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                  <text>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.
.• ~

�Co~mentary
.

. .-

.. -

.

Soviets need U. S. cooperation

WASIUNGJ'ON- Soviet leader about one-and·a·half tlines the
·
Ill Court street
Mikhail Gorbachev has Issued a American clvUian and military
Pomeroy, Oblo
Kennedy-esque challenge to his space budget, and have logged so
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
,
CO\IDirymen:
send a man to Mars many man-hours In space that
systems...were affected by the
..
The Soviets
have partially
and
return
hlm
safely to Earth.
the United States has been lett In
long filght," he revealed. "We cleared these
~~
.
hurdi!"S.
First,
Gorbachev hasn 't publicly spe· the dust. Or has It?
·
can see how to cope with II. Then underwater tmlnlng !s more rig·
t:~m~ ""'-',_.,..,,.,.._c:::l;.clfled a deadline; ·chanceS are
The United States is actually
q,v
we will start over again, with orous here In order to acquaint
·that such. a mission won 't be ahead In almost every area that
even longer flights. Because, you , cosmonauts with weightless-type
technically feasible within the requires first·mte technology see, the Idea of going to Mars In a - conditions. Second, cosmonauts
ROBERT L. WINGETT
decade,
or even by 2010. And the piloted space flight, extra -vehlc·
spacecraft Is the lure. But to go are on a strict daily exercise regl·
Publlaber
goal is ambitious enough that the ular activities (space walks),
there, we wlll need about two men In space.
technical and financial ass!s· and space launches, among oth·
years."
The United States already pas..
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tance of other countries, lnclud· ers. The Soviets launched about
Overcoming problems with the sesses much of the expertise the
Aulltaat Publlaber/C~ntroller
General Manager
lng the United States, might ulll- 90 rockets last year to America's cardiovascular system proves to
Soviets seek to exploit on a
mately be requested. Thus. the· usual15 or so.
be a tougher challenge then any manned mission to Mars. That
race to Mars might Include one of
Where the Soviets really turn on . thing posed-by the cosmos. In the
, LETI'ER.S OF OPINION are welcome. Tloey should be i ..atball SOO
may explain their calls lor lnterna·
our
astronauts
In
the
co-pilot's
the
afterburners Is In the area of weightless condition of space,
•ordl loa&amp;. 1\ll!e&amp;lera are subject lo ecllllll&amp;ud muol be alped •WI
tlonal cooperation, , Their space
Ullle, Udr- aad telepboae number. No uuipled letl«o 111111 be piabseat.
.
long-duration manned flight, In blOOd and other fluids don't pool
program Is always losing out In the
llabed. ~· 8hould be In 100d wte, addreaob!J ""'- 110&amp; peroonall·
'I)Je Soviet cosmonaut pro- their space stations, from the Sa· In the legs as they do In earth's
Ilea. .•
current
rockets vs. butter debate
gram has journeyed far since lyut to the current Mlr ("Peace") gravity. More collects In thecen·
In
the
tight
Soviet econo;~my, and
. _ ~uri Gagarln became the first space station. It's all part of their ter of the boay and tile heart
withoUt
finanelil.l
assistance from
man In space In 1961. "The space Mars cao1palgn. .
causing the heart to pump mar~
abrOad,
tbe
drive
to Mats wUI sllp
program has developed· a great
A top space official here d!s· slowly.
further
behind
schedule:
.
deal since his time," one .Soviet closed to us that they' re slowing
Calcium loss Is another proNUKING
A
NOMINEE
..:. The
colonel explained to us. "He (Ga· down long~ duration flight for the blem. The bones degenerate apman
President
Bush
has
nogarln) was In space 108 minutes. moment, until· the data Is In on proxlinately 0.5 percent per month
minated to clean up our nuclear
Now, cosmonauts have spent one the Tltov-Manarov flight. "We In space. And muscles atrophy
reactors Is taking heavy political
year In outer space.' '
are making a pause of one or two when they are not required to work
from all sides. Victor Siena
fire
The ,Soviets continue to spend years to see how their (human) against gravity.
By ROBERT SHEPARD
has
already begun working on
WASHINGTON CUP!) -When a delegation of Soviet legislators
the
$60
billion cleanup at the De·
visited Congress recently one of the things that I!J1pressed them most
partment
of Energy' s nuclear
· was the Information system available to tpe u :s"':'I awmakers. They
weapon
plants,
although he mulit
correctly noted that Congress Is supported by a vast array dfstaffand
still
be
approved
by the Senate.
&lt;resources that probably are unmatched In any country.
now,
one
of
the most poBut
· · This support Is in addition to tile members' personal office staffs
werful
members
of
Congress
has
·and the s,taffs of the various congressional com-m ittees. The sole
drawn a bead on Stella: John
·J)urpose or these support agencies Is to keep members Informed on the
Dlngell (D·Mich.). In a letter io
"Issues they may be called on to deal with.
Senator
Sam Dunn, · (D·Ga.),
· ·Rep. Lee Hamilton, D·Ind., also took note of the support agencies
Dlngell
accuses
'Sella or under·
recenlly in a report to constituents.
mining
public
confidence
In n,u·
Hamilton commented that members of Congress often complain
clear
power
plants
while
he
that their "workload Is uilreleriting, the Issues are frustratingly
headed
the
agency
In
charge
of
·-complex, and the solutions do not come easily." But, he noted, "Often
nuclear
powerplants,
the
Nu·
~verlooked Is that members of Congress have a lot of help."
clear Regulatory Commission.
_· For specialized or technical information, members frequently turn
Stella's
fll!gerprlnts are all o,v er
to experts at one of the four major support' organizations - the
problems
at plants In Michigan,
, Congressional Research Service (CRS), which is a unit of the Ll brary
Texas
&amp;lid
Tennessee, according
(Jf Congress, the General Accounting Office (GAO), the Office of
to
Dlngell.
And Dlngell has sug' Technology Assessment (OTA). and the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) . .
gested that the Senate obtain in'
formation on a ,federal grand
''Roughly speaking, the CRS tells us what something is, the ,GAO
jury Investigation or Stella In the
finds out how much It costs, the OTA determines how It works, and the
early
1980s, when hew as accused
CBO tells us whether we can afford It," Hamilton wrote.
r--f of Intervening In an Investigation
Together, those agencies have a combined annual budget
of the 1979 accident at Three Mile
approaching $500 inllllon. Last year, they Issued 2,300 major reports
Island.
and responded to 490,000 congressional requests for information.
Details or the Investigation have
With 5,750 employees, the GAO Is the largest of the support
never
been revealed. Sources tell
agencies. Established In 1921, the GAO has become known as the
us
Dlngell'
s letter may prompt an
"congressional watchdog." Its mission Is to assist Congress In
Investigation
be(ore NuM's Sen·
oversight of federal programs and carry out legal, accounting and
ate Armed Services.Committee.
audit functions.
' "In Its numerous reports to Congress, the GAO also recommends
. lmpro.v ements In the operations of government agencies.
; The vast majority of congressional requests for Information are
, directed to the Congressional Research Service, which has a 's taff of
: 850. Most of the queries are for factual lnfoi'l)lation, but the CRS also
, provides in-depih policy analysis for members of Congress.
, In 1972, in a move to stay abreast of rapidly changing science and
MODESTO, Calif. (NEAl near the shore. Indeed, some de· ' the state, bordered by the Coast
.
, technology, Congress established the Office of Technology
Ever since the first European mographers predict that 80 per·
country's largest snack food pro: Assessment. Harnllton noted that members of Congress, In making
colonists arrived In this country cent of the nation's population Range on the West and the Sierra ducers, is building a $20 million
, decisions on legislative proposals, ·'must make judgments on
centuries ago, settlement has will live within 50 miles of the Nevada on th~ .~"ast.
manufacturing facility that wUI
For man)!· corporations and
: technical and scientific questions that are disputed by the experts."
been overwhelmingly concen- shoreline by the end of the cenemploy
300 people Jn Modesto.
theli' employees, the glamour of
OTA 's main function, therefore, ''Is to help members understand and
tury.
trated along the nation's coasts.
Other new plants have been built
the coastal cities now come\; at too
:plan for the consequences of technological change."
In great measure. that ,pattern
But a contrary trend - fueled by high a cost In term sot congestion, In Visalia, by . the producers of
Most of OTA's work consists of comprehensive, In-depth
was Imposed upon the early settl- the soaring costs of land, labor and
crime and real estate prices. The Eagle snacks and Fresno, by the
assessments that may take up to 18 months to complete.
ers by the dominance of boats housing In densely developed coasmakers of Cornnuts.
median price for a single-family
The Congressional Budget Office was created In 1974 when
and ships in transporting both tal cities - has emerged In recent
The Frito-Lay complex Is loca·
home In the Central Valley Is well
.Congress moved to assert Its autllorlty over the federal budget and
people and cargo over lo!lg dis· years. With little fanfare, both peoted
betWeen a Nabisco distribution
·created budget committees in tlle House and Senate. The principal
lances. Thus, all of the country's ple and t,he companies for which under $100,000- less than half the center and Del Monte tpmato proprice In ihe San Francisco and Los
:duty of the CBO Is to provide Congress with budget information and
first ~!ties - Including Boston, they work ha~e started moving In·
cessing plant. ' (Acros~ the road
Angeles
areas.
reports on fiscal and budgetary Issues.
New York, Philadelphia and Bal- land to avoid those prohibitive ex·
Office space that costs $22 to from au three are fields of, alfalfa
· For example, Hamilton noted, the CBO Is charged with
timore- were situated to ensure penses.
$32 per square foot annually in and black-eyed beans, a reminder
. "scorekeeplng" - tracking congressional taxation and spending
easy access to the Atlantic co·
For example, In the country's
. o_f !he valley economy's continued
actions against the targets of the congressional budget resolution.
ast's shipping lanes.
most heavily populated metro- those big cities rents for $15 to$18 reliance upon agriculture.)'
The CBO has a staff of 220 and a budget of $18 million.
When settlement spanned the politan area, New York, Indust- per square fodt yearly In BakersThe Central Valley's other new
Hamilton credits the four support agencies with studies that are
continent, a similar pattern de- rial, commercialand residential field, Fresno, Modesto, Stockton, business arrivals range from the
" accurate, thorough and unbiased."
veloped In the West , with most of development has stretched In· Sacramento and other Central Toys 'R' Us California regional
"Witllout accurate information, good legislation is not possible,"
the region's major cities - In- land across all of New Jersey and Valley communities. Finally, the office, In Stockton, to the state's
average annual salary In the val·
Hamilton observed, adding that "Congress needs all the help It can
cluding Seattle. Portland San
now extends Into eastern Penn· ley Is $18,400 - bout one-fourth first cotton mill, being built by a
get In dealing with its agenda."
Francisco, Los Angeles and San sylvania. Nowhere Is the phenopair of Japanese firms In Fresno.
less than the $24,400 In the big cl·
Diego - located along the Pa·
menon more apparent, however, ties.
ot the 414 corporate expanclfic coast.
than In California, the state with
sions
or relocations In California
The eight-country valley has
Even the emergence of air and
nation's longest ocean coastline."
last year, 111 were in the valley.
long been a major agricultural·
ground transportatlonln this cen.
The principal beneficiary of
That represented 27 percent of
region. which probably accounts
tury has not affected the pattern
that dramatic shift has been the for the concentration of food pro· all business growth In the state;
of concentrated development at 'central Valley, a 17 million-acre,
compared with equally Impreste oceans' edge, In part because 300·mlle-long basin that Is, as Its cesslng, warehousing and dis- sive shares of 28 percent and 21
tribution faclllt les among te new
of people's affinity for living
name suggests. In the middle of
In 1987 and 1986, respecenterprises. Frlto-Lay, one of the percent
tively.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

.

:Congress backed by
.yast infonnation sources

·Busmess takes to- the hinterland Robert .Walters

Berry's World

Emergency Drug enforcement act
WEALTH A\'\0

FAME DO
~OT BUY
HAPPINESS.
[

HAVE
YOU 'EVER
TRIED
\T'?
I

.

'

I

'

l

. . . . . -.. . .w.-,....-----------r-----"'1

·~

,!

Senate Bill 205 was recently In·
traduced in the Ohio Senate by the
Democratic Leadership. This bill
outlines the basic features of a new
drug enforcement plan for Ohio.
Drugs have become the most lm•
portant Issue facing Ohioans today. Cocaine and crack use are on
the Increase ad both are slowly
erOding away our society. Illicit
druguseln Ohio Is costing us many
productive lives and billions of dol·
Iars every year. In order to successfully combat . drug pushers
and drug users we must get tough.
S.B. 205 takes a comprehen·
slve, statewide approach to the
problem. The bill specifically ·
calls for the creation of twenty
seven special drug judges and
procesutors, construction of two
new prisons In Ohio to house ml·
nlmum, medium and maximum
security drugs offenders, creation of a new Ohio Drug Enforcement Agency (ODEA), and fl.
nally the creation of the Drug Ad·
v!sory Board to assist the Dlrec·
tor of the ODEA.
The Emergency Drug Enfor·
cement Act would create nine
courts In Ohio, each with aver·
age of three judges and three
prosecutors to specifically han·
die drug related cases. Local
courts would .be relieved of the
excess burden of drug cases.
Two new prisons would be bull!

Sen. Jan M. Long

to house between 400 and 600 bus, Ohio 43215.
drug felons. The Ohio Strike
Force would be created to work
closely with local and federal law
enforcement officials to invest!·
gae, · lnderdlct and apprehend
By United Preu IJiternatlonal
drug criminals In Ohio. The act
Today
Is
Wednesday,
Sept. 13, the 256th day of 1989 with 109 to
would also educate our chldlren follow.
about the harm and criminal asu
The moon Is waxing, moving tow~rd full.
pects or Illegal drugs.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The total cost of this program
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
,
would be $50 million. The plan uses
Those
born
on
this
date
are
under
the
sign
or
VIrgo.
They
.Include
·
the state surplus In the Budget Sta·
bllization
Fund (BSF) as Its U.S. ,-~rmy bacteriologist Walter Reed In 1851; Gen. John "Black .
source of funds. The BSF was Jack Pershing, hero of World War I, In 1860; author SherwOOd
Anderson In 1876; English author J.B ,Prlestly In 1894· Bill Monroe
created to provide for a rainy day.
to h~lp In emergen~es. The fund · the "father of bluegrass" music, In 1911 (age781 ; singe; Me!Torme 1~
carries a billance In excess of $284 1925 (age 64); former White House spokesman Larry Speakes In 1939
(age 50); and actress Jacqueline Bisset In 1946 (age 43).
'
million by 6/ll/89.
The $50 million will not result
On this date In history: , ,
,
In any loss of the credit worth!·
In 1759, In the French and Indian War, the British defeated the
ness of the state, nor wllllt place
French
near the city of Quebec.
the State of Ohio In !lnanclal jeoIn
1788,
Congress authorized the first U.S. national election to be
pardy.
held
"the
first
Wednesday in January next (1789)."
'
On September 14 In Chllllcotlie
1814,
during
the
Brltlah
attack
on
Fort
McHenry,
Md.,
Francis
In
and September 18 In Ironton,
there wlll be a meeting to discuss Scott Key wrote the lyrics ot 'The Star-Spangled Banner." ·
In 1922, the temperature at El Azlzla, Libya, reached 136 degrees
the Issue of drugs In .the area. I
Fahrenheit,
generally accepted as the world's highest recorded
hope everyone will be able to at·
temperature.
atmospheric
tend. We must all work together
In 19n, New York state law enforcement officials regained control
to successfully ellmlllate drug us
o!
Attica State Prison, after a four-day uprtslng by Inmates.
eln our communities.
Thirty-one
conVIcts and nine hostages died when lawmen stormed the
It you have any questlns con·
prtson;_
a
guard
and a convict also died later of Injuries suffered
cernlng Senate Bill 205 or the during the Insurrection.
drug meetings please do not hesl·
l;ite to contact me at (614) 466A thought for the day: Author J.B: Priestly wrote, ''Any fool can be
8156 or wr,lte: Senator Jan Ml·
fussy
and rid hlinself of energy all over the place, but a man has to
chael Long, Statehouse Colum·
have
something
~!I him before he can settle down to do nothing." ~
1

Today in history

---

The Daily

Indians edge Tigers under
interim manager; Orioles lose

Wednastlay. September 13~ 1989
.

