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                  <text>P~0-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

July 22, 1990

Limber pole event at Vinton
TimberFest scheduled Aug. 4

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs SoU and Water
Con.servatlon District, Is located somewhere In
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the Ga!UpoUs Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave. ,
GaiUpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio, 45769,and you may win

a $5 C88h prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a lie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Ned week, a Gallla County
farm will be featured by the GaiUaSoU and Water
Conservation District.

Lawn-care law seems to be working
Columbus, Ohio - A turf
specialist says Ohio's new lawn care notification Ia w works, but
It may not be the last time the
lawn-care Indu stry faces regula tion In Ohio.
This Is the first full season for
the law requirin g lawn -care
companies to post warning sig ns
after pesticide applications a nd
to Inform people a beut chem icals
used .
"Companies and custom ers
have received it well," Pound
says. "Some companies say the
signs are a bit of a hass le to post.
but most realize the law goes a
long way In improving relations
with customers and neighbors ...
The law resulted from citizen
demands to know when law n
pesticides were applied by pri·
vate firm s and what those
applications contai ned.
Some groups are co ncerned
abeut possible health and envi ronmental effects of lawn pesticides, although there's a lack of
data In this area, Pound says. But
at least now property owners
know exactly what's being put on
their lawns and passers-by know
to keep off the grass a fter a
chemical was applied.
"There are s till groups in Ohio
that want stricter regulation s on
the use of lawn chemica ls,"
Pound says. "Their dema nd s
Include having firms offer more
timely and detailed information
to nelghbers . A few peop le have
even lobbied Ohio legislators to
have some law n pestic ides
banned.
"I think the new rules arP a
good compromise. They inform

misuse them.
The law also does no t pertain to
chem icals applied to grow crops.
maintain public utility property,
or control termites and other
pests. Fertilizers are not classified as pesticides, and are not
covered by the law .
Before Ohio's new rules began
in June 1989, lawn-care com pan ·

ies were not required to Inform
customers or neighbers abeut
details of their pesticide
applications.
Now , when a com pan y applies
pes tic ides to a lawn in Ohio, they
must leave detailed information
with the property 's owner.
That includes the name and
type of each chemical applied;
concentration of lhe chemical

and its application rate; any
special instructions on the chemical's label ; the company's name
and telephone number; and the
date and time of application.
Companies must also post
signs for 24 hours on the lawn
saying pes llcldes were applied
and tha 1 people and pets should
keep off. The signs list the
company's name and phone
number , and say nelghbers ma y
be notified of the application.
"If a company Is to apply
pesticides to the lawn next door ,
then on the day before applica tion. neighbors who have written
the company should receive a
mailing staling the time of
application and the firm' s name
and telephone number, " Pound
says.

Dr. Beamish gives lecture to staff
members of Woodland Centers recently
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Patricia
M. Beamish recently presented a
lecture to the staff at Woodland
Cen ter. Inc .. entitled, " Children
In Crisis: Psychological Emergencies of Children."
Dr. Beamish currently holds
tow positions with Ohio Untver·
s lty In A!hens. She Is an assistant
professor In the department of
counselor education and a counse ling psychologist/assistant
professor with the counseling

and psychological serv ices
department.
Recognized nationwide for a
variety of presentations and
publications, Dr. Beamish Is a
licensed psychologist and a licensed professional clinica l
counselor.
Among her many awards, Dr.
Beamish was most recently
selected as "Couselor of the
Year" by the American Association of Mental Health Counselors.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The big hit at last year's Vinton
County TlmberFest was the
limber-pole event. A pine log,
secured at water's edge, was
extended 18 feet over a pond.
Contestants raced the clock to
reach the end of the log before
falling Into the pond.
The Umber pole and other
traditional forestry events high·
llght the second annual TlmberF.
est, Saturday, Aug. 4, in McAr·
thur. The program beglns10a.m.
at the Vinton County Fair·
grounds, a quarter-mile north of
McArthur on Ohio 93.
Admission Is $3, and Includes
entrance to the VInton County
Fair, operating at the
fairgrounds.
Timber Fest also features concession stands and craft dis·
plays. During the program,
children can enjoy the amusement rides at the fatr.
At TlmberFest, teams of five
will compete In forestry events
for more than $2 ,000 in cash and
prizes, says Peter Gnessmann,
forestry associate with the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service.
Other contests include the
two-person crosscut and the post
throw. In which people try to toss
posts between two stakes.
Grlessmann encourages novices to form teams and compete In
TlmberFest. The team registration fee of $30 Includes a commemorative T·shlrt for each
entrant. Teams should contact
the Vinton County Extension
Office by July 27 to register.
"We're showcasing the timber
Industry In Ohio with a day of
publiC activities," Griessmann

says. "People can lear n how
trees are cut for timber and how
they grow ba ck, renewi ng a very
precious resource.
"Timber mean s different
things to people. Trees offer
shade, beauty and wildlife cover.
Timber Is also a renewable
resource that sustains famil ies
and communities. The cost of
goods sold from Ohio's wood
products Indus try is more than $5
b!Uion· annually."
Vinton County boasts more
than 190,000 acres of private
commercial forest land . More
than 70 percent of the county is
forested. Local sawmi lls handle
47 million board feet of lumber,
predominately hardwoods. eac h
year.
If all that wood were loaded
onto logging lucks. the convoy
would stretch from McArthur to
nortllern Col umbu s.

Gri~.?ssmann

says.

floa ted to the mill , with help from
loggers who bala need on the logs
and directed them into the mill

Griessmann

says.

Mo st

were arraigned over the wee·

•Portable Commodes
•Walkers, Canes, Crutches
•Wheelchai rs
•Alternating Air Pumps/Mattresses
•Traction Units
tU:.N.S. Units-Pain Control
(per M.D. prescription)
•Battlecreek Tread Mill
•Patient Porta-Lifts
•Hospital Beds/Siderails
•Trapeze Unit
•Bedside Tables
•Oxygen Concentrators

Specialist says
wheat crop good

wa s srt at his F'riday arra i gn·

ment al $10.000 with 10 percent
cas h to be posted by th e defend
ant personally . Hendricks wa s
found to be indigent and Meigs
Coun ty Pu bli c Defender Charles
H Knight was appointed as his

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE, INC.

565 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis
446-2206
Open 9-S Mon.-Fri.

State Highway Patrol.

Four Meigs Count y res id ent s
two-car accident on SR 124

Troy Yankuns, li, Po meroy,
was trave ling eastbeund when
hi s 1980 Fo rd Mustang went left

Saturday afternoon .

of cen ter and struck a wcs t bound

ONE DAY

Dry, sunny weather

LEFT

will return to Ohio

50°/o

By Unit ed Press International
Now tha t the wrPkend Is ovrr.
sunny and dry cond i tions will tw
rrturning to Ohio.
Thr we ekend' s miscrablP
weathe r ended on a drama ti&lt;'
notP Sunday, whrn a smoll
tornado touched down in Ni iPs,

~2~L~5s

lNO.II nono

DRESS SHIRTS
IU

$1 099 OR 2 FOR $20

GROUP OF lONG SlEEVE

$1 099 OR 2 FOR $20

S1899

STIAIGHT LEG

01 BOOT LEG

$2299

damagf' .

bv mid -morning . Some light

The tornado. with u·inds of up
to 72 mph, caused .some light
tlamage to a commerc ial se ction

ra in fal l w as to linger
f'astrrn co unti es.

knocking down a tJ'('('
and som c powf'r lines and trarin~
aluminum sidi ng off srvpra l
buildings. No injurirs wrrr

gr t a firm grip ow'r weathN
('O nd itio ns O\'C'r al l of thC' statr b.v

$1 099 OR 2 FOR $20

d&lt;.~ y ,

wi t h s kie s al rrady c learing
in thr

A high pr0ssure S)'Sil'm should

Monday nig ht. Sk 1es will c lea r
and cool tempera tures wi ll vi.sit
thr sta te ovrrnigh1 . Su nshi nr

T h r :-.lational \\-' ra ther Service
said there al so werr report s of
spve ral "m ini· tornadoes" i n nor·

.s hould th en br a bund ant on
Tu esday.

th east Ohio and north wes t Pen-

10s,

ns~: l vania

Sund ay afte rnoon and
evenln g, but no inju r ies wrrr

rPa r h thP uppPr lOs to mid ·KO s.

reported.
Sunda v'.s day long rai nfal l had
th e entlrr .s tate under a flood

wPek. it will br fair Wfldnesda .v
and Thursdav. wit h a c hancr of

After earlv morning low s in the

Tuesday's high s

s hould

S2599

the right. Her 19Rl' Che\Tolet
pic kup truck sustamed heavy
damage. T here were no injuries.

Saturday, July 28, 1990

gatPd thre e arridE-nts ovr r thr
wf'ekend

The first accide nt happened
around 4 p.m. Saturday on Go ld
RldgP Road. According to the
rl'port . .John D Brick les, 18.

Reg1stration Hou11: 8 AM TO tl ~OQN

AWARDS PRESENTED AT 4:00PM
DOWNTOWN HUNTINGTON

Pomeroy, was traveling cast on

lOth Street &amp;. Veterans M emonal Blvd • Huntington, WV

Gold Ridge Road and saw a red
car coming toward him ln a

S1ree1 Machines and Mowriud Bikes. e1c.

• Models Through 1970
• First 150 Entries Receive Dash Plaques

curve on I hr wrong sld e. lie
reportedly pulled to the right lost
control and went off the roadway
and s truck a tree. Brlckles 1978
Ford Bronco susta ined heavy
damage . Peter K. Brlckles, Ru tland , a passenger, wa s tr ans·
ported to Veterans Memoria l
Hosp it al.
The second acclden I occu rrcd
around 4:45p. m. on County Road
34ln Sutton Township. According
to the report. Martha L Camden,
Fleming. was travellngwestand
swer ved to miss a dog . She
apparently went Into the ditch on
the left then crossed thz roadway
and s truck a ditc h and bank on

FREE ALTERATIONS
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY TIL 8 P.M.

• Ist &amp; 2nd Place Winners Receive Trophies
• Public Welcome
Prtludlr Spuruurrci Br

GT~tiethSt~~k
HU~TINGTO~

·-- · --- ~-~ ..-- -·-

A MilTON . WE.IT

'

·- ----

\'IRGI~IA

.

.. ..... ........... .

30 DAY LAYAWAY ON SALE MERCHANDISE!
·• · -

-~ - • • · -

.I

•

dlff('rencc in the tw o coca i m•
c ha rges. according to th P MPigs ·
County Prosecu ti ng Attornry's
office, is du P to &lt;:t la rger amount

being so ld . On the chargP of
eng agi ng in a pa t !Prn of corrupt
activity. bond was sf•t at :10,000:
f ir st drgrcr felon y corflinr tmf
licking chargr at $30,000 and
sf'cond drgrrr frlon.v trafricking

at

$10 , [)(~1

.JoycP .Jewrl! wa s round to bf'
i ndigpnt and wa ~ rPfPrred to the

juana. a felony of the third
degree. At Sat urday's arraign ment. Hill' s bond was set at
$10,000 with 10 percen t authorized to be paid persona lly bv the
defendant
T wo other dr fend ant s await
ar ra ignme nt hearnigs, and are
rurn• ntly in t he custody of the
Mei gs Co unt y ShPri f f ' s
Depar tmr-n!.

Hobart Cundiff. MirlrllqJOrt,
was &lt;HTl'Sted O\'('r th f' wf'rkrnd

on four cou nt s of tra frirking in
marljuana. Two of tlw cou nt s arP
third degree fplon!Ps and two arP
four th drgn•r frloniPs.
Da nny Haggy of Pomf'rny was
arrPstrd on a charge of traffick ·
ing in marijuana. This co un t is a
fourth cleg rPP fPion y.
Dilnn y Dav is. a r e sident of
.Ja c kson County. was indictPd on

Friday but has not been a rrested.
Acrord ing to Warner. officia ls
anti cipate that Davis wtl\ b&lt;&gt;
arres ted or will appear voluntar ·

Meigs Cou nt y Publi c Defender 's
offi ce for rrprr sentation.

car driven by Larry 0. Seller s.
Jr , 19. Portland, head on. Both

ttw cocai ne charge was se t at

Mrnford Jpwe!l Is ,1waltlng .'lf'n·

cars sustained major damagP

Jackson County group upset
with district's limitation policy

Yankuns and Sellers su ffern!

was in sf'rious condit ion a nd in
in tPnsi ve car e and Seller s wa s in
fair cond ition as of Monday. A
p&lt;.~sspngrr in SellPr s' c ar. kat ina.
Wo lfe. 17. s uffered minor injurips
and was &lt;.~ I so taken to Grant by a

wcond LifeFli ght. Her condi tion
had yet to be determined . Yan ·
kun s' passenger. Tommy Lan''·
was takl' n by Meigs EMS to
Vc'IPra n' s Mem or ial Hosp ital
No ne of those invo lved wrrr
wearing sa fetv belts acco rd ing to

the state patrol
The Rac ine Fire Department .
Ba&lt; ha n Fi re Dcpa rt menl and the

By BRI!\/10 J . REED
Sentinel News Staff
A .Jackson County group i.s
displeased wi th the decision of
th~ multi -coun ty Solid Waste

According to Assis tant Prose·
cubng A11orne.v Linda Warner.

commit tee to limit landf il l co n

ing to AgnPs ! . Martin . a
spokcsp&lt;&gt;r son for fhP organiza
tion, the committrf' has brcn
activf' in their work sinrt' tht'
dis tri r t "s inception. and from
tha t t imr has PnrnurJ grd thP
d istr i ct to r on sidf'r a dL..,t rlc t

s id era tl ons to two f acllili es .

owned landfill

Managpment

Dist rir l' s policv

Ear lier this month, th e policv
rommitteP of th f&gt; At ht"ns. Ga l lia .

~a r lin

s a_\" ~

t hJt on(• of rh e

Sy racuS(' Pmergen cy squad rr ·

Hoc king, Ja ckson, M&lt;' igs and primary o bj rr ti vps of th r co m ·
Vi nt on Cou nties IAGHJM\ ' 1 mlttc r is to m ake thL' public
Was te ManagemC&gt;nt Dis tr ict, awarf' of thr quanti! \' of out ·or
voted to considl·r on ly the appli· di str ic t and out ·o f·s tatP giJrb 3g( •

spondcd to the acciden t. One

r atio ns of Mid ·A rtleriran Wa str

fireman. V\'a yne Lyon s, w as
trratPd f or heat rxhau stion . Th r

Systems and Kilbargcr' s Construction Compan y, beth private

Me1gs Cou nt y Sheriff 's Depart ·
mcn t a nd theOhioSta te Highway

Pntities, elim inating an applica

Pa t ro l a lso rrspo nd Pd .

No one has been ci ted for th e
acc id ent and the inciden t is s till
und er

invrstigation

Ca lli a -Meigs
Patrol.

by

th r

State Hi ghway

110n from Sands Hill Coal
Company.
The Ja ckson Co unty Environ ·
m''nlal Committee fee ls that th r
district sho uld givP serious con ·
sid Pra t ion to t hr idea of a

district -owned land fil L Accord

t hat w ill com r int o thP di stri c t
undrr thr l and f il l proposa ls cur
rrn tl ~' bring con sidrrN I bv the
poli c ~' committ rr .
··1 don't think that thf' g rnf•r;d
public is dwarr that RO prn ·r' nt o f
t hr trash th at romrs into 1he a r·ra
wi ll br comr ! r om ou t of thf'
distric t '", Martin rxpl;lined .
" Sin er thr daih· tra sh Uurdf ·n
of the r ntirr di str ic t is pstimat f·d

ily Davis L&lt;currcntlyoutonbe nd
Cont lnw•d on paRe Ill

10 h(• 600 ron .s a da.v, t hC' propo.sf'd
will potcnt ia llv takr in
four time" rn orc out uf d is trict or
out of sta ft' tra s h than tht.' cnt i r r
di...,rr ict produn's"
VL1 rtin . who t' \pl&lt;lins th&lt;Jt thr
.l('f&lt;(" ha ... lwl' rl in Pxis!P nn • for
sPVPral vP&lt;:tr s. o.u ldPd that tlw
rornmiti PP fppJ.c., th&lt;tt i t is "wrong
for tlw dist rict to nnl cnnsitll'r th r
potrnli .1 l lor a rti strirl ·uwrwd
fari lil y ...
Ma rt in s a~' S that thr · co mm it
!PP "'a ppPa r s In IH' hPadf'd to
loc king in lht ' \ "P I"\1 '\· i\ which !hi•
govf'l"nin g law wa s dPsignPcl to
prP vPnt - namP ly. qu t·of·st;:lfi'
l&lt;.~ndfill s

I r:1sh ...

Thr gnvrr nin g 1.1\\' t hat M&lt;:~r tin
rPft'r S to is I ~KH's Housr• Hill ~ y ~
which stairs that rac h f'DLHll\'
rn us t partl c ipatP in ;1 so lid wa stP
managrmP n! rt i strict to tktf •r
m Jnr po lirif&gt;s govr&gt;rni ng t hr•
d 1s pm&gt;al of it s solid wa s II'

Cont inued on page 10

Deputies of the Meigs Countv
Sheriff' s Department invcsti·

• Judging in 25 Classes
Anrique Cars · Modifides • Rods

wa s indict ed on flvP coun ts: four

charges of trafficking in mari-

felony; and anoth er count of
aggrava ted trafficking in co
ca ine. a fi rst dcgrl'l' f&lt;•lony ThP

r harged with t ra ffi ck ing in mari ·

Looking a head to thr end of the

Antique Car Show
Rcaistration Donauon : 13.00

arra ignment , hand was sri .1 1

$10,000 with 111 pPITent cash to be
pas ted personally bv I he
defendant.
Steven Powrl l. Midd lepo rt .

a seco nd drgrf'e

charge is a second degree fe lony .
Rond was set at $20.000 w1th ten
percent to be posted persona lly
bv the defendant
John Hill of Middleport was

Deputies probe three
weekend auto wrecks

PRE-WASHED LEVI'S

KNIT SHIRTS

~~L~5s TO

~~Goo

LEVI'S JEANS

DRESS SHIRTS

~3~L~5s TO

WRANGLER JEANS

The northwest. i n fact. n '
rC'ivrd th e first repr ievf' from thP

cl oudy and ra iny weather Mon-

or town,
OFF

tween 2 and 4 in ches fe II. bu I on I)'
minor flooding was reported

degrrl' felony At the Saturday

i n coca ine.

ll•nring on a pr rvious dru~
char gr .
To ny Hutton of Rulland wa s
indirtrd on one coun t of aggra ·
vated t rafficki ng in coca i ne. lhP

juana and one cou nt of aggra ·

Grant Hospital in Co lum bus by a
Li feFl ight helicopter. Yankun s

watc hformuchofthrda .v, bur no
serious flooding was rcportPd
The heavies t r~:~ in wa s in thP
northwest r'o unties, wh{'r(' bP·

co unsel.
.Joe Powell of Mitldleport was
indi cted Frlday on two counts of
traff!r klng In marijuana , a th ird

$20.000.
Rod Clonch. Midd lrport. wa s
ind 1cted on two counts oft raffle k·
ing In marijuana . both third
degree felonies . At the arraignment. hi s bond was set at $10,000
wi th ten percent cash to bz posted
personally by the defendant He
was found Indigent and was
referred to the Meigs Co unt y
Public Defender.
Menford Jewel l and Joyce
Jewell, both of Langsville, arc
rac h charged with one co un t of
engaging In a pattern of corrupt
activ ity, a first degree felony; a
co un t of aggravated trafficking

va ted traffickin g in cocafne .
Bond on eac h manjuana charge
wa. set at $10,000ond t!ie bend on

serious i nj ury and were taken to

where a 1981 twister kill0d nin"
pr o p!~
and cau sed maj or

reported.

GROUP OF MEN'S

the scene of a

Four Meigs residents injured
in two-car accident Saturday
wpre injured, two seriously, in a

present

··---------

\' ankuns, and Larry Se llers wen• takt•n to Grant

Wll'

two-car auto accident on Roule 124 near Portland

Medicare &amp; Insurance billin~ done.
24 Hour Service - Free Delivery

GIOUP OF MEN'S

But the smarter move for Ohio
farmers this year may be to lock
In a minimum price contract at
the local elevator. This way
farmers can deal with local
businesses and have a chance to
get additional price Incentives or
lower drying fees for delivering
grain with low moisture levels.

Saturday aftt&gt;rnoon around 3 p.m. Two LifeFlight
units wer e callf'd and Wayn e Lyons, Tro,y

Hospital in Columhus. On the Sl:ene W(lre the
Kacin P l"ire Deparhnt•nt, Bashan Fire Department, Syracuse emt-q{em·y StJuad, Meigs County
Sheriff's Deparlnwnt, and the Meigs Gallla Post,

ACCIDENT SCENE - Thl'

SPORT COATS

SUMMERFEST '90

the Meigs Coun ty Grand Jury,

.'t

kend In Meigs Cou nt y Common
Pleas Court.
Arraignments were held before Common rteas Judge Fred
W. Crow, Ill.
David Hendr icks, Langsville,
is c)larged with trafficking in
marijuana The charge is a
felony of the third degree. Bond

COMPLETE STOCK
MEN'S SUMMER

with

indicted at Friday's session of
f

shoots

JULY 23rd

Huntington Region AACA Car Club

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Te n defendants. eight of them
alleged drug offenders. who were

occurr pd in winter . When rivers
rose in spri ng, the logs were

MONDAY,

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP! )- Cor n
and soybean prices have fluctu ated 10 to 20 cents a day in the la s t
several weeks due to weather
conditions In Midwest and Southern states.
Dean Baldwin, grai n market Ing specialist at Ohio State
University, says farmers would
be wise to protect their profits
given these co nditions Strong
export demand should keep corn
prices well abeve $2 a bushel, he
sa:ts. and soybeans should stay
well above $5 a bushel between
now and harvest.
But weather problems In major gr.owlng areas could a!ways
change those figures .
He suggests either buying a
"put" contract on the fu rures
market or contracting a min·
lmum price with a local grai n
elevator.
Normally, Baldwin would sug·
gest the "put" as the best way to
protect against declining prices
while l,eavlng the opportunity to
sell the crop for more If prices
.rise.

Ten are al'l'aigned;
eight on drug counts

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE NOW RENTS

homeowner misuse of lawn and

4. ~·------

t il'S,

Clearing tonight. l,uw near
60. Mostly sunny Tut,.day.
lllgh In low 80s.

1 Section . 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Monday, July 23, 1990

Did You Know?

mers and nelghbers. And they
allow people the freedom to
contract f or pesticide
applications."
The law doesn't req ui re property owners who apply chemical s
to their land to post any warnIngs. Some researchers consider

Corn, soybean
prices fluctuating

Vo1.40, No.305

Copyrighted 1990

grea ter awareness and unders tandin g of the timber industry
and Oh io's renewable resource.
trees."
TimberFest even ts evo lved
from tradit ional loggtng activi ·

tured produc t - lumber. Tre~
vo lum es are exp ressed by the
beard foot. a unit of wood 12
Inches square and one inch thick.
Timber Fest part icipants can win

people about activities around

PRESENTS LECTURE - Dr. Patricia Beamish, left, Ohio
University, confers with Laraine Newsome, coodlnator, Crlsllne; Emergency Services and Crisis Intervention Unit Woodland
Centers, Inc, Jollowlng recent lecture at Woodland Centers.

Page 4

Ious to promote its business and
also educate the public." Grlessmann says. "Folks will walk
away from TimberFest with a

logging along rivers and coasts

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Ohio State Cniversity agronomist .Jim Beuerleln says Ohio'
wheat crop has had some disease
problem s that may hurt yield s a
bit but in general the crop should
do well.
The Ohio Agricultural Sta lls·
tics Service reports that 92
percent of the crop had tu rned
golden by J uly I and har vest was
In full swing this week.
Agricultural economls 1 Allan
Lines projects the Ohio winter
wheal harvest at 74.2 million
bushels, up 18 percent from la st
year.

Daily Number
995
Pick-4
8991
Super Louo
15-21-24-29-30-31
Kicker 112209

condary manufacturers, is anx -

The timber industry is unique
in measuring its raw ma terial strees- in terms of its manufac·

them and increase comm un lca·
tlon between com panies, custo·

garden pesticides to be a seri ous
problem that educatio n efforts
have not curtailed
They say many people do no t
read the labels of pesticides and

a chainsaw by correctly guessing
the amount of beard fe et in a
loaded log truck on s ite.
" It's not easy." he says. "Last
year's truck was loaded with
2,003 beard fee t. but volume
var ies depending on the diameter of the logs and how the truck
is loaded ."
Area sawm ill s, logging busi·
nesses and Hocking Technical
College have provided much of
the organizational support for
TimberFest.
"The timber industry, which
inc lud es loggers , mills and se-

Ohio Lottery

Kyger Creek
tournament
•
continues

'-

--

The third acc ident happened
around 6: 15 p.m. on Sund ay on
Success Road. Accord in g to the
report. Steven R. Barnett, 17,
Reedsville. was traveling west
on Success Road when the wheel s
of his vehicle ra n off the edge of
th e paveme nt in the curve . When
he ca me back onto th e paveme nt
th e vehicle slid si deways and
went off th e roadway on the left
side into th e ditch and lawn at th e
Tim Gumph res idence. Barnett
and his passenger, Lori Falls. 17 ,
Owl Hollow Road, were tran sported to St. .Joseph Ho spi tal for
treatment. There were no ar rests. Barnett's 1988 Dodge Ram
pickup susta ined heavy damage.
In other ma tters , George Mor ri so n. Sordon Road, Long Bot ·
tom, reported to the department.
that he had twenty 14 planks and
four posts stolen from the Izaak
Walton League Farm In Chester
Township.
\

CONTEST WINNERS- The first annual Marauder Punt·P88s &amp;
Kick competition was held Saturday evening at Marauder Stadium
In Pomeroy. Awards were Kiven to the winner In each grade and
the overall winner. Award winner• Included (1 -r) : 4th grade,

Franco Rom uno; ~th grade, A.J. Vaughan; 6th grade, James See;
7th grade, Donald Goheen; 8th grade and overall winner, Jeremy
Imboden, and 9th grade. Matt Clark. Pictured In the back row Is
Marauder Head Coach Mike Stagp

'1. '

�Monday, July 23, 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
romeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJG8-MASON AREA

~rh

~mRJ ~L-"""T""a~d~~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
rubllsher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

rAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press Internatk&gt;nal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Associ at ton.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subfect to Mit ing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone numbe-r. No unsigned letters will be publishe-d. Le tters should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Governor candidates try to
raise issues in the campaign
By LEE LEONARD
Uri Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Two capitol reporters were recently discu ss ing the
blizzard of pos!Uon papers Issued by the two gubernatorial
candidat es and how dull they have made the t·ampaign
"'Well, at least they are talking abo ut substantive iss ues ... one
reporter offered hopefully. ""l! 's either that or name calling."
"'Give me name calling," replied the other .
Both O..mocrat AnU10ny Celebrezze Jr. and Republican George
Volnov1ch have been churning out position papers left and right.
Much of what they offer either Is an extension of existing programs.
It's already been tried and found wanting. or it's pie In the sky.
, For example, Celebrezze prac!l cally lilted a page out of Gov.
Richard Celeste's book when he released his ·· tamlly health"
program last week.
Most or the O..mocratic attorney general 's recommendations
conc~rned accelerated sex education In thp schools, increased
emphasis on reproductive hea lth serv1ces !family planning) and
l~al programs attempting to get teen parents to stay In school and to
bolster the self-esteem or teenagers.
: Many of these are pilot programs born of I he governor's ta sk Ioree
on teen pregnancy. which was started by Celeste.
There's noth ing wrong with piggybacking on Celeste, bui one
wonders if Celebrezze Is going to have any original Ideas.
Voinovlch. meanwhile. throws everything but the kitchen sink into
his campaign planks .
In his senior citizen heal th care package. he recommended ··JIVing
will'· legislation. which would allow people to legally direct their own
care. to the point of pulling the plug on a llle support system. should
tney become comatose and terminally 111.
That proposal has been around for 20 year s. and a lim ited version of
It cleared the General Assembly last year alter the warring factions
cam e to a painstakingly ca reful agreement.
Under questioning. Volnov1ch was una ble to offer any fresh insig ht s
ftir ending the legal sta lema te over expa nded ""living will" "
legis lation.
Voinovlch. tf elected. hopes to solv e many of the problems of state
government as he did while mayor of Cleveland - by getting the
affpcted parties around the table and jawboning.
For example, on health insurance and cutting medical costs last
week, Voinovich sa id the answer Is to show the parties Involved that
th ey have a ··symbiotic relationship'· and that they· ·are better silting
ai a table than off by them s~ives ··
Voinovlch may have learned this approach from longtime Go,· .
J'!mes Rhodes . under whom he served as lieutenant governor for a

year
But It remains to be seen whether Voinovic h has the same sk ills to
car r y oft the negotiations at the sta te level as he did in Clevela nd . As
one observer put It . "If he wants to get everybody in the same room.
It" II have to be Ohio Stadium. ··

Letters to the editor
Following the leader
for kindergarteners
Dear Editor :
Do you know that 7W of
t&lt;Jday's 17 million In sc hool
teenagers have had a drink, and
o•e out or every 10 of these
teenagers wUI become aicobol·
lcs. When I ask teens some
reason behind teens drinking
again was the peer pressure, the
!ltt!ng ln. being cool Sam~ say
because !heir parents drink.
Come on kids. use you r heads.
Just ~a use you r parents drink.

doesn"t mean you have too.
Follow the leader Is for kinder·
garteners not teens .
Becoming an adult means
accounting for vour own action.
Being cool is lo~ Fonzy , being in
charge ol your mind and body Is
reality . The decision Is up to you.
Let's hope you make the right
choice.

