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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Noble among
Rio Grande
•
recruits

l'ick-:l: 057
Plck-4: t979
Ca rds :
7-H: ,J-C; K -D: 4-S
Tuesday , parUy
High ncar 85 .

Page 3

su nny .

•
•

Vol.41. No.71

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, August 14, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

1 SecHon. 10 Pages
26 Cents
A Muhimedia Inc _Newspaper

Embargo takes hold in Middle East nations
l!MO
Died: VIctor Will. or Canal
Winchester. Oh. on ,June ~1990. Mr. wm was struck and
kllled by an autornobtle whUe
vlsltlng Meigs County.

real es lal e coord !11at or . His
wife. Rebecca Shope Lyklos
'85 . Is ernplnye&lt;l by South We stern Cllv Sclwol s. The
couple reside In Grove City.
Ohio.

19ll4
Renrend James and Mrs.
Bonnie Magaw '7 0 have relo cated to Mansfield. Ohtu wl1ere
Reverend Mag;tw ls Lhe pastor
at First United Methodist
Chun:h .

1985

Attention Rio Grande Alumni!
Nominations ror Lhe 1991 Alumni Awards are being sought. In a revised selection process. names
or nominees wlll appear In a future Issue or I he Interchange. allowing the entire alnnml body to
sele&lt;:t. by vote. this year's candidates. The awards wtll be prese nten at the 1991 Alumni Banquet.
on Saturday. May 18. 1991.
The n~ awards to be presented are :
The Distlngnlshed Alumnus I Alumna Award Is given to alumni who ha~ brought honor to the
Unl~rslty through slgnU1cam personal achleven.,nt.
The Atwood Achievement Award Is presented lO alumni for personal achievement r enecling
credit upon the University. Including professional or civic accomplishments . and who have an
Interest In promollng the Ideals and objectives of the lnstltuUon.
The UnlYerslty of Rio Grande Alumni Award Is given for meritorious service to the University
or Alumni Association, In the ro.-m or maln11!~11ng alumni or class organizations. active partlclpa Uon In Unt~rslty e'"'nts. recruitment or students. placement or graduates. maldng or securing or
donations. participation on Uni~rslty committees. or serving to benem the general welfare or the
University.
The University of Rio Grande Faculty Citation Is given to outslllndtng. long-ltme members of
the University's faculty or stalf. rec&lt;:gntzed as leaders In their parOcular flelds . (Silltus or 15 ·year
employment of ellglbUity Is avaUable upon request.)
The Alumni Citation of Appreciation may be presen ted to an Individual or an organization.
whenever recognition Is appropriate

Married: Robert V. Shaw. to
Emily Howard. on J une 23 .

Robert Ls employer1 as an audi tor for the Slllte or Ohio. The
couple reside In Columbus.

1986
1964

Sharon Davls-Stubbe Is an
educational consultant In the
Adult Education Division "1th
the Ohio Department or Edu cation. Mrs. Davis -Stu bbe Is
currently serving as sll!te board
member for the Ohto Literacy
Nel'Mll'k and the Ohio Assocla tion for Adult and Continuing
Education. She was also se lected by the Ohio Arts CouncU
- as Appalachian Arts Advisor
and wtll be 1.mrklng with vari ous Southeastern Ohto coun ties . Davls-Stubbe resides tn
VIncent, Ohio with her hus
band. Marlyn, and has one son.
Chrntopher.

1972
Tarance Drafu ts an tnstruc tor at the US Customs Acad emy In St. Simons. Georgia.

1976

Mind! Schmoll Joseph Is a
ca feter ia manager for Ross
Laborrltc.-les In Westerville. Oh.
She . hu sband Ron. and daugh ter . Jcnna. reside In Colum bu s.
fl orn: to David and Penny
Evans Sands. their ftrst chUd.
a son. Sean Cameron. on Feb ruary 19. 1990.

Dirlt Elliot has .,-aduated wt01
a Master or Divinity Degree
from Asbury Theological Semi nary In WUmore. Ky. Elliot Is
currenUy a pas tor at TIJUnnan
and Vega United Methodist
Churches.
Sherri Lunnlng Simons wa s
recently promoted to Senior
MarkeOng Represenll!U~ with
Progressive Casualty Insur ance Company. She and her
husband . Bruce . reside In
Hanover. PennsytvanJa

Kimberly Dillon Is the Alumni
Publtcatlons Director at Mer
cyhursl College In Erte, Penn sylvania.

I HOME PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ZIP CODE------------------'

lssue- 2 funds inciudecleanll)g the

I

II BUSINESS ADDRESS ________________ BUS. PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _H

lagoon, correcttng sewer problems in low er Middleport. and
rs tablis h i n~ a sewage labora tory
so that the v llt a ~ c ca n do It s own
lestlng lnstzad or hiring th e work

:F~Y _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

donP at a co sf of several hu ndrr d
dollar s a month . ThoSf' thn•t•

Horn: to Lloyd ri nd Marlen e

.\II empl nW(' of M eri ·h :ull s l\J ;1
l i111 ltl l IJitlll~

Matthew Lykin s ro ·r-c ntll· rr
ce lved hi s MBA rrorn Xrtvtn
Unlversltv. Mr L\'khl '&gt; 1..,

t ' lll

,~own by The I.IIIIIIN I In&lt; " ' "

Holl y ll asti ng s i &lt;.. i' rllp lo\4 d
IJ\· 111 1 h ·dnnl (~m T Jifll i 'f ll t! "
ar1 111 \T&lt;., tlgatllr lrll ll!t• Olll r'f' 111
J'r•rc;cJflllf'l Ma n n~CIIII'Il l

c __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

-

-~

I
IMEMrnERSHIPSIAWARDS __________________________________~

I

I CDnCSER~CE

______________________________________

-

FIRST TIME EXHffiiTORS - For the New
Beginnings 4-H Club of Tuppers Plains, exhibiting
at the lair Is a "first". Besides a variety of sewing
and cooking projects, the cluh members took on a
group project of litter control. Denise Laughery

and Tern Browning art• the leaders. Here Ruby
Burke and Michelle Laughery add the finishing
touches to the club's booth In the junior lair
building.

pro ject s fall into the small
government compefiti vr pr o
gram fo r Iss ue 2 fund s
Th e fo urt h project com tn g

under Issue 2 alloc ati ons Is th r
rebuildin g of Pearl Street be-

[Alumni Fee Waiver Forms To Be Mailed In September
ll w :\lu i Jtnl Ft·t· VJ,\i ver tonn w il l lw di c; triliu l t'd !Jv th l' Utll vc r-...,uv·-.. 1\dmh-..tun.., &lt;&gt;n-ice ' rn
~· · p t i'JIIh('r 1\!tl! lllli w l1( 1grndt tnt cd in . or si rHt' . J~ j r, ; J wil l n'n'il.'t' tllt'l r furrn In ttw !flail t\lt i ii Ht i

In an nou nc i ng lhf' pl ans for tlw
new publication. Parker staled
thai " pictures v.- il l br sol icit ed

CLASS YEAR _
CITY

STATE

_,

ZIP _ __

I
I HOME PHONE

I
I

BUS. PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ j
RETIJRN FORM TO :
OFFICE OF ALUMNI RELATIONS
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
RIO GRANDE , OH. 45674

I

L ______ ____ ____ __ _____ _ ________ ~

TASTE TEST - With 364
entries In the haking and
canning division at the Meigs
County Fair, the competition
was keen. Here Betty Burris,
New Havf'n, a reUn•d home

Pconomks h•acht~r. and
,Jackje Anderson, Langsvillt•,
who ieaches at Point l'leasanl
High School, try yet anothr•r
chocolate chip cookie. There
were 12 hatches of the!W
cookies enU,red In thr class lor
chocolate chip.

1.d1u gra&lt;l ltft lr·rl prl01 l&lt;J 1~(,:\ lllil _\ r ' 'IJI!t' ..., l i't I1Jrlll !Jy cnlling 1\drnl.'\:-.lol l.i . Ciilllpll ~ rxtl' ll \ lf Hl '2UH .
.1\li ill l!li 1·'!'1' W&lt;lhrr ,1 llo'"'"' l~w &lt;tlwntrl ·.., Jx&gt;rhur· ;1 pro'&gt; pcctl w -.., t 1nkll!. In· r!ir tTiill g tlw -'\ tl
rrll ........ i&lt;HI " fI ll!\ I' !() \V~ tl\"1 " t h.-1 1 "'tlllt ·rll ·..., $1 :-i applic ·atlllll i"!'f'

tween Lau rel andHartlnger at an
anticipated cost of between
$RO,(KIO and $'l0,000 . In addition to
the actual rebuilding or the road.
the project would include curb- _
tog and sidewal ks.
Mayor Hoffman reported thr
village will rece ive about $33,000
fronc the co unty allocation. and
then will apply for an additional
$511.000 from the $100.000 more•

Council also agreed to proceed
with flltn~ a n applica lion with the
Department of Natural ResourrPs, Division of Waterways, for
Middl eport levee Improvement.
Th e lola! pr oject cost would be
$114.400 with the vi llage to seek
$76,000 from th e Division of
Wate rways. The remaining
$38.400 would come from the
village either in local funds or

which 1hecounty will rPcPlvP Hr

SPfviCPS

sa id that there has been an
informal agreemenl thatthdi ve
villages will take $:&gt;0.000 each In
separat e years which th e deci sion as to who gets It depending
on which village can get a proj ec t
approved and funded

A live-year, one mill levy for
current expen ses will be placed
before vote rs in the November
General Election . A renewal. the
levy genera tes $14,000 a year and
Is used primar ily for street
I ights.
Council agreed to make an
offpr fo r a woodfld area of aOOut

Arrangements were a lso made
for the Mayor Hoffman to proceed w1th the cubs Ide recycling
projec t application with the Oh io
Hoard fo r Litter ControL The
applicat ion deadline is Aug ..11. 11
was noted . F'unds received from
th at source would be used to
purc hase co nt ainers for recycla ·
bles an d also perhaps a I railer for
ose in collection . Mayor Hoffman
repor!Pd . ThP pru jPct would br
rarriPd out as a cooperativr
erro n between the village and
Roger Manlex ·s Rec~·c l e CP nter.

from th e public . They should be
no tess th an ~0 years old and
should d('pict somr facet of I if(' i n
Meigs Co unt y or of a n histo rlc
sitr. structu re or event. "
According to Parker. some of
the possible categories to be
includ ed In th e ixlok will be
tran sportation. !tres and flOod s,
th e ri ver, boat s, buildings, agri cu ltu re and fa r m life. r errral ion
and sport s. count y fairs ond
spec ia l rvr nt s. commun i l irs.
scenic and hi storic si lt's, rarl !'

indu s trirs, sc hools and rhurchPs
;\o family or Individual photographs wil l be u.srd. said Parkrr .
unlr ss th ey arr a pari of a
photograph that depict s the hts
to ri ca l categorie s described.
Th r co mmittee as ks that in -

I

·nw

---------------

Continued on page 10

two acres near the martna.
Councilman Bob Gilmore will
confer wilh the owner aboul the
property thi s week and report
back to Council. He described the
sec tion as Id eal for a park
development although he did
note that the land is in the flOod
plain . In conjunc tion wilh th at he
sa id that if the acwage could be
secured. II will be used as a part
or the planned Halloween
haunted ha yride in October.
Continued on page 10

History book planned for Meigs
Plans arf' now hl'in g madr h~·
the M eigs County PionrPr &lt;HJd
Hi storic al Socie ty to publish a
new his tory book .
The book. to be entitl ed "T hru
the Yea r s in Picture" will
f ea t ur e hund reds of photograph s
i many of th em never befo re
published 1 of M eigs Co unt y,
Ohio. This wil t be the first
photographic hi story of lht •
county ever y publlshrrl
Thr prPiiminary rornmillf'P,
chalrE'd by Ma rgaret Pa rker and
mad e up or societ )' 1rus tees Ll oyd
131a ckwood. Joxce Dav is. Re,WIIItam Middlrswarth a nd
Ka r en Werry

:NOMINATORY /YOUR NAME

AI Ma shat also sa id foreigners
in Kuwait and Iraq will be
allowed to go but that lhl' process
"lakes tim e. In due time they arp
going to be let free ."
There are about 2.500 Amertca ns in Kuwait. The State Department has sa id it is in
frequent contact with Iraq about
get tlng the Americans out of

~

PLEASE USE AN ADDITIONAL SHEET IF NECESSARY

:

Baker Wood . their '-.l·' roru l &lt;&gt;on
EvRn -JH v. () II .\~rtr 'L l

YEAR~

I OCCUPATION/TnLE ____________________________________

I ADDiill&gt;S

1984

By CHARLENE HOEFLil'll

IOTHERDEGREES _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:

the United Nations

Middleport
will
seek
Issue
2
1
•
sewer, street proJect money

I ADDJm&gt;S,____________ _ CITY _ _ _ _ _ STA'ffi _ _ _ _l

Melanie Hennen ts the Text I
Hefcren ce Book and Officer
Supplie s huyer for Clark State
Community College In Sprlnll flf'lrl. Ohio.

1989

in Me·

Cypriot vessel, which was at int ercept t anke rs and oth er me r lowed to co ntinuP on it s wav. chant shipping. Such incident s
Smith said it was normal pra'c
have not been reported sinc e th e
tlce for Royal Navy warships to
war was suspc•nded under a 1988
hail passin g ships on VHF radio
cease· firP.
and sa id It was prematu re to link
In Was hingron. Iraqi Ambassa ·
lhl' inc iden t to Bri li sh rf'solve to
dor Mohamed AI -Ma shat said
enforce the U.N . -sa nctio ned
Tuesday. "Th e blockade Is llleboycott
. gal." In an interview wilh NBC 's
During lhe eight year Iraq
" Today," ai -Mashat ca lled on
Iran war. it was common prac · the lnt ernallonat community to
lice for Anglo-American na va l
denounce the action. which he
forces In the Persian Gulf to
said had not been authorized by

I

:NOMINEE NAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - CLASS

:

Thomas ami Lls.a McNear
Savage reskic lnllrvhclm G&lt;-r lltitlly , w iH' rf' Mr S&lt;r\·age I~ a
2nd Lil'utrnr. rll in the l iS Ann\
Enp:l llt'r r Corp Mr&lt;., . Si1\.rrt~ I'-

Dubai,

~

Kann Bowdle Is a house manager for a group horne ror the
mentally retarded .

Born : to Tom and Valerie
Johnson Hans tine . a da ugll ·
ter . Rebecca DeAnr1 . on April
2\ . 19!=}()_ Tilt' CO IIpl f' lla~ a
son . Curtis. a~c 7

Shipping sources ln

I
OFFICIAL ALUMNI AWARDS NOMINATION FORM
I
I AWARD _______________________________________ I

ball coach at Vinton County
High School. Thts year's team
was Class AA District Champion.

1978

an act of war.

monitoring ship-to-ship radio
contact. sa id a Royal Nav y
frigate Intercepted a Cypriot oil
tanker off the coast of Dubai
Tuesday and asked the ercw
aixlullhe cargo and other partl c
ulars. The sources sa id Briti sh
personnel did not board the
Cypriot vessel.
Nicholas Smith, a llrltlsh Min istry of Defense spokesman In
London. confirmed the frigate
made radio contact with the

, ------------------------------,

1977
Dale Whlu Is the astslllnl lase -

Shaw. a son . Brian ,James. on
May 26. 1990

-Fair o

Comments by U.S. and Brilish
officials that their governments
would block ships to enforce a
U N .-sanctloned economic boycoli of Iraq have spill the
Wes tern world . U.N. sources satd
that lew mc•mber sta tes backed
I he move and France said Its
nava l forces would not intercept
Iraqi cargo ships at sea because
such a measure would constitute

Sentinel News Stall
Applications for State I ss ue 2
monies to finance four sewer and
stre et projects will be filed in
September by Middl eport Village Cou nci l.
Meeting Monda y nig ht at vi i
!a ge hall. Council auth orized
Mayor Fred Hoffm an to proc eed
wllh th e applications for lhOSl'
project s. along with the paper
work on two other projects. They
are a recyeling grant from Ohio
Board lor Llltl'r Control. and a
grant from the DPpartmPnt of
Natura l Resou r ces, Div! sion uf
Waterway s, lor addlltonal work
on th e Middleport levee.
The sewer projec ts lor which
the village will be rt'ques ling

PhU Howard Is the boy's var stty basketball coach at Piketon
High School. Howard r~rly
coached at the reserve level.
Howard al so teaches In the
math department.

Ibn: to J. Steven anrl Patrlrla

By ANN I'ETERS
United Press International
Iraq denounced the United
States' de facto blockade as
Illegal Tuesday and a British
frigate intercepted a Cypriot oil
la.tker off Dubai in an apparent
sig n of Bnlish U.S resol ve to
block the transpo rt or good s for
Iraq
British official s. howevl'r, denied the Incident was part of a
blockade.

---------

Counrl!

mcmbPrs arP cur

r ently lnvestlgallng the possi bility of consolidating all ln suran cPs on village property into a
blanket policy .
·
Among the Insurance poltciPs
now In effect In th e village are
ge neral liability Insurance, Insu rance on village hall and the

Two escape injury in crash
Two area men t'scaped sprlous
Injury ai 5:10 this morning when
their car went oul of control on
Powell Street, Middleport.
Accord log to a repo rt from the
Middleport Pollee Department,
the 1989 Ford two-door vehicle
driven by Robert G. Roush of
Syracuse, wen I off the rlghl side
of the road, cut off a telephone
pole and went over a 40 root

The driver was taken to Vete rans Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport unll of the Meigs
Counly Emergency Medical Service. He suffered contusions and
was treated and released.
A passenger, Rick Hall, Middleport. was treated at the scene.
The car was totalerl and
charges against the driver are
pending, pollee said.

firehouse. and Insurance on all
equlpmenl and vehicles.
The village has been In contact
with Bill Quick el, an In su rance
agent with Davts-Qulckel Insu rance In Pomeroy. who has
Indicated that a total fleet
Insurance premium of $5 ,128 can
be paid In Installments or 40
per cent down. and 30 percent In
two paymen ts.
John Musser, an agent with
Downing, Childs, Mullen, Musser
Insurance Company represent Ing the same Insurance company, !old VIllage Clerk Brenda
Morris that his of!lce could o!fer
the same package of fleet Insurance for 30 percent down and
monthly payments of the balance
wlth Interest.
An Insurance package of general llablllly Insurance, lnsu·
!!J

" IIJI : ••I

these S€'Ssions will be announced
at a lat er d atr .
The deadline for submission of
pictures Is December 8. Pictures
may be submitted by mall or
may be brought to the mu seum
T uesday through Saturday from
I p m until 4 30 p.m . Photos
should bt• mailed to Meigs County
Hi s tory Book. Rox 145, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 .
T he drcision a!-i to which of th £&gt;
approxim alt•ly HOO photos will tw
inctuden in lhr book will ill' made
by the book comm ittPe.

~w-

+

.+

--

i
(

\i

Insurance topic of Pomeroy council
By BRIAN ,1. REED
Sentinel News Stall
Insurance coveragr for lhP
Village of Pom eroy wa s the
subject or a special meet ing of
Pomeroy VIllage Council at
village hall on Monday evening

stead of original photographs.
only copies of ptct ures be submit ted Th ere will be serveral
copying ses sions held at the
muse um, when~ photos may be
co piE'd fo r a small !('{'. Dates for

NEW BOOK TO BE PUBLISHED- A new hook
of bl&amp;lorlcal photographs, l ike this one of the old
Sugar Run Salt Works on WesiMainSireel, will be
lh M I • Co
PI er and
I bllsh d b

Hlslllrlcal Society. The society's book committee
Is now In lhe process of soliciting phoegraphs from
the public.

Get Quick Results! Place A S5 Pr.r Day ·Bulletin Board· Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section.

�Tuesday, August 14, 1990

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER orThE' Uni ted Prf'Ss lnternartonal, I nland Dally Press
Assoc i ation and the American Newspa pt&gt;r Publlshl?rs Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should b&lt;&gt; less than 300
words long. All letters art&gt; subjl"Ct to editing and must be signed with
name. addnss and telephone num ber. No un signed IN tPrs will be pubtl shrd . Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues, not persona lilies .

Why campaign
~efonn doesn't happen

Congress fights for "firesafe' cigarettes
WASHINGTON- The tobacco
Industry could develop a "firesafe" cigarette, but It won't.
Now, In a rare defeat for the
toba cco lobby In Congress. the
Indu stry will be forced to come
up with a cigarette that Is less
likely to start a fire when it Is
dropped.
The Impetus for the new
cigarett e came from a member
of congress who has refu sed to
lake campaign money from !he
tobacco lobby, and Is finally In a
position Io call in favors from
those who do.
Rep . Joseph Moakl ey, DMass .. has tried sine&lt;' 1979 to get
Congress to mandatP flrcsafe
cigarettes. In 1979, a fire caused
by a cigarette killed an Pnlln•
family In Moakley's dl slrlct. HP
figured those deaths, and the
1.500 deaths and 7,000 Injuries

be more
Inclined In the futurP to rrquJrp
flresafe clg.1rettrs onrr thf' IP.sl
Is ava ilable.
Moakl ey had lri ed a tougher
bill - a federal sta ndard for

proce-dure s for

firesafr ci garett es within

flrr.safe

arRlJin g about

and

Formn Kyger Creek pi tch ing
rna inslay Vikki Noble is one of
si x ree rulis that Rio Grande head
softba ll coach Doug Foote has
signed to play for his squad for
the 199 1 season.
Noble. th e daughll'r of Kenneth
and Evelyn Noble of Blazer
Road, Cheshire. played for four

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

caused every year by cigarelle
fires In the Unlled Slat es, could
be avoid ed, along with the $400
million In annual property
damage.
The notion of a firesafe cl garelte was debated for several
years. but Moakley didn ' t have
I he clout In Congress to get past
lhe lnt t•rests of the Tobacco
lnsllt ute, a lobbying organiza tion that , In the last congression al election, handed out
$194.557 In campaign
contributions.
Moakley pulled some strings
and rushed through Congress a
new law on flresafc cigarettes
that will make them nel'cssary
wllhout making them mandatory . Moakley's bill orders the
Consumer Product Safety Commiss ion to set federal lrstlng

cigarettes.
Tobacco co mpanies wouldn't
be required to put thei r ci garettes to the test. But sources
In the tnduslry and in Congress
told our assoclale Tim Warn er
that th e effect will be thesameas
a mandatory standard. Once
Congress sets up a testing
mech anism , even a voluntary
one. tobacco compa ni es are at
grPa ter ris k In lawsu its resulting
from fires If It can be proved I hal

they didn 't do everyth ing possible to make the cigarette safer.

And

Congress will

vear and mandatory compliance
~fler that. But Moakley was only
using that t o scare the tobacco
indu st ry into a co mpromise -

years for Coach Sharon Vanno.v
tRio Gra nde '75) and wa.s a

iiPvelopmenl of Jes ts within three
years and a determination by I he
Consum er Product Safety Commission. not the lobacco lndus Irv . of whether th e firesafe
ci.gare tl c i s commercia lly
fea sibl e.
Moak tcy's success at co nvincing his fellow members or Congress Indicates that tobaceo
lndustrv may be losing some of
lis bought -and-pa id-for clout on
Capitol I-III I. As Moa kl ey sees II,
!he industry "realized that the
tlm r had co met hat they were no
longer thai sac r ed Industry that
nobcdy wa s go in g lo bolher."

two-time aii-SVAC and
District L1 select ion . In

farewell season, which saw her

sPctional c r own. shr was named

EXEIKISE IN CONCENTRATION - Reds
third sacker Chris Saho has more to think about as
ho makes the play on this grounder off the bat ol
the Giants' Gary Carter, which also makes its

then pass ing separate so-cal iPd

Reds 6-5 victory over Giants
CI NC I NNA TI tUPit - With
Danny .J ackson unablt' to st&lt;Hl
and Sco 11 S!'uddcr str uggl ing, it
was up to tht" Ci neinn all bul lJX'n
to hPlp knock thl' San Francisco

Cia nt s bdc k &lt;.~nuther game

Alabama. co llege sludrnl s in 1\orth Caro lina- to get the civil rights

.Joe Olivt'r's two -run doublC'

movement moving and to get Co ngress and the While llo usr chasin g

Monday nigh! highlighled a fiverun fou rth inning, lifting the Rrd s
In a 1) . ~ vict or y over tht.· Giants.
Thf' RPd.s, trailin g 4 0 aftct· thf'
fir·st inning, scored oncr in th e
sr-eoncl and fi\'r i n the fou rth to
takf' three out of four games in

to keep up .
The nas ty tru th abo ut carnraign finance reform is that very few
members really favor major c hang es in !he presrnt sys tem. despite

their pious declarations tot he conlrary _Most of them go! elecled and
re -eif'&lt;·ted under the sys tem now in place and privately view id eas for
change under the genera l proposition. " If it ain't broke. don 't fix it ."
B ut campaign finan cing prJcliees in many casrs look like nothing

so much as low -grade br ibery and members or Congress feel tha t they
at least have to pay lip serv ice to reform And, it should be said. boih
the House and the Senate did come up with some reasonably good
ideas to dea l with some of thP more seandal ous abuses .
For example. both bills atlempted to get at the increasing[)·

tlw ir wPPkPnd sprirs agai nst thr
Ciants and npcn a li 1t1-g amf' lrad
0\'f'r Sa n Francisco in thr NL
Wps t

embarrassi ng problem of co ngress iona l campaign co ntribu tio ns
fro m political ac tion comm itt Pes . In n·cent yea r s, it has become

an d onP-lhi rd in ing s in rPiief of

Ti m l.avann.

sell-serving throughout and almost sure to lead Ia deadlock .
II Is true the IX&gt;mocrat s had enough votes in both the House and
Sena te Ia impose lht·lr will on the legislation that finally passed, but
the mea s urPs were so different that com promise looks nParly
impossiblf'. And. evPr. if co n?.[ Pssi ona l Democrats co uld gPI togPI her
on a single bill. the threa t of a veto by the Republican presidenl han p,s
over any billlht' GOP has not agreed to.
II too k the Wat ergate scanda l to make Congress pul as id&lt;'
parti sa nship &lt;Jnd rP form prPsidentJal campaign fin anci ng. It may
take somPthing just as trauma tl c to do the samr for congressional
rampaigns

Berry's World

/1

/1

big win. '' RPrls
m ; tnag~·r
Lou Pin iC'Il a Silid
"l&lt;vf'rvDnC' cnnt ribut rd and our
pitr-hin g Wi. l ~ grPat ;rft Pr St'uddPr
g a vl' up !hue,!• follr runs in th p
''It

"I don't like your face, mister."