The Daily Sentltiel

Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Se;1tii'NII
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By TOM WITHERS
left with Toronto. three with
Twins 8, Blue Jays 2 ·.
UPI Sports Writer
Oakland and four with
At Mlnneapolls , Kent Hrbek
In Cleveland Its been a typical California.
helted a grand slam .and colIndian summer.
"There's talent on the . ball- lected five RBI for the Twins .
But oh, what might have been. club," Hart said: "Sometimes a David West, 3-1, allowed just one
A month ago, the Cleveland shakeup works In a positive run and six hits over seven
. 'Indians, ·who have not won a · mariner. This ballclub needs to innings . Todd Stottlemyre, 7•6,
pennant . or division IItle since begin concentrating on the funda- had a personal five-game win· .
1954, were In the Ileal of theliflrst mentals. A lot of times, plliyers . nlng streak end as he allowed five
pennant race In 15 ye·a rs. But get Into a rut. they drift, they play .runs in 6 1·3 innings.
·
since Aug. 4 the Indians have selfish baseball.''
Royals 8, Rangers 5
wilted to a 11-24 record.
Hart got off on the right foot
'At Kansas City, Mo., Pat
And as always seems to be the Tuesday as Bud Black tossed a Tabler belted a two-run, pinch·
case, ihe manager takes the five -hit shutout In Cleveland's 1·0 hit homer In the bottom of the
blame.
blanking of Detroit.
ninth for tlle Royals. Trailing 5·(
Cleveland fired Manager Doc
Black's second straight shu - Frank White doubled off Nolan
Edwards Tuesday and replaced tout ran his scoreless Innings and Ryan and Kenny Rogers, 2·4,
him on an Interim basis with J~rry Browne singled home relieved. Tabler followed with
John Hart, a former manager In · pinch-runner Tommy Hlnzo In his second homer to make
the Baltimore organization,
the eighth with the game's only winner of Rick Luecken, 2-0.
Indians' president Hank Pe· run.
George Brett had fol!r hits and
ters knew that It was time for a
''That's what you want to do · Ryan struck out 13 to boosfhls ·
change.
.
every lime. you go out there ... season total to 277.
"I think they (the players) had said Hart. " It does feel good. I
Brewers 7, A's 6
reached a point they were told Bud Black when I go to sleep
At Oakland. Calif. Greg
.satisfied with the type of baseball tonight I'm going to see that left Vaughn homered and drove ·ln
tlley were playing - and I arm coming through."
four runs to help the Brewers win
lineup to the umpire&amp; at home plate before
HART NAMED MANAGER- Perfonnlng his
wasn't," Peters said . "lthlnk the
Frank
Tanana,
9·13,
has
Loser
their sixih straight. Don· August
Tuesday night's game against Sparky Anderson's
. first official duty In his debut as Interim manager
thing th~t changed the perspec· . not won since Aug. 6, a spanofslx improved to 10·11 In relief arid
Detroit
Tigers.
The
Tribe
won
HI.
(UPI)
olthe Indians, John Hart (center) takes out his
tlve this year was the nature of starts. In .his last two starts Dan Plesac earned his 300th
the race In the Eastern Division. against Cleveland, he Is 0·1 with a save. Matt Young, 1-4, took the .
Hart, who spent several sea- 1.10 ERA. ·
loss.
sons with Peters In Baltimore, Is
"They hit some balls, they hit
Mariners 5, Red Sox 3
like
every
Cleveland
manager
some
good
pitches."
Tanana
said
At
Seattle.
Jay Buhner drllll!d ·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The players to feel comfortable with parts of two other seasons.
looking
to
play
spoiler
rather
Indians.
"They
got
a
clutch
.
of
the
a
two-run
double
and Greg Briley
"I think they (the players) had
'
'
Cleveland Indians, who have slid ,losing.
than contender In the pennant hit, we dldn' t. They win." ·
clubbed
a
two-run
homer to himd
John Hart. a former Baltimore reached a point they were race.
from second place to slxih In the
Elsewhere
"in
the
American
the
Red
Sox
their
seventh
past fiVe Weeks. Tuesday !Ired' Otloles: coach and most recently sailsfied with the type of baseball
"We
need
to
win,
we
need
to
be
League,
Chicago
trounced
Bait!·
los·
s
.
Scott
Bankhead,
straight
Manager Doc Edwards, with ·an Indians' special asslgnme~;~t they were playing - - and I competitive," Hart said. "We more 11·1. Minnesota clubbed 13:6, pitched 5 2·3 Innings to earn ·
General Managt;!r Hank Peters scout,. was nawed Interim wasn't," Peters said . "I think the need to make a difference In the Toronto 8-2, Kansas City nipped the victory. Mike Schooler hurilid
thing that changed jhe per spec· pennant race. "
blaming him for allowing the manager.
Texas 6-5, Milwaukee edged 11-3 Innings to post his 28th save,
Edwards compiled a 173·207 tive this year was ihe nature of
The
Indians
have
three
games
Oakllind 7-6, Seattle topped Bos· Eric Hetzel, 1·3, was the loser.record In one full season and the race in the Eastern Division.
Kaff-k.a ff
ton 5-3 'and California shaded
Angels 7, Yankees 6
New York 7·6.
At Anaheim Callf., Wai!y
White Sox ll, Orioles I
Joyner singled home Claudell
At Baltimore, Scott Fletcher Washington from second to give
hit his first home run In two the Angels their fourth straight
Boi!JE' State 311 Long Beach St . 28
college seasons. Holtz won 'em
their offense.
By MaJ. Amos B. Hoople
Bostm College 17, Rutgers 14
seasons
and Ivan Calderon and win and move them within four ·
Peerless Prognosticator
all last year, Including a · 34-21
In an explosive contestthat you BYU 38, Navy 17
Carlton
Fisk
added homers to foil games of Oakland In the · AL
Egad, friends! Here comes the trll!mph over West Virginia In', won't soon forget, your Peerless Central Midi, 18. Akronl7
the
.
Orioles
.
Eric King, 8-9. West. Bob McClure, 6·1, pitch~
Clem!lm42.
VIrginia
Tech
14
first (and only?) "Game of the lheFiestaBowl.Holtz'steamhas
Prognosticator Is predicting a
COlorado 28, llllnols 24
·
b
oosted
~Is
career
record against out of a bases-loaded jam In the
Year'' In 1989. Notre Dame, the defeated Michigan In the last two
Notre Dame victory - by a 31·24 · COI(I'ado St. 21, FuUertoo St. 15
Baltimore
to
6·1
with three-hit lop of the ninth to get the win.
· defending national champion, Is years, a very tough chore.
margin.
·
Dartn\oulh 14. Prlncetoo 13
pitching
over
seven
.Innings. Pete Chuck Cary fell to 3'4.
·
taking Its 13-game winning
On 'the field for the WWolves
Elsewhere. Florida State jour· Delaware 24, Rh«&lt;e Island 14
E. Carolina 28, Qnclnna tl14 ·
Harnisch
fell
to
4-9.
streak to Ann Arbor to ll)eet the are brilliant senior quarterback . neys to Baton Rouge, La., to face E. Ml(ll. 24, OhloUnlv. 7
, rugged Michigan Wolverines on Michael Taylor, Helsman candl·
Louisiana State on ESPN-Tv, Florida 49, Louisiana Tech 10
ABC-TV.
date RB Tony Boles (1,449 yards
while Miami's Hurricanes open Florida Sl. 31. LSU 27
Fresno Stale 35, Padftc 7
.The Irish, the Hoople pre- rushing In '89) and deluxe recelv·' • their home schedule against c;..orgta 21. Baylor 15
' .
season No. 1 pick, face Bo ers Greg McMurtry and Chris
Callfornla (also on ESPN).
Harvard 28, Columbia H
Hawaii 22. Wyc.rn lng 20
Schembechler's thirst Wolves, Calloway. The always-tough
The LSU Tigers and the FSU Holy
cross 14, Lafayette 8
our No. 2 choice. Michigan, Michigan defense ·Is led by
Seminoles are still In a fighting Indiana 32, Missouri 21
MILWAUKEE (UPII) - Fay once but lat~r rejoined the
mood - they were upset In their Iowa 38, Oregon 28
opening Its 1989 schedule, • Is . standouts such .as strong safety
Vincent
Jr., expected to be meeting.
seeking to avenge last year's Tripp Welborne and liJ!ebackers
openers. So, thls one should be a Iowa State 24, Minnesota 12
.·• '
nominated
to succeed late Com·
Kansas 17, Kent State 15
heartbreaktng two-point loss. to J.J. Grant and Bobby Abrams.
beauty. Make II Florida State, Kansas State 20, N. Iowa 14
missioner A. Bartlett Glamattl,
N.D. In this season's Kickoff
Countering ior N.D. are quar-· 31·27.
,
Kentocky 24, N. CaroUna 17
said Tuesday baseball's Execu·
Classic, fast and powerfu't Notre terback Tony Rice, a sure-flre
In Miami, the Hurricanes will Maryland 30, w. Mlch, 28
The Daily Sentinel'
live Council has decided on a
.l 38, Call!omla 21
Dame ro)lecl over Virginia. , .. Jlelsman f)nallst; running backs
tame the California Golden MlamiiFia
Mich. st. 12. Ml.amliOhloo ]2
riomlnee but he declined to say
. I
The brains on the sldellm!s11ndiii Ricky . Witt~'~!!$ - an!l 1\0d~:f •B!!ars lly' li'r.i8·!n eollntY N ·
Ol~lill!os'h Afk)nlas•20
.
(USPS 14J'KII) ·
more:·"
·
·· ·
A Dtvillo~ of MuiUmedla.lac.
the talent on the field should Culver, plus game-breaking re·
Finally, count on OSU to win In Nebraska 42, Utah 21
The committee will make a
N. Cardlna St. 27. Wake Forest 21
niat&lt;e N.D. vs. Michigan a clevers R·aghlb "ROcket" Ismail Columbus, Ohio, on Saturday . Notre Dame 31. Michigan 24
Published every ahernoon. Mond8Y.
nomination to the owners Wed·
masterpiece. In 26 years as a and Derek Brown . .Leading the
You can't lose. ' The Ohio State Ohio State 30, Oklahcma St. 20
through Friday, 111 Court St., Ponesday,
baseball
officials
said.
m..-oy, Oblo, by the Ohio VaUey Pub-. .
head coach - the last 20.• at Irish defense Is All-America nose University Buckeyes host Okla· Oklah(I'Jla 22, Arizona 18
The council met briefly Tuesday
llshtng Company/ Multimedia, ln(!.,
31, Colgate 17
Michigan - Schembechler has tackle Chris Zorich and the homa State University . Which Penn
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. SO·
Penn State 35, Temple 14
night, but decided to walt until
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,.
;ln. amazing 224·63·8 record. He' s dynamic linebackers, two-time OSU will win? We like Ohio State, Southern Cal 35, Utah State 10
Wednesday to schedule a vote on
Oblo.
·
•
SMU 14, ConnL"Cticut 12 '
won 12 Big Ten crowns. Bo captain Ned ·Botcar and Donn 30-20. Har·rumph!
the nomination.
SW Louisiana 49. Tulane35
Satunlay's 1 ameo
·topped off last season with a 22-14 · Grimm.
Member: United Press International,"
Syracuse 28. Army H
"We worked hard," said Vln·
Inland Datly Press Association and the
victory over So,u thern California
The home-field advantage goes
Air Force 21 . Northwestern IJ
Tennessee 21. Duke 18
cent, who said he attended the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
u
hi
B
tN
1
D
h
Alabama 31, Memphis Stare 14
Texas
A&amp;M
28,
TCU
II
In the Rose Bowl.
to mlc gan. u o re a me as Appalachian sr. 34. Cltadel20
Advertising Representa11ve, Branham
meeting to discuss other baseball
UTEP 14, N. Mexico St . 10
, . Masterminding the Irish is Lou that one game under Its belt - · Arizona sr. 28. San Jooe St. 15
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,:··
Texas Tedt 34, N. Mexico 24
matters . "I don't have anyihing
New
York. New York 10017.
Holtz, who stands 141·75·5. He has the 33·16 conquest of VIrginia Arkansas 27, Tulsa 24
UCLA 42, San Dletto St. 17
to say."
VIrginia
20,
Georgia
Tech
14
coached 14 bowl teams In 19 ·gave the Irish a chance to polish ~~·r,.~;·,~~~~~i';.~r:•••• 11
POSTMASTER: send address changes'
VIncent arrived at the · hotel
Washlngtm 32, Purdue 17
to
The Dally Sentinel, 111 COurt S~. •
Washlngtoo St. 34. Oregon St. 20
a•bout 3:30p.m. COT surrounded
Pomeroy,
Ohio 457£9.
W. Virginia 31, S, Car dina 24
by an entourage of aides for the 4
William &amp; Mary 31, VMII2
SUBSCRIPTION BATI!'B
p.m. meeting .. He left the hotel
Wi9COnsln 17. Totedo 14
By Carrier or Motor Route
SOUTH BEND, Ind. CUP!)~
36-13twoweeksagointheKickoff team that's still searching. We Yale 35. Brown 8
One Week................................... SJ.olll
Classic, but five weeks of wor- · still don 't know how good a team
Top-ra"nked Notre Dame strug·
One Month ....... .................... ...... $6.10·
One Year ......... .................. , ...•. $72.80'
gles with Inconsistency entering
kouts have disrupted the squad's we have. We're searching for a
SINGLE COPY
Saturday's game at No. 5 Mlchi·
rhythm. coach Lou Holtz said chemistry. We're searching for
PRICE
· confidence. We don't have a lot
gan, a critical test In the Fighting Tuesday.
Dally .............. ..................... 25 Cents.
Irish's quest to repeat as national
"It has been the most difficult , and I'm sure this isn't going to
Subscribers not destrlng tqpay theearchampions.
rigorousfallcampl'veeverbeen help. Trying _to put the team
rle- may remit In advance direct to.
Notre Dame defeated Virginia
through," Holtz said. "We have a together Is difficult. We can't get
1 The Dally Sentinel. on a 3, 6 or 12 mOnth
AT ONE LOW PRICE
basts. Credit wnt be given carrie- each
everyone on the same page.
week.

a'

Indians fire Doc Edwards

Notre ·Dame-Michigan billed as year's top game

Baseball owners expect
to nominate Vincent

~

I ris,h 'struggling' as · ~ig tilt nears

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
GO 2 GREAT PAN PIZZAS

EHS nette:rS lose pair. .

$1 0'' ,

.-

Again after wlnnln the first
This week was no\ the Eastern opening reserve match against
Kyger Creek. the little Bobklt· · game of the series, EHS lost two
Eaglettes week In the SV AC as
tens garnered the last two to take in a row to Federal.Hocklng.
the EHS netters dropped two
the set 15-8 and 15-13 In three
straight campaigns to the Kyger
EHS reserves were led by
hard-'-fought games.
Creek Bobcats and Oak Hill Oaks
Carrie Bernard's super 18 point
Charlotte Fournier led KC with effort, Michelle Metager had 4,
during area high school volley:
12, Heather Conkle and Summer and two each by Jenny Deem,
·
ball action.
Darst each had 10 and Alicia Lisa Hoffman, and Stephanie
Eastern gave KC all it had in
Ward 5.
the !lrst match of the two set
Otto.
Amber Well led Eastern with
series, scratching and clawing
Carla Washburn had 22 for
10.. points and 3 aces, Becky Federal.
olnly to fall short at 15-13. The
Driggs had 9 points and 4 aces,
second game saw a warmed up
Jac~son stated, "I was very
Jaime
Wilson had 7 points and 2 Impressed with how we played at
Bobkltten crew carry the moaces. and Anita Thomas 5 points. times, bli t they need some
mentum to a 15-2 score in the
Coach Don Jackson stated, confidence. We played good the
second contes I.
"Our minds weren't on the game first game and really relaxed in ·
VIcki Noble paced the winners
with 11 points, Beth Bradbtity •• at limes as we just stood and the second, then couldn't get
watched 'the ball hit the ground. going."
had 7, Amanda Cox 6, DanieUe
Scott 3, Amy Glndlesberger 2. · After a time out the girlS played
At ihe varsity level Eastern Is
better, but really dug themselves 1·5 overall and 1·3 In the league.
and Sally Saunders 1.
a hole. "
For Eastern freshman Ste·
phanle Otto led with 5 points and
was successful at 9-for-9 In the
spiking department. Lorrel
Baker had 4 point~ . Lee Gillilan 3,
plus a 3-for,3 spiking game; Toby
Hill poln ts and a two-for-two '
game. Hill also had two aces on
the front line.
Sophomore Mary Jo Reed had
one point.
.
Against the towering Oak Hill
'
.
Oaks EHS dropped back-to-back
15-3 and 15-4 games.
, Memra Ingram and Jo Chapman each had 9 points for the
winners, while Juanita James
had 4, Melynola Gallimore had 2,
as did Cindy Carney_and Alicia
Lloyd. Violet Adkins and Jen·
niter Ramsey each had one.
For Eastern Lorrie Baker had
4 points, and one each by
Reed,Otto, and Hill.
Ott was 2·2 spiking And Hill3-4.
Eastern setters Lee Gillilan
and Carrie Morrissey were lm· .
presslve with 10 successful sets
out ot 14 and 2·5 n!lpectlvely.
a~
After Eastern had · won the

· As of September 12th we will no
longer be at the Middleport office.
We sincerely thank all our clients
for their past patronage and look
forward to s,ee,ing you at our new
location.
Please come and visit us at our
more spacious and c;omfortable
office in Athens.- We have plenty
of convenient off.:street parking.
R. CRAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S.
530 W. Union StrHt
Athtns, Ohio 45701
Toll Fra 1-800-527-0922
592-1413
We'D be there, too•.Janet, Rhonda, Tonv:a, Paula
'

I&gt;

UMIUD
DELIVEIY AIEA

II

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Mall Subscriptions
lntlde Melp County
.
13 Weeks ....................... ....... .... $19.24
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Pizza
992-2124
WEST MAIN

Ototolde Melp County

13

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Page 4-The Deily Sentinel

Wednesday. Septembai' 13. 1989

W.draulll'f, September 13, 1989

Jury convicts Gioiosa on
three drug and tax charges

: OLIVER'S OUT - Reds catcher Joe Oliver Is
out at the plate after allempling to lie the score In
~he . seventh lnnln~~; of Tuesday night's game

against the Dodgers in Los Angeles. Oliver came
to the plate on a single by Rolando Roomes. The
Dodgers won 5-4 on a bases·loaded doubleby Mike
Marshall. ( UPI)

Cubs hike NL East Division
lead to 4 1/2 games; Cards lose
•

By JEFF SHAIN

•

.
UPI Sports Writer
·The Chicago Cubs, the team
people thought most likely to fold
dQwn in the heat of the pennant
race, instead are beginning to
pull away.
.
Mike Bielecki fired a two-hitter
a nd didn't allow a runner to
advance past first base Tuesday
n~ht , leading the Cubs to a 2·0
victory over the Montreal Expos
atld a 4 1-2-game lead in the
National League East.
'Second-place St. Louis fell
.further behind in the race on the
heels of its 5-2 loss to Pittsburgh,
and the New York Mets dropped 5
1 -~ games off the pace after
dropping a 2-1 decision to Phlladl'!phia. Montreal, the divis ion
leader for much of the season,

' Majors
By Unllf'd Pr1"'" .. ler .. lkl~al
NATIONAL I:.E"'GUE
'

"'.,

U' L Pet.

... tblcoii.,I{B ............. .......... II2
; st'. Loul,. .. ........... .. ....... ;;
.. N""'· \ 'ork ....................71
.,.Montrnl .............. ....... ;G
., PIU~llN;h .............. .....65
,. Phlladtolphta ................59

GO

63
&amp;7
SH
K9
711
11:.

.=161 .:1:15 IL~r
.52!1 31fJ
.:\Z.f 6
.-Ul 16 ~
.HI 't~ I)J

02
67
69
15
76
!UI

.5,'t .531\ ~
.f1:U
7
.4~3 13
,4;6 u
.3!13 26

We.;t

San Franclsc•o .............~3
San 01··~ ...................."1
Rou~ o n ......... ............. J6
'&lt;' lnclnlllll ................... 7&amp;
Lo" .\n.(ei i'S ....... .. ........6!t
•i\thanl.ll ........... ..... : .......~7

"'

·Tu esd1l,)' '.ot Rt&gt;s ult "

f hh· a,~:o 2, Montn&gt;al 0

'"
:
.,
_.

l'hllo&amp;d l!lptia 2: Nr"· \ 'o rk 1
Plll&gt;ilu rp;h :),1\t. Loulli t
San Dlt•I(U fl, HouHton D
.- Allanlti 6, San Franl'l,;r.·o J
Lo&gt;~ An~l l'S !}, rlnc ·lnmll -1
\\'e--..ctiQ' '!I Gumt'N
Nl'w Yor k 10jf' da ll · lll ) at P hll adel·
p_hl a ( G rlmslf'y 1· 0), 7::15 p.m .
~- Munln•al t Groo;~ 11 -10 ) at C"hk.~~;~~;o
&lt;!Sander !'o n 11·11 ), 7::1l p.m .
*' Pttt at urp;h (Dra~k 1!-1 1) at St. Lnu l~

'1 1H!LI.•on1H I L X: lrt p.m.
' 1\ llanlu ( I'. !Smith ii· l4 ) at !San Dll'~
{ B~n ""

1-t ), l0 :15 p.m.

Hou!4 on ( Porte ld ~- l l at L os 1\n ll'f'lf'IO

( H 1•rS.\s~ r

ll-l 'l l.l0:3/i p.m .
('lndnlllll (Si'Uddt.'l" -1·6)

Ml

!olan

f'riiRiio;t.'O (!Whi RliDR l i- 10 ), I 0: :IIi p.m .
'
Thur!idiQ·'!i Gaml"'
Hou!ollo n al Los An~•les
(' lnd nmtl a1 San Fram:I!K'O
,\Ua nta al San DI P~ . nl ~~; hl

me feel as though I i)ad an extra
fell six games back.
"I don't know know nothing foot -and-a-half on my fastball,"
about magi' numbers," Chicago said Bielecki, who pitched on his
Manager Don Zimmer said. accustomed four days' rest for
"I've been around all these the first time in the 'past few
years, and I still don't know how weeks. "Three or four d~ys - It
doesn' t matter to me. I didn't
to figure them. "
expect
a two-hitter. I just wanted
With · a four-team race, the
math remains complicated . But to keep my team in the game."
Zimmer called Bielecki's perif the Cubs win 13 of their
remaining .17 games, t!le division formance ''his best game of the
season ~
championship will be theirs.
'' You can't ask him to pitch any
Bielecki improved his record
to 16·6- four more victories than better," the manager said. "Our
his previous single-season total. pitchers have turned it around
Working with an extra day of the last four days and it couldn't
rest , hegave uponlyTim Raines ' have come at a better time."
Limited to a pair of singles
leadoff single and a secondthrough
five innings, the Cubs
inning single by Tim Wallach,
walking three a nd striking out snapped a scoreless tie in the
seven.
fifth inning against Bryn Smith
•
-"The extra day of rest made 10-9.
Vance Law opened with a
single and moved to third on
Shawon Dunston's bloop double.
Rick Wrona popped out and
Bielecki missed a suiCide.
squeeze bunt, then struck out.
.But Smith's pitch to Jerome
Transactions
Walton eluded catcher Nelson
Santovenla as Law scored.
Tue!ldiJiY'S SportH Tr~lll.c.... lolili ·.~
llallehall
Ryne Sandberg added a run in
CIPvt&gt;laad Fired M~tPIIII{er Dot'
Edward11 and nllm i'd "IJl'~ild ~&amp;~~slpmf'nt
the eighth with his 30th home run
liCou t .John Hart lnlforlm man a11 ~.
the year, a leadoff blast off
of
Ba.!6blhall
Chi L'It.I{O SiKDPd ~rd B . ,J,
reliever John Candelaria. He
,\rm,.;tron~~; .
became the first second baseman
LA flippers - Namt&gt;d Roh Sfllakand
-Jo e Rolw-rt ~ tUO&gt;~I!oilant UOik' heN .
since California's Bobby Grlch in
LA Lllk£'!'!1 - Sl ,.;ned lr ~IL I{'f'fll ~~:uard
1979 to hit 30 homers in a season.
Quintin D~tll ey .
Minnesota - Sl~d lrt&gt;r-a~tf'fli KlJilrd
Elsewhere In the National
C'.O niiE'f' HPnry to '!-)t"ar L'O nlrllel and
League, Allan ta clipped San
forw.. rd Do!Wid Ro)'O.IIo 1-)'I'JWt·o ntract .
I'II'Bi\ - ,\w ~trd (' d 1991 All ~~ ltu Gaml' lo
Francisco 6-5, San Diego routed
Ularlotle.
·
Houston 9.() and Los Angeles
\\'U~-~hln~on - SIICQl'd forward Tom
Hammofl111.
edged Cincinnati 5-4.
('ollt&gt;~t ·
In the American League, it
( ':.a l S t.~~;lt&gt; Full&lt;'l'ton - N~t. mf'd \"prn
Ru ljp a~~slstant h - hltllt'Oilt'h.
was
: Chicago 11, Baltimore 1;
Noln• Dame• - DP1:htn&gt;d forwa~d
LaPhonooo Elll11 IICad('m\t•ally lni'IIRihlf'
Cleveland 1, Detroit 0; Minnefo r lht• llrtit *-'m t'Nte r of thr ha.~lwthiLII
sota 8, Toronto 2; Kansas City 6,
Pt•pp•nilnt• - 1\'amtod 1\ndy R"ad
Texas 5; Milwaukee 7, Oakland
.II.Ksbilanl m e n'11 volleyh"'J ~ O IU' h.
6:
Seattle 5, Boston 3; and
Football
Cln•·ln .. u - SiltlM"d wick• r• ••·t&gt;lvt•r
California
7, New York 6.
Echlt• Brown .

R~tltlmor~ • ................... i9 6X .:'i:ri
Mllwaull!" """""'""""'" 1~ - ~7

llolifon .... ........... ......... .'l'O
INI'W l 'o rk ....................61
CJpvf'land ....................66
•I)Piroll .................. ......5~

%

61,,
10
19 .159 13'"1
1X .Urll 131,f
fl l .:m ~5 '-1
1.5

- ~K:I

\\' e.~ l

•oakhmd ......................117 5i
"'Kama~ ('lty .............. ... ll.~ 60
'"Culifornlu .................... K:I 61
"'Tt"XW~ ..........................1 :1 1tr
)ltnrrll o&amp;a ...................U 72
,St&gt;all"· ........................., 3 11. 1
f'hka~~:o .......................i/1 1&lt;~
Tht'!ld~Q~'s Kf'l'!ult!l
• &lt; fhli·~t~to II , Balllmorr I

::

.6ft ..lK3

3

.376

I

.3 10 lllt

.MID 15
.l !lil 'l-1
.tn 'l1

Gtt't'ft ~ - PI!K'e d lln11 hackt&gt;r .John
Oor!Wy on ln)urrd l'i'Sl'f\if",
Hartford - SI Jtfk'd l 't'niA'r RII.Y Ft&gt;rraro
to a multi· )'I'IIJ' (·oreract .
1n•ana poll11 - W1dved llnPh&amp;l:kf'r
Phillip Brown lrom lnjurrd rf'!W'r\'f.
LA R wldl&gt;r li - Plact'd wldt&gt; f('ct&gt;l\1.-.r
Tim Bro.,.,·n on lnjut'f'd t'f'Ktrw: !il p•d
dpfenslvt&gt; hiiCk MlkP Hasrdt"n .
N\' ,)f'h - Plllt'f'd whir rN~ f'l\'f'r
WPSif'y M'ldkt!r on lnlort•d t'e!lt'rw;

~

•

iloeatll!•

HN-t or.

PhOI:'nll - Plact&gt;d oHMMWP ,;u.ard
Toollf' Rohbln" on lnluft'd rt'Kt'nr :
lli~f' d dt-l t&gt;fllliV t' t'Dd Shawn Knll{ht .
Hockey
Bo!lllon - Keleill!it'd !'tlf'\'f' MoOI'f', i\1
Ttl{l'rt . Mike Mulownf')'. Troy Volhotfer.
Bra d Stt&gt;pltlla wnd MIU"t" Vachon.
Dt&gt;trotl - Sl~d drft'tlllt'nuin Lrr
Norwood to a m ukl-yt' lilt t'O nlntt1 .
Pllt!4wi'Jh - Sl..,.d l' f'nll'r Davr
Hani'IUI wnd de lenM"man -lim Paek to
maRI-)'I' ur t.'OnlnU1!11.

...

