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Page-D-8-Sunday limes· Sentinel

••

April 16, 1989

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

U.S. soybean
share declining

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the GaJUa SeU and Water
Conservalion District, Is localed somewhere In
GaiUa County. Individuals wlshln« to participate
In the weekly contest may do sa by guessing the
lana's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the GaiUpoUs Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave .•
GaiUpoUs, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win

a Sli cash pr!Be from the Ohio Vlllley Publ..hlng
Co. Leave your name, addres• and telephone
number with your card or Jetter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entrle&amp; should
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a Ue, the winner wUJ be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Meigs County
Iarm will be featured by the Meigs SoU and Water
Conservation District.

•

9115
Super Lotto
3-13-16-35-36-40
Kicker · 946722

Page 3.
•

Continued from D·l
•
states, "If you like to eat, then
conservation ls your concern
' too".
.
Lawrence Burdell, chairman
· of the Gallla SWCD b&amp;ard, satd
that although farmers know that
good conservation practices help
Increase yields· and Improve
their profit potential, they also
know thi! Importance of pasalng
on well-cared-for natural resources for future food producers. .
SoU and water stewardship IS
more than a hlgh·mlnded phrase.
It's the responslbllty each of us
has te properly tend our gardens
and lawns, as well as our
farmlands.
Materials are avallable to all
ministers IILGallla County from
the Gallla SWCD office. Please
contact our offlce If you have not
yet been contacted and let us
know the quantity needed for
your congregation.

DISPLAYS GRAND CHAMPION STEER- "WraniJier" owned
by Amber Baugbman and shown by Jim Bawghman was the Gl'lllld
Champion Chlanlna Steer at the Ohio Beef Expo at Columbua. He
was alao Grud Champion Chlulaa meer at 'tbe Ch...,pslp
Cli1111lc Preview Steer ShoW~ at Urbana. "WraniJiei'" waa bora ·
March 15, 1988 and Is sired by "BMC Sugar Ray."

OUR SELEcnON HAS NEVER BEEN BETTER!

S-15 Ptct&lt;up

VETERAN FIREMEN HONORED - Three
· loq·tlme ~r~embers were honored Sunday at the
Pomer~ J1'1re Department's o~n house. In the

honored group were Ito r, Ralph Slssen, 53 years,
John Ter~ll, 55 years, and Jed WID, 511 years.

Jury
S.1Ummy4X4

selection
underway

Stop by and let us show you our full lint of quality
GMC Trucks. Factory Rebates on select models
to $750.00.
CONTEST WINNER - Mrs. Walter (PhylliS)
Loveday, ieH, presents Rio Grande College
student Heather Bates a 3-man raft and motor
alter she was named winner of the recent Dairy

We now have 2 Locations. Our main office Is stln
at 133 Pint StrMt, but we've expanded our lot to
'ackson Pike (across from the Fairgrounds). 2
conir..-ient locations - still one great bargain on
new GMC Trucks. Stop and and Save.

Queen contest. The contest was part of the Dairy
Queen's kickoff for Its spring-summer seasen In
the Gallipolis area. Mrs. Loveday and ,her
husband Walter are ownersoltheGalllpollsDalry
Queen.

• .,;a.

Foreigners must report transactions
GALLIPOLIS - Foreign in- Realtors. Attorneys and others of any foreign investor lana
vestors who have bought or sold ·involved in the real estat,e transaction.
Foreign investors have reU.S. agricultural land are re- transactions are asked to cooperminded to report the transaction ate with ASCS' in the meeting the ported owning about 12.5 million
within 90 days to th e Gallla AF!DA requirements, by inform- acres of Agricultural land
County Agricultural Stabiliza- ing the Gallia County ASCS office transactions.
tion and Conservation Servlc
(ASCSl.
.
The report is still rE&gt;quired by
the agricultural foreign Investment Disclosure Act t AFIDA ),
and those who arE&gt; late In
Every
reporting. or fail to report could
face a civil penalty of up to 25''i of
Gold Lance Trilliurli Ring
the fair market value of the
· Interests held In the land .
Local Government Offices.

95

Com stocks higher
than expected
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UPI!
March 1 corn stocks were o.2
billion bushel s. sig nifi cant)v
below the 7.fi billion le,·el of a
year ago. bul considorabl:-' more
ihan expected.
Dennis Hendel'son. agricullu ral economist at Ohio Stat('
University. says this could mean
a near-term price drop of 10 to 20
cents.

. Fast 4 W~ek

Delivery

446-33~9

FAsCINAifED - Every youngster loves a flretruck, and Ben
Holler Is no exception. AI Sunday's open house ofthe Pomeroy Fire
Department Joe Struble, long time flremeu, gave Ben a closeup
look at the ladder truck.

Co In Style
LOOK YOUR V~RY ' BEST ON
PROM NIGHT WITH THE
HELP OF THE BASTILLE
'

• TUXEDOS PRICED AT

GAlliPOliS

$1995

.

.

Smith GMC Truck Center

LIFE • ANNUITIES •IRA'S
FRATERNAL PROGRAM S

Tawney Jewelers Inc.
422 SECOND AVE.

'"'~

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

1989 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

AND UP

- NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED -

•Bucket Seats With Recliners '
.~M-Stereo

•Tilt

W~eel

•Cruise Control

446-2282
UJ08 EASTERN AVENUE

•179 different styles
•52 tie and t'ummerbund shades
•Formal accessories ' top hat, cane,
.
gloves, and shoes.
•The latest looks, lncludmg alf·new
black and white tail models;
•Tuxedos to meet any budget •
1
21styles pdced under 35~00.
•Expert and friendly service
to help put it together.

IIOUIS
MO.. &amp; Fll. 9:11•1
TUIS.·ftllll., sn. .

.GALLIPOLIS, OWO

UP IN THE AIR- Firemen Brent Zirkle moved to the lop of the
ladder on the Pomeroy Fire Department's ladder truck to
demonstrate technique of Its usc duflng a fire and the safety
features which the firemen ll&amp;e whlfe wgrklng on a ladder.

•

p,atro l. investigates .ace.idents

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~4··7733

9:10-5

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WASHINGTON IUPI) -HousIng and Urban Development
~cretary Jack Kemp said he
will give directors of puiJI!c
housing projects the authority to
kick out tenants convicted of
drug-related crimes.
Kemp said In a statement
Sunday that be will notify public
housing authorities this week
that leases must include "a n
explicit provision that allows
termination of tenancy" if a
tenant or member of the tenant's
household is convicted of !)legal
drug .use, trafficking or dr ugrelated crimes. Kemp also said he will noti fy
public housing directors they_
may use federal housing Improvement funds for anti-drug
security measures, such as llgqtlng and hiring staff for drug
education and referral
programs.
HUD spokesman Jack Flynn
said the measures were approved by Congress last year
under the Anti· Drug Abuse Act.
A spokesman for the Amer! can
ClvU Liberties Union said the
grqup has few qualms with the
idea as long as the tenant has
been convicted of drug traffick·
lng or use aJJd as long as due
process Is served. Bu.t he said

enforcers of t he plan may use it to , and drug trafficking from the
target anyone merely suspected public housing properties.
of d•·ug activity.
From !he more th an 1,000
directors who replied, Kemp
In Fe'bi'Ual·y, Kemp said he said, It Is clea r "that law-a bldfng
sent let tel'S lo the nation's 3,000 residents In public housing want
public housi ng authorities asking to be freed from the plague of
them to lake part in a voluntary drug dea lers and drug abusers,
su rvey to see what can ·be done to and the criminal activ ities they ·
help erase the presence oi drugs create and spread."

Water leak found;
crisis averted in
Gallipolis Saturday
By MARGARET CAWWELL
OVP News Stall
Gallipolis ex perienced a water
pressure and water loss crisis
over !he weekend due to a major
water leak which took more than
9 hours fo r more than 30 city
employees and volunteers to
locate.
According to Brerit McCreedy,
supervisor of the Water Trea(
ment Plant. a major leak was
detected Saturday . afternoon
forcing water pressure to drop by

A Nelsonville man was cited In 11 truck-and-trailer accident
Sunday at,:40 p.m. in Bedford Township on U.S. 33, abeutthree
miles soqtll of the Melgs·Athens County line, according to the
GaJUa-Melp Peat of the State Highway Patrol.
Raymond C. Kllnebrlel, 41, was cited for driving left of center
after hlsl~ Chevrolet Blazer, which was pulling a trailer, hit a
19M Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck driven by Randall F. McMtllln,
34, of Hartterd, W.Va.
McMII!tn wu driving south, while Kllnebrtel was heading
north. Kllnebrlel went left of center, causing the trailer to hit
McMJIUn'a truck.
•
A LanpvUie area man was cited lnl\one-caracctdentSunday
at 12:20 a.m. In Salt!m Township on s.R. 124, about
three-quar~s of a mile eaat of the Meigs-VInton County line.

Three accidents were Investigated by Pomeroy Pollee over
the weekend.
At 7:48 Saturday evening,
Terry D. Mi~hael, 22, Route 2,
Pomeroy, traveling east on UnIon Ave., lost control of his
vehicle as he.passed another car.
Pollee reported that Michael
went o!fthe roadway on the right,
hit the hillside, turned around
twice before coming to a stop. He
skidded 92 feet and then left the
scene according to the pqllce. He
was apprehended by pollee later
and taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment.
Michael was been charged
with OWl, operating under suspension, and leaving the scene of
an accident.
As a result of an accident
Sunday afternoon at 2:55p.m. on
Butternut Ave., Douglas Clonch,
59, Patriot, has been charged
with failure to control.
Clonch driving an 85 Ford
Escort failed to stop at the
Intersection o! Second and Butternut. His vehicle traveled
across Butternut and struck the
front of a van owned by Melvin .
Van Meter which was parked In .
front of the Pomeroy Flower
Shop. There was heavy front end
damage to the Clonch vehicle and
moderate damage to the front
end of the Van Meter ·van.
A third accident occurred on
Elberfelds parklni lot on Secohd
Ave. Dennis M. Parker, 43, Long
Bortom, incurred moderate dam-

age to the right n·ontfcnder of his
truck when he struck the guard

railing while entering the parking lot.

Charles Gibbbs, veteran
educator, dies Saturday
Charles s. Gibbs, 83, former
superintendent of the Pomeroy
-VIllage ' Exempted Schools and
widely known Pomeroy resident,
died Saturday · at Overbrook
Center, Middleport, following an
extended Illness.
Born In Racine, Mr. Gibbs was
a graduate of Racine High School
and Ohio University. He began
his teaching career at 16 years of
age in a one-room school In the
Great Bend area of Melgs
Counly . He spent 44 years as a
teacber, principal, -!'- nd superintendent In the schools of Meigs
County, retiring In 1966 from the
Pomeroy VIllage Exempted
School system.
Mr. Gibbs was a 50 year
member of the Racine Masonic
Lodge, a mem ber and former
vestryma n of Grace Episcopal
Church, Pomeroy, and a _
member of the Ohio Superintendents Association.
He was preceded In death by
his wife, Ellen Marshall Gibbs,
his parents, Lon ljnd Maude
Salser , Gibbs, and a sister,
Winifred Gibbs. lie Is survived
by a nephew, Gary L. Gibbs,

Transfer of the 500 tons of
liquid caustic soda (lye) on the
PPG Industries barge which
capsized on April 3 at Long
Bottom to another . barge was
completed Sunday abeut 6 p.m.
Arthur Henry, PPG official,
advised that the barge on which
the lye was transferred will be
removed from the scene today .
Temporary repairs are under·
way on the 195 foot barge which ··
capsized In preparation to uprighting it. It 1.1 now floating
upside down just off the shore,
with the hull exposed, Henry
sat d.
He reported that there was no
leak from the ba'rge and that tile
trans!erwas111onltoredforenvti'·
onmental Impact at all times by
the Coast Guard and other
MAN L08I8 CONTROL OF VIDHJCLI:
&amp;iencles .
Dqlu CloiiOII falleC &amp;o 1l&amp;op at lie Mop lip of '
Harvey aald that he anticipates
l11tetrat Aw. ud leeoad, ud tlllnlal&amp;ooldrol
of bll Yelllole u be mowd acra.llle
~·~!::::g:;_ould be completed 'y erllh•r
Into tilt frOBt or tbla Pomerey

---...J _

L..l::.
~, _ _ _..;.._ _ _c_o_n_tln_u_ed_o_n_pa_se-lo_.;.I.L.t;.·

half and losing more than half a
mtllion gallons of wa1er.
The leak was discovered Sun- day morning, through process of
elimination, on the new Ol)lo
River Plaza property, said Dale
Iman, city manager.
The leak was threatening to
. drain the reservoir by Sunday
morning. It also affected the
wate r pressurt&gt; of half the residents In the city and residents
surrounding the city.·
Continued on pa~e 10

Pomeroy police probe mishaps

-weal news briefs____, -

PHON I

• f

Jury selection began this
morning In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court trial of
William Dean Whittington and
Eddl~ Patrie~. The ,twp l',ilddleport men were Indicted In March'
on two counts of felonious assault
an'd one count of felony lnt!mlda·
t!on In connection with a Jan. 31
Incident In Middleport.
The felonious assaults, as
charged In the lqdlctment, allege
that on Jan. 31, Whittington and
Patrick did cause or attempt to
cause harm to Erhest Ward and
Emmantoul Mazoros by striking
them with a propane tank.
Whittington and Patrick were
also charged wtth felony lntlml·
dation arising !rom the same
incident based upon an allegation
that they were attempting to
prevent Wax;d. who had charges
pending In Middleport Mayor's
Court, against Whittington, from
pursuing criminal charges
against Whittington.
Felonious assault ls a second
degree felony and carries with It
minimum penalties of two to five
years up to a maximum of 15
years, and a maximum fine of
$7,500.
Felony Intimidation Is a third
degree felony and carries with It
a minimum sentence of one to
five years up to a maximum of 10
years In prison and a-maximum
fine of $5,500.
The jury trial could last
through the week, according to
Paul Gerard, of the office of
Common Pleas Judge Fred Crow
Ill.
The state Is represented In the
·trial by Meigs County Prosecut·
lng Attorney Steven Story. Whit·
tlngton Is represented by Attar·
ney John Lentes and Patrick by
Attorney Charles Knight.

Barge cleanup
job completed
Sunday evening ·

LOOK WHAT THE BASTILLE HAS TO OFFER!
·

26 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newilpaper

Housing ·group told .
to kick out ·drug users

Check Out Our GlUT Stlection fo 2
and 4 WD's, Sierra's, S-15 Pkkups
aftd Jim111y's, Fully Size Ji111my's and
·
Cargo Vans.

SlerroSLE

1 Section, 1 0 Pagel

Pomeroy, Middleport, OhiQ, ·Monday, April 17. 1989

WE'VE GROWN!

MODERN WOODMEN
SOLUTIONS

Chance of showers 70 per·
cent. Low near 50. Tuesday,
partly cloudy. Chance of show·
ers 30 percent. Hlgli _near 65.

•

The living .

Relax. Visit family and friends.
Enjoy leisure activftlea. Our
life insurance and annuities
programs supplement your
Social Security and pen·
slons to ' make retirement
dreams come true. R.etlre·
ment Income-One of the

'

Pick3
090
Pick 4

Retirement
Income

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Lottery

Reds blank
Padres, 5-0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
The U.S. share of world soylJI!an
trade could shrink to the lowest
levelln recent history during the
1988·89 marketing year.
Allan Lines, agricultural econ·
omlst at Ohio State University,
says America produced about 60
percent of the world's soybean
trade during the 1970s. By 1984·85
that share had declined to 40
percent.
'

f

m-;;=:.

Racine, and a niece, Marlgene
Hartline, Shadyside.
Funeral services. will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy with
the Rev. Lee Miller officiating.
Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home on
Tuesday, 3:30 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.

�....

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nta
Comme. ry ·

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Pege-2-Tha Deily Sutlnel

=A=-~;:,;8~

·Mahler blanks Padres; Reds
stay in second after victory

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r=~==========~~~~~----------~-------------;·

The Daily Sentinel

A regulator 'e vent the .GOP can love_s-=--veo_r

ttl Coun Street

•

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Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MElGS.MASON AREA

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. . . . .._..,..,,.,.,.=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WWTEHEAD
AsslstiLIIt Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words l~ng. All letters are subject to edltlni and must be slined witH
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publtshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personallt~s .
·

A phoenix Is rising from the American economy an estimated
ashes of Ronald Reagan's· $9.2 billion a year - nearly 300
scorched earth attack on govern- times Its annual budget.
ment regulation, and It should be
You might guess such figures .
cause for rejoicing In taxpayer would Impress fiscally conscious
ranks.
conservatives, but you'd have to
Few, If any, government agen- guess again. The little agency
cies dellver more bang for the has one major problem: It has
buck than the Consumer Product nothing to do with the national
Safety Commission. This spunky defense or with delivering the
little I agency, charged at' Its mall, and It Is therefore of Itt tie .
creation In 1973 with protecting Import to Ideologues. Even
the publ!c "against unreasonable worse, It picks on business people
risks of Injuries and deaths who are just trying to make a
associated with consumer pro- buck, even If their products do
ducts," has never beeen heavily occasionally dismember
funded or staffed. It has Jurisdic- someone.
tion ever some 15,000 tl'pes of
So, shortly after Ronald Rea'
consumer products, . and the gan' s limousine carava11 rolled·
deaths and Injuries that are Into town, the CPSC's fortunes
prevented by Us actions save the took a severe plunge. The new

Many questions
unanswered in school

administration, proceeded to defang the watchdog by slashing Its
budget (Its 1990 request of $33.5
million Is less than half Its
original 1974 budget In Inflationadjusted dollars), by evisceratIng the staff (975 In 1981, 519
today), and by stacking the
commission with hardllne minImalists who eschewed regulation In favor of voluntary safety
standards.
Reagan's appointee to head the
commission, Terrence Scanlon, .
was described by Sen. Paul
Simon, D-Ill., as being "more
Interested In protecting certain
Industries than In protecting the
public."
The budget crunch was so bad
that the commission's lnvestlga-

_refonn proposal

..

By THOMAS M. BURNETt'
UPI Ohio Edllor
COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard Celeste took the unusual step of
appearing before a state legislative committee last week In an effort
to revive his near-dead education reform package.
One Jawinaker labeled II "dead on arrival'" at the General
Assembly when Celeste announced the plan earlier this year, and
there's been no Indication since thai estimation was far off the target
.,. which brought an Ohio governor before a legislative committee tor
the first time In at least25 years.
Crucial to the proposal Is a special Income tax Increase of 1
percentage point, with the proceeds to be divided equally between
local school dlstrlc\s, colleges and universities and state excellence ·
programs.
But lawmakers are wary of any Idea that Inc-ludes the words "tax
increase," for a variety of reasons, Including legitimate questions
over lhe size of the state budget, political cowardice and the
proliferation of pressure groups hovering around the Statehouse
these days.
The governor recognized this by calling for a statewide referendum
on the tax Increase, rather than a straight General Assembly-passed .
Increase. Some have said this amounts to the .state government
abdicating Its responsibility to govern, but others may wonder If that
responsibility has been misplaced.
There's no question state spending Is out of control- all one needs
to do Is look at the three 30-story-plus state office palaces constructed
In Columbus this decade. Add In the beautiful new headquarters of the
Ohio EPA on the city's near northwest side and the other state
agencies scattered around the rest of the city and you begin to wonder
,
where It wlll end.
The special education tax would raise an estimated $1.84 billion Its
first two years, which would free up who knows how many millions of
dollars In the general fund to be spent on other things.
The whole Issue revolves on two questions: Do the school districts
and universities need more money, and If so, do we need a special tax
to raise this extra money?
..
The answer to the first question Is far from clear.
One reason cited for Increasing aid to school districts Is the need to
raise teacher salaries - to attract better teachers. When you
consider, however, that the average teacher works only three-fourths
of a year, the salaries In many cases are comparable (in some cases
better) to private-sector compensation.
Another argument against Increased state aid is thequesllon of the
fairness of making people who are willing to vote for properly tax
levies for their own systems pay to help districts where people don't
supporl levies.
I realize there must be some j!Quallzatlon between rich and poor
dlstrlcls, so children aren't denied a quality education simply
because they don't happen to live In Shaker Heights or Upper
Arlington.
But will more money mean tomorrow's students will be any better
.than today's at reading books or world maps or balancing
·
checkbooks?
As for higher education, the arguments for Increased aid are even
more suspect. Anyone who's attended college can tell you many
professors have workloads even easter than federal judges. One
sociology class I took some years ago was listed as being taught by a
professor I saw exactly once the en tire q uar ier . The class Instead was
taught by a graduate student from India whose limited command of
English made the course practically worthless.
I suspect If every tenured professor were forced to perform the job
for which he was hired, the cost of education at the ·colleges and
universities would drop dramatically.
This would be where Celeste's proposals for closer o:verslght of
school operations would . ~_elp- something no doubt responsible for
the squawks over his proposal from some sectors of the education
lobby.
But if Celeste and those pushing the plan believe more oversight Is
needed for school districts and colleges and universities, lhe same
certainly can be said about state government .
And unless he can convince Ohioans that the $25 billion or so he
wants to spend the next two years Is being spent as carefully as a
family's $25,000, his arguments will fall on deaf ears.

Berry's World
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.&amp;-......:==

tors and analysts were forced to
scant attention to common
hazards associated with babY
cribs that collapse, toys that
cboke and blcyles that dlslntegrate. Instead, It focuaed on
products more likely to compel
public notice, such as steel·
tipped lawn darts that occasionally penetrate children's skulls.
One product the CPSC wants to
ban, for example, Is an -electric
warm probe called the "Worm
Gett'R," which Is suppoaed to
drive fishing worms out of the
ground. The a,gency believes the
product presents a risk of electric shock or electrocution.
The device was developed by
an Idaho busllies~man who suifered the government's attentions poorly and accuaed the
CPSC staff of using "Safety Nazi
tactics." Both Of the state's
Republican senators, Steven
Symms and James McClure,
were Inspired bY the Incident to
oppose reauthorization ' leglslatlon for tbe agency.
But with the departure of the
Reagan team, consumer activist
say they are detecting signs of a
new attitude. Sen. Barbara Ml·
kulskl; D-Md., chairperson of the
appropriations subcommittee
that oversees the agency's
budget, recently deplored the sad
state of Its funding. Nevada's
new "Democratic senator, RIchard Bryan, has also been
speaking favorably of the CPSC.
On the Republican aide, moderate Sen. Slade Gorton of Washlngton declared In February
that the commission "has been so
constrained bY budget euts and
by Indifference from many In t!ie
previous 'a dministration as to
have been unable to discharge Its
responsibilities." Even New
York's conservative Republican
Sen. Alfonse D'Amato hall suggested he would support the
agency under new leadership.
Maybe this bird Is going to fly
again after all.

pay

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STRETCH! -The Reds' Ron Oester stretehes
San Diego. The Reds exploded for four ruuln the
oul to field a grounder hit by lhe Padres' Tim
flrsllnnlng en route loa 5·0 victorY- (UPI)
Flannery In lhe flrsllnnlng of Sunday's game In 1 _

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embarrassing airing of Its dirty
lauoory.
In the Atlanta regional. office,
Investigators found that the arrangemBIIt.
regional director Ozell Suttoll , In Tucson, Investigators fo11nd
had been flying his secretary to that the service spent at least
work from Chicago every week, · $180,000 putting together 11 halfat the tl)xpayers expense. All the way house for refugees, before
while, Sutton was complaining to staffers realized they dldn' t have
the service headquarters In Wa- · the required local consent for the
shington, D.C., that his office bouse. Investigators also con·
needed more m'Oney.
eluded the contractor was padThe jet-lagged secretary cost ding the bills with services that
taxpayers about $1,000 a week In the government should not have
travel and hotel bills for a been paying for.
.
10-week stretch before headquarIn San Francisco, the regional
ters put a stop to the commuting · director Julian Kiugman reportarrangement. She flew to Atlanta edly was ·reluctant to answer
every Monday, and according to Investigators' questions. They
her travel vouchers, bunked at wanted to know why he turned an
the Marriott Marquis Hotel four .o fflcal visit to Hawaii Into an
days a week.
eight-day vacation with his wife.
Sutton told us the woman was Klugman said he made the trip to
an "administrative assistant" Introduce himself to new local
with unique job skills and could offlcals In Hawaii and explain the
not be easily replaced In Atlanta . . function of his agency . But when
He also said the Washington, ' Investigators later asked KlugD.C., office had approved t)je man what services be planned to

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Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta ""

What makes Bill Buckley
If you know anybody who owns
and edits a fortnightly magazine,
writes three syndicated newspaper columns a week, tapes a
weekly television program, lectures for pay about 30 times
annually, and writes an average
of two books a year, It's a safe bet
that he Is one of your busiest
friends.
If he nevertheless finds time to
spend a couple of months every
year skiing In Switzerland (while
hobnobbing In Gstaad with the
exiled royalty there), and generally manages to squeeze some
transoceanic cruise on a private
sailing vessel Into his summer,
he can only be Wllltam F,
Buckley.
' In Buckley's case, though, 'lYe
have thus far touched only on ·
what must be called his routine
activities - his drab annual
round, as It were. What does he
do for excitement?
Well, In September 1987 he
. went two miles down Into the
North Atlantic In a French
exploratory vessel, to prowl the
wreck of the Titanic. J..att month
he flew a planeload of friends
froin New York to Loullvllle to
watch tbe out-of·ton tr)'ollt of
his first play, buld Oil bla
popular novel "'St41Md Gl..,,"
ADd at the moment lie Is
elrcumnavtpttq the llobe Ill a
auper~ Concordt,ueompall·
led by 15 peqplt w11o pmd
apiece to go wtth 111m. He will
tape television Pf'*Jama and
give lectUI'tll tin r011te, and the
wllole trip' will take Juat over

.
.
offer In Hawaii, he reportedly • .
said none.
· Klugman told us he had a busy ... ·
Itinerary lri Hawaii and that the
trip was "strictly business" and
directed from Washington, D.C.
The Investigators found an
office In Detroit that the service
rented, but never used. They
found a $2!1,000 computer contract that was never fuitllled.
The New.Yorkofflce ran up a bill ''
of $3,436.99 one year for maga;!lnes and newspapers. The entire
agency's annual bill for period!- ·.,,
cals was $25,000.
' '
How did the Justice Department react~ It zipped Its lips and
told the Investigator who uncovered most of the dirt to forget ''
about it. That Investigator, Janet
Laver, was warned by her
superiors that If she made a fuss
about her findings, her job could
be In jeopardy,
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process.
I know, I know: You want to
know what Buckley does with his
·afternoons.
.