Christine Schultz
Pomeroy. Ohio

Upset with another price mcrease
Dear Editor :
I hav~ one question; WHEN
and WHERE WILL IT STOP ...
The big announcement In the
Sentinel about th~ increase in
passes and admission to the lair.
really got me!
I really don ' I know why that
people on the falrboard think
there Is anything out there worth
$5o! someones money . much less
S9 lor a pass . They ran 't&lt;&gt;Ven get
any &lt;ll'&lt;'eut stag~ attractions,
that would make It hallway
reasonable Ia hav~ those kind of
prtces.
You can ftgur~ It out lor
yourself. an average lamUy ol6,
p•"e' for all of !bern would be
S5f tJiell S3 ~aclllor a balld stamp
to ride. tbrre'l anolbrr fiB. Now,
you I.I!D me. bow many !amUlet
can attord
for no more tban
the fair 11M to olfer, It II plain
crazy, and as far u that goes
what famUy would feel like
payllllf S30 to geltbelr famUy In
&lt;&gt;VeD If they didn' t have a pall?

m

M)'Rif I've been rortuute
enoup. that my tamUy llu
bollpt pa11oes for my daupter
and I, blltwhal abouttllediUdrell
who aren't u lucky u lte are.

I wu aiWI)'I Iinder tbe Impression that children II what the falr

Is ail about, but maybe I "m
wrong, maybe Ills lor a bunch ol
adults, looking lor an excuse to
act like children.
There has to be a time and
place som~wher~. that someone
STOPS to THINK about th~
low-lncom~ class or people In
Meigs County, and tries to help
them. Instead ol always trying to
get rich all them, because ~ of
Meigs County residents are
below what everyone else calls
low-lncom~.

I think It's about time someone
took a stand lor low-income, and
this Is just a start.
There has ID be a stopping
place somewhere, what I want to
know II where Is it gulng to be.
Barbara Stahl
1515 Nye Ave.

Look before leaping __J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_a_nd_D_a_le_ V&lt;_a_n_At_ta
WASHINGTON The
member of Congress who Is
boasting about exposing the
shortcomings of first son Nell
Bush lives In one of the biggest
glass houses on Capitol Hill.
Rep. Frank Annunzlo, D-111. , Is
chairman of the House Subcom·
mlttee on Financial Institutions
Supervision, Regulations and
Insurance. He sports a lapel
button · demanding jail time for
the "S&amp;L crooks."
That ls the new Frank Annun·
zlo - born again In an election
year when It ls lashlonable to
whip the savings and loans. The
old Frank Annunzlo was not
nearly so harsh.
That Is because he takes his
cues on the S&amp;L Issue from hi s
chief banking assistant, Curtis A .
Prins . And not long ago, Prins
was ea ting dinner In the home of
Charles H . Keating Jr.
Keating Is the former owner or
Lincoln Savings and Loan. The

taxpayers own II now, and Its
collapse will cost them about $2
billion. It has been fashionabl e to
blame the·· Keating five" - live
senators who took big campaign
contributions from Keating and
then went to bat lor him against
S&amp;L regulators who knew better.
But from the look ol things, the
"Keating live" had better make

room for more.
Our associates Michael Bin stein and Tim Warner have
learned about two trips Prins
took at the invitation of the
generous Keating.
On March 2. 1987, Prins flew to
Southern California and Arizona
to. in his words, acquaint himself
With !he operation Of Lincoln
Savings and Loan. He also
acquainted hims elf with the
swank Crescen t Hotel. then
owned by Keating. where Prins
stayed, tor fr ee And he was a
dinner guest at Keating's home.
Traveling with Prins was Dave

Evans. a Washing-ton lobbyi st for
Keallng's holding company,
American Con!lnental Corp.
Evans, a former Democratic
congressman from Indiana, has
been one of the mosl visible and
aggressive advocates for KeatIng on Capitol Hill. Last year, lor
example, he so ught to short
circuit a House Banking Com miltee Investigation Into Keating
and Lincoln .
Annunzio and Prins have been
among the most outspoken critIcs ol a regulation that Keallng
also sough! to kill. It would hav e
reined In the Investment powers
of Indu stry hi gh flyers .
Alter Prins en joyed Keating's
hospltallly in Arizona - lnclud·
lng a round of golf that Prins
doesn't remember who paid for
- he and Eva ns look a side trip to
Las Vegas on Keating's jet . They
stayed at Bally's Cas mo and
Resort. and Eva ns picked up to
bil l.