Wi'd.!it'!idlU' 'II Gamt"'

~lan d

(NILvllrrn 5--i' at
( !oittowurt \9 ., ), 3: 15 p.m.

Oak-

MASON. WV.

~ r hl cll!I O

CHihhiU"d ~- 1 ) ai B~tltlmo"·
. ~o hn ~onHJ , 1::J5 p.m •
.-,. f.k:lrult tMorris ;'t- Il ) Ill C'lt'\'lllllfld
U -11 ), 1: J ll p.m .

• Toronln {Cf'ruttl ti ·MI Ill Mlnrftola
'1 Tapllnii ·OL K:05 p.m.
• Tt&gt;ull (HOUI{h ID-1'!) Ill Kun.'ill!i C'll)'
~~ SaherhllA:rn Ul-6 ), II: 3!1 p.m .
: .• Ne'!'' York (Cil daret ~) atl Ca llfornht
.I·H~If'Vf' n l ~ t l , 11:35 p.m .
,
Tlnn'llllU' '" Gaml'li
1 • Tornnto Ill MIDIW'!I nlu
• lh!trultat
1 : T~:•a."

C l t'"'ld~U~d, nl~~:ht

;:Si""~rJ,;(-. . .-¥.::=;;e.........,;6-;(. . .

·-¥'

1-trir

7

$ps~lal 01 The ,WBBk/

t

PIZZA BURGER

•

games:

We)lston at Gallipolis
Point Pleasant ar Athens
· w~verly at Jackson
WaShington CH at Logan
Magnolia at Nlariet ta
warren Local at Wheeling Park
Fairland at Coal Grove
Dcl!ales at Dayton C·J
Meigs at Miller
· Jlannan Trace at Eas
Soiithern at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Southwestern
Qa~ Hill at Symmes Valley
Ravenswood at Wahama

Fantastle Fall Sale II

'

ALL FALL MERCHANDISE

20°/o

OFF

$129

**

*

WITH FIIES...,$1.84

ADOLPH'S .DAIRY VALLEY f
·· "At 1'ht End Of 1'ht p...,oy•MI- lrl .. l'~

.:.:I'OMEIOY, OHIO

~0

992·2556
d

_

. ..:....&amp;.
_.
~~

•

T11esday at 3: 15 a .ni., Pomeroy Pollee were dispatched to 203
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, where It was reported that a person
Wll$ sfumped over the steering wheel of a 1981 Cadillac. The
lights were on and car was running.
Upon Investigation, pollee found the body Wilford.C. Hill, 74,
of M8$on. W.Va: A Pomeroy EMS unit and Meigs County
Coroner Douglas Hunter were called tothescenewhereHlllwas
pronounced dead by the coroner. ·
According to a pollee spokesman, authorities believe Hill,
. who was alone in ~he vehicle, was on his way to Veterans
Memorial Hospltalbut died of a heart attack while enroute.·
Hill's son, Gary, of Long Beach, Calif., has been notified by
authorities .
.

·Truck camper said damaged
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department took a report from
Louise Arthurs, Rt. 1, Portland, that a rear glass In her truck
camper had been damaged.
According to Sheriff James M. SoulsbY , Arthurs notified the
department on Monday evening, that she thought the rear
~ndow glass of the camper had been shot out. Upon further
Investigation deputies found no evidence of a gunshot.
Apparently a·rock was filpped from the roadway, or someone
threw a rock at the glass.
According to a new state law passengers under the age of 16
are prohibited from riding in open cargo storage areas of motor
vehicles traveling more Ulan 25 miles per hour. ·T he new law
also prohibits passengers of any. age from riding In cargo
storage areas or upon a vehicle's tailgate while the tailgate Is
unlatched.
.
Exceptions to this are workers performing specialized
highway maintalnenance or construction. .
Drivers permitting this violation would be guilty of a minor
1!lisdemeanor.

EM,S has eight Tuesday calh
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls ori Tuesday.
At 12:34 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Second Street for
Jack Follrod, who was taken to Veterans Memorial, and at 3:14
a.m. the unit went to Mulberry Ave. for W.C. Hill.
At 10:26 a.m. the Middleport l!nlt responded to a call on Page
Street fC)r ,Marilyn Bishop who was tra~sported to Pleasant .
Valley Hospital.
The Rutland station 4 went to Happy Hollow Road at 12:05
p.m. ror a tractdr nre at the Chastl!en residence.
The Middleport unit, at 3: 18 p.m. went to South Second lor
Zelia Riley who~as taken to Veterans, and at 3:56p.m . .the unit
was called to the corner of ·R utland and Second Streets on an
auto accident in which Billy Ray Ward was transported to
Holzer Medical Center. At 4:24p.m. the unit responded to a call
for assistance on Page Street for Jean Daniels who was taken to
·
.
Holzer.
Finally, at 10:24 p.m. the Racine unit went to Yellow· Bush
Road for .Lisa Haines who was transported to Veterans.

AN OPPORTIINJTYTO IZ'I'"TD ARTS JU.UIIINATB TB 4 CB·
JNO AlfD u:.tRlVINO, Dl&amp;COVERII' AlfD GROWTif lif JOUJt
SCBOOL. A DrNAIIJC IIJZ 0' PROCJR-III!!
BrA
_N B:ff NOif.J'ROJiiT .LURI¥JlfO Ci!HJ&amp;R AT '11m 11lm'BR·

srn'

have salll the propeny included .
·
bl!ilding materials.
In 8J)Other case, the secondstraight county grand jury indict· ,
ment of Mark Dale Clemente, 27,
now ol Point Pleasant, was reiUrned. The previous term of the grand
jury llad indicted Clemente in con·
nection with a Mlllch 1989 incident
in downtown New Haven when El-

County-u;ide...

vis Zerkle of New Haven told
police he had been manhandled by
the former pauolman. That indictment was thrown out .o f coun because of a technicality.
On Tuesday, the gmnd jury in_dic·
ted Clemente on three misdemeanor counts, one for assault,
one for brandishing and one (or unlawful shooting.
Continued

fro~ page 1

and anyone interested should Committee, updated the group on
contact Chamber Secretary tentative preparations for next
year's celebration.
Sherry Hart.
Finally, Reed thanked Vete·
Chamber Is sponsoring drawings for · several prl~es and rans Memorial Hospital administickets tor these drawings are trator Scott Lucas for allowing
chamber to meet at the hospital
available throughout Pomeroy.
and providing the luncheon.
Donations of money, candy and
Reed -announced that Nancy
prizes are needed for the annual
Hollister,
mayor of Marietta, wlll
chamber-sponsored community
at the October
speak
on
tourism
Halloween party. Anyone wishing to make donations should 10 meeting of Pomeroy
contact Bruce Reed, Tom Reed Chamber. The October meeting
will again_: l;&gt;e held at Veterans
o~ Leqny Eliason.
·.
Mary Powell, who heads · Memorial Hospital, at 12 noon.
Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial

---Meigs announcements-··- - Group to meet
The Meigs County Genealogical Society wlll meet on·sunday
at _2 p.m. at the museum .
Everyone is welcome.
Mt. Hermon Church
The annual homecoming ofthe
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
Church (Texas Community,
Pomeroy) will take Sunday.
Sunday school is at 9:30 a.m.

and worship is at 10: 30 a.m .
.A carry-in dinner will be
served at noon, followed by an
afternoon service at 1: :W p.m .
Special singers wlll be Marty
and Tammy Fullerton, Vienna,
W.Va., and Junior and Rita
White, Cheshire.
·
·The speaker wlll be the Rev .
Lemar O'Bryantfrom Pomeroy.
Rev. Robert Landers, pastor at
the church. 'invites the publiC.

Southern off to good start

The Southern Tornadoette vol- High SChool, where her teams
leyball team of Coach Suzanql! have a combined record of 124
Wolfe Is again off to a good start wins and 75 defeats ov~r the past
and is looking to be a strong nine seasons, quite an Imprescontender · in the SVAC this sive record .
Along with the long string of
season.
Thus rar, Wolfe has been victories are· several SVAC
pleased at _the ertort this season championships, 3 sectlonals, and
and the serious approach that her a district runner up.
Team members ihls season are
club has taken towards ·improvsenior
captBIJI. Trlcla Wolfe,
ing their game.
Wolfe said, "Our players have senior co-captain Jane Ann Williworked very hard to prepare for ams. and senior~ Tracy Norris
t·hls season. We had eight girls and Aimee Hill. · Chris Harmoattend volleyball camps this past n, Andrea Theiss, Junle Beegle,
summer and each one of them and Cheryl Pape are juniors and
has shown great improvement." freshman Megan Wolfe rounds
Currently Souther'! Is 6-2 and out the starting line-up.
· The reserve line...:up consists '
5-1 in the SVAC .
Wolfe addect. "Oak Hill seems of Marcy Hlll,captain; Renee
to have the strongest team In the Russell, co-captain; Tamml
SVAC and will be dUflcult to Buckley, Sarah Duhl, Jan WllllMary Shelton
Florence Hench
arn5, Angle Swiger, Kim Jenkins .
beat."
Mary B, Shelton, 90, fortnerly •· , Flore~ E~enbach Henctr;• ·~-. Tb1• mub"'-" Wolfeh'a :eSonththy"e~ ,__Heather , M~Phall, and · ~ristl
Maidens.
·
of Racine and · Pomeroy, died 96, of Scottsdale, Ariz., died Aug. · as vo 11ey a 11 coac a
u
Saturday at Willow Brook Chris· 30. Mrs. Hench was born and . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
tlan Home in WQrthlngton.
raised in Pomeroy.
She was born in Hillsboro, and
Survivors Include a daughter
was a member of the Pomeroy and son·in-law, Alice and AnBaptist Church.
drew Fiske; two granddaugh·
She was preceded in death by ters and their husbands, Susan
'
her husband, the · Rev. T.T. and Jay Woodworth and Elisa·
Shelton In 1955. He was the pastor beth and James Williamson;
of the Racine Baptist Church for great grandchildren, Marian and
23 years.
.
Nicholas Woodworth and Todd
. survivors Include a daughter
and David Williamson; and a
and son-In-law, Margaret and brother and sister-in-law, Rl·
Fred Wilcoxen, Johns!OWI\; a son chard M. and Ruth Ebersbach.
·and daughter·in-law, Blll a11d
Funeral services were held
Carol Shelton. Logan; three Sept 2 at St. Mary's Episcopal
grandchildren, eight great Churth on .Shelter Island, New
York.
grandchildren, and six great
great grandchildren.
Memorial services were conducted Tuesday at the Choedin· Emest Higginbotham
ger North Chapel In Columbus.
Former Middleport resident ,
Graveside services were conRev. Ernest Higginbotham, died
ducted today at 11 a.m. at the
New Market Cemetery in High- Friday in Farmville, Va.
Rev . Higginbotham is survived
land Counly with Don Treadway
by his wife, Naomi; two sons, Joe
officiating.
and David; six grandchildren;
Contributions may be made to one great grandchild; and a
·willow Brook Christian Home, 55
Lazelle Road. Worthington, sister, Dorothy Evans, of
Middleport.
43085.
Services were held In Farm-

TD APPALACBL\If DITITU'I'B I'OR TD ARft

0, JUO GRAim&amp;

I'Oll TBACBBRI 01' AU. DIICIPLINBI .. ~WITB
OR WITHOUT PRIOR ARTI TaADriR'O.
JJIH!i TAYMOB; AlmMRJtR 18 AND 17
AN INNOVATIVE YOUNG 1HEATRE AR11STWHOSE WORK .
HAS BEEN APPlAUDED BY1HE NEW YORK TIMES AS

roa I'UR'l'llalii'II'ORIIA'l'IOIC COR J*l'r DJL oam
MQI• AT Tim ~OJ' 1110 OIWIIDa AT 1-80028:1-7201, DT. 8&amp;1.

We Use Only Natural
· Spices And Seasonings,·

Stocks
'
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
:Rryce and Mark SmKh
'llunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
•

Cheer Up!
'

.

"Reserve Your Ad Space Now"'
.

992-2156
AD DEADUNE: SEPTE.ER 20, 1989

Other indictments included:
- Hany Harvey Lewis II, 24,
and Regina Ann Lewis, 20, both of
Gallipolis Ferry, on one count each
of burglary and gmnd larceny.
·Police say the couple took a
kerosene heater, a bed and a
microwave oven, among other
items, from the residence of Sher·
man E. Long of Gallipolis Ferry in
May of this year.
- Willard Eugene Bays, 20, of
Apple Grove was indicted on .10
counts. The first count was he ob·
lained $700 from People's Bank iii
New Haven by false pretenses, the
second count grand larceny of lhat.
money, the third count forgery of a
person's name on a loan application
at the bank; !he founh count ·uuer- ·
ing the loan aP.Piication knowing it
to he false; and the fifth count signing the cashier's check received
from lhe bank with another per,
son's name not' his own.
The sixth count involves Bays
uttering the cashier's check (actually cashing it). Bays is also
charged with fraud in a March 1989
transaction at Jack Roush Motorcar
in Point Pleasant. He was ch~ed
by the grand jury with obtainmg
property by false pretenses
(pretending to he someon~ he was
not); grand larcency of a 1984 Ford
from Jack Roush Motorcar; forxery
·on lhe lease agreement for the car
and executing, or uttering, the for· ·
ged lease agreement.
- Henry MUIJlly Henson, 22, of
Southside, is charged with one
felony count of breaking illld enter:
ing and one felony count of grand
larceny. Police say Henson broke

into Route 35 Cycle Sales in July
of this year and stole two all· terrain
vehicl~ . .
- Angela Lou Blessing, 19, of
Letan was indicred and charged
, with tl!c May 1989 bwglary of
OWe Blevins' residence in New
Haven. She was also charged with
petit ~ny of a microwave oven
in connection with lhe same incident
- Gary Lynn Meng of Hun-'
tington was charged on his 30th •
birthday with sexual assault in the , •
second degree and sexual assault in
the third degree in connection with
alleged relations with a IS-year-old :
girl from BarbotirsviUe in April of .
this year in a rural section of' •
County.

Mason.

=

mecnmore

1han teaching fi

~~en

1 nwana c.~UJing that wnen the(,..

,_,Ia -

·11&gt;omonov a- ..

"'"""""

.

'fOAl/ ChMdte!'I'S

•

Rhodes...

"

Continued from page 1
arrive at Michael's Confectlon~ry at Portsmouth and Water
streets in Jackson, where he will
meet Ohio House Speaker Vernal
Riffe, ,for the fun of handing out
goodies.
Tomorrow night, hundreds of
Rhodes's friends will gather at '
the Aladdin Shrine Temple In the ,
Columbus suburb of Gahanna for
a birthday pa~ty, at which Riffe
wlll preside.
The program, wlll feature the
All-Ohio Youth Choir singing
"Beautiful Ohio" and "How
Great Tliou Art." Rhodes's fa vorite hymn.

Wnt 2nd Str•t
P-roy, Oh. 45769 ·
Ph. 614-992-5479
...., 614-9'12-2477
ClaiiM: 1·100-421-3535
COII'rne10r o fl-.. ~·s ldf ...miCh
~ns I"IOw our Fomilv d fi..R:b hOs

-'""",...
...""""proepectus
-"'" ..,.
~-"'-""'
con- .
more
including....,.,_,_"""·voo
'lbl'l 0110 reee~ve a
toining
c~ inblidioll.

__..

'·

.,

...,.. - - ~It carefully before
in....t or ..nd money.

..........,_

....

NATlONWilE

Homllofflee;CQI

...,,OfiiO

--Area deaths---

"BREAnri'AKINO.. .A MAGICAL~ WIU.I;'RESENT

A LEC'ItiRI!:/DEMONS'mATION, A WORKSHOP. AND APRAcTICAL LAB IN MASKMAKINO FOR 'mE CLASSROOM.

Fall Car Care Edition
In -The Daily O
Sentinel
s·E-PT. -29, 1989

at Kani'ti.'&gt; City, nl ,a:ht

~day's

1

PICKENS
HARDWARE

Tf'a•11
Ge nt&gt;vu- ltlO,oot Swbi11 Grand Prb.
PhOt'IIIX - IUbO,OOI \ 'lrKiniiL SllmM ol
ArUu•
Tok;)'o - 1115,001 M' OC' M'Oinf'ft'A Open

,_ .. Bu"to n tBoddkker 12.-101 al St&gt;ltlllt•
1"7avtt.rlili H)) , -t : l5 p.m.

• {f ~tndlolll

Man found deaq in vehicle
•

Let Us Do Your
Cleaning and
Servicing!

Clqmont,
hi a 300 O..l~·ar t' ()pt&gt;n

8o11hm :1
fallro rnl a i, NPw Vorl! 8

"The jurors verdict is a
rejection of the steroid defense,"
ASsistant U.S. Attorney William
Hunt said.

•KEROSUN
•TOYOSTOV.E

Bowlin~~:
llf'l . -s~.IOOLPBTColwn·

~.

~ ;'WIIIwaukrP

C11rl Howard:

WPdnHd,v''!ol. SpCN't 11 C' all'fldlll

Kan.o;a.o. fi t y 6, TPJ:w; S
"' IMJhwuill'P 7. Oakland &amp;

. Cycling
Tour de France winner Greg
LeMond has signed a $5.7 million
contract to ride for the Z team the
next three years. LeMond was
under contract throua:h the 1990
season with the Belgian team
ADR, whose president threatens
legal action against the rider. ·

Continued from page 1
. until the chicken and fish have been sold , Tables will be set up at
the fire station for anuyone who wishes tO\Ise the area to eat and
. tbe Middleport ·F ire Department Ladles Auxiliary will have
home.made lee ~ream for sale at the fire station.

WINTER
CHECK UP
TIME FOR
YOUR HOME
HEATERS

i'il 1{1H'd II neharkt'r Kl'nn,y &amp;!it' .ud ul..ty
llri~ Wat~hln~nn: !ill{llf'd IIIM'hac·kf'r
1\d..-. Boh to dl'vPiupnwnWI ~quatd;
waiVf'd wldl• rPef'IVt'r Rallldy T.anN'r
frtm d PVrlopnwnlal Mquad; a•n&gt;l'd lo
l · ~u- dl'ill wHh runnln,a: h~k .lohnny

~:;~:~ ~- ~;~nD%

#.

Sports briefs

from excessive steroid use,
which blinded his .thinking and
prevented him from making
rational decisions.

The Daily Sentinel Page-5

--Local news briefs... -.;........, .Mason ... Continued from page 1

!WIIHn~

~~olt lv e d ~.--orlll'rhlll'k· !olllff'ty

AMERIC' ,\11; LEI\G UE
East
W I. Pd . GR
: Toronto ............. ..........110 6 ~ .552 -

CINCINNATI (UPI} -A jury
in U.S. District Court convicted
Pete Rose's former friend,
Tommy Glolosa, on three drug
and tax charges Tuesday after
about 12 hours of deliberations.
Glolosa, who once lived wltli
the former Reds manager, was
acquitted on two other tax
charges. He faces a maximum
penalty of 28 years in prison and a
$1.5 million tine.
Judge S. Arthur Spiegel res·
clnded Giolosa 's $20,000 bond and
remand~ the defendant to custody of the HamUton County
.
sheriff.
Glolos&lt;i, 31, New Bedford,
Mass., was found guilty of drug
trafficking, falsely claiming
$47,646 In race track winnings
·and conspiracy to defraud the
Internal Revenue Service on
those winnings.
He was acquitted of filing false
tax returns for 1985 and 1986.
In rescinding bond, for which
Giolosa's parents had put up
their Massachusetts home to
secure, Spiegel rejected defense
arguments the defendant is not a
danger to the community.
Spiegel said he will reconsider
a motion to reinstate bond next
week, following what he called
" a pre· , pre · sentence
investigation."
An appeal is planned.
Giolosa's attorney Martin
Weinberg said his client, who·
once lived with Rose for about
five years, has not cooperated In
the investigation of Ro.s e's gambling and J'lkely will not in the
future.
"I have no reason to believe he
will change his mind," said
Weinberg. "I'm not convinced he .
has anything Incriminating to
·
say a bout Pete Rose."
Rose is under lifetime suspen·
sion from baseball for gambling.
Weinberg also rejected contentions his client conspired with
Rose to defraud the IRS "out of
one penny" when Giolosa
claimed Rose's winnings from a ·
January 1987 horse racing
wager. .
_Gioiosa's defense during. the
trial was that he was intoxicated

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Am Electric Power .. .. ......... 30V.
AT&amp;T .. ............... ... ........... .. 40%
Ashland 011 ........................ 40%
Bob Evans .......................... 15'Vs
Charming Shoppes .... ......... .16'Ji,
City Holding Co .................. 14~
Federal MoguL.. ........... .. ..... 25
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ..... ............ 56V.
Heck's .. ...... .... ........ .... .. ... ··· ··· ~
Key Centurion ..... ...... ......... 13'Ji,
Lands' End ... .. .................... 26'!11
Limited Inc .. ....................... 37
Multimedia Inc ................... l03
· Rax Restaurants ................. . 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .......... ..... 16
Shoney's Inc ..... .... .. .... .... .... 12'li,
Wendy's Inti ........ ................. .6
Worthington lnd ...... ........... 24'Ji,

MeetinfJ to be held
The Orange Township Truatees will meet In special session
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at tbe
home or . the clerk, Dorothy
Calaway. Feaaquues and otllers matwrs will lie 4ilcuuecl.

DUTCH LOAF ....................... S1. 99·
I-LB. KRISP &amp; SERVE VACUUM PACK
SLICED BACON •• ~ ••• ~............ S1.19
. 1-LB. SUPERIOR
BIG .RED BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••• 99&lt;
1·LB.. SWfT ECKRKH .
.
$
-VA. BRAND HAM ••••••••••••••• 2! 19
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD .~·l\•••8 5&lt;
lEA VIR VAWY LAaGE

IIIAFT 16 SliCE

AIIU PROC.

CHEESE ..............t~.~.t s1.99
ILUE

IONN~

Announcing
the
Opening of

. , \\hich Naturall_J Make ·
Our Lunch Meats'laste Better.

21/t. SIZE &amp; UP

The'JasteYou\re Grown10 Love.

•'
•

•

YELLOW
ONIONS .UP.... 99 1
' .