dominate world politics. Indeed,
cle, at his easel, running for
It can be argued- conclusively, I
mayor of New · Ybrk. But think -that Buckley's battle for
always - brimming with wit and
laughter.
his beliefs had a lot to do with
the!~ ultimate triumph.
He Is one of the great originals
Across 30 years, the memories
of our time. No doubt, as
1 was Bill Buckley's closest
business associate for 31 years come flooding back. Some are of Emerson observed, "It Is as easy
until I stepped.down as publisher Buckley with various major but for the strong man to be strong as
it Is for the weak to be weak." But
of National Review last . De- less well-known pleasures of his
cember, and you might suppose life: his harpslchord1l his dogs .. that Is no · reason why we
that by now I would be accus- .Some are of Bill eni&amp;ied In shouldn't rejoice ln. excellence
when we encounter it.
tamed, even Inured, to his pace. . activities that Interested him
On the contrary, after three only transiently: on his motorcydecades It still flabbergasts me.
It certainly puts an end to the
·laughable theory thatallmenare
created equal, In any but some
purely juridical sense. Buckley
Is, of course, a workaholic - he ·
wouldn't know how to slow down
By Unite• PI'MIInlei'Mtlilnal
If he wanted to- butthatlsn'tthe
Today
Is
Monday,
AprU 17, the 107th day of 1989 with 258 to follow.
whole story. I know plenty of
The
moon
Is
waxing,
moving toward Its tun phase..
workaholics, and Buckley runs
The morning star Is Saturn.
Gothic figure-8s around all of
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter,
thems. He simply bas far more
.
Tholle bom on thll date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
energy than all but the most
AmeriCan
ID4ustrlallst and flnaneler J.P. Morgan In 1837, Danllh
exceptional people.
author
Bar-•
Karen Bllxen ("Out of Africa"), Wbo wrote under
Of course, this astonishing
the
ll&amp;me
Iaak
Dlnesea,
In :1885, Soviet Premier Nlklta Kbrusbcbev In
man has his flaws (I even know
181M,
novelist
and
playwright
Thornton Wilder In 1897, actor William
one or two things he Isn't terribly
Holden
In
1918,
televllloll
journalist
Harry Reasoner In 1923 (age 66),
good at), and he haa also
and actreas Olivia Hua~· ln 1951 (age 38).
encountered a certain amount of
critiCism. There are t11o1e wbo
On thll date In blatory:
uk what all thla freneUc activity
In lUI., the •a broU the dlkea at Dart In Holland, drownlna an
a,ctlllllly addl up to.
esdmatecl
100,000 people.
Well, tor oae tblq It brlqlllla
In
1121, Martin Luther wu excommunicated from tbe Roman
wbale of a lot of 111011ey - and
catbollc cburch after refllllll&amp; to admit charges of bereay.
that Ia Important, for Bill Ia a
Ill 1981, a force rA anU·Cu 11'0 Cuba rebels belan what wu to end
man of expeMive tutea. (Like
u
tbe Ul.fated Bay Cll Pip attempt to overthrow Cuba's new
ChurciiW. be 1a -Uy ~atlafled
communist
eowroment.
with Ute belt of everytblq.) rar
·
In
1961,
Jerrie
Mock of Columblg, Ohio, became tbe first woman to
more lmpartallt, bowever, Ia tile ·complete a lOla flight
around the world.
fact lllat maat of llllekllry'a
uacme energ1e1 lla~ tor 40 · A thoviht for the day: Author llali Dlnetea wrote, "In the mllld and
tJa...- wultl. ~t a dllln ~ 11111 at U. 1 •SOt crt tile aature of a mu a secret II an lillY tbtq, like a hidden pbyllcal
. . . . .~ wdf IP Ill . .
1f felr'''a I ......-vatllal defect."
•
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f
cordi will Ill 1lr - a Ill '1111 ~ t11a .., 01117 no I~ ClOIIIt to

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By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Spans Writer
If the Chicago Cubs have
learned anything so far this
season, It surely must be to hold
on to what you've got.
Last year Chicago's bullpen
saved only 29 games, the second
lowest total In the National
League. Thirteen of them were
earned by Rich G()ssage, the
37-year-old rellever who was
released In spring training this
year.
But 10 games into the 1989
season, the Cubs' bullpen is
seven for seven in save situations. Mitch Williams Tecorded
his sixth Sunday, nailing down a
5-3 victory over the Phlllles In
Philadelphia.
The victory was Chicago's
seventh straight, running the
·cubs' record to 8-2.

By splitting a set of weekend
home doubleheaders, the Rio
Grande baseball team slipped
slightly In District 22 standings
but remain poised for leadership
of the Mid-Ohio Conference.
The Redmen defeated MOC
rival Tiffin 6-4, 7-1 on Saturday
and lost to Wilmington 8-2, 14-4 on
Sunday, The team Is 16-8 overall
and 6-0 In the conference entering
Tuesday's away contest with
MOC powerhouse Ohio '
Dominican.
Rio Grande's district slate Is
15-8.
Against Tiffin, Herb Sharfenaker (sophomore, Columbus)
went two for two and Jon Gl bson
(freshman, Chesapeake) was
two for three to lead Rio
Grande's hitting In the first
game. The Redmen scored three
runs In the first Inning to Tiffin's
one, and both teams netted three
runs apiece In the fourth.
The Redmen connected on 11
hits, Tiffin on six. AI Sleradzkl
(senior, Westerville) upped his
season pitching record to 4-3 by
taking the win, whlle Miller was
on the mound for the Dragons
after relieving Johnson 'e arlier.
Pitching by Dave Cantwell
(senior, Lancaster) helped hold
Tiffin to a single run In the third
Inning of the second game.
Sharfenaker was two for two,
with a pair of doubles, to
highlight the hosts' hitting. Donnie Becker (sophomore, Middleport) and Jimmy Kearns (senior,
McGuffey) had a double each.
Both teams recorded seven hits
each. Gedeon was pitcher for
Tiffin.
Wilmington's Brewster hit a
home run ~o spur the defending .
district champion Quakers on to
a 3-0 lead over Rio Grande by the
fifth Inning of the opener. Wll·
mlngton then explOded for five
runs, tallying a total of 10 hits.
Rio Grande's two top hits were
posted by Bob Young (sophomore, Utica) and Mike Coman
(sophomore, Chillicothe).

Top Packe~
official dies

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Cubs captor~ seventh win in
·row;Giants split doubleheader

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"We're playing well, but we're
also ha¥1ng a llttl!! luck," Cubs
Manager Don Zimmer said.
Rick Sutcliffe, 3-0, allowed only
stx hits In 8 1-3 Innings, walking
five while striking out four. He
also drove In two runs with a
fifth-inning single. Wllllams
came on with tWO on and one out
In the ninth.
"Some days you are just
lucky," Sutcliffe admitted. "I
was In trouble all day . I even
broke my bat on my hit."
Loser Floyd Youmans, 0-2,
struggled with his control and
left after six Innings. He walked
five and gave up eight hits and all
five Chicago runs .
"My velocity Is getting better
each time out. ~ · Youmans said.
"What else can I say•"
The Cubs, last won seven in a
row _from June 1-8, 1983.

Redmen split pair
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•

Justice Department hides dirty laundry·
WASHINGTON - When Ed·
win Meese was attorney general,
and before he got caught up In
problems of his own, he ordered
Justice Department Investigators to examine the department's
Community Relations Service.
That low-profile arm of the
department Is supposed to help
local communities mediate racial and ethnic disputes. Rumor
had It that the agency was a
mess.
The Investigators found the
rumor to be true, but officals sat
on the evidence because they
thought the Justice Department
couldn't endure any more
embarrassment.
Oun associate .Jim Lynch has
seen the report, parts of which
are now being examined by the
Justice Department's office of
professional responsiblllty. None
of the findings will put anyone
behind bars, but the agency that
quietly spends about $30 million a
year could benefit from an

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy_- Middleport, Ohio

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GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)
Dominic Olejniczak, the chairman of the board of · the Green
Bay Packers, has died from
complications from a series of
strokes. He was 80.
Olejniczak died Saturday night
at his Green Bay home. He
served the Packers' organization
as president longer than any
other man and ended a 24-year
tenure In 1982.
.
"He was the sort of man who
had a good feel for the publlc,"
said Judge Robert Parlns, who
replaced Olejniczak as team
president. "He had a !Inger on
the public pulse. He got on so v,-ell
with people."

Thompson was the winning
pitcher and Jerry Hester (senior,
Greenfield) was on the mound for
the hosts.
· In· the nightcap, a three-run
homer by Chris Curtis (junior,
Springboro) In the fifth Inning
was the sole bright spot for the
Redmcn, putting a dent In a 9-1
Wilmington advantage.
But the Quakers advanced on a
pair of sixth Inning homers by
Alley and Bite. Pitching by
Wilmington's Mike Kees, a senior from Portsmouth who was
last week's top district player,
held Rio Grande In check for the
remainder of the game.
Rob Kuhn (freshman, Oak
Hill) pitched the first two innings
lor the Redmen.and was relieved
bY Tom Robinson (freshman,
Pedro). Coach Dave Oglesby
sent In Bucky Spindler (senior,
Chillicothe) In the tlttli, and
Spindler was spelled In the
seventh _by Darrell Marcum
(sophomore, Hamilton).
Rio Grande posted eight hits
and one error, while Wilmington
was successful on 11 hits and
committed no errors.
With the twin victories, Wllm ingt on Improved its record to
14-13,

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Rick
Mahler has pitched brilliantly In
all three of his starls with the
Cincinnati Reds. For the first
time Sunday, he received a
victory for his effort.
Mahler, who came to 1J:Ie Reds
In an offseason deal with Atlanta,
hurled a six-hitter forhls seventh
career shutout and Herm Winningham and Jeff Reed homered
In a five-run flrstlnnlngtopower
Cincinnati to .a 5-0 victory pver
the San Diego Padres.
Mahler, 1-2, has allowed just
one earned run In 22 Innings (0.41
ERA) this season. Against the
Padres, he recorded 18 groundouts and walked just one batter.
''It always feels great to pitch a
shuloul because you know you
ca n'tlose," Mahler said after his
first shutoul'slnce April 7, 1987.
"It just feels good to get a win for
this ballclub. It took longer than I
,.tan ted, but I know this team Is
going to score runs behind me."
San Diego starter Ed Whitson,
2-1, pitched eight Innings, permlttlng _elght hits and three walks.

After s~rrenderlng six hits In the
first Inning, the right -hander
allowed only two singles the rest
of the way .
"I was beaten before the .first
Inning was over," Whitson said.
"I couldn't figure out what I was
doing wrong. Dabber (pitching
coach ?at Dobson) saw (a dip In
his motlon) and pointed It out and
J was fine after that."
Barry Larkin was hit by a pitch
leading off the game and took
second on Chris Sabo's single.
Eric Davis walked, loading the
bases, and Kal Daniels singled
home two runs.
, One out later, Winningham hit
a drive off the right-field foul pole
for his first homer since Sept. 2,
1987. Reed, like Winningham a
former Expo, followed with a
homer to right, his first of the
season, ,to make It 5-0,
"It was the Montreal connection, back-to-back; that's something," Reed said. "The only
time I'm going to take one out Is
on a mistake. I got a ch'angeup
and was able to get underneath

In other NL games, St. Louis
clipped New York 5-3, Montreal
shaded Pittsburgh 5-4 In 11
Innings, Los Angeles edged Houston 2-1, Cincinnati blanked San
Diego 5-0 and Atlanta and San
Francisco split a double-hearder
- the Braves won the first game
Hn..TON HEAD, S.C. (UPl)- 67, and 69 to win his fourth PGA
7-2 8l)d lost the second, 6-1.
'· Cardinals 5, Mels 3
· Payne Stewart, forced to play 25 event.
"I'm . very happy a bout the
holes because of a rain delay the
At St. Louis, Ozzle Smith had
previous day, overcame a sore win," he said. "I can't express
three hits and two RBI and Jose
back to set a 72-hole record at the what I'm feeling. I've played
DeLeon pitched a four-hitter for
Heritage · Classic, firing a 16- some of the best golf I have
his ·second victory over the Mets
under-par 268 to win the $800,000 played over 72 holes."
this year. Darryl Straw.b erry
The 32-year-old winner rehomered twice for New York.
tournament.
.
celved
$144,000, while Perry took
Early round co-leader Kenny
Expos 5, Pirates 4
$86,400
and Couples and
home
Perry took second with an
AI Pittsburgh, Huble Brooks'
Langer
split
$54,400
.
11-under 273, followed by Bernhpinch-hit sacrifice fly scored
Stewart, one of 18 players
ard Langer and Fred Couples
Nelson Santovenla with two outs
unable to complete the third
In the 11th Inning to lift Montreal,
who tied for third at 277.
Stewart birdied the 16th hole round because of a rain delay
Santovenla led off with a double
Sunday lo go 16-under, putting saturday. was forced to play 25 .
against loser Jeff Robinson, 1-2,
and took third on Damaso Gar- · him beyond Perry's reach with ' holes on the final day of the
four-day tournament.
just two holes Jefl to play.
cia's groudout. Brooks followed
Stewart shot rounds of 65, 67,
with his fly to center to mal&lt;e a
Continued on page 4
winner of Joe Hesketh, 2-0, who
pitched two Innings of one-hit
relief.
Braves 7, Giants 2 (lsi game)
Giants 6, Braves I (2nd game)
At San Francisco, Kevin Mitchell drove in three runs with two
doubles and a single to help the
Giants gain a spill of their
do11ble-header. In the first game,
Gerald Perry belted a three-run
home run and had four RBI and
Tommy Gregg drove In three
runs to help the Braves snap the
Giants' four-game winning
streak.
Dodgers 2, Aslros 1
At Los Angeles, Tim Leary
pitched a five-hitter ~nd Mike
Marshall homered In the fourth
Inning to lift the Dodgers. Leary,
2-1, took a two-hit shutout Into the
ninth but gave up three hits and a
run in the fln~l Inning. Leary
struck out six and walked none.
Reds 5, Padres 0
AI San Diego, Rick Mahler
pitched a six-hit shutout and
Herm Winningham and Jeff
Reed homered In a five-run first
Inning to lift Cincinnati. Mahler, ·
1-2·, pitched his seventh career
shutout and first since 1987. He
recorded 18 groundouls, walked
one and struck out two.

Stewart wins Heritage
Classic by 5 strokes

and pull It"
The Padres' best threat came
In the third when they placed
runners on first and second with
one out, but John Kruk bounced
Into a check-swing double·play to
~
end the threat.
San Diego, 6-7, has won just
four of 10 home games this year.
"We're a good ballclub, we just
don't have II running on all
cylinders," Manager Jack
McKeon said, "But you could say
the same of a Jot of other clubs,
like the Mets. These guys are
good players; we'll weather the

storm.''

·

The Daily SentiQel
(USFS 141-Mt)

PubUshed every aftemom, Monday

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Spring into Action!

Now is the time to see how your car·
weathered through winter.

SPRING
c
GU

Girls' cage camp
slated for June

TIFFIN
ROCK SPRINGS - Roger
First Game
Foster, Meigs Marauder girls'
Rio Grande .. .... 300 300 x-6-11-1
basketball coach, wlll hold a
Tiffin................. 100 300 0-4-6-0 basketball camp June 19-23 for
Batter!i1s: WP-Sieradzkl,
C- girls In grades 4-10. Sessions will
Gheen; LP-MIIler, C-Edwards.
be held from 9:30-11:30 a.m. at
Second Game
Melg5 High School.
Rio Grande ....... 002 050 x-7-7-0
The cost of the camp is $30.
Tlffln .................OOl 000 0-1-7·1
Each girl will receleve InstrucBatteries: WP-Cantwell, C- tion In shooting, ball handling,
Sharfenaker; LP-Gedeon, C- offensive moves and defensive
Young.
. fundamentals as well as poslt!OII'·
.
WiLMINGTON
skills for post, wing, artd guatd.
· First Game
Each participant will recleve a
j'tlo Grande .... .-...000 000 2-2-5-0 ·camp T-shlrt and shorts. A
Wilmington...... 012 050 0-8-10-1 competition will be held on
Batteries: WP-Thompson. C- Friday with prizes for the
Lott; LP-Hester, C-Shar!enaker. winners, and pizza and pop will
Second Game
be served on Friday.
, Rio Grande ........ oot 030 0-4-8-1
Helping Foster with the camp
Wllmlngton ..... 420 302 3-14-11-0 will be former Southeast District
Batteries: WP-Kees, C-Lott; LP· Coach of the Year Ron Logan and
Marcum, C-Gheen.
current Marauder players.

,
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DR. JAMES P. CONDE

•

IS RESUMING HIS MEDICAL PRACTICE AT ·

15 5 NORTH SECOND AVE •
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
EFFECTIVE APRIL 3, 1989

1----;,_--------~------

NOW IY ·

TO SCHEDULE APPOINTMENTS

PH• .992·6800
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A Dlvlllon of Muldnudla. lac.

•

THIS SPECIAL EDITION WILL APPIAI IN THE DAILY
.
SEinNEL ON IIONDAY1 APIIL J41 1919.
AD DEADLINE IS WII.SDAYI APIIL 17I 1919

Ag FOIIIIAN 01 DAYL

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Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

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Monday, Aprl17, 1989

Gruber 'hits for cycle' as.
Blue Jays .defeat Royals, 15-8
save.
By United Press loleraatloaal
Kelly Gruber received a bonus
Royals Manager John Wathan,
that was not In his contract after
whose club rebounded from a S.O
hitting for the cycle against
first Inning deficit to win Satur·
Kansas City Sunday.
day, was philosophical abo11t the
loss.
.Gruber, the Toronl(l third
"We didn't pitch well today
baseman, found a bicycle at his
locker as an anonyn10us.present
control·wise or stufl·wlse," Wa·
after the game. It was a fitting
than said. "It's just one of those
' gift tor Gruber. who became the
11:ames you try and forget.
first player In Blue Jays' history
"Tommorrow Is definitely a
to hit for the cycle In a 15-8 good day Cor an off day.' •
comeback victory.
·
In other games, Minnesota
"It's just one of the guys clubbed New York 9-4, California
playing pranks," Gruber said. ·shut out Seattle 11).0, Milwaukee
" But actually It's a great thrUI to nicked Cleveland 4·3, Texas
get it."
outlasted Detroit 9·6, and Oak·
Gruber hlf a solo home run In land edged Chicago 3·2. Balli·
the first, a two· run double in the more at Boston was rained out.
second, a two·run triple In the
TwiDa 9, Yankees 4
seventh and an RBI single In the
At New York, Gary Gaettl
eighth. He finished 4 for6.with six homered twice and drove In six
RBI and four runs scored.
runs to lead the Twins to victory
Jesse Barfield's homer came over the Yankees. Allan Ander·
. off Bret Saberhagen, H, who son, 3·0, worked seven Innings for
was making his first relief the victory. New York starter
appearance since Sept. 14, 1986 Tommy John, 1·2, allowed 12.hlts
after lasting just two· thirds of an In 6 2·3 !Mings.
inning Saturday . .
AnJels10, Mariners 0
Reliever David Wells, 1·0,
At Seattle, Wash., Bert BJy.
pitched four Innings, allowing Ieven recorded his 56th career
two earned runs on six hits while shutout and Mark McLemore
striking out three and walking and Devon White each drove In
·one to pick up the win. Tony two runs, leading the Angels to a
Castillo pitched the final 4 2·3 shutout over the Mariners. Bly·
Innings for his first major.Jeague Ieven, 2·0, allowed just rour hits.
.

·.

Pomeroy UMW meets

Brewen t, lndlau S
At Milwaukee, Glenn Braggs
greeted Cleveland reliever Jesse
Orosco with a bases·ioaded single In the lOth Inning, allowing
the Brewers to squeak by the
Indians. ' Orosco relieved loser
Keith Atherton, 0·1, and Braggs
slapped an 0·1 pitch up the middle
to score'Felder. Chuck Crlm, 1·1,
pitched the final Inning for the
victory.

1

RanJ!!n 8, Tlpn 6
At Detroit, Steve Buechele and ·
Pete lncavlglla hit two-run home
runs and 11.dded RBI singles to
help the Rangers extend their
winning streak to eight. Charlie
Hough, 2·0, struggled through 5
1·3 Innings. Jack Morris, 0·3,
las ted just 2'2·3 Innings and left ·
trailing, 4·0.
Athletics 3, White Sox 2
At Chicago, Walt Weiss, back
In the starting lineup after
missing two games because of
the flu, smacked an RBI single In
the ninth Inning to lead the
Athletics to victory over the
While Sox. Oakland knocked out
starter Eric King, 0-3, In the
ninth. Dennis Eckersley, 1·0,
picked up his !lrst win of the year
In relief.

.

the death of her father, Richard.
Her best effort was a tie for 11th,
and she finished 109th on the
money list.
"It was a very emotional win,"
Bradley. 38, said during a tearful
news conference. "I reflected on
the last two years. One year you
,wlneverythlngandthenextyear
you're at ,the bottom of the totem
pole. I thought I was having a
nervous breakdown.
"I wondered If I would ever be
able to play this game again. I
even thought about going home
and working In the family sWre In
Westford (Mass.,..
Bradley said she was !lOrry her
dad was not alive to share In the
excitement or Sunday's triumph.
"It's the !lrst time I've ever

able to call him and tell him," she
said. "I know he was reeling for
me at what I was. going through.
I'll bet he saw more golf this
week from me then ever before."
Bradley's round featured four
birdies, all on the front nine.
''There were some anxious
moments out there today."' she
said. "I dldn 't want to make a
mistake coming down the
.stretch. I wanted to hold . tight.
I'm very proud or myself the way
I hung In there."
Lopez had four birdies on the
front nine but bogeyed the
145·yard 12th hole. Still, Clnishlng
second to Bradley wasn't so bad.
"I wish I could have won but I
am happy for Pat," Lopez said.
"I had good opportunities all day
wmakeblrdlesbutlcouldn'tget
the putts to fall.

Earnhardt
'

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DAVIS OUr AT THIRD - California third
baseman Jack . Howell (left) pull the tq on
Sealtle's Alvin Davis as he sUdes Into third 1o the
fourth Inning of Sunday's game In Seattle's

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NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C.
( UPI) -Dale Earnhardt held off
a brakeless Alan Kulwicki Sunday at North Wilkesboro Speed·
way to win the First Union 400
NASCAR Winston Cup race.
Earnhardt's 2.2·second victory
over Kulwicki was his !ll'st this
year and the 35th of his career. It
broke Earnhardt's 15·race win·
less streak and was his fifth
top-five finish In seven races.
"It's~been a long time since
we've on a race," said Earn·
hardt, ho collected $51,225. "We
have been competitive, It's just
been those little things that have
put us out."
Earnhardt's triumph was also
a victory for Goodyear Tire and
Rubber Co., which Introduced Its
radial tires to stock car racing In
the event. Earnhardt used ra·
dials throughout the race. lead·
lng five times for 296 laps.
"The more I ran on them the
better I liked them," Earnhardt
said. "I would like to see them
tested at all of the tracks."
Earnhardt averaged 89.937 ·
mph in the. r.a ce slowed by 10
caution flags Cor 50 laps. There
were 10 lead changes among five
drivers.
Kulwicki provided Earnhardt
with his only serious challenge In
the race's closing laps. When the
race restarted from Its final
caution period with 43 laps
remaining, Kulwicki WIIS second
and stayed within striking dis·
tance as the event wound down.
With seven laps remaining,
Kulwicki pulled his ~ord onto
Earnhardt's bumper and the two
dueled fender·to-fender for four
laps. Then, with three laps left,
Kulwicki scooted high In turn one
and lost half a straightaway to
Earnhardt. He then had to
concentrate on staving off Mar· ·
tin for second.

Stewart .•.

Continued from page 3
"My back Is real sore after the
last two holes," he said, noting
that he has three degenerated
discs. "It's just not designed to
play 25 holes."
His 16·under finish after 72
holes bested the tournament
record H·under 270 posted by
Nick Faldo In 1984 and Tom
Watson In 1979.
In addition, his first round
score or 65 matched the record
for low starts by winner, which
he now holds with Greg Norman
(1988) , Tom Watson (t9m and
Graham Marsh (1977) .
For Perry, the last 28 holes of
the tournament proved W be the
ruin of hls putting game as he
repeatedly watched birdie putts
brush the cup and Call to drop.
"He (Ste~J!art) just kept mak·
lng birdies and I couldn'.t make a
birdie," he said. "I was nervous.
It's kind or hard to go ror the pin
when you can't feel your hands."

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PEPSI'S
Willi I Pill PIJII
,-".. 11 . . . . . . . _
Ill. OilY . II at.

--·

01. Ia

Legion birthday. noted in Meigs County .
.

The 70th anniversary of the said that Eighth Dis trtct Is now In
American Legion was observed sixth place In membership.
by Drew Webster Post 39 and its
Auxiliary wlth a dinner party and
Also Introduced was Mrs.
recognition program held at the Betty Keister, Junction City.
Eighth District Americanism
Pomeroy hall.
Nearly a hundred legionnaires, chairman, all past presidents of
unit 39, and current officers and
auxiliary members and friends
attended the observa)lce at committee chairman.
which Mary Moose, Eighth Dis·
On behalf of the unit. Mrs.
trlct president of Junction City Miller presented Commando&gt;r
was a special guest. After bei'ng Richard Vaughan with a mane·
Introduced by Mrs. Charles tary gilt from the auxiliary.
Mrs. Mary Martin, unit ArneMiller, auxiliary president; Mrs.
Moose talked briefly on member· . rlcanlsm chairman, then pres·
. ship notlng that the unit needs eriteci to Commander Vaughan,
four to reach goal and the district an American !lag on behalf of
needs 70 more members. She Mrs. Veda Davis, unable to

attend, In memory of Harry
Davis. The new flag will be flown
·
over the post home .
Mary Martin was presented a
special auxiliary pin for having
collected 60 memberships this
year by Francis Hunnell, mem·
bership chairman.
It was noted that Robert
Duckworth had been named the
Legionnaire of the Year. and that
Bob Hoeflich had been selected
for the special Red, White and
Blue award for longtime service
to the legion post. Both were
given awards at a later meeting.
To open the meeting the colors

were advanced by Elza Gilmore,
Raymond Jewell, Marjorie Fetty
and Francis Hunnell, sergeants
at arm. Iva Powell had the
lnvoc,atlon. There was silent
prayer, the pledge of allegiance,
and preamble to the Legion
constitution given In unison. Mrs.
Dorothy Jenkins was at the
piano.
At the close of the meeting,
Mrs . Miller thanked those who
as sis ted with the dinner and
decorations. Baskets of poppies
made l&gt;Y Mrs. Gerald Rought and.
Mrs. Jan Jenkins, unable to
attend, were given to the special
guests.