A case of greed ________By_S_en_. J_an_L_u_
ng
Anyo nP driving In to a gas
sta tion the past couph' of Wf'Pks

has

probably

had

!he same

rxperlence. Gasollnr t hat only a
few week s ago was selling for as
low as $1 a gallon Is skyrockel!ng
In price.
According lo the American
Automobile Associ at ion, the
price of r egu la r unle aded gasoline In Ohio pumped self-scrvlee
was averaging $1.24 a ga llon las t
week. up sharply from the $1.04
average that prevailed around
July 4. Prices lor l ull -serve
gaso line and premium brands In
many cas f's Is risi ng even morP.
Since t hese inc reases are co ming
at a time In the late summer
when gas priers traditionally
stab ilize or even fall, there
should be a good reason for the
In cr ease
Unfortunatel y, the only reason
I can see Is greed. In Washington
and In Columbus. we as legislators a rp hea rin g the story from
oil Industry represent a lives thai
the Incr eases arP due lo higher
pri ces for all on I he spot and at her
world mark ets due the uncer tainty over the political sltuallon
In the Middle East.
We can blame Iraq for a lot of
thin gs - a brutal Invasion of
neighboring Kuwait and lnsen sl-

llvlt y lo world opin ion bein g !he
chiPf of f hPSP. Howrver , the
Amrrican publi c Is not that

st upid to think th at overn ight
price increcJ ses ranging from 20
cent s to 30 cen ls a gallon is Iraq's
fault alone.
This price gouging Is esp&lt;'cla lly disheart ening, since r&lt;'cent oil sp ills In Alaska and other
places should have taught the oil
compani es I he value of better
public relat ion s. President Bush,
In his address to t he na t ion ,
struck the proper chord when he
ca lled for r es tr aint on !he part of
oil companies.
However. It appears voluntary
restraint won't be enough sin ce

the oil Industry do es n't appear
able to pollc·e lis members'
In clination Io lake advanlage of
intern ational deve lopments . For·

tunal ely. el ected officials In
Washington and Columbus are
taking act Ions to keep a close
watch on the situation .
On Capitol Hill In Washington .
commltlees l he past wrPk have
been cal1in g In oi l co mpany
offici als and angry congressmen

have been threatening to Impo se
price controls to prolecl consumers . The Northeast-Midwest
Congressio nal Coalition , a blpar-

t is an group that lobbies fo r the
int('rests

of ou r

part

o f thr

coun try, ha s ca lled on the
Energy Department to find out
why gas prices jumped almost
Immediately after Iraq's army
marched Into Kuwait .
At a recent hearing, Assistant
Energy Secretary John Easton
told Hou se members that the oil
supply situatio n Is far from
crit ica l. The U.S. str ategic reserve holds 590 million barrel s or
crude oil, enough t o make up for
800 days of supplies f rom I raq
and Kuwait, Easion sa id . Together , th e tw o cou ntries providr

on ly 8.6 percent of U.S. Imports .
In any case. the strategic petr o
leum reserv e can' t be dipped into
until a tru(' emergency exists.

And oil fr om Iraq and Kuwai t en
route should prevent any supply
Interruption for .10 to 45 days.
F:aston sa id _
Current sta t r law all ows l i·
mlled regulallon of the industry
in a limP of rmprge ncy. Th e

Public Utili! les Commiss ion has
Pmr r gency r at ioning power s,
and coll ects Information on oil
prices and supplies. One of the
Issues thai is to be Inv estigated is
whether It Is possibl e to declar e
oll-rrlaled compa nies a "public

ut ili ty," therebv pl aci ng them
undPr rrgu1.1to ry co ntrol of thr
Public Uti lities Co mmi ssio n.
Whllr thi s migh t appear to be a
drast ic st ep. any thin g don e by
governmrn t

to

hrlp

Today in history
By United Presslnternallonal
Today Is Tuesday. Aug. 14 , the 226th day of 1990 with 139 to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this dale are under the sign of Leo. They Include
pioneer psychologist Richard von Krafft-Eblng In 1840, naturallsl
Ernest Thompson Seton In 1800, writer Ernest Thayer ("Casey at the
Bat") In 1863, English novelist John Galsworlhy ln1867, singer Buddy
Greco In 192' (age 64), rock musician David Crosby In 1941 (age49)
and actress Susan Saint James In 1946 (age 44) .

Some yea rs ago, there wa s a
tel ev ision commercial for an
after -shave lotion that showed a
drowsy man slapping himself.
Suddenly alert. the slapped man
says, "Thanks, I needed that. "
If America acts firmly on the
Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait, then
we, and the West, and the world,
can soon send that message for
Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein:
Thanks, Saddam, we needed
that."
American presidents always
want to create what geopolltlclans call "a new world order."
Few get the opportunity. George
Bush has it, because, In the
post-Cold War era, the global
community needs and wants a
new order. We all didn't win the
Cold War only to return to
Saddam-style gangsterism.
The new order Involves peace
and stability, unthreatened by
thugs. As the Iraq situation

shows. only a world led by
America ca n offer thi s.
A first step on a long pat h
would be to use Hu ssein as an
obj ect lesson . He Is being compared to Hitler, an aggressor no
one wlll stop. Wrong. The real
analogy shou ld be that dictators
do go too far, and they do end up
dead.
Ignore the piffle about U.S.
military weakness . We don't
need American ground troops lor
this one. Iraq Is essentially a
land-locked nation wllh a onecrop economy. An Americanorganized blockade, with symbolic co-participants. Is the way
to go.
II can be done. If the Turkish
and Saudi oil pipelines are shut
down, and the few Iraqi and
Kuwaiti ports are sealed, llttleoll
wUI leave Iraq. By cutting roads
and ralls,llttle food wUI get ln. (II
necessary, Iraqi air fields and

Saddam 's palace ca n he rubbl&lt;'lzed.J Only America has the
military and politic al ability to
pul such a blockade In effect.
, It should go fo rward unless
Saddam gets co mpletely out of
Kuwait - pr onto. No new worldorder lesson Is taughl by lrltlng
him retain Influence In Kuwait
and saying aren'l we wonderful,
we kept him out ol Saudi Arabia.
That Is appeasement.
It's said blockades don't often
work . But a big reason they
haven't has been obslructlon by
the Soviet Union. A year ago, we
would hav e properly fretted
about a blockade. Would the
Soviets reac t militarily? Would
they veto a United Nations plan?
But In Year One of a potential
new global order lhe Soviets are
either out of play, or on our side.
Accordingly, the legitimizing
Ioree of the U.N. Security Council
can also be with us.

rrcrss ion by SPitin g off an
Infl ati onary price spir al that
wou ld -'Prrad from Industry to
indu s tr~ ·. ra is in g rosts and l ead ·

ing to layo ffs.
Nohocly wan ts tu go back to !he
1970s and rarly 1980s. when
supply disrupllons in the Middle
Ea s1 set off gas shortages and
sha r p prier hikes . The economy
suffcrrd with high Infl ation, and
a srverr rPcesston In 1981 -1982
hu rt Ohio and It s residents badly.
Givrn thr uncprtalnty over fu ·
tur e oil suppllPs. It Is lime now for
govrrnmPnt t o act to make
rrrt ain !hat thr oil industry arls
r r sponsib ly and that th p e nprgy
nE'f"d s of Ohioa ns are mPI at
alfordable prices_
If .You ha ve any quPstlon s on
Thi s or on other Issues i nvolv ing
to contact me, Stal e Se n . .Jan
Mi chael Long, at the St atehou se,
Col umbu s. 43215. My phone
number Is lfi14) 466 -8156.

It ca n be done. There Is a
changed dom estic pol itical equa tion . Bush's optio ns are broad.
Even liberal s are whooping for
action. The publi c Is loughmlnded; a CNN call-In survey
shows that, by 81 percent to 19
Americans

.1

fi r.., t .

· '.J op Olivf'l" gut a b ig hit for us
in the fou rth and that's so nw
thing h0's IJppn doing all _V I'&lt;t r
And Tim La.\·ana, l{ob Di hb l1• ami
Handy Mv(' rs all did Their jnb..,
nu1 of ltH · !J ul lpPn It was a
compi Pfl' !i"'~trn pffort. no doubt
about It ··
•

Radio program
on WMPO-AM

say

use

military Ioree, If necessary.

It ca n be done . The petrorrunchlng 1970s are long gone.
Due to conservation and substi tutes , oil makes up a lesser share
of both our energy budget and our
GNP. Huge supplies In our
strategic reserves were designed
lor use In situations like this one.

,tl lc 1r11•un. Mond;n

l'om ~dn .v Mull inlf'di d.

_Inc

t'o nwrov. O hi o ·1'171i9. Ph o/12 21:1fi Sr
cond c l a~s postagf' patd at Ponwrov .
Ohio
M~:&gt;mbN " Un lt!'d Prrss lniNnattonal,

11 land Oalt v P rt--s~ 1\ ss oriat ion a nrl t hf'
Ohio ~ f' wsj).lpf'r Jh socla!lon. Na llona l
t

,\rl vf'rllslng R r pr ('S C'n lat l~·e . 13 ranham
:Srwspap ~; r Sahos. ;:n T hird Avrnur
Nr " ' York. Nrw York \0017.
t'OSTMAS't l :H. ~ · nd aortJ·p-.;&lt;; c hanJ!r~;
t 4 "1111' DallY Sf•ntlnf'l. 111 ( 'o UI1 St .
1-nmf't"H\" Oh.io ·\~"miG
r

Sl' R."ntii'TION Rt\TE."i

By C"arrll'r or Mol or Rouh·
On t· Wt;l'k
Month
On 1• Yt•;n

..

$1 ~0

Sti 10

()Ill'

172 .tt0
SI"'GI.E CUPl:"
I'U I( "E

I blh

Su bsc r 1hN ~ nr l1dt•s lrln g I o paY I Ill' rar
rlrr rnav r r ml1 In adva tH'f' dir ect lo
Thf' Daliv $to ni irwl on a 3, 6or 12month
basis Cr.Pdll w ill llf' )2"1vrnrarrlpr('ach
Wf't'k

NQ s ubscri pll ons hy ma11Pf'rmtl!Pd In
arms w hrrr homf' Cilrr iN serv lrr Is

,.vallablt-.

Mull Subsc ript tom

Will oil -turmoil yield reces sion? It might. No one knows . We
do know that we've had reeesslons ·before. We do know that
we've s~rvlved them all. We do
know that sooner or iater we'll
have one again.

ln!ll ldt&gt; Melp County
1.1 WP cks..
. .. $19.24
26 WE'rks .
. S37 .~
51 Wrf'kS .. ..
.. .. .. . ...... .... $74 .
(hlt!ildt• Ml'II(B County
1.1 WPl'kS ······· ·· ·· .
··· ·· ······· S20.8fl
~~j

W('('kS . .

~2 w eeks ....

and

c;reg Litton

scorPd

on

Will

Clark's double. Kevin Mit chell
walked and Malt Williams fo llow ed with a thrPP-ru n homPr,
hi s 22nd homP run of thP y('ar.

''I probably should have taken
morP time to warm up. berau se I
wa sn' I getting my breaking ball
over at fir st." ScuddPr sa id .
"Then I got a fa st ball up to
William s in !he firs! and he hit it
over thr center· field fencP. AftE'r
that, I seltlrd down and our
bu l lpt'n ca mr through,
\·\ 'i lh our hittf'rs."

along

Layan a lnher tt~d a tough task
when hr relieved Scuddt'r in the
f ifth with nobody out and runners
on f irs! and second Coming up
\\'Ore Clark. Mit chell and Willi ams, with the Reds' &amp;-4 lead i n
serious jeopardy .
13ut h~ slruck oul Cl ark . hi!
Mitch ell wi th a pitch and indu ced
Williams ro grou nd into a n
inning-rndtng double pl ay.
" I 'm proud of thi s team," sa id
Dibble, who struc k OUI three ol
the six men he faced afte r
!"(' ] irv in g Layana . "There's no
o nf' guy who carries ou r team,

. G i ant s st ar trr Trevor Wilson,

1111 (!I. J ~ h Frr•l.n . 11 I ( ",mrt ~ ~
Po
nwr oY . Ohl r•. tl\ tht • Oh l:&gt; \'&lt;!Itt•\ Pull
tbhln g

sin gled

thJt 's why it' s golng to be our

(1 1.SI'.S II ~ CIGOl
-\ Hh I~ inn l)f 'lu lthn1'Ctla, ln j·.
j ' \Tt\

in ni ng .
Wllh one out.

\ 'P ar.

Tlw Daily St&gt;ntind

l' u llli~twd

Scu dder wa s a las t·SL'eo nd
r Pp lacrme nt for Jack son, who
was unab iP l o gel loose whi le
warmi ng up bPca usP of tig htness
in his left shoulder , and was
pou nd ed for four runs in the f irst

nOW everyone plays th ei r part. And

··Thl' &lt;:r ·rdirnn RP\"if'w ··Ohio
\'aih' \" ll;tnk.·.., ;t n•a \\"l 'f'kl v hig h
scho1; l ra dio prugram. will bf'
ain·d th h \·Pa r on M iddlrpur t ·
Ponlf' roY .., t;rtion \\'MPO AM .
w rt h thf· fir ·st " how broadcast
S~ rtu rcl. t\ · from 10 to 11 &lt;t m from
tht• rnarn offirr lnUIJy 11f Ohio
\ "; dh ' V B;r nk. in Callipoli ..,
Th1~ sho w. in it s s ixth sf'nson. is
tw..,trd b\" 0 \ "8 nwdi;1 din·t·tm
Btl! C rav·. who wi ll brnadc&lt;L'il t ht•
l; d• ·s t high sc hool foorb;lll nt•ws
;1 .., wp iJ ,.l._ rntt·n·irw.., with art':\
playl' r s and coarh&lt;•s .

sta l f' government. don't hesitate

per cent ,

\\'&lt;I S

avoid

anothrr rr.crss ion mu st bt) cons! ·
dered . Dramatic price hikes In
!he Ot l indu stry cou ld tr igger a

Thanks, Sadda, We needed that Ben Wattenberg
"/asked Roseanne Barr to call you and sing
'Happy Birthday, · but she declined. "

hu rlf'd tv.·o

pit clwd thP ninth for hi s Wh
"avf'

t hrir vo tes
But therf' was no sin gle approac h lO ca mpaign rpform in e ilhPr

And that is why th £' timl' SPf'nt on campaign re form beforP
adjo ur nment prohably wa s wasted · the pffort wa s partisan and

~•- 0 .

Pml•rgr ncy sta r If' I' Scott Scuddrr
for lh(' virtor~ · Handy Myers

obvious that specia l Interests - business, labor and Ideological
groups - have been pumplng money into the campalgns of
lawamker s who an• in position to help them ac hiPve their particular
goals. That looks like special ln!erest s are paying lawmak ers for

house of Congress or l'ither parly . In fa ct. there is a stro ng suspicion
thaI I he only co mmon denominator in the various bills was lo shall I he
opposi tion . Thr HPpublican s. for exam ple, wante-d to get unions out of
campa igns. while thP DPmocrat s were intent on restri ctinR businPs s
PACS.

appearance, albeit broken, In Sabo country in the
sixth Inning of Monday night's game in
Cincinnati, which the Reds won 6-5. On this play
Sabo made the out and dodged the bat. f UP I )

Oliver's two-run double gives

and introduce tough bills in the seeurP knowledge that they V.'Ould
never becomr law.
It took bra v(' ac tion of ordinary ci tizens - a day worker in

allher

lead th e Bobcats to the conference titll' and the Kyger Creek

onP

ca mpaign reform bills
Except for the po li lie&lt;JI mileage gained by th e posturing members
of both parties engaged in during the debate. the time spenl on
ca mpa ign reform probably Wils wa s ted and could have been beftf'r
spen t working on thf' dPfirit crisis or some other national problem
th a t they really want to solve .
In so me ways, campaign fin ancp reform now i s like civil rights was
In the 1950s. Lot s of members were commi tted to pa ssage of
legis lalion to Pnd r acia l inju sti ce, but !h ey knew very well thai !he
lineup of forces in thP Hous(' and Senate wa s suc h that no civil righ ts
mea sure. cou ld pass So thc.v v.:pre free to g ive passsiona te speeches

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Noble among six softball
•
recrutts to play for Rio

Page-2- The Daily Senti~el
Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o
Tuesday, August 14. 1990

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - ThP House and the Senate. now happily depar!Pd
fro m Wa shington, spPnl much of the last days before the summ er
vacation

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

· .. $40.30

. S75.4n

H-4. was r oughed up for .six runs
and six hit s in 1hrre and one · I h ird

innings.
The 1\eds pulled with in 4-1 in
llw s&lt; ·cond whe n Paul O'Neill

walked wi th tw o out. look second
on a wild pil c h and scored on
Mariano Duncan· s singlE' .
T he Reds used !hei r fi ve-ru n
fourth innin g to take a ti -4 lead.
Chri s Sabo si ngled. too k second
on a G lenn Bragg s single and
scored when O' Neill htl a ground rul e double. Duncan singled
homp Braggs and 01 ivcr fo II owed
with ht s two-run double. Oliver
was sa crificed to third bv

Atlanta. rouki£' slugger Davt•
JusticE' erackvd a thrl'f' run
homer to !Pad thP Rr·tl\'t's. John
Smalt z. 4-8, .s urrl'ndered six hit s
ovpr S('Vl'n innings for the w in
l.1s Angf'lf' s stcJr te r Fernando
Va i PnzuPia . ~· 10 , tonk thl' loss hut
still has won 19 of 27 can'!'!"
dPcisions aga ins t Atlan ta . .J us
lice-, l hf' National J.pa gup Playrr
of ttw WrPk. hi.J s co llt•c!Pd sPvPn
homers &lt;llld 1~ R nl in hi s last

r igh t gamf's
/\stro~ 7. (' uh~ 2 ~ AI Chicago,
Franklin St ubbs hlt two hom ers
and Mark Por· tugal hit a two -run
slnglf' and pitclwd his first
rompiPir gamr to lt'a d thP
Astro s. Portugal. b · ~. scattpn•d
ninC' hi! s as Houston haltf'd a
fnu r ·J::LIInf' losing slrt •ak. Lann•
Dick son. tl -2, thr C'ubs" first
roun d pi ck in .June's amatPur
d raft . took lhf' loss Stuhhs \'1-"t•n t 2
for :land df"O\'P in four ru ns .

defen sive backfield, cornerback
J{ ic ke,v Dlxon undPrwent ar ·
throsco plc knPP surgery to repa i r

Sept. 9

iUPI)

-

In

car tJia gc damage Monday .
With Dixon sidelined for a.s
mu ch as four weeks, ''total

Dixon wi ll bt&gt; rPp l&lt;.wPd at fn•e
by Solomon Wilr ot s. w ho
star ted at !ha t position twn yt•ars
ago when thr Bcnga l s Wf' nt to lhf'
sa fet~

uncrrtaint y" surmund s thP Cin
c inn al i !Pa m 's dpfpnsivr unit.

Super Bowl.

lwad roac h Sam Wyc he sa id.
Onl)' st rong safety David
Fulchrr rrmalns from four

But thr cornf'rback situation is
more SPrlous . Four of the slx
candidates candidatl's ar[' roo·

young veterans who last year

kles :

formed the strongest link of the

Price, Larry Hargrove and Ty ·
reese Herds. The two Vl'lrrans,

dPfPnsive unit .
Al so missing arP cornE&gt;rback s
Eric Thomas, who Is out for the
vPar becausf' of knee surger y.

and Lrwl s Bi ll ups, one of !he
tl'am 's

t hrf'P

r Pmaining

ho ldouls.
Dixon had been moved from
free safety to cornerback to take
Thoma s's .s pot.
" This takes us from whf're we

thoug h! we had one of I he NFL's
best groups I of defensive backs I
lo lo!al uncertainty," Wyche
sa id. "We don't have any Idea
how we're going to be because we

Ju st haven't seen enough of the
young guys to know."
· Wyche saldd Dixon's InJury
ap parently did not happen Saturda y night In lhe Bengals ' preseason loss to Tampa Bay. "II was
an old old problem that Rickey
had had for a long lime and some
bone chips finally worked free,"
Wyche sa!d.
Dixon will be out at least two
weeks and possibly a month. If he

was

named

the bt&gt;st

G roveport -Madison graduatf'
was nampd to th(' seco nd tf'ams

or the Ohio Capital ConfNencP
and her district following a
se ason i n which shP post{'d a I . S~
Par ned ·run averagr for Coac h
Strve Cunningham·_.., C'ru i.sr r s.
"Ang ie ha s good spPcd and
grPal ro ntrol of h('r p iteh f's, ··
said Foot P.
This past season .Josrp h w as
thP reci pient of her team' s most
improved pla yC'r award and was
named player of thP Wl'&lt;'k by The
Co lumbus Dispatch
At Rio Grande she •..viii ma jor in

prc -kinderga rtc' n .s tudies.
Kaml Lewis- The daughter of
Brett and Ca rol l.rwi..s of Man
chester, this Manchc•.ster II .S.
produei was citr d for comptling
the most s tolrn ba ."t' ."· thr br sl
on ·ba se precrnta gt• and the best
ba l!ing avr ragr with thf' Grf')" ·
hou nds of Coat'h Mike Ciuxton
tRio Grande 'Rlt .
"Kam i bri nf:s 1o us a great arm
whilr being a nicr hittrr.· · said
Foot e, who plans to put her in thl'
infield . "Shf' cdso pos.s ('SS('S a lot
of versatllit .v .··

In addition to .sof tball. she
played ba.s ketlrall and \\'a.s a
member uf lht' ,-o lle)·ball and
tra ck tr am s fo r onP ~ ·par . Aca ·
demic &lt;J ll~· .

shr participatrd in

Don

Odegard,

Mitchell

th l' Spa ni.&gt;h Cl ub.
1\t RioCrandr Sht' wi l l major in

phys ical education.
She IIi&lt;· Moorr• - The daughter
of T J_ and Kay Moore of
.Ja ckso n, !his .J ackson H.S. grad uatp u:a s !hr tram· s MVP this
pa st sPason and wa s c hosrn for
thP all -O hio Classic t .. am as a
junior .
Moore, a "hort s tor for Coac h
Paula Erwin's Iru ng ir ls. was
nanlPd first ·!Parn &lt;J il ·SEO/\L and
t.~ll - district

" ShPIIiP can p lay an.v inflPld
po sition ." said Footr. "Sht' ha s a
good arm and und er stands l hf'
ga mP wPi l. And for rnt hu sias m.
shf' ha ~ provrn to bE' a grrat
hustler."

In addition. she' played basket
ball and v;a s activ(• in Jackson's
FuturP 'J'('ac hrr s Assoc ia t ion . At
Hio Gr andt' sh(' wil l major in
Plt' m(' ntar_\" Pduc cr tion .

Kelly Rollinson - Th e daugh
trr of Gar~· and (·a rol Hobi nson of
Marion. slw sPt thf"f'(' !"('Cord s
wh ilf' playing for Coach L.IIT~·

Wilco x\ PIPasan t ItS. Spartans
-

Hobinson . ~~ ho sNvf'd fimf' on
tht' mound , behind thf' plate and
in th r "infif'ld. wa s the t(•a m' s

co-MVP thi s pa st season und th e
M\'P in I9H!I. when she was th e
f('Jm caplain . In addition. shr
re cr ivPd hon o r e~b ] (' rnt•ntion in
thf' Nor th C'1•ntral Con f(' re nce as
a c,o phomo.n ' t.wfon• making thP
s(·cund !Pam a s a j un ior a nd thr
firs t !Pam CIS a srni01
'h:t•lly i..., a "' r ung add ition 10
nur !f' am bPca usc of hrr \'Prsa til ·
I!\·.·· Fuo lt' s&lt;.lid · "S ht' is a good
hitr t•r and ha s a gn•a l undf'r·
s tanding nf the g arm· "
Hobi nson. whn also played
IJaskPtba l l. was activt..' in band .
\"Pilrhook. tiiHl Studt• nt s Aga in.st
Drunk. Drh·i ng tSADDI At Rlo
t•duca!iun

!Se&lt;' ltECIWI'rs on PagP I )

ou ~P[CJ ,. ~I.JftR m.A~IN l¥r11PIH~

~ ~l\J111A HSUNDAf

SPAIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

'!:.~~~-~~;~~(

. ~~~tt 1 ~~~141j

-~
'~ 'n '"" '
I 10 • 9

._., , ~

,.

... I

~:

..

build

8" X 10"
ENLARGEMENT
SPECIAL

r-1
~- --

•

cu hes ivent:-ss

AVAILABLE FROM 35MM NEGATIVE ONLY

fWFER GOOD AUGlJST J:J TIIRU ·AtH;tiST 19

786 North
Second be.
Middleport

rans, is worrisome.

The mosl serious ly
appears to be wide
Lawyer Tillman, who
suffering from a stress

Injured
receiver
may be
fracture

(See INJURIES on Page 4)

36-90 sp- 1

OAlll

"' 1"(0

GHOST

SIGNS WITH REOWOMEN - Recent K_vg&lt;·r I ' m•~ gradual&lt;•
Vikki Nohle, s hown in action from th1• Bohl'at.o,; st•t ·tmn~li
tournament \·icfory against Trimhlr in Ma.v, wa.o,; . ~~~u· o_
l !'iiX
rt•auits who recently signed to play softball for tlu• _l .nlvt·r!'&gt;.ll,\' of
Jtio Grandt•. NoiJie is onP of three player!ii slat(•d to p1t l' h for ( oach
lloug Foot&lt;•'s Rl'dwomen. (OVP file pho&lt;o )

gai ned most of lheirexperince in

to

l~

WI ~

I JO ' J . l

alignment s utilizing five or six
defen sive backs.
Wllcots said It will take somP
time

..,.

' Wr[lfriHtlAT

Chris Barber and Richard Carey.

among the players.
'1'he young guys can't play as
aggressively as they 'd like. " he
said. "because they may be
uncertain about a coverage or
whatever. Once they get a few
snaps under their belts, once we
get a few more snaps together.
we'll start cutting down some of
those routes and other passes."
Browns' Injury list grows After Just two exhibition games,
the InJury list for the Cleveland
Browns, al ready plagued by
contract holdouls by key vete-

~l R!.

rnos ! wi ns i n a sl·a son

twsr wi nn ing pP rcr nt agr ! .900 !
and IIH' brs t F: HA ( I. Y21 A ~ a
r;;o phomorp shP brokr the sc hool
rPro rd for RBh b~· gr lt ing 22 .