QUARTERS

15 CT. FaESH

CANTALOUPE
32 OZ. OlE-IDA CRINIO.f CUT -

FRENCH FRIES •••••••••••••••••••• S2.49
MINUTE MAID LEMONADE .~L. 99&lt;
BROWN SUGAR •••••• ~ •••••••••• S1.29
11/• lB. DOUII.E STUFFED
OREO COOKIES ••••••••:......... S2.49
2 ll. JAR SMUCKERS
GRAPE JELLY ..................... S1.69
JIF PEANUT BUnER ••••• !!.~~ S2.49
· 16 OZ. AUNT JANE'S
SWEET PEPPER RINGS ••••••• S1.29

(61.4) 446·6446
1 (800) 872-2292

'

.FRESH PEACHES ........... 59 1
NEW

PlANT AnON liGHT -2 LB.

417 SECOND AVENUE
GALUPOI.IS, OH 45631

•

CABBAGE ...............~!. ... 2

GRADE A EGGS ......~~;.99&lt;

vllle on Monday, with burial In
Richmond, Va.

Hospital news
Veterua Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Zelia
Riley, Middleport; and Audrey
Ours, Racine.
. Tuesday discharges - Myrtle
,Gore.

1•LB. AMISH OLD fASiiiiON

24 OZ. DINTY MOORE

BEEF STEW ·················'······· Sl. 99
MUSHROOMS ••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••• 69&lt;
MOTT'S APPLESAUCE ...~~.~~. S1.29

.,

'·

•
·.\

·-

40 OZ. PENNSYlVANIA DUTCH

Ka1herhe Gard
Owner
Beverly Schultz
Manager

811 Elhenc:u

Travel coneurtont

MONDAY THRU FJIDAY
IIIIDA.M.IOIP.II.

15 OZ. CHEF lOY -AR-DEE

RAVIOLI ••••••••~ •••••••••••••••••••~ •••• 99&lt;
32 OZ. CIANAPPlE or CRANIEIIJ

OCEAN SPRAY JUICE ••••••••• S1 :79
TOWELS
Sl.l

••

�~-6-The

Dtilv Sentinel

!f!ldnlldiiY'. Sept.-nber 13, 1989

Wedneedrt. September 13. 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·MIDDLEPORT'S
.
7th ANN-UAL

No Layaways Please

See Our Grand Opening Ad
.In Tomorrow Night's Paper.

You'll Find Savings.

50°/o TO 75°/o OFF

1/2

Prescription ·Shop

OFF

. ·Kirsch .·

,•

"'1~·~~·---4$._

.SO%

LADIES BASIC BLUE DENIM

JEANS (LEE &amp; LEVI'S)

;:

C)f'Ft·~·.···:·:

headrall~aay to Install! Tempered

aluminum ·
lllatB restl't ':len&lt;ll and kinking. ·· '
·

King

POMEROY .-The Pomeroy
group of A.A. ~nd AJ-Anon will
meel on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Hear t CathoUc Church on
Mulberry Ave. For Information
cali1-8IJ0.,-333-5051.

SERVI5TJIR Hardw'are
'.

.

992-3748 or 992-so2·o
405 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

290 SECOND AVE., MIDDLEPORT====:!.!::::C:O:N:V:E:N:U::N:T:O:F:F:ST:E:E:T:P::!=:::~::I

ENTER~~~MENT
*Sweet Adelines
All Ladies' Sweaters

20°/o orr

*Community Choir
*Shady River Shufflers
*Midnight Cloggers
*Denver Rice

SPEC
GIRLS 7·14

ALL CONNIE FALL

BOOTS &amp; .SHOES

20°/o

OFF
Layaway Now for Christmas

ALL RED GOOSE &amp; POLL PARROT

1
0°/o
ALL ATHLETIC

OFF

SHOES

~isit

Our Sale
Room

SHOES FOR CHILDREN 1/2PRICE~
SUMMER HANDBAGS
1f2 PRICE

Ot.her .In Store
Promotions
I

•

STOREWIDE

10°/o DISCOUNT

.

BABY 3 PC.

. . KNIT JOGGING
REG. 110.99

.

Cig. Case

•••u• 52.75

ON THE

'

SHOE PLACE

. ' 1N
1
I

Ml

MIDDLEPORT

. SALE$988

BABY COMFORT,
SHEET, BLANKET .SET

::::99 SALE $1466
WOMEN'S SUMMER.

S~IT

SALE

. FLORAL
COORDINATION GROUP
Purse
w.. •u."$8,00
Cosmetic Bag w. •s." 53.00

...,,

htrifa_gt hOU$t
fTiie

$7 88 ASST. COLORS

LACE- PANELS

$633
SALE PRICED

'

ELASTIC WAIST WitH POCKETS

95 IN.

SIZES S4·L

... '

ADULT SWEAT PANTS

ssaa

SMOCKS ASST. PIINTS

PRKE

Purses, Me!l:s Fishing·
Caps, Hand Towels ·
'

SNORT SLEEVED

'

12
Berkshire Hose, Summer

SUMMER WEAR
1f2 PRICE

SWEAT PANTS

SIZES 8-18

l '

SALE ' TABLE, 1

KIDS

SUMMER BLOUSES
1f2 PRICE

q ~ "''

}

0

WOMEN'S SHOES
$1QOO

I

BAGS
WAS
$929.
S12.99 · ONLY · -

$400

LADIES

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

DIAP~R

ODDs ·&amp; ENDS

FLEECE TOPS
FLEECE PANTS

IDDLEPORT BL
PA
SPECIALS
ONE RACK OF

ONE lACK

PRINTED

:::::;~~~~~~~~;:===:====~~~~*~B~inta-ke~n. ..--.

Fall Mums

$

conoN SLEEPWEAR

766

,GOWNS $711 ,
PJs $611
SHORTY PJs S6ll · '

IACI OF

DEVON
1/2 PIICE 01 LESS

•

.

FOR .
ASCHE~,

•
'

THROW RUGS ·
20X30--ASST.COLORS

$311 ,·

-·
'

,

PORK SHOUlDER

Picnic Ham
SLICED
BACON

12 or. Pkg.

99(

ROCK SPRINGS -TIIe 'Melp
County Riding Club wlll have a
meetlq at the show ring at the
Meigs County Fair Grounds on
Thursday at 6 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS -Tbe Rock
Springs Grange will meet on
Thursday evening at8 p.m. at the
grange hall.

Bright huaa or 10ft putele. OWr 75 dellgner
IMplnKI colora. ExciU11118 ·cleaMine Mono-Rail

20°/o OFF

$1388

HARDY

THURSDAY
POMEROY - A publiC hearIng to discuss surcharge fees to
be enacted In the AHGJVM
(Athens, Hocking, Gatlla, Jackson,· VInton, Meigs Counties)
Solid Waste Dis trtct wilt be held 6
p.m. Thursday at the Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy. A
. meeting of the dlstrlcl's ·exec:u·
live commtltee will foDow at 6: ~
p.m. The district's poUcy commIt tee will meet at 7 p.m. · ·
TUPPERS .. PLAINS. -The
Tuppers Plains V.F.W. Post9053
will have Its regular ,uieetll\g on
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the posl
halt.

.

.

DENIM JEAN·S 20°/o·oFF

REG '17 9s

FOE auxiliary
holds meeting

ASSORTED COLORS

MIDDLEPORT -The Middle.
port Amateur .Garden Club witt
meet at the home of Elizabeth
Loshe on Wednesday at 6:15p.m.
There witt be 'potluck and also
election of offleers.

RACINE -The OAPSE 453
Soulhem Local will meet at the
So111hern.High SChool on Wednesday at 7 p.m. ·

BOYS &amp; STUDENTS' BASIC BLUE

Men's Dungarees

.

Middleport

_
.
992 2635

RACINE - The Racine Board
of Public 'Affairs will meet on
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at Star Mitt
Park.

CHECK OUT OUR PORCH SALE

Middleport, OH,

•

106 N. 2nd

''

992-6669

271 . North Second

~

LAST CALL FOR
SUMMER CLEARANCE

DON'T MISS MIDDLEPORT'S
7th ANNUAL BLOCK PARTY!

Successful completion of the
advanced camp and graduation
from college res ults In a comm iss ion (or the eadet as a second
lieutenant In either the U.S.
Army, Army Reserve or Nationa l Guard.
Slaon, a 1986 graduate of Me igs
High School, Is the son of Robert
and Karen Sloan, Roc ksprings
Road, P omer oy .

WEDNESDAY
CHEST£"-- The Past Councl. lon Club qf Chester Council No.
323, Daughters of America, will
meet Wednesday evening, 8
p.m., at the lodge hall, with Cora
Beegle and Margaret Tuttle,
hosleSses.

INGELS ELECTRONICS

*OHIO PAPER AIRPLANE FLYING CONTEST
*BINGO .
'I
*DRAWINGS EVERY HOUR
*5-K RUN
*ARTS &amp; CRAFTS
*CAR SHOW
*LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
·*CHICKEN BAR-B-QUE (Vol. Fire Dept.)

9:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M.

Cadet Timothy W. Sloan received practical work In military
leadership at the U.S. Ar my
ROTC adva nced camp, Fort
Lewis, Wash.
The six-week camp, a ttended
by cadets normally between
their third and four th years of
college, Includes Instruction In
communll:allons, management
and s urviva l training.

lal Fo undation In appreclatl.on of
their support of the senlorcltlzen
oriented Golden Eagle Fund
which the Foundation administers. Eagles raise money for ;Ibis
project which makes available
grants to bona fide charitable
organizations working on progra ins aiding the aged.
:
Each year at the Grand Aer!eAuxljlary conventlpn, a dlsetaY
Is shown of library gift presen'!a·
tlon news pictures sent In dutlng
the current year.
•

The local Ladles Auxiliary of
the Fraternal Order of Eagles
will present a gltt of $200 to the
.Meigs Cou nty Public Library as
a gesture or s1.1pport to the library
for Its services to the elderly.
This Is the 15th year of the grant
progra m, national In scope.
'Libraries receiving these grants
are asked to purc hase large print
books for the elderly and vlsl'ally
handicapped.
Eagle Auxiliaries receive the
grants fr om the Order's Memor·

u ,lty

· 9:00 A.M. TO 7:00 P.M. ·

· SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16

Mr. and Mrs. Henry (Tony)
s~. Pomeroy, are announcln&amp; the birth of a daughter.
Amorette Marie, on Aug. ~ at
Holzer Medical Cenler.
The Infant weighed eight
pounds and nine ounces, and was
21 and one half IncheS loq.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ken McCullollllh.
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Carl Hubbard,
Syracuse; and Henry Salser,

7

BEND \'oul' Independently Owned
BIG
Community
Low·PI'iced Supermal'ket · ..,c:....
calendar

SATURDAY,
;SEPTEMBER 16, 1989

·-

Cadet gets practical experience

~

Maternal lfeBl grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. James Chriswell, Middleport; and Mrs. ·Les
FultZ, Pomeroy. Paternal great
grandmother Is Eva Shlel~s. :

BLOC
PARTY · '89
,.

Salser birth

The Daily Sentinel

~cine.

•

Middleport

Middleport, Ohio

FRIDAY
CHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
Community Action Agency will
hold free clothing day for tow
Income persons on Fri.d ay, from
9 a.m. to 12 noon, ai the old high
school building al Cheshire.

...

. SWEET

SUGAR

4.4 LliAG

$139
•REG. •CALCIUM

Minute Maid

Orange Juice

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER . - Star
Grange · will hold their annual
hayride and wiener rdlst at 6: ~
p.m. on Saturday. Buns will be
proVIded an~ mernllers. and gu.
ests are asked to bring hoi dogs
a.nd drinks. All !lletnbers and
friends are Uf!lfld to attend.
. MIDDLEPORT ...:nan Hayman and the ' Faith Trio will be .
singing aloq wtth Peggy
Yeauger at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church In Middleport on Sal.urday at 7: 30p.m.

HI-DRI

Paper Towels

FRESH

eMT. DEW •PEPSI FREI
. DIT or REGULAR

Snow-White

Pepsi-Cola

Cauliflower

MIDDLEPORT -The Mel~
County Retited Teachers will
meet on Saturday at12: ~p.m. at
the Ml\klleport Muontc Temple.
For reservallons call 742-2141
by Wednesday.
,.

''·

MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Block Party Will be held on
Saturday In Middleport. Crafts
will be displayed.
·
LONG BOTl'OM - Tile MI.
· , · OllveCommunttyChu~hwlltbe
having a hymn sing at thechureh
with Jaoy ·and lhe David Daltey
family. The public Is InVIted to
atlend.
'

ROCK SPRINGS -TIM! Meigs
County Rldlq Club Inc., will
sponsor all ~ bOne ahow on
Saturday at tbe lltlal County
Falrp'DUIIdl. £xlllltltiDJrbarrela
witt biiiD at 5 p.m. dd die show
· starts at'6 p.m.
·
MIDDLEPORT -Tile Harrl·
IOJIVIlle Scipio Ai!IJIIIII Allac:ll•
tkm wiU bave a food bootb at the

Mlddl~lllociiPartyoaSatur·
day.
of IUpl' and

n::J:'ns

would be appre.
elated. Con.tact Harold Graham
at 7f2 31133 11r 742--3182.

baked

,.,

"STEAM.,
MACHINE
lor tho moll dromotlc carpet
cleaning
you've ever seen!
PYole" tonat Reluls

retu"'
e

$3000FF
COUPON

This coupon enl1tle s the bearer 10 53 00 OFF..
theregulor ren1olofo

CARPET MAll: "STEAM"~
Off• r bpir • OC1. 1&amp;, 1188

"

at o Low Do- ff·~ PrlceT

etooseno and Nib the deepest
dl~l

,,

_;P ..- .&gt; :.'!.l .,...
1

Restores color
1 ondt&gt;rlgl'rtness

'1~ : ~~. ~ .:J~

,.

loa:=

-~~~J CNtans Rtn&amp;e~
\·r, ..;t.\l\-~
.• and.,..;cuum~
~
voor ca:t1~~:!!;~~

.... "-trw 111t NOM To Um rt Qu~ntiU• • P"otalffRttvtt Thru Sat . S•pt . 16. 1988 • USDA Foallll

&gt;·

klmpe Ga.dty Accept .. •

·,.~;.:·.~··L·~
·· - - - - : - : : - ' - - - - - : -

: ,: ,

;;;·;~

.

EASTMAN'S FOODlANDS

Not R•pont rble For TYIIOifiPhtcellrron

�Wednesday, September 13. 1989
Ponwoy~Middaport,

.... 8-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

=Wildwood Garden · District D• of A officers discuss
·Oub meeting held state sesston during meeting
Members of the Wildwood Garden Club met recently at the
Forest Run Church for the group's annual flower show.
Kathryn Miller, president, opened the meeting by telllngo! all
the things she had been doing. Everyone In turn, told of their
goings on. Peggy Moore had devotions by reading a poem by
Helen Steiner Rice entitled, ''Birthdays Are a Gilt From God."
An Invitation was receiVed from · the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners and the Rutland clubs to attend t)le open meeting this
month.
·
aub members Will take the train ride In Nelsonville this
month also.
Doris Grueser and Dorothy Smith were thanked for tak!Dg
down the county fair flower show backgrounds at the conclusion
of the fair. Evelyu Hollon received a total of nine ribbons at the
Meigs County Fair:
· ,
The Sept. 27 meeting will be at the home of Kathryn Miller at 1
p.m. to make cone trees for the Galllpolls Development Center.
Flower show arrangements were made with the theme "Your
Birthday" In mind.
Doris Grueser, January, had an arrangement of marigolds
and arborvlta In a iow black container. Hilda Yeager, May,
, made a teddy bear arrange men I using sunflowers In tall green
vase. Dorothy Smith, June, featured an arrangement of two .
beaontas and statlce In a gold colored bowl.
Mary Niece, April, made an arrangement using roses In a
white container. Kathryn Miller, February, made an
arrangement using rabbit ears antenna on a wooden base with
garlic flowers, Iron weed, and lady of the lake.
.
Held! Elberfeld, March, used a basket as a container for her
tall all green arrangement of cain, mint, prayer plant,
peppermint, and chartreuse plant. Connie Hill, Febr11ary, used
a slnrle rose and baby's breath In a tall white vase for her
arrangement.
Betty Milhoan, January, made an arrangement with a heart
shaped vine wreath and cones, catnip, sage, !I candle, and
ribbon. Peggy Moore, No~mber , made an arrangement In an
antique dish with lavender mums, jop!e, everlas·tlng, collas,
and perUia.
·
Evelyn Hollon, 'October, had an arrangement In a tall black
vase using sunflowers, vine, and croton leaf. Juanita Wtu
displayed a gerba daisy plant. Mary Niece displayed yellow
mums In a circle or honeysuckle vines, weathered wood,
cosmos, and castor bean leaves on a wood base with a squirrel
figurine.
Evelyn Hollon displayed two arrangements. One was a
miniature In a perfume bottle with a rose bud, pf!tzer, and cork
screw w!llow. The second featured weathered wood, corn
tas.sels, mums, and pyracanth&amp; berries In a black vase.
Kathryn Miller, Doris Grueser, and Dorothy Smith served
refreshments to the 11 members present.

a

.People in the news

EstherSmlth,ChesterCouncll, district 13. All members are
district captain and vice slate urged to attend.
Betty Wolfe, Perry Council,
councilor, spoke brleflyconcern·
log the state session held In presided at the meeting In the
August at Mansfield at the recent absence of Esther Harden, dis·
meeting oftheD!strlct 13 Daugh· trlct 13 deputy, who was absent
ters of America when the group duetothemotorcycleacctdentof
met at the Chester Lodge Han,
her son. He!slntheMiam!Valley
Ms. Smith announced the fol· Medical Center In Dayton.
lowing on the state eomm!ttees:
Eileen Cla~k. Guiding Star
Erma Cleland, Chester Council, Council, noted the members'
state judiciary; Alberta Hart· c~~rds and prayers during ber
shorn. Perry Council, state law; Illness. 11 was reported that
and Margaret Cotterill, Guiding Nettle Hayes, Chesler Council,
Star Council, state credential.
was 1n the hospital.
A reception will be held In Ms.
The friendship meeting will be
Smith's honor at the ·Chester Nov. 2 at the Belle Prairie
. United Methodist Church on Council, Belpre. A potluck will
Sept. 23. at 2 p.m. hosted by begin at 6: 30 p.m. Installation of
.
officers w!ll be held and all

produced from nlne egg masses
· last year, but o!!lcials expected
few to survive the winter .
·
. Stone said the toads produced
only two egg masses this year,
probably due to a cool spring and
dry conditions.
.
Twelve of the toads found
during the fall survey were·
captured and taken out of the
wild for study and to help ensure
the survivability of the species.
Stone said o!!!clals want to

Xi Gamma Mu,
Beta Sigma Phi ·
Sorority meets

A dinner party was the high·
light for the first meeUng of the
XI Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
officers are urged to attend.
Sigma
Phi Sorority held at
Refreshments were served by
Sebastian's
hi Parkersburg,
the Guiding Star Council. Mar·
W.Va.
garet Cotterill was pianist for the
Twenty·two members were
meeting.
present
for the first meeting of
Present were Alberta Hart•
.
shorn and · Betty Wolfe, Perry the 19$9·90 sorority year.
·
Kay
Adkins,
president,
wei·
Council, New Lexington; Janice
Lawson, Margaret Cotterill. corned everyone and noted that
Mary Donna · Davis, Betty the program books should be
Spencer, Eileen Clark, Bette completed by the next meeting
Biggs, Guiding Star Council, and ready tor distribution.
Ruth Riffle was presented a
Syracuse; Erma Cleland, Opal
single
yellow rose In a silver bud
Hollon, Charlotte Grant, Thelma
vase
In
hOnor of her 25th wedding
White, Marcia Keller, Faye
anniversary.
Kirkhart, Dorothy Ritchie, Ethel
.
The next meeting ~ll be held
Orr, Mary K. Holler, Everett
Sept.
19 at the horne of A.R .
Grant, Esther Smith, and JoAnn
Knight
In Pomeroy .
Baurn, Chester Counc!l.

"Dialogue with Governor Celeste," a monthly' series of
statewide radio call·ln broad·
casts, monitored by. Gov. Rl·
chard F . Celeste, w!ll premier
Wednesday, Sept. 13, from 8 to
9: 30 p.m. Subsequent programs
are scheduled for October, No·
vember and December.
Each program lntheserleswill
be a special edition focusing on a
current Issue of Importance to

Ohioans. Tile governor w!ll be the Increasing use and sale of
' joined on each show by one or crack cocaine In Ohio· and the
more guests for a discussion of Impact on the state's cities,
the topic Involved, and listeners neighborhoods, fam!lles and
throughout the state may call . schools. Guests on Ibis program
with questions or comments on a w!ll be Dr. Ronald L. Fletcher,
toll· free number, 1·80().686-7323.
director of the Ohio Department
of Health; and James Newby,
The topic of the September 13 director and chief of pollee, City
show Is "The Crack Crisis," and of Dayton.
will ser.ve as a continuing part of
"Dialogue with., Governor Cethe governor's efforts to explore leste" will · he broadCfiSI , by

By John C. Wolf, D.O.
AMoclale Prof-or of
Family M~dldlle
Ohio Ualvenlty CoUece ol

Osteopalhlc Medlellle
In honor of my profession, I've
taken the occasion of National
Osteopathic Medicine Week to
talk about the philosophy of Osteopathic medicine and the con·
cerns of the osteopathic health
care community.
Doctors of osteOpathic, Qr D.
O.s, receive the same amount
of schooling as M.D.s - four
years of college, four years of
osteopathic medical school and
at least one ye11r of post-doctoral training. MostD.O.sandM.
D.s take additional residency
training In a specialty area
-but we D.O.s are much more
.likely to specialize In family
~edlclne or ·another primary

care area (pediatrics, Internal
medicine, and family medl·
cine). In fact, recent statistics
from the American Osteopat·
hie Association show that 68
percent ofD,O.s are In primary
care, With 89 percent of these
being In family medicine.
D.O.s a~e licensed to prac·
tlce medicine In all 50 states
and ,the District of Columbia,
and are Involved In setting
health care policy on the local,
state · and natlnal levels. For
example, Murray Goldstein,
D.O., Is director of the National
Institute of Neurological and
Communicative Disorders, one
ot the NIH Institutes.
D.O.s use all scientifically
accepted means of diagnosis
and treatment - Including
surgery, drugs and radiation.
An osteopathic
physician's
'

tratnln~. though, places spe·
eta! emphasis on the lnterrelatlonshlps between body systerns and on the roleoflhemus·
cles, bones and nerves play In
health and Illness.
The osteopathic philosophy
says the doctor Is not a healer,
but a facilitator, 'helping the
body's nautral ability to heal it·'
self. A D.O. believes that the
body has to be thought of as a
whole and that no part of It can
become (llseased without af·
fectlng other parts.
This helps us remember we
are treating a person, not just
the specific organ that may be
rnaltunctlonlng at the time. It's
not surprising, therefore, that
most D.O.s are family physl·
clans.
The theme of this year's Na·
·.

missing.

ecological services manager for
the department, said what could
Endan1ered toad species show be the last bastion of the species
appears to be thriving In the
sliM of • comeback . .
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UPI) Laramie Valley.
The endangered Wyoming toad,
Stone said a recently com·
which some biologists feared pleted fall survey foUnd 34 adult
extinct when field surveys found toads and several young toads In
.
·
none In the m.ld·1980s, appears to the area.
be making a comeback, a: Wyom- . "I'm optimistic that what
lng Game and Fish Department we've seen. Is a bout as good a
population as has existed any·
official said Tuesday.
. A small population of the toads where out there," he said.
was discover~!~! In Albany County
About 600 young toads were
In ·1987 and Mike Stone. an

TOP DOLLARS
FOR
·wiLD DRIED
GINSENG BOOTS
Direct Shipment
1b The orient

---

Alaskan otter pups arrive at
Tacoma zoo
TACOMA, Wash. (UPII Thirteen orphaned otter pups left
homeless by the closing of the
otter rehabilitation center in
Seward, Alaska, arrived Toes·
day at Tacoma's zoo where .they
will be cared for until they are

aground In Prince William Sound Slate can't donate meat to poor
· on March 24, spllllng nearly 11
PHOENIX tUPII -The Ariz·
mUllen gallons of on and creating ona Game and Fish Department
ecological havoc In Alaska.
has been ordered to stop donating
Out of the first group of six tons of wild game to feed th e
otter pups sent to Tacoma last poor.
_April. four survived, she said .
The Health Department , In
The single male was sent to Sea enforcing a state law for the first
World in San Diego, wh!Je the time, .said the meat fir st has to be
three females were kept In the Inspected by the state while the
all·female otter exhibit . In ·animals are still alive.
Tacoma.
Most of the meat the Game and
However, permanent homes Fish Department donates ha s
are still being sought for the been confiscated from poachers
latest arrival of 13 pups.

