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                  <text>Page-12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 4, 1990

.---Local news briefs---. Mercury red-hot for
Hay shaw entries due Aug. 10

The Meigs Soil and Wat er Co nse rva tion District and the
Meigs Cou nt y Fair Board will aga in be sponsori ng a ha y show at
the Meigs Coun ty Fair .
Ca tegories for the hay show will be 75 percent or more alfalfa ;
a ll grasses; 49 percen t or less legu mes.
Rules for the show stat f' t hat exhibitors m ust brin g one who le
ba li' of hay to the fai r and that hay will be taken fr om the middle

at the ba le for jud ging .
ThPrP mus t be at leas t 10 Pxh ib its to mak r a show Pn•miums
will be $20 fo r first place, $15 for seco nd plac e anrl $111 for thprrl
pla ce in each category .
ThP show is open to M Pigs Co unl .v res id ents on ly and you mu st

purchase a :11elgs County Pair Membership ticket to r nter .
Entries mu st be made to lhP M eigs County F&lt;iirboard b_
v

F'n day. Aul(ust 10 . All rx hibtt s mu s t be in placP by noon
Monday, Augu st13 .
The hay will be au ctioned on Mond ay. following judgtng. and
J ll ha.v mu st bp used at th r fair and ca nnot be takrn hom&lt;•.

Fog m orP informa lion on the ha.v show. residents ma .v cont ac t
The Mei Ks Soil and Wa !f'r Consrr va t io n Distric T Officr a t
~m -6647 .

Oh.~ermnce planned July II
'· /\. &lt;ll lo nJ I Ctwt'r L p th P Lon~' ly Da y" w iII be obsron·pd on .J u Jy
11 by thr . '\mPricar·e-Po m r ro.v Nursin g J nd H( ' hilbilitalion
Ct•nh'r .

Thr day 1s sPt aside· annua ll_v to encouragr th r romrn unit )' to
takP tim e to sharP by visitin g pnsons wh oan•sh utiJl or living in
a n•a nu rs ing homPs .
The staff of Arnericarf'- Po mrro~' Jdvl~ t'.&lt;. that m any
community mPmbprs m J kr rhrir ho m r at t he· :lb/:iq
Hoc kspri n_gs Road fa r ility and rnco uragp fa m il.v an d friPnd " to

\'hi t thr pat 1rnts.
For i nformat ion on th{' acth·r \"Oiun tf'('r pr og r&lt;Jm al Tht•
nurs in g IJ c ility. n 'si rlPnl s ma y co ntact rithrr Lena Ra.,h am or
Pam Trip lt-&gt;t 1.

EMS has four calls Tuesday
Fou r calls wrrr answr r('(l by unit s of th e Mri gs Count.\'
F:mr- r:gPncy Medi ca l Srrvi rr· T upsd ay and (' ar l.v WC'dnrsday
rnor nmg
i\ t ~ · &lt;1 m. Tursda_\'. t hr PomPru_
v unit wrnt to Pomrroy Cliff
,\p&lt;lrtml'nts for Amb~r Lohn who wa s taken to Vet er a ns

n

Mrmorial Hospital; at 2: 08p .m thp Svrac use uni t tran sported
.Jo hn Hunnell from Ant iqu it~· to VC' trrans : and at 9: :15 p. m. thr
Pornf' roy unit wrnt to Ches lt'r Coad and took Ma r l Y Rit"fl r. to
\'rtPra ns for rreatmrnt.
·
·\t 'L i6 a. m . Wed nrsdav. thP Porn lJrov un it rook Bt'c kv Comer
from Weic ht own Hill to \·Ptrra ns Mrrrloria !.
·

Patrol cites Michigan driver
Mary· L Mill s. l l. Dr troit. Mic lliKan. was CJt rd for failurr to
\·ic- ld whPn turning lr ft \.~· h rn shr wa s im·o lvr d in an accidf' nt
Tursd a~· P\'f'n in g.
Mill s wa ." turn ing left from Countv Road :&gt; i n th r ,·ic init v of
llra d bur' Sr hoo lwh en she s tru ck c'vn th ia Hutt on. 2b. SH ·124.
La ngs\·ill e
,'\,j o onP wa s injured

First anniversary of court's
Wehster ruling is obsenred
On the

fi:ic! lit :V that I wa s f&lt;Jm\li ar wlth.

f1r sr anniversary of the Supreme

ST . LOU IS IUP !r -

and talk ro total st rangers and be
Treat ed by total s tra ngC&gt;r s who

C'rHrrl' s dec ision upholding Mi s·
. ; nur i's r es trictive a'oortlon la w.
Mctralee Din sdale told how she
v.:as forced to go to another state
h&lt;J\"f'
tl borled
f( i

h~?T

defective

fetu s

Oi nsdale . 33. who lives in thP
u.·('SIPrn Missouri town of Ca rro l·
I ton. re lated her story Tur s d a~· at
a nrv.:s co nfr rrnct he ld to mar k
th r an niversary of th &lt;' ruling in
thP case of \\'ebster \ "S. Repro·
clu c rive Hea lth Ser viCE'S.

T hr Su preme Court's deci s ion
s tates more leewa\' to
regulate abort ions. It uph eld

ga\'P

Mi ssou ri' s law that pla cr d rr s-

trictl o ns on the avatlability of
aOOr tJ ons in thr sta te'.

·1 wen t th ro ugh a trtrlblr
ord ••a l,.. Dinsda le sa id while
fig hting back tea r s. " And I'm
hrrr becau se I do n't lhink a ny
other woman should havr to go
th ro ugh what I did ...
Sho rtl y a ft er thr Su preme
Co urt' s dec is ion In the Wrbstrr
case . Dinsdale. wh o Is marrit~d .
bP ca m e pregnant with a

"wa nted " c hild. she sa id . Durin!(
hrr prr gnancy. howPvt• r. shr
Jea rnE'd h er fr t us had a fatal

condit io n Its bra in was falling to
develop. Doctors told her It would
nu t bP ablr to livP more than a

few days aftPr lrirth
Because of hr·r medica l his tory
of problrm~ i n c arrving and
delivering bablrs. Din sd a le
fea r ed carrying the fe tu s to te rm
wou ld a Heel IhP possi bilit y of her
ha vi ng a nother baby la ter. She
sa id she al so fe a red she co uld die
from th e comp licatio ns of giving
birth to the doomed ch ild.
Dins da le sai d shP "'r nt to two
hospita ls where hrr doc to r prac·
tl ced In the Ka nsas Cl tv area Liberty Hospital and North Ka nsas Ci t y Hospit al -I n a ttempt s
10 obtai n a n abortio n. Bu t off!
c lals at both fa ciliti es ci ted
Missouri 's 1986 a bortion statute
in refusing to a llow the abort ion
10 be performed at eith er
hosp ital
Under the law, abortions a rc
prohlblled al Missouri hospit a ls
that receive sta te funding .
Dinsdale said she was forced to
travel to Kansas, 45 miles from
her home, to gel an aborilon .
.. 1 was forced to go away from
my doctor, away from an y

Correction
The caption under the photogra ph of the field workers on
Swnd11y.'s front page Incorrect ly
ldMtiffed the worke rs as be ing
on Charlie Wolfe' s crew. The
woriiti1:"W on Charlie Hill 's
ere&gt;(

did not know my· mPdi c ~:~l hi s t or~·
wr ll. "' shP said
B.J. Isa a rson-.Jo nl'S, thr f?X('C
uti\·r di r rctor of ReproducTh·r
Hra l th Sen ·ll' ps_ sa id St. Louis
pol ice and tht' clin ic's seru rit.\·
pNson nPI wrre gearing up T urs
day· for an PxpertPd "' Operati on

Rrscur " dPrn onstration bv a nti
JbortJon pro tPstr r".
On Mond &lt;J~·. a tx:&gt;u l ill Opr r a 1ion
RrsruP protp o; !('r s v.:rrr arrPs trd
a ft r r thr~· sal down insidr th r
offi cPs uf two c linics whr n·
aOO rti ons an• pnformed in " ·rst
St. Lou is Count\· Jnd rl'fusrd to
leavr.
As of f'ilrl~· Tursdav afte rnoo n.
no dt&gt;monstrat ors had ap~arrd
at Rf'product Jq:. Hralt h Sf'n1res .

poll cP sa id.
T he director of flcprod ucti1·c
Heal th Ser vices, which is funde d
prl va te lv, sa id publtci tv abo ut
th e Webster decls ton ha d led to
Increased donati ons to th e clinic.

" We only do fund ·ral si ng for
our lov.'-income f und. and wp 'vp
been ver y please d with thr
support of our friend s for tha t
fund," s he sa id . noting the rllnlc
had ra ised more than $100 .000 for
the fund In the past vear.
"T hai will help becau se evPrv
year we donate $CJOO.OOO to th at
low·lncome fund ... s he sa id .
lsaa cson·Jones cal led the In crease In donat ions "s ta tis tica lly
Insign ifica nt, but s ig nificant In
terms of women . We proba bl y
helped 50 more wom e n...
Frank Susman . a lawyer who
r e pre se nt ed ReproductlvP
Health Se rv1 ces In argument s
before the Supreme Court, noted
th at the Missouri Leg isl a ture had
dec lined to pass further restrlc
lions on abortion In th e 1990
Sf'SSion.
"The s tate legis Ia I ure during
this past 12 months has not seen
fit to pass laws tha t would
undoubtedly result in the dea th of
wo men," Susman said. ''They
have not seen fit to pa ss laws that
wou ld result In the ja il ing of
phys icians on a whol esale
bas is ."

By United Press International
Mu ch of th e nation sizzled
Wedn esday on a fi recracker hot
Fourth of July as temperatures
pu shed into the triple digit s
across the Southwest, and offi cials in drought -parched Ca ll for ·
n ia worried abo u t the th reat of
.new fOr('Sf fires .
Alth oug h some large thunde r ·
s torms whipped Arizona and
New Mexico, most of the WPs t
enjoyed clear and hot weath er on
Independence Day, with tempera tures reaching towa rd the 100s
across the desNt Southwest and
So uthern Plains.
However ,

s un shin e

Tu es day .
A band of I h u TldPr.., 1' 1rrn .-, ... v. t •pt
from South Dakota in to Minn('·
so la early Wrdnrsdi:i_\', but &lt;:i

hi gh -pre ssu r e

syste m

kept

weat her ciPar across much of thr

a nd

cia ls warned thP reeo rd dr v
wea ther and holiday fireworks
were a potentially PXplosivP m ix
i n t he reg ion stricken by a

starh)d a flre fivP yrar.s ago wil l

start o ne tod ay. "
An arson ·ign il ed bl aze that
de stroyed hund reds of home s
and killed a woman in thP
can .von s above Santa Barbara .

Ca li f. was final l1 declared ou t
Tuesd ay. and cooler weath er
a ide d fi refighters ba ttling wild
fires from Alaska to Texas.
Thunderstorms , some co nTa in in g hra1·y ra in, m oved throug h
part s of eas t T e xas a nd sou thw
es tern Arkansa s towa rd L oui si

a na ra r ly Wedn esday . A funnel
c loud topp led trees near th e ea&gt;t
Tr·x a.s town of Woodv tlil' latf'

New Yorkers
afraid to
walk alone
at night
\E W YORK IUP !t - N1·a t il
on(' out of e\·er y two NPw Yor kp r ..;
is afra i d to walk a lone· or1 thf'
cit .v 's st reE' ts a ftrr dark. a s urYc_\·
rr! Pasr d Wednesda_v sho wPd
Thl' po ll. ro ndu ctrd in ph one
inw rv!ews u.·ith 7:12 IOf';!l rP"i
drn ts b:V P rincPton Sun·r.\ · HP
'-'Parch AssociatPs in m iti -.Juru• .

rou nd That ~6 pprcP n t of the
respo ndents WP n ' afraid to walk
b_\· thrmspl\·ps throug h 1hr c i 1-'. J 1
ntg hl
Th r sun·ey. commissioned by
televis ion statron WNYW T\' Fo x
al so

co nc lud Pd
New
York er s ~re not surr thr policr•
cctn be of much hr&gt;lp .
Whf'n &lt;Js kcd how much c·nnfi
clPn ce th ry havr in polirP to
prot ec t thrm from vio lr nrt •, :l7
pt' lTCnt ansu·&lt;'rrd "nonr at a l l."
or " not vf'ry much ... till' survf'\'
!\"t•w s.

Winfield
12-3

a nd Georg ia.
Ear ly morning te mperatures
across the South ranged from 81
in Miami to 77 In Atla nta, 76 rn
Charles ton, S.C.. and 74 in
Knoxville, Tenn.
New E ngla nd from lhc upper
Midwest Temperatures buill
into the upper 60s and early 70s
by 2 a.m. Wednesday- a good 20
degrees above temperatures recorded 24 hours earlier.
Cloudy skies prev a iled over the
six -state region as Boston rose to
a muggy 74 degrees. In northern
New E ngland, Burlington, VI.,
warmed to 71 and Portland,
Maine, s tood at 74 .
Fa ir skies were reported over
Maryland, Pennsylvania, West
VIrginia and sou thern New JersPy ea rly Wednesday , wllh lows
In the 70s In most areas . Low s In
the 60s were reported In portions
of western Maryland and Wes t
Virginia.

warmth in Ca l iforn i&lt;J werr not
necessa rily good news as of!i

four-yea r drought
Karen Carro ll of the Sta ll'
Department of Fores n·y said thi.s
year is t he dr ies t in mony yt'&lt;H s,
and '" th ings that wouldn't have

Ohio Lottery

Legion

Daily Number
857
Pick-4
1203
Super Lotto
2-12-13-16-25-38
Kicker 031544

Warm air s1reamed toward

WEATHER MAP- Alter a week and a hall ollempl'ralures In
the triple digits. Co lorado and several other Rocky Mountain
slates will experience near normal high templ'ralures. The heat
will dominate th e central and eastern sections of the country highs
In the 90s and !Oils, while the northern states slip back Into the 80s .
The transition zone between warm and hot air will · be the
battleground for thund erstorms. Thl.s area will extend from New
Mexi co to Colorado, across the Ce ntral Plains to the Northeast.

NASA •••
Lenoir ,

gi\' in g

r eporter::;

a

d&lt;•t a il rd upd a te. sa id r nginr&gt;er s
wil l pump liquid hydrogen back
aboard Atlan ti s's ex ternal tank
Tuesday or Wedn esday for addi ·
tion&lt;Jl m eas urement s 10 b et ter

Isola!&lt;' the source of a lrak that
showrd up during a simil ar l est

las t Friday.

In thf' m l"a ntime, enginf'rrs in
Ca liforn ia are gearing up to
pump s up e rc ol d h vd r ogrn
throug h th e s hut!h · Co lumbia' s
lcak v 17·i nc h fuel line " di sco n
ncct" fi tting T hursdav or Friday
10 dupl!c atr

launch co ndilions in

rhe laboratorv where the problem can br m orr ras il\· assP ssrd.
L eak s somPwhrn• in thP mass i\"C' dlsco nnrc t fir lin g.-; forced

NASA to indefinilril· rll'lav Co·
lumbt ct'.s pl a nned :vla1 :111 lift off
on a 10-dav astronomy miss ion

and i\tlantis·s mid J ul.v flight to
frrry a srcrr t Prntagon pa _v loa d
int o orbit.
I n bo th case., . thP !Pak". w(•n•
rracrd to l hf' fill i ngs wh pn • &lt;J

4

(LISPS

at
Vol.40, No.294
Copytlghted 1990

l

Pub lish«! evt&gt;rv aft e rn0011, Monday
throo)l!h F'rlday. Ill Court St . Pomt'l" cy, Oh io. by th e Ohio Valley Publishing Company iMul!lmEdla, Inc.,
Pomerov, Ohio 45769. Ph _992-2156 Se·
ra nd cl.iss postag e pa id at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

l

POSTMASTER: Send adltrf'ss rh ;mges
to The Da lly Se ntln E'I, 111 Co ur1 St ..

Pom('foy, Ohio 45700

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

8)' Carrier or Motor Route
OnC' Week...... .
$1.40
One Month ..
.. $6.10
On&lt;' Yea r
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SINGLE COPY
PRICE

25 Cents

Su bscr lbfor s not d es lrln~ to pay IlK' car riff mav remll In advance dlrect to
The Daliv Se nt lnel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basts. Cr.ed lt will bt&gt; l(lven ca rrier each
WPek
~o subsrr tpllons bv mall

jX'rm tHed 1n

areas where homf' rarrler service Js
availabl e

Malt

Subscriptions
lnAkl e Melp County
13 Weeks ...
. ... ... $19.24
26 Weeks ....... . . ....
. ...... SJ7.96
52 Wcf'k S
$74.36

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
This wagon
belonging to Vaughan's Cardinal received "Best

Horse Drawn Unit" In Middleport's Fourth of July
parade yesterday.

Out&amp;de Melp County
1.1 Weeks ...................... ...... .. .. $20.80
26 Weeks.
. .. ... WO.JO
~2

Wet"ks .

Parade
•
wmners
named

$75.40

.-HAPPY BIRTHDAY AMERICA ....
Homegrown

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall

YELLOW SWEET

sa id

CORN

Weather

S2.98 DOZEN~

Ho1 c:rncl mugg:, tonigh !. Lm\
n( •a r 70. So ut hwf's l wi nd "~ to 10
mph
Th u rsda~·. pdrt h · cl oud _
\ hat. .\
ctnd humid with a cha ncf' or
s hOWN S and
1hund !'I"S!O!'m (.,
Higharound~ll l' hance ofrai n411

pPrcrnt
ExtendPd Foretast
Friday through Su nd av
F' t:lir Fridav c:~ nd Sa tUlia v i\

chancr of s h ~wcr s and rhurld.r r
storm s Su nda_v Hi ghs 7~ to ~:t

WATERMELONS

Prlda.v a nd Sat urd ay, a ndd in tllP
ROs Sunda .l Lows in the till s
F'rlday. :,:iTo6oSatu rdava nd to
th e 60s Sund av
·

5mall. .................................. 24 LB. AVERA GIC
Medium ............................ ....28 LB. AVEnAGE
JUmbO (long Jubilee) ......... .4Q L B. AV ERAG E

Hospital news
~

Veterans Mt-mori.al

FIREWORKS - Many area residents enjoyed the aight of
lireworb over the Fourth of July Hoiida,y such as these over
Racine.

Tuesday Adm iss ion - .Juanit a

Ri tc hie. Racine

Northern Ohio gets ·
relief from heat

Discha rgrs: 1\onr•

Lil'ense

i~sued

A marriage l icPnse h a~ bre n

Iss ued to .Joh n Mi c hae l Dav is. 29.
a nd LeA nna Ly nn Plants , 211.
both of ~iddlcp ort

By United Press International
Thundershowers dampened
the Plains and Midwest early
Thursday, doing little to cool a
stubborn summer heat wave,
while scattered storms rained
over parts of the South and hail
battered parts northern New
England.
The National Weather Service
said thunderstorms dumped
heavy rain southwest of Mllwau·
kee as showers rained over Lake
Michigan east of Kenosha and
over northern llllnols.

Dimr&lt;'t'!i sought
Dre m a Ar lene Ward. PomP·
ha s [llr d a dlvorr r &lt;H' 1ion
agat ns l Tomm y Ward , Sha r on.
W.Va . in Me igs County Common
P lea s Co urt. Also seeking a
di vorce Is Sa ndra S. Pey ton ,
filin g aga ins t Ri c ha rd A. Pey ton ,
bo th of Dex ter
ro~·.

"A" Size
us# 1

Tree Ripened
South Carolina

NEW WHITE

PEACHES

POTATOES

4 LB. BASK ET
12.39

10 LB. BAG ...... REG. '2.79

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

•.. · :::.

Spetial
Price

sge

·Grear For lfom cma1e
Ice CrC'am ·

OTHER

PBODUCI

1/2 Runner 1r Snap Beau • Cucumbe.. • I'&lt;TJIIMI.. • Pl.wno
Nectarlneo • California Red lr
Grape• • Much Morel

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

l'rodu cc Price s
E ffective

Thru

Sunday, July 8,1990

Cll'J

\j

JLIY 4
8 ,\ \ 1 -

q

t'\1

111M
I : UUI:!H

7h·""'"h ~

--

114 Mile North or
Pomeroy/MI10n Bridge

(Acrou 11om K.U.rt)

Phot11 (ll04lT73-·5721 or 773-5900

(614)446-1711

MalOn, wv

By JULIE E. DD..LON
Sentinel News Stall
Everyone loves a parad e.
At least everyone In Mlddlpeporlloves a parade because quite
a crowd turned out yesterday lor
Middleport's Fourth of July
parade.
The theme of the parade was
"For God and Country," and
trophies were awarded to the
winning entries.
The Meigs High School Marchlng Band received best marching
unit while the American Legion
Feeney Bennett Post 128 caplured best walking uni t.
Vaughan's Cardinal partie!·
pated with Its horse drawn wagon
and received best horse drawn
unfl lor that entry. Carol Cross,
Rutland, wau awarded best
equestrian rider unit
Manley's Recycling captured
the award lor most patriotic
entry.
Carol Johnson received a
trophyforbestantlquecar,a1963
Chevy. Best dressed motorcycle
was awarded to Joyce Frye who
rode with the Meigs County
Bikers, and best dressed bicycl e
11wards were presented to
Spanky Tyree and Josh Hooten.
Following tbe parade, which
concluded In Dave Diles Park, a
flag raising ceremony and gun
salute was conducted by the
American Legion with the Meigs
Band playing the' 'Star Spangled
Banner." ' This was followed by
an awards ceremony for the
parade.
A hula -hoop competition was
held this year at Dave Diles Park
and the winners were John
Stumbo In the category of 11
years old and up; Euva Stumbo,
age 6-10; and Heidi Gilmore, age
0-5. All three winners were
presented trophies . This was
followed by a local group, Bllly
Lee and theCountryRoads Band,
who performed throughout the
evening.
Special speakers for the even ing Included Stale Representa tive Mary Abel; Meigs County
Commissioner Richard Jones,
candidate tor representative of
the 94th district, and State Sena- .
tor Jan. Michael
Long. - -

New York, New York 10017

Dally

2400 Euttm AYII'MJI
Ottillpoill, 011

25 Cents

A Muttlmedia Inc. Newapeper

Large crowd on hand
for Middleport parade

I

J.l~988)

Member: United Press lnterna!lonal.
Inland Dallv Press Associat ion and the
Ohio NewsPaper Associat ion. Na!lonal
Adver tls lng Represent at lw, Branham
New spaper Sa les. 73.1 Third AVf'nue.

2 Sectiont, 12 Paget

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 5, 1990

A Olvl!llon of Multimedia, Inc.

