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                  <text>House, Senate refuse to cut sugar price
Page 0-8-Sundly Tmes-Sentlnel

By CHARLES~ . ABBOM
UPI Fann Editor
WASHINGTON - The HouM'
and Senate, warned Amerltan
jobs are at risk, relused las t week
to cut thP federal support price
for sugar despite argum~t s
consumers would save $500 million If the guaranteed price were
cut 2 cents.
The votes vir tually assureo
there will be no change In the
support price, eve n though Congress Is only part way through
debate on the new llv...-year farm
poUcy law, since price s upport
critics said they would not seek
another House vote on the sugar
Issue.
In addition, the vot£'8 Indicate
that farm program critics face
powerful opposition to the ir plans
to try to scrap other farm law
provisions they see as was telul.
"'l'he bottom line Ion sugar 1 Is,
It Is jobs In the United Sta tes of

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

America , farmers In the United
States, " s houted Rep. Kika de Ia
Garza , D-Texas, chairman of the
Agr iculture Committee, as the
House vote neared. " It ·s jobs ,
Jobs, jobs In the USA ."
Critics said a 2-cent cut In the
s upport price, which the pending
bill would freeze at 18 cents a
pound for the next five years,
could save consumers $500 million a year, as well as res training
U. S. production and allowing
torelgn grower s to sell more
s ugar In the United States.
The House rejected the Idea,
271-150. Sena tors, In a roll c all a
few hours earlier, rejected the
2-cent cut, 54-44 .
"We got waxed. I thought we
would do much bette r ," Rep.
Thomas Downey, D-N.Y ., a leadIng price-cut a dvocate, sa id a fter
the !louse vote.
" I think we s UI! have In this
country a fairly prot ectionist

bent, " Downey added.
There was speculation farm state congressmen prevailed on
the suga r vote wlth the help of
co lleagues worried about tex tile
Imports or sav in g o ther jobs
unde r pres sue from foreign competition. Defenders of the s upport price warned a cut would
drive farmer s, and sugar refin er Ies, out of business.
Sen. Bill Bradley, D·N.J.,
vainly a rgued during Senate
deba te tha t the sugar program
"was the S&amp;L of the farm
program. " The sugar program
guarantees farmers a minimum
price for sugar and sha rply
limits Imports of lower-priced
foreign suga r .
Import quotas unfairly deprive
U.S. allies of a marke t and
Indirectly hinder e!!orts to stamp
out cocaine production, Bradley
said .
"These co untries have to have

other goods they can export.
Sugar Is one of those goods, "
Bradley said.
Supporters argued the sugar
program ensures a rella ble
supply of sugar at reasonable
prices. Sen . Bennett Johnston,
D-La. , said the cut would' 'devastate my state" and questioned
why sugar was under attack
when the program, thanks to fees
charged on Imports, operates at
no cost to the government.
"I don't know why the foreign
aid group, the goody -goody,
s oft -headed, American -Jobexporting gang, wa nts to export
a nother set of jobs," Johnston
said .
The sugar program, which has
kept U.S. sugar priC£'8 above the
world prices, has been credited
with aiding the development of
lower-priced corn sweeteners In
the past decade.

Young pigs may need supplemental Vitamin E
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPl i Sudden unexplained deaths of
weaned pigs can reach 5 to 8
percent In some swine opera tions, and an Ohio State scientis t
says many of those deaths can be
traced to a vitamin E deficiency
''Farmers may take the dea ths
In the nursery as routine, but
they don't have to be," says Don
Mahan, who has a lso worked on
similar problems resulting from
deficiencies of the mineral
selenium.
Although problems stemming
from selenium and vitamin E
deficiencies are related , he says
many of the current problems
are attributable to vitamin E.
VIta min E can be a dded tofeed
to offset deflctencl£'8 common In
many swtne nurse ri es, he says .

Streptomycn ...
Continued from D-1
New Products
A 1988 study by Nielso n a nd
Dunlap at OARDC con!lrmed
that Tempo 2E, Sevin SL and 80S.
and Turcam 76WP applied to
plant foliage provided 100% control of adult bee tl es wh e n
sprayed onto the beetles. However, no residual effect was noted
with horticultural aU or Insect ic idal soap. Talstar 10WP Is a
recently rt&gt;glstered pyret hrold
with activity against adult JB' s.
The botanicals, rotenone and
pyrethrUm, also have some ac·
tlvlty and can be used by organi c
gardeners.
The exlenslon office will be
operating on a very limited basis
this week due to major r£'Spons l·
bllltles at the Galila County
Junior Fair. Emergency sltua·
tionscan be handled by calling or
just stopping us at the I air to talk.
We stilt have three or lour
openings for the Tobacco Trip to
Tennessee on Aug. 9-12. See me
as soon as poss ibl e If Int er es ted .

In a recent s tudy, Mahan and
graduat e s tudent Yang Kl Chung
compared the performa nce of
two form s of vitamin E and found
one works significantly better In
feed than the other.
"We round that in young pigs .
synth etic vitamin E may not be
as eas ily digested as we ll as th e
na tural !a rm ." Mahan says.
"The synthetic form, commonly
used In feed , Is a very good
product. It's very stable In a
complete ly mixed feed. unlike
the natural form . But Its success
Is dependent on norma l fat
digestion."
In a wea nling pig, digestion
Is n't fully developed, Ma han
says. It ta kes about three weeks
for weaned pigs to develop a
diges tion system mature e nough
to proper ly handle dieta ry fat s,
and thu s th e sy nthetic form of
vitamin E. T hat form has an
acetate molecule atta ched to
preve nt oxygen from destroying
the vita min .
The a cetate bre aks off during
diges tion, freei ng th e vita min E
to be a bsorbed and used by
tissue.
In the st udy . the natural form
or vita m in E didn' t req uire the

digestion processes necessary
lor the synthetic form, Mahan
says. The study showed that
young pigs need about 25 percent
more synthetic vitamin E to get
the same e ffect s of the natura l
form .
The natural form of the vi ·
tam in was coated and emulsified
with fat to protec t It from norma l
oxidization In the feeds .
"If a deficiency becomes a
problem, producers sometimes
Inject selenium and vitamin E ."
Mahan says. " But that's expen·
s ive and labor-Intensive. and by
that time It may be too late."
The deficiency sometimes occu rs because the sow herself was

TV station, paper declare drug war
CINC IN NATI tUPI )- Wa r on
drug pus hers wa s decla red
T hursd ay by a newspaper and
te levision s tation In a campaign
c alled "Push out the Pusher. "
The Cincinnati Post a nd
WCPO-TV said the effort Is
Intended to e ncourage people to
watc h for drug activity and
re port It to pollee In as much
detail as pos sible .
The newspa per distributed an
eight -page broc hure with Thurs-

any faith or creed.
" This mu sic service Is the
lates t, stat...-of-t hea rt sys te m" ,
says Cremeens, "both technically and from t he stand -point of
human emot lonal support" .
The so los fe ature the vocal
artistry of Merrill Womac h,
nationally known gospel soloist
and r ecording artist . Re nectlng
a li fe long minist ry In mu s ic,
Me rrill Wom ac h's singing has a
dis tin ct lve qu alit y w hlch Inspires
and uplifts - perhaps th e r £'S uit
of his own personal ex perie nces.
On Th a nksgiv ing Day of 1961,
Womac h barely escaped with his

life from a fiery plane crash In
which he was burned beyond
recognition . He has risen above
adversity through a strong faith
that has challenged and encouraged thousands of others through
personal appearances and ma ny
years of radio and televis ion
per formances .
The entire s taff at Crem eens
Funeral Cha pel Is dedicated to
serving the community, and In so
doing has chosen with pride to
prov ide this additional comfort
an d hope to the !amUies they
serve. They are located at 75
Grape Street, Gallipolis .

MONDAY, JULY 30 THRU SATURDAY, AUG. 4
MEN'S 14 OZ. UNWASHED
ST. LIG OR BOOT CUT

LEVI'S JEANS
NDW$179 9

BOYS •••
PIE-WASHED

ALL STONE-WASHED
ACID-WASHED, nc.

JEANS

25°/o OFF
PRE-WASHED

LEVI'S

LEVI'S

IIG. ' " ·"

IIG. 123.50

NOW

NOW

S2249

S1949
REGISTER TO WIN
11'111 , il l l.iS

I I , WI· 1&lt;1/1

J I'AIIS
LEVI'S JIAMS

day's editions - " A guide to
reporting drug dea lers to the
pollee."
The broc hu re, which provides
pollee phone numbers, Includes
checklis ts for taking notes on
suspected drug activity and
fill -In blanks for reporting Information to the poll ee.
" fhe purpose or the handbook
Is to help people come forward
with Informa tion on Illegal drug
activity In their neighborhoods.

Continued from D-1
Cremeens ••• ---..:=.:::.:.::..:::.:.:...:::...:..___
_ __

b DAYS ONLY-

BG.I22.99

vltamln-E deficient, passing
along the problem while nursing
her pigs. It can also be caused by
using old corn as feed . Corn can
be a good source of vitamin E.
but the vitamin breaks down over
time.
"Farmers need to be aware
that If they have young plgsdylng
for no apparent reason, they
might have a vitamin E deficie ncy ," Mahan says . "It's something that can be prevented."
The study will be presented In a
poster session at the Annual
Meeting of the American Society
of Animal Science, July 31-Aug.
3, •• Iowa State University.

LIYI'S POmiS
LIYI'S WA JCHIS
LIYI'S
1'11-IOLDS

......."

July 29. 1990

Senate approves... _ c_ o_nti_nu_ed_f_rom_D-_ 1 use of chemical weapons and Its
attempts to acquire nuclear
arms technology.
The administration opposes
the sanctions, which It says
would deprive the United States
of leverage with Iraq.
In a speech Immediately after
the vote, Dole warned that "a
substantial nt" In the bill was
likely. He pointed to estimates
that cuts could run as high as to
$18 billion.
"Keep In mind, If we don't do
anything, we'll get a (budget)
sequester and that will hit
agriculture very hard," Dole
said.
In addition to extending farm
s upport progra ms for five years,
the bill would set the terms for
operating food-aid, export promotion and environmental
programs.
Since 1985, farmers have been
required to practice conservation In order to be eligible for
program benefits such as crop
loans and support payments.
The bill does not contain a
nutrition section, the provisions
that would renew food stamps
and other public-feeding programs. Leahy says those programs will be added during
House and Senate negotiations .
The House has proposed a $4.5
billion expansion In food stamp
spending by allowing larger
deductions for recipients and
slightly sweetening the formula
lor benefits.
Senators generally refused to

major chang£'8 to the bill,
whether they Involved so-called
reform amendments - like ban·
nlng payments to large farmers
- or e!!orts to Increase subsidies
or reduce spending. They
dropped the Idea of Including a
mandatory seafood Ins pection
program In the bill.
The only notable changes were
a vote to end the honey program
and to reform the money -losing
federally subs idized crop Insurance program.
"It Is a carefully crafted,
difficult compromise, " Leahy
told senators just before they
rejected the final attempt by
prairie Democrats to ra ise target
prices.
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind .,
said It wa s misleading to suggest
that subsidies could b e
Increased.
" It 's not going to happen . It 's
going to crash In a heap, " Lugar
said, pointing to the virtual
certainty of budget cuts.
A key point In the bill was Its
creation of two new programs to
protect environmentally sensitive land. One would buy 30-year
easements to protect wetlands
and the other would pay farmers
up to $1,500 a yea r to help
farmers Implement practi ces
tha t will avoid conta mination of
wate r by farm chemicals.
In a ddition, the bill strengthens
the "swampbu s ter" program by
making It easier to catch producers who convert wet lands to crop
production.

HOLZER CLINIC

Ohio Lottery

Hannan Trace
captures KC
LL tourney

Daily Number
202
Pick-4
8624
Super Lotto
5-6-18-22-24-38
Kicker 654637

Page 3

•
Vot.40. No.310

McGinnis trial
starts Tuesday

F.1 RM POND EXHIBIT - Jenny Varney dlsplayshere.hlblton
"Ohio Ponds. " She was one of more than a hundred 4-H club
members parti clpallng In the miscella neous judging of projects
held Saturday at the Rutland Civic Center.

GONE FISHIN' - Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood
judges Edson Hart's fishing project. Hart will be having his 4-H
e•hlblt on display al the Mel g&gt;~ County Fair, Aug. 14- IR, In the
junior fair building.

Sheriff
involved
in wreck

HOME
446- 'j 381

T wo wrPcks were r epo rt ed
over the weekend by the Pome
roy Pollee Depa r tment
Me igs County Sheriff J amL'S
Soul sby was in volved in a n
acc ident Frid a y a ft ernoon while
res pond ing to a n e mergency c all
on Eas t Ma in St reet In front o!
Kroger' s , Pome roy. Souls by was
travelin g nort h when a car
drl\·en by J ohn Jo hnson , Maso n.
fa iled to yield the rig ht of way .
The ca r dr iven by Jo hnson
struc k a wa ll near the Kroger 's
park in g tot a nd was s truc k by th e
Sou ls by vehic le

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(lacludlas Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)
Stale Bank No. 130

The Ohio Valley Bank
Company
Federal Reserve District No. 4
of GaUipolbi, GaUia County, In the State of Oblo al the close of buslnesa on June 30,

1990.

C ONFISC.~TE

DRUGS - An ongoing tw&lt;&gt;county drug inv estigation paid off during th e
weekend as forces from the Mason and GaiDa
County Sheriffs' Departments . Gallipolis Polke
Departm ent and West Vlrglna State Patrol raide d
a house ne ar Hend erso n, W.Va. Pictured here
tlefl to right) are Galll a County Sheriff DennL&gt;

The 19'ltl, F'ord · dri ve n by
Soulsby r Pre ivPd hea vy dam agP
to rrar , pa ssr ngrr s !dP an d
dri vrr·s door . Th P 19R6 Mr rc ury
drive n by John son. owned by
Morri s Scarberry of Blue fie ld .
Va., rec eived hea vy da mage to
the pasSPnger a nd dri ver's door

Salisbury, Mason County Chief Deputy Uoyd
Akers, and Mas on County Sheriff Erni e Watterson with som e of th•• mat erials confiscated from
the house. Three people are being held In the
Mason County jail awaiting charges. (OVP photo
by Melinda Powers)

and u nd erca rri age .

Sheriff Souls by was ta ken to
Vetera ns Memori al Hos pita l lor
obse r va t !o n. Joh nson was not

Parents of Athens youth plan to
find out more about son's death
ATHENS. Oh io i UP i i - T he
parents of a n 18-year -old youth
who di ed mysler ious ly las t
month In the Netherl a nd s plan to
vls!t that co untry to lea rn more of
their son s dea th
Ma rk Gri mes, tourin g Europe
after his s pr ing gradua ti on from
Athe ns High Sc hool, d led J une 20.

member of the U.S. Cons ulate
c al led. sa id Mark 's mother
13&lt;'1ty.
She a nd her husba nd Steve n. a
physics professor a t Oh io L nl w r
slt y, a re pla nning to vis it th e
~ Pt he r land s to get som r answer s
a bou t th eir son's death .

minutes a fter hav ing eal en in a

the home of Corrie te n Boom .
w ho wc n1 to a Nazi conc en trat ion
ca mp bec au se s he a nd her fa mi ly
h ld Jews during World Wa r II.

restau ran t

in

Haar lem,

1h(l

Netherla nds.
But his fam il y d idn't le arn of
his deat h unti l J une 29 wh en a

M ark was i n Haar lem 1o

Sl'l'

Since his bod y d idn 't con tai n

injun•d.
Johnson was f i tPd for fa ilurr t 0

yield thl' ri ght of wa y to an
cmcr gPncy ve hic lr.

A Syracuse• ma n was r iled
Sund ay followi ng a one-ra r ace!·
de nt on NyP A venue. Pomeroy .
.John Jeffers. Ru s tle Hills. was
tra ve lin g south on Ny P Avenue
when he los t r ontrol , went off th e
r ight sid e of the road a nd struck a
telcphonP pole cau sin g heavy
dam age to the fr on t of hi s B R5
Ford Esco rt.
Je ffe r s wa s ci ted fo r failu rr to
ma in tain co nt r ol and lea v ing the

a ny Iden tificat ion. It wa s buried
in · an unmarked grave Mrs
Grim es said her son was pla n·
nlng to car ry two wallets, so she
thinks one may have been s tolen
The seco nd was found In his
baggage.
It was his ba ggage th a t led lo
his Identifica ti on. The Chris ti an
You th Hote l in Haar lem notified
poll ee a fter the yo uth 's baggage
went unc la im ed . A wa llet was
found wit h this baggage, Mrs .
Gr ime s sa id.

I

I~Ti{i'lAYS4
FREE BALLOONS FOR THE KIDS

OPEN MONDAY A FRIDAY NIOBT8 'ftL 8 P.M.

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condl·
lion and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best.of our knowledge
and belle! has been prepared In conformance with official Instructions and Is true
and correct.
Morris E . Haskins
Jeffrey E. Smith - Directors
James L. Dalley
State of Ohio, County ot Gallla, u :
Sworn to anchublcrtbed hefore me thll24th day ol July, 1990, and 1 hereby certify that I am not an omcer or director of this bank.
CIDdy H. JohDJton, aka Cindy L. Harrtneton, Notary PUblic
My commission expires March 2~. 1991.

left to right, Sharon VIckers and Mildred Fry.
oo-chalnnen of the Autdllary's Scholarship

By CARLOS BREZII\'i\
UPI Business Writer
WAS HI NGTON - Persona l
1neome inched up 0.4 percent in
J une on the s tren gth of higher
wages . bu t pe r sonal consu mp·
tl on ex pe ndi tures rose even morr

and depressed th e sa vi ngs ra te.
Commerce De pa rtment said
Monday .
Per sona l inco me rose $1 6 fi
billion in J une, to a sea sonall y
ad justed an nual ra te of $4 6
tril lion. up0 .4 pcrce nl from Mav.
wit hou t ad jus ting for inflation .
the depa rtme nt' s Burea u o!
I he

Economic Analy sis said . Per
sonal inco mP had posted i n

crea ses of OJ pe rcen t In bo th
May and Ap ril.
Di sposab le pe rsonal incoml' perso nal Incom e a fter tax es and
somr non -t ax pay mPn1 s - ad
va nced $1 Rbil lion. or 0. 5 percenl .
in .June 10 $.1.9 tril lion. Th r

c alcgory: r osr OJ pPrr rn t in Ma.v

a ft er re ma in ing s ta ble in Apri l.
Prrsonal consumption expe- ndit ure Increa sed $:t4.8 bill ion in
.J une to $.18 trillion - a I P&lt;' rcc nl
adva ncr from Ma y - after
r{' m a i ni n~

st ablf' i n

M i.l ~·

and

advanc ing 0 2 percen t in Apnl.
the depar tme nt sa id
As a res ult, per so nal sav in g
dropped lo $19.1.6 bi ll io n in J une
from $210.2 billion in May . T h••
.June mont hly sa,·lngs ra te fell to
4.9 perce nt from 5.i percent 1n
May and 5.1 perce nt in Apn l. the
bu rr a u's fi gures s howrd.
Ad jus ting lor infla tion. d t,pos
ablr prrsona l inr omP was un
c ha nged In .J une as we ll as 1n May
a ft er slipp in g 0.2 pe rce nl in
Apri l.
Infl a tion ad justed perso na l
co nsum ption expendlt urr s r osr
0.5 perce nt in J u ne a fter f a lli n ~
Cont inued on page 12

Centerburg man
is electrocuted
COLUM BUS. Ohio iUP li - A
Ce nt erbu rg man sta nding on top
of a house be in g moved died
Sund ay a fter he accid en tally
touched two hig h-vo lt age powe r
lines.
Ro nal d Matthews died In
surger y at Ohio State Un iversit y
Hos pita ls a bo ut three hours after
the acciden t in eas tern F rank lin
County, said a spokes man for the
Jeff e r so n To wn s hi p Fir e
Depar tment.
Ma tthews was sta nding on the
roof of the house and was try! ng
to keep the 3,200-volt wires fr om
touching the house when the
mishap occurred .
Th e spokesma n said If Mat thews had touched only one of th e
two wires , he would not ha ve
been hurt .
Ma tthews sulfered second · a nd
third-degree burns over the
upper half of his body . a nd
mas sive hea d Injuries when he
fell onto the street , the spokes man said .

SCHOLARSHIPS-:_::-cTr:;.;nac;;I~B~a:rte~ls. The S400 scholarships are renewo-

AWARDED NURSING
Two 1990 Melp High School graduates were
presented nursing scholarships recently by the
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospltal. Pictured at the presentation ceremonies are,

Personal income
up 0.4 o/o in June

sce ne of an acciden t

I , the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condit ton has
been prepared In conformance with olftclallnstructlons and Is true to the best of
my knowledge and helle!.
Madge E . Boggs
VIce President and Controller, July 24, 1990

... ,.,..

tri al to taxpa ye r s by abo ut
$12, 000.
The pn x·c•pdl ng it se lf. m ea n
killer Lyle McGi nnis were sch e
while . is ex pectPd to focus on
duled to be In Fayette Count y McC inn ls' whe rPa bo uts bet wren
Monda y In hopes of com ing up thc• evening of No v. 28. 1989 and
with a jury fo r the Hun ti ngton 8 30p.m Nov 30, 1989 - the time
period poli ce believ e Ka thy
accountant 's mu rdl•r trial.
The ba nk rupt former millio· McG innis was sla in .
Although prosecutors do not
nalre bu sinessman Is to be tried.
have wit nesses to the killing.
in a proceed ing thai begins
Tuesday . on cha r ges of s tran - they a re likely to produce othe r
glin g his wife Kathy to dea th las t Incr imina tin g testi mony.
For one. they are likely to ca ll
~ove mber behind a Kanawha
on the paramedic who a id ed
County mall.
Ca bell County Circuli Judge McGinnis a ft e r he was disco·
Alfred F ergu son said he feels an vered In his Jeep some 100 feet
unb iased ju ry can be pi cked in down a ravi ne In neig hbo ri ng
Fayette Cou nty. eve n thoug h it is Kentucky, In what was a n appa r relati ve ly close - wit hin 100 e nt a ccident.
The para medi c reca lled tha t
miles fr om Huntington.
who cla imed to have
McGinnis,
De !er. se attorney s had soug ht a
been
a
bducted
a nd tortured
change In ve-nue, however. the .
judge sa id he d id no t believe tha t a long wi th his wife. a p peared
re laxed nex t to a ca mpfire he had
was necessary .
Fergu son said Faye tte Coun· set .
Police say they have a lso been
ty's res idents have not had too
able to deter m ine th at the
much exposure to the case, sin ce
most do not rece ive the Hunting- key-sha ped bu rn s infl icted on
Ka thy McGi nnis' c hes t we re
ton newspaper .
made by a key from a Cabe ll
He co nceded . howeve r . that
some m ay have knowledge of th e Cou nt y m otel where Lyle McGi nrase th rough local telev ision nes sta yed prior to the kil li ng .
In add ition. a uthori ties sav
broa dcasts a nd Charleston's
they
fo un d pieces of l c l e ~ hon.­
news papers.
cord
.
s im ila r to that fo un d
"Kn owledge of the case does
arou nd Kathy McGinwra
pped
not exclude a juror . it 's wh ether
they have formed an opinion on n is in McGin nis' w recked Jeep.
Tr ia l proceed ings are sla ted to
it ." Fe rguso n sa id.
res ume Tuesday with cons idera
Ca be ll Count y Pr osecutor
\ion of som e 25 pre -trial motions.
Chris Chiles estimates that
The tria l Is se t to sta rt at 1 p.m.
brin ging In a n outs ide jury will
th at sa me day.
lik ely boos t the cos t of McG innis'
HUNTIN GTON. W.Va . iUPI)

- Ca bell Count y prosecutors and
defen se attor neys for accu sed

SIX BOARD CERTIFIED OBSTETRICIANS

ASSETS
Cash and balan ces due from depository lnatitutions:
a. Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin ................. 4,213,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ......... ... ... ... .. ............ ............ ..... ..... ..... .149,000.00
Securities ....... .. ............. .... ...... ....... ..... ...................... .. .. ......... .... .... 59,618,000.00
Federallunds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to resell In domestic offices of the bank and of its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBF's :
Federal lund sold ... .......... ....... .......................... .. .. .. ..
. .. . 11 ,700, 000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ........ .. 132, 058,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses .... ... .... . 1,557,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income.
allowance, and reserve .. . .. .. ...... .... .... ......... ....... ...... .. ...... ... .. ...... 130,501,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (In cluding capitalized leas es) .. ... ...... ..... . 2,398,000.00
Other assets . ... ..... ...... .. .. .. . .... ......... . ... .. .. .. .......... .. ... ................. ... ... . 2, 983,000.00
Total assets ..... ..... .......... : .......... .... ..... .. ..... ....... ... . .. ... ........ .. .. ... . 2 11 . ~2.000 .00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823 (j) ... .. .. . 2 11 . ~2.000. 00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
a . In domestiC offices .... .. ..... ... ... ........ ................. .. ... .. ... ........ ... 193, 826,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng .. .... .. .. .... ......... ... .... .. ...... . 15, 765,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ........ .............. .... ........ .. ... ... 178,061,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreeme nt
to repurchase In domestic offices or the bank and of It s
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBFs:
Securities sold under agreements to repurch ase .. .. .................. .... .... 699,000.00
Other borrowed money .. ... ....... .. ... ...... ..... .. ......... .... ..... .... .. ......... .... ...... 40,000.00
Other liabilities .............. .... .. ........ .... .. ...... .. .. .... .. ... ... ....... .... ........... 2, 844,000.00
Totalliabllltles .. .. .... ...... .. .... .. .. ................. ...... ... ...... ..... .... ........... .. 197,409,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock No. of s hares a . Authorlzed .. ....... .459,606
b. Outstandlng ....... .454,392 .. ......... ... . 4,544,000.00
Surplus ...... ................ ...... .... ...... ... .. .................... ...... ... ... ........ ..... .... 6, 785,000.00
a. Undivided profits and capital reserves .. .. ... ..... .......... ... ... ........... 3,161,000.00
b. LESS: Net unrealized loss on marketable equity securities ...... ... .. 337,000.00
Total equity capital .................... .... ............ ... ......... .. ....... ............. ...14,153,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C . 1823()) ... ..... ...... .. ...... .................... ........ ....... 14,153,000.00
Total liabilities, llmlled - llle preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) .. ..... ... ... .... ....... 2 11. ~2 . 000. 00
MEMORANDA: Amount• outalalldlng u of Report Date
Standby letters Of credit . Total ... ..... ... .. .. .. ....... ...... .......... ..... ..... ... ... ... .729,000.00

1 Section, 12 Pages 25 Cent s
A Muhimadie Inc:. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 30, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

~

HELPING YOUR
"SPECIAL DELIVERY"
TO ITS FINAL
DESTINATION:

Low tonight In mid 60s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Cloudy Tuesday . High In mid
70s. Chanc e of rain 30 percent.

ble for one year. Caruthers, daughter ol Diane and

Herman Lynch, and Robert Carulbers, all of
Middleport, will attend the Unlversltyhol Rio
Grande, and Bartels, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Edward Bartels, Pomeroy, wlll attend Hocking
Technical CoUege at Ne lsonville.

