southeastern
Ohio, NA , Is seeking $11,073.44
from defendants Frederick W.
Klein, I.;aGrange, Ga., and Martha Ellen Klzzee Klein, La·
Grange, Ga. In a foreclosure
action.
America's Mortgage Servicing
Inc., FKA First Family Mort·
gage Corporation of Florida, has
been· awarded $22,958.34 from
defendant Richard E. Workman,
et al.
·
The Farmer's Bank and Savlngs Company has been awarded
$17,394.98 !rom defendant Gary
R. Canterbury, et al. In the same
case, George Colltns, Meigs

Tr~as.urer,

County
will recover
$552.81 for delinquent real estate
taxes, and defendant Teresa S.
Canterbury, has also been
awarded $7,000 trorn Gary R.
Canterbury.
·
Betty .. L. Gilkey has been
awarded $1,000 In · a judgment
against defendant Bernard D.
Gilkey.
· .
The case of Clyde Slone, et a!.
versus Oranna Perry has. been
dismissed with prejudice.
ln other matters, Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby has
appointed Gregory Wayne
Cooper and Timothy Ray Gumpf
as special deputy sheriffs of
Meigs County.
1

. woman WID8
. ·o1!lCll!} 3. m1
• k pol
. 'II'Ion J8C
Loram
CLEVELAND (UP!) -, Ohio
Lottery officials said Monday a

Couples to end
mBITiages
Jacklyn J _Dailey, Pomeroy , Is
seeking a divorce from John
Cline Dailey , Pomeroy. '
John R. Jeffers, Pomeroy, and
Robin Annette Jeffers, Middle·
port, are seeking a dissolution of
their marriage.

containers of alcohOlic bever.ages. "Keep tile 'd rinks Inside."
Hoffman said.
The following · other business
matters were also conducted by
Council.
,
.
A four -month .option, costing
$3,805, renewable for fqur more
months, on six properties on the
block of North Second Ave,
between Mill and ·R ace Streets,
was approved. The village is
taking the option for possible
future commercial development.
The option was prepared by
Hank Cleland, of Cleland Realty.
T.he money for the option wlll be
paid from the village's general
fund. ·
A resolution was passed au tho·
rlzlng the mayor and ,clerk·
treasurer to take rieces~ry
actions to comply with a consent
order from the Ohio· Envlrqnmental Protection Agency, to
make certain needed changes to
bring .the village sewage system
into EPA compliance.
Council approved the mayor's
suggestion to advertise for bids
for Middleport's proposed State
Issue II project, even though
funds for the project have not yet
been released. The mayor said he
was told by Meigs County Engineer .Philip Roberts that most
entitles are taking bids, pending
expected project approval and
release 61 funds from the state.
Finally, It was reported that
$6,277 In fines and f~ was
collected during the month of
August.

55-year-old Ford Motor Co. em·
ployee from Lorain won the $13 ,
million jackpot from Saturday's
drawing of the Superlotto.
Jones, a widow, will receive
20-annual payments of $520,000
after mandatory federal with·
holding taxes.
She Is the mother of seven,
Including two · foster children,
and the grandmother of 13.
Wednesday's drawing will
have a jackpot of ai least $3
million.

Hoople says
Irish will
win big tilt

·Ohio Lottery
Pick-3

854
Pick-4

The Meigs County Board of
: Election wlil be closed on Thurs- ·
day. The office staff will be at a ·
regional meeting In Washington
County.

LEGAL NOTICE
The PUIIIic: U1llitieS Com-

Vol.40. 'No.90 M
Copyrlght•d 1989

mint practicn and
policies of Ohio Power

18, 1989 at Clly Council
Chambels, 218 ar.•td

!\venue, S. W.. canton.

HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

fr• Electronics hearing tilts will be given by ltltone ·
Hiaring Aid Clllftr at
·

Pomeroy-Middleport: Ohio. Wednesday. September 13. 1989

•

By NANCY. YOACHAM
.
., Dally SenUnel Stall
,
·
"We want the enure county to
be represented and get back to
what the Chamber of c;:ommerce
'Is, really supposed to be aboutprpmoting bu~lness and economic development In the areanot promoting functtpns," explalft!!d Pomeroy Area Chamber
President Bruce Reed at Tues·
day's regular .meeting of the
Pomeroy organization.
The meeting .was held in the
conterenc~ room at Veterans
J'4emorial Hospital:
Reed was speaking In regard to
a decision made .last' month •by
Po11jeroy and Mi.d dleport
Cham~&gt;ers \O . " consider" disbanding the separate organlzatio11s, and then reuniting under
thenar:neMelgsCountyChamber

of Commerce
Actually, a ~ommllteeofboard
members from the Middleport
and Pomeroy Chambers began
discussions In July regarding the
posslbllityofcomblnlngtheirtwo
chambers. From those Initial
meetings evolved the Idea that it
would be better lor the entire
area if the organization were
county-wide, not just Middleport
and Pomeroy.
Under .the new proposed new
name, all of Meigs County would
be· Included In the organization
an~ the mah1 communities In the
county, ·tncludi'llg Ch·e ster,
Tuppers Plains, Rutland, Racine
andSyracuse,wouldbeinvitedto
participate and to appoint a
representative to a Meigs County
Chamber Board of Directors
Besides the one representatlv~
from those areas, there would be

306 SECOND AVENUE
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14
. 9:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON
UMWllND UlW PROVIDER •
THE TESTS WIL • GIVEN IY A UCENSED H~AIIINGAID SPICIAUST
Any- who hao tr...,Wt loGiag or ••11.,..1 oinwlrMIIoftll iwft ... It .... •
fr oo heorii.g t•t to 111 if tlil pr.....
IIIII_,... ••• Y• fer
your F.U KUliNG mT of $75 .... Wolto ooly, ......._

- ·11o .........

COME iN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

~

'lii£WEST BLIMP ,:

A.P.R. .

$1,000 MINIMUM

''The Spirit of Akron"

N~W--.-·Haven .police
By CHUCK MASON
OVP StafT'
'
POINT PLEASANT, W,Va,_The Septem!J!:r term of the Mason
Comty grand jury · indicted a former 'Point Pleasant police sergeant
on consJ)Iracy and embezzlement
charges and alS!l indicted three
other men in connection with
propel')y allegedly talcen from the
Carolina Lumber and Supply Co. in
Point Pleasant this year, County '
Prosecutor Damon B. Morgan Jr.

ANNUAL

I

YIELD*

ONE YEAR TERM
•

Huddle ·under This Warm And
Washable Throw ·from Blederlack
Of America's College Collection.
Choose From Marshall, WVU, or
Ohio State University Logos.
$10 ·with Deposit of $1,000 or More
$5 With Deposit of $5,000 or More
FREE With Deposit of $10,000 or More

Mayor Hoffman issues reminder
.

Middleport Mayor Fred .Hoffman today issued a reminder
that there will be no parking o,n North Second Avenue from Mill
St. to Rutland St., between the hours of 5: 30p.m. and midnight
on Thursday, Sept. 1~ ..The fire deparlment wlll be washing the
streets In this area during that time.
Traffic will be routed around the business district throughout
Thursday evening.
.
"Cooperation of motorists and residents of the area will be
appreciated in order that the street cleaning can be cornpteted
as soon a's possible," Hoffman said.

New Haven

Malon

812·2136

675·1121

773·5514

"INTERES1 COMPOUI:'ID~ QuARTERLY

Bomb threat -closes school
The Meigs Local High School dismissed· today (Wednesday)
at 11 a.m. after a bomb threat was received at the school.
According to Meigs Local Superintendent James Carpenter,
It Is a policy of the school board, wh,en a threat Is received, to
dismiss school until the next day.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparlment is investigating the
·
Incident.

Plan chicken barbecue

ANK

Point Pleasant

.The MiddlePort Fire Department, in conjunction with the
block party, will be holding a chicken barbecue and fish fry on
Sat~ay at the ~llecue pit near the fire station.
Bar.becu~ chicken diMers will be .avallable for $4, which
Includes one-hall a chicken, baked beans and a roll. One-half
chickens will also be available without the dlmter. Fish tall
.
'
sandwiches ($1.50) will also be available.
Serving wlll begirt at 11 a.m. Saturday and wlll be available
Continued on page 5

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL
•,

•

·

Local news briefs ----.