2 16 •CI 011 niM
PillAS

512.95
,_.,

-

11 . . . . . . . ..

- - . . .4 . . . . ..

Why the Ten Commandments all'could gain life everlasting.
Bernice Carpenter presided
was the subject or Marie Chap·
man' s program when the Pome· over the business meeting In
rQy United Methodist Women :which reports of committee's ·
were given. The least coin was
met recently at the church . .
Mrs., Chapman explained that collected by Jackie Hilderbrand
the Ten Commandments are not with prayer by Ada Warner. ·
outdated and that God gave them Ninety six sick and shut In calls
to all people as a moral constitu· were reported.
Plans were made to provide
lion of the universe, and that all
should live their lives using them cookies for Vacation Bible School
as a guideline. Mrs. Chapman on June 5-9.
Rev. Don Meadows reported on
closed by reading the Beau II·
the
new tape repr09u&lt;;er ena·
tudes for Women.
Dorothy Downie, devotional bllng the shut Ins to enjoy the
leader, read the scripture Ephe· sermons and music of the
slans, chapter five, and the group church. Rev. Meadows' closed
sang, Walk In the Light." Mrs. "with prayer.
.
Hostesses were Betty BaronDownie read Lessons In Love for
April pOinting out that love Is . lck, Leona Cleland. and Marjorie
sacrifice, God·loved all people so Reuter.
much that he sacrificed his son so

Chester Council meets
Erma Cleland read Hot Stuff, the time of her son' s death.
The hostesses served refresh·
Elizabeth Hayes read Taxes and
ments
and games were con·
Flower Sack Underwear at the
dueled
by Opal Ho lion and
recent meeting of the Pas I
Pauline Ridenour with Ethel Orr
Couoncllors' Club of Chester
•
winning the door prize.
Councll323 Daughter of America
· Others at tending In addition to ·
held at the Pythlans Sisters Hall
those mentioned were Charlotte
·at Long Bottom with Mae
Grant, Jean Frederick, Sadie
McPeek, Alta Ballard , and Ada
Trussell, Mary K Holter, Betty
Bissell as hostesses.
Roush, Lora Damewood. Thelma
Marcia Keller presided at the
White. and visitors Bonnie Land·
meeting and read 10 verses of
ers,
Judy S. Holter. Sandra
Psalm 41. The Lord's Prayer and
White.
and Betty Young.
pledge to the American flag was
repeated In unison.
Inzy Newell, secretary , read
the minutes from the previous
. meeting, Mrs. Hayes gave the
treasurers report and members
The Orange Township Volun·
answered the roll call by naming
·
teer
Fire Department In Tuppers
their fav.ortte .spring flowers.
Plains
will be having a chicken
Get well cards were signed for
barbeque
on May 14 at 11 a.m.
Faye Kirkhart and Margaret
The
price
will be $3.75 and will
Amberger, and Mrs. Newell read
a thank you note from Carolyn include half a chicken or ribs,
Holley, Tampa, Fla. for the baked· beans , cole slaw, bread,
sympathy cards she received at and beverage.

8arbeque slated

Family visits ·in Meigs County
Senior Airman E4 David Var·
ian, stationed with Nellis Air
Force Base, Las Vegas, Nev.,
and his wife, the former Cheryl
Pierce and their two children
Ryan and Brittany Nicole, spent
a weekend In the bend area
recently with relatives and
friends.

Eastern won the 200 meter with a
time or 29.2. To cloae out the
scoring In the 1600 meter relay
Lesley Carr, MoniCa Turner,
Laura Aleker, and Amy Wagne~
of Meigs won with a timeof5.19.4.
In the boys compltltlon the
meet was never decided untU the
last event win Edmonds of Meigs
won the 3200 meter wl th a t lme.of
·u: 33.8 just beating the time or
Garret of•Alexander with a time
of 11: 34 to give the Marauders the
win. Meigs finished with 74
points, Alexander came In second with 73 points and Eastern
finished with 13 points.
Other Clrst place Clnlshers for ·
Meigs were Steve Caruthers In
the high jump. Curtis English In
the long jump with a l~ap of
18'11". Tony Miller In the discus
with a toss .or 105'8W'. James
Savage In the pole vault clearing
11'0' '. Carson )"On the 400 meter
with a time or59. 7. Eastern failed
to have any boy finish In Clrst In
any of the events.
The Mo\lrauders will travel to ·
Vinton County to take part In a
four way meet on Tuesday. Als.o
taking part wllili* Oak Hill and
Redolvan of Eastern took !lrst Nelsonville YoF. .
place honors with a tlmeof7.18.4
In the 1600 Meters : Jody Taylor,
NOW OPEN FOR
Jennifer Taylor, Amy Wagner,
SPRING SEASON
and Ronnea Davis again took
Complllle
Line of Vtglllable
first place honors this time In the
&amp; Bedding Plante, Azal400 M. relay with a time or 56.4.
&amp; Fruit Tr-. Geranluma,
Missy Nelson of Meigs won the
Hanging
Baakllla, Shrubbery
400 Meters with a time of 1.10.9.
and
Tre•.
In the 300M·hurdles ·Jennifer
OPIII
DAU
9 AM YO 5 PM
Taylor of Meigs 'once again took
SUIIDAY
I te S
home the honors with a winning
time of 53.1. AprU Hudson of
Hubbard's Gr•nhouse
Meigs won the 800 meter with a
992-5776
time 3.04.4, while Garfield of

During all of 1919 we art eel
tbrating our 40th y•r at bring· ·
ing IMIHer hHrtng to our
frltnds-clitnts. It il gratifying
to know that we hall devil·
oped a reputation. for int.g..lty
and dlptndalllllty. We were
here y..._tlay, expect to bll
here tomorrow; a11d our ollligatilll to you is to lit avcilablt

PRESENTATION - Mrs. Charles (Gerrl) Mlller,.presldent of
the American Legion ,Post 39 Ladles Auxiliary, presenled
Commander Richard Vaughan with a monetary gift from lhe unit
at the 78th birthday celebration.

Area visitors named
Easter guests of Ida Murphy
were Robert Murphy, Robbie, .
Ginny, and Chad, Mrs. Joseph
Evans, Tyson and Jonathan,
Mrs. Greg Davis, Ashll, Joshua,
and Mlrinda, and Mrs. Iva
Johnson.
·
Mrs. Johnson spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith. Saturday visitors of Mr.
and. Mrs. Smith were Julie A.
Stevens, Barbara Steadman and
her mother, Mrs. Rosa Plumley,
Fairfax , Va. , .
Mrs. Elsie Bratton, Radcliff.
spent a few days with· her sister
Mrs. Galdys Tuckerman and
other relatives, Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Haning and Ronald, and
Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. LesUe Frank,

'
·
.
·

Luncheon menus for schools In
the Eastern Local School Dis·
trlcts and Carleton School have
been announced.
·
Eastern
Monday: hamburger, baked
beans, Crull, no bake cookie, and
milk .
Tuesday: chicken patty.
french Cries, frult, ,and milk.
Wednesday: macaroni and
cheese, com bread, stewed tom a·
toes, fruit and milk.
Thursday: taco salad with corn
chips, peas, br~wnle, fruit, and
milk.

a

lEE US EACH
WEDNESDAY IN THE "PM"
AT HOLZER CLINIC

GALUPQUI, OH'O

DILES HE.ARING CENTER

(614t 591-3571
TOU.fUE IN OliO 1·100·217-7716
116 WIST IliON S11EET
ATIIIIS. 1_1110 45701 ,
v

,,,

,.

Office 1-Jpu.rsi .
. Monday t.p·ough friday
8:30 a.m ..- 5:00 p.m.

Riverview PTO has meeting

Bazarr, hot dogs, and pop will be
sold during the sing.
It was voted to fix the refrlger·
ator, and Mrs. Catherine John·
Suite 12
son. head teacher, went over the
PVH Medical Office Building
school calendar for April and
(304) 675-6015 .
May. Mrs. Martie Baum's se·
cond grade class won room
count , and the by·laws were
passed.
.
The Science Fair was viewed
from 6:30 to 8: 30 In the gym with
grades four, five, and six taking
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550
part.
Refreshments were served by
the first and second grade room ,, . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . - - - - - - - mothers. ·

Officers for the new year were
Sarah and Matthew, Texas Rd.,
elected
at the recent meeting of
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
the
Riverview
PTO and are as
Mrs. Eugene ~anlng, and
follows, Sue Douglas, president;
Ronald.
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and Cindy · Mayle, vice president;
Melissa were Sunday afternoon Patricia Hayman, secretary;
visitors ·of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves. and Nancy Larkins, treasurer.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, · A baked steak, fried chicken
Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin dinner, and gospel sing featuring
Knapp, Michelle and Amy , Ra· the Harvest Trio Is scheduled for
May 6wlthdlnnerfrom5to7p.m.
cine. and Mr. and Mrs. Charle~
.
The
sing will be from 7 to 9 p.ri\.
Knapp brought and served birth·
Prices
for the dinner are the
day dinner for Mr. and Mrs.
same
as
the carnival.
.'Charley Smith on Monday even·
Admiss[on
price for the gospel
lng to honor Smith's birthday.
sing is $1 per person with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
children 12 and under free.
Brandl and Robbie, Chester,
were Tuesday evening visitors of
Dorothy Reeves, Gladys Tucker·
man and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Mary Martin has been named
Han tng and Ronald.
queen of Ohio TOPS 570 for the
highest loss of goal weight among
members of her chapter by
FrWay : fish, scalloped pota· losing ten and a half pounds.
Mrs. Martin will be honored
toes, fruit .. and milk.
along with VIrginia Dean and Ola
·
Carleton
Monday: pizza burgers, french St. Clair at the Area Recognition
Day In Zanesville on May 20.
fries, pickles, fruit, and milk.
On behalf of TOPS 570, Llnnle
Tuesday: open race turkey
Aleshire Invites any women,
sandwich, green beans, fruit, and
men, teens, and preteens inter·
mUk.
ested In losing weight to attend
Wedgesday: !Ish nuggets, peas
the club's open house that will be
and potatoes, roll, Crull, and held AprU 18, 7:30 p.m. af the
rilllk.
Thursday: beef stew, biscuits,
cheese wedge, fruit, and milk.
Friday: spaghetti, garlic
bread, green salad, fruit, and
milk. ·

Doctor Repotta .....

TOPS meeting conducted "Overweight Patients .
Coonhunter's Lodge at the
fairgrounds.
Take Off Pounds Sensibly
(TOPS), an International non·
-profit weight control organlza·
ORANGE, CA - A lipificurt
lion with over 320,000 members · wciibt loll braktbnJuBh of UD•
worldwide, was founded In 1948
l2llplitude bal jUit
and Is the oldest major weight
5311de. A new biotctive diet pill
control group. Its programs are
oroaram c:ontainiDI amaz1n1
1'E.A.B. Plut" ba beea perfec:led
based on a combination of group
dynamics, competition, recognl·
and il beinl tllldrmd UDder tbc
lion, and obesity research.
trMen•mc ADola 200()TM,
For lnformantlon on TOPS,
Ree n:but are l&gt;lilirw it tbc
contact Mrs. Aleshire at 992·7476.
"diet minde of tbe '901:1' Auorcz
2000 widl "E.A.B. Plus" lciiWly
tumi tbc body iznD I ''fat bunlinl

Lose Too Much Weight!"
l:e':'"'red

machine" wbich COIIIWIIel ia own
lUnd far, flab and ~ thua
P"lnda and iodlel lille
51111ic. A pmel ri lesd'tna U.S. doc. tDrl ..r bclltb aperll Cnuad
Aualex 2000 "life Far ~
weiPI loll.'' However it Ia ID .
exqemely powaf\11 anaic •
inlinxliaat sbould be ljolle wed

slydd,

:Catholic women meet
It was decided to hold bake
sale after Mass on the first
Sunday of each month for the
next rew months at the recent
meeting or the CathoUc Women's
Club held In the church social
hall.
The bake sale proceeds will go
the help raise money to purchase
the new carpeting.
It was also announced that the
Church Women United will hold
their spring conference at Sacred
Heart on May 5 at 12 noon. Those
attending are to bring a sack
lunch and the women of Sacred

..
Family Practice

JN MEMORY - Mrs. Mary Martla, Americanism chairman of
the Ladles Auxiliary Unit 39 oflhe American Legion Drew Webster .
l"osl, presented Commander Richard Vaughan wllh a flag In
memory or Harry Davis, on behalf of Mrs. Veda Davis at the
American Legion birthday party.

Menus noted for schools

'

IILL DILES

They were the guests of their
parents, Joan and Richard VarIan, Mason, W.Va., and the
James Pierce family of Rutland.
While here they attended the
50th wedding anniversary party
of Mrs. Varian's grandparents,
Doris and Kenneth ·wilt, Racine.

David R. Ayers, M.D.

SYIACUSE OHIO

' ......., Hearl... C!id ll'~t
.Call the rtllalill - WI
.CAlli

Wilt.._ St. liMit.. llllhtry •
"2-2124

S.,II•Diwllllla

....Ao,.._,_"".,....

Elsewhere Cleveland clipped
Chicago 111·92, Houston dumped
Dallas 114·112 in overtime, ne.··
troll defeated Washington 104·98,
Milwaukee nipped New Jersey
100·96, and the LA Lakers routed
Mtaml121·108.

.If thtlt Is to bll found. Htar11111

.

••••

!rom Ewing and Mark Jackson
and 14 from Oakley.
"You have to give them some
credit," . Ewing said. ''They
played an outstanding game. But
give our guys some credit Cor
coming back."

.'"II'Y
iliii)as yai-nild w, with
the .-1 up-to-tlatt ttchntlo· ·

........ - Clllleap . . .. ....... ,: ..

.

'

Cavaliers romp

RED, WHITE AND BLUE AWARD - Commander Rlc,hw'd
Vaughan, right, of American Legion Drew Webster Post 39,
presents the Red, White and Blue Award to Bob Hoeflich for his
longtime service to the Legion Post.

Meigs thinclads cop
weekend tri-meets

11&amp;.: ..... a1 Chle.p, 1: II

-a. Lollll at Qleap, 1: II

LEGIONAIRRE OF THE YEAR - Robert Duckworth was the
recipient of the 1989'Leglonalrre or the Year Award trophy which
was presented by Drew Webster Post 39 commander Richard
Vaughan. The award Is made annually at. the American Legion
Birthday Party.

KlnJdome. DaviA taJpd at 11ee0nd after .Jeffrey
Leonard filed out before belna' tagpcl oat to
complete lhe double play. The Angela won lt-11.
· (UPI)

poise and great character by
By JOE CIALINI
holding them off at the end. We
UPI Sports Writer
Winning the basketball game were down but we made the shots
wasn't enough for the Phlladel· we had to make."
phla 76ers' Charles Barkley.
Gmlnskl led the 76ers with 25
He had to st&lt;1rt promoting the points, Barkley had 22 .and
Hersey Hawkins added 21 as
likely flrst·rou'nd playoff mat·
chup between the 76ers and the Philadelphia won the season
series from the K~tlcks, 4·2.
New York Knlcks.
rr the playoffs were to start
.•'When we meet In the playoffs,
I'd pay to see every game," said today, the two teams would meet
Barkley, who sank 2 Cree throws In the first round and, with only a
with· eight seconds to play Sun· week left In the regular season,
day to help the 76ers defeat New It's unlikely that will change.
New York got 16 l!Oints each
York 115·112. ''There are not
many basketball games I'd pay
to see but I'd pay to see us play
these guys.
·
"Five of the six games we've
played against each other this
year have been clinics."
Each team taught the other a
lesson on Sunday . The 76ers
jumped to a 26·polnt lead In the
By DAVE HARRIS
third quarter but the Knlcks
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
came back to go ahead twice In Marauders girls and boys track
the final period.
teams both won trl·meets re·
cently
at Meigs High School over
· Patrick Ewing's jumper ·gave
the Knlcks a 112·111lead with 10 · Alexander and Eastern.
In the girls competition. Meigs
seconds to play. Ewing sat olit all
of the third quarter and most or finished In first place with 84
the fourth with a sore right knee points, East,ern In second place
before entering the game with with 59 points and Alexander In
third with 9 points.
5:16 to go.
Jody Taylor won the high jump
With eight seconds left, Cha·
with
a jump of 4' -4" and the long
rles Oakley fouled Barkley, who
jump
with a jump of 14' 6~ " .
made 2 free throws for a 113·112
Jodi
Cusler of Meigs won the
lead. The Knlcks, out or time
outs, turned the ball over as they shot put with a throw of 28'7'A ".
tried · to set up a shot and Mike Nikki Bunch ·of Meigs won the
Gminskl sank 2 free throws with discus with a toss of 82' 8'% ".The
two seconds to go for the final Marauders 3200 relay team of
Lesley Carr, April Hudson, Amy
margin.
"l dori't think the remarkable Warth, and Missy Nelson took
thing was them coming \)ack," first place honors with a time or
Barkley said. "lthlnk the remar· 12: 14.6. Jennlfe• Taylor of Meigs
kable thing was us winning the won the lOOM·hurdles with a time
game. When a team makes a run of17.7. In the lOOM·dash Garfelld
like that, there's usually .nothing of Eastern won with a time of
13.81. The Marauders 800 M·
you can do.
' "I thought we showed great relay teal)'l won with a time of
12.00.7. Running for Meigs was
Jody Taylor, Jennifer Taylor,
Amy Wagner, and Ronnea Da~is.

x-Aprl • - Qllcaao at St. Lo..., 8: II

t. AUdia I, t.S

LHAB . . •I. ...II&amp;oal
Diepl

a.-....

,.

'N•nt.Dhr.. lon
Olle... n . st.Lollll
,\prl 18 - Ollc.p .t 8t. LoiR, 8: II

Afrl 14 '

81 LenD I, New York 3
,t,U..aa 7, a.. Fund~ I, 111

r

p.m.

,.,. •..,. rP .. Molllrr:.al ..

Les Mpla J. HoUlton 1
If;, Lo ... J. New Vorl!, 11111n111p
Salt
I, Atlanta t

.

Golden state_. Se1Uie, nlld&amp;
Denwer at LA Laltrh, nlpt
Porllaadllt Salftmealo, ~~~~~~

Detrott at MlnntiU, alahl
CaliiOrnla ac Chlcap, allhl
Mllftuke•lll Tnu, alpt

PttlllbllrKh

niP~

Allanla AIID•ana . ni,W
LA Clippers II Utah, nl~

Culllornhl If, St'aiUe f
Bu.lllmor'f' Ill Boston, ppd., rain
'
Mond.,'ll Game~~~ '
Balllmol'f' (llaolllla 1· 1) at Btullon
( GIIJ"daer U), ll:tla.m.
New York tHawkiM 1·21 al Toronlo
{ F11U1aaan •t), ..1 :J~ p.m.
Call .. rnla tMcCuiiUI 1·1) IU Chlcaro
tHIIkA'M 0..0), 8:31p.m..
Mllwattlre tWrlf'W' 0-21 at T~n~
(Ryan 1·0). M:U p.m.
Oakland f VouiiiJ ..!) al Selitllf (Han·
!ton I· I) , II:OSp.m.
Tut'SdiiQ''!I Game~~
N~ York at Toroalo, niPI
Kana&amp; Ctty al BaltiiMft'. nip.
Bo1lon at Clenl .... aiiM