.

.

•
rtce.s
U . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, GRAIN FED
BEEF, "UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE CUT"
CAP·ON 10· 12-LB. AVG.

Locally, Radio WMPO, ~·
FM. will be airing Gov. Celeste's
program tonight (Wednesday) ,.8
to 9:30p.m.

'

'

'

1
• I

.:

II

'

' l

. ''•'·

SLICED

FRE~ .

....
..
..
••
l
!

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

Boneless
·Chicken Breast

~--~

rtUfY.

' .
..

.'

-'

Pound

Dole
Banana·s

. I'

(N TfjE DELI·PASTRY SHOI~PE

Gl~zed

~

Donuts
22-oz. Dozen

REGULARLY
$2.39

LEGAL NOTICE
Tile Public Ulilties Com·
mission of Ollio his Sit

lW~IS~~ 141&gt;1SI

hellina Case
No. 89-101-El·EFC. to

lor publlc

r8viiw ll1e fuel

iOO\ ljlllliltll

proctlf1-

ment practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Cotniiii1Y. the operation
of ill Electric Fuel cam.
ponent, and related mat·
ters. This llearina Is
st;!leduled to blgtn at

t~mLAND

Sealtest
Ice Cream

1:~p.m .. on Sepllmber
18, 1889 ai City Cotllcil

;, I

TIME

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tiona! Osteopathic Medicine
Week Is: "Growing Up Heal·
thy." This theme was chosen
because D.O.s, as family prac·
tltloners, are concerned about
the health care of all, Including
the youngest members of the
family. Over the past 10 years,
child health In our country has
actually deteriorated, Factors
like heart disease, Inadequate.
prenatal care, lack of trnmunl·
zatlon and obesity are threa·
tenlng children's health.
D.O.s would. like to educate
Americans about these problerns and encourage parents
to give their children a healthy
start In fife. Regular visits to
your family physician or pedla·
trlclan are a part of raising a
healthy youngster. I recom·
mend that you make sure your
child receives all the lmmunl·
zatlons he or she needs. Give
your children a diet that In·
eludes the four baste food
groups: protein,
vegetables
and fruits: dairy products: and
whole grain
breads and
cereals. Regular, vigorous ex·
erclse Is also essential for good
health.
Your os teopathtc physician
wants to work with you and
your children to help them
grow uo healthv:
(Continued on page 9)

(
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Whole Boneless
L---.. Sirloin Tip

mission.

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or from anllna ls killed by
vehicles .
Up to 10 tons of meat, mostly.
from deer or elk, has gone .
annually to charitable organlza•.
lions that provide food for the ·
poor . Some of the meat has been:
us&lt;;&gt;d to feed jail inmates.
.
The state attorney general's ·
office recently issued a legal :
opinion that the meat cannot be :
used lor human consumption if it ·
was not subjected to proper :
Inspection.

Go Krogering For .•.

satelllt!! from the sudlos of the
Radio Sound Network In Colum·
bus and will be carried by a
number of stations throughout
Ohio. The broadcast Is available
free of charge to any interested
station.

be QiVIII

Dr~

Sentinel~
. Page-9

AI)VfRTlSI:D ITEM POliCY-Each of th&amp;se advertised item·s is tequired to be readily availlbkt for sale in each Kroger COPYRIGHT 1989 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, SEPT. :
· Store, except 11 specificaHv noted in this ad. If we Go run ·out of an advertiaild item, we wUI offer you your. 10, THROUGH SATURDAY, SEPT. 16, t989, IN GAlUPOUS AND POMEROY STORESc
choice of a CO(Ylparable item, when available, reflecting the Barna savings or a raincheck which wilentitie you to
purchaaa the aclvenised item at t~e advenised price within 30 days. Only one.vendor coupon will be accepted WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO L!MIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .
per item purchased.

to be t.nt. Furlla lntor·
matlon may be obllliolld
by COIIIIGti!IQ the CIJm.

Good wine year
·expected by French

~.;_

establish more than one population of the toads to ellminate the
dangers of extinction.

strong enough for permanent
placement.
Lily Moore, associate director
at the Point Deflance Zo9 and
Aquar iurh, said the pups range in
age from 3 ' weeks to a few
months, with the smallest weighIng in at barely 4 pounds.
"You try to be scientlflc when
dealing with animals at a zoo, but
with these you just have to coo
'aren't they cute,"' Moore said.
. The orphaned pups are the
second group sent to Tacoma for
care since the Exxon Valdez ran

The Daily

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What does ·a DO do; anyway?

Family M~dicine

Quirks in the news,_ _ _ ___

. ·-

(Continued from page 8)

Celeste to moderate radio program tonight

Trwnp Monday night. She In·
By WILLIAM C. TROTJ'
vited 400 people to the re-gilded
VnUed Press International
ROYAL FAMILY EXPAND· ballroom of her husband .DolNG: ·Britain was bubbling Toes· nald's Plaza Hotel to mark the
day with the news that the restoration of the Fifth Avenue
duchess of York Is pregnant. The landmark to Its former glory.
former Sarah Ferguson, 29, and "This place looked Uke a battlePrince 1\ildrew are expecting field just a few hours ago," said
their second child In March and, Ivana, who shooed workmen out
as might be expected. Buck· minutes before her celebrity
'
Ingham Palace says the royal guests arrived. Furnishings In
couple is "very pleased." Queen · various foyers and halls still
Elizabeth also Is thrilled that were sparse and some of the
Andrew and. Fergie's first child. floors were bare. "There was a
JJ.month-old. Princess Bea&amp;rlce strike in India that held up the Large cal reported running loose
of York, Is going to have a rugs, " said Trump, who Is on 14nl bland
BELLPORT, N.Y. (UPI) brother or sister. The pregnancy running the Plaza after serving
her
apprenticeship
as
director
of
Suffolk
County residents have
announcement comes during a
her
husband's
Atlantic
City,
been warned to beware of a large
busy week for the duchess, who
publishes two children's books N.J., hotel·caslnos. "You don't cat·llke animal spoiled by two
motorists driving alimg a high·
this week and attended a literary know what I've been through!"
INCREDIBLE STRESS OF way In Bellport.
lunch Tuesday.
Linda Pew, s~pervisor of the
IMPERIAL WEDDING: The BEING HAMLET: Daniel Day
Japanese also had some royal Lewis, star of the film "The Brookhaven town Animal Shel·
news Tuesday. Prince Aya, 23. Unbearable Lightness of Being," ter, said Tuesday one of the .
the grandson of the late Emperor has given up the ;lead role in the drivers described the anjmal as
"cougar-like," and the other said
Hlrohlto, announced that he will British National Theatre's production
of
"Hamlet"
because
he
It appeared to be a "large cat."
marry psychology student Klko
Suffolk County pollee said one
Kawashima, 23, making her the ·is suffering nervous exhaustion.
second commoner to marry Into Lewis, 32, left In the middle of of the' s!ghtlngs was made by a
the imperial family in 2,600 Tuesday night's performance county deputy sheriff as he drove
years. After months of sex and and his understudy, Jeremy down Station Road In Bellport
bribery scandals, the Japanese Northam, will take over. Day shortly before lloon.
A search of the area by animal
were excited by the prospect of Lewis had played Hamlet 65
times
since
the
opening
of
the
shelter
employees was futile, but
the first imperial wedding In 30
show
March
16
and
was
schethey
found
4 %·inch-wide paw
years and the media coverage
duled
to
play
the
parl'ln
seven
near
the spot ~ of the
prints
was intense. A news conference
more
performances
through
original
sighting,
Pew said.
with the prince and his fiancee
Sept.
28.
''l'hey also found some empty
was aired on television, as were
GLIMPSES: The 15th anniver- animal dishes In the area," she
hon;~e
movies of the infant
Kawashima eating spaghetti In sary of "Saturday Night Live" added.
Pew said It Is suspected that
her mother's lap. At the news will feature lots of alumni.
conference, Kawashima asked Original cast members Chevy the animal may be some kind of
Aya •s permission before answer· Chase, Jane Curtin. Garrett domesticated wild cat on the
ing questions such as what does Morris and Laraine Newman, as loose after being kept In Illegal
she like about the prince. "He well as Eddie Murphy, will be captivity.
She added that the Long Island
plays the guitar and when he does back for the 2 %·hour prime-time
·
show
Sept
24.
other
guests
Game
Farm and another facility
that, I'm very attracted tohlrn,"
Include
Steve
Martin,.
Tom
in Holtsville which keeps wild
Kawashima said. Aya, the se·
cond son of Japan's Emperor Hanks, Charlton Heston, Mary animals were contacted, but both
Aklhlto, said his parents' 'wished Tyler Moore, Prince and Paul said none of their animals are
us happiness and told us they Simon ... Clarence Clemons has
hope we will join hands in sax, will travel. Clemons Is a
building a happy home." The mainstay of Bruce Sprlnpteen's
wedding date will be set after a E Street Band and also toured
one-year period of mourning for with Ringo starr this summer.
Most recently, he played In
Hlrohlto ends In January.
PLAZA'S FACELIFT: Not ev· Mansfield, Mass., during the
ervtbing went perfectly for Ivana weekend with Jerry Garclaofthe
Gra&amp;etul Dead ... Harry Reem•.
Unda 1.4velace's co-star In
"Deep Throat," pleaded guilty In
Los Angeles Monday to a charge
of not filing a 1982 federal tax
return. Charges for 1984 and 1985
against Reems, whose real name
PARIS (VPI) -With an early Is Herbert stretcher, were
grape harvest under way, ex· dropped in return for the guilty
perts said Wednesday that condl· plea.
tlons are perfect ·for making 1989
an exceptional year for French
'L
'
champagne and many classic
Bordeaux and Burgundy wines.
"All the weather cond!tlons are
In place for very good quality
wine," said Dominique De·
trance, co-director of France's
wine producers association.
· Wine producers benefitted
from a summer drought that
resulted In severe agricultural
losses and prompted major
forest tires In southern France.
· ''l'he generally drY and sunny ·
weathe~ produced very heal thy ·
.
srapes," Defrance said. "There
are no Impurities, no rot. The
srapes are naturally rich In
·~llr."

.Quirks...

Wadn•day, Septembw13, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaoy- Middlaport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 13, 1989

Wednlllday, September 13, 1989

·Miss Ohio, Miss Missouri win opening Miss America events
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . (IJPI)
- Miss Ohio Kristin Huffman
won t he ta lent competition anQ
Miss Missouri Debbye Turner
took t he swimsuit contest In the
first r ound of preliminary com·
petition In the 1990 Miss America
Pageant.
Huffman, 24, of Canal Whtchester, performed a spirited rendition of the operatic aria "Clsardas" Tuesday. She wore a
tomatcrred floor-length gown
wit h a flowing train and held a
gold-sequined mask trimmed
with ostrich feather s.
Huffman, a 5-foot-6 'inch, 112pound blonde with olive eyes,
wa nts. to perform on an operatic
concert level and teach voice at a
univer sity.
Turner, 23, a 5-foot·7 ~ Inch,
118-pound Mexico, Mo., resident,
wore a canary yellow suit to win
the swimsuit title before a crowd
of 8,000 In Convention Center.
Turner, who wants to become a

veterinarian, Is one of three
black co ntestants In the pageant.
The sleek swi msuit winner said
she worked out In an aerobic
weight-lifting program, rode a
stationary bicycle and ate sensibly to at tain her trim physique.
Her dinner Tuesday, however,
consisted of five cookies.
"Being on stage In a swim suit
does motivate you to not have a
tummy," she said.
Huffman, who said she was
proud of her performance, said
she sang to a tape prep11red by a
bunch of her college friends.
" I can always tell I! I 've done
well because the heat just rises
off me," she said. " I felt
wonderful. "
The opening number of the
pageant featured a novel jungle
gym production In which the 51
contestants, clad In elegant pant·
suits, danced In a towering maze
of go-go cages. A second production. number featured singer

Clin t Holmes In a beach scene,
with the. contesta nts perched on
Harley Davidson motorcycles
and lifeguard stands.
The contes tan ts, e ach In a
d ifferent lipstick-red gown ,
struck mannequin poses and
waltzed around the stage to the
tum~ of ' 'Lady In Red" In another
number.
Earlier Tuesday, new pageant
director Leonard Hor n a n·
nounced a. series of c)langes
designed to get out the message
that the annual end -of-thesummer r itual, In which contest·
ants s tr ut down a runway In a
swimsuit and high heels to win
scholarship money, Is truly more
· than just a beauty pagea nt.
The goal, Horn said, Is to
broaden the pageant's focus to
offer recognition and assistance
to women beyond those who
actually compete for the rhlnes·
tone crown.
. The quest .fo r the 63rd Miss

nationa lly televised fina ls, which ·elud e three entities - t he Missculminate In Miss America 1989 Ameiica P ageant, Inc. , or the
Gretchen Elizabeth Carlson's actual competition; the . Miss
ceremonial crowning of her Americ a Scholarship F und, ·
which provides the scholarships
successor.
Horn a.nnounced Tuesday a . for the wi nners, and the nei\'IY
realignment of the pageant's for m e d M iss A m er ica
structure to form a new parent F oundation.
The new foundation on F riday
corporation called the Miss
will honor former First Lady
Am erica Organization. .
Bet ty Ford with the fi rst Miss
•'It Is no longer simply the Miss
America Pageant because the America Wome n's Ac hievement 1
term 'pageant' Is an old term and Award for her work In helping
it does not connote the depth and others cope with alcohol and drug .
the significance we believe this abuse and breast cancer .
program always had, " Horn
The award Includes a subs tansaid.
· Hal fin ancial donation, which will
Th.e new corporation will In· be announced Frl!lay.

America began Tuesday evening
with the first of three nights of
preliminary competition, du ring
which the 51 contes tan ts splltlnto
three groups and r otate thr ough
the talent, evening gown a nd
In terview a nd swi m s u it
competitions.
While the winner of the swim·
suit a nd talent contest are
announced each night, the result s of the evening gown·
inter view prelhn lnar ies are kept
secret In an effort to ma inta in
suspen se over the Identities of
the 10 finalists.
Those names will be announced du ring Saturday night 's
Public Notice

Public Notice

certified line of tirodll. in the
NOTICE OF
l'tllte emount, from 1 bank.
APPOINTMENT OF
doing bu1in•• within the
FIDUCIARY .
On August 23, 1989, in scope .of . Ohio Banking
tho Meiga County Probate ·Llw1, will be accepted. u
Court. Caoo No. 26192. complying with th• bl&gt;nding
.Jo.,io R. Revnoldl. Rt. 1. requlremtnt.
AI 1 pr•equiaite .for tiidMlddlop0 rt, , Ohio 4&amp;760, ·
ippolntod Admlnlotro' ding. c;.nty contractors :that
trlx w~h the Will Annexed of oro qualified OOOT biddero
tho oototo of Clifford G. . wilt be CO!IIidorod for the r•
Newh.Jn, deceMed. l.te of ourfoc:lng work.
The .Ucc•llful contractor
Bo• 52, Long Bottom, Ohio
Frederick von Anhalt, of West 46743.
moy be requited to turnloh .
Ger many, and her lawyer, Wll·
Roben E. Buck, ony lob work 11 required by
Probate Judge the Malgs County Engin-.
!lam Graysen, In tow. Her
PropoNII Ire to WI .r•
Lana
K.
Nosoalro.d,
Clerk
hairdresser did not join her
turned on bid formw .upplled
iBl
30;
191
e.
13
3tc
,.
Tuesday, as he had Monday .
by tho controctor, bidding
each project •-rotoly.
. After lunch, during which
Public N alice
The envelope. containing
GabOr visited her dentist to have
each bid. must lie · plainher teeth cleaned and declined
ly morkod, '" RESURFJ,ICPUBLIC NOTICE
the "jailhouse chill" on the
ThB .•nnual r~ort form ING PROJECT. CR 1 0 '" or
rest;1urant meriu, . she was 990PF for the Kibble RESURFACING PROJECT
•
greeted by a public-access TV F.oundation. Bernard ·V. CR 65" .
Bid Spodllcatlono may be .
Fultz.
Trustee,
ia
available
show hosi known as ''Mr. Pete, ·· for public inspection at Ber· picked up at tho Melga
who has been selling buttons nard V. ·Fultz Law Office, County Engineer' 1 Office or ·
reading, "Free ·Zsa Zsa . Her · 111\&lt;l W. .Second Street, t~o Molga County Commio· ,
Pomlfc)y; Ohio 46768. dur- 11on•• Office.
Trial Is Ou r Trial."
regular bu1in11 hours for
The Moiga County · Com "Oh, darUng, I love you ," ing
a period of 160 deyssubl• mluionoro
the right
Gabor said as she examined one quent to pub·lication of this to IK:Cept or rojechny or ell
notice.
of the buttons on his jacket.
bidl, or any pan thereof.

Media.courts Zsa Zsa Gabor··
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
(UPI) -With prospective jurors
In the cop-slapping trial of Zsa
Zsa Gabor being asked their
feelings a bout profanity and
p&lt;illce powers, the one-thne ac·
tress objected most strenuously
tp being called "Mrs. " rather

She said Kramer manhandled
her, throwing her over the hood
of her car to handcuff her, and
called her a "whore. "
Fox asked each potential juror
what they had heard or read
abOut Gabor's arrest. Nearly all
said they knew little about the
than ••Ms."
case, Including one man who said
On trial for slapping a Beverly be passed over the story In a
Hills cop who had pulled over her
newspaper the day after her
Rolls-Royce, Gabor ordered her
arrest because he was "not
lawyer to object Tuesday arter . Interested In lt."
the prosecutor referred to her as
' 'That's the kind of juror we
" Mrs. Ga bor" while questioning want to select for this case, the
prospective juror s:·
kind that drop down from
The faux pas prompted the
another planet," Fox replied.
Hungarian-born Gabor. known
The second day of the trial
for her volatile temper and eight · began with Gabor pri&gt;clalm.lng
marriages, to tug at her lawyer' s
her Innocence once again and
sleeve and prod him to make assuring reporters that her war·
certain she was ·referred to as
drobe would provide her with
''Ms. Gabor."
_
something new to wear even "If
Deputy Dis t rict Attorney1 this lasts a year ...
Elden Fox a greed to call her Ms.
Wearing another Donna Karan
Ga bOr and the jury se lection
design - this one a camel and .
continued. Opening statements black leopard print with a large
· we r e expected to beg in cross gracing the plunging neck·
Wednesday .
line - GabOr said she had a
P rospective jurors were asked
restful night after having a
ques tions Including how they felt
nightmare on the night before
a bOut profanity, whether they
her trial began.
believe police have too much
"Of course I slept well. r didn't
power and . whether there Is a
do any thing wrong, " Gabor said
potentional for police to abuse as she swept past reporters. At
that power.
another point, she added: "Why
Ga bor, 66, is accused of slap- should I be punished• I didn' t do
ping the face of Officer Paul nothing."
Kra mer after he stopped her
There was considerably less
J une 14 for having an expired media attention and only a
registration ta g on her $215,000 handful offans Tuesday as Gabor
Rolls-Royce convertible.
arrived with her husband, Prince
•

roo-•

Police accused GabOr of drlv·
lng off while the motorcycle
officer was on his radio checking
her license. He chased her and
ordered · her out of the Rolls.
GabOr compiled but slapped the
officer In the (ace after he
allegedly abused her.
·The' misdemeanor charges
against the former Miss Hungary
Include battery on a police
officer, disobeying a pollee of·
fleer and dtlvlng with an expired
license. She also Is charged with
having an open container of
a.lcoholln a vehicle - a flask of
bourbOn found In her glove
compartment.
If convicted of battery, GabOr
could be sentenced· to a year In
Los Ange.les County Jail and
fined $2,000. The other charges
carry maximum six-month jail
terms 'and $1,000 fines .