EARN "BIG GREEN• AND SUPPORT YOUR FAVORITE TEAM!
INTERCEPT THE "FALL'
CLASSIC'' C. D.
'
BEFORE TIME RUNS ·oUT!
ONLY AT

OPLES

officer

said TueSday aft~oon.
The same grand jury also re-indieted a former New Haven police
orficer on. misdemeanor assauk
charges, Morgan said.
Sixteen true bills were rerumed
on 16 individuals, Morgan said. Arraignments before Mason County
Circuit Coun Judge James 0. Hoiliday are set for Friday at 9 a.m. Indictments are simply allegations
against individuals, Mapn said.
Former city police sergeant
l:lugh Ernest Burris, 48, of Point

-·

MEMBER F.DJ.C.

takes of! from Wlngfool Lake alter receiving Its
FFA cerll!lcatlon Tuesday.

t\ •

~~~n Grand Jury re-indicts
·'

0
.
0

..;a

qa.-.,...,.

adminl~terd

.by tlieiDeparlment of Health and
the Department of Mental
Health, respectively," Sen.

Deposit

•

'4

- --·

Pleasant was charged with one
felony count of conspiracy to
commit embezzlement from an unspecified beginning period to June
of this year. The ser~eant, who was
dismissed from the police force by
Mayor RuS!Iell Holland, ,Was also
charged with one felony count of
receiving stolen property · believed
to be in June of 1989. TJie grand
jury also charged Burris with five
misdemeanor counts of receiving
stolen PJO!JertY· Those charges stem
from two tncidents in June of 1989
and three incidents in May of 1989,
according to the indicimenL
Bunis is out on bond. .
The grand jury also indicted
three other men in connection with
the Carolina Lumber heists.
Stephen Scott Rainey, 27, of Gallipolis Ferry, was indicted for one
count of conspiracy to commit embezzlement, one felony count of
embezzlement and two ' mis·
demeanor accounts of embezzlement Eddie Lewis Duncan, 30, aiso of Gallipolis Ferry, was indicted for one coul!t of conspiracy to
commit embezzlement. one felony
count of embezzlement and one
count of misdemeanor embezzlement
.
The third individual indicted was
Roger Martin, 41, of Henderson.
He was indicted one felony count
of conspiracy to commit embezzlement and three misdemeanor
embezzlement counts.
While Burris has previously been
charged in an investigation by the
West Vqinia State Police, Rainey,
Duncan and Martin were first charged Tuesday. Aceonling to the indicunent, police believe the latter
three men - all former employees
at Carolina Lumber Co., li:COiding
to the prosec:utor - toolt the
property from the store, gave it to

Bums,·and then the former police

sergeant put it to his own penonal
use. Felony counts involve property
worth more than $200; misdemeanor COWIIS invOlve property

worth less than $200. Authorities
Continued on page 5

meeting to vote," said Reed. If
the vote Is In favor of the
county-wide chamber and by!·
aws, then by the first of th~ ye~
the two · chambers w I
disbanded.
If the county-wide organization
Is not approved, then Pomeroy·
Chamber wlil continue on as In
the past, and will m~ 1 ~
.November to select new · ar
officers tor \he next year.
''I think this is the most
111 e step taken in a long
pas v
·
b
time," said Pomeroy us1~~swoman Ann .C hapman. 1 er
chamber members also seemed
in agreement that the .f~nty·
wide organization wou
e a
positive step.
DI k
Pomeroy businessman
c
Warnlllfquestioned If civic lead·
ers in the other areas of the

1

county have been contacted as
ye~~bout the proposed county·
- R :. groupi . d th 1 reas·
outs~de P~:'rie~~~eand ~ddl~port
have not been contacted yet
because the committee !~It 11
would.~e les~ ~mfulsin~~f a co7
group wou
eve op e organ ·