I

BLOOD RUN - The Melp County Bikers congregated at lhe
Pomeroy Parking Lot on Sunday to travel united to the Senior
Citizens Center where they gave blood for the American Red
Cross. The bikers make the blood run annually 118 a service lo the
community. They are also responsible lor the "toys lor lots"
program each year al Chrlslmas whkh benefits Melp County
chUdren.

Get Quick Result s! Place A S5 Per Day ·sulletin Board · Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section .
•

'

�Monday, July 30, 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'l'I!RI!STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

aj;b,

r:s'm ~

-r. ~c •~==~~

,...,...__,l-

~v

ROBERT L. WI:-.'GETI'
Publisher

CIIARLENE HOEFLICII
General Manager

PAT WIIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Untied Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers A&gt;e'iOCiatton.
LE'ITF:RS OF OPINION are welcome. Thev should be tess than 300

\

words long. All letters are subjN't to ed lttng ai'ld mus t be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unslgnf'd letters will be publlsht&gt;d. Letters should be In good taste. addresslng Issues, nOT per sonall tles.

Supreme Court
•
surpnses
By ARNOLD SAWlSLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - President Bush says he hasn 't asked hi s
Supreme Court nominee for his views on abortion and other "litmus
test issues, .. but th e betting In Washington Is that at least one person
at the White House knows what they are.
Circuit Judge David Souter Is, after all, a protege of chief of staff
John Sununu, who appointed Souter to the New Hampshire Supreme
Court when Sununu was governor. So the guessing Is that Sununu and
possibly Attorney General Dick Thornburgh as well have asked
Souter about his opinions on the hot Issues that are likely to come
before the court In the near future .
And despite the president's stated unwillingness to put such
questlons to his nominee, there Is good reason to do so. Presidents
serve only eight years at the most , but Supreme Co urt justices can be
on the bench for generations, often representing all that Is left to be
remembered of the president who appointed them
Thus, It was recalled when Justice William Brennan retired that the
most consistently liberal member of the court was appointed by
Republican President Dwight Eisenhower, who was no right -winger
but certainly a mainstream conservative.
Ike, It Is sa id . was completely flummoxed by Brennan's rulings,
declaring after he left office that the Bennan appointment was the
worst mistake he made In his eight -year admlnlstratlnn.
Eisenhower also appointed Earl Warren chief Justice and It seems
likely he did not expect the former Ca !Uornla governor to lead the
court Into the legal thickets of civil libertles, politics and criminal
justice that It plunged Into during his tenure.
Warren was known as a liberal Republican , bot he also was one of
the stronges t voices In favor of Interning Japanese-Americans when
the United States entered World War II after the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor.
Of course. Ike was not the first president to be fooled by a Supreme
Court nominee.
Franklin Roosevelt wa s simply trying to cement his political ties
with Southern Democrat s when he chose Sen. Hugo Black for
Alabama for the Supreme Court. Initially , It looked as If he might
have tapped a hard -rock segregationist when It was revealed that
Black had been a Ku Klux Klan member. But as It turned out he
became one of the most liberal Justices ever to sit on the high court.
FDR and his critics thought he had chosen a real liberal when he
nominated Felix Frankfurter to the court , but once again the tables
were turned . Frankfurter, a Harvard professor who had sent dozens
of fiery young liberals to work In the New Deal and break all kinds of
new ground In government, turned out to be a legal conservative who
lor years slnglehandedly kept the court oul of one-man, one· vote
cases because they were on legis lative turf.
More rece ntly. !he Supreme Court appointment of Byron White by
John Kennedy probably put a far different Justice on the bench than
the president contemplated.
White, a football All-American In his college days, was very much a
part of the Kennedy circle before going on the high court. and was
expected to become a part of the liberal voting bloc. In fact. White
never was to the left of center and once on the bench he moved
steadily toward the right. Now. he Is regarded as one of the
conservative votes on most Issues, certainly not what JFK had
expected.
So even If he does n't want to ask the "litmus test " questions of
Souter. Bush would be well advised to have somebody do It for him.
Otherwise, he may be setting himself up for some nas ty surprises
down the road.

Berry's World
GREA.T SPIRIT, AFFLICT THE
WH\TE MEN, WHO WOULD
USURP N\OHA.WK ANCESTRAL
LANDS. WlT\1 DOUBLE,

TRlPLE AND

QUADRUPLE.
BOGEYS.
I

sh lnglon and Moscow ran a close

race to see who could grant the
most scholarships to Latin AmerIcans . Most American programs

were run by the U.S. Agency for
International IX•velopment.
The Soviets Initially took the
lead . "For every Panamanian In
the U.S.. there were nearly flv&lt;' In
the Soviet Union," recalled Dr.
Eduardo Conrado. a veteran
university director of AID
sc holarships.
In 1984, the U.S. National

Bipartisan Commission on Central America Issued the "Kissln·
ger Report" with arecommendation to boost the program to
10,000 scholarships.
AID responded by giving some
$268 million to foreign students
between 1985 and 1987. On the
surface, the scholarships looked
good. They were targeted at poor
people wtth leadership potential
who could get an American
education and then to home to
serve their countries. Some
didn't go home, but AID has
gradually worked out most oft he
loopholes the students used to
stay here.
The United States built up Its
numbers until today more than
13,000 Latin and Caribbean scholars have been educated In the
United States courtesy of the
taxpayers.
But an audit of the program In
1985 revealed that Initially the
United States was less interested
In educating future leaders than
It was In outnumber! ng Soviet ·
educated leaders .
The audit noted that poor
people should be targeted for
scholarships because they were
also "one of the prime target
groups of Soviet bloc training
efforts." The audit said that
unless the program was upgraded, the scholarships would
be Ineffective In counteracting
Soviet scholarships, a mission

Hannan Trace captures Kyger Creek LL Tournament title
Ry G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stall Writer
Hannan Trace's Wildcats
posted their third straight com&lt;'from-behlnd victory- an eight Inning, 13·12 triumph over
Green's Senators - to captur&lt;'
the 1990 Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament championship Sunday night at the Kyger
Creek Employees Club Field
near Cheshire.
The Wildcats became the first
Gallia County team to win the
tournament since Green did It In
1973.
The Wildcats, who prevented
Syracuse's Hubbard's Greenhouse from returning to the title
game In Saturday night's 11 -7
heart-stopper rTracecastasldea
7-4 deficit with a seven-run
rebellion In the top of the sixth for
the win), found themselves In an

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
the audit called "the ~o~mary
goal" of th e AID schola r&gt; hips.
The report went so far as to
complain that too much money
was going to countrie s where the
Soviet presence was minimal
Nowhere In the audit were the
educat ional needs of s tud ents
from tho se co untri es
emphasized.
Scholarship administrators at
various univers ities told our
associate Dean Boyd that the
Soviet-U.S. competition has always been one motivating force
behind the AID largesse. But
under glasnost, the program has
outgrown Its Cold War mentality .
AID officials assured us their
program has matured beyond a
numbers game. University ad·
mtnlstrators agree. but some
feat that without the competition,
the scholarships will not be a
priority and the bud get will be
cut.
AID officials told us that won't
happen and th at li ttle or no
consideration should be given to
what the Soviets are doing. But,
one feder al scholarship administrator told us, "It remains to be
seen how committed Washington
Is to long·term development In
Latin America or short-term
political goals."
UGLY LEGACY - Commu-

nlsm has left beh lnd a mess In
Eastern Europe. an environmental blight that has to be seen and
breathed to be believed. The
communists have abandoned a
dying economy of smokestack
Industries, toxic chemical works,
leaking pipelines and dirty coal
furna ces. Take Czechoslovakia,
where nearly 70 percent of the
rivers and 90 percent of the rural
wells are polluted. The oil pipeline from the Soviet Union Is
leaking at every connection.
Withdrawing Soviet troops are
leaving behind piles of trash,
dilapidated buildings, chemical
dumps and contaminated water
supplies.
MINI·EDITORIAL Why
ca n't Congress simply cut the
waste from the federal budget
and e liminate the deficit? Fiscal
enemy No. I Is the bureaucracy
Bureaucrats rarely solve problems. That would eliminate their
Jobs. In stead they study and
perpetuate problems. Fiscal
enemy No. 2 Is the leadership.
Political leaders at all levels
refuse to make hard decisions
that might pain their special
constituencies. They put off
needed remedies un ttl the next
person's term. and the next
person has no more co urage than
the last.

9-5 hole going Into the Wildcats'
half of the fifth Inning, but a
three-run rally shrank Green's
lead to one after five frames .
HT's David Rucker, who
started the game at third base,
came on to pitch In the fifth In
relief of starter Paul Dillon.
Rucker held Green scoreless In
the top of the sixth (the only
Inning In which Green didn't
score), which helped Trace tie
the game In the bottom of the
sixth.
In the Wildcats' sixth, Michael
Black laced a 3·1 pitch Into left
field for a single, and an error by
the left fielder allowed Black to
go to second base. Nathan
Swindler struck out, and Dillon
grounded out to second, which
allowed Black to go to third. Then
Jamie Merrick hit a hot smash
back to Green pitcher Moose

Clark, whose late throw to
The elgbth - After Jamie
Graham hit a high chopper back
catcher Robbie Woodward allowed Black to score. The Inning
to the mound for the first out.
ended when Nathan Waugh
Chris Casto- the sultan of swat
grounded Into a fon:e play at ·who slammed a grand slam in the
first Inning and a two-run shot In
second, with Merrick as the
the third for two of his
putout victim.
tournament-high three homers
The seventh- In the Senators'
half of the Inning, Chad Ford hit a
- knocked an 0-2 pitch Into left
field for a single. Yogi Neal
shot to lett center field that went
singled to right C&lt;'ntcr and moved
through the wooden fence and
was declared a ground -rule dou - Cas to to second. Ford followed
with a single to ce nter to get
ble. Chris Moore, who started the
Casto home and Neal to third.
game on the mound, singled to
But Moore hit Into a 6-3-5 double
center field and advanced to
play (translation: from short·
second on the throw from the
stop to first to third! that ended
outfield after Ford moved to
the Inning, but not before Green
third. Then Chase Borton hit an
0-2 pitch to third base, but scored another run to post a 12·10
lead.
Merrick's throw to the plate got
Casto came on to pitch to the
to Swindler In time to retire Ford .
Borton went to second on th e Wildcats In the bottom of the
eighth, and he Issued back·tO·
throw.
back walks to Swindler and
Robbie Woodward grounded
Dillon,
throwing one strike out of
out to shortstop for the second
nine pitches to both hitters. Then
out, but Moore scored on the play
Casto got the hook , was sent back
to put Green ahead 11·10. Jason
to center field and was relieved
Ratliff hit a grounder to short·
by Graham, who was greeted by
stop that he beat out, but Dillon,
Merrick with a single to left to
who moved to first base, threw
load the bases. On four straight
out Borton at third. The Senators'
pitches, Nathan Waugh walked
frame ended when Clark
to force Swindler to score,
grounded out to third.
cu tting Green's lead tu 12-11.
In Trace's half of the Inning,
At that point Ratliff wa s given
Jeff Stitt walked and moved to
the call to pitch, and Graham was
second on Harrison's groundout
to second. Stitt moved to third on sent back to second base. Ratliff
fanne d Stitt. but Har rison hit a
Clark's wild pitch with Rucker at
the plate, and even though nubber back to the mound that
Ratliff shoveled back to Wood
Rucker grounded out to short·
.s top, Stitt was able to score on the ward In an at tempt to nail Dillon,
out play and tie the game at 11 -11 . but Dillon slid ahead of the peg
Wes Gibson followed with a and tied the game for th&lt;'
double, but Black struck out to Wildcats. With Merrick at third
and Harrison at first. Rocker
end the Inning.

eT-rA
~ &lt; HutME

@1~&lt;)0 FoR:!' m'illl'l ~rAA·TE'L~G~
'-=----

TilE RJGIIT STUFF - Rutland hurler Gary Stanle~ had the
right stulf In sending Syracuse's llubbard's Greenhouse to Ita
second straight to.. in the Kyger Creek Little Lea111e Tournament
by fanning nine and allowing one hit In the Reds' 6-3 triumph.
Stanley was also named the tournament's top bitter, as he got eight
hits In the dlamondlest. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

.,

'

.-

•

-

I am happy to advise you.

however, that the work has now
been done at last, and that the
results are devastating. A book
entitled "And That's The Way It
Isn't," which was publiShed In
June by the Media Research
Center of Alexandria, Va ., dem·
onstrates by careful statistical
analyses and an overwhelming
supply of examples that the
work·product of America's lead·
lng JournaliStic enterprises, both
print and electronic, Is positively
saturated with liberal bias . "Dis·
tortlon" Is Its middle name.
The book's title Is, of course, a

pardoy of the sign-off of one of the
oldest and shrewdes t liberals In
th e new s-ti\Ung bu si ness, Walter
Cror.klte. The Media Research
Center is a group of dedicated
young conservatives who spend
their days taping and watching
TV news programs and poring
over lead ing newspapers and
magazines. They also know how
touse such new techniques as
Nexls. a computerized Index of
virtually everything that appears In America 's major print
media.
Their book begins at the
beginning. with a chapter sum·
mar lzlng. separately, the original Lichter- Rothman study and
no less than eight other Investigations of what journalists personally believe. Chapter 2 names 27
prominent journalists who shuttle back and forth between
mainline journallsm and jobs for
liberal pres sure groups and the
Democratic Party. llt also. In
fairness, lists eight whom It
found doing the same thing with
conservative groups and the
GOP). A 50-page appendix ex lends the list to a total of 235
Individuals, 178 of lht•m liberals.

Next comes a chapter quoting
the ultra -liberal comments of
prominent Journalists on a host of
subjects and another demon st rating how th ey label conservative political figures as If they
were so mehow contaminated
while letting th eir liberal oppo.
si te numbers pass unlabeled.
Then come separate chapters
analyzing 1and profusely quot ing) the work-product of Ameri ca's top media on almost every
subjec t in the public domain :
superpower relations, regional
conflicts. economic Issues, Ronald Reagan and political campaigns. It Is virtual encyclopedia
of distortions .
What do you . suppose the
liberal media will do about thi s
book? Th ey can't refuse It, and
don't dare admit that Is basic
charge of bias Is correct, so my
guess Is that they wltl do their
level best to Ignore It: no
reviews, no Interview shows, no
references to It at all.
But they can't burn it . Maybe
I'm preJudiced, · being ghostly
presence on the Center's board of
directors, but I say: Don't miss
It!

By United Pr- International
Today Is Monday. July 30, the 21lth day of 1990 with 154 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Us lull phase.
Tbe morning stars are Venua. Mars and Jupiter.
Tbr eveniJ:Ig stars a~ Mertury and Saturn.
Thole born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include
English novelist EmUy Bronte In 18lB. auto pioneer Henry Ford In
11113, baseball player-manager Ca!le)' Stengel In 1890. English
sculptor Henry Moore In 1898, actor Edd "Kookte" Byrnes In 1938

In the Midwestern city where I
live, a deaf man died of a heart
attack a few years ago while his
wife waited for the pollee department to respond to her 911 call.
The man's wife was deaf, but
their house was equipped with a
TDD (Teletypewriter Device lor
the Deaf), a device that allows
sages over the phone lines.
Unfortunately, the pollee department's TDD wu turned off.
His death was especially trartc
to me, because I was one of a
11roup of people who helped get

the TDD system started In our
city. We raised money to buy the
expensive devices and put them
Into the homes where they were
needed, at the time, the units
were running as high as $500, and
a compassionate man named
John Talbot volunteeTed his
professional answering·servlce
operators. They would take callS
and type them so lhatdeafpeople
could read them on their TDDs
and vice versa. It was called a
"relay sysiem", and It worked as
wl'll as could be expected, After

all, It relied on volunteer labQ,t,
and could relay only one call at a
time, emergency or not.
But It should never have had to
be. Deaf Americans deserve
access to telephone service. At
the time, Southwestern Bell
provided equipment that deaf
cus!Dmers, most or them In low
economic brackets, could rent at
a very high price, as well as
operlors who would give them
lnfonnatlon or help with long
distance calls. But no relay. No
help supplying units to emer·

gency services .
A · bill recently passed by
Congress may change all that.
The Americans with Disabilities
Act will require phone companIes tolnstallanatlonaiTDDrelay
system that will allow people
with hearing or speech lnpedl·
ments to make and receive callS.
It will also bar employment
discrimination a1alnst the dis·
a bled, required many bllllnenes
thai 1erve the public to offer the
disabled full enJoyment of the
goods and services they provide.

By BOB KEIM
UP! Sports Writer
KJRTLAND, Ohio !UP! I
Sure. Scott Galbraith would love
to get his plct ure In the paper for
catching a game-winning touch
down pass.
He knows that tight ends who
get Into the end zone make a lot
more money than those that are
regarded as blocking specialists. ·
and that blocking specialists
always aren't the most appreciated members of the team .
Still. If Cleveland's seventhround draft choice from Southern
California had his choice, he' s
level LawrencP

to knock down Banks or someonr

FD!ST HALL-OF ·FAMER - Point Pleasant resident John
VIckers, shown throwing out the first pitch of Sunday's Kyger
Creek L.ItUe League Tournament championship game, was named
the first Inductee Into the newly&lt;reated Kyger Creek LUUe
League Tournament llall of Fame. VIcker., a pile her lor the 1960
champion Summerville Motors team from Point Pleasant, struck
out I~ hitters In no-hitting lhe Racine Cardinals 5·0. Also In that
game he hll a triple and a double. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

LOOK OUT! - Syracuse's Kevin Deemer hils thedlrtto avoid a
high pitch by Rutland's Gary Stanley In the fourth Inning of
Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament consolation
game at the Kyger Creek Employees Club Field. Syracuse was
held to one hit In Rutland's 6-3 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer

The Reds, whose 8-4 lead in
Saturday nlgh1' s semif ina l game
against Green eva porated when
the Senators conducted a fi verun Jailbreak In the bottom of the
fifth en route to a 9-8 victory fur
the Galllans, went to work on
Greenhouse reliever Cass CIP
land, who came In from shortstop
In the third to relieve starter
Robby Crow.
The west Meigs nine coll&lt;'cted
three runs In the third, and with
Stanley's arm In effect, th&lt;'Y had
little to worry about from the
Greenhouse until a two-run out
burst In the fifth cut the Reds'
lead to one. But Rutland countered that with two runs of their
own In the top of the sixth that
gave the Reds the Insurance they
needed to lock up the victory.
Syracuse's staff of Crow, Clela nd and Kevin D&lt;'emer combln&lt;'d to strike out II and Issue lllJ
walk,.
Rutland's offense was powered
by George !3-4) , Michael Jarvis
12 -3). Stanley, 12-4), Adam Barrett and Chris Roush (both 1-4).
Score by Innings
Rutland .... ... ... .. ... 103 002-6-9-1
Syracuse . ... ... ... ..100 020-3-1-0
WP - Sta nley
LP -Cleland Iin re lief of Crow 1

Browns' new tight end
Galbraith enjoys hitting

" I know If I'm going to have
any longevity here It's going to be
because I'm the best blocker,"
said Galbraith. 6·1oot·3. 260
pounds . "Truthfully, you stick
around longer If you get your face
In the paper and make a
touchdown. But if r have a c hance

Throwing the book at media bias_ n_ush.e_r
were merely retreating to a
previously prepared position .
Nowadays most of them admit
they're personally liberal but
Insist that It does n't show In their
work. So once again the question
arises: You know better, but how
the deuce do you prove it?
Clearly, what Is needed Is a
painstaking review of the entire
work·product ofthe major newspapers. newsmagazines, and TV
networks. something well
beyond the capacity of the
average Individual.

t hrPe-run victory.

end zone.

"You're dismissed, but I'm fining the jury big bucks for finding out how
guilty you are."

Up un til a few yrars ago, it was

Rutland 6, Syracuse 3 - The
preceding consolation game was
the showcase for Rutland hurler
Gary Stanley, who negated his
six walks by racking up nine
strikeouts and yielding only one
hit - a si ngle by catcher Ryan
Hill - In lead ing the Reds to a

much rather

~

the custom of journalists to meet
conSt'rvatlvc complaints of prolibe ral bia s with a bland denia l.
The cons&lt;'rvative might know In
his heart that the reporters,
editors. producers and anchormen of th e top papers and major
TV networks were overwhelmIngly liberal. but precisely how
co uld be prove It?
This sor t of Journalistic decep·
tlon was knocked galley·west,
however. by the famous Lichter·
Rothman study of 1981 and
subsequent Investigations. For a
time , many media liberals res·
Is ted by refusing to submit to
furth er scientific In -depth surveys of their attitudes. But by the
late 1980s most Journalists had
quit trying to pretend that they
were polltically neutral or even
"average." In 1989, the Amerl·
can Society of Newspaper Edl·
tors. after questioning 1.200' reporters and editors at 72
newspapers, reported that
nearly three times as many
considered themselves liberal as
conservative, and were willing to
say so.
Our media friends, however,

si ngled to center to allow Merrick to come home with the
game·wlnnlng run.
Dillon and Rucker combined to
strike out four and walk two.
Moore. Clark, Casto, Graham
and Ratliff totaled six whiffs and
10 walks.
Marching In Trace's winning
hit parade were Rucker (3·5,
triple), Nathan Waugh (2-3 ),
Merrick (2·5 1, Swindler IJ.3i.
Gibson 114, double! and Black
and Harrison 1both 1·4).
Green's offense was propelled
by Cas to 13·3, two homers 1.
Graham 12·4), Clark, Moore,
Neal and Ratliff (all 2-5), Ford
(1·3) and Woodward 115) .
Score by lnnlugs
Senators ....... 403 110 12- 12-15-5
Wildcats ....... 131 031 J:l-13- 9-5
WP- Rucker (In relief of Dillon)
LP - Ratliff (In relief of Moore,
Clark, Casto and Graham 1

Taylor or Carl Banks with a
devastating block that springs a
Browns' running back for a lon g
touchdown run than catch a
five-yard pass and fall mto the

of that cal iber. I'm going to be so
happy I don 't know what I'm
going 10 do. I'll probablv cry or
something . "
T his man w ho lovPs

to hit

pPOple Is the son or a pastor who
sings In the church choir. was
student body president of High
lands I Ca lif. 1 High School. and
has a degree 10 public adminis
tratlon from USC.
Not exactly your prototypical
NFL madman
But It was a t South ern Ca l that
Galbraith , who Is competing lor a
spot on the roster as Ozzle
Newsome 's backup and blocking
specialist. learned to appreciate
th e beauty ol blocking. Or rather.
It was where the Importance or
blocking was almost shoved
down his thr oat.
"At Sou th ern Cal. they feel like
passing Is for the weak." he said
of the sc hool that made the
student body right famous.
"Tiwy taught us to lin e up
loes-to-tO!'S, nose-to-nose. and hit
!his person . Try to push his
mouth Into the back of hi s foot. I
try to take that attllude to the
fil'ld ."
II he ca n pul some punch
behind his bold words. Galbraith
would prove to be a valuable
member of th e Browns . Right
now. hi s main competition for the
backup tight e nd job Is John
Talley. who wa s on the developmental roster part of la st year

and worked out with the team
this spring while Galbraith was
finishing school.
While Galbraith loves to block.
he also Is capable of catching the
ball, too. He caught 21 passes for
311 ya rds as a junior and T7
passes for 241 yards as a se nior In
a program not exactly known for
throwing to the tight end
"I've got good hand s," Gal
bralth sa id .
Yet he knows that right now.
the Browns would lw willing to
overlook some deficiency In hi's
pass catching skills If he prov"
he can move opposing players off
the line .
"People think of blocking like
it's a cuss word or something ,· ·
he said. " If yo u can kick

somebody 's !behind!. th·tt is
some kind of thrttl. That's not a
bad th ing. lllocking Is a good
thin g.
"Tha t' s what I like abo ut the
game. If you hll somebody In
basketball . ll's a fou I. But 1hts Is a
sport where not only Is aggres -

sio n allowed . hut you grt comp ll
mentt•d fo r it."
G~LBR~ITII

(See

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LARGE
CLUTCH PERFORMER - llannan Trace's Bobble Harrisou,
shown taking a swing ID the third lnnlug of Sunday's Kyger Creek
Uttle Leape Toumunent title rune aralultGreen,
DIHl of lhe
heroes In the WUdcata' oome-lrom·beblntl, extra·IDnlnJ victory
over lhe Sena&amp;on. llarrllon hll a rrollllder to GreeD reliever I MOll
Ra!Ufllbat Ratllft failed to ret 10 the plate ID time to keep Wildcat
runaer Paul Dillon from comlug In with tbe t;ylnrl'UIIIn lhe elllllh
Inning. Teammate David Rucker, the next bitter, 11111eclto ICOre
Iamie Merrick to give the WIMcail a l!J.l2 win. (OVP pboto by Q,
Spencer Oabome)

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Thl' Daily Sl'nlinel

GOOD JOB, CHRIS- Green's Chris Casto (right) gets the arm
bash from teammate Yogi Neal after Casto cracked a two·run
homer - his second of the game- oil Hannan Trace starter Paul
D!Uon In the third Inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek LUlie League
Tournament champloMhlp game at Cheshire. In the first Inning
Casto hit a grand slam. However, Hannan Trace came back and
won 13-12 In eight lnnlugs. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Disabilities act is a positive stepsarah Overstreet
Today in history

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Wildcats first Gallia champs in 17 years

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 30, 1990

Battle of the brains ends
WASHINGTON - The end of
the Cold War also means an end
to the battle of the brains, the
struggle between the United
States and the Soviet Union to see
which superpower could recruit
more foreign students to Is
universities to be propagandized
In the "right" thinking and sent
hom e.
Scholarship adminis trators In
American universi ties fear that
federal scholarships to foreign ers wil l suffer from the budget
axe now that the United States In
no longer as Interested In oneupping the Soviet scholarship
programs.
A student scholarship may be
an unlikely tool for assertlng
control in the Third World. But a
close look at a certain U.S. and
Soviet scholarship programs for
Latin American students reveals
more politics than academics.
Throughout the 19llls, Wa-

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

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�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 30, 1990

Monday, July 30, 1990

Red Sox hit AL-record 12 doubles in 13-3 rout of Tigers

IN\NG 1 2

WILDCATS 1990 CHAMPS- Hannan Trace's
Wildcats posted an eight-Inning, 13-12 victory over
Gn,en in the championship game of Sunday's
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament to claim
thr Utle and end the season at 14-6. Kneeling In
front are (L· RI Robbie Harrison , David Rucker,
,Jamie Merrick , Nathan Waugh, ,Jonathan Hall

and Mike Waugh. In the second row are Michael
Black, Nathan Swindler, Paul Dillon, Jell Stitt,
Wesley Gibson and Benny Cardwell. Behind them

are assistant coach Terry Rucker, manager Scott
Gibson and assistant coach Norm Swindler. (OVP
photo by G . Spencer Osborne)

SENATORS CAPTURE SECOND - Green's
Senators captured second place after losing 13-12
In eight Innings to Hannan Trace In the Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament championship
co olest Sunday night. Sealed In lront Is ball girl
Courtney Clark. Kneeling tn the front row are
(L-R ) Pete Leon, Jason Coburn, Chase BoriAin,

"' : "

I U HU.