OakliUid at

cops First
Union 400

Pro resuhs

Majors

Monday, April17, 1989
Page-S

Mike Campbell, 0.2, took the loss
for Seattle.

~~~!:;~..~~ ~~~!~~~' $=~~~~~? 76ers edge Knicks;
Bradley, completing a comeback
from health and family prot&gt;lems, fired a 5-under·par 67
Sunday to capture the AI Star·
Centinela Hospital Classic and
become the first LPGA player W
earn more than $2.5'milllon.
Defending champion Nancy
Lopez and Hollis Stacy each
finished one stroke off the pace,
and Allee Ritzman and Beth
Daniel were tied for fourth, three
.shots behind Bradley. .
Bradley, the tour's all· time
money winner, finished the 54·
hole event at the 6,213-yard
Rancho Park Golf Course In
8·under. Her 23rd LPGA title was
worth $67.500 and Increased her
career earnings to $2,544,297.
The 1986 Player of the Year
missed much oflast year suffer·

The ·Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Heart are to provide desserts and
beverages.
First Communion will be held
on June 4 at the 10 a.m. Mass.
Father Michael Hellmer held a
question and answer period regarding lite In the Priesthood.
. Hostesses for the May meettn'g
will be Marty Gress, Betty
Ohlinger, Sandy Iannerelll, and
Sonya WoiCe.
South Africa and the So\liel UniQD
produce 70 percent of the world's
m•n1anae, euentl•l to lroa and steel
production.
lj

c:anfully.

B.JJ-'Jt'.:.: :==:;."1.

ua A. I'DUI •, CPA

• -·

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day:'iIll&amp;:

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IEILEI IUSIIISS SEIVICES
"1·7170 '
611 last .... str..t, .....,.,,Ohio
I,

Pne 30 Day Trllll Oft"er
Alas 2000 is 10 eft'ective tnd
tbr rcaultluc 10 •tm•hlaa !bat till
llllllllftctwer il offering I 30
fnz trial If you po&amp;tdlile your c '
• filii 30 days, il will be brld to Ill '
you prove liD 'YGUtiClf tbat you C1D
ufely lolc Ill the weip&amp; you - - If
you ae IIDI I~ wt!JM.t widl till
wbblr ........, you sec in till
:w:b:aca, just ldUIIl your Anoia
2000 tnd your cblck will be datn~Jed ,._bed You line no rilk •
you CID't lolc IIIOIICJ• aa1y Jan ri
UDWIIIIted fll lild ymn rlf your
4i aw,
Send dlldt or IIIOIICf order lor
$36.45 (+$3.50 lor shippq IIIII bmdlq) b 1 30
ar S6LGO
(+f3.50) lor • iiO
AIDa 2000, 4M2
Aw., P.P, A83, Or I , CA
For flrlirc ...... fli credit . .
an11n ONLY •I Jb ell ,A_..
2000. :M boun. cliy, 7.,. . . .
TOU. JIIIIIBa I Ill 'WWNii
l!a.A83,_. •JIIUT'YISA.Il!rrta•
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�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Midcleport. Ohio

Community Catendar
MOND!lY
TUPPE RS PLAINS - A mid·
spring revival. with the theme
"Keep Your Focus, wlll .be held
Aprll17-23, 7 p.m. each evening,
at the Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ.
'
RUTLAND - Meigs County
Churches of Christ Men's Fellow·
shrp will meet at the Rutland
Church of Christ on Monday at
7:30 p.m. All men are welcome.

. cafeteria.

Meigs County property tr~lers .

McNerney.

TUPPERS PLAINS -St. Paul
Untied Methodist Church In
Tuppers Plains Is having a
pancake supper on Tuesday from
4 to 7 p.m. at the church. All you
can eat for $3 or $1.50 for children
under 12. P•oceeds wilt' benefit
the church building fund.

MIDDLEPORT - Group two
of the Middleport Presl)yterlan
~
-. Church will meet Tuesday at the
'RACINE - River Valley Her·
home of Mrs. William Morris.
balists w!!lmeet Monday, 1 p.m ., Mrs. Harley Brown will .h ave
a t t he home of Mrs. Larry Hill.
Bible study and Mrs. Francis
Den tse Adams, Fairfield County, - Anderson will have devotions.
will be the speaker.
POMEROY - The Women's
POMEROY - The Mothers of Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial
Twi ns Club will meet Monday, 7 Hospital will meet Tuesday at
p.m.. at the Pomeroy United 1: 30 p.m. In the conference room.
Methodist Church.
Libby Fisher and Jessie White
will be the hostesses.
REEDSVILLE - Eden United
Brethren In Christ Church. two
WEDNESDAY
miles north of Reedsville, will be
h~v! ng revival services Monday
MIDDLEPORT- The Middlethrougl) Sunday, April 23, 7: 30 port Uteraiy Club will meet at
each evening, with Rev. Robert the home of Mrs. Wilson CarpenSanders as evangelist. Everyone ter on Wednesday. M~s. George
welcome. Hackett will review the book The
Iceman Cometh by Eugene
TUESDAY
O'Neill. RoU call will be a
MIDDLEPORT - A specta'l charactter I could play.
meetIng of Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;A M will be held Tuesday, 7 Youth ft!vlval
p.m .. with work In the Master
PORTLAND - A weekend
Mason Degree. Members who youth revival will be held Friday
help with the Fellowcraft Team through Sunday, April 21.:..23, at
are asked to attend. Refresh· the Zion Church of Christ, State
ments will be served.
Route 143, near Pomeroy. EvenIng services will start at 7: 30 a.nd
RACINE - Southern Local Sunday morning service atlO: 30.
Board o! Education·will meet In The m\lslc and message will be
. regular session Tuesday, 7 p.m., presented by Diana Underwood,
in .the Southern High School Thomas McNerney and Rhonda ·

Revival
RUTLAND Hysell Run
Holiness Church will be In
revival Wednesday thr11ugh
Aprll23, 7 p.m. nightly, with Rev.
Thomas Collier. The Jusds FamIly Singers will be featured.
Everyone welcome.
Sllft'up
RUTLAND - Anyone Interested In pardclpatlng In the
Ru tiand Ball League sjlould
slgn:-up Immediately at the
home of Dennis McKinney, next
door to the Ru I land Legion Post.
For Information, call 742-2279.
Neecl coach
POMEROY The Melp
American Legion baseball team
needs a coach. Anyone hiterested
should call Paul McElroy,
992-7180; George Nesselroad,
992·5881; or Art Stobart, 992•5481.
Open house
POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire
Department Is having an open
house on Sunday, from 2 ·to 4
p.m ., at the nre station. Fifty and
60-year members, and past
chiefs, wi1t be honored. Refreshments will be served and the
dress Is Informal. Everyone
welcome.

••

junior and senior high school · lor, excellent, or good certlfl·
students. Their projects will be
cates form the Ohio Academy of
judged by more than 500 profesScience. Special awards pro-.
sionals in medicine. education,
vided by 75 professlo~~l socle·
industry, and science.
ties, corporations, and govern· The State Science Day Is
mental units will be presented.
sponsored annually by the Ohio
Included in the special awards
Academy of Science, a not ·forare cash, savings bonds, trips ,
profit membership organization
and scholarships worth over
$70,000 . .
founded In 1891 to advance
science in Ohio.
Exhibits are open for public
A,ll students will receive superviewing from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.

Service veterans deserve better
Dear Ann Landers: I know you
care about our veterans because
. yon asked your readers to remem·
ber them on Valentine's Day and
more than a million and a half
people responded. Please be their
friend again.
Did you k.now that supplies arc
so Short in many VA hPSpitals that
the nurses are scrounging the little
souvenir bars of soap and shampoo
bottles from hotels to bring to VA
patients?
In one VA hospital in the South.
tiW nurses were so fruStrated by the
refusal of the prosthetics depart·
ment to supply wheelchair cushions
that they raised $25, bought a large
foam mattress, borrowed an electric
knife and cut ' the foam to make
wheelchair cushions for their pa·
tients.
· Another VA nurse reported that
in her hospital it was impossible to
give diabetic patients proper care
because they did not have insulin
syringes. This could be life-threaten·
ing.
.
At a congressional hearing last
September. VA officials said they
faced a $600 million to $1 billion
shortfall in their budget for medical
care. Yet we srem to have billions of
dollars for the Defense Department.
Does any of this make sense to
y~. Ann? - E.A., OAKLANJ?,

Ann, when 'he smokes, he gets
·spacey and lazy and doesn't want to
do anything but listen to music and
stare at the wall, Sometimes !le gets
silly and gilll!les over nothing,
which is very upsetting to
Will you please tell me if mari·
juana is harmless as he insists? I
need to know what you think
because my views don't carry much
weight with Tom and yours might.
Thanks for your help. - PALM
BEACH, FLA.
DEAR P.B.: We now know a
great deal more about marijuana
than we did in the '60s, when it
became popular.
One or two joints every ~Y is a
lot of pot. It is not hannless as Tom
. seems to think. It destroys initiative,
clouds judgment and distorts vi·
· sian. Like drunkenness. it can lead
to car accidents.
We now know that pot smokers
damage their lungs the way ciga·
rette smokers do. Pot is also illegal.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

me.

" 19M, LM A.~ll'fll ..
Tlmea Synd,Nte
en.. an s,.ndlrar

CompUecl B)' Office Of
Emmotpllle Hol81eln ContJO
Melp County Recorder
Marion D. Slater to Bank One,
Athens N.A. 1 lot 172, Pomeroy
village.
. ·
•
Thelma Lytle to Phillip F . Burgett UI, Susan C. Burgess, par·
eels, Sutton.
'
Drexel B. Cochran, Betty J.
Cochran, Carl E, Morris, Janet
E. Morris toJames R. Hlll, Della
D. Hill, Richard L . Hill. Earley
W. Hill, parcels, Scipio. ·
Charles P. Zlnn, Pansy Zlnn to
Ronald G. McDade, Loretta
McDade, Robert L. Jones, Mary
M. Jones, 3.621 Acre, Olive.
Larry Roush, Grace Roush to
Columbus Southern Power Co.,
right of way, Ch.ester.
Clinton r. Faulk, Wandel M.
Faulk to Columbus Southern
Power Co., right of way, Chester.
Melanie Stehem, Terry M.
Stethem to Columbus Southern
Power Co., right of way, Chester.
Dale S. Machlr, Jennifer LQu
Machlr to Columtius Southern
Poweer Co., right of way, Ches·
ter.

CALIF.
DEAR OAK: No, and it hasn't for
quite some time. I urge. my readers
to remember that · the wheel that
squeaks gets the oil. In this case, the
oil is a letter to ·your congressman
and senators. asking them to support an increase in the budget for
our veterans. They risked their lives
for us. This is the least we can do
for them.
Dear Ann Landers: I am engaged
to marry a wonderful guy who is
28. I am 27. "Tom" has a good job
and loves his work. Everything is
peaches and cream except for one
thing. He has been smoking a joint· · Do you have questions about sex,
or two of marijuana every ~Y for but nobody you can talk to about
years.
them? Ann Landers' newly revised
I have told him that I think he booldet, ''Sex and the Teenager," will
should stop smoking pot, or at least
give you,the answers you need. Torecut down a little, but he says there is
ceive a copy, send $3 plus a self-ad·
nothing wrong with it, -that pot is
dressed, stamped business-size envehannless. and he sees no rc;ason to
lope
(45 cents postage) to Ann
deprive himself of the pleasure and
Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
relaxation he gets from it.
Ill. {h;l/-o562.
.

HEATHEI,l MOORE

Moore birthday
Heather Moore celebrated her
fourth birthday at McDonald's
here In Gallipolis, Feb. 18.
Joining .her were: Parents,
David and Judi !'4oore, White
Road, Gallipolis; grandmother
Della Moore, Cheshire; uncle
Jeff Moore, Cqlumbus; uncle
Scott Moore, Cheshire; ,Kathy
Parker, Columbus, Jason Major,
Lewistown, Don and Pam Wothe,
Amanda, Aaron, Rio Grande;
Ch~rles Baker, · Brett, Derek,
Gallipolis; 'Glady Collins, Jessica, VInton; Paula Back, Gallipolis; Millie Tabor, Joey, Galli·
polis; Suzanne Walker, Rachel,
'G allipolis; Debbie Grant, Tlsha,
'VInton.
Those unable to attend sending
gifts and cards were grandparents William arid Jenny Whiteside, Parkersburg, W.Va.;
grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
James Perry, GaUipolis; great·
grandmother Anna Kerwood,
Gallipolis; ·Jenny Crum, Paul,
Jesslcalind, State College, Pa.;
VIcki Amburn, Johnaunas,
Phenix City, AI.; VIckie Major,
Steven, Lewistown; Amy Hash,
Joshua, GaUipolls.

By United Press International
No f'ences make better
neighbors!
DAVIS, Calif. (UP!)- Robert
Frost wrote "good fences make
good neighbors/' butsomenelgh·
bars In this Northern &lt;;:alifornla
agricultural university town beg
to dltrer.
!'Jiey took ou.t their saws and
cFowbars the other day and,
board by board, tore down the 60
or so teet of fenee they said not
only separated their four homes
but also blocked out fellowship,
fun and neighborly asslatante.
"This Is anathema to the guy
who wants to define his territor·
lallty," Larry Fisher said as he
helped his friends tear down their
fence~~.
·
But, said Kevin Wolf, who owns
one of the horiles, '1'hls allows
tor the madem-day convenience
of privacy &amp;lOIII with the need for
an exttellded farillly."
The nalgllbors plan to recycle
the feace wood to buDd a cblcken
c:oop !OJ' the four hollll!holda. to
share.
The common baclcyard al·
tNII,y h41 a &amp;arden filii ot

MATTHEW MOORE

Moore birth

Mr. and Mrs. David A. Moore,
White Road, Gallipolis, announce the birth of their son,
.Matthew Allen Moore, Feb. 14,
weighing six pouiuls and seven
ounces, 20 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
once had faced h~melessness Sue Westfall, Parkersburg
. W.Va., Mr. and Mrs. James
herself.
Members of Ga,!Uee Episcopal Perry, Jr. Gallipolis. Maternal
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Church looked for parking spaMrs. W.H. Whiteside, Parkersces While regulars at VIrginia
burg,
W..Va., the late Mr. and
Beach's only soup kitchen
Mrs.
James
Perry Sr. Parkerswalked In cold, rainy weather to
burg,
W.Va.
the ceremony Saturday .
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
Powell, 53, three years ago
and
Mrs. Freddie L. Moore,
organized local churches to voCheshire,
paternal great·
luntarlly cook for a soup kitchen.
grandparents Anna KerWOOd,
The orga nlza lion, VIrginia
the late Tony Kerwood, GaUipoBeach Christian Outreach,
the late Mr. and Mrs. Seldom
lls,
dishes out meals six days a week
Moore,
Galllpolls; paternal
at a Christian coffeehouse.
great-great-grandmother
Mrs.
Powell lor the past three years
Della
(Pearl)
DeVault,
also has worked to form a shelter
Gallipolis.
for slngltl street people In the
The couple have another child ·
ell~.
Heather Nicole Moore.

atJ'a'wberrlel, rupberrlel,
chard, · mjller's letiDQe, trult
treea, ellllltro, ~ and

Soup Jlllclaee bepg marrlap
VIRGINIA BEACH, V'a. (UPI)
- It's a marrtaae made In a aoup
kitchen.
Richard H. Powell, one of thll ·
re10rt city's mOI'e vlllble aclvo- ·
catea tor street people, marrlecl
Robert M. "Bobby" Ad11111, Wllo
'

(

-

JOH.N A. WADE, M.D. Ina

hoUR."

-- - ·} "'--;"" .,.

____ -----

·

ser,

Wayne He!zf!r !.Q Gale R.
Heiney, 4.0 acres, Olive.
Arnold Eugene ~ggs, Elaine
Riggs to Timothy M.~lres, lot9,
Rutland.
•·
Benjamin Franklin Upton, Jr.,
Bft!nda Lou Upton to Benjamin
Franklin Upton; Jr., Brenda Lou
Upton, 2.63 ac:res, Orange.
Michael
Warner, Sheila G.
Warner to Ronald Price. Linda
Price; 5.96 Acres, RIIU,Ind.
Mark A· Parsons to Edna G.
Panons, SherUr s Deed, Letart.
Carl J. Horkey, dec., to Betsy
E. Horky, affllljlvlt, Racine village. "
Bobby Joe Pope, Rolemary·
Pope to Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
parcels, Salem.
Lester Rolllb; dt!C. to Carrie
Roush, Karen Conley; Joyce .
Smith, Edith Manuel, Joann
Smith, Gary Roush, VIcki Cun·
dlff, Michael roush, John Roush,
Cert. of Trans., Letart. ·
Carl Fred Goegleln to Frances
B. Goegleln, certificate ot
transfer, Salisbury.
.
Emogene J. Simms to Charles
R. Simms, parceis, Salem.

Lennie Haptonstal presented a
program on crepe myrtle and
care of the shrub at the recent
meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club when members met
at the home of Mary Skinner. ·
Roll call was answered · by
members stating what they are
planning to do In their gardens
this spring.
Members were requested to
bring miniature arrangements
and they were as follows. Judy
Arnold had white and pink
blossoms In a white finger vase
with a figurine In a colonial .
dress. Dana Kessinger made two
arrangements, one with miniature daffodils in a ·blue vase and
one with miniature tulips and
forsythia. Dorothy Morris made
an arrangement with bridal
wreath and necklace plant. Nellie Zirkle's arrangement used
violets and bridal wreath In a
· seashell with a wQod base.
Rita Hamm had an 'arrange-

VMH Auxiliary

THE
BASICR WEAVE

I.,W;Q.I;,r.:l..,l
POMEROY, OH .

-

-... NEW LISTING - POMEROY

wnh fireplace. knchen, and
utrlny room. ~orage room. en·
closed pon:h and carport. On
51h ·acres, tno~~ wooded.
Near town. $7,220.00.

It was announced that Cathy
Hudson lost the most weight at
the recent meeting of the Five
Points Slinderella class.
Losing the most weight In the
Mason class was Majorie Wigal
and Brenda Roush. The runner
up was Wanda Shank.
New members are welcome
and lnformatln may be obtained
by calling JoAnn Newsome at
992·3382.

PlUUII' hillY IOSPIIII.

EAI, lOSE I
G-.LAll-1

....... _,.,
. fiN)., 11M

Recent guests of Neva and
John Brogan Sr. , New Lima Rd.,
Rutland were Mr. and Mrs.
Barry Brogan, London; Mr. and
Mrs. John Haley and Larry
Haley, Corning; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Haley, Jennifer and John,
New Lexington; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Davis, Norwalk; Andy VanMa·
Ire and Earl Lockett, Clifton,
W.Va.; ·and Dana Haine~. Na·
than and Timmy, Syracuse.

We Service All

4 ·4·88·1 mo.

11

NEW LISTING - RACINE
- 3 bedr ooms, bath. modular snting on 90x484 lot.
$32.000.00.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Newii-Wt
"Free. Ettimetet"

DAVE'S ENGINE
REPAIR
992•6506

PH. 949-2801
or le1. 949·2860

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT -' When the work ts
done and the pr ice is small,
it' s perfect lor yout 3 bed·
rooms, equipped · kitchen.
in sulated . viny l sidin&amp; large
lot. $22.000.00.

PI.UM.NG

.~-· filE&amp; I . 101111
GEIIEIAL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry fi1hlng luppll•

4X11NIIVE REMODEUNQ
•VINYL IIDINO. ROO.. NO
•MITALIUIL.DINGI

HOUSING.

Your Phone
Billa Here

*'T. PROJECTI

I'IIONI

SINCE 1969 .

sr. sra11•

NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe have buyers lor Meip
County Property. list with
us lor best resuhs.
. ·-

A

------

' Treaaurer of the Board of
Education, South•n Local
School Dlttrlct. Box 1711,
Racine, Mel go County, Ohio
46771 untO 1:00 P.M. Dav·
light Saving~ Time on Mev
8. 1989 for the in.l lallltlon
of a nRV heater and modification of the Warm Air Heet·
ing in the preeent Syracul8
Elementary School, Syra·
cu11. Meig1 .County. Ohio.
all in accordance with apecl·
fications on file at th1 office
the TresUrer of said

Bo ..d.

Biela will

be

publicly

office of the Boord of Educ•
tion.
.
The information for Bidd-

MORTGAGE
REDUCTION
SYSTEM:
Save thousands on
existing mortgage.
No refinancing. A
Mortgage Consultant
Service ·
Call 1-800·422-.9010
Ext. 4051

tlons moy obtoln thlll1 from

the owner at Racine, Melp

County, Ohio 46771.
14110, 17, 24, 3tc

7829 to ... If you qUIIIfy,

tl-28 WORDS

t5 .00

18.00 .

CHESTER, OHIO

bot- 9GD-12GO.

·......Pomeri:iv......... ..

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS .
•KITCHENS- BATtiS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

Middleport

S-'em Sl .. Rutlend. 10:0()..3:00
Tuetdly, April 18. Mena ~tens.
33-34: 2 chitdo- · - 150 lb.

985-4141

GENERAl CONTRACTORS

f'eCIUM

t 1•18,- 'tBe-~tln

INSTALLATION AND SERVICE Of HEll
ENEIGY EFFICIENT HEAT PUMPS, All
CONDITIONING AND 9511(, EFFICIENT
FURNACE.
,.
985-4222
..
DAY 01 EVENING

HOURS: Mon. 9· 7
Tues.-Sat. 9-Ei; Closed Sun

18 .00

113.00

113.00

$21.00
551 .00

CHESTER, OHIO

"1'MIW I CIIDICIU'41111111C'I

bow.

.......Pt.PTeiisiint ......
&amp; Vicinity
-..-·-· .. --· .. -...... --.. -·· -...
~-

GaregtSale. April I, 7,8et 2123
Maple A,.. two old 8 d~~tl
ctoeb end ml.c Items.

B

Day or Night

Call AI 742-2328

441-Gallipolil
317-Ch•h6tt

912-Middl.-ort

175-Pt. Pl..,nt

388-V•nton •
U5-lllllo Orende
256-Gu,-n Oin
Ul- Arab11 D11t.

915-Ch•••

U. S. SPRINT ,

Call Marlin w.dem.,.lf, Auctio-

n_., Ucented 6 8onded In
51.te of Ohio : Liquidations.
f•rnt. .stet•.- antlqu•.· •c.
814'246·lt12.

Pti-boingpsid.Cotl614-4463tll8.

BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTATM

Wltl buy or appraiee II'IYt~gl
Antlque1. furniture. tppii.,.OII.

SER~ICE

Pay •so.oo P• Gamo

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

Middleport,

SYRACUSf. OHIO
Moll Foreign •nd
Oom. . ic Vehlcl• "
A/ C Service

PUBLfC

All Major 6: Minor

RELATIONS

NIASE Certified Machanic

Rep,~W1

CALL 992·6756
"DO&lt;" VAUGHN

•M oblle Ho,...•. Parte
•Mobile Home
Rente Is
•Lot Rentals

..

,.,. ....,
Ill•&amp;

992-7479
lt. 33 North of

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
Paying today

.. 992-6282
31.9 So. 2nd Ave.
Middl~rt, Ohio

ALLEN'S
HAULING

ue-Loon

671-...,oi•G"""'
n3-Maon
812-N--sn
lt6-.__
127-luffolo

We Haul

and

Spread
Umeatone .

Dirt,' Send S.
Delivered
1,000 Gel. Water
Service
Coal

let Reealt• fut

992·5275
.i-:Jf4.
mo.
·s~ . ,

\

April $, 1989

(Subj•t to Ch111p Whhout

Notlcs)

#1

corrn -........... 16' ~~

#2 COPPEll _,, ........ 6S' .._
CIIAN ~U..UM
SlEETS - .............. 52c ..
ClllN ALII.IUM

CAST-···-"-······..·· 40' ".IWI.IUIII

.YIIAIII CANS _ ... 50' .._
liONY
SIBT _ ......... 5• to 30&lt; ..
IIONY CAST - 3• to 20• .._

ST A1NUSS -----20• &amp;
NO GLASS AT PIISlNf

992-5114

locatllcl Off Byput
At Jet. of Rta. 7 •
143, Pomerov, Oh.

Hl· 'll·tln

buak'l• -ftrmtlnyour lmmedi••
bueln• •r••· Elrn WMklv
commlltlone. Sel your own
hourt. Prompt. trlenctv HNict
fromiOyroldAAA-1 compq,
No. invatrnent. No callect60na.
Ptwlou• Ill•
r.. ulrld. Write: Rlch•d Lowe,
Newton Mfg. Co .. Dept .
H120t1, NeWton. lowe 80208.
1-616- 792; 4121 .

.,_,.,ce not

Fwniture .11'1 d appllan-. bv the
piece or entire houllhold. Fair

15

Schools
Instruction

RE·TRIIIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN 8UBINESS
CO LLEBE. 129 Joclqon Plko.
Wanlldll 'We pev CM h for Cotl448-4317. Aoo. No. 88-11·
"Antique FurnitUre. ";4~t"' 101118.
qulb • Coli 114-246.

Listenin&amp; Devices
..ependable Hearin&amp; Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic..
C!J 'Hearing Evaluations For All Aps

Ueed llrrilture by the pl. . or 1 S Wanted to Do
sntlnl
houoehotd
'~----------,
114'742·
2418. ·.roo oolllns. I"

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Clutttl
Pre 1940 qulttl. Any condlllon.
Cooh oold. Coll114-992-1887

~ '(614) ~-7619 or (614)
992·2104 ·
z '417 Second
Box 1213

or 114-1112-2411.

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
AVIIIUI,

- Gal6polis, Ohio 45631

or at

Veterans Memorial Hos1pit!l

...

U1ed furniture 1nd houdhold
eppli•ncee. Phon• 114-742·

2048.

LIMESTONE FOR.SALE.
ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

Quality
Stone Company
3 Mile East of McArthur on S.R. 50

PH. 596·4756 or 992-6637

4· t 4-89· 1 mo.

&amp; SPIUD
CO. AIU
.50 PEl 1011

NOW OPIIII FOI
IUSINESS

Cont•t

14111 &amp; llaln St.

614-2415-1155J

Point Plaa1a11t, W.Va.
We luy Aluminum
Cont. 01••· B,_t,
Copper and More

. MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

MON.-F ••: 9 om-6 Jl!!l

Ul• I am;12 h..ii

304-675-3161

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
•MANNIS TILLERS
•INTERSTATE
BATTERIES
LAWN. GARDEN
SUPPLIES

For Mora inform!t~

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Arilltlttllrl:lrll:rtl~.

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

3 Announcement.

PUBLIC
AUCnON
EVElY TIIIISDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
IIOWE'S GlOVE PUll

=Ohlt

UJNSIG-rs W&amp;COIII

PATIKI H. aOSSII
AIIOIOII&amp;I

PH. 304·421-7245

4-5-lt-1 ...

r tnanr:titl

11

21

Business
Opportunity

Help Wanted

Roil.oo oo1e .,d ,., with
- T o l : l . . .,di·YIP'Wa,_ Plio' owolololo II , .....

Pit-.

4

'

. '

I NOTICE!

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

VISA 1M ASTEIIc.\11 D
US CHMIGE o-... ood

Atg.;dl•• ofCredt Rltlng. C.ll

_ , !2131 926-11808 .. t.
2824.

u

Eeoy Wotkl E-1 . . f'oyl II•
11mtlleAWOclrtl •• hotne. C.ll for

Information'. 104-149-0870
ext. 313.
Galllpolil Aro m•ag•l.r po~t­
tion. P,..,• oldw ooupla Hou~t­
ing I living--~~ ptOYidod In
fDr men.c;ng loCII

rental lalain-. Call 114-8187748. -···1·88&amp;7741.

EARN MONEY flo-g boolot
130.000/.,.., lnoomo pot.,lol.
Dotollt. 111 801&gt;187·8000 Ext.
Y-101119.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY •
home A....,.,btv wcwiL J.w~.
toy~ ....... Col 1-819-8181122•tT·8120H241n.

LICENSED SOCIAL WORKER
Eoholng Me- RMI-Itl
c....... tCFIMRio-gto

ING CO. _......, ... -you
do bu1in.. wtth people you
knW!I, lnd NOT lo _..d monev·
ttwough thl m .. untl you h••
nv-..ed the off•ing.
VENDINO ROUTE
BALUPOIS AREA

All nav m.chin-. prhne locttions, pot. -1300. 1700pluo
ea. mechlrte wWv. Must
Cllf
I ·800.419- 80119 ..t. 188.

_.I.

Rei 1M bu1ln•s tw lila Mldd• '
port. Ohla. John1an'1 V•lety'
Store teon F..,kllnl. 1-30~
773-6308 oft• IGOp.m .

VenclngBUIIn . .Routelor .-!e.
• 1750. n• profit P• mom h.

C••h

bu•ln••· ••tablist.lf

route. 3 d.,1 P• month. C.h
114' 742-2067.

Met II bulclng MlnUfiM:t:Urerwfl '
dowolot&gt; deolw in .toe1 opon
. . . 100n. Start• ...._ tr*llng
snd .,aln. .lng
vlded. Cuetom bulclngs our
opeoltlty, Coli lor IP-Ion!
303-7111-3200 tat. II.
.,

,._,pro.

Ill
• pooltlon
.,....
·"
-·
worklr,
wt. m
both
-todtl
••
. fed•lt riiiUirlm.n.lnt•••
PIRIM 1houkf IIWid ,_,,...

a

ref•tncet to Echoing Mt,.
dowo. 318 W. UnionS~ A-..
OH 41701 or coli 614-68~
3141woel&lt;....,t--818

p.m.

Lit .. otrroo • tol.,ltone work
,......, in p - • tho - 1'11• .., .... 10:00 ....

..

"3"1---uHo:om=n=to=r-.S"a,;-le~~

ll.,ottroctr.elllld&lt; 4-0011\
2 btl~ ....., _ , with • •
p i - ....... clnina ..ge ......
room. JO fl. CUllom oM ldldt1n '

c - - ook woodworl&lt;, lhlloh
- 2lot.
. . 4-.-.-. .
....
............
... .
Hoo(lllot olf lit. Jl.
flbnwbrool&lt; Su-ition. Cal .
814'448-4181.

Delu•e

I IR . !tau" fw Ill•

aw- fln•oo.

1104.

949-2168

4-10-'19-1 110.

Baby1llt• IYIIilable. fl•lblt'
hours, full or Plrt time. Mhind
Orctrunoe School. h•e rill•., ... 304'871&gt;2784.

&gt;

7
w...

Gutters

t.llen.-y ar•. C.l 814-4410802.

EllliJiuynwnl

•dt~nge

PUBUC
RECYCUNG

bob¥olning In my home.

Wilt •

'"".........._..,. Cal e14'
182-11818.

. '!ulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

Howard L Writ..!

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

pen1 Ind . adtnrUalng gifts tc

I t4'248·8182.

·ID-'e ·1

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Mike Mor1 Mon.,
F 1.111 or '-t· TltMII
Man ~nd YA~mtn nMded to ....
our profitable line of Clllendlra,

........ MltOL cor~~~H~e honw
furMhlng~. '-'•lin Yftdemavtr.

Cer11fl«&lt; Licen••

MOBILE•
HOME PARK

&amp;.bv'•tt• needed for 2 ehilchn
au• 4 &amp; 7. Prlllf• 11t mv home.
DeveNft. Replv to: lox C · 22, Pt.
Pl. .snt, WV 215510 in c•e of
the Regilt•. Clmp Conlw • •·

Wanted

EVERY

BINGO

belli Cell ~ltyn We••· 304-

88~28415.

A•ocl•lan for Reterded Citl...,. Yrglnlo it toel&lt;klg
rnllurt ln.,icl.ltll to aulA with
9 Wanted To Buy
Clmp A.-che t»Mng_ h•d It
Ced• Llk•Junt 17·24. Coun;
TOP CASH paid fo&lt;' '83 modol lefor, R N LPN lnd Nurtlng
and n.-• uMd c.., S mtth .A...._Mt position• avallebl•
luick·Ponll.c,; 1911 Ea ..•n Food, lodging end Stipend
Avo.. Gollipotlo. Cit! 814-446- provided Apply 700Ma.k• St.,
2282.
Room 400. Parkenburg.
Mondlv·FridaV, 8:30-4:30 or
Compl•e houMhol• of lnr'!~
coii1·80Q.B42· 1S04.
turiJ &amp; ~ntlquat . Alto wood &amp;
coal .......... Swain's F~.rniture
a Auctlo" Thi•d • Oliva 12
Situations
814-446-3119.

Part Time Job With Network 2000
In Network Marketing
Coat '1 84•• (Includes training • materials)

Oh. 45783

POMEIOY -EAGLES
CLUB

v••• • .,..

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

For mora info write:
Scott Anderson
P. 0. lox 337

Jutt w~nt to e•n a l•tle .,,.
man.,.? Or would you Ike to
Mve • .__.? Eithw way Avon
c:.n help you bet hi beet you c.,

871&gt;3040. AA-EOE.

America's only 1OO"fe Fiber Optic lang
Distance Network
COMING TO THIS IlEA SOON!

Factor• Choh

Author•d John

lao.oo

M•on Co,. WV
Aru Code 304

mo.

4-16-86-Un

SAT...IGHT
6:30P.M.

Deere. N- Holland,
Buah Hog Farm
Equpment.Doaler.

•

M.. gs Co1.1nty
Ar. . Code 114

SUNDAY CALLS

304'871&gt;1429.

v.u.,.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.,

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.

NO

Telephone Solicitor nMded.
Work t\l'lning houra. C.l 814992- n11 bMwetn 9:00 a.m.
.. d 15:09 p.m.

MT or MLT ASCP
MUIIt ro•te •U POI.UOM Md
tectk»M. Clll Pl....-.t
Hotpkll, p. .onnel office 304--

AUCTIONEER
Winter now ~oklng
spring ul•. 17
rt ..... Phone 304--273-3447
Revenw100d. W.Va.

PH. 9'49-2801
or Res; 949-2860

614·662·3121

110.00
115 .00
126.00

Gallia County
Ar.. Codel14

LIMESTONE
HAULED .

411/89/tfn

following telephone exchanges ...

2·7-Letln Felli
949- Racri'!a
742-RI.IIItlnd
117-Cootvile

"At ltasonablt Prices''

EvENINGS

II. S. IT. SO IAR
GUYSVUI, OliO

'Classified pages cover the

e•3-Pen•nd

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

992-2269

SAliS &amp; SEIYICE

Aa1• ere tor ~on•CI.ItNe runa, broken upd~lwfll bech•ged
tnr ear.h riw 11 "perate •d•

Pom•ov

BISSELL
BUILDERS

e~ep•l.,ce n~sery.

AVONIIIIr-ll&amp;hirlaySpen.

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
Referen ...

Ptoplt cllll you. No
Call (r•
fundtblol1 · el8-489-lfi87Eo&lt;t
Kll22 7 doy~
ordtr1.

AVON· All " - · Col .-llyn
we . . . 304 882-21Ui.

8t Vicinity

OIIGON IAIS, CHAINS
IY AN SEIVICI Cltnll
Parts &amp; Service .on
AI Makes.

BILL SLACK

BOGGS

21·31WOADS
17.00

15.00

17 ond 34. Colt ooll ... l14-446-

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

•FIREWOOD

Phon• (614) 992.2922

DAY BEFIIAE PUBliCATION
-11,00 A.M. IATUADAY
- 2 :00 P,M MONDAY
- 2:PO P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 ,00 PM. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M. THURSDAY
' - 2 ,00 P.M 'FRIOAY

0-15 WORDS
14 .00

379- Welnut

7

•310.-DIIy Prae~ttlng. Phone

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
YAIDIIAII IIOWEIS
ECIIO SAWS I n . .IIS

VISA· MASTERCHAAGE

Btruatu.-1 M•ch•lm, J.t Me-

c.ttei4· B4:J.nu

MARCUM C

··-oy

w... llaln,

992-2284

108 High St,.rt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

RATES

I

110

treinlng provided in •"- followIng . . . tlyou qusNfv. Aw!Mion

ehanlm. Aviation electronlts
end Avll'tlon Apprentlc.hips
arlllble now. Mutt be Mtween

Call 992-2772

FABIIC SHOP

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associates

·A cla..ifred IIWert. . menl piKed m The Daily Sentinel!~ ·
cept - tl•lified diapt.v . Buain•• Card 1nd leglll notic•l
w jll alae appe11 tn the P1. Ple•ent R•Mr end the Galli·
poha Deity 'Tribune, reach•ng oYer 18.000 hom11.

$33 .00

MASTERS .TUXmO RENT AI
DRY CIUNING SEIYKE
SCISSORS SHARPENED
usm SEWING MACHINEi
AITERA110NS
SING£1 AND WilT£
SEWING MACHINES
SINGII XNmiNG
MACHINES

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

•f1•

1 MONTH

614·915·4180

GOVERNMENT JOaS
011.040.·fSI.230 y-. Now
l*lnQ. Colt II FILE ERROA
Avf•ion WOrkln Ntecled. Paid

GaM found in L(!_ng:Bottom .,...

Sl!fVILI!S

"Ads outside Meigs. G.llia or Muon counti• must be pr•
paid.
"Receive 1.50 ~iscount for ads ,_.din adltanc•.
"Free •d• - Giveaway and Found ads under 16 wordt 'NIII be
run 3 d-vs 11 no ch•ge.
•Pnce of 1d tor all capnat IMtltr'l is double pnce of ad cost .
•7 point line type ontv 1.1Md.
•sentinel •• not raponslblt tor tfrOJs after tint d., . IChedli
tor errors firtt day ad runs m p..,.r ). Clll before 2 :00p.m.
pUblic•hon to meka correction.
d.,.
•Ada th• mu.st be paid in adv•nce are
C1td of Th8t1kl
HIPPY Ads
In Memorttm
Y•d Sal•

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS

Paotor Jameo E. Keeoee

Basham Building

Ovor ITO hoplo 16S.OO
Ptr Game
U&lt; #DDS-ll ..
2·3-tr.

POLICIES

'

WEDNESDAY 7 :00 P.M.

FREE ESTIMATES

HAVE IIRIENCI ,

•LIGHT HAULING

, _ per bin., sess1on.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

TUESDAY PAPEA
WEDNESDAY PAPEA
THURSDAY PAPEA
FRIDAY PAPER ·
: suNDAY P'AP E~

SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
SUNDAY 7:00P.M.

GU.N

· Wo

'

MONDAY PAPER

llown IMulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

I . We can riPCiir alltl rt·
I'
' core radiators ond
l'IIUIS. Ll. 6:45 P.11.
heater cores. We can
SUN. Ll. 1:45 P.M.
DOOI PIIZI
also acid bol alltl rocl
2 H.D. FREE with COUJIO. .Id
pun:hae of min. H.C. Pack· ' out rotliators. We aha
repair Gas Tanks.
•~ Lim~ I coupon P" cus-

• The Area's Number
1 Marketplace

COPY DEADliNE -

EVERYONE WELCOME

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9871

Classified

. . '

ltpkxament Windows

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

ments . may be examined in
the office of the owner.
Bidders roqulrlng spoclflco-

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

525 North Seeond
Middleport, Ohio

4·11-1 mo. pd.

.er•, Form of Propoul. Form
of Contract. Spocltlcltlont
and other Contract Docu-

•

Vinyl Siding
SeaiiUss Gutter

4otthoDIIioyDu-. 119UH«
AW• Rd. n•t to k.mlin.

Lott:vldntty d Fifth snd lincoln
Ito. In Mldcloport ..,Aptlllttl\
tong-haired whke • w . .lng
brawn fiM coli•. Anew... to
Kit. Cllldo pll. CoN 114-9927144.

EcMoln

opened
and
rNd aloud
at
t:OO P.M.
Ooyllght
.ovlnga
l~~~~_!!tt!~~ Tim
a on Moy 8 , t 9881n the

Arrangements for having
another Jitney Supper in July
were discussed at the recent
meeting of the Bashan Ladies
Auxiliary.
The meeting was opened ' by
Becky Pu!ilns, president, with
Lou Pitzer giving the treasurer's
repQrt, and Kathy Riley giving
the secretary's report.
The group also discussed the
possibility of an Ice cream social
in June.

Mostic - Certaintttde

the pain out of
d0
pal 1 I.e
nt Ill• t me
It for you.
VII' IEASOIIAILE

3/ 31/8811 mo.

of

"

INSULATION·

HOIIIPilna 6.111 tirM .piiCIIIIians.
Nop.:tlmo•pth:otlo.. wll ..
oc-od. Apply Mon...,, Tu•·

...,, awo..,-.aotw-21

6 lost and Found

FREE ESTIMATES
Tab

949-2969

Public Notice
POMEROY.:... PEACOCK AVE.
-A neat 2 story l4 bedroom
LEGAL NOTICE TO
home with basement. Gas FA
BIDDERS
heat - carpet throoghout.
Sealed propoula bearing
!J;rge yard lor children. Call the tMie of tho work 111d the
lor appt. PRICE REDUCED name of the bidder will be re·
10%. WI&gt;S $17,900.00.
1eeived In the office of the
Henry E. Cleland
992-6191
Jean Tru sse II ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner .. ... 992·5692
Jo Hill .............. 98S.~6
!lflice:.......... ,.... 992·2259

H£AnNG

Now location:
161 North 5tcond
Mldl'hpart, Olio 45760

eCUaTOM KITCHIHI. lATHS

BRADBURY - Close in, but
out ol town. Garden area, 3
bedrooms. outbuildin&amp; front
&amp;rear porches and some new
carpetihg Part~ new root.
$20,000.00.

INTIIIOI-EXTEIIOI

NO SUNDAY CAUS

3~20·'11·1 mo.

NEW LISTING- RUTIANO
- 3 bedrooms. bath, frame
home, $25,000.00.

PAINTING

VICTORY
Bi\PTIST
CHURCH

Help Wanted

-D.... o.-. of Oollpollo it,_ '

...... Gallip-olis ........ ..

Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS·
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS.
ETC.

NEW LISTING- POMEROY
- SPRING AVE . - Old
irame house on 100xl20
lot. $6,500.00.

Bashan auxiliary meets

446 4524

992-6155 .

NEW LISTING- POMEROY
-LOCUST ST.- Old frame
house
on 40x120 lot.
$5,000.00.

A silent auction was held at the
help pay for the lobby redfC~&gt;ra­
March meeting of the Women's
tlon . Information on the sa1e may
Au&lt;dllary at Veterans Memorial
be obtained from Jessie White at
Hospital when the group met I~ 992-2939.
the conference room.
. At the. next meet in~. to be held
Plans for the bake sale and . Tuesday all: 30 In the conference
soup sale were discussed as well room, there will be a plg-ln·a·
as the rummage sale to be held In poke a uctlon. Jessie White and
Elberfeld's Warehouse on Me- Ll bby Fisher will be the hoschanic St. on May 4 and 5. Money tesses for this meeting.
from the rummage sale will go to

Slinderella meets

lEN'S APPUANCE
. . SERVICE
915·3!61

Weaving Cl11te1
OPEN MOST SATURDAYS
IO:CIO 11l5:00
PAM llaiiO lH • OW Nil

- 3 bedroolns, ,IIVrng room

.

•Ranges •Freezers
•RIIfrlgarators
"Mutt k ltpair..lo"

Large Suppty of B11ket
Weaving Suppll•
Sign up now for B11ket

992-2269

'

DEAD 01 AUVE
•W..hera •Drv••

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

101
E. Main

ment of grage hyacinth In a boot
shaped vase. Betsy Horky ma!le
an arrangement of white (.laffod·
Us and grape hyaeil'lth In a pink
swan shaped- vase and bridal
wreath and daffodils in a milk
glass container.
Grace French. an active
member of the club since Its
early days and member qf the
Methodist Church, Middleport
Literary Club, and granilmatron
of tbe Eastern Star, was honored
with a memorial service by
Nellie Zirkle.
The meeting concluded with
the reading of Shopping in
Heaven's Grocery Store" by
Mary Skinner; , . ,
..
· Refreshmenis' 'were served by
Mrs. Skinner and Mrs. Zirkle.
Table daffodils In a sliver bowl
with white tapers and silver .
l,
candelabra carried ··~
out
the decorations. Mrs. Arnold presided at
the coffee service.

meeting

Giv•way

...

c:

h~

The Daily

Middleport, Ohio

f
0
d
4
~========;r.:S=e=-=r=v=i=crr.:
·
=s==::::::::~e=r:;;e;:::::====il
~:~~:.:;:
:
u~vLINDA'S
J&amp;L
WANTED

Guests noted

---Quirks in the news--garlic.
The rest 'o f the yard is a giant
playground to the three preschoolers living there and a spot
to relax and socialize !or the 14
adu lis. Two are married and In
their 30s. The rest are single.
The four liouseholds - com·
prlslng both homeowners and
renters share a washing
machine, a computer, a large
bike rae)~ and baby-sitting
chores. Eventually they want to
buy a home together and make It
a "common house" for the tiny
community.
The common house would
·serve as a place where the
neighbOrs could share commun·
lty dinners, baby-sltdng or socla·
blllty when they do not have a
desire for privacy.
'1t'a a thing from the '608, but
It's not a commune," Waite said.
"We all still have our lndMdual

Ora Watkins, Nellie Watkins to
Columbus Southern Power Co.,
Right of way, Salisbury.
Jeffrey L. Tillis, Debra J. Tillis
to Paul A. Musser, Deborah MusRobert E. Musser, Roberta
Musser, .2}, Rutland.
Hazel drnahan by Executor,
Nancy Bobb, John Par10ns,
JoAnn GilmOre Par10n1 to Ruth
Simpson, \4 Interest In oil and
gas, Sutton.
Wm. Walters, Brenda s. Walt·
ers to Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
right of way' salem.
Raymond F. Burns, Ruth m.
Burns to Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
right of way, Salem.
Elster C. Metheny, Ellen L.
Metheny to Southern Ohio Coal
Co:, right of way, Salem.
·
Dale D. Rowland, Martha L.
Rowland to Southern Ohio Coal
·
Co., right of way, Salem.
Dannie R. Jacks, Wanda L.
· Jacks to Henry Hartman, Nara
Hartman, parcel, Chester.
Wald Hayman, Alma Donna
Hayman to Rhonda Sharp, par·
eels, Sutton.

Pomeroy

4

Middleport Garden Club
conducts recent ·meeting

Fish fry
CHESTER - The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department Is
sponsoring a fish fry at the
firehouse on Saturday, April 22,
from· 4 to 7 p.m. Dinners will
1nclude a fish tall, french fries,
cole slaw and beverage. Pie and
cake will also be available.

Distria Science Day winner named
'MIDDLEPORT - Sheryl R.
ThOma. daughter of Guy and
Ellen Thoma, New Lima Rd .,
Rutland. received a superior
rating, ·for her project Solar
En&lt;:rgy, Solar Roller in . the
Dis tr!ct 12 Science Day held
recentlY. -at Ohio University In
Athens.
Th'oma will now compete In the
41st annual State Science Day at
Oh io Wesleyan University on
Sa turday with more than 800

Monday, April 17, 1989

c.•

304-&amp;711:

~-~-.-..:-.-=.:--....
-.-:-....-....-"'...,"' .
- · · K-. · ' - • I mi. oil '
lit.
7-lt- l!un. CoU e14o • •
3t'J.7182.

IJOYIIINMINT 1•10 VW.
... htn 1100. , . . . . . . . .
- c...... CltooiYa. ...
ptu.
·~· ...
_111. .
10. . ..,.
bl.l-101

•;&amp;;r,•

...•·

1111,,114•• ... - .........
Olllo. Clll 814-•'J. ·
7711.•117-.,....
.

a...r.a

�•

•

Pag~

31

'

8-The Daily· Sentinel

Hom•

for

·LAFF·A·DAY

Sale

- l l r t - - ho-lor aolo
o r - " " " - · houao. Splk
...... 3111,141120foml¥""""
1100f, vtnyl
oldn&amp;
3 plua
- · .........,. :Z0.40 in
•aund poel With aheflw houP,
alty .,d Gr- eohoot dlatrlct
~ .. in tho 4D'a. Coli 114-44!10112 oft• llpm.

51

-~
~

w..

extrl nlaa MeldowbrookAddilion. clll aft• 1:00 .. d

k -~ 30•17"741 a
-·~
- ·

liD'•. · ~ nd
pool,manyMtl'lt,low80t,e.tl
8 room hou II. 2

10

304-411-1597 fDr intori'Nitk)n.

1988 21b.ll ...ouae, 2 c•
n~r-e. 3 br :z· bill'- t.mi...

• '
,.,
..,
robm. l*'ltrel air. full lenglh
deck outbuilding. Appn:.. 1

•crt on Creb Creek Rd .
145,000. 304-171-30...

lots &amp; Acreage

Approx . 1 'h
Aodltpring~

flat ecrtt ·

Rd . Good loc:Mion.
2 ... 44 bulclnJ&gt; Call 814-992-

1114.

...,. dfor all&amp; Onetofhrtea-•ln
Rutl.,d T-nahip. Call 114-

192-3143 ott• 1:00 p.m.

•bt•

fence. fltt•.

~N!) f!IA1 ONJ...'{ CAl? CAN

a wao iMity. lntttl-

., .. .,.. Call
24 hr1. 1- 100-34&amp;-0141.

bedroom

&amp;Accai8Drlaa

44

A

partm&amp;nt

for
Two hou . . : I rooms and beth.
batement. u•-ae. l*ltral llir.
1orctd 111r furntce. Oth• il 4
roomt lnd blth. furnithed.
f~rctd air ~rniCie. Cell ·1149•9-273• or 81""9-49· 2836.
In Port'-'d, Ohio, • mil• from
R
Bri
9
old
.vMSwood ckle. 1 .,....
·
· 3 blldr~. 2 b.l:t., dining
room.
k~chtn, tU kitc:Mn liP·
.
. ... ~. H
llv'
PI ltncet •n UOt
mg
room. full beltrMnt. nWlftv
e.p..:td. plenty •rdandglrdtn
apace, fT.. gM. 1360. per
month. Cell 814-843-5309.

44

Apartment
for Rent

FUrnillled tfficieny. t150. util iti• pd , ah•• b•h. 701 4th.
Gtllipolill. Cell 1114-448-4418
tfter ?PM .

Furn .. hed Apt., 1 BA . t240.
utlkl• pd., 920 &lt;tth. GaHlpotio.
Cell 114-4411-4418 aft• 7PM.
l.)'t~rnished.

1 BR. 322 Third
Ave., no p•s. CaR I 14-446-

3748"' 2111-1903.

g-. tffidenc:v with
c•p• •d ..,pli.-.c:.. Ideal tor
one ar two p. . ons. On Third
Awe. 1185 mo. C.H Rick.

Nice Ill

114-441!-2002 .... 114-992·
3IO&amp;•ft• e.

Now accepting tppll-=-:iona for
2 btdr'oom tp.-t"*1h. ~lly
c•p•ed. IPPIIrla., wat• end
tr•h P'dcupe provided. Mtint•
fr• lhlmg dase to lhD~
~g, blnU .. d scflooll. Far
more intormltiDn clll 304-812-

n., ..

Clblnet1.

Rent

n-

Gllrege apt. 3 iJrn'ed. rooma &amp;
blth,. waahw. dryer, air, cte~n,
no oMs. Rtf. &amp; Dtp. reefed. Cel

614-4411-1619.

,,

79

Aototlller, like fiiiW . 8 HP, r ...
tine. 3 spd. forwt~rd. 1 rev ... e.
UOO. Cali 614·4411-8810.

55

Pets

for Sale

Merchandise

Toblcco poundage for It••·
2.420 lbt. at t -. 35 P• lb. Call
114-2411-6421.

AKC Garman Sheptt.d pupa.
Black &amp; ttn. Shota Ia wormed.
Cell 114-245-6133
4pm.

•fl•

3 adult AK C Reg' H. O.rman
Shepherds. t100 eech., 2 AK c
Aeg'td. German Stlepherd puppin. UIO oach. Call 814-4*88087.
'

AKC roglotorod Cock• ep.,lal
pupa. t1150 tach. AKC regia·
tarod ChM·CIIow pupa. •110
tiCh. Cellll14-381·8190.

Trailer tpace for rent kl Middt•
port Mth vi-.v of river. C.U

814-992·3194.
Farm land for rent. 115 ttere1
boHom ground It Darwin, Ohio.
Ceil Don Lombert 814-992·
7&amp;03.

Sal a: 1971 Ford Flatbtdton
truc::k, 16.000 orillnll mil•.
$1100. 2 portllble 5,000 BTU
apace hntn, t140. etch.
Slttlite Dith. like naw, W~h
video receiver Md sttrtO procnaor. 30-31 ch.,neta, t430. Cell
Of

Tlklna dtpoaits for AK c regia·
tered Slberi., Huskevs ell blue
eyed, lllke pick . -. 304-6752193.

814· 992·

AKC German Shept.d mal•
pups. black aniltan, 1200.00or
1250.00 aolid blade. lttar clle.
614-8811-9086.

3. piece bali-oom tufte. 5 pie&lt;:e
MaPle dinettatat.' Oaybtd. Call
814-992·8687.

QUILTS WANTED
Buying old quitts. Mutt be 26
ve•s or older. Hind quilted Only,
Any condition. Ptying top doll•
cah! C•ll collect 304-472·
151192. Will come to you.

57

MI•Fender Sup• twin

49

For leaae

Ford 15000 dlta ... nctor toots.
h_, 11 p• btllt. Htwldnl rHie.
.,dri atwe- t400. • mile. CaU
114-44.. 1118.

J D 30 hydooulic bale ejector. J D
4 row front mounMd e~~ltNatora.
3 ~idler IMie wagons. Ctll
114-2&amp;11-1011 .

Cav••

21 ft .
WtFn cemper.
M'nin• H conAian•. 1 Ollv•
1510 diMII triiCior. 1 Fennlll H
trKtor. 4 bon om plow . I

-n

lndkliduel gu iter l••ona. be·
glnnerl,
guttllrilt. INicardis Musk:. 814-441-0117.
Jeff Wemsi!IV inttructor. 1144411-8077. Umk~ o_i....,.

•riou•

· SplnM-CoMole PIMo •rgk'l
W.,t_.: RnpoMfbf• p ..y to
tllke aver low monthly prffMIItl
on apinet-&lt;:Onaale plana. Can be
,..,.. loctll¥. c.tl Mr. While
1·800-327·3345 •••. 101.

18 ft •bov. •o..md pool complete, 304-895-3470.
PIH1tblellahted tign with IItten
U99. 00. l'roo daliY. . till April
22. Plastic 1111• 147.50 bo)IC •
1· 801).133-1411 onytimo.

58

Wh... chair. good oon«&lt;tlon.
Priced e11. 304-882· 2131.

Allla .Chal,_.a M2 Gl..,_., 4
row corn head JJA4s 13 II bean
h•ed. •c cond. c..l 304-93720.11.
-Holland7fthor'*'d good
CORd o304-273-4211.

livestock

will-

flo,.hod

""*·

Hlu•.

U t i _ , 2 Ill ho-. lg.

....... -~~' -dolod.
llctwoll lohool Dlat•lot .
· - - - - Ctlt14-449-t320.

·--·--0...
.,..........
_ _ _ ... -

......... for

- · ...... .......... Cll

2 -.....
Carpotod.
Ni&amp;» aattinllorLoundry
faalttl• . . . . . . c.tl 814-912-3711 . IOH.

CiriiOioua lv lng. 1 m d 2 bedroom tp.rtments •• Vlll-o•
Manor ond lliY.,Ido A...,·
m.,tt In Mldclapon. From
*112. Cal 114-19J.7797.
2 -

........r . ._

" -.
. ; . , - " " ' 1. . .

.... -

...... - .............
· CM
114-HJ.

.

1 bo·- .... for - · 1221
11..

..........

._
..,...,, Nw-.•aaaNe