17-inc h·wide hyd rogen fuel line
fr om the ex ternal tank bull s up
aga inst th e belly of the orbiter.
The disconnect umbilical is what
al lows the fuel lin e to break apart
in space so the 1an k ran be sa !ely
jetllsoned.
L enoir sa id Pngineers arP
studyi ng a varie ty of possi bl e
ex pla nation s for th e leakage,
in cl uding the effects of slight ly
misal ig ned fuel ta nks. damaged
or fau lt y sea ls. improper lightening of bolts holding the dlscon ·
nrc t hardw are tog ether and so
on.
But un til a ll the test res ult s are ·
in. he sa id . It wi ll not be possible
to det ermin e what might be
required to fix th e trouble or
when the shuttle ca n resume
living
Problem s with the disconnect
ha rdwa re ca nnot be fixed at the
la unch pad. and Atla ntis. like
Colu mbia before it . ultimatel y
will have to be hauled back to a
roc ket assemb lv build ing

Tonight, party cloudy. Low
mid 60s. Chance of rain 60
J&gt;erce•rt. Mostly SUDII)' Friday.
In low 80s.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Continued from pagr 1

IUQAJIII IIIIIHT nJ[SOAY
(UCEn "ll'15 or TIUilO" "OTt HQO r•J

627 3rd A¥t., Ganlpolis
PH. 446-1699
HOUIS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.

Midw&lt;' .&lt;t as tempera ! ure s
reac hed into th r 90s.
Hi gh pressu re also kept much
of th e Sou th hot and drv . Isolated
thundershowers dampened parts
of Mississippi , Alabama, Flo ri da

NATIONAL WEAYli ER FORECAST TO :J PM EDT 7-4-tO

U . 7! UR&amp;AIII WUIUS SATUIIOIIV &amp; Sllf!MY

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

July Fourth holiday

Wisconsin state police blamed
temperatures In the high 90s for
potholes on Interstate 90 near
Madison. Sgt . John Brandon said
the heat caused pressure pockets
to form and trtggered small
explosions that sent hunks of
concrete into the air . "Moisture
gets trapped under the road . It's
like a volcano," he said.
A tornado touched down just
before midnight near Martelle,
Iowa, 45 miles southwest of
Dubuque in the northeast porUon
or the state, pollee said .

After a soggy Fourth of July
las 1 year, Racine's Pourth of
July celebration managed to
beat the heat of thIs year and
bounce back In a bigger and
better fashion.
People flooded the downtown
area to watch the annual Pourth
of July Parade-. About 85 vhlcles
and floats took part In the parade
which wound Its way downtown
a~d back up to the high school.
The winning float was the entry
by the Racine Baptist Church.
Second place was won by the
Southern Junior High School
cheerleaders' float and third
place was won by the Racine
Reds number·two team.
Matt Hill had the first -place
bicycle. · Dally Hill and Julie
Hensler had the second and
third· place bicycles.
Spectators flooded the riverfront near the launching ramp to
watch the second "Anything
Floats but a Boat" Race. In this
unusual event, the participants
race anylhlng that can float.. . but
a boat. Ralph Fisher and Fred
Thompson, both of Racine, ran·
the race In a siu.Jing 1:46.45 to
come In first . They were followed
by the teams ·of Kevin and Paul
Grady, and Chris and Joe Wolle.
Aaron and Troy Hoback, along
with Brian Decosse, won first
place In the youth division.
Following the race, people
looked to the skies over St11r Mill
Park for the arrival of skydlfers.
Four skycflvers landed sh rtly
alter three p.m.
Throughout the day p¢ople
e njoyed the free entertainment
at the park. Entertainment
lasted up until time for the
fireworks which concluded the
celebration.

Middleport Mayor ~'red Hof- name of "freedom of expression,
tman Introduced Rep. Abel who free speech, and the right to
spoke on the Importance of the
'dissent'."
Fourth of July and It s true
"We hav earlghttodlssent,but
meaning.
the right to dissent Is not
She stated that people every- absolute," Jones stated. He went
where In the world wanted on to say that "you simply can not
freedom and that the Amertcac commit any outrageous act you
people must continue the model choose and excuue It In the name
of freedom for the rest of the of 'free speech'."
world . Rep. Abel also stressed
Jones concluded by saying that
the need to the remember those nag burning ''is an act of
who have fought to preserve the violence committed against a
freedom that American people unique symbol of our Republic."
enjoy .
Sen. Long also spoke on recent
Jones sta ted that Americans criticisms of the flag and called
should be proud to live In the for Americans to consider think·
oldest democracy on earth, and . lng about the true meaning of the
to remember all those who have Stars and Stripes. because many
fought and died for 11. He went on have fought and died to protect
to say that one thing was what !I stands for- freedom. He
prevalent In all Fourth of July c fled examples of patriotic herofunctions and that was the
Ism In the Vietnam War a nd
American flag.
World War II.
Jones voiced his concern with a
Activities In Middleport congroup of dissenters In the United e luded with an outstanding patrtStales who feel the need to oUc performance of the Shady
desecrate and burn the Amerl - River Shufflers followed by a
can flag . He stated that this Is fireworks display at Dave Diles
done by disguising It under the
Park.

"'
\

GUEST SPEAKER - Meigs County Commissioner Richard
Jones, a candidate lor representat:ve ollhe 84th district, spoke
Wednesday afternoon at Dave Diles Park 1111 a pari of Middleport's
Fourth of July activities. Jones spoke on the Importance of the
American flag.

Parade highlights Rutland activities
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News staff
A parade, several eontests,
live entertainment and plenty of
food were all a pari of Rutland's
celebration of Independence Day
on Wednesday .
"Our American Heritage" was
the theme of the parade, a nd 83
Individual s and organizations
participated. In the marching

unit category, !Irs! place honors
were awarded to the Shady. River
Shulflers; second place winner
was Meigs High School Band;
and third place, Rainbow
Cloggers. In the float division,
Rutland Tire Center was the first
plnce winner with second plnce
going to Rutland Mine Supply,
and third place to Joe 's Country
Market Best religiou s lloat was

won by RuUand Church of Christ.
Plrst place In the Eques trlan
division was won by Danny
Young, Charles Ohlinger, second
place, and Lisa Compson, third.
First place In the antique car
category was Carroll Johnson,
with second place being awarded
to Frank Case, and third place to
the Pomeroy Fire Department
Continued on page 12

Eastern board given approval to
advertise for coaching positions
Approv111 to advertise for sev·
eral coaching positions was
given to Dr. Daniel L. ApUng,
superintendent, when the Eastern Local Board of Education
met in special session Tuesday
nfltllt.
The poeltlona are alhtelie dl·
rector, a bead football coach,
Ibm ....,Iaiit football coaches,
a beld volleyball coach, an
Militant volleyball roach, a

marching band director, a high
schooiicheerleader advisor, and
a junior high cheerleader
advisor.
The flUing of all the posillons Is
contingent upon the booster
organization~ depositing the necessary reqUired donation~ of
money by the Jillq 6 4eadline, It

was reported.

Per110ns Interested In being
considered for any of the PQIII·

tlons are asked to contact the
superintendent's office Immediately, 985-4292. The board
board anticipates tilling the jobs
at a special bo11rd meellngaetfor
Wednesda,y.
In other bllllaess the board
au lborized the advance of monles10tbeStateTeacbenRetfre.
mi!DI Sy11Zm, and ldopted ' lelllporary approprllttolll for llaclll
yi!IIJ'

PAIW&gt;B Bq111:8'l'BJANt -n-..-~r~u~
ptll'lldpMed Ia J'lterd&amp;J'I Foltl'tb ol ola)J )IlNde
Ia Middleport d•plle llle lleli ud llumiii&amp;J. Oae
, rider wWI llle ll'GDP· Carol Crou, received •

1991.

'

.... a.-rrtaa

trop!IJ ro~o··
t
Rldw." Some rlden
alto ptll'lldplied Ia Rlltlantt'a parade eiiJ'IIer Ia
tile da,.

•

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

CII.~RLENE

HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WIIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Associat ion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LETTERS OF OPINrON are we lcome . The\'· should bf' less than 300
words long. All letters are subj('Ct to editing ai1d must be signed with
name. address and telephone numbN . No unstgnftl letters will be publlsh£'11 . Letters shou ld bP In goOO taste, addressing Issue~. not ~rsonall ­
tles .

Mandela: legend
with a mission
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHINGTON 1UP! 1 -Nelson Mandl'la came to the United Sta tes
as a l£&gt;ge nd , a man whose 27 years in prison made him the very symbo l
of resistance to South Afncan apartheid H&lt;• carnL'. too. as a soldier of
the African Nat ional Co ngress . with a very down to earth mission.
Mandela ended his eight -city visit Saturday with his legendary
eharacter, if anyt hmg. now la rger than lifl&gt; and his multi -faceted
: mission largely accomplished
As a mix of spectacle and ser iousnrss, thr rlusps f comparison to
Mandel a's visit has been the 1979 and 19H7 U.S. pilgrimages of Pope
John Paul II, and their miXture of on thr road hype. hysteria. hoopla
and, at times. hard word s.
Even before the 71 -year old deputy presldrnt of thP ANC arrived.
U.S. organizers of the trip tried to put some perspective on the event.
"Mr. Mandela is a worki ng man . ·· sa id Roger Wilkins. chairman of
the organizing committee . ""This tr ip is not some kind of I personal)
victory lap As he said whe n he ca me out of pr ison. he is a disciplined
member of the African Na tiona l Congress. The anti aparth eid
strugg le is one of the most .. essential freedom struggles now
occurring In the world .... This trip is a part of that st ruggle ."
And Mandela. while acknowledging the spo nt aneou s outpouring of
mass ildulation that eruptPd at rac h stop - rvrn. at limes, not
unju stifiably basking In the distance he has trovelcd from the
solitariness of Robben Island pri son - nevrr lost sig ht of his miss ion,
never lirPd of stating and restating his purposes .
They were severa l
First a nd foremos t was thP call. sou nded on his arrival in New York
a nd repeated at each and evrry public appeara nce in Pach and every
city. to maintain economic sanctions against the white·minority
government in Pretoria.
In the lace of arguments that the government of So uth Af ric an
: President F.W . de Klerk was moving rapidly to disman tle apart heid
· and should be rewarded. Mandela politely but pointedly lect ured the
nation on the iss ue, tel ling America ns it was theAN C and it s allil•s at
· home and abroad that brought the government to its prPsen t point of
compromise .
PresldPnl Bush. at best eq ujvocal on the sa nctions issue, would llkP
to embr ace the ""rf•ward de Klcrk"" argument. but acknowledged. in
his Rose GanJpn appParance with Mandela, that sanctions mu st
remain.
And Mandela derisivl'ly rejrrt ed the argumPnt for relaxing
sa nctions .
~ "II is because of sanctions Ihat f\Uch C'normous progress has been
made In the attempt to address !h e probl ems of our coun try ... he told
!3ush.
Mandela" s mission also had a si gntflcanl South African domestic
·component: to establish the ANC- despite crit ics on both it s right
:and left - as the premier opposition force 10 the gover nm ent .
: Here, too, Mandela and the ANC showed themsel ves to be astute
· poUtlclans, able to use th e legend to achiPVC" nilty ·gritty objectives .
The photos and news stories whipped around the world to South
Africa, showing Mandel a and Bush standing as eq uals and describ ing
Mandela"s disarmingly politl' but blunt rejccl ion of Bu sh's plea lo
renounce violence and his virtual order to the president to consult
with the ANC before taking any action on So uth Africa.
· Among the messa ges sen t back home - surprising to many
Americans who expected MandPla to be a Sou til African equivalent of
Martin Luther King - wa s thai the ANC is no! about to renounce Its
commitment tu armt&gt;d struggle. " If necessary," 10 achieve black
majority rule.
Again, in what amounted to a nf'ar lect ure. Mandela told the
. president he was misinformed and had not had· ·a proper briefing·· on
· eith er the history of apartheid or I he curre nt slt ua t ion in Sou lh Afrlra .
""If we are forced to resort to violence ... Mandela said. ""I t Is
because wp have no oth(lr a ltrrna tl ve whatsof&gt;vPr." When a
government resorts to repressive mrasurrs. hr sai d ' ' fhP people h&lt;JvP
oo alternative but to resort to violence.··
· Mandela also carne t o !h ank those groups of supporlers especially In the trade union movemf'nt and the religious community
. -who have worked long and l1 ard. when the apartheid issue was out
:or !ashton as well as in vogue. and to ra lly th em for the final march
·towa rd the dissolution of apa rt heid
: " I am your flesh and blood . I am your com rade ... he told the Un it ed
Auto Workers In Detro it . ·"You are our brot hers and sisters."' he told
an ecumenical gathering of Protestant, Jewish and Roman Catholic
readers brought together by the National Council of Churches In New
York.
Both groups trace their opposition to apartheid to before Mandela
: was Imprisoned 28 years ago.
· And !lnally, Mandela came to ra i se money for !he ANC. The
: t);.gantzatlon, only recently allowed to opera te legally In South Africa.
·races major hurdles In bringing back some 20.000exlles, In creating a
Political organization, In providing education and legal programs In short, In structuring It se lf as an Ind ependent opposition movement .
· WhUe the totals are not yet known, It Is likely the trip may have
· jatsed between S5 million and $10 million .
: ·It was a grueling trip for th e aged. unbowed revolutionary . but at Its
:end Mandela , the legend. should be able to report: "Mission
·accomplished.··

Today in history
By United Pre11s lnternallonal
Today Is Thursday, July 5, the 186th day o!1990 with 179 to foUow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
: The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They Include
David Farragut, the !lrst U.S. Navy admiral, In 1801; showman P.T .
·liarnum In 1810; British colonialist Cecil Rhodes, founder o! Rhodesia
Zimbabwe), in 1853; Dwight Davis, founder o! the Davis Cup
:tennis tournament, In 1879; Fren&lt;'h wrtter and film director Jean
"Cocteau In 1889; actor Milburn Stone In 1904; poUticlan and diplomat
:lJenry Cabot Lodge Jr. In 1902; Julie Nixon Eisenhower In 1948 (age
~) and rock singer Huey Lewis In 1951 (age 39) .

:(now

.• On tbla date In blstory:

: f.II,.N ,WWiam Booth founded the Salvation Army in London.
'fn--.l'i"~ldent Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the National Labor
J!.eJatloris At:t.

:

.

: .Jn 1!M5, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced the liberation of the
:Philippines as World War Two approached Its end.
~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page- 2- The Daily Sentil'\el
Pomeroy-Middleport, D~
Thursday. July 5, 1990
·

Montreal scores early, holds
on to defeat Cincinnati, 5-3

How Berlin Wall is saving lives
EAST BERLIN - More than
1,000 doctors have left East
Germany for West Germany
since the opening of the Berlin
Wall last November. They were
lured by the possibility of earning
up to $5,000 a month.
Now, Ironically, pieces of the
wall are helping the dedicated
doctors who remain behind to
keep their struggling hospit al s
r unnin g.
That Is why, when we toured a
children's hospital in East Berlin
recently. the doctors were full of
gr atitude for rich American
so uv enir hunters, including
Nancy Reagan.
In an unusual vl~nlurr. a
sta tE--ru n ex~rt company ha s

teamed up with a Wesl Berlin
business to sell prime pieces of
the wall to the former flrsllady.
among others. and give the
money to hospitals. Everybody
and his brother has a chip or
chunk from the wall. but this new
venture Is selling the last of the
large sections with the coveted
grafflt I.
Not lone alter the wall came
down, the new government declared that ··official "" pieces
would be sold and the proceeds
used for urgently needed muder·
nl za tton of puhlic healfh
services .
While the ('Ommunists ran
East Germany for 40 yrars, thPy
never pumped enough money

Western stand ards.
The six-floor "'Kindercllnic" ·

we visited was considered the
finest In the country, a showcase
for the com munist system. But it
Is at least 10 years behind
West er n hospit als. The only
relatively modern equipment we
saw was donated by an Ohio
hospital or bough! with the Berlin
Wall proceeds.
The wall. pieces are being
marketed by a state-owned trade
enterprise called Limex and a
new private eompany ca lled
LeLe Berlin Wal l. Co-owners
Judith La Cro ix and Christian
Herms have already given

Sen. }an Long
A boost for ethanol----------------For more than a decade, since
the energy crises of the mid and
late 1970s, Americans have been
urged to look toward alternative
energy sources to help alleviate
any potential energy shortages.
Progress has been made. Ca r s
are more fuel efficient, and even
though the United States Is still
too dependent on foreign oil.
Americans havr become more
Pnergy co nscious.
State government has also
gotten Into the act. Earlier this
month. the Senate approved a
bill. H .B. 400. that could give a
boost to et hanol production at
plants such as the one at South
Point In Lawrence County.
The bill would require the
Department of Nat ural Resour·
ces. Environmental Protection
Agency and the Department of
Agriculture to adopt rules to
require speci fied l'mplovees to
refuPI state owned or leased
vehicles with ethanol-bl end fuel
Refueling would have to occur ar
a locat ion that didn 't dPviate
excess ively form lhr employee's
ord inary travel route
Under the bill. the Ohio Depart ·
ment of Administrative Services
would have to accept bids for
et hanol -bl end fuel and contract
with a vendor to supply the fuel to

the refueling facilities of the
Agriculture and Natural Resour·
ces departments.
Th e bill's requirements would
expire two yPars after passage.
Th is is good. since It would give
dl!partment s a chance to t ry the
program out and then report on
how well II worked. Th e bill
requires that 90 day s after thr
!PSI program Pnds, a report
would be submitted to the Gover·
nor and both houses of the
General Assembly giving lnfor·
matlon on fuel efficiency and on
whether mechanlea I problem s In
s ta le ownPd or leased cars could
be attributed to ethanol. This will
give members of the General
Assembly another chance to
review whether the program
s hout~ be continued. and perh aps
expa nded tootherstateagencles .
Today more than 90 percent of
the world's energy supply comes
from the burning of fossil fuels
such as coal, petroiPum and
natural gas. Known resf'rves of
petroleum tha t can be recovrrPd
are being used up rap idly. Oil
compani es are searching for nPw
reserves. particularly In offshore
waters. and testing ways to
re m ove hard·IO · recovPr
resou rces .

Funding individuals
If you ever wondered why
hund reds of Individual artists
receive direct funding from
Washington. let one of them .
Karen Finley. explain.
"" If It weren't for the help
provided by the NEA !Na t ional
E ndowment for t he Arts). art
would be only for the rich and
powerful."" she opined recently In
The Washington Post.
·
From where Finley sits. on ly
fat ca ts visit museums; only
plutocrats decorate their walls
With anything more costly than
children's watercolors; only pro
plewhovacallonlnAspenscrapP
up the cash to purchase records
or tapes; only millionaires pa ·
trontze the thousands of galler·
ies, acting troupes. dance compan les and ser iou s mu sica l
gro ups that nourish throughout
the land.
You begin lo wonder whether
F inley lives In the United States
or In Dickensian London .
··1 n the rlrst act. I sit In a
rocki ng chair, fully clothed, and
talk about women In the under·
class and society under patrtar·
chal rule. In the second act. I talk
abou t the dally oppression of
women ... . In the third act, I am
shrouded In a white sheet at a bed
... I talk about the survivors of
death In the wake of AIDS . the·
bl ack sheep of our culture who
are related by their diversities
and are all part of our large
extended family . "
In other words. Finley Is a
polemicist, only slightly more
sophisticated than an adolescent
with spray paint. It would make
more sense to give NEAgrants to
Gloria Stelnem or George Will,
except that they have too much
self-respeet and talent to ask lor
one, and also because they make
a fine llv lng on their own - a!eat
Finley might try to achieve
herself one day.
I haven't even mentioned the
showstopper In Finley's act: She
strips naked and smears chocolate over her body, as a symbol
(to use her delicate simile) or
"women being treated like dirt."
It Is all quite uplifting, no doubt,
and perhaps even better than a
nude wrestling match In a pit of
Jell-0 . Not having seen either,
though, I can't be sure. Still, I'd
bel most Americans, If asked,
could not fathom why Finley
should receive a public gift of
tens of thousands of dollars to
further her peculiar career,
while so many equally deserving
artists (or undeserving, as the
case may be) do not.
Tile application lor Finley's
latest funding request doesn't
even specify what kind of performance would result. It simply

But. the supply of petroleum Is
not Infinit e. Ethano~blended
fu el s help extend that supply. and
will help the United Stat es get
away from future ene rgy
dependence.
If you have any quest Ions on
this or any other is sue, don't
hesitate to contact me. StateS..•n.
Jan Michael Long. at the State·
hou se. My phone numbPr is (6141
466-8156. and my address Is the
Statehouse. Columbus. Ohio
43215.

$625,000 In wall money , IQ
hospital s.
These are not pieces for casl\il
souvenir hunters. The pieces sPU
for tens of thou sands of dollars.
Word quickly spread among
art collectors. and they gathered
last week In Monte Carlo for an
auct ion of 81 pieces by Lim ex and
LeLe Berlin Wall.
·
Before the auction, LaCroix
confided to us, discriminating
buyers had already spoken lor
some of the best pieces. Actor
Gene Hackman spent several
days In Berlin makjng his
selection .
Other buyers have Included the
Aspen Art Museum in Colorado,
the Hefn er Gallery In Oklahoma,
the Bassoli Museum In Italy and
some Japanese and French
companies.
The buyers have to sign a
contract sayi ng they won't dis·
play their chunk In any way that
trlv lallzes the tra gic mes sage of
the wall.
Footnote: Anyone Interested In
ront rlbutlng to th e East German
publi c health system or buying
the ecrtlfled pi eces ot the wall
can writ e to ""LeLe Berlin Wall."'
Tcmpelhofer Ufer 10, 1000 Berlin
61. Federal Republic of Ger·
many . The company's phone
number In Berlin Is 251.76.26.

BALL DROPS SAFELY - Cincinnati's Barry
Larkin nnd Paul O'Neill watch as pop lly drops In

for a single In first inning In Montreal Wednesday
night. The safety gave the Expos a 2-0 lead.
Montreal won, 5-J. IUPI)

Canseco, Sandberg top vote-getters
•Automatic
•Air Condition
•AM/FM Stereo
•Cruise Control

•Tilt Wheel
•Rear Defrost
• 7/70 Limited Warranty
•Loaded!

Vincent Carroll
would permit her "as an ar tist to
continue working." she says. In
laym an's terms. It requests c
blank chec k.
With t he NEA so skittish over
recent publicity, Finley may not
get her grant. Yet whatever the
ruling of the National Council fo r
the Arts (which oversees these
gifts! . the real scandal is tht• fact
that Individu al artists are eligl·
bl e for fundin g at all
By all means. let's subsidize
theater companies, musl'ums.
sy mphonies and other organlza ·
lions that otherwise rnighl not
survive. If th ey were to expire.
the public would have no alterna·
tlve to the enrichment they
provide.
But the same Is not true of the
crea tive writers. poets. composers and ··performance artists ··
lik e Finley thai the NEA supports . Thousand s of such artists
manage on their own already.
and a few even grow rich . The
public' s access to art depends on
the survival of these indep endent
artists, not on government fund ·
lng of I heir less success fu I
competitors .