,.. ___ -

v ~ '+

r--

Jasoa RaiUif aDd Robbie Woodward. In the back
row are assistant coach Bob Erwin, ,Jamie
Graham, Yogi Neal, Chris CasiAI, Moose Clark,
Chris Moore and manager Mark Clark. Not
pictured Is player Chad ford . (OVP phoiAI by G.
Spencer Osborne)

o :o ; 1

tj ~ '-4

IUrAL

By ERIC McHUGH
UPI Sports Writer
Dave Bergman must have felt a little lonely Sunday - no one
stopped long enough to even say hello .
The Deroit Tigers' first baseman watched seven different Red Sox
players cruise past him Into second base as Boston broke a
56-year-old American League reco rd with 12 doubles In Its 13-3 rout of
Detroit.
Wade Boggs led the way with three two-baggers; Jody Reed, Tim
Naehring and Ellis Burks had two apiece; and Randy Kutcher, Mike
Greenwell and Carlos Quintana chipped In with one each to highlight
an 18-hlt attack.
The previous record was set by Detroit against the New York
Yankees on July 14, 1934. The Red Sox fell one short of the major
league mark set by the St. Louis Cardinal s on July 12. 1931.
"It looked like we were going to explode yesterday, but we didn't,"
Naehrlng said . "We' re star ting to swing the bats better. We're getting
our pitches to hit and hitting Is contagious ."
Quintana's ninth-Inning double off Mike Henneman, the fourth
Detroit pitcher, broke the record.
''I' m happy to be part of a record," Quintana said. "I think maybe I
would have stopped at second, even If I had hit a tr iple ."
Jelf Robinson, 8-8, had allowed only two hits In each of his last two
starts but was hammered for seven hits , Including five of the doubles,
and six runs.
"I felt fine, so give them cred it," he said. "They kept hitting the ball
after I left. It seemed like everything they hit was either down the line
or In the gaps."
Boston manager Joe Morgan was relieved to be just one game
behind Toronto In the AL East alter a 4-8 road trip.
"four and eight equals 12, that's all I know for sure , " Morgan said_
"We're still in the chase. We could be six games out bul we're not.
"We're capable of that kind of hilling a nd we'll have to do It If we're
going to stay In It," Morgan added.

Beck claims victory
in Buick Open Sunday
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sports Writer
GRAND BLANC, Mich. iUPI)
- The Buick Open has turned
Into a fuel depot.
It either fuels a golfer's career
- five golfers since 1980 have
made the Buick Open their
Inaugural PGA Tour win - or
refuels It .
Chip Beck, using the tourna -

ment to refloat a si nking career,

~rr~­

ltt:IJS (

L\1~1

TIIIRil -

The Rutland Reds

Marcum, Morgan Vanaman and Bryan Colwell.

hamlt·d S}'rOLcU,"it''s Hubbard'~ Grcf'nhouse Its

In thf second row are Chad Bartrum, Don Yost,

!W nmd ~traig ht loss Sunday with a &amp;.3 decis ion in
IIH• &lt;nn,olalion game of the Kyger Creek Little
].A 'iLJ{Uf' Tournamt• nt to claim third place. In the
front row arr &lt;L-R) Scotty Colwe ll. B.J.

Mike Jarvis. Gary Stanley, Adam Barrell, Chris
Roush and Sam McKinney. Behind them are
assistant coac hes Rory Bartrum and Ray Roush
and manager frank Eb.rshach. (OVP photo hy
G. Spencer Oshorm•)

" ·urkman. St·otty George, .lt•remy Ph•rce, Todd

GREENHOUSE TAKES FOURTH - Hu~
bard's Greenhouse of Syracuse made a solid run
for Its second straight Kyger Creek LttUe League
Tournament championship, but lost In lhe
semifinals Saturday to eventual champion
Hannan Trace and In the consolation game to
Rutland on Sunday lo take fourth place. In the

•

front row are (L-R) Kevi n Deemer, Paul
Chapman, balboy Jerrod Clay, Aaron Panglo.
Jack Day and Jay McKelvey. In the second row
are Robby Crow, Jason Pangio, Ryan Hill. ,Jay
Day, Cass Cleland and Tyson Buckley . Behind
them are manager Marvin McKelvey and
assistant coaches Bob Crow and Ken Buckley.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne )

Giants sweep series with 4-0 victory over Reds Sunday
uf thr sraso n

lt.v I'AUL DEfEDE
( 1'1 Sports \\'riter

With tllf' Candlr sttc k cr owd
chanting "Swrrp. Swrep." Scali
Garrl' l ts w it'ldC'd thr br oo m and
put ttw finishing touc hrs on
Ginc in ni..l t i '.&lt;&gt; horribl e week .
: In 1hr pa s I wcrk. I hr Red s werr
O)..ltsrorrd 37 -Din losing .sf'vrn of
eig ht ga mrs: wt~n· swept by thf'
PaclrPS a nd tht• C: i ant s, two of
thri r NL Wr s t Divis ion ri va ls;
a nd almoq bf'came victims of
thr th\ ' vea r 's l' ighth no- hiltrr
· Gar rr·l ts c&lt;J mP wi th in onP ou I of
10ssing it Sunday hut hadtosf'ltlr
for a o nP·hitlt' r lea ding the S;1n
F' ranci &lt;.,co to " ~ - ll vict or y O\TI
1

he Rrd'
Tt1 c Ci ;lnt 'i . wi nners of fivr

st r a ig ht . mm·r·d tn wi thin

~) ~

ga mes of lh•· fir·q plar&lt;' RPds
Ci ne t nna 1i. &gt;'I ~II . has drop p&lt;'d
seve n str aight
- " One bad week of ba sl' ball,
rspecla lly aga i nst thr tra m s that
are chasin g vo u. y·o u losr a lot of

ground . " Rrds manager Lou
Pinel Ia said " Th a t hlilh win has
!Jeen ha rd to gl'l Wr'l·r got to
regroup dow n in lA Atlrr lhls
r~ad trip wr'n• hom\ ' for thr
nionth of Augu st an d we'\'t' go t to
do something ...
Agaln s &lt;Ga rrelts. lhl'y co uldn't
do anyth ing .
Garrell$, 9 7. wa s in command

toroughoul. m ix in g fastba lls
"lith off-speed pit c hes as he
handcuffed the Reds ill'forr
:rR,36o - the largest home crowd
of the season . 11 was hi s second
shu lout a nd third complete game

Galbraith...

I

I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PX tra two runs, "

"I didn't strike out a lot of
hi llers like most guys who throw
no-h it ter s do." Ga rrelts sa id.
" lhr defen se playe d great."
The right-ha nde r los t his no hi t
bid when Paul O'Ne ill lin e d a
two-out si ngle in the ninth .
Ga rrelts though. wa s not dlsap
pointed. "Not really . ! just lookerl
ar ound and saw ~rl c Davis on
deck and s tarted to think about
how I wo uld pllch to him .· ·
Ga rrf'lts said_ ''It would ha vr
bC&gt;en nic e , but I j usr wanted to

win Ihe ball gamP."
Aflpr

walking

pinch hittr t

Todd Benzinger to o[X'n the ninth .
Ga rrr lt s rrtlrrd Chris Saho and
Barry Larkin befo re O'Nr ill
ripped the firs t pit ch c ll'an lv lu
ern ter
Garre lts was tr~' i ng to bPcU ml'
the fir st Giant to toss a no -hi t tl' r
s ince 1976 wh en J ohn Mont e fu sco
bla nked the Brave~
Garre lts th e n got Da v is o n a
short fly to left lo end th e gamr
P rlor to O'NPlll's sing iP, tlw

nParPst tlw Reds had comr to a
hit was RonOPstpr's thlrd -innlng
bunl down the third base line _
ThlnJ baseman Matt William s
s nal r hed the ball a nd threw out
O' Nei ll on a close play at firs t.
Terry Kennedy . who hl l a
tw o-run homer In the e ight h
Innin g lo put the Giants ahead
4-0. seemed more upset th an his
bat tery -mate at losing the nohitter.
"Scotty wa s glad to have those

l-~ennedy

sa id
" Bu t l'd havr traded II for a
no-hitl er any time . iGarrelts)
wa s great HP star ted with
fas tballs and In lhe middle
in nln gs went to sliders and Ia te In

lhe game we nt back to the
fa s tba ll with an occasional
slider."
Now the Reds are doing the
s lidin g.
El sew here In the Nationa l

----Sports briefs----Boxing
.Japanese challenger Yukfhlto
"Leopard'· Tamakuma captu red
thr World lloxlng Association
flyweight c hampionship with a
lOth round TKO of South Korean
defending champion Lee Yul
Woo In Milo, Japan
Cycling
It a lia n Gianni Bugno s tormed
10 thP top of th e 13-racc PPrTie r
World Cyc le Cup se ries with a
co nvincing victory In the Wincan
to n Class ic a t Brighton, England
The 26-year -old Italian covert•d
th e 148 miles In 6 hours 9 minutes
:, 1 seco nd s. finishing 13 seconds
a head of defending World Cup
c hampion Sean Kelly of Irela nd ,
wl lh Belgian Rudy Dhaenens
third . Bugno hold s a six point
lead over Dhaemens after s ix

races .
Equestrian
Blyth Talt of New Zealand took
a double In lhe three-day event
World Championships In Stockho lm by winning both the IndiVId ual and the team titles. New
Zealand crushed the opposition
In the team competitions wllh
three of lis four riders placed
among the top live .

Tennis
T hird -seeded Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario ha s withdrawn from the
$600,000 Player's Challenge tournam e nt In Montreal because of
a n ankle Injury, forcing a redraw
of the main s ingles event scheduled to begin Monday. On
Sat urd ay. second-seeded Monica
Se les withdrew because of a
wris t Injury and World Tennis
Association rules stipulate tha t .
should two of th e top four seeds
withdraw from an event, the
event must be redrawn ... Topseeded Milan Srejber of Czechos lovak ia defeated Kelly Evernden
of Naples, Fla., 6-1. 6-2. for the
champions hip of the $12,000 Mlnlkahda Invitational In Minneapolis . Srej ber. at 6-8. Is the tallest
player on the men's professional
tour ...
Spaniard Francisco
C lavet defeated Arge ntinian
Eduardo Masso, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-0,
to win the $215,000 Dutch Open
championship at Hllversum In
the first-ever Gra nd Prix final
featuring a lucky loser against a
qualifier. Clavet, a 21-year-old
ranked No. 148 on the ATP
computer, came In as a lucky
lose r when frenchman Henri
Leconte withdrew because of
Injury.

League : Ch icago clipped Mont real2 ·1, Pittsburgh edged Phila delphia 2-1, Los Angeles scap led
Allanta 4-3, San Diego shaded
Houston 4-3 and New York
blanked St. Louls 6-0.
Cubs 2, Expos I - At Montrea l,
Mike Harkey and Mitch William s
combined on a four -hitler to help
Chicago win It s third straight
game against Montreal. Harkey,
9-5, worked seven and one· third
lnntngs, a llowing the only run
and all four hits. Williams.
notched his 12th save . Kevin
Gross. 8-8, allowed botll runs and
took the loss .
Pirates 2, PhUIIes I - A&lt;
Pittsburgh , Doug Drabek allowed only two hit s to help
Pi ttsburgh snap a four-game
losing streak. Drabek. 13-4, won
hiS fifth straight game and
pitched his third complete game.
Pat Combs fell to 6-8 despite
allowing ju st three hils In six
Innings .
Dodgers 4, Braves 3 - At Los
Angeles, Ramon Martinez al·
lowed five hil s over eight Innings
and Sian Javier singled In two
runs In the fifth Inning, allowing
Los Angeles to complete a
four -game sweep over the
Braves. Martinez, 13-4 , struck

out nin e to ra1 sc his major -leagur
leading total to 159. Char li e
Lelbrandt fell to 4-4.
Padres 4, Astros 3 - At San
Diego.
Ja ck Clark belt ed a
two-out two-run homer In the
e igh th Inning off Dave Smith. 2-3.
to rally San Diego . Greg Harris.
o-o, who had allowed the Astros to
lak e the lead In the e ighth. picked
up the win . Craig Lefferts
pitched the ninth for his 14th

becomes the third golfer of the
last 11 years to fit Into the latter
category _
He mad e up eight shots with a
nine-birdie round Sunday to pas s
Hale Irwin and 12 other golfers
and win lhe$1 million Bolek Open
by a shot with a 16-under 272
total.
"It's the mos t surprising thing
I've seen In a long time," Beck,
33, said. " I was making a lol of
birdies , but no one else w11 s
making a lot of birdies.
"! was just hoping to get In a
play off," said Beck, who left the
television tower where he wa s
acting as a guest commentator lo
begin warming up when Irwin
stood over a 30-foot eagle putt on
the 16th hole.
Irwin missed another :«lfoo t
pa r putt on the IH th hole , where
he drove Into a bunker and then
Into the rough , for a bogey that
cost him a playoff opportunit y
and dropped h im into a secondplace ti e at 273 with fuzzy Zoe ller
and Mike Dona:J .
"T his was the sa me situation
as Ne w Orleans (where I won In
1988 1 - I wouldn't have p layed II
If I hadn't felt I needed It ," Beck
said
He missed the cut at the British
Open. where "I hit the ball well ,
but I don't &lt;hlnk I ca n remember
when I ever sco red as poorly as I
did last week."
Aft er missing the Brlllsh Open
cut. Beck notified the Buick Open
he would exercise his exemp t

Mets 6, Cardinals 0 - At N•· ~
York, Ma c key Sasse r linod a
tlflh -lnnln g grand s la m home run
to help Dwight Gooden. 11 -5. gain
his eigh th straigh t victory .• Jose
Ue Leon fe ll to6-ll.

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KIII\MII 01}' 10, B&amp;lllmono II. 1~1

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Sunday Kl"'ulh
York •. &lt;lr\·tland l . he
N.-w 'h rk t Or,.,bl,.d l . t ...
RoAton 1S. Dtl roh J
Tonnl• II. Tnu II

. ~·

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

"WE HAVE HEARING AIDSII
(304) 675-1244

'INNER ONlY

Balllmon'

s traight

tournamt•nts,

h8d

Mll-ukr, t. Olraro
Colllnrnbl ' · ~uUir t

~. IOl,.rbp

ro unds broken wlth a 2-ovPr 74.

Zoeller c losed a t par 72 for h is
27.1 while Donald, who mlssl'd a
15-fo ot birdie pull on lH that
would ha ve tied him for lhel ead,
finished with a 2- under 70 for hi s
273 .

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

Y IESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432 '
POMEROY, OH.
featuring IHtudly Frletl Chicken

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Padft~ Coul Ltape (A.U).

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Mllml - Wll•d &amp;.cUe Dan PldUi:

.. II'•

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Trll'l'l
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Nr.w v.n ............. ...... Js .- ...

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PIUoiMII'Itlli ............. ..... J1 41 .Ill

I

Harris survived a shaky first inning In which Detroit took a 2-0 lead
on Alan Trammell 's two-run single. The Tigers had three of their five
walks In the Inning and anotller runner reached base on second
baseman Reed's error.
'"I just didn't have the right combination In the f irst Inning ," said
Harris, who dropped a 1-0 decision at Tiger Stadium on July 19. "I was
feeling strong and then I have a te nde ncy to rush. That's bad here
because the mound has a big dropolf and you have to be deliberate.
My pitches were all over tll e place.
"Once I got In the groove the big lead put me over the hump,"
Harris continued. ''I could just challenge the hitters and say. 'Here It
Is , guys.'
"It's strange the way this game goes," he added. "I hope this Is a
sign our offense is going to get started. Somebody can run away In th e ~·"
division and maybe It will be us .''
Elsewhere in the American League, New York clubbed Cleveland
8-5 In the first game of a doubl e-header a nd 4-3 In the nightcap ,
Toronto topped Texas 10-8, Minnesota edged Oakland 6-5l n 10 innings ,
Milwaukee trimmed Chicago 9-8 In II Innings , Baltimore bounced
Kansas City 4-I and Seattle sa nk California 6-2.
Yankees 8-4, Indians 5-3 - At Cleveland, Roberto Kelly belted two
homers and knocked In five runs a nd Greg Cadaret reccrded his first
two saves of the seaso n, pacing the Yankees to their second
double-header sweep of Cleveland In three days. Alvaro Espinoza
added three RBI In the first game to help Tim Leary. 5-13, pick up the
win. Eric Plunk, 4-2. pitched three Innings of relief for the win In tlle
nightcap.
Blue Jays 10, Rangers 8 - At Toronto. Fred McGriff and Manny
Lee each knocked In three runs to power the Blue Jays. Jim Acker, the
third of four Toronto pitchers. went two and two-third Innings of
shutout relief to even his record at 2-2. John Candelaria pitched lhree
a nd one -third Innings to earn his fifth save . Reliever Craig McMurtry
fell toO-L
Twins 6, A's 5 (10 Inn.)- At Minneapoli s , Brian Harper , who
extend ed his hitting streak to an American League-leading 19 games,
s ingled hom e AI Newman from third base with none out in the lOth
inning. Rick Honeycutt, 1-2, took the loss. Rick Aguilera. 3-3. worked
two and one-third allowing one run and a h!L
Brewers 9, White Sox 8 (II Inn. )- At Ch icago, Greg Brock capped a
three-run lllh with a two-run single. Sco tt Radlnsky, 6-1. took the loss.

Paul Mirabella, 3-2, earned the win by pitching the lOth Inning . Tom
Edens garnered his first save.
Orioles 4, Royals I - AI Kansas Clly, Mo ., John Mitchell threw a
four-hitter through seven and one-third Innings and Sam Horn and Cal
Rlpken Jr . had consecutive run-scoring hils In the tlrst Inning .
Mitchell Improved to 3-3 and Gregg Olson finished for his 23rd save .
Tom Gordon Jell to 6-7_
Angels 6, Mariners 2 - At Seattle, Bill Schroeder hit two home runs
and Jim Abbott pitched seven strong Innings to e nd Seattle's
three-game winning streak. Abbott, 7-9, gave up seven hits In seven
Innings. BrlanHarvey pitched the final two Innings to record his 12th
save. Matt Young fell to 5-11.

Vinay Vermani, M.D.
Oncology /Hematology
Specializing in the Diagnoses and Treatment
of Cancer &amp; Blood Disorders

(304) 675-1759
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office Building + Suite t 1
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant , WV 25550

(!ll PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
trJ The !ami~ of proleuiono/$

JENOs
The Pillsbury Company, which supplies premium
quality food products and outstanding service to
its customers is now accepting applications for
full-time employment as a team member tn the
following areas:

• Maintenance Mechanics
• Refrigeration Technicians
• Electricians
•
Applicants working in the team environment will
have had some manufacturing expenence and
enJoy:

• Working With Others On A Team
• . Solving Problems
• Learning and Performing A
Variety Of Jobs
• Assisting and Coaching Others
Applicants should also:

• Possess High Work Standards
• Work Well With Little
Supervision
• Participate and Show Initiative
• Possess Good Cornrnunication
and Listening Skills
•
2-4 Years related experience
(Maint., Refrig. or Electrical)
• Technical School preferred
• Past experience in manufacturing environment is a plus.
The Pillsbury Company offers competitive wages
and excellent benefits.

Applications Will Be Taken
At Your Local Ohio Bureau
Employment Services Offices
JACKSON/VINTON
317 BroadUTay

PORTSMOUTH
1005 Fourth St.

GALLIPOLIS
45 Olive St.

ATHENS
246 W. State St.

CHILLICOTHE
38 Marietta Rd.

WAVERLY

c..... co

toiiiiHIII ..

.a o..-d, •ta'l
E"'

~und" Sport~

(A.U) ; opllloned OYifteldW Mollet

CalllctniiM l'lt ... a, a!Jhl
Texaa It llll...llrt, •tclll

Snltat

Transactions

PMtarab - Plltthud Ch~ oo1iracl
of elk._. Dan• BlltrdeUG from Ulelr
lktflalo of die Am,..k:• Aaooc:lldU

Ttnllllo a&amp; laltlmor!', nlpi

&lt;J

s treak of eight straight sub-70

Ho~~~~ton

4. K•a- ( 'II)' I

Mlnauo&amp;a '·Oakland

TUM

FOR JUST

Sorvod wKh whrppod potatoeo, chicken
grovy, colo otew, hot roll ond l&gt;uttor.
Sorry. no oubotKut.. except beverogo
with oddltlon.ot prlceo.

, CROW'S F

goUe rs and take a one-shot lead
over Zoel lrr .1nd two over Irwin ,
playing three and four holes
behind him, res pectively
fr wln , seeking to become th e
fir s t playpr !-;\ncP (; ;Jfy Playrr in
1978 to e nter and win three

Sr"· l"oril lt.l Molllrtld. nl~
Sl . l.oul~ al Phlllldrlphla. nllrttl
Pit lllbu rw h at ('hk•Jo. nll(ht

cn,mr•all-1).1:)1 p.m.
C'•llfonl.a (B(JII"Vt-n 1'--iJ 11 Ml•--'•
tT.,.nllt.I).IUI p.m.

tDWnal- Onlyl

the first lime In 12 years_
Beck, scor-•d nine birdies on
the first 14 r. .es to s hoot pa st 13

. 11

fhlc ..o (Petenon I·!)

PLEASANT VAUEY HOSPITAL

Jacobsen

nard Thompson won last year for

hi

'- p,,

mono (MIIIrkl.f·lJ.1:U p.m

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

Peter

(1980), Denis Watson (1984), Ken
Green (19851, Robert Wrenn
( 1987) and Scott Verplank (1988) _
Ben Crenshaw used victory ln
the 1986 Buick Open to announce
he'd recovered from a hyperactive thyroid condition while Leo-

Monlrf'aJ .
rhl&amp;ad!'lphl" ..
C' hk·..-o
Sl . l.c&gt;uh ..

Majors

~

tCon tlnued from Page 31

lt 's not impossible to make
money as a blocking tight e nd .
either. La s t year's blocking
s pecialist at tight end, Ron
Middleton . was left unprotected
a nd signed with Washington as a
Plan B free agent for a reported
signing bonus of $115,000.
Ga lbraith already has ad
justed to the professional outlook
on football, with his tough words
and his team -oriented discus s ions of the Browns' running
game. Last year, the running

winners

save.

Torfl•o t!lioUirm)'rl' t-Il) .. B.alll

game s truggled without Middleton In the lineup, exposing just
how Importa nt a run -blocking
tight e nd Is the the Cleve land
offen se.
··w e got people who can run the
ball." he sa id . "If our runn ing
ga me comes up to ou r passing
game, we are In the Super BowL
Happy days are here again . "
And as long as he has knocked
some unsuspecting linebacker on
hi s backside, Galbraith wlll be
the happiest of alL

rights and enter the tournament
on short notice.
"For the first time, I realized
you have to control the fundamentals," he said. "You don't
have control of th e ball once It
leaves the clnbhead. "
Beck wasn't exactly a pauper
prior to the tou r nament, having
won $135,379 this season. But he
stood In 73rd place on the
earnings list, far lower than his
runnerup spot of 1988 and ninth ·
place finishe s the years around
tha L
But after risi ng to winnings of
$926,817 on the strength of his
only two previous tournament
wins In 1988, the Fayetteville ,
N.C., golfer slipped to $694,087
last year and was sagging even
fu rlher this year unUI the
winner 's check of $180,000 arrived Sund ay
The Buick Open h as had 11
different winners since 1980 and
five of them were first-lime

Greg HarriS, 8-4, pitched a four-hitter through eight Innings for the
win.

Mfi'IIIJ

Beb" a.n•• ...

•-'••all

r,tau·d

111m •• ad:lwt
li~J'i17 '-·
Ml_..ta - 8fpd deftiMhe ellll

O'.W1 8ellilldlll.,.

a .. PrudKO - Ofleulw llnema•

'eflllnplaoiiOilDCfdldo ntlnmnt.

110 E.

E~n~nltt

Ave.

Beginning Immedia-tely
From 8:00A.M. - 5:00P.M.
PILLSBURY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPL:OYERIEOEIAA/M!FIVETERANS

�• 1.•. Mineral Surface

51 GALVANIZED

• lolled Roofing

sI oaa

By The Bend

ROOFING

·Green •Brown •White
·Black •Green &amp;White

1

.,

Monday, July 30, 1990
Page-7

Durham Cherry

1. Paneling
4'

Photography contest set

x 8' Sheet

26"x6'·························· ................................ss.25

GALVANIZED
CORRUGATED

J,

ROOFI Gn

'

1.

'

26" X 10' ..............................................S6.60
26'' X 12'.............................................. s7 .90

RUTLAND GO-GETTERS PLANT TREES ...:. The Rutland
G&lt;&gt;-Getters recently planted two Howerlngpplum trees donated by
Hub bards Greenhouse, In observance of Earth Day . The trees
were planted at Salem Center Grade School and Meigs Junior
High. Pictured, l·r, are Becky and Kathy WIUiams. Miranda and
B.J. Nicholson. Other members not pictured are Elizabeth
Downie, Clndl and Jon Stewart, !Wxane Williams and Jessica
Priddy.

Universal Rundle Tub Sets
1 PIECE .............. WHITE ............s189.95
2 PIECE .............. WHITE ............s259.95
5 PIECE TUB SURROUND
1TRAV ............................................$49.95
5 PIECE TUB SURROUND
2 TRAVS .........................................$56.95
36" SHOWER ........................... s219.99
32" SHOWER ..............$199.99

-.
I
'
.

,.

Concrete WorJt Products

---+~+:+~-

Wire Mesh
6"x6"x10/10
5' X 150'

84399
Jlolf

WELD WIRE MESH
Choose from Charcoal Blend,
Stale Blend, Weathered Wood
Blend. Burnt Sienna Blend

$4995

so.

ANDERSEN WINDOWS
,-

VINYL FLOORING
6'x12'
S4
1
YD ....~ P.HI.~...
• 95

$AVE AT
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

CARPET
83.99

SQ. YD.

Come home to quality.
,._.,.
I' A d

WlTII ALL ITS ENERGY

In hc"m~ months AndeN·n
lli~h Pt rtonnanrt wmduYr"'&gt; an·
l fll , rn1 1rt' rner:.;v rffJCwnt than am

~~crseo

i

n ersen,

• Whi tc

Only

ordll\ar. •lnuhk JMnt' WJ:Jdo\'.
ll rm dot·" 1\rdrN.'11 &amp; hw \ t
tlu -.. k111d ii]Jwrtonnil!lil '
t!Jt

th ·lltm~ the' '"" il&lt;·t•n n

J m W ~ l'&gt;i!h \rj.!111l ).!.1 ~

5IK.

l!rll:l

0 .....1133.80
124210 ..... 1140.35
I ?A?1 0 .....1150.1 0
1159.95

,J

PRICE INCLUDES SCREENS

'&gt;ll p1·

5IK.

l!rll:l

0 ..... 1 172.40

2831
30310 .....1 183.60
2432 .......1 147.50
2832 ....... 1155 .30

SIK

Price

RUBBER BACKED

CARPEriNG

The Atrium Door is

B)l Hot Staff

en hanCing the beauty

sass

act ually a whole
system of ideas for
of any home.
Co me m today - let us
he lp you choose lhe
1dea that's nghllor
your home.