~~~
- 'Mill~,

_......_
51

Housal1old Goods

SWAIN

AUCTION I. I'UIINITUIII 12
Olivo .... - - NM· ......
I po. ·
Ulvlrltl
- - .,...·
1.. ..

~··din·
'*·
............- ......
---ion
....
......... witt.

•tertiRI.· __til . flrtollnere

Wcrdn-. 21th. 7 ,30
PM, Fev.ne Co. FM.oundl,
W•hington CO&amp;mhouM. Slllingi
200 head of Dwuc a Hemp.
/ Duroc cro11-llre•ds . Aem.mber 2out afthlpMt3ye. .
t~ Chempkm lerrow 11 the
Ohio S11te Felr Jr. Show Wla
purch•od at tho ltntlor Pig
Show, plua many coYnty
winners. Aoa«e.ntlw. Subine.
Cllil814-113-2381.

Pur•td limmentel bal, ebout
110 lbl. Alto 7 month old
boosl• Call 114-4411-2724.
Good dt.n. Nliat•td qut~rtw
hora•. C8ll 814-3I.. HI1 or
114-3811-8823. .

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

-

·-

....

IICXnJM'D'N.......
T
\~ C\WlMIWI?

, .... """'"'
~

'Q

114-4411-0710.

1985 Ford E.:ort. 43.000
mJI•. Mctlltnt con.-6on. I lee*
with IJI'OV intariot. UIOO. Coli
114-2111-1311 me 7p.m.

Home
Improvements

1978 lmernMional Scout. New
tlr-. runt good. t1000 firm.
I14-182·11S8.
1178 Oldl Cutl•• lupr.-ne
Coupe. hctHent condition. 2110
VI. AC. niW drta. 1100 mJI•.
*1800. Caiii14-V9:Z.8110.

1181 Opal OT. F..-, _.,od,
rtbult ..gin• Mutt .... 114117-3-CU
11130I.Cud. . C._,L 4cyl..
•to.. Nnl gootl. Atldnt • 21500.
Alao 1179 Ford pi .... p. SmaA
alna. outo..
A...ina
UliO. Caii114-V92-7941.

"'""-d.

1974 !I Cornino 310 out-lc.
PI . P 1.· AM -FM' c . .tftll. •
1

Mlchtlln ....... on N.lv rima.
70~ 000
E-.11.-rt oondli·
tion. UIOO. 114-1149-3003.

mM•.

Uaed tr~n•mM:aton. 30 _,.
gu•ontao, 304-175-1001.

1987 Pontiac Grond Am turbO.
304-17!1-3819 oii•I:OO.
'13 Chooy Col ....lty. Pl. PS.
aruillt, r - . . .o.-r. power

Ia..._

air, oell aft• 1:00, 3041711-8147.

114-4*8-1771 .

Hor far •lo. 114-849-2170.