Within a month, Prins was the
dinner gues t of Evans and
another Keating lobbyist, James
Grogan, a! the pricey Washing·
ton, D.C., reslaurant , Lion D'Or.
When asked about the favors
from Keating, Prins told us,
"Keating snookered me. I wasn't
the only one."
Alter the fact, Prins is trying to
make himself and his boss
Annunzlo look like tough guys In
the light to bring the S&amp;Lowners
to justice. But the record says
otherw ise.
Annunzlo has taken $3,000 In
campaign contributions from
Keating. He Is caught In a tough
re -el ec tion ra ce in Chicago
where his opponent Is making
claims that Annunzlo Is more
responsible than others for the
S&amp;L fiasco.
The revelations about Annunzio's statler hint that there Is
plenty of blame to go around.

~~~ONe GI~T Heij) FoR MANKIND

•

N~SA

The Boston Globe ran a think
piece the other day arguing that
America Is undergoing a ""crisis
of the spirit.'"
Reporter Charles Radin Inter
viewed various noted doubl edomes. finding general agree·
ment on that proposition but
widely differing dellnlllons oft he
underlying malaise.
Some of those questioned
thought Americans had lost their
traditional confidence !hat the
next genNatlon wUI be better oil
!han !his one an oddly
materialistic sort of crisis of the
""spirit ." Others detected a grow·
lng cyn icism. Some observers
leit that our sense of '" responsibility tow ar d others" has
"eroded"" - which may, how·
ever. just be a compialntthat the
liberals" guilt -generating tech·
ntques stU! haven't fully recovered from Ronald Reagan's
ant&gt;cdoles about the '"welfare
queen "
Anyway, recent polls testily
that most Americans are optlm ·
lsllc about themselves but pessi mistic about everything else.
What accounts lor this lr arne of

mind ?
Surveyi ng the scene, one can' t

help being struck by the number
of people who are enraged about
somethin~ or other- and at the
lar g&lt;• number of different things
that enrage them. Two Earth
First' activists In California
were badly Injured recentl y
when a bomb blew up In their car.
Pollee t heo rlzed , on the bas is of
details of Its manufacture, that
they had assemlng to a reg ion
where lumberj ac ks' jobs are
threatening the habit at of a
subspecies or owl. !
Certain anti· vivisect ionists.
moreover, tiring of the usual
l neflectuai protests. appear to be
turning to viol ence against their
fellow human beings, allegedly
to protect dumb animals !rom
cruel laboratory experiments
In Los Angeles !California
agai n!) . random v iolence has
recen tly taken the form or
shooting strangers from anot her
car, speeding along th e
ex pressways .
All this is disturbing, of course
But outrage and violence are
nothing new. Around the turn of
the century. when Bakunln's

theories

WC'fP

ralhPr bet1rr re-

garded than they are toda y.
ou tra ged Individuals ofien pro
jected !heir private antagonisms
onto the state, and bearded
··anarchis t s· · managed to kill
quite a lot of Innocent people . The
only difference today is that they
protest In thp nam e or the
northern .'ipottC'd owl , or som('
ot her newly modish ca use.
But. ass uming that Americans
are Indeed gloomier th an usual
about th e future. doesn't it stri ke
you as odd that nobody thinks to
relate thi s to what is go ing on all
around us? F lags are burned
with the full endorsement of !he
Supreme Co urt ; a photograph of
a crucifix Imm ersed in a glass of
urine qualifies for federal support at the taxpayers" expense:
all sorts of prominent people
co habit and spawn without both
ering to get married: dru gs flood
the co unt ry. crippling you ng
m inds and breeding crime; ev
ery trace of a religi ous lmpu lse ts
sta mped, religiously. ou t of our
public life. Doesn' t anyone see a
connection between ail this and
pessimism, cynicism. or numb
Indiffere nce?

Bu t there Is a su rprise in store,
down the road Whenever l as in
the fla g-b urning case) the liberals get a narrow majority ol the
Supreme Court to agree with
them. and I hen manage to block a
co nstitutional amendment with
the help of slightly over one-third
of one house ol Congress. they
delude themselves that they have
scored another "victory." Just
so did the New Lett, In Its heyday
In the 1960s, Imagine that It s
widely televised riots we~etrans ­
l orm in g America.
The New Left s!UI doesn't
realize that, on the contrary, II
was losing about 100,000 votes per
rio t. In 1968, George Wallace got
13 percent ol the votes, and
Richard Nixon stU! had enough
left over to beat Hubert Humphrey . Telling themselves this was
because Humphrey wasn't Iough
enough In his opposition to
Vietnam, the Democrats noml·
nated McGovern in 1972- an lost
every state but Massachusetts.
If America is leeilng slightly
nauseous, whom do you think 11
will throw up on In 1992? Stick
around and watch.

B:r Valletll'l"ette latendoaal
Today Is MoDtlay, July 23, tbe l!nftb day of 1990 wltb 161 to IaDow.
Tbe -~~waxing, IIIOYI1181DWard Its flnt quarll!r.
Tbe monlng 1tar1 are Venus, Mara and Jupiter.

The evening •tars are Mercury and Saturn.
Thole bora OD tbls dati! are uDder the stan of Leo. They Include
t1eteet1ve uovellst Raymoad Cbandler In 111811. EtbloplaD Emperor
Halle Sefaule In 1B9l, Broadway restau ...teur VIncent Sardl Jr. In
1915 ( &amp;ae '151, actor Michael Wild IIIII In 1912. actreu Glorta DeHaven
in 1925 (age 65), and baseball pitcher Don Dryldale ID 1936 (are~) .

head injuries received in a car
accident lei! her In a "vegela·
tiv~" stale. Doctors says she is
oblivious to her environm~nt
except lor reflexive responses to
sound. Here atrophying body lies
day alter day In a Missouri
hospital bed, her family beside it.
Cruzan's family believes her
present condition steals the dig·
nlty from the Intelligent, vibrant
woman she was.
They say she had expressed the
sentiment that II she were ever In
an accident such as the one that
befell her, she would not want to
be kept alive artlftclally.
I don't think any of us who are
still talking and writing aboutthe
Nancy Cruzan case faull the
Supreme Court for its decls Ion,
wblch Is bulcally tbll: A patient
does bav~ a coMtltutlonal right
to retus~ unwanted medical
treatment, but In cases where a
patient Is Incompetent. states
also have the right to set tough
legal standards to ruard against
abuses.

By United Press International
The Cubs" .Joe Girardi was a
reluctant hero. waiting until his
final at ·bat to knock in the
winnmg run in each of the
Ch icago"scome·from -behind vi c·

tories over the San Francisco
Gia nts.
Friday. Gtrardi followed
Shawon Dunston's RBI single
with one of his own, stroking a
two-out single in the ninth inning
to give the Cubs a o-4 victory.
Saturday, the Cubs" catcher
lined a grounder that carromed
off shortstop Jose Uribe's knee to
sc ore Marvell Wynne with the
winning run as Chicago scored
twice i n the eighth to win 3·2
Sunday , Girardi hit a two-out,
tie -break ing RBI double in lhe
eigh th inning, lifting the Cubs to a
4-2 victory for their seventh
straight win .
The las t ttme the Cubs swept
three games from the Giants at

Wrigley Field was Aug. 23·25.
1982. Ch icago had not won seven
In a row si nce April 7-16 last

season.
Throughout their recent tear.
the Cubs have relied on !lmeiy
hitting and outstanding pitching .
In the 10 games since the All-Star
break, Cubs starters have a 2.89
ERA, giving up 24 earned runs In
74 2-3 Innings.
From behind the plate, Girardi
has witnessed the pitching staff
mature .
"'The thing thL•y"re lpttchersJ
doing Is making the pitches when
they have to," " sa id Girardi. "I
think pitching is contagious. It' s
ju st like hitting.'"
If hitting is co ntagious, Ger
ardl must be se riously infected.
The 25-year -old native of Peo·
ria . Illinois went 5 12 in the
series. Girardi has 24 hit s in his
la st 58 at -bats for a 414 average

during that period.
But perhaps hi s finest hit of the
ser ies came in the eighth 1nning
on Sunday .
With one out and the score tiefl
2·2. Luis Salazar singled aga inst
loser Allee Hamm aker, 4·5. Dunston . hit into a fielder's choice,
forcing Salazar at second before
Girardi belted a doubled down
th e left field. driving in Dunston
with the go· ahead run . The throw
home was on time. but the ball hit
Dunston In the back of thr
helmet.
"" I knew if I htt the ball i n thr
ea rner, Shawon had a f'ltdnce to
score,"' said Gtrardi
Pinch-hitter Lloyd M cCIPnd on
was then intentwnailv walked
and Doug Dascenzo· followed
with a single, driving m Gira rd i.
The Cubs took a 2-1 lead on
Ryne Sa ndberg 's RBI tnple
In the eighth, the Giants !ted
the game 2·2 ~hen Bre tt butler

deltvrred a run scori ng doubl e.
San F"ranct sco took a 1·0 lead tn
the fourth on Matt Willtams" 18t h
home run . a two-out shot tu left
Ch tcago tied the game wi th a
run In the sixt h on Dunston's RBI
smgie.
Rel!ever Paul Assenmacher .
3-2. earned the wtn by pitching 1 :l
inning . Je ff Pico pitched lht'
ninth for his second save
Elsewhere tn the Natwnal
League, St . Louis dropped San
Diego 1;-4; Pittsburgh slammed
Los Angeles ll ·6, Atlanta scalped
New York 3·2 in 10 innings,
Philadelphia downed Cincinnati
6·2 and Houston ellpped Montreal

Yet we are still discussing the
case because we a re afraid the
next Nancy Cruza n may be us or
our loved ones . We know that in
the blink ol an eye our own cars
can go careening all a road like
Cruzan's did, or that the torment
of a terminal illness can leave us
begging a frightened medical
community to withhold lifesustaining measures.
Most of us know of similar
cases In our own circle of
acquaintances. We can easily pitt
ours~lves in their places, envisioning a beloved family
member wasting away and
stripped of dignity. Here In
southwest Missouri where Nancy
Cruzan and I live, attorneys have
reported a surge in calls asking
about "Jiving wUis." But those
attorneys say that even living
will doesn't guarantee your
wishes will be follow~d In
Missouri.
Under the proposal, the ramUy
of a person who had been
unconscious for at least three

RY PAUL DEFEDE
Uri Sports Writer
T tte difference between Greg
Swi ndel l and Mark Langston wa s
not Just in the direction of their
lengthy strea ks , but in their
location as well.
Sw indell found it and Langston
didn't.
In limiting California to six hit s
over eight inninngs , Swindell
won his fourth straight game
Sunday and helped Cleveland to
a n R 1 v ictory over the Angels and
La ngston. "'hu los t his seven th
s tra1ght
""After I got out of the first
inning, I just round it and became
effect ive." said Sw indell of hi s
local to n. "Onrr we got the lead.
a ll I wanted to do was throw
strikes . They did the rest iAn·
grls r by popping up and ground·
ing out .
·'You sta r t lo retire a few
hJI!ers in a row and vou build

LONG POND. Pa . IUPII Geoff Bodine won the bat tlrof the
fuel pump and th e gas pedal
Sunday at Pocono international
R aceway.
Bodine. a nati vr of Chemung.
N. Y . . made a one- l ap dash to thP
green flag and won the AC Spar k
Plug 500 NASCAR Winston Cup
Stock Car race. And he Just made
it
·The car was burping ... Bo·
d ine sa id . ""My heart stopped I
sa id. ·Don"t run out of gas .· It
bubbled. then it caug ht . It surged
a nd away we went . It was
scary.
Bodtne, tn a Ford T hunderbird .
finished ahea d of runnerup Bill
F: lllott. who drove a Ford: Ru st)·
Wallace. in a Ponti ac Grand
Prix, D ale Earnhardt, i n a
Chrv r olrl Lumina. a nd Dave:-.
·\ lli son . who al so drovr a
Thunderbird .
Bodi ne . who col lected $.\8.&gt;011
for his seco nd vtctoryof J9!l0. and
Hary (;ant \\'err th e dr1vrrs of
note when the grrcn flag flew to
r nd a ca ution period with JUSt 2 ~
miles to go in the 200-lap. 16th
even t on the 19-race NASCAR
calend ar.
Bodine and Ga nt. who drove an
Oldsmobile Cutlas s. we re in
fr on t. but bot h had nra r:-.· f'rTlpt y
tanks.
On thr n 'st arl. Rorlmf' s r'.!J

m their l&lt;J st 2 ~ games. Ken
Dayley. 2 '2, earned th e victory

and Lee Smi th no tched hts 14th
save. Re\iP VP r Grf'g Harri s. 4 -~.
took 1he loss.
Pirates II. Dodt::t~r~ 6
At Pi t tsbu rg h. Garv il.Pdus hit
a gra nd slam. Rafae l lll"lltard
delivered a thre(•·run doubir and
Jay Be ll knoc ked in three runs to
power Pittsburgh Bob Kipper.
4-}, earned th P \"ictot v \-\.lth:! 2·3

:l 2.

inning s of hllit's" l"(' ]i('!. L os
Ang£'1Po..; slartt·t T!•tT\" WC'Jls, 1·2,
allowed sP\f' n runs in rhrPe
inning s
Rraves :~. :vlt•ts t
10 innings

Cardinals 6, Padres l
At St. Lou is . Tom Pagnoz zi
doubled homP a pair uf ru ns 10
c ap a threP-run seventh innmg
and send St Louts to it s fourth
stra tg hl vtctory. San Diego. who
ex tended It s losi ng s trPak to

a S &lt;Jtrillrl~ fl .\· inllw Hllh mn ing to
l1£1 A tl an ta . sa]yagi ng thr f i nal
ga mr of l hC' WP1·krnd sPTIPs v.. hi lt'
snappm g It ~ luur garrw ]using
s11 0ak
Hon (;ant w&lt;ilkPd and
scorrd a ~a m ... t losPJ .IPff l nms.

your confidence and you're not
afraid to throw anything."
Sw indell, 6·5. who struck out
ftve and walked none, helped
Cleveland snap a four-ga me
losi ng st r ea k . Doug Jones
pit ched a scoreless ninth mning.
The Indian s are 9·0 in Sw indell" s
last nine starts and the l eft .
band er hasn "J dropped a game
since June 6.
Meanwhile. Langston. 4·12.
didn't last to see the third innin g.
The lelt ·hander was battered by
the Indians who scored six run s
on 10 hit s m his 2 2·3 innings.
Langston, who signed a 5-yea r
$16 million contract as a free
agent during the winter. made
his earliest exi t since June of
1988.
"" Hi s loca tion was ott and he
wasn't able to get the breaking
ball over enough to make his
fastball effect ive,·· California
ca tcher Lance Parrish said.

sixth

ThP t•s ti m cllPd crowd of mon '
than IIO.Il(){l saw 1:1 car s ttntsh tn
rht' IP ~ld lap. with Bodinr m akmg
the trip at a. n ;n PI ag f' of ~ ~~diRK
mph .
M art in. of llatesvillr. Ar k . .
sa w his lrad in thf' s t a nd 1 n g~
shrink 10 ·lR points O\'t' l r unnl' ru p
Earnhardt. WallacP. thl' dPfl&gt; nd
in g ~ASCAR champio n . g a inl'cl

million Molson 'I 01 onto !nd.v ~ to

two Jl'a su ns to el'lrbratP Sunda y
Fi1 st hf' wnn hi s th ird CAHT
r&lt; lr'f' of lhf• st•ason· ~ the $1

standings.
Seco nd . 1t was announc l'cl
before th e raln -shortPnPd ra cf'
th at Unsrr had sig nf'd a thlf'f' ·
y ear deal to rema1n \\.ithCaliPs
Kraco. ending specula tion he
would jump to the Formula One
circu it nex t spason.
""By sig nmg the co ntract I l rlt
lik e I could breathe again ... sa id
Unser. 2R. of Albuquerque. N.:\1 .
·" it was a big weight off nn
shoulders. That dtdn"t hav e anv
bcanng on the race though .··
However. a prrsis tent . hPavy'
ratn did .
Before t he race. a light r.1 in fell
on th e 1.78- mile tempo rat y road
course. The sprinkle quickly
turned Into a downpour. Dett• r io·
rat ing conditions fotu'&lt;i official s
l o halt the race after 94 of to:l
laps. with Unser holding a
com fortable 37-second advan ·
tagc over Michael Andrctti .
""Rai n is a great equalizer ."
said Unser after winning his
seco nd Toronto Indy in three
years. "'It allowed me to pull
ahead II benefited me a grea 1
dea l, but you've got to be so
careful when you're racing wet
beca u se thP car ca n get a way
from you so fast.
"I called Into the pi! about
three laps before the race wa s
called and said. 'The race is over
boys - they have to shut this
thing down before we ail go into
I he wall."

,Cd\('

Tlw Daily Sentinel
( ti S~ 14 ~t60J

.\ ()lvls ion of Multimedia. lnt'.

C omp&lt;ln\" Multimedia

I n c.

Ph 992 2156. St•
p;lid dl Po mf'l"O\.

-1 ~769

Cllnd cf .l~:-. IJO~IilJ.l:f'

•

struggled a btt. but Gan t" s died of
starvation. As Gant fell off.
Bodine powered to his second
career win on the tricky 2.5-mtle
Pocono tri -oval.
· ·w e ran out of gas ... sa id Gant.
who won the June Pocono NAS·
CAR 500 . ··we lacked about a
mile of finishing it. But sti l l. I
don"t think we would have caught
Geoff, the way he was running ··
Bodine, 49. said he was '"taking
a chance on the fuel, a gamble.··
·"We figured it would be close, ..
said Bodine. who sports an 11 -win
career record . ··we figured it
would be close. Seco ndlv. I
needed a good jump on th r
restart . I had enough to get
around and I sa w Harrv pu l l
over I sa id on my radio. ·J ra n
coas t from here ....
Gant . of Tav lors ville. N.C.
ftni shed 14th. whi le Wtnston Cup
point leader and polesitter Mark
Martin drove his Thunderbird to

tlJPlt - AI Unspr
his Gc.l lles Kraco team

"llli{() ~T O
. !1

1 1~ h1ng

years;- Clluld file a petition in
probaie.o;ourt to end life support.
The court would then appoint a
lawyer to review the case and a
hearing would be held. II three
doctors testified the patient was
permanently unconscious, and
lmmedlat~ family members
were unanimous in their decision
to end life support and testified
that the patl~nt had expressed
opposition to being put on a
Hie-support system, life support
could be withdrawn. The bill
tailed this session, but It's
sponsor, state Senator D~nnls
Smith, says they'll go at It even
harder next session.
Is somet hlng like this proposal
good enough? That's your call. If
you have ideas of how you want
yourself and your loved ones
treated If you ever ftnd yourselves In the Cruzans' bell, It's
time to write to your elected
representatives and let them
know how you feel.

f1ve earned runs.

At Nrw Yot k . Ualt • Murphy hi t

.~stros 3, Expos 2
At Ho uston. Eric Yeldmg
\ l'Ured fr om t h trd on a t\NO-oul
bunt s in g !~ b)· Frankltn Stubbs m
the eighth inning to lead Houston .
Uavr Schmidt dropped to 3-3.
Reliever Jua n Agosto . 5· 4.
worked two hitl ess inmngs and
Dave Smtth struck out the stde in
I he ninth for his 1Bih save.

Langston has no t won m nine
starts si nc e J unr ;} and is 0 7 at

Cleveland l ead. Cleve land al so
added a r un In the ninth.
·· wr got some key base hit s.·
Clevela nd skipper John McNam ·
ara sa id "One of the biggest was
1Felix 1 Ferm ins' two -o ut ba Sl'
hit j ust be forr Ski nner's home
ru n
E l sew herr in the Amrric&lt;.~n
Lcagoo. Ba ltimore clubbed Chi·
ca go 9·3. New York pounded
Minnesota 10·6. Sea ttle edged
Milwauk&lt;•e 4· :1. Cleveland
clipped Ca iUornt a 8·1. Oakland
IJlankcd Toronto 3-0. Kan sas City
clipped Boston 2- 1. and Te.xa&gt;
tripj.led Detroit 5·.1
Orioles 9, White Sox 3
At Baltimore. Randv Millig an
had four h1t s as BaltimorP rolled
to a sweep of thr four ga m e
sNiC's Sa m Horn homered. Bob
M el vi n add ed d two-ru n triplr
and r 1&lt;J ig VVorthington. Jof
Or sul t!k and Rracly Anderson had
two RBI f'a c h fur thl' Orioles

home stn ce April 11. when he
co mbined o n a no hitter with
Mike Wilt in his f trs t slat t of the
vear.

Dunng the game. Sw indell
k new what h e had to do to r onta i n
California .
··1 knew afler what happenPd
earl y .. the.v t the AngPls1 ramr
out swinging. that if I was go in g
to be effec tive. I would have to
get a head on 1he coun 1. "
Sw ind ell sa id ""With the hot
weather I didn"t want to be uut
therr too long ...
Joel

Sklnnner

&gt;macked

a

l hrt'C· run

homer and J err v
81 owm.•, Miteh Webster and
Ch ris J am es e ach had lhrcP hit s

to pace the I nd ia ns who had a
season-high 17 h!t s
ThP Indian s added two ru n" in
l hl' first . onP in th e seco nd and

four

in

the third

for a 7·1

Pf'tr Ha1 ru . . . ch . ~l - ~ Par nt'd thP
'A'l n Jncl ( ·ut 1 Sr tulling \\01 kt•d ."\
] ..) mnin g.') for Ill\ " f'{"Oil d "rl\'1'.
:vir lido Pr tr/., ~l r:. idstt·d ]U\ t :.! 1 .1
1 nmngs

\ .ankl·es 10, 'I\ \ in s 6
A I Mmnca puli". Kent Ht bPk· .,
two -r un th r ov.l n,L; PI ru t !wiped
\ t·w l ork 1&lt;.1llv to1 I!\ (' run s 1n
th e mnth &lt;md sco rP no PJrnPd
r un s courtes :-.· or [J VP :vllnnes ota
rr ror s. CrP,e; Cadarrt. 3-4.
p1tched t\vo 1nnmgs or relief for
lh&lt;' win and Ri ck Agutlera fel l to

ground 10 thtrd pla ce l:lodtnt•
now si ts tn fourth place. I I~
point s of f.
Wallace . Martin and r\ l liso n all
took a qut ck spla sh ol fuel when
th e final of 10 caution f lags flew
on lap 197 after Ken Reaga n
wrecked his ve htcle.
Ellio t t. th e defendtn g Porono
July race winner. had taken an
ex tra splash v..:hrn rvf'ryo nt·
plf!Pd on an ac cident cautio n
pertod on lap 157.
At Pocono. th e 12-gallon fu el
t.wks car r .v each of thr \-Vin ... ton
Cu p cars about 1011 miles .
On th P srrrtch bctwer n a lJp
l :i'i pit stop and thf' f tnish.
IJod ine"s car. fi elded bv th&lt;·
IPgPndar _v .Juniot· Johnson, got
107 5 mii('S II lOOk 21A gal l on~ to
Ii i! th P ta nk al th f' post l"d(' t'
1\ASCAR tl'chn ic al check

GPorgr BrPII had co nsPcu tive
run -scon ng doubiP!-1 to boost

Kan sas Cl tv Da vis . 4 6. won for
1hr th!ld lifn l' in four starts . Je ff
Mo ntg omerv. pickru up his 13th
s&lt;J ve. Tom Bo lton . :1-1. took thf'
loss
Rangl~ rs 5, Tigl•rs 3

~ - .L

:\tariJH'r!'i t Brf'Wt.' f!'i :i
At Milwaukrr. Br1&lt;1n Holman
,1 nd :Vl i k&lt;'Sc huolrJ combmedon a
four ·hltli 't to g uide th(· M annPr s.
Holman . 9·7, ailowrd t hr ef' run s
and thn·r hlh in i :! J mnm gs .
Sc hoo l&lt;'!" ti nL" hcd for ht s :!6th
\i l \'('
Tt&gt;dd ~' ll1 gurra. ti :), a l ·
lowf'cl fou1· run\- lhn'(' f'arned
~ clncl J(J hih In fiV(' Innings .
,\thll'lk~ :J. Blul' ,Jays 0

A t A• ling ton. Gary Pettis and
Ceno Petra IIi scored on ca tcher
Mike Heath' s throwing error in
the eighth innin g to lift Texas.
Brad Arnsberg. 3·1. earned the
victory . Kenn v Rogers notched
his lOth save ·.lark Moms. 8·12.
took the loss .
• .,. SPECIAL St.MU:It BARGAIN
) ATI.IRCAY!SUI40Af l W(!:IIHOAV

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 •4524

"'

~~ ~ 5 00.

&gt;&lt;UI.I ff

)~

PI• I

NESl

Sl I} 8ARliAlN ,._T[N[(S

~Ali)UN I W[D
BAR!iA l N Nlli~ll llJ[)O,.T
l l t (fP1 ' llAl~ Of 1~HDIT "OJ[ AAAO 1'1

At Oakland . Caltf . MlkeMoorr
fuur hlh uvf't ~ 2.\
lnnin gs .!ltd Da' c Ht'nd4· l son hi!
a "o lo t10m1 'J !n lt·ad O:..~kland
~1oor (' tJ .t;, -.. tt uckout two anddid
not \ l(.' \d a walk and R ic k
H onP~TU1t J"f'&lt;Uided hh fourth
Si l\"(' .J imm\ 1\c~. h -.~. allowed
t hf"! '(' ru n ~ a ncl s I.X h ib m ·t·r st'W'n
in n rng-.. 1n laking lhl' loss

,I] lowed

"'We Wl'I l' getting our door
bl own off on thl' c;tralghta\\.a _\. .·
v. :alla cr sa id · 'Wp u:err f]\·i ng on
t hr turn s Cro ff JUS t ran a '&gt; UJ.l(' l"
l"i..IC('

T he &lt;'-'Pt'Ctl'l1 startin g fu 'ld oJ
-t Owa s reducPd to 39 by thr dea th
o f fi rs l ·lim f' W1n &lt;&gt; ton lu p rarr1
Ril'h Vnglf'r

Royals'!, Rt•d Sox I
Cnv . Storm Dd\ 1s
p!lf'tll'd ,! l hl"l ' (' hill( '! IJ\"(' 1 SlX
in n1ng" .1nd C1 'Tilld P••tn and
,\ t Kan s &lt;.~ s

cars t at
eatt e
s!

'"Lo(•ff s car ai~\.'J\." c.;{•['m\ to
gr t g()(xl g&lt;l" mil(•agP, · ... ald
\\'allan·. of F'Pnron. Mo · We
.,.,,uuldn"t han' madr il to lhr ('ncl
wrthou1 th(' stop I'm Jll"l h :.~ pp\"
"r fini shPd aht·ad of thr ng hl
cc1rs thf' six rMar !ln l and thr·
thrPP t Ea rnh,lf'dll ·
Walldct' and ,\lli~on cha i
lt•ngPd Bodine Wllh 20 !aps togo

Hut aftt•r swapping m&lt;' tal ~ tth
Bod i nP for srH·ra i laps. \\"a l la cr·
clropp&lt; ·d of f. Bod tnt' po" err·d b\
1\lll so n to take lhf' IP~ld for goQ(l
on lap lKO .

Al Unser ]r., wins Molson race

Pumrr01. Ohio

Sarah Overstreet

1 :l Reliever K ent Mercker, 3 I.
pitched hitless ball over two
Innings.
Phillies 6, Reds 2
At Cincinnati . Rickey Jordan
doubl ed home th ree runs and Len
Dy kst ra scon.:d thrrt~ mon·· to
lt•ad Ph iladelphia Rookie .Jose
DeJesus . 2·2. wt'n t 6 1·3 innings.
al\owi ng f ive hit s and two earned
run s and Roger McDowell go t the
!mal two out s for his loth save.
Scott Scuddet. 2·3. pilched five
innin gs, alJowi ng f1vr hits and

wven gdmes. has won onl.v three

Indians down California 8-1; Boston loses 3-2 decision to /(C_

l'uhli&lt;,h('(l PVf'fV aftf'rnoon. Mondav
lhrough Frida'.· Il l Court St.. Po
lnf'lo\ . Ohio. tn lht"'Ohb\'all f'V PUb·

Life-support decision is with states
It' s been weeks since the
Supreme Court denied a Missouri
family's request to remove llle
support systems from their
daughter, and newspapers ali
over the country are stU! filled
with the story.
Columnists stUI analyze the
court's decision and try to
Interpret what the decision will
mean to all of us. Outraged
readers stOI wrUe letters to the
editor, aghut as the misery
Nancy Cruzan's family has had
ID endure these seven years since

Cubs sweep Giants; Reds lose 6-2 to Phils; Pirates romp

Bodine captures AC Spark Plug 500 race

What makes Americans gloomy?__Rus_he_r

Today in history

I

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, July 23, 1990

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f Jhl o

MPmbPr Un it('d PH'SS lnt ern a !lonal.
1nI an n na llv PrNs As.soc!at I on and I hi'

Association. National
RepN'sentattve. Branham

O h1u Nt&gt; wsPai-H.'f
,\ dH· riis!n~

Nrwspa p('r Salrs 73.1 Third
Nrw York . New York 10017

f\Vf'MUf'.

POSTMASTER: Send address changf'S
to Thf' Daflv Senltn£'1. lll Cou r1 S! .
Pom•·r~·. (&gt;h.lo 4~7fl:l
SUBSt..:RIPTION Ri\.TES
Ry (:arriP.I' nr Mntor Routt!
Ont• Wt•Pk . ... .. .. .
....... $1.40
On r Month
S6 Jtl

OnrYrar

.... Si2.1~0
SINGLE COPV

PRICE
Dafl.v .

25 O&gt; nts

Subsnlbrr s not d('!ltrtng 1opay the car·
rit•r mav remll In advance dlreC1 to

Thf' Dativ Scntlncl on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basis. C1"roit will be !Vven carrier ra('h
W('('k

No subscr lpllons by mall permitted In

ar ras wherr home carrlrr se rvf('(' Is
available.
Mall Sub8crlpt ioiiB
Inside Melp (;ounly
1J Wt&gt;pks ..
26 Wt'£'kS .
~2 Wf'eks

. ............... .

...

Outside Melp Counly

13 We£'ks ......
26 Weeks ...
52 WPeks

$19.24
$37.!16
$74.36

............... $20.80
.......... $10.l)
.............. . $7~ . 40

. .. .

ldkC'

lhf' lf'&lt;J d 1n

the dr ivpr s

Unser carefully worked his
Lola-Chev around the treachor·
ous 11-turn circuit a~rage

.

spcrd ol i:&gt; .~l~j mph \~ Jth unl\

Michari Andre•! 11 on th P saml' \J p
dt the t·nd ftni shin g &lt;c·co nd
F.d dt&lt;' Chee1w. who dde cted
from Formula Onf' th1 s Sl'a!'ion.
had his best CA RT resu lt f tni sh
tng thtrd.
Star ted eighth on th&lt;• gri d.
L.:n se r mJneuvf'red hi s wa y
through tho f tc ld. taking th&lt;' IPad
I rom Michael Andrctti on lap 2~
··:'&lt;ftchae l go t loose on th&lt;"
ba ckstretch and 1t w.:.~ s a mi s takt&gt;
that al lowed mr tu get bv him . ·
Unsu sa id .
Mario and Mtcharl Andt rttt
hounded Unser until M ar io tnh er·
ited the lead when Unser cam e in
for his first pit stop on lap 47
Andretti reciprocated when he
pitted on lap 54 handing the lead
back to Unser who then pulled
away from the field.
The vic tory was worth $130.200
to the Un se r and his Galles·
Kraco tea m . More Important, the
20 point s he pic ked up for winning
plus the point for most laps led
allowed him to move into first
place In the drivers standings
with 106 points, two up on
Michael Andretti.
"I'm happy for him," Andre! II
said. "'They are a good team, he' s
had a lot of success and I wish
him the best for the next three
years . Although now It puts more
pressure on me because now ail
you guys are going to ask me
about Formula One. There' s
nothing yet but If the light offer
comes along I'd consider it ."
M lslortune continued to foUow
Mario Andretti. He was running

Pl)mouth

Acclaim

Plymouth Sundance

In a n:c('tlt rJ"('fl.'l"('tlCetest,

100 ~chose either Plvmouth Acclaim LX over Honda Accord EX
or Plymouth Sundance owr Honda Civic DX 83 to 17.'
Acclaim and Sundance were ra!ed superior overall!
Plymouth Acclaim LX bea1 Honda Accord EX 44 to 6.
Pi)1110Uth Sundance beat Honda Civic DX 391o II.
Now, read how eaw the lowesl·priced model; are lo own
. as lowas •.1 9''"AP.R
wu. hf.manang
. . ..,..
! . '"

1' 1 1 H•rll

,1'

ll19~e lnr/"11. '.1,,. $218\t,)
l'ackail" 10% Down Total
Price
Payment Fmann'd ;'I''J fm-ti!'.li-,., S245Ml1

l';,ckag&lt; 1001\"l Down
Tmai
!OO'o l"'""""' $183M,
Pnce
Pavment Fmance-d
~ 9°-e for ..S MO!I. $206Mo

1

112,548' 12,510

110,o38

i''·o!oo

16~,... S314Mo.

! 'I"~ luf !4 \l u•

5431 \to.

' til l l oll o

10,556

1

2,111

1

8,445

1

70~ foo 16Mo. *264Mo

I""'"' l4 M&lt;&gt; $363Mo.

Or, get a $750 Rebate:··
S;~w· wn h k)\\ r;nr hn.11 h 1111..: ' • m ' .1~ h rl'h;ltt"' 'm the 1:1 r• t ho~! fx·;n dw Hnn,b .
Plu ~ ~et dn ver\;w h&lt;lh pT• rln tlrltl .111d ~ ~,~ IMI\\ lllrali11'"1tl'l rum" rh.11 thcv Jnn't h.1\'l'

Hurry to the $ummer $ale-Abration.
See your Chrysler-Plymouth dealer now!
' Combined raw scoreottoMJ50-mOmber panels . Ford and GM tlwneJ"!i Sundance teS1ed Wllh oplronel 2 5-l•ler eng1ne '"Annual Pll•t;e!ll!t9f1 Ra10 F•nancong 101 qualit•ed re1a11
buyenlhi"CJulll Chrysler Oed•lon new '90 delle!" stock Othttl rilles tar lo11ger C(Jnrracts !Accta•m pnce base MSRP Wl!h SYOOI B Package SunaancA pr&lt;ee 's base MSRPWith
2SU 0pt100 Paci!Aige Sucktlrprlce miClUOII"Igl!tle. taxes. ancr oesMat•on cnarge5 -"dual rel81l pnce5 Wlll~ry ··-cash back 01f8dl~ trum Ctu'f!llei"Colporeuonon f18IW 90dealer
stock See dfleler lor dti&lt;IJu!s t tPI"Oiects entpne. powef1ri'ln 11nd aga.. •st ou1er t&gt;Ody rust·lhrougtl Stre l...,.ar 01 10,000-fTllle hmrmo warremy ot ooe1er Ae91riCI•ons apply

PAT HILL

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE

399 S. Third- Middleport. Ohio
·Phone 992·6421

-------- l
\dl ,IJll.lt:t':
~

l hn ,lcr.Jlh llltllli h
-- --

--·-

Continued on page 4

.

......._______________________--'___

-·----~----'-::::::::=-&lt;-----------......11

.,

�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 23, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

ln the Kyger Creek LL Tournament,

Pitching, defense dominate scoreboard

-·
•

\ j

., .

'

..

~

•

SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT- In Sunday's rematch of last
year's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament championship
game, Hubbard's Greenhoust' pitcher !Wbby Crow went the
distance a&amp;alnst Point Pleasant PSM, racking up U strikeouts,
surrendering lour walks and as many hits In the Greenhouse's 4-3
victory. (OVP pholo by G. Spencer Osborne)

...'

TIES GAME- PSM's Jimmy Litchfield (left) slides home just

ahead or lhe throw from Huhbard's Greenhouse shortstop

Ca~s

Cleland to catcher Ryan HIll ( I4) to tie the gamt• at 1·1 in the fourth
Inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament contest
a1 Cheshire, which Hubbard's won 1-3. (OVP photo by G. Spent-er
Osborne)

Al Unser Jr., wins ...
: a solid third unt il lap" when he
: .. pun out at the turn three hairpin
and fpll bark 10 sixth where he
finished
Pole -sitter Dann_\ Sulli\·an.
: 11·ho had finished second three
· times and third once in the four
: previous lnd~ rae£'!-i. WiJ S fourth .
. · Sulliva n. winner o f thf' Cif'H' ·
:l and Grand Prix July H. surrf-'n ·

drred the lead to Michael An
drrlti on thr first turn . fal lin_g dS
far back a~ lOth pi&lt;H'i' 11f~ rnrr&gt;
bcginninR his comeback .
Robbv Rahal 'iarll'd fourth
and ra·n s trongl\·. nt.'\·pr lowf'r
than fifth until he grazed the wall
on lap 12. He damaged hh
susP£'ns ion. forc ing him int o tht·
pits and out of the race .

,..,. \or~ I. .\JillflLI :!
\to .. N·.U l Hou&gt;;~on!
" UluL' I. SiUl Dirr;u ~.: lnnil"ll{'
.lo(und.v.\ Rt•,,.t.
Plllht.df'tphl:t li, (~Jnl"in~l• "!
t hk11.10 I. ~.n f'raiJ( ·I.,. ·t• !
l'h t..bu ra: h I I. l.o .. :\n ,;d•..., ti

Majors
ftJ lllllt'd f"~ .. lnWrntl lol'llll
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shortstop

Jeremy

Tuckrr ~ wa':i ablr to so l\·('
Coo lville pitcher Brian 80\.\."f'n's
rna~ tf'ry of thP strike zone b~·
co ll t.•c tin g ntv.-'o·out. third ·i nning
sin gil•. the Orioles' lone hit.
But rven then. !\jew Ha\'f'n 's
luc k worf' thin. as Coolvil lr
ct•ntcrfir lder J.R. Springer. who
pla yed the boun ce on Tucker" s
hit . fi red to third 10 re tire 1\ew
Haven catcher Josh Mi ller and
end the Inning .
Alter two scoreless Innings.
Coolville drew first blood In the
third. and kept the Orioles away
from the plate in it s half of th e
third. But the roles were rev ersed in the fourth. as l'ew
Haven tied the game at I 1 and
forced Coo lvil le tocomeupwilh a
pair of sixt h inning tallies lo
notch the win

Bowrn co untrrrd his SIX walk s
by fanni ng ni ne. Heath Engle.
l'rw Havcn ·s hurler. str uck out
four and walked two. Both went
lh£' di stanrP.
Coolvil le's sPvf'n ·hit attack
was led b_v Springer 1H 1. Slick
Chapman 1~41. Ceci l Atkinson
and Rrian Dixon I both 1 :1).
Scon- by Innings

Ru II and 15, Hartford I Shortstop Gary Stanley hammered two home runs - a
seeond -lnnlng grand slam and a
third -run lhree~ru n shot - to
propc·l the Rutland Reds to their
victory over the Hartiord
Braves.
Those rockN sho ts made a
winner of Sam McKinney, who
struck out three, gave up two hit s
- fourth -Inning doubles bv Mike
VanMeter and Chris Roach and Issued no walks in the
lour - i nnin ~ affair. which wa s
delayed in the top of the third
following Sta nley 's second homer The Braves Mike \'anMe·
ter. who was the losing pitcher.
fanned seve n. but was hurt by his
11walks .
Rutland·s hit collec tors were
Stanley t.1-3. two HRst. Adam
Barrell r ' ·t doubler. Scoll)'
Georgr 11 ·1·1 and MrK i nne~·
11 -.1 )
Score hy Innings
Rutland .
. .... 2 4 4 o-1.170
Hartford .
.. 11001 - 1-22
WP - McKinnpy
LP - M . \'anMelrr
Thr- rcmaindrr of this weC'k 's
srrond·ro und !ournamPnt action
is as follows·
Today - Peoplr·s Rank vs.
Greerl': 6 p.m.; Mason \'F'W vs .
Ga l Upolls A ·s. 7· 30 p.m.
Tuesday - Gal lipolls White
SDK vs . Gallipolis Indians. 6
p.m.: Racine a 2 vs . Hannan
Trace. 7: 30p.m.
Wednesday
Hubbard's
Greenhouse vs. Gai Upoll s Yankees. 6 p.m.; Coolville vs. Point
Pleasant Fruth's Pharmacy,
7 30 p.m .