~~~:· !~dn ~t!,c~~~~~o :~e~~~~ ·

1990 ..
, -fhts is an

·
rtunit
to oin
0
ppo
Y I ·
forces and say that Meigs County
has something. to offer .. con·
'
1 ded R ed
c ~n ot;er · business it was
•

~~~~u~~~P~~t ~~~~~;ed~r~

tours for chamber members on
Oct 5 and Oct 12 There is room
·
· ·
·
for 10 to 12 people on each tour
Continued on page 5

Drug an:d· alcohol recovery
.
•·
•
•
services emergmgm Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) State •senators, conceding a point
to . Gov. Richard Celeste, !Ire
preparing to try a new cabinet· ·
level agency to coordinate state
services for recovering alcohol·
' lcs and drug addicts.
. '"l:he purpose of the depart·
ment would be to assume total
responslbllty lor alcohOl and
drug abuse education, preven·
tlon and treatment progra1Ds

Call Toll ·f ret ·Number 1·100-634-5265 far illllllltliatt appoint1111nt

.Of

.

Pomeroy and Middleport
Chambers developed the proposed bylaws. · But ·although by!·
·aws have already been deve•
loped, "they are not set in
concrete" noted Reed.
Neithe~ is the decision to
disband the two separate
chambers and to form the
county-wide chamber set in
concrete.
"This Is not a decision. to be
made by a few of us" said Reed
'
·
Both chambers will be discussing
the proposed bylaws this month.
The bylaws will then be voted on
by each separate executive
board, and will then go before
.both chambers at their October
regular meetings for official
voting.
"We want as many members
as possible to attend the October
·

I. 8. DlYO, M.D.

KICK OFF 711 FO
WI,.R A RECORD.
The "Fall Classic"
Certificate

'

three representatives each from
Pomeroy and Middleport on the
executive board , and lour representatives at large who could
come !rom anywhere In the
county.
It was also pointed out by Reed
that "It's where you work, not
where you live " that would
determine what ~rea you repres·
ent on the chamber executive
board. For example, If you live In
Rutland but work In Middleport
'
·
'
you would represent Middleport
on the executive board .
The formation of such an
executive board is explained In
detail in the proposed bylaws for
the county-~ide chamber. The_
proposed bylaws were reviewed
In yesterday's meeting.
As explained by Reed a
committee comprised ' of
members representing both

MIDDLEPORT FAMILY PRACnCE CENTER

.

2 Sections. 14 Pagea 25 Cants
A Muttimedie Inc. Newspaper

County-wide. chamber .is proposed for Meigs .

ComiJIIIY, the.ope!llioit
of Its Electric Fuel Component. and related mat·
ters. This hearing is
stlteduled to begin at
1:30 p.m., on September

by contlctipg .the Commission.

•

..

mission of Ohio haS se1
for public hearino ~
No. 89-101-EL.fFC,' to
review the fuel procure-

Ohio 44702.
All intllested parties wiU
be giv111 an opport1jnity
to be heard. Further infOrmation may be obtained

Low tonight In 60s.' Chance
of rain 70 percent. Thursday,
high In mld·'l'Os. Chance of rain
80 percent.

0291

Page 3

Office cloeed

COUPON

Stocks

I

Veterans Memorial
Monday admissiOns - Arthur
Nease, Middleport; and &lt;;hester
Young. Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Mary
Jones, Freda Ferguson, and ,
William Hart.

·WE HAVE MOVED

---Meigs announcements _ _ __
Free clothing'day
Group to meet
Gallla-Meigs Community Ac· .
The Past Councilors· Club of
lion
Agency will hold free cloChester Council No. 323, Daugh·
thing
day for low-Income per,
ters of America, will meet
sons
on
Friday, from 9 a.m. to 12
Wednesday evening, 8 p.m., at
·
noon,
The
clothing bank is
the lodge hall, with Cora Beegle
i&lt;lcated
at
the
old high school
and Margare·t Tuttle as
building
In
Cheshire.
hostesses.

Hospital news

Grace Drake. R-Solon, said
Tuesday .
The Republican-controlled Se·
nate had preferred during budget
considerations earlier this year
to retain drug and alcohol abuse
programs . in t!leir exls ling
departments.
But Drake, chairman of the
Senate Health and Human Servl·
ces Committee, will unveil a
substitute to House Bill 31~,
whl~h ct~ari&gt;l!the ijo\.tse In Ml\)'.
Thill blll,:i4&gt;onsored by Rep. Ra:!
Miller, D-Columbus, created a
Department of Recovery

Services.
The new bill, which will receive
a hearing in subcommittee 'Wed·
nesday, names the agency the
Department of Alcoholism and