By APRIL ALFARANO
UP! Sports Writer
Dennis Martinez sought his
revenge from the mound but he
did entertai n other thoughts .
Martinez. who limited th e
Ci ncinnati Reds to five hits over
eight Innings Wednesday night In
the Montreal Expos 5.:! victory
over the Cincinnati Reds, came
to the plate In the first Inning
aga inst Tim Blrtsas with a 5·0
lead and in his view. wearing ,,
target.
The right -hander, who earlier
In the year hit Cincinnati pitcher
Jack Armstrong with a pitch.
fully expected Birtsas to even th e
score.
He was right. Birtsas plunked
Martinez on the elbow with a
pitch.
"I walked to first base holding
my bat and I was really thinking
of hittin g Birtsas with 11,""
MartJnez sa id " I was really
mad . He hit me In th e elbow on
purpose . l"m luck y it wasn't my
head . Hopefull y it"s over now .
We're rven. I knPw they were
going to th row at me .'"
lntentlonal or nol . nBiling
Martinez may not havr lw en such
a good by the Reels
The incident only firPd up
Martinez en route to eve ning hi s
record at 6·6.
··] was pleased with the way I
pitched tonight." said Martinez
""I h ad my doubts how welll"d bt•
ab le to continue after I got hil .
but I was motivated by !he fact
we really needed to win this
game. That enthusi asm got me to
the eighth Inning.
Martinez tired a bit in the
eigh th . so in came Dave Schmidt.

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Ana
into hospita ls to keep up wi1h

Now Starting At

ONLY

$}}

499°0 *

NEW YOR K IUPI I - JosP
Canseco and Ryne Sa ndberg led
!heir leagues in voting for thP
Ali·S tar Game. and Ca nsef'o was
j oin ed by Oakland teammatps
Rickey HendPrson and Mark
McGwlre when the starting li·
n e up s were
an no unced
Wednesday

The 61sl All·S ia r CamP will be
played Tuesday night at Wrigley
Field in Ch ica go.
Ca nseco. of the World Cham ·
pion Athletics. received 2.31:1.091
votes in fan balloting. lhl' mo st
since Montreal's Garv Carter
received 2. 785.407 ballois in 1982.
Chicago Cubs second baseman
Sandberg, who leads the Na
tiona ! League with 24 hom er s.
co llected 2.262.245 votes .
Ken Gr iffey Jr. received

nll r rll'r&lt;&gt;«~

Rr I

,un:J(II

····-···-··-·····---·-···----

2. 159 ,700 votes to win a sta rrt ng
bertll in the AL ou tfield. berom
ing the first SeatUe Mariner s
player ever elected to start In an
All-Star Game . Griffey led th e
AL with a 338 batting average
befo re Wednesday's game H&lt;•
joins Ca nseco and Henderso n
11.989.184! In the AL outfield.
Ca nseco was elec ted for !h e
third time. but did not start in las t
year's game because of an
mjury. Hend erson will make hi s
sixth star t.
Catche r Sa noy A l oma r
11.043. 1161 became only the third
Cl evela nd player eiPCted by th e
fans .
The AL infield is comp rised of
Wade Boggs 11,291,2731 . making
his fourth consecuHve star t at
third base; Bat tlmore"s Cal

Scoreboard ...
Majors

'Dealer Retains Rebate. Tax and Tille Extra

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

"~

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t'I''BI. I

Anthony

Taylor

-

Ro·lo·,.r d
11n d

s.;,.,,.

Bahlar•

Toronto

who worked the ninth to record
his lOth save.
"'That was a big game for us
tonight. " Expos Manager Buck
Rodgers said. "'It's nice that we
finally got Dennis some runs. He
looked to me like he was running
out of gas In the eighth Inning.
That's why I brought Dave
Schmidt in and he got the job
done.
Montreal scored all five runs In
the first Inning off Cincinnati
starter Scott Scudder, 1-2. With
one out, Mike Fitzgerald walked
and Larry Walke r was hit by a
pitch. Tim Wallach followed with
a bloop single to center, loading
th e bases. Mike Aldrete then
drilled a two-run single to right
and Andres Galarraga made It
4·0 when he doubled to deep
center. Blrtsas replaced Scudder
and gave up a single to Tom
foley who scored Galarraga .
"" I don't know what the prob·
tern is with him !Scudder), but
l"m no t going to give u"p on him ...
Reds Manager Lou Pin lelia said.
··our bullpen did a nice job for
the remainder of the game and
gave us a chance to com r back
We just fell short ...
The Reds got a run back in the
fifth. Gl enn Braggs si ngled, went
to third on two groundouts and
sco red on a H al Morris pinch -hit
single.
Cincinnati closed to 5-.1 in the
eighth on Paul O'Nelll"s two-run
homer. his lith on the year.
In other National League ac·
lion. San Francisco routed St.
Louis 9·2. New York pounded
Houston H. Atlanta topped Phi·
l ade lphla 4· 1. Sa n Diego nipped

Pittsburgh 5·4 and Ch icago
downed Los Angeles 5·3.
Giants 9, Cardinals 2
At San Francisco, Bill Bathe
hit a two-run homer and the
Giants scored two runs on Terry
Pendleton's throwing error in a
four -run seve nth Inning. John
Burkett. 8-2. gave up two run s
and four hits over seven lnnings
for the victory . Jose DeLeon, fi-7,
took th e loss
Mets 7, Astros 4
At New York. pinch hitter Mike
Marshall hit an eighth-Inning
sacr ifice fly and Howard John·
son followed with a two-run
hom er to pace New York. The
Mets won for the 14th time in 15
games. Dwight Gooden. 8·5, gave
up four runs and seven hits for
the win. John Franco pitched the
ninth for hi s 15th save. Juan
Agosto. 4-2, wa s the loser.
Braves 4, Ph!Uies I
At Philadelphia, Dale Murphy
homered and drove In two runs
and Greg Olson si ngled in a run to
break a seven tll ·inning tie

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-IHIO)
A Dlvt.lon of Multbnedl*' In c.

Published pvery a(ternooo, Monday
throogh Frida~. 111 Court St.. Po ·
merov. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub
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Rlpken .Jr . (1.206.2021. makin g
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York' s Steve Sax 11.184.8901.
making his AL debut at second
base ; a nd McGw irP 11.206.&amp;89!.
making his third straight sta rt at
first base.
Defending NL division cham·
pion s Chicago and San Francisco
each had two starters elected,
altllough both tea ms are far out
of fir st this year. Sandberg is
joined by Cubs out!ielder Andre
Dawson. while Giants first ba se·
man Will Clark and out fi eld er
Kevin Mit chell were voted

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-Sports briefsHorse Racing
Easy Goer coasted to an
Impressive 3 J.4 length victory In
the $399,000 Suburban Handicap
at Belmont Park Wednesday,
reaffirming his sUit us as one o!
the tdp handicap horses In the
country. De Roche finished second with Montublo third .... Red
Ransom, a top 1990 Kentucky
Derby contender earlier this
year, likely will never race again
after fracturing a bone In his left
front leg during a morning
workout at Belmont Park.

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OuhJfdf' Meigs (;ounc,.·

13 Weeks .

start ers.

Sa ndberg will be making his
flflh stra i ght start and hi s sixth
over all. Joining him in the NL
in fi eld will be Clark 12.2 11 .2431 :
St . Louis· OzZie Smith
l i.:t:l7.8 l o1. making his eighth
co nsecuti vr start at short stop ;
and Ci nC'innat i 's Chris Sabo
11,.199.6()4 ·, at third base .
San Di ego's 13enilo Sant i ago
d.785.412i was elec ted for the
srrond su·a ight year as ca tchrr .
I n the r&gt; l. out!ield. Andre
Daw son 11.G22 .640i will make his
sixth sta rt and Mit c hf'li
t1,34B.9301 will start for the
seco nd stra ight year. Len Dvk·
stra r 1.564.1571 was the the first
Philadelphia outfielder elecled
sin ce Greg Luzinski In 1978 .
Dyk stra. th e major leagues ·
batting leader. was hitting ..16R
befor e Wednesdav .
Missing fr om the AL starting
tr am wa s Cec il Fielder of De·
troi t. who flni shed second in
vo ting to McG wire at fir st base
despi te leading th e majors with
27 homer s and 70 RBI.
PitchE-rs and reserves. seIPCi ed by All-Star Managers
Tony La Russa of Oakland and
Roger Craig of Sa n Fra ncisco
and the league offices. will be
announced Thursday.

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�Page-4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page-6

Thursday. July 5. 1990

In Wimbledon tournament:

"THE BOSS
IS BACK
SALE"

Becker, Edberg, Lend) advance to semis
WIMBLEDON , Eng land
!UP!) - Top seed Iva n Lend!,
looking t~ become the fifth man
to win al l fou r G rand Slam titles,
s urvived a surprisingly s tiff
challe nge from Brad Pearce a nd
advanced Wednesday to Wim·
bledon's semiJina ls with a rain
delayed 6·4, 6-4, 5-7, 6·4 victory.
On Friday, Lend! will face hi s
first seed In the tournament . No
3 Stefan Edberg. Defending
champion Boris Becker a lso
advanced to the semifina ls.
where he will meet Goran Ivani·
sevlc, the 18-year-o ld who beat
him In the fir st round of the
French Open .
Wednesday 's matches were
delayed because of ra in for more
than four hours . When play did
begin, players had to deal w!lh
gusting, swirling winds while
dark clouds swept overhead
Pearce, ranked No. 120 , live d
up to Lendl 's dl•scription of him
as "a solid player with good
shots." The American played a

smart, steady ga me. always
keeping the ball deep a nd making
Lend) wo rk for his net ~ rush lng
opportunities.
" Havi ng never played on Cen ·
~ tre Co urt, it's quilr a n experience,'' Pearce said '' I fl'lt IIke I
belonged out there."
~ Lend!, in his ll th assa ult on the
:wimbledon c rown , called Wed·
·nesday even ing's playing condi·
lions "very difficu lt."
"It was a bit windy a nd a big
problem was the court go t damp

after a few games and the footing
became da ngerous."
Becker, refusing to yie ld to the
history of "The Graveyard, "
Wimbledo n's famed Co urt No . 2
where upsets are a trad ition.
dispatched No . 7 Brad Gilbert
6-4, 6·4, 6 L
In a pairing of hard -serving
non-seeds, Ivaniscvic reached
his first Grand Slam sem ifinal
with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6 7 18-10), 6-3
victory over 1985 finalist Kevin
Curren.
Ed berg made the sem ifinals
for the fourth consecutive yPar
by overwhelming fellow Swede
Christ ian Bergstrom 6·3, 6·2, 6·4.
To gel all four quarterfinal
matches completed befo re dar ·
kness, tournament official s
switched the Becker -Gilb ert
match to Court No 2 a nd put
Edberg · Bergstrom on Cou rt No .
14.
Becker sa id !he wc~ther, thP
smaller stadium at Court :'Jo. 2
a nd the s ubdue d crowd made il
difficult to rerm•mbl'r he wa s
playing fo r a sem ifina l berth at
Wimbledon.
" I was sit ting down iduring a
changeover!. thinking it seemed
like a second -ro und match at
Quee ns on a sidff'ourl . It wa s a
fu nny a tmos phere. espec ia!lv
during the first hour," said
Becker . "Yo u couldn' t play grea t
tennis out th ere llul I kept my
cool and played a sol id thre~
se t s."
Gilber t. who e nt ered the match

with a 4·3 career advantage
against Becker. play ed the 22 ·
year-o ld champion even through
the first six games, but the West
German's booming ser ve and

accurate service ret urn proved
too good. In Becker's fin a l 10
se rvi ce games , he dropped just
10 point s.
T h e American, who ha s failed
to reach the se mifinal s In 23
Gra nd Slam s ingles tourna·
m e nts, missed too many first
se r ves, a llowing Becker to s lam
service ret urn winners down the
l ine.
"I was a lit tiP flat ." admitted
Gilbert, who sa id the short noUcc
before playing and the too-bri ef
warmup made him feel rushed .
He said the fas t surfa ce al so
prevented him from warming up
sufficiently , "Yo u don't havr
time to work yo ursP if into a

match on grass ."
Af ter Becker held serve to lake•

a 5·1 lead In the third set. he sa id
aloud. "Break now and go watrh
football." referring to thr Wes t
German -England World Cup srmillnal. He broke Gilbert at 111
and left the co urt to find a
te lev ision.
Edberg, thel988champion . dicl
not ar gue with the offic ial!'l'
rra sslgnment of him to an
ou tside cour t beca use "i t wa ~
best to get the matches over. with
thl' weather situat ion ."
I va nisev lc, whose gro und
.~ trokes are co ns is te nt and hard.
had a match point in th r

fourtll·set tiebreaker, at 8-7, but
failed to convert as the more
experienced Curren took the next
three points. Ivan lsevic broke
the Soutll African native In the
fourth game of the lifth set then
held serve to complete the
match .
"It was very windy and dltfl·
cult for serving," said Ivan I·
sevlc, who still managed an
extraordinary 25 aces. "I was
concentrating very good, especially In the fifth set.
Play resumes Thursday In the
women's singles, with defending
c hampion Ste!fl Gra! lacing No. 5
Zlna Garrison and No.2 Mar dna
Navratllova meeting No. 4 Ga·
brlela Sabatini.
Garrison, who upset No . 3
Moni ca Seles In the quarter!!·
nals, will likely have to play the
match of her life to beat Graf,
who has norlost a set thus tar and
Is play ing on her best surface.
Garrison has not beaten Graf
s ince 1985, losing their last five
meetings, but Is eager to gain her
first Grand Slam final.
"I've always had chanc&lt;•s but
never had tha t little bitty brea k·
throug h," sa id the Texan .
Navratllova. 33, desperate for
a reco rd ninth Wimbledon si n
gles title, has a career mark of
12-3 against Sabatini. The No . 4
seed seems unlikely to pull an
upset Her play has been errati c
this year and she has not learned
the serve-and-volley gam&lt;· Nav ratilova has masterPd.

•

Jackson's 3-run homer

·· r uns and four hits in a th ird of a n
Inning .
"You havp to go to .vo ur horsr
tGuetterm a nl. · sa id Yankees
. Mana ger Stump Mernll " Of
: so urse. it 's been so long si ne('
~

we' ve been i n that situatio n."

•. Bob Geren' s three-run horne
: ru n pu t New York in tha t
: situation. giving lhe Ya nkees a
· 5-4 lead In the top of the seventh
&gt; -before Jackson followed a walk
:: and Bill Pecota's single with his
: boomer .
White and Kevin Se lt zer each
: ha d two~ run homers for lhe
;. Royals , who were able to with ·
stand a season-high tR h1ts fo rthe
Yankees .

D~ FOR WOSE BALL - Cle veland's
Carlos Baerga dives unsuccessfully for a linr
drive of! the bat of Marlnr's Edgar MarUm•z

StcveCrawfonl. 2 1. gained the
victory in rrliPf of star trr Brer
Sa twrhagen .
E lsew hPrP in thr Amrric an
League, Ros!rln n1pped Mlnn c
sola 4 ~1 , Sea t tic c lipped Cleve land l2. Toronto topped Call for
nla 4 ~. Milwaukee m a ul ed
Oakla nd 7 I. Baltim or e battered
TPxas q 4, and Detroit ourlastrd
Chicago 10-7 in 12 inning s .
Red So• l, Twins 3
AI MinnPa polis . !)wight
F. vans smashrd a two-out .
thrcr-ru n homer in thr ninth
inn ing off Rick Aguilera, 2·2, to
rally Bosto n. Dennis Lamp
pitched three hitless innings to
improve to 2·2. Jeff Reardon
threw the ninth for his 14th
save .
~artoers 3, Indians 2
At Cleve land . J e ffrey Leonard
drove in one run and scored
another a nd Randy Johnson, 9-J.
won h is s ixth s tra ig ht decision lo
he lp Seattle c la im the ir sixth
tri umph In seve n games . Mike
Sc hooler gained his 21st save
Cleve land 's Charles Nagy, 0-2.
s uffered the loss In his seco nd
rna j or league s Ia r t.
Blue Jays 4, Angels 2
At Toronto. Errors by Ca lifornia pitcher Jim Abbott a nd
cen ter fielder D&lt;&gt;von White
he lped Toronto to two first-Innin g

Pomf'rm

992-2124
Houn.:
II am 10 Mtd Sun . Thur.;
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Brewers 7, Athlellcs I
At Milwaukee. Ron Robinson.
1· 1. hurlcc! his f irst completr
ga me of the y ear and Greg
Vaugh n drow' in thrPP runs wilh
a homer a nd a doubll'. hel ping
Milwaukee snap a five-gamr
losing skid . Da ve Stewart, lll -7.
wa s rocked for six runs and Pig hi
h tt s in 2 J-3 Innings .
Orioles 9, Rangers ~
At Arlington. Texa s . Sam

HURL'! THREE· HITTER - Righthander Jauon Wright pitched
a thre~&gt;-hlller and added a single and a double at the plate as Meigs
delealed Wlnlleld 12·3in Aver lean Legion action on Tuesday night .

COLORFUL - The entry from Rutland Tire
Center was a colorful addition to the Rutland
Fourth of July Parade on Wednesday. Several

other area businesses were represented In lhe
parade as welL

-----Graduate named---Usa Davis, daughter of Clyde
and Linda Davis, Gallipolis.
recently graduated with honors
from Ohio Unlverslly with a
bachelor 's degree in Speech and
Hearing .
She was awarded an assistant·

Meigs Legion in
12-3 victory over
eig ht wit h a one hiller when
Winfield took advantage of two
walks, a sing le and a I ripiP to
score three runs. B ut Meigs
ca m e back in the bottom of the
eight to score th ree more and
c lose out the scori ng . Heck led off
with a walk after he moved to
seco nd on a passed ball Wrlgpt
doubled to drive In Heck . Wright
and Stewart who was on base
after a walk la ter scored on a
fie lders cho ice to make il n3
Wright had a n ou tsta nding
game. besides pitching the three
hit ter he led Meigs at the plate
with a double a nd a single . Wes
Young . Matt Flnlaw, a nd Ter ry
McGuira each added two si ngles.
Chri s StPwart, TPrry Reuter and
Eric Heck Parh rhipped in with a
sin g le each
Me igs now 10 J:l will play
Glouster a t Me igs Hi gh School on
Thu rsday n ig ht a t fi

Horn' s two -run homer hlghlt gh·
tC'd a fou r -run six th inning for
Bal timo re . Orioles shortstop Cal
Ripken' s r ecord errorless streak
ran to 7' ga mes des pite a wild
1 br ow In first ba se in the third
i nn ing nave .Johnson, 8-4, garm·n·d thew in a ndChar!leHoug h,
'i h. took the loss..
Tigers 10, White Sox 7
1\ t Chi cago, Mike Heath belted
&lt;:~ three -run home run with one
out in the 12th inning off Ken
Pal!rrson , 11. to lift Detroi t.
Lance McC ullers, 2·0, picked up
thr v i c tor ~· allowing j usl one hit
i n four innings

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING?
OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
GENERAL RELIEF
UNITED MINE WORKERS
BOILKERIAAKERS
PAID

'"s.

MEDIMO
BLUE CROSS

10°/o DISCOUNT
TO THOSE 60 AND OVER
ON ALL PRESCRIPTIONS

992-5177
'
220 EAST MAIN
POMEIOY, 0110

Rutland Park durlnK Fourth ol Jill)&lt; festivities there on
Wednesdlll'. The park was full ol folks enjoying the mWilc, food and
games that were a part of the village's celebration of
Independence Day.

during sixth Inning action of Wednesday's ~aame
at Municipal Stadium. SeatUc won, 3·2. (UPI)

run s Toronto startPr John Cer
un l , ~ - 6, gavr up two r un s and
nine hits over 5 2-3 innings for the
vic tory . Tom HPnke recordPd his
l ~&gt;lh sav e.

BOWS

TRAIN RIDE - These younptera enjoyed a train ride In

Me igs erupted for four 3-run
Innings and J ason Wright pitched
a three-hitter as Meigs defeated
Winfield n3 in American Legion
non league action Tuesday
eve ning.
The game was caiiPd after
eight Innin gs becau sL' of
darknes s.
Meigs jumped out to a 3~0 lead
in the third Inning when Wcs
Young singled, Mal l Flnlaw
followed with a walk . Terrv
M cG ui re singled in one run and
after Eddie Crooks walked TPrTy
Reuter singled In two ru ns .
The host made It 60 in the
six th , Eric Heck and Wri ght each
had base hits In the inning Me igs
score-d three more in the sev enth .
Chris Stewart si ngled and sto le
second, si ngles by Wes Youn g,
Flnlaw and McGuire made it 9~ 0
Wright wa s breezrng tnto th e

Jackson's homL' ru n, a tow er -

8o rrmembers .
Guetterman, j .J, gave up fl vr

ONLY!