Ground eW CDrn ti.OO P•

100. I'Jor..,·aWDociMnFerm.
Rt. 31.' 304-937·2011. 1 :00 ..
12:00 dally.

85 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Dooelb aOod oorn ond ellcjfo
304-175-110l

72

TNcka for Sale

JAMES
JACOBY

~'"-ITanlghl
e Cll UIA Today
ae®M'A'I'H
e 0 di _JJioCoiFP•I""IIIylfl Q
tiJ Cnwallfe

·•

CB Major Loegua laMball
• CfOOII ll1tl CIMIM
7:35 Cll llnlotd And 8on
1:00 ()) MOVII!: Tile lall Day

71

1811

=-·-• .,_
---~

-

-·

.......""!_two-tone paint.

::.~~-

Cell

1112 llonoul LoCor, 2 • ..

• .............. boclir - -

•... -~ - ..
114-.,...,47

2 ton Dedgo ftrOhod wllh
hydroullcliftpta 70,000aotuol
mil•. hull~~nt condition.
UIOO. Calll14-949-2101 .

ft•-

1177 Ford Sul*oab F1eO
Goodoo-n. •1000
Calll14-742·2011.

73

_

clol - .. orull&amp; -~ - ·
'"""
· - · rUinlrlt lluatcrO

~

•'

1171 ,ordVon, goodaoncltion.
!-ar)l wort von. 1700. Ool~
, _ Colll14-4ll1-110:1.

1.1· 17

itfJ

EEK AND MEEK

1:30.

(2) 1111 ....,., llepelttacl
G111mpa asks ghost Granito

Point, Wllhtrl. dryera and

2' NIC Mondap N

Mvan Bl-op ond ....,in1&gt;
Htndaraon. WVe. W.p.,e«tv•
wava. parldnglota,
.... - ... 304-1711-24e .

_.lnJ: ,,..

scheme.
&lt;D (J) Leeming Itt Allllllca

·-•arlo•.
Coli K.an 304-1757237, Rt. 1 loa 10 A, Point

Epsodo diiCU&amp;UI the major
probltlmo of ettractlng
IOIChera. C

..

a • o llltlfPhy 11town

InvestigatiOn of a lederal
proucutor umo Millo a
d181t1 thrNI. (R) Q
(!J Lany King Uvil

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

84

·.

A N!W FAMILY
JEST MOVED IN
DOWN TH' ·ROAD,

Elactrical

&amp;

I

MAW

Refrigeration

rLL GO
SORRY
A CUP OF

"'''~''"' II

'•

IT'S

. YOU JEST GOT

N!I6HIOR'-Y

PIV! POUNDS !I

YOU DON'T NEED

TO lORRY

NO SU.ItRII

Meal. . EIMrfc. R•idlntlll or
24 - · .........
Cell 814-37.. 11a3.

co...........

A•hllntlll or oomnwal81 wirIng, New tevloe or repelra.
Uc.naed elec:llrld.... Rl-.our

gl...

•

-.
-----.....
·-··-......
110::$ . ....

=:::;. (,_ •

~.

=.rr=·....,. ., ~·no
merna.

,., Clllnlll- .tiled. far Arflllln""

una ,...,_....-.. ~ ....
Clrtlpllpt I fllllutw today. M. . .110 ,.._

.....
a..&amp;""" a

DIUIIfttoalla . .u

matter 111M lt8l .,_. parturOinQ you

ttone. If wMI

II

1U1m of p

good.

=

dlllrl II wtll*1 tile

II~. )'OUI' " " -

took. 11

~Td''fi!.-11
9 .L. Inti
Tom'• -.rena go.- too fir;
liaCidlraa. (A)

"·
suit was not splitting so there we~ ·
on.lY eigbt tricks. But ~urely East, who: :
bad bid hearts and shown up with four•
diamonds, could be put under pres- ,
sure So out came the A-K·Q ohpades · ·
forcing East to discard. U East shed~ beart, declarer could play any red ;
card and East would have to give up ·
the last two tricks to the A·Q of clubs. ·
u East parted with the nine of elubs, ·
declarer would make nine tricks by
playing to the ace of clubs drOpping '
East's kina.
'
. ·'

.
,. '

...
'

IEa=rulan

•.

'

...
~

_,
'

6 Songbird
811owler's

~~he! .!;~~~~;.

DAILY CRl'PIVQUOID_;, Hen'l M to wor11 U:

~

...

.

•

....
4117

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

'

One letter IWIIII for IIIOther. In thil urnple A Ia !lied
for the tine L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sinlle letten,
IP(IItrophel, the llfllth IIIII flll'nlltlan of the words are all
ldnta. Eadlclay the c:ade rettenan tlffete!IL

.

CKWPIOQUOIIS
MDTU

RNCKA(II

wvu

T LEN

(!)-011

• , .. CIItltllllr

.

.,

em (J) e(JJ • eo

'
'·r '' Ta

I ;

..

. . . . . Coullbi
11:00 ()) IIW'nl'l I lillie

......
fJ:!:; :;;;.••

Opening lead: • 5

4 Silkwonn

(!) Tile . ._
lrtln
Examine current IYidtncl
!hat lilt bralnt of mala and
lemalo miiiiiCIIIII, Including
humena, ora dlffertnt
anatomically chlmlcally, and

a....

Pass

Pass

3 Glutted

during lila .,. ol Theodort
ROOHVIII.

Johnny' a plan

I NT

ZMuse
of poetry

llltldlclne1 and gowmment .
lntaroell In child hUith .,.,.

..

!NT

language

10:ao m Caflna Porr.-w••
c.-bamlne prti..,IIVI

«

w....... lwtmmlng

lila bucolic Apple

~~(~Hell

trcMlraph, cfo this .-papar, P .O . now on Ill way to being resolved . The
BoK 91428, Cleveland, OH 101-3428. end reouito lhould please you , even
though they won't be what you hopefulBe sure to alate y~r iodlac sign.
TAUIIUI (April ....., 20Jidau you ly onllclpoted.
get today thll have dellnlle, practical ICDIII'IO (Oct. 14-Nov. Ill) People
BERNICE
appllcellona
will be worthy o~ turth~ with whom you uooolate today could
BEPEOSOL
collalderatlon. Sound lhem all adviHr&amp; · hove a stronger Influence then usual on
. or counselor• whoee opinions you your lhlnklng, 10 It behooveo you lo select companlona who have something
respect.
GEMINI (.., 21-.lune 20) You 're pret- conllructlveto offer.
ently In an lnterettlng cycle where you IAGmAIIIUI (-.a-Dee. 21) Try 10
might be able to genorete addHionaf In- give priority today to mllltrt that are
·~
come or . .rnlngl from other than your meaningful to you llnanclolly. Thlnge
usu11 IOUrcet. 11'1 time to lnvettlgata lhould wor1c out mort favorably for you
now lhlrt they will II they era pottponad
the untKplored .
CANCIII (J- 21.......,. Ill) II YO!' ....,_ IOI_d....
ciale with peoplo tD&lt;ley ideAls, CAJINCONI (Dec. 1l-olaft, 1t) II you
limo and 11mbl1lonl arellmller to yours, taka pride In t~ IIOkl you perform tothortl'l a po1olblllty eomethlng mutually dey lila quality of your- will Aprll17,1advant~o may r-'1.
, 11. Be oura-1 you do lleomethlng to
ln tho yeer you f!IIIY beCiorne In- LIO l.ltllr D-Atil. II) Amblllouo ob- whiCII you wNd be proud 10 eflbt your
- t e d In ..... related.,........... JectMI can be accomplllhed today,
1'111. ,., YOU may
turoa, either u 1 hobby or u .., eddl- prO\Otdad you put your Imagination to
good uu. Think creotlwly llld, II nec- haw an tJI'IIO'Iunttr today to .-pay a favor that I OOMidltlle frtencl IICintly
-v, dare to be dlllorent.
tlonal of · -· Ioiii YIIICIO CAifl, ala,L Ill 8omethlng did lor you. Wllln ~ raalproolta do..,
unuiual might datcatap toct.Y- cauld may occur today tltlt wiR ctlubw your . . . . . . . ., .• • paulllltl.
NUt In • 11111111 but llgnlllaant ltiYin- IIIIth In your '-'low man. Wltal tran- PIIDII(I'III.. 7 llt.,You'ranow
-lor you ......... Do not llkllt eplroa will,_ t1t1t an Uloolltela ea en11f1n1 a riiiiW hap IIIII pat1od, .o
tor granted nar 1ttoa lilt Ill
Ma· )llgh minded lllld trul'-lhy . . you don't put ct.mplrt on )'OUI' eiiii8CIB-

Pass

I Computer

(!J 1""*'11 Newt

General Hauling

Soatlc

DOWN

Foattvel 1 ~ of Vegas

El-icai, 304-1711-1711.

85

VldeoCountrl

Ill eCD llawi\WI MlchHI

'

East ·

Culbertson

,ram

THING TO DO!!

Pass
Pass

2NT

I.

39 ll-Day bea.ch c:-4-+43 llating
from birth
45 Crane
48 Incensed
47 Wide open
48 Quoter

10:00 ()) 700 Clull
(J) 11101' Oyntnullca
(l) Naaswakfa
(!) Letllr
PlllltiM
Using 1 homt vldlo camere.
fllmmlker Stew York
f8COrdl IICtiiH In the
loratll-occupled 111 11too111 In
an lrN of pOlitical llillion.

TH'

Norlb

fnrm)

Rich

38 -

11J Ptlma Time Wmtltng
1:30 • e CD Daalgnlttg Women

.'•

Weat

room

(JJ '8.L. lflyltet' AIC

MagicTouoll

1111 - • 400ouetorn. 8&gt;100 II I. II - · . . . lo&amp; Pocrla,
......... aog .. Col 114-4411- clntrnt. well•. lmmMiM•
1,000 or 2 . -....... del Ivory.
1411.
Cll 304-171-IJ70.
71 ... ullf . . IIOI.-·toh
P&amp;b 1a1u1 W•• llluNnolervloe.
.......
G- tiNe. - 1!1!- 7100 ..... tiiD. Cll 1,000 or 2.000 - · cloliYarl-.
, _ 104-179-11111 01 114aD4-179-1411 otlellt&gt;ot.

"" ..... Clll14-. . .111t.

At Tile

vlllege iosldenll get caught
up In 1 gem amuggllng

Plinting Comp.,y
let w cotor your wortd. lnt•~

Vulnerable: North-south
Dealer: East

I 0 St.•a hlrd
14 Ascertain 17 Checker
' 15 Inhabitant
piel·es
(sulftx)
20-Lattlce
11 Friend
part
(h.)
21 Mouths 21 Rushdle's 36 Mary
18 Food llsh 22 Sunday
"The - Moore
11 Beat It!
talk
Verses"
39 Harem
14 Layer
· (abbr.)
31 ReJ!ret
40 Newsstand
II Code word28 Make lace 88 Emulate
buy, for
· II Wheat
24 Drove
Henry
short
speclea
21 Pixie ·
Clay
41 Ms. Gardner
II Begin
Z7- tal
34 lnOuence 42 Shoot
30 Den
cocktail
by bribery from the
31 Cheer
28 Dressler 31 Having
32 DIIICover
role
84 Pistol (sl.)
-37lJ.S.
cartoonist

Myatary Movll R1lirlmant

MY D4.D THINK'S MY
MOM HAD 6011\ETI-IINISn::&gt; ro WITH IT,

NOT MY N,OfiA
ANDM6 .. . JU6T
MY DAD.

.AI 3
.AH3
.713

fllhrtc

=oftQot Advenlln
Cll •

Remadllllng. ,..., eddtiDnl. car·
pori:L 91•81• tnd clel*l. Fr•

J. J

.,

a

Johnny gets a history lleeon
frcim 9 .L. Q
1:00 • (2) 1111 MOVII: 'Aiound
Tile Worlcl In 80 ~ hll

etovoa. 304-S7.. 23tl.

...-11. . *• ...........

......

. . . grandeon.

awrastlea
• allMIIIend
Oue .
will\ • dlllmma;

RON'S APPUANCE IIIIVICE, ,

CARTER'I PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth Md Pint
Oolllpolla, Dhlo
l'tlona 114-449-31S8 or 1144411-4477

13

look alter his l'tlollela

hou.. oall 1.vlclng GE,. Hot ·'

SOuTH

ACROSS
7 Baby's
I Atl.a1·k
discovery
6 Pronounce 8 nusy
II Macaw
- beaver
I Z Tough
9 Threefold
qui'SUon
(cilmh .

PrirniNSWI

(G) (3:17)

-

.K9

1065

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Q]l DuckTIIII

• ....._Now
1:115 Cll MOVII!: DoCtor Zhlvegti

,.

.KQJ86
• Q 10 8 4

CROSSWORD

11J Murder, 8lw Wtole

.

Rotary or ctblt ·tool ctlllng.
Mnt..aaoompl.redtemedly.
P\lmp • ' • 1nd urva. 304115-3802

Call 114ol742- , 4:1..

, . , . . . ¥11 . .

(!) War 111t1 , _ In

The term •endplay' refers to what
happens when the last few cards are
played, but it also refers to tbe strate·
IY of putting a defender on lead when
he cannot exit without helping declar·
er. .Thla week we will examine thio
strateiY.
Althougb South was too strong by
some standards 10 open one no-trump,
it was fine _for him to have ~methtng
extra for hiS overcall. That s good Insurance in case partner is dead broke.
Havina arrived in game, South
ducked East's heart jack at trick one.·
East continued with the heart king,
which declarer .won. It was obvtous
that East held the outatandlna higb
cards for ~is opening bid,,so adiamond
to dummy s king, followed by a finesse
to tbe jack, was an easy play to find.
Tbe ace of diamonds disciOied that the

.

.AKQ

By Jameo Jaeoby

uput when he thinks hla dad
and Uaa are hiVIng 1 fling.

'f '

•s

.J

.

•Js

East put
under pressure-

. ; r i o u-tn Danny Ia

,.

Fetty Tr• TrimtNng, atump
........1. Call 304-175-1331 .

11 . . Ford XLT - - M i n i
Van . EaaeUent condition.

74

Cll Mat:Orvor

the dlfferances eboul how to
reduce ttta ~lk of nucltlar

..

RON'I T.. evlalon Service.
Hou• c • on RCA. Queur,
OE. Spacialing in Zon•h: CIIH
304-171·2381 .. 814-441124114.

Vana&amp; 4W.D.

........... ""'" -10.000

Tampa, FL (R)

Tile Nuclear Age Examlncl

Cor-try work. Pan elinJ&gt; dry · "•
wall, plumbing. .teatrioal. rwmo•
doling comploto. Coli 114-44117829.
.

Whh 1112 Chooy eo.......
11.000 mi., • dr. , ••· oon&amp;,
- · 11llltl. Cll 814-3792118 •171-DN.

I A . . . . . .. .

!rom
(i) •

'·

Jim'a Odd Job'a. lundtcks,
aiding. paJntln&amp; roofine. •• .,....
ter, buHclng. dozer wortL F,..
ootlmatoa. Coli 114-379-2411
or 814-2411-11830.

- ..1211.
olat- 24
. · .... 114-

""lolo IIIOComn 121, N,
· 11tll0. Col 114-ID•
H'la

World Cup Chlmp(Onahlp .

,.

Mac:Gywr drlvet In a
championship race and
confronts an old enemy. (R)

- · Cll

1171 Mertury ......... ....
..o d - . - .... in.
Calll14-. . . ., ..

hlmHII and lila Tanners as
stars ol black and willie fllm.

18 81 ChewroiM Scot'ttdale.

lllock I. • .,. Good con-n.
Cell 114- 4411-0441.

ootuol mM•· fUOO. C.H 1142411-123:1.
.

.,po r•
~
alar\
Cl
. 4 p IPIIAC,
- -AMIFM
·--

e (2) 1111 ALF AL.F Imagines
~ . . . Jumpllltl Volvo

Septic T.,k Pumping. dO, Ool ·
lia Co. RON EIIAKS INTER ·
PRIIES. Jackaon. Ohio 1·101).
137·9121.

..,r.
••oo..
82

1t71 Docloo von, •trolong._ 4

1ft

INRI (1 :40)

c-

1971 Ford plokup. 300 I
ltenct.d tr...gsion.
Cell 114-4411-0492 aft• epm

e

Auto's For Sale

.,d ..wing machine
,..,... pert:L .. d auppl-.. Pick •."~
up end delivery. Davit YIIIIUum
...
Cl•an•r. one hllf mit• up ''
Oaorgaa
M . Coli 114- -~
4411-0294.

..,~.,

EAST

WEST
.1086&amp;2
2
.97

()) Major L.Mgua letobel

.·

Pl.ont, W. Vo. 21110.

1177 CJ.I JHp, cv~. •100.
Cell 114-31• .,13 ott• Bpm.

Tr .t'hflllrl:i!IIHI

,.. !!!Mz..:r ..... -

1

1111 ~ 01

7:30. (2) '•""" Feud

ooti-11, oeii304-195-342S.

11~371-2109.

Mbttd h~r;. Square bel•. C•ll

:n.r.-:.+449-ltll ..

•

ea

7:116(1) Andy Grllltlh

...'

1178 VW lalrroco. Sh•p.
e1ooo. 1112 Ch.,y Cev•li•.
Sh•p. 11200. 1880Bonnevile. .
lh•P· uooo. eon 114-94&amp;2801 .

1879FO&lt;dF.1eosu. .cab. 3e1
onJ&gt; PS ,, PI, AC . *2100. Call

.-o,: ..... JIIIFI.'I*hm
- . .Claollo.
...... -.........
••.
.
. .'lot-

...........
.
.
.
..........
,.....
..-.Cilia,.........
;;-::11~

fi~Ul

84 Mor 111 ry Lynr&lt;. 49,000 mi.
Auto. Good oondhlon. Call

an

Fruit
Vegetables

•al•-

.,,,.hod

'4-

74:Z.24U

reverb amplifier. Call 814-446- . Hay for .... aqu.-e bal•. c.11
7781 'eft"' IPM.
'
aft• 7:00p.m .. 114-H:!-1531

""'it•

For

Musical
Instruments

For Sale: Fen dar Super t!Mn

Surplus, Army, Aentel, Denim
clothing, Sam SomerviHe's, Nu
Trail• lot for rent, MWtr Md · Ere WV, Junction lndap.,c:a
water furnished. 304-1175- ,Rood, Old Rt. 21 . Fri. Sat. Sun,
til 8 :00PM. N- Army
1078.
light weight, Army c.rn.,ftoga
far Turkey -on (Aprll2• • May
Camat·
20) BID •d
47 Wanted to Rent
II .... 304-273-685e.

rw•b empHfler. Ctll 114-4417781 aflw e PM.

N- Hotl.,d 410 hor bind 9ft.
Good running oonciUan. •1 100.
Cell 114-2111-1919.

17th Annual BtnlltV Pig U e;

;'Qo,i'87t;,o;l."'·

.,·.

s

NORTH
.743
.1074
• K6 2
.AQ82

(!J....,.I..
CBCitHrs
11J Miami Y1ce

SWEEP~A

Black ond ton hoelthr laagio
pu•es for Hie. Had ahots.
wormed. f26. Cell 114- 742·
2969.

AKC lh-·Apso puppi•. htd
vet ch~ad.

'•

__ _____...

63

~r

-&amp;RIDGE

frottuMQ
• Qll,'lllriHI'o Comp_any

;:
A o g e r s l a a e m • n l ...t •
Wcrtarprooftng.
;__.:;_

1149.

or

•lnl

NewaHour

111

••an-

FIJI blooded Germ., Shepherd
pups for ute. C.ll 114-446-

Fiah Tank. 2413 Jtckson Ave,
Point Pleuant. 30111-175-20113.
10 gelttt up t14.99 and 10 gel
complete t43.2&amp; . .

••

•

She shrugged, "I shop on the SPLURGE of lhe moment. "

(i) • Cll CufNnt Analr
&lt;D (!) MacNaM/ Lalnr

,•
.•

I.UEMENT
WATEIIPilOOFING
Unconcll6onll lt.tlme uu•.,..·
.... Local
-hod.
,... aoti-•. Colt oolloct
1·114-237-0481. d., .. night

.-rt.

56

Sprung - Clang - Valet - Fracas - SPLURGE

My girlfriend arrived home with ·an armload of packages.

())~

------ ·

Barn wood for •It: 100 .,.••
old. will sell all or
E ~etllent
cond, one inch thi&lt;:k boerda end

S•••

MobHe Home Ptrk.
Route 33, North ol Pom•oy.
I.Dts. rentala. parts, sal•. Ctll
114-992-7479.

81

Concrlte btoc:ka- •II sHI· ywd
ordtl~erv . Melon NOd. Gllllpollt Block Co .. 1231h Pine St.,
O.llipoUt. Ohio. Call 114-448-

Buy or SeU. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E, Meln Street. Pomeroy.
Hour1 : M.T,W 101.m . to lp.m .,
SundiiV 1 to 8p.m . 814·992·
2528.

SCIIAM-I.nS ANSWERS

.Top Card

Building M•erilll :
Block, briclc.. sewet" pipN. windows. Int . . etc. Clauta Winters. Rio G,.,dt. 0. C8ll 114246·1121 .

of

Country

Sc:rvccc•

(2) PM Mog

•

8 ft. alicia In tnrck carnpor,
•10o.oo. 304-41.. 1171.

Building Supplies

tlmbtra, 304-876-6765. ,

114·992·7811
6990.

by filli ng in ti-le miss ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

In Cincinnati

Q]l -

7:00 ()) Our llouH

Motors Homes

Comp• top lor ·eft plcku p tnrc;k.
UIO. CoR 114-4411-9304.

vt••

Park-lots avalllble. Call 8144411-0254"' 448·3843.

L-..1.-..1.-..L._.1.-..1.-.J

.
CB WKIIP In Cincinnati
IIJ Clnooft l!xprau
•Newc-try
1:16 (I) Ont Day At A 1'llna

&amp; Cempera

Furnished room. t126 • month.
All utilitill paid. Sh•• beth. 919 12 foot low-boy utility treiler.
Second Aw. Call 614-446- ,Call 814·441·9411.
3946.
Pine bark mulch. 3 cu. ft. begs.
Sleeping room1 with cooking. 12.00 each. 3 for t&amp;.oo.
A lao TraU• ap~~ce . All hook- ups. MJga.. s 12.60 .. ct.. Call 814CAll after 2p.m. 30 .. 713- 2111-1720.
1151 . Meson WV.
22 tnch . rur bag l...,n mower.
Clllafter lp.rn. 114-446-28715.
46 Space for Rent
Bern wood for •le: 100
old, will sell ell or pert. EJCtMent
For Rtnt : LarJPt one-c• g.-age. condition. 1 inch thick bo•dt
and tlmbera. 304-875-1785.
r...- of buMdtng
corner
Second end Pin• GallipoNa. CtH
814-4411-4421. 114-4411-4249 For ule: 17a.~ . ft. trail•. 10inch
plOw. potato plow , 3 point hitch
o• 614-4411-2326 .
for
Yard Gtrden Tractor.
Commscial lot w / snul build- 304-773-6131 .
in,_ corner Second &amp; Sycemore.
Pnme location for .nell busf. Sever.al boxea of Avon collecte·
btM. Buyer ta take all. Belt offer.
Call 114·881· 4340
114-992-2910,
446-1755.

Green Terr.:e Mobile Home

8

(f)3-2·1~Q

'•

45

Rt. 588 off 36 It Roctley. Up to
80 ft. trail•. Hook-upa. Rent
186/ mo.·includtl W'ller. Cell
814-4411-2114btwn. 81. 4.

I ~.' :"hat you c an lhink of 11--r,rs..::;,~,;;:_,r'--'T,..:c.'T,--i Q Complele lhe chuckle quoled
ZE L NO

CIJ lhowllz Today

Oragonwynd CaUery Kennel.
Persien and Siem•e•d Him•
lavWI kittent. Chow ltud ••·
wice. Call614-441-3844tft•7
PM.
.

n••·

counts at business mettlngs ,

(D llotlr l!laclrtc

•

Antiques

54 Misc.

.L......1.-.J__.J.--l

-

1...

.

One co-worker to another:

" II isn 't what you know that

a eDCBINril

2783.

53

~

K I T C H . .-

"'·s:-rl;....:;n:l4~r,;....;.;.1-it ;_!

e Cll AIC Newt Q

Cll

'&lt;

Complete hou ..hold furnithlngt. 'lh mii•Jerrlcho. 304all575-

2801 .

Hotef-814-oMI-91180.

PERFECT CONTENTMENT

....
·'

··~~= NIQitlly Newt

N- and uaod lurnlturo and
IPpliCiftCII . C1ll 114-4467 672. Ho'-''• 9-1 .

Groom and Supptv Shop.Pet
Grooming . All brttdl ... All
llylu. lemt Ptt Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-448-0231 .

Roo rnli for ,..,.. week or month.
Stlr'tlng at •120 • mo. Gellia

I!Jihe-111

-r-r

1:011 (I) Allae

Efficianqr tpt . Ideal for 1
p.-son.. Mobile home betow J ~---:--::-.,---­
town ov...tooldng river, CA •
Large coin collection and llfge
he•. Ref, Call 814-~0338.
P8P• rnon• collection . Best
raqonable offer. Celll14-949-

Furnished Rooms

,_.C)(

Vellett Furnhure

-agg•

Furn. Apt. nut to lillrary
parkmg A A .C . Ref. raq'ed.
Alit able for 1 penon. Cal
614-446-0338.

MORE COULD A
PERSON ASK FOR ? TriE
wARM SIIN ON 'fOUR FACE ..
'(OUR D06 ON VOUR LAP...