Thursday - Racine No. 1 vs.

Hu11'lllon ~ l'ltdl~'t -l im ( l o~nt 1 ~· ·
•• •puod opl~llll "".;l,;nmrnl ln "I'u ..··nn "'
l':.~·llk ( (l;t~l l .#"al\'" r,\ \ .·\ ,
' ''" \ or1. - Tr~d4·d plldll't Oil Ill[ Sl"k
to .\11 04nlu lor pltt· hc-r Ttft)' \ "LIJir :
"""l.(nt'd \ "alk• In Columhl ~ of I ht Sn 11th
--'till.nrlt Lr-.v.~ I ·' 1: opllonrd pitt lwr
·It'll ln fi...o lu Tldo·"~l!'r o( th&lt;• lntt•rm
tl•n'lioll Lf'ii(UI' t .\ \ ,\ &gt;. rrt·allo•d pllo ·ho•r
.Ju lo .\ hl"lutdo lr am Tldo·"tt.tn
}911,.-.ukrt· - Plan·d pllo·ht.,. ("h.., lo
t ·rlm on l l-rl14.,1&gt; Ol..at.lt•d 11~1 : n•t"i&amp;.llt"d
pk•· ht"l' Ton,,- F&lt;J~!III.II Crmt llt•n1Pr of th r
\mf'rM·IUI ·b ~ ol"lallon ! ,\ .\ ,\ l

6

MOndQ" Sport~ ('ll lrndu
lk&gt;-lnJ';
l111r;trwoed, Calif. - ('- Humhl&gt;rlo Gortlll l t"11 \lllo .fllni'KPUIIIJm. U. M'8( " IIPt
ny..,lpt lliir: MIILP Phrlpt~~ n . U111·

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Game~

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T\'LER J. KEARNS

Kearns birth
Patrick and Kimberly tPau leyl Kearns, PomProy, are an ·
nouncing the birth of their first
chi ld, a son. Ty ler .Joseph, on
Apri l 14 at Holzer Medical

Center.

,,
DRAWS FIRST BLOOD- Coolvllle's,J.R. Springer (lell) sUde•
hard Into and under New Haven backstop Josh Miller to score the
game's first run In the third Inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament malchup. The Athens County contingent later
broke a 1-1 lie lo post a 3-1 victory. (OVP photo hy G. Spencer
Osborne)

·.~·.

Call Leesa Murphy &amp; A880ciale8

PUBLIC RELATIONS/ ADVERTISING
992-2922

vellng the farthest.
Door prizes were won by Debi
:vtichael, Monica Holman. Kc ll ev
Holman, Clarence Lawson. Jeif
MlchaPI, Mike Salser. Annte
Alley, Jessica Alley, Davtd Law son, Matthew Shain, Kim Law son, Kat hi Salser , Virginia Rowe .
Janice Lawson. Tabatha Law son. and PPtl' Snyder.
Attendi ng wpre Roy and Kathy
Murphy, Sandy , J.R . and Rl
c hard. Ruth and Arnold Johnson.
Co lumbus; DPbi Michael, Tara .
Jeff. and Myra. Mike Sr.. and
Kathi Sa lser. Mike .Jr, and
:vtallhew. Shade: Pete and Verdina Snydrr , Dl'lawarl'; Bruce
Holman. Angi&lt;• Russell. Mem·
phts. Term ; Roger and Sally
Holmiln, TracC'y, Jarrod, Mon ·
rca. and Kel ley. Charlie Weddil' .

Ru tland; Charles Shain, Jessie
Jarrell. Virginia Rowe, Brady
and Donna Sayre, April Stitt. and
Harry Snyder, Pomeroy; Jean
and Sampson Hall, James and
Jane Teaford, JanicP and David
Lawson, Syracuse; Sam and
Ruth Shain, Emi ly, Samul'l and
Matthew, Jerry and Cail Rowe.
and Jennifer. Carl, and Caro lyn
Robinson. and Nikki. Nicole Hill.
Evel yn Manuel. Carmen. Joan.
Jane~ and Jenny, Lucille Law son, Clara Powell. Cla rence and
Kim Lawson. and Tabatha. Ja son Imboden. Brenda Tutlle.
Eric and Mike, Ear l and Goldie
Holman, and Annie Allev . .Je; ~
sica and Jimmy, Racine .
Th e 1991 reun ion will br held
July '1 at Star Mill Park in
Racine. Each family is to bring a
door prize .

Ka t hry n .John son conducted
the program on get-away Idea s
and secret gardt:'ns at thr recent
meeting of the Fer nwood Garden
Club held at her home.
In her program Mrs . Johnson
qated that getaways cou ld in
elud e anything from a trip to an
ll.mu sement park to a spo t in a
!Ja ck yard. A sec ret garden co uld
IJe alm ost anywhere or anything .
ShP showed pictures of each as
sh•• talked about a garden in th e
back yard. on the deck or porch.
in a 1ree, a rock garden, water
garden. a gazebo. or a gathering

of flowers in front of

.I

window .

with !he narnf' of thl'ir

Attenda nce 1s rPQUlrPd at o nf'
two hour sessitm wrekly. ClassPs
will includf' nutrition education.
strP ss managf'm ent. wrekl y

-.
.,

•

'

~-·

4&lt;C

·'.'to~

NICKI TUCKER

.·

Tucker birthday

:-:.t.
.~... · .

. _ ..,"\t .~

. ..

A party honoring Nicki Ka~ ·

Tucker was held recentl y at Star
Mill Park tn Racine.
A "Mario" themr was ca rrird

SCORES GAME-WINNER- The Racine Reds' Gre&amp; McKinney
takes the last stridr toward the plate and what proved to be the
game-winning run In the seventh Inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament gwne agalllllt the Middleport Dodgers,
as Dodger catcher Wes McClure looks on at right. The Reds won
2-1. ( OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

- - Sports briefs - Ba.•krtball
The United States, led bv
Katrina McClain with 23 points
and Teresa Edwards with 17.
defeated Yugoslavia 88-78 to
retain lis women's world basket
ball title In Kuala Lumpur .
Malay sia. Cuba trounced Czechos lovak ia 83 -62 to clin ch thi rd
place. and the SDv1et Union
finished fifth by downing Austra l ia 97- i l

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 Se&lt;ond St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

FREE

INSPECTION

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC
All BRANDS

o ut.
Attf'nding wer e h('r parrnt .~.
Darla and Terry Tuckrr: g rpat
grandmothrr, Mar~· Kaull.
Pomeroy ; grandparents . .Jo~T P
Jnd Ca rroll Whitr&gt;. RarinP .
OthPrs at!E"nding w ere Deannd
TuckPr, Keith o.HuJ Kevin \Vhit r .
Glrnda Hoi!Pr , BPck.v. T11n.
.Jason . .Jlmm.v. WPS if'~' Hall .
Rus tv and Connle Tucker . An net
and joe WolfP . ;Ill of Racinr .
Gift s and cards
w f'rf'

prr se n ted
Ot hrrs srnding gifts wpn•
great grandfather. Dorsa Par·
sons, Ra c ine . grandmot her . IC'if'
Tucker and Gil Tucker. Si il'r
Ci ty, !' .C.; and Haze l \· an
Coooney. Mrddleport

SBC list set
Stud ents named to lhP achieve
mrnt list for Southeastern l:lusi
nes s Co lle ge lor spring quarter
who obtai ned a 4.0 average
include Michelle Adkins . Sandi
Co le. Angela McKee. Kelly Nel
son. Bel le Polcyn . Darla Roush.
Laura Sm ith . Julie Spires. and
.loy Thompson .
Stud ents with a .1.5 or better
average are Nikki Johnson.
Danelle Jones. Dixie McDonald.
Gem Miller. Odessa Proffill .
Rarbara Samour. Shei la Trl ·
plell. Karen Wall. and Lisa
Whaley.

WIC pick up

w e igh -i ns . relaxation tech ·
niques. recipes. diet recall
shr&lt;'t s, exercisf' techn iques. and
ot her phases of wetghl control.
There wrll be a limit as to the
number of people who ca n be
admilled t o each series of classes
which wi l l be held in the confer rncp room of the multi -purpose
buildtng. Resident s should reg ister soon dur to class siz('
limitation ....
M e iRS Count.\ · rc~i dent s rna)
rcgrster by calltng the hPalth

992-6491

786 North
Second
Middleport,
Ohio

national

gas&amp;al c::c::rocrato'l

Pomr·rov \"il

ft:~ vo riH'

Thr group will have thP nJIUrl'
di s pl~l .V at the Meigs County Fair
and pamphlrts w ill bP a\·ailabk
For the nPxt mrf'ling. al the
hhom r of Suzannr \r\·' arnt·r. eaf' h
will hring an arr.1ngrmrnt for a
chose n holiday Mr s \~'arncr v.·ill
have a book rrvirw. "1'\atural
Dyes &lt;tnd ProcrssPs . "
Ot hprs prrsrnt wt'n ' Hl'lt'n
Eblin. ThP ima Gilf's . Wilovpne
Bai lev. Marge PurtelL and gu
r s ts Peggy Bole and 1\·aJ ohn son .

drpartmrnt at 992·6620 and inclr
cate a prrfPrf'ncr of thP Tursda)·
or \Vrclnesda\ f'\'f'ning class .

8 dor~

vou break ground at anv
you 've t.aken
proper mtas ures to a.chiC"vt: lhe

c o n~trul1t on ~ue. b( ~ ur~

SYRACL;SE - ,\dv an &lt;nl Iii• ·
sa\·i ng classt•.., \·d ll bf' offf'rr&gt; d a!
tht ' London l'ool in SYrJCU t '
brginning Mund.l\. o11 I p m . Thr
cost is $JO plu s a book cl nd tlw
instrurtor L"&gt; H&lt;•idi Bt'f'lgf' CJll
Ms . Beegle at 992-991~ or
24";"-4 ·r)~ f or morp inform ~ tti on .

t h~

CHEST t:R- Thl · allnual ji ll
nic of th t· l zaak Wclltrm lamil.'
wil l br h•'ld Mnnda \ The' club
\\"ill furn i.._h h ~.trn and tc~miliL '.., l lll '
to bri nJ.! a CO\"t'n'd di:-.h . ~~•blt ·
o..;rn·icl' .. !nd d r ink o.,

·· Lnilal i'f (itmmatt-d

n ·ESII.\ Y
II.\ !1111SO:-; VI I.I.F' - Th &lt;· H a 1
ri so m·ilh ' SPn ior Cilltt·n:-. •nl l
mt'l' l Tul' o., da\ .11 J p .m Ltl lht· ·
l O WilhOU ~ t ·
,\II llH'JlllliT'-. ;lf"l•
ur~l'd to ;!t '!' nrl Sn;wb \~Il l ht '
9'1 \'I'd

" ·..:n:-oF:sn.\ 1
PCIMI-: IWY -

nJp.hest I~\~[ 0 1 ~1 l':"IY [XlUtb lt A ~ tmpk

phOne c.all to NauonaJ Gas &amp; Otl
CoflX)ratLOrl or the Oht o UttlliiC!o
Protec110rl :x-rv~ct. 2 worl!lrlg da..,~
be lore IIMltn"- exca vatt on. w1ll result m
rror~erll llltv e tocaunp. our bune-d ~.;as
; : n~ at ·• ou1 ~ 1 te

,\

J"~e nH 01 dt5TUDUng g~ 'orfVI~ can h~

b._.

parut.wal\1111. m

'-la uonal 1 Ca..JI Before You Dtg Pro .
/U am Jt · ~ ..., on It d.LI!,.glf1g mto
~ATIO~ili GAS &amp;
CORPORATION

on.

'"war~
/...anf:."iVlllf
L.aldwrll

bi4 ,_\4S-0861

\ottt~ Lounr.-

614 / 9&lt;19·1166

0 I 4, .&amp;S4. ;1.s ~

0 14 11Jl .!J}6

0 HJO l TILf1lF.S
PROTECTION SER\1C[
~ Houn A O.,. , i O.yt ~ \o\t-PII
IWO!Jol-2164
'\Jauo n;u Ga..s &amp; 011 Corporauon

Thr \\ild" '""'

THE 1990

Harrisonville happenings
Timothy and Pats_\· HivP!y an•
Jnnouncing the birth of a d&lt;Jugh
tcr. Sama ntha L y nn. on .June Ti

Ma tern!il gra ndparents are Mr
and M rs Harold Graham . Pater
nal grandparents arl' Jim and
Debbie Barker. and Bessie Cra ~
ham is great grandmother.
Mr . and Mrs. Ray Pat1Nso n
spent a 1h rre·d ay w('ckend camP·
ing w ith friends in the New River
area of West V!rglnla Ot her s in
th (' group wrrr Mr . and Mrs .
Allen Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Randv
Wood. Mr. and Mrs Rick Titus.
l. arrv Richman and friend. all
from the Rutl and area .
Jar and Virginia Casrrrl. Co·
lumbus. visited her sister. LouisP
F.s helman and famil y.
Ho.v Chapman. Co lumbu s, who
has SJ)f'nt S&lt;'\"C'ral Wf'f'k~ with his
grand mother. I'Pilie Lowe. has

resumed h1 s work of long di S·
tJnce truc king .

Mr. and Mrs . Duane Stante) .
Mr. and Mrs . Steve nStanle)·. Mr
and Mrs Dav id l'apper. dau ghtt•r s. Beck)· and BrrtiP. and Mr~.
Margarrt H~ ·sf'll. r('cP ntly rn -.
joyr d i.l p1r nic ala park on Hou tr

:u.

:\ (•llil' Lowr \·ts ited her son.
Roy Lowe. in Co lumbu s while her
.~ ister. lkssif' Gra ham. \ isitrd
tH:' r doctor.
Dar-old Graham . son Phrlltp.
.Junr 1\rwhousr and ".J lmm.v"'
Anderson. all of South Carolina.
\· i ~i trd
thPir motht•r. lJpssir
C ratlam. Uuring lwr rt'rPnt
hosp it aliza 1ion .
ThP Ha1risOJl\"iiiP Srnim Citi
l.f' ns ha vP cli•;utPd and pain lPd
lhPir mPf'ling room in 1hc town
sh ip haiL

Meigs property transfers
L('{)nard Nf'w and VPrna Work ·
man, r ight of way to , Columbus
Southern Power Co .. Salem .
Ella Cullums, tracts, to Helen
Swartz. Bedford.
Phvllls M. Bearhs . 1.75A. to
Scali· A . Bearhs and An ne M.
Bearhs. Chester.
Ohio Pallet Corp .. l .81A. to
Jemco Ltd., Sal isbury.
Rov T. Grueser and Opa l
Grueser. !8.l&amp;l!A. to Jemco.
Ltd .. Salisbury.
!van L. Wood and Evely n
Wood .. 993A. to Jeffrey A. Wolfe
and Lora J . Wolle, Che-ster.
Co lumbia Gas of Ohio. Inc.,

agrN". to GeorgP H . Warner and
Grace M . Warner, Beford.
T .O. Stewart and Joan Stewart. r ight of way. to Ohio Power
Co .. Rutland.
William Reeves. by guardian.
right ol way . to Ohio Power Co ..
Pomeroy .
Victor Painter. right of way. to
Ohio Power Co .. Rutland.
Robert E. Napper and James
H. Barnhart, dec'd, aff ld .. to
Bessie Marie Barnhart. Pomeroy Village.
Opal M. Baslm, right of way, to
Monongahela Power Co . Olive.

The Meigs County Health De·
partment has annou nced the
foUo_.1ng WIC pick-up dates and
shot dates tor Augu st. They are
Julv :UI and 31. 9-11 a.m . and 1-.1
p.m .; Aug . 2. 3. and 6. 911 a m .
and l ~ 3 p.m . Make up dates arc
Aug . 13 and 20.
Sho t dates for August are Aug .
14 and 2H, 9-11 a.m. and 1 ~3 p.m.

TUESDAY

NIGHT
SPECIAL

Warner selected
as top agent
Jeff Warner, agen t for Nationwide Insur ance. was selected as
the Mariella District Agent of the
Month for June.
The Marlella Dis trlct Is comprised for 19 agents covering
eight counties In Southern Ohio.
Warner was recogniZed for
outstanding service In multiple
line production, Including life.
mutual funds, and group.

MIDDLEPORT- Th e MiddiPport Church of Christ wil l hav·p
Vacation B ible School Monda)·
through Friday from 9:30a .m . 10
noo n. There will bp cla ssrs f" or
children from agt' thrPP rh roug h
jun ior hi gh
MIDDLE POitT - ThP CIH
KAf\i Coin Clubwillrr.l'f'l Monda.v
J t i p.m J l th r Gurkt•lt Bar brr
Shop in Mrddleport. Th&lt;'ll' 11 rll br·
Cl trading srs~io n. co 1n sate·. ancl
rrfrf'shmf'nt s Thf' pub! ir i.., in·
\'itPd to artrnd

Cardrn Cl ub i.tnnual plcnic will
lw held Wrdnt'Sday at ti · 30 p m.
at thl' homP of .Juanita Will .
Bring a covf'n•d dish Mc'al will
tJC' p ]"()\ HlPd.

lagr Co uncil will rnpc t m " prc i;tl
s~ 'ss ion on Mond&lt;~ _\ · Jl ':' :1j1 p.m

g1•t - t:~wa~ ·.

The prog ram closed with an
article from a woman who had a
secret place when sma ll and
when she grew too big for this
place she realized she cou ld go
back in 1ime by just
rcmpm brri ng .
Ida Murphy presrded at the
mcellng. The club collect was
rcj)('ated and Mrs . Murphy had
devo tions by usi ng ·Thmgs to be
Thankful F'or· · and "Lord. I Love
Ther.··
For roll rail. ea ch respo nded

~0/liDA \'
REEDSVlLLE- All "udents
attending Eastern High Sehoul
who want to participatf' in fal l
sports shou ld pick up an informa
lion packet at the sc hoo l Mondav
through Wednesda\· from 9 a.rn
to I p m . at the athiPIIC olticr •.

POMEROY -

Fernwcxxl Garden1tlub meets

A series of slx ·week cla sses for
weight com trol will begin Tues &lt;lay at th e MPigs County Health
Drpar tment .
There will be a choice of night s
for the classes, either Tuesday at
7 p.m . or Wednesday at 6:JO p.m .
Cl asses are free to Meigs Co unt y
rc•s ident s

RAIOIS IUY IE DIOPPID OFF IN ADVANCE

FOR A FREE CONSULTAtiON

The infant weighed eight
pou nd s and was 21 Inches long.
Maternal grandpareniS arc
Mr. and Mrs. P ..J . Paulev,
Pomeroy . Paternal grandpa"rents are Mr. and Mrs Harry .1 .
Kearns, West Columbia . W.Va .
Great grandparents arc Mrs.
Helen Williams. Middleport ;
Mr s Mabel Pauley , Poml'rov .
Pat er na! great grandmothPr ·is
Mrs. Joseph IMaryl Kearn s.
Letart, W.Va.

The descendants of Charles A .
and Alma Hinzman Snyder gathered for lhrir 17th annua l
reunion recPntly at Star Mill
Park in Racine with 70 In
attendance.
Roger Holman asked I he bless ing before a basket lun ch held at
noon . Charles Shain presided at
1he meeting and officers were
elec ted for next year. Charles
Shain. president; Sally Holman.
vice president; Emily Shain.
secretary; and Jean Hall.
treasurer.
Hecognized and presented
gift s were James Teaford. oldest
man;
Clara Powell. oldest
woman; Matthew Salser, young est boy; Myca Michael. youngest
girl; Mrs. Evelyn Manuel. most
famil~' members present: and
Bruce Holman and family. Ira -

Weight control classes scheduled

INCLUDES: CLEANING, OILING,
ADJUSTING, GREASING.

NOT WITHOUT HELP!

Community calendar

Snyder family gathers for reunion

••

TUESDAY
JULY 24
4 TO 7 P.M.

Fnnth;dl
\,r;N·•·d to rolllro~r1 worm~
wteh wltir rrnhE•r Roll ~oel'f•. quartrr
h•·t. Trny TM..flor. rnrnt•rha,rk llclho•rl
}t,·"rlllll.v.nd t·or ... m .., ... To 11J Stan: I'll;
~ IIIM 'd IIIW'hlr.dtf'r RuNII PrOt·tor
~ ... .utlf'
SIIJK&gt;d ..all't) ~r.tl)"
GIM .. n&gt;~·
Hot· by
Ml"*"'(l(• - {ul ftf'f""llrtll f(lrwiinb
.Jim .llhlkl'nj.aoOJ. S11m hy . f'al H111tlrr
llnd " ""'"' klk&gt;y Smllh .

Monday, July 23, 1990

- · ·.' "l""

Same Day Service
All Parts Extra

M .U1·Pd lonoard Kotmon

The Daily Sentinel
Page-5

$395

'' .,,.h -

M L P1·1.

~..WJIPirwt.Pu..,..,.

I M,..

player

Racine No. I 2, Dodgers I - In
a pitcher's duel that saw both
hurlers get plenty of defensive
gems behind them throughout
the contest, the teams' respective offenses didn't dent the plate
until the lhe fifth Inning.
The Racine Reds scored In the
top of the fifth when Greg
McKinney scored on a wild pitch
bv eventual losing pitcher Paul
P-ullins Ieight Ks, two walks! .
The Dodgers, the last Middleport
team to fall. reta liated when J.P.
Fisher walked and moved to
third on two wild pitches by
Racine starter .Jeremy Hill, who
was In his last Inning in that
game, but Pullins got Fisher
home when his grounder to
second base was bobbled by the
Dodgers' Jeremy Smith.
3o th pitchers restored order In
the sixth. but It was Racine that
had the last work when McKin·
ney. who walked and moved to
seco nd on a sacrifice bunt by
Smith. scored on a single by
Ryan Martln. Hill and Jamey
Nel son filed out to end the Inning.
After Wes McClure grounded
out to the pitcher to start the
Dodgers' seventh. the Dodger
bat s resou nd ed with pair of
ringing shots. with the first 1by
PulllnSI ending up In the glove of
Racine third sacker Luke Hoi·
man and the las t tby starting
pi tcher , flrst baseman Donald
Goheen! landing In the glove of
McKinney, who played shortsto p. to end the game.
Goheen fanned five and surrendered no walks In his two Innings
of work. Racine's Shawn Dailey.
who came on in the sixth in reHef
of Hill Ieight Ks. five walks ! .
fa nned one and walked none .
Racine's offense was powpred
b&gt; Martin !2·4. two doubleSI.
McKlnncv 1121. Dailey. Holman
and Richie Wamsley . 1all 1-31.
while the Dodgers four hils
came courtesy of Brrnt Hanson
t2 -21. Roger Barnhart and Go·
heen 1 both 1 ~ 31 .
Score by Innings
Racine No. I .
000 010 1-2-6-1
Dodgers ...... ..... 000 010 0-1+2
WP- Dalle.v lin relief of Hill!
LP Pull ins 1in relief of
Goheen!

Rarno~o .

............... ..
..ll Jl ""' ~
:'Iii,.. t'ertl .. . .......... JJ r. .)!II l 'r
• • ,.... .......
.. ...l l H .117 t

. Ok... s,s .. r,..~t

Tr~n""'

n.... h:aJI

foolvill•· 3, New Haven J Coo lville rhiiiPd l'ew Havrn 's
of ff' nsP. as on l:o' onr north Ma son

Coolville ........... .. 001 002-3 -7-2
New Haven ......... .000 100-1 -1·2
WP- Bowen
LP- Engle

Ba~IU'lhllll

\iAT10\i,\L LEMJI E

,......
n.,_.,.........
.. ,....,..,..
••

d;L.I ".p nr1'

Ponlund -

nilht

~~

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Transa("lions

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n..t-'1........

l AIII~

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~,.... hrtt ••.
!W .. IIf' I. IMII•a•ko·r l
&lt;1nf't.M -· hlllorllia I

....

C"hl&lt;alll i\l ;,~ddtH .i·!l l ,II 'l

t fio · l .. · onh ·~l M .l.lpm
l ind nn:t.tlt RrO\II run~: 'I· .i 1 ~~ ".In 0•&lt; "1:"
I k ;IMIIU"-..f'A:: I. j(l: ll .) p rJ1
tr · nd ... u 1\\il -.n n t;~ , ~I Ln ~
\n ,;..lo.,. t \ .dt•OJifl·la j ~I . J!l· :l."o p 11&gt;
Tllt '..O:tJo G"m'"
Huu..a on o~ l \llanl&lt;l

~~ (..6 111 ... ni~tht
1 In&lt; 1nMII o~l ~a n lll rt;n. nl~thl

"-nd&amp;)' H""~"
Bahlmorr I. fltk111"0 J

Tr_.

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K u - fll) I . lkt..aon ~
( "a iNanl.v. l . nr\-t"IMnd ~

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l'ltll.tdt~ phi~

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flllll•l'lll• •

t \la.Mint•ltt:l . : :ll !).rn
,,..,. l orl; 1\ iul11 1:1-11 .tl

l'ltt...h. 111:11111 \tu rfro·a.l. n 1~ ht

.. !. '""I \ "orlo I
Drt relll.
~1•••

\rbntn :1. '''"" 'utk ~- 10 lnrtl"t'&gt;
&gt;i.1 l..ot.ll~ 0. Sail [)ip,;o I
ttou&gt;;~nn :l . Monlf'l·ld "!
\tond ..\· (ia.mt""
f'hl~l'"l~ 1\o( lltll•·.\ lit .11 \innln· ;,l

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stall Writer
A rematch of last year's
championship game, solid pllch ~
lng. tight defense and an ex Ira Inning match were among the
things on display In Sunday's
Kyger Creek Little League tournament games.
Defending champion Sy racu,.,
Hubbard's Greenhouse. Coo tvtlle. the Racine Reds No. I and
Rutland posted wins Sunday .
On Saturday's scoreboard. It
was Hartford 4. Mason County
Bar Assn. 3; Rutland 3. Cheshire
2; Point Pleasant People·s Bank
3. Middleport Cardinals 2; Mason
VFW 10, Nelsonville-York 7;
Galtipolls While SDx 10. Middleport A's 0; and Racine No. 2 5.
Tuppers Pia ins 3.
Syracuse t, PSM 3 - Robby
Crow and Mlkey Richmond. the
pitching workhorses for Syra cuse and Point Pleasant PSM,
respectively, dueled once again.
as they did in last year's
championship game, bu 1 Crow
preva i iPd by Ianning 14. walking
four and forcing PSM to squeeze
thre(' ru ns out of four hits.
Richmond. who suffered the
loss. st ruck oul thn•candallowed
four wa l ks . Both pitchers fin isiJL•d what they started .
Aftl'r 21f:., scurr less innings. lhP
Greenhouse notched a run !n th e
bo11om or thl' third. but PSM
ramr right back to knot the game
a 1 I 1 Ru I a fifth -in ni ng solo
homer b! Syracuse's Jay Day
broke the ti e. and the boys from
lhl' bl•nd added another run to
rake a 31 lead into the sixth.
PSM racked up two runs to lie
th e game at 3-3. 1orrlngSyracuse
10 bat i n the bollom of the sixth.
Cc ntcrf it'lder Kevin Deemer
starlt•d Hubbard' s hall of the
inning by ground ing out J ason
Pangia followed with a walk.
.Jack Da.v. who was sent in to
pinch run for Pa ngio. moved to
o.,t'cond on a sacrifice bunt to the
pitc her b_
v left fielder Paul
Chapman . Jack Day moved to
th ird on a singh• by shortstop
Cass rll'la nd. and Jav MeKelvev
got enough of Richmond' s first
offering lo tap a slow roller back
10 thr mound. which was just
slow enough to give Jack Da)' the
l i mP hl• nPPdcd to sprin t in from
third and scorr the game·
winning run .
Sy racusP 's hit parade was led
bv McKelVf'y r3 -4. doubler. Ty srm Buckley t' ·.1. doublet. Jay
Da .v 11 -2. HR 1. and Clela nd and
Rvan Hllliboth Llr . PSM's hil s
w~rr co ll ected by Richmond t2·3.
doubler. Stepht•n Diamond 11 2!
and DonniP CochrJ n 0 ·31.
Srort~ by innings
PSM .
000 102-.1+ 1
SyracuSf' .
001 021-4 -B- 1
WP - Crow
LP - Richmond

\

By The Bend

(Dining loom Onlyl
Served whh whipped poutoeo. chlckon
grovy. cole o'-w, hot rott end bunor.

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 10, 1990
Advertising Deadline Is
August 1, 1990

FOI JUST

$325

Sony. no IUblth:utu ••cept bever•ge
with oddhlonol prlceo.

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

- CHW'S FAMILY IESTAURANT

PH. 992·5432 ·. .
P-lOY, 011.
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chlclc111

CALL BRIAN OR DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

9.92-21 ss

6,

I.J

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Go to reputable bridal
shop, get references

Chester Council D of A meets

Ann
Landers
•~N LANIJt:R~

" IC)B?, I..o~ -'"~~

Timt'tl ."i~nditatr . .. d

· · Dear Ann Landers: I have never
seen this subject discussed in your
column. I am talking about being
ripped off by the bridal industry. I
worl&lt; in a bridal shop, and you would
not believe what goes on.
First, almost everything must be
paid for before the merchandise is
deliven:d. We've had bridesmaids in
leal;. because their gowns were too
small and floor -length instead of tea·
length. Theshopownersays, "Sorry,
take it to a seamstress, and have her
trim some fabric off the bouom and
put it in the side seam."
Last month, a $5,000 wedding
gown came in two days before the
wedding, and it was the wrong style.
The shop owner said, "If you want a
gown for that day, you'd better take
iL"
Recently, an order came in for six
bridesmaids' dresses. Five gowns
were too small. Even though the
bndal shop had been aware of the
problem for three weeks, alterations
were not done until the day before
the wedding. The bride and her
mother were nervous wreck s.
My cousin's wedding cake was
deli vcn:d to the reception undecorated -- with JUSt fiat frosting. When
my aunt a.&lt;ked what happened, she
was told, '"The pastry chef didn't feel
well. and he went home."
The bridal industry is rippin g
people off left and nght, because
they know it is an irnporwu day,
and they can call the shots. I've never
seen anything in prim about this
scandalous racket, and it would be a
public service if you took them on.
.. R.M., CONNECTICUT

Monday, July 23, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

He is mistaken.
We completed our first quarter of
medical school yesterday, and it
included an anatomy class. Four
students were assigned to a cadaver,
which we dissected and studied for
100 hours.
It is my opinion that the woman
who made it possible for us to learn
from her remains taught us more
than any other smgle person ever
wiU during our education process.
After the final exam, my three lab
parUlers and I stood around Molly,
the name we had given her, and said,
"Thanks."

hral~ S~nd i r•t

tell the person what has happened.
In most cases, the epileptic will not
be aware that anything occurn:d.
Make no references to the seizure
on fulllre occasions. Continue to treat
that person as you have in the past.
.. NON AME NO PLACE
DEAR NO NAME: Thank you for
an opportunity to shine a very big
spotlight on a problem that has been
grossly misunderstood for too long.
You have written a leucr that will
help millions of people mink about
epilepsy in a completely different
way.
Dear Ann Landers: This letter is
about tllank -you cards for wedding
gifts.
Three years ago. "John" and I
re&lt;:eived many beautiful presents. I
did my best to send thank -you
lcuers promptly. but I have been
unable to express appreciation for
two gifts.
One was a wonderful picnic thermos jug witl1 matching cups. There
was no card. The se&lt;:ond had a card
hut the handwriting was illegible and
the ink was smeaned. That gift wa.&lt;
an elegant silver picture fram e. In
yet another in stance, one of my
friends signed only her first name.
It took me several days to detenninc
which "Beth" had sent the gift
Ann, couples arc often criticized
in your column for not sending
thank-you letters. Please tell your
readers to remember to mclude a
card, securely attaChed or inside the
box , and signed legibly with their
full name s.
BLANCHE ,
JAMAICA PLAIN, MASS .
DEAR BLANCHE: Legible handwriting and last names arc a help.
Another thought: Most gifts come
from stores or shops whose na mes
arc on the box or wrapping. A
telephone call will often unravel
the mystery.
An alcohol problem' How can you
help yourself or someone you /ovr 1
"Alcoholism.· flow to Recognm It ,
flow to Deal With It , llow to Con quer It" will give you the answers.
Send a self-addre.ued. long . business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $3.65 (this inc/udn
postage and handlmg) 10: Alcohol.
c/o Ann Landers. f .O Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill . 606 /1 -0562 (In Canada. send $4.45)

Please let your readers know that
a body of any age is of great value
to medical students. -- W.P ..
SACRAMENTO
DEAR SAC.: You did, and in a
way that! never could. Thank you.
Dear Ann Landers: What afflic tion is more common than cancer,
cerebral palsy, tuberculosis, multiple
sclerosis. muscular dystrophy and
AIDS combined? What affliction did
Hammurabi's Code mention and
Hippocrates insist began in the brain
and was not caused by supernarural
forces? What affliction was shared
by Mohammed. Julius Caesar.
Dostoyevski and many other famous
and accomplished people?
Epilepsy is the hidden disability
that society will not accept. The vast
majority of epileptics, myself
included, arc partly to blame for this
unfortunate situation. When these
people h1de their disorder, they
accept society's ignorant and fearful
proclamation that epileptics are
freaks and cannot live nonnallives.
I can 't sign my name to this leucr
DEAR R.M.: Several of my farn · for fear that I will not get another
itr members and friends have had JOb. I was fired from a college
lovely weddings, and I do not recall pos1tion after a seizure and was told
hearing any horror stories such as that I should not be working With
the ones you describe.
the public because I might fri ghten
We called a local bridal salon, and someone.
this is what the spokesperson said:
The reaction of many people to
There arc some shady characters eve n a mild seizure is fear and
and slick operators in the bndal revulsi on. Epilepsy can affect
business -- the same as in other anyone from a genius to an idiot
businesses. They should be reported and is in no way a sign of mental
to 'lhe Heuer Business Bureau.
rcwdation or emotional illness. In
The best way to find a reputable most cases, it can be controlled by
bridal merchant is to a.&lt;k friends and medication.
relatives for recommendations. It is
Epileptic sei1.urcs (or convuiSIIJns)
always wise to go to a store whose occur when the ele&lt;: trical signals of
reputation is well -es tabli shed one group of brain cells overwhelm
Crooked operators do not survive for neighbonng parts of the brain. The
long.
symptoms vary and include a brief
The usual procedure is a request cessation of activity and a blank
for a 50 percent down payment. stare, uocontrollable lwllching that
There shoo ld be a written agreement s-preads from the fingers to one side
spelling out the cost of the gown (or of the body, uncharacteristic and
gowns), an approxtmate price for sometimes bizarre behavior, a fall
alteration and an agreed-upon date as tile body stiffens, and then sleep.
Srx -star\o'l'd m alt• dUf · k~
for delivery .
If you arc with someone who has rounded up
Dear Ann Landers: I JUSt read a seizure, guide that person to a safe
t\AS HVIL LE. Tenn. tl Pi t the letter from J.J.C. m Upland, place. Remain calm . Remember thiS Spx s ta r ved m a lf' d uck!-. havf'
Calif., who feels that, because he is is not the movies. He or she is not killed 40 femaiPducks at a lak&lt;• 111
75 years old. he has nothmg but his "goin g cmzy" and will not harm a ci ty pa rk, a nd vo luntt•f'rs ha\'C
gold teeth to offer from h1s body. anyone. After the seizure has passed, begun roundi ng up thr offending .

Members were reminded to
take gifts to state session at th e
recent meeting of the Chester
Council 323 Daughters o!
America.
Bulah Max eyhconduct ed the
meellng In which the pledges to
the ChrlsUan and American flags
were given. the first stanza of the
Star Spangled Banner was sung,
and th e Lord 's Prayer was said.

II was reported thai Zelda
Ritchie had hlp surgery and
Zelda Weber had eye surgery.
Proverbs 21. ve rses 1-3 were
read .
The meeting closed in regular
form

and

refreshments were-

served by Doris Grueser, Doro thy Ritchie. and Cora and
Shirley Beegle.
Allendlng with those already

Monday. July 23, 1990

HARVEST
GOOD&amp;.VALUES IN THE

mentioned wer~ Mae McPeek.
Ethe l Or r, Kathryn Baum, Eve
rell Grant, Helen Woll. Elizabeth
Hayes, Erma Cleland. Lau ra
Nice, Alta Ballard, Ada Bissell.
Lora Damewood. Opal Hollon.
Charlotte Grant, Thelma While,
Sa ndy White, Belly Young , lnz y
Newell. Mary Holler, Jean Fred·
rick, and Marcia Keller

The seventh

annual family non ; Glenn and Sue lien Simpson.
reunion of Elbert and Della Becky, Matthew . and Jonathan,
Gillilan was recently held at the Portsmouth , Charlene Arm ·
Kyger Creek Power Power Plant strong, Orange, Calif.
Club House.
Mike and Brenda Neutzllng,
Allendlng were Sylvia M. Missls. David. and And!. Ray ·
Rambacher, Akron; Gary and mond and Dolores Donahue.
Linda Haynes. Brian Carlyle, Sieve Donahue and Angie, GeMichael and Becky Carlyle, rald and Lind a Donahue. Crys Melina . Angle, and Mlkle, tal, Robin. and Jody, a ll o!
Tammy Wright, VIcki Chaf!ln, Pomeroy : Ma rk and Regina
Joshu a and Caleb, a ll or Colum - Simpson, Joshua and Til!any.
bus: Beatrice Ca rlyle, Wesler- Middleport ; Scoll and Lori
v111e; Kenda Donahue, Mt Ver - Bea rhs and Rachael. Ches te r:

People in the neU'J - - - - - .

Todd and Diana Bisse ll a nd
An drew , Long Bottom .
Don and Mary Bu sh, Freeman
a nd Mildred Wlillams, Jan, Bett y
Spaun . Joy Imboden and Zachery, Gerald and Shirley Simpson,
Dave and Sheryl Rose. Stephanie, Jamei, and Harley. all of
Racine.
Plaques were given to Sylvia
Rambacher for the oldest, Cha r

Vo lunlt'f'r K;ur n F a...,tr&gt;r said
t'\a~ hvillr'~:;

Cr ntcn nial Pa rk i'-1

r ausrd b1· peop le who get du e
By t:nitl'd Prt&gt;"'s lntt•rnalional
STALLOr-;E REr-;Oli:\CES RAMBO : Sylvester Stallom• . of
al l pPoplt•, says lhrrr is ton much act io n in action movies l udav .
" I recentl y ~aw 'H ambo I II' again and rrcoiled at a scene

whE:'rt'. strong and im·ulnf'ra b!r. I s tood up thr rr ... hr told
Peo ple maga zi ne_ '' I mran . I was so invi ncible 1 had vri ns in my
hair . T here I wa s. in thr jung!P. supPrhuman . with my gun

ob li tera tingrve ryo nr cross ing mv path . When I looked ul th a l, l
rea lized I had made a mis take. AudirncPs wil l neve r identifv
wit h th at kind or unst op pable .SU)lf'rhr ro .. Evrn though
thousands did see "Rambo I II ... Sta llon P say' act ion mo\'if'"'
need m ore than au tomatic wt&gt;apon s. C'X plosions and darf'df'\'il
stu nts . " Wf:'n, going to ha\'(' to gf't hack to c ha r ac l r r -dri \'f' ll
movies." he says. ·' Right now. Wf' don., c a rf' abo ut rli a loguf' Wf '
know it 's just a boring intrrludr hf'forro lhP act i on starts _..

A wepk a ft&lt;' r ~110 fr iends and
admi rer s turned ou t to toast RoSf&gt; Fitlgerald Kt•nnedy at her
ANOTHER ROSE

P .~RTY

homC' in Hyannis Por t, \1 ass .. &lt;.1 far smallrr co ntingrnl of
rrla fi \'('S and c lose frir nds asS{' mbl ed at thf' famil_
,. co mpound
Sunda.v fo r th ecenturY·Oid m a lrian•h'sact ual bin hda,·. f\ wh itr
ren t was set up o uts idr hn Ca pe Codf' homr for aOOu t :lO prop !c .

inc luding Jacqueline Kennedy Ona.-.ls, who skipP&lt;'d last werk's
cele bra tion .
WALL FALL.'l: Thr Ber lin Wall fell S• lurd a' in a command
perform~nce

k!in gs as

1-:&lt;:~ ..., lf 'l

prPs1•nt s a nd

thrn a bandon thr-m whr- n thr~'
mat ur r .
Af ter spf' nd1n g Sa tu r da y
r ou ndi ng up \-\'h itr PPkin g duck s
at the l acre lakr. Eastn d ell'r

' Th t:&gt;y ha d 40 i fPmtllt • l duck..,

" I just ('a nnat stand Sf'('i n~
J nlma ls hf'ing t r ra trd br utally ."
She sa id the cl i sp ropor t i o n&lt;:~l f'
num ber of

ma iC's ca usPd thf'

sex-s tarved du cks 10 gang up on
t hp femal E'S. se riou s ly Injuring or