KC wm Winfield squad

By DAVE ENGELDRUM
UP I Sports Writer
Bo doesn ' t know hi s own
strengt h.
Jac kson ' s mammoth three- run
· homer tr iggered a seve n-run
· seve nth innin gWPdnesday. rally ·
!ng the Kansas City Royals to a
13·6 win over the New York
Yankees.
Ing 45()-foot bias t over th e ce nte r ·
field fence off reliever Lee
Guetterma n , was his 15t h of the
yea r . T hou gh hl' has s ix home
r un s in thP las t ni ne games ,
J ackso n can't seem to judge the
dis tance of his blas ts. And he
does n't care
"I though! il wa s go ing to be
caug ht or bP off the top of the wal l
becaust' I go t under it ... sa id
.Ja r kson . · I don't care- how far
they go, j us t so they go over the
fence . "
His teammatPs lo ve to view
the ir flight.
"That was some poke," said
Frank White, who mar veled at
the height o f the shot that landed
• halfwa y up a grass knoll "I can't
Imagine Bo getting a cheap home
run. I think he' s just s tarUng 10
show the abilities he has "
Jackso n. whose been hot at the
plate recently 115 RBI in 10
gameS!. finished fourt h In fan
ba lloting for Tut' sday nig ht' s
All -Sta r Game but Is n't cons i·
dered with making the squad.
" I don't think abou t it !All-Star
· Gamet, the only thing 1 think
abo ut Is th&lt;• next game," said
Jackson, who wa s the MVP of
last year' s ga m e
But J ackson. mu st also ha ve
been think i ng of the pre\·ious
ga me when he slammed a so lo
s hot off G uetterman.
" He thre w me a n off-speed
pitch la s t night so I wa s loo kin g
for a fa s t ball tonight. · sa id
Jackso n

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
JULY 6 &amp;7

10Karat

GirlsHigh

Class Rings

~~\ID~&amp;W*

R:~r

[l[]~~~

s149oo

Harrisonville happenings
The Harrisonville Senior Cltl ·
zens enjoyed an evening picnic at
the township park In Pagevllle to
honor members having birth·
day s In April, May, and June.
Twenty-three attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cotterill. local. and Mr . and Mrs . Ray
Birchfield, Middleport, spent two
weeks camping In Vermont .
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Do·
nohue. Angle Donohue, Brenda
and MelisSa Neutzllng wPre In
MI. Vernon to attend the gradua ~
t!on of Kenda Donohue from MI.
Vernon Nazarene College.
Lawrence Cotterill, Killeen.
Texas . visited 'his parents Mr .
and Mrs . Raymond Cotterill . He
Is employed by J. B. Hunt .
Da llas , Texas.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Duane Stanlev
recently spent several days In
Wa shington , D.C., where they
toured the Capital. memorial s,
The Smithsonian. Arlington
Cemetery , Mt. Vt'rnon. and at ·
tended an evening show at
Kennedy Center and the "Spirit
of America" by the Third United
State Infantry and the United
States Army Band a t Capitol
Center.
Recent visitors at the Raymond Donohue home were Mr .
and Mrs. Gary Haynes. Colum·
bus; Kenda Donohue and Alun
Armstrong , Mt. Vernon; Shirley
Simpson and two grandchildren.
Racine ; and Louise Myers.

I. LOOK .lhrough newspaper'

1/2

4. CHOOSE the items you need'
S. ARRIVE at the nearest NATJONWISE!

Mr. and Mrs . Jim Oliphant of
108 Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy,
announce the birth of their first
r hlld, a son. Aaron Lee, June 29,
at the Holzer Medical Center .
Tht' Infant weighed seven
pounds, 12 ounces and wa s 21
Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ohlinger, Rose
Hill, Pomeroy, and the maternal
great-grandmother Is Mr s .
Mildred 0 hUnger .
Paternal grandfather Is Bill
Oliphant of Gooding Road,
Marton.

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992-3785

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992-6254

Pomeroy.

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ALL SUMMER SHOES
YOUNG PATRIOTS - Children were an lmporlaot part of the
Independence Day Celebration In Rutland on Wadneadlll' · Youth
organlzalloas In the parade Included Junior Grange, 4-H. ball
teams, and several bicycle riders, like these.

_,
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Davis was a 19111i graduate of
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granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Carrol Nelgler. Syracuse.

BANKE
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AIR CONDITIONERS
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ltf

�Sentinel

Thursday, July 5. 1990

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

July 4th celebrated in Middleport with parade
HULA HOOP COM PETITION - Trlsh Tobias Is
pictured here In the final heat
of the Hula Hoop Competition
held yesterday In Dave Diles
Park as a part of the Fourth of
July activities lor Middleport.

MARAUDER BAND - A

THE TIUULL OF VJCI'ORY- Ralph F1sber,
rip&amp;, aad Fred Tbompaon. left, In lbe winning
entry In tile Anylblng lbal Floats but a Boal Race.

cr0881be Unlllb line. The race was part of Racine's
Fourth of duly celebration.

parade woulda't be complete
without millie, and lbe Melp
Wgh Scbuol Marcblng Band
pro&gt;ided pleaty of palrlotlc
aonp durlag lbe Rutland
Fourth of July Parade on
Wednesday. The band also
pardclpated In tbe parade In
Middleport and received Beat
Marching· Unit honors there.

PONDEROSil
STEAKHOUSE

FLAG RAISING - The Amerlcu Legion
conducted a flag raising ceremony and gun salute
yeaterday afternoon In Middleport. Bob Gilmore,

Mason

with the Feeney Bennett Post 128, was In charge of
the raising and the Melp Hlgb School Band
performed the "Star Spangled Banner."

Furniture

KENDARIZER

Woman chosen
for contest
Kenda Rizer of Racine has
recently been selected as a
contestant In the America's
Classic Miss National Finals to
be held on board a cruise ship to
the Caribbean In October. 1991.
Girls !rom eight through 22
may compete on a national basts.
Prizes will Include a new sports
~ar. Europa furs. diamond jewelry, cash and tutlon scholarships. free cruises and more.
Classic Miss Is a program to
honor outstanding young ladles
t_rom across the United States
each year; only two percent of
those that apply are selected.
Rizer attends the University of
Rio Grande where she ls majorIng In early childhood development. She has the opportunity to
represent the State of Ohio at
various parades and county fairs
throughOut the state this year.

CROWD PLEASER - The Shady River
Shulners were quite a crowd pleaser last night as
they perlonned lor an hour during the hot
temperatures, for a crowd of approximately 259

people. Their show concluded with two very
palrlodc numbers which brought tears to the eyes
of many.

biker, Joyce Frye, was awarded "Best Dressed
Motorcycle."

MEIGS COUNTY BIKERS- The MelpCounty
Bikers bad that palrlollc spirit yesterday as they
rode In Middleport's Fourth of July parade. One

Fantastic Buying Opportunity For You
Frankly, we're In a tight spot Our warebol18e Is big. but not big enough for the deluge of merchandise
that 18 pourtng In on us! Uke nearly everyone else In this business Vl'e bought men than we should ~
and now we can't do anythtngabouiiU We can'tstop load after load of merchandise now coming ln. We're
bulging at the seams ... and more shipments are arrtvtng dally! We've crammed our floors more than
full, and cut prtces to the llmlt for quick sale! We're counting on your ablllty to rttognlze real barplns
and to help yol1111elf to fabulous aa&gt;ings ... and help us get out of thla real jam! This After-1be-4tli-OfJuly Sell-A-Bratlon laata for 3 days only 80 huny In and help us make &amp;Ome elbow room!

D of A meets
A picnic at Kachelmacker
Park In Logan highlighted the
.:ecent meeting of the District
Deputies and Past Councilors'
·Club of District 13, Daughters of
-America.
- Twenty members attended
'with two visitors. Sylvia Bownes,
-Logan. asked the blessing.
- Erma Cleland presided at the
- meeting with Lora Damewood
readlni Psalm 121. Mrs. Cleland
read tile nag etiquette, then the
·t.ord's Prayer and pledge to the
-nag were given In unison.
· Memben answered roll call by
-namlni a holiday whelf· the flag
would be flown,
It was voted to canrel the
spring meeting of the club which
18 held In April.
- Janice Lawson, secretary,
: read the minutes of the previous
· sprln1 meeting and Thelma
·While gave the treasurer's

report.
Get well cards were signed by

tnembera lor Bea Mayers. Ma·
rlelta: Faye Haselton, Belpre;
and Esther Harden, Syracuse.
- Opal Hollon read a poem,
·"Ute'a Little Blessings."
Present were Myrtle HigginS,
J;c!ILI Edpr, Irene Phillips,
Kathleen Trowbridge, Sylvia
. Bownes, Faye Trowbridge, Faye
-Balle:Y, Vernle CoJIIP'OVt, Ruth
:.Buntboff, Mildred Lowery, Lo-:gan eouneU No. 120, Logan;

--------···········
HUI?I?YI Coupon Expires 1115190

CHARBROILED

Kansas Gty Strip
Steak Dinner

MOST PATRIO'l1C -This lloal by Manley's
Recyclblg received an award lor "Most Pal rio-

lie" during Middleport's Fourth of July parade
yesterday .

Parade In Middleport. The group also parUclpaled In Rudand's Fourth of July parad e earlier
In the day .

BEST WALKING UNIT - The American
Legion Feeney ~nnett Post 128 captured "Best
Walldng Unit" In yesterday's Fourth ol July

Includes pototo and
garlic loost plus Ponderosa 's

AII·You·Con·Eot Grand Buffet"

PONDEROSN

·················-• ••••••••••••••••••
HUI?I?Y/ Coupon Expires 7115190

CHARBROILED

Kansas City Strip
Steak Dinner
Includes pototo ond
garlic toost plus Ponderosa's
AII•You•Con•Eot Grond Buffet"

PONDEROSA®

•••••••••••••••••••

• '1110 Pandlrall.lne.

.Mary c. Mooee, Perry Council
:No. 283, New LexiJIIIOn; Janice

·J.IW-.

Eileen Clark. Guldtng
· Star Counell No. 12&amp;, Syncuae:
~-'l'llllma Willie, ap.t Hollon.

;;llluell Keller, EtM1 Orr, Lora

':Damewood, Erma Cleland.
~....,. J(.

llober' Chee tel' Council

"m
Cllelter; and vllltors, Millie
::.u,ery..., Sandra Wlltt..

GALLIPOLIS
Upper llwer ld.
(Acro11 fro• the Airport)

STATE SENATOR - Stale Sen. Jan Michael Lone (DCirclevlllelapolut on the Importance of American Dar andJie mae
m-1111 dllrlq yeaterday'a activities al Dave Diles Park Ia
Jtlkldleport for &amp;lie Fo•rtll of July.
I

STATE IUtPIU!i8ENTATIVE - State Rep. Mal')' Abel
(D-Alhtll) apoke Jlllerdi.J ev•lll at Dave Dllel Parll Ia
Middleport u part of lbe Ylllap'a l'olll'lb tf oJIIIJ acdvlllee. Slle
ab tlld lbe lmportaace of rem-~~ertq· wlaal llle day ruiiJ
alandl tor and tor lbe lreedam lbe people of lbe Valled 8&amp;atea of
Amtrlca

enJoJ.

•

MNNIDI
' - oJo.. .
Euva lll11111bo, and Re141 Gilmore
were ....._. In ,eaterdq'a llll..,buop competi&amp;IDa lieN la
Middleport u pari of lbe Folll'lll of oJIIlJ acllv!Ua Ther woa II d.e

cateprlea of 11 ud over; ap •It; ud ap f.l,lll!lpedlye!J,
'·'

\

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 5 , 1990

Thursday, July 5, 1990

Community calendar
across from Farmers Ba nk In
Tuppa rs Plai ns beginnin g al 9
a.m . All auxi liary members are
to bring item s lor the sa le .

·:

·•·..

Members of the Meigs Cou nt y
Sheriff's Department. which Is
the sponsor for the Meigs Ex·
plorer Pos t, a long wi th other
area law enforcement officers.
Includi ng the public defender an d
public prosecutors. and local
jud ges have been invited to
attend th is presen tat ion.
At the co nclusion of the meet ·
lng, pos t members will ma ke
tentative plans lor a day or
overnight tr ip to at tend a meet ·

AND
Boys, Girls, ladies and Men's

YOUTH RACE WINNERS- Aaron Hoback, Brent Decosse and
Troy Hoback, display th eir trophy lor winning the youth class of
Racine 's Anything that Floats but a Boat Race.

TROPHY WINNERS - Ralph Flsl1 er and Fr ed Thompson ul
Racine, dluplay their trophy lor winning the Anything that Floats
but a Boat Race . They finished In une minute and 46 seconds.

~

290 N, 2ND

992-3684

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

lng and va rious trai ni ng sess ions

of th e Madison Township Div·
lslon·s program in Groveport.
Ad di tional information may be
obt ained from post adv iso r
Teresa M. Tyson· Drummer at
992-6784

We can repair and re·
con radiators and
heater corn. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

1-ll·Hc

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl

·uGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

788 N. 2ND AVE.
MJOOLEPORT
992- 2178

41 1 tl/ 10

BILL SLACK·

992-2269

EVENINGS

SIDELINES
SPORT CARDS
367-0588

~~TRAVEL

PURSUIT
Airline

The Souther n Sc hool Distnct
Boos ters will mee t Mond ay a t 7
p.m. a r the hi gh school to plan
monev ·mak ln g pro jects wh ich
wil l go to su pport ath let ic and
other ex tr a-cu rr icuJa r act iv ities.
Coaches and pa rent s of st udents
are asked to attl'n d I he meetin g.

SKYDIVERS- People celebrating the Fourth of July In Racine
were treated to the sight of skydivers perlonnlng their skUis. Four
skydi vers land ed in Racin e's Sta r Mill Par k at around 3 p.m.

Printer for Home or Office

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grapllic s Up to 160
Cp S. lf26-281 5

RA CINE'S WINNVo; G FLOAT - This float,
mad e by the Racine BapUs t Chu rc h was the n._t

place winner In R ac ine's Fourth of July parade.

Community calendar

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SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Specia l scr
vices at the As h St reet Freew ill
Baptis t Church wi ll be held
Sa turday at 7 p. m. Guest spea ker
will be Lynn Davis of WEM M
Radio. Singing by the Unroe
Fa mily and Da n Hayma n and the
Fai th Trio.
PORTLA ND -There wil l be a
hymn sing at the Haze l Commo n·
Uy Church on Sat urday at 7: JO
p.m . fea turing Way ne Hinzma n
Gospel Si ngers.
RUTLAND - !There will be a
gospel sing at the Rutland
·c hurch ot God on Saturday at 6
p.m . featuring Ta bitha , Moun·
taln Top Singers . Taylor Family,
and possibly more.

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BURLINGHAM - The Bu r·
llngham Camp of the Modern
Woodmen will have a picnic
Sunda y at 12:39 p.m. at the
northbound par ll on Route 33
near Darwin. The camp will
furnish meat and everyone Is a
bring a covered dish lor the
potluck. special recognition will
be given to Emerson Douglas and
Kevin King. The publiC Is Invited
to attend.

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hard dr1ve - tak e your work anywhere1Has re-

movable. 1echargeable banery pack and 720K
lloppy dnve . plus built·1 n carry handle Super·
cnsp LCD display. Save now' #25·3505

1985 OLDS CUTLASS
Stock l1 356 1, 2 doon, hardtop, 6 cyl.,
air cood., auto., PS, PB, powar win·
dowl, powar locka, t1t1 wheel, cruise

control, AMIFM atllreo tape.

eR.A'I'INCN.W
S'I'ANIIAIIIIS

5995

200PM FR ID AY

Cl n.1.1i(icd

f! U!fl ' '

co t &lt;' r rh &lt;'

j oUmrill!f rel eph orH' l'xclrnrtp:f'L.
'Gall11 Coum¥

Mergs C ounly

AreaCode614

Area Code 614

44 6 Ga l lopolo~
36 7 - Chesh"e
388 - v,nt on
2 4 5 - R1 0 G r ~ nLie
2 5 6 - Guvan o , ~ I
6 4 3 Arlb•aDo!l
3 7 9 - W nlnu t

991

Mrdd l eport

Pomeroy
9B!; - Chesleo
84) - Por t land
247 - l el lln F11l ls
949 - Racone

742

R ul land

667

Cool.,oll e

Mu on Co
Are11 Cod~

Announcemenls
3 - Ann oucemen l ~

53 -

675 - Pt Pleau n t
458 - Leon
S76 Apple Grove
773 Muon
882 - New Ha11f'n
B9!) l eUr\
937 Bull alo

An!lque5

5 4 - M,,c Merc hll'ld •se
55 - Bu rl dong Supplol!ll
56 - Pets tor SaiP
57 - Mul•cal ln t trumenl s
58 - Fruo\1 &amp; VegaubiM
59 - For Sale Of Trade

Help Wa nt ed
Sotua 110n 1/YaniiHI
- l nsu111ncr.

1J
14 - 8u SI I1 65S Tr a1n 1ng
1 5 Sr hoo l1 P. lnttruCi rOn
16 - R • d•o TV &amp; CB A epa«
17 MIICf!ll itni!Oul
18 - Wan t ad To Oo

3 1 - Homes tor Sale

Now

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4: 30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

39,000 employees, seven
R&amp;D centers, 27 USA and
tour O\lerseas manutacluri ng
plants.

Nobody co...,..,..

end teetlo our eKactlng
standards

3-FAMILY
GARAGE SALE

NoboflyC--

.Denver Weber 's in Reedsville

"'

Most MaJor

Friday

&amp; Si!ilrday, July 6 &amp; 7

9:00A.M.

Wide Varietv Mdse .

1 ·1 1-90 tin

992-5042

Co. Rd. 28

209 South 41h St.
Middleport, Oh.

RACINE, OHIO

'" LOW INCOME HOME"

6·21 .''10. 1 mo.

3· 24-' 90- tfn

USED APPUANCES

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE

to DAJ wanmr

WASHER$-1100 up
ORYER$-169 up
REFRIGERATOR$-1100

up ,

581 S. Fourth be.

RANGES-Gos·Eloc.-$125 up

Middleport, Ohio

FREEZER$-$125 up
MICRO OVEN$-$79 up

RESIDENTIAl and
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou•• · Mobile Homes
· Tran1port Vehicles -

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Farm Equipment •
Heavy Equipment, Etc.

FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . SERVICE

Acrooo Frono Post Offl&lt;t
POMEIOY, OliO .
10/ l0/'891fn

1114-992 -6242

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON

FOREVER BRONI
TANNING

5-tl -'9G-I mo. pd

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

OPEMIM8 SOON
Now To Make

Call

Appointment

949-2794

SPECIAL

30 Sessions-S30
Co. Rd. 21

985-4473
667-6179

Wa1dt

For Signs

RACINE, OHIO
l · t7 .'90 ·t mo. 4

5·3J.'90 tin

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CliNIC

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR
1361 hwott !I.,'Midoll(lorl
(i( JGil

frtm Htin•• Ttwift Stan I

(6141 992 -7843

TV-VCR-STEREOS
SALES AND SERVICE
Fo&lt;lory Authorized

Cenlor For Mosl
Matt11
Modols
Fast Ou.alltv

Sarrict

SPRINI SPECIAL
CL£AN, LUBE &amp; TEST
$1816
OPEN: MON .·FRI .
10 A .M.· 8 P.M .
Or By Appointment
5- , -1 mo.

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE

· Stop In and See

Paulin's Hill Between

DALlAS SAYRE

Rutland and Rt. 554

AT

OPEN MON.-SAT . lOtoS
STRAWFLOWERS: Dwarf
&amp; Tall; PAMPAS GRASS:

PAT HILL
CHRYSLEI.PLYMOUTH

Pink

DODGE
399 S. Third, Middleport

MORE.

992-6421

5·16.'90- 1 mo.

5 19. I mo.

D!UVIRY

629.'9().1 mo.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

71

Autol tor Self!

72

Tr ucks fo r Sale
Vans 6 q v-,o s
Motorcvcle!i

i ;~ : :::~·p~~~~o~~~:;0~ 1,:S

]] - Farm s l or Sill!

77
78

79

Auto Rrpa"
C amp1ng Eq uopment
- C~mpers ~Motor

Homes

lollS. A c• e•ge
Rul E. state Wan t ed

4 1 - Houses t or Rent
4 2 -- Mo bl le Homes fo r R1 n1
43 - Fi rm s ta l Ren t
4 4 Apar1 ment l oo Ren t
45 Furn1shed Rooms
4 6 SpiCI! lor Aenl

4 7 - Wante d to Al!'nt
48 - EQuopmMI too Re,l
Fo r le Qe

NOTI CE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Notice is hereby giv en t hat
on Juty 18. 1990 fro m 7 :00·
7 :30P .M ., a public meeting

on th e Budg et &amp; Revenu e
Shering for the year 1991

for th e VIllag e o f Pomeroy,
Ohio . will be hald et th e
Br e nda M orris,

Village Clerk
Pom eroy, Ohio 46769

171 5. H e

Public Notice

Services

hoofing on July 13. t 990 11
9 A .M . ontho1991 Budget
The hearing will be held al
the Township building at Sa lem Canter.
Bonnie Scott
· Salam Township Clerk
Langsville, Ohio

NOTICE TO BIOOER8
tho Boord of Educttlon of
Eootem Loco! School 01•·
trict dMiiot to
receive
oeolod bldl on tho following:
Oolry Producto;. Bokery
Products; Ootollne; Oltsel
Fuel; Fuel 011; OM t1o 010110:

FREE

ESTIMATES

Bring It In Or We

--··-· rPROFESSIONA
INSTALLATION

Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SEARS
788 N. 2nd

992 -SJJS or 915 -3561

MIDDLEPORt

&amp;troll From Post OHic•
217 E.

Soc. Pamtrar

992·2

POMEROY, OHIO

FRE E ESTIMATES

316/' 90/ tln

949-2168

81

Home

liNDA'S
PAINTING

l mp r o.,~ml!fl l l

82 - Plum bm g &amp; Hel\ rny

8J - E•cl'll &amp;l mg
84 - Eiect 11C11i &amp;

Relriveralron

85

General Hauh ng
86 - Mob1l e Home Rep a..
8 7 Upholstery

Public Notice
Ti r es &amp; Tubes.

S pecifi cation s heets a re
available at th e Treas ure r' 1
Office.
In o rd e r to be c on sidered
all se.,led bids s hall be received in the Treaaure r·s of fi ce by 12 o 'c l oc ~ no on on
J uly 24 . 1990 .
The bid s will b e for the
1990 -91 fiscal yea r. Said
Board of Edu cation reserv81
t he right to accept or rejec t
any and all part s of any and
all bids .

Eloiae Barton. Treasurer
Eastern local Sc hool

District
NOTI CE OF PUBLIC
HEARING ON SALEM
TOWNSHIP BUOGET

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Clean ing
Painting

FENCING

MICROWAVE
O~EN REPAIR
ALL MAKES

6-5-90.1 mo pd.

l;tfilWtl

PubliC Notice

.-

985-4422

614-742-2772

&amp;liveslock

7J
74

t71 6, 11c

Ove r 1500 e ngi neers and
tec hn icians develop, evaluate

30 Sessions- '30

RUTLAND, OHIO

Transporl al ion

The Salam
Townahip
Trustee • will hold a public

THIS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
ONLY $5.00 A DAY!

SPECIAL

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

F.,m Equrpm en t
62 Wa nt ed t o Bu v
63 - l rvos t oclo.
64 - Hav &amp; Gram
65 - Seed &amp; ~&amp;rtrlour

Pom e r o y Village Hall .

THE MASON COUNTY FAIR
DEMOLI TION DERBY APPLI CATI ONS
CAN BE PI CKED UP AT THE FAIR
Offi CE OR CALL 304 ·6755 463
THE DEMOLIT ION DE RBY Will BE
HELD WEDNES DAY, AUGUST 8. AT
700 PM

•GRAVEL
•LIM ESTONE
•FILL DIRT .
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

Rf!p ll ir AH Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery

161

34 - Busmess 8u1td1ngs

49

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

RMiing Mow•t-lwin Cyl .

Mowers &amp;

PICKUP &amp;

Farm Supplies
I

21 - Bu srness O pp ortunrt~
22 - Monf'l' to Lo1n
23 - Pro i • SIOn l l Servo cet

Real Eslale

949-274J4

742-2455

Servtces

35
36

•-n-1,...