(;ra rHIP sht • pLm s to major in

Davis sin gle.
The Gia nl s pulled with in a run
in the seventh . Brctl Bu tlrr
walked. moved to second on
Lllton's sing le and scored on a
Mitchell si ngle.
El sewhere Monday nigh! in the
Natio nal L eag ue. Atlanla
dumped Los Angeles 9-5 and
Houston clobbere d Ch icago 7-2.
Braves 9, Dodgers 5 - At

canno t pr ;H·ticf' lor 11 month. hP
probably wi II not br ;1 Ya i Ia blf' for
I he·· rrgular spasn11 opPnrr
agains t tlw Nt•w Yor·k .J p h on

CINC INNATI

~~ f'ars,

defensive player for Coach Deb-

speed is very good."
Angle ,Joseph - Thr• dau~hll'r
of Pat Joseph of Co iumhu s, !hi s

Scuddf'r and scorrd on an E ric

Dixon, Tillman hit by
knee, ankle injuries
more had nPw s for thP Bengals'

second team all-s tate and was
the Bobcats' best defen sive
player as a junior. Her hlghwaler mark In the strikeout
department this pas t season
came aga inst Point Pleasant,
when she fanned 19.
"As a pitcher. Vlkki has very
good control and speed, and fill s
a big need for us," said Foote.
While at Kyger Creek she also
played volleyball for four years
under Vannoy , and ba sket ball in
add ition to her involveme nt in
the sc hool's Key Club and the Art
Club. At Rio Grande she wi ll
major in nursing.
Allee Caudill - The daughter
of Denver and Sharo n Caudill of
Hamden. this Vinton Co unt y
product has received aii -Tri Vallcy Conference and honorable
mention all -di stric t honors in her
prep career. This past season
Caudill, who also played vollev ball and basketball for four

\'ikin gs.
" Alict• has good rangf' . is a
g01xl hill«.'r and posspsses a nice'
arm ," sa id Foote. who p lans to
u sf' her in thp ou tfi t'ld " HPr
IJjp WesT 's

Phone

992·6491

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. August 14, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Blue Jays spoil birthday party with 4-3 win over ChiSox
B y 1\PRO.. 1\LF1\RI\NO
UPI Sports Writer
The Toron to Blue Jays kept
Bo bby T higp&lt;•n from taking the
American L eague lead In saves
and Alex Fernandez from a
b€tter ce lebra tion of hi s 21st
birthday.
Junior Felix capped a three-

run ninth inning with an RBI
single Mond ay night . rallying the
Blue .Ja ys to a 4-3 victory ovt'r th(•
Chicago Whit e Sox.
Toron to overcame a 3·1 deficit
by ra l lying against Chicago
re l ie f ace Th igpen. 4-5, who
entered th&lt;' game !ted for the
American LPaguP !Pad in saves

with l 7

expeet a save. But flve r yom&gt;s

human . ··
Elsewh ere Monday ntg ht 1n th&lt;•
American League, Detroi t edged
Cleveland 6·5. Kansas Ci t v
dropped Texas 5-3, Oakland
blanked Boston i -0, Baltimore
b€at Seattle 3-2 and California
defea ted New Yo rk 4-2.
Tigers 6, Indians 5 - A t
Cleve land, Ceci l Fielder hit hi s
major league-lea ding 3nth home
run and Tony Ph illips and Al an
Trammell rach drove in a pair of
r uns to lead Detroi t. Walt Ter rell. 1-1, sca tteredsevenh itsover
six i nnings as the Tigers snapp&lt;'d
a three-ga me losing s treak .
Jerry Don Gleaton pitched the

final tw o inn ings to E'arn his
sf've nth save. CIE'vel and starter

Jeff Shaw, 2·3, took the loss.
Royals 5, Rangers 3 - At
Ka nsas Cit y, Mo., Gerald Perry
drove home two run s and scored
twice a nd Kevi n Appier won for
the thi rd consecu tive start to lead

Kansas Ci t y. Appler,

~ · 4,

allowed
runs in the fir sl and second
innl ngs bul went f!v e innings
without allowing a r unner to get
pas t first base. Jeff Montgomery
go t four out s for hi s 17th save.
Kev in Brown. 12-9, was the loser.
1\ 's 4, Red So• 0 - At Oak land,
Ca lif., Sco tt Sander son pitched a

season to lead Oa kland to Its fifth
straight win. Sa nder son , 12-7,
wa lked f ive and struck out seven
in posting his second co mplet~
game of the year . Thr win made
him a 12-ga me wi nnPr for fht'

first time sin ce 1982. Kos ton
start er Greg Harris, 9 o. took the
loss.
Orioles 3, Mariners 2 - At
Seattle, Ben McDonald sca ttered
four hit s over eight and two-third
Innings and Cal Rlpken .lr.

scored a r un and drovP in another

for Baltimore . McDonald. :&gt;-fl,
walked th rer and struck out
three in hi; fifth ma jor ·league
start . C. rl'gg Olson go t the fi nal
out for his 27t h save. Seattle
star tr r Bria n Holman. 11-8,
pitrhrd J six -hi tter for his sPco nd
comp iPit.• gamf:' . walking fo ur

and strikin g out six . The Mariner s have lost six of their last
sevC'n games .

Angels 4, YankP&lt;'s 2 -

By The Bend

Anaheim, Ca lif. Dave Winfield
doubled home a run and scored
anot her on a fo ul pop-up in the
seventh Innin g to help California
hand the Yankees thei r fourth
stra ight loss. Kirk McCaskill, 8-8,
sca ttered six hi ts over the firs t
seve n tnnlngs for the win. Bryan
Ha rvev earned his 14th save
despit~ yielding a one-ou) solo
home run to Jesse Barfield In the
ninth .

Tuesday, August 14, 1990

Page- 5

TOPS meets

At

th ree-hitter and Doug Jennings

hit his first hom&lt;' run of the

F'Prnandcz, who lim it ed To-

ro nt o to fivr hits over eight
inn ings, had hoped to celebra te
his 21st bi rthday by notching hi s
second major-league win in three
s tarts.

A BIG HUG - Connie CoUins, left, Girl Scout Camp Director In
Meigs County, gets a big hug lrom Shirley Cogar, Big Bend Girl
Seoul Service Unit Director, lor a job well done. Girl scouts
throughout I he county gathered this year lor a weekend of lun at
Forked Run Slate Park. Next year's camp program may be
expanded and ColUns will again serve a.• director. To assist In
planning, contact CoUins or Cogar.

''You havt: to und 1.• r stand that

wh(•n you ha ve a rrllevcr like
Bobby Thigpen. probably one of
the bes t In th e league right now.
yo u've got to give the ball to
him ." Fernandez satd. "I took
them a long wav. I took them

'fhe Daily Sentinel

Ol a Sinclai r, Charlotte Haning,
and Pegg l Vining were the best
lo sers and Texanna Wells was
the runner up at the r ecent
meeting ol Ohio TOPS 570 held at
the carpenters hall in Po meroy.
KOP S members honored were
Brenda Templeton , Bernice
Durst, M aida Long, Juli a Hy sell,
Ola Sinclair, Virginia Sm ith ,
Lennie Aleshire, Jea n Wright,
and Mar y Martln .
Lenni e Aleshire , leader,
opened the mee ting with prayer
and pledg e and rep orts of the
spcretary and 1reas urn were
given .
It wa s announced th at the
funny money auction will be held
Aug . 2R.
The flow er fund was collected
and the fr uit basket wa s won by
Charlott e Haning.

EI\STERI'i JUNIOR V 1\RSITY CHEERLEAD ERS -The Eastern JV Cheerleaders have been
practicing extra hard this summer for lit e

upeominK loothall st·ason . l"icturt•d are Anita
Calaway, Shelly llendrix , Mkhl'ill' !l'!urphy,
Mi ssy Harri s, Amle Friend, and Andrt•a Dill ard .

EI\STERN CHEERLEADERS - Thr East&lt;·rn
Cheerleadlng corps sometimes utllb.t.•s tile'

.~mil'

eight i nnings . l t hi nk t ha t 's bcf tpr
th.nt lh P.v px pec l ri g ht now.

" It 's ju st a mat ter it didn't
work out our way tod ay. T hen

again. the next time out. I'll give
the ba l l agai n in the ninth inning
to Bobby Thtgpen He deserves
i 1. ..
Fred McGriff led of f the ninth
with a double, his third hit of the
night. and score d on John Ole r ·
ud' s single. Kenny William s ran
for Olerud and moved to thi rd on
a Greg Myers si ngle. One out
latrr . Wllllam s scored w ht•n
Mooklr Wil so n hit inlua furcrout.
Wilson stol e seco nd and score-d

•

the go·a head ru n on Felix 's
bou nc ing sin gle up the middl~.
"Th ese games happen.
guess." Thigpen said . " If two
strlk Ps was an out. I'd be a lrigh t
I ju st co uldn't get the thi rd one
tonight. I didn't walk anybody . I
wasn' t rea lly wild. I didn't have
as good stuff as I 've had in the
pa st. ..

GOOil .108, CECO" - Detroit '&lt; Tony Phillip.,
fongratulates tf'a mmate ft•cil Fi&lt;&gt;ld~· r ( ri~ht )
aftrr Fieldt'r cra(' kt'd a cwo-run homrr - hi...
mltjor lr-agu t&gt;-l ra dlng 36th of thP st•ason - uff

Dua nf' Ward, 2-!:i, pitched two
thir ds of an i nning in re lief of

U.S. cagers beat Argentina 104-100

Blue Javs starter David Well s.
Tom Henk e pit ched the ninth for
his 25t h save.
Th e wi n helped Toronto close
wit hin two ga mC's of A mrrican
L eagur Eas t leader Boston,

which was shut out Monday night
by Oa kla nd .
"lt could be a turning point lor
us." Henke sa id . "They had us
beat . T hey had their best pitcher
un thf' mound and we came back
to win it . With Bo bby being one of
th e bes t lreli evr r st - If not the
brs t -

lndian.'i pikht•r ,JI'ff Shaw in ttll' first inning of
~londa}' ni~ht' s ganw in flt•\'t'land, whil'h ht'lped
Ill•· 'l'i~t·r s to po:-;t a 6-5 \- idoq·. (\ 1 PI)

SURFING OR D.\NCING? - The answer Is neither, built's hard
to te ll by the actions uf Indians second baseman Carlos Baerga
(left) or D&lt;•trolt baserunner Lloyd Mo se by alter Baerga tagged out
Moseby on a steal attempt In the third inning ol Monday night's
game In Clev eland, which the Tigers won 6-5. (UP!)

By KE1111 DRUM
UPI College Basketball Wrll er
BUENOS AI RES. Argenti na
1UPir ~ The U.S. basketba ll
team m ay havr fel t Monda!
night as th oug h the)· were star
ri ng in one of thosr Frictav thf'
13th seq uels.
·
Llke J ason in th r movlf's,
Argentina wouldn't be put ro rPst.

and t he l' .-:. . W&lt;L" tortunatP to
escapr ~rith a l!l.J 100 \'i&lt;' to r_\- 1n
thf' quartrrfina ls ol l hf' Wo r ld
Ba skrtb ctll ( 'h,lmpinn..,hipo.;
' T \'r lll'\·t· r- lH't'n in Cl ga nwlikr

that ." g u:1r·d

~ r nn .\ ·

t\n clf'l'.'iOn

sa id " ] a lw;n.., th \ !rd soc cHwas
thf' \'o . 1 ~ w~n in Ar~f' ntin a. but
not tonigh t Thosr gu ~ · s arf'
CT&lt;Il .\ '

in thf' lraguP, you alm ost

Scoreboard ...

Injuries ...

Th1· I ' ~ " ' 'Pnwd i n con tro l for
much of th(' ~Zaml ' . I t rod~· a 12-0
run miclwa _
\· through thrf l r sr h.1lf
lu hrl'J k a :l 2 :tl tiP. f• nw rgin,g
H'ith :1 :)~ ·12 h ..J!ftirnf' IPad. The
L. S pu~ lwd i1 s !(•tt d to '1.2 po ints
t\\'ll't' in tht· o.;pc ond t1 a lf. and it
" t i l l WtJ"l lt'&lt;t ding tJ~ · l h \.\'i th st'VP n
m inuH• s l!'ft .
llu t poOl' sho1 SP lec t io n com bint·d w11 h t1 bar rJgr of ArgE'n ttn ;~ thn•t· ~oin!N s lC'ft thr U.S.
clinging b\' it s nai ls . A thrrC'po inl bomb
h\
Argrn tina's
Yl ar ct'lo M i lanf'~ i o wit h 1: 2l lf'ft
brought 1\ r gt~n r i n a wi thin 101 -96
.1nd cuust•d sh(l{'r lunac y in
vt·ntTablr L una Park .
·
" It wets nazy . it wa s incr('di ·
IJII', " U.S forwar d Mark Randall
sc dd " Wr wf' rrn' ! as sm art as we
s hould ha ve• bren, and th rv hit
su mc incre dible sho ts, a lmo~ t ou t
of bo unds. Wr'rr ju s t glar1 tog ef
ou t wlt h a wi n. "
HO\-'-'t'\·pr harrit•d . the \'it torv
~o t thr lJ S lt'am off to a good
st11 rt inthclhn•r-gamrquartprfi -

!Co nt i nued f rom Page :!r
d ho\'f• his lPft ankle. Tillm.1n
und r r wPnt a bonr scan Mond ay

at th e Cleve land Clinic Found a·
tion. but thr results were not
expected to be ava ilable until
latrTursdav

•

Ktckr r Matt Ba hr , leveled by
Crt'l'n RJ~· sa fe ty Sta n Shiver on
a field goal attem pt in th e second
qua rter of Saturday night' s
ga m•' · avoid ed a ser ious k nee

Majon;
,\!\IF.RU Ar&gt;; l.t:Ma F
Ea..,t
W I. Pn
. .. 6'! 5'2 HI

TPam
Boston ...
Toronto . ...til 55 .Hti
Baltlmon•. . ..16 5X .191
C'll'\'l'lund ... 5-1 6\ .1ill

(; 8

l&gt;t'trolt ... ...... 5 ~ 6:1 .IIi'!

91 !

on !\' a brulSP . HP also hurt h is
back .
Bahr" i nJuri rs g&lt;n ·r a chancr
t o frer &lt;~g1·n! .lf'f r y !&lt;auric a nd
th e Cand d 1a n l.(•agur refugee too
adv.wta gf'. hitting fiPid goa ls of
2~. 2.1 1~ :tnrl 2.1 ya rd s in th('
Brown~· 2~ HI \k torv ovpr thr

Pack('rs
Thr Brow ns dlso havr four
runn i ng backs hurt. t hf• m ost
srriou s hr i nJ,? Derrick Gainf'r,
who w ill h;l\·r a r Pd ucC'd work
load fnr t hr nP xt t wo or thrt'e

weeks The on ly hea lthy running
bac ks arP \'Pir rans K evin Mac k,
Eric Mrt cal f. Tim Manoa and
free a~e n t Nu u Faaola .
Trainr r B lll Tessendorf says

Tillman apparently hurt his leg
somrtiml' bdore the Aug . 4 Hall
of Fame ~arne, but he played In
that co ntrs t and caught two
passes for lb yards.
He t rlPd to practice in Gr Pf'n
Bay l ast Wrdnesr!.1y, but the
ankle swe lled up and he watc hed
Sa tu rday 's game in st ree t
cloth es.
Tessendorf sa id it's possible

Tillman Is sufrprlngfr om a strPss
fracture , whkh co uld sideline
him a consid era ble length of
time, but that it 's also possible
It 's something as simple as
tendinitis .
Al so watching Saturday's
game In stree t clothes was wide
receiver Webster Slaughter . who
Is suffer ing from bursitis In his
knee.

rCo nt!nued from Page 31
The Redwomen. who finished
o-23 this past season , are tenatlvely slated to open the 1991
season at home on March 21
aga inst Ca pital.

\\·e .. I

Oakland .. . .. .11 H .6:1x
Chlcago . ..... .. 66 16 .5~\l
Texa..~ ........... 59 56 .5 13

6
1-I L~

Si•attle .......... 5X aX .500 16
Kunsa.'ifll)· .. 56 59

A~j

11 1 -1

faiUomla .... . SG 60 . ~1\ 3 II\
Mlnm•sot 1t ... ~ 61 .-t/0 19 1 -1

!\londay's n •sults
Udrolt ti , fii'Hiand 5
'l'uronto t l'hlrago :1
Kans.a.~ flt y 5, 'f t'xas .1
Oakland -1. Ro"ton 0
Rultimon' l S(•atlk '!
falifomla t
\'orlc '!

't'".

TuPsda)''s gamt•s
Mlnm•sota (Gulhrlt' 3-5) al
f1l'Hiand 1Ria1 'k 10-i ). 1::15
p.m .
Tonml o (Stotth•m)·rp 10-1:1)
al ('hit·a~=:tl ! lllhhard 9-6). K:M
p.m.
'\111w ankt·t• (Knudson H-6 ) al
Ot•l mit (Rubinson 9-9). ~ : 35
p.m .

Tnas (1\-toy..r 1 - ~ 1 al Ka n-wt.s
fll}' 01d...laffl~an :i-0) . ~ : 35
p.m .
Ro ston (f'h•mrns IG-5) at
Oakland ()1ool'{' 10-IO J. HI: o;,
p.m .
8altlmon• (.Johnson II -i) at
St•atllr (\'oung 5- l t), 10: 11 5
p.m .
Npw l 'ork (I.A•;ar}' 6-U ) a t
falifomla (1\bbolt 7·10), It): :Jj
p.m .
Wedn esda)''!'i gamPs
Bos ton at Oakland
Minnesota at flpveland,

night
Milwaukee at DetroH, night
Toronto at Chicago, nlghl
Texas at Kansas CU}', night

Baltimore at SeatiiP, night
New

York

al Callfomla,

night
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaot
Team
W L P&lt;'L GR
New York ..... 64 47 .571
Pitt .............. &amp;t 4H .57 1
~'?
Montrea1 ......60 54 .a26 5\\
Chlcago ........55 60 .47R II

St. Louls .......~l 61 .170 12
PhiL ........... !2 60 .464 I2Y,

.5Hl .526

6 1·z

51:1 K
.nH I t
~3 5

1'7

:H!I t:l

\1onday 's n•sults
Cindnnull6 , S1m Franc · i~ · o 5
:\tlanl a 9. Los ,\ngt•lt•!'i 5
llouston 1, Ctd eago 2

MJJw,wkf'(' ... .tx 65 .tn n 1 2
Nrw York ..... l6 6X .101 16

injury, but d is !Of'a ted the SPCo nd
fingpr of his right hand

Shl\w' s helmet hit Bahr's
rig ht leg j ust above the kn ee he
tnjured in 1986. so he suffered

·•
6
K1.l

\\"f'SI
...66 1:
HE llS..
SoUl Fran ..... 60 5 ~
Los i\ngf'h"L5S 55
San Oit·go . .... 5 ~ !i9
llouMon . ... 5ol) 65
\llanta .
. t:l 111

'l'ut•sday·.., Kamf's
Uou .~on (ScoU 9-IO l at fhi ·
t•u.go ( M nddu ~ §.10) , t: 20 p.m .
Los Ang('les jMartln("'.t. 15--1
a nd llartl l' )' 3- 1) at Nf'W \'orlc
(Goodl.'n 11--G a nd Co m• ~ - 51, 2,
5: 05 p.m .
Atlanta ~L~' Ihr andt -t -6 and
.-hc•ry 2~ )
at Pittsburgh
(0ralwk 1-1-:-tand Z.S mlth &amp;1) ,
'!,

5: ~() (l.lll

San
Frani' IS(·o (LaCoss
J-1) at l'hllad r lphla (('omh!'i
G-1\), i::l5 p.m .
( 'lndnnati ( Armstron~=: Il -K)
a l SL Louis ( Ut•IA•on 6-11 ), H: 35

nal

p.m .
Montrl'al ( Martlnc•z 8-~ 1 at
S•m IJ irgo &lt; H asmu ~"i(' n g. JO ).
10: OS p.m .
\\'i•dn('sdaJ'i'l gamt'"
llouston a t Chi cago
('indrmall at St. Loul!';

PlttsiJUrgh at Atlanta, night
Los ;\ngf'i('s af Nl'\A-' l'oril ,
night
San FrandS4:'0

a.t Phlladt•l·

phi a, nlghl
VlontrPa.l at San

[)lp)!;o ,

i.

BI\TTLES 1\RfiENTINli\N - U.S. forw ard Bryan Stith 115)
batHes Argentinu' s Diego Osella as he goes to the basket for two
during Mondaay night's quarterfinal ganw In llu· World
Bask etball Championships In Buenos .~ir~•s . ArgPntina. Th•• U.S.
won !04-100. I UPil

THE BEAT GOES ON WHEN
YOU GIVE BLOOD THRU
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAy I AUGUST 15

night

Calendar
Ba.~&lt;ke th a ll
1\rgcntlna - Mrn '~

World
( 'hamplonshlps
Boxing
Fort llu ac hu ca, t\.rlz . - l l ..S .
.runlor Champlon8hlps.
IHF Bantamweight Title

Saratoga Springs, N.Y. c·Orlando CanlzaJes vs. Eddie
Rangel, 12.
Roller Skating
PPnmcola, Fla. - U.S. Indoor Speed Championships

Shooting
Mo !H: ow

World

~ 'hampkmshlps

Tt•nnl.l!
India napolis - Men' s Sl
IIIII IIon U.S. Mf&gt;n's Hardcour1

Ch ampionships
M anhattan 8t~ ut~ h. Ca.IU. -

Wom en's

$350,000

Vlfllnla

Slbns of l..os Angeles
, .ew Haven, Conn , - Men's

$1 million Yolvo International

Thos1· gu\'s wrrr tht' Arge n tina
fan ..... w ho tu r n( •d thr• ga rn P in to
onf' co n~tanr m usical n um ber
with cont in uous si n_ging and
d r um·pla:.-ing, and th~· Argrnti na
p layrrs. v.· ho sta,e r d an rmo·
tionalliJo.;t ditch ra i l ~' th at h.1d lhf'
L.". S. team gasping fm its brL'ath
i n th e· fin a l m inulf' ......
t\nd t' r ~orl , who l ed th P U .S.
\\ 'tth '!'2 poinh. cli nc hPd thr
, .l ctll!'\' wilh ~)o M' con cl s IC' f! whrn
h~ , hit iJ drh·ing la ~ · up Jnd added a
l r Pf ' th1 HV,. for a IO.J% IPad that
m ;lclc · ,\rgt·nt irl a's two final
b.t..,k t•lo, nwan ingit' ss .

POMEROY SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

1:00-5:30

~

OON1,
-J~-I'w\-1}.

GIGANTIC AUGUST
"SALE" NOW GOING ON!

FO/l.~ET
""'~
"Prices Slashed to Near Wholnale"

90 INCH WIDE QUILT MATERIAL
Pillow Tops and Stuffing All 30% Off

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

31D STIDT

949·2800

RACINE, OHIO

MASTERCARD - VISA - GOLDEN BU CKEYE

round rob i n. T he

Un it ed

S t &lt;:~!rs

p lay s Aust ra l ia on
Tu f' sday .
A lonzo Mourning sco rrd 17

po int s. Lloug Smith added lh and
i.Pe Mayberry and Ri llv Owens
each had 10 for 1111• U.S.

Syracuse. The Brownies m et at the London roolt o
learn pool safety and earn badges.

BROWNIE FUN - 1\bout 70 girls participated
In the Big Bend Brownies' Daisy Event Friday In

Syraruse UMW meets
M ar ie Houdashelt and irene
Parker conducted the progra m,
"C hurch Advocate for Public
Education," at the recent meet Ing of the Syracuse United
M ethodist Women.
Mary Cundiff had a r ea ding
fr om Guidpposts and Marcia
K arr closed the program with
prayer.
Harriet Sincl air presi ded at the
meet ing which opened with a
readlog , "Than k You Lord ."
An n Sauvage had devotions
from Mat thew on "Why Do We
Pr ay."

were three birthdays thi s month.
The bl essing boxes were col·
lec ted and the new stov e, pur·
chased by M arlca Karr for the
kitchen, ha s been hooked up and
Is rea dy for use.
The festival of shartng will be
held Au g. 29 in Sprin gfield . Kit s
are to be r ea dy by Wednesday
The annual m ee ting will b€ at
Logan on Sept. 22.
Othe rs attendin g were Helen
Teaford, Buelah Ward . Hope
Moore. Mary Li sle.

Elberfeld reunion held
Descend ants of Jarob Rao&lt;er
and Katie Mees Elb€rfeld met
Sund ay at th e jj:lberfeld Farm in
Tuppers Plain s for their annual
reun ion.
Followlng a s horl church sPr·
vice. t he family enjoye d a
po tlu ck din ner , swl mmln~ and
re minisci ng .
Attending were Robert and
Cha r lotte Elb€rfeld, and Scott
and Julie Elb€rfeld Dillon , all of
Pom eroy; Stan and JoAnn Coates, ,Josh and Bobby, Reidsville,
N.C.; Steve and Beverly Elberfeld and Kate Elberfeld, Gallipolis; and Allan and Nora Elberfeld, Barboursville , W.Va .
Ear l H. Elberfeld, Logan:
Sherry , Harrold, John and An
drew Elberfel d, Sparks. Md.;
Martha E lberf eld Sa mpsell.
Whea ton. I lL , and Susan and
Rober t Centers, Chillicothe.
Ra chael Elberfeld Downie and
William B. Downie Jr .. Racine.
Rob€r t and Barba ra E lberfeld
L y tle. Chilli co the; Janice Mahoney and Mi chael. Pittsburgh,

~a~
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

Euve ta Bechtel presented the
program at th e r ece nt meeting of
the A!ternoon Ci rcle of the Heath
United Methodist Church In
whic h she revi ewed two chapter s
from the stud y book , "R ice in the
Stor m ...
.J en Cheshire presided at the
meeting which opened with
prayer Nan Moore, devotional
leader, read "Your Own Back
Yard" and "Brighten the Corner
Wh ere You Are ."

Pa ; and Dav id M ahoney,
Findlay .
D r . .Jerry and Ba rbara Kelle r
Do lan , Darien , Conn., Rill and
Ba r ba ra Brown, Em ily and Bethany, Silver Springs, Md ; Rod
and Katherin e Keller Hood,
Annandale , Va .; and Ala n Hood,
Centerv ille. Va
Mrs. Jacob tBeth t Elb€rfel d,
Ma rga ret Jo Ruhl, Dav id and
Sa ra Deever and John and Am y,
all ox Wester v ille ; and F:d and
Barb Elberfeld, Columbus
George and Mary Ellzab€th
Elb€rfeld Morris, John and .loan
Anderso n and Brad and L auren.
Bernie Ander son, Barb ie, Sa rah

ll&lt;•ndrix , and

Andrea

(7,' ~
"'
I &lt;~

•

BIRTHDA\' I"On:n
Charles Dill was honored
recently on his 72nd birthday .
lt·e cr eam, cake, chips and
sodapop wt~ re served to his
wife, Betty; Linda and Missy
Foster, Rh:hard, Roberta, An gle , T tmytl, and Riehle Dill ,
and Sharon t' olm er .

and Becky Ander son. Racine-;
and Krist in Gragan and Andrew ,
M ar ietta; Dick and Mill ie Elb€r ·
feld, Hamilton : Anne Elberfeld
Cole. Allen Co le and Andrew .
Cincinnat i;

&lt;Jnd

Raf'hPl

and

Bobby Elb€rleld . Cincinnat i.
K atheri ne and Kellv Sidd all ,
Mec hanics burg, Pa.: and Karen
Siddall, Shrewsburry, Pa.