Bush's lecture gets mixed reviews
WASHINGTON-IUPI) -A few
miles- yet a world away - from
whe re President Bush delivered
his nationally televised anli·drug
lecture to school c hildren, Calvin
Barbour, 17, and Travis Hill Jr.,
16, listened and fretted.
" What the pres ident said made
sense,." said Barbour, a senior at
Spingarn High School in a drug·
ravaged section of Ute District of
Columbia . "And some people will
listen to him. And some won' t. "
" As long people make money
selling drugs , they won't care
wha t the president says, " said
classmate Hill. " And as long as
this happens, more and more
peo ple will get killed."
BarbOur and Hill were among
the millions of students from
Washington, D.C ., to Washington
state who hea rd Bush declare In
ltis speech from the White House :
" The day of the drug dealer Is
· draw ing to a close."
Hill, who said he has los t ma ny
friends to drugs , said, " I don't
know If the president has a good
feel for th e sit ua tion. He's never
been through what we' ve been
through."
Bush urged s tudents to stand
up aga inst narcotics, warned
them that " drugs can slam the
· door on their future" and asked
them to he lp a fr iend turn awa y ·
from dr ugs .
" Drugs are r ightly called an
·equal oppor tunity destroyer," '
Bush said. " ';!'hey just murder
people. Young and old, good and
bad, innocent and bad."
: The pres ident's 15·minute ad·
clress was part of his escalated
war a gains t dr ugs that bega n last
wee k when he a nnounced his $7.9
billion battle plan.
' At the White House Wednes·
day, Bush was to partlcjpate In a
Jtose Garden anti-dr ug ceremony Involving DARE - Drug
Abu se ResiStance Education, a
program begun In 1983 by the
GOOD USED
WAS.U, DIYEISr
IEfiiGliATOIS,
GAS

I

TYs,

schools and police In Los
" But if that's not enough
Angeles .
reason, there's another side:
Bush' s address to students Using illegal drugs Is against the
Tuesday drew mixed reviews.
law . And lfyoubreakthelaw, you
Chris Jackson, a junior at pay the price."
Westbury High School· In Hous·
At Detroit's Denby High
ton. said altho\ll!h he believed the School, students listened over the
speech '' would ma ke a differ· public address system.
ence, " the president "forgot to
· 'I def,lnltely felt the message
point out the connection between · was getting across," said assistpoverty and drugs. "
ant principal Larry Latimore.
"He doesn't understand that adding he thought the speech
poverty in Houston. Texas. has a ' 'would help those who m ay be
big factor . on drugs," Jackson tempted'' to try drugs.
said.
Back at Splngarn High, Tho·
Bush sought to be compassion- mas Corbett Jones, 15, said, "I
a te and tough.
told my 8-year-old brother to
"Saying no, won't make you a watch. And I hope kids will listen.
nerd. It won' t make you a loser. A lot use drugs because they
In fact, It will make you more don't have anyone to tell them not
friends than drugs ever will, " he to."
said. " Real friends."

..

If you
have diabetes,
get 8100 for
taking better care
of yourself.

Philip M. Robeno.
P.E .. P.S .
Moip County Engln..,. ·
Mory Hobltettor, Clerk
Meigo County
Commilaion••
19) 6. 13. 2tc

Public Notice

BIO SPECIFICATIONS ON
RESURFACING WORK OF
DESIGNATED MEIGS
COUNTY ROADS
BETWEEN CERTAIN
Public, Notice
TERMINI IN
MEIGS COUI\ITY. OHIO .
Bid propoula f.or the r•
IN THE
aurflcing work d"ci'ibed
COMMON PLEAS COURT .
heroin "'ll ba rocoivod by the
OF
·.
Bo•rd of County CommiaMEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
lion•• in the Melga court . JAMES WILBURN
Houoe, Pomaniy, Ohio untH WOLFORD
Plelntlf!
Noon, the 20th of Soptom·
· VS ·
bor. 1989. Tho biclo wll be CHAR LOnE ANNE
oponod ot 1:00 P.M. on the WOLFORO
Dotonclont
20th of September. 1989
CASE NO. 87,- 0R-293
ond •-'! oloud.
.
NOTICE IV
Tho propooalo wll be ·· per
PUBLICATION
ton in pl.:. bid price for'
To Chorlotto Anno Wol·
OIK:h project.
ford. whoae place of reeit
Each bidder muot file a ·dence il unknown, you •r•
10% performance bond ot hereby not~ed thet you are
the tim~ . of the .bidding ond n -.,P-dont In o logal .
the aucc.-lful bfdder muin lotion ontltiod Jomoo Wll·
file o 1.00% perfurmonce burn Wolford, P(aintlff vo.
bond. A letter eotoblls hing

Public N otlce

Chlflot'te Anno Wolford,
o.tondant. Thio octlon hoo
bHn ••ianed c•• number
B7-0R-2tJ3 In tho Court of
Common PI- of Moittl
County, Pom•oy. Ohio
45761 . There lo p.,clng In
lllid octlon. il Motion flied by
N!ille Mulen, orlginolly. Sold
Motion Ia HI tor hoorlng o~ ·
tho 3rd dey of November,
1989 ot 10:30 o.m. In the
Mliga County Common
Plooo Court. Sold Motion 1o
for en order conveying the
Defend8nt'a inter•t In the
following doocrlbod rool • ·
tate to the Pfaintttf pur~UIInt
to the partial' divorce
decree.
Tho following doocrlbod
real •tate aituate in the
Townohlp
of · Chootor,
County of Molp end Steto
of Ohio, bounded end de·
ocrlbod ao ,followo :
:
Sltuoto In Chootor Town~
ohip, Stoto of Ohio, end be·
in·g In Fraction 19, Section
20, Town 4 North, Ronge12
Woot of the Ohio Com pony' o
Purch•• 1nd being de~
scrlbod 11 follows: Beginning ot o point North 87 dog.
13' West 1618 feet end
North 2 dog. 47' Eut obout
900 feet to a point ot the
Moriotte Rood !old Stott
Route 181) ond North 16
dog. 13' W•t obout 202
foot. 11id point of baglnnlng
being m•ked by "8 concrete
mar~or HI, llid point of be·
ginning aloo bllng South 16
dog. 13'. Eaot 313.4 feet
from a Southooolorly Qliio
-Route 7 R/ W m -·81
. 437 + 23.38 IR/ W morker •
found); thence North ·112
dog. 44' Eoot 150 feet to a
·concrete mMer Jet thence
North 15 dog. 13' Woot
313.4 feet to o con-•
m•k• let on the Southe•·
tlfly R/ W line of Ohio Sta1o
Route 7; thence South 52
dog. 44' Woot 1110 feet
olong the Southoootlfl¥.
R/ W tine of Ohio Stetoi
Route 7 to a highway R/W
cancrllta. merker; thenCll
South 15 dog. 13' Eut
313.4 feet to the point of be·
ginning, contelnlng 1.0

~ acr&amp; more or
Tho -lngo In the obovo
doocrlptlon oro booed on o ·
Ohio ~rtm- of High·
woyo ourwy merllod S.H. ,
111 he. M. jpt.JN. + Ojpt.)
R.W PIMI. doted 3 / 13/46.
'REFERENCE DEED: Vol.
~93.
·Piiao Bl3. Molga ..
County Deed R-rdl.
You ~It either .1ign a
dood conveying your Inter·
oot In tho oubjact r•l oowto
prior to oaid h-lng or the
Court will moko oald con·
veyonce ot the hoorlnt. Tho
notice shell be publlahod
once - h for lio con·
._tt.. - · · The lilt pu·
bHcotion wll ba mode on the
18th dey of October.
In ••• of your fliluro to
..,._or ol-Io• ,.pond
oil required by the Ohio
Rutoo of· ClvH Pro..... ro,
judgment or det•utt wli be
. rondorod agalnot you for the
relief demanded I~ tho Motion.
Dated: September 7, 11189

t.anvs--.

Clerk of Cou"o of
Meiga County Common
'
PI- Court
19) 13. 20. 27;
1101 4 . 11 . 1B. Btc

FaliyotJ~et
lollth awant f(t

SINCE

SEPT.13,1989
Daddy. you have
been gone llx ye••·
It . . .malike
yesterday .
•
.We atill mi11 you 10.
Wlf• Gertrude;
Dliughtera Cerolyn, )
Jean &amp; Eleanor

Southern Ohio
has been home to
·Richard and Mildred
McFerren since 1934.
After Richard retired
and they sold their
hol!'le;, Bristol Village
b&amp;aine.their address
in Nqvember of
198e. "We always admired the beauty ohhe Village,
Mildre4 said. "Everything was always neat, attractive and
~11 keru. The Pe9ple always ..yaved as we drove through."

1868

2 ·11x 1~1
4. 5 X

18 ·GIANT WALLETS
,,.

FREF

I

~··

•

•••
"Today's Memories ·...

GWCOMETER®ll Blood Glucose Meter
.,
with Memory
Regular Price
Special Price
Mfr. Rebate

$182.76
$135.00
$100.00

FINAL COST

$35.00

&lt;&gt;tJerfloudSc.-prrmhe r 1 -Decemlkr ~ l . 19H9. _
GLl'COMETER l!'i a rt:lli!itt'rtd lr.tdcmark of Miles Inc.

Prescription Shop
992-6669
·271 North Second
Middleport,

oH.

SATUIDAY r SEPT.

TIME:
12

NOON

til 5 P..M.

FRUTH

~

liME:

9A.M.tH11A.M.

2

Not-for-profit, non-dmominllklrlll.

.

"'._.-!I 1
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I

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J•,
'

.. c..,.,,., OH. Off 143

'

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e

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'{\

OHIO VALLEY

~~

•

•

'

EVERY ·SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.
· ..
9-6- 89-tfn

SATURDAY, ·.
SEPTEMBER 16, 1989
10:00 AM. •
HOUSE AND LOT

•

0

"

'

.i'/

•. ,.

'

1

' ..

,

•

-fl':
' ;.-

,

~KES

AND
MO!)ELS

MARTIN'S

and MORE
222 Eastllaln
POMEROY, OH.
·992-6872

. 6-s-·

VAUGHN'S •
AUTO - DIESEL

SERVICE

SYIACUSI, OliO
MHt Foreign '"d
'D omlltlc Vthid•

CAlL 992-6756
"D.OC~'

Certifi~

OFFERED

ll5 EBERNEZER ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

New Porch. New Kitchen Floor, and
; New Cement works on outside.

• R'&amp;a·av to'move in. · · ·

·

" For more information contact Scott
Shank 992-3293.
The Farmers Bank and Savings
' Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, reseryea
the right to bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above collateral prior
to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank
and Savings company reserves the
right to reject any or all bids submitted.
. .
Further; ·ihe above collateral will
be sold in the condition it is in with
no expressed
implied warranties
given.

AT

Fabric Shop
992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO

"W•••'
•• gown .
Speelallet•"

COILUIMBUO GAS OF OHIO, INC.
PUCO Case No. B9'-820-GA· AIR
NOTICE
Notice io hereby giv., thet Columbio Goo of Ohio. Inc. (Columbia), 200 Civic Center
Orive, P. 0. Bo• 117, Columbuo. Ohio 43215. hll filed., Appli..tlon "'!ith the Public
Uti!~ leo Commlooion of Ohio ICommioalcln or PUCO)II roqu11t1 that the C,ommloslon II·
tabllo h a uniform rate to ba ch•ged end collactod for ott gu oorvlce within the Southell•
w~&gt;Po tiMU'I!I!i!!!l rotp~o ..._.J!I!tabtiohed.~ oortlin .
torn Roglon.
municipal ordln.,ce contract• or bV tpiiClal r•ti'Cont111ct1. Th8 SciUthiiiiim"'liltglon wUI
bo composed of tho counttoo of Athens, GeHle, Hocking, Jockson, l.awr.,oo, Molga,
Morgen. Perry, Ro.,., Scioto, Vinton end ~uhlngton. Ohio. Tho existing rot• In t"'!"t
arNii are unjult, unfair and are inauftident to yield r...onable compenutton for HrviCe
renct.ed by Columbia. The rat• preeently being collected from the approJdmately
118,000 customers that wll be offoctod by thlo Applicotion oro thooo -crlbod in &amp;0 dlf· ·
· flftnl PUCO R•te Schodulao, purouant to voriouo orders- by the Commlosion,
voriouo inunlclpol ordin.,ce controcts thlt have oxplrod by November 17. 1889, but thet
are currently being billed the SoutheMtern Region nite' punuant to the Joint Stlpulltion
and R-mmondotion flliod In Cooo No. 87-181-GA-CSS . Columblefurthorrequaotothat
the Commlaolon fix and d81ormlno uniform, Juotond rouonoblo rotoo to.ba chorged end
collected by Columbia for the service ,.,dorod to the gonorol oorvice custDifters In the
Southeootern R~lon end oubotlluto ouch ratao fur thooa.rotoo currently b.olngchorged .
Tho municlpol~loo effected by thlo Appllcotlon oro Adelphi, Albany, Amoovltlo.
Athono. Beverly. Buchtel, Chauncov. Chaoopeallo, Chaohlro, Cheolorhlll, Chillicothe,
Cool Grove, Coalton, CoolvHie. Cor~ln~t- Galllpollo, Glouoter. Ho.mc;ton. Honglng Roclo,
Hemlock Ironton, Jocksonvillo, JunctiOn City, K1ngaton, LaurelvHie, Log.,, Lowell.
Lower silom• .Mc.llrthur. McConnalovHio. Middleport. Murray City, NoloonvRio. N~
Booton, Naw StreitovKie, Oak Hill. Pomeroy, Port.,.outh, Proctorvnte, Rendvilll. Rto
Grondo, Roseville, Shawnao, Somlfoot, Soot~ Point. South Webster, Stockpon, Thornville, Tr1mblo ond Wellston . ·
.
· .
·
.
The Applie~tion will alao affect the rat• of Columbi1'1 cuatomera in the unincor~
porated area of the counta of Athena, Gallia, Hocking, Jackaon, Larence. Meiga,
Morgen, Peny, Roos. Scioto, Vinton end Wuhln.g ton, Ohio. llec~oo tho ~.ropooad
Southe•terri Region Tlta·w• be uniform. it 81Mntlally rep,.enta an average rata for
the region. Thua. soma of the exilting rat• within the new region may be lncr... ed, while
other e•ilting ratflll Within the region may be deer-eel.
. . .
Columbia presently h11 4 uiltlng municip .. ordinance contracts w1thm the pro·
polld Southea~tern Region that are eacludlld from thia filing: Thea a contr.ct1 are with
tho mupicipol~ioo of Crooklvlle, Jocklon, Molto .,d Nawl.aXIngton. Boc.... the Com·
mia1ion do• not exarciae jurilclction over IUCh rat•. the costs of providing 'S8f'Vice to
theta municipalitiel will not be Included in the AppliCIItion to ea~ablilh the uniform .ratea
for the Southea~tern Region. How.ver. •t the expiration of any auch ordinM1ce. •f the
municipality prefers to ba outiooquontly Included In IIIII Southeatorn Region for rotomok·
ing purpotes. it may do so by not renewing h1 ordipancecontra~withColumbla . lfanaw
cont111ct ia not nta~iahed. the municipality will ther..fter be Included in the Sou,heutern ·Region for r•ttimaking purpaa81.
·
. · .
PRESENT RATE . ·Tho prooont ratu vary by rota ochodulo; depending on.locat1on within
tho oroo affected by tho Application.
.
PROPOSED RATES . In thio cuo Columbia io propooing a rate doolgn unclorwhlch Col·
umbia will bill ita customer~ 1 "Cuatomer ~harge" of fe, 14 per meter per month during
the monthl of November through Marcl;l. and t9 .48 per meter per month during the
months of AprH through October~ eeg~rdl•• of g-. conaumad. Th• rllt81 for all ga co':'·
sumod In - h billing month are 65.229~ per 100 cubic foot for the first 500,000 cub!•
feet clolivorod end 62.296¢ por 100 cubic teet for ell dallverloo oxcoedl.ng 600,000 cub1c
feet. The.a rat• will gener8te an lncr••• of ••· 130. 4&amp;2 1n opwat1ng revenue~. However. to the a~ttent that operating condhlons or ex pens• chenge during the pending of
tho cao, Columbia moy ravlooito propooad rotoo occordlngly.
COST OF PURCHASED GAS ESCALATION · Both the prooont and the propoood rotoo
are aubject to decre11e or tncrHie in accordance with the "Gal Colt Recovery" provision• of Columbia's Ruteo and Rogulotiono on file with tho Commlsoion. oS REQUIRED
BY Commlosion Ordero doted Octoblr 11 , 1978 end Octobar 18, 1979. in Cue No. 78·
616-GA-ORD .
·
.
"0 1 E 1
.. 1
OHIO EXCISE TAX. The propoood rat" oro also subject to on
h o ""sate• c auoa,
purouanl to which otl billo rtlldorod oheii be odjuoted tQ ln.cluclo tho offocto of Ohio Excloo
Tox on gran receiptslmpoood by Ohio R~. Code Bection.6727. 38, ••ceptl~g thOIOIK:·
counts e•empted from auch tax.
· '
·
BILLING ADJUSTMENTS . All bills Nndorod shell be adJuotod to in~ludo the lntlf.i",'•
Emlfgonc:y ond Tomporory PIP Plan Toriff Schodulo Rider 101 fonh on the Columbia 1
Rutoo end ·Rogulationo on file with tho Commlaolon.
.
RECONNECTION CHARGE · If oorvico under thlo rote ochedutolo discontinued ot the
requ•t of any culiOmer, Columbia shall not be under obligation tomumeeervicetothM
cuatorrfer on the ume prem•• untl that cuatomer h• mllde p.yrn11nt of In amount
equol to tho "CustDiftlf Chorgo" for tiK:h month of tholntarvonlng period, but not to ••·
coed ooven 171 monthl.
·
TO
ANY PERBON, FIRM, CORPORATION. OR ASSOCIATION MAY FILE PURSUANT
SECTION 4809.19 OF THE REVISED CODE, AN OBJECTION TO SUCH PROPOSED
INCREASED RATES BY ALLEGING THAT SUCH PROPOSALS ARE UNJUST AND
.
DISCRIMINATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
lllcommondotiono wlllch dlfflf from the Appllcotion moy be modo by the Steff of the
Commlosion by Columbio, or by Intervening portloo end moy ba ocloptodbytheComml•·
elan . If a proPosal to nt•blilh 1 uniform rate II adooted in Pllrn ,.G·•: ~R :;:;~:~~
AIR 89-117-GA·AIR 89-61a.GA· AIR. 89·819-0A-AIR, 89· 6 20 · ,...
•
.
CMR end 89-944-GA·CMR, thli rot• to customers within ony o~o or - • 1 of Col·
umblo's oorvice roglono moy •••oed the propolod roteo In Columbio soppllcotionoln·tho
- •· Further informllion roglftlng the Application moy be obtelnod from Cotumblo
Goo of Ohio, Inc .. 200Civlc Center Drive. P. 0. Box 117. Columbuo, Ohio 43211-0117,
11114)4&amp;0-4603, or from the Pul&gt;llc UtNitloo Cornmlooion of Ohio. 180EeotBro.c!Btroot,
Columbus. Ohio 432111.
PERCENTAGE CHANGES FROM P'RESENT RATE · Booou• thlo APPII ...ion
to ooteblloh o unifprm rote tor gil oorvice which lo cumntly -ldod un., 10 dltt.-:!
rate ochoctulll, the ohlngeo from _ . , t rstoo wll. V8rY tlltlerldlng on lho rote ollhedu~
unct.whlchlocuotomoirlocurrorttly-lngg•-· TlleritachMfiOI~apandby
this filing range frofll 2.8" to 1 2:K for - p t l o n of t7 Net por montdu.._!lrlnhel the
wlntlf monthlond t4.9" to 211.3% for aono...,plion otl-por onontlo ""'•• .....,.
m• monthe. Thooo por-og• choniOI .,. dtlllilod below.

-.tar_,...

pro....-

•-tlllllll , _ _ , __ - - ( - - 1 · IILL llr.l _,
I
IILL niL ,.,
1. • ·
AT IIUI JI.T _, IIIC Ill). lt'l IU
Ill: IIIC .

-

_

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&amp;T-

.AUIL-- - ...WI. ...WI. .IIIK.l&lt;ILl .IGL .IGL ~~
I
I
II
I
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I•
ts .61 100. 00 4 .43 4.6 111.76 l7.IAI
97 . 11 lOO. Dro l.H z.t 32.21 17.IAI
97.1a 100.04 · z. H · z. t sa.» 37.IAI

6. 34 111.6
4.11 J4. t
4 ..a1 14.t

01

DEAD
AUVE
•Waahera •Dryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrig, rators
· " Must le Rapair ..le"

lhw"-lullt·
"F- Eatlmlt81"

DUMP TRUCK
Sand - Stone - Dirt

KEN'S APPUANCE

Pll. 949·2101
or ln. 949-21'60

(614) 667-3271

192-5335-"915-3561

SERVICE

Grant A.

We Service All

NO SUNDAY

Wt can r~r and ,..
core radiators ond
heater cor-. We can
also acid boil 111111 rod
out radiotors. We also
repair Gos Ta'*•·

SMALL
ENGINE IEPAIR

PillS &amp; SERVICE

•Lawn Mowers
•Riders
•Chain Saws

CISTERNS

Call Anytime
992-2371

Middleport, Ohio.

.

If. 124, P-oy Ohio

1-13-tft

5/

BiNGO ,

JONES nRE

POIUIOY .UGlES

CWI

CENTER
•New &amp; 'Uaed Tir•
oCuotom Pipo Bondini
•Oil Chongoo
•G-oJobo
eGener.. Che18il
Maint ..ance
•Computerlred Balancer

224 E . MAIN ST.
992-99711

THUIS. LL 6:45 P• •
SUit. LL 1:45 P.ll
DOOII'IIZE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

2 M.D. FREE with
1purth• of min.

I

,IlL lim~ 1. eoupon per.
·1 - per bi~t~~ IISSIOO.

Alto Tr••••l11l01
'

•so.oo

992·5682
.or 992-7121
PH.

N001·32 I

: ,

Qls-i 1

.. Wo Par
P.or Gilmo
Om I 10 Poopts '65.00
Per Gamt

.

GALLONS

POOLS, WELLS

992-2196

Roger Hyse.ll
Garage

4-25·

·1,000

PAT HILL FORD

•WeedeBters ·
·3 miles off of Rt. 7
at Meigs Memory
Gardena

~

WATER
SERVICE

SE~ICE

EAGLE RIDGE

1-1·1 mo.

Public Notice

WANTED

NEWlAND
rNTERPRISES

·BISSELL
SIDING CO'.

99

PH.

D()ZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SU:ittitG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

.

PARTS ANO S ERVICE
For Most 2 and 4 -cycte
en gin•
Stock Pon o to r
Homelite, Weedeater.
Tecumseh, Briggs •
Str•tton.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

8-17· 1 mo.