Sq. Yd.

2842 ....... 181.55
3042 ....... 1 193.80
2846 ....... 1188.90
3046 ....... 1201.15
1

6'0 X6'8"
lentJy· 2 PIECE
Propane '!'arch Kit

•

t

~ S799

•iiiilD
•
;..

M rs . Edna Wlck£'r , Galion, wl!l
be In charge of next years
reunion.

POMEROY - Vacalion Bible
School will be held Mond ay
through Friday at 6· 30 p.m.
nighlly al Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel on Slate Roule 14 3 Call

•

GL\ssCursCosTs

A welner roast was held the

MONDAY
JACKSON - The Parenls
Advocacy lor SpeclalhStudents
will meet Monday al 7:30p.m. al
the B.J Allison Health Depart ·
men1 In Jackson. Joy Kear, a
consultant for Ohio's Chapter
One reading program will be th e
gueSI speaker. Ms Kear's topic
lor the evening will be "Left
Braln-Righl Brain" . All parents
and educators are Invited 10
attend. For more Information ,
contact 2ll6-4899 or 682 -3068

GRASS

WHITE· HI·PERFORMANCE u .. ,...,.,

Cooks for I he Sunday luncheon
were Bob and John German
Following lhe luncheon . mud
volleyball was played
Those altending the evenl
traveled from Galion, Carding
lon. Shelby, New York, Mt
Gilead, Florida. Bucyrus. Pome·
roy , Lan gsvi lle , The Plains.
Kirkersville, Pataskala, Gran
ville. and Newark

INCLUDES SCREEN
AND HARDWARE

BuyNow
And Save~

8599

·~

992 2952
REEDSVlLLE- Th ere will be

By United Press International
SWAYZE'S RECOVERY: Pa·
trick Swayze's drinking problem
almosl torpedoed his marriage
until he gave up liquor last year,
People magazine says. Swayze,
37, says he had problems In the
1980s ada piing to his fame and his
father' s death ." ! got In my head
that as an actor I had to suffer . ..
the star of "Ghost" says. "And at
the same lime I was hearing th ai.
like my father. I would have no
choice over alcohol in my life so I
decided to lind out. My falher
dldn'l get vio lent. but lik e him.
just two or three tdrlnkst would
waste mr Aller he died, I'd go up
on Mu lholland Drive ti n Los

"""

....·.

8' x 8' Sections

Shadow Box

Fence

824.95

•a!?-

~

15- Ft. Unllok•

...

__ _

~u.r;;
_....,.....,..
~:::;.'""'

::.....---=-- .....-

,..
,_.,. ='I~
.....,_......
""'!"IIIlO
.- 'O.'Q.."':: .. "' .

-_

80-FI. "-ddtar"'

Aluminum Fiberglass Roof Coating .H~~~RIL124 11
Roof &amp; Foundation Coatlng .............. §. IM.~~!I!'!.....'9w
Roof Coatlng ......................................~.!fA~I.QIL ..'9w

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will hold Its annual
picnic on Monday at 6 p.m. at the
home of Mr s Virgil Atki ns. The
group will tour the garden of Mrs.
Joe Bolin at 5 p.m . and lhe
garden of Mrs. Atkins at 6 p m .
Workshop will be conducted
usi ng the Meigs County F'alr
Flower Show schedule
TUESDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP- The
Lebanon Township Trustess will
hold their regular monthly meel·
lng on Tuesday at 7:30pm. at the
garage

Angeles l. race cars and get

crazy- pu shing lhet'dge to see II
I'd go over it and kill myse lf "
His wife ol15 yea rs, Lisa Niemi.
began going to a support group
for families of alcoho li cs but
Swayze dldn'l rein him self In
unlit one night In earlv 1989 when
Continued on pageR

Personal
news notes
Mr and Mr s William Righi ·
hou se. Pomeroy, were vlslled
recently by their daughter . Mrs.
Wilma Pack and granddaughler.
Held! , upon lhelr return from
England.
lleldl. a student at Cumberland
College, Williamsburg, Ky .. was
c hosen from the college jazz
ensemble to accompany the
co llege chora le while they toured
England, Ireland, Scotland, and
Wales .
The group performed In many
of the cathedra ls throughout the
United Kingdom.
....

~ I'E C. IAL

SUW:l lollllliAU MTINUS ._
SlWJIIlAT /SI.KloU &amp; Vf:IJIE51lo'l

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

A,IIW••II"ffHOM

. ..

Mloilll-""""ftl-eoi

Universal Rundle
Toilet Bowl and tank
White
OnI)'

A picnic and swi mming party
at the Roy and Pat Holter Farm
was enloyed recently by the
youth group of the Trinity
Church.
Attending were Ron Howell.
Morgan and Matthew, Connie
Marcum, Josh and Jessica, Su·
san Well, Ross and Ryan, Re,· .
Roland and JoAnn Wildman. Jan
Davis, Trlcla and Zach. Jan
Holter, Alyssa and Kelsey , Usa
Morris, Greg and Brad, Becky
and Nick Depoy, Trevor, Debbie

Th ere will be two place preml·
urns awarded with three place
ribbons In each class. Premiums
range from a high ol$2forrtrst to
a low of .75 cents for second.
Two special awards will be
given Including best of show and
$3 and reserve best of show and
$3. Best of show awards will be
Judged !rom all entries.
Four categories, color snapshots, 4x6 or smaller; black and
white snapshots, 4x6 or smaller;
color enlargements, 5x7 thru
9xl2, and black and white enlar·
gements, 5x7 thru 8x12, will offer
seven classes Including lands ·
cape and seascape; anbnals;
portraits and personalities; pic·
torlal. storytelling with one pic·
lure; abstracts, patterns, special
effects, etc.; nature closeups,
and mlseellaneous.
Another category, co lor snap·
shot size 4x6 or smaller. will
feature a class entltled Meigs
County Fair Happenings or pic
lures taken during the 1989 Fair

POMEROY - Picture taking
butts will have the chance to
display their work In the amateur
photography show, under the
chairmanship of Randy Houda·
shell, at the !27th annual Meigs
County Fair, Aug. 14-18.
All exhibits must be In place by
Monday, Aug. 13 for the I p.m.
judging. Purchase of a member·
ship ticket Is the only requiremen t for exhibiting In the show.
Photos are to be mounted at
least one and one half Inches on
all sides of the picture, and be
ready to hang .
Photos cannot have been exhl·
blted previously at the Meigs
Co unty Fair.
It Is not mandatory to title the
pictures or have them framed.
but all work must be the original
work of the exhibitor.
Persons who earn over half of
their Income from photography
may display but cannot compete
for ribbons and premiums.

Dorothy Smith was presented a
pin and certificate for being a 50
year member at the recent
meeting of the Racine Grange.
Earl Cross presided at fhe
meeting and officers were
elec ted.
It was noted that Mary Easter·
day has been CW A for 46 years
and Cross has befon master lor 35
years.

Cooke, John and Bethany, Dan
and Fonda Thomas, Michelle,
Danlelle, and Heather, Sally
Erwin, Tara and P.J., Julie
Spaun, Jackie Buck, Melody
Holliday, Jim Huff, Beth Mayer,
Pauline Mayer, Pat Holter, Alle e
Globokar, and Ralph Werry.
It was announced that the
church and Sunday school picnic
would be held Sunday at 3 p .m.
Each family Is to bring a covered
dish . Meat, drinks. and table
service will be provided

Chester news _____
By CLARICE ALLEN
Plans for a trip to the Mid·
dleton Doll Factory In Belpre, a
visit to the Marietta Museum,
and lunch on the Becky Thatcher,
were finalized at the July meet·
lng of the Ladles Auxiliary of the
Chester Fire Department. All
members going on the trip are to
meet at the firehouse al9 a.m. on
Wednesday . Becky Edwards,
president, opened the meeting
with praye r and pledge to the
flag. Paula Wood gave the
secretary's report and Opal
Hollon gave the treasurer's re·
port. Dues and money lor cards
was collected Refreshments
were served by Pau la Wood and
Dorothy Hawk to Erma Cleland,
Ethel Orr, Cleo Smith, Becky
Edwards. Opal Hollon, and Su ·
san Cleland
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Roush
have returned 10 their home In
Winter Haven. Fla . , after a visit
here with Mrs Jean Frederick
and Mr. and Mrs Virgil Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Will.
Phoenix. Ariz., were guests of

Racine Grange has meeting
from a white tablecover with
ca ndles, and a cake decorated
with the Grange emblem baked
by Donna Norris, and sand·
wlches. nuts , mints and drinks
were served.

Chuck Alkire Is Improving.
Annual Inspection has been
lentallvely se l for sometime In
August.

Fifty-five year membership
sea ts were presented to Laura
Circl e, Mary Easterday, Marlon
Eas terday and Earl Cross.
Re freshments were serwd

an organizational meeting on
Monday for all boys grades 9·12
playing football I hi s fall. and lor
lhelr parents, at 6 p.m . In the
Eastern High School cafeteria.

People in the news _ __

I)IJI'l .O.U0US1 SUJ'EH BUV

¥rtli.A

Church picnic, party held

Mr . and Mr s Clayton Allen on
Monday and Tuesday
Burt and Ruby Landers and
Ellen Mason, all of Los Angeles,
Calli. were guests of Bonnie
Landers for several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Karr and
daughters, have returned home

alter a weeks visit with her
brother Roy Christy.
Mr and Mrs E ldon Lee Will,
Hermitage , Tn., were guests of
his cousins Clarice and Clayton
Allen, Friday and Saturday.
They all called on Mr . and Mrs .
John Bailey, Flatwoods Road,
and Mr. and Mrs . William Will.
Texas Road.
Mr . and Mrss . Homer Biggs,
Unionport . were w!'ekend guests
of Bonnie Landers a nd altended
the Biggs reunion.
The word " nickname" Is de·
rived from the Middle English
word "ekename" (literally "ad·
dltlonal name"! and picked up
the Initial' 'n'' from the Indefinite
article "an" lhat often preceded
it .

Community calendar

8&amp;9,Q.YD.

HlGH·PERFORMANCE

The fourth German family
reunion was held recently at I he
Bob and Jodi German shelter
house near the log cabin home In
Newark.
Five children ol the late Mr
and Mrs . Howard German and
their spouses a !tended the even I
along with grandchildren and
greal grandchildren. A lola) of 75
attended.

3/8" x 20' Rebar.............)2.25
1/2" x 20' Rebar... 53.25

CARPEnNG

-

German reunion held recently

night before the reunion

BROWN &amp;GRAY 12' WIDE

The Daily Sentinel

84

446 •4524
&lt; i~

)

•"'tff {

STEPHANIE CARSON

Carson birth
is announced
Roger and Linda Carson. Ml·
no!, N.D .. are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Stephanie
Nicole, on June 14 at Trinity
Hospital In Minot, N.D.
Grandparents are Russ and
Pal Carson, Middleport and
~nhart and VI Mlndt, Minot.
N.D.
Caraon has a son, David Alan
C.1'11011, Denver, Colo.

1

,',f' :

~~P~•I

JENO~.
The Pillsbury Company, which supplies premium
quality food products and outstanding service to
its customers IS now accepting applications for
full - time employment as a team memb er 1n the
following areas:

•
•
•
•

Pizza Processing
Frozen Vegetable Processing
Distribution
Maintenance

Applicants working in the team environment will
preferrably have had some manufacturing experience and enjoy:

• Working With Others On A Tearn
• Solving Problems
• Learning and Performing A
Variety Of Jobs
• Assisting and Coaching Others
Applicants should also:

• Possess High Work Standards
• Work Well With Little
Supervision
• Part:icipat:e and Sho"" lnit:iative
• Possess Good Communication
and Listening Skills
The Pillsbury Company offers competitive wages
and excellent benefits.

' Applicat:ions Will Be Taken
At: Your Local Ohio Bureau
Employment Services Offices

S2 15 BAAGAIN MJTUEES SAT/SUN &amp; WU.
BARGAIN Ill"" T\J[SilAf

JACKSON/VINTON

PORTSMOUTH

,...--.,:';;"'::,;"'.:..;
'""';;;,''I ~--.

317 Broadway

1005 Fo.urth St.

GALLIPOLIS
45 Olive St.

ATHENS
246 W. State St.

CHILLICOTHE
38 Marietta Rd.

WAVERLY
110 E. Emmitt Ave.

Beginning lanDlediately
From 8:00A.M. - 5 P.M.
PILLSBURY IS AN .£QUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYEAIEOEIAAIM/F/VETERANS

.

'·

'

)

�Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, July 30, 1990

•

•

Recent AIDS dentist case ratses concerns about
By REBECCA KOLBERG
UPI Science Writer
WASHINGTON The first
possible case of a medical
worker infecting a patient with
the deadly AIDS virus has given
.Americans yet another reason to
:worry when they visit the dentist
.or doctor and has rekindled
·debate about how best to ensure
patient safety.
Last week the federal Center s
tor Disease Control reported a
young woman apparently was
.infected with the AIDS·causing
:human immunodeficiency virus,
- or HIV, by her dentist during a
surgical procedure to remove
two teeth.
The dentis t, who was dlag·
11osed with acquired Immune
aertcle n cy syndrome three
months before the operation, did
not tell the patient t ha t he was
Infected with HIV. He was
. w earing both gloves and a mask,
and neither he nor the patient
recall him bleeding during the
tooth extraction.
The report attracted a flood of
publicity and provided people
who ar e afraid of going to the
dentist with an additional. albeit
ra ther farfetched, excu S€ to shun
tooth care.
· Enid Neidl e, director of sc ien ·
tlflc a ffairs for t he American
Dental Association. called th e
CDC r epor t i ncom plete and
" kooky," saying she ca n not
understand how th e patient was
Infected by the denti st.
"People should not avo id t he
dentist and let th eir teeth rot
because of a freak accident that
15 not well und er stood," said
Neldle, whoS€ gr oup Friday said
some dentists were reporting
pat ients ca nc ellin g ap poin t·
m en ts after hear in g of the CDC
report .
No previous cases of a dentist
or any other type of health ca re
worker tra n slm itt ing the AIDS
v irus to a patient has b een
:brought to the atte ntion of the
CDC since A rDS was first recog·
nized In 1981.
Aoout 140,000 AIDS cases aoout 5,300 among hea lth care
workers- have been reported in
the United Sta tes over the pa st 10
years. so the r isk of a he al th
·worker Infecti ng a patient ··mu st
be awfully sma ll. " sa id Dr .
Haro ld Ja ffe of the CDC.

A r ecen t study In the Journal of
the American Medical Assocla ·
ilon found a Tennessee surgeon
who died of A rDS apparen tly did
not infect any of aoout 2.000
pa ti ent s upon whom he operated

while Infected.
But the possibility that the
dentist Infected his patient has
prompted the CDC to scheduled
an Aug. IJ.I4 meeting to review
Its guidelines for patient care by
health workers Infected with
HIV.
Th e CDC now recommends
that health care workers Infect ed
with HIV use their judgment In
deciding what procedures they
can safely perform. The agency
has no guldellnes on whether
health care workers with AIDS
should tell patients of their
condition.
The American Medic al Associ ·
allan and the American Dental
Association have similar policies
tha t leave condu ct up to t he
discre tion of HIV·Infec ted doc ~
tors or dentists .
" I'm a littl e surpriS€d al t he
sort of fudging, hemming and
hawing and tap-dancing going on
aoout this subject. The answers

are very clear," said Arthur
Caplan, director of the blamed! ·
cal ethics center at the Unlver·
slty of Minnesota In Mlnneapolls.
Like any person who has been
Involved In behavior at high risk
of HIV Infection, health care
workers who think they are In a
hig h· risk group should be tested
and counseled, Caplan sai d.
High· risk ac tivities incl ude mul
tiple sex partner s, intravenou s
drug u se and working with blood
products.
Hea lth workers who tes t HIV
pos itive should no t take part in
any medical procedure th a t
could Involve the exchange of
blood or other bodily fluids with a
patient, Caplan sa id . Procedures
that fall Int o that category
In cl ud e orthopedic surgery,
some obstet ric procedures and
some dental work tha t in vo lves a
medical professional working
with sharp Instruments ma i nly
by "feel" rath er than by sight.
Other medical activities, suc h
as a pediatrician examining a
ch ild. a surgeon performing an
eye operation or a psychiatri st
co unseling a patient , pose virtu ·
ally no risk, he added.
"H eal th care workers do not
have an ethical obligation to tell
their patients If they are Infected
with HIV, but t hey do have an
ethical obligation not to do
anything to put their patients at
risk ," said George Annas, dlrec
tor of the Law, Medicine and
Ethics program at Boston U n l·
versi f y School of Medicine.
Annas said he thinks ooth
HIV po s itive health care
workers and H IV-posltlve pa

People in the news...
he t ras hed a hotel room He quit
drinking th e next day.
HAWKING SPLITS: British
physici st Stephen Hawking, con ·
sl dered one of the greatest minds

Continu ed from pa ge 7

Frederick Von Anhalt, took pll ~
lows. a silk co mforter. diet
drinks and tee c ream to her ce l l
to help her serve her time .

,.

Jane. h is wife of 25 years.
apparen tly for re l iRious reasons.
of "A B rief
has a nerve
him to spe nd
a wheelchair

and had been cared for by J ane
for most of t hei r ma rri age but
now he has moved to an apa rtm ent in Cambridge, where he
has full · tlme nursing ca r e. The
London Su nday Co rrespond ent
newspaper quoted a f orm er
st ud enl and univer sity lec lurrr
as sayi ng religous differences
were responsible . "The split
partly came aoout throug h r eli
gous di fferences." th e unldenti ·
fled lectu r er sa id. ··she is a
comm i tted Chnslla n and as he
Increasi ng ly beca m e interes ted
In scientific ra ther than r eligous
ex plana tio ns. It became more
difficult for th em . They are still
t.he bes t of friends but In those
condi tion s you ca n't expect peo·

pie to havP a normal marr\Pd
life. "
ABZUG 'S GRIEF: Feminist
Bella i\hzug says the 3 12 years
since her hu sband . Marlin , d ied
have been lhP most difficult of
her life. " I s till have this
rremendous pain, .. she says In
the premier issue of the revi ved
Ms. magazine. "And the guilt
that I wasn't there when he died
... 1 kept c r y ing, 'Whal did I do''
Why w as I campaigning In
ti n New York
Westches ter
stale\ ? Why d id I ru n for
Congress aga tn •"' Abzug. whose
Ms. article Is part of a book she Is
writing. refer s to her ma rriage
as "42 yea r s of grea tness" and
can"t picture herself with anyone
else. "People say, 'Don't you
think It's tim e you had a love
affair ?"' she writes . " It doesn't
relate to me." Abzug says Martin
saw a side of her that the public
never did. '"My reputation Is thai
of an extremely Independent
woman and I am," she says.
·' But was dependent , clearly, on
Martln. He would embrace me In
his furry chest and and warm
heart and ·protect me from the
meanness one experiences In the
kind of life I lead. "

Quirks in the news... _ _ __
Pet rooster
helps heart patient
SEBRING, Fla. IU PII
Co unty officials are considering
awarding a spec ia l zoning ex~
emption to a heart pa tient whose
doctor says the man has an
emotional attachment to a pet

rooster.
A Highland County zo ning
Inspector re cently c ited Ernie
Shinn and his wife, Flo , for
keeping the rooster at their
mobile home. The Inspector said
the zoning code prohibits farm
animals in are-as zo n ed
resid ential.
But the Shlnns contend tha t
IB·month·old Chickle·Bid , an
Easter gi ft last year. Is therapy
fo r 66 ~year ·old Ernie . They've
taug ht the r ooster to eat h is
favo rit e meal -scra mbled eggs
- of f a plate and to dr in k out of a

gla ss
Doc tor s at th e Veterans Affairs
Medi ca l Cen ter In Miami agree
with the Shlnns. They said the
co unty should not force Shinn to
give up his pet rooster beca uS€
that would upset him. And tha t's
the las t thing they wantfor Shinn,
who underwent heart bypass

s urgery in Sept ember.
"Seen i n cli nic tod ay," res I·
dent phy sic ian Mu ha mmed Nlazi
scribbl ed on a prescription pad
after examin ing Shinn Thu rsday .
" It appears pat ient has emo·
tiona! attachment with rooster.
!He! will benefit medically If pe t
Is left with him ..
The doc tors co nc erns are r eal ,
Nlazl told the Tampa Tribune in a
stor y appea rin g 1n Sa turday's

editi ons.
" Wh en 1Shlnn1 was in here
yesterday he t old me he has been
feel ing pain w hen he thinks aoou t
losin g the rooster. " N l azi sa id .
"We stro ngly urge that heart
patient s not be exposed to emO·

Gabor planned to head to
Europe after getttlng oul of jail
Monday . She was to be released
Monday after serving 72 hours In
the EI Segundo, Call1.. jail for
alapplng a Beverly Hills cop last
year and her husband , .Prlaee

ca ller has offered to help the
co uple hire a legal eagle In case It
co m es to a courtroom cockfigh t
with the county.

CHRIST
IN AUGUST
AT THE

communist era nam es back in
w hat Is ooth a r et urn to ancient
Russian roots and a t urn ing away
f rom communist id eo logy
Gor ky 's name graced an entire
cit y alter hi s death , bu t this year
the Indu strial cit y on the Volga
got back Its t radi tiona l nam e or
Nlzhny Novgorod. Soviet dlss l ~
dent Andrei Sa kha rov wa s sent
Into exile In the ci ty from 1979 to

20°/o
ON NEW CHRISTMAS
ENTIRE STOCK OF

.,

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'11~~~ ' /

---... ~ \!&gt; ~
I
"&gt;.
'(J
~ \~ \\ \~)'.;&gt;

. ./

fil,•

I!)

OO

PRICE

~ ~~

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~-_ . . ~. ! .!
.•

I

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50°/o

SEPT. 6TH- 1:30 P.M.

SUNDAY PAPER

- 2 00 PM FRIDA"'!'

Gall11 Counly

Me•g• Coun1y

A ru Code 6 14

Area Code 614

M11 on Co W"V
Area Code 304

446 - GallipOIII

992 -- Mtddlup ort

67!l - Pt Pleeunt

FABRIC SHOP

256 - Guvan 01s1

247 - letan Fell $

64] - A rib&lt; I 0&lt;51

949 - Ractne
742 - Autland
667 - Cooh.. ~le

ChM1fH

B43 - P or llend

Sale iuued out of the Common Plea~ Court of Meigt
County. Ohio. in the case of
Diamond Savings S. Loan
Company. Plaintiff. 111 . Roben W. Crow , eta! .. Defendanti. upon Judgment therein rendered . baing C11ae No .
90-C V-07 in said Coun. I
will offer for sale at the front
door of the Courthou 18 in
Pom&amp;toy . Meigs County .
Ohio, on the 24th d11y of Augull. t990 . at 10 :00 A.M ..
the following Ianda and tenem&amp;ntt
foc•ted at 2273
Seventh Street. Syracuse .
Ohio 46779 . A comoletale ·
gal description of the real
estate It as follows .
Situete in One Hundred
Acre lot Number 297. Town
2 . Range 12. Sutton Township. Village of Syracuse .
MBigs County. State of Ohio
and being mOfe fully describtd 11 followt
Commencing at a point in
the southweat corner of lot
Number 64 of Carleton ' 1
Second Addition to Syracuse as recorded in Plat
Book 2. Pago 36 in thereco rds of tho Meigs County

1986 .

THE 1990

Recorder's

30°/o OFF

896 - Letar1
937 - Bulfalo

LEATHER TENNIS SHOES

30°/o OFF

210 EAST MAIN

LY SHOES

992-6254

POIEIOY'

31 32 33 34 JS
36 -

Homes lor Slit:
Mobtle Homn lor Safe
Farms lor S.1le
Business Butldmgs
lou &amp; Aetuga
Rul E11a1e Wante d

Office.

47 - Wtnted 10 Rent
48 - Eqo.upmentlor Rent
49 - For le• e

said

and the exilling southerly
right of way line of Seventh
Street; thence S. 88 deg .
00' 00" E. along the gran·
tor's north property lin a end
the exittlng southerly right
of way line of Seventh
Street, 98.60 feet to an iron
pin; thence S. Z deg . 00 '
00" W. along a fine. 100.00
teet to the point of beginning end containing 0 . 226
acres .
Subject to all legal night ·
ways end e11ernent1 of record.
E )IICeptlng therefrom, that
portion ot the r•l ettate conlleyed by deed recorded In
Volume 275, Page 829 of
the Meig1 County Deed Re cords.
The real Mtate above detcribed is bounded on the
north by 7th StrMt. on the
lOuth by 1 1&amp;' eRey. lito
known as Been Alley; there
ere no ltrHts bouncing the
property on the e•t tnd

-·

Premlttt known 11 : 2273
Seventh StrMt. Syrecu ...
Ohio 45779.
The rul 11t1t1 hal been
HtiQned Auditor' 1 Ptrcel
Numbo&lt; 20-00115
S•id rut .. tete '' aubiecr
to acc:rued 1910 reel •tete

POMEROY - N1ce n01gh·
borhood, 4 bedroom home.
shd1 ng glass doors 1n liVIng
room. oak lnm woodwor~
carp6:mg, a1r conditiom ng.
apt over gar age lor rent al or
workshop. and mu ch more
$4 2.900.00
RACINE - Ran ch hom e
w1lh 3 bedrooms. I ~ bath.
carpetm&amp; and 2 car garage.
Slltmg oo 12+ acres.
Woodburner lo supplemenl
heat and sprmg avarlable
$28 ,900 00
RACINE- LEBANON !OWN·
SHIP - 4 acres ol vacant
land. 12.000 00
IIIDDLEPORI - N1ce star·
ter home lor a young couple
Some remodeling completed 3 be d1ooms and I
bath. fimsh rt the way you
want. 120.000 00

•

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

PORTlAND - Approx 8
acres. two attached mobil e
homes. undersh1n~ed root.
3 bedroom s and bath. BUlK
on ut111ty room. 30x30 stor·
age buildin&amp; 116. 500 00

205 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992 -2886 / HOME 992 -5692
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER
RUTLAND - Smith Run Road - Appr ox. one acre of co ol.
green lawn or grow your own vegelables Hasa well kept mo·
b1ie ho me w1th two bedrooms 1n good condit1on. Front deck.
Just S13,500
MIODLEPDRT - A bar ga~n ol a home - A I~ story home
w~h 3 rooms up and 3 '•om s down. Carport. part basemen!.
equ1pped krt chen. Greal slarter home or rental home
$8,000

SALEM CENIER - Amce 3
bedroom
Shun
mobile
home, 14x70 wlhattached
family room. Electric heat
pump plus co~ combu!lion
slave EQ Uipped krtchen
Storage buildtn\l'. IJ(Chard
and grape arbor. $19,500.
HENRY E CLELAND
992 ·6191
Jean Trussell ... 992o266C
Mae ~ upp .. ...... 94H2 51
JO ~ill ........... 985-4466
Office .............. 992·2259
OUR SALES VOLUME ~AS
BEEN GOOD AND WE STill
HAVE BUYERS lOOkiNG
FOR MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT TO
SELL
CALL ClELAND
0

RUTLAND - Smith Run Rd. - Th1s d1gmfied country resi·
den c e~s a p1cturesoue sen10 g w1th a redwood home that srts
way back hom the road Has a dreamy pecan krtchen, cathedral ceiling in spacious ~ving room wrth lireplace. The counlry ~zed lamily room also has a fireplace, and there are lwo
baths. This 125 acre !arm is set up for beet cattla It has a
l•&amp;e metal blrn and olher oulbmldtngs and slock pondt
Musl see to belia&lt;e.
$140,000

992-21 ss

LANGSVIllE - 1room homewlh 4 bedrooms, dinin1room,
1nd 1 &amp;i11111it living room. Also inc:ludtiS a store buWdin, IR

efficiency lpll'lnt1Rllat118 and lpprox. one 10'8. Ha11n

income of $44D.OO a month.