It wa s noted that Heath Chu rc h
will serve th e bloodmobile on
Wednesday.
It was announced tha t there
will b€ a combined meet ing l or
all ci r cles next m onth when a
m issionar y, K aren Cornmlller ,
Peoria, Ariz ., will be the spea ke r.
She has co mpleted her third term
of service on WGMS American
Indian field where she served as
principal and musle coordinator.

to May 1990 al Oceana Naval Air
Station In Virginia .
A 1984 graduate of Southern
High School. Bu sh entered the
Navy In January 1985.
He Is the son of Suzanne Bush
and the late Jacob Bush, McKenzie Ridge Road, Racine.
Bush and his wife, the former
liluth Ann Fry of Pomeroy, reside
on Bowling Green Drive. VIrgi nia Beach, Va .

EASTERN VI\RSIT\' fHEERLEi\DEitS
The Eastern varsity c h\'e rk•ade r!&gt;i haH' hc ' l'll
working hard In pnpartion for lhl' l!l!lO sports
s~·a~o~on, hoping to duplkatt' their award winning

Tht ' Pn n1P r m

SP nior Cit izrns Cr ntrr . ThP
SPf'JkPr w ill tw Hill ( 'adlt·.
Middll·port. Tht• J-lUblk jo.; in\'ltt•d
a nd r r fr rs hm('nt s w i ll bj' sl'l'\'l'd

!(1\C i r-;E - Thi' Rac tn• · l\c11.1
n •nr· Church wi ll hold

a

rt11ld ·

rl' n's nusadc~. "Ch a ra(' t r r ~ fo r
Jl'sus," for ages 4-1'2 . TuC' sd;_r\·

SUPPORT

Count\· .JI ) &amp;· ~ n·illllH 'i '! Tu··..,d.r\
;t t thf' lf'g ion lw l l

Fla me l·'PI Iow ship wi ll mr•·t
Tues day at 7 .10 p.m at 1111 ·

•

l'idun•d arc 1\nglc Murphy, Carrie ConnoUy.
Tral'y .~!urphy , Carrie GIIUian, Lisa Gold en, I\ my
\\' 1,11 .' :llld 1\1onifa Adams . .1\hse nt w1t.s Suzanne
('I&lt;'.\ '. ('ht'e riPadinA" advi ~o r s ar(' Ru Lh and U e hbif'
Brook...

Community calendar
TUF.Sil .i\ Y

I

a~-::o.

perform ances of t'IHnpdltion ont' )'t•ar

PO MI&lt;HO Y -

and Davi d, a ll of Pomeroy; Jim

Man recieves Navy medal
Petty Officer Seco nd Class
James M. Bush recently received th e Navy Achievement
Medal for ·exhibiting positive
leadership, technical expertise
and Intense personal dedleatlon
for professional achievement In
the superior performance of his
duties whtle serving as night shirt
supervisor and collateral duty
Inspector for lhe AT Workcenter
In Squadron VA 75 from July 1986

Shelly

Forty -one shu t i n c alls were
rPported and i f w.1 s notC"d thrre

Heath UMC circle meets
busine11 inau111nce pack age, thai is. It's SERIES
ONE, a broad-coverage,
competitively -priced
plan
for retail stores, offices,
churches. apartments and
drug stores. Call us for a proposal and quotation .

\'arsit,)' and JV !'~Quads in landPm . Pktnfl•d arl'
1\nlta Calaway, Michelle Murphy , Mlss.v llarri ' .

Friend,

Dillard . Ha(_'k row - Varsit)· s quad nwmlw r s arr
t\n~ir Murph)', Ca rrh· Connolly, Trac·y Murphy,
l'arriP (iillilan . Lisa Goldl•n, Amy \\it&gt; ll. and
Monifa Adams.

WEU~E S UA

\.

COUNTY

l 'UMI-:H OY - ,\ H t•d ('m&lt;,~
Hlo111dmobi lc will b\' h1·ld at !llf'

FAIR!

\1e l.g~

Count\

S(•n jot

&lt;'iti i. Pn ..,·

th ro u~ h

Frid ay at 6·30 p m
n ight!.\'. undrr lhf' dirPcfion of

( 't•n!t•r un \\ . l'drw ~ d.t\ f t l lnl I
p tTl un til -l p .tn Tlw w onwn (J f
lht ' IJ, •,Jtll l ' nit t• tl .\1 t 't h () di ~t

Dill n row n. Gr ov&lt;:&gt; Ci ty . A pro-

Churc h\\ ill f ur ni&lt;,li .t nr l &lt;,1•1\ t·t lw

gram will be held Sunda!' at LIO

('C Uill ' (' ll

Harrisonville
happenings
Mr. and Mrs . Harry Yonker,
Toledo; Mr. and Mr s. Bob Willis.
Columbu s: and Ga rv and Denni s
Foley, Syracu se , wf.re weekPnd
guests of Mr. and Mr s. Bob Mahr
Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Willi
ams, Portsmoouth; and Paul
Carr, Akron, spent the weekend
with Mr. and M rs . Virgil King
and attended th e Ca rr reunion at
Lake Snowden.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gibson and
sons , Columbu s, vis ited Mrs.
VIrginia Gibso n, over the
weekend.
Mrs. Bob Alkire visited over
the weekend In Co lumbu s with
her sons, Ray Alkire and Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Gibson and Robin .
Mrs. Penney Clark has sold her
property to Ed King and has
moved to Chester.

nishrd and morf'

informat ion

MEIGS

l)OM F: HOY - Ll{: td l ng l 'n•t·f.:
Conq ·n ·ancy ll b!rir t \\ 'l l l l11dd its
monthh nwc&gt;ting on \\'c-dnl '_..,(l;t .\'
a: 'l am at th r· off iC" &lt;'

a m . Tran sport a t ion wi ll bP f ur

93RD BIRTHDI\ \'
Lt'na
Hellman was honored recently on her 93rd birthday .
Cake, Ice cream and sodapop
were served to Sharon
Folm er, Linda and Missy
Foster, and Betty DilL Lena Is
a resident at Amerlcarf'-Pomeroy Nursing Ce11ter.

THE 1990

I' III :SIIIIU&lt;

- T I1•· , , ,lit. •

M~ · i g..,

may br obt ained b\' ca ll ing
992 )OOfi or 949-266ll

l'D mmunt t\
.\tti ••n
t\gf' rH · ~ will h;n: t• .1 !tt'l ' rl () t/11n ,..:
da\· for l(lw irwonll' ]l!' l "1111" rn1

HARRISONVILL E- The Har
rl so nvlllr· Sf' nior Cltizf'ns wi ll

Wt 'dnPs d &lt;c~\ ·

at !lw o ld hi gl1 "rhl!()l build 1ng in

hold a frPe blood prE'ss un' clin ic

lhc'shi rf' .

lr rHn 11 .1 rn t••

!1111111

AUGUST

14-15-16-17-18

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON. WV.

on Tu esday from 10 a. m . to noon

at th P town housr .
POMEROY
ThP Mrigs
rount v Boar d of El['{'tiuns wi ll
mPe t .-rursdav at 4: .10 p.m HI !lw
off icr on Mf'c han ir Strcr r in

Pomeroy .
RA CINE - The Raci ne Lodge
"61 F &amp; AM wi ll meet Tuesday at
7: ](I p.m . All m('mbers an• urgPci
to at tend .

RUTLAND - The Rutl and
Village Co uncil will mee t In
r e gular sess ion on TuPsda y a t 7

p.m . at the civic center .
POMEROV

- Th e

MPig s

Corredion
The name of Shaw n Michael
was left out of the team lineup for
the Rutland Reds who took third
place In the Kyger Cr l'€k Little
L eague Tourn am ent. He wa s
absent when th e picture wa s
taken

H&amp;R BJork Offers Income
Tax Cpurse In Pomeroy
T hou sa nds of pt•oplr lrarn how ldC" al for pNlp lr w ho wa nt to
t o prrparr incornrta;.c r eturns incrpasr thrir tax knowiPdge,
from H&amp;ft Blo ck and t hl'n lhf' coursP lf'arhPs s1ud('nts
rar n monr.\· as incnmr l a x how tu s ave monf'y on th r i r
prrpa rers . !1&amp;11 Rlock, th&lt;• ta xrs a nd also prepares them
wor ld 's largest in comr tax for a rrwar dlng rarN:'r.
prrparatlo n sf'rvlrr. offrrs i ts The affordable fee Includes
Inc ome' Tt~1! Co ur sP st flrt.lng tex tbooks and supplies. Gra·
Sept. lOth. Morn ing. aftpr - rlu;JIPS rE'Crlve C('rfiflcates of
no on, r vr nl ng and Wf'f' kend i\(.'hlevem &lt;:&gt;n t and continu ing
classC's arc available.
educat ion unit s (CEll's). Qual-

Experienced Inst ructors teach Ified graduates of the course
tax law. theory and appl ica - may be offered job Interviews
tion . Classroom dl s cussion and with H&amp;R Block but ~re under
practice problems
provide no obliga tion to accep t employstudent s wit h a t horough un- men t.
derstanding of each tax topic Those Interested In more InforIncluded In the course. Stu - mat ion abou t the H&amp;R Block Indent s learn how to handl e l o- co me Tax Course may contact
creasl ngly co mplex Income tax the H&amp;R Block o!flce at 618 E .
sit uations as the cours(' pro- Main St., Pomeroy, Oh. Ph. 614gresses.
992-6674.
l1t&gt;p; _ 17R-J().f1636M

�Pega 6-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 14, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, August 14, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page- 7

Beat of the bend

I

Any information...
By BOB HOEFLICH
Mrs. G.R. Graham, West Mid·
lands, Eng., telephoned inquirIng II any Information has been
forthcoming on
an Eddie LeM·
asters, formerly
of Long Bottom,
who served In
the U.S. Army
during 1944 at Llchfleld, Eng land, September and October of
that year.
Mrs . Graham seeks your help
In locating Mr. LeMasters before
It Is too late to bring about a
reunion and she and her hu sband
do plan to come to the Unilt'd
States for that reunion if it romPs
about.
Perhaps. someone in the Long
Bottom area could advise me if
Mr. leMasters !s now deePasPd
or can provide a lead on hi s
present whereabouts . I wou ld
appreciate hearing from you .
Thanks.
Mildred and Gerald ShustPr
are thorough ly enjoying their
experiences with a famil y or

raccoons.
Each evening, a bit afte r Y
p.m . , the famil y arrivPs on th£'
back patio at the Shuster home to
enjoy the food which theShuster s
put out for them each evening.
The Shuster s sit nearby in their
kitchen and observe the family
meal each evening. Th!' rae coons are undisturbed by human
voices from the kitchen and don' t
even seem to mind being
photographed .
The Meigs Coun ty Fair rolled
out In lu ll force toda y and wi II run
tbrough Saturday.
Fencing around the Roc k
Springs Fairgro und s se em
strange- the grounds ha ve been
so long without. Rides on the
midway were all set up by early
Sunday evening and f' alr Board
Member Dan Smith is to ying
with the Idea that perhaps.
activities of the annual fair cou ld
get underway on Mond ay each
year rather than on Tuesd ay

Another Fair Board member .
Barbara Fry, puiln an exhau stIng day Sunday getting ready for
the activit les which she wi II cha ir
during the fair. Her hu sband .
Jim, one of th e most ambitious
volunteers working at the fa i r .
loves the activity Involved.
~nother volunteer this year Is
Sandy Folmer. Sandy Is working

Classifie

/

in th r src n ' ta ry·s offi ce to g ive
Mary Gilman•. Fair 13oard SelTPiar y, a mos t ~H' Ic om r hC'Ipin '
hand

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992.21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

By tht' wa _v , if you dun' thwant
to battle parking your motor
vehicle at the fairgrounds this
yea r - and it will be a differen I
ball game - you might wan t to
park at th•• M&lt;'igs High School
parking lot and ride the tree bu s
to and from the fairground s. Th ,,
bus will be running from 6 10 11
p.m . each nigh t of thr fair
between thP two lo('afinns

'Ad ~ o ul s Hl t: Mc1us Gall1&lt;1 ur M.a ~ utl ''"'"1't."" '"'' ' !too ·

C .trd ollh,u l k ~
,,, Ml : lliOII~III

last bu s tnp to the high school
parklnglotwtllbe atll p.m And
there will be gua rds posted at th e
high sc hool parking lo t to sec tha t

free broc hu re. with complet e
dlrecllons on loca tions and ph one
numbers. on farm market s. T hr

de partm e nt is urg ing yo u to
" r xperiencr thr frPs hnr s..., of
producls direct fr om the fa r m "
this time of y(' ar .

,.

. .. ..

~

_~

. .' . .
.'

... '
'

".
I •, •

I

EXERCISE TIME- Brenda, left, and Krls ;\sh of Racine post•
with a lamh they were exercising on the rnldw&lt;~y of the Ro&lt;'k
Springs Fairgrounds Monday aftt•rnnon. 'rhis is Kris'!li fifth yrar to
••xhlblt lambs in the Meigs County ,Junior Fair .

.

20

S6 00
S9 00

30
42
60

sn oo
Sl 30 / day

1

C.ud ut Th anks

'"}_
3

In M e 11&gt;01y
A llllOU CI!Ill t!fll\

4

( i l v~aw .- y

&lt;J n ni w• rs &lt;.~r v

H.tppy Ad ~
6 l u s ! and ~11unrt
l Yaul Sal t" (pit od rrl d ltv .I IICI! I
H Putrlo t; 5~ 11! &amp; Au ct m n
~~
Wanh!(l l u Eluv

BR ~par tm ent Prope r !~ mc lud e~ pond. ap
pr ox 4.800 r; ll 11 tarm bldg and m001tP
home Areal bMga1n al $89 900

CALL 614 992 7104 FOR APPT .

1987 DODGE COLT
DL PS. P,M, AM/ FM cass E41 e. AC.

for a who lf' Wf'f'k - aft f'r t hat
Wf'f' k , thrrr wi l l IJr a cha rgr.

new

l1res. automatiC. Gets good gas
mileage. Excellent rondrl10n. 43.000
mil es. $5.500 ftrm .

HAY ,IUDGING - .Judge Bill Twarogowski, .'\!hens (ounty
Extt•nslon Agt•nt. ga\'t' 2-.1 £'ntrit•s a thorough ('ht•(·klng at 1\londay's
hay judging at tlw M1•ig~ County Fair. TIH' hay ~how was
co -!;ponsorf'd hy tht• Meig-!'1 ('ount,\o' t 'air IJoard and liH• :\1t•igs
County Soil and Wat&lt;•r Con ... t·n·atiun Uistrkt.

i\ n in\·i t.tl run Wil~ n• ad fr om
tlw H ull.trHi C .t t r! (' n ('lu h fo r a n
opr n nw!'tinl-! on ;\ u~ t i .11 tlw
Hull and M 1·ltl0dt o.. l Chu rc h

A rl' pnrr wac, r c ~ rd r·o n&lt;" t ' t· n ing
t h(• 19XX X~ l h•J TJ WO!Jd ( ;ilrd Pn
Cl ub book .t nd it lld d l l't'l' h Pd il
r·xc t•l l('nt rati ng .

.

,o rra ilg&lt;'rn&lt;' nl'

T he

Coun t \ · !·' a ir

1-'t·rnwood ic,
'2 11

H '( ' !'l '

tor

disi 'U'-&gt;SPd d nd

n •s pi l n ~ illl l'

J ll fli\ " t ' l"~i ll

'2~ 1h

\.

the

fn r lhl'

d llll i\'l' l" ·

"·'' .\'. IPrh ann iYC'r..,;t r Y. .:~ nd 7:11h

Th&lt;• g roup wi ll
o n Thur sdd\. 10 pr(' parr

.! ll ll l \' l 'l'." a t· \ · .

ll H' t ' l

I IH '" t' l ou t arrangenwnts The
c luh aJ ...,o will prm·idt• Pduca
I II Jtl ctl t• Xhi b Ji s ('OTU" C' I"llillg bu1
I t•r ll it ·&lt;.. an d hummin g bird ~ l o r
til e f&lt;l ir .
Fl \' (' l ht' l ' iub m r mbrrs will
" I u•nd 1he· (; a rdl' llf' J' ' s na .\" Ou 1a 1
\t· w PhilidPiphLt on i\u g ·,n iJil d
. tl ~o

;- tltt•nd

" T ru mpf' t

i n thP

.Jrr an gf' m t"nt for
{l;n· ;t nd t hp~ r ·

d

g r; 1111 on '\atu r al lh·c.... " &lt;..l&lt; t ling

th ai ~WtJp iC' no r m all _
\ · thi nk of
&lt;'iltro l s. lwt ·l ~. a nd o ni o n ~ for
d.\ in g buT 11u ·n · ,m · man ,v nlht'rs .
Thf' m unJ.t n t nr fi xi.l tinP m os t
oft t&gt; n us(• d i.o., :ll um and crPam of
tarLJ r l&lt; xampiPs named and
t'o lor s to IH' alr olitwd wf'rf' hla ck
w:llnut. dt'P]J b l&lt;ll 'k; sumac.
gr&lt;.l.\'. go lclt·nrod. go ldf'n _v pJJow .
St .John's \\" ;trl . .' ·cl low : pokc brtT _\·. !'I'd ora nge· to rPddi sh
pu r ple&gt;: o.,as ... ;~fr as . ch;ut n•usP.
Sht · &lt;1lo.,o prm·idrd ti n.r baskets
ouu l nl &lt;II PI Ltl \ for l':ll'h In ma kl' ;1

minialun • :ttl:tn gPn w n t
Tht • llt'Xl nll'l'l i ng w ill ht •Sq.ll
lX at lh C' Zion ( 'hu rT h of Ch ri s I
w i th a po!lu rk lundwon T ammy
Du mm it t wi ll h:J\' t' &lt;J wo r ks hop
on ·· flows a nd P :qJ••r T\,·is !

HiiJIJon ."
Ot h l'r &lt;.. pt ·f' ~ f ·n t Wl' r\' Th ('lm a
Ci!Ps. Kathr .vn .Jo hn son , F.vp l_v n

Thoma , 1\L!l"i.! t ' l)urtPII. HP!l'n
Eblin , and \\'" ilOVI' Tll' Hclilt·v.

Speakerr .I et

'1\ ;tr\'n

C:1n· lli nt•s o~nd
Da\· i .~
wtl ! lw s pt 'il ki n~ o n ckli\'(' J"a ncr
.1 nd w il nl'o.,si ng a 7 p.m . TuPs d av
ttl thr ~· t' \\' l.iff' Cm·Pna n l Churc h
of C od , C ht •s h ·r

SumnrH ' \o\'; 11 ·np r h;tcl tht • pm

1990 Junior &amp; Senior
Meigs County Fair Schedule
TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 14
4:00 P .M. - Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Rin g
5: 011 P .M. - Ta lent Show - Hill Stage
7: 00 P M .-Demolltlon Derby

,J umor Fa ir Quf'r n. a nd arwndrd

8:00 P.M .-Junior Fair Swine Showmanship and .Judging

lh&lt;' Cltl1en ship Washington F' o

9: 00 P .M .-Midnight Cloggers-HIIl Sta ge

cus i n Was hin gton D C

RlffiP pl iln s tn a t tr nd Ohio

WEDNESDAY,AUGUST!5

Univl' r sll y and m aj or in politi ca l

sc lpncr

By United Press International
PRESIDENT DOLE?: The first woman president should be
Labor Secretary Elizabeth OGle, according 10 a survey of
McCall's magazine readers . Dole, wife of Sen. Roher! Dole.
R-Kan., had 25 percent of the support while Sen. Nancy
&amp;MIM!bllllm, R·Kan, had 15.5 percent. Rep. Pal Schroeder,
D.Colo., polled 15 percent, wl(h Texas Democratic gubernator Ial nomine Ann Richard.• getting 7 percent and Nebraska Gov .
&amp;II)' Orr, a Republican, and California Democratic gubernat orial choice Dianne Feinstein taking 5 percent each . " I am
convinced. that In my lifetime a woman will break through th e
poUtlcal glass ceiling and be elected preslden t, ·· Dole sa ld when
told of the poll. Her husband says he can make a contribution
!rom his own tailed presidential campaigns. " I told everyone to
save all those Dole buttons," he said . •'Looks like I wa s right ."
FINE FOLK: Joau Baez, who got her musical starr al the
Newport, R.I., Folk Festival 32 :;et~rs ago, closed her weekend
set at this year's edition with Indigo Girls Amy Ray and Emily
8allenjolntng her for the t'oungbloods' tune "Get Together. "

En Jo y r he

flexibility

and

liquidity

of a

CD

w hi ch IS auro mar rca Ji y renewa b le an d redeema ble
Jf

eJ ch 7 day J lln Jvc rsa ry

T he 7 Jl.,, - J' ru n """ CD
1~

.l! lr Hh&lt;:r cx.t 11 1p lc o t our

Cr nn lllHIJH.'Ilf T o Cu sr onu: rs

Call

o r vi s 1t ytHJr nco~rT~t

Cl' nt r.d Trn" &lt;~ifi&lt;t· for dl'tad s t&lt;ll l. iy

s10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
M.l~ l l ll l!!l\ t fl.pt&gt;~ H S'J'I'JfJ'l 'J'J .:;llh\t,JJl (t ,tlpt ·n.th \' /,, r t·;~rll' W l!hd r .lw .il
ln trrl"!!l pa id In Jlr lnr lplll a nd f'Om pou ndr d Wf'f'k ly RA I PS f'rf r ('t ]vp Auj!. J. 19'90
.111d q,b]t'~ ! , , ,,h •n,c{" WIIIH&gt;III ll&lt; llfl t· Yl(•lo l ·'""In("' rh .u , I,Ht•&lt;l fJI (· r t' m alll ~
tO ll ~ LUI! f&lt;ll ·' full \'CJr ll&gt;'lth 1111 Wrt h dra w.~l \ ., f rnr ("f( '\ 1 nr r rmur .d

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
The Bank That Wake .&lt; Tlting.&lt; Happen .
992 -6661
446-0902
Middleport

Gallipolis

.\1ember FDIC

NOTICE

TOOL 80)( : Fual tank {19}
gallons · Twin remote hydraulic valves - SMV Sign
HITCH : 3 point category
1/ 11 w / mechanical float Selective sen1ing unit Draft 8r: position controL
MOWER : Hydraulic driven
60" rotary cuner shall be
revertible. Mast shall be
r110unted to tractor frame
approMimatety midway between front 8r rear wheels on
right skte of tractor. An innet arm shatl be pinned to
the lop of the mut to per·
mit vertical movem&amp;nt . An
outer arm sh.11rl1 bepinn&amp;d to
the end of the inner arm and
shall ptvot vertically . At the
end of the outer arm • rotary mowing attachment
shalt be mounted on a rotat·
ing head. The entire arm as when fully eJt·
sembly,
tended in the horilontal po·
sition, shall have a horilon tlll reach of a minimum of
17' from the centet of the
tractor to the tip of a 6' ro tary auembly . Shall be
operated hydraulically by
means ot a sy1tem of lifting
cylinders. The mast shall
be equipped whh a hy draulic cy linder and be cap able of pivoting 90 degree
into a full forward position
to permit the rotary cutter
to operate in front of the
tractor when 1aid tractor is
driven into brush. A hy ·
draulic breakaway auem bty sh11lt be part of the
mast. which. when the
machine is in a lateral
mowing position will per mit the entire mast and arm
11uembly to pivot rearward
or forward for travel, and
be designed so the mower
and
tractor mulmum
width does not exceed B
feet.
{1) Set of Operator' s Man·
ual and Parts Manual witt be
furnished .

4:00 P.M. lhe J01h day of
Augu'at. 1990. for the pur·
chase of 111 Used 1986
Tractor with Rotary Mower .

TRACTOR
ENGINE : {4) cyc linder diesel. 219 cu . in - 85 HP
w / two st11ge dry ~pe air
cleaner
Final &amp; Safety
Element• - Oust Evacuator
- Service Indi cator and
·centrifugal pre -cleaner.
MUFFLER : Upright, Ther mostats Starting Aid - An ti -freeze to -30 deg

TRANSM ISSION: 12 speed

synchroniud - 12 forward
and 4 reveue speeds Neutral
Start
Safety
Switch .

POWER

ti!H l ViP \\'l 'd

dt'm nnstr at ion pro jpc t s in hr r
ni1w .vr&lt;~r .., .1:-. .1 ~ - H 'p r. She has
a lso bPPn th e Mei gs Count y

~UBLIC

Public Notice

The Board of Salisbury
Township. Meigs County of
Ohio. will receive bids until

disc.

ex pla ined

Riffle wins preservation award

Public Notice

CLUTCH: 12 " double dry

.&lt;..pt·c ific hol i

H"('l'('

614-992 2377

SELECTI!IiG THE B~;sT 1\rr•a shutl•·rhugs h&lt;1d tlu•lr work
t•valuatt•d and judged ~1onday aftt•rnoon hy Ualt•l.t•;u. Gallipolis .
:\rf'a amat(·u·r phntographt•rs rntf'rt•d IX5 pll'lurt'!'-1 in a
widr-rangt•d t•ontest at the Meigs (' ount~1 Fair . Tlu• i'O lor and hlad1.
and whitt• pit•Cun·~ will ht• on display in thP C'oonhuntPPi huilding
for pulllk \'it•wing during thr fair.

l..1 nd " that nigh t.
For ro ll &lt;' al l. Ca&lt;'h had made " "

FOOD PRESERVATIO!Ii ,\" ,\RIJ - (;reta Riffle of Racine,
Jell, was awarded the HI food preparation award at the Ohio Stale
Fair. Leo Disher, right, r&lt;• prr•en~·d tlw Ohio HI Foundation
which opo118ored the award.

People in the news

Mohrlc Homes hH n.,,11
f lllm s too Renl
ApartnH!fll l o r Rr=111
Furnr~hed R oo m s
Spac" for R e nt
Wo~111~d tu A e r11
E q1upm cfl1 to• A1!nl
f o tll!;ut!

44
4!&gt;

fo/ Io 1&lt; •i11 If. r ..1 1'I' lwrr' · I' " ·I trill/!.'·-'-Galh a Count~
Af caCodc 614

446

G;JIIopoll ~

]6/

Ch1!$htt I!
Vmrun

388

24!i Rto Gr•ndtr
156 fiuyan D1sl
643 A1ab1a D1 s 1
319 Walnul

2 00 PM lHUHSOAY
] ,) 0 PM FR ID AY

VERY NICE LARGE HOM E ONAPPilOX ] '•
ACRES- 4 BR. 3 b ~ lh s. 2 ~a ra~es. rrnted I

Tht' Middll'p urt PfJ!Ii h closf'd
this WPPk duP to lllf' Vlr igs Fair ,
but t! wrll be reopened oo Aug. ~ II
J nd th&lt;' rf' will bf' no admiss io n
charg&lt;• fr om Au g 211 through
Middlcporl Villa ge
Aug. 1ti.
Co un cil ciC'rid r d on that p lan la st
n i ~ h 1. So it wil l lH' frPI 'S Willllll i n '

what ? Do keep smiling

I;Ai)Ji1t11
42'

Me1g s Cou111v

Ar c;r &lt;: o de 614

9 9]

M.t!&gt;llll Co

WV
Aot'd Cod,. )04

1I

6 1 f iii! II LQUIPtlll!l\1
67 W.t11h; d to Ou,.63 ltV tll iUO.: k
64 Hay fl. G r~n1
6 ~ SoJed II. r t!''''''e'

Houw' lor Ren1

43
45
47

tt et o W&lt;illtL.,J

48
49

12 S 11u a ho n Wanred
1)

lrl~ Uroiii i' C

14

Bu s on l."!H

1!,

Sttou o t ~

16
1/

fLul oo

M· ~ · ; ~lt ,." t~ ~~ ~ ~

~I

18

W .u111HI1 u 0 o

Sl

Autta for S dl1:

13

V,ut\ !1..4\1"10 ,

74

Muw, cvct cs

!':.
76

Rudi S &amp; M u 1u• ~ ' " ' S,olo!