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

REPAIR

lamtotf at v•y l· I r
In llioWioport, OIJ•

· PH. 949·2801
or aes. 949-2860

EQUIPMENT

All

SMAll I!NGINE

" At Reosonc"e Pricts"

.M ORRIS

Public Notice

S'IIIACUSE- Qual~y show in this 3 bedroom ranch home. I
bath, beautitul family room. nice kdchen dh all appliances
includin&amp;dishwiSher, washer &amp; dryer. large yard w1th cham
link fan~ New wood storage buildin' $45,000.00.

t

1

\

V

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiQn

POMEROY PIKE - Forty·one acres plus a 1980 liberty Mo·
bile Home. Beautitul view, 2 car garage, porch.on 3 sides, 3
storage buHdinp, a~d a barn. 2 g9od sized bedrooms, bay
window, equ,ipped k~chen, real p11vacy. $35,000.00.

. .

,,-,;,,

1 ' 1 ' ' , . .l'
..,
"·
~\\,.. \V ' '•
,,

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•A_..

~.·, • ..,
1
• ~.

Located Behind
Tractor Deaterohip

691-61

'

An offilille cl Nllionol Chon:lt ~cts.

.,.
J/I! I \~ ' ''o

APPAlACHIAN
WOOD STOVES

Mon. -Tues. 8 -6; Thurs.-Fri . 8-6
Wed. &amp; Sat. 9 •6
..
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS!

TUPPERS PLAINS - Morlon ·Addit ion - 3'to 4 bedroom
ranch in excellent condition on a large I acre lot. Alarge tam·
ily room makes living here joy. Electric B.B. heat plus wOod:
burner. large storage shed. Call tor Appointment.
$41.000.00.

(614) 947-1118 En 103
CaD 1bU Free: 1-4100-113-3811 Ext. 103

DEUYEIED:
MONDAY I OCTOIEI

*****
SUMMER HOURS

. PORTIAID - SHARON ROAD - MINI FARM IN THE
COUITIY- In Southern District. 14+ Acres, I'h story house'
wnh 4)ledlooms. 2 kitchens. 2 baths, 21ivin grooms, carpet.
natural gas heat, garden and well water. $39,500.00.

ll1 Wendy Lane/Waverly, Ohio 45690

•••

BC»DY SHOP
550 Pogo St.

10°/o OFF

CREW RD. - POMEROY - New ranch home on 2+ acres
dh 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, with carpet. electric B.B.heat. Up·
stairs untinished. $51,500.00.

7161erth '2nd

"NEW" IECUNEIS

SWEEPER REPAIR

DAVE'S

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

DJNEm sm

me s ... vic•
AII 'M.tor 6 Minar
Aep8irt
NIASE Certified M•ch.,lc

LANGSVILLE - Ranch Home wrth kitchen, dtning room,
tamily room, 3 bedrooms. 21.1 baths, with carpet N0G.F .A.
heat.. Pantry and satelln e dish, and large metal buoldtn&amp;
$79,900.00.
.
.
' .
MIDDLEPORT- 2 slory brick home on 2 lots. wrth 4 to 5
bedroms, 21'1 baths, woOd iloors, N.G.FA turnace. Garage,
carport and !5'x25' storage shed. $49,900.00.

PHARMACY
AYHH

GEARY'S .

CAKE and CANDY SUPPUES

POMEROY - This 2 story trame home has 2 bedrooms. 2
baths, completely remodeled. and washer and dryer, couch
&amp; chair, kit chen table &amp; chairs go dh property. PRICER~­
OUCEO, $28,000.00.

.,

liVING lOOM SUITES
IEDIOOM SUITES

Mioldloporl, Oh.
OPEN
7 :30 A.M.-6:00P.M .
8 · 23·'89 1 mo.

POMEROYrO.
992·2259

~.

ln...Middleport .

Business
Services

3

*****
Speelel thl1 WeeU Sept. 14·15-16

E. Ma1n

. , ltstol Village offers affordable, individual· homes
available with a choice of membership plans. For more
iqformation and an appoit;ltment to see our rnodel
homes, call or write today.
. .
.
.

16

Fruit • Apple Rings • Prunes ··
. · .Apricots • Figs • Pineapple ·'
Papaya • Sweetened Ba.nana Chips
Unsweetened Bananas Chips
Golden. Raisins • Chopped Dates
Thompson Raisins

BISSELL
BUILDERS

USED FURNITURE

FURNITURE

608 .

Tomorrow's Treaures"

•••

F~estive

DRIED FRUITS

'I'

"·We found
a great place
tQ retire •••
•"rad:i_cally ·
rIn
OUr own
back yard!,

32. WALLETS

1'1

Mlscellanaous

R•l Estate Gene111l

;;The Mderrens liked how the homes in the Village were
mote modern and manageable; requiring less maime.. nance. They were also pleased to discover the many
·
activities Bristol Village
offers and how easy it is
to make friends. "There's
something to do every
night and every day, and
everything is done in a
.
professional manner,"
Mildred said . Bristol
Village residents conduct
many of the activities.
"They are very responsi ble, forward-looking
and friendly people,"
licbanl Mcfe:rn:a
Bristol Vlllqo Rcoldont
added Richard.

.4.• 11101

54

f .' •' •

.

Qualifications . include a Registered Nurse
with a current Ohio nursing lican·le. Prior
Quality Assurance and Utilization Management experience pritferred .
Please call or send a resume to :
Margaret Holm, Auistant Administrator
Veterans Memorial Hospi1al
115 E . Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 46769
(61 ~I 992.·21 04

E.O.E .

or

.

\ .

Must be able to work well with the public. Licensed Social Worker preferred. Salary based
upon education and experience.
Send resume to
Administrator
Americare-Pomeroy
36759 ·Rock Sprincs Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

8

• IN. MEMORY OF
STANLEY
LAWRENCE BASS
BIRTHDAY

111 Second St., Pomeroy

MEIGS COUNTY

PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR
Veterans Memorial Hospita l, a JCAHO-ac credited , not- for -profit hospital, i1 looking
for a Patient Review Coordinator. The Patient Review Coordinator will be respon1ible
for the naessment, planning, Implementa tion, end evaluation of t he hospitel'1 Quality Auurance and Utilization Management
Plana .

AUCTION

'

AGENT$ SERVING

FULL TIME ADMISSIONS
COORDINATOR

Sentinel Page 11

The

Business Services

Help Wanted

P-eroy,
Ohio

'.

Y.O UR INDEPENDENT

11

I

._.L

MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Help Wanted

Merchandise

Public Notice

DOWNING CHILDS

COMING •••TWO
BIG DAYS!!!

0

Pl. 446-16tt
HOIIS: I AJL..6 P.a

Approvlld;

.

ELIC. IANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 Jrd lw... 8 .. Ill»

1917. 8. 11 . 12. 13, 1•. 15, 7tc

11

'

Pomeroy- Middeport, Ohio

992-3897

·

St. Rt. 124
Middleport. Oh.
INe~ t to Hill Top Grocery}

. ,.... ,.2·J.tln._,

S·ll·tfn

A

LINDA'S
PAINTING

. UlTERIOR-EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

painting. Let me do
it fer you.
VIIY IEASONABLI
·. HAVE "EfiU.. ~IS

•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

MOBILE
HOME PARI
•Mobile Ham• -··
.. _ Pa~
.
· •Mobile ltorne
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

lt. :JJ Jlorth of
Pomeroy, Ohio
.

614-915-4180

eUGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD .
BILL SLACK

992-226t

.

EYEN.GS

1·13·'U-tfn

• t e / 88/ tfn

B/4/ 89-tfn

SUN'S UP
TANNING
2 1/t Milas

Out New

u- ad.

it lutland, Oh.

SUSAN COLEMAN
742-2771
Call for Fall Speelalt .
Ist visit FREE

HAULING

. 1600

POMEROY, OHIO
We Buy All Non Fer-

rous Metals, Plastic~(

Stainleu StHI
(PAYING TODAY
AUG. 30, 1989 J
CLEAN; DR'
ALUMINUM CANS

DIRT HAULED

8-23·89· 1 fTIO. pd.

B&amp;W
GARAGE
AUTO

PWMIING &amp; HEAliNG
· New IAiatlioll:
161 North Soctlllf

&amp; TRUCK

Milldiot~orf,

REPAIR
CUTTING 8c
WELDING

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE

PlY Your Phone
. and.Wt• Billa Here
ltBINESS I'IIONE
16 1'41 992-6550

St. lt. 338
Letart
Ohio

IISDEIICE

16141

MEEl THE

Now

titru Sept. 9,

Tll~co.

TERMITE

CONTROL
SINQ 1976 ,
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member Notional Pest'

I

WALK-IN WELCOME
KAY'S

BEAUTY

.

&amp; PEST

10% OFF All PERMs

169 N. 2nd

Ohia .45760

Wo c.r.y Flohlnct luflllll•·

247-3522

PERM SALE

Th~-~t~:.~ mo.

985-4422

992-527

#2 COPPER . ........ 7S• lb.

On

•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
.AT ALL

#I COPPER .........90' lb.

At Jet. S.R. 7 &amp; 143

•LIMESTONE

SPREAD

STAFF

Houl\s
7 Days A Week
9 a.m .- 7 p .m .

•GRAVEL

GALLON '

UMESTONE

41Cperlb.
lED I lASS .......... SO• lb.
YnLOW IRASS _,40' lb.
IADIATOIS . ........ 35' lb.

CHEml, OHIO

WATER SERVICE

..._Possib!v. more. .
· 1·14·'19·1 mo.

Til COUNTY
RECYCLING

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

ALLEN'S

SHOP

Control Assn.

Middloport

FrH
1-800-535-2199

Announcements
3

Announcements

Reduct 111Wi end taat Wllh Qo:.
8111 cepaulea and E-V1p
"W111r Pilla.. 11 Fruth PhlriMCJ:
ReduCe your Weight, Teke "N41W
Shope Ditt Pion" ond EVAP
Water Pills. AvaUablt at Fruth

Pharmacy.

4

Giveaway

e montha melt puppy, hH
ahote ne.d1 aooc1 hom~~ OWIWf
ollerglc lo onTmol lur, 30W7fo
:1215:
:
Adorable black &amp; whMt pu~
Molhor
Englloh
Sprlngo~
8r&gt;lnlo11 2 moloo, 4 ........._

Woonoa, -nnod.I1.._7AL
Booglo pupo 8 wHkl old 304171-7111 or 175-t01 e.
.
Block ond Ton lemole

a.-..,.

to good home In country, 30oh
182'21111 aftor12:10.
,

llock khton loolllng tar •
nice ho/TII. I14-441-4142.
•
-

I

kill-,

~ holr, II

colori,30W7WIU.

•

�12-lhe

13, 1989

Pc;~maov.:....Mimhpoet. Oljo

Sentinel

LAFF - A~ DAY

35

45

ACrNQe

71 Autos lor Sale . • :

Furnished

-------h.
Rooms

'
llllllnl •

1120/mo. Ollila
Hoeii..IU11tllll

.11.1111 -

wlh

Col-.........
-1.-WV.

ft
~ - At-All*

""!*J*Jt.
-JD.

.=. .

I

.... .

M

~

:

72 TruCks lor Sail

.~
i
I•

~ ...... 1400 ""'"·

- IIIII
Plno.Ami&gt;IO
Colll14
•••
:14.. ~

Eddy

ChoJi
ol.·-...-.••rlntl
Nd Collar, IIW7H121.
Found: ,. :

aura~

101-111'..-ocJ

IUJetl Oulde
Ext.8-10181.

• • • tal

.

Cot•»lllabii.HomeP,rll.

Pound ...

'

(

IIWU.74l'l.

low to form four simple word•.

I '0 F T I N y
· I I I I'

t:OO IJJ Hordclttnll I McConnlck
(2) (I) •

•

(II

tJil

91 Newt
. CJJ Home llun Derby

·=

·12 G R 0 U H

shoplifts; Stephanl8 mean
hllr soap opere Idol. C

NO, lf'OU "!EVER MENTIONED
A WOIW ASOIJT PORTA61N6 ..

Cll Sq...,_ One TV (0:30)

• liD ThM'I t;o.mpeny

Q

•.
1

. I 1· I I t
1

(D Dea,.ail Junior~
Voutalln~s out ,~

.

won

~y

M

WED .. SEPT. 13

....

r::;~:~' S(C~4llA-J&amp;t.trs·
lrltrM
CLAY I. I'OI1AN .
~earrango lortoro of tho
0 fovr
xramblod words bo-

EVENING

-Loll, -11,
n. - '""'..- P-ror.
Colt

Rentals

. The Daily Sentinei- Paga 13

Television
Viewing.

Pordi-M•c 1 dae. ·

~.

.. 9pla for Rent

vio!!&gt;1Y ..

Af2E~T.

fromlttOO.

Alto ... . , - All--upo.

Found In

a.or.¥-S

Pomeroy- Middleport. ri~io

Wed(luday, Sept.,IB 13, 1989

GOVERNMENT SEIZED VehlciM :
hom $100. F-. 11-o.
eo...aoo. Chtvyo. lurpl&amp;a. - ·
Buyn•Oulclo (II a-7-toOO . •
Ext. 8-1011.1.
•.
OOVIRNIIENT SEIZED Yehlcloo .

·

T WP E S
5

~ ~~er knew our 8181e

I~ I I 1 I ;

@f-OfUie
0 C.floOn EltpfHI
Ia Alllllicltn Mltpalne

=:=rIta"::

when quizz':'
motto, she shrugged, "-'-

r~-~~-u-,--T.-~M--EI_S_I---,1 ~"Comploro

1

8:05 iiJ leVIfly HIIIIIINol
t:30.• (2) ill) Nlic Ntgd, Newa

rho chuckle quotod

bv filling in the missing words
L......JL-...L......I•..._.J.L-..1.--1~ you develop
lrom slep No. 3 below.

ili ·Sportal.ook (0:30)

Cil 811l ABC Ntwl ,..,
(IJ

GaUipolls .
&amp; VIcinity

®Jelfiii'IOfll

e

(JJ~(0:301

(I) 811) CuiNntAH81r
(IJ (!)II-/~

........... ...._ clolhel. manr
M - II. Ill. • · 2 mltoo hom
town on lolL llonopuoldo Dr.
Sept14-ll. M
Yanl- FrL. S.L . , boalclo
Foodland • IlL :15.
Y1rtl S.le: ThUN, 14th, Prt. 11th.
Fifth 1-. put r.- Rd. on

® Andy Grttfi1lt
0 Mleml VIce Theresa

Stereo.
YlclooC;ountiv .
7:05()) Jlflei'IOIII
7:30 li 12J Family Feud
(JJ lcholaotic 8poltl
Amertca
()) !n-lnment tonight

'

....... .

HOfl/46

l. WAS

811l UIA Today

I

T0

IIIAI-~nlyl Q

'

II) CI'Oiofn
@llajorl.e.............

FINI&gt; AN

Flral Tlma Vonl Solo, 8opl. te •
11. :1114 Foutth It, .._,, Five
lomlltoo, llallf tlllngo, tilonkllo, IMd ond aprlngo,
manrllouatholdlarno.

Top Cerci .
7:35 &lt;II IInford .. Son
1:00 &lt;II MOYIE: Home In lnclllt1111

fSeALAfO~.

e (2)

p"'l'".:/
..... 114-112-W30 01 It

91 UniCIIved
Mylterlel Search lor a lOst
Indian gold mine In New
Mexico. (RI Q
Cil elll Qniwtng P81ne

Real EstJte

(R)Q
(D (f) Survhll llpeclltl See

..-."
,.

Shot Store and Vldao 11-

.....,._. lar ..... In

Jason's mom decides to
remarry aboard a cruise ship.

2571.

how 14 orphaned goslings
break lrom their human

31 Homnlor Sill

adop~ve parents. Q
Ill 811110 MiniMs

HOlM• AM. Polnl Pte•cnL
, . b•**'-l lwlctl.
..,...
.,.....,. •
......., Hnhl
air, 2 Onipla- "'"' . ..
·noon
10 ~:oo PM or ......

Gigantic JON oala. an. oft tnd
of .umiMf. 11.... · 15-112

modlum, _ . J.ll, boya 7·
14.
End loblea, ounalnt,
ho...hold • ....., ale. Albough

.., III'Polnl-.t, -128

Highlighls of over 1,700
broadcasts of 60 Minutes wilt
be leatured. .

•c
M

• liD MOYIE: Tammy (PGI
(2:00)

-

II) PriltiiHIWI '

aftor 1:30 Pll.
3 bedroom brick howo with
toroa lolbllld Way Drlvo. Hovon. ood Cond. 304-JD.

Pralna.

Everything exctl.. nl cOndl:lon.

Sepi.14UI. 1-8. Telbalto.

IJ)Mu-,SheWIOie
Murder In The.Al\amoon .
~ -'Otlurolt--8:os I]) MoVIE: Ceveman (1 :55)
1:30 (!) Great Amerli:ln . .
Qull (0:30)
.
(I) • (JJ Growing Palnl

.

~1.

3 ·br.l 1 112 botha, brick I ...._

roncn. with lllllo o - 112 aero
tot. 1 mltoo liom town, on Rodnay Plka.114-245-1233.

=-.. . .

and ntwtr uud '· cera. Smith
81.1k:k-Pontlac, 1911 blttm

Ave., Galllpolla. Call 114-4*
2282.

llaaon, gao ,_
n - wdllng dlata,_to _ . ,
••~.ooo. :10Ua2-2871 1or .,..
polntrnonl.
·
I room. •nd bath. large ·l at, 304175-311114.
Br ownar, 2 112 blldroomo, 1 112
bl,the on 1/Z acr. lot. z outbulldlngo, control air and hut;
nawly aarpotod. Ownar will halp
llnanoa. 114-742-2718 Dorio
Hudoon.

1 100111 houit,

114-742-

Wal'llad: s-neto taar down
old chwoh buildinG In exchange
Uaod furnlluro bv tho ploco or lor matlriall. Coif Dan Wll at
entl,. household al.o Mlllng. 814-118$.4344 after I:OOp.m.
114-742-2455.
Work at home. Elm up 10
$100/day. Pocpto coli rout 714240.f41B Exo L·1.

Help Wanted

'

12 · Situation
Wanted

. opl,

11-\E: ' .
FAINT

;!o.ND

Llka now 3BR homo. At. 110
naar NOHS. WIQ bo put In Rogoncr, Inc. 28R, oti(. , _
Roaltar honda aoon. .,..,.. pluoh 00'1101, , _ palnl,
am.
utllhloo. parftallr pa1r1.· $171/mo.
Coii30U7WIOI.
NICII 3 BR, Uvlng room, dining
100111, utiiRr room, , _ heall!lll
BmaH lum. - · · oultablo
lor 1
&amp; cooHng unM....uon Pilei 012.11--.oDI.
.
ar&amp; ,..u Clnerne. Reuonablll
priCI.et4-14W111.
Nice 3br, home on oomw lot. In
Konaugo, Prlcod lo oat~ 114Taro Townhouaa Aplt, 2 br., 1•
446-2251.
·
bat ....l CA. clahwoohar, dtoSyracuH. Brick home wllh at· 112
poiat; pnVOIO -totod patio,
tached a•r•ge, 1 ,oome. poet, ptroyar-d. Wolar, -il
ttraptaco rn living room, ball!, &amp; lrolh fnctudod. ltartlnt
biHmtnl, niiW hal pump. SZHimo. Coiiii4-:M7·l'IIO. •
cloH lo achool. Nice toootlon
1Win RW..T-r-+loullnt lor
with lorgo lot. II 4-M2-3104.
lha lldariJ, .Hondlo.-cl lnd
32 Mobile Homes
Dlublod.
Lricatod . - ·
-own Polnl "'"\::~
for S8Je

$300 a day. Proc100 Phona Of. Hava 1 room 1ar otdlrly ladr In
den. People . Call You! 114-251- my home. .Stat• llcenlld. 1700
1450 Ext. L·21 .
per month. Home cooking,
loving cora. II 4-742·2212.
2 nurua 111a.. lhol!l clerk.J. , Inqui,. It Oddll and Ends ::thop, Have on1 ·room tor 1n ::.:~
tady tn my homo. Slota lc
llldd._n.
$7001mo. Homo cooking, laving
AVON I All Arou I Shlrlay
Spaaro, 301.f75-1429.
ooro.ll4-742•2212.
Wa caro 1ar aldorly and hanAVON • All artao, Coli Marttrn dlcapood
In our homo. 2B yeoro
Woovtr 301-882o2145. ·
uparlonco. LPN on col. .._
l•bysmer nHdld In my home. lnoomo homo. Coiiii4-112-Nn
Mult be mature and ~,.. aftar 7:00p.m. lor 01011lnlor- ~~~~~~~~~!!!:,
I,
dlbll. Reter.nce nlltdld. lt4- rNtlon.
112.f531.
15 Schools&amp;
Bo rour -n bout Noad part•
lnstNCIIon
lim• Income? I hi"' 1n out•
atandlng opportunltr Whb Nil·
WOrk 2CJOO••• MI •uthorlz•d lnd•
pandanl marllotor of U.S. Sprint
Long dlotanoo aarvlooa. l.fOO.

.,.,.... 304-B'IMI71.
- . . . Opportuni!J, .

AROMA.CFeGefFCO

YWNG-.

0 MOVIE: l'lre • llaln (2:001
Stereo.
Nlllhvllle Now

e
WELL-- SINCE
YO'RE FIXIN' TO
EAT SUPPER OVER
AT YORE MAW'S

. .•

SUNDAY---

I THOUGHT
I'D GIT YORE

STUMMICK
TUNED UP

1:30 • (2) ill) Quantum Leap 1;1
(I)
(J) Ccoecll Hayden Ilea
about hla marllaiSIIIUI to a
wealthy widow. (R) (0:301 Q
10:00 (J) 700 Club Wllh Pit

e

Aabemon ·

(JJ LadiH Pro lowllltg Tour
(J) Mejor
a,ubatl
(I)
(J) The Koppel Report

U - Rlwf Rd. 3 apL Upotalr,
~t"!- rol., .............
.......,.. llooooll roq'd. '

Ted Koppel moderates thll
program which looks al tile

.....
ibr. - · .......
pick-up.
114-liWMO.

profound effect that modem
lechnologlcal advances In
television have had on our
Hvas, our__poiRica and our
history, g
• ® Crlinewa~ Tonight
II) Evening Newt ..,_
10:30. liD MajOr l.ellgiM
•••• b..

18 Wanted to Do
Babyoltttng In mr homo, &amp;~
lhlft. 7 mltoo Iouth ol
llpotla,l14-211-1111.

®Nft8

ASTRO-OR.APH
•

••,,

.

a5 Genarsl Hauling

•

•w
III Cll 8&lt;11 a .
eo Gil-.
a YlclaoCounlrJ
•&lt;i....!}onlgld lllow
(J)
(0:30)
~ a-lee'i Arlfrorum
IL"'~~tl;l

=·-·

.