WE NEED LISTINGS
l

Only! $25,000

REALTY TODAY!!!

We tie.. Llatl•t•l
1990 Ohio Houaing
laaua N- Avellellla.

FIXED RATE 7.711%
1 at yr., 8.211%
through 301h yr. Cell
Claltnd RHity today.
Wt wHI htlp you find
• qutltfltd home

from our txlatlng
invent

SEARS
788 N. 2nd

.DDLIPORT

992-2

znoR

TUCTOIS &amp; lOADEIS
MOWEIS, UKES
AND TEDDERS

76 - Boau &amp; Motor• for Sale

Models of Farm

Machinery

77 -- Au to Repilll
7 8 - Camping Equ1pmen1

79 - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

IUliANO, OHIO
6~ 19·'90

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING
OFfERS 2 LOCAnONS TO SUVE YOU, _,

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY , OHIO: Rt . 60 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY : 9 o.m .· 7 p.m . 7 Days
ALBANY : 10 a.m · 6 p.m. 6 Days, Closed Sunday

PAYING AS OF TODAY. MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90¢ per lb .;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans, 35¢ per lb .
Clean Auto Radiators, 40¢ per lb.

PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY
MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742 -2455

Servtces

WE BUY All NON FERROUS SCRAP. BATTERIES.

qcADOPTIONSpoolal
laml\y
..,.. to glw your babr ond uo
1 chance. C.U oollid ""71)1.352.
1656. Mary Ellyn and Chuck.
Rile AkJ Coupon U .OO off any
new or tr~~nltlrrtd prnc:ripllon.
All• Aid guarante• the lowest
pr1co on ol -rtotlonl. Wo
will beat any compeihcn price.
See your local Rite Akl ptw.
maelst tor dltalltl. Not ftlld -on
tnnafwt trom oUw Alta Aide.
Good o1 Point Plouant,
Pon~e~oy, 0111\poUt Ale A~
ExplrM il1190. MUit Pre.ent
Coupon
Si ngles Information tnd a

mt-

ntrlecl option tor rtndllllf •
pt~ltner.

HMI'1NI:reh: P. 0 . -.ox

1043, Gallpollo, OH 45t31.

·raking aurwy of Mnon County
Aur111 ~ needlnQ ,.gUlar
truh lic:kup. Wrhe Hartey ltar~ . ~- 2 Box t2, Leon, WV

4

Glv811Wl1y

6

Lost&amp; Found

STARTERS . TRANSMISSIONS. ALTERNATORS . ETC .

n.-....,

992°6114

I mo.

61 - Homelmpr oVI menll
82 - Piumbing &amp; He«ing

83- flCI'olt1ing

a.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

84 - Eiactric.l
Refriger11io n
85 -0en•tl folaultng
86 - Mobile Home Rep•;,
8? - Uptwllnerv

ted by us. Your invotvement
is encoura~ed .
CRA STATEMENT
AVAILABLE
You may obt1in our cur·
rent CA A 1t1tement tor this
community In thl1 offlce.
You may also 180d tigned,
written commenttlbout our
CRA stetement of our ptrtormanct In helping to mHt

MIDDLEPORT - Remod·
eled home 3 bedrooms.
basement. small yard wrth
pr•acy lence Ni ce Iron! srt ·
lmg porch PR ICEO 10
SELU 1 PRICE REOUCE011
$19 900.00

3 Announcements

INSTALLATION

V8So3S61

Repair All Makes &amp;

communlty credit needl to :
Joe Ehlson. Prnklent II
CEO. Tha Paoplao Bank of
Point PleaMt. Mason and
New Haven, 2212 Jeckaon
Avenue. Point
pteeunt.
Waot Virginia. 25560; and
to the Regional Dlr.ctor ot
the Federel Deposit lnaurence Corpofltlon. loceted at
Marqul1 One Tower, 246
P11chtree Center Awnue.
Atlanto. Georgia. 30303
Your lenM. toc.ether with
any retponll by Ul. may be
made public.
REVIEW OF FILES
You mey look at 1 fileoflll
Mgned, written commentt
received by Ul wtthln the
pelt two years. any rat·
ponan we have mede ta the
comment•. end Ill CRA ala·
temenu in effect during the
pMt two yean at our main
office l"""tod at 2212 Jok·
eon Avenue, Point Plea ant.
Wut Virginia. 26550
You may ask to look at any
comment• reoetved by the
Region81 Office of the Fe deral D.eposh
lnturence
Corporetion et Marqula One
Tower, 2415 Peachtree Can Ariantlll ,
ter
Avenue.
Georgia. 30303 . The telephone number It (404) 52&amp; 0308.
You mtv alto requeat
from the Federal Dapoalt ln turance Corporation. &amp;&amp;0
17th Street NW , Wathing- '
ton, DC , 20429. an an nouncement of application•
covered by the CRA filed
wl1h the FDIC.
" Peopln Bank " Is the
name we Ute in our advertisIng, lltereture. etc ..
and
throughout thi1 IUI1ement
the name, Peopln Bank. It

POMEROY, 0 .
992·2259

=.::;::;f PROFESSIO

I.

PubliC NotiCB

E. M•m

Announcements

I0/30/'8911n

Public Notice

601

FREE
ESTIMATES

POMEIOY; OHIO

76 - Auto Perts &amp; Acceuori•

7 -20-1 mo

FENCING

·Aaast Fnun Post Office

7 1 AutOI for Sale
72 - Truckl for S• le
73 - Vens &amp; 411VD"s
7 4 - Motorcvcleli

for Rent

46 - Spac e tor Renl

~92 -5335 or

Farm Equ1pmem

Transporl alion

emmma

41 - Houses

W.- Guarantet" Your Satisfartion
JOSEPH 0 . JACKS

FREE ESTIMATES

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

ta Buy
6 3 - l t11estodc
64 - HIV &amp; Grain
66 - S1ed &amp; Ferttl1.1er

Real Eslale

We Soy.

7 -23·1 mo . pd .

62 - Wante~

to Lo1n

44 - .Apertment for Aen1

Real Estate General

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

HOOD F

e 1-

23 - Proftllhont l Strv•ces

43 - flrm• tor Rani

MEN'S FLORSHEIM WING TIPS

BOYS &amp; GIRLS L.A. GEAR

&amp; Ltveslock

21 - Butmeu Opportunrt v

42 - Moblle Momes for Rem

REGULAR PRICE 148.99

20°/o OFF

Situafion W1n1ed
tnsurance
Bulmen Tr1rnrng
Schook &amp; lntHut ti OI"I
Rad10. TV &amp; CB Repa~r
17 - MrsceUan80ul
18 - Wtnted To Do

773 - Muon
882 - New Ha11 en

point also being on the existing easterly right of way line till I I.
REAL
ESTATE
APof College Street: thence N.
2 deg. 00' 00' ' E. along the PRAISED AT: e11.000.00
existing easterly right of way The real estate cannot be
line of College Street end 1ofd tor leu than two· third•
the west line of said lot the appraised value.
TERMS OF SAlE' Cooh
Number 54 . 116.00 feet to
an iron pin in the grantor ' s on delivery of deed
James M . Soul1by .
toutheast property co rner
SheriH of Meigs County
and the existing northerly
right of way Hne of a fifteen 171 23. 30: IBI 6. Jtc
foot alley: thence N. 88 deg .
oo· 00 " W. along the gran ·
tor"saouth property lint! and
PubliC NotiCB
the existing northerly right
of way line of a tlheen foot
COMMUNITY
alley. 98.50 teet to an iron
REINVESTMENT ACT
pin and the real point of beNOTICE
ginning tor the land het'ein
The Community Rtln\ltSt ·
dMcribed; thence N 88 ment Act ICRAI require• the
deg_ 00'00 " W . continuing FDIC to evaluate The Peo·
along said line. 98 .60 feetto pin 8ant1 of Point Pleaunt,
an iron pin the grantor' • Mnott end New Htven' 1
1outhwe11 property corner: performance In helping to
thence N. 2 deg . 00' 00" E meet the credit needs of this
tlong the grantor's west communtty, and to t1ke thlt
property line. 100 .00 feet t o evaluation
into account
en iron pin the grantor's when the FDIC dedd11 on
northwest property corner certein application• submit -

HUSH PUPPY
BODY SHOES

ALL OTHERS

12 13 14 16 16 -

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SAlE
By virtue of an Order of

992-2284

ONLY

Farm Suuolir.s

Servtt:es

676 - Appl • Groul!

985

Public Notice

POMEROY

BlACK &amp; WINE

Emplovnwnl

458 - leon

Pomtroy

J88 - "V1nton
245-RIO Grand e

tht ResuJh Fast

LADIES

250/0
/4 OFF

5 4 - Milc. Merchtnd11e
56 - Building Suppl ll!lll
~6 - Peu for Sti ll
57 - Mulicellnsnllments
58 - F ru lll &amp; Veglltablfll
59 - For Sale 01 Trtde

9 - Wanted 10 Buy

What

36 YRS . EXPERIENCE

WASHUIS-1100 up
ORYERS-$69 up
REFRIGIRAIORS-1!00 up ,
RANGES-Gos-Eitt.- $125 up
FREIZIRS-$125 up
IICitO OVENS-$79 up

53 - Antiquea

1 - Yard S.1le (ptad on advan ce!

45 - furnrstled Room•

50°/o OFF

TAUPE AND BLACK
N·M·W

- 2 .00 PM YV£0NESOAY
- 2 00 P.M THURSDAY

200PM MONDAY

•

SUMMER
PURSES

OFF

THURSDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

(CRAFTS AND ETC .... )

SHOES

TENNIS, DRESS &amp;
CASUAL

- 2 00 PM TUESDA't'

REGISTER FOR SEWING SEMINAR

GROUP OF
)

-

379 - Walnut

FAMILY

\il. \\ \ \ \ ~

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

367 - Chesh~~e

AT
HOOD

/ W,
\, ·\'\.\
\~ ·~·
~'"')~-\$
J
,

.

- 11 .00 AM S.ATURDA't'

We Soy What We do. We Do

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodeling

Drapes

614-992-2328

Tufrinfl

90 DAY WAHANTY

82 - Sparling Good1

8 - Publ1c Safe &amp; Aut;tion

foUt'Ju·inf!. rriPphon e exchnrl/{f'L.

attornev l o inves tigate whether
ao exem ption could be grant ed
the Sh lnn s and Chlckie·B ld .
"I think if a doctor is willing to
say it' s the ra peu ti c, he should be
allow ed to keep tt ," Su mmers
said .
Flo Shinn sa id an anonymous

~

DAY DEFORE PUBLICA.TION

MONDAY P.t&gt;.PER

C u slom

USED APPUANCES

5 1 - Houaahold Good11

4 - Givuwa.,.
~ - Happv A.d1
6 - loll and Found

22 - Mon~

20°/o OFF

11 0 WEST MAIN

2 - ln Mem orv
J - Annouce ment s

C/assifit&gt;d paf!.e.l corer rh1•

SALE PRICED

OF FABRIC

c011

lihijUIHhil

QUILTER'S CAUCO

1/2

Merchandise

1- C.,d ot Th.,-.ks

1 1 Melp Wan1ed

PRINTS &amp; PANELS

LARGE TABLE

Annou nee men Is

.

cept -:- cl•~fiod display. Business Ca rd and legal no11cesl
Wtll 1110 appear in the Pt Pl•••nt Reljliatl• 1nd the GaU1
polls Dally Tribune. reachmg ovet 18.000 homes
COPY DEADLINE -

Hand

Rote
ov,r 15 Wo1;
54 .00
$6.00
. 30
$9.00
. 4~
etJ.oo
.eo
$1 .30/ dey
.05 / day

lte

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·7762

UPHOlSTERY

hw ear.h rt..., a• Mparet• •ds

• A class rl1ed actvltr1 1tflmll:lf11 plac;ed m The 011ly Sent mel (tu

SAVE

\1

Ret• ••• for con•cutr.re run I. broken up dey I will be chtrged

• 7 pomt l1ne 1ype onlv uted
"Sentinel is not responsible tor errors 1f'ler tu sl diP( (Check
lor eu or1 lu s t d-v •d •urn'" p1pert Cell befo•• 2 00 p m
d._. at1e. pubhca110n 10 mike correction
"Ads that must be petd in tdvtnce are
C.1rd ol Than ks
H1ppy Ad1
In Memo r•am
Yard Sties

Count y Commlsstone r Arc h
Summers h as asked the cou nt y

.
1

\

3 d~s at no ch•ge

"Pr ice o f ld for all capi1allfltten 1a double pr1c11 o f .1d

40°/o OFF

8

paid
"R•c-• $ 60 dttcourn tor adl IUI•d on edllence
"Free ads - Giweawav &amp;rid Found eds und41'! 15 wo1d1 w•ll be

Celehrate Christmas
In August

Words
16
15
t5
t•
15

to
Monthly

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIE S
"Adt outs•de Me1Q1 , Ga1!1a Of M110r1 co untiOi must be pre

IN POMEROY
STARTS AUGUST 1st

SUMMER
FABRIC
CLEARANCE

Days
,
3

8 A.M. unfil NOON SATURDAY

'

FABRIC SHOP

. .

·i\\ei'M~

RATES

TO PLAC~ AN AD CALL 992 ° 21 S6
MONDAY thru fRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

Is Your Roof Ready for Another Yeor of
and Snow?
Now's The Time to find Out .

::\~

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

IUn

Gorky Street gets
old name back
MOSCOW iUPI) Gorky
Street, Moscow 's main thor ough·
f ar e and the very symoo l of the
Soviet era, has been given b ack
Its ancient name of Tverskaya
Street , the gover nment new s·
paper Izvestia reported .
Tverskaya Street was r e·
nam ed Gorky In 1932 In honor of
the Soviet writer Maxim Gorky
as part of a wholesale renaming
of ancient ci ties and streets afte r
communist heroes. With Its f a~
shionable shops , Gorky Street
ca m e to symbolizP thP new Sovi et
state .
But th e Moscow City Soviet, or
cit y council, now con trolled by
non·communlst s and led by w
forming liberal Mayor Gavrill
Popov , restored the 15th ·century
na me of Tverskaya to the cap! ·
tal 's main thoroughfare. Izvestia
report ed Sa turday.
Dozens of other st reet s and
squa res In Mo scow wtll almost
cer t ain l y ge t th eir pre ·

Business Services

Classifie

1ional stress."

W ZSA 'S BARD TIME: Zlla

z.a

Although a health wor ker who
reveals that he or she Is HIV
Infected faces a real threat of
losing his or her job or medical
practice, Annas said he thinks
most health workers would take
that difficult step.
"The last thing you would want
to do Is spread thevlruslfyouare
a health car e professional. It
goes against everything you have
been taught," h e said.

p...;..;.._____________________..,

of our time . has separate d from

Hawking, au thor
History of Time."
disease tha t f orces
most of his time In

!Ients should notify other partie!·
pants In bloody medical procedures aoout their HIV status.
"J us t to play fair, both sides
should operate on the same
rul es," the lawyer said.
Annas and Caplan agreed that
current conduct guidelines lor
HIV·Infected medical workers
are too vague and precautions to
protect patients should be spelled
out more cl ear ly.

:onday·
.........
- .. . .July
. .30.
. .1990
..........................
~.m•••~. .M~::~=:~O:oo:_
______________~~----~--O~Siy~&amp;m--i_na__~_~_a__
9

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•Mobile ,..ome

PA!!•
• Mobile Horn&lt;!'
RPnlbls
•Lob RenJals

Now"- hilt
"Free

Estimates"

Pomeroy, Ohio

4-16-16-lln

•New Homes
•Garages

SER~ICE

LINDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

Fomalo
21

Ta.. the pain out of
pointing.
let us do il for you.
VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCEI

OUTDOOR POWEI

FOREVER BIONI
TANNING

S~LE

NOW OPEII

Push Mo•ors &amp;
Riding Mo•ors· lwin C.l.
Repair All Matos &amp; llodols of

Call Now To Make
Appointment

Olain Slws 111d lawn IIDM!!"s.
Saw Chains for Sala
PICKUP &amp; DIIIVIRT

SPECI~L

30 Sessions-530
(o.

6-19.' 90-i

~~

CHESTER, OHIO

CUSTOM BUll T

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

RACINE, OHIO

IUliANO, OHIO

d

6-71- ' 90-1-

SHRUB &amp; TREE
DIM and

Reasonable Prim"

PH.

949-2801
or Res. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

985-4422

1· 11 -90tln

4· 16-86-~n

Doyo 114,._0 Evontngo.

1111 GMC 7000 Cheat11 A.tle,
gu, &amp;12. 13-\12 ft. tlumlnum

~

dump ,.-..,.. hoyst truck.

1880 1 ...,.., ton ehwrotM , 4
wheel*fw; , . . s.-10. Ilk• new,
114 251 1101.

1111 Toyota. •••· Power ....,.
1ng. Nloo. $1.- 1,._3200.

liM Dodgo pickuP. good condl·
lion. ... mlloogo. $3200. ••
tr.dl lor car of equtl nlu.. t142!11-1251

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Exc.
condL $7~&gt;U;
Ahlmlnum Topper, tu t t-ord
- · good eood, $200 . .,• .
446-1251.

1811 Font Ranger, S-TX, cxc1 _s

opel,

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VICinity

\2,3. Clo4 hoo, boyo,
glrfa, _ICfuh. chi.Jra, 2 Mater

Pick Up.

c.rpon 1851. A~ust 1-2..3_Rtln

Aaau F,... Post Offlco

*· P_.,

217 l.
POIIIIOY, 01110

316/'90/tfn

' ·" ,,...

I :CIII-6:00.

1&gt;0arc11., oddllenda. 30111 NNce

992oS33S or 91S o3S61

-

Aug. 1-1 Shaftert. 4 mil• SA
141." Old batt._, old 11 recont..

AU MAlES
Bring It In Or W1

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Q
.

Rood, 11-port.

.

~

~p In

01 ehlna. Folk:M tM

DamiUo.

Lorge I tomlty ~trd otto. Zuopan
Hollow Road. Aug&amp;* 1.... loCI
olm\ae. l -?

- S o l o. On Ill .

r.z•. 2 ,,.

mt aliowa 9ou1Mm High xhoOI
(Old F1lhor proponyj Bland
mi Muce.
bltnMI~

Oullta, - pUiowe,
otc. Aug. 1·2-).4 H

p.m.

The Director reaervel the
right to reject any and ell
blda
BERNARO B. HURST
DIRECTOR
171 30: 181 6. 2tc

pr-.. . .!ill*'•
. ........ ......

1177 Cbe¥rot• 112 ton Pkk-up
Good Cond. 11,100. 114-446-2125

REMOVAL
·uGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

MICROWAVE
OV,IN REPAIR

16141 742-2027

.....,

1V11 Ford F--250 AtAo. Good

tlrw. $250. 114-""2-3014.

8-12-90 ttl

Airline
Roaervat !on/ Tick oto
A lk for Ken da

OROINANCE
NO. 1232-90
An Ordlnence to A mend
Ordinanca 1223-A-90
a. 11 ordained by tho
Council of the VHtogo of
Mldtloport, Ohio • loltowa:
SEC . I . Thot Ord. 1Z23·A·
90 Ia heNby emended to tno
cluda the fallowllllf pay

-·

USID RAILROAD TIES

...-=-- TRAVEL
PURSUIT

Types of
Travel"

't?Y•.

large 4 t.mily prd .....
dorfio, cio4hlng, lonnol1, ml&amp;c.
Juty 31 thLW _Aug. 1rd, t mhas
... Jony AWl Rood, Appi o

·~·

HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"At

Rd. 28

Watch for Signs

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

All

Yard Sale

949-2794

742o24SS

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

conn;;tion

-to .
color

Pt . Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlly

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

985·4180

''Your

r..p. July

Namod Lody. ~ ; J-21-tO 0&lt;1
county Ad.11. Slipped OUI ol COl ·
ll:r. .. noll hundnl dog, but -18 a
loved lamll~ ..... - call 814-182·7201.

l· IJ.~c

PRODUCTS

FREE ESTIMATES

8 · 18'90 ·1 mo

lfoa;lo,
Old,

mos...

~ ;Smoll &amp;1u lomtlo
Blac.k-whti:Hwown In

7

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

INTIIIOI IXTIItOI

l

Factory Authoriud
S.rwico (1111• For Most
Makat ond Mr*ls
Fast

992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio

5·)1 .'90 tfn

Public Notice

Pallo oolo. Aug. 2,S,4. Mo Mag

PLUMIING &amp; H£A TING
Ntw lotation:
" ' North
Mlthl.,.,,
ot'lioSoo:and
45160

SAlES &amp; 'SERVICE

air
--.
-ldryor.
loy
ett.t, bedroom tultt,
Bible

..-,

bunll 1111:·
etoriM, StiNG. Ldt mltiC. Fnt
put Cl!un:h In Chootor.
Yanl Solo. Fino! O¥or. lloolng In
. ,.. Ala Oaapman't 3H15 Sr

MI. Aug. \2.1

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

788 N . 2ND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT

~..·~·~2-2171;.::;.~

Swimming

"'"dett-a. . -·..,Mal_
Dlcxeo;.

~:

bllck!Whlte

PAl' HILL FORD

667-6179

171 15 , 23. 30 3tc

IIZIOhlo
C...
" ' - .,.. 111 1;!Ia .':..k¥.1
..... tle111 thoQIIjiert......
oiTrano...,....iolil!lldlhiat1• of the Dltlllat DIIM!tY

lolt: Fawn and whitt tlrn~~le
boxer. Morning Star Road a,...
An8WWI to -t&lt;tlly". Call IIMMi-21132. R-nl.

SAI.ES AND SERYI&lt;E

tan repair and rt·
aH'e radtaton and
heater 1orn. We 1an
also ocid boil ond rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

985-4473

(6141

Will

Rtwardl

Pll&lt;hlot11 Rood Pony

We

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

bank holding companiM.

CliiPt•

Subdlmlon,

•""*'
to the RIIM nrry. ll444UI5f.

-VCR-STEREOS

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

request from the Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond.
Virginit,
23281. an announcement of applic:etiont
covered by the CRA tiled by

m•••••"" ~..

C.lieo cat loat In Por1arbrook

16th. lloW7't-2571.

Holding Company , a bank
holding company . You may

qulrod to lito with hla bid •
CM'tlffed check or cashier' 1
check tor an emount equal
to flvo peroent of hit bid. but
in no evan' more then fifty
thouund dollaro. or • bond
lOt' ton por cont of hlo bid,
poyoble to tile Dlreotor.
llddwo muatoppl\l, on tile
for ..~
11oft"' . . .

W" Netod .

NO SUNDAY CALlS

1 · 12·' 88· ~n

OWNERSHIP
We are a tubtkliarv of Cltv

POIII. ''
Each bidder thall be re-

OOITI£ S. IUIH!I. 110111

PH. 949-2101
or les. 949-2860

992-7479
Rt. 33 Nerth of

10 Uted .

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
July20. 1910
Cont,..ct Saln lege!
Copy No. 90·113
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propoaalt will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohto Department of TrensportiUon. Columbut, Ohio, until 10:00A .
M ., Ohio Standard Tima,
Tunday, Auguat 14, 1990,
for Improvement~ in :
M .. ga County, Ohio, on
MEG-7oj0.00·21 II . State
Routo 7, Molg&amp; County. by
r11urteclng
with esphlh
concrete
Project and work length:
32,472 f"t or 8 I 5 miloo.
Pavement width: various
" The dMe let for compl•
tion of this work thell be at
... tonh In the bidding pro-

205 N. St&lt;Ond Str•t
IIIDDUPOII, OHIO 4S760
Office 614o992otll6
HDMI 614-992°!692

In-or ... t4.01 per hour

SIDEUNES

Uf!t G-d ...•4.01 por hour
IIC. II. Thill INa ..,._

SPOI'r CADS

to

: ...r=s="~

: IIC.=1...-..otv""
Mt That thou ,..,

·o.;:_M
....._
~
...... cteolt

mn.ao.

of C

8"1:1

367-1588

I 1.---"l;;.;l.-·'10-o,;l;,o•ioiiitoi-...

"

�Page 1 0- The Dally Sentinel
7

Yard Sale

42 Mobile Homaa
for Rent

LAFF·A·DAY

a.,-.-

3 112 mila pa11 Holt.,. on O.J.
While Rd. Loud tor olgne Aug s.
4, 8-6.
'

'

Aug;:_112, 6 l. on Bulavlll• Pike,
otf :»1. Firat Ad. lo .... 111

fence,

board

-hn

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~nee makes the dltter.nce.

_,,..r... '

lleenHd Oh~ K_!!!~Ucky WHt

Vlrgtnto,

Wanted to Buy

9

-

JOHN F. KENNEDY

only; $100 for 1lgntd lener: $'150

-·

'lo

tor olgnod photo, eotl 81~12-

o- Tulf
110e1&lt;
Fum. 114-441-11144..
ant roo~. -

Apartment
for Rent

Old Vflll!l" Ad., Acton, - .
NChuuftl 01T20.

1---------"""T---------~

Employment Services

Help Wanted

11

G2524 .

day

lfol.

NO

.......

qll.

-11144·

2 1 A a - - a r o l.

••=-·c..l

--

1*'-*J;;

u.--Uppor

-

~~

td-

e.t.

lvmlol!lng. 112 mL
Ad. Pl. -..m, WY,
2 - - t o e . A h &lt;1113Q4.t'lti-M50.
oolcl
no or
AENT TO OWN
.torlfoh&lt;

IM-44~-m~

»15.

1 pe. wood II"'"P f14 ,111 por
wllk.. 4 pol1•r bedroom auJia,
coml)latt S1I.20 per ....k.