Other Drug Addiction Services.
Drake said she had to walk a
tightrope all)ong Interested par,
ties, some of whom wanted
"alcoholism'· specifically mentl·
oned and others . who . feared
eating and gambling could come
under the \lefinltlon of recovery
services .

New Goodyear blimp gets
FFA certification Tuesday
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - The the Enterprise, which is being
Spirit of Akron, the Goodyear ·retired In Pompano Beach, Fla.
Tire &amp; Rubber ·Co. 's newest and
The new airship Is the first with
most advanced bllt'np, has re·
electronic
controls, replacing the
celved certification from the
system
of
wheels
and foot pedals
Federal A \lla tlon
used
to
control
other
blimps. The
Administration.,
At a ceremony marking the Spirit of Akron also has a top
mllestone Tuesday, Goodyear speed of 65 r:nph, 15 mph laster
Chairman Tom Barrett said the than older blimps.
The new airship Is the first one
company planned to continue
replacing Its fleet of blimps with of more than 300 prOduced since
newer airships.
' the 1920s not actually built by the
The Spirit of Akron replaces world's largest tlr~ maker. Goo-

dyear Aerospace Corp. was pur·
chased in 1987 by the Lora! Corp.
after Goodyear was forced to
fend off a hostile takeover
attempt by British financier
James Goldsmith.
·'While we are Lora! right now,
we stili have those feelings that
no one can take away," said Len
Laden, president of Lora! Defense Systems in Akron, adding
Lora! was ready to build more
airships as soon as Goodyear
orders them.

Rhodes
turns 80
COLUMBUS, . Ohio (UPI) Former Gov. James Rhodes will
celebrate his 80th birthday Wed·
nesday in the way he likes best~ .
having fun with kids.
In the company of his eight
grandchildren, their parents and
some close friends, Rhodes will
motor to Jackson and pass outlce
cream cones and peanuts . to
school children on the street
corner near the candy shop
where he had his first job.
One time when he was gover·
nor, he was late tor an engagement because he stopped to give
some kids a ride In the state
plane. "Just think," he mused,
"If I was a kid and somebody
offered to give me a ride In an
airplane."
Rhodes, who Is said to have
lived as a child In a modified
chicken coop In Jackson County,
rose to become mayor of Colum·
bus, state auditor and finally to
set an American record of 16
years as governor.
Today he Is a multimillionaire,
thanks to fortuitous stock Invest·
ments and real estate development projects, and he Is tinker·
lng with fnventions that could
multiply hiS holdings - an
environmentally pure building
and a battery that could store
enough energy to light a city.
Rhodes never thought small.
Before going to Jackson,
Rhodes will visit his birthplace In
Coalton, now a historic site.
Shortly be!Ore noon. he will
ContinUed on page 5

'

OUSTS INCUMBENT MAYOR - New York Democratic
mayoral candidate David Dinkins 1lves a "thumbs up" gesture
durln1 his acceptance speech alter de!eallng three-time
Incumbent Mayor Ed Koch In the Democratic primary Tuesday.
(UPI).

Dinkins ~ats Koch in Big Apple battle
By United Presslnleraatlonal
David Dinkins took a giant step
toward becoming the first black
mayor of New York City Tues·
daf, deteatlnathree-term lncum·
bent Edward Koch In a D_emocratlc 'primary. Democrats,
meanwhile, won two House seats
they h'-d lett open because of
scandals.
In a mlnl·Electiori Day that
saw a smattering of races from
California to New York, the
biggest was In the Big Apple,
wllere Dinkins, the Manhattan
borough president, stopped a late
surge from !he flamboyant Koch
to capture the Democratic
nomination.

With 100 percent of the pre·
cincts counted, Dinkins, relying
on extraordinarily heavy black
support, had 537,313 votes, or 51
pei:cent. Koch, trying to overcome administration scandals
and racial tenslqns in the city in ,
hiS bid for an unprecedented
fourth term, had 445,816 votes or
42 percent. Two other candidates
picked up the remaining vote.
'The win made Dinkins the first
black to capture a major par·ty·s
mayoral nominatiOn In New
York etty and also. established
him as the clear favorite to win In
November, when he will face
former U.S. Attorney Rudolph
Giuliani.
.• ~

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