17
7H

r ••, ., .. ,,
1!.

/1
/ '}

79

Merchandise

lu~ lruc l ll&gt; ll

IV &amp; \. ll R ., 1,. .,

P I P lu-"anl
l t!O!I
Apple Gt tJ II C

~]

Anloq ue~

54
55

M1 H Mt!l chand• SC

H1
!'12

81.uldrny S1.1 p plous

83

17 3

M,u o n

~6

Pe t ~

24 7

le t a nF.tll ~

882

New 11avt!ll

57

949

Ra cml'

H95

14'"}
66 J

Aul lantl
C o olv•tlv

937

M1.1St c al tru11 u 111 cnt ~
t"ru ol s &amp; Ve !JHtotble§
For Sa l u or Tr ~ rle

8u s m ~~ Opp o rlu ll ol ~

li!liHI

M iJ il i.'V

Buflalu

7]

l'r u l tl"S~ IIHI ;J ] SL'I VI! r!~

~II

W ln M1

AuroP;ur s &amp; A c ~~:. or · ~
Auru A i! p~"
t:am p m ~ l Ell "'l'"'c"l
C.tnlpltl !. 1!. Mul o r Uo o t H' ~

liJijiQJI

6/ 5
4 58
516

"I t
l?

Ttudo \ lor S ,olo~

Hoowh o ld Good!&gt;
Sp ortrng Goo ds

Mtddlt.)UI (
PtJJlll.!tu"\'
9 H ~ C heste r
84 3 Prull.;tnd

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?
CLASSIFIED
ADS

~9

tot S otlt!

64

85
86
tl!

Uom e lontJ ouvcm en t -,
Pt umlHny &amp; Hc dl1 1111
f ~t C a'Yillit ' 9
t:l ect tt cotl &amp; R .. r.. q i•IJ IIO II
G "11etat Ha "'"I !J

M o tutt! lh111t, ~''"'''"'
Uphu hlt•r v

Business Services
BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

Is Your Roof Ready For Another Year of Ice
and Snow?

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Now's The Time to Find Out.

New Lomtion:
168 North St&lt;ond
Middlep&lt;~rt, Ohio 4S760

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7762
For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodeling
Wr Cuaranlt&gt;t' Your Sati~farlion
FREE ESTIMATES
JOSEPH 0 . JACKS

Pit. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
Day or

Howard l. Writesel

FOR SALE IN RACINE

d ate

So th &lt;• incn •ascd p r icf's C:J t th e
gaso linr pumps is snowba llin g
into a pr ier i ncrease i n m any
directions . Now Is 1hw1 swPil o r

J?

7 -20 -1 mo

4- 16 - 8&amp;-~n

lowing Mr. Ka r r' s most rPc Pn l
hea rt att ac k. So. thcy most tikc J; ·
will be rec&lt;•rvi ng th eir mail at the
hos pil al on rhr

t-lun• t.-s 101 S ale
M o b1lt: H n me ~ lo1 S dl 1·
i1 r ,, .. , ~ too Sal !!
3 1 l:lu smes s Bmldrng ~
3~ l u h &amp; A c1eagr.
J b ""·~ [ s t~l~ Wanl t: d

J1

41

l'ilt ., .,;f;,,.t /!liP' ·' , ... ,.,.r r Jr,.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

Real Eslale

~

Vf' tPran s MPm oria l Hos pit a l fo l

.\
' . ',,

Greta Rltne of Racin~ recrn tlv
n!celved the 1990 4-H food preser
va!lon award at the Ohio St air
Fair.
The Ohio 4-H Foundation spon
sored lhe award which Includes a
trip to Chicago for the Nati onal
4-H Congress In December.
Ri!tle has excelled In 4-H food
projects. as well as clothing and

2 0 0 PM TUESDAY
2 00 PM WEDN ES DAY

Announcemenls

15 Word s

Rilllt!S .:ue lo t COII!tf!o:;tolovt! '""~ ()l' fl kl!lliiP tJ...., s woU lrc o:; l'la~g t."11
each d;ry a s s ep ,uaH! a ll~

Ron Pauley, Mason, W. Va .,
held winning ticket In the
12 Gauge Shotgun Drawing
held by Ractne Post 602
Amencan Legron .

d ing anniv rr sa r y on Spp t. li '? ThP

-'1 '
I

0\l~f

S4 00

lor

BULlETIN BOARD

cou pl e only rcc£' ntl v signed in lO
the Sk ill£'d Care F'aril il\· at

..
o

10

R a t~

'

Did I mention thatl'h aril's and
LPonil Karr - so popular with so
many peo ple ovr r tllf' vPar s will be mark ing th eir rij th wed

~ ~

1

3

6

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

t

Th&lt;il ll idi'' ..

,

1

IJOMF:STH' ARTS - EvrrythinK from pr.-tly l'lothPs to pillow
{'tL"if'S, from {'Ushions to ('t'rami('s, in tlw donwsth' arl.'i department
Wtl';. j udg-NI 1\tond a~ afternoon in prt•parat ion for thP opening of tht•
Ml'igs fount~ Fair today . The 230 t•ntries of tht' show after being
judgt'd Wt'rt' pli.u·t•d alnng tht• wall uf th t' st•nior fair building by
i\ddalou L1•wis, ldt. and Kay Fn·dt•rit'k , l'hairman . Judging tht•
man)' t·ntrit•s wt•n Bunny Kuhl, Ut•t·ky Cnlhf'rtson. and .Jat·kit•
(;rah am .

Th 1· F1 ·r nwood (; ;_tr dcn ('ILill
nwt n•t 't• u tl\· o11 tlw Zil m ( 'hurch
ufl"hnqnrthSut dlliH'Wd!nl 'l " "
host•'·" ·"
Ida .Vl urph _\· pn · ~H h'd ;tt rlw
rnf 'Pl ing ro ordr· r otrHi a l l n •pralt'd
till' (' lu ll l'(l lh •c ·r
1\;tl lll" \·n .lolrn c.,o n h t~ d dr·\·c,
Iro n:-. usi ng tlw tlwnw 'Ht ·a u t \· . ..
M ;~ n ~· id• '' ' " n·r·n· gh T n 1t 1Jn'l
PiH' h 1o d r·..,ni b~ · t hi' wo rd tw a u t \
C
Jnd Jl l di f ft'!"t'(l Stw then n·:11 l an
art ie If' '" W h ;l l ( ,od J.., B r'aut\ ·
~·

I t:l 000 huun:)

u~o! J

11 00 AM S ATURDAY
7 00 f' M MONDAY

MONDAY I'AI't H
lU ES OA't' PAPER
W£0NfSDAY PPr.Pl:R
THURS04Y PAP£A
~Ht(JAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAl' I A

Fernwood gardeners hold meeting

...

S ,1lt !~

DAY fH fOR E PUfH !C AliON

C OPY OtAOLtN£

If you arc havin g probit.'ms in

w hich yo u can r ail to rPr ei vf' J

V .rrd

puh-, O,loly T t rhu ow ro:.ochllHI

The wealher at thi s point in
time looks promising for fair
weather through Sa turdav

Words
15
15
15
15
15

Day 5

HdjJp,.- Ath

- A ( I .a ~ ·•·•:d oHI\I t: r ii~C IIlo ~l( pl d L.:tl Ill ltw o .uly Sl :ll( llld to:•
l Cjll
' t .•., .,,,,L... r ! lo-.pl,ry o .. ......~ .. C.utl .llltiiL~ I,tl nn1O(. r.!i.l
wtU .ol ~o •'PP &gt;!.tt Ml Hit: Pt Ptc, l!. ~ll l R l~ t l &gt; l&gt; l l' t Jll tllh u G ctt l!

none of the ea r s &lt;HP bolhPI 'Pd
during your abse nce.

loc atin g fruits and vegetablPs and I doubt if manv of you are in
Meigs County - th e Ohio DPparl mPnt of Agrirul!ure has a toll
fre e number . l - HIIII ~&gt; ·ll ri7 -H

J.l' "

p.t•d
' Ac ccrllt'" ~ ~0 tk'o COIInt t o • ;ul~ pot Ill 111 artv.lll t:o:
'f Jt'l~ o~U ~
G&gt;lll'oJWay "nd Found .od s undt!f 1~ wuHh wollln:
1un 3 clifl' !&gt; at no chill~ll!
"Pr•c1 ~ ul at! l01 all cap•l cll l r!11cJ ~ I ) tl o uhl1 ~ prot:t! ul onl c 11 ~ 1
"1 1-''""' lm~ lypc 011oly u~~d
' Scnt11 1d IS r1 0 1 rt!SpOIISiblt! l111 CII \H S ul1-: r fn ~ l d ,flf l ( h.,i;k
tw enm \ ln~l d&lt;l'f ild Hltl~ o11 p;rtmrl C .oll lidorl! ] 00 p m
tl ,t,o ,1I1m pubiiCJIIOIIIIlllloiko• (" UIII!(; (Ill ll
'Ad1 \11itl n&gt;U !&gt; IIn· p iud 111 a Jhu tll Co· '"''

T hP

RATES

Monthly

PO ltCil S

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

9: 15 A .M .-Junior Fair Beef Showm anship and Judging
Followed by Open Cl ass Judging
12:00 Noon-4-H Flower Show J udging !Jr . Fair B ldg. )
2: ()()P .M .-Horse Harness Racing
2:00 P .M .-4-H Style Show-Hill Stage
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull -Show Ring
4:30 P.M .-Little Miss &amp; Mister Contest - Hill Stage
5:30 P.M .-Junior Fair Parade
6:30 P .M .-Country Blend Band - Hill Sta ge
7:00 P.M .- Youth Awards Nlghl - Show Ring
7:00 P.M.-Open Horse Show
7:00 P.M .-Antique Tractor Pull - Trac tor Pull Ar~"
8: 30 P.M.-Mike Snider- Grandstand
8: 30 P .M. - Kiddie Games- Show Ring

TAKE

OFF·

640 / 1 000 RPM Indepen dent w / ASAE
master
shield 11nd shah shield.
DRAWBAR : Swinging. slid ing,
eMtendable. Height
Adjuatable.
CAB : ROPS w / heater - Air
Conditioner - Deluxe seat
w / tilt up arm rests · 2"
seat belt. defroster ~ wind shield wipors.

ELECTRICAL SYSTEM 12

volt - 46 amp alternator .
GAUGES : Warning lights
for neutral start ignition
switch , alternator. Engine
Oil pressure · Engine Air
Filteu - Transmisston Oil
Filter - and High Headlight
Beam G11uges for engine
coolant temp .. fuel level,
combination tachometer / hourmeter. Horn Button.
Cigar lighter.
AXLES Rear. Heavy duty
w / differentilllock and outFront.
board reductions
Heavy Duty.

TIRES 11L X15. 10 ply
tfmntj - 18.9 • 30, f6 ply

OFFER EO AS TRADE IN:

re11r) - left rear tire filled
with 90% tolutton contain·
ing 6 lbs. ca lcium chloride
per gallon water · Appro•
300 lba . bolt on weights .

{1) John D&amp;era1 020 Tractor

SI N TL 10028879T w/ Triumph Mower.
Bidder to submit detailed
specifications of equipment
offered . The Board
of
Trutteea reserve the right to
reject any or all bids .
By Order of the Board of
Trulteea of Salisbury
Townahlp

STEERING: H'f'drootallc w/·
trantverae mounted ram .

LIGHTS: f2) front heotw / hito beam · 121 tail 121 fender ·
Mounted tiBthing watning
and directional signal• - (1)
fender mounted rear flood ·
.
light .
PAINT: Manufacturers ong inal color.

Soroh Gibbt, Clork
3404&amp; Bell Run Road
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769

181 14, 1tc

SEE YOU THERE!

.SlCJe.l!!!!!!J!:
I

Its Allin 1!Je WADAoS

111//IIHIIHIHI/HIIIffllfi/Hl/HI/HIIH!If/lftlllfiii!Niflllllh/HIIIHII/11111/fllllfPIIIIIIIHHI!IHIHI.

11

Help Wanted

PHYSICAL THERAPIST WANTED
Position available at Americare-Pomeroy Nurs·
ing &amp; Rehabilitation Center. Position involves
treatment of geriatric patients with primary
emphasis on neurological and orthopedic ad·
missions.
The facility has excellent ancillary and nursing
support lor a true team oriented rehabilitation
philosophy.
Contract candidates will be considered, salary
competitive. If interested contact:
Mary Mason. MS. SLP. CCC
Rehabilitation Coordinator
Care Enterprises
500 West Wilson Bridge Road
Suite 245
Worthington, Ohio 43085

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
PBinting

HOT SPRING
SPA
You r

cants; make necessary contacts during screening process:
schedule IIRDD or MH le~~elll assesments when necessary:
confirms Medicaid status wilh county Department of Human
Services: maintains records and complete reports as required: may be responsible for completing the monthly PASS
and RN Assessor schedules: maintain •~ ahonshi ps with case
managers and RN assessors to facilitate client rJow through
system: may contact additional information sources to apply
PASAAR and PASSPORT cntem.
QUALIFICATIONS: RegiSIOied Nurse 01 licensed Social
Worker with experience in home care for elderly and/or
disabled adults. Elcellent interviewing skills 10quired
Compute1/ typing background a plus.
SALARY RANGE: $18.000-115.000
Resumes must be received no later than 4;30 p.m. on
Augusll7. 1990 rn the office of Joyce Shang. Pmonnel
Manager. Area Agency on Aging District 7. Inc. P.0 Box
978, Univmity of Rio G~ande. Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
"An Equal Employment Opportunity Employer"

PASSPORT ASSESSOR/CASE MANAGER
lhe Area Agency on Aging Disl1ict 7. in Rio Grande.
Ohio is seeking to fill four full -time and two temporary
contract Case Manager/ Assesso• positions lo• a new
Medicaid PASSPORT program fo1 hom e bound senior cit·
izens. DUTIES INCLUDE: To assist. manage and coo•dinate comp1ehensiYe case plan with long-term care clients
and thei1 tnfOimal/ fo•mal p1oviders within designated
cost caps To asSUie that the services are app10p1iate and
meet the needs of the client. Conduct face-to-face comprehensive assessment to determine client's level of care/need, eligibility lor available community mources and
long-term care opt tons: develop care plans: mange for
serv ice delivery including collaborating and negotiating
with service providers for services: maintain recular con·
tact with client. caregivers. and othet ptov iders of servrce
to determine if services are appropriate: conduct comprehensive reassessment to determine client's needs andreevaluate the appropriateness of ca1e: review cost of
PASSPORI covered setvices and make necessary adjustments: maintain on-goin1 telephone contact with all ser·
vice providers: maintain on·going contact with caregiv·
ers. family and friends listed in service plan: monitor client's proiJeSS relative to goals and objectives oflhe home
care; assist client in transition . if PASSPORT p1ogram drs·
continued; maintain data collection system: participate
in client care con,~rences with p1oviders: educate families and commun~y agencies regarding PASS PORI long·
tetm case management: advocate on behalf of a client fm
other services.
QUALIFICATIONS: licensed Social Worker or Registered
Nurse with at least one year prior experience in home care
lot the elderly and/or disabled aduRs, home health caro.
medical social work, ltriatrics/gerontoloav or other relevant subst~ult . Must possess the knowledltand skills n&amp;cessary to provide the le~~el of case manacemenl required
by the client and by any Ioiii retUiations. Must possess an
undefStanding of tho community service delivlfY system
and the abil~y to utilize the community's tesources.
SALARY RANGE: 118.0011-125,000
Resumes must be received no later than 4:30 p.m. on
August 17. 1990 in the office of Joyce Shon~o Personnel
Manaaer. Area Agency on Alina District 7. Inc., P.O. Box
978, Univtrs~y of Rio Gtande, Rio Gtande, Ohio 45674.
"An Equal Employment Opportunity Employer"

OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ...
POMEROY, OHIO : Rt. 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt . 50 &amp; S.R . 143
NEW HOURS :
POMEROY: 9 a.m.· 7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 6 Days. Closed Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY, AUG. I 0, 1990
# 1 Copper '1 per lb.

\h) Da y-A- Yt·.ir
Ht ' !re;JI

FREE ESTIMATES

Clean Dry Aluminum Cans, 35C per lb .

949-7168

Clean Auto Radiators 44C lb.; Batteries $1 oa
Yellow Bross 40C lb : Alum . Sheels 40C lb.

8-7.' 90-1 mo

614 992 · 5114

81J 90 H"

r\lllC:ril"a ·s Favunh.:
Port oble Spa

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301

Cu ~ 1mn .

/fnn rl

Tu {linl(

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Council of
the Village of Syracuso in
their office. Syracuse Mun icipal Buiting. Third St .. Sy racuse . Ohio . 46779 until
12 noon on August 21 .
1990 and opened and read
aloud at 2 p.m August 21 ,
1990. f or the furnishing of
materials. performing labor.
etc. for the following pro jects:

Bond complying with Section 1 6 3. 6 71 of the Ohio
Revised Code, or a Cashier's
Check , Certified Check. or
letter of Credit property secured in the amount of not
leu th&amp;n 10% of the total
sum or sums bid.
Upon award of contract .

100% Bondi submitled

by

successful bidder must automBtically convert to e Performance. Urbor and Material
Payment Bond gNen in the
name of the Vilt&amp;ge of Syracuse in a specific amount
equetto 100% of the Contntrct

sum.
No bidder may withdraw
their bid within 60 day• efter
the actual date of the open ing thereof
Contractors and sub -con trators must adhere to and
pay OeiJi!I-Bacon prevailing
wages applicable to this project .
The Village of ·Syracuse is
vita lly interested in bid pro·
posals from Minority and female contracton.
The Vill.~~rge of Syrcuse reserves the right to waive any
and all irregu larit ies and/ or
informalitiet and to accept or
reject any or .1111 bids and/ or
any part thereof
Village of Syracuse
Janice lawson.
Cterk -Trears .
[8f 7 . 14, 21C

AODITION TO SYRACUSE
FIRE DE~T . BUILDING
SPECIFICATIONS:
Size: 32 ' 0 " tong by 40'0" _2___1n_M_e_m_o_ry'----

wide by 14 ' 0 " eave height
Fr.11rming : Rigid frame.
loadings 26 P . S F. roof
line loBd; 90 M.P.H wind
load
Roof: 28 ga . metal panels
to match &amp;Misting.
existing
Walls : Match
Varco Pruden insulated panels No . VP102 . Re - use eM isting end w111l panels.
Floor : 6 " concrete. 3600
P .S.I Jtrength. reinforced
with 6 ga . wire mesh
Insulation ; 6" vinyl faced
in roof.
Overload
doors :
2
12 '0 " x1 2'0"
fiberglass
dnors wittt electric opere tors by Clopsy Door Co. or
equal.
Walk doors:; Installed new
3070 H .M . door in new end
wall. Relocate existing door.

Plumbing:

2'0" •2'0"

trench drain between bays.
Electric: By owner.
Plant and Permits: Sue·
ceuful bidder sttalt prepare
a complete ae1 of building
plana and obtain steta approval of same. All neces·
. sary permits and pet"mitiHB
are to belnciuded in the bid.
All propoaal1 are to be ac·
companied by a bid security
In the form of a 100% Bid

ASHER MAN
TILLIS
Died Four Years
Ago Today.
Many times we needed
you,

A million times we
cried;
If love

.

7 -23 · 1 mo .

Public Notice

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

lhnp1 ' ~

614-992-2328

We Soy What We do. We Do What We Say. ~
36 YRS . EXPERIENCE

PASSPORT SCREENER
The Area Agency on Aging Distri~ 7. in Rio Grande. Ohio is
seeking to fill the position of SCieener for a new Medicaid
PASSPORT program lo1 home boond senior citizens. DUTIES
INCLUDE: Complete telephone screens; schedole daily assessments for both PASSPORT and nursing facility appli·

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

could have

saved you
You never would have

died.
It broke our hearts to
lose you
But you did not go
alone,
For a part of us went

with you
The day God celled
you Home.

For
all you went
through.
He saw you needed

rest.
God's garden must be

beautiful.
For He only picks the
batt.
Mial8d by Wife and

Children

USED APPLIANCES
90 DAY WAIUNTY
WASHER$-$100 up
ORYE R5- $69 up
,
REFRIGERATOR$-$100 up •
RANGES- Gas-Elec - $125 up
FRHZER5-$125 up
MICRO OYENS- 179 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
q92 -S33S or

~8S-3S61

Aaoss frem Post Offill
POMEJOY, 01110
I0/ 30/'89 1tn

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

SER~ICE
We con repair and re·
core radiators and
heater corei. We can
olio acid boil and rod •
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tonks.

PAT' HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
l ·ll rt c

R•. l. HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTER, OHIO
•GRAVEL

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

9q2-S33S 01 98S -3S6l
Across From Post Offiu
217 E. So&lt;. Pomeroy

•ANYTHINu
AT ALL

POMEJOY, OHIO

l /6/' !0mn

•VINYL SIOING
•ALUMIIIIUM SIDIIIIG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
lltw • - • Iolli
"free Estimate• "

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAT CAU.I

985-4422
1-11 -90 " "

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garoges

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

985-4473
667-6179
5l t '!I011n

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

BILl SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD nES
1-12-90

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Homo

PM!•

•MobileHome
Aent11t1
•Lob RenJIIII

• 992-7479
II. 33 Nerth of
'-•roy, Ohio
1-12-'88-lfn

�t"age -

ts -

1 ne uauy :.entlnet

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

35 Lots

I

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

\

&amp; Acreage

45

16 1crn Jor Nit. Gat weU, all
mineral rights. l.DcDd on
Beech Grove Road, Rutland.
$12,1100. 114-092-JIIOt.

I

Fannland 415 ,I.e,.. motl or lnl,
Bud Chanin Road, city water,
p.ovlcf fOld, W,IIOO. 304-775~19.

One acre trailer lot with county
wlltr, Npllc ttnk end tltc:lrlc
hook up. On black top road.
P.rtlllly tenctd. OWntr wUI plfo
tlally Dn•nce. 12,100. uklng
prtet. 304-675-2722.
Aouta 2 Ashton, 1 ICrt loti 3
mn.. eouth llalllpollt Locka,
public water, no rettrictions,
some with r1var fronla~t, 304571-2336.

3

41 Houses for Rent

• · ·~ · ... •.•.... ' · .• ~- .. - ··...... ...~.... 8 '"

Furnished

·· -

-

Single? You should be roadlng
Haartsearch Hotlirwt Newslener,

Prollling
area
sin gles .
H11rtaearch, P.O. Sox 1043, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Tra'oltl, Basablll but trip, Sunday Aug . 19 , Pittsburgh 11 Cincinnati. $3S. lrip tick... Bus
dapar11 Point Plusant 9&lt;30 AM
Contact Rusty Caalo, 304-755-2431 or 755-5105.
Giveaway

2 fem ale mlx«i breed puppits,
614-44fi-2S43, 614-446-8131 .
5 tlg•r 11rtpa kltt1n1 to good
~mt, 304~7~2302 or 87&amp;-1571.

Adorabla pupj:Mtl. Hall blonde
llbl. 614·992-2219.
Olrty A.rMrkln deskan COMOII
TV, preny cabin .. , "TV nMds
wort, 304-675--5416.
Fu .. oil floor furn~~nct tnd tank,
plus misc. junk Iron. Fr.. tor
,.moval. 614·992·566•.

rntn::lti-Hom•
Unit•
from
Sln.oo. Lampa-Lollons-Acc ...
tortu. Monthly paymtntl low
11 $18.00. C1ll todty FREE
Color Catalog 1-800-228-6292.

EARN MONEY Reading Booktl
S30 ,000Jyr. Income potential.

Found: Or~~y kitten with four
whltei ..... Wttrlng a whitt 11..

POSTAL
JOBS
$18,3G2S6T,125Jyr. Now hl~ng . Call (11
805.fls1..6000 EXT. P--4562 for
currtnl la.t .
Qualltltd
reglattNCI
nura
needed tor &amp;2 btd facility (lonQ
term! loci!~ In Polnl Pluunf,
d
WV. Admlnlltr~~llvt tklllt an
work ••~net nteettary.
Corn.,.thlv• .. llry and btnttllt.
Contact
Frank
Topping,
Carthtven of Point Pleaunt
drlvtra-200 milt
Pomeroy. Send
P.O. Box 129-H,

Wtnttd: Atlleblt G.A.H.S. ltudtnt to walk 10 rny home to
Gallipolis
w.tct'l 0 yr. old after echool.
TUII-, Wtd ., TN.Ira. 3:30-7:00
&amp; VIcinity
Mull llvt In or clott to town.
ALL Vard Stlet Mu.t Bt Paid In 614...u&amp;--T110 btfote 1 Of . , . ,
Advance. OEAOLINE: 2:00 p.m. 7,oo.
the day btlort lht ad It to run.
nd cart. Lady to Uvt In
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.
Fflday. Monday ltdltlon - 2:00 1nd eart for tldtrty lady In
SyrtCUM, Ohio IVIf}' WHk ..nd .
p.m. Saturdly.
8141992-2800
16th, 17th, 18th. C1olhlng, cratta,
mi sc. OH R1 . 7, Addison Pika 2 15
Schools &amp;
mllat , 11t Rd . !ttl . Behind AdInstruction
davlllt School Wh ita houN
with rod barn.
WHI tutor 1ny aubjKt 1-12 In
your ~\om• or min•. Dorothy
Mit chell 304~1'5-2598 .
Pt. Pleasant

w.....

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon

&amp; Vicinity

18

Wanted to Do

I

H•d Hill Damage) Wa tnspld
or h1lt damage jo roofl, tiding,
lie . FrM E111mllt. Alto, we gl._l
ntlmtln on roots, tkflng,
soHln, rtpllctmnt windows,
guners. Millhont
Bultd•rt,
Floyd Mlllhon•, Bllpra, OH. 814423-7927, 423-6882.
Child c.rt provided In my Rlo
Grande Home, dayt. Exc. cart,
wlr.. ton~~blt Fill". 614-2•59550.