304-882-2645.

AmeriCIIJW..Pometoy

dinette

and RthabiUtatJon Center haa
lmrMdlate
openlngt;
few
qualitl.cf LPN'a and RN'a. We offa r compellttv• nllry, bet'Mflta,
pleasant aurroundlnge tnd .:re.llenl wortlng condltk&gt;ol. We
ara In ~tqual
Dpponunlly
Emplo yer. Pt. .H oontlct LIAUII

II your honnt, rtiMible, I tntoY
peoplll I have WCMt In 5 .,,_
rounding countitt. C.U :J04..522.
0791 M-F, 10a.m...sp.m.

15

AVON ! All Arua I Shirley
Spurw, 304-175-1420.

Boollh:rlngJAccounling,
HottUMol
~.

DRIVERS

Airline lr8V'tll, Nurau ANI. T,.._
lor Tr~~ll• tJW~Intng, A.....
dM'Ittt4ofM .. udy. Finlnclll aida
avall•bl8 It qut~lln.d. P~Kernent
••lltanc:e. County Bchoolllo-

TRANSPORT

ZANESVILLE, 0H

'

S.1 klng 11 J»~d dttvera
(m.., or wom.n/ who want to
stt y long larm w th 1 atabla fut
growing comp~ny In tht z.n..

Schools&amp;
Instruction

til offioe 2307 Clrnden Avt,
Parbraburg, WV 1-t00.848 641t

villa ' ~~~~~':!~~no .,..._
t Wut Coast &amp; return every
WHk.2 . Oriv•r lnsur~~ne~~ Poflcy
with disability bentllta ott.red.
3. Safety lnsenthtt bonua.4.
Hit Pay.5. Slalt of the art •
qu pm~nt. (K W I PETE"S).
Outllflcallon1:
1. 2 yurs , OTR e xperience fJntl
2~ ytars old.2. Able to Pll8
drug tc,....... 3. Good .......
'
record .U.S. WATIS 1-80()..:134-

Wanted to Do

18

,..,,.,..~-_;:_~.:;_;-­
Cflltd c.rt pt~Wklld In my Rio

Min Paulo'o Doy can Conlar.
Sail, ltfordell, &lt;hlldeall. U-1'

e a.m.

• I:JO p.m.

A~

a.,_ '"" - -

2 -10.

wale c me. 114-446-1224. D~op.~na

"C t-.rl.tmaa-Around-T.,._Worid".
July-O.eemb«. t..ve name
addrua, and phone number ~
answering aervlc t . 614-992-6319.

llothlr, Doughlar, bobyolnlng
Hrvke, " one oan1 do II, tht
01 her one can. Fullodme or partttrN any llhlfl, convwdant loce-

EARN MONEY Rudlng Books!
$30,000/yr Income potential
Now hiring (1) 805 -687-6000

nporloneod, 114 441 0065
antr lp.m.

llon,

Ext. Y4562.

Wlll hlbyolt In my homo.
onty 114 441 1812.

EARN MONEY Reading boob!
SJO,OOOiyr. lneorM pottntla l.
Now t'llrtng . (1) 805-687--eooo
Ext. Y-10 189".

Doyo

Ftnanc ial

EARN MONEY Rt1dlng bookal
SJO ,OOOJyr. lneome pattntlat.

Business
Opponunlty

21

Edward'• Tranaporl atlon Ia took·
lng tor • lew good cwar thai ~
drivera lor flat bed, opMllllon
basad In Ravanawood, WV, 800228-6658 IDr details.

OHIO

~·~ s

23

INOYIC£1
VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Professional
services

Clrclea
Marqgament:
Haw
Managa ~~~~ ctaan rooms, low

,..,... . 1

2~

9PEaAL Fodooy 10 ,.,.,.... 2
or J bid owtclb10 ....,_ II
IM wt II
ol
h2,100 ..... ....
... . .
Cal1-nl445 ... _

250t.

Real Estate

HoUMCt.enlngr w..tNng. . . .

112 .era, a

Ohio Area. Exp.rlence Prafar·
Nd. Will tr•ln . s.nd ,...ume to:
Box CLA040. 111. GalUpolll Dally
TrlbunoJ... 1125 Third AYO., Clalllpolls, unk&gt;. e831

lfacitrlc,

Dapoal roquirod.
--•florlp.m.

2

~- Gallla llo(ll.

and

roam~

2 ~ hafM. ......lng
$11,900. 883 Mapl• St,..t, MkJ.

Primary ca.... Must

hu•
c:umn1
velld
Ohio
Deplrtmenl of Educallon Teaehlng Cettlflcata, and hev1 or be
and able to obtain Ohio

d"por1, Ohio. &amp;M-892-8227 or
tM-618-3301.
7 rvoma 1 112 bathe, countty
lvtng but cioN to IWot Schoo4
and town. AI.
lane,
T-hlp Rood :17. Rrll -.1 to
right.. Call &amp;~2-7111 or 1-384-

~

of
Education
C.rttflcltlon. Annual

ss..

otlrllng Hlo:llor B.D. 0..-.

2097:

I

sr~;;=·-~·Oht~o;4;;;•;n;•·~--;;: tlno
ey Ownar.
••utlt\11tor
prtvat•
tor bedroom
beth.....
11
~~~.pond. $t.,OOQ. tM.~m.

pU01tlon lntDrtMtlon (218)&amp;82--

11:111 Ed.al111 1-m-UOpm. Country flltllng. 4 bedroom~, 2·

T..h_::•::
nk:crou
~·:___ ___,-- l 112 taettta, centra~ hN1 •od •"

biHrMn1, lttachM garage. 20
mlnutn from .lthtoa, 1-112
leal lludtnt u MCUrtty guard. mi._ ta Mllp High School.
w'RI WOI'II 1round CbiH ........ M:ee lnd cfepoaM ,.
ochadull. CaH Royal 0111 qulrlcl. 11f.603.4tm.
Par1-dma emptoyrnwd tor col-

....._.._,.

ot

s.a. e.n..r ..... 114-"JU:ZJ:II
~

For LANise
01 1

~

11

oom

5 011 ........

r.1ercnandise

Goods

a iota. 'Aub
hu, -11
llalgo
MClo!doo•
VII... I I I - 47A lalo 3M.

Coornlr 1\flll ..,.lne. Good

13.000 tor aL 114 4!53 ....

-...:1 'I M

'-T.v. Mtl.. Opren

~ Ji'"'~A!'· :::
1

..,...Jo,llll
llgl1ll. IM-441 •
Fum•'"
FarmlllndUAareeiiiiiii'•IMa. .OM*•._
. . . 141!1 v.n.y
EatwnI Ava.
luy,
Que! Cllonln flaod I - . Wood-.~- 1111:17.000
4411'P
Lat tor ..... 3
pe CM11 GOOD USED APPUANCES
Road. 112 - 0111. E.1wr - . _ ..,_, r""lgooll10
---~- .""""
_. IlL .....
I f1.J11.- Clllll14111- CllllC1111-'13a.

IOJII lftto with ._., -

.....
.._-:zou-.....
. mi.814-38UJ114.

J-,._. •=

llaynald
Qutlb!
P~~
of APdnoy, S5I....
.._
Ooon
10-6

llor&gt;oSII ;
lllllneh
-lng 12.81 I Q
~tr:g
110 lneh C(UIIIIy _...... •
~ yd.,

M lneh batting

land

pWIIo . . . . . . • . . . . . . . .

a

-

~"

... S.tolnChHt11to ....

celll14 441 •42111 1111334
Pliny Trucfc Stop AI. 3S lo , _ In Northup, 1 _ , . 1 a

...
wlltrMI.L-~If

::bbae~h·~·~14~4~4~1~a·~·t~=-:-:=

304-711,...7.

Hko Sllrl• - · :lbr, 1 bllh,
g11, urptl In tOWft. Ownlr

Financing Avalloblo. IM-446-

1312.

Jooldnt tor LPN Of 32 Mobile Homaa
wllh II•
lor Sill
ponanoo, .,. . - lnfounotlon

-

.........

IIIII - - jllfl tor ..,...

kltoll~

4

F~n~~~ut,r;:j SA. S5,
,
IS-t717;
Wide 8IMct
MW I. WMd farm

WMI GaUl

tm...-o. Buy,

1011, IIOdl, a : ~~
Bat till-.

1881 llor!da 250-X, 4 whlltor,

7:()0 p.m.

-r•.

75 Bolts &amp; Motors
lo r Sale

ment, $7,100. 304-m-a660 ....,

Ukl new, motor boat, 1t81 B•l•

I

lllander 180 lnboMi 140 hp, 111'
walk throuGh wlndahl11d, 1/fw
laclllta, 2 lilt of 1101:, •II COVIt1

J·~~

~·1

lHtNK WE'll

H...VE ...NY

hole

_.,_,
441-1111.

(1 :30)
(!] Adventure Follow

Seas 10 an outrigger canoe.

g IIJ Ill MilO&lt; Dad

h.llty Mll-conlalntd,

Services

SSMWAY IU'LL 13£
ABLE 10 GD 10 THE

MUJICiffil GARBAGE.

~I

!¢GULAR BA'SI'S

Home
Improvements

The
Major returns home from

RIGHT AF1l.R 11-\E.

MOOIJ OJ A FAIRLY

P1CKlPS

'-

or night.

Choop. 114-112~12 .

55

Building
Supplies

~.:\~·= 5:
~

71

-rk:at.

Autos for Sale

114-251-1811.

INOI

~~~~~~--

tm Oedgl llafii!UIII XE. HO
VI. Alllonilllc,
Fair lo
condnton. Aatdng WI.
080. -~.

n- "

w--

lfnii.AI~

Yin.

Julio

Retwencw.

~~pelro.

,.., Otdo ~ IOftdl.

auto, O.D. Tnlno.

·

I

- " c o r . - . - -.

1111 - . 1!!.'!, ~l.• • good
thM. CAlf 1 1 4 - - ot 111-

1112

ctwnM~ a.wn..

~---

i
THAT

BEAR
TRACKS If

=:::..:•

.._ w.lle completed Nml day.
and MrV'-, 304-

(A) Slereo.l;l

w-

Dlvla
Saw-Vee
94rvk:.e
0 OlgM Owk Rd. Palla, • •
plloo, pl&lt;kup, ond dollvery. IM-

a

veterans return 10 the site of

ASTRO-GRAPH

Ellcllfo -

RNidlntlal
ot ropolro.

· 114-141-2711.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

rom a nucalty perrect for you . Mail $2
Matchmaker . c/o thiS newspaper. P 0

Bo• 91428. Cleveland. OH 44101 -3428
VIRGO (AII(I. 23-S.pt. 221 Companoons
mighl sense there is something bugging
you today, bot they may find It dlfflcull
to •dentify the offense. Chances are you
won 't be sure of-It yourself

ltl2.ao47.

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Confidential

llr, Mlflm Ollillttl.
11.-~•ttarlp.m.

malters pertaining to your company
Should not be discussed In an environmen! where what you say could beov.r-

"'11114==,.,--:-d"',-,_
-""'t""t"v,."".-...~
nar

*·

85 General Hauling
AlA Wotar Dollnry. 2,000 gal.

-My. IM-31'1-73011.

wan._•, Hauling
volume dl.:
oounto, z.ooo 1o 4,ooo ••fll'lhr,

renonable ,...

:C~ -· llo. Calf

lhe tamouo battle .
!Ill
Dtatgntng women
Suzanne rekindleS a
lrlendshlp with an old friend .
(A) Stereo. Q
10:00 (J) Ill Kn~o And G.., Club
Two doelors struggle to keep
thetr emergency room alloat.

ce

Refrigeration
wl~ng. niW -

or

S-1 World War It

Gllllpolto, Ohio

!11~4~4~41:;3~11~1~----84 Electrical &amp;

withhokjlng an informant 's

Identity. IR) C
liD tD Allan tlatton C11thy

il) Prime Time Wre1tttng
1211 Na11wtlo Now
tD WCKfd
Ski Tour
From St. Louis, MO (T)
a s L, The Fua 111ary
9:30 II) Men War. Untold

'

Cart.-'a Plumbing
andHIIIIna

IIJ Ill Murpl!y Brown
Murphy goes to prison lor

notices a dramatic change in
a Doy she knew on the ship .

Saptle Tonk Pumolng SIIO~Galllo
Co. RON EVANS ~NYERP•ISES

off

-

AN' FAIRLY
FRESH, TOO I!

LOOKS LIKE

hllah,

......

.

pioneering broadcast
~urnalism Is ax;amined . {Pt 1)

1 ""'

...

laii&amp;QJJ

Edward A. Murrow's

F!Od Marb, -71Witl.
Aolary or 01bl1 tool drilling.

FoWih and Pfna

llfiO, 4 brt,
door, -

Counlr .....

v....-

(!] Amorfcan Millen

3Q4~jll0 Ohio 6~454-

H~ng

Man

Stereo. C

Plumbing &amp;

folr OONI,I100.

~

l1l Clllll Project

"'"'294.

, . . ~ Ltblrron. •
out-do; AI;, 41,000 mltoL
121101.
I1W!Mia.
nood
'lila.

FNI1a&amp;

Monda&amp;lght

Aooflng and Siding. T,.ltl1
rvofl painted. Frw ntlmatea.

.lao"-. OH I-IOQ.431.Q52B.

surrounded b~ colorful

Ill On Sllge
9:00 (2J G 11J MOVIE: 'Flying
Blind' NBC
At
Tha Movleo C2:00)

wv

LloenOotl Ellcllfolano. Pooquolo

58

IS

olhtr brlndt. HOUN cella , 1110

oome apptlanea

dinner party Into chaos. (Pt t
or 2) Stereo.
I!J) IIJ Ill Shanglf-la Pilla
The owner of a donut shop
characters .

AOII'I TV SIIM&lt;I, lpoelolldng

r;,"'"',i;" home
oon41&lt;!to lfoll -·-Algol, 1 - . . .houl PE8- ~-··call -.lngl: 111~..:.~-=•Ovemght.M.

n

THEN WElL- TAU&lt;. A60UT A
RAISE' IN MY A'-l-DWANCE.

In Zanhh 1110 MrY~tna motl

Commercial and

•iU!

HE' SAtD WHEN I S'TlY
6RONIN6, GE-TTIN6- CWtTIE'5
AND\NEARINGOJT6HOE5 .

bdmatn .

~.tooll'lloGanlAit-at 11124772.

~

I A6KEO MY CI&lt;\D FOR A
RAIGE: IN MY AU-O'WANCE .

Uninvited guests turn Tess ·

Sun. ~S-mD.

Transportation

-·-·t--

Joe-

lldiWiika rooflno, pturnbl~:
Me: , Na ~ too email. Call •fter
5:00 wMkdaya anytlrn. Sit and

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

Complato Mobllo Heme . . upo
I 10palro, olio fliumblng I
rooting, rwrno&lt;lollng,
potloo &amp; dleko ole . AEIIODE[·

1tll Ponltoe Catalina, PS, PI,

·-·

1l0

ttng.

Hoy lor Sato. eto.. I TI-lly.
Round Salol In tho Ftold. 1~
:MI &amp;1111

(R) Stereo. C
IIJ Murder, She Wrote
Lovers And Other Killers
1211 Ooepet JubltH
Pro !leech
Volteybatf F10m Hawaii (T)
PrtmeNewl
all MOVIE: Count or Monte
Crflto C2:00)
a,os CD Goodwill 0ame1
8:30 (2J G I!)) Wor1dng Girt

=
w-··
a

Aog.,. a.......m w.r..-proo-

Mil ond Hor Conlllllcllon, addntone
dlekl,
oldlng

battle a hero . IPI 2) CAl
Stereo. 1;1
IIJl tD 21 Jump Streol
Hansoo trtes to convince a
juvenile on to star in a video.

WATERPROOFINQ
Uncondhbltl llllllma guaranIM. Local rtfe,.ncn tumlthM.
Frw ntlmat• Call collect 1·

f:':.:'2:1f"lo
IIOid.-

a

600-mlte i&lt;&gt;urney ol the South

QardOM'I Horne lmprovi!Mnl:
RM. I Com., Rooting, palMing,
docU, ond Me. 114-

Whlla unllonn pont oulta. and
1W2112.

Cro11t1re

drugrunneTS . (A) Stereo. C
IIl Rarry Hopf&lt;lna: AI FDti'a
tilde This dOCumentary
delalts the crucial role played
Dy Harry Hopkins,
Aoose.,.tt·s closest friend
and ad viae&lt;. In the Great
DepresSion and World War tl

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

day

a

7:35 CD Sanford And Son
8:00 (2J G 101 Slotor l(jlto Kate

grave to battle deep-sea

~~424

114-23M488,

Moneytlne

MacGyver risks a watery

t

NOW ON SAL£11 YAIIANA
WAVEAUNNERS. 9a._, Partt,
AccnaorlnJ. Service. RIVER·
SIDE MARinE, At. 1 (Krcu
fnlm K-llart) Galllpolto, Oh. 114-

441-11211.

111-

a

llll Scarecrow I Mro. Kfnll
Q

l1l Cll .. MocGyvor

DIFFICULTY

001~ THA-T.'

1D SponeContor

ruins Todd"s dating plans .
Stereo. 0

:r4~·. on !lOIIar,

exc. cond, uklna $'11,100. ew.

~point
r, 11

Ttlao
hhoh, poell

t1on.. m.111 • • 1

"The toastllllll fln¥'l Sony, Pop. 1won'l
dry mr - ' !lOdes In the IOII&amp;ter a'IYII'II)I'8."

11-.I,A.oJf'i)

OOP

!p.m.

IIF with Ill buill hog, G,lltll;

t'"

"P •fttO~'IE~ ' "'

BASEMENT

W: : 1 Ltd CllrtniC OOCMII Condl-

0

r•G

tLfvE""'
TfN
)CHOOLf.

eterM/canlttt wHh trail•. Include~ cover and 11r.ty tqulp-

revenge. Stereo.
Ill Mullc Row VIdeo

7,05 CD Jetteroona
7:30 (2J G Family Feud
(J) Major Laaguo Buebtllt
{l) EnterUIINMnt Tonight
(J) 11 Momo'o FomUy
1111 IIJ • IIJ Jeoperdyt Q
l!liiD M'A'S'H
ID Motorweek tRuotraled

Tf'lf CU/&gt;6fT. t'ff'f
FfO/VI Of-If Of iHf

motor,

1m 9outhwind CioN" 21 1oa1
3Sk IIIII. ., • . _ 7. «W ONAN

I month Old pell harfonj bull.
Onl c:ow ond &lt;Ill. Yautlng hi~
lor. 114-102-11168.

Wlrd•••a "'

WllrfiiJ _ _ _ __

TO r4i/.f 1'/IM rAl-Afo-ICE

1G87 11 ft. FOfWine, 0f*1 bow,
138 hp. llen!lufwr olpha ona,

81

~J"t'll"'l:.t'..=:.

·--·

p.;.,'

Orovl1y ~. ·~~-

---.-=

r t'
..._
Aatw ............. . . . - .

...--- THe f~f)ll&gt;fNT .JU&gt;i
Hl~fp A ~f'l'l fCOf'oiO/VIfiT

1m 17 h. Slororo• T"-Hull
" Englno,
"
Boot. 12ll HP, Ewlnrudo
~ top new uphofttarv,
com.,......e

Gtnrtn~tor,

or

suspects a rape victim of
having her own plan tor

--'--------

79

I asked
my doing
neighbors
son
how
he was
in Little
League. "Great; he smiled,
, _ _ _ _ __.::.•-, "the coach says I'm the best of

I

lhe chuck le quoted
·-L-L......:L..JL..J-J.
by
filling
in
the missing word$
1
you de .. elop from step No. 3 below .
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE A&amp;oVE UTTERS
TO GET ANSWER

were rig hi, I have kids of my own who say I'M NOT!

liD ID Ntaht Court
11J MlamT Vlcl Trudy

H1rtey Sportll•ra, m1.11t ... to

IOVJiation to be too cand:d . He/she
wants
approvml.
not
objective

evaluelions.
PISCES CFeb. 20-March 20) Don'l lei
insignifk:ent disagreements between
you and yout mate get blown out of proportion today. The tri'llial issues over
whiCh you may argue now won"t even be

remembered tomorrow.

waluea cru""l_le and family
drlttS apa'!, t;1
illl IIJ • Flee To Face With
Connie Chung Stereo.

IIJ)• New Twilight Z0111

with it. but this may not be the case lo-

SUrfing From Gold Coaal,

t-_

a-.

r-

fi,Nebraska
Greel Porform8nceo A
buelneasman·s

ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprlt 19) Occasional- .
ly we can goof on a bil and get away

day. Too much lime at the water cooler
ll88rd by the wrong people_
couklll'ouoe the wrath of the boss .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-llov. 22) Pressing a ·TAURUS IAprll 20-Mer 201 There's a
friend to repay a favor could be an un- posalblllty you mtghl do what II lhe
wiS&lt;! procedure tor you loday. What you , mosl ••pedfttous loday and not that
ask may be ""all. bol the way you do II whiOh your basi lnllresll. ShOrl
'cuts you lmpallently tal&lt;e could turn oul
might
prove
lrrltaling
lo
your
pal.
Jlllr 31, 1111111
BAGmARIUIIIIo¥. u-o.c. 21) Even to .be roota tor the long way around .
E•clllng limes could be tn lhe offing tor !hough your Ideas may be superior to GEMINI (1117 21..,.,.,. 20) H1hlf'lla an
you IOQialfy In 1no year llhead. New in- thoS&lt;! of your aseoc:lat11s today, you unpteasant o1ml&gt;lpllero ot home today
vol-11 wflh lnterastlng•. - peolffe could IIIli meet wtth reslatance, so don't It might be due to your properlllly tor Issuing- 1CIIill'y0111- doing
, .,.likely. HCIOI II, t:ton'f tel them.,.,.,. ~~tO get lilY 11111dlng OVIIIOIIS.
)IClUt' old lftendlhflll.
CAPIIICOIIH IO.C. D.,.. 111 uau.!ly very 111111 yoonall. Ill I doer ....., of
LIO (""" 11-Aifl.ll) tt you oro pr• you ll'o I rather ._, minded lndtvld·
.CAIICIIII.Iune 1W1r1r 12) Ill gr.wut
•
011 1111 ...,... aceounl, keep 111 uot, bul loday you mfgll1 Ignore the
- - - d. . . . . ..,.. may be lletplut •fllllllllonl of jult be- ·tO
wfiO10 your - · · todayol CllltciJihll
&lt;*llduPOft Ia jUIIIIy 'fiN/~· , CIUH .,0U cllllikl llll 1)1&lt;1011.
,do lhlnOI. H you f t I nii. .W. the
KMw wNn1 ta 1oo11 lor 1-ICI 1111C1 AGUAIIIII I&amp; ...... 111 A you'l w n. The Allro-Oroph Milch- trlll1d might 1111&lt; YIM OjllntOn lboul nnt_you..,torllllp,no-wll
- · tn1111111r
wllfcllllfgnl 1&lt;1 • Wlillhlng today, but don'll..e It Mlln

...

the...,"""

~..

Attsin - Wound - Oxide - Jumble - I'M NOT

Fortune

appNCIItl, 304-B82.-2481, afttr

Onl ARts WAY &lt;Jrlndlr lllkar,
ono 3,DOG aoJion plutlo wlllr
tank, 0111 11M ton KILBAOS

Com Alto

I

Clllll Cu,.nl Affair
l!ll IIJ 111 IIJ WhMf

tl1!da, 114-44141111.
For ule 1U4 candy appll rtd

I

By the time I was old enough to realize my parents

New•Hour

:::=-0:::--::':----:-----:----:--1SI88 250-R 4 wh ....r:, tor 1111 or

2

SCRAM.J.ETS ANSWERS

1D (I) MacNeil Lohrer

114-311-11W7.

• pull,:~
$8!00,

I

• IHUBMT
I I I

r;l

1D Sporlllook
6:35 CD Andy GrlHHh
7:00 (2J G PM M1gazlne
{l) Andy Griffith
{l) tn1lde Edtllon

tDU HI~Dowld1011. FXAS .
'-- glkto,
-d"-&gt;, 5-a-,
evolution motor. a,ooo miMia.

15,500.114-148~315.

ROUTSI

I!Jl IIJ Ill CBS Newa r;1
l!liiD Th,..'l Company

11111 ' I8IO. l-o~f-~477.

CaiiiM-286-13-t&amp; after ' :00

I
l I I 11
I I I I' I I

iDBodyEieclrlc:

(!] 3·2·1 ConiKI

letters of tht

four ICrambled wordt below to form four slmplt won:b.

•

Ill Top COlli

lalo modal 11000 Ford Dlaool
T-"!j $58110; 111 IIF £11~j
t'M-ZM

lllslcal
Instruments

r·:=:.ra:: ~';1..-r:
RAM. I I -

bed,

110 II• Acuna Sator, $2,1K10 ; ..,

Alatttered .... a....n Hound,
had - . . I monthl old, 1M 3111

1 • -..

~lining- .....

~~

-r

Iton,-•
1111 lulok -

t.c:a.

111ri,
;t a
~--

Hoy Wegon, 1&gt;111

troetoro I

Polnl-

D1Mr11; 11110
AUNII

J'l&gt;..':".!

Empfro Fwnllln Wall- I
JtiW7Will:l 10
. . up 114.011 and 1G 'go~
SuPOitoo. Sta~lng II gal
_,....
14:L:.IL
1*.111; ........ 144.lllli.."::
~
a - and Supply Sh:r, I'll
1 a at 144.15; eondh

.__In a....

Mlchln. . p

F onl lOGO d - wllh ~
........... -,_ bolar,
.
Fonl Jubtfol w•h lolcllr 12500.
.Ill f.488G . 2010
tlwi!IIIIO&lt;
I plowo, 1:1850.
wiN flnanol. t11-:!IW522.

tm Ford LTD II, ~1 -~loth
lnt•!5 - point job, .,...,.GO,
304411H131 -lnga, 111112U dlyo.

lrtd.
At. I4UI2 - - AWI;00114411Mh

hT I' I

Enning' 1,..._

a-11u1 AICC - - Potdn- n t l.
puootoo. I old.
&amp;r.• Bed, tuH . . . hledboerd,
- · arid - -· 11110. 111loolboor&lt;l, lroml &amp; IIIIo, 111,.,._
Dro.... IWjlod Caa~ Poroton.
Clllronoo Sola H~ma S t . - ond Hlrnalo- 1111-.
11' ••s -·· •..•7p.m.
•-·
trlmmere, 1,-. ov.
.. Pafnev&lt;taotvl
Pl.. ,~.
,_ ,.._ "-'d,
- -· I(Jt.._ Aid, no. llocll, I \'2 7j.rO:tcl
cond. t.rYIIt DOid In DDtor, 171.114 141 llta.
ft50. 114 Ill 8Cll!l.
l'tolt Tank, :M1I
Avo.