&amp; White; FUSCHIA,
BASKETS, HERBS ond

Push

Employme.~l
11
12

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
OUTDOOR POWER
PRODUCTS

SALE

S 1 -- Househol d Good•
62 - Spo rllng Goodl

4 G111UWIV
5 - H• pp ~ Ad~
6 - LOS I and Found
7 - Yard Sale [pa•d on adv&lt;tnCI!I
8 - P ublo c Sale &amp; A uc tron
9 - Wanted ro Bur

WV

304

60

Merchan~ise

1 - Car d o t Th an~s
2 - I, M em ory

742-2455
IUTLAND, OHIO
6·29 .' 90 I mo .

05 / day

A • t n . , 6 lo o c o nMcutN e runs. IHOkl!n up d ..,s w oll b l! char ged

32 - MoblleHomes 101 Sa l e

RIUABLI QUAUTY

I

3 00

IIUtfHijMI

PROVEN LEADI.RIHIP
Over 7000 USA loca tiO n s,

1

-

$$1, 30 / ds y

, 5

15

Public Notice

Save '225

WAS

TU ESO A'f PAPE R
W ED N ESDA.Y PI\PER
T~ U A SO A V P A P ER
fRIOI\Y PAPE~
SUNDAY PAPER

DAY BEFORE PUBLICti.T ION
- I 1 00 A M SA TU AOA.Y
'} 0 0 P M M O NDA Y
2 00 f' M 1U£SOAY
2 00 P M WE DN ESDAY
'} 00 PM TH URSDAY

.30
42

Now

Now

12995

Sal~

' : Oet RpsuHs Fast

diesel. 112 ton,

cond , auto , PS, power windows, 1/2
ton. long wide bed.

WAS

1\tJ'

Over 15 Word s
.
20

Rat e

fnr ear M " ""' u sep a r•tlt ads

cept - ci~S1I 1ed d1spl 8'y . Bus1ness Cud and legal notoc es l
.,.,oi l also appflll r m I Mil' Pt Pleasant Aeg1SIII' and !Me Gall,
po liS Oa 1ly l 11bune. r t~achony u"tl' 18,000 Momr~

6995
AM /FM ste1eo. auto -

Hap o ~

Yar d

Words

10
M onlhly

•A ci1Usol red a d'llfln osemeol pl acl!d 1n Thl!t Oailv Senlo n el te•

1

Save $30

SUNDAY

I

Dual-Cassette Stereo

Die -Cast Shelf Speaker

8-in-1
Remote
Control

· refr('shments

BURLING HAM -ThPModcr n
· Woodmen will be wrvl ng a
· cklckt•n din nr·r on Frldav from 11
a.m . to 6 p.m at rhe Wocxlmen
Ha ll. There also will br bake and
ya rd sale. Carry 'ou r avai lab le.
Rwceeds go to Burling ham
: cemeter y up-keep

16
1s

Ca1d of TMank ~
tn Memor 1am

TUPPERS PLAII':S - ThP
Tuppers P lains VF'W Post 905:!
Auxi liary wt l\ meet Thursday al
7: $0 p.m . All membrr s are u r,ef'd
to at tend

Pomona

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

1
3

' Ads ou11 1d e Me1g!i G• lli • or M uon cour\lr M m u sl be pre
pl 1d

.

j

GoodRat os
T.L.C.
27 Yra. h:p.
References

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

Days

POli C I ES

RC Racer While Tiger

or Res. 949-2860

Repair All Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery
PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·215b
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

CLOSED SUNDAY

conn;~tion Q··

TRACTORS &amp; LOADERS
MOWERS, RUES
AND TEDDERS

'

'

"Your

ZOOR

• The Areo's Number 1 Morketploce
Was S6991n
1990 Ca talov

(6141 742 -2027

CHESTER, OHIO

Classifie

Pe r Mo nth •

Res ervation / Ti cket s
A sk lor Kanda

All
Types of
Travel"

To Make

Appointment

PH. 949-2801

low A• s2s

79.9 5

35 memory red1al
#43·602

Now Homos Built
" Free Estimates"

4· 16·86Hn

Cellular
Car Phone

luue 'UUIW
noalonQ

RACINE -The Racine Ameri·
can Legion Pos t 602 wi ll meer
Thu rsday at 7: JO p. m lcPfresh ·
ment s wi ll be served .

mPPI Friday at 7 30 p.m. a t thp

With accessones.
case lt16-852

Save $30
95 Reg .

ROCK SPRINGS- The Sa lis·
bury Townsh ip Trustees wil l
meet Thu rsdaq at 7 p.m. at the
townsh ip building.

Co unty

1990 Catalog

Was 149 .95 In

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NO lUNDA T CAlll

799 9~:900

Speed-Dialing
Speakerphone

1n
any room #43 ·557

ROCK SPR I'\GS- There wil l
be a special meet ing of all tra sh
haulers on T hursday at 7. $0 p.m ..
at the Meigs County Fa irg rounds
In Rock Spri ngs. All tra sh haul·
ers and customers are urged to
attend.

F RID A.\ '
ROCK SPHI:-iGS- Tpe Mr igs

Save $200 5

Low As 515 Per Mon th •

Make f l ake cans

THURSDAY
REEDSVILL E - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday a t 7: JO p.m at the
Reedsville Fire house . There wil l
be a budget meeti ng a r 7 p.m .

9995

Speed -Dialing
Cordless Phone

69

Compact Bmm Camcorder

Dual-Tone Radar Detector

fir rl(ll/!lt!(~p..)Jnnn lllti;r;..1111%1JJ)S

•VINVL S IDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
• BLOWN IN
INSULATION

MOW OPEN

Call Now

992 -S33S or 915 -3561

.,._ 1 2- 90 tfn

Buy · Sell
Trade

loom &amp; Board For
Stnlor Citlrons and
Handicapped

Walch fo r Signs

Middleport , Ohio

S-2 1-'91}-l mo_pd

To meet

EUM HOME

FOREVER BRONI
TANNING

A meeting of the Meigs Co unty
Law Enforcement Explore rs
Post 230 has been scheduled for
Monday a t &gt;: JO p.m. at the
Co mmon P leas Court Room of
Jhe Meigs Coun ty Courthouse.
The recruiting and trai ning
sergean t of the Madison Town·
ship Divis ion of Poll ee and
members of the Explorer's Po·
lice Cadet P rogram will be a t Ihe
meeti ng to ex pla in the proce·
dures a nd tactics of Mvcl oping
an act ive Exp lo rer Ca det Po llee
Program lor Meigs Count y.

25°/o
OFF
SUMMER SHORTS TOPS

Sentinel-

Business Services

Explorers
post meets

•

SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLA INS - The
Tupper s Pla ins VFW Post 9053
Auxiliary will have a bake and
kn ic k·kmar sale on Saturday

The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

38900 S.R 7
Re edsville. Ohio 46772
PH . 614 ·985· 43 31
171 5. 12. 19, 28. 4tc

&amp; co.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

INTEIIOI UTERIOI

HOMES &amp;GARAGES

FREE ESTIMATES

" AI Reasonable Pricts"

Take the pain oul of

PH. 949-2801

pointing.
let us do it for you .
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES
(614) 985-4180

or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNOA YCAUS

FOR SALE
One Oj Racine's Nicest Homes
Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 garages, 3 baths, rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm build·
lng, pond, over 40 acres fenced pastu re
land and rented mobile home.

Calll-814-992·7104
after Bp.m.

6·5·1 mo pd

H686tln

6· 1 8' 90 ·1 mo. d.

HUMPHREY'S
CliMATE
CONTROL
H10ting, Cooling,

COUNTRY

MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home

.PAllS

Refriger,ation
Service

• MobiteHom.t'
Rental a

Residential &amp;
Commercial

•Lot• Renfela

CAll

It. 33 Nwth of

992

992-7479
Pomeroy, Ohio

89

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFERS

2 LOCADONS TO SERYE YOU •.••

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt . 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANV, OHIO: Rt. 50 &amp; S.R. 143

NEW HOURS:
POMEROV : 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: tOa.m. -6 p.m. 5 Days, Closed Sunday

PAVING AS OF TODAY , MAY 29. 1990
#1 Copper 90¢ per lb .;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans , 35 ¢ per lb .
Clean Auto Radiators, 40¢ per lb .
WE BUY All NON FERROUS S CRAP. BATIERI ES.
STARTER S. TRANSMISSIONS. ALTERNATOR S. ETC

6141 992-5114

H2.' 88-Hn

J.13' 9 0 · · ·

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Juno 28, 1990, In th e
Meigs
County
Probate
Court. Cou No. 26877.
Ethel F. Bentz. 33944 Bentz
Rood. Roclne, OH . 45771 ,
w11 appointed Executor of
the eototo ol Mlchool An·
drew Bentz, Jr., dtcelled.
tote of 33944 Bontz Rood,
Recine, 0 H. 41771 .
Robezt E. Buck.
Problto Judge
Lena K . Neuelroad , Clerk

171 6, 12, 19, 3tc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The propoaed 1991 Ra·
cine Vlllogo Budgot wtn be
evallable for public viewing
July 5thruJu!y 1htlhe Ra-

cine Department StoN.

A publlo heorlng will be
hold II 7:00 P.M . Mondoy,
July 18,' 1990, prlar to Ito
adoptlllot by Vllloge Council.
Jane G. Beegle.
Recine VMioge Clerk
171 6, 1tc

PLUMIING &amp; ...........
Ntw locllllon:
161 Norttt Socond
Middl.,..t, Olio 45760
SALES &amp; SER~ICE
Wt

C.V F-1 luppll•

VourPho,..

Bille Here
PMONI

K and J CONSTRUCTION
GIEG 8AILEY
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

AGreat Combination" Quality and Reason•l• Prices"
WE GO THE EmA MILE"'"
992-6810

�Page-

1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements
3

31

Announcements

'"· co. lllllo l4dci too.
OOLO
CREDIT
CARD
Vlolilllolorcold -nload no
-~~'~~r dopooH 1-IIOO-ie3-Bioo
'"· co. blllo 41.50 too.
No ~aalng on Qorokl
Hoclgoo tond on sand Hill Road.

4

Homes for Sale

By owner. On• Mory, Walnut

lor Rent

Older z 11ory larm no-

APARTMENT RENTERS! Homoo
lram $1.00 (U.Ropolr) Gov,

Dining room, 2BR, garagt.
440-4101 .tt• 5:00p.m.

giVNMYI,

B~

Prlco Roducodl Portot Brooll
SubdlvltiOfl, 3BR. 1 1rz Both,

F.R. 9c~-ln-Porch, 314ac,.
lot, Clly School. 114-4411-11111.

Spring V.llov Subdlvlalon: 815
O.k Dr., newly decorated raneh
atylo homo. 3 tr., 2 both, dining
2 car gonogo.
Nog. o14-448834.

room,'"""'·

Giveaway

Prlco

32 Mobile Homes

4 booulllul, IYiaky killona 1o a
good and loving home, otll 304-

121160 whh room addlllon. 3

for Sale
~tr•

M

Lost &amp; Found

6

LOST omall d.lrlt rod O..hund,

"

~'::.'~!=,!~~~
Ptt. On medtclne chlldt pet .
Call or ratum tl4 'viand Sl., Pl.
Pit. 304-111-27'111.

L.ool: Tlt.fokl
blfokl, comalnod
lmport1nt
pl!pMI. A.,..rd. fl14-

111!-6821.

7

8

• echool.

' Uraa, loola, mla&lt;., H , llh, nh.

Public Sale

V1CE.

AUCTIONEER:
BOGGS. OM-448-77!0.

DAVID

O.rag. s...: Route 218, 2 112
mil• out, Fri., •nd Sat ., July Casto'a Aucllon Service, ButGl.rdn«'1 VartMy I Fumnwe
Shop, 1414 Eaatorn Avo. Buy,
Sell 1nd T111de. Low pricee. 114-

hlto, WV. Llceneed Ohio and
WMI Vlrglnll. 30 y•rs IX•
perience. For your Nl• call ut.
Goldin Caito 304-i37·2216 Of
Juper Casto 304-9'37-2126.

Glom SOlo: &gt;144 Spruca Sl. E111.,

9

eth, nh.

on ustd or

buyaro. C.lll-10().581-6711.
SPECIAL
Ft.clory to you1991, 2
or 3 bod'-1114KJQ inodo&lt;a ol

full-lime poahlon ovolloblo. Cou 1-10()-m-4044,.,.. dalollo.
1()()"111 tuttlon ,...nburHment.
S.nd r..umea or Cllll tor an 11 ~ Mutt Mil 1VTI Ntw Moon 12x60
~ntment. EOE. Otll A.wUnt, whh 12x24 room, $.4,500. :J04..

Clay CALL . BOGGS AUCT10H SER·

c~ott1ing,

FumltuN,

.,_,.ment,

Down

101
oooad mobile hom" oa
tow .. &amp;500 down lo qUIUfled

&amp; VIcinity

All Ylrcl Sal.. Uulll Be Ptld In

bolllnd

Help Wanted

HMrtltnd of Jackeon LPN/AN

&amp; Auction
Adwance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly betoN the ld lt to run. Rick PNr.on AuctJon Company
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. now booking auctions, ••·
· Frldty. Mond.ly edftlon • 2 :00 r=nce make• the difference.
. p.m. Satur*y.
~io, Kentucky, WHI
cenud un
: Garogo SOli: 7 mlllo ....h R1.7, I ,YI~rg=l_nc.
~:..:'304-.:...,~m-5785.,::...:.:.:.:::.·_ __
-

derpennl'!:,na conerete lltPf,

,_»~._.a'-!-'-==-----W

11

· 5 t.mlly yard ule. , mU• OUI

, Briel&lt;

rooma, 2 balha, hoal pump, un-

Pomeroy,
Middleport

Ylrd St .. : St. P.ul United
Mtlhodlll Church, Tupper~
Plaint, Ohlo..My 1-7. Ck)thlng,
toya, hou11holcf and mltcel.. MOUIIIIMftl.

· 218.11-Hhura., Frt., Sal.

1888 Schult wUh IXpind, 3

t==========-r-=========1

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

HIM lr.cM-ina. 114448~38.

,

I don t want a career, Dad .. .l
Wan t a }:1"
ueS tyle.n

mil. Will coneld•r lind

contract. 814-JI2-2114 evenlngt.
1M3 14•1Q, good cand., 3 Br.,
CA, -~. unctorolnnlng: con-

7-5

FNI My to CUI and haul .way.
114-1'12-Zf7e.

, 8668 St. AI. 83, Jtckaon,

lho

unbollovablo

prk:o

of

$12,100 dellvtrtd lnd ttl up.

87S-l'888.

Ohio 45640. 114-286-5028.
33 Farms for Sale
Logging Qrty.,. Neldtd, 2
JNI'I IX1*6tnce drivtrl need Big O.kota firm home, buitt on
tpply, 30~-3650 .
your lot. $14,1114 &amp; up. 514-5867311.
Make u much money u you
wt.nt. Woril •• many houra 11
Business
you Wlnt. Be a Beluty Con.ult· 34
ant. lluel be 18 yNra ol age.
Buildings

114-1112-2111.

Need aameane to ITKWI tumthn from ltorege b\llldlng In
Point PMaunl to.houN In P'olnt

Plauonr. 114-9'l2-115111.
Pliny Truck Slap At 3! le now
ICCtpllng lprlcstlon tor cook·
wahrna, eai 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
304-7S7-8357.

2nd Ava., Gllllpot/1. CIOII to
Court Houae. 1 room, 2 rooma,
3 rooms, • rOOIMI. All nleely
diiCOf'lll•d. 1lr conditioning,
your water • ..wer bUiare paid,
Make your ehoice now. No
qiXItM ow• IM phone, you
mult ... them. Phone for an
appointment 614~7QV day,

..a-e~3Vewe.

8-1, Wornerw clolhlng, knlvee,
loll old toote, CB r~~dloa,
gl••ware, pottery, tumhure:
NCrwllry desk, china cab/nett,

more., Antique wall cloek. rnov~

CIITtllrt,

protector, scrwn. Cut

Iron. Mort!

; Mult..,amlly Juty 7 I 8. 8~ two
. kM:atkma. Oaorges CrMII Ad. 1
mill frvm lufavllle Ad. Ani._
quee,
guns~,
toot., lirte,
..houaehoHI nem..
bfcycltl,
4WIIjll I , t.n}o, gultlre, puWI
lawn rl"'o.lll, much more.
Ruotmogo 91 ,., aoy eom.
._. liaunlty Building, July 4-7, 10:00
a.m.-t:OO p.m.

91- SOlo. July 8,7 (Frl., saql
~?

DHnle Or., 2 mil• Weet o

. Holzar HoapHal.
Yerd Bile 3 mUM below EuNkl
U 1nd lth. Kltch.n caiMnete,
Dish Wuhlr, curttlne, ..,.....
clolhee, loti mt.c.
1:~

Yard 511•11 Madleon Ava.

4:00 Thin., Fn., Sot., IIUio glrla

8-1, JNnl, whatnots, Ulec.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
G1rage S11ti, J""ly 5,8,7. 2123
Map. Ave. BedaprNdl, ap-

Junk Cll"*

wllh or whhout
Richard G.orge~o

motort.

Sunday catle piNN. 814-388-

110115.

Quine
Anllqut or new. Excellent condl·
lion only. Prompt payment . 814-

1112-6117.

Employment Services

JOBS 118,392-$87,
125f'Vr. Now hiring. Call (1) 805POSTAL

Lots &amp; acreiQI svalllbla tor

687-tooG Ext P-4562 tor current

Rayburn

lilt.

county

_1,.,.,1,....H.,.e.:.lp_W_a_n_ted
___
AVON . An

end . 814-62-2800.·

1r111,

Call Marilyn

As 1* Artk:lt I Tra,..t.re and

12

vacancloa, sac~fon a, Pooling,
of the N-aotlsttd AgrMment
betwHn 1M MLTA •nd the

Board of EduciUon, thl Melgt

R01d. Pawed road,
water,
qaeonablt

rutrlctlons. lntonnatlon mal'-d
Taking appHcaUone fDr a on requeel. 304-675-&amp;253, John
wom.n of the 90'1 carwr. Part· D. a.rtach, no slngla-wldt
time work tor tuii·Ume pey. Must trau.,., pte....
be 18 r•n ot 1ge. 614-742-2118. I -c::--:-:''---c-...,-,c--=-tOOx110 lot on Broad Run Road ,
THCherl nMcl ex1ra $, rwtlr.d, 2 miiH trom New Hnen, city
WGril momlnge Of' eYMings. Wlltr, cable TV, no down paySend ,.ume, P.O. Bo1 1115, m1nt , will llnanc:e SS,OOO. Lucy
Bktwell 45614 .
Kay lor, 30ot-382-3739.

w......nd Clrt. lAdy to provide
live-in c.re for .. deny lady In
Syrac:uH. Every other w.ek·

w......, 304-882·~5.

noma construction on

new

S~uatlon

Wanted
private l'lome for
elderly men or woman. 814-2566509, Crown City arM.
Hl'lfl room ln

local School IOittrict \1 potting
the following vacancy hH Itt
rogular 1ooe~1ng atan: Soc:ond 18 Wanted to Do
Oract. TuehM a1 Pomeroy ~-:-::-=-::.:::...:::._:_:=--:-:­
EieJMntary School.
Car I lawn mowll' reptlra, pick·
wp 1nd delivery. Moblla homa
AVON I All AI'NI I Shlrtey untMoc:ked I reblock~, roofs
Spoara, 304-&lt;175-IQII.
polntod. !ICM-67!1~816

Blbyelnlf'
netded.
Mature Fonner Klndlrgsrt~tn INCIMI of.
respon.tbMI lady tot 6 and 5I yr r.rtng chlldcs,. In my home. FT
old tn my home. Mutt be nail- or PT. Structu,.d ICIIvlt'". Cen·
able after tchool, holldtyl, ttnary 614~&amp;-0230.

18 314 flit, patturltd ground.
$13,000. 61•·)12-2088 or 814·742·
2421

2 Iota. Vaults and h•dltonn at
Meigs
Mtmo.itl
Garden ..
Vttartorw S.etlon. 47A Lot• 3&amp;4.
$3,000 tor all. 614-453-&amp;484.
Ont acrt tra/lar lot whh water
tnd ..puc aystem, $3,900. 304675-2722.
Route 2 All'lton, 1 acq 10ta1 3
mlin eoutl't O.lllpol/s l.oekl,
publle wit•, no Nltrtctlons,
10mt with riv1r front.ge, 304-

s•

Mowtng, toll I chair,
clothe~, IGI: mtae, lawn mover I

Yard

1/4 mile plllld the Y on
At. 12 9 . Wed. ihur, &amp; Frlt:OO ·
??
Yard SaM Thur-.d1y and Friday
ICJOII from Pleuant Valley
Nur1h-..g Home V:OO till 5:00.
Yard Sate, 7 North 3rd SlrMI,
Maaon WV. July 5 and 8.

tiUar 1

Yard Sale Juty 5 &amp; 8 G.lllpo_
llo
Forry, bolllnd Quick Rk:k'a a-s

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp;VIcinity
4 tamlty yard 11le. St1rt1 July 5.
e.? 3317t Bolloy R101 Road.

BIG \'an:l Sale. Route 6B1 to
Alhd Co. Ad. •1. Second Trailer

______

._.t

glven. Come lnlplct our naw, 050e.
modom oqulpm«&lt;l. llorl&lt; you
calondar lor S.Oiulday, July 7.
Como

ialk wfth: CAST INT'L,
INC.
1.101).73:1-2778.

•fl• 5:30p.m.

rnlloo eo1 on !88. 2 Br., AC,
wat., p111d, 1235 ptue d.p. 614448-2082, •e&amp;-105&amp;.

14170, ltXpindo, 1 112 bath, 3

21

- . (aomo nnl. -

OR. 614-4-4&amp;-4B2•.
bedroom

Funtrtl Homt).

51

~

Household

Roome tor rant • ••k or month.
Starting at ft201mo. Galla HolM.

61-4-4&amp;6-8580.

Slooplng rooma wfth c:ool&lt;lng.

At.a trail• apace. All hDok-upe.
C.ll after 2:00 p.m., 304-~
5651, M11on WV.

Good'a

Dunro~n

Rool a hOUII pal~~~ lhlngllng roota, houH ~r. IM.
:IIMJH aftar 4 p.m.

Wort&lt;_._ 1-111.
Whirlpool

$111.

--

GE

nahor $111, GE Drvor $78, Hoi·
po1n1 rofrlg. Pl.
ungrorrlg. PI; OE -g. lllio now
$150, aide by aide rolrlg. horaGid, nlco, 12!0., aloe.
. . . ')()• t95, *"irtpool aloe.
,.,.. 30" fM. AM tn
oond.
ancl guaranroad. ~ ~

w..