killing them in the pnx:e'5.
Easter said the pel ~uck s
bought around Easter tim e a re
ill-equ lpp&lt;&gt;d lo try to fend for
thl~ m s f'l ves

In thr c i ty park

"They buv them. and rais&lt;'
them to be totally de)lf' ndr nl on

when a gia nt pla s tk pig brokr through it j u'-! 1 as lr ad sin gt•r

Roger Waters cr ied ou t the key line. " Is thr rr anybodv out
I here'·· The show a Iso fra t ured )lf'rforma nces by Cyndi Lau p.-r
Stnead O'Connor and Bryan Adams in th e m&lt;:~s s iVf' squarr that
was a no-man 's l and before th e wal l ca mP down . Organtzrrs

said before the s how they expected a record ol more th an 1
billion people worldwide to watch on te lev ision.
HUNTS FOR SALE : Th e Hunt famil y fire sa lp continues.
Nelson Bunker Hunt. once a mong the rlc ht'S I men in Ihe world
until he and brother William Herbert Hunt lost a fortun e In the
sliver crash. saw a part of his life auct ioned off Saturday In
Roanoke, Texas . The furniture . paintings, co llectables a nd
ot her Items brought In an est im ated $450,000 , which will go lo
paying off Hunt's creditors. pri ma r il y the In ternal Revenue
Service. "I t' s unbelievable the way this thing has ta ken off ...
sa id Carter Pale, the bankruptcy trustee. " ll 's ju st gollen a
little crazy . A $20 dime-store tea pot sold for $150 and I he crowd
just went crazy." One of the mos t popular Items was
cowhide-covered oak rocking chair with "N.B. Hunt" burned
1nto the headres I. "I want to get II In my office lo rem lnd me that
no maller how big you gel and how high you rise. you can always
fall," said Mike McCaul ey of Dallas. who paid $3,000 for the
chair. Hunt's son, Houston, didn 't like the atmosphere of the
aucllon. "This Is really unpleasant ." he said.
GLIMPSES : Los Angeles Lakers superstar Magic Johnson
may soon be doing more than ju st ma king commercials for
Pepsi. Johnson a nd Earl Graves, lhe publisher of Black
Enterprise magazine, reportedly have made a deal to purchase
the soft -drink company's Washington, D.C.·area botlllng
operallons, which would make It Ihe largest mlnorltv-owned
Pepsi franchise In Ihe country .

I

'

S4 00

3

15
15

S6

run 3 d-,s II no ch•ve
for Ill Cl!pitll l_.ters

farthest, and And r('w Bissell for
the younges t.

"Sen111,el is not respontible for errors 1her lint dtv !Ciledl

&gt;I

doubl e

pt'ICI!

of 1 0

COli

"7 po•nl hne type only UIM!d

lor 11"0' 1 '"" d~ ad runs 1n ~uper) Cell before 2 00 p m
diiV eher pubhcnhon 10 mek e coue ct •on
•Ads thM mutl be pe1d '" edvence are
Cerd ot Thenks
Happw Ad•
Me mo r~a m

Ytrd

MONDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FA10A1' PAPER
SUNOA:V PAPER

Sal~

1 - Cerd of Thanks
2 - In Memory
3 - Annoucement s

51 - Hou•enold Good~~;
62 - Sporting Good1

4 - GIIIfi8WIV
5 - H•PP~ Ada

54 - M•• c M erchandt141

6 - Lou•nd found
7- V•rd 5•1• (pa• d •n ildvan ce l

56 - Peu lor Sa!P.

1 ) - Insuran ce
14 - Bu•.neu lram•ng
16 Sct1ool• &amp; lnllruct ,on
16 - ~td&gt;o . TV &amp; C O Rep a "
17 · M.scellan eous
18 - W.tnted To D o

- 2 00 P M THURSDA Y
- 2 00 PM FRIDAY

21 -

Bus1ness

Area Code 614

A• e&lt;~

992

675 - Pt Pl .. unt

367 - Chesture

M•ddhiClOtl
Pumeroy

576 - Appl fl Gr0\19
773 Mu o n

256 - G~,~yan D•st
643 - Arllb•• D1H

2 47 - l elarl falls

882 - New Haven

9 49 - R 1con •

895 - Le"rf
937 - 8u ll alo

742 -Rutllnd

667

Phyllis Bearhs, lht•

woman's health care technician. and Norma

Sale iuued out of the Com mon Pleu Court of Meigs

Health Departm ent, demons trate lilt• uS&lt; o! a new
piPcc of equipment to chrck venrn•al disPa"'P-

County , Ohio . in the case of
Diamond Savings &amp; loan
Company , Plaintiff, vs_ Roben W_Crow. et al ., Defendlints. upon Judgment there·
in rendered. being Case No.
90 -CV-07 in said Court I

Torres, RN, nuring director lor the Meigs County

thrir lin'li hoocl. · ·

" The firq )'l'ar I rl idn ' l f'\'f'n

Easter sa 1d . ·'And jus t when thev
beco me a li tt le bit trou bl esome.
they dump them like a pierr of

qualliv 1for the contest'' fin a l

for

trash . "

Faster sa id 1h ~re are about ~I
wt ld ducks on the la ke . She sa id

rounds! ... sa i d Rurn ha m, owner

or .1

ron.stru r t ion cif'a nup firm
·'B ut the co m ra derir and goOO
11mrs krpt mr co ming back."

Sixtv -thrre Hemingway look
.tllk r~

from as f ar away as Sa nt a

sho uld be W to 11 )lf'r acre

Rosa, Ca lli .. rom!X'Icd 'hcod lo

EastPr sa id af a• r dt'tnmining
thr birds ' sex, lhC'ir tails wen.,

head " i n th r rr day ~ of r ompt'!i

sprayed w11h pink or

ad\'l'r II Sf'S it srlf as Hrm mgw ii.V 's

blu~

paint .

ThP birds wrrP pu t up for
&lt;ld option an d man .v W('l'f' tak en to

far ms with priva te lakes . Easter
said fi ve male and 2&gt; dom es tic
ff'maiP ducks Wf'ff' !P ft on fhf'

lak{' .

:llan win• llt•mlngway look·
al ik{' c·ontL·sl

KE Y WEST. F'la t UP I1 - The
third time proved the char m for a
Lo ngboat Key ma n who wo n top
honors in thf' E r nPst Hrmin gwa\·

li on at

Sloppy Jor·s. which

will offer for sale at the front

91st birthda\ thi s wrekend

In the 1930s. Hemingway wrot&lt;'
~ omf'

of hi s m os t fam ous works al
his landm ark man sion. now .1
m u seum , i n Kr _
\' Wt.~s t . in cludin g
· F'or Wh om lh r 1'1&lt;' 11 Tolls." "II
Fa rewf'll to Arm s. .. "Thr Snows
of Kilimanjaro ... and "G rer n

Hill s uf Africa"

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

\\WE /lAVE IIEARING AIDS''
,(304) 675-1244

Look Alike Coolest. pari uf Ke1·
West's lO th a nnual tribute to the
,\ 'o br l Prize-w inning autho r.
Frf'd Rurnha m . compPIIn g for
h is third conseeu tiv£' vcar , a l!rib-

utrd his win Sund a1 to the
addition or a shaggy, gra_l' beard
rrmini SC t' nt of th P onP thr !a l P
no\'Pl is t spo r trd in his maturr
yrars.

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
FAIR
SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1990
1:00 PM.-3:00 P.M.
REGISTER AND HAVE FUN!
The Fair will hold "Your Pet Picture Contest"
(snapshot), Popcorn Man, 20 Yard Dash, with
Gold, Silver and Bronze Meals awarded.
Milk Can Toss, Hat Dog and lemonade Stands,
Candy Man, Number lady, Duck Pond and a
Deer Hunt.
Bring Your Children and Friends
Vacation Bible School will Start August 1·14
9 A.M. to Noon for Ages 2 through Grades 6
Youth Grades 7 thorugh 12
Starts at 6:30 P.M. ta 9:00 P.M.
Same Dates.

First Southern Baptist Church
41872 POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

(

4-8X10
4-SX7
48-GIANT
WALLETS
IN LIVING COLOR
S3.00 D1posit

When Photograph1d

IAlAIICI 011 DGIYIIY
No age limit

Single or Groups Taken

(Plus FREE llX 14
and Illy Ring

with Package)

TUESDAY, JULY 24

wat .

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL MARKET

Ptemltet known e1 : 2273

Sfi'Yinth Street . Syracu1e.
Ohio 4&amp;779.
The re1l lltltete has bean
111~ned Auditor ' a Parcel
Number 20-001 t e.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PHOTO'S IY HONEY POITIAITS

..

Beld reel

If It Runs Or Flies Our Dogs
Will Chase!

e~tete

is subjecf
to IICcrued 1990 real estate
I·

taxes.
REAL

ESTATE

AP -

-

..., _ _.. , ~.,

614-992·2121
._......
.., _., ,. .. . .. ,

...,.....~···

~ V-, .._. ,

Fast

Project and work length
25, 238 feet or 4 .78 miles .
Pavement width: various
" The date set for comphtt ion of this work shell he as
set forth in the bidding pro·
potal "
Each bidder shall be re·
quir&amp;d to file with hi:s bid a
certified check or cashier ' s
chech for an amount equal
to five per ce nt of hit bid . but
in no event more than tihy
thout8nd dollars. or a bond
for ten per cent ot his bid.
pavable to the Direc tor

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
-GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

992·2

TRI·COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ....
POM ERO Y. OHIO : At . 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY . OHIO: Rt 50 &amp; S.R . 143
N EW HOURS :
PO M EROY : 9 a m .- 7 p .m . 7 Days
ALBANY . 10 a.m. -5 p .m . 6 Days. Closed Sunday

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 199Q
#1 Copper 90C per lb. :
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans . 35¢ per lb .
Clean Auto Radiators . 40C per lb . ·
W£ BUY All NON FERROUS SC RAP , BATTEFHES, · ·
STARTER S. TRANSMISS IONS. A.LTEANATORS. ETC
31390-•o

USED APPLIANCES
90 DAY WAIUNTl

WASHER5-$l00

up

DRYERS- $69 up

REFRIGERATOR5-1100 up ~
RANGES- Gas E tec.-11~ up
FRWERS- $115 up
MICRO OVENS- $79 up

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

We Say What We do. We Do Who I We Soy.
36 YAS EXPERIENCE
7 23 1 mo pd .

8 7 - U pho1Jiery

New Homes Bailt
"Free Estimates"

KEN'S APPLIANCE

PH. 949 -2801
or Res. 949-28110

992 -5335 or 985-35&amp;~
Aao" from Port Offlut
POMEROY, OHIO

NO lUNDA Y CAttl
4-16-BG-tln -

SERVICE

10/ 30/' llHtn

Public Notice

In Memory

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
OUTDOOR POWEI
PRODUCTS

IETOR

SALE
Pu5h Mowe.-s &amp;
Riding Mowers -Twin Cvl.
Repa11 All Mates &amp; Models of
Chain Saws and la wn Mowers
SawCham s !01 S.-. !e
PICKUP &amp; DEliVERY

742 -2455

RUTLAND, DHIO

RUTLAND, OHIO

G-19 .- 90·1 mo

EAST

992 -2259
MIOOLEPORT - GOOD

STR££T - ThiS nl(f' ] 1;torv rJOm e leature} 3-4
b!:'C IOOi fl 'l. lllOdPrn k.II CII€fl
m!11d1n 1 n~. b-11 all ~ form s &amp;

man y othe1 leafures In
chJdP'&gt; trallp r tot Ca ll tor
'PPI
PRtCf Rf OUCfD

m ;oo oo

TRACTORS &amp; lOADERS
MOWERS, lAKES .
AND TEDDERS ·
Repair All Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery
PICKUP &amp; DELIVERT

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742-2455

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

POMEROY, OHIO

LINDA'S
PAINTING
&amp;

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

co.

INTERIOR EXTERIOR

•Mobile Home

FRE E EST IMATES

Take the pain out of
painting .
let us do it lor you.
VERY REASONABLE

P~r~s

•Mobile Home

APr.1als
•lot· Renlals

992-7479

HAVE REFERENCES

(6141 985-4180
6 16 '9 0 -1 mo

6-19- 90 I. mD

Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy, Ohio

1-12-88-tl

d

LETART - l) m1n toR 1 C~' '
Bndgl' 7 room h c u ~ r 3
bedr oom c:. \ bat h carpet

In loving memory of
our son,

JEREMY RAY
GUINTHER .
who would have been

13 years old today, 723-90. I k"ow this
birthday being your
first in Heavan will probably be the best birthday ever. We miss you

Reek. and we love you
so very much.
Mom &amp; Dad

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

!htou~h out La1 Re k1tchen
anrl pal10 Ga~ hral and hot
Nalrl heat 7 car ~ar age

129.900 00
MIDO LEPORT -

Be aut ,~ I Co

1on1al hom e' LevelloL2 car p,ar
3p,e. h.:IS o1nate tr1m. a"1c :,tu
d1c w/s Kyl1gh! Well 1nsu1J!rct

nroucro 1~ 9. !JJO oo

SYRA CUS E- NICe modula'
on co rner lot J bed 1 oorn ~. l
ba 01 l ~ undr~· room . i!nd car
pel PatiO and c l o ~ r tc

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; !iARAGES
"At R001o"oble Pri&lt;es"

Pit. 949-7801
or Res, 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

FOREVER BRONI
TANNING

NOW OPEN .
Call Now T a MakeAppointment

949-2794

SPECIAL
30 Sessions - '3
Co. Rd . 28
Watch For Signs

RACINE, OHIO

4-16-llG-Hn

6-21 .' 90-1 ....

school 121.900 00
POMEROY - ? lnl&gt; w1th pos
s•br!~u~ " Sept1 c and flee
ava1lable.

Lots of shade trees

$1000 00
LONG BOTTOM - 6 toom
f: i!bln S l!tm ~ on ] ' . ~ .1r.re ~
w1th a v1e w ol 1he Oh1o R1ver
Newly 1emodeied. ca rp et
elcdiiC

hrat. 1rl anrl1 r1 nRe

New Ded $11000 00

.t.~,-=:... TRAVEL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New lo(o tion:
1U North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We CIJtt'y Fishing Supp lies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
1

MIDD lEPORT - 1 ' '0' Y
hamr. thai show s thr war~

!h at has bee r~ done N1 cp
k1t chen. 3 heLJiooms. d1n1nR

SO Uted .

RARE &amp; EXOTIC HUNnNG DOGS
Our Pups Runneth Over!
BEAGLE/BRITTANY CROSS

Makes and Modoh

614-992 -2328

2

EWING PICK-A-PUP

PHOTOGRAHER'S HOURS:
11 A.M. Til 7 P.M.

TtJ (r • " !!

erato

OWNERSHIP
We ere 1 tubtldiary of City
Holding Company , a bank
holding company . You may
ntQUMt from the Federal
R~t~erve Benk of Richmond.
Virginia.
23281 , an an nouncement of eppllcatlons
covored by tho CRA filed by
benk holding c:ompaniBS .
(71 16. 23. 30 3tc

Fodory Authorind

Se-rvi(e (enter for Most

1-l nnd

Bidders mu st apply, on t he
proper forms . tor qualifica tion at least ten days prior to
the date set tor opening bids
in accordence with Chapter
5526 Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and specifications
are on file in the Departm ent
of Transportation and th e of
fice of the Distric t Depu ty
Director
The Direc tor reserves the
r igh t to rej ect any an d all
bids
BERNARD B HURST
DIRECTOR
171 16 . 23 2tc

s_

SALES AND SERVICE

Hom elmprollflment •

62 Plurnbmg &amp; Hea'l mg
SJ- ElciiYaltng
B 4 - EtecHtCI I &amp; Rel rig en tton
85 - Genet'al Hauling
86 - Mobile Home R epau

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
July 6 . 1990
Contract Salas legel Copy
No . 90-866
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation . Col "
umbu1 . Ohio . until10 :00 A .
M .. Ohio Standard Time.
Tuesday. July 31, 1990, for
improvements in ·
Meigs County, Ohio on
MEG-6B1 ·(0 .00-4.46). Stale
Route 681 . Meigs County. by
rmurfacing wrth asphah con-

You may ask to look at any
eommanh reCeived by the
"•tfonal Office of the Fel!lltrll Depo1it
Insurance
Corporation 11 Merqult One
Towtr. 241 Paechtree Center
Avenue.
Atlanta.
Georgie. 30303. The tel•
phone number is (404 ) 526 0308.
You may also request
from the Federal Deposit I nsurance Corporation. 660
17th Street NW. Washington, DC. 20429, an an nouncement of 1pplications
covered by the CAA filed
w~h lho FDIC .
"Peoples Banlt " is the
name we usa in our advertising, Uterature, etc .,
and
throughout thi1 statement
the name. Peoples lank, Is

MIDDLEPORT

e ~ 26 ' 90

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM S IDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

COMMUNITY
REINVESTMENT ACT
NOTICE
The Community Reinvest ment Act lCRA) requiret the
FOI C to evaluate The Peoples Bank of Point P1eeaant.
M11on and New Haven ' s
performance In helping to
meet the credit needs of this
community, and to t1ke this
evaluation
into account
when the FDIC decid81 on
certain applications submit tad by us. Your involvement
is encouraged
CRA STATEMENT
AVAILABLE
You may obtain our cu r·
rent CAA statement for this
community in this office
You may also send signed.
wrftten commenll ebout our
CRA 1tatement of our performance in helping to meet
communitv credit n"ds to :
Joe Ellilon. President &amp;
CEO. The Peoples Bank of
Point Pleasant. Mason and
New Heven. 2212 Jackson
Avenue. Point
Pleaunt,
West Virginia. 26660; and
to the Regionel Director of
the Federal Oeposrt ln•urence Corporation. located at
Mlfquis One Tower. 246
Peachtree Center Avenue.
Atlanta . Georgia, 30303
Your lener. togethar with
any response by us. m1y be
made public .
REVIEW OF FILES
You may look at a file of all
1igned. written comments

W•t V1r1lnia. 25650

- 788 N. 2nd

788 N 2ND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT
992·2178

Serv1ces
81

SEARS

SEARS

{614)992 -5114

PRAISED liT 011 ,000 .00.
The real estate cannot be
sold for tess than two- thirds
the appraised value.
TERMS OF SALE Cash
on delivery of dtHtd
James M . Soulsby,
Sheriff of Meigs County
171 23. 30: 181 6. 31 c

received by ua within the
pa1t two yean. any respons&amp;~ we t-tave made to the
commtnt1, and all CRA statementt In effect during the
IIAit two yeera at our m1in
offiee located et 2212 Jak.en Avenue. Point Ple~unt .

,... ~~·""

I 13-tlc

7 4 - Mo!orcvcle!i
75 - 8o au &amp; Mot o •• fa• S•le
76 - Au t O PariS &amp; Accessor u!lll
77 · · A ~to Rep a.r

Public Notice

Public Notice
----------1

'

992-2196
Middleport , Ohio

71 Au to• lor Sale
72 - T•uckJ l or Sate
73 - Vans &amp; 4 1/VO · ~

7 B · C&lt;'! mpmg Equ•pmen t

'

. 1 !&lt;1Ui"'-f- ~ '
· ;;._t!lf'"

PAT' HILL FORD

Public Notice

u__c__,..
___

PHOTO SPECIAL

Transporlalion

Public Notice

door ot the Courthouse in
Pomeroy. Meigs County.
ORDINANCE
Ohio. on the 24th dey of Au ·
NO . 1232-90
gust. 1990. at 10 :00 A .M ..
An Ordinance to Amend
the following Iandt and ten Ordinance 1223-A -90
ements
located at 2 27 3
Be it ordained by the
Seventh Street, Syracuse.
Council of the Village of
01'\io 46779 A comolete le Middleport. Ohio es follows:
gal description of the real
SEC . I. ThalOrd . 1223-Aest1te it 11 follows
90 i1 hereby amen&lt;Nd to in Situate in One Hundred
clude the
following pay
Aero lot Number 297. Town
rates :
2. Ranga 12. Sutton Town Swimming
ship, Viii age of Syracuse.
Instructor . . t4 .05 per hour
Meigs County , State of Oh io
Head
and betng more fully de·
Life Gu.1ud . . '4 .015 per hour
scribed as follows :
SEC . 11 . That this ordiCommencing at a point in
nance is herebv declared to
the southwesr corner of lot
be an emergency in order
Number 64 of Carleton's
that recreation personnel
Second Addition to Syra - may be peid immediately for
cu 1e u recorded in Plat
their duttes.
Book 2. Page 38 in ther eSEC . Ill : Th1t these pay
cords of the Meigs County
rates are retroactive to July
Recorder ' s
Office. uid
1, 1990 .
point also being on the exist ·
SEC _ IV . This Ordinance
ing ealterly right of w11y line
shall take effect and be in
of Coll&amp;ge Street thence N
force from and etter July 9.
2 deg . 00' 00" E along the
1990.
existing easterty right of WilY
Passed the 9tt-t dav of
line of Colllt{le Street 1nd July, 1990.
the west line of 111id lot
Attest : Jon P. Buck , Clerh
Number 64 . 116.00 feet t o
Dawey M . Horton.
an iron pin in the grantor's
Pre1ident of Council
southeast property corner (7 1 23. 30. 2tc
and the exisling northerly
right of way line of 1 fifteen
foot aii1Pf; thence N . 88 deg .
00' 00" W. 1long the gnn p bll Not'-•
tor ' 1 south proparty line and _ _ _
1
the existing northerty right
of WIY ~ne of 1 fiftMn foot
attev . 98 .50 feet to an iron
NOTICE TO liDO£~$
pin and the real point of beTtta loard ef Etlucatien ef
ginning for thli land herein
Elttern loc1l Scheel Di•described; thence N. 88
trict d•ires
to recl+va
deg . 00'00" W. continuing
•••led bids on the following :
along 11id line. 98 .50 feet to
DAIRY PRODUCTS
an iron pin the grantor ' s
BAKERY PRODUCTS
southwest property cornar:
GASOLINE
thence N_2 deg. 00' 00 " E
DIESEL FUEL
along the gr1ntor ' s west
FUEL OIL
property line. 100.00 teet to
OIL &amp; GREASE
an iron pin the grantor's
TIRES &amp; TUBES
northwest property cornet'
Specification eheeu ara
and the existing southerly available at the Treuurer's
right of way line of Seventh
office .
Street; thence
88 deg
tn order to be considered
00' 00" E. along the grin· all 1ealed bids 1hall be re tor's north property line and
ceivad in the Treasurer' s ofthe e11.isting southerly right fice by 12 o'clock noon on :
of way line of Seventh
July 24,1990
Slreet. 98 .60 feet to an iron
The bids will be for the
pin; thence S . 2 deg . 00'
1990-91 fiscal ye1r . Said
00" W . along a line, 100.00 Bo1rd of Educetion reurv..
feet to the point of beginthe right to eccept or reject
ning and containing 0.226
any and all parts of •nv and
acrM .
atl bids .
Subject to aU legal night·
Eloise Boston.
w1y1 1nd e11emen11 of re·
Treasurer
cord.
Eutern loc11 School
Excepting therefrom. that
District
portkm of the rui11U1te con38900 SR 7
veyed by dead recorded in
Aeediville. Ohio 46772
Volume 27&amp;. P1ge 829 of
Phone: 814-986-4331
the Meigs Countv Deed Re(7)6, 12, 19. 23, 4tc
cords.
The real estate above described is bounded on the
north by 7th Street, on the
south by • 16' alley, al1o
known •• Bean Alley; there
ere no streets bounding the
property on the east and

f.J\'Oritf' Kry Vi: r ~ t bar .
If hr was .still alivr. ll r mi nf:
wa .v wou lrl havf' celrbra l rd his

Hav &amp; Gr•m
65 - Sud &amp; Fer f•l• le•

79 - Ca mpers S. Mo10r Homes

4 5 - Furll&gt;Sh ed Rooms
46 - Sp1c e lor R l! n t
47 - Want eel to Rent
48 - Eq uiPm ef\ 1 for Rent
4 9 Fo r LeM&lt;!

We '"" repair and re core radiators and
heater core. We 1an
also tKid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

Wanted to 8vv
l •v U t oclt

33 -- Farms tor Sel l!

41 - Hou se5 lor Re m
41 - Mobtllf Hom es for Rent
43 - Firms lor A en !
44 - Apartment for Rent

SER~ICE

Fil m Equ•pml!nt

34 - Buslne!IS Butldrngs
35 lots &amp; A c reag e
16 Rul Euate W 1nt ed

FREE
ESTIMATES
PROFESSIONA
INSTALLATION

TV-VCR-

Farm Supplies
&amp; liveslock

l;tqi1filtl

.tJ,: · •

NOTICE OF SALE
By vinue of en Order ot

humans

32 - Mob•teH omes IO! Sail!

Co olv ~le

Public Notice

NEW EQUIPMENT -

31 - Homes lo r Sale

458 - leon

985 Ch~ tt r
843 - Pon lan d

379 - Watnut

Real Eslale

Code 30 4

245 - Rio Grande

]88 - Vml on

-

exchan{!r~ .. .
Mu on Co . WV

Me•g • Coun t v

446 - Gall•pohl

2 3 - Proltll ~tona l Serv•ces

FENCING

6-12 -90 tfn

59 - for Sale or Tr1de

Opp o rt un.t ~

22 - Monev lo Loan

USED RAILROAD TIES

57 · Mus •c al tn11rumen1 5
5 8 - Fru•U &amp; Vegill'fa bt et

lihfUIHtll

Classified pa[te., cnu' r !he

BILL SLACK
992-2269

56 - 8ulld•ng Supp{1es

61 62
63 64 -

\\ t• (;uarantt"t' \'our So ti~fa&lt;' tion
FREE ES TIMATES
JOSEPH D JACKS
7 -20-1 mo.

'FIREWOOD

53 - Am.ques

11 - Help Wen ted
1 2 - S •tua t •on Wanted

992-7762
For New Roofs, Shingles ,
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodeling

'LIGHT HAULING

:-:------

Employf1!enl
Services

DAY BE FORE PUB liCA TI ON
- 11 00 AM SATURDA Y
2 00 PM MONDA Y
2 00 PM TUESDA Y
- 2 00 PM WEDNESDAY

Killf! lelephonr

.30

$9 .00

8 - Pubi• C S1te&amp; A uct•an
9 - W•nled to Buy

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

20

00

Merchand1 se

,

" Pf!CI Of ld

15 Words

11., II . . . .,.II! 1d1

" Ru:..... e I &amp;0 d!•c o unt lor 1tf1 Pl•d '" 1dY1nce
"Free ads - G•vetwl'l' 1nd Found 1d1 und• 1 ~ wtord • will bt

l enP Armstrong for traveling thr

Ov~ r

Rate

16

fnr

Is Your Roof Reody For Anolher Year of Ice
and Snow?
Now's The Time to Find Out.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates
985-4473
667-6179

42
513.00
.60
16
10
05 / dly
s1 30 1day
15
Monthly
lll•t• ere tor consecutive r un• broken u pd..-s will be ctlert-'

"Ads ou ts•de Me,gs G•ll•• o• M.. on coun1•• mu1 t b• ,,,.
Plid

TUESDAY PAPER

(.j

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

131 -' 90tln

1

6

y

COPY DEADliNE

for thousands of fan s in a per for mance of Pink

Floyd's rock epic "The Wall. " Thr crowd of 200.000 at Ea st
Berlin's Potsdamer Plat z Ch&lt;'i'red wild!)· as a O&gt;.l foo t tal~
504-fool long wa ll made of .1. 000 styrofoam br icks cra shed down

rf:ADS

Words

Days

'A clan •f•ed edl.-enJSem~~nt plar:M m Tl-lfl Dally Sent .nellfl.ll.
cepl - cl•sit•ed display, Busmess C~td end legal not•cesl
w•ll e1 10 appear m the Pt Ple•ant Aeg•11tu and lh li! Gall•
pohs De•lv Tnbune. reect1mg over 18 .000 hom es

m1ned the popula tion wa s pw
dominantly male.
die this spring alonP." she sa id .

1

RATES

TO PLAU AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. Ia S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

In

lh f' m axi mum numbrr of duck s

the probl em al 1\'ala uga La ke in

&amp;

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Quirks in the news _________

qu ackrr s

:CLASSIFIED

Classifie

Gillian reunion conducted recently

The Daily Sentinel- Page~ 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BUliNEIS PHONI

PURSUIT
Airline

(614) 742-7027
"Your

con n;~tion ,

1614 1 992 -bSlO

All

JEliDENU PHONE
16141 992 -1714

Types of

I i?R IIIn

1

.

Reservation/ Ticket9'
Ask lor Kenda
·

Travel "

... . .
- ·
:
6-12-' ~

room. att 1c area an d much

THIS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
ONLY $5.00 ADAY!

mme 118.500 00
HENRY E CLHAND
991-6191
JEAN TRUSSHL ... 919-1660
MAE HUPP ....... 949-1157
JO HILL ... . .. .985-4466
OFFICE .............. 992-2259

MICROWAVE
OV.EN REPAIR
ALL MAKES
Bring It In Or We

Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992 -S335 or 985 -3561
Acrost

From 'ost Offica

217 E. S.c., Pomeroy
POMEROY, OHIO
J/61'90/tln

WANT ADS

ARE JUMPING

WJTN AJAA~INS

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

985-4422

1- 1 1 -90-ttn;

SIDELINES
SPOil CARDS
Buy · Sell
Trade

. •. 367-0588
'l• .-J . •

I.

·-.•
.... . J. '

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

LAFF -A-DAY

Announcements

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
llolgl
Momotlol
Oardon•
Vlll... no Socllon. /fiA Loto S64.
a,ooo IDr all. a,....ss uu.

qoADOPTIONSpoclai
lullly
Wtnfa IO give rour blbr tnd U1
a chanc.. Cal collect "los-35218!18. Mory Ellyn ond Chuck.
Reduct your Wal~ht: Taka .. New
Shape 0181 Plan and E-YAP
Walter Pill•. Avalllblt Frutn

:18 ..,. 2 mltM '""" VInton.
Good bultd!na oMoo. No 111-ol
rightL 114 44J 023g,

\ ~'

Pharmar~~.

Alta Aid Coupon $5.00 oH n~

new ot transr.rrtld prescription.
Rite Aid guarantees the lowest
prlee on au pr..crtptlona. Wt
wlll beat any competitors prlct.
Set your local Rllt Aid pharmacist for details. Not ~a lld on
lrlntftra trom other Rlt• Aida.
Good II
Polnl
Pleasant
Pom.roy, 0111ipolle Rit• Aids:

Route 2 Ashton. 1 •era Iota, I
mllel lOUth Galllpolla Loella.
publk: Wllw, na r.•ridlona,
eome whh river fronl.gt, 304-

5.,..2331.

Rentals

VntJ'-HI''''

. ..

Giveaway
1 mother eM and II tp ktnen

. • . . . ,., ' ...... ..

o~· · ·

· ····-·

"Tiw n'st are und«:&gt;cided, hut
I have reached a verdict
'
Your llonor."

Cltl 10 good hom.. 414-M2-

sm.

Help Wanted

2-1 month old cata. Both t.male, 11

~ w/Cigt. OtvMWiy to good

Gill plld '"'

.goo

21

tHing oooy onapp. 100. Wrhe

1hot1!
PASE-31H, 111 South Uneofnway, North Aurora, 11. 80542.

Ha/r Sly!/ .. I'IIMdld. Fuu.tlme or
plrt-tlme. Good MH"klng condl-

homo.IM-44ti-1BIO.

~~-.:~~-aa

lulldlng 8x18 ft . alraady 1om
down, 'fOU haul, ]04..675-261 l

tnd•pend•nl S.IN R~.

Fddlna attic

.Uirs. Two 15•

ttr.. Jib4..aa2-2756.

I'M to aood h&lt;&gt;&lt;na. 3 pupploa, 2
fitmete, 1 male. 7 wb. old. 814111:1~80 .

L.d: ovwr yard .... llem1,
...... bogo, 304-7!3-!1040.
VjNy Clrto 112 huol&lt;y, 112
allophord puppiH. 8 ... ob old.
8M-:M7o0431.

6

Lost &amp; Found

LOST m•le 1nd female 811g1e,

bllt, whltl, brown, piiUI call

304-451-ttm, REWA AD.

LOST-etond Coellar Soolnlol
Appll Grove erM1 • loel hr-.t of
~~- to ... I, 304..!711~ : In

Hudaon Valley aru or
AtM.vtlle. 2 pupa. Trt cclorM
,_,. ........ and rvot latnttlt Coekllraponlal pup.
-.rd for""'" ralto"n. Coil col-

-1~2118 .

Yard Sale

7

Gallipolis
r. VIcinity
ALL Yonl SoiH Moot Bl Plld In
· DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

6M-5Q2...111

fof':
Hoallh SoiH. Worlt So'"llom
Ohio Ar.a. ExCrMI"'IO Prtt.,..
rtd. WUt train. end re~uma to:
Box CLA040. 'Wt Gtlllpolll Oalty
TrlbunoJ.. 625 Th~d AVll., Oa~
llpoll1, unlo. 45631
MANAGERS1000 • WKLY

EXPERIENCED
SALES
PEOPLE

19 yr. old multi-million

S

cor·

apenl~ new dlvtelon.
MINgtra nMd~ lmn&lt;Uately.

If you ever wt.t..d you coukf
aet I bi'N k. II II now hlrt. Calt
Mond1y 1 e.m. to 5 p.m. tor an
lntert'ltw. 114-288-6381 ~lect.

NNd u~rltnctd but ~1yer
lor local goaplll .........
11130.

811,392-$117,
hiring. Coli (11 805687- Ell. I4U2 lor current
llat.
JOBS

Chlrln MeN..,, Newton llfg.
Co .• ()opt J11321...L-on, 10201. ili5-1't2-41&lt;1.

odKion • 2:00

or wrtto:PASE-31E, 111 B. UncoJnw•y, H. Aurora, W
. 101142.

llondor

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Rick Potonoon Auction Compony
now booking 1ucllon1, 1.1·
~nee maY• ltMI diHar~~nce.
Llcenltd Ohio, Kenluck-,, West

Vlrglnlo, 304-173-5711.

WAffTED: c.- orientod lndiYiduol for ""'lght lola Industry
..IH and marketing experlenct~
a ptue but not requtrtd. PaJd
ll'llnlng fllncluct.d. Will rtcelve
baH pay, comm'-lon, piUII
bonuNI. Poentve •nd an "on
lhe go lltftuda .. 1 mutt . C1N SM446~664 .

Help Wanted

deposit VISAIMC and e.u h ad·

nne::••·

1-800-473-1087

G2524.

al1.

AVON • .U areae, Call Uarllyn
w...... S04-882-2645.

Accounllng

P•Hiooo

Ooon:

Knowtadge of Aeeountlng Pro-cedu,..t, Comput•r Expertenee
N.cnury. 40 }-tour Work Week.
Send R.-um• to 8o1 CLA039
clo Galllpollt Dally Tribune , 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
AVON

! All Artu ! Shirley

Spoono, 304-675-1429

COOK WANTED, Mull be In
Q00c1 huhh, abl• to II" heny
eontelnMI, 11parlenc.d ln
cookln~ large amount• of lood.
RuporW~

Muet

work

for food lnw.nlory.
well

with

other

ompiOJ- I loouro par day,

llondi.,..FI1dlly, 8:00a.m. to 2:00
p.m. mlnlm.... wago. Applr 101
lecond 84rMC, POint Pteulnl,
on ot befor8 July 25, 1900.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING. RN

llMded fof lt.t CNrec:tor of Nu,...
liVj poaltlon "" • 711

bod''"""'

nurstng tacMity. E•e.ll•nl com-fltUnloltian, IUdlrt;hlp and
patient ca.-. 1kllle ar. 1 mual. In
ratum •• oH• 1n uc:er..,nt
waoge and benefit p.k:luigt. For
~e

cOMI&lt;*atlon apply

6n pert0n Of lend AllUm. to Areodltt Nurolnv Cantor, lloln St .
Ca alu. ., OH. 4.5123.

lim ....,....., by the WiNk. Join
the ......., to dtmonllrlll
"01111 w Atound·Tt.Wortd".
~ember. I.Nve MIN,
~ and 1)hone number on

BooU.et pin g/Acco unlln g,
Hotei/Mo1et
rnanapment
Airline trevel, NUf"'ll A~. Tr.c~
tor Trail., ll"'lntno, RHf.

poltntlll.

. (1, 101-M'HOOO

loU
EARN IIClNEY Aoodtnv boottol

I~

•

~lD
~fa:

lroven .ucceu
PC:•· 10/bre.

track flcord.
pet weell , .

ator. $325 whhout. Plul
S300
. llep. -6-0332 Aoll
lot' Tom lope.

~~ 1Botlroomp• !'.~~~21od8

~• n omeroy. "'...,..._..._
Itt« e p.m.
Unhlml.n.d, 2 bedroom houla.

SIVLAH
EVENING

liON(:«'(

FE10Ple!

6:00 (2) II

propMt . .,

QOu• Ml.nt

Mlnlllutee. Anne K~e~n, Sl
Michele, Plntor Bogto Bor. Lovl,

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

1 BR MobUa Homl, 3 miln
C.mp 9overl~a1 L.-llo Faye, below Gelllpolla on Old AI. 7.
Lucl.. ov11
Dt'lnGI also, AC, unturni1'$'26J'H ttovt and
mufti tier pricing chcounl "' ratigorotor,
imonlh plua
lomlly otoro. Rotan p!looo depoell. Adule preor.t id. 114unbelteveble tor top qu~~ «MIO?.
ahoel. Over 250 brlnQ
ltyiN. flt,IOO; lnYenlory, train- 14170 38R., 2 lull botho, In
Ing, IIIIUI'II/: olrlono, grond coumry, -mo. pluo Dop, &amp;
opening, etc. an open t1 dllya. Ra'--1~1114.

Ur. Bchnetdar 407-e0&amp;.33tt
VENDING RotnE:
eX1rll

~.

G-

Income.

Hlgh traHic
locotlontt. Priood 1Dr qulc.ll Mit.

1-100-727-1300.

2 bedroom mobile h&lt;&gt;&lt;na, !urnlahed, $100 depoeft plut
.. IIKIH phone 304.f711.fllt2 or
1711-3GOO.

2 Wroom tr'llll• large private
lo4, 304.f75-122S aftor 5:00 Pll.
2 lleclooom tntller, lumlolood,
AC, Wllh..- &amp; dryw- $200 morl:h
plue '"lllllaL Aol. ~711-41111.

2 BR I 3 BA, $200. I 1210,

-·

rnonlhty plue depoah. Stov1,
.-.trla..-.tor. W.t..-, trah p.ld.
Ott Morgan Center Ad. 114-381-

2 BR 322 Tlolrd AYO. No relrlgorotor,
"""' 1~1118
apptaiHdCA. value
or 8M-251-110:l.
$21,500, uklng t18,900, lond
contr11ct nlgotlable. Call eve's 39R troller lor ..... Avlllllbla
llra1 ol month. IM-2511- t307.
lftlf' 7 p.m. 8'14~58 .

"'"'l"lc

electr ,

1!.J leN to1 whh Mx70 1080
moblt. hom1, 3 BRa. 2 full
bltha, garden tub In mut.- BR,
dllhwaaher, wuher
dry..-,

CA.

44

Apartment
tor Rent

1ppr11I1M

Vllut

7 rooma 1 112 t.tha, country
living but clouto Melg1 School
and lown. Rt. 3$.4 llln.,

SHE'S THE
PRETTIEST LITTLE

n... apace, uptown

k)C~Uon,

304.f75-874e or ~5-21114 .

l DON'T 5UPI'OSE
HAPPEN TO
AAVE AN'! COOKIES
uJ(T(.l '{OU, DO
~"'- 'f'OU SWEETIE?
~OU

61RL I'VE EVER

For Lease

one-bedroom

Second 1nd Pine, OllllpoUI.
Slow 1nd retrloerator. Water
provfded. ·No ptll. ReMncll
r.qulred. 12:21 per month. 114446-4249, 814-4&amp;6-2325 or 814-

446-44211.

Household
Goods

-12711.

•lectlon or "bedroom IUitt..

hoodboarda S30

and up to II5.8G dly• Mmt . .
c.11h whh ·~ cndll I ml

Cf:. 1~-·A.M...to

Old Buio¥1114! Rd.
I ~II " - lhru

--::1:-1-::-:-1
~~·~·~-'::--:-:=-·-=11112
44G 03'M

Big S.vlnga on IIOcil t3:M yard.
Fum. l-11141.

Fl.

Turl In
llollohon

CouniJ AppilaiiOI, Ina. Good
, _ opplltiOCOI, T.V. Mta. Ooon
I 1.m. to e p.m. Mon •..s.t. 614-

-'"'!-. 021

Upotlo, utt

3rd. . . .. -

llond, onooolra - .
8711efl• 1:00 Pll.

304

•71-

G1rdner'a Varilty &amp; Fumthn

Shop, 1415 Ealtom Ave, Buy,

Sol! ond Tnodo. ~ po1coo. 814446.f22t,

Good
od 25" • - TV, onoclal...
IM-3114-1'112.

By owner, 4 bedroom nome
river ~. enciOIId front 1nd
bllck porch, Buftato Puti\MI
&amp;3:1,500. 304-757-1280.
'

ft.

91.,.,.n

T!UiuU

Bolli. 121 HP, Evhwuda Englno,

-lory.

comolal• top, -

C.U t14.28..13111fter 't:OO p.m.

11'11 SooStor 11112 ft. All equip.

114-111:1-111711... -

Uust aacrlflca. C.ll ,,.., 7 p.m.
114 ue au.

Roush'•
Stnwt.ny
Fann.
Beane, ptckl... ouc:umberw, etc.
2 mW.. beck of H• Haven,

Top Cool! paid. Old lllmlturw

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
SoiH ond oholra prlcod lnom
S3115
to - Hide
· Tobin
and up
to 1121.
1 b1d1taohiO
to
$585. Aaoll-. P2S to h75.
Lampo 121 1o S12S. Dl-•
t1o10nd up to 14a, w- toblt
w.a chllno Ulllo 1718. Daklt
S14l up to t3711. HutchH 1400 &amp;
up, bunk oomplllla with
monrMO S2lll lnd up to S315.
boby bode S110 Mod- or
bo1 oprlngo fuR or twin S7B, finn
Ill, and $H. a.-,
up, King S3SO. 4 dloot
$61. Gun C.bl- I, I, l 10
gun. eoby moll.- W 1
141. Bod lromoo 125, a._,
8110 w 1 king 1ramo $50. GoM

711, Couch • Choir.
Corpat. Colll14 441 11118.

1m 17

wl••••-

Merchandise

motel · · - ·

WHCH BCIXE8. Klda Onlyl
Paring up to 1110.00 lor Jo~
...,.. bol. laghalll po1oa paid
for vfnrl ond molol bollolono
~~~_
, or,....
aotl
ft tol -&lt;&gt;hoop.gin
ColiM