OOYEAHIIENT H011E1 lrom ft
CU ropolrl. DlllllQUOIIC Ill 41 Hotnn lor Rant
propeny. A '
tlllona. Your 38A._, _ _ _
_

· Doy11~r~~:

2 Horol Tnlllor -

~,~R. x71 . -lop
~~ ~ aft• I

Bigs b1droom firm home bull

Renl als

aorllrw:l. 114-251 till

-

SQ4.47&amp;.3117 .. -

.._.,

bed. Good

on your lot. Ul,tll I up. 111-

lll1l NewhortC
CllD ABt Newa r;l

1084 Pontoon · 8111 Tracker

IINI3 Jom 0... 450C dozar,
0111
dayo
304-11H280,

I~

McCormick r;l
8:05 CD Bovltly Hlltbllttea
6:30 (%) I) 11J NBC NlghUy New1

m-1B38.
~11"84::-:;X;:;-R--:!IOO=RL_n_aw
_p71ot7en
-,-

24ft, Mercury 35 hp

s.... Z2 cu.

· ... 111-112-mt.

SNAFU® by IInKe Beatue

I

61 Fann Equipment
~"1:

llll Hardcllllle And

~

whh Tralter, outboard 1nd troll~-=-·and ct.pl~llnder. 114-

:!i:O.

• II. · - · -

7- 30

1D83 Aqua-patio Porooon 8oal

110
'11 llallbu, SSO, po, r&gt;b, olr, rtd
wnM'own lrhrior, ti70o.OO, 304~ yd. ~~~- pone~~, "·711 56 Pats lOr Sale
ll&lt;h; ootid • prt,.. malarial, ;;-=-..,--..:..,~.:,:..,..:..,...,..- 1 - _
"'fL£"'"~ ~. ~ ~ Aaalll_. Btoek Lab Pup- 'IS llanotM Aallanr:o, 4 door,
qullo, _ ...ad, 11.111 ~lb. ~· 111-24U387, 111- ~~,100 mllll!,

1 --, s

a

pick,

........ uu.-.114-"'Z.:me.

ft. chiM ........
bedi oom Iuiie, 12• table

condhlon.
1m llor!da
$100.T&amp;0-1.
CAl •••
Elrealtom
llp.m
114 881 4221.

~UAN

T Y l 0 MS
llhe -----1"
r-r~-'nls,=-.1;;-:;l,_:...,lr-1 0 Co~p lelo

motorcycle racing. (0;30)

a WCKfd Todly

L1 CK 't'OV ON
T~E SIDE OF
'(OVRFACP

I

'

coverage ot all facets ot

11-7 111-0112·1184 or 114-1182-tMO,

wtlh eklll lor biJ. throwll',
Atholto, OH, ~141.

Snl Y11r Annual Salol

~n

~DOG.

liN C1t 101-68'7-1000 bt. ~
W2 foi ........ ropolfol.

Alrnlnglon m . 12 gauge. Bolh
bon1llli, nn foothOr ollng and

T':t :v;..,_
a sa -.. - .
J357_
... _
IIU
..
••
....ltubobedo.
· -~
--·Pol
Pari:""~.::&lt; a.-.
--..--. r~::':':=:::-:-::--::-..l.;;;;;::::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;:::;:::;J :.:..Coli ~. =~r
tloiiJ

Ono•..,.
, ....,..
_ -lo_ ... -~
hocl
up.
on .... -

hiYI

For Sato: Homo In good eCifldl.
lion. 10 mtn- frOm ..... oampe111, -lbto land

....

.... •

Am........

:=7-:::...:.7-==:__:---------:

wanted to Rent

=-:::-··
,._
......

C111k.
Wlter, gill Mit on OM I Crt o1

Hlm-.vw., Ohio.

~

20 lneh, ..... btU, Hutly. m.
lWtn bed wtilte canopy wl'lprtng
ftOO. e-.1111, anytime.

poul' ' No pMa. R I enc.

NUI'H Prldloner Two Canlo-

114-lii2-21U.

buohlllor Eoilll- - ·
"",..,.....,.. d - il Farm
Muoo1.111 304-17UUZ:

cwfonlot,

tore,

1 • -1 - MO. 111-JIIWIOI.
MK Oold ladllo Wlddtng band.
!..1M now. 1sa. 114-t1112-ZI77.

S11DDN1 floor, conwr

For Sale. I room houM and 2
Ill

~ to Milt ,.,.....

'(OV, 6!\0WNIE
CHARLES:

u

111-

Tfalar Iota, lulrMa, ' HIJ oto
Rd.. .. AI. t ~ ....,
Ulp.&amp;

,...
....- .......,.
_ w...r
...... _
Qollpolfo.

310ood..,_.........
2- - -No-

441

82UIM.

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

w

honct ~. two
lllr
- milo.
nltendo
&amp; toll
IM I..,.;~CiOohoo
em

or lntlrt Mllta
Clrll oo1r.tt 504- 128 sm, or J04.

49

prtoo. ~

bedroom troltor, Loodlng

qutno.

pelntlnal,

d brt:tga. Cal

w..,_.CA.

tOIMI--

llor!day. l14-fii-

.to...a-k:ol-

.. _

-

with ._..

.V.,

Motorcyclea

Top Cat~~ pold. Old lumft'"

_......... - -.ng-- .....

'J.:v• u

-

~- 1011 " to ~ Call

Merchandise

~c:.:.:.·:

ltohl~ •

...

114-182 U57 Marc Fultz.

54 Miscellaneous

kit-

ptola -

_....__.
•·..---.

.na

=a.L. ~~--

218. .,, ... 2110, . . . . . . . . .
, . 7:00.

dining room. oot:obli*' ~
cabtnltl .,. 2 ,..,. llld. - .

heetera, 120 MOh. All uu Newt
Call 10( • 3122.
llotrtng Sato' 11 .., Soli Alii 1Wo
oom..Wa bunk ·~ - . ono
new bedroom lulll OOfnptlte,
-.ptota lvfng , _ Ill ooon-

yau throw l _., glwe •

10'140'1,

out

Smll-lor-4112M/1.--.
4
llwtng ........._

.-n

-=--~i,o~~

AECORD9. U'H&amp;'o-11"._.,.,..

n ::.

oom ""'

home

=.

mn'a boi. H'ahall: priDe paid
tor vtnyt
mat~~ bona.

Salon

belna,

heat•~ and mMNgtt. •~
1311
~ "I
-~
Aoulh'o 91,.~ Fann a·-·
11en-=••
p:
'""u.- Ootf
_,,
: u.rl
Cou111 llarnlw hal out I POlO Baono, Tornll- c:orn,
of town. ort.l'lld at NMIUOid PGUtoea, and aucmbar. 2 mil•
priol. t1t ttl 1320.
behind N• Haven, WV Un6on
IIOVfNQ BAl.£ • Couch A"""- 3041~:1237.
~~-, -ut~•r .,.
••ao; •·•
ov...--.
n•n :-·1
DM
wtth m1ttrw1 &amp; t.: IDriftGI

IOXES. Kldo Only!
Paying up lo ft!O.GO lor .fol.

• . ...

1k a

114-44&amp;-117'1.

•

WHEN I WAS
A PUPI"', AN D
I USED TO

Exoelllnl condition. 1800. 114-

Hill n:nner belna flO. bu you
wo pick 814. Sllwar a._,_ Tomll-. -.em.
J
1 R Produce. Frelh
King 8ba Wlterblcl wtth book
cue haldbolld, bumper -*"flllblll. &amp;14SIDERS
IPJII
1011 ~~ ENT, -

WNCH

car.,....,.._. ....._,..,.

bema and C.. at.ad.

Speeloto. Buy 1 &lt;hlln &lt;hlln
,..-, pr1e1 a-t .,.. FREE.

p.m.

41112A.I,_briek,.......
~I I.JIFp, II&lt;, ... 1 112
Dllft tul .........
tuet o1 Fmllact.d

"""'f, lovo 11111 I matehlng
..cllnar, qa-. _. of MddanQ.

Furnished
Rooms

__ _ _ _ h.

==':""
-

Ollila l 1111011 County Folr

twtn

=

33 Fanns for Sate

appnluc:l
VtiUI
$71,000, liking ftl,llOO. Land
eontf'KI Mgl)llable. C.H avt'l
afttr 7 p.m. {14-311-81&amp;1.

lnltruclOf IIIIo l..eh 11 Car1eton

9oKing a roeopilonosl lor
phyolclan oltloo, nporionoo
recorntMndN but wNt contlder

oac:e ...... tor rw11.

Skytlno 1'177 Ml&lt;l'l 2 BR..
Elldrio, ... bay - . - lnv, 11!1'1, good ......._
Frt.nch ctty Bmk aga. .,......._ _ . , . _
8340.

1!3 acr. tot wtth 1b:70 1NO
moblto homo, 3 lAo, 2 lull
bath&amp;. prden tub tn ......, BR
dlahwuhw,
dtryw'
range. rtfrlgetator.
tot.i

lnctapondenl Saloo Rop. lor'
H..llh S.S.s. Wortc SoutMm

' """'10"'ta.m.
on ""· e-p.m.

0

____

mant, new hHt pump. gar.v-, 2
tlulldlng~. Locatld 81 LAtart
Falla. 814..247-SJIU.

cooking raqu rtd. Ex~tnet
tnd raferenc. . prtfwrtd. Send
rtaurM to Moody, 403 Fourth
Avt, Gl:lllpolll.

op~~ng

..- _..,..or 23 ""· n., wou-

t

Hom.lor_Chlthn_

31 Homes lor Sale

tor

of •MMloQ eurgaone In lit
-.....,..1 lllllna,
of pottont
.... 110
In
epprox.
holn pt&lt; woo[ Elr•. Salory I
e.ntflt p1D'bage with rMoaflon
aullllrtee. Bend r.ume ; Connil Sllgetl:18211 Flrot A..~Me
.,0, -~ WY 25rv-4 Of
eal1304-12

an.

...
011
u
S700.I
MoiJI3 ~

tnytlme I"M-Mt-3DM..

INCMI', 7:30a.m. ID 12:30, M..f.

Vaoc ... r I Thoraek: Surgeono
lrnrnodlall opontng lor
lk:anead Phyolclano Aaolotant.
Th0&lt;1&lt;k: ourgk:al ·~
d"'rabiO, but not 11oantlol oo
we wtn treln. Dutllo w i l l -

AUCTION I FUANrruAE. 12
Oltv. Sl,llllllpotto. - &amp; .._
twnn..., -..,., w....,. &amp;
WO&lt;k _._ 111-44W!P.

..r:

dloll, _ , - . - ·

Get paid tor taking NIY tnapaho!al UOO pel' 100. Wrtt.
PASE-31 H, 181 South Uneolnway, North Aurora, II. 805ol2.

A.ortl14492-64i8.
PHYSICIANS ASSISTANT

SWAIN

M o l l y - mobllo homo, I
. . . b8law kMn. owert~ a~~
- · CA. haot, All. I

1

441-64ll altar 1

· u-~ - · .-.

446-JII11.

-

elng.......... Ql ' •

~
-

. - -Conw
' W of Rand
I end
AppUanc•.
Pardi 8t Kanaugo, Ohto.I14-

1088
-lgo.
..... J
balhl,ll
_ _- _.._

_,

In

For Sale: 18M Bronco II, 814-

HAS AN'!ONE
EVER K15SED

11112 llor!da cxsoo. 3,1100 mllao.

FNIII &amp;
Vegetables

5S

For Nil, I p1aoe dining ,_,
ouflo, K _ , porlablil rltoh- Dunrowln Fruit Form luot off 91.
:;•="""::::::..:·S0441M'IU.::.;,.::,::::,:::.____ At. Ill Eall of Albony. Wa..,
1
For Sail: I horoo powar roto Olfl4 IIMipo. - - .

:.=.,... ,. . •
=
=
burner.Awocado.
- All -Sao.
SI:Z.:nd

1INIJ. MX1t Oontnol • . 5660 ' " " 5 .......

ICr&amp;.

drye

=

4p.m.

llobll quMt..

10...:: ;,':!.,A:.

buiN4'1 OYIII,
~ ~--- -~
,_, - · - •N

ball\,ll--~-

7

·

*.,:• a::•re:;:o,...Metric
,.,._
lng 1nlm 158 I up. Alto a eornpial• kttchan •rt•, link top
wllh oink, , _

NOT to send money tlw"ouah lht

Exctlltnt W•gu tor apar1 lime
..aambly. Easy wof1l; at horn..
No up«~nea need~ . call 1·

Uw
EnfOicerMIII.Ho
II·
poN- .-.ry. For ap-

~

1 112

mah unt:ll you have tnvettTgated
tha ott.rlng.

lncludirwt~ S.t. and Sun

...

I -

I

rtcommtnda that you do 00..·
wfth J*)PII you know and

~·· 1-9'18-622-5652, El1 . 1244 ,

$17,00Cf. Pa.t ng endl 11119o.
S.nd reiUme onty to: Mtlgt
Mr.OO 1310 Carftton Sti'MI

F - ..,_, &gt;b'la,

OHI

EXCELLENT
:;-;:W
:::Io/J
= ES;:---:Ior
- 1-p arl
tim• assembl y. Easy work 11
ho mt. No nparlance nttdtd.

M. . P.R.

-

latglt, Lr wJfli I

.,_._

Now hiring . II) 1108-6117-tOOO

School

Ellldoncy,
ft15,
Awo,
lflll K l - 28A, .... IAMIII Pold, lQI oN; sa • ............,.. an.r
c:ond. $MOO.h4-44H712.

7

Ext. Y-4562 .

wtnt~

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

ntlnlry.Op«o

.......

1

A'{"I I houoo
to ._!!I"'Ingl 1 hi n1 roo1ft11t
gnng
,·
- r. 111118-1'7M
&amp; p.m

~
_ _ ... 1 _ _ ....
-_ _
....
flwn., - a d ,
. . :SA.

¥"'"

reuonablt,
Mpendabae,
llcerwe. qUIIIty chltd c... Yonday tftru Frida~, 7:30 lUI 5:30.
f!or rn&lt;n lnfonnltlon or to
.....L.ttr :JOoM:7&amp;-584l
•..,....

Ea m monty by the weak. Join
lhe numbers to d.mDOMI'Ita

HOUMkleplf

par-.

-· :.=..
.,.

GrancM Home, day-a. E.Jc. CIN,
w/ru80illo~• r111a.. 114--2•
8550.
Ma""'"'" y..,. Day cat~ Center

1229

504-341 -7178 Ea:t. 511~ . Open
hours, Including Sunday.

rr.ao ,.,

Aollfgarator 112.111
15
..,, n. - . , fiO.IIIl por
Wlllk.VI'RI Furniture.. Rt. 1(1,, ,4
llll oil AI l.C.
7

WORK!!!

Hill, D.O.N. Amertean-Pornoroy
36759
Rocksprlnge
Ad~
Pomoroy, Ohio. 814-0112-6801.

KINGWAY

with 4 chlll'l

week. M1glo Chef 14 cu. ft.

Nursing

54 MlacellaneotF?

111111', aooc1 condition, CIJI .,._ grMn

-

..... -Rd. -...:!!MG.

AVON • AH ,,..., C.M ...rilyn
Wa~~w.,.

,_, 17ll; ed l11-

NewNHd

At. 7,

~~========:;:::::::::::::::::::J

~

!

~OW ABOUT

0 Rearrange

WOlD
tAM I

WARBL

provide a homa to many
creaturea. Q
(!] Reading Allnbow r;l
l!ll tD Andy Grtttt1l1
il) He-Man
ID Motowotfd Host larry
Maiers glwes comprehenalwe

PEANUT~

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

74

c•

Uttk!-known areas of Texas

l
j

448-7720.

Merchandlu

.
PICKENS FURNITURE

-·bill!;
-.n-...Ave.•-

and
1 .......
..-

- . Checll• out.

Ponaoonk: C o - ....... ,.

-·I

lorS81a
1IMIO ,,_ -

•ow

....,.GOJIII

lure • low

Slow._ ratrtg.,
-~..
lUI. 44)2.1/2 24th Sl., Pl.
1

In

llotlohln Carpllo Uppor At. 7
North Oual~c~' l Fuml-

- . w.v.-.sesa.

32 Mobile Homas

POSTAL JOBS Sl1,382-'11,
11
Help Wanted
mrtr. Now hiring. ean Ill lf05.
$2,000
CREDIT ~ Ex1. 1'4512 .... -

olothn,

Big Sawlnao on

8400; or..nd x•ro• copy to: 37

111M
approvaH Also quMiry lor
d~h VISAIMC and c..h
vanc... 1-800-41'3o1087

fnlm SIOO. Fonlo. lloreadoa.
Corwtt•. Ch1vy1. Surplua.
Your oroa. Ill llOUif.tOOO Ext.
S-111181.

'ICA, .711; baby,
....... -1012, · -

"You woke me up just to teU
me I was lazy?"

AUTOGRAPHS
Wulted to buy, $50 1w tlg1111t....

CARDIGuaraniHd

t1211;

....... i35;

Surptuo.

ChiW'(I.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED ""lcloo

I P.M. lion, tlvu Sot Coli 1'14-

CoiHW.
Sally bed

M•~•a.

$100. Fordt.

Your .,..._111 llOUif.tOOO bt

cforo Ami 11
-h wMh optiN'Md CI04l S mt.
out Bulnltto Rd. Ooon I A.ll. to

Rick Pooroon Auction Company
now booking eudions, ••·

IIJ,...,.

S-111181.

1111111 oabl-, hudboonto 130

•

ID t Oreom Of Je1nnle
ID Wild America

Corloll•.

and up lo NUG

~y

1

6:00(%)8 Ill I))D all

OOV&amp;ANIIENT SEIZED Vlhlol11

rrom

MON., JULY 30

T~!:t:~' S@~Jl1A-'££trs·
ldlrod
ClAY I.

EVENING

111-31

- · 0un eabt.- o, 1, a 10
gun. Baby - - PI I
flol!, Bed ....... 1211 a.Size !lSI I kina tromo iio: Good
1111c11on of l&gt;a- ounoo,

Ayl

•

Speod,= llllol. IM-317-

-- -

champion farms, 814-367~7'631.

Fifth Avonuo,
mllll. 114-

11811 Nlaun Pul11r NX, Btoek, T·
Top,
AIIIFM/Call.
I

and up lo me.
...
1110
-ftrm
..
box..,oprtnga
tun or1w1n l'll.
$11, and 198. Ouoen- WII
~1 King PIG. 4 dtowar -

A - 111 ol _,h 3 lA.
- . I mllll Gllllpelfo
... ZII;I14-3U--

Television
Viewing

11818uk:k Clnlury Cullom. PS,
PB,Tllt, Air. Slam&gt;. Tapa, Cnrln,
Pl.. Mud! 1101'1, Eu. Cc&gt;nd.
Aaklng N,DOG. 814-141-4525

,... &lt;hllro szoa to t7ll. Doou
•ond, ... 1... tl4l up to $3'18.
-~
S&gt;NI7I, 1'14-4*4'150.
up, bunk ........ with

thing .,0

BORN LOSER

Autos for Sale

11111 Cllryollr

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport.
- .
.... Ohio.

~· tii,DOG

· llocllnorw
to
$311.
dopootl oiiiO Lampo
$21 to Jt:ze.
011111111
.......
2 ot tiOII
and up Ia S.CIIIL Wood tobto
~
..
-

1ren1 Mlllng la tM t1mty pet•l

hOUII,

11

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriRhl

LA-'S FURNITURE
- - l l l o1 l o r o n o - . 1o1M and dlaln! pr1coc1 trom
.,. ...
13M lo - - Tabtoo 110 and up
I ' 0 OCAU MObile home, fur.. 10 $121. H~da I t 111 t3IO to

4 Famlll..: Everythlnil goea.
clothQ,
office
fumhure
etectronlet, nlnlendo tlpee'
only

Household
Goods

5I

1br, _..., In dly, fully tur-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

loyoL loolo. Tho

Monday. July 30. 1990

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Monday, July 30. 1990

tD Bundlblrtl Masten
Aultrella (T)
~~tEvenlng-

A.,_.

llll 700 Cltib With Pat

High on the list of common bridge mistakes is failure to play for jus! the
number of tricks needed Tor the_
contract.
North cue-bid three hearts to show a
b1g club raise after his previous competitive response of one n&lt;&gt;-trump .
East doubled, and South passed to
show minimum values. North then
confirmed his club support. If South's
spade king Wt're the heart king, he
would go on to live, but knowing that I
three of his high-&lt;:ard points were
wasted kept him at an apparently safe
level.
When the bear! j;lck was led, declarer could see that a 3-2 club split along
with a 3-2 diamond split would likely
let him score an overtrick. So he won
the heart ace and played A-K of clubs
and then played on diamonds. Alas,
East's J-tO-x-x provided a stopper,
and declarer had to ruff the fourth diamond. When dedarer played a spade
back to his king, West won and played
a low heart to East's queen. East then
cashed the jack of clubs, and the de&lt;
fenden made another heart trick to
set the contract.
Four clubs is ea5y to make. Declarer must suppress his greed for a paltry
overtrick and play low on the opentna
heart lead. ftecardtess of tbe subsequent defense. the communication lets

CROSSWORD

7·31- H

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86

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WEST

+JD

·~Q7642

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.Q814

tJI012
tJ 10 I

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+K

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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Sootb

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I NT

Eall
Pall
Pass

4+

Db I
All pau

Nortll

Pus

t•
2+

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Opening le.ad: • J
declarer make 10 1ncu easily . As declarer actually played, good splits tn
the minor&gt; might not help . II the de·
lender with the Ions club also has the
doubleton dilomond, be will rutl lhe
third diamond anyway. East-West will
then lake two major-suitlrlcks to hold
declarer to 10 trl;;;cu_,., ..,...,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Pale
ACROSS
3 That's
1 Bucket
the way!
5 Rustling
4 French
sound
article
10 Cash
5 Jack of ,1
resource
nursery
12 Nebraska
rhyme
Sioux
13 An acquelnl - 6 Trouble
ance of
7 SA
y es Ier day .s 4 nswer
Indian
Allee
8 Con game 21 Wing (La I.) 33 Mop
15 Watch
34 Those
18 Brown kiwi 9 Dangerous 22 Denver
emotion
is
one
people
17 Soul (Fr.)
11 Symbol
24 Jordanian 35 Grass
18 Terra of
royal
mountain
genus
20Beach
power
25 Be in hock 37 Canyon
house
14
Whit
26 Espouse
mouth
23 Persuade
18 "I Pagli- 28 Mariner
38 Token
27Book by
a
eel'
hero
30
Capone
39 Edilor' s
Adm. Byrd
19 Showy
feature
lerm
28VT.
flower
32
Graceful
41
Metal
ski spol
20 Aulo
horse
42 Curve
29 Nobel
Prize
physicist
30 Lose
one's cool
31 One of
"The Odd
Couple'
33 A.A. slop
36Cap
37 Ninny
40 See 13
Across
43 Eagle's
nesl
44 Norway,
lo nallves
45 - large
(generally) k-1-+-+--+48 Lack
DOWN
1 Tempo
DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES - Here'I bow 1o work It: mo

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter slands for another. In lhis sample A is used
for the three L1s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

1·SI

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I F

10:30® Non

NORTH
ttOIIl

L K J E G

SKVUF ,

G C C I
T J DC

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n:OO(J)• ~ llle 91 c•

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TJSC. - EJULNCE

Y.... . . ,•• CoJPI04J1110te: MONEY IS LIKE A
SIXTH SENSE. AND YOU CAN'T MAKE USE OF TitE
OTiiER FIVE WllltOUT IT. -

MAUGUAM
9

HS

W. SOMERSET

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday. July 30, 1990

Forecast
rain for
most of Ohio

WEATHER MAP - A cold front will trigger showers and
thunderstorms along the entire East Coast, !L' well as through Uu·
GuH Coast states. Heavier rains are possible In central Texas.
High pressure will hrlng mostly sunny skies to the central U.S .
Scattered alternoon showr-rs and thunderstonns will develop in
the Rockies.

------Weather----Sou lit Central Ohio
Showe r s and thundPrs torms
likely Monday nigh t , wit h a
c hance of heav y ra i nfa ll. and a
low between 65 an d 70 Chance of
rain Is 611 pe rcent Most ly cl oudy
Tuesd ay, wllh a r h a n u~ of
s howP r s. and highs between ?J
and 80. Ch ance of ra in is :10
percent
Extendt&gt;d Fort&gt;cast

Wednt•sday throu ~ h Fri~ay
Fa i r Wednesda y and Thur"
day, with d cha ncr of s howpr&lt;-,
and thunderstorms on Fr ida\· .
High s \vi ii riln gp from the upp(; r
70s to lh!' low!'r ROs Wcd n&lt;•sdar
and Th ursdav. and in the &amp;is
Frid ay. 0\'rrni g ht low s wi ll bPin
the 50s Wrd nrsdd _\' and Thu rsd a _\
mornings, and tn thr hO .. . c•&lt;Jrl\'
Friday .

Area deaths- Ernestine Hayman
Ernesti ne Hayman, 74, Lo ng
Bo tt om. died Sunday at St
.Josi•ph Hos pi ta l in Pa rkers burg.
WVCI .
Born in Reedsvi lie, she was the
daugh ter of the la te and Ernest
and Winifred Landon Barton. Sh&lt;•
was a member ol thf' Lon g
Bottom Com munit y Assueia ton
and the Py' thia n Sisters
She is s urvivpd by a son. Guy
Thoma s. Long Bottom:
stx
daughters. K athry n Fruend, In
d&gt;anapolis. Ind .: Barbara Fi l z
patrick. Lanc as te r. Margan•t
Howard . .\1 ountain Home. Idaho :
Lila Hid eno uc Long Bo t rorn;
Sharo n Fi tzpa trick. Ca nal Wm r hes tf'r: and Con nie Hi ll. Ra ·
cine: lO grandchildren. 16 grral

gran d c hildren;
two s istrrs,
Sarah Smi th. Manetta : and
Mary Ba rnh art . Glenford: " nd
rwo bro th er s. Robr r t Ra rron
Bar Uet t; a nfJ John Barton, Port
St. Lucy, Fla .
In add i ti on t o hrr parPnh shr
was preceded in dea th by her
husband, Guy Hayma n i n 197 1. a
so n. Richard : an infanl daugh
ter. Chery l ; anti onr bror hrr.
Ra lph Bar ton.
Sen1ces will be ht'ld Wednes
rla y at 11 a. m a t th (' WhiU'
B lower Fu nera l Hom(' i n Coo l·
vi lle with 1-tr,· Terri' Powr•ll
offic iating . 13urial "ill bf' in Sand
Hill Ce metNy .
Friend s m .:1_v c~lll an y tim('
Tuesday a t thP funPral home and
thf' fam il.v w ill recf'i\"(' frif'nds on
T uesday from 7-9 p.m

---Meigs announcements - - - Plan gott classic
T h~ Ducks U nl imit ed Golf
Cl ass ic will be held at Riversid&lt;'
Go U Course in Mason, W.Va on

T hursday
Golfer s wi II be di v ided. accord
1ng to handicap in A, 13. C. and D
groups. A goU pro!,•ss ional wil l
pirk teams.
Therf' w ill br shotgun sta rt at I
pm .
Th e entry lee is $40 per pla vrr
and will i ncl ude a steak dinn Pr
and prizes. Ti cke t s must br

pu rr hased by TUL·~da_v
Ca II
1719027
Meig-s grid practicr
For an~· int Pr es ted footba ll
players at Meigs High Srhool.
football practicP will hegin Wf'd
nesday and Thur..... da_
Y From ~ - r:

p.lll
Practi l'l' '"~'ill b f' ht' icl F rida _
\
from 'i J m to l::W p.m. &lt;.~nd all
prayers an· requi rf'd to allPnd .
Frf'shmrn rna~· rrport on WPd
nesday or un tht • mandaton
sta rtin g dJ.tf' l or fr ps hmen on

Aug g_

...
~

•

l ivt•s tack

hra t

s rrrss .