••c.

plio--. 114-4411-73111.

2 lois, tor rent, C.ll 614-38J.J131.

Buy 0&lt; Mil. Alvwlna Anllq1124 E. l..ln StrMt, Pomeroy.
Hourt: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
11
·2121.

and wlter
fumlehtocl, ~•rene• , 304-t75·

Trtoitll'

epiC~ , . . . . ,

1078.

'iT Wanted to Rent
Nlet two tMdroom ap.artment Ol

small hou" tor elderty coupM
In Pomeroy, Mkldleport 1rea.
ReferanCH IYIIIIblll. Call IMP92-2t47 or B14·H2-3112.

49

Antiques

P-,:'t:'nctoy

Merchandise

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
prac.d from

$595. Aectlnera $225 lo $375.
Lampe S28 to $125. DlntUII
$10i and up to $4M. Wood tab&amp;ll
chalre 1285 to
Detkl
$1.t5 up to $375. Hutchn $400 &amp;
up, bunk bedl complet• with
maUNU I29S and up to 1315.

ma.

w-e

2 bod ~nmoa.

z-

., aprlnga

$50, 1 """,_· 2 t...d boarcJe.
114-4411-3711.

2--··

ta~.
Mow.,
2-4" -·beauty lhOI) •
qul-nl, ale. Phono 304-'m-

5040.

I ft. NteMtte dish, Clble 1
rocolvar. WG&lt;Ico good. $300. 11..
37t-2847.

Forced air fuel Mnace. Gun
210 gal....., oil lin~ 814IU&amp;-4136 Detort 10 p.m.

~YJ&gt;O.

ehnt or dr.-rw S-44.85.
All wood country pine dln~tte, 3
Chllrt a bench ~~. Tw4n Of
run maftml, ~9.95 . Vaughn
lanett alltper aohl, lnterwpr·
lng matlrns, qu.en liD. Open
Mon.Sat Usrn-&amp;pm. Sun. 12
dr~~w11

noon-Spm. At . 1ot1, 4 mll11 ott

AI. 7. 414-446-3158.

County Appliance

Inc. Good

J/m'1 Ferm~ulprntJnl, SR. 3~,
WMI 0.111
, 114-44H777;
Wide Hlect
new &amp; UMd fann
tNCton • lmptementa. Buy,
..rl, trade. l ;oo-1;00 wttkdl'f'l,

3114-8115-34113.

62 wanted to Buy
Wlnttd to Buy UMd Mobile

0J&amp;.m&lt;l.

Round bal.. of hay tor ..... $20

• b«lo. 414-i43-434e.
Will do cu.tom combining, 304773-1010 0&lt; 773-6197.

71

Oarri-Chalr good cand. Folcla
- · Lop Tray 114-3BU193
Long dlatonoo goa A - pump
11 hp. Kohl• motor 1,.1/er and
llnee Included. 114 14S.5312 e~ll
afttr 1:00 p.m.

Mlnofto :t1mm SRTIOI, Monclonl
lono,210

!Omm

•nala.... 1\50. 814-258-

Ill I c :pi

Uq..

bod.,,...._.,.,

Slnco llhcM qUilt' Wettem

't1 Mu.t.ng, e1c eond, ""'
palm and llrtl, $1,600. '71

'83 Aenautt AeHence • door,
auto, good cond, 64,500 mlltl,

$1,500. 304-471-4584.

1HI Comoro. 402 Big
114-012-42U
4:uo Pll304-67!5-4858 .

1971 Oldll . Aun1 oood. Good

!JTaolcobla
~-.
~-Hionor 1350.

..m condhton,

Womona ClolhH, alza 7-1 ond

55

Building
Supplies

BlOCk, brick, -

plpoo, wlnetc. Claude Wln,..., Rio Orondo, 011 Coli 81424UI2l
dowl, lint•.

UMd eiMI bMmt, c:hlnnetl
engl•, 3111 plate Ifni, .ttti
aholvoo, -•1 "':::~lnaulolod

~:~~ ~~ 8. llectr\c
::=:.::::::..:;:::::;,_
___
56 Pets for Sale

-

1080 Iuick Regal, 2 door, excel·

1NO Chivy • dnva pk:~­
up, """" atop aldo. 1fll Corvette Stingray. 1V71 Flrtbird
Formula. 114-1611-4306 or 114112-25811 sek tot- Jim.

1085 Aanaull Alliance, 1.7 out,
mini conct.. $12,710 30&lt;-1112·

37113.
Toy~a

Turcel Wagon. !I
door, 11ft bock, .... ..
$300. 114-371-a72Z.
11M

Iorge alia d - . clothing,
hat.aJN*i Heme, mlac. llneofn
Hlo., Uppor and. PGtnlroy.

Eacolllnl

condlllon.

11n DoGao Catano, muat

F~IO-? .

Y•rd ..... Clathea, unllorma,
comp.....,, etc. Jut., 1-l Neleon

Roed, AutiMd.

8:30 G

Low

'!'\

Yn - · Auolk Hlllo.
clothoa.
July U-7. IH.

'-tQ.J

you?

614-992-2156
304-675-1333
614-446-2342

behavioral patterns of
several species of

A lD SER.

Kin~snakas

hounded by his Iarmer
secretary who has a crush

on htm. (A) Stereo. Q
(!)Top Aonk Boxing
1111111 II) (() American
Danca Honora Stereo. C
Cil (]) Myotory1 Aumpo(e

Home
Improvements
WATE RPROORNO

Uneondftlonal ilfellme guarsntM. Local reterenc• tumlahecl.
Fr11 ettlmatM. Call collect 1·
114-237-0488, day .. nlgh1.
Aogen S...nnt Wat •proo-

llng.

linds the temptation to
escape too strong to resi st

MORK MEEKLE

~ Ill~ Wlaeguy Vinn ie IS

HOP

caught in the m1ddle ol a war
between Carrico and Chin

WHY DOES 81/ER'fBODY
c.cw.E 10 NE. Wln-t
Hou.-hold

11J MOVIE: Tht Long Hoi
Summer (PI 2 Of 2) (2: 001

MalnttNnce :

61-3802.

'

Slplk: Tonk Pu-.&gt;~ng $110 Gallla
Co. RON EVANS ~NTERPRISES
JacUon, OH 1-800-637-1528.
Da~•

'

Sow·Voc

Sorvlca.
~ C~ Rd . P1r11, ·~

® Naohvllle Now

9:30 GIll ill Selnleld Jerry is
ecstatic that a woman 1s
coming to live with him. (A)

(0:30)
10:00 I]) 700 Club With Pol
Roblrtoon
IJ(ll
L.A. Low

a

Markowitz becomes a lunatiC
wt1en his wife goes into

labor. (A) Stereo . C

Ralertncet

Mobile

Home

conef'lts

work.

82

own. Q
(IJI Evonlng Nawa

rD Newa
10:20 (I) MOVIE: Countdown 12 00)
10:30 I!) Maotttploce Thealnt
IJI ll]l Paid Programming
® C100k • Choat
11:00 I]) Selmon

Heating
Carter'a Plumbing

Electrical

ASTRO-GRAPH

&amp;

Refrigeration

LlctnM llectrlclan. Aklenour

a.101n.

Elacirlcal, 304-671-1711.

72 Truck1lor Sale

85

General

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-ion.

NuonaiM mea. VOlume d~
- """! 1'-110, 110_2 .,., alllo counla, 2,000 to 4,000 capocl~l
claloma, air, ........ 12,2011, 304-67t4tlt
. - · alo. Call
IJI.11• .

rn

Upholstery
~~~7.=~~~--~
~· Uphol""""' ""
.... ·
- Tho
boOt~~~-~
·In Wtnilluro
Uflllclolarfng.
Coli ~114 lilt lrao ...

""'"'•

:m-•

iH4 a-, Eddlo !!_l*......_od~ Graham Uphoialory Conlof,' ~

lion,.,.., oond. 304... ,...,..,

\

Hauling

11172 Cllaw 1 .... 4 ...... 10 ft., A &amp; A Wllar Sorvico, era.
- . , wallo. lmmodla1•1,00ci or
1117.
.
1171 a..y 112 "'" wllh ~~ dollv.y. Calgood
380 .,_
~ - 114-JU.aoiiG&lt; 114- W.ftoraOfl'a W.lar Hauling

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

mismalched attorney s dBC!dB
to start a law firm on their

&amp;

andHaatlng
Fourth and Pfna
GaHipollo, 01\io

Hllllap Dr. Call lor
• ..um.... c.ll1111111.

Wllhoul Walla

11m 1111121 Bar Girl a Two

lniUIMCe cl1lma

Plumbing

Wo~d

Gove rnment and bus ines s
leaders discuss the new
global marketplace.

accaplod.l14-111l

84

1tl7 ,.... FIIO Super Cob
~~. ,_. Fonl •~ n
..,1410. 1Wf Dalaon Super Cab
ti,IOO. 304-4711-4480.

(])

TWO FEET"

aiiCI;{.OI, plumbing a!lporionca.

114-441-3818

t-

"THANKY FER
GIVIN' ME

I SHORE THANKY
FER GIVIN' ME A HAND
WITH MY
KNITIIN'
YARN,
PAW

44U2M.

call ~ mon-trl H

t-.

fJ 1111 CJ (() Plimollme Live
Slerao. Q
Cll Newswatch

piiM, pk:kup, and dollvwy. 114RemodeUng:

.QJ
.986~~

• AJ 7

EAST
• J 76 J

WEST
• 10 4 2

• A 10 5

.J 9742
• J 10 J

.Q

Souih would nave li ked st ronger .KQ
clubs. but everything else aboul nis

.8 6543
SOUTH
• K85

cards cried out for a game force in no-

trump. West led a heart , and declarer
• K 86
put up dummy's queen , won by East
• AK7 2
witn tne ace Back ca me the 10 of
.10 9 2
hearts, ducked, and lhe third heart,
Vulnerable: Botn
won by declarer 's king. II was apparDealer . Nortn
ent that West had started w&lt;th five
hea r ts . and it was equally apparent
Nortb
Eur
W.s&lt;
South
t hat makmg the contract depended
Pass
upon sett ing up ext ra diamond tncks 2 NT
All pass
Pass 3 NT
without allowi ng Wesl lo gain the
lead
nmg lead: • 4
Bill Root analyzes th&lt;S problem succmctly in "How to Play a Bridge L-- - - - - - - - - -...J
Hand" (Crown Publishers. Inc). If diahea rlll, declarer w1ll win the next trick
monds are 2-2 or if East has three.
and play A·K of diamonds, running the
there " no probl em. If West has three
suit to make his contract. (f the queen
dtamonds. you can keep hi m out of the
of diamonds had not appeared from
lead only if Eas t has the lone queen . so
East. decla rer would of course have
you must a llow f or 1l.
A-K . hopmg lor the best. ·
After winning the kmg of hea rts. de- played
JRmes Jaooby 's boob "Jicoby 011 Bridge"•nd
clarer pl ays a spade to reach dummy •JM.'Oby on Cs rd G.ames • (wrlllen with IW f•Chtr.
When he leads a diamond from dum- tht&gt; l~te ()$ wald JM'Oby) RN' fJO'W .tv.alllbJt l l
my and East plays th e queen. decl arer books/Ofe$ Both It? pubJUMd by P/JArotJ Boot!
@ 1110, Nf:WSPAP£11 Elfll:RrRIIl &amp;lilt.
can play low. Since East has no more

I.

o,..

ahead . Send lor your Astro-Graph pre·
dictions today by mailing S1.25 to Astr a-Graph. c/o this newspaper . P.O.

Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Something
you've been trying to do thai hasn't

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 18) Usually
you are ta~her ou~golng and iflendly In

vorked out successfully so tar can be
ICCompllshed today If you approach it
n a methodical manner . Do things one

your personal relationships, but today
out of your corner, you'll have more lun
being a ml•er 1han a loner.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. ZZ) You' ll be bol -

PISCEI (Fob. 20-Morch 211) View your

ter at calling the shots today than you

expectations realistically today, be-

will be trying to comply with the direc tives of others . Don 't be reluctant to
take charge when you see other

cause your posalbllltlea for making

tumbling .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Don't waS1e

achievable.

because Uyou locus on your more serl·

.:van though partnership

arrangements

might nol be ~oo appealing to you In I he
year ahead, seyeral alliances you lorm

you mlgh1 be a llifte wlthdtawn . Como

step at a time.

any time today on frivolous pursuits,

July 8, 111110

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-.lln . 18) If something difficult has to be taken care of In
your-dealings with your peers today,
you are likely to be appotnted a co mmit ·
tee ol one to get It done.

Box 91428 . Clevel and . OH 44101 -3428 .

ous priorities what you can accompUsh
. may amaze you. Handle lhe tougher
matters llrst.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ZZ) II I here is a
serious Issue you'd like to Iron out with
another today, don't beat about the

will be extremely advanlageoua. Others bush. Gel down lo basics as quickly as
possible and set your mind upon
might be only ol nom inal value.
CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22) A partner- resolutions.
ship arrangemen~ could repreoent your SAGinARIUI (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Be
moll beneficial lnvolvemenl today. It alert lot ways 10 Improve your ma~erlal l
will have mutual advantages, but each . circumstances today. Your posalblllllas
party will have to work al 11. Gel a lump lot pe1110nal gain look good , even1
on lila by understanding the Influences though whal you might ge~ won'l be
which are governing you In the year earth shaking .

them realities are within the realm ot

probability.

Ptacllcal

goal&amp;

CROSSWORD
br THOMAS JOUPH
ACROSS
1 Task
6 Summit
9 Energize
10 Nasal
sensation
12 Modify
for usage
13 Ward off
t5 Sllll
t6 Skimmer

are

ARIES (lbrch 21-Aprtl11) Your possl- ·
bllltles lor being an achiever ate qulle
good today , but you're llkaly ~o be extremely selecllve regarding your obiOCtlvea. II you're no1 strongly motivated,
you migh1 wall until later.
TAURUI (April 20-MeJ 211) A lesson
you've f!larnad lrom a pelnful, pas~ experience will be put 10 conltruc11ve uee
today. You're not opt to make the ume
ml81ake twlca.
GEIII!II (IIIJ 21-.IUM 211) Flnenclal or
commercial lnvolvem..to ohould be
•your et(ong oult today. You'll recogniZe
1• good dell H you - one and you'll
1know how 10 ectvantageoualy ftt yourself
;lnlo the picture.

• Ill 1111111 CJ (() 11m
1111121 ill Nowa
(!) Baoablft Tonight
IJI ll]l Araonto Hall
(IJI Montyllno
OMteml Vlco
® Amorlcan Muoio Shop
rD Twlllghl Zone
11:30(]) MOVIE: Stloula Bluoa
[2:00)
II Ill ill Wlmblldon UpriiiO
(!) Sport•~·
1111111 CIIHra Q

DOWN
1 Lucius
or Hsnry

2 Pelt
3 Eggshaped
4 One ol
435 (abbr.)
5 Rhapsodiz e
6 Type
ol cake

21
22
23
24
27

work
14 Nol
Grassland
water Function
prool ed
Unsavory 17 "Artie"
Hag
author
Borgnine 20 Melody

28 Enllce
29 Play
on word s
30
31 Gnocchi,
e .g .
33Me(Fr)
34 Asian
riv er
35 Aries
symbol
38 Carthage's
language
40 Framework
42 Elephant's-

k-- 1----1--

k-+--+--

ear

715

DAU.Y CRYPI'(IQUOTES - Here'1how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR

!aLONG FELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlerll,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

II(() NlghdiM Q

CRYP10QUOTE

1111121 'Sting,.r CBS Lila

7-5

Night Stingray uncovers a
political scam being all up
by 1he pollee. IR)

K B P J W

90n Stago

illl M•onum, P.l.
11:488(}) ill Tonight Show
Stereo.
12:00 (!) 1190 AMA Supercrou
From Ol&lt;lehoma Clly, OK (T)

BSXQRVX

I B V

1111111 NiGIIIIIM Q

• (() !nltlteinnllnl Tonlghl

~~~~~~-tlow

Eng .
composer
Ornery
Wrath
Greek
nickname

43 Sports
palace
44 Hire
45 Cambric,
e .g .

11m Night Court
(IJI Sport• Ton~

s=~Stereo.

25 Elapse, as 36
a subscriplion
37
26 One kind 39
of number 41
27 Tuneful

111m

li!OneOnOne

(JJ lbr.um, P.l.
• (!]) old Plogrommlng

Yestarday's Answer

or boater 7 Poem
23 Bombastic 29 Buddy
18 Mexican
8 In
outburst
31 Embroidery
tree
demand 24 Holding
loop
19 Musical
11 Havs p1ly
device
32 Eve -

(AI Q

tl]) Larry King Livel

'THEIR TR(J(JBLE5 ~

p.m.
OC7t'ERNMENT S£1ZED vthk:loa
from 1100. Fordo. I I • -·
Corvtn:•. Chevy•. Surplus.

.... bod.·-·

Q

90n s..ue
9:0011 Ill @ Choera Norm is

OC7t'ERNMENT BCIZEO vahlciM Elaclrtc Sorvlco. 814-441-271$,
from tiOO. Folda. .. .........
ar oommtrc1a1
CorvotiM. Chovya. Sulflluo. R.-.nual
wiring.
new
eervfce
or ..,alra.
Your arao. (1)IOH8HOOO El1.

WHO-().{)-()
can~

An1181es. C
(l) lnelk ,reviiWI Ooe1
Vldoo
(]) Wild Ame~ea Explore the

StlaiJ Mt. s::ME.OU. ()JiO
r51JI B.JSY A"-lD I 'LL SltW

Comnwo&amp;al and At~l!Mmlll
Yaur-. (1) IOH8HOOO El1. ~~
new ..,... or rwpalre.
11-101n.
.. . _ EIICirtclana. Paoq,.lo

l l y -. Lcla ol -

Ill ill Bloaoom An astute

and quick-witted teenage girt
comes-of-age in Los

Services
81

,._,.

[PGi (2 :00)

priold to Mil,~.

111f7 c,_,. 11-10, ,_ mllaaga, repair roofing,
1NI Chryalor Laloron Coupe,

elderly . (A) Stereo

® Amorte1n Mualc Shop

....rvo"-

Upper River Rd. B11ldeo Stone

on

rD MOVIE: The Outoldera

otter, Phone 014-

"'"' good. $100. 114-;JJ'i-2847.
1883 Codllloc Coupo Da Vlllo. Ron's TV !Mrtloe, apecilllztng
In Zenith 1110 MrVk:lng moal
1t82 CutlaM Sup.rema. 304-615- othlr
bntndll. Houle calle, ttiO
2403.
_,. oppllonoa ropolra. WV
1184 CutiUI Sierra Brougham. !ICM-47!14318 Ohio 814-4.a-2454 .
DieM!, toaded, 1\1 orlgln1T. Stll Roofing and Siding. Trollor
tor
014-4411-23&lt;11 "' 2U· roofl pelnt.ct. Free eellmaiH.
Frod llorl&lt;o, 304-m-tlll.
1884 Olde Dena, •rc.Jitnt candltlol\ $4900. 132 Butt~rnut, Rotary or Clbfl tOOl drill!~.
MOll Wille compleltd 11me day.
- . , . Ollie&gt;.
Pump 11111 and aerwk:e 304-

Crall llolol. Call 114-1411-73811.

~ouches

PrimeNew•
[JI Murder, She Wrote

Roon,., - - l r , oldlng,
nowlrapolr, carpo,.ry, odd loba.
1t80 Sunblrd, Nbull engine, ..urnat• . 114--371-2120, aH tor
Uhel'l.

1814 RX·7, 13,100. 11Jl3 Ford
cube truck, f,SOO. 1Q6• Ftlcon

the llnlshlng

8

241-6tll5.
1m ProwM•. 24 toot camper:
Roal aooc1 • " - ~,500. 114-

11111 cavallor Z-24. Loadod,
•nraof, low mil••· Take o'ltr
poymonta. t1W414:m.

Now

pu~

the house.

16211.

5 p.m.

AKC - a l puppioa. Sho4a
Mothod. t125. uclt Franc•
Household tumlehlng. 112 mi. V-114-617-3asl.
Janicho Rd. Pl. Pl..-, WV,
call 30W75-M50.
AKC Aalrlavar puppiH.
z .._loa loft, wt.a. old: mo.
114-441-0211.

(!) Hometlme Subconh'actors

$1500. 6'14--«6-

$400, good ahopo. 114-2511-12711.

AoOIIoncoa,

for Thanksgiving dinner. IAI
II(() Father Dowling ,
Mylto~n Father Dowllng ·s
help is sought by a dying
man . (PIt) (A) Stereo. Q
I!) Hometime

1111111

BASEMENT

1i70 Ford Falrllnt 500, .nglne
~J tctu•l ml'-1 11,7112, aher
ehspo. •V\1\. Calllt&lt;I-"N2·2320.

•-ldryor

a

entire HuKtable clan galhers

r

1171 Dodge Champion motorhorne. Good condition, low

Bloc~

c...

Sl.,ll~ -

you JAt/&gt;1 "NO,
fi~HAP$ Af'JOTtttR
TIMe'~ .. ?

114-3111-2381.

Dodgo Diplomat good eond
11,0011. 304-773-0B11.

Q

IJI ll]l M•lor Loaguo
Baoablll
(IJI Crotlfl,.
rDS.wnched
7:35 CD Malor Loaguo S.aebll
6:00 (]) MOVIE: SL Loula Bluea
12:00)
G Ill
Coaby Show The

~orgotten

21ft umper bath, bMroom,
complala kHchon, awning,
et.etrlc braba, aood cond,

11111
rv, :108, I aod.,
cnHa, tin, air, all pow.,, 'lk•
...... 21,000 ....... 114-448-eoM.

a.?. 0110 Gronl

'

NORTH

By James Jacoby

the plight of Ameri ca ·s

Autos for Sale

m(laaga.tM-4411-1111.

MIIW Family y~rd &amp;lie. One day

LOANS
'

11m tll1121 ill Jeopardy!

awnlna. Oaod condtUon..

miiNge, maka

.

If you need it,
play for it

al 1111121 48 Houra Exploro

'J112-20lll or 8'M-~·24&lt;ll.

Washtra, dryers, rehiglfl1ore, 61-4 388 8021.

PICKENS FURNITURE
HawiUHd

f
-------' Y!&gt;TEF!P~Y, WHfN
I tf j (l.tiVIEMtf'

All

Transportation

Ndd... UU new. $100. I14-'N2•
2&amp;31 ul&lt; lor Rolllll

. - appllonooa, T.V. aoto. ()pan
8 a.m. 10 1 p.m. llon ..s... &amp;14&gt;144·119'l, 1527 3rd. A... Ga~ ....,,...-~,..,,...,.......,-11po&amp;1•· OH
2 Famolo AKC Raglalarod I w~
GOOD USED APPLIANCES old C - PuppfM fill oach.
rang•. Sklgga

FRANK AND ERNEST

AlrwtNamL-~~·
MWU.

ft .