Ant~ ond Sold Dolly
~
or
Carl

Fow polllor wotor bed •11
driWtr pldl.ll, el,_...- ~ah'l

tot.. 1 bedroom 1p1. SloveL r~trlg.,
me.. Conekltr Hum1n Mrric•
$21,500, liking 818,900. Lond or HUD. 402-112 24th St, Pt.
contracl nego~lebla. Call IYI'I PINUnt, W.V. 814-112·5858.
Ifill 7 p.m. 6'1-4-388-8151.
a bedroom 1pt, onk&gt;e Of bull·
r1nge1 rerrtgerator.

tlectne,

l't'lllablt H ~allned. Plac.ment
School• Jo.
c.l oHice 2307
mdan Ave,

mlnu1H '""" Athono, 1-112
mil• to ... lg1 High $chool.
Ref•encee and depoatt ,.._
qulrod. ,,._5113.fn7.

Wanted to Do

Mull Sail: 2BR Log - .

UliatlllCI.

Porltorobur;, WY 1-800 848141t

18

W.V..-.mJ.

qlllb,
-~~~.
palnllnp, top, or anllra oototo

""-

c.ll ool1ect 304 52&amp;-1~ Of J04.

54 MlseeIIaneoue

11'11 Kam a- Boat. 40 HP
11111&gt;ury tnalno, Good Concl.
Aaklng ·~ tM-241H214.
IHI M 112 R loy- Coprt
runol&gt;out,IOhp--11
thru whtdaN1kl,

AM-PM cu-

· · uc
_ , - altar ......
phono
IOW'IW03t
1:48.
~....

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

~.

ot bill ofllr.

Fla-.

24 Ft. lfttlan Cobin
1unrmctcr:EZ
aqul-.
228 HP ""
Uo
'-troller.
$11,100.

Coll-7101.

ao.\TER8
Maooury ........., llpaclollot.
Faclorl trolnod, bondod. Prod1 lotgo bond uw. 1 !11111111 , _ . 61 Farm Equipment
lion llobl.. Marine. W. - t o
loth, H" Jolntor. 1 anliqua
nollo. 114-t1tl-4010 oftor 1:00 110 AlAN Cllttlmar XT with 4 ,....II-Nfll.
llttltom p i - ond gnoln drill
p.m.
Auto Parta &amp;
$63!10. 014 AC wide front 3 pt. 76
I G. E. HI. Goa ..,... Hltch • - hog S2!180. iN
Acceseortea
141. Elaclrlc rango tl2l. I G. i . Ford Wlbuah hog 12215. Ownor
WIIOhln tl2l. ft,OOO air con- wiH finance. 814-286-6522.
3 molcn lnd Iran&amp; Clwry.Ua 4
dhlonor, 110 ~Sill. 11,000
borntl, 4 volt ford.UI C •
Air condftlonor, uu von sal ot
tnona, !02 4 bonltl I trona,
1112·2531.
-1114- Truck 4 apd. larry _
Flr.tant Men In llkkf..,.., c.u
_,
_ _ dloool with
Ohio.
HOW ON 8ALEII YAMAHA
" Slai'Cf"'ft travel lralllr, Aol~ maohlno, roklt1. baler,
Ford
Ju- w•h loodor
. WAVERUNNERS. Soloa, Porto,
"P· IIIICI. II Aile hanl1cp ..,._
A c - , SIMoa. RIVERJO I 14150.
2010 .tOo..~.': SID£ MARINE, AI. T j par, - - Fual' oil tank, t125. tiYIIIIOI'
plowo, s:IIIIO.
'""" K-llarl, Qlllllpollo, 01t. 114Aoo !lid • ....
- porta.
wln~-VW
..,......
441-2424
1:114.
· · - · 114-211.f522.
JD
110 Dooor - · 11n foot ...
I l2 A Couoh l
notional tNCk S uol loctory 79
Campe111&amp;
1
.
-~:.~·II Lowboy. Coli - S:IICI. 114-1112·
......._ ot~t;~
2411.
MotorHomee
rocbr, t10. I
Big 5 ll1~room flnw home bull .llnt'l F~t14n1j SA . Sl, 1111 T•""'"· 24 n. """ -~
1 &amp;-t177; oontolnod. - . . •. hDCIO. 114ort-lclhl,lll&amp;up.IM112.f1211.
·~&amp; l n
-t.p
UNtllonn
,_.,.
- Buy,
aol~ troclo, I;IIQ.I;IIQ - . y o,
1m Storcnoft .._
H-ma Solllllwtth awnlna, .....,_ I, aa oand,
,
_ ,J04.t1I..40M.
. , 10'11. -· SIOO. :IM.f~.
Ph.11,
Holtond 311 1ank ........
ELECTROWX SALIS I SEA· epr1111a. o.N t1 artnder mbc•, 1181 so ft., l'ul- bod,
AC, nool nlco &amp; _ ,, a-.
VICE 304-475-1457.
both 11c oond, 304-273.t215.
.,. 441 0141
End "' a-on CIN,.._ •• 63
Livestock
!own and lllotna trlm2 Tnollor • 25ft. 5Uo - , 11ft.
mon In otodt no,_... oJ. F
C.mpar.
Both 11011 aoow IDr.
51Ia: A-••0~
~
•-•
•uE
•
1
0&lt;
•-n
goldlng.
••N,
4o-,
""' , . , _ ...,,_. qYo.$1 In A-oo~r
,_.
• r 114 141
•
••v
Canopan~ IOW7&amp;-1112l
_ , 0• , ....
~•' r-.
23 ft. Air !11101m. Wlfllalta troda.
with 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Good condMion.l14 ttl - ·
2141. ' $110 phone :J04.,11.,._ "'Hay~lor-.,.S.-"10'. ~Cto-v-oo-:1-:TI'"Irool_,.lty-.
AOil1id llloa In lha Field. 114Services
Uttle gJM GtCithN . . winter ,.••••
a n d - -· 10- hoy.-

Merchandise

WHATtV!! you f&gt;O,
()ON'T W,166Lf I
~·

a

. ..

a.--

w..

-nn

.

c
~

.. -.

::t.., __, ..,.

175--.

·

Transportation

71

Autos lor Sale

81

TiiU.~.lY

\1.11'1'
1D lXS£CRA1E. 114 flAG

0

7:05 m Jeffe..ona
1:30 (2) II Family Feild

mission. (PI 1) (~ereo . Q
II]) 18 21 Jump
1 Garren
and HoHs go undercover In a
massage pertor. []
I[! Murder, She WtOie Three
Strt~os, You 're Out

®OMpet-

@ Women'• Pro Beech
VoUeyba8 From Huntington
Beach , CA (T)
1HJ Prim-we
!D MOVIE: Afriel Soreama

Qan:lner'• HolM lmPIOUIMIUt:
Roo. • Com., Rooting, palnllna,
aunor;l""lc doc.loa, olidoto. I~
1411228.

MY FP06 qoT510&lt;:
,AND I ilXlK HIM

- --=

lVlHE::

HE ul-WPEO IN 11-\EIR
AQUARIUM AND ATE
ALL THEIR EjOLDFI6H.

vs-.

MY DID t::iOT A

BtE&gt;

E!oii.J., AND MY

~ 6T!U.. 61()&lt;..