\

BUDGET f!'RICES AT JACK· 1450. 114 - 388 - 9773.
SON ESTATE$. 138 Jldtaon av_..g1 .
PUce from 1183 • mo. W.,k t'o =:-:-~:---:--:-:--ahop .,d -·~ 11" .....
.a..r.a-oot - 1 • - • d-r aot,
"JVY-· ..--v white.
'""""" Nke ....
,_.
.,...
2588. E.O .H.
new·QOO. Ken mora
Wllher· •7a. Ken mora we1her,
Tare Townhou" ep.-tmentl· 2
- - 191 N
7
wec_....
· orr,drytr· • 6.
BAl., 1 Ya baths, CA., dia· Hotpofmd,...r-t9 . GEweshtr.
hwtsher. dfapoe~~l , prNI'tt en- liken...,, Harvnt gotd-t175. 30
doted p•io. pool. pi-ground. · 1 ~ ~~- 1c
•9• 30
Wit•. MWer, &amp; traah1.&lt;*.1ct.d.
nun -.,.r. r•011- · u.
inch
Sl""~"' t2S9 P• mo. Cel itl~lci rM1ge. w+tit• tthe. 30
n..,, e ec:trfc renge, •vest
114· 7850.
· ~d-•71. Rtfrigentor. fro It
bee, coppenon.-t91. AtfrlgerDowntown 1 IR , tpt. nWl'IV etor. frorrtrN, whtt•t1150. Rt·
rtdllcor8ttd, Clrplt, compl•• frlger•tor . aide - by-side ,
kitchtn. AC. Parking. No pea.
IIV•cedo-12•0. 0.. rwnae. 30
Deposit. Cell 81 ... 446-0139 .
inch. white, ~~~~ l.,al-1176.
""
-·
2 IR . ...t .,
plush c•pllt.
AIJI)filftCft, Upp• River
...,.
Ad. 814·448- 7398
new ,-lnt, utlitl• ,-rti•ly ,-id.
11761 mo. Call304-176--6104. Uud eppll~nce•. Washers, dry875-6381. 671&gt;7738.
ers, ran get, refrig«atora. microwav• oven•. Kan't Appll.,~.
Aptrtment wailtblt. HUO ec· 217 E. 2nd St., Pom8roy.
cepttd. Call 304-1176-5104.
114-192-533&amp; or 814-98153161.
F.. nlohod eHic:lanOf.' 107 So·
cond. O.llipolil. 11110. Sh•e Roll-.vay bed witt. mtttreat.
bath.' CIIII4411-4418oft ... 7PM . totO. Chest of drawtn, 116.
Refrigerator, 1 year old. t260.
Furnilhed ll)t.· 1 BA . 243 CaiiS14-992-7366.
Jtckton Pike. •226 • mo.
Ulillti• paid Call 448-,..18 s •••• utowuher. $75.00. Call
tft• 7 PM .
304-773-96&amp;1 .

on

()) Iuper llowl ollporla
Tllvla (0:30)
·
(D Tile Power of Cltolce
Loem how 10 mike cholcos
lon(ghllt!IM: can live wllfl
tomorrow.
(f) .... llllltl littbow Q
• Q]l " - "·Lillo
Daya
Ill

W~AT

·,

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
BEAUTIRJ L APARTMENTS AT

~--1-rt_,sF.,.::-1 ~vi-il l

Epl-1

,,

10 Daya ume u caah wtth
appraved atdtt. 3 Ml• out
BI.Jtwile Ad. Open lam lo 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-448·
0322.

t~;:=~~~~~::;::~~"T~;::::;:::::;::::::::::"j
Homes for Rent

1:00 ()) llonltlie: Tile Loot

.,

. e C2l aJ e Cll !Ill e CD
1111 Ntwl

w•••

3111. hou•.
AC. UIOa
mo. COl 304-87a.e104. or
87a.S311.

Auto Pert.

hNdboMdai30Mdupto t85.

· "Don't ·let them start boarding yet ... we're still finding
money in the seat cushions."

41

eutt•.met..

I 11 I I I

I!YENINQ

78

floor.

Hem• for Rant

tal&lt;:.

latlo~ I. ftnanolng

&amp;
I uM•o ••• 1n d tot• on Ray- . 3;:11. E.D.H . ..
For Le•e: Apertmant, n.wlyburn Rood. 30 4-1711-1211
. decorated, 2nd
cor•. T•ble wtlh mltching bench•
Corn• lot. 1 Ua149 ft. E..-nt, One M"'oom llrMhed .,.. Vf11Y Second • Pin-. GelllpoHt. One- with p.:tded aeata and bllck
- - · .. _ • rofrl-or. (Royal Blue! *100.00. Good
F·-· boo!, corn fed. opprooi·
W .Va. on bl.ak top ltNM, wat• nice .,d el..,, a6Jits ont¥. no
provided. Dopoa• ond cond, coli 304-17&amp;-e1 31.
matoly, 2e0 lb. eldoo. 304-1711·., da..,.. 811'aHtble. t7.ISOO. 00. pota, phono 304-175-138l
roqu~od. •221. P•
4182
304372-9493.
Aponm-. lor - . laoch
month.
Col
114-448.4249,
~-------===.L.::========~
. 4 aar• on County Ad 50 Str• Mldclaport. Ohio, 1.,d 2 4-tll-4421. o• 4411-2328.
fGunw•tl . Pouibleownw., .,_ be*oom fur,.had apts, rwf•·
«to. requir-. 304-812-2111. · ""' ront 2 - ol.,g ...
with
moblo honw, nee.oo month
SNAFU~ by Bruce Beatti,e
3044
1871tiOQ.OO - " LMgo 2 -oom
pluo uti~...
Hud.
opt.
Nt• downtown '-int Pf•ent.
LMgo front porol\ a•ov• a poco 304-1711-8812 or 1711-3900.
......... 304,195-3410.
_........
""

41

1uH~ M~l'e7 A

B•lrv mott...... ue • ••e.
ltd -frMn• •zo. t30 • King
"'"'• tiO. Good Hlection ol

3liOif1

*•I·

35

. A CNt of

eea

N••

100aereJerlcho Rold, be11.1tiful
bullclng sit•. Ow,_ flnancin g.
Som.-ville Flealty. 304-876·
31130"' 87!1-3431 .

(3W

For Sate • Coi.eret• end lll81lc
l ll'tic tenka. AI all•. RON
EVANS ENTEIIPIIIIEI. Jack·
Ohio. HIOO·e37·H21.

1110. Ma~NIItt or bax tllpl'ing~
full or twin
firm 171. .nd
tBI. Qu.., ttta 1210 • up.
King 1310. 4 drft'ltr cheat t89.
Gun &lt;:etMnttl I , 8 • 10 ~~:~n.

,.,Ct.

OHIO FARM- 219 A. surface.
At. 141. 11 mi. fromOIIIipolia,
n• Raccoon Co. Pk. approx . 60
A. bottom. roMing cropl.,d. Trt
Pk. Hous.,l bw_ot, out buildln g.
rurtl wat• drilled and tpring.
'110,000.00 (304).988-3434.

1·800-1811-

IWIMMING POCX. . t11as
Early bi&lt;d apoolel on H -Ia.
H...... 11•31 II' - HIIJih-

w-1 ohlllrt t211 to
4791. Doak •100 up 10 *371.
HUichM MOO •d up. lunk
beds co....-a w ·mlltn~SM~
*291onduptof391.1alrv boda

'*'

Farms for Sale

BDitland
Mutwtforlale

"'I'

omen- •1ot.nduptoe4ts.

Wood

Route 2 North. • bt•oom. 2'h
b.tt.. ~~ t-.mmt. a.tr•
h •• • d coolin 0. fi re pi -on 2
ecrelot.
Routt 33. 2 be*oom house. a...r_Nie. I rooms .nd b.th.
l1rge 11x20 •
in kitchen. yar and V•dtn. t200.
baumn. bD yard h• chain month plue dtposit. A:Wroved
link
city wat•endti!IN•. r .. .-~ .-.quired. C.l 8 14Sondhill Rood. 8 room houao. 742·3149 or 114·992· 7286.
~H ._f!I'IJnt, ..Ueched g•~•
_,_ acr' e lot 2 bedroom hoult. ref•enCM
.. d mar. On c.7'11
... umebleloM.
r•quired , 304-876-8483 or
FOR RENT 3 bedroom trail•. 87!1-1082.
central t.e• Md cooling.
Colonial Rental, 304-896· 2 BA -Midcleport, Large yard.
3&amp;88.
E*· neighborhood, ful b••
mont, dw, dlapoool. AC. Coli
114-4*8-920e aft• 5,30 PM .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1:Z.70, 3 IR .. 21ullbetha. , _
c.ptt. House type windowL
undarj&gt;lnnlnJ&gt; P•loed lor quick
ule. Foatw'sMobileHomePwk. Fully furnilhtd u•eo• apt, AI
ut iUti• peid except electrtcity .
814-4411-1802
Newtv !edecorltld • ~peted.
Otp. Alto 3 bect'oomtreil•. C. II
1979 Wlndaor Mobile Home. aM 61444!1-85158, C41·6810.
Blec:trh:. 2 lA . l•g~~ living &amp;
dining aru, deck, ~ blackt.DP
lttlt. 2 BR . Ref. &amp; Dap.
rold, 10 minut.. from Hoi~:•
' ad. t125/ mo, Garden
Holpittl. Set· up on large rented Req
lot· with . atorege building. spece. Cell 814-448-7754 Dr
'12.500. Call wodt 114-24!1- 643:2144.
5305 or eve's 246-5658,
Extra nice, 14x60 2 BR, CA,
1981 Bro..tmoora mobile hot'NI . priv8te lot. new hoJpitel. e250
1... 72. 3 BR . 2Iullbotha,.,king P• monthl, nO pMs. C.ll
114-~11-2300.
,.-yoH. Call 114-441-9308 between 5 • 8 pm.
large trell•. 2 BR . loclllla:l on
na. n. . Patriot. C-'1114-379·
12K44 19 89 Kirkwood 2 , BR , 2841
.
u• htlt. elso underpinning and
porch. Very good cand11ion.
Traltr for rent. Nice, 3 BR .
114-4411-0175.
ec.-ndo living room. lerge yard.
314 Third St. Kana,p. Call
1971 Nlrw Yorlmr mobile OOme. .,
4-4411- 7473.
1 :Z.63. *4100. Coil 614· 387·
0289.
2 BR . furnilhed. cebleavaHabte.
for bachelor. Fosters MO·
On IMld contr•ct. Vkldllew / tx· ldetl
pando room. 2 BR. air, on private bile Home 'Park. Call 614-448·
lot, lot for rent. Call 81..,446- 1802.
140~ 4-lpm.
14k70. 2 bedroom. Adult• only.
1988 Radmen Sectionll28•66.· no pets. C.ll 814-992-3328 or
3 BR . CA. To be moved . Call 814-992-1722 mer s ,oo p.m.
814-4411-8694 aftw 6pm.
2 bedroom trill• In Mlaon.
w .Ve. fully furnished, Will._
1979 Elcona. 141170. 3 bed- and
dryer, air cond, 304-nlrooms. 1 11.! bMhl. n-.v V~nily. 6968.
und~rslllirting. porch, bul~gon
• rented lot, t10. 500.00. 304- 2 bet*oom trail•. MWer and
1752949.
water furnished. e mil• north
on Rt. 82, 304-67!1-1078.
For Slit or Trtde. 14x85. 2
bedroom trailer, 2 bathl, 2 bedrOf)ms furniahed or unfur•4. 500.00 aaleor rent $200.00.
nist.d, no pets. on• child. will
304-882·3121 .
eccept Hud, re1•ence and dep1983 Mobile HOm·a 14Jt70. 2 oait required. avlilabte May 1.
bectOoms. 2 full betha, priced to ccjl 304-882-2149.
..n. 304-773-5983.
1988 14x72 trail.- on 1· 2acre, 43 Farms for Rent
3 bechomo. 2 botha. alleloct•lc.
cent111lair, double gwage.
ite dllh. porch. $36,000. Plain Celebrate t prlng wi'th e n8W'
V.AI., Road; let.-t. 304-895- romance! Meet your mltch
through our tlnfll• n•work
3832att•6 p.m.
Writ e He.-ta_.ch. 8011 5841
3 bedroom Schultz with 111Jprox Athans. 0 H 46701 .
one acre l•d. 304-175-6376.

33

ch..,.

up 10 e121. Hl.... a-t.ds t390
to 1815. Rtol"'-' t221 ta
'371. Lompa •21 to •121.

1170

3 bedroom ....... priced eo·,

Aogea Modloel
2104.

priced from
•311 to , , ., Tebl• t&amp;O and

RodlaprlnVI ar-. C•om bultt.
1 IDW'*' home Dn •prDll. 3
•cr•. I bt*ooma. 21h bath. •
flr..,t~. int•com tyittn1. inground pool . gaebo. Iota of
•t~ 'riced to MM. For mort
Information, call 304-773-

Good con d. 304-173-5881.

Rloor ftd . Stono
c ... Motai. 114-4411-739S.

Sot• end

Tim lttlt 814-992·
8174 or 814-742·2110 lor
l moralntormadon.

~!.'":~rw~t..,":.':·~:-:.

'whaelod
MI_.ch••
new- or uttd. 3
lli...,ic ........ Col

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE

to town.

p .m.

lliiD APPUANCES

•

76

Marchandlae

WMhera, *vera, refrtgen,or..
ra"oea. Sll.egea Appliance•.
Up. .

•

e v• oldtri-lw... 4 • • clott

i.~~;":~:B:a'C:'"
, , ....,2-5272 before 1 :00

54 Misc.

Houaehold Goods

.GDOO

n• ._,,,.... -....
llrvt•-••-

Mondav. Aprl17. 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

OURRUV

RNWK

UMENUciUY

-·..

..
. ..
-:~
•

'

ENUciUY;

DZ

RDOWEED

R N U T • - A • y·.

CM

DKU

IV U K. R C E U ( ":,,

Y1 1 ' ;"e Cll-t~!'~IW\111
WM AI
GREAT AI 11tl
- ·
NO
~M:
JlliMOiiY Of A
-

&amp;•

,.

1

�,..

-.... -.

..

..

•

~

'•

10-The Dally Sentinel

........ •.

.._ ..

•

Oh~o

tincinnati

Pornaot MldciiPC)I't. Ohio

r---Local news briefs... - - Announce .winDers :of 'AEP awards
• :
Continued from paie 1

~LAin

Weather

l!ly Valted Preu laterutlonal
ALBANY - AI YOil ':E!erta ·
.loulll Ceatral Olllo
says, It wu like deja vu au·over
Tonieht, a 70 percent cllance of
asaln.
•
showers and thundentorms.
L9:W near 50. SoujJ!west winds 10
The wlnnen of aw.arda r11r
'to
15 mph. · Tuesday, partly
outltandlfti safety at American
cloudy
with a 30 percent chance
Electric Power's coal·mlnltli
of lhowers. Hl&amp;h ne'ar 65.
operations during 1988 are 1M
Wftlleadqr lbrou&amp;h Frldqr
same three . opera tiona tllat ·
A chance of showers Wednes•
earned those awards In 1987.
day and fair Thursday and
Southern Olilo Coal Company's
WUUam . K. Moore. Mark A. Sear lea and Ronnie E. Taylor
Friday. Hlihl will be 55 to 65
Raccoon No. 3 miDe, tile Cones·
were all arraigned recently In Melea County Corrimon Pleas
Wednesday and hi the 60s Thufs·
Court.
ville Coal ·Preparatlon Company
day
a.ntl Friday. Lows will be 36
AEP
River
Transporta·
and
the
· Moore was arraigned on charges of sexual batmry and groas
to
4~..
·'
tlon
Division
received
1988
AEP
sexuallmpoaltlon. He pleaded not iUilty to the charges and wa&amp;
Fe\11 Supply Safety Awards dur·
released on a $1,000 bond. D. Michael Mullen' was appointed as
his attqrney.
·
Ins a special ceremony at AEP
headquarmn In .Columbua. w.S.
Sear~ was arraigned on charies of felonious asaault and
White, Jr., chairman · of AEP,
carrying a concealed weapon. He pleaded not iUilty and was
made the presentations.
released on·a bond of $8,250. Charles Knliht was apPQinU!d by
A special meeting of Pomeroy ,
For the third consecutive year,
the court as counsel for Searles.
Chapter 186, Order of the Eu tern ·
the Raccoon No. 3 mine captured
Taylor was arralped on a theft charge. He pleaded not iUilly
Star, will be held Wednesday at '
the Fuel Supply Safety Award In
to the charge and was released on a $1,000 recognizance bond.
7: $0 p.m. at the Cheste~ hall.
the underi!'OUnd mlnlni cate·
Charles Knliht was also appointed by the court as counsel for
Initiatory work will be held. and
Taylor. •
·
eory. Raccoon's ' 1988 dlaabllng
officers are asked to wear long
Injury Index rate was 15 percent
Searles trial lias been set for 9 a.m. June 6. Taylor's trial has
dre•llll· All membera are ursed •
better than Its 19.87 fli\lre. (The
been set for 9 a .m . ;\Une 3. ..
.
to attend.
Index considers both the fre·
quency · and severity of
HILIABD HONORED- AI Billard (left), pneralluperiiiCead·
accidents.)
ent
of Southern Ohio Coal Comp&amp;DJ'I Baceoon No. Smile, receives
"Winning the award for three'
Melp County Sherut James M. Soulsby reports the
aaAEPFuel
Supply8a(etyA.ward from w.s. Whlte,Jr:,chalnnaa
•
years In a row li&amp;ln&amp;t some very
department took a report of an accident that occurred on
of Amerlcu Eledric Power.
determined competition Ia a
Sunday at 12:45 a.m. on White Oak Road In Bedford Township.
tremendous achlevel)lent for our manaier of the Conesville prep national average for the barge
Accord'l!a to the repOrt, Lloyd D. Klfti, Klqabury Road, was
workforce,"
said AI Hillard,
plant. ''But I'm alsp proud or the line Industry.
.
.
southbound In heavy los and ran off the roadway strlklne and
general
superintendent
for
both
fact
that, during .1988, our em' 'We have some definite safety
heavily damaglpg a garage owned by Clarence Hook. A car and
the Raccoon No. 3 and Melp No.
ployees didn't have aily lost·llme goals for 1989," said Gale
other Items In the garaie were alsodamaied. King's vehicle, a
1
mines.
"I
think
there's
iome
accidents
at home, either. I thln.k Rhode's, manager of the River
1986 Chevy pickup truck was also heavily damased. No Injuries
validity
In
that
old
aaylng
that
our
safety
progrl'ftl has carried Division, "because we· set an
were repormd.
gettlns to the top Is toueh. but over Into the hom~. and I~ at's an all· time record· with our 1987
The dej&gt;Brtment also reports that on Sunday morning, Edith
staying there Is even touglter."
Important part :of the total acclden.t lncldentrate (2.69) anq
Barnhouse, Guysville, backed her vehicle Into a ditch on
Hillard jokes that wlnnlns the situation when you have a In 1988 we weren't quite as iOod.
Rocksprlnea Road while turning around. The driver reported
CIMne tor
Diet Pill i
underground
safety competition workforce that's as small as
''We've r.educed the num~r of
that due to the heavy log she didn't realize that shl! wasnear the
has become "hablt·formlng •• ours. .
,
..
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (SJ111Cial)-.
accidents resulting from slips,
edge. There.)Vere n0 Injuries or damage.
but says that this third con5ec~­
"Our mot10 for 198'7 was · ~~k · falls and pinch points," 'said An amazill&amp;- weiaJtt loss Pill called'
tlve award Is evidence that
to the Bastes' ani! we essel)llally Rhodes, "and our new bariH
"fat-mqnet" has ftltendy been dMI-:
EMS~
"Raccoon No. 3 has developed a continued that t~fme 1~ ~988.'' have safety features that should
oped lllil perilglld by IWO ~:
tradition of safety aware and
Leppla said. "It's.pald off. We're be a definite plus for our dOcton at a ...W l'ainoulllolpilll ill·
Meigs County Erner_Jency Medical Services reports 11
alertness. It proves that we have .workinlf hard to overcome that employees,
Los Anplea thlt Npodtdly ..,...
_..
lltlady .. lou lad calorla·
weekend calls.
·iood programs In place and syndrome where more expe:·aut havlni an accident rate
On Saturday, Rutland at 3;40 p.m. was called to SR 692 for
Individual employees who have rienced workers seem to be lower than the natiOnll average
•lnipl.r.llkiaa lbelr.-:
- Elmer Althouse who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
taken this to heart.
suaceptlble to accidents ...
and~-pW.
Is always a significant achieveMiddleport at 9:04p.m. went to .Cuater St. for Mildred Milburn
The u.s. I'JYIII'IIIItenl hasjuallpjinll'-:
"This year's theme - Safety
AEP' s River Division received ment tor us .. Because our haull
ed
the tlocuin claims lOr altaril-to-te~ ·
taken to Veterans Memorial. Middleport at9: 27 went to Lincoln
by Design - aptly describes the Its flrst·ever AEP Fuel Supply , are so·much shorter than most o(
pa1e111
that ClOI'lfinna "lhere hu :
St. for Daniel Stone who was transported toVeteransMemorjal.
steps we're planning and putting Safety Award j\ISt a year ago.
the barge lines, we're handling
.Middleport at 11 p.m. was called to .P age St. for Agnes Brown
Into place with ttie merger of the This year, the RlilerDivlslonwas the barges much more often and . beeniiiYihlnallbtlteirfat:boadinl=:
pn!C!III"ba~Jie:• It is aiDIIIly.
taken to Veterans Memorial.
Raccoon No. 3 arid Meigs No. 1 a repeat winner because Its we 'h ave greater exposure to
scienllfie
lmlaklhrouilllllid
Ia
u-:
On Sunday. Tuppers Plains at 9:26a.m. took Robin White
mines," Hillard notes. "We have accident Incident rate once again accidents.''
tioai%i• tbc weiaht Toss lnduttrv. .
Veterans Memorial. At 1: 26 p.m. Pomeroy was called to Coal St.
a lot of work ahead of us dn matched, or was bi!tler than, the
liJU Cu ..,.
for Homer LaudermUt who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
merging the mlnesl, but we hope
Bell cl all, ''you can ~ to·
At 2:57p.m. Pomeroy went to 2nd St. on an auto accident where
to continue this tradition of
ea1
~r fal.orite ilodl and )IOU don't:
Douglas Clonch was taken to Veterans Memorial. Syracuse at
safety. achievement."
.
Q
Continued from page 1
have
to c:hanp ~ liOI1IW eatln.l•
2:59 p.m. was called to Amerlcare for Ruth McElroy taken to
Employees at the Conesville
hablll.
You can 1Wt lOIIIIJ f11
Veterans Memorial. Middleport at 3:05p.m. was called toasslit
preparation plant worked with· McCreedy .said the problem calion. Construction workers at· reduce calorMI &amp;om the Yery finl dly,;
the Pomeroy unit In the above mentioned auto accident and
out a single lost-time accident
was that the leak could not be tempted to close the line with a until )'011 acbieYe !be ideal weipJ )0011·
transported Betty Clonch to Veterans Memorial. At 5;48 p.m.
during 1988, enabling the plant to
cap that was not properly secure, dain: witbaut mR:Isiua".
:
visibly detected.
Racine went to Bucktown Rd. for Herbert Roush who was taken
earn Its third AEP Fuel Supply
FlulllelfaiOutiillody
'
"It was amazing, there was · and, In turn, blew off.
lo Veterans Memorial, and at 6:24p.m. Mlddlepbrtwascalled to
Safety Award In the past four · never any visible evidence of the
'They will pay for the cost o(
The new piU II :moprillely called:
Page St . for Leota Schaeffer who was transported to Veterans
years.
·
leak anywhere, '·' McCreedy said. the water and the labor or the the "lil-111181*" "~bei:aule It breab'
Memorial.
''We've now worked more than
"We didn't recellre ·any calls water will not 'be turned back Into thouurida ofputiclel, each actina;
600 days wlthou t . a lost·tlme
from residents about a leak and on, "• Iman said. "They need to like ~ ti~ ~~~~~~*· ''llnclina"
accident, " said Dave Leppla,
we never actually saw any preceed · with construction and trappq ~ timea Ill size in undlthey can't dl&gt; that without ~tlilpanides. Then, aU !he trapped.
water."
·•
l'atandcalorieaarensturally "fllll{leid" .
water."
·
H08pilal news
riJbt out
~ body bCcaute they
petition has been. filed In the
In a foreclosure act ion In Meigs
McCreedy said resl4ents In cannot
The l'lak also threatened tbe
be
llllorbed.
.
'
County Common Pleas Court by
matter of the AppUcatlon ·of the
town and on hills were affected at
pressure
of
all
fire
hydrants,
Within
2
days
)00
should
notice
1
Veteran• Memorial
Home National Bank, against
Middleport Church of Christ In
first by the loss of pressure. · changeintbecolorof)OOrstool,cauled
Saturday
admissions -Marie which could have caused prob:wnuam Harris. et al, the bank Christian Union to transfer real
However, as the night went on · by the lit particlea being eliminated.
estate to the Middleport Com- Thomas, Pomeroy; William lems In the event of a fire ,
has been awarded a default
and
the pressure continued to
Ray Bush, Gallipolis fire'chief,
"Anmatkally" Lale ~
Jones. Pomeroy; and Elmer
'judgment or $50,034.7:(,.,to be paid munity Clturch. a non-profit
.
l!rop,
more
residents
surround·
Accordi!ll
toonecllbe inventors, Dr.
said he had a contlniency plan In
Althouse, Albany.
organization.
wl!hln three days. f~
lng
the
city
were
affected.
William
Sliell,
heart specialist and
Saturday discharges - Carl the event of a .fire.
An action by Bank ·'one.
Hom~ National Bank. Racine.
Once
the
leak
was
located
and
associate
pnmaaor
of medicine 11
"It would have been possible
Hubbard, Billy Brown, and Jac·
Is also seeking judgment plus Athens, N.A., against Homer
shut
down,
the
plllnt
ran
the
hlih
UCLA
medkal
school
"the new fat- '
.
for the plant to kick In the high
quellne Duvall.
Hill, et a!, has been dismissed by
Interest from AprU 23 against
service
pressure
pump
for
more
bondina
fHOCeS8
is
a
"lazy
way" to loae
Sund!IY admissions - Walter pressure pump, but that would
the court.
Todd M. Kimes, Racine, and
than
21
hours
to
resume
normal
wei1ht
becauae
the
pill•
alo11e
have added to the leak and loss of
Roush, Racl'!e.
A voluntary dismissal has been
William T . Kimes, Racine.
"automa!ically"
reduce
calorie~
by
pressure.
The
r~servoir
rose
Sunday discharges - Elmer water," Bush said. "We had a
: Judgment actions have also · filed In the case of Judy Parson
back
to
normal
this
morning
with
~lill!i""tina
die!ary
fat.
It
iiiOOlli
11&amp;1
tentative plan to draft water
Althouse.
·
·been flied by Jeff Harris, of against Elmer Parsons.
·
the system now under normal and not _a q.''
from the (Ohio) river."
Finally, Cofer Lee Walls, Grl'·
Harris' Farms. Portland. against
The rat-maanet pills are already
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS- Reoperatlor;
McCreedy
said.
!man said the leak was degory Stephen Fields, Michael becca Collins. Syracuse; Lois
Scott and Ellen Smith. of E&amp;J
!man sii.ld he was pleased with •-rine the country with alowlna
tected Saturday, 4:15 p.m.,
Orchard and Greenhouse, Craw· Anthony Holter and Danny Jo Province. Middleport.
the cooperation and assls tance teporll il. wel&amp;htloss fron1 ilirmerly
which force water pressure to
overweipt people in all walb life
ley, W.Va.; and by Francis Reynolds have been appointed by
received during the crisis.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES Bookman. Scenic Hills Nursing the court as sileclal deputies to Carrie Osborne. David Curfman, drop from the normal 110 psi
"I'm proud of all the men. We who are nciW slimmer, trimmer and
(pounds
per
square
Inch)
to
more attractio;e qain.
Center. Bidwell, against Eva Meip County Sheriff James M. · Angellque Starcher, Eva Diehl,
about 54 psi, losing up to 600,000 had such a good response from
Now A\ia1llble to tbe Public
Soulsby.
Bookman Delancey , Re!'dsvllle.
everyone,"lman said. "We had a
Agnes Brown.
gallons
of
water
anp
as
much
as
If
you 1111 uylna to 1o1e 20,
100
In otht'&gt;r cpurt matters, a
three and a half feet of water In lot of people come In to assist as po11tids or more, )00 can order )'OUr
·well as the volunteer firemen. I IUJIIIIY o( IMM "no-rilk" hiahiY IIIC'
the ·reservolr.
At approxlmatley. 11 p.m. Sat· want to thank everyone for ceiil\illil-llllpllpillitliJecdy ftilmlhe
urday, the water treatment plant working together to help resolve docton' excltlalw msnufillclilrer only
(includes optionll calorie-teduction •
ted Methodist Women and the OiUand officialing. Burial will fol- began lsolatlria lines, shutting off the problem."
James Hudson
Dian
l l r - better ..ala). Send $20
Chester Garden Club:
low . in Oral)am Cemetery. Friends valves to see I( the water
Space ol~kaen
l'or
•
90 pUllllfiPiy (+$3 handlllll), or
She
Is
survived.
by
two
sons
and
'
may
call
Monday
from
(i
10
9
p.m,
prt!Ssure would rise. The leak
James Hudson. 67,' Syracuse,
$3510ral80piDQoly(
+S3handl'llll), ·
daughers-ln-law,
Paul
and
Ruth
at
the
funeral
home.
.
·
was finally lso)Bted when pres·
AbOut ·hall the astronauts suffer 10: 1'11-Mipl!l, 9IJl6 Wllabin~BI..a;
died Friday at Veterans Memor·
,.
Karr,
Long
Bottom,
and
Horace
·
·
sure began building up when from space alckneu, kQOwn as apac.
tal Hospital fol)owlng a brief
:Dept
W48t,
Bevvly
HUll,
CA
90211.
•·
and Dorothy Karr, Pomeroy; one . ..
McCreedy ,shut off the main line adaptation syndrome, tbe flrat few
Illness.
(UIIcomiA'IIMilllfiiNI
t.c.t
days In spac., according to Tbe 0ma1
daughter and son-In-law , Ka-'
· upSR7.
.
Born June 21,19211n Pomeroy,
Spac.
Almanac. The m,.t unpleagnt ''' 1/ 1101 1H'6 llilllfft. Visa,
thryn
and
Woodrow
Mora,
Po
me·
Iman
said
the
water
syst11m
on
he was the son of the late John
Dally
atock
price~~
symptom
Is na..-, whlcb can result MutOICarcl and AmerU:an
•
roy; one sister, . Leah Nease, .
the property ·was turned on
navld and Sally Anna Hughes
C8ld nlimber, expire . .
Racine; 13 grandchildren, 21 (AI of lD:IO a.m.) .·
without city lnspec'tlonand notlfl· from basic movemenll, sucb •• turn- OK.
liudson. He was a laborer and
and 1
re.) Rlr fulelt Mrvlce b
Ina
the
head.
Soviet
scientllts
beUeve
Bryce
and
Mark
Smith
:served In the Army In World War great-grandchildren. and ser· or Blunt, Ellis .t; Loewt
It Ia caUHd by a fluid ablft In the body, credit Card orden ONLY Clll ~
vera! nieces and .nephews.
II.
while 10me U.S. doctors consider lt to 24 hours, toll free 1(801) ~
She was preceded In death by·
ext. W400.
.,........
He Is survived by seven childbe motion slckne11.
Youth reviVal set
her parents; her husband. Pur- Am Electric Power ......... .... 26~
ren, Linda Beaver, Dexter;
ley Karr; five brothers, Charles, AT&amp;T ... ... ............. ... .. ...... .. .31)1,
James David Hudsop, MiddleA · youth revival will begin
port; Trlna Hudson, Gallipolis; . Joseph, .J acob, Dana, and Albert ' Ashland Oil ..... .. ... ... .. :.. :.....42'&gt;'
.
. .·
.
tonight
at the Middleport Wes·
Bob Evans ........... ~ ....... ....... l5
Baer, and a sister Anna Bailey.
Michael 0. Hudson, Minersville:
leyan Bible Holiness Church and
Funeral services will be Tues· ChaTQllng shoppes ....... .. .. .. .l4'&gt;'
·Suzanna Eblin, Pomeroy; An·
continue
through Friday with the'
Co
...................
17
City
Holding
day, 2 p.m. at the Ewlni·Funeral
:netta Hudson. Pom~roy ; and
•
Steve
Tomek . as the
Rev.
Federal
Mo11111...
..............
..
,51
)'a
Home with the Rev. Don Atcher
:Anthony D. H,udson, Minersville;
speaker.
Services
will
be
held
at
Goodyear
T&amp;R
..
...
..
·
...
......
...
48'&gt;'
officiating. Burial will iN: In the
:a brother, Bill Hud~g~~, Pome:
7:30 p.m each evenlrlg. The Rev.
Melp Memory Gardena. Calling Heck's ....... ....... . ,........ ........ . ~
roy; two sisters, Rosella Secoy,
Roy McCarty, pastor,lnvltes the
Key
Centurion
.....
.....
.....
:
....
13)1,'
.
houra are today (Monday) from
Syracu~e; Freda Elkins, Lancas·
public.
Lands' End .... : .................... 30%
3-5 p.m, -and 7-9 p.m.
ter; IC!Veral nieces and nephews,
in
Limited Inc ... .. ........ ......... .. 29%
and 12 lll'andchlldren.
Elver Fox
Multimedia Inc ................... 94~ , Name ront£81 winner
He wu. preceded In death by
Rax Restauranta,. ............ _ .. . 2%
·hi• parents; a son, Alonza
Blver 0. Fox, 86, of Clifton, Robbins It Myers ................ 15~
carolyn Caatri, 143 Butternut
,[)elbert Hudson; a rrandaon, W.VL died Salurday, April 15, Shoney.:s Inc ..... .. ........... ...... 8~
Aye., Pomeroy, was n1med
floyd Euiene Eblin II, four 1989 in the Vcleawla .ManoQil Wendy' a Inti. .........................6
wlnner or the recent contest
Infant, Cfl.iftlnn t!!.!Uducent !Mulkine
brolher•. and one slater.
Holpltalln Pomeroy, Ohio.
sponsored by the GalUpolla Area
Worthlftlton lnd ............... .. 21%
Gravnlde Rrvfcet will be at . Born May 1902 In Clifton, he
Sportsmen.
at
the Rocklprlnp Cem"ery on wu the 1011 of !be - Goocp and Seeka dlvoree~
' " She will receive a new ReJI!Ina· ·
Wednesday at 1 p.m. with "the Lain V'anMiur Poll. He wu a
ton Expreu Combination
Annl Maude Spirea, Rutland.
Rev. Mar11ret RobiDIOII otrlclat· carpenla', a tniUwrlabtllld I melft• and Charill L. Splrel. Rutlllnd,
al!otpn.
IJII. C&amp;llllll hours are 2-4 p.m. ber of ~··l.ocal· 1755 of and Arnee Sue Ward, Syracu111,
ProCeedl wlll iO toward the ·.
and 1·9 p.m. on Tu~ay at tbe Pntnllull. He wuallo I _.ber and Troy E. Ward Portlalld, have
Anelent York Masonic Lodie No.
Ewilll Funeral Home.
of tbl CllfiOD Rollam 'IWienllcle. fllld tn Melli Coullty Cammon
33, GalUpolla.
He- ~dlltb b)' two Pleu Coul't filr dlllolutlonl of
. C.aeellon
....... · - 9Mit Fell two their marrllltl·
.SuinapatUnts
lliot .., ~ .., FoAl 1114
Robia E.·llat., Lupvlle, bu
The foJIIIWlQ ~ _..
!1r(~~1rlt{Qy
filed .for a ·dtvarce trGm Tf11B
two
plloll\10_.. Ia laat wwlc'a
Marte Slater, JWBeroy,
94.m.. 5p.m.
AnleriOP W Croll lloodmo-