•

.AQ9

7!M GIll Family Foucl
(!) Pro Bowltra AIIOCIIIIon
1111111 En-lnmont Tonlghl
a(() Mama'o Fomlly

Campers&amp;

)1

•

BRIDGE ·

® MuiiC Row Video

Typaio, Uood &amp; Robul ft, 30 doya
to 1 y•r warranty, OWMr: Bill
Flowtrl. 8M-~s.M77 ar 1143111-2Zt3.

1171

Premium eltalfl h.ly, ba._ and
rona, 1torage •val/able, Morgan
Fsrm, Rt. 35 Pliny, 304-V37-2018.

.

Ensure - Rayon - Thump - Hinder - NUDIST

rD Hogan'• Horoea
7;05 CD Jelioraona

1155
lfllller
t0x32
good
campette tralllf, 304-175-«dd.

Hay lor .. ,., 304-671-7853.

.

The bus driver kept the obv1ously Inebriated man
from board1ng the bus by asking him if he was going lo
the NUDIST colony .

0 Miami Vice

Accessorte1

79

Comple te th e chuckle quoted
by ltll tng m th e missing wmds
L-L-.!.....l-..1-....JL...- you deve lop from step No 3 below.
.

PM Magulne
SportiCentor
Cltalllnllde EdiUon
I!) (]) MacNeil Lohrwr

(IJI Monoyllno

BOATERS

Tranem'-lcns;

I0

~6,-TI;;.7...:.,1_:,,.:...,,;"--~,.--i

NewaHour
II(() Cu.,.nt AHair

HP Merc.CruiHI' 110, many extru. Rolld Runner trallar. 8'14446-2141.

Budgtt

I \ I

I

iill Ill

Motor Homes

Full length gtaas •arm door,
wnh -.::r.an. m.oo, phonl, 304-

Ilene......._ 1'14-446-7113.

Night Sllndt, $39.M . • Post•r

11348.

Nomoa.Calll-75

.... Aak for s... 11o A
Old u• -•
:~ .._-:. -=.:::-.1 • ' n.

Ca•h a Carry Salt

wMI ..... ...... 114-446-

Tractor tor ula, Ford 8N e II .
bruah hog, 8 h. blado, 14" plowa

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

up, King $3110. 4 dmror choal
181. Gun Cobl.- I, I, &amp; 10

«6..0322.

-

l,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Fortune
ll]l Night Cou~

1m 17 ft . Starer~ft Trt-Hull
BOlt. 125 HP, EvlrYudl Engine,
~If• top new u~let.ry.
Colll14-2811-1ili •"" 1:00 p.m.
1883 Syhron oftal!onl ZZ ft. 140

l
Is

FH RAW

1111 e1121 ill Wheel 01

mechln., rake1_baler, plowland
dlac, groin drm $41110. 2010 JD 18 II. Deep V-1\aul aluminum
wlcult~etora 1nd plow 12850. Stan::r1ft U1hlng boat with tltt
Owner will finance. 614-281- trtlllr. Call B14-lt2-6377 slier
llp.m.
1122.

I

BEASA

IJI ll]l Throa'a Company
®Top Cold
rDNewhlrt
6:35 (I) Andy GriHIIh
7:00 (]) Sctorecrow I Mra. King

e

....... $100. 114-4411-3434.

II I I' I I

(]) 3-2·1 Contael Q
11m e1121 CBS Nowa Q

nga.

-

HODURS

I offered to hide the size tag
1,"
sticking out of a companions
.
.
.
.
.
..
jacket. "Just leave it dear," she
. - - - - - - - - - , smiled ''I've lost weight and
EF S0 FT
that's one way to··-· ... :

CUll II (() ABC Nowa Q

1188 Honda Z10 R._~nl bib,
good cond, 34JO.I75-mt.
1w Ylmahl550 304-e1S-5021.

nl

l

l!l Body Electric

12 ft. V-Bonom Boat wtth trailer
3 Harw Power SNrl Motor,
17 lb. thruet Ulnkota trolling

'1147 Farman Cub w/ belly
mower, 12,000., JD 110 llwn
tNCtor, 31 ln. cut.!.._'!led• little

I

a
It Sportaloo~

~·=•1-:--8110::-=-.-;-:=&gt;c-....,-,-;-::-

a.

54

11114.

gun. Baby flllftr.... $35 I
$45. Bod lramaa U5 auSizo $35 a ldng fnmo iio. Good
Mlectlon of -..oom IUhel,
metal cabinets, Mldboardll30
and up to $85.10 daye 11me ••
cash with 1pproved cNdll. :S mi.
out Buta¥1Ue Rd. Open 9 A.M. lo
5 P.M. Mon, lhru s.t. c.ll 114-

MICKEY

All wery good DOndltJan. 114-

61 Farm Equipment

will fln1nce. 6-......a8-4522.

boby t110 llaH...... or
bo• aprlngo lull 0&lt; lwln '~.J!.nn
$88, 1nd $N. Queen Mia N~ I

MOUSE 'S S~OES
DON'T J.lAVE LACES .

WHY DOI'h YOU GET
SOME S~OES 7 MICKE~ MOU SE
WEARS Sf10ES ...

tor Sale

011- Tract0&lt; wHh mowing

8

Olgnt
I!) Club Connect
(]) Reading Rainbow Q
IJI ll]l Andy Grllfl1h
(IJI Wo~d Today
0 Ho-Man
rD I Dream Of Joannto
1:05 CD lovertr Hlllblllloo
1:30 II(])
NBC Nightly Newo

75 Boats &amp; Motors

123-eaM.

Unfurnllhtd,
one-bedroom
apartment Second floor, corner
Second and Ptne, GalllpoUI.
Stove 1nd refrlgM~tor. War

448~425.

YOU HAD SHOES TO T IE
YOU WOULDN'T Tl-ltNK THIS
WAS SO FUNNY ...

IF

llarcury llon:rutoor Spoclallat.
Sit WI-.
Faclory lralnod, · -~
Top Cah pold. Old lumM1n Lata- 80HP JD dloool lrao- e6on rlob41e Marine. W. come to
cubot.l'dl,
quilts,
oriental, IO&lt; $11150 241 lnl'l ro&lt;o1d b«lor youl11445e.Hl'l.
palnttnal, toy~ , or entlra little 123111, 1M IIF l-or $3850, 420
call colleCt 304-125.Jm, or 304- MF round baler $2495. Owner 76
Auto Parts &amp;

For Lease

provld.cl. No pet.. RefwencM
r.qulrod. $224 por rnonfh. 014448~241, 614...,2325 or 1'14-

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

nltLne14-44f.,.44.

leflers of fhe
words be·
low to fo rm fo ur $irnp le wo rd$
~erombled

II(]) CUI a (() 11m
e 1121 ill Newa
ill llu4woloar Thoroughbred

1883 Honc11 V..U, uc. cond.
$100. IM 251 8117.
11114 Hondo 310 XR, 11150., 2
11111 Honda 100 XR, $500 ooeh.,

I'll

Rearrange
0 four

8:00 (]) Hardclallo And
McCarmlckQ

Sr Ill &amp;• of Albany. 11•-tQB.. 1tll Vanha llulma motor·
1218. We acctpl tooCI 1t1mpe. 1 cycfl 700 oc. 4,300 miiM. 814Amlah producte, elrawblrriee, ; :•,::•3:,:-1::312-=:oa
:::U
: .•:•.::•:..:•:.P.c:.'"-::..:..-=--.,.
~hoa,- boana. g.y dolly. . 1197 KX80 -on:yolo. EICOI·
llonday and July 4.
lord condlllon. Col l14-112-608!1

paptr, " 'ahan Fu,..

53

114-iQ2-JII78.

FruH Fa1111. Juat ofl o1

sava lOll. on all carpo1 In alock

46 Space for Rent
Country Mobile Home Park,
Ro... 33, North of -roy.
Lots, rtnlalt, p.rte, NIM. Call

FNitS &amp;
Vegetables

3 bedroom mobllt home tor rent
In Syracu11. G"M.Jg2-1689 stter

Mobil a homa lor rent : all
aleclric, no pelt . 614-367-lll38.

JulY 1. Frklay. Put Fairgrounds
on Old U. t-4. Rain ceneele.

~Y!Ifd.Sola .

mo., 1100 tor

2 Mdroom trallor.
et Raccoon Trallar P1rll (10 ml~ out
Rt. 141 on Right from Wlll/1

llaaon~- Y.
o.r.ge Sale. Ant6quee, dlshle,
tumtfwt, clothing. On 811 bet·
wwn TUpper• Pralne and Dar·
wln. July H-7.
Oorago SOlo. Friday, July 8, 4:00
p.m. • t:OO p.m. and !aturday,
July 7, 11-4 p.m. Fry ... ~c~onco
ned to thl Sltllbury Sehoal on
Counfy Road 21.

only. Sat. July 71h

f'le(l

Ashton

s..

and

Sl-

lloplo

1r111..,,

depoelt, etov., Nf. , . . ., &amp; garbage funriltlect, ~

chUdren lllll and other ~tore
Merna. Ta many to mention.

Furnished
Rooms

--...

~=========:-r:=========:-

tumltur.. htetlf'l, WMiem 6

45

!""'V'"'Vl

'
.,..........

SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE. 12
Olivo 91., Gofilpollo. - . Uood

lnduct.d.

THURS .. JULY 5

WOlD
tAM I

- - - - - - - E d i t e d b)' CLI.Y R. POLLAN

EVENING

814-lm--5144.

~~

Aenl :
Fumlshed,
apar1mtnt Ullltta..
BM-H2-5Q.4t.

twin bod wl1h bedding, 119'l. 4

12180 Mobile Home for ,-.nt. 3

Upland Road,

Oorago Bolo. 4,1, 7. lncludao
onny clclhoo, camo/00 ohoH.

ond

Financial

57&amp;-2260

2

on left. W.7.

Slcond

614-992-2463.

'Y")'Y'Yl

whh ad In

Etftcltn1:

1971 Hondo 750 59. Wlndahlold,
trunk, ciUioa. 17,400 mlllo. MOO.
18152 CR 480 dl~ blko $1150. Bclh
OKCafionf condHion. MuM Mil.

V'j

.

Ono bodrcom apia . lor - ·
$225 month. O.poelt r~uirad .
114-892-2218 liter I p.m.

S31! to 1995. Tebln 150 and ~o~p
to $1215. Hid....bedt $390 to

•vn-

uo.Appllcotlonl will bo ap- ""-:-':'-":=-:::---:-- ·-:-:-=
prvnd MMI road t•te will be Worll for $3.00 per hour. 814-441-

requlr-.d.

70'1 8MCI'I Street, Middleport.
Fumlehad. Ret. and depotlt.

lsrga or too emsll. Compllle
home Improvement•. 40 yeer. HouM I« Nle or ..... with opDAIVER9
e1per~. lftil or G1ry. 611.- Hon to buy: 3 BA, 1 V2 bathl, 2
IMYEDIA.TE HIRING
44e.fn7 Of 8'J4..446-4738.
car unalllchtd garega. AtJuly 7. 1HO
M ...... y
n... Co
C.
sum1~ mortgag•. AppUcanc"
Lincoln Sal" and Setv~. the
Nrw - r
"
nler tumlstted.
Rtlertncee
&amp;
drfvlng force of CAST INT'L, ==-~~llty ettlld":r:,.~~:: NCurtty depotlt required . 37
INC., hlull generti freight dlw thru Frfdlw, 7 :30 1111 5:30. Pon1mouth Road, Gallipolis.
thfouQI'Iout tht u.s. tt you •re
,
,
elot-446-0254 .
an experienced drtv«, 1 ree.nt For men lnfonnatlon or to
drlvtng tchool graduate, or juet Ngftler 304475-5847.
ThrM Bedroom, untumltl'ltd
thlngklng about Joining this Mill Paull't Day c.,. Cent•. houae In Pomeroy. 814-102·22'18
0 "_"_0~P--'"':._
profellkln1__come talk lo ue Sa .. , aHordable, chUdure. U.f 1 '"
o1:HUUDAY
INN
Galllpollo, Ohio
o o.rn. - 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2 · 10. 42 Mobile Homes
Beton, atter echool . Orop-lns
Saturday, 'lni'90
_. _ _ 0"·••• 22
10AMto2PII
w..........- . .........,-a •·
tor Rent
If you aN et
21 y•re old, Aep~lr.,
rtflnlsh
fumfture,
c.n pua a drug acreen and the q111.111y won, tree ... lmatt. 304- 1 mi .. out Crab Cf'Mk ADid,
garbag~~ lnd water pt~kt 304·
DOT phyalcal, """"' lof~ lo 117!1-7H1.
Annue, Gallipolis, Utt45e3'1

'll\_

mile below town, o~,.7
rtvor, CA, hoal, Ral. I

Sofas and cnalra

YARD SALE .July II-~ 134 S.
Ptrtl. Ortwe t :Cib •7, donn
,.~r~goro~or, high chair, clolhaa.

7-f

nlshect 1pt All utllltl• paid Includlng
prbogo plc~-up. $3711. 1

41 Houses lor Rent

3_04
__c
.e_a_._
:IM6
..c.:_,-·_ _ _ __
Family looking for ernau htrm to
rtnt or buy on lAnd Contract .

,~

racloue living. 1 and 2 bedroom apirt:menlli at VIllage
M•nor
and
Alverala.
Apartment1 In Mldditport, From
$118. Caii614-H2·778t EOH.

614-344-4&lt;114.

Motorcycle&amp;

74

Fumlohod ...., 12!0-' _2 BR,
'":"' : ~lei, '7vi 41h, UO!IIpollo.
t1 4
11aftar 7 p.m.

dleport. $200

8

11

S@\t~~-~f.,[r~e

THAI DAILY
PUULII

Fonl

Font 8n&gt;nco 1111, XLT Loadod.
Colll14-4411-3583 oftarlprn.

Oal-

=~::"t In Mid·

Y~c»..y'.;~

160 Van. 300, I cycllnd.. Good

lipolla. 814-4411-4411 allor 7p.m.

0338.
One b«troom

TCOAY'&gt;?,~

condlllon. ti,OOO. e...-n.

Fumlohod Apl. 1225, 1 Br.,

The Daily

Television
Viewing

F0&lt; SOlo. 1fll Ford Econollno

Fumlahed Apl. 1200, UIUHI•
Paid, 1br, 701 Fourth, Clolllpollo,
114 41tl 4418 afttr 7p.m.

Goods

ChcMMI•ol Scrt«~lng T.ch.
llad.JL.ob. E1pori...,. pnl1arrod, Lawn Care Strvtc:.. Mow end
but wh\ treln rlghl penon. Send trim. 814-245-6604.
NIUmt o: Box CU037 cJo Gil·

llpollo Dolly Trlbuf1!, .121 Thlr&lt;l L.oO ono call doH all. No)ob loo

-

per.on,

Household

Th,.. FamilY Sa... Cart Cllnt'l,
c.nter St, lluon. July 8 and 7.
t :OO am. Clothing, houMho'ci
nema, toya. much mor•.

c./1304-675-1957.

Fumlshtd lpirtment on 21tt

miiM. Prtc.d lo leU. 614-44620515 Ewnlnge or 11t 448 1211
Daya.

monlhfy.l14-NH1121.
Nieoly furnlahod mobile homo, 1

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

3306.

mov'-. c.ne~au. EbH.

In Pomeroy. 4 bodroom, fur-

1990

ger van, cutam Interior loaded,
11,000 mltoo, $4,400. -

ESTATE~,. 538 Jockoon Pllco
from $11r.umo. Walk lo shop I

UlllhiM paid. 1507 2nd

5,

&amp; 4 WD'a

tonvanolon Von,
·
1lraa,
,..,........
poriac1 ,.,.. lraval w.l&lt;ldo,
46,0110

91rMt, aultabla for 1

Thursday, July

1183 Chivy BoauvHio 7 ,..._..

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Rentals

plllnotl, mlac llema.

a.,_
Portable Sawmill, don't
hlui)Uit

foreck)sur., ... •unquem
1-tlUZZ-66&amp;2. olll.
A12:W,IncWing Set and 8un.

57H338.

lllnn. ., aummefl. Reter.ncM
NqUired. 3CM.e75-"TZM.

1990

..,.uo, 4x4, auto trane, 350
..... $25,000 304-67&amp;-1131.

repoe..

blnk

Vans

5,

1181 Fonl 414 4 ap, F-1110 351
ong, $35,000. 1178 Chov. Sll·

..-1o.

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE ""

&gt;144-4221.

Wanted to Buy

73

$231rol. l dop. 304-171-Ztll1.

2 doga, 1 hualry, 1 ahoap dog.
See at Dlck..-.ont, Bllley Run
Rd., Pomeroy, 011.
171-UM.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment

44

SlrMI, Middleport. 014-9'l2·!5&lt;133.

GOLD
CREDIT
CARD
VlolillloiOI'CIId gUIIInlood, no
-ll'ltr dojlooll 1---.11100.

Thursday, July

Middleport, Ohio

,

VN

INSW

JRIW

B

XN N Z

YW

y

K U B J

PUNQTZ

w

NVW . - fBSHQP
BQSWTRQP
Yestenhlv'• Crypt. .•otel JOYS THAT WE'VE
TASTED MAY SOMETIMES RETIJRN. BUT THE
TORCH WHEN ONCE WASTED, AHI HOW CAN IT
BURN? - GEORGE W. PAlTEN
. () 1990 by King Foeluroo Syndltale. Inc. •

--

�•

f'w~D• 12-The Dally Sentinel

~-Area

Thursday. July 5, 1990

Pon Mlioy-Middleport, Ohio

deaths-- Squads have 9 calls July 4

: Connie Adams
:· Connie Jean Adams, 41, of
:Stewart, died Tuesday evening at
:Camden Clark Memorial Hospi-tal after an extended Illness.
: Born In Reedsville, daugbler ot
. Wanda Kelley Adams and the
: late Oyde Adams, she was
: employed by Federal Hocking
:Middle Scbool as a custodian.

Stir!vlng are a daughter, Bath.
al home; one brother, Richard
Adams, Lancaster; two n~&gt;­
phews, Riehle Adams and Terry
Adams, both of Lancaster.
Services will be held Friday al
1 p.m. al White Funeral Pome In
CooMIIe wllh Rev . John Misner
otflclatlng. Burial will be In tbe
Stewarl Cemelery. Friends may
call at the luMeral home alter 5
p.m . Thursday .

Middlepol1 Coul1 news
Eight were fined and another
forfeited a bond In lhe Tuesday
·night court of Mlddleporl Mayor
::Fred Hottman.
: Fined on three charges was
-Lance T. Hermann, Middleport,
l25 and costs for disorderly
manner and disorderly manner
. alter being warned, and $100 and
: costs for resisting arrest.
· Others fined were Jeffrey E.
:vmars, Whitehall, S425 and
:COsts, and lhree days In jail,
1&gt;Wl; Terry W. Mullins, Langsville, $50 and costs, consuming
alcohol In a motor vehicle;

Shirley Cole, Mlddleporl, $25 and
costs, open conlalner; Marvin L.
Warren, Polnl Pleasanl, $10 and
costs, expired operalor's II·
cense; Charles E. Fllchpalrtck,
Mlddleporl, $10 and cosls, no
molorcycle endorsement; Melody Clark, Middleport, S50 and
costs, disorderly manner; and
George M. Gordon, Mason, W.
Va .. $425 and costs, and three
days In jail, DWI.
Craig Sleven Baldwin, Blu~&gt;­
creek, W.Va . !orfelleda$60bond
lor no driver's llcense.