Rooflng, -'""""·
~
owwfNioolr,
carpanlry, otltllolli.

0641.

...~me~• . f14.37Nt20, . . for

and qule oountry

cabfn, 21 ICI'IIa on Owl Hollow
Ad, 20 mlnuttl trom Polnl

Ml1clo,

Ron'a TV SoMoo, --'lllna
In ZonMh aloo Mrllolna oncoil

Rooflng and Sldlnt- Troltar

lor Sale

BARNEY
LOWEEZY II

CHAN6ED

A BITII

WIO do genonol clllnlng ol
o fflc• « buslneu. H1w
8M-

to

•• Oemolhton

82

Financial
21

® NuhviU. Now
QJ WOIId
Sltl Tour
From Lansing. Ml (T)
IHJ Larry King U..l .

w-

Plumbing r.
Hlllltlng
Cartlt'l Pltolftblng

Buslnese
Opportunity

9:301W 1121e OHignlng

and Hooting
i'otl'tholiiiPTna
Golllpollo, Ohio

-~·
potontlot.
lolrlng. (1, -?.fOOO

-

84

1Jt.Y-4M2.

Electrical &amp;

Refrigeration

when she doesn't get her

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

ITt ACREAl DEAl

you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Bo• 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101 -3428 .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) Don' t be
alrald lo plar a leadership role today In
a matter that concerns you as wetl as

others If you lee! II Isn't being handled
as eHecti•ely as II could be.
LtBAA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Owing lo circumstances you do not control, things

85 Gene1111 Hauling
AliA Wot• Dlllwl¥. :1,0110 1101.
-lly. -7161.

o~
July 2.t, 1890

should hiYe 1 way of working out to
your ulllmate benellt lodar. Be optimleUc regarding end results and now wtth
Ill&lt;! trend.
ICORPIO (Oct, 24-llcni. 23) Today
you'll be more comfortable tn the company of friends with whom you hive
omotiollal bonds than rou will be with
pals with whom you share onty mun-

__ _

=- .....

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

loenlllot lor 1111114 ... _
14 lJ I t OIL t10,1D1 Col loll

I

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.19) There is a
strong POSSibility you might gain in
some manner at this time from an ar·

rangement - · tile ground work loaa
llreadr been taken care ol by ano1her .
PISCEI (Feb. zo.MMCh 201 Todey )'OU
might be called upon to make a decision that wtll ha•e lar reaching eHects.
Foflunately, yoor judgment 11 good and
lhe results tlhOUid ple888all c:&lt;&gt;nC&lt;Io'ned.
ARII!S (March 21·Aprll11) Unosual deyelopmenta - . your career and 11nancos are concerned could work lo
your benefit today. However, you'll have
to moollor events carefully In order 10
time rour moves praperly.
TAURUI (Aprii2NIII' 20)11'Sirnperatlve today you auoclate with people
who encourage rou to expand rour ho,rlzono rather with tlooH Who Inhibit yoor
vtslon. Broaden your outloolt .
OE. . (liar 21.- 20) Several sltuatlool on wiiiCh rou ha-·t beento get a handle could atartto 111P
Into place • ol toei8J. " - cllai1Q111
will be lnftlated by Olllllder fi!C10&lt;1.
CAHCD (.IUM 11-Mr 12) s-111
1*11111 WhO ....1 dlntctly ~....... In

dane lntereata.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Your
-rtll to succeed will be cooBiderably
enhanc:ecl todar In manors - e rou
11e mateflally motivated. Con~.
rou could be lndlllarent In ar- thlt
don'l promise peroonal galno.
CAPIICOM COte. !INa 1tl n there
11 a c.tlln ~ with wham you've
,....,
hoping to ..........-.... llap rout ... lrt Cl1culnll- ... ...
tum a praM. tllhereiO lOOk lor romanoa 111te1 you'l Rnfl K. Tilt Altto- ,Wllltlta lor a call. TltllllnK Clll be eatab- watching tlldly to llllty you
Grlph Matehmlltar lnllantly , _ :lllhed. but rou'8 ha¥e10 mal&lt;e the flrot ! IJMt thote who are. Be oo yoor belt
belt-.
which otana are romantlcllly parfec1 for

There 01e encouraging IndicatiOns regarding your earnings powers In the
year ahead. H rou apply rout talan1s
properly, this could be a ""'11 lrultful
•cycfe
LIO C.IMIJ D-Atil- 22) Your Pf)Mibllltlae
for ~~~ g11111 loOk a bit better today thin tilly do
Oon't pro...-...... In .,_ - . J0i111Cipllo

,......,
:=.--"'-_..,
ii£i~·'"=-c

-ow.

"Order jeUo lor " - t tonight,
and I'll clobber youl"

""""'·

I

women

Mary Jo takes a second joll

114 ... 3111

I

•

chlld-suppon . (A) Stereo Q
10:00 CD NOWIWIICh
C!J Great Performance• Tho
misadventures of a former
111m goddeas. Q
1m llJ Face To Face Wl1h
Connie Chung Connie
Interviews BrUC41 Willis, Now
Kids on the Blod&lt; and
repons oo the Morgan
Foratlcl1 c:Nid-ebulo case .

F---------.

BRIDGE

Twtllahl zGI Pro 11urt1ng O'Neltlf'el&gt;sl

Cold Water Classic From
Santa Cruz, CA (TJ
IHJ Evening 0 700 Club Willi Pit
Robartaan
10:30CD Germany U.. The Black
Forolt

o• Tul

• Croolt a ChaH
Gl 8Uifer ••, ..... (0:30)
, :00 (J) • Cil (I) • 1111 1121•

o .....

NORTB
Ul-11
+AK7tl

Wbo is the world's best bridee player• No one knowa, but a poll ol know-

•Ju

ledgeable

+A7

tAQJ

people would probably select Zla Mahmood, the cltarilmatlc

WEST

Pakistani wbo baJ made his mark In

'Q 1D II
tKIIZ

dummy'a

.Ki15Z
SOV'I1I

tQS

'KH
tl01751

.QJID
Vulnerable: Nettber

-

Dealer: North

INT

Poa

Nerlli

l!ol1

t+

Paa

All paso

SNT

Opening lead: • 10
cash two more diamond tricks for biio :
CODtracl If Welt ltoldl up willl tbe
king, declarer limply plays aee and a.
club, makln1 lb...,., ttpades, tbree diamonds, one heart and two club trickslor the game.
Aftboucb Zla'o play mtgbt hive sacrUiced overtrtcb, tbe type olacorio&amp;
that '11118 uoed empltash"" maklnc the
contract, willl Oftl'tricb IncidentAl ..

trkkJ.
.
Zla found • simple but elegant play
whtcb l!lllltlred the contract as long as
the deleoden &lt;011ld manaae no more
than three winning beart tricks. After
wtnnlnc dummy'• jack ol dlamondl,
be played the diamond queen. If West
take~ the king, declarer can eventual-

play to

u

•eo

spouored cash-prize event. His play
of tlm!e no-trump In loday's deal is
characlerlatic.
Wben the 10 ol bearts was led, Zia
played lowlrom dummy. East flagged
the oeveo, an encourallinl card, and
declarer won the kina. He played a diamond Ill dummy"• jack, wblcb beld
the trick , AI maoy tables wbere tbe
play had been the same, dummy's ace
of diamonds was now cubed, That
spelled defeat lor declarer, since West
could now bold up on the tbirtl diamond. thereby boldlng Soutb to eight

ly

EAST
+Jl012
'A 71

+II

au forma of competitive bridce· Last
May be won the world lodlvidual cltamplonshlp In AllanUc City. a cuino-

diamond ace and

aetchmRosswoRolll
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Slrpped
t Deli orrle1
away
4 Small seed 42

Denl&lt;~l

7 Home of
Timbuklu

degree

8

rv·s

' -

10

12 '

43 Pas!ure mom
DOWN
I Getman

T&lt;~ke ~

cily
2 - Cil rle
3 Polpou"'
Yesterday's Answer
Jllltnac le
4 Toolh
13 Be
clennet
18 Parkmq 29 fhe ma11nq
rndisposed 5 Food ltsh
pla ces
game
14 Mild
6 Sunshade 21 Mend
30 Suppose
rebuk e
7 ls1aers
22 Jazz
31 G lacier
16 Any and
Golda
pianrsl
snow
CVCiy
9 Silk ne(
/\rl - ·
32 fake
t 7 lnlro·
10 Ghoslly 23 P L 0
lo courl
duct ion
sound
!eade t
37 ·The -·
19 She (Ger ) 12 Spor!s
24 W andered
News
20 Gold i Sp)
shoe
25 Upper
Hcots ··
21 Spanr sh
lea!Ute
h and
11976
lady
15 Japanese 27 Otreclor
lilml
22 ' A - - o f
herb
Zellerling 39 S h&lt;Ufow
btealhm
11 Ice

25 Hol cl
empl oyee
26 Crealive
work s
27 Delace
28 Sailor
29 Artillery
p1ece s
33 Cr !y Ill
lhe Ural
Mountain s
34 Success
35 li!Ue
(Fr .)
36 Conce ivable
38 Buslhng
40 Odlong
and
Souchong
DAILY CRVPTOQU~-

Here'show to work It :

,,,

AXYDLBAAXR
iliLONGFELl.OW

e

II]) •

')- 2.0

Infamy - Snarl- Elude - Baffle - MUFFINS
"What would you like?" the bakery clerk asked the
woman . Sighing she said, "WeU , I'd like lhe cupcakes
but I'U take the b1an MUFFINS ."

(1961 frllll)

ti'D Ill Allen Nation George
experiences the jOys and
discomlofls ol pregnancy .
(R) Stereo. Q
0 Prime Time Wreltl(ng
Ttto Santana &amp; Jim BrunzeU

MEUSSY

.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Hone (

Miles askes the crew to
become role models for
~ung reponers . (R) Stereo.

A FEW
CHAN6ES,

.

POINT NUMBERED LfTTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Movle(2:00)1;j

ti o 111 Murphr Brown

THAR'S BEEN

.

CD M~ Tl\e Public Mind
(PI 4 01 41 America's poiKical
escape tho truth. Q
C!J Amortcan Meollfl A film
b !~raphy that captures the
~rlt ol Cole Porter' s work.

-~Ohloi'MMI-1454.

""''"llartoa,
pllrtlod.
Freo ~~~~~­
Frod
304-11S-ft11.

8:05 CD OoodwUI Qamoo
8:30 (2) 8 Worftlng Gin Sal
anracta the anentioll ol Bryn
when he sneaks Into Teas's
polly.
(J) Major League BuebaH
a1 1121111 Sydner Sydney Is
faced with 8 decosioll that
could change her life. (R, Q
1111 Paid Progremmlng
®On Stage
9:00 (2) 8 If) MOVIE: 'Kite' a
Soc:ret' NBC _ , Nlghl
At The Movlea (2:00) []
Cil Cllll MOVIE: 'In seH
a.~-· ABC MondaY Night

culture relies on images

cottoor- -.....
oomo oppllanoa.
. -WY

WIH Boby ott In my homo. Ho•o
Good RelwMCM. IM-388-1114

,._terence..

CD Body Electric
C!J 3-2-1 Contact Q
1111 1121 Cll CBS NttWo Q
II]) Ill Threo'a Company
®Top Card
QJ SporteLoolt
6:35 CD Andy Griffith
7:00 (2) D PM Mlgulnt
(J) Andy Qr(fflth
Cl)lnalde Edition
CD C!J MacNeil Lehrer
NewaHour
CllllJ c .... nt Affair
1m 1121 Cl) 1121 Wheel 01
ForiUne
liD Ill Nlahl Court
I[! Miami VIce A cowboy
repons tho theft of
irreplaceable bull semen.
Stereo.
® Mutlc Row VldeG
QJ SporlaCentlf
IHJ Monotyllne
!D Scarecrow &amp; Mn. King

on stand-by tor a secret

ISIJ'T

•

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

~ Hogan'• Heroea

C8VIal5LY. BURIJIU.?

Q Compleio

oho chuckle qu o!ed
by f•llmg in rhe miuing words
'--'--'--'----''---'--' you develop from step No. 3 below.
.

Alit Newa Q

Two talented young drivers
compete In the high octane
world of auto racing,
CD ConHNing America
Various gtoups battle over a
North CarOlina coastline. Q
C!J Adventure Stephen
Porn's goal is to walk the
ontlro length of Japan. 0
1m 1121 Cl) "Major Oad Major IS

AFTER ALL THESE
YEAR5--YOU HAVEN'T

tOt.

8

Cil (I) II Checkenod Flag

raiH . Phone IIIM-H2..zl30.

-1131.

m

about her addiction to bingo.

EEK AND MEEK

I

a

ENTIRE PLIIINET!

Home
Improvements

Offering chlkl e1r1 In my homa,
dlys. Win provkttiacen.m eare
1nd eoter1alnmant. Ataon•bl•

~

FRITTH

1--~r--~r;S..;..Ir;'-,lr',l--1

motorcycl8 racing. (0:30)
Worid Today
!D Nardca1U. And
Mt:Connlck Q
6:05
Beverly HIHbllllea
6:30 (2) II IIJ) NBC NlghUy Newa

(2:00,

doy lhru Frlolioy, 7::10 1111 5:30. Pt-nt. SOUIS-1?71.
For mon Wtbmadon ot lo Two ~- en. In O.lllpoHI 1
.Jar 3044711-SMT.
one 10 MIIH 010. Both ........n
CondMion. 11HII.fl!l8
llllu · · DoychlldeaN.
C... Cant•.
Satl,
ltfardabll,
M--F
I o.m. • UO "''"· AgH 2 ·10, 32 Mobile Homes

home'-

Maiers gives comprehensl11e
coverage of all facets of

orphan8 confront Sister Kate

CONTR.Ol THE

a.

ecr~~nlld-ln porch. Kinton AYI.,
G1lllpolle. By owner. 814--44f.

wtk:gme, ~224.

QJ Motoworid Host Larry

SOON WE WILL

.

':fi:'"·

Safort, Itt..- IChool. Drop-Ina

(!J Ho-Man

tHI Crooonre
T:35CD S.njord And Son

.

=-..,..,,...-....,....,.,.--,--

C1r &amp;nd~
mow~rM I~ h pick· "
-•-tl
- 2 1r. ~•~no: o.
.,. LA wllp. lg.
up I
..,. very.
.. omee ut·ln kltehtn, anached QlfiQI,
unblocked &amp; r.bloell.ld, roola tg. renced-ln blck y1 fd. lg.

f'Haontble,
ct.pendabJ.,
lice,..., q._Uty child care. Mon.

As a kid when I was worried
about something, my dad
~ always said thai time had a
. - - - - - - = - - - - . way of weeding out the ------.

I I' I
'-..J'---'-..1.-'--'-

8:00 (2) II iiJl Sl- KJ!ta The

Fm.

N.wtv carpeted, ltonld hMnh

Mogle v..,. Doy Core Center Pa1&lt;0ful

TONFE
1-T"--,,.--..-:,....-l

(J)IIewhched
Cil Entertainment Tonight
(I) llJ Mame'1 Family
1m 1121 Cl) If) Jeopardy I 0
II]) 18 M' A'S'H
QJ Mo-ek llualratad

··-·-~·

;;B::;:b:::::::::::-::7::-:--::-::---: I wooc:f..bumar, 10'x24' Deck
• yslltlng In home. Yother of 12'x12" building. RJvarylew. LAnd
2 on 2nd An . FulltlrM prefer- contract. I14-44Wi01 or IMrod . 814-4411-8723.
2511-1182.

palnt.ct. 304-67&amp;·2811.
Georges Por1abM Sawmill, don't
hluljult call 304-fi75-1H7.

I
I ~.

C

C!J Rud(ng Rainbow Q
II]) Ill Andy Oriff(lil

(l) (I) II

oportmant. Second ftoor,-

5I

III

AI F RY

(J) I Oream 01 Jaannle
CD Wild America Bears

l WONDER WHAT
1 COULD SAY TO
6ET ACQUAINTED

===~-===

and Nf. ,..
quiNd
.• No lnehM ,.... 814-M2·

giYMway programs. For Inforlnlont!Pratoon, WQ1 Sl100, mation call 1-504--MI-1171 Ext .
Petite or matemtty deot. Dtn- R5214. 24 hourL

1111 1121 •

~ Nawhert[]

~~ of owntr. Call 114-5Jil... 3000
store,
chooee
trom:
.INI'VSporttwMf', Udlea, Mtn'e,

(l) (I) llJ

II

IIJ) Newa

spawn.

1fT Wanted to Rent

Untumlthed

the

low to form four simpte words

feeding frenzy when salmon

Country lloblo Homo Partt,
Route 33, Hcw1h of Pomeroy.
Coli
I~mrontalo,
-111111. porto, -

49

of

UMI

four acrombled words be.

8

MON., JULY 23

letters

WOlD

gather for a four-week

Nkltl, dMn. Dtpot.lt

Why PoJ Ront? - • l o r ti.IICII
Own your own 1ppa,... or •hoe Bini&amp; ,._, ... doll._..

O Rearrange

lY()

Motorcycles

74

EARN IIOHIY Alldlng boottol

-

~1060

Country Sitting . 4 bodroomo, 2112 bltha, cenll'll heat tnd 1lr,
dent/Homt ltuch. Financial 1ldt buamant, attacMd garage. 20

. . . . . . . . . . .. tM--112-e:he.

. ..~ lnoofN

...- SII,OOO. 114-

~ ...,_Eddie ....., Edlllon.
.. lllvwodo (Dooley), lalh
- - -ion.
Mutt.
Nl. 114-21H471.

lim, Muon WY.

Upper RIYOr Ad. 814-441-11140.

Schools &amp;
Instruction

15
S2.!100
CREDfT
CA.ROIGuaranr..d sama da'f
approvlll Als o qualify tor NO

1111 Ford llil • • -

~'lOCI

S l - ....... wllh --.g.
Atto. trill• ep10e. All hook-up-.
Call 1fttr 2:00 p.m., 3Q4o.7'r.J.

Townehlp Road 27. Fll'lt road to :l BR IJIIf'trnenl, •tow &amp; r.f.
~ - Call 814-iia-7118 or 1 ·~ lumlohotl, Upotoln. Wll.or •
trulo !umlllood. Upper AI. 7,

Employment Services
11

n,. for u/1. mm~'-1• f'llum
on Investment, high profll1bfllly,
low overh•d. Franch/u 11 ....
tabllahed Mel r11put1blt wtth 1

qclloloe Moro llonoyqcful! or
perHime:Men and
women
Real Estate
neead to Hll our proflabla liM
ot caltndll,.., ptnteM ectvertt.
"" glfto to - - n... In
your lmmedlltl bualniN ....._ 31 Homes tor Sale
Earn •11kly commlaalone. Sat
your own houra. Pr~ 1
lrlonolly owvlco '""" 81 yr ooo 113 1cre tot with 14x70 1980
AAA·1 compan~. No lnvtlfment. mobile home, 3 BR•, 2 fuH
No collectlont. Prtvfoul al• hllhl, garden tub In ma1t..- BR,
nparlanea roo1 Wrfto: dlahwalher, wuhar dryw,

Rood boob for poyl 8111Q o thle.
Call 1-f00.6Q.7871 ($0.-lnj

-

Local Merkllln~ I S./11 bual-

Add color onolyala. Bnnd
na,_: Ll:l: C'llllame1 ,Mir1hl

porallon

POSTAL
125/yr, -

Business
Opportunity

CIWNrfHroblc, Brldal Unger\~~,
Book Shop, - - . lltoro.

the day .,...,. the ad II to run.
Iunday odllloro - UO p.m.

p.m.&amp;otunitty.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I

Furnished
Rooms

114 4411141 oftar 5 p.m.

Small 180 oq. ft. hoUM, 38R,
living room, lit-In kitchen, c.l,...
pot, prlvota drlvo, downt&lt;Mn
G=··
IL t340 with nongo •

S@\\~lA-~£~s·
- - - - - - ldhod by CLAY I . ,Otu.N
IMAI DAILY
'UIILII

~

3 BA houH. Rt. 141 G!'Mn lWp.

1----------+----------l

Shophood, 1 yr. old. 614-256-Jon - - - - - - - - -

4 JK~pptn. Manct.st~r Tarrlar. 2
lillie, 2 ltrnale. 1 pUow rn~~le
oollle. &amp;M-1!42-2827.

IJC

Will.

2 Btdroom houM In CMy.
SuhltM for :l ,.apll. 814-446otll.

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

P'IM I ~VE!C:~~0::::----~;:------------;;~ Television
Viewing
'200 A:OPL€;

Commorcla! Sign Spaoo AI. 35

41 Houses for Rent

4

hoUM broken, all ahot1 but
..- . 114 441 40711.

45

POf11eroy-Middlepm,t. Ohio

46 Space for Rent

Singlet Information tnd a dig·
nllled option for Undlng 1
partner. HNrtuarch: P. 0 . Bol(
1043, Gl.lllpolla, OH 45631.

.:_:::~~=-;::::;:.-;:;:::=
Mtttt
r•mat.
German

-._low mlloogl,
oontl, ~ ..., , ..

timbo&lt;,
rural watlr tap, city IChooll. Rt.
- for ronl • &lt;&gt;&lt; rnonlh.
211. 4 ml hom GolllpoUa. R
llortlna ., tGQ-. GaJUa Holol
S11,100. 114-211S-1!180.
,,. •••sao.

,'I I

2

1114 CMv- CUotom Doltao,

one

Monday, July 23. 1990

BORN LOSER

72 Truckllor Sale

2 BR. Apl. For Aont, Nlco, Good
Loutlon. SO+t'IU104

II - . l-eo -

Expl- 111190.

a gray atrtpe, 10 wwk old kll,..,, lo good ~ntry hocM. &amp;M-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriabl

Apartment
for Rent

2 kU. Vaulta and hNdllonM at

3 Announcements

t4W317after 5 p.m.

44

Monday. July 23, 1990

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etr. Sinl(le lelle rs,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wuni~ arc all
.hints. Eat·h day the code letters are dilferenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES
7-23
I&gt;

T Q (J W

GQYIJA

MQPZMXZ CJ

VMQQYC

XC

IM(JGZII

NAWZll

.I S Z
.ISI&gt;.J

SZI&gt;I'7A .

I[D. ArNnlo ....

0 Mlalltl VICe CroCkllt and
Tubbll)ll the llld tltey on a drug trldar.

.,
.. And,, ....
Houlton UviiiOCk

~

RodeO ........ gNI!IIng
rodeo compallllon, Tanya
TUCklf In ooncert

- JSOtfEZUOK

v.......,.• c.,,aa 11,.. •.., niE lROUBL£ WITII

and

MOST FOLKS ISN'T SO Muat THEIR IGNORANCE.
AS KNOWING SO MANY TiiiNGS lliAT AIN'T SO. JOSU BIWNGS
I

.

�Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Floods reported
By United Press lnternallonal
St rong storms, some dropping
2 i nches of ra i n an hour. lashed
parts of Texas, Nebraska, Ohio
and Pe nn sylvania . ca u.'iing
floods and closing roads Monday
while a storm with 30-m ph winds

swep t across Ba ltimore's lnnf'r
Harbor.
Days of r ai ns pushed th e Big
B lu e River in sou th east Nebraska about 6 feet above flood

'llage in Dorches ter, whrre the
river peakL&gt;d at 21 feet. the
high es t level since 1986 .

A sm all s tream and urban
flood war ning was i n effect
Monday in eas t-cen tral Ohio as
heavy ra i ns fell on so il already

sa t uratrd from a month of heavy

rai n.
f l ood watches were in effect
for spvpra l coun ties i n t he

northeas t and eas t-cent ra l par ts
of Ohio. t he Na ti ona l Weat her

Service sa id .
Across thr stall' linr, the samr

s torm systPm caused flood s in
northwP .ster n Penn s v l vania

•

ID

Thunder storms m oved across
northern and cen tra l Ma ry land
early Mond ay and a wea ther
servi ce observer in Ba lt i m ore's
Inner Harbor reported frequent
lightn ing, very heavy downpours
a nd w inds gusting to 30 mph.
A broad strip of showers and
t hund ers lorm s formed along and
north of a slow-mov ing co ld front
sprawk•d from deep so uth Texas
i nto Louisi ana and Arka nsas
Monda y .
"It is unusual to get these tco ld
fronts) this far so uth in the
m iddle of July," m eteorologist
Buddy Mcintyre at the NWS
office in Fort Wort h sa id
Mo nd ay.
Temperat ures north of the
front were sevPra l degrees below
normal Monday lor th e second
day In a row, he said . The jet
strea m was mo\ing through thE'
cen tra l portion of 1tw co untry·.

Ten
1 '
··· -==::...:.:..:::.:~:....:.___ _ _ __
Con ti nued fr om page 1

strmming from thf' same cha rgC'
in Meigs Co unt y Court.
According to Warner . Friday 's
drug rPi at pd indietme nts ar(' t h(•
rrsult of ;1 ~ear-a nd - a · halr undrr·
C'OvPr invps ti gat ion
ShP stated that t hr arrrsts
wprp duP to t hi' coopc ra t ion of thr
:VI C'igs Cou nty ProsPcutor Steven
L. Ston·'s Office, the office of
Yl&lt;•tgs Count y ShPr iff J am es M .
Sou lsby rJnd thP Bureau of
Cr imin dl ln vl' ." li gation and
!den t if ica 1ion .
lH hrr i ndi c tm en ts hand ed
dow n b\ the Meig s County Grand
Jur~' on Friday wne J ose s P.
Sco tt. aka .Josep h P Scott, who
W.:J .c, indir tPd on charges of
;l l fl ' m p!Pd a ggr a v ~llt'd mu rdr r . a

firs t degree felony, and aggr avated bu •·gtary. an aggrava ted
first degree felony Th e c harges
stem fro m the shooting of Ronald
Cremea ns ear l ier thls mont h in
Midd leport His bond was set at
$511,000 on each co un t.
According to Warner, Sco tt
attempted to ora lly plea d not
gui l ty due by reason of Insanit y.
The pl ea was not ac,e pted, since
this plea must be mad e in
wri ting The pub l ic defender has
bePn appoin ted to represen t
Seo tt .
John Cl ine was arrested on a
count of gra nd t heft auto, a felon y
of the third degree, and a fourth
degr'"' fe lonv c harge of fl eein g
and eludi ng.

Area deaths--Robert Rinehart
Cec il RinL•h a rt, Sl
.~l iddlepon. dted Sa turdav at the
\ 'e terans Memorial Huspltal Ex tPndcd Ca rr Unit
Hf' was born i n Akron on M arc h
21. 1907, the son of the la te Brn
and Cecilia Ki t rirk Rinehart
Hr wa s an elect rician
M r Rinr hart is su r vi ved by his
wife . Mary Step hen son Rinehart.
Middleport: a son . Robert Rinehart of M~eh tga n Ci ty, I nd.: a
qepdaugh ter . Caroly n G rea s of
San Ra pha i l. Calif: a br ot her.
Rober t

M alcolm Rinehan of Cuyahoga
F alls, six grand chi ldren and
strp·gra ndc hild rPn. St'veral nlr·
ces and nephew s
In add it io n to his parent s, he
was preceded in dL•ath by two
brothers and two sister s.
Graveside ser vices will be held
Tuesday at 11 0 .m., at t he
Ri verview Cemetery with Re1·.
Pran k Smit h officiati ng.
Arra n grme n ts an' being
handled by Rawling -CoatsF'isher Fu nera l Homp in Midd leport There will he no ca ll ing
hours .

Monday, July 23, 1990

~o ont&gt; wins Super Lotto game Saturday

South, Ohio Valley

wher e route 208 between Emlen ton and Knox was undf'r 2 feet of

water and o th er roads were
elosed In th e region near Oil City .