Y1rd Sale . Judy Humphrayt
Aock1prlngs Road. Mond1y,
Tuasday. Wedn•sdly. 8-5 p.m.
- - - - - - - - - - , Countrytidt R"tdential Cart
1Homo. Enjoy tho qulot of tho
PubliC Sale
8
I country. t.falw your homt at thtl
Countrr-ktl Rltlldent'-1 Cart
&amp; Auction
_ _....::.......:..._:_
_ _ _ _ ' Homo. 24 houro "'"· loundry,
room and I'KHnt cooked rnult.
Rick PNI"'Ifl Auction Company Wt promlu t . - r lcwlng cere
now boOking •uctlons, ••- IO all OW" l'lllidtnts. F01 mort
ptr1tnctl mak11 the diHtrtnct. Into call 304--88!5-3831 or 8t&amp;Llcen. .d Ohio, Kentucky, Wut W3 1nd olk lor Judy.
vtrglnla, 304-m-!785.
Mitt Paula'• Day Ctre Cef\ttr.
Sate, affordable, chlldcere. M.f
9 Wanted to Buy
I a.m. · 5:30 p.m. A~ 2 ·10.
UHd Mobil• homtt, ctll 614- Befort, afltr echool . Dtop-lnt
Wlicoml. f14-44&amp;-82:2AJ,
.wl-0175.
Wenled To Buy: Junk fwtot Will leby ah In my home. Mne
wHh or without motors. Cell Good At,.,~. 814-388-8'11-4
L.aJTY Uvlly. 614-388-9303.
Will baby tH In my holM, tXC
Nterencet, 30o4-t75-3t23.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

AVON · All trNI, Call Marilyn
wuver 304-882·2'&amp;415

Will babyatl in my home Mon·
day lht\1 Friday. Have good
refwenc... Rodney lrtl. 614245-9128.
Will babysit In ·my homt. D1ys:
only.l1t 441 6882.

Mil to babyahtlng tn my home
A&lt;:Cipllna opplk:otlono Mondoy WMitd1ye, Aget: "2 I up. HIVe
thru
fhul'ldly,
1:Oo-4:00. •ycare ex~rilnct • referen·
Uln&gt;bl'o Pluo, 911- Brldgo 0111. Exctllenl Cart. 6~
PL.azl, Ollllpolll, Olto. Apply ln
peraon. no phon. ealle pluM. 1202.
Would lllco to do lllbvoHtlng.
Aflllllaollono being ICC&lt;Opllcf II LoOrondo Blvd. Rol. • Exp. 1&gt;1Ulfto CoMiro In O.lllpollo lor 441-1po~~lnt&lt;l hllp. Evonlnao ond
ohlft onlyl Aok lor
Bllll

-nell

Financial

AVON I All AJMI I Shlnoy
~toooro. 30U75-142!1.
lobyoHtor In Northup "' Can- 21
tenary 1r11 lor 7 year old boy
going IO GrMn School. 614-446-

1310.
BlbvoHt• noodlcf. MUOO Ill In
my liomo.I14-401-Jtllll.
Chnhlre Kyger eNI, ret..ncN
~. your homo or mln1,

--'IIP7 """'

lljl.m.

nre Removal &amp; Dls-

Business
Opponunny

!NOTICE I
~10 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r1camrnendll thet you do IM*·
with poopllpr ,._, lnd
NOT to Hnd manor through till
moll ufllll you hlvt ln-Jglllcf

lhlo~
~
ng.~----------

2 Mobllt Hom" tor Rent.
Chlldran welcoms. $175/mo. 614·
256·1575.

Real Estate
31

2br, lumtshed,
614-446-0527.

1

Of

unlumlah«i.

2br, trailer, Wlltr paid, Ktrr

Homes for Sale

Belhtl Ad., $200 rent
dtpotlt . 614-446-1354

1 114 acrt, 3 mlln from town,
2br LR wl1h ltreplaet, dtn
baNmtnl. 614-446..0)65.

local rock group I• now holding
eudltlona for: Drummer. Musl
have own drum sytt•m. 81 4-

r

2 bedroom tralttr for rent Galllpolll Ferry, partially tumlshtd,
frN water &amp; garbage, phone
304·773-2666 or •v•nlngt 15752827.

poui.Rtasonablt Ratn. Call
Mon&amp;t. 6()6..324-Gm or 606325-T1t7

Ind ividual to perform cleaning
.. rvk.. at tht Raclna Potl
Ot11ct. Contact poal master. 614949-2500.

Mltalng whttt female Cock-a- r~~dlut or
poo, rned tlza, very fl'ltndly, retumt to
retpondt to Goofy, ho011 dog, Pomeroy, Ohio.
pi..H call ~-tfS-7452 or 1 f8
Highland Av•, Pt.PH .
SofMone to do houNWori&lt; by
hoUI". Rtftrtncea and hourly
rate. Wrtlt Box PtO cart Point
Yard
Sale
7
Pltltant Rtgllttr, 200 Main St ,
PcMnt PINNnt, WV 2S550

Y1rd 54111, Thu,... and Fr1, Aug
18 &amp; 17 1809 JtH•rson Blvd.
i :OO 1111 5 00.

~111p

•rro

EARN
MONEY
typing,
wordproeeulng, ptrt;onll comutln~AI home. Full or pl . time.
35,
ryr. lncom• potential . (1)
805-'87.0000 Eort. 8·t0t8i.

tMIH419.

Professional

EXCELLENT WAGES lor
Umt .... mbly. Easy wor at
homt. No ••perillnct nHdtd.
ean 1 - 918~22-6852 , EX1 . 1244,
Including S.t. tnd Sun.

~co~llor~.:114-::::092.:::·7711
:_::1::··---,--- l S.ml truck

&amp; Vlclnlly

for Rent

Services

Euy Workl Excellent Pari A•
semble Products AI Home. Call
For lnfonnaUon. 504-641-8003
Ext. 313.

..:

$1,000 caP reward tor Inform•
tlon leading to tM rttum of two
ma .. &amp;luei:ICk Coon Hounds k*
or •tollln In Qallla Coun{ Ctmpalgn Chureh are•. July • 1HO.
Call ~75-1V15 Of 614--44&amp;4864 after 4:30 P.M. or anytime
on weektnd •·

23

Ext. Y-101BS".

:256~
-t5::tf:.::.:·•=•~
klor::_;IM
=:_._ _ _

Mobile Homes

2 bedroom mobllt home. Furnlthtd. Waahtr, dryer. 1$236/mo.
plus depoatl end utllltl... 614-

EARN MONEY Reading bookll
$30 ,000/ yr. Income potential.
Now nlrtng . (1) 805-387-6000

NutMs: Overbrook Center. Tht
arNI newHI and most modem
•klll«i km~ltnn care facility,
now hat full and pa.r1 -tlme RN
~r
Part BHgll. 614·256- and LPN poeHioot IVIIIabial.
For mors lnform1Uon regarding
Small mb:td brMd ftmalt dog . Overbrook Ctnltr tmploymenl
Shots &amp; SPiyed. 614-441-12"16, whlc:h f8aturltl 1 vsry competlUvt wage •nd btnlfft pack•r.·
1146~857.
PIMH call 61AJ-t92-f.472. ..
Washtr and dryer, truck topp.r, quest Sally G6otckntr, Director
304-m-5176 .
of Hurting.

&amp; Found

42

Now P, lring . (1) 805-687-6000
EKI. V4562.

Labadort Atlrlver and t'laH Lab
pup to good homs only, :J04..
87!-3923.

LoS1

Four bedroom home, btnmenl,
patio, earpol'l, $•00tmo. Homeataad Realty, Broktr. 304-6755540.

WOLFF Tanning B.ct•. Com·

1656.. Mary Ellvn and Chuck.

-- - -

For Rent: 3 or 4 bedroom
houea, Kyger CrMk School 01•
trtct. No Pet1, $265 lncludn
Wtllr &amp; g1rbagt, plut $150
HCUrfty depoail, 814-367-7267,

VENDING ROUTE
Big Ill
locellon1, $300-$800 pontb ..
uch machine wHkly, must Mil.
1--800-111111-9844.

&lt;qe&gt;ADOPTIONSpecial family
wants to give rour baby and us
a chance. Ca l coll ect 708-352-

11

72

a

Country Mobile Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomtroy.
Lote, rentale, par11, Nlll. Call
614-992-11171.

Pomeroy-

Middleport, Ohio

~T A~IOf&gt;.PLY

~' I

WIIJ':' .... ~~

'iE'7,
Sl~

Television
Viewing

HAVF.Il'T 'OJ
5a.I£'.Tl11tJb A

LAFITTB,'

•

Trucks lor Sale

1i81 Chevy pick up runt good,
$1,1100. 304..~182 .
19 85 F250, 4 whMI drtvt, good
condition. 614-049-2380 or 614·
94i-2008
19 85 Ford Bronco II 43,300; 1184
SlO Blazer $3,500; Nluan P.U.
Wlllr, $5,200; 1987 Nlnan P.U.
$2 300 . 19113 Ford F150 Explorer
1 u1 0 &amp; ak, $3,500: 1984 Ford
Conv Van 1 owner· 1983 Chev.
9019 ·P.U. 'Long B;d; 1978 Font
Larlot P.U. $1,9000; R&amp;D Auto
511111 Hwy. 160 N. 4 mlln North
of H~lztr, 614-446-6865 or 614-

Would llltl to renl hauu In thl
country. LlngnlllasOtxttr or
s...m Ctntlf I I'M . 814-1112·233t
Of 614-&amp;611-4008.

plus

Doublt wldt, prtvata ~. 3 btdroome, 2 tult baths, alrlcond,
112-acrt, 6 rooms with ba..- Gall. Ferry, $325. month. 304menll new heat pump, g~ragt, 2 175-3087.
build nga. Loeattd el Lltar1
Falla. 6t4-247-37431614-247-2055. Atnl: 3 bedroom tr~~iler. Nice, 2
mllat from Pomeroy on Sr "M3.
3 SA home with nlct garden 304-875-1200.
1
-• 1 N h G 111
apot, ocal.u n ort
a a or
: Furn'td or unfvm'.ct, 2
Kygtr CI"Mk echool dlst . Trelltr
RNson~~bly priced. 814·384- SA, cablt, btautltul r1vtr vltw.
In Kanauga. Folttr'l Mobile
97UO.
Hom• Partt. 614-446-1602.
3br, brick, 1 112 bath, full bat•
ment on 314 acr1. AN.Ing
$68,000, 614 -245-S146, 614-44S:. 44
Apanment
4039, localtd on LcMtr Rlvtr
Rd .
for Rent
4 room houea, b.sth, full bas.
ment, txtra toe, 42 Burdttlt Add , 1br, furn'ed apt , wtwashar &amp;
drytr, In Vinton, 614-446-27'25.
Pt. Pn. 304~1&amp;-2139
4br, livlngroom, dlnlngroom ,
kltchtn, woodburntng alovt,
tlrtplac., 1 112 batht, 2 car
gange WOJklhop. 114-387-7800.
7 room houN-good rtpalr In
L.ong Bottom, OH. Setnlc view
ot Ohio Rlvtr·3 mlln hom
ForUd Run Btett Park, Shade
River Fornt &amp; eoon to bt
martn~. Within mlnut" of thr11
public boll ram,-. Owner
dtc11Md, prtctd lo Nil f1!,500.
Call 6M!i85-417! or IW247·
4035.

35 Wtlt Apt . 2br, t blth, privalt
enclo..d patio, closa to grocery
Ito,_ a stlopplng ClOt If, Wltlr,
NWer, traah provkttd, $265/mo.
614-441-1608.
Apts. In Pomeroy and Middleport . Cell i92-7611
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, !5.38 Jackton Plkt
from $192/mo. Walk to atlop &amp;
movlotl. Ca11614-4AJ6-2561. EOH.

Fumlthld 2 room• &amp; bl!h.
7 rooms 1 11'2 btitht, country Oowr.talra. Cltan. No pita. Rtf.
living but cloee to Melgt School &amp; dtp . required . 814-446-1i5"1i.
and town. AI . 3~ ltn•,
Townahtp Road 27. Flrwt ro.d to Fumlthtd Apt 607 Second Avt ,
Galllpollo, 12U; UtiiHin p.old,
~."Call 614-H2·1118 or 1·384lbr, 614-446--4416 after 7p. m.

Counlry s.ttlng. 4 bedrooms, 211'2 baths. etntral htlt and air,
baNmtnt, allachtd garage. 20
mlnut11 trom Ath.ana, 1-112
mlln to Meigs High Schoot
Rtf•rsncet and dtpotlt raquir.d. 61-4-5a3-6i37.
For Salt: 3 bedroom hou11 on
1pprax. 32 aer. ., tree gu 1
mil• from Au1tand, $39,500; For
Sale or Trsdt : 2 bedroom houH
on Chtsttr Rd. In Pom.roy,
$4,000 . 614-367-T.l67.

Fumlshtd Apt. 154 Firat Avenue,
$250. One pttwn., Small Hou ..
938 Flm Avenue, $175. Phone
614-448-161!5., 44&amp;-4038
Fumtthed
Eftlcltncy,
$"175,
UtiiHIH Pold, Gotlllpollo, 614·
446-AJ416, an., 7p.m.
Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
room tptrtm•nts al Vlll1gt
Manor
and
At'olertldt
Apartmtntt In Middleport From
$1ill. Cllll14·tMI2-m! EOH.

Middleport, Ohio, BMch St. Ont
HouM 101 ult, ~ Burdttlt bedroom furnished 1pt., dtpotl1
Addn, 304-e7S·27114.
&amp; rsltrtnet required, 304-882Price rtductd, I room house In 2566
town , butmtnl , carport. 814- Nicely Fum'ed Sm111 h00111,
446..0365, 814-446-4246, 614-446- g•raga,
not
tuHablt
for
0127.
chlld"rtn, no pet1, S300Jmo.
O.poolt' 614-448.()338.
Spring Valley ArM, 3br, :3 bathe,
formal dining room, lara• flmlty Nlc:ety Fumlehld Mobile Homa
room
wtth
woodbumlng In city. CA. SuttJblt for 1 per·
Urep&amp;act wtth bucktlov1 1 2 Cll r eon. "Rtf. &amp;Otp Atqulrtd 614dtck. brlek patto, hot 446..0338
tub
utility .building, 517 Oak
-c---c--:--:Now ecctptlng apj:MtcaUont for
Drtve 61~928 etf., 8p.m.
Maton Apts, AJC, fi'Miralh pick
Two etory homeo with full .,.... up, laundry room, equal houlmenl. lDw hNI budg.t, bc•l· ln~ opportunity. Cloat
IO
lent condition. G111rpoUt City achoola and ltort. Pay full
Schoolo. 114-25Ha55.
IICurfty cllpotlt and get 1
months trwe rent. 304-m-5101
32 Mobile Homes
One bedroom epts. tor rent
$225 month. 0.~11 required.
lor Sale
814-902-2218 ahsr I p.m.
14x56 mobllt home whh room
1ddltlon on h•lf ltCN IDI , 304- Ont bldroom fumlthtd apt,
675-1768.
utllllltt peld, 304-&amp;7&amp;-2722.

9'"r·

1----------"T"----------+
54

Miscellaneous

Goods

Merchandise

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Sotae and chah priced from
$395 to $fKI5. Ttbltt $50 end up
to 1125. Hld. . ·beda $390 to
$595. R•cllntrt $225 to $375.
Llmpt $28 to $125. ~nttt•
$109 and up to $4Q5. Wood t1ba.
w-t chalrt $285 to $795. O..ka
$1U up to $375. Hutchtt 1400 I
up, bunll Ndl cornpllle wtth
m•llrne t295 and up lo $315.
baby beds $110 MattreiHI or
box tprlngt full or twin $18, firm
$88, and $98. Queen 11ta 127! &amp;
up King $350. 4 draw« ehnt
$69. Gun Cabinets B, I, I 10
gun. Btby '"""'",.. $35 I
145. IIICf lnomoo $25 OuMn
Size 135 &amp; king lnomo $5o. Good
Mlectlon of bedroom tulles,
mtt•l cabinets, h•dbolrdt $30
and up to S65.GO d1yt Nmt u
caah with approved credit. 3 mi.
out lula'lllll• Ad. Ootn 9 A.M. to
5 P.M. Mon, thru Qat. Call 81._
445.0322.

24 ft pool, und INIO&lt;Icf, 1 yr okll
A-1 cOJl!l, p.old $2,800. will 111
lor $1,8oo. or $600. clown ond
taka over perment•. 304-878!IMB.

Big 5 bldroom llmt homo i&gt;ljll
on your lot $35,tMII 6 up. IM888·7311.

Dl'lln; Wllghtt, 30 lneh etovt,
1100; l.awn "Chtet Lawn Moww, 1
yoor old, $7&amp;0; rnllll - . 150;
Poof cluner, 6 moe okl. $200;
614 388 8817 evenlnp.

Rmrood Far Salt: Moltly
eugar, 4x16, ltack. SI)Ht ttacktd
oncl dollvorod, 150. !Mill 3057.

FOf' Set.: Woodbwnlng Fumtoe
Syotom, $200.114-446-2048.

Couch •nd chair, good cond,
304-675-5185.
Couch, 2 chair~, tnd tabl11, 2
lampt; $150. Wood ltbJt AJ chairs
$80 . 2 br~u lamps $30. bar 2
lloolt $2! . 304~7!-6865 .

Moldtd vinyl lugg•ge, chlrco.l
gnty, larp pullman CIN $30.
tnd coemetlc caM $11. :J04.."7'ntf02.

County Appll1nce Inc. Good
uud appltanc.., T.V. tel8. Open
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ..Ssl. 6~
446-1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Gelllpolll, OH

..... 2 twin btd1,
mlcrow•vt, dinette Nt, 4 chairs,
misc. E.verythlng mull go. 814tMI2-3002.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Wuhert, dryers, refrtgtrelor.,
rongn. Skoggo Apptloncoo,
Upper River Rd. Staid. SCone
Crttl Mottl. Call 614-446-7318.

55

bor.

Mollohan Carpett Upper Rl. 7
North Quality C.rptta l Fuml·
turw allow prlc.. Check ut out.
614-448-JI-44.

PICKENS FURNITURE
New...U.«i
HouMhold tumlshlng . t/2 mi.
Jerricho Ad. pt, PIIUint , WV,
call 304-875-1450.
Outtn air• wal., bed, mlrrowecl
boollc.t1t hMdbotrd, J*Sed
rslla, 2 Mta ehMt_sL~ month
told, $200. 304-8'75-:M48.
RENT TO OWN
I t'l-441-3158
8 pe. wood group $14.0'1 per
WNk. 4 potltr bedroom IUtft,
compltlt $15.20 per WNk,
dinette wtth 4 chair~ $7.50 .-r
WHk. Magic Chef 14 CU. ft.
RolrlgO&lt;otor $12.111 per - . 15
eu. n. ft11zer, tiO.OO par
WHk.Vl ' Ra Furniture. At. Mt, AJ
mlln ott Rl . 7~nltnary . Optn 7
dayl I WHk.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FUANrTUAE. 82
Olive St., Gallipolis. Ntw &amp; UMCI
furniture, Matera, Wattm &amp;
Wortl: boola. 614-446-3159.
52 Sponlng Goods
Blctnttnnlal tdlllon 44 Magnum
by
lnttntr!'IW
of
made
Altundrll, VA. Stamped 1178-197! &amp; Aprtl 1-4, 1111. Wnt1n1
holaltr &amp; full box ot Cllr1ridgH.
N..c:t• very minor r.p.elr. Atilng
$175. May contlder ptrt ..l traM
on 12 ge. pump tho4gun . C.U
Henry S7S."M33, tvenlnga.

53

Movtn~

56

M'&lt; 6RAMPA HAD ANOTHER
BIRTHDAY 'f'ESTERDA'f'..

BUT TI-lE

HE SAID.'' l !-lAVE TO

MO~THS AND

WEEKS HAVE BEEN
A LITTLE RUDE! I'

ADMIT THAT HIE YEARS
flAVE BEEN GOOD TO ME ''

i

Mercha ndlse

2~

Transportation

AKC Aeg'd Mete Pomenlnlan 2
112 }'lifO old, $150. 1114-2H-13:ti.
AKC roglotll'lcf Chow Chow,
block, $150 . 114/tMI2-t52t

"71 Uneoln Ccdlnental Town
300-r--lt.

'83 AtnsiA1 RtllanctJ~ door,
1uto, good cond, &amp;t,:wu mu...
$1,350. 30U75-4!1115.
1V65 Corvelr convertible. Slln·
dan:l Tranamlnlcwt, rur. good,
nttd• paint, $l,OOO. &amp;"M-24&amp;187:1.

1m Bt11t..L runt good, stan·
dsrd. 614-361-7217.
1914 Corwllte Stingray; 1916
Mtrttdll Bendt; 1964" Chevy
Celtbrhy; 1982 Bub; 1988 Fcmf
Aero Star Van; 1N3 Chrytllr
Cordova; 1te2 Votklwaoon
Scrrocco; 1~1011. Gt4-:J88.
977ll.

tm Lincoln Cont., 197! Old•
Cutlau, both run, $2tl5 each,
304-6'1!..2211.

SPECIAL Foctory to youttlllt, 2
or 3 btdroom14x70 mod..• at
the unbtllevablt prtc. of
$12,900 dtllvtrtd 1nd Ill up.
Call 1-aoo..:m-4045 tor dtt:allt.

llnrgonwynd Canwy Porolln.
st1m. . and Hlmalayen kltt101.
814-4U-3M4 1ft• 7 p.m.

Fll:h Tank, 2413 Jacklon Ave.
Point Plell11nt, 304-17~2013, 10
gat Ill up $14.98 and tO gal
complete f43B.
Groom end Supply Shop-Ptt

G""""lng. All brolcfo. All otyloo.
lamt Peil Food O..ltr. JuUt
Wobb. Coli 114-441-0231.

Hill Yorbhlro Tmlor fl"pploo,
$25. 304-e7So6203.
Pur~
(no ptptrt) Norwolgon El"""'-'1d fl"pploo, 304-

Sehnluzere..r. mlniMurt, 11n and
AK~.;. Aloo
- " llny
toyo.·
Coolvlllo.
114-to7-i40"4.
SlamtM Kltttnt PD. Etch. 114-

319-2113

33

57

Musical
Instruments

58

Fruits

1i8t Oodgo Omnl 024, 1500.
Qood ~f"!d1 1lr, al.io, 85,000
mil•, :at4--075-11'13 1ft11 ~ : 00

PM .

1981 otdl Cutl. . lrough1m ,
llr, tin, CfUIN , power k»c\q, IIC
cond, $1,'100. ~3446 .
11182 Oklo Omoao, 4dr, PS, PBJ
mtkl ortw. 8~113. 1-!i M-t".

tm m, !IOW82..!8tl.

1984 VW Aabbh L, good oond,
AC, _4opd, $2,1100. 0 .8.0 . 81424&amp;-¥184.
1015 Chev.na 4dr, automatic I
air, AmiFM llttrto cautttt,
$1,8!0. 8t4-44... 7!11.

1tal5 Dod~ Charger, autom•lk
&amp; air, Atrilf"M ltttiO CIIM!It,
,..., detrottlf, $2500 . 6~

em.

1015 Ford EICOI'I, 2dr.t... Sapd .,
Ex c. a• mllolgo, $1,8 "'· Ooy'
114-281-5068, Evtnlngt: 81&lt;1245..,18.

1981 Chevy Cav11ttr Z-:M. Low
mllelg~t. Like new. Call 614-44&amp;-

&amp;

1171. I to 5 p.m. lfltr 5 614--U61818.

Canning tom.toe• 14.00 bulhel .
hhlnd Maeonlc Lodoe In
Aacir.. o.rtn• Hill. 1\4-Mi-

1086 Ford Escort GT, air, 5
opood, lltC cond, 304-f75-t514.

1117 llonlo Corio, Supor opor1,
IUfll~ C3,000 mlllo, ohorp,

61

oellint.

Business
Buildings

-.o

11813.

Fann Equipment

Fox
lllllgll' 7 ft.

304-e75-3030 or 515-3431.

Old Pomoloy UbnofJ b&lt;oHdlng
tor a. • . FOr lntormatton con11 tho llolg1
loci Aulh
County Pul&gt;llc Ubrlry. IM-1112·

114-318-

1111 Cor!-, 4 oond, 304-e7H215.

· good

··vour bringing extra smelling sails Isn't
exactly boosllng my morale: ·

Hou. . Boat, 34' FIMrglaiS. 19'72
Nautl·tlnt
350
tngtna,
wlapprox. 1,000 hrl, nc. cond,
614-446-4109. 614-379 · 2~.
Kawa.. kt X-2 jet akl. 614-992·
11167.
NOW ON SALE!! YAMAHA
WAVEAUNNERS. Salts, Parta,
Ac cntorlll, Strvlc•. RIVE.ASIDE MARINE, Rt . 7 (across
from K-Mtrt) Glllipotl•. Oh. 614446-2424
76

(l ' " " " ' "' • ......

FRANK AND ERNEST

Of

CIVII-IZATI

ON ou~
Pl-ANETi&gt;
~

&amp;

Auto Pans

Accessories

-

For Nit 6 Cyl. Mot04' tor 1 Ford
Auto. 1150.614-446-4537 AH•r
5pm
Plch up beds, Fotds 1nd Ch•va,
1980 to 1987, no rult, 304-i75&amp;286.
campers

ALLEY OOP
NOW WE'LL DO TH' SAME

THING ON TH~ OTHER SIDE,
AN 1 HOPE THE ACID DOES
ITS 1\QRK IN SHORT ORDER!

&amp;

Motor Homes

/~

~/~
_ ""'

-------- ""~

•--t.

1913 Dodge motor hom., 304- '
Tn-!5363, ChlrtU Otcktt.
19'14 Apache 13ft pop-up lr111ltr,

1700. 304-882-3237 after 5:00

J11,

1.

1oo11t ..:

Pont. lunblnl. 4dr, euto I air,

P,IMII; tll87 Chivy ClloiHI!y,
100; 11117 Chovy Sprint,
100j__1tl7 Ply ~"'"''"· $1,""!;
01111 Cllllo f4,200· tloo
11185 Ford &amp;-on~S1,10o;
cad,
400j
1NI Dodg~~

=·~~:=g:;:
$1,000;
~
Chi.
,100i

;

181S BUick SkytutWio

1112

Bu'ck

1111 Ford Folrrnont
000 mlloto; 111t1 Pont. Orond

-yo,

s.-.

'

T•"f..~

( 011- l(l( ---l4,l

(1-IO&lt;CJI.Alt'

8:30 (l)
The Wonder Y11ro
Kevin 's math teacher leaves
just before a big exam. (A)
Stereo. 1;1
8:35 CIJ Mo)or Luguo Bellblll

I

I

I- ·---·
1-ff.W').,J~ 'I'"

11:00 &lt;IJII 11111n The Heal Of
The Nlghl A Councilwoman
helps a young boy who may
have witnessed a murder . {R)

Stereo. Cl

(J) IJ)CJRooeonne
Rosanne wants Darlene to
recite a poem in front of her
peers. (A) Slereo . I;J
(!) (!) Amerlcon Experience
Lise Yasui explores the
history of her
Japanese-American family .

81

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
UncondHiontl llttllmt guaranIM. Locel rtftrencn tumlthtd.
Frw •1rna111. C.ll collect 1&amp;14-2374'68, day or night.
Aog.,.. Blltmtnt Waterpro.&gt;
tlng..