Lottery

Pick3
324

lOth, 3-2

Michael L. Wrliht, 19, Rt. 1. Lanpvllle, wu cited ror
apeedlq and not wearlni a seat belt after hll 1985 Chevrolet
Camaro came to a rest In a ditch.
Wrliht waa headlq west when he • werved to avoid a deer he
said he saw In the road. He then lo1t control ot the car, which
. went oft th~ left side of tht road and Into the ditch.
•

,

Pick4

4634

Variable cloudiness tonight.
Low In mid 408. Chance of rain

40 percent. Wednesday,
mostly sunny. High In mid &amp;Os:

Page4

Three arraigned in Meigs court

•

..

s~»ecu.• meeting

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to

I

•

Lose Weight .

Gcw't.=...,., ;

B,- NANCY YOAf.~
·· Seatllle!New1111&amp;ff
,
Differences or opinion regard·
lpg property lines on the river·
bank side of East Main St . In
Pomeroy were discussed at .
li!tlglh In Monday night's re11111ar
session of Pomeroy VIllage
COuncil.
Pomeroy resident, Dottle
Turner, In recent months, pur·
chased property on East Main St.
which, according to her deed,
extends "from the road to the low
water line otthe river."
However, village officials cOn·
tend that the old railroad prop-

erty, which runs the length ofthe written authorization from the
Turner said she did not believe was not trying to give her a hard
vtllage and Is owned by the U .~CorpsofEnglneerstorepalr
a survey was necessary "when . time, but that the vUiage must
v.lllage, bisects Turner's the bank and construct the dock.
the property lines are clearly retain control of the riverbank ·
property.
She also told council that a IItle
defined" on the deed. She said for possible. future development
Last night's open discussion of opinion on the property has been .... she would discuss the matter in the area of tourism, and that
the property question came prepared and that her attorney ·again with her attorney, but that plans were In the works to pass
about because Turner wants to has given assurances that all the
she plans to move ahead with an ordinance to prevent parking
build~ private boat dock on her property In question Is hers.
excavation on Thursday.
and theplacementofadvertlslng
riverbank property, and possibly
Mayor Richard Seyler and
Members of council and Seyler signs on the riverbank.
In the future, a commercial dock Council however, contend that
cautioned her not to start someCouncil President Larry Wehfacility. She has scheduled heavy - property deeds are not always
thing that couldn't be finished.
rung backed up the mayor' s
equipment to begin excavation accurate. They suggested that
"Do you mean that the bul- statements.
this Thursday In an effort to Turner have the property sur!dozer can' tcross the property on
"But you can't control it If It's
repair the rapidly eroding river· veyed and the matter reviewed
Thursday, If It turns out to be my riverbank •• 'Turner coun·
bank before the dock Is again by her attorney, and they
your property?'' Turner tered, and asklid council If tbere
constructed.
.
would do the same with their
questioned.
was an existing ordinance which
Turner showed council her deed.
Seyler stated that the village WO\IId .prevent her from crossing

::.by

Nariiiiii7"" .

ana:

ana:

~------Court

news-------

'

111 BroCben volualeer Ken
Re!laH ar Gallpotltl, ... bia
"little brother" J 01hua
MeFarlud of Rio Grande,
tool! part bt tile Bowl for Kids'
Sake ( 8aper8&amp;rlle11) spoaaored by lite local orcaalsa·
lloa s.&amp;urday after- at
. 8QIJM LanM. At rilht, BoJ.
land · pye1 J01hua aoiae bowlltll polatera, &amp;lten looill on
(pboto altova) u be aeads lhe
bell do-lite lane. The eveat
wu held lo nile moaey for

.

lbe or&amp;anln&amp;loa, wblcb·
- - Gallla, Muon, Melp
ud Jaellaoll Coaallee, malcJt.
111 lldiiM volitBMeen to child·
rea from llnp parent bomea.

so.

-----Area deaths-----

=

·Missing plane found

tS

Dr. Victor·Hochman

.91.nnounces tfu opening of liis practice

.

Pediatrics

s.

Pfeasant o/4lky !Hospital
Suite 118

=::.~r.:,. -~

~U:i:
Ilia
wile, ...... Uce.U.iuued
~ of
0111
fd J) • .

.....

Jllox of C!!flpq -

.wtDbe

Ill

PAl
.It die PclPeanl
l'allill Hallli . . . . leV. lArrY
.-

11111 .. Mtlll Cowtty. IU...S of
-

lalloll ...... u pN!IIoubo

. POMEROY ..,. Marrlap II· · repor•ld: Wtllam aaonet~
baVI! been llllled Ia Melp DID Follralli ........ MeKaapt,
CouiJ.ty Probart COtlrt to Randall Unk J'rall)', DciUid MladoWI,

c:e,....

1'llolllll W..,Y, ~. Raelle, 111d "'"'" Hedl.
VIolet ll'rUCtlt VIola, 21, Racl•· \' ud Alva Qarlc.

.......

Dlrta TboJiw

PLEASANT VALLlY HOSPII'AL
The fom~y of proleulonala ·

Call(J04)675·52ZOfor4pptMtmmts .

"

Little JJeople
need big people

m

Stocks

'

,.

m

.

the property to get to the
riverbank.
Wehr11ng said there was not an
ordinance at this time but Counell had been, over the past year,
working on such an ordinance
and could be passing such an
ordlnace on that same night.
(Later lb the meeting, council
did .approve the first reading of
an ordinance to prohibit parking
and the placement of signs In
prohibited areas of village property to protect the health and
safety of citizens and to promote
the asthetlc value of village
Continued on page 5

Whittington is released on
bond; Patrick gets 18 months

11 weekend ·.calls

G ll ip0 lis, •• ·

2&amp; Conta.

Sunrey sought for riverbank property Ibt~~~~

Sheriffprobes 2 accidents

.u.s.

! ';;~~~o r•oo;:

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. April 18, 1989

•

B,- llalled p.,.. hteraa&amp;loaal
Elevell days or searcblni for a
milling aircraft bas come to an
end. · with the wreckage of the
craft piloted by an oft-duty Ohio
state trooper found In a ataad of
trees In the heart of the ~earcb
area In aoulhealt West VIrginia.
All four . people aboard the
atngiHnp craft were dead •
aatd·West VIrginia atam pollce11)1.11 1pokesman Ric Robinson.
The plane wu found Monday
near Duo, W.Va., about 10 miles
norllleut of Rupert. ·
· Crala TyiP'flt, a 2J.year-old
Duo maa, told the Parlterlburg
(W.Va.) senttnel he was one or
the ftnt to spot the wrecklp. He
said be was walldng hll doi near
Shelnmp ·Rldp and throwlDi
rocilllnto a pond.

Tygrett said he noticed birds
circling overhead and found the
wreckage In a stand of trees. ·
"I first began runnlng up the
side of the hill toward the plane,
but then I thouellt I'd better go
get someone,'' Tygrett said.
He told .t he newspaper he ran
back to his home and called the
Greenbrier county sheriff's
offlep.

'!'he Beechcraft Bonanza was
piloted by Ohio Highway Patrol
Trooper Jon Metz, 38, of St.
Clairsville, Oblo. The craft was
reported mlsalng April 7 - a day
after the plane took off from
Parkersburg for a 45-mlnute
flight to Lewisburg, W.Va.
Metz was taklni Kent ·and
Shirley Place of Jieverly, Ohio,
and Geofle Johnson of Parkers·

- ·LoC8I news briefl
Driver eape~ injury in wreck
A driWr eacaped IDjpry In a one-whlcle accident at 6:43p.m.
Mondq Ia Welp County .oa Leadllli Creek Road, o.5 mtlett
1101111 oiiDR. 12', aecordllli to the Melp-Gallla Poat, State

HlpwayPatrol.
'fnqJen Hid Tlmotlly A. Coata, 29, Pomeroy, alowed hll
Vtlllale, tiMa aceettrated. Coata 1011 control. Hla car went ott
tile roM. atruck an embanllmeat and overturDed. Damalll! wu

........

,

The palrOI cited Coata for feeklell operation.

Spider-Man to mit area April 29
1M ftla oiS,IIIIIr ¥an, a part of tbe Ohio Tour, a pi'CJII'am

Coatll""'oa,...s .

.

-·--'--·
..... _-~- •
\.,

The Meigs County Common
Pleas Court trial of Eddie Pa·
trick and William Dean Whittington did not go as planned.
Although the combined trial of
the two young Middleport men.
both Indicted on two charges of
felonious assault and one count of
felony lntlmldatlon, was schelluled to begin Monday morning.
only Patrick actually went to
trial. Whittington's case ended In
a plea bargain before the jury
selection began, and Patrick's
trial ended In a plea bargain at
the close of Mo11day's testimony.
One of Whittington's felonious
assault charges was amended to
aggravated assau It, a fourth
' degree felony to which he entered
a .plea of gulltj1." The otl!el'" twci
charges against Whittington
•were dropped , a pre-sentence
Investigation ordered and sentencing scheduled In six weeks. A
$1.000 .cash bond for Whittington
was continued and he was
released on ' his own
recognizance .
Although a 12-person jury was
seleeted and tes tlmony presented by witnesses on .behalf of
the prosecution. Patrick's lnvol·
vemenllll the trial also1Rided Ina
plea bargain,
In return for Patrick's plea of
guilty to an amended charge ot
aggravated assault, the State of
Ohio Is dismissing all other
pending violations against him.
Upon recommendation from
Melp County Prosecutor Steven
Story and Patrick's attorney,
Charles Knight, Judge Fred

Middleport
•
mcome
taxes
due April30

Middleport tax administrator
burg to Wblte Sulphur Springs tor Carol Cantrell reminded Middlea business meeting.
port residents and employees
Robinson said the bodies were that Individual village Income
flown Monday nliht to the state tax forms must be tiled and taxes
medical examiner's office In
paid by April30 for the six-month
South Charleston. Robinson said period from July 1 through Dec.
the plane was found on Shel- 31, 1988.
lcamp Ridge, at an elevation of
Residents of the village are
4,3&lt;18 f~t.
'
subject to the one percent tax on
Robinson said the Federal gross salaries, wages, commlsAviation Administration has slolll! and other compensation.
been called In to Investigate the Non-residents who are employed
crash.
rwlthln the vlllage·are subject to
EarUer. officials said they ' this same one percent tax.
suspected rainy, fosgy' weather
Business returns are also due
was to blame for the crash.
on April 30 and are subject to the
Robinson said there has been ao one percent tax on net profits.
tnfonnation to contradict the
Non-resident businesses are subearlier assumption.
ject to the tax of one percent of
"!'he FAA will make a deter- ·net profit resulting from sales or
mination, ot course," Robinson services performed within the
said. "But we belieVe weather vii lap.
wu a great factor In thla."
There are Interest and penalty
'!'he plane was nearly tmpossl·
charpa for both businesses and
ble to see from the air, Robinson Individuals who fall to file before
said.
'
.
'
the April 30 deadline In addltlon
· "Maybe you could see It If you to crtmlnal penaltlee.
were In a hellcopmr, howrinl
. The one percent Income tax
rlihl over It," lie said.
became effective on July 1, 1988,
The aircraft wu found ln an and the procndl fram tbe tax are
area ~earcb planes and helicop- allocated 40 pe1 cent ieneral
ter• already had covereclleVf!l'al fundi, 25 perceat 1tree1 fund, 15
times. Two •·F jell llllns In·
pestent fire departmeat, 10 per·
trared acans alao tailed to detect cent racrutloD, aacllO percent to
tbe wraclrap.
Cllllltellw, Wlllcll UIUl'll that
~~ said tbe plane looked
all areal ol tbe vUlap will be
Intact, with the I!Xel\Jtloa of a recelvtq beneftta tram tile tax.
wtq tllat had broUil aft.
An!IODe nus• .....IIIICe ar
''It louted tall It ....siYed ba'lflll ~tlca CC:iliWII:ft tile
toward the rWrt IItie, .. fnrett tu lll&amp;f_ OOltact
at
said. "Tree apllatlrl flam tile
tllroulllfridaY,
lllabD tnllaad fallllll• lt ...
'
'

.

--Moatlay
.........,....

cutJ;

Crow III sentenced Patrick to 18
months In prison with credit for
77 days already served In the
Meigs County Jail. Patrick was
g!ven seven days to spend with
his family before appearing
Aprll25 at the Meigs County Jail ..
to beglq his sentepce.
Judge Crow cautioned Patrick
that the plea bargain Is cantingen! upon his IPatrlck'sl staying
out of trouble over the seven day
period he Is free, which Includes
staying out of Middleport.
Patrlck said he understood the·
stipulations.
The judge also told Patrick he
was an extremely lucky man Cor

his attorney to have arranged
Ibis plea bargain.
Both Patrick and Whltilngton
were charged In connection with
an Incident on Jan. 31 h\ Middle·
port In which they admittedly
assau-lted Ernest Ward, manager of the Friendly Tavern.
However, lt was the contention of
the defense that Ward provocated the assault.
Ward was preseqt for Patrick's
plea of guilty to the amended
charge and the resulting sentenclng, and stated fo r the court
record I hat he was satisfied with
the outcome of the plea bargain.

Consumer prices
rise 0.5 percent ,
WASHINGTON (UPI) - RIS·
lng energy and food prices
pushed consumer Inflation up 0.5
percent In March, the Labor
Department said Tuesday.
Casts for shelter and apparel
also Increased last month to
contrlbu te to the signs of growing
Inflation. The 0.5' percent March
hike In the government's Consu·
mer Price Index followed a 0.4
percent galtl In February and a
0.6 percent rise In January,
according to the department's
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Figured on an annual basis, the
Index jumped 6.1 percent In
March and during the first
quarter of 1989. That Is · the
largest quarmrly Increase since
a 6.3 perr;t!nt rise In the first three
months ·of 1987, when prices
climbed because of skyrocketing
energy costs.
Inflation roae an annual 4.4
percent In 1988 ancl1987.
From January to March of this
year, petroleum-based energy
prlc.e s soared at an annual rate cit
22.4 percent, accouhtlnifOllmore
than· two-fifths of the Increase In
Inflation. Food- price hikes aj:·
counted for nearly a quarter of
the acceleration In costa, the
department said.
Food prices In March then rose

twice' as much as In February
while energy costs were up 1.1
percent, the biggest advance
since August 1987.
The Index for all items exclud·
lng food . shelter and energy rose
0.4 percent after a ~.3 percent
February Increase. All figures
were · adjusted for seasonal ·
variations.
•
Breaking down the statistics,
food and beverage prices rose 0.7.
percent In March with grocery:
prices up 1 percent. A large part
of the gain resulted from a 2.4
percent rise In the Index for
meats, poultry, fish and eggs, the
· bureau said. All components of
this Index rose. especl\llly eggs at
18.4 percent.
Fruits and vegetables rose 0.2
percent while other grocery
categories registered smaller
. price increases.
·

'

Bail refused for

SAN JOSE, Ca!U. (UPll - A
judge refused to release !Jn ball a
17-year-old boy accused of kUling
two people with a home-made
bomb be aald wulnsplred by the
movie ''The Terminator."
San Jose High School senior
Chi Ma, wbo was belni held In
juvenile lletentlon hall on two
murder charpa, learned how to
stuff a plpe with gunpowder rram
repeated vtewtap of t11e tuturla·
tic Arnold Schwaneneaer fUm,
hi11atlorlll!y said Mondqr after a
heariJIIIn Santa Clara Juvenile
court.
·
"The movie ,... lnll1rltJnl!lltal ·
tn macblllitbeleJuwalllallllwto
make Uliae dlrtllcel," ..ad at11or·
ney Albie Juth
Nllrring to Ma 1114 1111 frl I Creli
Andre, Who died Ill the April

accldnt.
Dtlpu~ Dtatrtct A&amp;ttiiiiiJ Rldl
Gudaa' bal DOt u:f* II wliJ

mll dlr e-.. _..

a.....t . . . . . . . . . . . . .!....

ease wu ...-..,.. .....
,
tlllll
tlllll. Uldlr atate law, a ..a

ell... "' •
-;---·

--

Transportation costs rose 0.6
percent with energy prices accountlq for much oflhe gain, the
report said. Motor fuel prices
, rose 2.2 percent, meaning gasoline prices have soared 4.8
percent In the first qilarter !bough they remain 26.8 percent
below their peak level of March

1981.

pipe-bo~

*"".._

boalll ... lie

•

suspect

automatically charged as
murder without evidence of
premeditation.
Judge Daniel Creed refused to:
let Ma out of custody. despite
statements of support from par·
ents of the youq victims.
The molher of Ma's niece,
10.year-old Duyen N1111yen. who
also died In the blast, made an
emotional plea for tile releue ot
ber brother.
'1t'a enqh for ualo bave one
loali," aile said. .
Jachlmowlcz said bll client
wu extnmeay r111101'1et111. Ma,
alsO bart Ia tba ldut, 1lled
CI'IIIIIMI ......., 1111 ftnlt eourJ

an:

a

11t11e-...., NIH••• ·

. _ . . ___. .late lilt..-.
ltfiMI tlltllilt rocUd tile Ma .

t111111'11 .101111 11M , _ t.le
IIIC Aid .. pollee fGUIII lour
ollir ••• baml!a - • • lila
lie

,

i~J~·~,,~tr~~afllla§ii~=~
wtn

-

...

•

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