..

~ 0

•
•

Tuesday, July 31-Fri~ay, August 3

Muddy

fet&gt;d iot s i n some areas. thoug h,
co uld
h amper
a ni mal
movement .
Humidity wi II ge nera l ly stay :,0
IJ("r ce nt o r highPr throug h TuPs clay bcfon· lowe r i ng Wed nesday .
Du ri ng Ow night , sk ies wrrr

par tlv rloudy with widely sca t tered light shower s over the
nort hwest quartrr of thC' st atr .

i\reas of dense fog developed
over south ras t Ohio . Overnight
!Pm pcra t urr s we re in the 60s and
lowtjr 70s and w inds wrr e l ig ht.
On thf' mo rr. ing wea ther map,
a co ld fron t ex tended !rom lower
Mi chigan across Indiana to
Texas High pressure th at was
ove r the Plains likely wi ll IJu ild
i nto thP C real La kes reg ton
Tur s d J~' a nd Wrd rlPsd a!' .

--\\ "'

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II .I (W ITPnt in \ILl .\ and rx pa ncling
0 1 p1Tl' ('n t in A priL So far this
Y"~r r . r·r al pNsona l cons umption
ro~P only i n Ma rc h and .JunP
Thf' burrau sa id wag&lt;'s and
salarirs in rrrasrd $J.I billi on i n
.Junf', co mparf'cl with an a cl\·;u]('('
of $10 .1 billi on i n May .
Farme r s' in comr, howt' \.1 rr.
plu ngrd $~5 billio n in Junr &lt;~flf'r

fal lin g $.1 bil lion in Mav . FPdf'ral
subs id y payments t o fa r m
ov.· nrrs sltp JX'd $4 .2 bi ll iOn in
.JunP af1rr pl unging $4 q billion in
Ma~·

Th P burr au notrrl th &lt;Jt it hJ s
rr\.·if·wpd il.&lt;; ca lculation of Pl'r
son a l incomr and expe nd i tu rr for
prrvio us y ~)a rs . Prr sonal lncomr
was rrra lcu lated dow n fo r 19R7.
up for 1~.-tH . dnd down for 14K4
P(•rso na l income was rf'v isrd

down $11.2 billio n. or 0..1 percPnt .
for I~ R7. For 19RR. the Cd tegorv
was rrv isf'd up $11. :\ bill ion. 01 !I.L

Hospital news
Vrtf'ra.ns Mrmorial
SATUR DAY A DMI SSI ONS - Martha !\ ncl rrso n. Ha r inf'
SATCRlJAY IJ ISl'Hi\Hr ; t·:Slns BakPr TPrry BarrPtt
SlJN lli\ Y ADM ISSI()I\S 1._\"IP Sinc lair, Athens, William
l.Pvacy. Racinf'
SUI\Di\ Y D ISC HAHCd:S
Co nnir Morr is.

TUESDAY I JUly 31ST SPECIAlS
ONlY!! "All DAY"

ance over the weekend .

On Saturday, 12: 15 am, the
Pomeroy sq uad res ponded 10 a
call tram second street lor Jamie
Hudson, who was transported to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital. At
4: 35a .m ., the Middleport squad
went to North Third Street for
Char les Estep who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
5:06 a. m ., the Pomeroy squad
went to Tuppers P l ains lor Otis
James who was taken to St.
Joseph's. At 9:12a. m ., Tuppers
Plains went to Owl Hollow l or
William Watson who tra nsported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
T he Racine squad wen t to Bucktown Road at 9: OJ p.m . lor

M ar tha Anderson w ho wJs tran s-

ported to Vetera n."- Memorial
Hosp it al.
Su nday. at

12: n a m . the
Sy racuse squad wl'nt to Nease
Road for Davld NPasr who wa s

taken to Holzer M ed ical Ce nter.
At 1:2 1am ., the Pomeroy sq uad
went to SR 33 lor Lyle Sinc lair
who was tak en to Vf' ff'r an s
Memorial Hospit al. At 5:40a .m . ,
LileFiight tra nspor ted Lyle Sin
clair to Riverside Hospita l in
Co lumbus .
At 2:04p.m., the Rutla nd squad
went to Dye Road for Luci lle
Lambf'rt who was transported to
Holze r Medical Ce nter. The
Rutland squad. at 9: 07p.m .. we nt
to Larkins Street l or Shawna
Davis who was takPn to VPtera ns
Memorial Hospital.

Winning Super Lotto ticket sold
CLEVELAND iUPI) - Th e
Ohio Lottery Commission said
one ticket was sold bearing ail six
numbers In Saturday's $3 million
Super Lotio drawing.
The winning numbers were 5,
6, 18, 22, 24 and 38.
The top prize lor Wednesd ay's

drawing will be at least $3
mUllan .
In the accompanying Ki cker
game, no tickets were sold
bearing all six numbers in exact
order.
To have won the $100,000 top
Kicker prize, a player must have
654637 In seq uence.

Coun ty. was made In deference
to the vast media coverage In the
Huntington area of the murder of
Ka t hy McG innis .
The wife of the oneti me millio naire accountan t, emb ro il ed in a
myriad of financial troubiPs, wa s
found strangled las t November
with a telephone cord wound
around her neck. Her body was
found be hind a St. A lbans shopping mall.
Cabe ll Ci rcu it Judge Allred
Ferguson had suggested an im partial jury cou ld be chose n in

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Goodyear T&amp;R .
27%
Key Ce nturio n .
. .. 1 2•~
Lands' End .
.. 15
Limited Inc . ............... 20 '~
M ulrlmedla Inc .................. . !lh
Rax Restaurants ...... .. . .. ..... 2
Robbi ns &amp; Myer s.
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Shoney's 1nc
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Star Bank .
.. ...... 19%
Wendy's Inti .... __
.. 5'1,
Wort hingt on lnd
...... 22 1;,

Divorces sought
An actio n l or divorce and a suit
l or money have been filed In the
Meigs County Co mmon Pleas
Court.
Tina Ann Hamilton, Albany,
has flied a petiti on lor divorce
from Richard A llen Hamilton .
La ngsvi lle.
Parke r sburg Billing and Co llec t ors, In c., Parker sburg,
W.Va. , ha s filed a petition for
judgment of $3,239.19 from Den nis R. Wingo. Rutland .

Licel18e granted
A marriage license was recently Issued to Joseph Richard
Fields Jr., Pomeroy, and Ci ndy
L y nn So ulsby
Richardson,
Pomeroy.

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Regular Price, Get
Second One for Equal
or Lesser Volue!

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DOOR PRIZE
DRAWING WILL BE
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WEDNESDAY THRU
FRIDAY!!
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

Jewelry Sale

1 LUCKY WINNER Will
WALK AWAY WITH A
19 INCH COLOR TV
WITH REMOTE.

AWARD PRESENTED - Vera Crow, l eft , Crow's Stellk House,
was prese nted lln award Monday lor being the 1990 Work St udy
E mployer of th e Y ear. Presentin g the award Is Carol Brewer,
work study coord inator for M eigs County Schools. Crow's Steak
House employs several students from Vleigs Co unty who ar&lt;
enroll ed in work study progmms.

Plans being completed
for first Volksmarch
As a par t of thf' continuing

ce lebrat ion of Pomeroy' s I:JOth
bi r thda y, plan s arP now bP ing
ro mplr1rd for M t• ig" County's
fir st an nual Volksmarrh. to br
held Oc tober 6.
According to M ary Pow,.l l.
Chairman of thC' SC'sq ui cr ntr n
nla l Co mmittrr. the lOK ''' 1
m ile! rou te will bf'g in at Ci t v Hall
Audlt orium and 1ak1 · the p&lt;H tici
pan ts down Mai n Srrrf't thr oug h
thf' Po m eroy Hi storic Dis tr ic t.
up Linco ln Hill to l'iew thr b'· nd
and th C'n across thr flood roiJd to
Sugar Ru n.

stop &lt;.tl Thr c hurch. thr ruu. ,
co nti nurs to Sffond ~trf'f' t pass
ing thr co urthou st' to SycamorC'
.1nd back to thP Municipal
Building
Upon their re turn. v.:alkcrs will
n 'cr ivr 3 srs q ui&lt;'rn tPnnial ml'·
dal Thr mr-dal is an outlin f' of
Mc1gs Cou nt .\· wi th thf' S{'squi cr n·
tr nnia l logo wit hin !he outlm r
The nwdal wi ll hP ava ilablf' only
to thOS(' who cD mpletp th(•
'.·o lk smarch
·
Powr ll SJ\"S rh ;-~ t thr vo \k s·
march
s igrwd

IS

a
to

lt~is u r&lt;'lv

bt'

walk di'
by

rnjoyrd

l'VPI "_V Or!P

FRIDAY
AUGUST 3, 1990
10 A.M.-7 PM.

GRAND OPENING
SCHEDULE

Othrr &lt;Ht' as inc l udf' rl in llw
Vo lksmarch wi ll includl' Mul
brrry A ve nur, &lt;1 port io n of £3e('Ch
Gro ~·p Cr mf'trry, thl' M aplro...

Thf' vo lk&lt;.;marf'hes t~n• l'Spf'
cwll\ popular in Europ(' . wht' IT
m·cr R millio n peoplf' p~1r t icipatr
rarh yrar .

TUESDAY, JULY 31

tfor mer rhild rrn·, ll om'' ' · Un
io n Avp nu P. Osbornr Strf'c1. and
Sacr rd Heart Churc h /\ftrr d

in g hPrP shou ld con tact Powr.l\at

NEVER BEFORE SHOWN IN
THIS
AREA.
iJ
14K GOLD NECKLACES,
BRACELETS, RINGS, EARRINGS
AND MORE.

In Store Sale

UP TO

70°/o SAVINGS

Live Remote plus Giveaways
plus

Photo Album &amp; Mug
Drawings
THURSDAY, AUGUST 2

In Store Sale
plus
Men &amp; Women's Seiko Watch
Drawings

q~2 - ~O(X) .

Local news briefs___,
Rutland man not hurt in accident

plus

19 Inch Color TV with
Remote Control
Wt IHtnt tht light to Limit Quan~tits.

992 -6669

they have !onned an opinion on
It ," Ferguson said.
Prosecutor Chris Chiles es tim ated that an Imported jury
likely would raise the cost of the
trial by some $12,il011. A similar
move was made with the recent
retrial of a man convicted of
murdering a police officer.
The prosecution planned to
locu s on McGinnis' whereabouts
between the evening of last Nov.
28, and 8 30 p.m the following
night -

the ti me period polieP

be lieve Kathy

McGi nnis wa s

- Volnovldl soug ht to demon-

th e Jist of Issues In th e Ohio
ca mpai gn.
HIS Repub l lean o ppo n~ n 1.
G~orge Volnovlch. sai d abortion
is "an importa nt Issue," but hr
rated it f;u down a list of other
item s, Includi ng Integrity and
et hics, management i n govern ment, economic development
and educa tion.
Their ratings were revea led at
press conferences ca lled by eac h
cand idate to grab l or a better
hold on the co nt roversia l Issue.
which has movpd further toward
the fron t burner sin ce the resig
nati on l as t week of Supreme
Court Justice Wil liam Brennan .
Using telev ised vi d('() tapes ot
Pach o th er's reren t past sta tements , supplemented by shea!&gt;
of newspa per ar ticles.
- r f'lPhrPZZP a tlrmp ted to
show th a t Voinovich at fir st said

strate tha t Cr iPbrPzze is tr yi ng to
make abortion the No. 1 iss ue in
the carnpalgn at the expense of
ot hers . He al so re minded rcpor
ters that the Democra t s witche~
from a longtime pro-life stancP
last December to a pro-choice
posture.
"The !ac t is, Geo rge Votnovlch
d()('sn 't wan t Ohio voters to know
wher e he stand s on t his lssur. ··
sa id Celebrezze. "He's tryin~ l o
duck, he's trying to warne and
skate around th e issm• . "
Volnov ich sa id on July 111 th at
he wou ld sign le~isiati o n Si milar
10 Lo ui si ana's s t rict proposal
\ Un i ting abortion. thl' n found out
t her£' wen• somP '' unrrasona
bie" pro vi sions.
Hr told rf'po rters Mond a)' he

hP wo uld have sig ned a rrs tri c
tlvr Loui siana abortion law ,-p-

sla in .

While prosecu to rs do not havr
wi tnesses to th~ killing. they arr
like ly to produce othe r incr im i
nat ing testimony .
For instance, thp prosecuU on
Is expected to ca ll on a para
medic who aided McGinnis afte r
hf' wa s d iscovered in h is Jeep
some 100 feet down a ravi ne in
ne ighboring K en tu cky , In what
appeared to be an accident.
The paramed ic recalled that
McG inn is . who claimed to have
been abd ucted and tortured

along wit h his wile, appeared
rr l a.J((~d nrx t to a ca mpfire he had
set

Po lie&lt;' say they have also been
able to determine that the
key-s haped burns in!licted on
Kath y McG inn iS ' chest were
made by a key from a Cabell
Co unt y motel where Lyl e McGi nnis stayed before the murder.
And. au thoriti es have sa id they
found pierrs of telephone cord,
si milar to tha t found wrapped
around Kathy McGinn is . In
McGinnis' wrecked .Jeep.

B~ VINCENT DEL GIUDICE

· UPI Buslne.s Writer
WASH 1NCTO N - New hom''
scdrs adva nced by R Pf'r cen t in ··
,lunp fo r th r seco nd consPcutivr
mon thl y ga i n af ter a wi nt er and
spri ng ol str ady dffl in£'s, 1h1•
~overnmPnt sa id Tu esday .
Thf&gt; incrPasP. to an a n nua l ratr

Voinovich greets
Quayle in Toledo
TO LEDO. Oh io t UPli -

Ru

puhliran g u t&gt;erna t o rl &lt;~ l nominrP
Gl'orgl' Vo inovic h g rPf'IPd VicP
Prrs ident Dan Quay ll' o n hi s

arrival In Ohio at R 40 a m .
Tuesday
Quyalf' was sr t to spend ada\·
ra mpalgmng In wes tern Oh io for
Vo inovich. the ma .vor of Cl P\"P·
land for 111 years who cl ~cldf'rl not
to seek re-el ec tion in 1989 so hrcou ld conce ntrat e on this year's
gubrrnatoria l ra ce.
Voinovic h and Qua y!(' im m r ·
dialriy left the airport tor th r
fir st or a serirs uf fund -rai se r s on
be hal! of Vo inovich. Th~ fir st
fund -ra iser was at a Toledo ho tc•l.
They also were to met't wit h
pat ients at the Medica l Co ll ege at
Oh io in To ledo. before trave l ing
to Findl ay. Li ma , Dayton and

Lilli e Har t, Raci ne, Is thr
wi nner of thr photo ld entl!ica tlon

Units of Meigs Coun tv l·:mergPncy Med ica l Services
responded to three ca lls for ass istance on Monday .
At 10: 27 a.m., Pomeroy wa s called to State Route 7 at
Ke~baugh 's Res taura nt lor Lau ra Phiel er She wa s transpor ted
to St. Joseph's Hospi tal. At II: 04 a.m., Middleport was ca lled to
Pearl Street for Grace Du r st who was tak en to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital . and at 11 : ;,oa.m .. Pomeroy sq uad went to
State Route 681 to an au to accident where Leona,rd R. Phillips
refused treatmen t.

Vo in ovich

q ui ckly cou nte r atta c ked , say i ng Crlcbrezzt' is

try ing to mak e abortion "t he only
ls s u~. an d I think people resent
it ."
Ce lebrezzf' sald hr is iss umg
about one position papt:-r rver~··
wrek on rdur alion. hPalth care.
dc vf' lupmc• n t a nd
thr
env\ ronmpnl .
He addPd th i:l t in vil'W of
aOOrtion ac tiv ity in ldah o. Pe nnsylva n ia and Louisi ana. it is
vc.ry much an Issue in thr Ohio
ca mpaign.
"To say that abor ti o n is not an
issue. as m y opponrnt has sa id.ls
demeaning to rvrryo ne: ma lr fPrnalr, rig hT to lifr pro-c hoicr."
Ce lPbre-zzp sai d thJ1 for th oSf'
who hav e jobs. abo rti on should

br th e top issue. Only jobs and
dr1~ l opm ent programs shou ld
br- cons id r rr d ahPad of health
i.&gt;; _~;, ups ,

arro rding to tile OC'mOnatic fi_jncJidatr .
He said (']pm rn 1&lt;HY Jnd ~peon
d&lt;:II'Y educatio n. crimP and safr
neighborhoods. and thP t• nviron
ment foll ow on his lis t of issurs
" f n tPrms of th r major issuPs
fac ing thi s stat e. in trrms of thr

lSSUe

impact a gover nor can make, I
would say i t's minimum ." said
Volnovich of the abortion Issue
"I t' s an Important issue. I don't
wan t to minimize it. "
Voinovic h sa id Ce lebrezze wa s
par t of th e sca ndal-r idden adminlsn·ation ot Gov. Richard Celeste. even thoug h he was elected
i ndependently. " I don 't think
Tony Ce lebrezze ca n be cred ible
as the candidate for governor
when he was part of the problem ... sa id th e form er Cl eveland
mayor .
Meanwhile , in Cleve l and.
Bet sy Grund , executi ve direc tor
of thr Na ti onal Abortio n Rights
Actio n League. sa id her c rga ni·
zatio n wi ll begi n air ing :\0-seco nd
radio cu mm Pricial s " highli}:!:h1 i ng the an ti -choice position or

guberna torial ca ndidat e Georg~
Vomovlc h."
"Oh io's Republica n guberna toria l ca ndid atr is out of touc h
with lhf'ma Joril yo !Ohiodn sw ho
do not wa nt th r govPr nm en t
inter fl'ring
i n thPir priva lP
livrs. " shl' SC:I id _ ' "Ohioans wC:~ nt
womPn and ram il iPs, not po li tir ians, 10 drcide ."

o f ~)~n.ooo nrw homes, was much

salr pricPs tJa\·r tx&gt;1• n r·unnin g

brlter than rxpectf'd b~' priVil1P
rronom ls ts and till? brst showing
si nce November 19~. whrn the
ra te stood at 6f17.000 nPw homrs .
In Mav. nrw hom(' ~alPs
adva nced.by :,U percrm. accord
ing to a r eport by thr CommPrTI'
[)ppa r tm rn t and Drpartmrnt of
Housin g
an d
Crban
Development
The mrdian prit£' 11 f a nrw
home i n J unr was $12q_qoo . i-l n
i ncrease of $2.000 ovrr Ma y. &lt;wd
th l' avf'ragr pri ce stood at
$152,900, up fr om $ 1 4 ~.700 in M ay,
the governmPnl sa id .
A ma rKe t Jet tPr by Mit subi shi
Ba nk in Nrw York sa id nrw hom&lt;'

about .10 percPnt high f' r th&lt;&gt;n
r:&lt;isting homr prices. ··which
puts tho. nr v.' segmr nt of thP
marke1 .11 :-1 C0'\ 1 dd va nt agr . ··
··Ail in alL this does not bode
\\"l'l l for thl' sail' of nf •w hou.-.P5
""lthout pri er concess ion~ Uy thf'
1Juildcrs ."t hl' markPt lrliN sai d
Co mpared to .J une 1 9H~. whr·n
1tlf' mrdlan prir&lt;' of a home wa:-.
$122.H00, nf'W ho m P ~alPs Ill .) U ili'
\990 W£'rP llff b\' mon· th;tn lll
prrr('nt, th e gon'rnm('nf"o.., . . t;llis
tics showPd
The annual ratr of hom e '-'llll'"

in .Ju ne t9H9 was 1&gt;16.11011.
B:.-· r('gio n. nrw hom(' "a \(•.., in

-j umper!

.1o

)X'rcr nt in th e

No rlhPas1.
- fell 4 :1 JX'ITf'n t i n th~~
Midwest
- galnrd t:l h percent In the

Sout h.
-d ipped o.H perce nt in th~
Wf'S I.
Thr an nua l rate of nrw hom f's
rP m a i ning for sa le a t th f' r•nd nf

.I u nf' edged down to 352.il011 from
·l:•l-\,000 in Mav. leavi ng a supp ly
of '"i 1,~ mont hs of dwr llin gs at the
currr nt sa les rdtr. the govrrn mf'nl &lt;;a id
All lhl' st a t is ti cs 1n thf' rrport
wf'rf' adjusfe'rl lor Sf&gt;&lt;-J.~tma l
f ; w1or~ .

.1 u nr- 199tl

Cinci nna ti.

went of f th '' right sid e of the road and ! lip)X'd ovf'f .

EMS has three Monday calls

wou ld sign lrg isl at 1on pP r m1tt ing
abo rtions only in i nstancps of
rape or incl~st, or to savp thP li fe
of the mothr r . but would not
initi a te l egisla ti o n on th(' issuf' at

al l.

•

New home sales up 8 percent in June

Lillie Hart winner
of photo ID contest

Work m an was c ited for !allu rr to co nt ro llJy th eGa ili a-Meigs
post of th e State Highway Patro l

toed by Guv. Huddy Roemer ,
th en changed his mind . and th ai
he was trying to m inimize
abortio n as a ca mpaign Issue i n
ord er to hide his own in secu re
posi tion .

w ith other hea lth care lssuPs, on

A Ru tland man escapf'd injury ~l o nda y whf' n th r r.:~r he wa .-;
dri vi ng wr nt off thr road and ovrrtu rn Pd
Todd Workman, 16. was tra ve lin g· nor thbo und nn Co unt:--·
Road :~ w hPn hP l o~ t con trol of his 198~1 Nissa n pirk -up t ruck,

FRIDAY I AUGUST 3

14K Gold Sale

253 NORTH SECOND

Those int eres ted in partic ipat ·

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 1

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

" Knowledge of the case does
not _exclude a j uror, it' s whethrr

ranks abortion second. a long

PLUS

All GREETING
CARDS

newspaper.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS Democra ti c
gubernatori al nominee Anthony
Ce iebrezze .Jr said Monda y he

4. 1 Year "FREE Membership for Med-Module

1&lt; CANDY

Fayette Co unty. although It Is
relatively c lose - within 100
miles from Huntington .
Ferguson re jected a reques t
from defense attorneys who
sought to move their client's
murder tri al out of the Ca bell
Co un.ty area.
The judge sa id Fayette Coun ty's res idents have not had too
much exposure to the case , slncP
mosl do not get Huntington' s

Nominees trade jabs on abortion

I. Savings on Your Next
Prescription Purchase

PRODUCTS

Dally stock pri ces
(i\ s or 10 :30 a.m.)
Bryc e and Mark Smith
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp;. Loewl

Units of the M ei gs Co unty
Emergency Medi cal Servi ces
responded to 10 ca lls lor assist

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. IU PI I
- Two vans filled with a jury
drawn from Fayet te Co unt y
arrived at the Ca bell Co unty
Courthouse ear ly Tuesda y l or the
start of accountant Lyl e McGln ·
n is' trial on a c ha rg~ he strang led
his wife and left her body behind
a shopping m al l.
It took bo th si des al l day
Monday to agree on th e jury. wi th
t hP flna l membpr no1 C' hosr n until
5:30 p.m .
A move to pick jurors three
counties away , outs id e Cabel l

selected Monday for McGinnis trial

WHILE IN THE
STORE GRAB
A DISCOUNT
BALLOON!

Stocks

Squads have 10 weekend calls ~~Xe~~i%~~~0

•
IS

YOU'LL FIND INSIDE

Co nt inurd fr om pagP 1

Am r:tect ric Power AT&amp;T .. · .. · · ·
~s~l~nd Oil ·
O
va ns · ..... ···
Charmrn g Shoppes ..
.

Jury

1 Section. 10 Pagee 26 Cenu
A Multimedia Inc:. N ew~~paper

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. July 31. 1990

PLUS MUCH MORE!

Personal...

p!·rcr·n1.

CAT TRAINING - EmUy Duhl shows Butterscotch to judge
Allee Thompson . Emily's 4-H project Involves the training of c ats,
and was just one ola •arlety of proj ects judged at Saturday session
held at the RuUand Cl•lc Ce nter.

Vol.40, No .311
Copyrighted 1990

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

bring a cha nce of ra in Fr iday and

Cl earing tonight. Low in
~Os. Mostly sunny WedJnesd••Y · High near 80 .

•

•

Canadian high pressu r e behind
the front will bring coole r air to
Oh1o after Monday. Cons iderable
cloud iness should continue Tuesday, but rain chances will be
sli ght.
Fa1r skies Wed nesday and
T hursday will let some ou tdoor
work res umf' in t he dri er arf'i1S .
Anothl'r front, howev er, wi l l
possibly this com ing weekend .
Highs 75 to 80 on Tuesday wil l
b&lt;.' mostly in the upper 70s to
towe r 80s Wednesday and Thur s
day . The m ild er and even tually
lrss humid wpather w i ll easP

Daily Number
869
Pick-4
8708
Card8
H-5; C-A; D-A

Page 3

possibiL'

UPI

Dodgers hand
Reds eighth
loss in row

•

By l!nitcd Press International
This week should star t off wet
across much of Oh io as a weak
co ld front slides slowly through
the state Monday night.
Most rain amounts through
~lo nday
night. the National
Weather Servi ce said, should be
one- hall to l inch. but isolated
amou nt s of 1 Ia 3 inc hes are

Ohio Lottery

sPrl es "Around Town," which

Ba nk One is doing In conjunc tio n
wi th
P \ m r r o y's
sesq ul cen tenn ia .
Th e series r un.; ever y Wed nes day In T he Da i ly Senti nel. For
those who want to participa te,
en tri es should be turned In to th e
Se ntinel off ice by the followin g
Mond ay.
Answers may be submitted by
mall or dropped-oft at Ut e office.
Winners receive a landmark
Chri stmas ornament from Bank
One.

THIS ONE'S FOR THE BIRDS - Billy Francis,
rtght, ex plains his exhibit, and the research
Involved, to judge George Bottrell at Saturday's

judging of 4-H projects In preparation for the
Meigs County Fair which opens on Aug. 14.

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

STORE HOURS: Monday thru Friday 9 A.M.-I P.M. Saturday 9 A.M.-3 P.M.

Gel Quick Results! Place A S5 Per Oay ·Bulletin Board ' Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section.

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