MY ClADWASOFFERro
A R:JLITIO'-L ASSI5TI'NT'5
JOe IN WASHINGTON . ..

BUT HE 1URNI=D
IT COMJ .

~

CA!.lt;HT IN !HE SHREDDER

9:30 (l) (I) CiJ Coach Hayden

ComP*t Mabtla Hom• ut ups
I repalrw, also plumb1n; &amp;
tlectrleal, roofing, ramodtllng,
petloe • dtchs ale . REMODE.LINGI AtlartneM. Eatlmatt•.
114-256-1811.
Ron'• TV Service, •peclallzlng
In ltnlth 1110 Mrvlclng moal
ot t.r brende. HouM caltt, a lao
tome appltanc• repair•. WV
304-6'1!-23118 Ohio 114-448-2464.
Roofing and Siding. Trailer
root. pelnttd. Fr.. t.tlmatll.
Fred Marb, 3G4-773-0116 .

reluctantly agr99s to meet
the Rosobrocks (AI S tereo .
1;1
10:00 &lt;Il D 1111 Cutting Edge Wllh
M•ria Shriver Shriver
interviews pop smger Sinead
ConnOf', Britistl billionaire
RicMrd Branson. Actress
Kirstie Allay and former
football player Lyle Alzada
(l)
II 1hlrtyoomo1hlng
Gary is offended when
Michael offers him some
financial help. (R) Stereo . Q
CD Naw1watch
(!) P .O.V. Golub features
artist Leon Golub. Q
llJ)
New Twtllgl11 Zone
ta Evening Newt
11J1700 Club With Pal

TWO DAYS FER CARRYIN'
A CONCEALED WEAPON
IN A CARD GAME 11

THAT ACE
OF SPADES
WARN'T
MINE,
JEDGE II

SOME LOW -DOWN
VARMINT SLIPPED IT
IN MY HAT WHEN
I WASN 'T LOOKIN'

av

m

So,.k: Tonk Pumping $80"0.1111
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPHISES,
Jockoon, ~ 1.8Q0-637-'l528.
Dlvlt
S.W·Vec
S...Vk:•,
Otorg• CrMk Rd. Parta, au~
pllet, pickup, and dellvtry. &amp;1AJWHI2M.
Plumbing

Robl~10t1

&amp;

Carter's Pklmblng
and Hilling
FOW1h and Pfnt
Galllpoll•, Ohio
IM-44&amp;-3888
Electrical

&amp;

iiERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Rnldentlal
Of
commarclal
wlrtng, ntw MrYice Of" repal11 .
LlcenHd tltctrlcltn. Ridenour
Eledrleal, 304-675-17'88.