&gt;

J • J Watar ......_ 8wlrllml1111

58

FNitl&amp;
Vegltlblel

l:t,N.~- ..... call ~~

. •ltJeonlgld
PatlltJIItlllaw

llloiiWlllt ............. ....

,,ooa

·~ . . ... emu , . . .
or
lm~....,,c.o._

w...oort'a

AO,GOO/Yr. -

potonloL ,
Dololl (11 ~-lbl. y. Will do .... all• • In"" .......
Ill Vlnlan .... . , ... 1
10111.
IIIUMblel'llltl.l14.11tll
...... 'r ...
·:.;,·_=&lt;~

HeM ........ Ill

-

·P.L Cltlna Doll
I CniOk. CMia
'

•.

ace of hearts, aud thea playa the
tn1mJt1 u before, tbls time tbrowiDC
any the el&amp;bt aud Jack of bearta to
1111- West out ol one of the red
klap. ADd finally the lltreallb of declarer's heart suit provldlla solution

ACROSS
47 Allot
1 Common
DOWN
streel
1 Tourist's
name
need
5 Grunl
2 Irish
10 Firenze's
' indeed"
river
3 Fearless
11 Tremble
4 Remark
12 Golf term
upon
13 Beach house 5 Assile
14 Disgusl
rock
18 Nora
8 Pen
Charles
poinl
. portrayer
7 Stadium
17 "Youshape
My Lucky
8 Nevada
Star"
city
19 Freshly
9 Salver
21 Presenl
11 Perfume
oneself
15 Trim
23 Long-eared 17 Span
mammal
18 TNst
27 Critic,

i!i:;;m:.;t~~~-~~••,;lltiiiio!!l-....
iit c

..::*':- ~ "".: ..
. . . . -... Col

..........-. ...:::1...,..

.Tho

• Na. . . ..

12:30. (J)

. ..,..' .·..-...

(-

•

&amp;att Nlgllt Willi

DlvldLe•••••

(II NI'L YM1tn'

.r.

.IJllelson

p. .

1lleol
Dbl.
p-

tNT

. p. .

~ler:

...,.,

••

Soulb

.A ll pua

Nwlli
lledbl.
,.

~·

Openln&amp; lead: + Q

wiU cllleard. heart rr- duiuwt ...
ruff, thea play - "' beal1a ...... .
the Jack tllroaP- Wliellllr . . . _
the beu1 or llllt, deelalw will be able
to pt rid "' damiDJ'• dla!!MMMJ . . .
Cbarlle bid the riPt- .,.. aU.

22 No more . 34 Party (sl.)
24 Auminanl 35 Poker term
25 Old dance 38 Graas
26 Sicilian
genus
cily
38 Genesis
28 Famed
·name
film
40 Dlslealure
direCtor
42 Favorite '
30 Actress. 43 Devon
Sallyriver

28Cambric,
e.g.
29 Wilfrid
-. -White
30 Put on
weight
31 Slrap
33 Old musical
note
34 Lambkin's
cry
37 Lawful

3• Orwell's

·-Farm·
41 Nitwit
44Strlng
of pearls
45 Summit
48 llslened to

DAILY CRYPI'OQU&lt;ri"ES-Hen:'s hew tO work It:

t/13

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for ailOther. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the hvo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrQPhes, the length and fonnaUon llf the words are all
hints. tich day t11e code letters ue different.
·
CIIYft'OQUOTI!

,..•
s

QGGT

CYDP

.

,.

vw-tble: Nortii-Soulb

-Barnes

-Ill,
304-BJWtit
- . - · ... Crill •'•
~~;_,__;_- '
Upholatery ·

.7

by THOMAS JOSEPH

0 W Q X~

87

.AQJ72
.AJIZ
tAQ5

CROSSWORD

PWRN

12:00i!Jl

Houllrtg,

soun

U West laltead Jeadl a dlamoatl, de-

filliP 271 ,...... _........ dii- . ·
~ 3,000 .. 4,0011 .......... .

.,

'.

.

+I HZ

.IIUU

clai'lr willl dummJ'a jack. cuhetl bls If West playa alltltber club. Dlclanr

0 ....,... VIce Tht Great
McCarthy

11:30(2)..._

BAIT

' winDer.

ltJ Monevtlota

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

•

Rnfderllfll
or OOIILUII*Cial
wiring, 01 ..........
Ucanud lllotr~ RkNnour
ltoatricll, :1114411-tl'll.

a an ~~age
11:00(J)aan-

..

••

2210.
URN MONEY Rnd'ng boolr.t

L••a•

e

.•u.,

.Ait5

away, dummy's jiiCk becomes a

.

Speclll Movie (2:00)

II) Lany King Uval

747~111.

CUll.......................
aam up to 11. lo $1. por llr
wort&amp;lng 11'0111 IMIIM, 304-Jtt

~t"rJ

:19nswlck World
Open 9-Ball Champlonahlpt
from Las Vegas, NV, Men's
Quarterfinal 3: Matlya vs
Archer. (T)
(I)
(II AIC'I Camedy
Bnaak Paak Enjoy lhls .
entertaining showcaH of
AB.C's new. comedy urtes,,
hosted Bob Uecker. AaiO
teatured will be lamlllar ABC
comedy laces like John
Goodman, Mark UM-Baker.
Bronson Plrn:hot and Jamie
Loa Curtla.
(D (f) Fktng Une lpecllll
· Dablte Debited II whettter
there should be tree trade or
trade sanctions. (2:00)
· 1111 811l MOVIE: 'Woll' CIS

e

- ...p;
roqulroil,

UMd fumlturt and houHI:1old

_n

e

011 .

Junk ..,. wRh 01 wRhCUI ParWma RN Poaltlon available.
0101010. Col Lanr Uvoty 114- Contact Dlraot01 ot Nurolng at
3111-1303.
·
·
CaraHonn ol Point Pleaaant.
Quina
Pre ti4Q quina. Any condRion.
Caah Paid. Calll14-1112·5857 or
114-II2·2&lt;M1.
TOP CASH paid lor 1113 modal

...,_.

Jason's mom and her fiance
call oH their marriage. (A) Q
Ql Cro$ • ChttH
1:00 (2) 91 Night Court Heroic
Judge Harry Stone iu&amp;l
nailed a Ill~ In a ellng

3br., 2 - · 1 outbulldlngl2 112
....... Iouth ol Gill palle,
S37'iQOO. 114-14WSI1 or 11._

FumRwo and appllancM by tho land/or
pteoa 01 antlro hou-ld. Fair
paid. C011.114-4*

,,

""heart

(2:00)

Pomeroy,
Jl.'lddlepoi1
&amp; VIcinity

11

'C

e

. ......

•ton
+Jt

Careful Cbarlle wu deelam In today's deal, bat onlooken woudered If
he bad been rniiDametl. He Willi duin·
my's ace. of clubs aDd ruf(ed a Uttle
club' wllb' bls jack of spaa.. Thea be
c--' to dummy wllb the el&amp;bt of
spedel aad ruffed the kiD&amp; of cliabrt
wllb bls lplde ace. Tbat's wllea the kl·
blllen paped. Bat Cbarlle coatiDued
UIIJIMturbed, playtac a spade to clammy's 10 aud leadiD&amp; the 10 of llearts.
Wbea CbarUe played low, Wilt Willi
the
Wbat would you .....
tba1
plaJ?
.
returD wwld ll1ow declarer
to WID the aiDe Ia dummy, cull the ace
of dlallllll!dl, overtake tbe queeil of
spadel wllb the kine aad play two
'more itplldea, tbrowiDC the five aud .
queea of dlamonda away. H W!est .U.
cards a heart, declarer !U~ the A.J;
If w.t tbrowl tile kiDI of dlamondl

a

AG.l\IALL'f.

NOift'll
.ltlltll

ByJIIDHJaeeby

CouriQ .

Flral Tlma I lomlty Yanl Bolo, Frl
and Sat. 10:00 Uti?. 3 llliloa CUI
ol Hondnon on AI. 35, Thrat
lllte Crwk Rood llnl ...._on
Righi Lq Rood, -hat,
.......... old lrunll, - · ......

Employmenl Servtces

,....-__..:.....-...,.------,

BRIDGE

IL'i...

Pt. Pleasanl
• ' &amp; Vl~lnhy

Phone

' .

Unjuat - Legal - Youth - DeintY- ENJOY
Ayoung boy, who had been grounded lor • week, moaned
to his friend "When somebody does something lor your own
good, you C.n bat you're no~ going to ENJOY Ill"

NewtHour
,. 8111 liS WIIHI Of

581.

appUencta
2048.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIIS

7:001]) Our H (2) PM Megltalne

...... ._,

Tuppera

. ..,.

8:351]) Andy Grltfttll .

ALL 'hod -DEADLINE:
Bt 1'11111111
Advo"'*
2:00 p.m.
lhto dar loeloro lhe od lo to run.
SUncloy . odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldov: _ , dlon • 2:00

Addtlldn,

lloilr Electric

(1)3-2·1 eon.! Q
ill 8111 CBS Ntwl t:;1
811]1 Love Conntetlon
all lholl!ll&amp; TodiJ

VB

s

K y J.

CYDP

QGGT

DPGWNPDB .

PWRN

LGBPWS

QXFRGVAB
Y•••••••'• er..t......, THEY THAT ON
,GLORIOUS ANCESTORS ENLARGE PRODUCE
~ :DEBT _INSTEAD OF lHEII DISOIARGE. -

t,,

C)

K. .

fMII!JII ~. 1111: .

'

•

�Wednesday, Septanbar 13, 19~

Reds Jose
8-7 tllt in
13 ·innings

DOUBLE
COUPONS
Alt WEEK

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday

Ohio Lottery
Pick-3 ·

229
Pick4
2528
Super Lotto
4-7-9-21-25-33
Kicker 702248

Page 5

•

THRU
SEPT. 16

8 AM-10 PM' .

298 SECOND ST
· POMEROY, OH;
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., SEPT. 10 THRU SAT., SEPT. 16

Vol,40. No.91 M

, Pomeroy-Middleport,

•Thil total value of &amp;lie
double coupon may not
exceed $1 .00 ,

• only.

.,

•The total value of the dou-

ble manufacturer'I COU·
pon cannot exceed the
purcha18 price of the item.
Money will not be refunded.

$1.19
Chuck Roast ••••••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS.
Chuck Roast •••••L:-•• $169
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.
$ . 99
Round Steak •••••L:-•• · 1
LB.

eThis Qffer does not apply
to Pow.e ll's Super Velu
Coupons, free coupc)n8&gt;· •
or any ~ompetitor'a coupons.
•This offer excludes cigarettes, or any other items
prohibited by lew.
•Offer is good only
product on . ·hand. NoRainchecks.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

$499
·
s
t·
.
k
Rib ea •••••••••••••
LB.

CORN KING- 6.to 8 LB. AVG.

Boneless Ham •••L!.•• $1

79

'

•There is a limit · of
coupons you may
deem.

~iiiM'ENGRAVED

r~t­
'

'

.

MARKER -The names ul these
Meigs County l)len who gave their lives in VIetnam are engraved
on a memorial marker In front' of the American Legion Annex In
Mldllleport, never 'to be forgotten. President George Bush has
decl'ired Sept.
u alitlo~ POW-MIA Recognition Day.

. ON
AT COURmOU!!E - In
Vlelaam
Veteran Dwight McDaniel, of tile Albany area, presented the
Meigs County Commissioners with this POW·MIA flag. The flag
has Down at the courthouse In Pomeroy every day since. The
county·'s civil war monument Is also shOWn In the picture.

S.AVE

12 OZ. PKG.

$7.50

HOMEMADE

Sausage •.•••••••.••L!.••

·THE PURCHASE
OF YOUI
THANKSGIVING .
TURKEY
WITH OUR
TUBEY ' .
YALU 'CARD

Leg Quarters ••••l!-•••

w•

$ 99 ,
Potatoes •••••••~::~:::. 1 ·

U. S. NO. 1 RUSSET
•

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $J59
GALLON

NEW COUNTRY

Bounty Towels •••••

Yogurt ••• ~......~~;•• 4/S]
FREEZER QUEEN
•
oz.
D
TV 1nners ••••••••••••
7.5-10

SUNSHINE BITE-SIZE

Dog Food •••••••••••••
•

Jeno' s Pizza •••••••••

20 LB. BAG

7.4-1.1

•

MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER BLEND
34.5

oz.

COFFEE •

$4 99

limit 1 Per Customer
!leoti Onlr AI Powoll's Supermorktt
Geod Sun. !tpt. 10. ·~ru. Sat.,
S.•· 16
-

oz.

BEnY ClOCKER

CAKE MIXES

.FLOUR
5 LB.

99&lt;

5/Sl

69&lt;11.5 oz.

•One apece w• be valideted
with the pun:hae
NCh
of *16.00 or moree•cludlllg
beer, wine and tobacco producto. the firat two w .....
are FREE: no nun~mum ·
purchase. Only one spice
mey' be valldeted eacll week,
no makeups.
·
•Only one Turkey Certlficele
per family .
·
~
•All tw..ve apec:a must be
properly validated before a
Turkey Certificate wHI , be
honored.
•Certlflcet• can only be redeemed on the purch81e of a
turkey. No cash refunds wll
bemlde.
•Turkey Certificat• wHI be
honored Novembef 20-23.
1989. No redemptions aft•
this date.
•The week of Oct. ' 9 ·we ask
thlt you -bring In your card •
and exch.,ge it for a n- '
card (for our inventory purpoaasj.

·The Meigs County Commis- · study by the county engineer.
stoners accepted bids !or twa new The accepted bids will probably
dump trucks for the · Mejgs be announced at next WednesCounty HighWay Department day's meeting .
when they· met Wednesday in
Sheriff James Soulsby met
regular session.
with the 'com missioners to dis- ·
Bids were submitted by Pat
cuss the need lor a new cr'uiser
.Hili Ford, Middleport , and Gib- for his . department. Souls by
son Inc . . o! Athens.
submitted a list of cars presently
Pat Hill Ford entered bids of
in service. All bu I one of the cars
$30,388 on each truck.
presently in service have miGibson Inc . submitted !our
leage exceeding 100,000 miles.
separate bids !or the two trucks.
The co mmissioners agreed to
listing different available options
advertise lor bids !or a new
·with each bid. Gibson's bids were
cruiser .
$37,211.38; . $29,493. 07; $35,419.38
· The sheriff also clarified deand $27,700.07.
·
tails of a recent a uto accident
Specifications which were afii· involving a cruiser. The sheriff
vertised for each truck were
reported that pne of his deputies
identicaL
was drivi ng !rpm Pomeroy to
· Only orie bid , $13,395 from Pat Middleport , when he was blinded
Hill Ford , was received on a new by l~hts and went of! the road,
pickup trlick which was adver - striking a pole in front of the
tised for the highway Excelsior station on East Main ·
department.
St. The accident wa·s investiAll bids were tabled !or further
Continued on page 8

"'" ~" \~:~g..Sept..l5,Y.rlday, @.s, NatiQnal
POW-MIA ~ecQgnltion Day.
Let.me simply stateihepolicy .
Many Meigs Countians may
of this· new administration. The not be aware that Friday is
fullest · possible accounting re- Natiana'l Pow:MIA Recognition
mains -a matter of highest na- Day . but Pomeroy reslden.t Ed
tional priority. We will do every- Cozart is well aware and wants
thing• a government' can ·do to other Meigs Countians to take a
recover the missing, and If we moment on Friday to remember
discover proof of captivity, we that Americans, both dead and
will take act ian to bring our men alive, may still be held in
home. And so long as you must Southeast Asia.
live" without knowing the fate of
Cozart is closely tied to the
·your loved. ones. the United · POWMIA movement in the Uni· States willlilslst. in the name of ted Sta,tes. He helped organize a
humanity, that the governments Meigs County Chapter of the
of Indochina give the fullest national Vietnam Vets Motorcypossible accounting," pledged cle Club. which was organized as
President George Bush in regard a show of support to bring all
to the highly e motional Issue of POW's and MIA's home.
Prisoners of War and Missing In
In April, he was In Washington
Action.
D.C .. visiting with the D.C.
The president s ubsequently Chapter of the Vietnam Vets
signed a proelamatlon establish- Motorcycle Club. His brother.

10WIDS

. CHICKEN

25 Cents

Inc. New

Friday is National POW~MIA
Day; local observance sought

SUPRIOR

Bacon ••••••••••••••••••••

A

Dump truck
bids accepted
.
.
by. CODUDISSIOD

•Onhi one manufacturer's coupon per it•!"'·

CHOICE

2 Sections, 16 Pag.es

Ohio, Thursday, September 14, 1989

,•Any manufacturer's coupon gree1&amp;r then ~1 C ~I
. be redeemed at f!IC8 value

U.S.D.A~

.I

Low near 65 tonight. Chance
of rain 88 percent. Friday,
high In mid 70s. Chance of rain
88 percent.

NOT TO BE FORGOTI'EN - A close up view of·,

remember that not everypne who served the
United States In the Vlet11am War has been ·
accounled lor.

the POW·MIA logo Ill all It takes to make you

Mason County 4-Iane highway
hearing scheduled Sept. 26 ·
By CHUCK MASON
OVPStaiT

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. __:
Just like the Mason County Fair
and lh~ outdoor high school band
coocerts, you had better bring a
lawn chair to !he Tuesday, SepL 26
hearing on a possible four-lane
highway.
·
If not, you may not gel a seat.

The hearing .is set for !he West
Virginia Army National Guard Ar·
mory at Camp Conley beginning at
7 p.m. It is !he second public hearing held by !he West Virginia
Dejlarunent of Highways concerning !he foW'·Iane highway. State
officials .l!l'e expected 10 announ~e
which cOJTidor has been selected m
a
$ZOO 000
federal! y-funded
feasibility ;tudy.
~

local
DeWS
brieJ.S
l
b
l
ide

D
F atrO

prO

es

UnUSUQ OCC

nt

An unusual accident 'was reported Wednesday In Meigs
County on SR. 124 about two ·miles west of' SR .. 7, by the
Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
,.
Troopers say Nicholas J. McKnight. 21, Middleport, was .
headed west in his 1971 Chevrolet Silverado with Eric Priddy,
20. Rt. 1, Middleport, In the back holding a gate: A gust of wind .
caught the gate, blowing both Priddy and the gate out of the
truck onto the highway.
Priddy suffered minor visible lnjurJes and was taken to _
veterans Memorial Hospital by the G&lt;tiHa County Emergency
Medical Services.
Anotlier accident occurred at 9 p.m. Wednesday on SR. 124
Involving 'a 1988 Thomas bus driven by Dorothy J. Plumley. 43,
Rt. l, Scottown.
. Troopers said the bus, owned by the Ohio Department of
Mental Retardation, met an unidentified vehicle which was left
of center. and Plumley went off the road to avoid a collision. No
one was Injured. The only damage to the !Ius was ag outside
mirror wl)lch clipped a utility pole.
The patrol said .II ,has no exact loeatlon of. the accident.
·
(CoM..... oa Pare I)

•

r-:-----

-1.-

~kie Stein, Mason County
Area Chamber of Commerce prest·
dent, 10ld !he ,chamber board
Tuesday afternoon !hat officmls 1!1
the armory have chairs for 250 to
300 people ..inside the ne~ly
renovated facility, but !he capacity
is 500 people. "Fi~e ~undrc:d
people may tum out, Stem sa1d
she was told by a spokesman for
the state Departinent of Highways.
"We encowa11e people to bring

-wes, a •• Vlet11am v~eranr ~·· a
n;'ember of the D.C. Chapter .
Cozart has been to Washington
D.C. many times, and eac h time.
visits the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial.
This time, says Cozart, " while
looking at the thousands of
names on the wall. one in
particular caughl my eye. The
name was Robert Cozart , on
Panel·232-West. Line 24. The only
Cozart out of 57,000 names on the
wall. "
I) was only natura l ihat .Cozart

would wonder If this Robert
Cozart might possibly
be a
distant relalive, so he did some
checking.
"I found his name in the
register book and lear ned he was
born in 1947 a nd was a major In
the U.S. Army. He was listed as
Continued on page 8

Commander Epling begins national
American Legion duties on Friday
The thought .of what lies ahead
"Each and every person in the
OVP StaiT
humbles Epling. It was a thought American Legion owns a piece of
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. that dominated prior to his election my red cap," he said, adding,
The long, long journey is over.
last week in Baltimore.
·"They elected me."
Mason Cmmty Circuit Clerk
"The night before, I remember
Epling knows his near two-year
Miles Epling is now the national thinking, I want to do Point quest for national .commander, a
commander of !he three-million· Pleasant proud, Mason County dream born at !he first American
member saong American Legion, proud and West Vli'gini!l proud. I'm · Legion national convention he at·
but he doesn't let the title get in !he still a blue cap legionnaire. I know tended, nurtured by 20 years' in scrway of his friends, his feelings, or where I came from ."
vice to the organization, made
his work for veterans of aU wars
As national commander, Epling difficult by· !he fight he has every
that lies ahead in Indianapolis and is privileged 10 wear !he red cwof day as a bilateral amputee, is
Washington.·
· the American Legion. It's a cap !hat shared by many. for many have
In a way, it all hasn't sunk in yet doesn't sit on a swelled heacl.
·
Continued on page 16
By CHUCK MASON

me~~1eps::a;~ng is expected

10 be followed with a third public
hearing in October, or about three
weeks after !he Tuesday evening
session: ·
.
Officials ~id Tuesday at the
chamber board meeting that the ex.·
act fD!Ite of the four-lane road is
expected to he announced during
the first pan of JanWiry.
Thme are several COJTidors unclet
consideration, . including routes
from Kenna to Point Pleasant,
opeaing up Jackson County; .Point
Pleasant 10 Milton; and Point
Pleasant to Hwricane. Spec:ulation
has run rampant in the county that
stale officials 111e thinking about
expanding the exillin&amp; two-lane
road alon&amp; Route 35..TbeR has also
been some input from officials in
Cabell County . who would lite to
see a four-lane IOid added lhme.
Mason County is !he only county
(Coauaued on Paae 8)

I

j

NAlr!Oi\IAJ. LEGION COMMANDER- Miles
Epllllg, (center), Pobtt Pleuut, WUIIWora In u

•

aa&amp;lonal ~mmudf!l' of the Amerlcu ~.!!lion In
BaiUmore, Md., 1aa,t week.

.,

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