Nine calls for assistance were
answered by ucils of Meigs
Counly Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday.
AI 2:46 a.m., Pomeroy was
called lo Welchtown HIU lor
Becky Comer, who was taken lo
Veterans Mwmorlal Hospital. AI
9:59a.m., Pomeroy was called to
Locust Grove; Ilene Swain was
transporled from there lo
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital. Racine squad was called lo
Adams Road at 10:50 a.m. lor
Josh Ryan, who was lransported
lo Velerans Memorial.
At 1:50 p.m., Rutland was
called to Side Hill for Woody

Kuhn. Kuhn was taken lo Plea ·
sant Valtey Hospilal. The Racine
Fire Deparlrnent was called to
Third Street lora lree fire at 3:16
p.m. AI 4:06 p.m., Mlddleporl
squad was dispatched to Overbrook Cenler for William Smllh.
He .was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 5:32p.m.,
Middleport was called to South
Second; Rhoda Fox was laken lo
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 8:16
p.m., Chester Fire Deparlmenl
went to West Shade for a car fire
and at 9:29p.m., Middleport was
dispatched to South Second for
Jane Ann Warner. She was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

NAOONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EDT 7...10

?omeroy Court news
: In the courl of Pomeroy Mayor
fUchard Seyler Tuesday night.
IM'Ven were fined and seven
-oibers forfelled bonds.
. Fined were William D. Whit·
:11Jlglon, Pomeroy, $213 and costs,
·!15saull: James Hannan, Pom~&gt;­
roy, $63 and costs, disorderly by
lnloxlcatlon: Gene P. Hood.
l\llddleport, $63 and cos IS, dlsor@rly conduct; James E. Harris,
· Middleport, disorderly cooducl ,
:$A:! and cos Is; Charles Knapp,
Mldleport, DUI, $375 and costs.
and $63 and costs. operating
tinder suspension; Andy Palterson. Syracuse, $63 and costs,
expired registration; and Wlllla m Erb, Mason, W. Va ., $63 and
costs, operating under
suspension.
Forfeiting bonds were Edward
Burket!. Middleport, $43, Improper backing; Matthew R.
Smith, Cheshire, $63, squealing
!Ires; Marvin K. Wisecup, Mlddleporl, $43. allowing children
under 16 to ride In the back of a
pickup truck: Elnora Bernard,
Reedsville. $63, expired vehicle
reglslrallon; Darr!n Cremeans,
Racine, $63, expired vehiCle
reglstrallon ; John Ward, Middlepar~ $63, dlsordejlyconducl; and

Rober! F . Jeffers, Pomeroy.
$2.3, leaving the scene of an
accident and $63, failure to
control.

~~~a
.. ..

-

~At. ~
..........

'191'11

~

lto10111

Colli

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

,,.,.,.

m ....

--

j• ,;• :t• - , ; t ! l l t :·· =··,; ·;· l,j•l : ,

Grltlith, Vanessa Harless and
Tara Fllchpatrlck.
The tradllional ox roast was
held In Rutland Park, which was
the location for all of the
post-parade evenls. The afternoon offered train rides for
children, food of all sorts, games,
contests and live musical
enlertalnment.
Enlertalnment was provided
twice during the day by the
Rainbow Cloggers. Aluo perform lng for the crowd was the
Blue Jean Special Band.
The Fourth of July Celebration
In Rutland was held for tbe
benefll of the Fire Department In
the village, which will receive the
proceeds from the events.

Hospital news

Dally stock prices
(As of 18:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol munl. Ellis a. Loewl
Am Electrtc Power .......... ... 29*
AT&amp;T ................... .......... .. 38't4
Ashland Oil ........ ..... ....... 35\i,
Bob Evans ........................... 14
Charming Shoppes ............. .10\i,
City Holding Co .. ... .. .. ..... ... 14\'l
Federal Mogul. .................... 17
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ 29)1,
Heck's ............................... Ni A
Key Centurion ... ........ ........ .12 y.
Lands' End ......................... 16',&lt;;
Limited Inc ........................ . 24
Mulllmedla Inc ......... .... ....... 73
Rax Restauranls ..........
.. . 2\i,
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... 22'h
Shoney's Inc ................. .. .14',&lt;;
Slar Bank ........... . ......... .... .20 34
Wendy 's Inti ........ ... .. ........... 6Y,
Worthington lnd .................... 24

South Central Ohio
Showers and lhunderstorms
likely early Thursday night and
becoming partly cloudy alter
mldnlghl, wllh a low belween 65
and 70. Chance of rain Is 60
percent. Moslly sunny F'rlday,
with highs In the low 80s.

Accident free
Meigs Counly had no automo.
bile accidents on the Fourth or
July.
The accldenHree holiday was
confirmed through reporls from
the State Highway Patrol. the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, and villages olflclals.

I

$6 38
3 K.
UVING ROOM SUITE................ Reg. $999 NOW $388

~~G ROOM SUITE.................. Reg. $699 NOW $299

$64 8

SOFA AND LOVESEAT
MATCHING WING CHAIR _... Reg. S1299 NOW
THESE ARE JUST AFEW EIAMPlfS YOU'U FIND. OVER
SO MORE SUITES TO CHOOSE FROM AT BLOWOUT PRICES.

IEDIOOM SURE
Ul. $1499

IOW$899
Receive Matching
Night Stand FREE.

•
Vol40. No.296
Copyrighted 1990

~~

'l' ...
- \..!::..&lt; , _ .

.:lit• .....

Rates were increased this yPar

10$50 an hour for a min im um of
two hours. Last nigh!, council
reduced the pool party rates to
$35an hour fora minimum of two
hours.

PATRIOTIC KIDS - These youngsters showed
their patriotic spirit In Rutland's Fourth of July
parade on Wednesday . Area youth were encouraged to be an active part of the parade, which was

Meellng wllh council in fP.
gards to the pool was Za ne
Beegle. manager He prese nted
to council a breakdown of costs
for pool operation fr om it s
opening to July 4. It showed a
profit of $1 ,622.07 .
Gene Imbod en of the Syracuse
Fire Department also met wllh
council and asked that ofllcials
give consideration to placing a
new one mill lev y on the No
vember ballot to be used lor thl'
replacemenl of lire equipment
Council took no action on th e
request until It Is dete rmi ned
what It will cost the average

homeowner and how much mo"

ney a one mill levy will generate.
In oth er action, howrver, coun -

cil did vote to place on the ballot a
renewal levy of 1.8 mills for
current expense. The money
from the current expe nse levy is

used to pay tor street lighting .
Council also agreed to adver·
lise for bids on repair of Seventh
Street In front ol Syracuse
Elementary to be financed with
Iss ue 2 monies
Also meeting with council were
Bill t.rnott, and th e Rev. Michael
Panglo of the Rejoicing Life
Church in Middleport in rega rd
to a tent revival to be held July
n25. The tpnts will be placed on
Louks' Field. Jim Pape. council·
man. Is to see If all ba seba ll.
games are completed and that
there are no co nflicting dates a nd
then advise counc iL Services will
be held at 1: 30 In the even lng with
Bible studv at 10 a.m. each day
Council . accepted the 1991
budget as prepa red by .Jan ice
Lawson. clPrk -l r rasurrr . in th P

amount of $171,415.
Kathryn Crow, councilman .
reported that 58 street repla cement signs are needed following
her survP:v of lhr l awn. Coun cil

agreed to purchase the neces ·
sa r y signs.
II was reported that c hild re ry
are rid i ng bikt's down toward th~
river around the marina and arc·

swimming In that area. Council
agreed that this mu st be stopped
and asked parent s to keep th eir
children away from th ere. Coun ·
cil did indicate that gu ard pos ts
will be placed in th at area.
In regard to the proposed
annPxntion of sevrral arrrs 1o

the villa ge to allow for deve lop
m e nl, It was pointed out that the
property use if the annexa 1ion is

approved will be for the construe
tio n of a senior citizens complex

and no t tor general low and
middle inco me familif's.

Attending.

Mayor

Ebcr

PickPn s. Mrs L 1wson . Crow.
Pape. Minter Frya r . and Jim

Hill,

and

Poti er Ch ief Jim

Co nnoll.v .

Ohio House committee tones Two are hospitalized after
down drug-fighting legislation two-vehicle wreck Thursday

An action lor divorce has been
flied In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Terry D. Michael,
Rutland, agalnsl Jennifer Sue
Michael, Middleport.

UVING ROOM AND
BEDROOM SUITS,
APPLIANCES, TV'S, DINING
ROOM FURNITURE, PLUS
MUCH MOREll

v

one oil he events held In Rutland on Independence
Day. The theme lor the parade was "Our
American Heritage."

Divorce sought

BLOWOUT
PRICES ON ...

25 Cen1S

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Syracuse Council cuts
pool party rates $15

-

Exlended Forecast
Saturday tbrourb Monday
Fair weal her Salurday, with a
chance of showers and lhunder·
storms Sunday and Monday .
Highs will range from 75 to 85
Salurday, and In the 80s Sunday
and Monday. Overnight lows will
be belween 55 and 65 early
Saturday, and In lhe 60s Sunday
and Monday mornings .

2 Sections. 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. July 6, 1 990

"m

IDINING ROOM FURNITURE I
ALL DINING ROOM FURNITURE
IN STOCK
,
,
300 600
/0

SAVE

TO

/0

TAlLESt CHAIRS.r CHINA'S
IN OAK, PINE OK MAPLE.

WHITE AND BLUE FINISH IN THE COUNTRY LOOKI

PRICES START

AT$299
FOR 7 PIECE sn

BEDROOM SUITES

Receive Matching
Night Stand FREE.
IIOYIILl CHillY

Page 3

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

~...

Clear tonight. Low In mid

50s. Sunny Saturday. High In
lower s.

------Weather------

2 Pl. BROYHIU
UVING ROOM SUITE .............. Reg. $1299 NOW

S488

6888

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel News Sial!
Pool party rates at London
Pool In Syracuse were reduced
by Syracuse VIllage Council at Its
regular meeting Thursday night .

"YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS THIS SALE"

Oak • Formica Top

Pick-4

A marriage license has been
granted by tbe Meigs County
Probate Court to Duncan Eric
Mozingo, 26, and Rhonda An·
dreonl, 21, both of Rutland.

STOREWIDE FRIDAY, JULY 6 AND SATURDAY, JULY 7

SIIAU IEDIOOM SUITI

969

License issued

BIG JULY 4TH BLOWOUT SALE

I

Daily Number

Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS- Amber Lohn,
Pomeroy; William K. Smith,
Middleport.
DISCHARGE- Karen Pooler.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

I

over Phils;
hike lead

WEATHER MAP - A weak cool front will produce widely
scattered lhunderstonns In the Ohio Valley. Widely scatlered
thunderstonns also will be present In the Southern Roekle&amp;. The
hoi, sleamy weather continues In the Southern Plains and
soulbeBSI portion of the country. SeBSonable lentperatures have
moved Into the Northern Plains and Great Lakes. Showers move
Into the Pacific Norlbw.,.l. The Desert Southwest continues to
bake with the triple digit temperatures.

Stocks

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Reds roll

Darade··~--....:..........
Conlinued from page I
r,
_ _ __
lor Its classic fire truck. Miscel·
laneous division winners were
Chuck Harmon lor his Uncle Sam
costume, !lrst place; 4·H Go
Getters, second place and Jason
Knight, who was also dressed as
Uncle Sam. third place.
Winners of the pie baking
contest, which was held In the
afternoon, were Margie Bishop,
first place; Donna Weber, second
place; and Judith Hill, third
place. In the cake decorating
contest, held In conjunction wllh
the pie contest, first place went to
Dorothy Leach, second place to
Cathy Lambert; and third place
to Wilma Davidson. After the
baking contests, the entries were
auctioned.
Games concluded for the child·
ren during the afternoon In·
eluded an egg toss, bubble
blowing contest, balloon loss,
watermelon seed spittlng contest. thre~&gt;-legged race and lug of
war. Cash prizes were awarded
to the winners: Dustin Pullman.
Joseph McCall. Clndl Stewart.
Kristen Dassylva, Jamltha Wll·
!ford, VIrginia Hamaker, Amber
Huddles ion, Sandra Moore, Phyl·
Us Clark, R.D. Barnhart, Scott
George, Tyler Barnes, Holly

Ohio Lottery

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLU MBUS - Mindful of the

House in Janu ary in different
form .
.
Lawmaker s discovered that

high cost of increasing thr prison
population . a selerl Ohio Hou se

increased prison terms and man datory sentences would balloon

committee moved Thursda y to·
ward ton ing down a comprehen·
s lve drug-lighting bill slated lor
passage la ler this month .

lhl' prison populat ion b&lt;•yond the
sta te's ability to pay lor space.
The latest version has a pri ce
ta g of about $70 million. wh ich

somet hing about lh&lt;• drug prob·
!em . All we're doing is exc using
a nd alibiing."
McLin also induced the com

T hf' committf'rworkrdi1 sw ay
through 62 amrndmen Is, with t hP

.Jones sa id i s all the state can
a fJord o n its light bud get . HP said

mitlf'P to Plimina te a f]v('·year
mandai ory i ncarrrr at io n for pos·

Ohio Public De fender's Office
winning more round s than the
Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys
Association.
Re p . Wa y ne .Ione s . D·
Cuyahoga Fa l ls, r ommi11 C'P
c hairman , told mrmbprs hl'

h&lt;• is co nfer rin g closely with
Se nate sponsor Cha r IPs Henr v.
R·Warrcn,m hopes ol avo iding a
formal House·Senate co nferenc e
comm ittee ft ght.
In Thursday' s action. Rrp .
Rhine Mcl.ln, D-Dayton. wan 7-4

scss lng a fin•arm durin g a
drug · tra ff ick ing offense Posses
sion of a weapon during other
felon res c a lls lor an extra three·
vea r mandatory se ntence.

REDUCED!

1S IICH·21 INCH
S.ONS lOX SPIINGS
AND umrss
.. YO

50°/o OFF

IWIN.fQU.QUEIN

SIZE BRASS HEADBOARDS

$28-$38-$48

t hought we wC'I"c ga in~ to do

amPnd mPnt

An oth er M cLin amendmr n1
allow s a judge to revokr an
indi vidu&lt;-tl 's drive r lice nsr for a

allowing Individual s to avoid a
drug trafficking c ha rge by cla im·
ing m os t sma ll amounts of drug s
arr for thrlr ow n personal use .
'Wr ' rp Irving lo ge l th e drug

first ·degree fclonv drug r on vic
tio n. and s uspe nd it for up to five
vca r.s fo r other drug offenses.
'rhe bill originally mandated
thosr pr nallir.s.

"war on drugs" thai c lean?d thr

dealer s," snid Rep . Otto Bt&gt;atty
.J r, D -Co lumbu s. i n support of

But the com mi1tf'f' Wf' nt &lt;.~ l ong
with 1he prosl•cutors in redur i ng

Senate las t year and then the

MeLin 's amendme nt.

hOJX'S

w fi nish

work next Thur s·

day and perhaps vote the bill out.
It would then go to the full Ho use
and Senate for approva l la ter in
the month or in Augu s t. he said
Th e bill already Is a scalrd
down ve r si on of the $2 billion

approv'--11

of

her

Co ntinued on page 10

Forecast cooler weather for Ohio
By United Press International
More co mfo r table weather 111

somr cases as muc h as

10

rlegrrescoo ler th an the Fo urth of
July - is in Ohio 's wpath r r
picturp for 1hl' nrx t eoupk of

days .
T he cold front that e ntered the
Buckeye Stat e early T hursda .1·
morning was ju s t about ou t of the
state early Frida y mornin g. and
humidit y lrvels wPrr t o br morr

ZENITH TV'S

·' If we start burning the users.
we'rr going to hurt the dea lers . ..
sa id Rep. Russ Guerra J r ..
R-Eng lPwoo&lt;l an oppo nent. "I

rea sonabll' through Sa turda y
Highs were to range from
around 70 in the nort h to the lower
80s in the extreme south Fr ida y
and around 80 s tatewide Sa t ur ·

day . So mr W ednt' sd a ~ rrad i ng s
wrrP near 100 .
11 was a warm riJ .\ ' acros s mos1
of Ohio Th ursday, wi 1h a f1t•rnoun

highs rangrng through the 80s to
thr mid · 90s. The coolest reading
~a s a 79 at Clevela nd. while 9os
wrrf' rcportrd from bo th Dayton
and Co lumbu s.
Sca ttered showPrs ;.m d 1hun
der stor m s broke ou t over CP n1ral

and southern oh io In th e early
afternoon. died out a nd then
rPfirPd in late aftrr noo n and
Pvt'ning . Rain fall amount s va r
ied widely , from mostly 1race
amount s to somP luc alizPd

ODMR to hold public
forums this summer
The Ohio Depa r tment of Men tal Retardation and Develop·
mental Disabilities will co nduc t
public forums this summer to
ol!er citizens and policymakers
the opportunil y to disc uss the
departm en1's

nrw

long·lerm

plan .
The department has begun
general dlstrlbullonof Its JO .year
plan, "Choices and OpUons for
People: A Winning Slrategy for
Ihe 1990s." The plan Is the res ult
of two years of dlscu ss ron and
comment through public forums
(AprU 1988throughJanuaryl992,
and a review of lhousands of
leiters and documents. The department sought !he opinions of
parents, advocales, government
employees and service providers
to chart directions that will a ffect
programs In the fulure.

State legislator s wi ll co·
moderate some of th e forum s
with ODMRDD s taff. Di rec tor
Robert Brown or Terry Walla ce.
deputy director for policy and
planning, will open each session
with an overview of the plan, and
will Introduce legislators who
will offer remarks rel atin g to the
plan and the budget. Public
testimony will follow .
Th e forums will be held al
deparlment ·operated develop·
mental centers from July 10
through lhe end of August. All
forums a re on Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 7-8:30 p.m.
The neares t lecture 10 Meigs
County will be held al the
Gallipolis Developmental Cenler
on Tuesday , July 31 . More
lnformallon may be obtained by
calling 446·1642 .

t1moun1 s i n Pxccss of 2 Inches
Heav y ra infall eausrd fl as h
flooding
in westt&gt;rn Vinton

Cou nt y T hursdav night A she·
riff' s ·di s pa tc her said a mobile
homr and a car wr rr washed
&lt;Jway IJy high water s. but no one
was injur('J Thf' di spa tc her sa id

Ohio Routes 611 and 34~ re
ma ined c losed Thursda y morn
ingbecau se ofhlghwater U.S.50
was c losed ove rnight. but wa s
reported pa ssable by morning .
As the high moves east of the

A two vehicle accident In
Pomeroy sent two people to the
hospital Thursda y evening, while
six oth ers refused trea tmen t.
According to the Pomeroy
Pa ller DPpartm ent. Al&lt;m Eas 1Pr
was t raveling south un Spri ng

Aven ue when the brakes fai lwd
on his 1976 Ford truck . c au sing
him to strik e a parked 1977 rord
tr uc k owned by Violet Brown

J aunlla Arthur and Geo rge
Easter. both passengers in th&lt;·
Eas ler veh icle. were transported
to Vpteran s M emori al Hos pi1al.
whPrl' they were trrated for
co ntu sions and rrlt&gt;il-'&gt;Pd. Other
pa ssP ngrrs refusing 1rPa1mrn t

were Cheste r Arthur. Sr . ChPs
ter Arthur. Jr .. Alan Eas ter.
Shirley Kerns. Kathv Shockey
and ElsiP Ea strr .
Eas ter' s vehic iP sustained
moderate dam age ancl was
towed from the accide n1 sc r nr.
Alan Ea ster wa s cited for no
insurance and hav ing r hildrr n

under thragpo f IG in the back of a
pirk·up .
E arlier i n t hf' day Thur sday.

By CHARLENE HOEF'Lit:H
Sentinel News Stall
OVP News Staff

Independent ca ndid ate for the
11th Dist rict Ohro Se nate sear
ThP Ross Count y Boa rd of
Elec ti ons recently ac ted on Ea st·
ma n's petitions , verifying the
val idity of 969 signatures on hi s
peti tions. well abovl' th e required
909 .
Hi s name wi II appear on the
:slovember 6 ballot, along with
Sen. Jan Mi chael Long, ID ·
Clrclevl llcr and Dan Hl eronl ·
mu s. tR ·lronto nl .
The 11th Ohio Se nale District
includes Athens, Gallla, Jack ·
son, Lawrence, Meigs . Pick·
awwy, Ross and Clinton VI unties .
In discu ss ing his candidacy.
Eas tman said that his goal II
elected will be lo put "common
sense" back Into government.
The candldale said thai people
need to have a c hoice and he Is
running lor lhe office to give
them that choice. "The lltlle guy
and his lifestyle Is my concern,"
commented Easlman, who referred lo himself as the "working
man 's candidate."
He lalked aboul the tax str uc·

of

showers

and

The shower s will linger Mon
d ay, and lair sk ies will retu rn
Tuesda y. Highs Monday will
agai n be In the 80s, while
Tuesday' s readings will be 75 to
R5 . Lows during Ihe period will be
mainly in the 60s.
The moderating weather will
per mit a var iety of !arming
chores. although wind speeds
may reach levels high enough lo
Inhibit spraying except In the
morning and evening hours.
The winds will keep ground
level ventllation adequale lor
moderate drying rates with pan
evapo ration amounllng to
around a quarter-Inch a day.
Small grains should ripen at a
good pace and harvest conditions
will be good as light dews
dissipate fairly early.
The dry sunny weather will
also con tribute to good hay
Conllnued on page 10

Po lief'

Drpartmrn1 .

le ft turn.

-Local news briefs-.
Fire hits Flair Furniture building
F'Dur tH!'d fire departm1•nts from P1 Plpac;; 1n1 . Ca llip olis,
\!,alley and F'lalruck re sponded to a fire al Fla i r· Furn it un•.

owned bv CPri l Wi lliams of Pt. Pleasa nt at 9: 2~ p.m T hursda1·
rvening
Thr firr v.-a s apparrn 1l y s1af1Pd by l igh1nin g ',\·hich s1ruck
th r a1tic portion of the building acco rding to wi1nPs~rs

It wa s rrport rd lha I a pa rtme n1so n thr top fl oor ol 1hr bu rlrlrng
Wf'rr rlf'stro.vf'd whilr furnllurr in botto m fl oor WPrr cl amLigi•d
h.v srn okf' and wa !Pt
Af1rr l hpir arri val fircfi ghll 'rc; hacl1hP
fire undPrcontrol wi thin 40 minu tPs
F: st im ali'd dam ;IRP-"
wPn' no1 availablE' at prrs s tim e.

4 from Rutland hurl in wreck
Four RutlJnd rrsid en1.s suffered minor mjurit·~ T hur sda.\
whPn 1hr rar 1hcy wrrr r ld ing in wr nt off 1lle rn;1U ,l!ld
ov PrlurnPd
The e a r . dri ve n l&gt;y Hay·m ond Wilford. -tO . wa :-. 1ran• ling
northbound on SH ~ JHa round 10: 30 p.m . whf'n hf' los1ro n 1rol 1n r1

Co ntinued on pa gr 10

Eastman's petitions valid; will seek
17th District Ohio Senate seat Nov. 6

Ity level s will be on the Increase
Sund ay . with highs reaching well
into th e 80s . and there will a lso be
r han ce

Pomeroy

3

when Miller fail ed to stop and
s1 ruck 1he re ar of Mulfo rd' s ('Jr.

assurPd c lear dls 1ance whrn shr

Ro n Easlman of Sumner Road.
Chf'.s1er. has been certified as an

t hunclersl orms.

Mulford had s lopped on WP.S I
Main S1rcet to mak r

Pauline Miller wo .s riled for

stair Sa1 unla y, sou th winds will
r eturn . T r mprra t ure and humid -

a

struck the !'Par of a vehlclP

drive n by Step hanie Mulford .
According to a report fr om the

turr and i1s unfairness whcrr•
propert y ownr r.s have to lake on

the · ·rrsponsibtlily for schools
and about every thing else" and
t•xprrs sed roncf'rn for thr " man

with just" dollar in hi s pocket. "
Charging representation lor
on ly big bu si ness a nd the lega l
co mmunit y, and a lack of rep res
e ntat ion lor the ord inary citizen .
Eastman said he represents a
c ha nrr lor change II' elected.

Athrn ~

('(Junlir s . ;~nd 1:-. J "llpt ·t
visor of lhP Mf'ig ~ Snl! and \\' ;~ l t 'l
Co nscr\'a 1io n Di s l r ir l Ht · ht·
l ongs to 1h P Church of C hr i ~1
Ea ~ tm nn

sav:-. hi s

c amp&lt;~r g n

will consls! mos1l.v of makin g
per so n &lt;.~ ] appe ar ;_mr t• {If
ro m
mu ni tv act ivities and fl' . , lh als
slncr his financrs arr l imill'd . 1-11 •

a lle nded seve ra l Fourth of .1ulv
celebra tions in thr di str icl .

He sa id he felt there should be
more state supporl for s mall
bu sinesses and co ndemned spe
cia ! cons ideration lor fo re ign
in vestors .

A native of Meigs County. fhe
!lrst lime candidate graduafed
!rom Pomeroy High School and
attended Ohio State University a
yea r. A dairyman In easlern
Meigs Cant y, he Is married and
has lwo daughters ·attending
schools In the Eastern Local
School District.
A Vietnam veteran. he belongs
to the Tuppers Plains VFW Post
and Is a member or the Vietnam
Veterans of America. He also
serves on the Meigs Coubty
Veterans Service Commission ,
lhe Farmers Home Admlnstra·
lion commlltee lor Vinlon and

RON EASTMAN

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