.\

85 General Hauling
AlA Water O.llvary. 2,000 gal.
cepeclty. 614-317-7'308.
A &amp; R Watar hi"'ICI. Poota cl•
ttmt, wetls. tmmedlat•1,o0o or
~~~- doiiYOfY Coli 304W.tter.on's Wat..- Htull~~g
reaeoneblt "'"· volum. dta.:
counte, 2,000 to 4,000 capeclty
clllterne, POGit, wtllt elc . c.ti

304o6'1!-2tll

'

87

Upholstery

Mowrey'• Uphol~er1ng MrVIclng lrt cow.ly lrll 25 YNra. Tht
btiM In fumtlure upl"lolttertng

Call 304-175-4114 tor ,.. ..:
tim••·
Or11ham Upholstery Ctnt., 303
Hllnop Dr. Call lor 1 ppotnh~ente
• •Uma.tH. Call 614-448.3438.

A

'Your

w'Birthday
Auguot 15, 1990
Ideas you conceive in the year ahead as
to how to improve your matenal securl ·
ty will be feasible and have profitable
potenUal. Be sure to put them to use .
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) You're likely lo
be more astute In commercial and hnanclai aflalrs today than tor which
yau·ll give yourself credit. Be mln~ful ol
the Ideas of associates, but don I discount your own . Leo, treat yourself to a
birthday pllt. send for your Astra-

Graph predic:llons lor lhe year ahead by have to be a bit more asserl1'o1e with an
mailing $1 .25 to Astr a-G raph, c/o this assoc1a1e today than you hope would be
newspaper . P.O . Bo;.: 91428, Cleveland , necessary. 11'8 impor1ant this individual
OH 44101 -3428. Be sure lo stale your under s tands you mean what you say.
zodiac sign.
PISCES (Fob. 2G-Morch 20) PartnerVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) You mighl ship arrangements look promising lor
have to be a bit firmer than usual today you today . provided your counterpart is
in s ituations where you are supervising pr o ductive. It" s imperative you have
the efforts oj others . Be sure to praise someone who can match your own
the worthy, but don 't be afraid to repri- mettle .
mand lhe slacker s .
ARIES (Morch 21-ApriL 19) You might
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Success in have to make some diffi c un decisions
your endea'llors IS a strong possibility today where your work is concerned
today because ol your mode ol opera- that affect others as well as yourself
tion . Before your competition realizes Fortunately, your reasoning powers are
whal's happened. you'll achieve your very astute .
objectives .
TAURUS (Apri12G-Moy 20111 theoels a
SCORPIO (0&lt;:1. 24-Nov . 22) A lrlend ,serious subjeCt you ·d like to discuss
who puts great stock in your opinions witt'! another today. try to conduct the
may take you into confidence today . ;.. e~~;change in convivial surroundings. It
Fortunately, your pat wilt be putting will make It easier for both parties to extrust In the right person.
press 1hemselves freely .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Pay GEMINI (Mor 21-June 201 Managing
special heed to the sound business ad- complex davelopments Is your strong
vice given to you recently b:; a success- suit today. If your major thrust Is rectifylui friend. This person has sized thing s lng matters for others, your efforts
up rather well.
also produce benefits for you as well. ;
CAPRICORN (0.0. 22·olln. 19) Your CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22) In serious
thinking Ia ambitious today and II you ; deliberations Involving bolh you and
can
match It with appropriate action. your mate today, don 11 tune out the oth1
·the re!ults could be Impressive. Merely ,, er's opinions. Each can make construc- 1
:thinking alone will net you nothing.
· tlve conlrlbullons ol mulual benefit.
IAQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Fab. 19) You mlghl

wm

'

1 1 :00 &lt;IJ II (!) (l) (II Ill Ill
a2118 IDI Now•
(!) Rovolellono (1 001
llJ) ID Areanlo Hall
I!JI Mloml VIce Prodigal Son.
Pt20t2
1211 Church S1ree1 S1111on
ta Monoyllne
liD Bebnan
1 1;20 C1J MOYIE: Tho Dovll't
Brlgodo (2:451
11:30&lt;IJII 1111 Tonlghl Show
Stereo.
(!) Magnum, P.l.

me
Nlghtllne ~
~ Night Court
a21e 'Sting..,-

.

~

1

...__
K_N_A_W_E_E_~
1.

.

_

_

_

.

•

tho chocklo quoted

by filling in the miu1ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

i) ~~F. ~~~\ER
. LEHERS TO

IIIIIIII
e-11

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Pistil - Swoop- Grasp- CrfKJie- OPPOSITE
rve always wondered why when there are two teleVISIOn programs I like they are always on OPPOSITE
of each other.
NORTH

BRIDGE

B· ll·tO

• 61

•o

Learning
when to let go

• 106 43
IQB 642

WEST

EAST

.6

I AJ 8 3
By James Jacoby

A beginner quickly learns to guard

IQ109!

• K 72
• Q8 5
4953

the tncUaking potential of honor
cards. This becomes a habit that is dif·
flcult to overcome Look at l&lt;Jday 's
deal. South opened w1th a strong arli·
f1cial two-club bid, bid his natural
heart suit and then jumped lo game in
hearts . When a c lub was led. it ap-'
pea red that dedarer would have four
losers - three spades and the kmg of
hearts - unless the king of hearts was
singleton. Or perhaps there would be a

• J 97!

+ K J 10 7
SOUTH
I K74
.AQJ 10985

tAK

lA

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer : South
Wt'st
Pass

Pass

free finesse against the heart king if

All pas.s

2.
3+

Nortb

East
Pass
Pass

the defenders led hearts So declarer
Opemng lead
3
played a low s pade at trick two, saving
his spade kmg for later Eas t won woth
the spade nine and led back a hear~
South put in the queen; Wrst won the spade ace . To cut down spade ruffs in
king and returned the suit.
dummy . West willlhen have to lead a
Declarer now cashed all of his heart heart. but m domg so, he offers a free
tricko but one . He hoped that the de· finesse. On the actual layout, suppose
fender with lhe spade ace would blank West takes the spade ace and plays a
11 No such luck . Eventually declarer trump . South will win and play a sec·
had to lose two more spade tricks for ond spade. If Easl wins. he does not
down one .
have a second trump lo play . If West
And th e wmning play ' At trick two. wins. he cannot play another heart
decl a re r s hould boldly lay down lhe wi t hout g1ving up his natural trump
spade k ong . hopmg t hat West holds the wmner.

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

38 Travel

1 Chapeaus 39 Gov'l
5 Dorothy's
dog

agenls
DOWN

1

9 Yearn
10 Ennui·

Ia

vista

inducing
12 Beef

-

2 Pass

or

judgmenl

hish

3 Genuine
Yeslerday's Answe1

a~icle (sl)

13 Sibyl
14 " High -

"

15 Crock

4 Slilch

11 Cooney ol 25 Camb1ic

5 Type of

16 Greek

boxing

ca ke

ghost

27 lelteo

15 Walden

man or

6Ateyoua

17 Wind llower
19 Malay

18 Atguable

mouse?

21 Ullimate

7 Bt ibe ( s l)

gibbon

Bowie

man -

22 legal

8 Away from

20 Tops
21 Tax

10

22

Bumpkin

23

Destiny

24

Cov

letm

23

ca mp

rv s

Esc hew
food

Paladin

24 Old hal

28 Scandina ·
v1an
29 Oevilkin
34 Batd ·s
adve1b
35 Oil 01
bu1te1

en ant
25 Whip

26 Ttee
27 Sltelch
30
31

Gel i!
Picnic
pes I

32 ·· Annabel
lee·

33 Garmenl
leature
35 Buco lic
selling
36 Enler
genlly
37likewise

OAIL 'r' CRYJ'TOQUOTES - llere's how to work it ; 8 - t4
One tetter stands Ior another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, ell'. Sin!(le letters,
apostrophes, the length and lorrnaliou ol the words are ~II
hints . Each day the code letters are dille'rent
AJ

II T Z G Y F 0 F M

as Lolo

.1 E AU A B T:

ill On Sligo

A II

m•

From The Didja Ever Notice
Department: Clothes that are
tight get tighter in the wash
while those that are baggy get

•

HFESNTSSTJJ

ta Sportl Tonlgh1
My 1&gt;111 Guo (2:00)

11:35 (J) CMoro 1;1
12:oo

.

Night Stingray aids a
principal In convincing
student&amp; to aYOld a gaJ19. (A)

i1J1 MOYIE:

I

poe I

10:30 (!) Ralalng Kldl
llJ) 1D Taxi
all Craok • Chuo
tD Malo• League Baaoball

Heating

84

.

o·

Rotary or ca~t tool drilling.
MOlt Willa completed Hmt day.
Pump 11lM 1nd eervlce, 30480!1-3802.

82

a21 Ill MOVIE: ' Guilty 01
Innocence: The Lenell Geier
Slorr' CBS Tuoldoy Movie
(2:0011;1
d1l Budweleer PreHnta:
Tuelllay Night Flghlt
® Naohvlllo Now (LI
ta Lorry King Llvel

HE 51\¥.5 HE W/'5 AFRAID
HE'D &lt;QET HIS FINGERS

I

GIRRO
Is I I

4

rn• PM Magazine

Services

Electre

0~11 blhlnd wltft SO"
Buoh
PIO. linn. 304-411f!,OOO. 860 Allo Soloo,
15$1 lltyl
Hwy. 1.. , 4 mlloto N. ol Holzor,
114 Ul 6M5,...........,.189.
Jlm'o Ftonn E&lt;lu""::"i..:~,~·
Oltlllpollo,
; OOYERNMENT SEIZED Volllcloo
Wldo
6 Ullll lono 11om $100. .. . . -..
1Jicloro I lmf'lln*"o. Buy, Corvoltll. Chlvyo. Surptuo.
1111, lrldo, I :OH:GO
y..,. ..... (1) Ext.
S.t.llll Noon.

-ion,_

I

TERRY TRAVEL TRAILERS
Hl90 CLOSEOUT I
All units to go 11 lowest prte..
thl1 year! Plue no ch1rg1 tor
A/C . T•rry dular tor ewer 20
ytarw. Buy wtth conlldenct.
Fixed ralt tlnlndng 1v1llablt.
IRV1NES CAMPER SALESI On
St. A1 . 7 North at St . RL 555.
Little Hoeklng Ohio Approa. BO
min . 814-~2291 .

J'J5!. ou
. T

EBSOE

IDle

(1111

Camper 1h1ll $450. for mort
Into 304-8~2086 atter 5:00 PM

I

1--,:,6:_:.;.17.;..:...;.1::_::,1~..,~--1 0--~~·mplete

8 :00 &lt;IJII 1111 Mattock Mallock's
life is in danger when he
tries to help an attorney . (A)
Stereo. I;J
I!) Major League Beoobalt
(l) (I) II WhO'I Tho Boll?
Tony leams that a baseball
hero is unscrupulous in
business . (A) Stereo . 1;1
(!) (!) Nova Explore an
alarming nuclear waste
problem in eastem
Washington Stale. C
®l 1111 til R. .cue: 9"1 1 Pollee
speed a drownin.9_ infant to
tho hospl1al. (AI !;I
llJ) ID MOVIE: The Sorpanl
And The Rolnbow IRI (2:001
I!JI Murder, She Wro1e
Armed Response
all Hank Jr.'o Double Eagle
Tour '89 Hank Williams Jr.
stars in Hank Jr.'s Double
Eagle Tour ·as. Hits including
Family Tradition and All My
Rowdy Friends A.re Comin'
Over Tonlght.
ta PrtmeNowo
liD MOVIE: My Pel Guo (2:00)
8:15 CIJ Wrottllng'a Greltelt Hill

'

SPOGSI

II

a

(1111

WHAT po '(OIJ TH INtc

Refrigeration

1111 Hl. . n Sentr11, 21,000
mllea, ..... "'· .,,800; 1987

--Zl!:l! --. 5' 1114

blm, aoriiQI lnd oulb&lt;olldlngo.
All mrneralli. Ownlr flnencrna
$80,000. eon SomorvHiot RooHr.

34

f:2':"· et4381 143-4,

Fannall c tr.ator 1nc1 ptowe. O.VIONI
400; 1115 Rtnaull,
arodM' - . fi.IOO. 3 pl. hHch $1,100bl:' 0.. Cololot, $2,800;
S40Q. Chivy I' b1Cf $310 304- 11114
Oo!IIDIII,OOO mlllo,

154 ecrw on Routt 38, ten miiM

11 fl . Starcrah Trt-Hull
Boat. 125 HP, Evinrudt Engine,
complete top, new ufholsltry.
Call 614· 206-1316 1h1r :00 p.m.

1083 motor home . Toyota Dol·
phln . Self-contained, tll't on
gat, du. ... lr. Good condl11on.
Low mlln. t10,800 . 614·985-4418.

Pont lun.lrd, P,OOO; 1iir Ply

"""' Polm Ptoooom. Houoo,

tm

1980 Flrabln:l, right front
dameged, Met ott.r. 614-38811328.

1085 acts t8 Aegtney. Exc.
concl, 00,000 mllea. 114-446-8102.

Farm Suppli es
&amp; Live stock

Fanns for Sale

lor Sale

1080 Holliday Rambler, 32ft,
Mll-eonlalnsd, 26ft . awning on
~ . 614-388-e331

1015 Chevy C.valler. Automatic,
4-door, 1mtrm t1artO cantttt.
Good condlllon. $2,800. 614-9854418.

1143-1313.

'11117.

&amp; Motors

1m Ford Mu.ttng, 1900. runs
~· 304-67!5-510! '"" 5.00

1183 Cllovy Clvlllof, 4dr0 4opd,
Reg'd btiegr.a, 5 moe &lt;Mct, 1 .......... otNrlng, ,..... .......
milo, 1 lomoll, $50 nch, 114- """'ng $800.1&gt;1-251-em.
246-!1518.
ti83 lmpoll. 111Jt1 Novl. 304451-1611.

J6R,_,_
honwgtown vtgl(.t blla. 614-

1

75 Boa Is

1i&amp;8 Camper, good cond ,
111epa
call 304~82·3546 .

~m.

Mobllt HomM tor 1111 on 3
quar1lfl 1Cf11 of ltnd. For
S7,000. 614-256-1575.
Naehua
14x70
Wllrpando,
dulled .75 ecr. lend, Polm
Pt ....nt, M•ny mras, 304-875-

1987 Suzuki Quad Runntr 4whlller, ettetrte 11an, rtverse
gur. E•ctUtnl condition $1800.
Call 614-446~75'1.

Pll .

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

IXC.

WUAT
ARWef.l

8f HIRW TO WORK 1

Motorcycles

1m Ford LTO II, low mll11ge 1
new llrM, balltry, etc., gooa
car. &amp;2450 oao, 614-«&amp;-etse.

1m R~g~l luk:k, ••c cond,
88,000 mil ... $2,000. 304-tl751151.

CHILDRf.~ UklDER II&gt; CA~~

I

m11

I!) Andy Griffith
(J) tnoldo Edition
(!) (!) MacNeil Lollrer
NewtHour
(I) II Current A Hair
~ a21 Ill 1111 Wheel 01
Fortune C
llll 1D Nlghl Court 1;1
1!J1 Miami VIce Crackel! and
Tubbs safeguard a witness
to a DEA agents murder .
Stereo.
® Muoio: Row VIdeo
all SportoCanlar
all Monoyllno
liD Scarecrow &amp; Mra. King
1;1
7;30 &lt;IJ D Famllr Feud
I!) Bowl1chod
(l) Enlortalnmlll11 Tonlghl
Mama'o Family
~ a2l Ill ti)J Joopordyl 1;1
llll 1D M"A"S"H
all Malar Loogue B01ablll
ta Crooollro

ou 1 wm,

If M£A~ Ill /oiOf&gt;f CA'!*f!

:~:-6:~::·------------

79

___

10711 Kirkwood t2x60 28R,
cond . lt4.-441-4782.

umt

1m Dodal Magnum, V8, Hop,
hilt condTtlon. Btlt ottar. 81494i..llll3.

Rtnl : 1 bedroom apar1mtnl.
Nlct carpet, cllln and neat.
HUO approved. No pets. Pt.
PIIUint. 30~715-6200.

1012.

7:00

Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Jeep Chtroktt, $650 614-

Car, South C.ro/lna ctr. A·l

Cond_,_ ~dod, uklnt $2,500.

1H6 Tr~rw-Am, 1i,OOO miiH.
2&amp;11.
Hld... -btd couch • chair, $3&amp;;
Exc. Cond., a•rogo lcopl. u,ooo
1i Inch color T.V. ttD; new Canning lomciOM for 1111. Pick firm. t14-25e.;aUO.
mlcrowevt; d,....., w/mhror,
6
~ 11131
S30; L.. hlptd wooct.n ... nd; ~r own or ll,...dy p~Gkld. l14- t017 Chryetar Ftf'lh Avenue, dirk
4t!J1.
blue, kaedtd, Interior, I txttrio:,
197'1 HlllcrHt, 14x70, but oH....
doubt• btd. 114-4AJ6-l313 or can
O.tt ot S. ..: 8f13/IKI 3:00p.m. RENTERS! Homtt from $1.00 ... 758 Flrll Avt.
Clnning tornttOM. 13 1 buthel. wAII'htr ...,,, tunroof, ntck
(U-Aop.olr) Gov't glv.. WIIy, bank
1-· •••220a
Pick your own. Bring own con- on tn~nk of Fox Cl, IOQ llghlt,
~
·
e-•,
od~·...
-,••repos, forteloaurn. tax dtlln· Hoop"ol
n
wu
, ...
good gat mileage, actual mUte,
talnerw.
pepper~. 1'141873 Flamingo t2:d0 12,1500. qutnt propertl... 1-ilB-622· hotpllal bedside tabtl, In chair. 2474213.RM'grMn
21,400. $11,500 080. • ,._...._
Eugon1 Dlvlo.
56521 Eort. R1244, Including Sot. UN&lt;f vory lhtlo, vory good cond,
300..75-1082.
1145.
1nd :;un.
61......_1ba2.
Clnnlng 1ornttOM. Br1ng con1i74 Carriage HouM, all electric,
lllrohlll Adomo. 114- 1187 Floro GT, I cyllndor1 33,000
2 BR, 2 btth, 12x65, $6,000. 11-4- Why Rent? Hom• tor $tOO, King Size waler btid. Cln tM tolfllfl.
1r11a.. Call evenings 114-238247..2055.
446·1511.
rtp::tt.
Gov'l
Give
Away anembltd. Will Mil Ne~~am.
Proar•msl For lntormatlon 504- 814-441-0'100 (dlyt) or 81
1117 llonlo Corio SS. Burgondy.
18711 Guwdon Futurama 12d~. 2 640 ~ 670 Ext. A-3t 3.
1607 (Evet Ask tor Amy.
U,OOO mllol. Shlrp. $111100 . .,._
bedroom, C.ntr~~l Air $58i!l I ~==:.::.:::::_
J.;::::;:;;;::;::;::::;;::;::~
•hown by 1ppojntment 114-44e-t
31WII23 or 114-388-8434.

1969 Prlncets mobile hornt
t2 :x60. tNt Ch •vv 11 uc k· 304-

73

Autos for sale

1m Fotd LT02. Air, aUiomallc .
Aunoo good. $7!0. 814-Ht-2877.

Pets for Sale

low to form four simp le words

3-2-1 ContiCII;J
~
CBS NIWI I;J
llJl ID Tlvee'o Compony
®Top Cerci
all SpormLool&lt;

1985 Pttt. Conr., 13 1p., on air,
l•lce 370 m,.. Walk~n a iMpet.
19s6 Fruthaul. 45 ft ., on air, 10-2
•prtad, atdt kit . 545,000 for
bolh. 814-1'12·2480.

74

Supplies

Vegetables
Miscellaneous

Hoy lor Solo. Clovor &amp; Tlmoohy.
Round Baln In the Fltkl. 614-

71

letters of the
four scrambled words be-

NowllartC

Ill

::::

ORearrange

(J) (I)
ABC Nowo 1;1
(!) Body Electric

Grain

Building

Buy 01 1111. Alvwhw Antiquet, Cou~ Felr Speclll. t5% ott
1124 E. Main Sire .. , Pomeroy. f'I9Uitr hmlng1. Ends AugUM
Hou,..: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 t5. J a M Plano Strvlct. CatrBIII
p.m., Sundfly 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. Word 304-el2-2321.
&amp;14 -992-252&amp;.
E F1al Aho Saxaphonsi, uttd 1
Wanted: CIIW foot or elmlltr y.r, $500. 3Q4..&amp;~181l
1
atylt bath tub. Good condiUon
only. 61-4-902·1563.

54

&amp;

1971 Corvtnt. C1ll l'lfitlnga
614-256-6m

Block, brk:k, - r olpoo, wlndOWI, llnt ..t, etc. Claud• Wlnllf'l, A~ Grandt, OH Call 114245-5121

Antiques

Top Caah paid . Old fumhurt
cuboarda,
qullla,
oriental,
paintings, toys, or entire ..ta1t
call eoHtct 304-525-3275, or 304523..854.

Hay

Air condHionlro, 5,300 btu $40.
1nd 6,000 blu $7!1. 304-875-5011.

Manu1l hotpltal bed with S..rs
bttt we11rproof manreat $4&amp;0.
Two ollc:lric rodllloro $20 HCh.
304-7n-11102.

Hlde-11-btd, tiC . cond a lazy
rtclln•r, good cond, O.tt of
Sa t : 8113190 . 3:00p.m. U..t of.
fer! 614-446-2208.

64

'UUUR

----~~ ldllod by ClAY I . ,OLIAN _.:...__ _ __

(l)
~ a21111
NIWI
(!) I Dream Of Jeannie
(!) Second Vorege 01 The
MlmiQ
Ill Aoodlng Rainbow 1;1
l!ll ., Andr Grtfllth
I!JI Ho-Men
all Danokln'o Running And
Aoclng
ta World Today
liD Hlfdclltlo And
McCormicki;J
8:30 &lt;Illl 1111 NBC Nlgh!lr Nowo

IDI

992-38Q4 .

0

S@~~lA-~£2/tSfl

TIIAT DAILY

TUES., AUG. 14 •

e:oo rn•

1m 1 ton ~ord Truck. Steel
bid. $3500. 614-!102·3194 Of 814-

Wanted to Rent

Household

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

EVENING

Announcements

Single lady would like to hear
tram single male 55 10 60 , wrtta
P.O. BoK 1'3 , Poi nt Pleasan1 , WV
25550

l

19.. Orand Prix LE, lolded,
black $7999. 1i84 Volvo diMIJI.
$49111. WMo. 614-992-3184, 0.
5p.m. or 814-992-5963 eve.

Space for Rent

Commercial Sian Space Rt. 3!i
Will. 614-245-9~.

14, 1990

Autos tor Sale

oH. 814-446-8189.

I ftliNI( If WAS U~lla!MAN
Wit! ~lb, ''IF y~ CM'f ~ 1/le
~I ~ Dl)f Cf 1"11C 14~•r

Slooplng ,_,, wHh - n g .
Alto lflller tpace. All hook.upa.
Call 1ftlr 2:00 p.m., 304-7735851, M111on WV.

47

Tuesday, August

1988 Chrysler LeBaron, very low
mllalge, nc. cond., loact.d. !Jay

Rooms tor rent . WHIII or month.
Starting 11 $120/mo. Galllt Holll.
114-446-11580.

46

14. 1990

446~1811 .

Furniture Sa le Now In Prcg,.n
at Flair Furniture, Gallipolis
Farry, wv.

6

71

Rooms

Merchandise

4

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriflbl

At ttslt 3 BR home, prtferably
North llallla School Dl.trtcl.
Rent, loiN optlon to buy. Allocate quickly. 11..........._7112, or
286-AJ23AJ, Donne Aetd.

Rentals
Announcements

1 uesday, August

Middleport. Ohio

1101

DOGGASTJJ
A .1

CFASPJ

STPOIIAIT

0

UTJJOIIAYS

YV

ZTFTXM

ZYZTSIIOFM

Efll!rtllnmont Tonlghl

ill Mig...,, P.l.

!llle Love Conlllelion

IIJ Coime Stofy Pauli relives

hla IICipa from an atomic
bleat. Stereo .
Ill Noliwlllo Now Country
mualc ·a ltoltea1 atars are
foaMed live.
ta NawaNight

- CTFIIFOSB

ESDOGGASTJ.I

FEJJTXX
Veetel'dev'• C1'11J11oq•ole: YOU CAN 81: TilE
HAPPIEST PERSON ON EARTII BY I'AU.ING IN
LOVE WITH YOURSELF. YOU WON'T IIAVE A
SINGlE RIVAL. - AUTHOR UNKNOWN

�.,.
Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. August 14. 1990

Mf,"ddleport ... - - - - - - - , -

I

,..__ Local news briefs----.

Continued from page 1

Seniors plan fair trip
A chartered bus trip to the Ohio State Fair Is being organized
by the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. A few seats are still
available for the Friday trip. Cost is $17 . Call992-2161 for more
information.

Homecoming set at church
The Hazel Community Church located between Long Bottom
and Portland will have a homecoming on Sunday featuring the
Gabriel Quartet and Jimmy Gabrett. The public is invitL•d to
attend.

SR 124 to close Wednesday
A portion of State Route 124 In Meigs County will be closed for
three days beginning on Wednesday. According to James
Proffitt, Meigs County Superintendent for the Ohio Department
of Transportation. the closure Is to allow state crews to clear the
vertical crest of the road by removing three to four feet of
pavement.

The point of closure Is two miles south of Long Bottom, near
Dewitt's Run . The official detour for the closure Is State Route
Seven to Sta te Route 248.

Lock cars, Sheriff warns
A safety hint for the week of the Meigs County Fair has been
issued by Meigs County Sheriff J ames M. Soulsby.
Soulsby reminds ail falrgoers to lock their vehicles while
. parking at the fairgrounds.
''Sf&gt; s ure to keep lrmpting items suc h as cameras, binoculars,
purses, and so forth are placed In the trunk out of sight",
Souls by sa id .
This Important sa fety ru le should apply not only to th e fair,
bu t any time you are ou t. accord ing to Soulsby .

Two charged by lawmen
Meigs Coun ty Sheriff .James M. Soulsby reports that 19 year
old Russell Todd Plott, of Dallas, Texas, and 25 year old John A .

Howard. Cooperstown, N.D.,

were arrested on Monday

afternoon on charges of con tr ibuting to a delinquent or unruly
child .
The two are charged with permitting a 17 year old female to
accompany them on a semi truck slnre Friday .
The two were arrested by the Middleport Pollee Department
following I heir return to the girl's home In Middleport.
The g irl's parents have also flied unruly c harges against Iter .

Discharges, admissions listed
Discharges and admissions at Veterans Memori al Hospital
Monday were:
Admissions - Louise Sider s, Middleport; Jessie Whil e,
Pomeroy; Susan Sheppard, Racine : Dorothy Higgins,

PomP roy
Discharges- Oscar Price. Vera Hayman

EMS answers six calls
Six calls for asslstanrP were answerrd by units of Meigs
Co unty Emergency Medical Services on Monday .
At3 : 39 a.m., Pomeroy squad was called to Lincoln Height s for
Ann Griffith. Shew as taken to Pleasant Valley Hospit al. At 7:28
a.m ., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine 2 for John Jeffrey
Daniels . Daniels was tran sported to O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital. Syracuse squad was dispatched to Chesler at 10 16
a.m on Monday for Ralph Ours . Ours was taken to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.
At 3:48p.m., Middl eport squad went to Logan Street . Louise
Siders was transpor ted from there to Veterans Memorial
Hospllal. Syracuse squad wa s ca lled to Morning Star Road at
6:30 p.m for Susan Shepard who was ta ken Ia Vptrran s
Memorial Hospital. At 10: 18 p.m .. Racine squad was called t o
State Route 124 for A l ice Holman. Holman wa s transported to
Holzer Medical Ce nter.

Marriage

lice~es

issued

Marriage licenses have been Issued In Meigs Coun ty Probatr
Court to Jo seph Lincoln Shinn, 19, South Side, W.Va . and
Jenn ifer Lynn Lee. 21. Ches ler: Darrln Doyle Roarh, 22, and
Donna Leigh Curtis. 20, both of Por.,c;·oy; and James E::dward
Morrison . 29, and Robin Lynn Wagner . 24. both of Middleport

Divorce filed in court
An action for di vorce ha s been flied In Meigs County Co mmon
Pleas Co urt by Joh n P . Miller, Long Bottom, against Margaret
E. M tller . al so of Long BDI!om .

Honorable mention reported
Matthew Herman Sc hul has received Honorable MenUon In
the :.lath and Sc l enc~Compe till ve Scho la rship Competition and
Honorable Mention in the Honor Scholarship Essay Compel I·
lion at Martella College
Schul is the son of Herm an and Nancy Sch ul of Reedsville .
Marietta College , a private college In southeastern Ohio
enrolls noo student s in a variety of liberal ar ts and professional
majors

Area deaths-Treci" K. Abbott
Funrral se rvlcps for Treclr
Katherine Abbol!, 80 of Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy, who
died Su nda y at the Overbrook
Center will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday al the Ewing Funeral
Home. Friends may call al the

Embargo...

Middleport swimm ing pool from ·
Aug. 20 through Aug. 26. The pool
will remain open through Labor;
Day . Co uncilman William Wal··
ters questioned th e unscheduled'
closings of the pool and t he effect
it has on season ticket holders. It
was expla ined by the mayor that
attendance has not been suffi.
cienl to warrant keeping the pool.
open when only a frw swimmers ·
show up.
The mayor' s report showed
recdpts of $6, 14l.OS.
Atlending wC'rC' Mayor Hoffman, Clerk ~ Treasurrr Jon
Buck, and Council members;
Horton. Clatworthy , Gilmore.'
Pau I Gerard. Jack Satterfield,
and Walter s.

Weather

.i

I' i&lt; k &lt;I: IIOii
Pirk -4: ~1~3

Cards:
J.H; &lt;·H '; 111 -U; 6-S

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
In an effort to capita lize on
Intersta te traffic. the Bob Evan s
Restauran ts will be making a few
changes . lt was announc ed at thr
an nual sharflholders meeting in
Rio Gra ndl' on Monday.
According to Cha irman of the
Board and CEO Daniel Evans,
some res tau rants will be going
back to a co ncept started in 1962
with the General Store, l ike the
one at Rio Grande, affectionately
ca lled lhl' "Sausage Shop" to
l oca ls.
The store wi ll offer diners a
place to brouse while watti ng to
bt&gt; sea ted. and will also provide
itflms like souvenirs and snacks
for travPirrs to bu y, l ike anothPr
rcstaruant in the south does
Cracker Barrel.
Evans sald this movr is to
co mpete with the Cracker Ba rre l
c hain. which Is capturing that
Interstate bu si ness, and is a llttiP
more " upsca iP." He said thf' fir st
of 20 nPw general stores and
newly-designed restaurants will
be placed In the Kings Island
interc hange near Cincinnati.
The fla gship restaurants have
also been redesigned, Evans
said, to nearly double the size and
accommodat e approximately 40
more diners each.
The restaurant divisron is also
looking to acq ui re a new chain of
businesses. of a "casual dinin g"
nature, Evans said, deelining to
namr the chain .
Ano ther r hangP in thr rf's tau ra nt s will lx• in t he menu s. The
Bob Evans Resta urant will be
addeing a mu l ti·graln pan ca ke
and a potroas t la ter in the yea r .
Evan s said.
Thr brrakfa sl taro introdurrd
at lo st year's shareholders met'! ·
rng didn't quite fly in thi s test
group, Evans said, but In Texas,
It se lls 30.000 pounds of produ ct
weekly.
Hr no!Pd thr taco will bf'
brought into this arra . but
repackaged and made into a
burrito product with sausage,
eggs, peppers and potaiO&lt;'S .
Cho lestrrol and ca lorlrs ha vr
had an impaet in the sausagl'
di vis ion, he said, and added the
co nsumption of Bob Evans sa us·
ages remained eve n with last
year while other brands saw a
nlne percrnl decrease In tonagc
"We had a Iough lime last year
In the sausage division," Evans
sa id.
Dietary concerns are sUit high,
and the Image of sausage and
high fat and cholesterol are

Insurance ...
Continued from pagt• I

9 p.m. today !Tuesday). The two
surviving sons and daughters-In ·
law of Mrs Abbott were lncor·
rectly listed In the obituary . They
are Edgar and Jane Abbott, and
Horace (Bud) and Grace, all of
Pomeroy.

v illage hall was renewed earlier
this month with Brogan -Warner
Insurance. That policy will ex ·
plre In August of 1991.
After discussion of premiums
and amounts Insured for build·
lngs and their contents, council
members agreed thai a comp lete
Inventory of village property
should be completed before a
blanket policy Is written up.
Council members voted to
review all Insurances with the
village and consider putting all
Insurance under one blanket
Insurance policy, advertising for
bids.
Council estimates that all
Inventories will be complete and
bids accepted early in No·
vember. This, according to coun ·
ell member Bruce Reed, will
allow the month of December for
the construction of an Insurance
package before converting insu·
ranee to th e blanket policy In
January.

difficult Ia break, he noted.
Du ring the past year, Evans
sa id "we have not been a growth
compa ny." and added it was the
firs t time si nce he took over the
reins from his father, Emerson
E. Evans, the company reported
lower ear nin gs
In an effort to assis t econom ic
growth. the company restruc ·
lured at the corporate level
C'a rller thi s yPar. making seve n
divisions. and Pliminat i ng dupli cation of services between thC'm.
Stockholder Herb Bush of
Gai Upolls made a proposal from
the floor of the meeting on
keepi ng prox y votes secret from
the board of directors, whirh hP
&lt;.tllf'ges lobbies to change them .
Thr motion was defeated. with
on ly 15.98 pPrcenf of lhl' stock ·
holders and proxies voting In
fav or.
Adcli l tonall)·. the corporate
sh ar r holdrrs voted thrrP thrf'P-year dirc•ctors. Keith P . Brad
bury, PXPeutivt' vic£&gt; prPsident,
treasurer and rhief financial
office of !lob Evans Farms ;
Daniel A . Fro nk. senior execu·
li ve vier presidPnt and director
of t he Ohio Compa ny, and G
Robrrt Lucas I II, a partner in
Vorys, Sa ter, Seymour and
Pea se taw firm of Co lumbu s. All
three were current director s.
see king re-elect ion .

Page 3

'/

lli~h

•

a1

e
Vol.41. No .72
Copyrighted 1990

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Mason County man,
46, is arraigned on
kidnapping charges

BEST MARKET HOGS - Erie Sanders, right,
had the Grand Champion Market llog in Tuesday
night's junior fair swint' judging at the Mci"'s

Hy BRIAN .1 . REED
Sentinel News Stall
.John L. Young of Mason
County, W.Va . was arra i gnrd
this mornrng in Meigs County
Court on krdnapping charges.
Young . •lh , allegert ly abdurtrd
a fema le minor ovn lht'Wl'ekL'nd
and transported her into Mason
Co un ty.
M aso n County ProsC'ruting AI
torm•y Damon Mo rg an r f'portf'cl
late Wrdnrsda y mornin g that no
chargf•s have bPrn fiiPd agninst
Young in thr Mason Coum~·
co urt s.

County Fair. His gilt had what lthtook to Impress
judge ,Jim McCoy. Mall Titlus, l eft, won the the
Rrscrvf' Grand Champion in the ('Vent.

Medical examiner testifies
in McGinnis murder trial
HUNT I NGTON . W Va

tL:PI•

- West Virginia ' s mPdica l PXa ·
mlnf'r. testi fy ing at the wi ff'·
murdf'r t rial of accou ntan t Lv il'

McGinnis, told a jury thai
stranglrrs usually cnvr r ttw
fac es of loved onfts to avo id their
terror-f illed stares. when death is
lmmlpent.
McGinnis allegedly put a plas .
tic garbage bag over th e head ol
Kathy McGinnis, then wrapped a
piece of telephone cord around

her neck last f all to stra ngle her
Dr
Irvi n So pher told th e
import ed lUr,· thal Kalh;· McG i n
ni.t, wa s sl ra n glrd brtwf'f'n 1 Ll .m .
and ~ am _ last Nov . '29 with d
pirce of telephone cord .
The prosecution contends th at
McGinnis, traeped In a web of
embezzlement of his cll~nts,
aliC'gC'dl y murdrrrd his wltr
w hen his ( inancial world began tu
fall apart, then dumped her body
behind Gateway Shopping Pl aza

in St A lban s.
So pher sa id I he ll' lrphonl' cnrd
wrap!X'd 2 11 times around
thr vic tim' s neck i:.lnd knotted in
front. ove rl ay ing a plastic bag
AI length. he told of the classi c
signs thr body shows after
strangulation . He said the te-leplionr coni tightened around the
nC'ck would be C'nough to brin g
death . But, thP doctur noted, thr
plastic bag would -a l so be a
contributing fact or .
OncC' thr wirr wa . . wrapprd.
Sopher _
t,aid . it would ta k e fivr. 10
or 1:l seco nds for tlw v i cti m to
I'C'.:I('t IJPforr hf' co iL J[ISf's

\\.' aS

A nrw supPr inll'ndent for the
Ea stPrn Local School Distric t
was hin•d at a me et!n g of the
F:astrrn Board of Educ.Jt to n
Tursday aflrrnoon.
1-lirrd for thP position t· r ~·atPd
Whl' n Dr. J);Jn /q.Jiin g rrs ig n(•d to
accl•p t a superintendent's job in
DelawarP County wa!-i Ri chard
Sm ith of McArthur.

GRAND AND RESERVE CIIAMPIONS - Grand Champion
Amy Smith and Reserve Champion James Languall showed thai
their rabbits have what it lakes In Tuesday's meat pen competition
at the Mfllgs County Fair. 'I' hi~ is ,Jamt.•s Languall's first year of
showing rabbits .

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 23, 1990
RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
BEST SWINE SHOWMANSHIP - SkUIIn swine showmanship
depends on the showman's ability to guide the hog around the judge
(who moves about the show ring). The showman has to pay cl"'e
attention to the Judge. Grand Champion In SWine Showmanship
w 118 Eric Powell. Reserve Champion was Melissa Guess. Eric and
Melissa have been showing hogs together for four years.

Morgan did say, howew•r, that
th e Ma son Cou nty Sheriff' s De·
p;utmf'nt is working in coopera tion with Oh to officia ls in th e
invrst!gai!On of the incidrnt.
Kiclrw!)ping, as rhargf'd in
Young 's cast..•. is an aggravatf•d
felony of th&lt;' second degree.
puni sha blr by a maximum sent ·
rncr of five ro2~ _
vea r s in Ihe state
prnitPntiary and a maximum
f in&lt;' or $lfi.OOtl.
ApV'aring this m or ning befon '
Meig s Counn· Court Judge Pa ·
1ric k H (Hir ir-n . You ng piPd not
guiltv to !hi ' chl.lrgf's

He wa s referred ro the office of
M eigs County Public Defender
C' harlrs H Knight. who was
r('presf'n tf•d i n court thi s morn·
ing bv IJ Micharl :vlullrn
Meigs County Assistant Prosecutin g /\ttornry Linda R . Warner
repre sen ted thr State of Ohi o.
Bond in !h E' case was set at
$50,000. recommended to the
cour t by WarnPr du£' t o Young 's
pa st r·reo rd of "v iolent fPi ony
offrnSf's"
A prrlimina ry hf'aring was set
in Y oun j.(s rasr for Aug . 22

Steps sought to end sale of
X-rated video tapes in Meigs

Smith
named to
Eastern
school post

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1990

K5 to 90 .

2 Sections. 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. August 15. 1990

~:

~' LOOR I'ROPOSi\L Herb Hush of Galllpoll' made a floor
proposal for vote at tht.• annual Bob Evans stockholders meeUng
Monday in Rio Grande. Bush, speaking, Is watched by Evans Ct;o
and chairman, Daniel Evans. tOVP photo by Lee Ann Welch)

in mid

•

South Central
.
Tonight , clea r. Low around 60.
Winds light and varia ble. Wedm•sday, sunny with the high 80 tb
Ro.
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday and Friday. but
a chance of showers and thunderstorm s Sa turday. Highs during
t hP period In the ROs and lows irr
the 60s
'

~--

flcar tonight. Low

60s. Thursday , partly cloudy.

General Store concept returns to Evans chain

ranee on v!llage equipment and

gated reports of Iraqi troops
deserting to Saudi Ara bla but had
not been able to con!irm the
reports.
Warplanes aboard the USS
Independence have been con·
dueling nightly fighter missions
over the Persian Gull to protect
the U.S. naval force dispatched
to the region In I he wakeo! Iraq's
Aug. 21nvaslon ol Kuwait during
an oil and border dlspute.
WhUe naval forces from sev .
eral countries were converging
on the gulf, It was stU I not clear
who would be In overall charge of
a, multinational mission or
whether the vessels would act
Individually.

L

GROOMING- An all Important factor In exhibiting animals at
the lair Is being sure that they are clean. Here, ,Jill Taylor washes
her 4-H entry In the Meigs Fair, a holstein calf, In the veal class .

funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 tu

Continued from page 1

Kuwait and Iraq, but answers
from the Iraqis so far have been
"unacceptable."
Smith said the duty of a British
patrol in the gulf was to ensure
freedom of navigation In the
gulfs International waters and to
reassure British vessels that
assistance was at hand If
required.
The Iraqi newspaper AI Jumhurlya, quoted by the Iraqi News
Agency INA, sald Tuesday that
Iraq knew how to penetrate a
blockade If one was Imposed and
would " make (U.S. I troops taste
death If they attack."
A U.S. Embassy official In
Riyadh said officials had Invest!·

"')fl. '

Council ex tended thanks to Jay
and Jerry Hall for their work in
tearing down thC' old house and
cafe on Rare and Third in
preparation for the expansion o(
the parki ng lot for the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services.
Gilmore repor ted on a meeting
which he had wit h Mtlch Farley
of the Division of Rf'rlamation ,
Department of Na tura l Resour ·
CPS, regarding mint' water run
nlng into th e wt'tlands in the
Hobson area recently annexed
tohthe village. Gilmore read a
letter from Farley noting that he
is recommending that the Larkin
Mine fr om which the water Is
flowing be sealed. Far ley sa id
tha t he will make th e grant
request with the U.S. Depart ·
men! Interi or, Office of Surface
Mining, In mid 1991.
It was noted by both Counci l·
men James Cla tworthy and
Dewey Horton that complaint s
are coming ln about accumula tions of tras h and uncu t grass at
residences in town.
Clatwo rthy al so reported tha t
lhP blasting at a Clifton . W. Va.
mine was monitored and that the
noise level Is within legal limit s.
Council agreed to "free" the

Ohio Lotten'•

Reds up
division lead
after win

S mith. &lt;t tf'arhcr a nd adm!ni s tr;_
! lor fo r· lilf' past 21 yf'a r s, has
IJC'en t hP as si stan t su perintend en! of the Vint on Count y School
SystPm for thC' past five year s
Hr wi ll begin his duties In the
Ea s tf'rn Di st rict on Tuesday.
.J ohn D l{iebc l, Sr . Meigs
County suprrintendrnt. has bPf'n
acting superlntendPnt for thro
di.~h· ict slncr thr rrsignation of
Dr. Apl lng.
Durin g anothpr spf'c ial rrwet ·
lng of the board IJPid Monday .
Kathleen Peyton was hirPd as a
di sabled ·handkapped teacher
for the 1990-91 schoo l vear T he
board al so vo!Pd to accrpt .J Jy
Long a s assi s t.1n t volun tf'rr foot
ball coach.
The resigna tions of Don f&lt;i
c hlnger as assistant foo t bt~ll
coach and Edna llou sr holder· as
teacher aide were accepted.
Lunchroom priers w erE' set
wllh lunches to be $1.20 for
elementary students, $1.25 for
junior high and high se houl
students, and 65 cents fdr student
breakfasts.
The budget was amended to
allow for spending reserves. The
board adopted a resolution fl"·
questing a state loan .
Act ion on remodeling work a I
the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School was tabled during the
meeting. Attending were Ray
Karr, president , and members,
Bi ll Hannum, I 0 . McCoy and
Jim Smith.

t

Mrigs Count y Prosrculi ng At torne)-' Steven Story i s bring
askPd to " takP immediate steps"
to enforce existi ng law s wh1ch
co uld be used to halt the renting
and selling of X- rated videos.
Eighty stngle-para graph let ·
tcrs WPIT' del ivcred to I hP prosf' cutor's offic(' Tuesday afternoon
as king for his ac tion . The lellPr s
were signed by Meigs Countlans
who attPndf'd Monday rvrning 's
worship sprvpcr ill thr Rock
Spr ings Fa i rgrounds . 1\.pprnxi mately 10&gt; people altl'nded the
r ain·d ampened traditi onal open
ing of the Meigs County Fair.
The l efl~rs said. " Mr. Story: I
am opposrd to thf' r enting and
se lling of X-ratrd vidPos in Meig s
Cou nty I belicvl' i t is incon sistf'nl v.,itll thP stand ard s of !Jph,w
ior of Meig s County and is in
vin lat !On of thP Pa ndering Law s
of the Stair of Ohio . Please take
immediatr s1Pps to rnforcr law s
wh ic h would hring into account
those who aare in violation nf
thrsr Jaw s."
Th e let tr rs were givrn to
.JrnnifPr Sherts. represe nting
Prosrcutor Stor y. a t a meetin g ol
Meigs C'o unty and Middleport
Ministerial Association s
Tursday
At that mecting . Dr . Willlam
Offuff. pn•siclenl of the Ashtabu Ia Co unty Chap let of I he Amet'l
can Family Association , c h;ngPd
thai there is 'probable cause" to
bel1 evr illegal things are being
dnnr in Meigs County relatiVE' to
thl ' n •ntin g of X-ralf'd vidf'OS. Dr .
Offutr. who has !pd succrssful
rfforts to rid the commun it y of
J efferson. of X·rated videos. also
was the featured speaker at the
fa ir on Monday evening.
Other officia ls representing

vio lation of rxis ting state laws
T hr "LAPS" trst. he expl ained.
i s usee\ as il guide! inc to drter rnin r i f a product ion or publica tion is 1-JI'Otrctrd by thr Fi rst
Amendment ' s freedom of speech
gua rantees.
M.1trrial mu st makr a "l i tPr
i-l ry". ''arti .s ti r . .. " pol ltiral ·or
··sCi r ntlfic" contribution to enjoy
Fir st Amrndment prot('C1iun. ht·
rxplainC'd
If a mJtc-rial is
designed to apjX' al only to
pn1rirnt intrre s ts it i s obscrnr.
Dr OHut t continuNl. notin g tha t
th(' purpose of X ra tr•d vidf'OS is
aimPd at ar ousal.
llr said tPstimom· g in 'n to thr
Mrrsr Co mmission o n Porno
g raphy. unrk r thr Rt'agan Ad ·
ministr ation rr\·f'alrcl conc lu siv P rvl dt •nrf' tin k in g thf' $R
billion &lt;.l )'1' ~~~ - (._lllrnography bu si
ncs.s to organL'J'cl crirrw. This 1:--.
primarily tr ue from vornu gra
phy ·s p1·oduction and point of
origin. hl' said .
LrntPs f'Xplainrd ttw diffi c ult~·
in vo lvPd in th r invr stigation o f
and thr prosl't'u tion ofobscrnit _v
1--if' warnrd of thl' leng th .1 nrl
rxprnsr in vo l ved . MatC'r ials
whir h ma v br di sta s trfu I to somP
can nut · !w categori7.Pd and
dcc la rr d obscl'nc as a who lr. hP
sa id . ln slf 'ad, rach publicati on or
production mu st be challenged

separatr i)-' .
She riff Sou l.s bv echoed thr
difftculf y which would be encoun ·
trrrd in inves tigating allegat ion s
of ob.scrnlty Asked if his depart
ment would investigate complaints, tile sheriff said his
department "would ai\Vays in ·
vPstig.1tf' lrg itimalr comp la lnts
of viob!ions of thP l&lt;Jw "
Til e publi c orfici, ls all l'Om
mrndt' d the Mr ig s and M iddle·
port Mimstrrial Associations for
t hr 1r i nt C'rf's ts in co nfron ling th is
~on.1l i ss uf'
ThE':V said thf&gt;~
lwlif'vPd l 'du cation . ra th Pr t han
l1•g &lt;li l' Onfront atpo n. would
achirve grf'at f•r success in t'limi ·
n;Hing X-rat ed vidros
T he H ev.s. Seddon and
M cC lung i ssued a joint stat r mrnt following thr Tu es da_v
rnPPting '' \-\'r wrrr f'nrouragf:&gt;d
IA'ilh tiH ' initial rf' sponsP and
attirudt'':i of tlu· perso ns who
camr to mpf't with us . We beliPVP
the "'"liabilit y of X·ratcd videos
in our communitirs co ntributes
to thr co rruption of morals and
c;~n br a rausati\'f' factor in
\-' iO IPn1 and s£'xual rrmws Thrrf'forr, wr call upon rvcry c hurch
in thr co unty to m ake their
thought s kn own. and urge count~:
rrsidrnt s to pa tronizP only thosP
vidt-'0 out lrt s which do not offpr
X ·ra tt•d mat eriah . "

co unty and cit_v government a t
the m er l!n~ Tuesday at lhf'
Pometro\' U nited Methodi s t
Church ·Wt' rf'
Attorney .Jnhn
Lrnte s. Meigs Sheriff Jamt•s
So ul s bv. Pomeroy Co un ci!wo·
rn&lt;Jn 1-iPllv Baron ick and Pomr·
rov Ch&lt;.tmiwr of rommrrcP Prrs·
idl•nt and VillagP Councilman
Bruct· RePd .
M i nis ll' r s a ttrndin~ includ(&gt;(!
the Rrv . Glen McClung . pastor of
thr Pomrrov NazarPnP Chu rch
and pres id ent of the Meig s
Cou nty M ini'i trrlal Assoc iation ,
AI Ha;t so n. pastor of the Middle·
port Chu rch or Christ and treas ~
urPr of the Middleport Minl ste·
rial Association; thl' RL•v . Jame s
Seddon. pastor of First Baptist
Church of Middleport and prcsi
dent of the Middleport Minlste·
rial Association; the Rev. Les
Hayman , pastor of t he Middle·
port Freewill Baptis t Church:
and the Rev . Don Meadows,
pastor of the Pomeroy Uni ted
Methodist Churc h and treasurer
of th e Meigs County Ministerial
Association.
Dr . Offutt said materia Is \Vhlch
could not meet one of the
requirements of the "LAPS" test
rould be judged obscene and In

IT ONLY COMES 01\'CE A YEAR - The Meigs County Fair Is a
hlg time for youngsters; and falrf1;oers enjoyed beautiful weather
for tlu&gt; opening day .

....--Local news briefs---Board acts on personnel matters
The Eastern Local School Board acted on severa l p&lt;'rsonnel
matters at a specia l meeting held on Monday.
The board hired K athleen Peyton as a Developmentally
Handicapped teacher for the new school year.
Also hired was .Jay Long as an assistant football coach. Long
Continued on page 5

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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>August 14, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
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    <tag tagId="295">
      <name>abbott</name>
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    <tag tagId="131">
      <name>sharp</name>
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</item>