Middleport, Ohio

further sout h than norma l. :VIc i n
ty re sa id.
A !la sh fl ood watch wa s 111
effect for several cou ntirs in
cen t ral Texas as light to modrr ate rains co nt!nued in thf' soggy
reg ion. Powerfu l storms dumped
up to '2 inc hes of rain an hou r in
.J uno in Val Vt•r dc Co unt y alo ng
the stat e's sou th western bo r dPr .
AI least two coum v road s W(' l't'
closed because of flood i ng. offi cials sa id.
[n the northwP ~ t. a t rough of
low pn:&gt; ss urc' was mo vin g f'a'&gt;l
OVI' r inland YVa ~ hin g t on s taH'
during the ntg hl ami morning
hours, brin gin g cooler temrw r a·
tures and area s of drialc . Th&lt;'
cond i t io n also promisPd coolr r

Dry... __

C! .L\ L!.r\\D 1l'PI1 - \oorw

weather for Or egon and nonht·l n
Cal iforma .
l so ! J!Pd thundf'!' showl•n
poppC'd up O ~'Pr thl.' northern and
E(•uth ern Idahn bo r ders.
Showers covt~ red northern
New E ngland early Monday,
wh ile fog shrouded the southe rn
porti ons of the six·sta tp n•gion
Th ick fog ma rk for espec ially
poor vi sibi lil .\' 1n thr Hasto n a r 1•a.
so u1heas trrn MJssachuset ts and
Cape Cod .
Tempcratur0s in th r rPg ion
wr rP mos tly in the· l ow 70s or
upper I:)(Js, but the m&lt;·rcun
dropPf'd to :19 dPgrecs a t Mainr:s
Hoult on airpor t In ra i n)' M an ches ter. N H .thrmrrcurvstood
at 119 degrPC"'
·

Con ti nued ___:___:____
from pa~r I

____

showf'rs F'ridav Hghs wil l bl' 1r1
;qJpJi cati on of chf•mkals. but J
th(' ROs and lows in the upprr ')()s tlornc of high pn·ssure mo\'in g
and 60s .
IJVC' I th1 • starr should prO\' ide
The re turn of fair wea!hrr will
f&lt;tirly light wind rond il ions much
improve condi tions for m:mv
of Tu rsda\' and ear ly \VPdnr sdJv
farmin g oprra lions .
·
brforP "ou th Niv w i.nd s in c rra ;-; ~'
As drying c-on tinu es. p rospt&gt;&lt;'h
l atrr in thr Wf'l'k .
for !hp h&lt;.~rvr s l of rema i nin g
On rht · £'&lt;11"1.\ · morn ing wpat h c1
sm al l grain look good and gr ov.·
map. lmv PI '' ' ·"" UI"t' was OW '!"
r r s s hou ld bP a hlr to rt' l urn to t ht'
non hr·r n Prnn.sylvania and
fi rld for th P harvest of frui1 &lt;.tnd
trai lr d a co ld fron t throu gh WPs t
vrgeta blf' crops
\' i rgin ia info cent r al Te nnrssrP
Pa n t&gt;\"a poratio n ra iP.c, &lt;c. hou lcl
and Pil S tl~rn TPxa s. High pn's climb ro nea r J quartl'r -inrh a
surr oc cupiPd most of thf' Rock
da.v on TuesdJ\ .. a~ sun~him •
it'S .:.111d Plai ns sta!Ps i nto l hP
inrrra sPs and lf' ...; s hu mid &lt;Jir
midcl lP and upper Mi ss i ss tppi
mov es into thr rrg ion Mi ld
\ "allP.\' . Tht· high v..·as Cf'nh·rt&gt;d
tem!)f'raturrs also should kcf'p
0\f'r E .:.~ n s a s
wea t her stress on ltvPs trwk a t .1
Ttu' low pn'ssurc wi ll con !mu f'
minimum
mov ing north l'as t and in to ~ ('W
With tf'mpera turrs climbing
E ngland :Vlo nday a fl rrnoo n J nd
by· midwC'rk. hav cu rin g condi
rvrn in g. \11 'a nw hil c th e fr on t
lions will br good. Wei gt·oun&lt;l
will pu sh to th e Mid A tl an t iC
and l im it ed suns hinr WPI"l' ro Coast Hi gh PI"I.' SSutT' will mo\· ,,
keep curin g ratrs dow n Mond a\'.
&lt;; lowly Past fr om f\a n ~ a -" and
but drying sho uld impro'·"
shou ld be ccn! r r Pd O\"t•r I llin ois
t hrough Thursdav.
Monda .v P\"{'ning tl nd ovpr Ohio
Wind speeds Mo nday wen ' It ) on Tui'Sda.v .
r ause som e oroh i Pm .~ \Vi!h 1h1 '

1\0 n 11\P Sh rniil1un Supt·I l.ii ll 'J

]JCkpot &lt;) atuidJ .\ n 1gh1 . boos1 1ng
Wednf' c, da_\ · ~. j.:.~ r kpnt 1n $~1
mil l ion
Thl~ w inni n~ numbi" r ~ Wl' l"i.' 1:1
21. 2 ~. 30 and :n
Out of lh r $-l,l lh2.X l ~ worth of
ticket s sold. Oh io l. otter v offi
c ial.&lt; .S ilicl 121 had liw• of th l'
numbers lo r $1.000 Pac h and
anotlwr ~. 719 had tourolthf'rn lnr

n

$71.

Weather
Soulh f entral Ohio
Cli'i.Jt"ing M ond ay night. w 1th

Exll.·nded Forrcast
W••dncsday lhrou gh Frida)"
Fair Wedncsdav and Thurs
day, \l,:i th a chan ce of s h o ~~,o·ers
F r ida\ Hi ghs w ill br tn th0 80s
PilCh d :l\ ' 0\·crnight lows "'i l l
ra nge from ll t~:&gt; hl r &lt;HI\·
\\'l'd rll'~d '-1 .\'.
and in thP I)Os
T hu rc,da .\' and Fridav mornin gs

and E so ftballtournarnPn t Sa tu1
d l.l.V

and S undr:~. y at th (' Ma son

11&lt;11 1 1'"11'ld Fn1r~ · fPf ' ts $1-{J dnd
rwo balb. Ca ll Rtck Stafford at
J 04 · R~2 - Jl li9 or Rick r\rarns ;11
J114 -7n:ms

Stocks
Daily stock pric es
11\s of 10 :30 a.m.)
Hryce and Mark Sm ith
of lllunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am El ect ric Powe r .
..L~P-ii
AT&amp;T ... .. .. . ... .
.... . :!7
Ashland Oi I
.. .:!ti ~
llob Eva ns
...... . . I.W,
Charmin g Shuppr\ ... . ..... . 10 %
Cit.v Hol d1ng c o..
.. !:, •;,
federal M ogul. .
.. I R -'~
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .... .... 28\',
Key Centu non .. ... .. .. ....... 12\-1
Lands' End ............ ....... .. 16•,;
Lim ited I nc ................... .. 20 7,,
Mult imed ia l nr ............... 6R
Rax Rf'sta urant s ..
. ...... 2l;.j
Robbins &amp; M)·cr s .
22
Shoncy's Inc .
.15 1t~
Star Ba nk .
.. . .... .18 11,
Wendy's Inti.
. . . . . . .. . .. t) ''!l
Wort hingto n ln d
.. :UJ ,

- - - - - - Hospita] - - - - VETEMNS \'IEMOUL\1.
J urH •
Soul sll y. Pomi'ro.v .
So turday disc harges - HJrlvn
Hasham . l.ind tt nru nt_\·. Uila
Sa turd a_
v adm iss ion s -

St rau ss . a nd Rulh Pul lins
Su nd ay adm iss ion s - Rurti na
K lein . Porncroy, and Agne s
Brown. Middlepor t
Su nd ay d isch arge~ - f\'onf'.

Pnrn•·rm

992-2124
HoW"!''·

I I am tu ~1td Sun ·Thu"
.tm to J am Fn &amp; S-lt

II

Piek-Up Only!

Daily Number
481
Pick·4

264-8

•
Vo t.40, No 306
Copyrighted 1990

""'"'-' UO&lt;"• C•U • '"'0

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Two pro posed subdivisions
were approved by the M etgs
County Regional P lanning Co mmission at its quarterly m eet in g
held at the Farmers Ba nk
Monday .
The firs t subdivis ion appr oved
wa s proposed by John Fish er.
Located of! Crew Road and nea r
the Meigs Count y Fa irground s,
the subdivision is located In
Chester Township and r eceives
water from Tuppers Pla i ns Ches ter W ater Dlstrlcl.
The second subdivision Is loca ted near the Count ry M obile
Hom e Park i n Bedford Town -

ship. It is made up of 10 lot s
frontin g on Township Road 243
and Is owned by Alfred Conard.
This subdivision Is also su pplied
wit h water by TP C Wat er
Dis trlct.
Meigs Coun ty Engineer Phil
Roberts and Me igs Cou nt y
Hea lth De pa rtment Director .Jon
J acob s appro ved the plans for
the Fi sher and Conard subdivi sions, as did th e members of the
co mm iss io n.
Th e plan s no w go to the Meigs
Cou nt y Co mmi ssioners fo r
approval.
Execu t ive Director Charles E .
Blak es lee repor ted that little
progre ss w as bein g made In the

purchased a piece of property at
Five Points with the assurance
from the se ller that they would
have access to water . After
building a home on the property,
the Burkes now find them sel ves
wlfhout water service, and have
been to ld by th e water company
that Installation of such serv1ce
co uld not be Installed by the
co mpany, bqt that the subdl·
vlder, or se ller of th e property .
would be responsible for the
water In sta llation.
Burke's problem also spurred
discu ss ion at Monday 's meeting
regarding land transfer procedures and the subdivi sion l aws.
According to Blakeslee, "no

Robin's Cr est subd ivision pro·
jec t, located bet ween Syracuse
and Racine.
Bla keslee Indic ated at the last
meeting attorneys for the projec t
were to mret with Bruce Teaford , the r ealtor, and J acobs
f ro m the health department.
Problems with the sewage system were to bP worked out
betwe en the pa r ties and a report
was to be made to 1he
commission
"At th e moment", Blakeslee
said, "Robi n's Crest Is a dead
duck "
The commission a lso hPard a
prese ntation f rom Mrs. Wilbur
Burke. M r. and Mrs. Burke

system of property transfer
being approved by co untv offl ·
r ia ls Is In olace" .
The commission moved to
form a com mittee comprised of
severa l cou nty officials and
commission members to Investigate the p rocess of transferring
property In th e county and how
that process ran be Improved.
In other business, the commission heard a re por t from Leesa
Murphey of Leesa Murphey and
Associates r egarding her attend·
ance at the Governor's Conference on Touri sm
According to Murphey, the
tourism Indu stry Is a growth
Indu stry for the stat e. She

ind ica ted that Dagma r Celeste,
th e state's first Lady, told the
co nference th at It' s importa nt
that the state emphasize it s
waterfr ont co mmerce potential.
both on th e Ohio R iver and on
Lake Erie.
Murphey adv ised the commis
slon that anot her ma jor point of
the co nference was that the
chamber of commrrl'e should
beco m e ln volvPd in tour ism
development
Murphey also adv ise d that
progress Is being made In the
preparation of th r co mmis sion' s
economic devt_'lopmrnt bro chure. which will feature sevPra l
Co ntinued on page 10

First cult trial starts today
PAINESVILLE, Ohio tUP il T he Oh io Supreme Court Monday
ordered Lake County Comm on
Plea s Judge Paul Mitrovich to
allow a telev ision camera to
videotape t he trial of cult
member Allee Lundgren In t he
Avery family slayl ngs.
Jury selection was to sta rt
Tuesday In the trial of Lundgren.
wife of the cult's leader, Jeffrey
Don Lundgren . She Is charged
with five counts each of conspirac y to commit aggrava ted
murder and compli city t o com mit aggrava ted murder.
The other judge In L ake
Co unt y, Mar tin Pa rks, already
had agreed t o a pool arrangement for the trials over which he

$699

•or_., .,,,.. on ...

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Regional planners approve two subdivisions

' 19q O Dom .no , p,, .. lnr Ou r dr"'lllfl ~ •'"&gt;' ..,,, ti'&gt;en •o&gt;o oo n•'"''"' •' ~• 1....,,.,,1 ' " ft"'~"
•• 1 ~ rlo"o•'" "

1 Sec1ion. 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 24, 1990

1 ITEM PIZZA
PAN OR
ORIGINAL STYLE!

Clear tonight. Low near 60.
Mostly sunny Wednesday .
High In mid 80s.

Page 4

LARGE

_ _ _ Meigs announcements ____
Softbal l tournament
There wil l bP a lTlt'n' s cla\ s U

&lt;.1

low nC'ar 60 . Most lv "-Ufl n\· Tu Ps
day. wi th high s in ·the l o ~ Htb

Thl' Ki cke r portw n ol the gam&lt;'
produced th £' num ber 11220~. and
on(' pl ayer ha ...,that number.

Ohio Lottery

Reds hike
division lead
to 11 games

S•t• , ., •&lt;t(lf!o n&gt;"'l '"'"''" O(lp i•COI'I o FaM I

TlfoJII A'IIDCAA! f R O P POA lUNill fS NQWA~' AHABlE '

is to preside.
Autho rit ies say Jeffrey
Lundgren , a defrocked lay mini ster of th e Reorganized Church of
.J es us Christ of Latter Day
Sa ints, shot and killed Dennis
Avery, 49, his wi fe, Cheryl, 42,
and their three d aughter s: Trlna ,
15, Rebecca, 13, a nd Karen. 6, on
Aprll17, 1989.
Their bodies were discovered
burled In a barn In Kirtland, a
rural community eas t of Clevela nd . on Jan. 3-4.
Federa l and loca l law enforcement agents searc h the cult 's
farm the day a fter the slaylngs,
after hearing rumors they
planned a bloody assault on the
Reorgan ized c hurch's 150-yea r -

old temple in Ki rtland . Bu t it
wasn't until thP roUowing January , wh en they were tipped by a
cul t member , t hat they learne&lt;l
of the slay in gs.
El eve n oth er cu lt mPmbPr s,
Including th e Lundgrens' son,
Damon. wer e i ndi cted i n the
slaylngs. Five of th em- Jeffrey
and Damon Lundgren, R1char~
Brand, Daniel Cra ft Jr. and
Ro nald Luff - face the death
pe nalty II convic ted .
Th e prosec ution is ex pected to
portray Allca Lundgren as a key
member of the plot to kill t he
Averys, while the defense is
expected to presen t he r as a
m entally and physi ca lly battered
wife.

-r---r~

EMS has 17 weekend calls
L'nit s of the Me1gs Coun 1v

At 4: H p.m . the Midd lepor t
unit went to Ash St reet for Bill
" ponded to 17 ca l ls for as~i~ta nn~
Ha lley
who was tak en 10
ow• r lhP wef'kend.
Vrterans .
On S &lt;:.~ turddy. a t 9: 0:, a .m . thP
The Pomero) Fi re Depart f1 c~r i ne unit was ca l lfld to I.Pt art
me nt, at 4: 18 p .m . . "'"' ca ll ed to
fnr :\lbf'rl Gnmm w ho was
Gold Ridge Road on a motor
11·ansported to \"f'lrr:tns M emor ·
veh ic le accidrnt in which PPt er
t.d Hospttal.
Brickles and John Rril'kles were
:\1 ."l Ofi p.m thP R ac i ne unit
rakrn to VP IPrans . Fin•ma n
wa .c, CJlled to H.uutr 124 in
Stacey Shan k was taken to
l'or! lJn d for a rnul ur ve hicle
Vr tera ns for hPal ex haustion .
;H'rldrn t in w hich Wa y ne Lyons
The Tuppr r s Plains unit, at
wa~ t ra nsportPd to Vptrran s
7: 09p.m .. went to ~ a in St reet for
Ltfrf" l igllt was caiiPd and tran sEuby Miller who was t ra nsporlf' d Troy Yankun:; and Larry
ported to Vrtrra ns
St"&gt;IIP r ~ to Cran t Hosp i tal in
At R: 01 p.m . th e M iddleport
Co lumbu s
unit wen t to Page Stree t for
t\ sPcond Li fpflight u nil was
Nr lllr Con nolly who W&lt;:l s t r&lt;:l ns·
called and Kalina Wolie wa s
po n ed to Vetera ns.
tro nspo r ted _ F i rem('n Brian
Th r Pome rov unit, at 10 .16
Dit'hl and Wayne Lyons wrre
p.m .. responded to a ra il on
1rPalt_'d for hea l ex haustio n. Also
Mecha n ic StrrP t fo r Rirhard
on the scene were thr SyracuM'
Grady• wh o was ta k en 10
F' i rr• Depa rtm en t and the Ba shan
VC'trrans .
Fin' De partm en t. Yan kun s is in
On Su nd ay. at 12:0 ; a.m, the
C rant Hos pi tal i n thP intensivr
Sy raru ~ unit wr nt to Mi nPrs
carP unit in ser iou s co ndit! on
vil le for John Stumbo w ho was
Se llf'f" is in f oir condition in
transported to Veterans.
Gr·anl Hospita l
Thl' Tupper s Plain s un it. at
Thl' Pu rn erov unit. at 2: i9
8: 0ha .m . , wen t toHou te681 1-:ast
p.m . Wl'nl 10 r\hboll Road for
tor- Edward Cru m who wa s takPn
Trrsf' Abbott who wa s takrn to
to Vrll'ra n s
Ho lzer Medical Cr n1cr. and at
ThP Pomero1· unit . at ~ :!4
"\ '&gt;:1 p.m thr unit re sponded to a
.J ITL , was cal led to Ltnroln Hill
rn ll on Hil&lt;tnd Ro:JCI for Lrona
fnr ,\nn G r iff ith who wa .~ trPatPd
Walla cl' who wa " t r~m s portrd 10 but nor tran sportrd .
\ 'rt Prano..
.\t Y Ham. t heTuppPrs Platns
un it v.:rnt to Pine Grovr H.oad for
Cirv Mullens wh o was taken to
St Joseph Hosptla l in Parkers burg, W.Va.
Because ol rhr num erous rf'
The R aci ne unit , at Ill: '&gt;.1 a m ,
quests co ncPrning cam p s itrs at
t
ra
nsp ort ed Ma r ie Roy to
the Rock Spri ngs fairgrounds
Vrtera ns.
·
d urin g Meigs Cou nt v fair week.
At
5:
5i
p.m.,
the
Pomeroy
unit
clar ifl ratio n on procf'dure has _.,
we nt to Overbrook for Ag nes
been issued bv Mary Gtlmore.
Brow n who was ta ken to
secretary· of the Pai r Board .
Vetera ns.
Shr adv ises that there ar(' fi ve
The Raci ne unit . at 1: 57 p.m.,
rules which the Fatr Board is
was
called to Durst Hldge Road
operating und er . They are as
for Margaret Holter who was
follows :
transported to Vetera ns.
r;o spots m ay be reser ved prior
At 6:09 p.m. on Sunday, the
10 the ope ning of the secr etary's
Tuppers Pla ins unit responded to
nf ftce on the fairgrou nd s on
a call on Success Road for an au to
Thur sday. Aug. 10. The offi ce
acciden t In whi ch Steve Barnett
hours are 9 a. m . go 4 p.m .
and Lori Falls were taken to St.
Spaces will be assigned on a
Joseph Hospital.
fir st come, first serve basi s.
Only one space may be reser ved per i ndi vidua l, which
mea ns tha t i f an Individual
PICK-3
ca nnot be presen t to reserve a
995.
ca mpsite, someo ne may as k
PICK -3 ticket sales totaled
another individual to do th at for
$1,390,551.
with a payoff due of
them . but they m ay only reserve
$338,25
1.
one spot total.
PICK-4
An Individual must be at least
8991.
1R years of age or older to reserve
PICK-4 ticket sal es totaled
a space.
$275,720, with a payolt due of
The fees are $50 a week for
$147,700.
campers a nd $25 for tents.

Cmrrgency Medical SPrvicf' n~ ­

Clarification

Lottery numbers

(

Commission at Its Monday meeting . Two
subdivisions were approved at th e meeting.

SUBDIVISION PLANS MI\DE - Phil Roberts,
far right, explains plan s for a new subdivision In
the co unty to the Meigs County Re~lonal Planning

Rain causes problems with
winter wheat crops in Ohio

-----

COLU MBUS, Ohio !UP I1 Persisten t and h eavy ra in over
the pas t week Is caus in g prohlem s wit h Oh io's winter wheat
crop. while the res t of t hr
Bu ckeye Stat e's crops could
stand a long period of sunsh in r .
The Oh io Agricultural Stat is
t ics Service sa id Monda y thrr r
wa s an average of 4.2 day's
suitable f or fie ldwork in t he
sevr n days end ed Friday, bu 1
that wa s hefon_• weekend rams
blanketed the st at e.
In th e seven da ys end£'(] at S
a.m Monda y, nearly all of the
fedPra l agency 's report in g sla ·
l ions reported above-averHgP
ra inf all , with some ar eas in the
nor thern co unties n~c l.' i v in g
more than ~~ lh inches.
The wheat harves t is ne arin g
co mplet ion. but th e agency said
It has not come without l nrldenl
Flrsl. harves t operations were
dogged by heavy, Intermitten t
showers. Nex t. co nd i ti ons for

~ X'

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That's less than if you're buying lots of
money orders or paying check-cashing
fees where you don't have an account.
And if you're on a fixed income,

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d oub i P·cropping soy b ea n s
&lt;;eemC'd marg in al at b est. F'i ·
nail~. w ide spread thun der storm s coupiPd w ith hpavy ra in ·
f all dur i ng ear ly harvf's t
encouraged stand ing w hrat to
sprout.
Wh eat far mers report a wide
range of dock age at local eleva tors. Test we ights re m ain high
and . unfortunatel y, so does thr
molsturr co nt e nt.
So il mois ture rated I per cen t
short , 7~ percen t adeq uat e and 20
percen t surp lus, wi th \he surplu s
mois t ure m os t preva l ent In the
western, eas trrn and centr al
portions of the stat e.
Var iou us areas report field s
under water aga i n. Warmer
tempera tures he lped cro p deve lopment. however , less preclplt a·
lion would undoubtedl y be the
m ost d esirable change In the
weat her .
field activ i ties In cl uded harv
es tlng wh eat , cult iva tin g row

Local news briefs---.
Street bid projects accepted
In regu lar sess io n last nig ht . Middl eport Vi llage Coun ci l
voted to accept bid s ! rom two construction companies for wor k
on several street proj ect s.
Co uncil accepted a bid from the Shell y Com pan y to begin
work on the Cotta ge Dri ve and Beech St reet project s. They al so
accepted a bid fr om Eld en Wa l burn f or work on Mill Street
Improvem ent .
The Cottage Dr ive and Beech St r eet pro jects will cost
$29 ,533.20 . Cost of the Mill St reet Imp rovem ent project Is
$27,674 .51.
In other action , cou ncil dlscu ssed cl ea n lng the sewage lagoon.
Estimated cosrs of cl eaning th e lagoon have ranged from
$250,000 to one million dollars.
Council voted to apply l or an Ohio Depa r tment of
Tran sport ation grant to help lessen costs to th e villa ge lor
c lea ning the lagoon .

CQuncil accepts insurance bid
A bid of S12,822 from Davl s-Qul ckel In sura nce Co mpany was
accepted by Pomeroy VIllage Council at l as t night 's speci al
meeting. T he bid was for fleet Insurance of village vehicles .
In other matters, council edited th e village street map In
preparation of the upcoming zo nin g ordinance .
Con tinued on page 10

I

'·

cro ps, spra ying bea n s and al
f alfa. ba lin g ha y and straw .
harvest in g tom atoes a nd cu·
cumbers. packi ng p ic kles, dig·
g lng carrot s, pick ing sweet corn
and genera l ly preparing l or t he
Oh io St ate Fair.
Corn ra ted good to f air . More
than 20 percent of the crop was
sllk ing . while so m e corn In t he
south was nea ring the dou gh
sta ge.
A r m y worm s co nHn ue to be a
probl l'm along wi th som e Japa nese heetle infes tat ion . Stands
loo k good In the northern portions
of the stat e.
Vigoro us spraying programs
wpre in itiated ln an effort to
contr ol th e potato leafhopper
Inva d ing the soybean cro p. Wet ,
hum id wea ther has promoted
som e f ungal grow th.

RIGHT ON SCHEDULE - Construction on the
Pomeroy McDonald's ts "right on sc hedule"

according

to

Steven Scott, generaJ contractor for

Scott said he expects the building to be finished h)'
late September. Her e, build ers work on the East
Main Street locallon.

Mus•tngum Valley 1\ssoclaled Builders, Inc.

Few remember Souter; questions are raised
WA SHIN GTON tliP I) - Ap·
pea ls Co urt Judge David So ute r
breeze d thr ough th e confirm ati on process ear lier In the year
f or the appe llate job, a nom ina ti on so devo id of con troversy th at
few Se nate Jud iciar y Committee
m ember s re m embered more
about him than his nam e.
Members pledged a careful
examination of Souter and most
sa id they would not let his
positi on on any singl e Issue should he eve n d ivulge one In th e
usually genteel and Indirec t
questioning process be a
litmus tes t In hi s confirmation as
a Suprem e Court justice.
However, some sa id they
wanted to ex plore questions
abo ut his decisions on c iv il rights
and ch urc h-state cases.
"His credentials appear Impeccable to m e," said Sen. Orrin
Ha tch, Rlltah, a committee
member who said he had a scant
recollection of Souter's Initial
approval by the co mmittee.
" !think most or us will want to
evaluat e him. We' ll want to get
acquainted and reserve judge
· .'

ment until we have th at oppor
tunlty," Hatch said.
" I think we all kind of sus
peel ed he wou ld pick somebody
who didn ' t have a very wide
reco rd that co uld be attacked."
sai d Hatc h.
" I would hope we wou ld not
have a rush of m embers of the
U .S. Senate saying they would
vote for or against Judge Souter .
... We should have the hearings,
hear those for or aga in st him and
vo le the Iss ue up or down ," said
Se n. Pat Leahy, D -Vt., who
likewise recalled little about the
j ud ge.
One of th e l ew member s of the
Senate to know Souter, New
Hampshire Republican Warren
Rudman, said It could be lo
Souter's benefit thai he has not
had a chance to write too muc h In
scholarly journals and at the
appeals court - writings th at
would point to his potential
dec isions In th e coming years.

gave criti cs ample ammunition
durin g Senate conllrmatlon
hearings .
"I would be very surprised If
there would be serious oppositio n," Rudman sa id. "There Is no
chink In his pe r sonal life. He does
not belong to any organization
that I know of. He works too
hard."
Sen . Howard Metzenbaum, D Ohlo, said Sou ter Is "pretty much
of a blank slate" but added,
"This senator has heard nothing
nega tive " about the nominee.
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell of Maine called
Souter a "respected member" of
the court of appeals and said,
"The president will have my
cooperation and that of the
Senate In a prompt and lair
process for consideration of this
Important nomination."
Hearings were not expected to
start until alter the August

Controversial Reagan nominee Robert Bork was rejec ted In
part because he had written
num erou s sc holarly articles that

Sen. Paul Simon, D-111. , a
member of the .Judiciary Com·
mIt tee, said alter quickly review·
lng some of Souter's opinions as a

judge and as attornev gcnl'ral
th at " there are t hings that ra tS('
som e ques tions .''
Specifica lly, Simon sa id hr ~~"" '
trying to find out whether Souter
acted properly as attor nP)' gcn ·
Co ntinued on page 10

recess.

D.\VID SOUTER

\-

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